Bavuma unfazed by pressure as South Africa look to avoid mistakes from 2021 edition

South Africa captain says he’s blocking out the noise from outside on his form and role

Firdose Moonda23-Oct-20224:19

O’Brien: Zimbabwe will be quietly confident facing South Africa

If South Africa learnt anything from the last Men’s T20 World Cup, it’s that speed matters. Speed of run scoring, that is.

They missed out on a semi-final spot at last year’s event, despite winning four out of five matches (the same number as losing semi-finalists England, losing finalists New Zealand and eventual champions Australia) because their net run rate (NRR) was the third-lowest in their six-team group, and only had themselves to blame.South Africa bowled Bangladesh out for 84 in their fourth match but took 13.3 overs to chase the target down. Had they scored the runs quicker, they would have given themselves a better chance of advancing. A year later, they’re aware that they have to keep an eye on more than just their number of wins, but also the margins of victory.”You want to try and perform as well as you can but make sure you keep a pulse on that [net] run rate. If there’s an opportunity to really win well, [you have to] make sure that you do so,” Temba Bavuma, South Africa’s captain, said. “We don’t want to ease ourselves into the tournament. There’s really no time to do that.”Related

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Ironically, Bavuma is the player around whom this discussion is most relevant. He is not known for being quick off the blocks and has had a particularly poor 2022. He was injured for three months after hurting his elbow against India and missed South Africa’s entire tour of the UK – where they played matches against England and Ireland in preparation for the T20 World Cup – and then was ill in the build-up to this tournament.As a result, Bavuma has only played seven T20Is this year and scored 64 runs at an average of 10.2 and a strike rate of 82, making it his worst year in the format. In those matches, he has been dismissed in the powerplay five times. Among batters in the top ten teams, Bavuma’s strike rate in the powerplay is the second-worst (96) and he is second on the list of most balls faced per boundary (8.8). Only Sri Lanka’s Avishka Fernando has worse numbers (powerplay strike rate of 92, ball-per-boundary ratio of 9).Those numbers look even worse when one considers that Bavuma is not South Africa’s only opening option. Reeza Hendricks, who batted in his place on the England tour, has had his best year in T20Is. Hendricks has scored 323 runs in seven innings, including four successive fifties, at 46.14 with a strike rate of 139.82. But there is only room for one of Bavuma or Hendricks in the XI, with the other top-three spots occupied by Quinton de Kock and Rilee Rossouw. Bavuma, by virtue of being captain, is always going to play ahead of Hendricks and, therefore, the expectation on him to perform is ever greater.Some believe that Hendricks would’ve been in the XI if Bavuma was not captain•ICC via Getty ImagesAsked if he is aware of the discussions around himself and Hendricks and the debates on team combination, Bavuma indicated he has distanced himself from opinion outside the team environment and is concentrating on his own game.”I’m aware of conversations that are happening in my head, regarding my game plan and how I am going to go about leading the team. I’m not aware of what’s happening outside,” Bavuma said. “In terms of the team, there won’t be any surprises – at least to the guys in the team. We know what we’re going to do, we know how we’re going to do it and we’re all quite comfortable around all of that. That’s where my focus is with the guys in the team. Anything else, that’s for other ears.”Still, the pressure on Bavuma is ever present and he acknowledged that in his dual role as captain and opening batter – there’s nowhere to hide. “The element of pressure is something that is not really unique to me as a player. All players have to deal with that pressure but it comes in different forms. Being the captain, it’s a lot more blown up,” he said. “All eyes are on you. There’s a lot more critique regarding your performances and just how you are as a leader. With the title of being captain comes that responsibility. It’s not something that one can really shy away from.”And in true Bavuma style, he said he is ready to meet the challenge head on and humbly. “With all the pressure that is upon me, I will face up to it as honourably and with as much gratitude as I can. The element of pressure is something all players have to face.”Bavuma can take heart from coach Mark Boucher’s expectation that Australian conditions will be more suited to his game than what he faced in India. The ball comes onto the bat quicker in Australia than India, seamers have concentrated on hard lengths in the opening round and Bavuma is confident and comfortable against the short ball, which should all work in his favour.From the matches already played in Hobart, it’s been clear that run-scoring in the powerplay can be difficult as seamers deliver what Jason Holder called “Test-match lengths”, and Bavuma believes he has the game to match the situation. “We’ve seen it has been challenging upfront. We’ve seen bowlers trying to challenge that off stump. So we want to be as circumspect as we can be, but with the right intensity, in order to put pressure on the bowlers,” Bavuma said. “We understand it’s going to be challenging. Looking at our batting blueprint, it works in our favour.”

The breaking and making of Murali

An extract from a new book on Sri Lankan cricket looks at the chucking witch hunt the team endured on their 1995-96 tour of Australia

Nicholas Brookes09-Dec-2022For Sri Lanka, there was one last test before the 1996 World Cup: a near three-month tour of Australia. Nothing would come easy, but the opportunity to test their mettle down under meant a lot. They knew they would be thrown into a pressure cooker. “I remember on the plane, the senior guys said, ‘It’s going to be really tough. You have to be really tough to beat Australia in Australia,'” Ravindra Pushpakumara recalled. “We thought, what do you mean tough? I don’t know – honestly, what do you mean? We have to sledge? We have to fight? No, you need to be tough mentally.”Pushpakumara sees this toughness as a natural consequence of the Sri Lankan experience. “We tough, mentally tough,” he contests. “Our cricketers come from the villages. They were very tough. I used to go to practice without food – that’s mentally tough. I’d walk six, seven kilometres to go to practice – that’s mentally tough. I didn’t have shoes for the whole year – that’s mentally tough. It comes from our nature.” When you have to prove yourself a survivor day after day, how can something as trivial as cricket lump pressure on your shoulders? Pushpakumara’s “just a game” mentality, seemingly shared by a number of his teammates, no doubt helped Sri Lanka deal with the trials they faced down Under.From the moment they arrived, it felt like all of Australia was intent on destabilising their progress. Sniffer dogs met them at the airport, putting noses out of joint – and the team were shunted from the warmth of Cairns to the colder Tasmania, before being dumped into the cauldron-esque WACA for the opening Test.Related

