Test players available for Matador Cup

Australia’s Test players will be available for the Matador Cup one-day tournament and a red-ball camp will be held in mid-November to help preparations for the first Test of the home summer against New Zealand

ESPNcricinfo staff01-Oct-2015Australia’s Test players will be available for the Matador Cup one-day tournament and a red-ball camp will be held in mid-November to help preparations for the first Test of the home summer against New Zealand. The changes come after the cancellation of Australia’s Test tour of Bangladesh due to security concerns, which was confirmed on Thursday night.The Matador Cup begins on Monday next week and although all the squads had been named, there will now be changes due to the flow of Test players back into the state systems. There will also be an expected flow-on to the Cricket Australia XI squad, the seventh team introduced for this year’s Matador Cup made up of fringe players who did not make state squads.Importantly, the cancellation of the tour also means Australia’s Test players will have limited red-ball cricket before the first Test against New Zealand at the Gabba on November 5. However, a two-day red-ball preparation camp has been scheduled for October 13-14 at Hurstvill Oval in Sydney, with centre-wicket practice and net sessions for Australia’s Test cricketers.As a result of the camp, the first round of Sheffield Shield cricket, scheduled to be a day-night round, has been pushed back a day. The Shield competition will now start around Australia on October 28 to give players involved in the Matador Cup final an additional day’s preparation ahead of their first Shield game.”The tour of Bangladesh was going to be an important series for our relatively new-look Test team heading into the Australian summer, so we’re disappointed it won’t go ahead,” Pat Howard, Cricket Australia’s executive general manager team performance, Pat Howard, said.”Given the circumstances, it’s important we give our Test players the best preparation leading into the summer so they will now be available to play in the Matador BBQs One-Day Cup throughout October to get valuable match experience in Australian conditions.”We want the best players playing in the Matador Cup so we will manage the movements of the Australian players and the flow-on impact this will have on the new CA XI team. We will also hold a red-ball camp in Sydney to provide extra preparation for Australian players. We have scheduled this camp to fall in the quietest two-day period of the Matador Cup to limit player movement during the tournament.”While we believe the red-ball camp will provide solid preparation for the Australian players, the first Sheffield Shield round will provide a long-form match opportunity for those players. We have therefore pushed back the first Shield round to start a day later on the 28 October to give the Matador Cup finalists an extra day to prepare for their first Shield match.”Australian players will be made available for the first Shield round dependent on injury and workloads ahead of the first Test against New Zealand.”

England seek back-to-back wins

Preview of the third ODI between New Zealand and England at Eden Park

The Preview by Alan Gardner22-Feb-2013

Match facts

February 23, 2013
Start time 2pm (0100 GMT)

Big Picture

Whatever lessons the five limited-overs matches between New Zealand and England have taught us so far, the most glaring seems to concern that most nebulous of concepts, momentum. So far, whichever team the Big Mo has lined up behind, their almost instantaneous response has been to stumble to defeat. Four of the matches have resulted in hefty thrashings – though it seems fair to note that England have handed out three of them – and New Zealand will have to maintain the trend for bouncebackability if they are to avoid defeat in two formats in the run-up to what will likely be an exacting Test series.As with the T20s, the one-day series will go down to the final match. A rusty England lost control during the last ten overs of both innings in Hamilton but had hit their stride by the time the teams got to Napier. They still haven’t worked out how best to bowl to Brendon McCullum, though, and the return to form of Ross Taylor is important for New Zealand cricket as a whole. Their main problem in the ODIs has been taking wickets early in the innings: England’s Test-hardened top three blunting the effect of two white balls, and Tim Southee might have to be rushed back to new-ball duty a little quicker than anticipated in Auckland.If they do manage to ruffle England’s top three, it will only hasten Joe Root’s return to the middle – something Taylor has admitted wouldn’t be ideal either. Were Root the hero of a Jane Austen novel, right now he would be struggling to move for society belles petitioning for a turn on the dance floor. Root’s composed Test debut last year brought many admiring glances but his dashing one-day form has really set hearts aflutter. The one person left chewing his lip is Ashley Giles, who has seen his list of Champions Trophy selection issues grow by one; and not only has Root’s form raised the question of what happens when the rested Kevin Pietersen returns to the squad, it has had the knock-on effect of limiting time in the middle for Jos Buttler and Chris Woakes, the two players most in need of chances to impress. Although, if it means England securing a first ODI series win over New Zealand since 1994, Giles probably won’t complain.

