Kumar Sangakkara named as first non-British President of MCC

Kumar Sangakkara, the former Sri Lanka captain, has been announced as the first non-British President of Marylebone Cricket Club (MCC), and will take up his one-year post on October 1, 2019.Sangakkara’s nomination was announced by the current President, Anthony Wreford, at the MCC Annual General Meeting at Lord’s on Wednesday.”It is a huge honour to be named the next President of MCC and it is a role that I am thoroughly looking forward to,” Sangakkara said. “For me, MCC is the greatest cricket club in the world, with its global reach and continued progress for cricket on and off the pitch. The year 2020 is going to be yet another significant one in cricket, especially at Lord’s, and I am thrilled that I am going to be able to play a part in supporting its future as President of MCC.”Sangakkara is already heavily involved with the club, having delivered a powerful and memorable MCC Spirit of Cricket Cowdrey Lecture in 2011, in which he touched on the power and importance of cricket in healing the wounds of civil war in his native Sri Lanka, and recounted his experience of the Lahore terror attack in 2009.In 2012, he was awarded Honorary Life Membership of the club, and, in the same year, he joined MCC’s World Cricket committee and remains an active member.His connections with MCC go back a long way: he played against the Club in 2002, opening the batting for the touring Sri Lankans in a first-class match at Queen’s Park, Chesterfield. He also played for MCC against an International XI at Lord’s in the 2005 Tsunami Relief Match. Proceeds from that match were used by the Foundation of Goodness to set up the MCC Centre of Excellence at Seenigama in Sri Lanka.Sangakkara appears twice on the Honours Boards at Lord’s, having scored 147 in the drawn Test against England in 2014, and 112 in their ODI victory on the same tour, an achievement that earned him one of the inaugural placings on the new limited-overs boards that was unveiled earlier this year.Sangakkara’s year of office will begin on October 1, 2019 and will conclude on September 30, 2020. His tenure will encompass two England Tests against West Indies and Pakistan, and the launch of The Hundred competition.Wreford said: “As MCC looks to broaden both our horizons and international reputation, I’m delighted that Kumar has accepted the invitation, which he did in January this year, to be the next President of MCC. He is an outstanding individual both on and off the field and will make a huge contribution to the Club. In a World Cup and Ashes year he will also have a significant role to play as President Designate.”

Stalled Sri Lanka must stand up to Australia's might

Big picture

If Sri Lanka’s chances of progressing to the semi-finals of the World Cup are slightly better than the one in a million offered to Lloyd Christmas by Mary Swanson in , it’s not by much. But just as Lloyd replied with a goggle-eyed “So you’re telling me there’s a chance?”, so too must Dimuth Karunaratne’s men push on against an Australian side that, while not firing on anything like all their available cylinders, are comfortably ensconced in the race for the tournament’s knockouts.To progress, Sri Lanka will need to do it the hard way with games against England, South Africa, India and West Indies still to come after Saturday’s outing. For Australia, the equation is more likely to require three wins from their remaining five fixtures.At the same time Australia will be chasing improvement in terms of performance and also balance, having looked so far like a collection of jigsaw puzzle pieces with either one too few to complete the picture, or an abundance of pieces that won’t fit the remaining gaps. Chief among these are Usman Khawaja and Shaun Marsh in the middle order, while the bowling attack, too, has a significant lack of depth once Mitchell Starc and Pat Cummins are dealt with.Sri Lanka, though, have more fundamental issues, needing somehow to find the collective confidence to get into a position to win. Their two completed matches feel an age ago when they were bowled out for 136 by New Zealand and 201 by Afghanistan. However, they have gained two points from washouts, and a victory over Australia would help provide the type of critical momentum required for the sort of unlikely progression that Lloyd Christmas had so desired.

Form guide

(Last five completed matches, most recent first)Australia WLWWW
Sri Lanka WLWLLGlenn Maxwell is bowled•Getty Images