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Nonetheless, Arjuna Ranatunga remained upbeat. “We are a very young, positive side,” he told the press before the match. “Our fielding has improved and we have three bowlers who can take wickets.” Strikingly, he made sure to remind the world of the significance of cricket in Sri Lanka. “Our players are deeply committed for their country,” he said. “Everyone at home is keen on cricket rather than the other problems we have. If we can do well here, there will be a lot of smiling faces back home – and that is important to us.”Optimism quickly dissipated. Sri Lanka might have been encouraged by the algal virus which slowed the pitch – yet it quickly proved curse rather than blessing. A number of batters got in, but none stuck around; it was a long, hard slog in the field as the hosts pounded their way to 617 for 5. The game was up: though Hashan Tillakaratne’s 119 helped restore a little dignity, it was hard to gloss an innings defeat.Ultimately, the match was defined by an incident that had little to do with cricket. In the 17th over of Australia’s innings, umpire Khizer Hayat examined the ball and said its seam had been tampered with. There were three conversations between Ranatunga and the umpires, but the ball was not confiscated – as Sri Lanka requested and the rules dictate.Umpire Peter Parker and Sri Lanka captain Arjuna Ranatunga discuss the state of the ball during the Perth Test•Getty ImagesThough umpire Peter Parker was initially unconvinced, a report was submitted to match referee Graham Dowling. With little evidence and no thought of consulting the Sri Lankan management, Dowling issued an extraordinary press release, stating: “The Sri Lankan captain, Arjuna Ranatunga, was notified that the condition of the ball had clearly been altered by a member or members of his team during the course of the 17th over.” The Lankans had been branded cheats prior to any proper investigation. Worse, they were effectively gagged by the ICC laws – barred from making any statement to the press.The next morning, the “tampering’ Lankans” name was dragged through the mud in newspapers the world over. Though they had no real reason to manipulate the ball – and certainly no bowlers looking to exploit reverse swing – Sri Lanka held an emergency meeting at the close of play. “I was thinking, ‘What do I gain by tampering if I’m Murali [Muthiah Muralidaran]?'” Chandika Hathurusingha reflected when we spoke on the issue. “And I remember [Michael] Slater hitting one shot down the ground into the concrete stand. I was actually thinking, what would , bowling 110, 120 [kph]?” All 11 steadfastly denied tampering with the ball. A bewildered Ranatunga was seen on the brink of tears.When Pakistan had been accused of tampering in a tour match at the WACA earlier in the summer, it quickly became clear that an algal virus had created an unusually abrasive pitch. Equally, there had been consistent complaints about the quality of Kookaburra balls throughout the summer. Considering the facts alone – an abrasive pitch, a potentially dodgy ball, which the umpires did not confiscate – how could anyone accurately assess the cause of the damage, especially with Slater smiting the ball into the stands?Secure in their innocence, Sri Lanka went on the offensive. The BCCSL threatened the ICC with legal action – and when the second new ball showed similar signs of degeneration, the media began to change tack. Two weeks later, the team were cleared of any wrongdoing. An editorial in the bemoaned the fact the ICC report “expressed ‘sincere regrets’ to the Sri Lankans but did not include an apology. The best that can be said is that the ICC came to the right conclusion, if belatedly, and that the Sri Lankan players conducted themselves with dignity throughout the unfortunate episode.” Some felt the incident had racial undertones; certainly, there was a sense that England or New Zealand might have been treated differently.The tampering scandal was swallowed whole by the circus that engulfed the second Test. In so many ways, this tour revolved around Murali. It changed his life: during the early carefree days of the trip, he would slip out of the team hotel and explore Cairns unrecognised; by the end of the tour, he couldn’t step into open air without flashbulbs bursting in his face. The storm had been brewing. Murali had no idea that his action had been reported twice by match referees prior to the tour; nor that umpires Darrell Hair, Nigel Plews and Steve Dunne had expressed concerns to match referee Raman Subba Row during Sri Lanka’s recent trip to Sharjah.

Even in 1995, there was the stench of something rotten. Robert Craddock reported that “a series of secret conversations between leading umpires, high-ranking officials and disgruntled players preceded the stunning decision to call Murali”

“Chucking” was becoming an increasingly contentious issue – strangely, often couched in moralistic terms. For many, it was a scourge on cricket, a repugnant canker that must be removed. The chucker was a dirty cheat – even today, few acts on the cricket field are accompanied by such a grave sense of wrongdoing. Yet, as Ian Peebles pointed out in his 1968 book on the subject: “Surely the essence of sharp practice of cheating is the covert and deliberate disregard or breaking of a rule or agreement. The suspect bowler subjects himself to the judgement of the umpires and up to eighty thousand people. He makes no attempt to conceal anything, in the confidence that, in his own judgement, he is in no way infringing the letter or spirit of the law.”Perhaps chucking was transformed into a deplorable crime by the way it was framed. As Australian influence grew during the early ’90s, the country’s administrators seemed to declare themselves moral guardians of the game. Just as it was their duty to rid the game of the Asians who would pick at a seam, they felt obliged to crack down on the chuckers who threatened to bring cricket into disrepute. Suspicion surrounding Murali’s action had amped up after he took seven wickets in a warm-up match against Queensland. Now, not only was he a threat to the sanctity of the sport, but to the reputation of this Australian side. Moving forward, TV cameras zeroed in on his action in the nets. Sri Lanka coach Dav Whatmore was troubled, and told Arjuna as much. Together, they decided that Murali should sit out the three-day game in Tasmania before the first Test.Meanwhile, ICC match referee Subba Row had been in touch with the BCCSL, imploring Sri Lanka to take their own look at Murali. Whatmore knew he had to get ahead of the game, so he bought a video camera and began shooting his star spinner. Both he and Murali were convinced there was no problem, but realised that might not be immediately clear to outsiders.After all, Murali’s mechanics simply cannot be replicated – in a sense, it is as though his body was built to bowl offspin. Not only was he blessed with an extremely supple wrist, his right shoulder was flexible almost to the point of double-jointedness; on top of this, he had a slight deformity which meant he could not fully straighten his right arm. Were it not for these physical abnormalities there is no way he would be able to impart such lavish turn. Yet, these elements equally combined to create the illusion that Murali was chucking. Those defending him were clear in their stance: Yes, the arm was slightly bent at the point of release, but only because it straighten. It would take Murali many years to prove he wasn’t breaking the rules.The whole squad woke up with butterflies on Boxing Day morning. This was the big time: 55,000 crammed into the MCG; Australians from Darwin to Devonport gathered around their TVs. Pre-’96, Sri Lanka often struggled to attract broadcasters for their Tests; the marquee sporting event of the Australian summer was a chance for them to prove their worth.Murali undergoing biomechanics testing at the University of Western Australia in 2004•AFPArjuna opted to bowl, turning to his star spinner just before lunch. Murali thought nothing of the fact that Hair stood further back than usual; nor was he concerned when his second ball was flagged. Only when his third delivery was called a no-ball too did he sense something was wrong. He asked Hair if he was cutting the side crease. The umpire’s frank response chilled Murali to the core. “No. It’s your action. You’re chucking.”Arjuna arrived on the scene for a lengthy discussion. Though he encouraged Murali to keep bowling normally, it’s hard to imagine how the spinner found the strength to carry on. “It was so insulting,” Murali told me when we spoke on the matter. Hair called no-ball another five times in his three-over spell. Had a crack burst from the ground and offered to swallow Murali whole, there’s little doubt he would have willingly obliged.Instead, he soldiered on. Ranatunga switched him to Dunne’s end; though Dunne had previously expressed doubts over Murali’s action, he told Hathurusingha, fielding at square leg, that he wouldn’t call him during the Test. In his mind, doing so was tantamount to playing God. Mercifully, his arm remained by his side. But by tea on the second day, Hair decided he’d had enough. Unless Murali was removed, he would call “no-ball” regardless of where he was stood. His sudden strikes as strange, given the fact that he had stood in four Sri Lanka ODIs in the past four months. For many, it is hard to escape the sense that the incident was timed to cause maximum humiliation. Even Steve Waugh later admitted that “it was a bit unfair the way it unfolded”. Murali had been crucified for the whole world to see.His tour, and his whole career, lay in tatters. Privately, Murali planned for the worst-case scenario, hoping legspin could provide a lifeline. But the team stood firm behind him. “Arjuna and Aravinda [de Silva] supported me a lot,” he remembers. “They said, you’re not doing anything wrong; we will challenge this.” Sri Lanka could have easily yielded and sent Murali home, but Ranatunga insisted they rally around him. “If he had any other captain, I don’t think he would have survived,” Pushpakumara opined. The incident was hugely destabilising, but it helped the Lankans develop a sort of siege mentality. As Asanka Gurusinha put it, “We were together [before], but that brought us very, very close.”The ICC were quick to stand behind Hair: the umpire had become judge, jury and executioner. Murali made it through a ten-over spell in an ODI in Hobart, but was called three times by Ross Emerson during his first over in the following match. At least the team had a plan. Sensing Hair had been calling haphazardly, Murali switched to legbreaks – widely considered impossible to chuck. Emerson fell headfirst into the trap, calling one a thrown no-ball.

