Another season as also-rans?

A preview of Kings XI Punjab in IPL 2013

The Preview by Vishal Dikshit05-Apr-2013

Big Picture

After making it to the semi-finals in the inaugural IPL season in 2008, Kings XI Punjab’s performances have only waned. From finishing second in the points table in 2008, they finished last in 2010 and then missed the play-offs in 2011 and 2012 by a few points.Even though only four players – Piyush Chawla, Shaun Marsh, Luke Pomersbach and Nitin Saini – remain from their successful squad of 2008, they bought only two players in the auction this year, the least by any team, along with defending champions Kolkata Knight Riders. The squad also has plenty of players getting on in years, such as Adam Gilchrist, Azhar Mahmood, Dimitri Mascarenhas, David Hussey and Ryan Harris – all except Harris are 35-plus. Their star performers have mostly been overseas players which means they need to get more out of their domestic names, especially their pacers since their home games will be played in Mohali and Dharamsala where they lost five out of their eight games last season.For this squad to churn out better results, they will also need a stand-in leader and wicketkeeper as their 41-year old captain missed nine out of 16 matches last season due to injury. Saini stood behind the stumps in Gilchrist’s absence, but for a two-month long competitive T20 event, they are missing someone like a Kusal Perera or a Quinton de Kock.Kings XI have also failed to put together a run of victories, failing to win more than two matches in a row last season. Additionally, they failed to win their must-win matches in the last two seasons, which kept them only two points away from the play-offs.One thing working on their favour is the appointment of Darren Lehmann as coach; the combination of Gilchrist and Lehmann has already captured one trophy, for Deccan Chargers in 2009, and Kings XI fans will be desperate for a second, though the odds aren’t favourable.

Key players

Adam Gilchrist averaged 34.40 last season with a strike rate of 120.27, made a highest score of 64* and led his team to three out of the eight matches they won. What went wrong? His hamstring. The challenge will be tougher for him this year as he is now 41, he last played a competitive match in May 2012 and the burden will be heavier as Marsh will miss King XI’s first few matches. If they want to book a berth in the play-offs, Gilchrist will have to turn their fortunes around with his bat.Kings XI’s leading wicket-taker last season with 17 scalps, Parwinder Awana averaged under 22 and later made his way into the Indian T20 team. In order to change their win-loss ratio at home, Awana could play a crucial role if Kings XI do not want to rely only on their overseas pacers Ryan Harris and Azhar Mahmood.

Big names in

Kings XI bought only two players in the auction this year – Pomersbach and Manpreet Gony. While Gony has struggled to take more than five wickets in an IPL season after 2008, Pomersbach was the second-highest run-scorer in the Big Bash this season, 15 runs behind team-mate Marsh. With a strike-rate of 139.78 and a 65-ball hundred against Melbourne Renegades, Pomersbach would want to replicate that performance on Indian pitches.

Big names out

A player Kings XI released in November 2012 went on to score 966 runs in the Ranji Trophy at an average of 96.60 and was the most expensive India player sold in the auction, for $675,000. Abhishek Nayar is a player Kings XI will sorely miss as they need domestic match-winners, especially who can bat and bowl.

Below the radar

A part of the victorious Under-19 World Cup team in Australia in which he took four wickets in the final against the hosts and finished as the joint wicket-taker for India, Sandeep Sharma also took 10 wickets in six matches at an economy of 4.57 in the Vijay Hazare Trophy this season. He had quite a solid Ranji tournament too, finishing among the top five wicket-takers with 41 at 19.41 for Punjab. Giving him a chance to share the new ball with Praveen Kumar or Ryan Harris may not be a bad idea.

Availability

A hamstring injury Marsh suffered against England Lions in February ruled out him out of action and he is expected to join the Kings XI squad in the second half of April.