Form guide

New Zealand LWLWW (Completed matches, most recent first)
England WLWLL

In the spotlight

BJ Watling was one of the few New Zealand batsmen to come out of the Test series in South Africa with any credit but he has since scored 86 runs in five ODI innings and is struggling for form after being promoted to opener in place of the discarded Rob Nicol. Facing a bowler as good as James Anderson (or Dale Steyn) is among the harder tasks for any opener but Watling is now also the senior man, after the injury to Martin Guptill. The stilted start he and Hamish Rutherford made in Napier undermined New Zealand’s chances, and cosying up to the eight-ball in the hope that McCullum will bail the side out is not a strategy for the long term.Of the England players that came into the ODI side after a decent layoff, only Graeme Swann has failed to slip back into a groove. The experience of bowling in a Test in India is someway removed from one-day cricket in New Zealand but, after James Tredwell’s recent stalwart displays as understudy, most would have expected Swann to return with his usual ebullience and restate his seniority. That has not quite happened and, although his displays have not been poor, he only has the wicket of the No. 8 Nathan McCullum to his name so far. One more will take him to 100 in ODIs and it is rare that Swann stays flat for long.

Team news

Hamish Rutherford will double his tally of ODI caps after Guptill was sent for surgery on a thumb problem and New Zealand could turn to Colin Munro to strengthen the batting further down the order. Trent Boult would be the most likely to make way, with Munro and Kane Williamson capable of filling in with the ball.New Zealand (probable) 1 BJ Watling, 2 Hamish Rutherford, 3 Kane Williamson, 4 Ross Taylor, 5 Grant Elliott, 6 Brendon McCullum (capt & wk), 7 Colin Munro, 8 James Franklin, 9 Nathan McCullum, 10 Tim Southee, 11 Kyle MillsWith the series on the line, England are unlikely to make any unforced changes. The rise of Root has further limited Jonny Bairstow’s chances and while Giles might be tempted to have a look at James Harris, this is probably not the occasion to bring in a debutant.England (probable) 1 Alastair Cook (capt), 2 Ian Bell, 3 Jonathan Trott, 4 Joe Root, 5 Eoin Morgan, 6 Jos Buttler (wk), 7 Chris Woakes, 8 Stuart Broad, 9 Graeme Swann, 10 James Anderson, 11 Steven Finn

Pitch and conditions

Eden Park is notable for its short straight boundaries and England got their geometry right during the T20 there earlier in the month, hitting 15 sixes in a record total. The drop-in pitch and a warm, cloudless day could lead to another high-scoring game.

Stats and trivia

  • Brendon McCullum has overtaken Martin Crowe and Craig McMillan during this series to sit fourth on New Zealand’s ODI run-scorers’ list with 4796. He needs 86 to go past Chris Cairns, but in 19 one-day innings at Eden Park, he averages 21.18 with one fifty.
  • Six years ago in Auckland, New Zealand scored 340 to win batting second against Australia – at the time the second-highest chase in one-dayers. They knocked it down to third two days later in Hamilton.
  • England have won four of their last five ODIs at the ground, stretching back to 1992.
  • Joe Root has scored at least 30 in each of his first six ODI knocks – the first man ever to do so.

Quotes

“There’s a lot of emotions going through your mind and body. With what’s gone on it was nice to know I can still bat.”
“That’s the idea really. You rest, so that you’re fresh when you come back in and it’s important you perform when you do that.”

Mumbai edge thriller to stay on top

A round-up of the latest round of matches of the Vijay Hazare Trophy

ESPNcricinfo staff25-Feb-2012West ZoneMumbai‘s last two wickets managed to scramble 22 off 12 balls to set up a one-wicket win against Saurashtra with two balls remaining at the Wankhede Stadium. When Mumbai lost their top-scorer Shoaib Shaikh for 83, Saurashtra were in with a chance to bowl out the hosts, but No. 9 Iqbal Abdulla (29 off 31) and No. 10 Dhawal Kulkarni (15 off 7 with one four and one six) put on 21 runs to reverse the balance. Sandip Maniar (3 for 34) struck in the final over, which meant Mumbai had their last man Kshemal Waingankar facing with one run win. Waingankar held his nerve and took a single to give Mumbai their third win in as many games.It was heartbreak for Saurashtra who recovered from a middle-order implosion that had left them tottering at 116 for 6 in the 28th over. Waingankar was the wrecker-in-chief, with 3 for 21 in ten overs, laying to waste a rousing start set up by Sagar Jogiyani’s breezy 67 off 53 balls. Cheteshwar Pujara’s poor run of form continued as he perished for 5 off 25 balls. Thereafter, Chirag Jani (79* off 71) and Kamlesh Makvana (54* off 67) revived the innings with an unbroken 135-run stand that came at run-a-ball. Mumbai’s chase too went off the rails early, before Anup Revandkar and Shaikh helped them recover from 41 for 4 and later 114 for 5. The steady loss of wickets set up an exciting finish, and it was fitting that Waingankar scored the winning run after doing the damage with the ball.Gujarat managed to defend their score of 196 for 9 by two runs against Baroda in another nail-biting game, at the Bandra Kurla Complex in Mumbai. Though no one from either side managed to grab a clutch of wickets, the game was dominated by bowlers from the outset. Gujarat’s innings never took off, with Niraj Patel’s 56 off 77 balls offering the only semblance of stability as wickets fell around him. Things look dicey at 133 for 8 in the 36th over, but Mehul Patel (29) and Amit Singh (21) helped their side limp to within four runs of 200 with a 53-run stand. In reply, Baroda’s top four all got starts, but none of them managed to push on and make a big score. Baroda strolled to 108 for 2 before their chase went pear-shaped. Four wickets went down for 24 runs in the middle overs, before Rakesh Solanki’s 52 steadied the ship. Gagandeep Singh and Swapnil Singh took Baroda closer with a 20-run stand. Baroda were favourites with five to win off 17 balls and three wickets in hand, but a run out and two strikes by Akshar Patel gave Gujarat their first win.