For many, chucking was a scourge on cricket, a repugnant canker that must be removed. The chucker was a dirty cheat – even today, few acts on the cricket field are accompanied by such a grave sense of wrongdoing

With this one fell swoop, humiliation shifted from bowler to umpire’s shoulders. Clearly, Emerson had no idea if Murali was bowling some balls and throwing others. His calls were coming at random. The incident lifted Murali from his pit of despair. His tour was over, but the injustice he had been subjected to was plain to see. A volley of boos rained down on Emerson, who needed a police escort to leave the field. Standing in his first ODI, he had made himself look a fool – and exposed the sham that simmered beneath the surface of the scandal.Even in 1995, there was the stench of something rotten. On 27th December, Robert Craddock reported in the that “a series of secret conversations between leading umpires, high-ranking officials and disgruntled players preceded the stunning decision to call Sri Lankan spinner Muttiah Muralitharan”. He went on to reveal that “at least one high-ranking Australian official felt strongly Muralitharan be exposed as a ‘thrower’ and had a lengthy bar-side conversation with a Test umpire three weeks ago forcibly expressing this point”. Clearly, such a discussion between a partisan national representative and a supposedly impartial employee of the ICC, saw both men wading into murky water. It suggested collusion: something Steve Waugh hinted at when he later said, “I think Darrell Hair, we all knew, was probably going to make that call.”Dunne subsequently claimed the umpires’ “dressing room was never free of at least one member of the ACB”. The Australian board’s CEO Graham Halbish damningly admitted to telling Hair “that if he called [Murali] for throwing he would have the full backing of the ACB”. Prior to the tour, Australia’s coach Bob Simpson asked the official board photographer to take photos of Murali’s action – even suggesting his preferred angles. This was the antithesis of a fair and balanced trial.Yet shockingly, as the Sri Lankan author Michael Roberts pointed out, all involved felt they were “serving the long-term interests of cricket”. They seemingly forgot that targeting one of the opposition’s stars so forcefully created a serious conflict of interest. Equally, they went about their business without a shred of care for the bowler. Murali was just 23 – a rising star from a fledgling cricket nation; the type of talent that should be nurtured and by those who want to see the game flourish. No one can criticise these men for suspecting Murali of throwing, but did his humiliation need to be played out in front of the biggest TV audience of the year? As Murali put it to me 25 years later, “The only question I have is why didn’t he do it before? Why did he wait for Boxing Day?”India VikingWhile Sri Lanka continued to toil across the country, Murali was sent to Daryl Foster in Perth to prove his legitimacy. This was an ideal solution: the UWA’s department of human movement and exercise science offered facilities, and an air of impartiality, that Sri Lanka could not. Murali bowled under the gaze of high-speed cameras; the footage was enough to convince doctors that he did not extend his elbow while delivering the ball. Murali had been vindicated.Though he was in the clear for now, his trials were far from over. For the next 15 years, Murali laboured under a cloud of suspicion; wherever he went, he had to endure grudging handshakes and brush off unfounded allegations. It must have been tough to carry on. “It made me a very strong-minded person,” he told me. “I will never give up.”An Island’s Eleven: the Story of Sri Lankan Cricket

Ireland's call goes unanswered as Lord's prepares to underwhelm

Under-strength, under-prepared tourists arrive in London with dice grossly loaded against them

Andrew Miller30-May-20231:36

Miller: England-Ireland build-up exposes game in flux

For all the grandeur that Lord’s offers up whenever you step through its doors, there’s something about its early-season Test that has never quite felt right, ever since the ‘tradition’ of two matches per summer first came into being nearly a quarter-of-a-century ago.First it was a series of turkey-shoots, with outclassed opponents such as Zimbabwe (2000 and 2003) and Bangladesh (2005) finding the occasion, the mid-May conditions and the opposition all too much to process.Then came the advent of the IPL, and the first rumblings of discontent from the players involved – with visiting teams arriving with increasing reluctance, in some cases only hours before the toss, until Kevin Pietersen’s bitter stand-off with the ECB in the early 2010s exploded the myth that the honour and glory of Test cricket would forever trump T20’s more lucrative tractor-beam.On West Indies’ tour in 2009, Chris Gayle caused the first of his many stirs by declaring he would “not be so sad” if Test cricket died out.But one year before that, New Zealand had been the early-season visitors, a certain Brendon McCullum among them. His startling 158 for Kolkata Knight Riders on the IPL’s opening night in April 2008 remains arguably the tournament’s definitive performance, but less well remembered is how brief his stay that year was.Ireland’s young players have been learning on the job in Test cricket•Alex Davidson/Getty ImagesFour matches and barely two weeks after lighting up that opening night at the Chinnaswamy, McCullum was playing in a three-day warm-up match for New Zealand against Essex at Chelmsford (making 4 and 35 in a 92-run win) and no doubt getting his first inklings of a mounting existential crisis within cricket that has now led him to embark on his Test-match rescue mission with England.But, with apologies to the myriad mismatches that Lord’s has hosted in the English early season – all of which have played an underacknowledged role in hollowing out the very sanctity of Test cricket – Thursday’s encounter with Ireland is already shaping up as the most grotesque of the lot.And quite frankly, even if Andy Balbirnie’s men achieve the unthinkable and avoid an awful and unfair thrashing over the coming four days, in terms of input rather than outcome, there may never have been a more unequal struggle in the history of English cricket.

“Hopefully that inspires the next generation as well, seeing a Josh Little at the IPL. Maybe we can find another Josh Little playing in the middle of Malahide.”Ireland coach Heinrich Malan defends the absence of his side’s star fast bowler

It’s quite the claim to make, when you consider the weakness of many early touring teams – the South Africans of the early 1900s, or India’s first forays in the 1930s, when well-heeled makeweights such as the Maharaj of Vizianagram (33 Test runs) further undermined the competitive balance.More recently, of course, Zimbabwe were gutted by political machinations long before their suspension from Test status. But until Ireland clubbed together to play (and lose) three Tests against Bangladesh and Sri Lanka in April, they had not played a Test match since their last appearance at Lord’s in 2019. Nor had most of their players even played so much as a first-class game in the same period, after their fledgling domestic competition was put into mothballs during Covid and never brought back out again.That lack of first-class cricket, incidentally, also covers a wealth of potential experience that they’ve not been permitted on the county circuit, due to the reclassification of Ireland-qualified players as overseas signings. Hence Tim Murtagh, the man whose five-for routed England for 85 on that heady first day at Lord’s in 2019, was forced to retire from internationals even though he’s still doing the business for Middlesex in the County Championship at the age of 41, while the crucial experience that the circuit offered to the spine of that 2019 team – William Porterfield, Kevin O’Brien, Gary Wilson, Paul Stirling and Boyd Rankin among them – has not been replicated for the class of 2023.Little’s absence will be the elephant in the room at Lord’s•Associated Press”When you think about the inexperience, it is what it is,” Heinrich Malan, Ireland’s head coach, said. “But it’s also the starting point for us. It is challenging when you think none of our lads have played a lot of domestic first-class cricket for a period of time, but it’s also our duty to go out there and do our best for our country.”We are pretty much at the bottom of that Everest,” he added, “but it’s an exciting opportunity for us to try and climb that as quickly as we can.”The climb, however, is made all the harder by the ongoing escalation of cricket’s club-versus-country struggle – one that last week veered uncomfortably close even to English circles with Jason Roy’s decision to negotiate an early release from his incremental contract to play in the first season of Major League Cricket (all two weeks of it, none of which – for this season at least – would have overlapped with any England commitments).For Ireland, however, the implications are vastly more serious, and the cause célèbre for the coming contest is surely the absent Josh Little, their star left-arm seamer who will spend the week with his feet up having played for Gujarat Titans in the IPL final in Ahmedabad on Monday night – a contest that his team-mates happened to watch on a mobile phone in the frozen-food section of a North London corner shop, of all the poignant vignettes with which you could hope to illustrate such a tale.

