Lyon: 'Remarkable to be around for that long and have played a role in Australian cricket'

The offspinner returns to Galle, the scene of his Test debut, as one of the most prolific Australian bowlers

Andrew McGlashan25-Jun-20221:29

Nathan Lyon on Sri Lanka Tests: ‘We’re expecting it to spin from ball one’

“In my head I thought, ‘oh no, that’s going to be short and wide’ but lucky enough that wasn’t the case.”Nathan Lyon, 23 years old with just five first-class matches and 14 wickets, who a year before was on the Adelaide Oval groundstaff, marks out his run. “Here he is, an offspinner bowling to left handers, normally offspinners like that,” says Tony Greig on commentary.Lyon comes round the wicket to Kumar Sangakkara, the delivery lands perfectly around off stump, grips and dusts off the dry Galle surface, draws the great left-hander forward, takes the edge and Michael Clarke grabs a brilliant one-handed catch, low to his left at slip.At that moment, Lyon becomes just the third Australian to take a wicket with his first ball in Test cricket – the other occasions happened in the 1890s. There are still only 20 to have done it in the history of the game (bizarrely, Shaminda Eranga did it later in the same series and Lyon’s fellow debutant, Trent Copeland, had struck with his second delivery just an hour earlier).”All I tried to do was bowl my best ball,” Lyon recalled, speaking to ESPNcricinfo, as he prepared to return to Galle for Australia’s upcoming two-match series. “I honestly thought it was going to be hit for four in my memory, but lucky enough Kumar nicked one. When you’re able to nick the left hander off it’s a nice feeling. That’s one of our dismissals.”Michael Clarke grabs a low chance to remove Kumar Sangakkara•AFPLyon’s rapid elevation to the Test side, with just a handful of matches under his belt, came at a time when Australia were still searching to fill the void left by Shane Warne. They had cycled through a variety of options in the four years since with none really sticking.”I was pretty nervous just being around the likes of Ricky Ponting, Michael Hussey, Michael Clarke and these guys,” Lyon said. “Michael Clarke and Greg Chappell were the ones who informed me [I was playing]. I was pretty pumped…to be told I was going to be the only spinner was a bit of a shock but it was pretty goddam exciting to be honest.Related

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“I’d always dreamt of having that moment, always dreamt of being at the top of my mark in a Test match and seeing what I potentially could do.”A few hours after that first scalp, Lyon walked off with a five-wicket haul to his name having run through Sri Lanka’s lower-order. The surprising nature of his debut is emphasised by his memory of that experience.”Before that I’d never really taken many five-fors in my life so didn’t really know what to expect,” he said. “I probably didn’t understand the size of the events that had just happened.”Lyon returns to Galle this week with 108 Tests and 427 Test wickets to his name, long since established as Australia’s GOAT offspinner and now only behind Warne and Glenn McGrath in their overall tally.

I was pretty nervous just being around the likes of Ricky Ponting, Michael Hussey, Michael Clarke and these guys

“I was only talking to family the other day about where things started,” he said.  “So it is pretty remarkable when you look back to 2011 and see where we are at this stage but obviously it was a dream come true to play just one Test, so I’ve been pretty lucky.”Lyon’s career was not entirely smooth sailing after his remarkable start, but he has only ever missed four Tests since his debut and after returning to Test side during the 2013 Ashes in England he has played 86 consecutive matches (although given Australia’s current injury challenges that is a statistic given with caution). When pressed, Lyon picked out a period around 2014-15 when he really started to feel things had clicked for him, although even now he takes nothing for granted.”It’s a good question and to be honest I hate answering it,” he said. “Because as soon as you feel comfortable that’s when things get taken away from you.”After a bit of toil as wickets briefly dried up during the 2020-21 season, then the wait extended by Australia’s absence from the Test scene due to Covid-19, Lyon crossed the 400-wicket milestone against England at the Gabba last year and in his most recent outing took 5 for 83 to secure Australia’s significant series victory in Pakistan during March.Nathan Lyon walks off after completing a five-wicket haul on debut•AFP”They’d been a lot of media talk in the last couple of years when we’d played on some very docile wickets and we weren’t able to get the win,” Lyon said of clinching the win on the last day in Lahore. “That was on my mind heading into the last Test, but was pretty proud of the way the boys went about it.”Now he’s back on the subcontinent with Australia hoping to further their push for a place in the World Test Championship final. This is Lyon’s second return to Sri Lanka after his debut series having been part of the 2016 tour where they lost the Tests 3-0. His 16 wickets at 31.93 paled on comparison to Rangana Herath’s 28 at 12.75 and he knows the focus will likely be on him.”There’s an excitement level when you head over to a place like Sri Lanka, also with my personal history there,” he said. “There’s always nerves. If you talk to Mitchell Starc he’ll say I’ve debuted about 95 times out of 108 Tests. That’s not nerves from the fear of failing, it’s more from of really caring about the team and wanting to perform well for your mates.”While conditions are likely to be more extreme than those Australia overcame in Pakistan, Lyon did not believe it would require an entirely new approach. “Don’t think it changes too much. You get in trouble where you change and try to force the game,” he said. “When talking about the subcontinent, it’s about a good squad mentality and that’s what I believe you need to perform over there. You can’t do it by yourself.”Lyon regularly cites John Davison as the key mentor of his career – “I think he is the best spin coach in the world” – but on the theme of always looking at the next challenge he is excited by the opportunity to work with Daniel Vettori who will begin his role as an assistant coach.Nathan Lyon: “There’s an excitement level when you head over to a place like Sri Lanka”•Getty Images and Cricket Australia”It will be brilliant to have Dan on board. I want to sit down and nut out some plans and talk to him about cricket in general, but specifically spin bowling.”He is hopeful, too, that the embryonic partnership with Mitchell Swepson that began in Pakistan will get another chance. “If you look at Swepo, he probably didn’t have the dream debut but it’s something he should be very proud of,” he said. “I’m excited about our partnership and ticking off some big goals as the spin twins.”He is also encouraged by the longer-term prospects of Australian spin bowling. Offspinner Todd Murphy, who has drawn comparisons with Lyon, and Tanveer Sangha have been with the A squad, while Matt Kuhnemann has already been elevated to the ODI side.”It’s really good to finally see them be able to play some A tours away from home. It will only improve them,” he said. “They may find a couple of hard days but I promise you one thing, there are a lot more hard days than good days in Test cricket.”From that heady start in Galle, Lyon has experienced plenty of both. But what would his response have been if, 11 years ago, someone had told him this is how his career would play out?”You’re an idiot. Would have found it extremely hard to believe. It is pretty remarkable to be around for that long and have played a role in Australian cricket. It’s been very enjoyable and something I’m very proud about, but it’s never anyone’s given right to have that opportunity. In my eyes the hard work is still to be done. I still want to improve.”