Ireland gunning for at least one sizeable scalp

ESPNcricinfo previews Ireland’s chances in the 2011 World Cup

Andrew Miller13-Feb-2011Everyone loves an underdog, especially one dressed in green. From Italia ’90 in football to West Indies 2007 in cricket, Ireland have long been the neutral’s favourite World Cup team, and four years on from their extraordinary Caribbean campaign, they are back in the mix and hungry to prove their credentials once again.Everyone loves an underdog – except, that is, the sport’s administrators. The magnificence of Ireland’s performance in Jamaica four years ago came at a price. By dumping Pakistan out of the competition with a gripping three-wicket victory in their group-stage encounter at Sabina Park, they eliminated one of the tournament’s major drawcards, just as Bangladesh were accounting for India over in Trinidad.The upshot of that remarkable day – St Patrick’s Day, no less – has been a rehashed competition, with more group stage games designed to safeguard against a repeat of Ireland’s heroics, a fact conceded by the tournament director, Prof Ratnakar Shetty. And if that seems harsh, then worse is to follow in 2015, when the format is set to eliminate all non-Test playing nations, even those like Ireland with some pedigree at this level.It means, therefore, that for Ireland, this time, it’s personal. They have six matches in Group B in which to make as big a splash as possible, and prove that the administrators have got their priorities badly wrong. The core of the contenders from 2007 are back for another go, and while the injured Eoin Morgan has long since thrown in his lot with England, their batting has been bolstered by the return of Ed Joyce.Ahead of the tournament four years ago, Ireland’s tally of official ODIs was a measly eight – seven of which had come against fellow minnows. Now they are relative veterans, with 58 official contests under their belts, and a wealth of reasons to give it their best shot. It is asking too much to expect a repeat of the Kingston miracle, but with six opportunities to make their presence known, they’ll be gunning for at least one sizeable scalp.World Cup pedigreeJust the one tournament, but what a tournament. Ireland showed their mettle with an agonisingly close-fought tie against Zimbabwe, then held their nerve in a fraught finale to eliminate Pakistan in that unforgettable three-wicket triumph. The Super Eights were a let-down on many fronts, as their lack of experience took its toll, but they at least managed to win their mini-World Cup, by downing Bangladesh in their penultimate appearance, at Bridgetown.Form guideA little patchy in recent months. A shared series in Canada was followed by a 2-1 defeat in Zimbabwe, and their warm-ups on the subcontinent haven’t gone entirely to plan either, with consecutive losses to Zimbabwe and Kenya in Dubai. They may be saving their best for when it matters, but they’ll need to raise their game soon.Where they’re likely to finishProgression to the quarter-finals would be a miracle given the format, but they’ve got a few teams in their group that they are sure to target – England, West Indies and Bangladesh, to name but three.WatchabilityMore doughty than flamboyant, Ireland at their best are a team with tenacity who refuse to accept when they are beaten. Their bowling attack relies on diligence above all else, with Trent Johnston setting the example and Boyd Rankin providing the height and a touch of class.Key playersGeorge Dockrell is just 18 years old, but already he’s a player with an immense future ahead of him. In the World Twenty20 back in May, he blended nous with audacity as his flighted twirlers saw off Netherlands in the qualifying tournament, before taking 3 for 16 against West Indies and choking England’s middle-order with four overs for 19 in the main event. His school exams ruled him out of an ODI against Australia, but a two-year deal with Somerset was ample consolation. Another mature performance, and it might even be England who come sniffing next …Ed Joyce has made more trips across the Irish Sea than your average RyanAir flight. Born in Dublin, he set about qualifying for England during his county stint with Middlesex, before eventually making his debut in June 2006 – against Ireland in Belfast, no less. Soon afterwards, he travelled to the 2007 World Cup on the back of an ODI century against Australia, but having been jettisoned by England in the wake of that disastrous tournament, he decided to requalify for his native land. At the age of 32, he is arguably in his prime, and his experience will be invaluable.