“There’s no one in the changing room that has any issue with Josh playing the IPL and we all wish him really, really well,” Malan said. “But hopefully things work out moving forward so that, when these sorts of opportunities do come across our desk as an Ireland international cricket side, we can have our best teams playing for us.”Hopefully that inspires the next generation as well, seeing a Josh Little at the IPL. Maybe we can find another Josh Little playing in the middle of Malahide.”Malan perhaps did not intend to scorch the international game any further with his remark, but it does increasingly feel that the uber-carrot of an IPL deal is a far more realistic means for Little to help inspire a generation than any exploits he could yet produce for his country.According to a report in the , Little’s Test career may now be over before it has begun, with the bowler said to be angry at being described as an “unsustainable investment” by Richard Holdsworth, Cricket Ireland’s performance director, after featuring in just “two [actually three] out of 23 days” of international cricket in the past four months.Each of those three days with Ireland occurred at Chelmsford earlier this month, for which Little broke off from his IPL stint to aid their optimistic but not unrealistic challenge of winning three games out of three against Bangladesh, and so leapfrog South Africa in their bid for automatic World Cup qualification.In the event, a first-match washout wrecked their chances, and thereafter Ireland cut a discombobulated outfit, theoretically playing a home ODI series but in fact finding themselves outgunned on and off the field by a raucously pro-Bangladeshi fanbase than outnumbered their supporters by approximately 3000 to 30.Holdsworth also happens to have been the first person to say the quiet bit out loud, namely that this Test does not constitute a “pinnacle event”, given Ireland’s financial future is effectively resting on their forthcoming World Cup qualifiers. The 50-over event is now looming for them in Zimbabwe next month, with the 20-over version for European teams following soon afterwards in Scotland.Related

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And while Holdsworth is entirely within his rights to prick the pomposity of a format that has let Ireland down right from the moment they were handed Full Member status in 2017 (one Test per year of status is pitiful by any standards), it hardly adds much heft to a spectacle that is already grotesquely overshadowed by the Ashes, and facing further complications due to rail strikes that are likely to affect the attendance at an underwhelmed Lord’s.There’s no question that Ireland have the pride and the talent to put up a fight this week. Harry Tector, the ICC’s No. 7-ranked ODI batter is a truly thrilling prospect, while several of their players – Curtis Campher, Lorcan Tucker, Balbirnie and Stirling among them – were in the runs even in defeat in Sri Lanka last month.But against England’s Bazballers, in an Ashes summer, with the dice so grossly loaded against them that they can neither put out their best team nor practise adequately in the (traditionally) best format, it’s asking an awful lot of Ireland – and a beleaguered Test game – for the coming contest to be even moderately compelling.

Kuhnemann follows Jadeja blueprint to inspire Australia's comeback

Left-arm spinner shines at a time when the tour had threatened to come off the rails for his team

Andrew McGlashan01-Mar-20232:11

Chappell: Kuhnemann learnt from the second Test and bowled better

Whatever way Matt Kuhnemann’s Test career goes from here, he’s going to have some good stories to tell.While the first Test of this series was taking place he was playing for Queensland in the Sheffield Shield. Then he jumps on a plane and a few days later is making his debut in Delhi and taking the new ball. Virat Kohli becomes his first Test wicket.On the first day in Indore he held the ball aloft as he walked from the field, barely two-and-a-half hours after India’s innings had started, with the extraordinary figures of 5 for 16 from nine overs – a first-class career-best. His dad had reached the ground just in time to see the fifth wicket after lunch having missed the first session.Related

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At times Australia have tied themselves in knots over their desire to have a left-arm spinner in the side and their handling of Ashton Agar was a curious sequence of his events. When Mitchell Swepson is available for Queensland, Kuhnemann can’t make their Sheffield Shield side, but he was ideal for this devilish surface, which has even left India unimpressed with how much it offered on day one, and he troubled the right-handers in what was an uplifting performance for Australia on a tour that had threatened to come off the rails.”It’s been a whirlwind,” Kuhnemann said of the rapid elevation, whose ODI debut came in similar fashion in Sri Lanka last year. “Like every night I’m sort of just pinching myself. Even today just sitting in the change room, just looking around speaking to [Mitchell] Starcy and Nathan Lyon and thinking this is unreal, just be able to do this. To even go out there and play with Steve Smith and all these other players and contribute to the team, it’s really awesome.”Kuhnemann played a key role in getting Australia into this game after heads could have gone down. They lost the toss on a bone-dry pitch then saw Rohit Sharma nick the cover off the first ball of the game, only they didn’t review. When replays showed, somewhat surprisingly, that India’s captain had also survived an lbw in the same over, Smith could have been forgiven for worrying how events would transpire.Matt Kuhnemann picked up his first five-wicket haul in Tests•BCCIIt was vital for Australia’s peace of mind that they removed Rohit without too much damage after the missed reviews. Smith turned to spin in the sixth over after the brief, rare sight of two quicks in operation as the recalled duo of Starc and Cameron Green took the new ball. There is little chance of either of them being over-bowled on their comebacks.Kuhnemann’s third ball spun sharply past Rohit’s edge and the next turned and bounced to defeat a slog sweep. The straight boundaries at the Holkar Stadium are enticingly short and Rohit could not resist, skipping down and being defeated by more huge spin to present Alex Carey a stumping.In his next over, Kuhnemann produced a perfect left-arm spinner’s dismissal when he drew a skittish Shubman Gill forward and found the outside edge. It felt like every ball could be a wicket-taking opportunity. Two deliveries after dismissing Gill, Kuhnemann produced one that was full at leg stump and spun square past Kohli.On a pitch turning more than anything he had seen before, he kept it simple and let the surface play the tricks. “Nathan Lyon was excellent out there,” Kuhnemann said. “Even after a couple of wickets he said don’t get ahead of yourself, just think about bowling that ball…he was great for me. Not every day you get these wickets like so enjoy them, it’s very different to what we get back home in Australia.”Meanwhile, there was little Cheteshwar Pujara could do about his delivery from Lyon which spun sharply and kept low. Given the conditions, Kohli was constructing a superb innings before he was dismissed by Todd Murphy for the third time in the series, an offbreak straightening perfectly from round the wicket to win the lbw.It was a little surprising when Kuhnemann was taken out of the attack with figures of 5-0-13-3 – Shreyas Iyer having dragged on – although Smith was proactive in switching the spinners around depending on the right and left-hand batters. But after lunch his fourth wicket came when R Ashwin edged a full delivery, and the fifth arrived when one skidded into Umesh Yadav’s pads.Although it’s all relative in an innings that lasted 33.2 overs of which he bowled nine, Kuhnemann said he had implemented some subtle changes as the ball got older having watched how Ravindra Jadeja operated in Delhi.”I’m a massive fan of Jadeja and Ashwin so watched how they have bowled in the last few years,” he said. “The way [Jadeja] uses his crease and probably the biggest thing I picked up in Delhi is that he brings his length back a little bit when the ball gets a little bit older. That’s probably the main thing I brought into this Test. Don’t want to get full especially on a wicket that stays low, being consistent on that five-six metre length.”By stumps, Jadeja himself had four to his name – all Australia’s wickets to fall – to take his series haul to 21, and with India bowling last he could yet be the left-arm spinner to have the decisive say on this game. However, Australia are well placed to prevent that happening. It would be a remarkable turnaround, and Kuhnemann would be a big part of the story.