Fluent Kyle Mayers provides yet another rescue act for West Indies

Once again, when the chips were down, he managed to wrest back the momentum and leave Bangladesh deflated

Mohammad Isam26-Jun-2022Kyle Mayers’ batting average was bound to come down from 250.00 since his debut Test. A dream start such as his, an unbeaten 210 leading West Indies to a 395-run chase against Bangladesh in Chattogram last year, was always going to be a hard act to follow. Mayers’ was an exceptional innings, never done before by a debutant.As he got to his second Test century with a very Caribbean swivel-pull shot on his toes, he once again released the pressure from the West Indies in a tight situation against Bangladesh. It was a quiet appreciation of Mayers’ application of his overall skills, aside from the obvious stroke play. As has been the theme of his short career so far, Mayers stood out when the chips are down.Related

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He picked up the home side who had lost four wickets for 32 runs at the time of his arrival at the crease. West Indies had slipped from 100 for no loss to 132 for four. The visitors were buoyant at the batting collapse. There was always going to be a counterattack from a Mayers-Jermaine Blackwood partnership, but no one could predict how long it would last. In the end, the pair added 116 runs for the fifth wicket, taking West Indies easily past Bangladesh’s 234.Mayers deflated Bangladesh not just by scoring the 126 runs, but the manner in which he wrestled back the momentum from them. Shakib Al Hasan appeared defeated as he slowly pulled back the attacking fielding positions one by one, only to resort to one-day type field settings whenever Mayers was on strike.It was disheartening for the Bangladesh bowlers who brought the team back into the contest with the four-wicket burst in the morning session.Mayers didn’t provide many chances, except the odd play-and-miss, or the flying edges going past the slip cordon from time to time. He threaded plenty of boundaries through the covers in his off-side-heavy innings. Mayers’ tendency to hang back slightly to blast the ball through the off side, even slightly squarer, is in a class of its own. One of his best shots was hammering Mehidy for a six down the ground, which started to open up the field.The usually attacking Blackwood took a backseat during their 116-run stand, as he made 40 off 121 balls. Mayers also dominated the unbroken sixth-wicket stand with Joshua Da Silva to give West Indies a sizable second-innings lead against a tottering batting line-up.Some of Mayers’ shots would have reminded the Bangladesh bowlers of his Chattogram epic. There too, the left-hander struck plenty of boundaries through the covers, but Mayers also hit ten boundaries, including six sixes, through the mid-on region. This time though, he had a very high percentage of his runs on the off side, having struck just the one four and six through the on side.The Chattogram innings was a big announcement of Mayers’ ability. The man who was almost lost to his family in a powerful typhoon some years ago, combined his brutal power with mental strength under pressure. It won him many fans and appreciation from several of the game’s greats.But just over a year later, Mayers found himself seeing the other side of the coin. On the back of 12 innings without a fifty, West Indies dropped him for the first two Tests against England in March. He returned for the St George’s Test with a mesmerizing spell of seam bowling that decimated the visitors, his match-haul of 7 for 31 effectively winning the West Indies the series.

“I just thought the key was to being myself, being counterattacking, getting on top of the opposition and changing the momentum. It is just a matter of fully committing to what I do”Kyle Mayers

Mayers continued his bowling exploits with six wickets in three innings against Bangladesh. He nailed Litton Das and Nurul Hasan, two in-form batters, in one over that hurtled the visitors towards further trouble. He removed Najmul Hossain Shanto and Mominul Haque in the same spell on the third day, again derailing Bangladesh.On the first day of the second Test, he chipped in with two more wickets. Shanto fell to a fine in-ducker although Mayers was lucky to get the wicket on the umpire’s call. Later, he had Mehidy Hasan Miraz caught at point, ensuring Litton lost his last recognised batting partner quite early in the third session.After the end of the second day’s play, Mayers said that he wanted to change the momentum of the West Indies innings shortly after they lost three wickets in quick succession.”The plan was just to be as positive as possible,” Mayers said. “We lost three quick wickets. I just thought the key was to being myself, being counterattacking, getting on top of the opposition and changing the momentum. It is just a matter of fully committing to what I do. I have to be very decisive in terms of stroke play. I have to be very positive when I decide to attack. I give it my all. It is the same when I am defending. Making the right choices is important.”We just want to shut out the opposition at least for the first hour. Keep them out of the game, and then pile on the runs as much as possible to get a big lead. I think 200 would be ideal for us, given the amount of time left in the game. It is a patience game, for both batters and bowlers. I try to maximise every chance I get to score. They bowled well in patches. The pitch isn’t one where you can blast out the opposition.”Mayers’ status as an impact cricketer has been underlined in this series. He will of course have to be consistent but West Indies have to quickly learn the value of a cricketer like him. He will use all of his talent in a fantastic spell or in a backs-to-the-wall innings whenever they are in trouble. But Mayers cannot be expected to do all this on a regular basis, however special a player he is. West Indies, instead, will just have to be patient with him.

Auction stats: Curran and Green go past Morris; Brook's record; and a debutant from Ireland

Elsewhere, Unadkat and Pandey joined their seventh IPL teams, while Wiese kept the Associate flag flying

Sampath Bandarupalli24-Dec-2022Dealing in crores
A sum total of INR 167 crore was spent by the ten franchises for signing 80 players in the 87 available slots for IPL 2023. The aggregate of INR 167 crore is the highest spent in an IPL mini-auction, surpassing the INR 145.3 crore in 2021. That this was the first mini-auction to feature ten teams contributed to the sum.

Sunrisers Hyderabad were the most active team, having entered the auction with the biggest purse of INR 42.25 crore. They spent INR 35.7 crore on 13 players. Kolkata Knight Riders were on the other side of the spectrum, using INR 5.4 crore out of their purse of INR 7.05 crore for eight players.Only three teams did not reach their squad limit of 25 players. Mumbai Indians ended up with 24, and Punjab Kings and Knight Riders with 22 each. Kings were the only team that did not reach the limit of eight overseas players, signing seven in all.The record-breakers
Chris Morris held the record of being the most expensive player in the history of the IPL auction, having earned an INR 16.25 crore bid from Rajasthan Royals in 2021. But the figure was breached twice in 15 minutes on Friday afternoon in Kochi.ESPNcricinfo LtdKings spent INR 18.5 crore on Sam Curran to set a new record. Mumbai Indians, the losing bidders on Curran, shelled out INR 17.5 crore for Cameron Green. Not long later, Ben Stokes was signed for INR 16.25 crore by Chennai Super Kings to equal Morris’ fee from the 2021 auction.Banking on youth
The franchises spent big on the young players, hinting that they would look to groom them into long-term options. Three of the five most expensive picks in the auction were 25 or younger – Curran (INR 18.5 cr), Green (INR 17.5 cr) and Harry Brook (INR 13.25 cr). Green and Brook have not featured in the league before.

Only two of the ten INR 13-plus crore buys at previous auctions were 25 or younger – Ishan Kishan (INR 15.25 crore in 2022 at the age of 23) and Jhye Richardson (INR 14 crore in 2021 at 24). As many as 27 players sold in this auction were younger than 25, and a total of INR 71.1 crore was spent on them.Brook enters IPL on a high
Brook bagged a whopping INR 13.25 crore from Sunrisers for his maiden IPL contract. The England International is now the most expensive overseas batter in the history of IPL auctions. He broke the record of Chris Lynn, who was signed for INR 9.6 crore in 2018 by the Knight Riders. The price Brook fetched was also the second-highest for a specialist batter in the IPL auction, behind Yuvraj Singh’s INR 16 crore.