'We were outplayed' – Dhoni

MS Dhoni, the India captain, has said his team was completely outplayed by South Africa

Cricinfo staff09-Feb-2010MS Dhoni was candid in his post-mortem, after suffering his first Test defeat as India captain. It can be argued that India had started on the backfoot, losing Rahul Dravid, VVS Laxman, Yuvraj Singh and Rohit Sharma in the lead-up to the match, forcing them to field a sub-par eleven, but Dhoni was not looking for excuses.”You miss players because of injuries. This was the best available squad at that time. I won’t complain about that. We were outplayed in most of the departments, batting you can say, definitely bowling, and also the fielding. Because we were outplayed we are on the losing side. There are plenty of lessons to be learnt,” Dhoni said.India’s batsmen found it tough to handle Dale Steyn’s pace and movement and his ten-wicket haul played a crucial role in the result. Dhoni was full of praise for South Africa’s premier fast bowler.”The first few overs the way Steyn bowled, where we were three wickets down, most of them were brilliant deliveries. Luckily they got a ball that was really reverse-swinging [after tea on the third day]. That doesn’t stop me from giving credit to Steyn,” Dhoni said.”He bowled really well with that ball. He had already bowled 12-15 overs and after that coming back and bowling the way he did was amazing. But in the last 12 months, this was the best display of conventional swing bowling as far as I am concerned. We’ve seen good reverse-swing but you hardly get to see good conventional swing, especially in India, on tracks like these.”Dhoni went on to compare Steyn’s accuracy and ability to swing the ball both ways to Glenn McGrath. “When McGrath used to bowl around the off-stump it was always difficult to leave the ball, and that’s what is happening with Steyn. He was getting the ball to go away and from the same spot he was getting it to go in. You just get a fraction of a second to make up your mind and decide what you’re planning to do.”You may end up playing the ball and you may end up getting caught behind or in the slips, like what happened to Gautam Gambhir, first innings got caught behind, the second innings he got bowled.”Dhoni also had words of appreciation for Paul Harris who bottled up one end with his tight left-arm spin and picked up crucial wickets in the second innings. “He can really bind one end for them. He’s one bowler who can really bowl 30 overs out of the 90 in the day. You can’t look to play, just 30 overs you can block, at some point of time you have to look for runs. At the same time there’s not plenty of shots you can offer to that line of attack.”India’s woes were not restricted to the batting failures and, in fact, began with the ball. Harbhajan Singh had an ordinary tour of Bangladesh, and could not exert much control in Nagpur either, but Dhoni was confident that his number one spinner would bounce back.”He’s a great bowler and I’m not worried about that. That’s what stats suggest, he’s been doing really well, you’ve always seen him come back in big games, he’s a big-game player. He’s got the experience because of which he knows exactly what to do,” Dhoni said.Dhoni expressed disappointment that his fast-bowlers were unable to extract reverse swing. “If it’s a turning track you definitely see loads of spin for the spinners on the second day which means the wicket is dry, so more often than not you see the reverse swing going. The first innings there was a bit of turn, but we couldn’t get the reverse swing going.”When that happens with four bowlers and two fast bowlers they have something to play with. But it never happened for us, it became really tough for the fast bowlers to either contain them or get them out. Hopefully in Kolkata we’ll get the reverse swing going. Whatever legal ways are there we tried to get the reverse swing going but it didn’t happen for us.Dhoni was happy with the way the debutants stood up to the challenge. S Badrinath got his spot in the middle order due to Yuvraj Singh’s absence and Wriddhiman Saha was hastily drafted in after Rohit Sharma picked an injury, minutes before the start of the match.”I think they did quite well. Wriddhiman got a brilliant delivery in the first innings and Badrinath also looked quite calm and composed, his approach to Test cricket was good, and in a way it was good for them because they got an opportunity because most of the time, middle-order batsmen don’t get an opportunity to play in this Indian team. Of course we missed the experienced players, but it was good to see youngsters getting exposed to international cricket.Dhoni was banking on VVS Laxman making a comeback to the team for the second Test. “I’m hoping he gets fit. May be, the day after tomorrow, we’ll get to know what his scene is. But he’s been practising in the nets and we’re hoping he gets fit.”Dhoni has been a fan of the six batsmen, four bowlers combination since he took over the reins of the Indian team and stuck by his guns again. “You can always say if four bowlers can’t do the job no good reason your fifth can. Same way, you can say if six batsmen can’t do the job how can seven? You can pick the side you want to argue. But usually we play with a 2-2 combination and part-timers.”South Africa has Jacques Kallis who’s a specialist allrounder and they play with a 3-1 combination, so you can say they play with four bowlers and have a perfect all-rounder with them, which luxury we don’t have. We have to see what is the best combination,” Dhoni said.After Steyn’s initial strikes in the first innings, India seemed to be on the road to recovery through Sehwag and Badrinath. Shewag reached a hundred, but threw away his wicket soon after, attempting a big shot, which triggered a collapse. However, Dhoni was unwilling to blame Sehwag for the debacle.”You can say we lost the game but you can’t put the blame on him because that’s Sehwag-cricket for you and more often than not he’ll win more games then he’ll lose. There are other ten batsmen who can fit into the space. One and a half years back if he hadn’t played that innings against England in Chennai, we would not have been on the winning side. He has that liberty because he is a match-winner,” Dhoni said.”When he is playing aggressive cricket he puts pressure on the bowlers, they have to shift their lines which may not be their strength. It may look like a rash shot, but that’s the kind of cricket he plays, and we should leave it to him because he’s very successful in the cricket he plays. It’s very difficult to imitate that so I will not recommend that. Sehwag is one of a kind, he’s a great batsman and I just love the way he plays, and I hope he gets more and more runs.”The teams now have an extra day off following a four-day finish, before travelling to Kolkata for the final Test, which starts on February 14.