Picking six specialist bowlers reflects Bangladesh's aggressive intent

Tamim reveals that if Mehidy had not had a freak injury, they would have picked this XI from the first ODI itself

Mohammad Isam23-Mar-2023In the first two ODIs against Ireland, Bangladesh batted boldly to reach totals of 338 and 349, their highest in ODIs. There was even talk of an impending 400-plus total in the third match. Albeit slowly, Bangladesh seem to have finally updated themselves as a batting unit to keep up with the rest of the world.Picking six specialist bowlers in their XI, though, is a different story altogether. It is a rare occurrence for this team. But they came around to take that big step in the third ODI against Ireland. The move paid off, and how.They usually pick only five specialist bowlers when Shakib Al Hasan is in the XI. When he is not around, they tend to pick seven batters, relying on part-timers to bowl ten overs. But this is a World Cup year, and they are geared up to do well there. So a show of this intent was most necessary. Though it came against Ireland, on a slightly overcast day in Sylhet, everything fell into place for Bangladesh’s rare show of aggression.Firstly, Mehidy Hasan Miraz was deemed fit after missing the first two matches. His recent upturn as a batter has given the team management the confidence to give him a promotion. Bangladesh’s top six batters have also shown that they can hold their own after beating England 3-0 in the T20I series. The fast bowlers too couldn’t be ignored on this surprisingly pacy and bouncy pitch in Sylhet.After Ireland captain Andrew Balbirnie opted to bat on winning the toss, the Bangladesh seamers bowled the opponents out for 101 in 28.1 overs to script a ten-wicket win.Hasan Mahmud took his maiden five-wicket haul in ODIs, while Taskin Ahmed picked up three wickets and Ebadot Hossain two. Their relentless line and length choked the Ireland batters, who looked at sea even in the middle overs against this pace attack.Tamim Iqbal receives the trophy after winning the series from BCB president Nazmul Hassan•BCBIt was the first time for Bangladesh that all ten wickets went to their fast bowlers. In fact, Mehidy bowled just one over in the match. Even more incredibly, it was the first time that Shakib Al Hasan neither batted nor bowled in an ODI, and only the second time when he didn’t score a run or take a wicket in a Bangladesh win.Tamim Iqbal, the Bangladesh captain, later said that they had the six-bowler plan from the first ODI against Ireland. Mehidy’s freak injury, getting hit in the face by a football, kept them waiting. He said that it is the ideal line-up in most conditions, as it allows him an extra bowling option.”We had this thought process from the first game of this ODI series,” Tamim said. “If Miraz wasn’t injured ahead of the first game, we would have picked this XI [straightaway]. We have faith in Miraz’s batting ability. If he can deliver, it becomes easier to operate with six bowlers. Sometimes five bowlers and part-timers make it difficult on good wickets. When we knew that it would be a sporting wicket, we decided to go with six bowlers. We might do this in overseas conditions, depending on the opponent and conditions.”Mahmud had impressed with his death bowling in Bangladesh’s T20I series win against England earlier this month. On Thursday, he took three wickets with the new ball and two towards the end to complete his five-for.”It is my first five-wicket haul in domestic and international career,” Mahmud said after the game. “Our fast bowling attack is playing together for the last few years. We have a good connection. We are improving on it. We are working hard with Alan Donald, our fast bowling coach.”I have been preparing for this game for the last few days. The two white-ball formats are quite different in terms of mental set-up. I try to start well in both formats, in the different phases of the innings – powerplay, middle overs and death. Our bowling coach shares his experience and thoughts. He tells us how to bowl in certain situations, how to back oneself.”We [the fast-bowling group] back each other, we tell each other to give our best. Taskin is our senior, he looks after us. He tells us to avoid the negatives, look at the positives, what is needed to be done during the matches, and what will bring improvement.”Mushfiqur Rahim cracked 100* off 60 balls int the second ODI•AFP/Getty ImagesTamim, too, was full of praise for his fast bowlers. “If I just say that they bowled brilliantly, it won’t be enough,” he said. “Their hard work is paying off. Their success is not a fluke. They work very hard in the nets. When you have a fast-bowling attack like this, life becomes easy.”You become competitive in most conditions. I am actually very proud of the whole pace-bowling unit. I was extremely pleased with the way they bowled in this series.”Tamim said that sending Mushfiqur Rahim at No. 6 was also part of their plan to give the experienced batter responsibility of scoring in the slog overs.”The coach and I decided to bat him at No. 6 from the last series. Nothing against him batting at No. 4 where he has an exceptional record, but we don’t finish well. So his experience, and the number of shots he has, is the reason. He is someone who is very aggressive when there are only a few overs left in the innings. It clicked for us. He batted unbelievably well. If he can carry on like this, that’s the best possible thing for us.”Batting at No. 6 is very tricky. We will not always get a good start. He might have to come to bat at 100 for 4. Whether it’s [Mahmudullah] Riyad , Afif [Hossain] or Mushy, I have a soft corner for those who bat at No. 6 and 7. It is one of the most difficult positions to bat, apart from opening the innings.”Tamim said that his strong belief in following the process was proved right in this series, and that while batting in the powerplay was tough in the second ODI, he and Litton sacrificed their styles to get through that period, allowing the rest of the batters with enough of a foundation to get big totals.”I have a simple message for the team. I don’t set targets for the team, like 350-360. I believe in following the process. If it gets us to 260-270, it’s fine. I am happy we ended up scoring 350. If you consider the last match, we got to 350 [349], but nobody would know how difficult it was. Those first ten overs was the most important part. Following the process, ticking all the boxes, we ended up scoring 350 [349].”