Yuvraj, a designated allrounder, was registered as a batter for the 2015 auction when he earned the big bid from Delhi Daredevils. Brook is also Sunrisers’ most expensive player. Sunrisers, in fact, had spent over INR 10 crore on only two players previously – INR 11 crore on Manish Pandey in 2018 and INR 10.75 crore on Nicholas Pooran in 2022.Ireland’s first and Zimbabwe’s return
Josh Little was signed for INR 4.4 crore by Gujarat Titans – 8.8 times his base price of INR 50 lakh. He became the first Ireland player to earn an IPL contract. In another first, David Wiese became the first Namibia player to be picked at the IPL auction.Wiese was earlier part of the IPL as a South Africa player, but the 2023 season will be his first in the league since his switch to Namibia. He is now in a small list of IPL players from Associate nations – Netherlands’ Ryan ten Doeschate (Knight Riders in 2011 and 2014), UAE’s Chirag Suri (Gujarat Lions, 2017), Afghanistan’s Rashid Khan (Sunrisers, 2017) and Mohammad Nabi (Sunrisers, 2017), and Nepal’s Sandeep Lamichhane (Daredevils, 2018).Sikandar Raza, who enjoyed success in T20Is this year – with seven player-of-the-match awards, was signed by Kings for his base price of INR 50 lakh. He is only the third Zimbabwe player to fetch a bid at an IPL auction after Tatenda Taibu and Brendan Taylor.Seventh franchise for Pandey and Unadkat
Manish Pandey was signed for INR 2.4 crore by Delhi Capitals, which will be his seventh IPL franchise. Lucknow Supergiants, similarly, will be the seventh IPL team for Jaydev Unadkat, whom they signed for INR 50 lakh.

No Indian player has played for more than six franchises before Pandey and Unadkat. Only one player in the history of the IPL has represented more franchises than this duo – Aaron Finch (9). The 2023 auction was the 11th time Unadkat went into an auction and got sold, the most by any player.

Head-less Australia's horses-for-courses approach backfires

Head’s replacement fell for a duck, but what does this decision do to his confidence if he’s needed later in the series?

Alex Malcolm09-Feb-20232:45

Ian Chappell on Australia leaving out Travis Head

Travis Head cut a forlorn figure in the Australian dressing room a day out from the first Test having been told he had been dropped after scoring 525 runs at 87.50 in his last five Test matches during the home summer.Matt Renshaw, his horse for course replacement, cut an equally forlorn figure as he trudged off for a first-ball duck.Australia’s horses-for-courses selection backfired as they were spun out for 177 on Nagpur’s carefully curated pitch. Time will tell whether that score is a decent one or not as the pitch is only going to deteriorate further. But Rohit Sharma and KL Rahul made it look underwhelming with an assured partnership in the final session.Related

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Regardless, Head’s non-selection will cause a stir either way the result falls. Jaws dropped collectively in both Nagpur and Australia when the team sheet landed without Head’s name on it.This Australian selection panel, comprising chairman George Bailey, coach Andrew McDonald and Tony Dodemaide, has been suggesting for some time that they wanted to be adaptable with the team depending on conditions. They have never talked about picking the best XI cricketers, but rather they have been consistent in picking the best team for specific conditions.They have done that consistently with the bowling unit, playing two spinners in four out of five Tests in Asia last year at the cost of leaving out Josh Hazlewood. They picked Michael Neser for two pink-ball Tests at home when the opportunity presented. They picked Scott Boland for the MCG, albeit they didn’t get the flat conditions they felt they needed him for.They did it too with Ashton Agar in Sydney. Although that selection now has some questions attached to it given he too was left out for Todd Murphy in Nagpur. In Sydney, they were adamant they needed the left-arm orthodox to complement Nathan Lyon, as opposed to the next best spinner who was Murphy. The rain conspired against them, and Agar didn’t get to bowl in the sharp-spinning conditions that were expected. But his lack of control was a worry. And his lack of control and form in the training camp in Bengaluru meant he was not selected for tailor-made conditions in Nagpur – even better than those anticipated in Sydney – where Ravindra Jadeja scythed through Australia’s middle order with 5 for 47.Agar’s experience exposes the problem with the plug-and-play horses-for-courses philosophy. The theory is perfectly sound. Play your best players in conditions where they are best set up to succeed and avoid setting players up to fail. But what it does not do is account for the fluctuation of form in cricket. The greatest bowlers in the world need match-play to find rhythm and can be adaptable in all conditions. The best batters of all time have fallen in and out of form but have eventually problem-solved most challenges that are thrown at them.Apart from his below-par returns in Pakistan and Sri Lanka last year, Travis Head struggled in the training camp in Bengaluru as well•Getty ImagesTo ask players to have short-term success for short-term assignments belies the continuity that the great players throughout history have needed.The theory to leave out Head in Nagpur was sound. His experience in Asia last year had already raised red flags. On far better batting tracks than the one in Nagpur, with the exception of Galle, Head scored just 91 runs at 15.16. Either side of those tours he plundered 882 runs in nine Tests at home averaging 73.50 with three centuries and five half-centuries.But his ability on fast, bouncy pitches in Australia is nullified significantly on the low, spinning subcontinental tracks. He struggled in the training camp in Bengaluru having fallen out of form in the BBL after a long home summer.The Nagpur pitch with dry, bare patches outside the left-handers off stump caused Australia’s selectors to think long and hard about the number of left-handers they would pick. In the end, they were right to pick Peter Handscomb as a right-handed horse for the course at No. 6. His defence was as assured as anyone’s against Jadeja and R Ashwin while Marnus Labuschagne and Steven Smith both looked in sublime touch until Jadeja knocked them over.Leaving Head out on that basis could well have been the right call. But the flow-on effect is significant. Renshaw was picked for his superior play against spin, yet he fell to Jadeja plonking his front pad lazily into line first ball. Players can fail when they first walk to the crease, and Renshaw should be allowed more chances in this series having been given a start based on his skill set. But that footwork pattern to Jadeja cannot have been a better method than whatever Head might have brought.What does it do for Head’s mindset if he is needed later in the series knowing his own selection panel doesn’t believe in his ability against spin?And further to that, when do the same horses-for-courses principles apply to David Warner? He was bowled through the gate from around the wicket by Mohammed Shami. It was a dismissal more akin to those inflicted by Stuart Broad in England as opposed to his previous struggles in India. But as it stands, Warner averages 22.88 from 17 Test innings in India with just three half-centuries. He also struggled in Pakistan and Sri Lanka last year, just as Head did.Ultimately Australia did not bat well enough despite the selection decisions. They had planned meticulously for the spin threats of Jadeja and Ashwin only for Warner and Usman Khawaja to be knocked over by pace in the first 13 balls of the Test. Labuschagne, Smith, Handscomb and Alex Carey all batted beautifully at times for their respective starts, yet none could go on.They knew big runs were needed in India and failed at the first time of asking. The horses picked for the course were slow out of the gates early. There is time to rectify it but only time will tell whether these horses can.

How Nehal Wadhera went from T20 obscurity to lighting up IPL 2023 for Mumbai Indians

The Punjab batter had not played a single T20 game before this season, but has quickly become a mainstay for his IPL franchise

Daya Sagar10-May-20233:28

Moody: Wadhera ensuring the chase wasn’t entirely on Suryakumar was critical

Nehal Wadhera had not played a single T20 game before IPL 2023. A largely unknown entity coming into the tournament, Mumbai Indians made sure to back him, giving him a consistent run in the side, and he repaid the franchise’s faith with a 21-ball 40 against Gujarat Titans, followed by a 51-ball 64 against Chennai Super Kings.On Tuesday, with Mumbai chasing 200, Wadhera went a step further, scoring an unbeaten 34-ball 52 as he forged a 140-run stand off 66 balls with Suryakumar Yadav to take his side home. Coming in at the end of the fifth over, with Mumbai having lost both openers in the space of three balls, at no point did Wadhera seem out of his depth. Even with Suryakumar going berserk at one end, the 22-year-old kept his cool to stay till the end. But, who is Wadhera and how did he end up with Mumbai despite not having any prior T20 experience?Wadhera was called up for trials last year by Rajasthan Royals, but he could not make the cut. He went back to his home state of Punjab, where he took part in an U-23 tournament. Playing for Ludhiana, in one of the innings, he smashed 578 off just 414 balls, which included 42 fours and 37 sixes. The innings elevated him into the limelight and he was spotted by the Mumbai scouts who called him for trials.Related