Bethell: 'I've got to be ready to perform in Ashes'

Batter’s maiden professional hundred caps England’s 415-run total, as he reaffirms his huge potential

Matt Roller07-Sep-2025Jacob Bethell declared himself ready to take a potential Ashes opportunity after experiencing the "addictive feeling” of scoring his first professional hundred in England’s record 342-run thrashing of South Africa.Bethell, who turns 22 next month, became England’s second-youngest centurion in men’s ODIs in Southampton on Sunday and has already played four Tests, scoring three half-centuries. Barring injury or a late change of heart, Bethell will head to Australia in November as England’s spare batter but hopes he can push his case for selection through his white-ball performances.His performances at No. 3 in his maiden Test series in New Zealand put serious pressure on Ollie Pope’s position ahead of the English summer, but he was unavailable to play Zimbabwe while at the IPL and Pope secured his spot with 171. However, Pope faded badly to finish with 304 runs at 34 against India, and could yet find his position under major pressure.”It’s obviously nearing,” Bethell said. “I’m hoping to be in the squad and if I’m in the squad, it’s only one thing that has to happen – in terms of an injury or something like that – and I’m in, and I’ve got to be ready to perform. I don’t know if these runs mean anything [towards selection] but I don’t think they can hurt. If the opportunity arises, I’ll hopefully be there to take it."Bethell was promoted from No. 6 to No. 4 at Lord’s on Thursday to take down South Africa’s spinners, scoring 58 off 40 balls, and was retained in the same role in Southampton. He made 110 off 82, dominating the scoring in a 182-run third-wicket partnership with Joe Root, and roared in celebration when reaching three figures with a cover drive off Nandre Burger.Bethell drives through the covers en route to his century•PA Photos/Getty Images

“It was pretty special,” Bethell said. “Just goosebumps, to be honest. As soon as I laced it in the gap – it couldn’t have hit more the middle of my bat – and it just raced to the boundary. I didn’t really know what I did. It was a bit of a blur to be honest, but it was a great feeling… It was unbelievable. It feels like an addictive feeling, so hopefully there’s a few more of them to come."He does not anticipate a permanent move to No. 4, the position normally filled by captain Harry Brook. “I like coming in and facing spin to start. I feel like if I can get going, especially with the one [extra] fielder up, there’s always a gap to hit… I don’t think Brooky will be stepping down from No. 4 anytime soon, so I’ll just be looking to do that whenever the opportunity arises.”Bethell’s father Graham used to play club cricket at Sheffield Collegiate with Root’s dad Matt, and the pair have twice celebrated hundreds with one another this summer. “I was batting with him when he got his hundred at The Oval in the Thorpey Test match, and it was pretty special to be batting with him again when I got my first one,” Bethell said.Root, who went onto score 100 himself in England’s total of 414 for 5, described Bethell as "wise beyond his years”. He said: “He’s very clear on how he wants to play his cricket… I’ve known him for a long time – since he was eight years old – so for him to play an innings like that and get us in that position at the halfway stage was fantastic.”Related

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Bethell admitted before the start of play on Sunday morning that he “probably should have played more" domestic cricket around England’s Test series against India, but said that he had rediscovered his rhythm when he felt something "click" during an innings for Birmingham Phoenix in the Hundred last month.”I didn’t feel like I was hitting the ball badly at all, just the performances didn’t show, which sometimes happens in white-ball cricket,” he explained. “It is pretty tough to be consistent and score fast at the same time. It is nice that I managed to put performances together – and also a match-winning performance in this situation.”It’s just rhythm, I guess. You can watch as much cricket as you want and do stuff like that, but it is different when you’re out in the middle and I think it just took me a couple of games to get that back… I felt something click and from that point, I felt like I’d been playing nicely, but hadn’t quite got the results. Today and the other day, it was definitely nice to be back in the runs.”Bethell will deputise for Brook during England’s T20I series in Ireland later this month, and said he feels ready to become their youngest-ever captain. “A lot of players in that team captain themselves, almost,” he said. “It’s just about a bit of man management and marshalling the troops for a couple of days up in Ireland, which should be great fun.”