WPL opens a whole new world for women's cricket in India

The first season has had several examples of domestic talent benefitting from exposure to the international stage, and this is just the beginning

Zenia D'cunha25-Mar-2023UP Warriorz left-arm seamer Anjali Sarvani made her India debut against Australia in December, and was also part of the T20 World Cup squad last month. But it is an interaction with her bowling coach in the Women’s Premier League that she feels has made a dramatic improvement in her skills.”Ash [Ashley Noffke] has given me a solid tip about my bowling action, a little thing which made a huge difference within one game,” Sarvani tells ESPNcricinfo. “The WPL is a stepping stone to a new version of me. In the World Cup I didn’t get a chance, this is a huge opportunity to learn and get more opportunities with the Indian team as well.”Sarvani’s experience is not unique; there have been plenty of similar stories during the inaugural WPL.Twenty-year-old Shreyanka Patil, an allrounder who bowls offspin, did not have the freedom to set her own fields before she came to Royal Challengers Bangalore. “In domestic cricket, spinners are often told to bowl on one side of the wicket and flight the ball, and because there’s no pace the concept of short third or short fine mostly doesn’t exist,” she said. “I tried to challenge that norm and I got support from my coaches. So when I joined the RCB camp and implemented these learnings at training and in our practice matches, the coaches were happy. [Mike] Hesson sir said I’ve come prepared.”Jasia Akhtar, the 34-year-old domestic veteran from Kashmir, hasn’t played a game for Delhi Capitals yet, but says that sharing a dressing room with Meg Lanning and listening to her perspective on success and failure has been an eye-opening experience.The performance of the WPL will have tangible measures such as money spent on media rights and franchises, player salaries, television and digital viewership, and in-stadium attendances, but the intangibles – such as the learning experiences of young and unheralded Indian cricketers – are just as valuable.Shreyanka Patil – Sophie Devine reckons it’s only a matter of time before she plays for India•BCCIOne of the purposes of the WPL is to provide a platform for domestic cricketers to learn and shine, to be a launchpad for young talent, a finishing school for the more experienced. To build depth for women’s cricket in India, a bit like what the Women’s Big Bash League did in Australia. And the stories that have emerged from the first season are promising.Mumbai Indians’ Saika Ishaque, the second highest wicket-taker, is one of the finds of the tournament. She’s been on the domestic circuit for nearly a decade, striving in obscurity to make the state team for Bengal after an injury setback. At 27, hopes of playing for India would have seemed so distant, but not after bowling with discipline and courage on a global stage, and picking up the wickets of Lanning, Sophie Devine, Alyssa Healy, Tahlia McGrath, Jemimah Rodrigues. , she famously quipped while getting the purple cap. [I’m a bowler. I’m here to take wickets]Related

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Where else could a 20-year-old uncapped Indian cricketer from Punjab listen to one of the greatest to have played the game, get inspired, and help her struggling team end a run of five straight losses? That’s what Kanika Ahuja did for RCB after hearing Virat Kohli tell them: “It is not pressure but pleasure to get a chance to play here.”UP’s Parshavi Chopra, all of 16, is already an Under-19 World Cup champion, but to make her mark among proven international spinners is arguably a greater achievement. Her dismissal of Ashleigh Gardner, the Player of the Tournament at the 2023 Women’s T20 World Cup, is one of the moments of this WPL. And when Sophie Ecclestone, the top ranked bowler in women’s T20Is, says Chopra is a game-changer, you know she’s one to watch out for.Simran Shaikh, a 21-year-old from Mumbai playing for UP Warriorz, says she learned new techniques to improve her fielding. “My fielding is something that I have improved upon a lot. I implemented the techniques the coaches said and did things I have not done before,” she tells ESPNcricinfo. “The seniors and coaches would teach me how to throw correctly and share tips.”Listening to Virat Kohli helped Kanika Ahuja end RCB’s winless run in the WPL•BCCIThe impact of interacting with elite international players goes beyond technical skills, too. “I’ve often heard that foreign players have strong mindset but it’s only when I came here and interacted with them that I understood just how mentally strong they are,” Akhtar says. “They don’t panic easily if they are hit for boundaries, they play simple cricket and stick to their strength. We domestic players don’t get a lot of chances to play with senior India players also. I am from Kashmir [though she plays for Rajasthan] and very few know cricket there. While I was playing I didn’t know how to deal with pressure but that’s what we are learning here.”Eight league matches per team in a little over three weeks, several training sessions, and more offline interactions – the WPL has provided an intense learning environment unlike any other for its participants. Now imagine some of the knowledge and work ethic absorbed percolating to domestic teams through players who have been part of the WPL. And the impact this knowledge transfer will have as it builds over seasons.This is part of the reason that UP coach Jon Lewis, a former England fast bowler, persisted with Indian youngsters in his team. “There are two parts to my job here, one is to win games and the other is to develop young Indian cricketers,” he says. “The fact that we are able to put a 16-year-old legspinner [Chopra] and 18-year-old fast bowler [Soppadhandi Yashasri] out should be celebrated. This competition is all about growing young Indian cricketers and giving them an experience.”It’s a sentiment shared by Warriorz captain Alyssa Healy and they walked the talk. They stuck with Simran and Kiran Navgire, gave chances to India’s Under-19 World Cup winners Shweta Sehrawat and Chopra, as well as Yashasri in the final league game. They may have lost the Eliminator, but the fact that they made the knockouts while giving all these players chances is noteworthy.16-year-old Parshavi Chopra was a star for UP Warriorz•BCCICapitals, on the other hand, played just one uncapped Indian in nine matches: Minnu Mani, who comes from the Kurichiya tribe in the Wayanad district of Kerala, got two games. They chose to field the fifth overseas player from an Associate nation – USA’s Tara Norris – and finished top of the table. Hopefully the likes of Titas Sadhu, the U-19 pace sensation, Sneha Deepthi, the only Indian mother in the WPL, and Akhtar will get their chances next year.For RCB, the growth of their young players was a silver lining in a forgettable campaign. They fielded the most uncapped Indians, a consequence of their horrendous start to the season, but one of them – Patil – was so impressive that Sophie Devine said it was a matter of time before she plays for India. At Gujarat Giants, Dayalan Hemalatha finished the season with their second best strike rate, while 24-year-old Harleen Deol was their second-highest run-scorer and in contention for the emerging player of the tournament.Only the grand final remains, and then the players will go their separate ways, taking with them the wealth – both material and intellectual – earned over these three weeks to further their careers. As the WPL’s theme song says: [This is just the beginning.]

Ravindra comes of age with an innings for the dreamers

Unflustered by an ordinary day with the ball and unfazed by an unexpected promotion, he treated the world champions not with diffidence but with disdain

Matt Roller05-Oct-20231:29

Kumble: Ravindra reminds me of a young Yuvraj Singh

It was a moment of impudence that laid this drubbing bare. Rachin Ravindra, who watched the final of the 2019 World Cup in a bar in Bengaluru, had picked Chris Woakes’ slower ball before Woakes himself knew he was about to bowl it. When Ravindra swung it back over the bowler’s head for six, his back leg gave way like a flamingo’s.By that stage, New Zealand were already cruising towards their nine-wicket win, needing a shade over four runs per over. But Ravindra saw no reason to slow down: the youngest man on the pitch played the fearless cricket considered England’s hallmark. When he flicked the winning run into the leg side, New Zealand had romped home with 82 balls to spare: so much for the barest of margins.Related