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“When Nehal came to me, he was a very small and chubby kid,” says his childhood coach Charanjit Bhangu. “He was a very quick learner and used to apply whatever I used to say to his game. Whenever a player does that, he immediately draws attention. After finishing practice, he used to come to my room and ask me for inputs on how to improve his game. He used to carry his bat everywhere so that he could shadow practice.”Wadhera slowly moved up the ranks in Punjab age-group cricket. In 2018, he was selected in the India U-19 team and was also named captain of an India A U-19 side that played a Quadrangular series in 2019 which had India B, South Africa and Afghanistan taking part. He then found a place in the squad for the U-19 Asia Cup in September 2019 but was overlooked for the U-19 World Cup that took place in early 2020. That came as a blow to Wadhera.Nehal Wadhera scored back-to-back fifties, the second coming in a winning cause for Mumbai•BCCI”It was a very challenging time for Nehal, but he never doubted himself,” Wadhera’s father Kamal Wadhera says. “He is a very positive boy. Whenever there are any problems, he always tries to search for ways to get out of them and not overthink about it.”To be honest, we are a middle-class family and we don’t have any stories of struggles. Whatever he (Nehal) asked for, we provided him with that. But the good thing is that he never misused his time or money.”During Covid-19, he worked on his fitness, both mental and physical. He started to read a lot as well. He now has even more self-belief than before.”Despite putting in consistent performances in age-group cricket, Wadhera had to bide his time before the senior call-up came, and he made sure to capitalise as soon as he got one. He scored a century on his first-class debut against Gujarat in January this year, and soon after compiled a match-winning 214 against defending Ranji Trophy champions Madhya Pradesh to further his credentials.Wadhera is yet to play a T20 game outside of the IPL, but the way his 2023 is going, he could soon become an all-format middle-order asset for Punjab.

The Virat Kohli century that was a trip back in time

One of the best batters that India has ever produced played an innings that made the mind look back across eras

Karthik Krishnaswamy12-Mar-20233:03

Tait: Kohli batted for the team and not himself

Eleven years ago in Adelaide, Virat Kohli pushed Peter Siddle into the off side and ran, screaming at Ben Hilfenhaus every step of his way to the other end. When he completed the run, he was still so caught up in this quarrel that two bits of information seemed to have escaped him.One, there was a chance of an overthrow, and he finally turned to take it when he heard Ishant Sharma calling out from the other end. Two, he’d brought up his maiden Test century, but celebrations could wait. There was anger to vent first.When he ripped his helmet off halfway through the second run, the celebration was just as angry and sweary. That was every Kohli celebration then, incandescent with west-Delhi machismo.Now, when he brought up his 28th Test century with a flicked single, Kohli reacted very differently.Related

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Reactions – 'Things we love to see'

There was no swearing, of course. He stopped doing that years ago. This Kohli unstrapped his helmet methodically and raised his bat to India’s dressing room with a relieved smile. Then he laid his helmet and gloves down, and reached into his collar to extract the chain he wears around his neck. Having pulled this out, he kissed the wedding ring he hangs from it a la Frodo Baggins. In every way now, he’s less west Delhi and more western-beachfront Mumbai.You felt yourself reminiscing fondly about the angry, sweary Kohli at this moment. You almost missed him. But this may have partly been because you were young then, and now you’re… well, youngish.Kohli is youngish too, but perhaps not in cricketing terms, and the 11 years between Adelaide and Ahmedabad may well feel to him like 20. Recent years may have dilated time even more. Before Sunday, he’d last reached a Test hundred in November 2019. That was before you’d heard of Covid-19. Do you even remember what life was like then?Between then and this innings, Kohli had gone 23 Tests and 41 innings without a Test hundred. He’d averaged 25.70 in that period. In that time, his Test average had dropped from 54.97 to 48.12.There were times during this phase when he’d looked a little out of sorts. There were other times when he’d batted beautifully without getting close to three-figures. Two Tests before this one, in Delhi, he’d played an innings like that, a 44 that was every bit as good as a century.Do you remember Sweary Kohli?•Getty ImagesNo matter how many glittering 44s and 72s you score, though, a lack of hundreds over such a long period can dim the halo around a great batter, even a halo that’s been burnished so assiduously by the industrial complex that’s grown around Kohli’s name.Halos, in any case, look less dazzling when you average 48 than they do at 55.But everything is relative, and a large part of Kohli’s career has coincided with one of Test cricket’s most bowler-dominated eras. Bowling attacks have never been deeper, and pitches seldom as challenging.Now you could argue that the last sentence is both an exaggeration and an example of recency bias. You could bring up a hundred examples of potent attacks and vicious pitches from generations past. But there’s a simple counter to this. How often do you see a drawn Test these days?I mean, look at the numbers. Kohli and Cheteshwar Pujara are India’s sixth- and eighth-highest run-getters in Test cricket. But look at where they sit among India’s highest run-getters in drawn Tests – Kohli is in 15th place and Pujara in 23rd.

To arrange India’s top ten run-getters in increasing order of percentage of runs scored in draws is to travel backwards in time, more or less.It’s no slight on Sunil Gavaskar and Dilip Vengsarkar that they scored so many of their runs in draws. They were great batters in teams that often lacked potent bowling attacks, and their runs often turned defeats into draws. You can only play the sport that exists in your time. You have to recognise, however, that Test cricket in Kohli’s time is an entirely different sport to the one played in Gavaskar’s time, and significantly different even to the one played in Sachin Tendulkar’s time.Watching Kohli progress towards his hundred on Sunday, then, felt like an experience from the past. India began day three with a deficit of 191, and with one of their middle-order batters laid low by a bad back. There was no way that Kohli would take undue risks, and there was little chance of Australia’s bowlers – who had toiled magnificently on day three to keep India’s scoring rate in control – giving him an inch.Kohli simply batted time, and along the way collected whatever runs came his way. From 59 off 128 balls overnight, he went to 102 off 250 before he hit his first boundary of the day, and it came off a Mitchell Starc full-toss.It was old-fashioned Test cricket on a flat pitch where the team batting second was still playing its first innings on day four. Great India batters of the past played a lot of Test matches like this. India in the Kohli era? Not so much.Even on the flattest of surfaces, you need to bat really well to score a Test hundred. And you still need a bit of luck. On day three, Shubman Gill could have been bowled through the gate by Todd Murphy, or played on to Starc. He was fortunate that the Murphy ball bounced over the stumps and the Starc ball missed leg stump.On another day, the uppish punch that sent Rohit Sharma back could have flown wide of short extra-cover. The misjudgment that ended with Pujara lbw to Murphy could have happened off a ball that turned sharply enough to miss leg stump. Both had seemed on course for bigger scores than 35 and 42.Virat Kohli’s century celebration now – a kiss of his wedding ring•Getty ImagesKohli looked all at sea when he first came to the crease. Nathan Lyon had seen him demonstrate a sound method of playing offspin on the sharply-turning pitches of Delhi and Indore, based on going back and across to most lengths and playing everything with the spin. Kohli had adopted an open stance for this, and stuck to that set-up here.Lyon, though, was bowling from over the wicket, and he floated three successive balls well outside Kohli’s off stump. From its starting position outside leg stump, Kohli’s front foot was being asked to move a long way across. Kohli ended up doing this via a two-step process, across and then forward, and found himself moving a touch too late to get where he needed to. It can happen when you’re new to the crease, and this out-of-tune footwork left him jabbing at the ball. He got a thick inside-edge to the first ball, which flew to the left of the fielder at short leg. He was beaten on the outside edge by the second ball, and he edged the third one just short of slip.Batting is perilous by definition. One moment you’re in, the next you’re out. But with a bit of luck, good batters have the time to work their way into an innings on true pitches, and Kohli isn’t just a good batter. He’s one of the greatest India have had.There have been times in the past when a Kohli century has seemed inevitable as soon as he’s spent 15 minutes at the crease. It wasn’t quite like that this time, but you sensed that while there was a gradually diminishing chance of Australia’s bowlers getting him out, there was next to no chance of Kohli doing anything to get himself out. He was in to have his fill, and the circumstances allowed him to simply bat.By the time he’d brought up his hundred, India had brought their deficit down to double-figures, and Australia had spent 138.2 overs in the field. Their bowling began to fray around the edges – the symbolic moment came immediately after Kohli had reached three-figures, when Lyon dropped short and Axar Patel slapped him for four.Kohli took just 72 balls to rush from 100 to 150, and his highlights reel began to grow to proportions commensurate with the magnitude of his innings. There was a wristy pull with terrific use of the crease’s depth to place Murphy between square leg and backward square leg. There was a step-out-and-reach-out flat-bat cover drive off Cameron Green. The shot he played off the next ball took him from 149 to 153: he shuffled across his stumps, met the full ball outside off stump, and clipped it between a diving midwicket and a chasing mid-on.As Kohli and Axar hustled India into the lead and beyond, possibilities began to emerge. India’s innings eventually ended with their lead at 91, leaving them just over three sessions in which to try and eke something out on a still largely forgiving pitch. There’s a chance, then, that Kohli will end this Test match with an increased tally of runs in drawn Tests. There’s also a chance, however, that he’ll have added 186 to his tally of runs scored in victories.