Ashwin withdraws from Rajkot Test because of family emergency

As things stand, India will have to play with only ten men in the remainder of the Rajkot Test if Ashwin doesn’t return

ESPNcricinfo staff16-Feb-2024India offspinner R Ashwin has withdrawn from India’s Test side in Rajkot, effective immediately, because of a family medical emergency.”The BCCI extends its heartfelt support to the champion cricketer and his family,” the Indian board said in a media release. “The health and well-being of the players and their loved ones are of utmost importance. The Board requests respect for the privacy of Ashwin and his family as they navigate through this challenging time.”The Board and the team will continue to provide any necessary assistance to Ashwin and will keep the lines of communication open to offer support as needed. Team India appreciates the understanding and empathy of the fans and media during this sensitive period.”Related

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  • Why England started their innings in Rajkot with five runs on the board

The BCCI’s announcement came at 11pm IST, hours after the second day’s play in Rajkot had ended, during which Ashwin had provided India their first wicket of the Test.Ashwin’s withdrawal could leave India with only ten players, with three days of play left in the Rajkot Test. Ordinarily, playing substitutes are only permitted for players ruled out by concussions or Covid-19. In the absence of Ashwin, India are left with Ravindra Jadeja and Kuldeep Yadav as frontline spin options for the rest of this Test.With his wicket on the second day, Ashwin had reached a significant milestone, becoming the ninth bowler to 500 Test wickets.

New South Wales face tall order after 20 wickets tumble to pace and spin

Western Australia are well placed for a fourth win of the season in a game dominated by the ball

AAP23-Nov-2022Western Australia set New South Wales the seemingly Herculean task of chasing 268 runs to win after 20 wickets fell for 220 runs on an eventful day of Sheffield Shield cricket.On a lively but not unplayable SCG pitch, both sides struggled to make runs. D’Arcy Short top-scored for WA with an unbeaten 38 on a grim day for the batting profession. The visitors were bowled out for 127 in their second innings after slumping to 7 for 45 shortly after tea.Short and debutant paceman Charlie Stobo steadied the ship with a 60-run partnership – the largest of the day – to drag their side past three figures.”As you’ve seen, getting 200 on this wicket is really challenging,” Stobo said.  “Getting [a lead of] 260, 270 is a real bonus, so pretty content at the moment.”Related

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Journeyman NSW spinner Chris Green continued his dream first-class debut, picking up a five-wicket haul to add to his four opening-day dismissals.Quick Mickey Edwards got his first wicket in the competition since 2018 after a torrid injury run, trapping opener Cameron Bancroft lbw for 1.Chris Tremain got the pick of the wickets, taking an exceptional return catch in his follow-through off Sam Fanning’s firmly struck straight drive.The Blues were earlier skittled for 93, 140 runs short of WA’s first-innings total. Matthew Kelly was the pick of the quicks for the visitors, taking 3 fpr 9 including a double-wicket maiden over that brought the dismissals of Jason Sangha and Moises Henriques.Stobo picked up his first wickets for WA, while spinner Corey Rocchiccioli helped clean up the tail with four of his own.Daniel Hughes top-scored for the hosts with 30 off 96 deliveries, battling admirably for each run as his partners fell around him.Fast bowlers took 11 of day’s wickets with the spinners nabbing nine on a green pitch offering plenty of turn and bounce after the NSW spin pair of Green and Toby Gray dominated on day one.”It’s obviously a bit of a difficult wicket,” Hughes said.  “You can’t play any cross-bat shots on that. You’ve got to play as straight as you can and wait for the spinner to drop short or the quicks to bowl full and just hit down the ground. That’s the key, and if we can do that for a long period tomorrow we’re in with a chance.”With South Australia leapfrogging them at the bottom of the table following their draw with Queensland, the winless Blues will need a massive batting effort to avoid defeat on day three.

R Ashwin sends six-wicket Test warning as Surrey give Somerset final-day hurry-up

Offspinner bowls visitors out for 69 to hone his preparations for England series in August