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His unbroken partnership with Devon Conway, a close friend and Wellington team-mate, was worth 273 in 35.1 overs – the fourth-biggest stand in World Cup history, and surely among the easiest on the eye. This was a memorable night for both, making hundreds on their World Cup debuts; for Ravindra, having his Indian-born parents in the stands made it doubly so.”A hundred’s always special,” he said. “But in terms of being able to perform in India, it is pretty cool. It was nice to have my parents there watching: they flew over from New Zealand. It was cool to have that moment and it’s always nice coming to India – there’s a sense of a family connection whenever I’m in Bangalore, being able to see my grandparents.”Rachin Ravindra was surprised at being asked to bat at No. 3, given the depth of New Zealand’s line-up•Getty ImagesNearly six hours earlier, Ravindra’s first involvement in this game could hardly have gone worse. Asked to bowl the 17th over, he started his spell with six back-of-a-length balls: the third, fourth and fifth went for four, four and six as Harry Brook rocked back and nailed him over midwicket. When Brook hoicked his sixth ball to Conway in the deep, Ravindra’s sense of relief was palpable.After his first over cost 15, Ravindra recovered to some extent – though he still conceded 61 runs in his nine subsequent overs. He has always been a top-order batter first and a left-arm spinner second, but New Zealand have viewed him as a project player, primarily using him in the middle order and pushing him to develop his bowling.But circumstances enabled him to shift up the order. When Will Young was rested for the warm-up game against Pakistan in Hyderabad, Ravindra made 97 off 72 balls while filling in as opener. And with Kane Williamson not risked as he continues his recovery from an ACL tear, there was a vacancy at No. 3: Ravindra was only too happy to fill it.It came as a surprise when Gary Stead, New Zealand’s coach, told him he would bat up the order. “I wasn’t necessarily expecting it,” Ravindra conceded. “We bat seriously low with [Mitchell] Santner at No. 9, and he’s a genuine allrounder. It gave us that licence to go out and express yourself.”Empowered to attack, Ravindra started with a textbook one-two, whipping Chris Woakes’ half-volley wide of mid-on for four before pulling his overcorrection through midwicket. After he swung Mark Wood’s 92mph/149kph bouncer over square leg and timed Sam Curran past mid-off, he had 38 off 23 balls.Ravindra says he and Conway ‘check in with each other, ball after ball, and [make] sure what’s important stays important’•Getty ImagesJos Buttler turned to spin, giving Moeen Ali the final over of the first powerplay, but it made no difference. Ravindra dumped his drag-down over wide long-on and into the lower tier, and launched a floaty offbreak into the same spot to bring up a 36-ball half-century. He spent most of the middle overs playing second fiddle to Conway, shifting down a gear and finding cruising speed.Their partnership was a masterclass in 50-overs batting, both batters maintaining a strike rate around 120 throughout while taking minimal risks. “The way me and Dev go about it is to check in with each other, ball after ball, and making sure what’s important stays important,” Ravindra said. “The process, and your routines, as opposed to just blindly trying to take someone down or do something rash.”Conway brought up his century in 83 balls, the fastest hundred in New Zealand’s World Cup history. His record stood for barely 15 minutes, as he embraced Ravindra on reaching three figures in 82. “I know how much work he does behind the scenes,” Conway said. “He showed the world what he’s capable of.”Ravindra has been a long-term project for New Zealand: he played his first Under-19 World Cup at 16, and made both his first-class and List A debuts for New Zealand A rather than Wellington. But all they have invested in him would be worthless without the talent, the determination, and the composure underpinning it.This was an innings for the dreamers, one which kept alive the idea that a young man could walk out on the biggest night of his career and treat the world champions not with diffidence but with disdain. Tonight, that young man was Rachin Ravindra.

Bangladesh, New Zealand begin final lap of World Cup prep

New Zealand haven’t beaten Bangladesh at their backyard in 13 years, and will aim to do so without several of their heavy-hitters

Mohammad Isam20-Sep-2023

New Zealand bring one-third of their World Cup team

New Zealand have sent only five World Cup-bound players to Bangladesh. Lockie Ferguson leads the side that also includes Trent Boult, Rachin Ravindra, Ish Sodhi and Will Young.Related

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Boult returned to ODIs this year only last week when he played against England, and was later picked in their World Cup squad. Ravindra has impressed as an allrounder in 2023, taking 11 wickets while scoring 179 runs at 29.83 average. Sodhi has taken seven wickets in nine games this year while Young is their second-highest scorer in ODIs in 2023.Ferguson’s choice as captain is an interesting one as he has only led in one game in his competitive cricket career – a warm-up T20 between New Zealand and Gloucestershire last month.Dean Foxcroft is the only uncapped cricketer in the squad while Dane Cleaver’s only ODI appearance was in July last year. The rest of the squad has been involved in ODIs this year.Tamim Iqbal is back in the ODI side after reversing his decision to retire in July•AFP via Getty Images

Hosts bring back the stalwarts

Bangladesh have rested several of their World Cup squad members including captain Shakib Al Hasan and Mushfiqur Rahim. Mehidy Hasan Miraz and the pace trio of Taskin Ahmed, Hasan Mamhud and Shoriful Islam have also been given a break. But, they have dropped Shamim Hossain, Afif Hossain and Mohammad Naim from the Asia Cup squad.Tamim Iqbal and Mahmudullah have returned to the ODI side. Tamim reversed his retirement decision in July, but quit the ODI captaincy last month. He missed the Asia Cup due to his injuries but has since recovered well for the New Zealand series.Bangladesh have also called up wicketkeeper Nurul Hasan, and the uncapped trio of Zakir Hasan, Rishad Hossain and Khaled Ahmed. The biggest surprise is Soumya Sarkar’s inclusion, as the left-handed batter had hardly done much in the two-and-a-half years out of the ODI setup.

Bilateral relevance

Often, these bilateral ODI series have little meaning. The hype ahead of the World Cup, however, has turned it into a necessary encounter between two teams who could take a second look at their backups. New Zealand are still waiting on Tim Southee’s availability for the World Cup. The fast bowler will undergo surgery on Thursday for the thumb injury he sustained against England last week but New Zealand remain hopeful that he will recover in time for the marquee event.Bangladesh, too, have plenty to ponder as they are without the injured Najmul Hossain Shanto and Ebadot Hossain. Shanto could return in time for the World Cup but Ebadot is out for a long period. They need to find a backup at No. 3, while one of the fast bowlers must grab Ebadot’s place and replicate his performance.New Zealand have a notoriously poor record in Bangladesh•BCB

New Zealand’s poor record in Bangladesh

Bangladesh are on a long unbeaten run against New Zealand at home. They won 4-0 in 2010 and 3-0 in 2013, leaving the visitors with just one win in eight outings in Bangladesh. That came in the 2011 World Cup quarterfinals against South Africa. Bangladesh also beat New Zealand 3-2 in a bilateral T20I series in 2021, although that touring team from New Zealand also bore a similar experimental look.

Pace and bounce in Mirpur?

Bangladesh have preferred the more batting-friendly pitches of Chattogram and Sylhet for home ODIs in the last two years. Shere Bangla National Stadium’s reputation as the spin bastion changed slightly during the Afghanistan Test in June this year when the fast bowlers took 14 wickets. The ground average for the side batting first in a day-night game is a surprising 254 in the last seven ODIs here. On five of these occasions, the team batting first has won the game too.A bit of pace and bounce won’t be surprising in Dhaka this time as well. The weather, though, could be a concern as rain is in the forecast for all three ODIs.

Tactics board: India's top order vs Boult and Henry, Santner's threat in the middle overs

Where the India vs New Zealand game could be won and lost

ESPNcricinfo staff21-Oct-2023

The Powerplay face-off

The semi-final of the 2019 World Cup, in which New Zealand beat India by 18 runs, was pretty much decided in the powerplay. India were 5 for 3 in the fourth over making it hard for them to chase down the target of 240 set by New Zealand.This could be one of the biggest challenges for the Indian batters on Sunday. Rohit Sharma, Virat Kohli and Shubman Gill have not been able to dominate the opening pair of Trent Boult and Matt Henry. India’s batters have not faced them in ODIs since that semi-final four years ago, so how they take these two bowlers on in Dharamsala will set the tone for the rest of the innings.