When Maxwell went all Darth Vader against spin

The RCB batter was a class above on a slow pitch and his pyrotechnics had a direct line to the Royals collapse

Alagappan Muthu14-May-20231:13

Bishop: We see growth and understanding in Maxwell’s game

In the 10th over, Glenn Maxwell saw an opportunity to collect six runs.Adam Zampa had gone flat and into the wicket, one which was slow and dry and hard to score on. In these conditions, the ball doesn’t come onto the bat. Except this one did, much faster than the batter expected. Zampa’s quick arm action and the revs he imparts – overspin instead of sidespin – often make it seem like he gains pace after pitching.By the time a batter – one who’s made the mistake of thinking there’s a pull shot on – realises this, he doesn’t really have the time to adjust.You know that scene at the end in where everything goes black, the music stops and all you hear is extreme foreshadowing.Swap the Rebels out. Stick the spinners in their place. Swap Darth Vader out, Stick Maxwell in his place.Because only the Force explains how he still hit that ball for four. It helps that Star Wars never really committed to how the thing works. It even became a running joke, the most memorable line associated with it is Han Solo saying “that’s not how the Force works.”Related

Samson: 'We go really hard in the powerplay, but today it didn't work'

In much the same way, it’s hard to figure out how Maxwell works. You see him happen. He’s right there in front of your eyes. And it still doesn’t make sense. His genius sometimes suspends reality.Like here, that original big backlift, horizontal bat shot turns – in no time at all – into something of a straight bat whip. Maxwell has the best hands in the business. If not for those, this wouldn’t have been possible.Because while other people might have made contact with the ball – it was by no means wicket-taking – very few would’ve been able to hit it to the boundary.This is probably what the experts mean by having two shots to the same ball. Maxwell had the pull ready at first glance. Then he realised it wasn’t quite on, and he still had a pretty good back up plan that fetched him four runs through wide long-on.This is the way: Maxwell appeared to be conjuring the force at will to hit boundaries•BCCIThe chaos of the chase, where Rajasthan Royals lost six wickets in the first seven overs, were a consequence of this going from a 140-odd game to a 170-odd game. Yashasvi Jaiswal, Jos Buttler and Sanju Samson all fell to the first risk they took – because they had to. They were batting in the powerplay. That was the best time they had to score quickly. They had no choice.Maxwell is the one who imposed that misery on them by playing the kind of innings that only he can play. Check this out. Every other batter in this match combined made 89 for 7 against spin at a run rate of 6.51. Then there’s this one guy with 42 for 0 at a run rate of 10.9.Maxwell is a natural against spin, but he doesn’t just rest on that. He works every little advantage he gets. In the 17th over, he saw that three of the five fielders on the boundary were on the off side. That gave him an indication of the line Yuzvendra Chahal would be bowling. Long-on and midwicket were in place too, lying in wait for the mis-hit slog.That left fine leg and square leg up. It was the only vulnerability in this system and Maxwell exploited it beautifully. A good portion of his big hits are the result of premeditation. But here he had to wait; he had to stay perfectly still until Chahal let the ball go. Then, when the spinner no longer had any control over proceedings, he moved across the crease and scooped a ball that was way outside off stump into the gap behind the wicket for six.Maxwell once made a public moan about Suryakumar Yadav making the rest of them look bad. Here, he was catching up to that level. If indeed he had ever left it.Since his IPL debut, way back in April 2012, only Chris Gayle (608) has hit more boundaries against spin than Maxwell (457). This is in all T20s.In just the IPL, his strike rate against slow bowling – 164.59 – is the highest among all specialist batters to have faced at least 100 balls.You’ll notice the contrivance of that stat – “specialist batters” – because there is one man who has a higher strike rate. Sunil Narine with 194.79, because he’s had the benefit of facing 627 balls fewer. If ever there was a cricket bat that matched the power of a lightsaber, its Maxwell’s. And Royals felt the full brunt of it on Sunday evening.

Rafiq, Vaughan, Yorkshire: a race reckoning

More than two years on into the Yorkshire racism saga, it has taken a toll on all sides, and landed all parties in a deeply unsatisfactory place

Osman Samiuddin24-Mar-2023Nobody other than a handful of people can ever know for sure whether Michael Vaughan said what he is alleged to have said to four Yorkshire players nearly 14 years ago. “There’s too many of you lot, we need to do something about that”, or in some recollections, with a slightly tweaked second clause: “we need to have a word about that”. Fourteen years is a long time, so a word lost here or there is to be expected, but nobody disputes – not the recipients or Vaughan – that, if uttered, it would have been a racist statement.Of the four – three British-Asians and one Pakistani – three say they heard it. Ajmal Shahzad says he didn’t hear it and says that Vaughan was not that way inclined, being the way of the racist. Rana Naved-ul-Hasan said he heard it but chose not to give evidence to that effect. Of the others in the vicinity that day, we don’t know.Not even the three-person panel of the Cricket Discipline Commission (CDC), who sat over a five-day hearing at the start of March for this and other allegations made by Azeem Rafiq can ever know for sure. They don’t need to. They aim to reach a verdict by the end of the month based on the lower of two yardsticks in adjudications: on the balance of probability, the yardstick for a civil hearing, and not proved beyond reasonable doubt. That is, on the balance of probabilities, did Vaughan say what he is alleged to have said, or not?Related

  • Yorkshire come to grief over Azeem Rafiq affair, but acceptance is a way off yet

  • Why it was so difficult for Azeem Rafiq to figure out he was in a racist environment

  • Flawed but necessary: SJN hearings reveal no heroes, no villains

  • Azeem Rafiq: 'Cricket is in denial' about problem of racism

  • Vaughan denied 'due process' in Yorkshire racism disciplinary, claims lawyer

Two and a half years after Rafiq began the most urgent conversation the UK has had about race in cricket, and here we are, obsessing about those words. It is not, perhaps, where anyone intended to be. But given how it began, that is not surprising. The interview Rafiq gave to wisden.com’s Taha Hashim in August 2020 did not intend to focus on the racism he says he suffered at Yorkshire. That was a detour in an otherwise evocative profile on the fading of a once promising young cricketer who was a symbol of the county’s inclusiveness credentials.Then it barrelled away, slap-bang, into a fervent and ongoing culture war. People lost jobs. Careers ended. Sponsors left. Allegations of racism at other counties tumbled out. The government took note. Parliamentarians held hearings. Newspapers took sides. Social media poured petrol on to the burning heap. Yorkshire were left on the verge of financial ruin.And then here we were, at the International Arbitration Centre in the heart of London, its slick and featureless interior with unremarkable conference and meeting rooms, the anaesthetising aesthetic designed, one might reasonably suspect, to draw the sting and heat from the disputes to be settled within.