ECB Reporters' Network14-Jul-2021R Ashwin stepped up his preparations for India’s Test series against England by taking 6 for 27 as Surrey’s LV= Insurance County Championship match against Somerset ended in a draw.The 34-year-old off-spinner, who was making a one-off appearance for Surrey, helped rattle Somerset out for 69 in their second innings with left-arm spinner Dan Moriarty picking up 4 for 20 on a Kia Oval pitch offering plenty of help to the slow bowlers.It left Surrey needing 259 to win in 57 overs and England slow left-armer Jack Leach followed up his 6 for 43 in Surrey’s first innings with another wicket but the hosts had reached 106 for 4 when the teams shook hands at 5pm with Jamie Smith 46 not out.A day during which all but seven overs were bowled by the spinners started with Leach sealing his best figures against Surrey when he picked up last man Amar Virdi. Roelof van der Merwe had Moriarty lbw with the third ball of the day to finish with 4 for 54 as Surrey were bowled out for 240 and conceded a first innings deficit of 189.Somerset did not enforce the follow on and Ashwin, who took just one wicket in 43 overs in the first innings, took the new ball at the pavilion end and quickly settled into a high-class spell. Although the pitch was slow, the ball turned sharply out of the footholds and Somerset’s batsmen found it hard going against a world-class operator.Ashwin took his first wicket in his fourth over when Steven Davies was drawn forward and edged behind. Tom Lammonby fell to an ill-judged sweep, James Hildreth was pinned on his stumps when Ashwin went round the wicket, George Bartlett bowled offering no shot and van der Merwe fell leg before just before lunch which Somerset reached on 60 for 7.Ashwin took his sixth wicket with a superb delivery which drifted in and spun sharply to defeat Ben Green’s defensive push. He was given excellent support by Moriarty, who bowled arguably the best delivery of the day to end Devon Conway’s determined resistance with a ball that spun sharply past his defensive push and knocked back off stump.Surrey’s hopes of an unlikely victory chase effectively ended by the 13th over when they lost their third wicket. Leach had Mark Stoneman held at short leg and van der Merwe picked up Rory Burns and Ryan Patel before ending a stand of 66 for the fourth wicket when he pinned Hashim Amla to finish with match figures of 7 for 115.

Ashes planning starts now for Mo Bobat as Lions tour provides pointers for success

England’s bid for Test resurgence will hinge on their success in broadening red-ball playing pool

Andrew Miller05-Mar-2020As England’s Test squad assembles for their tour of Sri Lanka – in the wake of a multi-format tour of South Africa, with a home Test summer looming ever larger on the horizon, and with back-to-back T20 World Cups offering a more immediate route to further global glory, it would be easy to park the ECB’s other stated ambition for the current four-year cycle – victory in Australia in 2021-22 – in the file marked “pending”.And yet, if there’s one lesson to be taken from the abject failure of three of England’s last four campaigns in Australia – and moreover, from the stand-out success of that one campaign to buck the trend in 2010-11 – it is that a failure to get planning months, and even years, in advance is a plan for further failure, full stop.England have, after all, lost nine out of their last ten Tests Down Under, including a 5-0 whitewash in 2013-14 – the same scoreline by which they were thrashed in the 2006-07 campaign that preceded Andrew Strauss’s stand-out triumph four years later.And, as Mo Bobat, the ECB’s performance director, pointed out in the wake of a more recent – and equally rare – England Lions triumph over Australia last week, the groundwork that gets laid now will be of fundamental importance to any hope of a repeat success in two year’s time.For last week at the MCG, an England Lions team featuring a mixture of the tried and the tyros won by an emphatic nine wickets over Australia A, their first victory in an unofficial Test in Australia after seven blank campaigns.And just as Alastair Cook, Jonathan Trott, Kevin Pietersen et al had batted Australia to a standstill in that famous 3-1 win in 2010-11, it was England’s weight of first-innings runs that proved crucial to their MCG victory. Dom Sibley, fresh from his breakthrough Test tour of South Africa, made 116 out of 428, while Essex’s Dan Lawrence top-scored with 125 – all the while looking as run-hungry as Pietersen himself had been on the England A tour of India in 2003-04 that preceded his own breakthrough year.For a week earlier in Hobart, Lawrence’s 190 had been the highest of three hundreds in an imposing 613 for 8 declared against a Cricket Australia XI. It seems the virtues of batting time, so alien in the modern T20-dominated landscape, haven’t been completely abandoned by the coming generation.Dan Lawrence drives during his hundred•Getty Images

“I was slightly alarmed when I saw it was the first time we’d beaten Australia A ever,” Bobat said during a briefing at Lord’s after his return from Australia.”I remember briefing the players at our camp in January. I talked at length about what it takes to win in Australia and the way we wanted to approach getting results. It’s not rocket science, but we talked quite a lot around making the most of first innings.”Of the four times we had won in Australia over the last 20 years, I think in three of them we scored 500-plus in the first innings, someone had batted for more than four or five hours, and bowlers had put in something like 40 overs in the game – so it was about framing into context what it actually takes to win in Australia.”Situational experience is a key part of what the England Lions programme has become. As Bobat conceded, their actual playing record in recent years is nothing much to write home about – take the Caribbean tour two winters ago, when a Lions side featuring four members of the current Test squad (Keaton Jennings, Jack Leach, Dom Bess and Saqib Mahmood) were crushed 3-0 in a series that exposed some deep-seated issues with playing and bowling spin overseas.But as a means of preparing players for the step-up in intensity and expectation that will come at Test level – or to keep them in the bubble between senior assignments, as in the cases of Sibley, Bess and Zak Crawley since the South Africa tour – it offers the sort of finishing school that county cricket, in its current guise, is struggling to provide in its own right, as Bobat himself told ESPNcricinfo back in December.”In recent years if you purely looked at win percentage, I don’t think our ‘A’ team win percentage would probably be as high as we might have liked it to be,” he said. “But a reassuring thing that I’ve started to communicate this winter, that people have started to get their heads around, is probably moving the Lions from being viewed as a programme that people might pass through on their way to playing for England – which I’m not that keen on as a mantra – to it being a range of experiences and expertise that players can access based on their needs.”So we might have England players, as we saw this winter, who then drop back down and get a bit more exposure and experience, and then go again.Craig Overton celebrates after dismissing Tim Paine•Getty Images