In the spotlight

Against Pakistan, Glenn Maxwell showed off his skills – namely a rare combination of brutality and precision against spin – but also his drawbacks, beaten easily by pace when Sarfaraz Ahmed deigned to challenge him with it. Between the coach Justin Langer and his assistant Ricky Ponting, there appears a determination to ensure Maxwell is given the best opportunity to be a match-winner for Australia, more so after they attracted plenty of derision for holding him back too late in their chase against India. In 2015, Maxwell clattered the Sri Lankans for a brilliant and tournament-shaping century, just at the moment when the Australians were trying to shore up their place in the quarter-finals. The Oval and a less confident Sri Lankan side offer the chance to Maxwell to get his tournament going.Australia’s players have never forgotten Kusal Mendis after his match and arguably series-winning innings against them in a Test match in Kandy in 2016. It was Mendis’ breakout performance, but he did not fare as well against Australia in subsequent innings, not topping 42 in four Test innings down under earlier this year. Nevertheless a couple of ODI half-centuries against them in 2016 and also a wasted start in their warm-up match in Southampton ahead of the World Cup have demonstrated that Mendis has the skill and nerve to build Sri Lanka’s innings from the middle.

Team news

Nuwan Pradeep, who suffered a blow to his bowling hand while training and missed the game against Bangladesh, has returned to training. Whether he is match fit or not will be assessed later. The good news for Sri Lanka is that Lasith Malinga is on his way back to England after attending his mother-in-law’s funeral, and will join the team in time for the game. If Malinga is ready for action, Sri Lanka might not want to risk playing Pradeep.Sri Lanka (possible) 1 Kusal Perera, 2 Dimuth Karunaratne (capt), 3 Lahiru Thirimanne 4, Angelo Mathews, 5 Kusal Mendis, 6 Dhananjaya de Silva, 7 Thisara Perara, 8 Isuru Udana, 9 Jeevan Mendis, 10 Suranga Lakmal, 11 Lasith MalingaAustralia are likely to take the field with four specialist bowlers, with Marcus Stoinis still injured but not yet replaced in the squad by Mitchell Marsh. Aaron Finch suggested that they will stick to the four-pacer plan, and Finch and Smith, who had a decent bowl in the nets on the eve of the game, are expected to help Maxwell out as the fifth bowler, providing ten overs of spin.Australia (possible) 1 Aaron Finch (capt), 2 David Warner, 3 Usman Khawaja, 4 Steven Smith, 5 Shaun Marsh, 6 Glenn Maxwell, 7 Alex Carey (wk), 8 Nathan Coulter-Nile, 9 Pat Cummins, 10 Mitchell Starc, 11 Kane Richardson

Pitch and conditions

The Oval surface has thus far been on the slow, holding side, although this will be a fresh pitch. London’s weather forecast is for periods of clouds amid sunshine, but mercifully not much rain.

Strategy punt

  • Australia have been well served by promoting Pat Cummins to taking the new ball, shared with Mitchell Starc, but his move to the first ten overs of the innings have also left them somewhat vulnerable in the middle overs. Given the new-ball movement on offer to the likes of Coulter-Nile or potentially Jason Behrendorff, there is the option of moving Cummins back to first change to free up more of his valuable ten overs for the middle of an innings. A case of risk versus reward.
  • Sri Lanka lack India’s batting depth, but the lesson learned by all teams following the victory by Virat Kohli’s side over Australia is that if Cummins and Starc are able to be tamed, then there are plenty of runs to be taken in targeted assaults elsewhere. Of course, the cautionary tale is in how skilfully this is done, as evidenced by Finch’s slow left-arm occasionals snaring a wicket via an ugly full toss against Pakistan in Taunton.
  • Sri Lanka may seriously want to consider playing Jeevan Mendis and Jeffrey Vandersay. Since 2018, Australia have lost more wickets to legspin (38) than any other side. While the openers, David Warner and Finch, average over 40 against legspin, Khawaja (21.3) and Smith (27.1) are much lower.

Stats and trivia

  • Last time Australia met Sri Lanka at The Oval they were eliminated from the 2013 Champions Trophy, in what was Mickey Arthur’s last game as coach before he was sacked ahead of the Ashes and replaced by Darren Lehmann.
  • Lasith Malinga needs four wickets to become the fourth man to take 50 World Cup wickets. Three will tie him with Chaminda Vaas on 49 World Cup wickets – the second-highest for Sri Lanka behind Muttiah Muralitharan’s 68.

Quotes

“I think he’s always been a competitive beast. He loves the challenge, he loves the contest. I’ve never seen anything different since he was in the Under-19s, [as] an 18-year-old he used to love it. That’s what the greats do, that’s what the champions do. They love the contest. He loves the contest.”
“We are a team with limited talent. If you compare us with a lot of other sides, we have major limitations. For example, the India side has someone who hits a hundred virtually in every match. In our team, we’ve only had one or two centurions all year.”