Wins for Central Districts and Otago

A round-up of matches played in Plunket Shield 2012-13

ESPNcricinfo staff02-Feb-2013
ScorecardHalf-centuries by Grant Elliott, Michael Papps, Harry Boam and Mark Gillespie were in vain as Wellington lost to Canterbury by 20 runs in a closely fought Plunket Shield match in Wellington on Sunday.The high-scoring match saw many great knocks, beginning with Peter Fulton’s 94 for Canterbury on the first day of the match. Canterbury, who chose to bat, managed to put on a substantial score in quick time, thanks to Fulton and contributions from George Worker and Brent Findlay.Wellington showed their batting prowess too, amassing 356 runs and gaining a slender 27-run lead in the space of just a day. Captain Stephen Murdoch scored a steady century while wicketkeeper Luke Ronchi hit a quick-fire 95, which included nine fours and two sixes.While Wellington would have hoped to keep Canterbury in check, opener George Worker had other ideas. Worker, who scored 107 off 203 balls, was involved in two important partnerships with opener Peter Fulton and No. 3 batsman Shanan Stewart that helped Canterbury erase the deficit and then race away to a big lead. Two aggressive half-centuries by Tom Latham and Ronnie Hira helped Canterbury reach 410 for seven.Set a target of 383 to win, the home side, were struggling at 159 for five before a century-run stand between Grant Elliott and Harry Boam revived Wellington’s chances. Elliott and Boam’s dismissals left Wellington staring at defeat, before a fighting half-century from fast bowler Mark Gillespie brought them tantalizingly close to a win. Gillespie added 36 runs for the last wicket with No. 11 batsman Tipene Friday, who stuck around for 23 balls before McCone bowled Gillespie for 63. The Wellington pacer’s blistering knock included three fours and five sixes.
Scorecard
Table-toppers Central Districts won their fourth game of the Plunket Shield, coming from behind to beat Auckland at the Eden Park No.2 ground. Asked to bat, CD folded for 233 on the first day. They were in danger of getting bowled out for under 200 but tail-enders Tarun Nethula and Kyle Jarvis, who was the second-highest run-getter with 45, put together a last-wicket stand of 57. Left-arm seamer Michael Bates picked up four wickets. Craig Cachopa led Auckland’s response with 145, giving them a lead of 115, even though seamer Bevan Small picked up a five-for.In their second innings, CD came back strongly. Openers Jamie How (124) and Jeet Raval (77) added 173, and Carl Cachopa made 53. Wicketkeeper Kruger van Wyk and Doug Bracewell, too, hit half-centuries in their stand of 126 that helped CD reach 457 for 7, upon which they declared, setting Auckland 343 to win during the final day. CD just required 40 overs to bowl their opponents out with Nethula, the legspinner, bagging six wickets and triggering a collapse in which Auckland lost eight wickets for 81 runs. Auckland were bowled out for 151, slipping to their third defeat this first-class season.
Scorecard
Otago won their third game of the Plunket Shield and are now in second place in the points table, after beating Northern Districts at the Queenstown Events centre. Upon choosing to field first, Otago dismissed ND for 217 in the first innings with fast bowler Ian Butler claiming 6 for 65. Daryl Mitchell and Ish Sodhi struck half-centuries but weren’t able to prevent their team from being bowled out for a below-par score. Hamish Rutherford, who has won a call-up to the New Zealand squad for the home series against England, scored more than half of Otago’s runs in the response, smashing 162 to give his team a 102-run lead. He scored at a fair clip, too, hitting 25 fours and a six in his 187-ball knock.Butler was again among the wickets and completed 10 wickets for the match in the second innings, grabbing 4 for 46 and helping bowl out ND for 227. ND were going strong at 161 for 3 but lost three wickets for just one run and were only able to gain a lead of 125. Butler was helped by the medium-pace of Sam Wells, who picked up three wickets, while Neil Wagner chipped in with two. Otago were keen to finish the game off the third day itself, and took just 26.4 overs in their chase to achieve their task. Opener Aaron Redmond made an unbeaten half-century, as his team won by eight wickets.

India's bowling coach upbeat despite struggle

Despite the ineffectiveness of India’s attack in the ongoing Kolkata Test against England, their bowling coach Joe Dawes believes the group is on the right track

ESPNcricinfo staff07-Dec-2012India’s bowling coach Joe Dawes believes the group is on the right track, despite its ineffectiveness in the ongoing Kolkata Test against England, and is hopeful of building a “big pool to choose from” in the future. Dawes also said Zaheer Khan has the “best wrist in cricket” and was among the top six bowlers in international cricket.The BCCI appointed Dawes, who is from Queensland, as bowling coach in February, during India’s 0-4 Test defeat in Australia. India began their home season by beating New Zealand 2-0, but they have struggled against England. Alastair Cook’s team scored 406 in the second innings in Ahmedabad, 413 in the first innings of their ten-wicket win in Mumbai, and are currently amassing a huge first-innings score in Kolkata.”I’ve been in this job nine months and it’s been challenging. I believe that we’re making progress, although the results in this series say otherwise,” Dawes told . “I’ve spoken to the new selection committee about identifying a number of bowlers who we can invest on. This morning we sat down and made a rough list of bowlers for the T20s and ODIs to get things in place for them so that when they get into the team they’re ready. We have a close eye on the Ranji Trophy to look out for the guys who put their hands up so we can have a few more bowlers.”We’ve spoken a lot about patience as a group. The two spinners [R Ashwin and Pragyan Ojha] are quite young – they’ve only played a dozen Tests or so – and they’re still learning their craft at the moment. That’s why they have struggled with their consistency and we have talked about that. They’re gaining good education of the game at the moment and they’re working hard at their game. We’re improving and getting to where we want to be.”While India’s spinners have not been effective against England after the first Test, their fast bowlers also struggled. India lost Umesh Yadav to a back injury after Ahmedabad and Varun Aaron, Sreesanth, Praveen Kumar, Munaf Patel and Irfan Pathan are among the reserves injured. Zaheer, the leader of India’s attack, has taken only three wickets at an average of more than 60. Dawes, however, remained confident of Zaheer’s form and fitness.”We’ve had this joke going around in the change room that Zak’s back. I thought he wasn’t at his best against New Zealand and he’ll be the first to admit that. But he’s gone back and worked hard. He’s run himself into a bit of nick with his fitness and has started to get the ball through with some pace and get it to nip back. I truly believe that the time is not far away when he starts getting the wickets that he deserves.”You watch the ball come out of his hand from purely technical point of view and it’s just beautiful. He keeps the seam up and hits the seam all the time, every time. He’s not as young as he once was and so he’s probably not as quick as well. Considering the conditions he has to bowl in most of the times, in the subcontinent, he’s got to be among the top six bowlers in the world today.”Having played three specialist spinners in the Mumbai Test, India reverted to the two-seamer strategy for Kolkata and picked Ishant Sharma, who hadn’t played international cricket since January. “He [Ishant] bowled in a Test match today after a long time and I thought he did pretty well. He was unlucky not to get a wicket,” Dawes said after the first day in Kolkata. “He has worked hard to come back from his injury and you can see the changes in his action. He’s much taller now and doesn’t fall over while angling the ball in. The next step is to give him a consistent outswinger and that’s coming well.”The plus with him is that he’s still a very young man and he’s already played 45 Test matches; he’s an experienced cricketer. He’s now only 24 and his body will learn to endure the rigours of fast bowling with time and he’ll only get better from here.”Umesh was the best fast bowler on show in Ahmedabad, bowling quick and getting the old ball to swing, and Dawes was pleased with the progress Umesh had made since the New Zealand series. “I’m happy with where he’s going; disappointing for him to be injured but we have things in mind to put in place for him when he comes back; just tweak his action a little bit more and continue to help the young bloke get stronger and fitter.”