“Playing a game at the MCG against Australia A felt like something we should try and bank as an experience for them,” he added. “Because we wouldn’t want to get to the Ashes in two years’ time and for them to experience all of that for the first time.”It isn’t just what you get on the 22 yards, it’s being on that flight for that amount of time, it’s being in that country and dealing with Aussies just in and around the cricket itself. There are a number of things that you get from that that I would put into that relevant experiences category – dealing with the jet lag, walking out of the MCG through the tunnel. All those types of things, to get that first time, when it really matters, is probably asking a lot for a player, so banking some of that earlier is useful.”For the 2010-11 squad, a lot of that experience came first-hand – meted out by the likes of Shane Warne, Adam Gilchrist and Glenn McGrath in their valedictory triumph four years earlier, and stored away for future reference when Strauss, Cook, Pietersen, Ian Bell, James Anderson et al returned with vengeance aforethought. But it was England’s depth of fast-bowling options, every bit as much as their vast experience, that made the difference in that campaign – giving them leeway to cope with Stuart Broad going lame midway through the Adelaide Test, or for Chris Tremlett and Tim Bresnan to come off the bench for the third and fourth Tests and made fundamental contributions.Having been outgunned last summer by an Australian pace contingent featuring, at various points, such quality quicks as Pat Cummins, Josh Hazlewood, James Pattinson and Mitchell Starc, England know that they have the raw materials to fight back in style in two years’ time, with Jofra Archer and Mark Wood both demonstrating an ability to deliver eye-watering spells of raw pace that can rattle the very best.But, with both men currently injured, not to mention in high demand in the white-ball formats too, the challenge of broadening England’s fast-bowling stocks is one that Bobat knows cannot be left to chance. In January, the ECB handed the first of a new range of pace-bowling development contracts to Olly Stone, Saqib Mahmood and Craig Overton, a man whose temperament as a Test prospect is rated perhaps more highly than his bowling at present, but whose six wickets at the MCG were a key factor in last week’s Lions win.”We are making it a judgment on the quality of their current performance and we’re making a prediction on their future potential and all three of those bowlers were deemed to be guys that we thought could add value in the future,” said Bobat. “They are all slightly different, as well. One thing we do know, and we’ve done a huge amount of analysis to understand this, is to be successful all around the world, we need a varied attack.”Whether that variety needs to be augmented by using the Kookaburra ball in county cricket, however, is a question that Bobat isn’t entirely sold on, despite Joe Root’s recent endorsement of the notion and despite Australia turning to the Dukes in their own preparations for English conditions.ALSO READ: Technical tweaks the trigger for Dan Lawrence’s Lions form“A personal view is I’m not totally sold on the idea because I don’t think we know how it’s going to behave in this country,” he said. “Our pitches are not as abrasive, so I think we’re making a bit of an assumption. I’m slightly mindful that we play half of our games at home so let’s make sure we are really strong at home, too. If you start to move away from your own strength, there may be some unintended consequences.”The Ashes isn’t the only thing we plan for, clearly. We’ve got the World Test Championship and we’re very ambitious about what we want to achieve in the two T20 World Cups coming up. “It is my job, though, to help get a broader and richer talent pool, to allow us to be able to select strategically, which will also involve at times giving players a rest.”Increasingly, those rests appear to be coming in the switch between formats, with England’s Test and white-ball squads containing a range of increasingly specialised players … with a handful of notable exceptions. Key among those, of course, is the kingpin Ben Stokes, a man who produced two of the greatest matchwinning performances of all time at Lord’s and Headingley last summer. On his punishing schedule, Bobat is cautious but clear.”If we fast forward to the Ashes, the period before that we play India twice over five Tests [home and away]. We then go to Bangladesh. Then there’s the World T20 in India. If we think someone is going to play all that, I think that we are probably kidding ourselves,” he said.”I’d almost rather not be quoted on this but if we get to a point where Ben Stokes doesn’t have to play in the T20 World Cup because we can prioritise the Ashes that would be a great place to get to.” Planning for all eventualities, even the currently unthinkable ones, is precisely why he’s in his role.

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