The Devon Conway threat

New Zealand’s Devon Conway has had a great start to his ODI career but the numbers suggest there is a way to keep him quiet. Get your right arm quicks bowling at him from around the wicket. While he averages 46.87 facing right-arm pace from over the wicket, he averages only 21.00 when he’s bowled to from round the wicket. Will the Indian pace attack try to exploit this trend?

Bossing the middle overs

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Both teams have dominated the middle overs with bat and ball at this World Cup. With the bat, New Zealand have had the likes of Daryl Mitchell, Tom Latham and Glenn Phillips score in crucial situations. Latham averages 54.44 against India, having scored two centuries and five fifties, and he has countered Kuldeep Yadav well. With the ball, New Zealand have had Lockie Fergusson and Mitchell Santner take important wickets.Similarly, India have seen the likes of Kuldeep and Jadeja dominate the middle overs with the ball. The Indian lower-middle order is yet to be tested in this tournament and the game against New Zealand could be one where they may get their first opportunity. Kuldeep holds the key for India against New Zealand in this phase, having taken 35 wickets at an incredible average of just 17.17.

Mitchell Santner’s role

Mitchell Santner is to New Zealand what Kuldeep is to India. With 11 wickets at an economy of 4.4 and an average of 17.17, he has been the stand-out bowler in this tournament. However, Santner will be looking to improve his record against India in this format. He averages 60.69 against India and strikes once every 75.3 deliveries. His economy has been excellent at 4.83. Santner will be crucial in the middle overs for breakthroughs as well as to control India’s tempo.

When the Chinnaswamy swayed to Kohli's giddying beat

With bat and then ball, Virat Kohli treated an enthralled Bengaluru crowd to the perfect Diwali show

Shashank Kishore12-Nov-2023Murals of every Virat Kohli century welcomed commuters along Queen’s Road. Street vendors selling t-shirts with “Kohli 18” commanded a higher price; you wondered why they even bothered stocking up on anything else. Inside the ground, Kohli standees were erected for fans to pose with. Kohli masks were stuck to seats in certain pockets. On Diwali, Bengaluru had gathered to witness the Kohli show.But their hero wasn’t to be seen until the 11th over. Rohit Sharma and Shubman Gill feasted on a nervous Netherlands attack. Even at its noisy best, the Chinnaswamy Stadium doesn’t have the allure of a packed MCG, but it can certainly be intimidating for those who play much of the year in front of no more than a few hundred patrons. Netherlands seemed like they were.Initially, it was almost impossible to pick who did it better. Watching the openers on a rampage was as giddying as it was exhilarating. You’ve come to expect Rohit to begin an innings that way. Yet, when he puts theory into practice, you marvel at the purity and panache of every stroke. You wonder how he makes a slog sweep look beautiful.Then there’s Gill, commanding your attention by playing his trademark short-arm jab with precision. He struck them so clean that even a gentle loft – without putting his forearms to work – peppered the stadium roof. It was pure timing. The magic was in his footwork and how quickly he got to the pitch of the ball. It could have well been a hit on the driving range at the gold course a couple of kilometres down the road.Related

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Each shot elicited a bigger cheer than the previous hit. Ten overs in, how could the crowd possibly have kept this energy going much longer? Surely there was going to be a lull at some stage. But, just as you wondered this, Kohli walked in. The momentary humdrum after Gill’s wicket gives way to ever-increasing decibels, filled with sheer anticipation.It hit a crescendo when their hero bounded out, spot-jogging, playing a series of imaginary copy-book forward defenses, then swerving left and right, adjusting the top of his helmet and taking his trademark leg-stump guard. By now, there was near-hysteria: “Kohli! Kohli! RCB! RCB!”It truly felt like you were at the Chinnaswamy. How could you be here and not hear the RCB chant, a source of much amusement to every non-RCB fan… This was the same crowd that went “RCB, RCB!” last week when Rachin Ravindra went berserk. Now there were relatively more legit reasons to go “RCB, RCB”. And, of course, “Kohli Kohli”. The man was right there, in the flesh, ready to rumble.India had got to 100 off just 11.4 overs. The game situation was right up Kohli’s alley. It was as if the stars had aligned perfectly. This was as low-pressure a setting as Kohli could get to try and get #50 “out of the way” before the semi-finals. We’d seen how the pressure of such landmarks could gnaw at the best. Sachin Tendulkar, Kohli’s hero, had acknowledged this.Virat Kohli began scratchily before coming back into his element to score a fifty•ICC/Getty ImagesKohli started scratchily. More than once early on, he wasn’t happy with the shape he was maintaining. The timing was off, and he hadn’t found the middle. Off his 11th ball, he had the crowd on tenterhooks for a split-second as he tried to break free. The slap fell just short of substitute Shariz Ahmed at mid-off. Kohli wasn’t happy with his choice of shot.Great batters have the knack of not allowing indiscretions like those to chew away at them. Soon enough, there was a bottom-handed whip off Logan van Beek that sent the balls soaring over the wide long-on boundary for six. The crowd, of course, went wild. They could hardly contain themselves. Kohli shovelled the next ball over mid-on. He was up and away.From there on, he was peerless. He got to a half-century. An air of inevitability was beginning to grow. You could see it coming. ODI century No. 50 seemed very much on. Some in the crowd were preserving their phone batteries to capture the moment. But then, out of nowhere, Roelof van der Merwe slipped one through, and Kohli missed the cut. A hushed silence.They were anticipating a slice of history. But that wasn’t to be. Fans can finally hear themselves after hours of straining their vocal cords to be heard. But not for too long, because Shreyas Iyer and KL Rahul have them transfixed for much of the rest of the innings.They had come in hoping for a Kohli special with the bat. They ended up getting a giddying look at what could lie ahead if India’s much-vaulted batting unit fires in unison. It was spectacular, it was grand, it was blockbuster. But Kohli and his fans were not quite done for the night just yet.At his IPL home, Virat Kohli picked up his first ODI wicket since January 2014•AFPThree overs in with the ball, the crowd began their chants of (Give Kohli the ball). Occasionally, Kohli turned back to play to the gallery, entertaining them with some funky steps and jigs. When they went “RCB, RCB”, Kohli wagged his finger in disapproval and pointed to the “India” on his jersey, and they switched to “India, India”.Kohli was the concertmaster of the orchestra that was the Chinnaswamy. They jived and grooved to everything he did, with the bat and on the field. And then the cherry on the cake…Kohli came on to bowl in the 23rd over. Sure, Mohammed Siraj was off the field briefly and on another night India may have needed a few filler overs to cover for any issues there. But India didn’t need that here, the chase was simply meandering and if they so wished, Rohit could have brought on the frontline bowlers to kill off the chase.After the game, Rohit and coach Rahul Dravid did say India wanted to try out their part-timers with Hardik Pandya absent injured for the knockouts, but in the moment it felt like Kohli getting the ball was pure vibe. In line with what the crowd wanted. And one over in, he sent them into further ecstasy, drifting an innocuous ball down leg. It was such a poor ball that Kohli appeared to have had hands on his head even as he completed the delivery, only to then realise Scott Edwards had tickled it behind. Up went the finger. Edwards walked, Kohli roared. The crowd followed suit.Kohli looked up to the dressing room and chuckled. He’d picked up his first ODI wicket in close to a decade. He couldn’t have smiled any wider. The crowd had more than its fair share of Kohli. To top it off, India won. They’d served up a perfect nine-on-nine leading into the semi-finals.No one in those Kohli 18 t-shirts could have asked for more.

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