Hasan, batsmen shine in Sialkot triumph

After eight action-packed days at the Rawalpindi Cricket Stadium, it was the favourites, Sialkot Stallions, who came out on top

ESPNcricinfo staff01-Apr-2012
ScorecardAfter eight action-packed days at the Rawalpindi Cricket Stadium, it was the favourites, Sialkot Stallions, who came out on top. Sialkot, the six-times national Twenty20 champions, recovered from a shaky beginning with the ball to limit Karachi Dolphins to 167 and then knocked off the runs with eight wickets to spare to lift the Faysal Bank Super-Eight trophy for the first time.It was Karachi who won the toss and elected to bat, and the decision seemed to have paid off when they powered past 60 in the Powerplay. Their attack was led by opener Khalid Latif, who carried his bat through the innings to finish with 81 off 59. The main support was provided by Shahzaib Hasan and Asad Shafiq, who made scores in the 30s.Karachi, though, failed to make the best use of their fine start, as the in-form left-arm spinner Raza Hasan ran through the lower middle order. Hasan began the slide with his fielding, running out Shafiq with the score on 153 for 2 in the 18th. Off the remaining 14 balls Karachi managed 14 for 5.Chasing 168, Sialkot lost Shakeel Ansar early but took control thereafter. Imran Nazir scored a rapid 41, before an unbroken stand of 119 at close to nine an over between Shoaib Malik and Haris Sohail sealed the game in the 19th over.For the final, 20,000-odd people thronged the Rawalpindi stadium, with its newly-renovated stands. There were a further 15,000 fans outside the stadium, doing their best to catch glimpses of the action. Adding to the importance of the occasion, was the presence of Pakistan’s selectors and coach, Dav Whatmore. With the World Twenty20 being scheduled for later this year, the officials were at all the Super-Eight matches, keeping an eye on the talent on offer.

McKay, Hussey take Stars to semis

Melbourne Stars have earned a spot in the semi-finals, knocking Brisbane Heat out of fourth place with a comfortable six-wicket win over Adelaide Strikers at the MCG

The Report by Andrew Fuss19-Jan-2012
Scorecard and ball-by-ball details
David Hussey got Melbourne Stars’ chase back on track after the loss of three early wickets•Getty Images

Melbourne Stars have earned a spot in the semi-finals, knocking Brisbane Heat out of fourth place with a comfortable six-wicket win over Adelaide Strikers at the MCG.The Stars’ pace attack did most of the damage on a tacky MCG deck with Man of the Match Clint McKay leading the way, taking 3 for 17 off his four overs, including the key wickets of opening pair Daniel Harris and Michael Klinger.The Strikers failed to live up to their moniker, struggling to strike the ball cleanly throughout the innings, managing just four boundaries and one six. Callum Ferguson’s 41 off just 29 balls was the only resistance for the visitors as they were bundled out for 125, the last six wickets falling for just 25 runs.The hosts got off to a shaky start in reply, losing Rob Quiney to a brilliant bit of fielding from Nathan Lyon off his own bowling, taking the ball cleanly and flicking the ball back at the stumps to catch Quiney short of his ground.And when New Zealand import James Franklin and former Victoria spinner Bryce McGain struck in consecutive overs, the Strikers were in with a chance – the Stars stumbling to 3 for 38 off seven overs.Out of form Stars captain Cameron White – who had made just 13 runs in his previous six innings – strode to the crease with the game on the line and finally found the middle of the bat, working his way to 28 before hauling out on the boundary with just 24 runs to get.Despite some tight bowling from Striker’s spin pair Nathan Lyon (20 runs off 3.5 overs) and Aaron O’Brien (12 runs off his four overs), David Hussey (41 off 36 balls) guided the hosts to victory with seven balls to spare.The Stars’ win means they will travel to Perth to play the Scorchers on Saturday, while the Hurricanes will host the Sixers on Sunday.