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Hard evidence for the Vaughan allegation is scant, so to speak. Broadcast footage of the pre-game huddle at about the time Vaughan is alleged to have said it, exists. But it’s a tease. There is no footage of the exact moment the remark is alleged to have been made when the huddle broke away to enter the field.The investigation into whether Michael Vaughan, seen here arriving at the International Arbitration Centre for hearings earlier this month, made a racist utterance has been undermined by questions raised about how it has been conducted•Justin Tallis/AFP/Getty ImagesThe footage is not incriminating, which explains why it has been used by both the prosecution – the ECB in this case – and Vaughan’s defence for their own ends. Jane Mulcahy, the ECB’s lead counsel, highlights a 19-second gap in footage away from the camera where such a thing been said. Christopher Stoner, Vaughan’s lawyer, counters that the footage confirms Vaughan’s innocence. The team goes on to the field in good spirit; Adil Rashid, one of the quartet allegedly targeted by this remark and who says he heard it, is seen joshing with Tim Bresnan (who has also been charged with making racist comments on a separate occasion). There’s no way he would have said it, Vaughan reasons, because that’s not who he is, and especially not before a game because the impact would have hurt his side’s chances of winning.Even Vaughan shaking hands with the four players, as seen on the clip, has been weaponised. The prosecution say it is a sign he singled them out. The defence say it reflected a moment of genuine pride, referred to in Vaughan’s memoir from the same year: three British Asian players, homegrown, turning out for Yorkshire, a county with a long, exclusionary history, was worth celebrating.The prosecution sees Vaughan’s social-media persona as central. Referring to some of his tweets from that time – which Vaughan agreed were “unacceptable” – they say the tone is similar to the alleged remark. “If a person has a tendency to make racist comments,” Mulcahy argued, before garnishing it with some QED, “they have a tendency to make racist comments.”Mulcahy’s case builds on the atmosphere at Yorkshire CCC in that time as supporting evidence. The club has since admitted failing to address the systemic use of racist language. Two Yorkshire players, Matthew Hoggard and Gary Ballance, have admitted to making racist remarks in that period. Vaughan says he couldn’t recall Hoggard making such remarks in the dressing room. (Six other individuals as well as Yorkshire were charged by the ECB, though only Vaughan appeared to defend himself. Yorkshire and Hoggard have admitted, or part-admitted to some charges; the others have all denied them and refused to attend the hearing, claiming the process is flawed.)The crux of Vaughan’s defence, meanwhile, is that the ECB investigation was deeply flawed. Stoner called it “woefully and wholly inadequate”. The ECB, Stoner said, was hellbent on pinning Vaughan from the off, not only by not interviewing enough people but not even interviewing Vaughan himself, as well as ignoring evidence and testimony that was counter to their case. “Due process matters and it is the cornerstone of law,” Stoner said. “But in our submission, it was sent on holiday by the ECB.”There’s plenty else for the panel to consider; the amount of paperwork submitted constitutes a ferocious assault on the environment. A lot of it is one person’s word against another’s, though, so the case more or less boils down to this: Vaughan’s social media and various admissions on the one side, against potential flaws in the ECB investigation on the other.Protesters at Headingley in November 2021, following the publication of parts of the report of an investigation Yorkshire conducted into Rafiq’s allegations•Peter Byrne/PA Photos/Getty ImagesWords are important, as acknowledged in an exchange between the ECB’s legal head Meena Botros and Stoner, but the question for the panel is: whose?

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If that feels like a deeply inadequate place to be in after all this, then it is of a piece with the entire hearing. The CDC is more used to parochial housekeeping – sanctioning counties for fielding improperly registered players or issuing points deductions for poor pitches. Occasionally there might be the flutter of an anti-corruption breach or a doping case. Recently it has encountered racism-adjacent territory, retrospectively punishing players for inappropriate social-media behaviour in the past.This is bigger. This is one of the most successful modern England captains, a prominent media personality, against the man who has become the face of antiracism. This is a battle for unclaimed frontiers in that culture war. If Vaughan is found not guilty but the others charged are, it will likely allow many to see it as proof that there is no racism in English cricket, or that the problem is overblown; or that Rafiq is – and this is already a popular trope in such cases – a troublemaker. If Vaughan is found guilty, he has the right to appeal, and given that he has argued the very shape of his “life and livelihood” is at stake, he will exercise it. There is no end here, only more ammunition for the culture war.Yet on paper this hearing is about alleged breaches of ECB directive 3.3, which isn’t specifically about discrimination or racism. It is about bringing the game into disrepute. The ECB has an anti-discrimination code and a directive (3.4) that says each participant must be bound by it, but because that was only introduced in March 2021 and these cases pre-date it, charges cannot be laid under that code. That it took the ECB until 2021 to put in place a specific nationwide anti-discrimination code for all cricket under its jurisdiction, and then only as a response to Black Lives Matter, is itself an indictment. It isn’t as if these issues are new or that Yorkshire is the only county side with a past.It also speaks to the complicated historical nature of such allegations, and indeed more broadly, of the moment we find ourselves in. Laws and codes change as communities and values do, but they still can’t be applied retroactively to past behaviour, even though it might seem suitable to do so. Or, as the columnist Hadley Freeman wrote two years ago about the late novelist Philip Roth, whose work was being, let’s say, robustly reappraised in light of #MeToo: “Looked at from the point of view of today, every single thing from the past is on the wrong side of the modern moment, because that’s how time works.”In this case, of course, it isn’t that the words and behaviours in question were not offensive in 2009. They were; this isn’t the re-editing of Roald Dahl’s books which are much further away from the modern moment. But, as with the panic when old, inappropriate tweets from current England players were dug out, there’s no satisfactory consensus yet on how to deal with it.Consequently, having the CDC be the arbiter of what amounts to a Brief Modern History of Racism in English Cricket is much like the trial for the murder of Nicole Simpson being adjudicated upon by the Brentwood Residents’ Committee in LA.