Glamorgan turn the tables to scent follow-on opportunity

Nick Selman, with a career best 148 not out, and Marnus Labuschagne (128 not out) racked up big centuries in a second-wicket stand of 226, as Glamorgan made great strides towards rescuing their Specsavers County Championship Division Two match against Gloucestershire at Spytty Park in Newport.Selman’s innings was his first Championship century since he made his previous career-best, 142 not out, against the same opposition at Sophia Gardens in 2017. He shared an opening stand of 133 with Charlie Hemphrey, before Glamorgan reached the close on 359 for 1 in their second innings, a lead of 145.They had resuming on 241 for 8, 222 runs adrift of Gloucestershire’s first-innings 463, with Graham Wagg and Timm van der Gugten effectively becoming Glamorgan’s last pair, as captain Chris Cooke was ruled out of the remainder of the match with an ankle injury, sustained whilst batting on the second day.Wagg, resuming on 45, brought up his half-century from 90 balls, with four fours and one six. But he was dismissed from the next delivery, misfiring an on-drive to short third man off the spin of 20-year old George Drissell, who finished with 4 for 83. Glamorgan were all out for 250, and subsequently followed on with a deficit of 213.Selman and Hemphrey made a cautious but effective start, reaching 80 without loss before lunch against Gloucestershire’s six-man attack.Selman’s half-century came from 91 balls, including six fours as the pair brought up their century stand. Hemphrey reached his half-century soon afterwards, from 107 balls having struck six fours and a six.The visitors’ breakthrough came when Hemphrey was caught behind off left-arm seamer Matt Taylor for 58, but Selman and Labuschagne saw Glamorgan through to 195 for 1 at tea, with Labuschagne reaching his half-century from 70 deliveries just after the interval. Their partnership had gone beyond the century mark as Selman crept into the nineties.Both batsmen nervously awaited their respective milestones, but it was Labuschagne who raised his bat first, having faced 113 balls, striking 13 fours and two sixes, both of which landed on the adjacent football ground. Selman’s innings was more industrious, his century coming four overs later from 208 balls, having struck 10 fours.With just under five over remaining in the day, Selman and Labuschagne had brought up their 200-run partnership as they looked to capitalise on what is becoming a sizeable lead going into the final day.

PCB brings down contracted women players from 17 to 10, raises salaries

The PCB has brought down the number of centrally contracted women cricketers from 17 to 10 in a bid to increase remuneration for those in the new retainers, and also, it says, in recognition of a small national pool of players. A condensed list has left Sana Mir and Nida Dar in the ‘A’ category, while Bismah Maroof and Javeria Khan have been demoted to category ‘B’ and the fourth level, ‘D’, has been removed altogether.The trade-off for the reduction, however, is that the compensations are now higher. All three categories – A, B and C – come with higher pay now: a hike of 20%, 18.5% and 18% respectively. In addition, the length of each contract – hitherto always six months – has been increased to a year, starting from July 1. For the first time in 12 years, daily allowances have also increased – in training camps they have been doubled, making it Rs 2000 (approx. $13), as well as on foreign tours, going from $50 to $100. Travel upgrades for tours have also been introduced so that the team will now be traveling business class. All women cricketers will now also earn a match fee for each game of domestic cricket.

The contracted players

Category A: Nida Dar and Sana Mir
Category B: Aliya Riaz, Bismah Maroof, Javeria Khan, Nashra Sandhu, Sidra Ameen and Sidra Nawaz
Category C: Diana Baig and Nahida Khan

“The announcement of the new central contracts is a great story for the women’s game in Pakistan and indicates the exciting times that lie ahead for cricketers in the country,” Urooj Mumtaz, chief selector for the women’s team, said. “The women cricketers have shown tremendous improvement recently and this is reflected in the central contracts being offered to them, which are reward-and incentive-based.”With more international cricket scheduled over the coming months, this will motivate the girls to continue to perform strongly. Apart from the enhanced central contracts, we have also introduced incentives for the players in domestic cricket, who will now earn Rs 10,000 [approx. $64] per match. This is a small step in making women’s cricket more professional and inspiring young women cricketers to take up the sport with a realistic opportunity to represent the country.”Meanwhile, PCB managing director Wasim Khan stressed that the changes reflected the respect and importance the board have for women cricketers. “The enhanced new central contracts form a key part of the vision to enhance the profile of women’s cricket and our aim to strive towards a fairer system,” he said in a statement. “As a responsible and professional organisation, we remain committed to investing in the growth and development of women’s cricket. We want to strengthen the women’s and girls’ game at all levels so that our national team can continue to go from strength to strength.”That said, it’s worth noting that Pakistan recently won an ODI series against West Indies for the first time under Bismah’s captaincy – in February 2019 in Dubai – and subsequently drew the series in South Africa. Bismah’s form with the bat hasn’t been great in this period, but Javeria has been one of the stars, scoring 212 runs in nine innings in the past year, second only to Sidra Ameen’s 241. Their demotion, therefore, does strike as odd.Pakistan are currently fifth on the ICC Women’s Championship table, and have a top-four finish, which will help them qualify directly for the 2021 Women’s World Cup 2021 in New Zealand, very much in their sights. Their next assignment is against India.