England, Afghanistan put politics aside with tournament on the line

Defeat for either side will spell the end of their involvement in the Champions Trophy

Andrew Miller25-Feb-20253:01

How will England replace Brydon Carse?

Big Picture: Politics takes back seat in high-stakes match-up

For several febrile weeks at the turn of the year, it was impossible to ignore the political mission-creep of England versus Afghanistan in the Champions Trophy. And yet, it’s not impossible that a cricket match will be allowed to take centre stage, after all, in Lahore on Wednesday. A potentially fascinating one, too.To deal with the frivolous keep-politics-out-of-sport top line first, this is now a must-win clash for the two winless sides in Group B. Australia’s washout against South Africa in Rawalpindi has changed little in that regard, except that it guarantees that, if either team loses in Lahore, they will now be sunk without a trace, rather than relying on snookers and net run-rates when they play the table-toppers later this week.And, before we get bogged down in the baggage that this contest has acquired, there’s plenty of recent on-field intrigue to drill down into too. Afghanistan’s historic victory in Delhi at the 2023 World Cup has seen to that. It wasn’t the result that ended the reign of the 2019 champions – the tournament’s drawn-out itinerary meant no swift end to their humiliation – but it did unquestionably show them up as plodding, timid and past their collective sell-by date.Eighteen months on, similar concerns endure for England, even as they embark on their white-ball Bazball reboot. On the one hand, their five-wicket loss to Australia was a game of fine margins, none more galling than Jofra Archer’s glaring miss in the deep at a pivotal juncture of the chase. On the other hand, they put an apparently hefty 351 on the board yet still got steamrolled with almost three overs to spare. Not even Ben Duckett’s tournament-record 165 could suffice for a side whose reticence runs deep, no matter what positive messaging may have been carried across from Brendon McCullum’s Test dressing-room.Ben Duckett produced the goods in Lahore – but England still went down•Associated Press

On balance, therefore, would you rather be in England’s shoes – confused as to why your best is still not enough and, in the case of their captain Jos Buttler, vaguely cognisant of the implications of another early tournament exit – or Afghanistan’s – fresh from a shoddy display against South Africa that was so far from the new standards that they set themselves that the only way, surely, is up?Afghanistan’s 107-run loss in Karachi was studded with shoddy fielding, including a glaring missed run-out, and capped by a batting effort that was sunk inside the first 15 overs. Rahmat Shah showed the requisite mettle with a 92-ball 90, but Rashid Khan’s breezy 18 from 13 balls at No. 9 was their second-best score. After their march to the T20 World Cup semi-finals, not to mention four wins at the 2023 World Cup which secured them their Champions Trophy berth, this squad expects better of themselves these days.Cue England, then, the perfect opponents for teams in need of a little extra incentive to raise their games.In truth, the protests about this fixture have dissipated in recent weeks, but that’s not to say there won’t be more discussion as the contest gets underway, or that the underlying issues are no longer worthy of airtime. On the contrary, when the Labour MP Tonia Antoniazzi wrote to the ECB protesting the “sex apartheid” of Afghanistan’s Taliban regime, on whose watch women’s sport has effectively been banned since 2021, she was merely articulating the same unease that many individual boards were already feeling – including both England and Australia, who had previously pledged to suspend bilateral ties while the Taliban remain in power.That letter had been signed by a cross-party group of 160 British MPs, but the UK prime minister Keir Starmer echoed the ECB’s line, that this is a matter for the ICC as a collective body, not for individual boards. And that, broadly speaking, has been the final word on the matter for now. Certainly it’s a far cry from the situation that Nasser Hussain’s World Cup squad found themselves in back in 2003, when – amid similar political posturing – it was left to the players themselves to debate, and ultimately carry out, a unilateral boycott of Robert Mugabe’s Zimbabwe.Besides, as Buttler reiterated on the eve of the game, there is still a place for sport as “a source of hope and enjoyment” in tough times … much as was the case on the eve of the 2023 clash, in fact, when Afghanistan’s own aim had been to bring a bit of joy back to their country after a devastating earthquake in Herat had killed several thousand people. The issues may be different, but the underlying truth remains the same. When there are forces beyond your control, whatever they may be, all you can do is produce your best and hope it contributes to the greater good.

Form guide

England: LLLLL (last five completed matches, most recent first)
Afghanistan: LWWWL

In the spotlight: Mark Wood and Rashid Khan

To judge by its early showings, white-ball Bazball is distinctly Route One. Stack the side with the rawest pace imaginable, and let guile and subtlety go hang. It’s a policy that you can imagine being utterly explosive on its good days, but these have been all too infrequent so far in McCullum’s tenure. Mark Wood‘s display against Australia epitomised this. His ferocious powerplay spell featured barely a delivery below 150kph, and landed the key early wicket of Steven Smith. But by the back end of Australia’s 352-run chase, Glenn Maxwell was making room to leg with impunity, safe in the knowledge that any sort of connection would go the distance. Eight of Wood’s ten ODIs since the start of the 2023 World Cup have now come in ICC events. Nine wickets at 58.44 and an economy rate above 6.5 imply that the Aussies aren’t the only team who are ready for what he’s being primed to unleash.Rashid Khan has memories of success against England to fall back on•Afghanistan Cricket Board

England’s struggles against high-quality spin have been protracted across formats, and few spinners come more highly rated than Afghanistan’s gun leggie Rashid Khan. Last week, he was knocked off the top of the ICC’s ODI rankings by Maheesh Theekshana, largely due to inactivity, and though he went wicketless in Afghanistan’s opening Group B loss to South Africa, he has happy memories of his most recent outing against England: figures of 3 for 37 in that famous World Cup encounter in Delhi included the winning moment itself, a slider to Wood that sealed a 69-run success, their first over England in any format. As Adam Zampa demonstrated in Australia’s high-scoring win in Lahore on Saturday, stump-threatening wristspinners can unlock even the flattest conditions.