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The greater burden and scrutiny in these matters must fall necessarily on institutions. They are the ones who make the rules, who maintain them, and who run investigations against those who break them. The case Stoner made against the ECB’s investigation of Vaughan’s allegations, lasering in on procedural flaws, was compelling. Arguably, though, the bigger questions about the roles of the ECB as a regulatory body and one of its constituents, Yorkshire, which Stoner crept up to without quite raising fully, are more troubling.The ECB under Tom Harrison launched an investigation into racism in Yorkshire cricket, but the board’s position has been riven by conflicts of interest•Getty ImagesYorkshire have behaved exactly as you would imagine a county at war with itself might. When they first conducted an independent investigation, using the legal firm Squire Patton Boggs (SPB), the club was not found to be institutionally racist, although seven of 43 allegations Rafiq made, including of racist behaviour, were upheld. Nevertheless, Yorkshire’s chairman when the investigation took place, Roger Hutton, told parliamentarians (after he had stepped down) that he thought the club institutionally racist.Hutton’s own underwhelming standing within the county didn’t help and, done in by a lack of support from the ECB and Yorkshire, he was replaced by Lord Kamlesh Patel. A renowned former social worker in Bradford who had worked his way up and through the English establishment to become a peer, Patel seemed right for the job. He had been an independent director on the ECB board, loved cricket, and had experience of racism first-hand.Under his chairmanship, Yorkshire turned 180 degrees, admitting that the club had failed to address the systemic use of racist language by multiple players and employees over a long period. That sounds a lot like admitting to institutional racism without admitting to institutional racism, and a not unreasonable inference to draw is that it allowed Yorkshire to escape deeper cross-examination at the CDC, while also displaying sufficient culpability.Initially Yorkshire had said they would take no further disciplinary action after the SPB investigation. The investigation, which began in September 2020, took nearly a year. The report was presented to Yorkshire in August 2021 but to this day has not been published in full (it emerged that Hutton had links to SPB, bringing the firm’s independence into question).But soon after Lord Patel became chair in November 2021, the club summarily sacked 16 backroom and support staff. It was dressed up as a necessary reset of the club’s culture. Many of the 16 had put their names to a letter to the county board, complaining about the reputational damage Rafiq’s unchallenged claims had wrought on the club and about, as they saw it, his “one-man mission” to bring down the club.And then a week before the CDC hearing began, the kind of stuff CIA suits go to jail for at the end of Bourne films: Yorkshire publicly admitted to a mass deletion of emails and documents relating to the Rafiq case, but by unspecified persons and at an unspecified time around that of Lord Patel’s appointment. Except, during the hearing it was reported that senior club officials were sure that the documents were still in Yorkshire’s possession well after Lord Patel took over. Yorkshire are not unfamiliar with internal strife historically, but rarely can the club have been as pulled apart, at both ends of this culture war.A banner with an antiracist message on a fence at Headingley Stadium in 2021•Oli Scarf/AFP/Getty ImagesThe sackings feel now like an inflection point. Two of the signatories to the letter – head coach Andrew Gale and bowling coach Richard Pyrah – were among those charged by the ECB at the CDC. There was also the batting coach, Paul Grayson, who joined the men’s side in 2019, Rafiq had left the club, and so it wasn’t clear what the case against him had been. Kunwar Bansil, the club’s British Asian physio, was a signatory; Bansil was interviewed by Michael Atherton after he was sacked and spoke of a very different experience at Yorkshire to Rafiq’s.By then, though, there was no space in the discourse for grey. Everything had built unceasingly to this moment. The delay and secrecy over the SPB investigation, the lack of ostensible action in its wake, the public furore after Rafiq’s emotional appearance at a parliamentary committee. Somebody needed to pay and these 16 did.Except, by Yorkshire’s own admission, it was done without due process and was “procedurally unfair”. The letter the sacked staff had sent, seen by ESPNcricinfo, was bruising and not without vindictiveness in tone. It also did not acknowledge Rafiq’s experiences of racism at all, instead calling him “problematic” and “a complete liability off the field”. Firing the letter-writers, as Yorkshire did, ultimately cost the county nearly £1.5 million in severance payouts. The real cost was in entrenching the polarisation. Rafiq had been treated appallingly. Now there were 16 staff who could claim the same. At best, it was a purge; at worst, it came across as a crass act of revenge by Yorkshire on Yorkshire.Perhaps this wasn’t two Yorkshires but the same old Yorkshire, after all, as David Hopps said, detecting cruel irony in what Lord Patel had done. “Uncompromising, implacable, adamant that only his way is the right one, and supremely confident in his own moral compass, he has revealed many of the Yorkshire attributes that over generations have caused the county so much pain.”In a rare recent interview Patel gave to , he said that he had been asked by the ECB to come in and “turn the disaster around”. The publication claimed to disclose (in their words) that “the ECB urged him to get rid of people”. Which people wasn’t clear but Lord Patel said: “I was asked by the ECB to ensure some people who were there from the previous regime did not take part in that governance process.” The interview reads like a valedictory middle finger to the ECB – Patel steps down this month – claiming that ECB support wasn’t forthcoming once he had done what he had been asked to do.The interview was brought up at the CDC by Vaughan’s team, during a tense and uneasy exchange with Botros. It got close to what is, in some ways, the knotted heart of this matter – though it did not go right into it. Did the ECB, under pressure to act post-BLM and Rafiq, bring Lord Patel in specifically to clean house at Yorkshire? The interview leaves little doubt this was the case.Lord Kamlesh Patel speaks to the press after taking over as chairman of the Yorkshire board in 2021. It has emerged since that he might have been under pressure to sack people seen as belonging to the previous regime•Danny Lawson/PA Photos/Getty ImagesIf so, that would place the ECB as the game’s promoter and regulator, a former employer of Vaughan, a prosecutor in this case, and from one interpretation of Patel’s interview, an active participant because of the sackings. In the intersection of those duties, there must lie some conflict, and even, perhaps, a curtailing of the ECB’s ability – as Vaughan’s team argued – to be fair and impartial in the hearings. At best, as ESPNcricinfo’s UK editor Andrew Miller noted, it spotlighted the somewhat circular absurdity of the whole affair, the ECB charging its own constituents for failures that it, as the overall regulator of the game, must bear some responsibility for.Botros came across as both imperturbable and somewhat hapless, not least when Lord Patel’s interview came up, in a three-hour grilling. No, he said, he didn’t say Patel was not being truthful. But he also denied “any knowledge of the ECB telling Lord Patel to sack anyone”. He just didn’t have knowledge of the things Patel had spoken about.