Team news

Brydon Carse had been one of the breakthrough bowlers of England’s winters, but his battered toes contributed to an untimely breakdown against Australia, as his seven overs were dispatched at a tick below ten an over. He has now been ruled out of the tournament, with Jamie Overton the likeliest like-for-like replacement – and if Lahore’s conditions remain as true as in the first match, this might even include the impact that his powerful lower-order hitting has often promised, but rarely delivered.England: 1 Phil Salt, 2 Ben Duckett, 3 Jamie Smith (wk), 4 Joe Root, 5 Harry Brook, 6 Jos Buttler (capt), 7 Liam Livingstone, 8 Jamie Overton, 9 Jofra Archer, 10 Adil Rashid, 11 Mark WoodHashmatullah Shahidi, Afghanistan’s captain, hinted that the same XI that tripped up against South Africa would take the field in Lahore – unsurprising in light of his pointed but uncontroversial observation that “the England team struggles a bit against spinners”. In Rashid, Mohammad Nabi and Noor Ahmad, they will have to negotiate 30 overs of the finest, and most varied, slow bowlers in subcontinental conditions, although they will at least be spared a reunion with their chief destroyer at the World Cup, Mujeeb Ur Rahman, who has been managing injury in recent months and is not currently involved in the 50-over format.Afghanistan: (possible) 1 Ibrahim Zadran, 2 Rahmanullah Gurbaz (wk), 3 Sediqullah Atal, 4 Rahmat Shah, 5 Hashmatullah Shahidi (capt), 6 Azmatullah Omarzai, 7 Mohammad Nabi, 8 Gulbadin Naib, 9 Rashid Khan, 10 Noor Ahmad, 11 Fazalhaq Farooqi

Pitch and conditions

England got a clear idea of Lahore’s run-laden conditions in their tournament opener, and more of the same is in prospect on a pristine new surface. The weather, however, could be decidedly cooler. There’s been rain around on the eve of the contest, and while it is not expected to be a factor during the match, the cloud cover could remain in situ … a possible boon for England’s pace-dominant attack.

Stats and trivia

  • England have lost five ODIs in a row, their joint-worst run since losing six in a row in their home ODI series against Australia in 2009. Auspiciously, they followed that performance with an improbable semi-final place, weeks later, in the Champions Trophy in South Africa. (Although they did then get crushed by the eventual champions, Australia, once more…)
  • Rahmat Shah, who made 90 in defeat against South Africa, needs 41 runs to become the first Afghanistan batter to reach 4000 in ODIs.
  • Rashid needs two more wickets to become the first Afghanistan bowler to reach 200 in ODIs.
  • Duckett, England’s centurion in defeat against Australia, needs four runs to reach 1000 in the ODI format. Phil Salt isn’t far behind, on 968 runs, while Adil Rashid and Liam Livingstone are both in the 900s too.

Quotes

“We are cricket players, we are sportspersons, we are sportsmen. So, we control what we can do inside the ground. We don’t worry about what’s happening out of the ground.”
Afghanistan captain Hashmatullah Shahidi plays a straight bat to the political chat“Any time as an England captain you want to perform well, and you want to lead your team to winning games of cricket. We haven’t been doing that enough in the recent past. But as soon as you catch yourself thinking about any negative things, you try to completely flip that and focus on all the positive things that could go right, and where you can take the team. I’m very much focused on that.”

Goodwin shines with maiden hundred as Bartlett also stars

Then opener anchored Western Australia with a fine century while Sam Whiteman and Josh Inglis played their part

AAP01-Mar-2024Jayden Goodwin scored his maiden first-class century to anchor Western Australia’s first innings in their Sheffield Shield match against Queensland at the WACA Ground.On a day when Cameron Bancroft fell for a six-ball duck, Goodwin dug in his heels to help guide WA towards a competitive first-innings total.Related

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Sam Whiteman combined with Goodwin to anchor the innings, while Josh Inglis added a handy 47 before WA lost 4 for 25 late in the day.WA entered the match third on the ladder and knowing a loss could end their hopes of reaching the Shield final to defend their title.Goodwin, the son of former Zimbabwe star Murray Goodwin, was the hero of the day, with his brave knock only brought undone when he was bowled by Mark Steketee soon before stumps.”Credit to Jayden, he batted tremendously,” Whiteman said. “He scored a good 80 the other week [against Tasmania], and he’s scored a mountain of runs in club cricket and second XI.  So it was awesome to see him get the job done in first-class cricket.”We’ve gotten to know Jayden pretty well over the last few years, and he just loves batting. He probably gets that from his dad. He’ll do whatever he can to spend as long as possible at the crease. He leaves really well and sticks to his game plan. It was a joy to watch today.”Bancroft fell for a duck in the first over after edging Xavier Bartlett to third slip, but WA were on top following a 128-run stand between Whiteman and Goodwin.Whiteman’s hopes of a century went up in smoke when he charged down the wicket to Mitchell Swepson and was stumped well out of his crease.Hilton Cartwright fell for a duck two overs later edging Swepson to slip, and WA looked shaky at 151 for 4 when D’Arcy Short nicked Steketee behind.Inglis helped Goodwin settle the ship after that. Goodwin struck 13 fours and one six on the way to reaching his century in 245 balls, and he fell just short of seeing out the day.Bartlett was the pick of the Queensland bowlers with 5 for 45, while Steketee and Swepson snared two apiece.”To get Bangers [Bancroft] out – he’s probably the form batsmen of the competition – to see the back of him early was a nice start to the day,” Bartlett said. “I thought the way Sam Whiteman and Jayden Goodwin batted there, they were superb. They put the pressure back on us, so hats off to them.”

Australia could play extra quick in India as Pat Cummins eyes flexibility

All bases will be covered in the squad but Travis Head could have an increasing part to play with the ball

Andrew McGlashan09-Jan-2023Using three frontline quicks remains an option for Australia on their tour of India with Pat Cummins keeping an opening mind about the balance of the side that they will need.The last time they won in India, on the 2004 tour, their bowling attack was based around the three-pronged pace of Glenn McGrath, Jason Gillespie and Michael Kasprowicz alongside the spin of Shane Warne and then some part-time overs.Australia have the resources to go with a similar shape of team this time although the emergence of Cameron Green has given them greater flexibility. However, Green is expected to miss the first Test in Nagpur due to his broken finger so the selectors will need to decide whether to stick with the two-quick, two-spinner method employed against South Africa or back what is traditionally Australia’s strength in pace bowlers.Nagpur has not hosted a Test since 2017 and Australia’s previous game there was the VCA Stadium’s maiden fixture in 2008 when Jason Krejza took 12 wickets in the match on debutRelated

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  • Australia don't make big spin gains at SCG ahead of India tour

Mitchell Starc is also unlikely to be fit for the first Test – and things may yet be tight for the second in Delhi – due to his broken finger suffered at the MCG, but Josh Hazlewood’s impressive return from injury in Sydney, where he was threatening with reverse swing, means he could get more opportunity than presented itself on last year’s trips to Pakistan and Sri Lanka where he only played once.Scott Boland was left out of the final Test against South Africa and has yet to play a game overseas, but it could be an option to field him, Cummins and Hazlewood together unless the pitch is so persuasive of including another spinner.”Potentially,” Cummins said when asked about playing the extra quick. “[When] Cam Green bats at six you’ve kind of got three quick bowlers which is a bit of luxury as it is. [Josh] showed his class out there. No qualms picking him, you know what you are going to get and it’s quality. Each game in India we might need to chop it up slightly differently, maybe one game it’s three quicks and another it’s one quick. We’ll get over there and see.”Australia’s second spinner at the SCG was Ashton Agar who went wicketless through 22 overs in his first home Test, nearly 10 years after making his debut. Agar is assured of his place on the India tour, and Australia are keen on having a left-arm spinner in their attack, but Mitchell Swepson and Todd Murphy are also in the mix for the tour.Travis Head could get plenty of work with the ball•Getty Images

However, there is an option where Australia rely on a combination of their part-time spinners to supplement Nathan Lyon, with Travis Head’s development of his offspin making him a viable option. Head has taken seven wickets at 13.99 in his last seven Tests having not struck before then.”It’s a real option,” Cummins said. “Think the squad will have all possibilities there. Really comfortable [with the part-time spinners] especially Trav, he’s a slightly different offspin bowler to Nathan, a bit flatter, which could be really helpful over there. Probably underbowled him in this game so he’ll be a big part over there.”Away from the bowling, the batting options for the tour are likely to include Peter Handscomb, who was drafted into the SCG squad when Marcus Harris was released to play BBL. He is the leading Sheffield Shield run-scorer this season with 571 runs at 81.57 and coach Andrew McDonald said he was unlucky not to originally be selected for Sydney when Matt Renshaw was preferred.”He’s a huge chance over in India, he’s played really well in Bangladesh, India he’s been there before,” Cummins said. “He’s earned the right by scoring a lot of runs in Shield cricket. I’m sure come selection time he’ll be there or thereabouts. Always nice having a right-hander as well, we’ve got plenty of left-handers.”The squad is expected to be named later this week and will depart at the end of the month. There are plans for a short training camp in Sydney with the tour itself not including a warm-up match before the opening Test in Nagpur from February 9.