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A little tempering of this critique of institutional failings is advisable, given that racism inquiries or investigations are messy, difficult processes and rarely resolved tidily. Nobody . Somebody just ends up slightly less unhappy than somebody else. As Cricket South Africa well knows, having grappled with issues of race, discrimination, and representation near daily since its readmission post-apartheid in 1992.Partly as a response to BLM and the discussions it ignited, CSA set up the Social Justice and Nation-building (SJN) hearings in the South African summer of 2021. It did not constitute a disciplinary process. They began as a compensatory process for players who had been victims of racism, but that idea was dropped because, well, putting a cost to racism is another level of messy.Instead, they became a bit like the country’s Truth and Reconciliation Commission after apartheid, an open house for former players and administrators to unload traumas. Some of the testimonies were harrowing. Others were little more than the ordinary grievances carried around like an ID badge by professional athletes who never quite made it.It was an imperfect process and ended up with the least desirable but most predictable outcome: having to weigh one person’s word against another’s in a formal disciplinary proceeding. Which is not tenable because victims of racism, as ESPNcricinfo’s South Africa correspondent Firdose Moonda likes to say, don’t carry around receipts for the racism inflicted upon them.Graeme Smith and Mark Boucher faced investigations after the hearings. Smith was cleared and charges against Boucher were withdrawn after witnesses, including Paul Adams, declined to appear. Smith was CSA’s director of cricket then and is now commissioner of the SA20; Boucher was South Africa coach then and is an IPL coach now. Of the receipt-less alleged victims, Thami Tsolekile was, and still is, serving a ban for corruption; Adams’ promising coaching career, meanwhile, was throttled by the board itself – according to a former board CEO – because of the deep-set inequalities in the game in the country.Adil Rashid features on a mural for the Hundred in Bradford. Rashid, along with the likes of Moeen Ali, has been seen as a success story of British Asians from the north of England making it big in cricket•Oli Scarf/AFP/Getty ImagesStill, the hearings served a purpose. They painted an alternative but necessary history of that great South Africa side, and really, of modern South African cricket. It was sobering and, hopefully, cautionary. The collective unburdening felt necessary at that point because these were stories that had not been publicly aired, and given they finally had been, at the very least they would provide some residual deterrence.This is not the CDC’s remit. All it is tasked with doing is to work out the probability of whether 14 words of racist intent were spoken in Nottingham in June 2009. (To be fair, had all those charged turned up to defend themselves, this would have been a more substantial audit; that they didn’t is not on the CDC). Also, the CDC (or English cricket) does not operate in a country in which racism was state policy. The SJN hearings had the very tangible and real legacy of apartheid to rail against. It gave that discourse a shape.English cricket has no such target. All it has is the anxious and hurried acknowledgment, after BLM, after Rafiq, that there is racism within the game. Is it institutional or does it permeate the game? The shape, extent, and nature of it is not clear. Yorkshire has been pulled up. How many skeletons exist in how many other counties’ closets? In recent years, the chairmen of Middlesex and Essex have been condemned or officially sanctioned for inappropriate or outright racist comments. Playing staff at both counties are deeply unrepresentative of London, given their pool of talent comes from London or Greater London, areas with the country’s most diverse demographic.What of the culpability of the ECB in all this, with the broader responsibility to make the game more inclusive? What of its own failures, including but not limited to the abysmally low rates of conversion of recreational cricket to professional cricket for British South Asians, barriers in pathways the ECB is aware of but has struggled to overcome; the fact that only one British Asian has ever been head coach of a county; or that there are two umpires of colour in a 34-person panel (after none were appointed for nearly two decades ); or the 75% decline over time in the number of black British professional players that led to Surrey setting up the ACE programme in 2020; or, in recognising, as Rainford-Brent has, that the problems of the game’s inclusivity might be more acutely centred around socio-economic status, with race as subset.A more holistic reckoning will come in the shape of a report by the Independent Commission for Equity in Cricket (ICEC). The Commission was formed two years ago to examine race, gender and class in the English game. It has collected evidence from over 4000 people of their lived experiences within the game and the report – which will be made public – is due soon. could be a lot of words to take in.

Stats – Stokes' maximums and Lord's bouncers go through the roof

Extras were part of the main cast in a Test where 18 wickets fell to short balls

Sampath Bandarupalli02-Jul-20232001 The previous instance of England going 0-2 down after the first two matches of a home Test series was in the 2001 Ashes. The ongoing series is only the eighth for England at home, where they lost their first two Tests. Six of those eight home Test series have been the Ashes.2The number of Test matches lost by England since 1950 despite scoring 300-plus runs in both innings, including the Lord’s Test against Australia. The other instance was against India in 2008, where they made 316 and 311 for 9 in Chennai.0 No player had scored more than 150 runs in the fourth innings of a Test match while batting at No. 6 and lower, before Ben Stokes’ 155 at Lord’s on Sunday. The previous highest was an unbeaten 149 by Adam Gilchrist against Pakistan in the 1999 Hobart Test.Ben Stokes’ nine sixes are the most by a player in an Ashes innings•Getty Images1 Only one player has a highest fourth-innings score for England in the Ashes than Stokes’ 155. Mark Butcher, who scored an unbeaten 173 at Headingley in 2001, sits at the top.9 The number of sixes hit by Stokes during his 155 – the most by a player in an innings in the Ashes. He surpassed his record of eight sixes during his match-winning effort at Leeds, in 2019. Stokes is now also the leading six-hitter of the Ashes with 33 hits, going past Kevin Pietersen’s 24.5 The number of sixes hit by Andrew Flintoff against South Africa during his 142 in 2003. That was the most number of sixes in a Test innings at Lord’s until Stokes’ nine against Australia. The nine sixes by Stokes is also the most in a Test match at Lord’s, surpassing Graham Gooch’s seven sixes against India in 1990.Short balls accounted for 18 wickets in the Lord’s Test•Getty Images504 Short balls bowled by the pacers at Lord’s are the most for a Test match since 2015, as per ESPNcricinfo’s ball-by-ball logs. The previous highest was 426, during the 2017 Wellington Test between New Zealand and Bangladesh. The 18 wickets that fell off those 504 bouncers at Lord’s are the joint-most for a match, alongside the 2015 Hamilton Test between New Zealand and Sri Lanka.8 Player-of-the-match awards for Steven Smith across 34 Ashes Tests, the most for any player in the Ashes. Smith has a total of 13 of these awards in Test cricket, the joint-most for any player since his debut in 2010, alongside Joe Root.74 Extras conceded by England at Lord’s. Only once have England conceded more extras in an Ashes Test – 83 at The Oval in 1934. It is the sixth-highest among England’s tally in all Tests and the most by any team in a Test since England gave away 82 extras against New Zealand in 2015, also at Lord’s.

Stats – All the records Matthews and WI broke during a 425-run thriller

The allrounder slammed West Indies’ highest individual score in T20Is, and in the process collected a seventh consecutive Player-of-the-Match award

Sampath Bandarupalli02-Oct-2023213 Target chased by West Indies against Australia at the North Sydney Oval, the highest successful target chase in women’s T20Is. The previous highest successful target chase was 199 by England against India in 2018 during the Tri-Nation series in Mumbai. West Indies also became the first team to score 200-plus runs in a women’s T20I chase.425 Runs collectively scored by Australia and West Indies in Sydney on Monday, making it the first ever women’s T20I with a match aggregate of 400-plus runs. The 397 runs between India and England in 2018 was the previous highest match aggregate in women’s T20Is.Related

Australia insist T20 losses aren't part of rising trend

Hayley Matthews credits leadership role for 'incredible' run of form

Matthews 132 shapes world record West Indies chase

213 for 3 West Indies women’s total in the chase on Monday was the first time they breached the 200-run mark in T20Is. It was also the first time a team has posted 200-plus against Australia in women’s T20Is.132 Hayley Matthews’ 132 is now the highest individual score for West Indies in T20Is. Deandra Dottin’s unbeaten 112 against South Africa in the 2010 T20 World Cup was the previous highest. It is also the highest individual score against Australia in women’s T20Is.1 Matthews’ 132 is the highest individual score in a women’s T20I chase, surpassing Danielle Wyatt’s 124 against India in 2018. The 132 by Matthews is also the sixth-highest individual score in women’s T20Is.1 The number of women to score a century and take three wickets in the same T20I before Matthews did against Australia on Monday. Deepika Rasangika of Bahrain scored an unbeaten 161 against Saudi Arabia in 2022 before following it with a three-wicket haul.Phoebe Litchfield brought up an 18-ball fifty•Getty Images7 Consecutive Player-of-the-Match awards for Matthews in T20Is. She scored 452 runs at an average of 90.40 in those seven matches while striking at 138.22 and bagged 15 wickets at an average of 10.60.174 Partnership runs between Matthews and Stafanie Taylor for the second wicket. It is the highest partnership for any wicket for West Indies in women’s T20Is. The 174 is also the first 150-plus runs stand for any wicket against Australia.1 Number of T20Is won by West Indies women against Australia in their 14 previous meetings. Their lone win before Monday’s record heist came in the final of the 2016 T20 World Cup. It was overall the third win for West Indies in 32 women’s internationals against Australia, out of which they lost 27.18 Balls needed for Phoebe Litchfield to complete her fifty against West Indies, the joint-fastest in women’s T20Is. Sophie Devine of New Zealand also got her fifty in only 18 balls against India in 2015.

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