Peter Handscomb to leave Middlesex with immediate effect

Club captain stands down for family reasons after struggling for form in two seasons

ESPNcricinfo staff22-May-2022Peter Handscomb, Middlesex’s club captain, is standing down from his role, and will not return to complete the 2022 season following his involvement with next month’s Australia A tour of Sri Lanka.A statement from the club confirmed that Handscomb would be returning to Australia after the Sri Lanka tour for family reasons, and that Tim Murtagh would be taking over as club captain in both the four-day and 50-over formats.”We would like to thank Pete for all he has contributed to the club throughout his time with us,” Alan Coleman, Middlesex’s head of men’s performance cricket. “He is a fabulous bloke to have around the dressing room and has led us with distinction this year on the field.”He is a natural leader and inspires those around him to perform, and many of the younger players within our squad have learned an enormous amount from him during the time he’s been at the club.”Despite leading Middlesex to the top of the LV= County Championship Division Two – a position that he helped to consolidate with an unbeaten 39 in their six-wicket win over Durham at Lord’s on Sunday – Handscomb’s own form has been intermittent, with a solitary half-century in five appearances this season, to go with his average of 17.46 in his seven matches in 2021.The news follows the confirmation that Shaheen Shah Afridi, Middlesex’s other overseas player, will not be returning to the club this season either, due to Pakistan’s busy international schedule. The club confirmed that they were in negotiations for a replacement top-order batter for the remainder of the season, and were hopeful of making an announcement in the near future.”I’ve really enjoyed my time here at Middlesex and it’s been a pleasure to have played with such a great bunch of blokes,” Handscomb said. “To have started the season in the manner we have is testament to the amount of hard work the playing group and coaches have put in, and I wish Middlesex every success for the remainder of the season and moving forwards.”It’s been an honour to have been able to call Lord’s my home, and my thanks go to everyone at the Club for their support in allowing me to head home to spend time with my family after my international commitments with Australia A.”

As it happened – Australia vs India, 4th Test, Brisbane, 1st day

Join us for updates, analysis and colour from the first day of the Brisbane Test

Varun Shetty15-Jan-2021*Most recent entry will appear at the top, please refresh your page for the latest updates. All times are local.

5.30pm local/1pm IST: Stumps

Australia will be pleased with the day. It didn’t begin particularly well, with two wickets, but India gave them a sniff by dropping Labuschagne early and he’s anchored a positive innings on the day one. India were hamstrung with their best two bowlers going out, and the new faces might have felt like they were doing a decent job until Australia flipped the pressure on them through flowing knocks from Smith, Wade, Green and Paine right at the end. By the end of the day, India looked like a fading team, and the hosts have capitalised on that. India have also ended the day a bowler short. It could be a long day tomorrow.

4.30pm local/12pm IST: The pitch

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It’s been a difficult pitch to assess from afar. Natarajan’s two wickets were deliveries that kicked off the surface and got big on two pull shots. The only real instance of that any time previously was the delivery off which Labuschagne was dropped earlier in the day. And these all came off different bowlers, and form differing lines. So what do you put it down to? The range of pace? The likelihood of a bowler getting it to grip? Cracks in the pitch? And in that case, the cracks would have to be on both the left- and right-handers’ sides. Which sounds far fetched so early in a Test. Perhaps the only characteristic that an be gauged confidently is its slow nature.

3.56pm local/11.26am IST

2.52pm local/10.22am IST: Tea

India left to rue another sequence of missed catches. They got Smith in somewhat fortunate fashion as he flicked a half-volley to Rohit Sharma, but the drops of Labuschagne not along after – one simple one and one half-chance – will grate on them as he sets his sights on a century. There is precedent for fighting back, but you don’t want to be fighting back all the time, especially when it is avoidable. The unavoidables are racking up in any case – Navdeep Saini has complained of groin pain.

1.28pm local/8.58am IST: Scoring rates

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Big Australian names like Ricky Ponting, Allan Border and Glenn McGrath have spoken throughout this series about Australia’s scoring rates, and about their intents. Our stats man Gaurav Sundararaman has been digging around to see how the patterns have been. And he found the numbers from the screenshot above, which are Australia’s scoring rates in various series since the start of 2000. Many of the slowest scoring ones have been over the last few years. A reflection of changing pitches, or the uncertainty they’ve carried with their batting line-ups in that period? Hard to tell, because it’s not limited to Australia – those numbers are pretty much par across teams.

1pm local/8.30am IST

12pm local/7.30am IST: Lunch, 65 for 2

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A resurgence from Marnus Labuschagne and Steven Smith to blunt India’s good start with the ball then – with a 48-run stand after India got rid of both Australian openers fairly early on. All bowlers have had a go and, to their credit, have been disciplined even as these two batsmen try to haul the game in Australia’s direction. The boundaries have come, but they have been rare. They look solid, but haven’t been completely dominant. But no one needs reminding that this can change very quickly with Australia’s best two batsmen. Some work to do for the visitors in the second session.

11.40am local/7.10am IST: The lines, and Smith

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A significant change in bowling personnel has also meant a significant change in bowling plans, it seems. India’s leg-trap, the line that has proved both an attacking and defensive option during the course of this series, hasn’t been on show too much this session. The line seems to have shifted outside off and wider in that direction. Perhaps that is to do with the pace and styles of the bowlers coming in, or it could just be a matter of them not having trained for it alongside the main bowling pack.Whatever it is, Steven Smith is enjoying it. Particularly against Thakur, off whom he has picked up all five of his boundaries so far.

11am local/6.30am IST: The end of the first hour, 35 for 2

India came into the Test with two debutants, T Natarajan and Washington Sundar, who were both only on this tour for limited-overs cricket. They stayed on as nets bowlers and with Bumrah, Ashwin, and Jadeja all missing this game, they found spots in the team alongside Shardul Thakur.This meant that Mohammed Siraj, who debuted in the second Test, was the most experienced bowler in the line-up. And the de facto leader made the early breakthrough, getting Warner for the second time in two Test with one that jagged away in the corridor. Thakur’s innocuous floater into Marcus Harris’ pads, his first ball in Tests since hobbling off after 10 balls on debut in 2018, proved to be a wicket ball. Harris chipped that straight to square leg.That opening hour is India’s, for sure, and the discipline has been impressive. Now they need to separate Marnus Labuschagne and Steven Smith, who are looking good.

10.30am local/6am IST: One of Australia’s worst

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This is a list of Australian opening stands at home, filtered by series and the lowest returns in terms of partnership average. So far, the performance in this series ranks as one of Australia’s worst – ALL TIME – at home. Staggering numbers, considering there was one fifty stand in there.

10.20am local/5.50am IST: Siraj’s List

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This is the list of Australian batsman that Siraj has dismissed more than twice in first-class cricket. Some very good names there, and Warner is the latest.

9.49am local/5.19am IST: GOAT turns 100

2:34

Nathan Lyon: I’ll continue bowling the way I do – with a smile on my face

Australia has always been the land of the legspinner but Lyon has shown the more conventional art can succeed, writes Daniel Brettig in his piece about Nathan Lyon who is set to play 100 Tests for Australia today. Lyon is four wickets away from 400.”I have had a chance to reflect on it, because when I first made my Test debut I thought ‘jeez how amazing is this’ – I was very grateful and humble to play one Test for Australia, but after completing my 99th a couple of days ago, and looking forward to Friday, it’s been very exciting,” Lyon said. “I look at the 12 other guys who have played more than 100 Test matches of cricket for Australia and they’re pure legends in my eyes. Not just for Australia, but all around the world.”I’m going to pinch myself each and every day to see my name up against those fellows and being the 13th player to do so, it’s pretty amazing. I’ve tried in the past not to look too far ahead, but I’m pretty excited about this one. I’m really hoping we can play the positive brand of cricket that we know we can play and walk away with a series win.”

9.35am local/5.05am IST: ‘Three Tests and 10 balls’

Jasprit Bumrah and Mohammed Siraj during India’s epic draw in Sydney•Cricket Australia/Getty Images

My colleague Gaurav Sundararaman has told the story of India’s attack with those words. That is the collective experience of India’s bowling attack today. Ashwin out with back spasm, Bumrah out as expected. Two debutants. India’s fifth, maybe sixth choice bowler in the fast bowling roster, is leading the pack today: Mohammed Siraj, all of two Tests old.Fun fact: India haven’t had a left-arm seamer in their XI since Zaheer Khan retired in 2014. And here’s a list of the number of players India have used during a series. They haven’t had to use 20 since 1960.ESPNcricinfo Ltd

9.26am local/4.56am IST: Debuts galore

So we have spotted T Natarajan and Washington Sundar being handed caps in the Indian huddle. A big day for the Tamil Nadu team-mates. Natarajan becomes the fastest man to get debuts in all formats after starting off in one – he made an ODI debut on December 2, having not been part of the plans for the series at all until Varun Charkravarthy – another TN player – was injured. He becomes India’s 300th Test player.Washington Sundar is in the same boat – only around as a nets bowler on this tour but suddenly having to fill in. A decent batsman at the first-class level, apart from his primary skill at bowling offbreaks. We suspect he replaces Ravindra Jadeja in a straight swap.

9.05am local/4.35am IST

Ajinkya Rahane and Tim Paine at the end of the SCG Test•AFP via Getty Images

Good morning and welcome back to our coverage of the final game of an explosive, utterly dramatic series. There’s hardly been a day of this Test series that hasn’t been sustained quality all round. And perhaps the only argument against that is all the peripheral drama on the final day of the Sydney Test; but there have been arguments, non-stop and loud, around all of that for the last few days. Today is the chance to make it all about the sensational cricket again. And there will, perhaps, even a deliberate de-escalation from Tim Paine and his men who hold the advantage in many ways coming into this match; India’s medical table has continued to pile up, so much so that they had to let go of their new-found tradition of naming the XI a day prior to the start. It is touch and go for many big names today – Ashwin, Bumrah, Agarwal. Add to that the fact that his game is at the Gabba, where Australia haven’t lost since 1988. Their prime batsmen are in form again, and their bowlers will be have another crack at a softened batting line-up.That isn’t to say India are completely out of it, of course. Each time they’ve been down this series, they have proved capable of bouncing back. At 1-1 coming into this game, they are still in possession of the Border-Gavaskar Trophy. And 1-1 is all it’ll need to be for them to hold onto it till the next series. The top order’s getting starts, fifties, and occupying the crease solidly over the last couple of innings – will a century finally come from one of the top three? One of many intriguing questions for after we know the answer to the big one – do they have 12 men on their feet to put on a teamsheet today?

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