Gary Kirsten, Matthew Mott unveiled as Cardiff Hundred coaches

The ECB has confirmed two more coaching appointments for The Hundred, with Gary Kirsten and Matthew Mott taking charge of the Cardiff-based men’s and women’s teams respectively.Kirsten, the former South Africa opener, coached India to World Cup victory in 2011 and then oversaw South Africa’s rise to the No. 1 Test ranking. He has had extensive experience in the world of franchise T20, working with Bangalore Royal Challengers in the IPL and Hobart Hurricanes in the Big Bash.”To be involved in English and Welsh cricket from a coaching perspective is something that I have never done,” Kirsten said. “It’s great to be given that opportunity and to come to Cardiff.”This is a new format that I am sure will grow and grow. The real win is that it will grab the attention of families and expose the game of cricket to as many environments and communities as possible.”Mott knows Cardiff well from his time in charge of Glamorgan between 2011 and 2013. He has previously coached in the Sheffield Shield, and took charge of the Australia women’s team in 2015, leading them to the title at last year’s T20 World Cup, and overseeing their successful recent defence of the Ashes in the UK.”Cardiff is a special place for me and my family and that was a big part in my decision to return,” Mott said.”I’ve got no doubt The Hundred will be a success for the women’s game. I’ve got a young son who is a Sydney Sixers fan and he doesn’t see gender – he just sees the team. The Hundred will provide that sort of platform in England and Wales and I can’t speak highly enough of what that can mean for the game.”

Fifties for Tom Banton, George Bartlett seal win for Somerset against Warwickshire

In a match of ebbs and flows, the tide was ultimately strongest for Somerset, carrying them home with wickets in hand and the best part of two hours to spare after the promise of the morning ultimately came to nothing for Warwickshire.Chasing 258 to win, Somerset had been 49 for 3 inside the first hour’s play but half-centuries from their two brightest young batsmen, 21-year-old George Bartlett and 20-year-old Tom Banton, enabled them to close out a victory that trims the gap between themselves and leaders Essex to just two points.Yorkshire, famously involved in the three-way tussle with Somerset and Middlesex that went to the last day in 2016, are not yet out of the race and the finale to this season may yet be just as dramatic, not least because Somerset’s last two opponents at Taunton, either side of a visit to Hampshire, are Yorkshire and Essex, the latter in the last week of the season.It has not escaped their captain, Tom Abell, although the task facing him now is to ensure his team adhere to the mantra of taking one match, one session at a time.”That last game is something a lot of people have been talking about and potentially it is a great prospect, but we try not to look too for ahead,” he said.”We have two games before that and each game is massive at this stage of the year. We will take each as it comes and try not to think about anything else, try to focus on what we are doing.”He felt that this match served only to emphasise the point, the win all the more remarkable given that Somerset had to fight hard to avoid being required to follow on in the first innings after Warwickshire had piled up 419.Even after a fine hundred by Steven Davies had given them foundation, it needed gritty partnerships between Dom Bess and each of the Overton brothers to see them past the follow-on point in the face of some testing bowling by the Warwickshire seamers.”Warwickshire are a good side who had us in trouble in this match and that is the nature of this division, which is why you need to be on the money every session of every game you play,” Abell said. “We can’t afford to have sessions like we did on the first day.”But we do talk about that a lot, how we answer it when our backs are to the wall, and it really does give me a lot of satisfaction to see how we were able to come back from that position. It showed great character.”The partnership between Dom Bess and Craig Overton on day two came at a crucial phase of the match. Avoiding the follow-on was massive and then that spell from Jamie Overton yesterday, the kind of spell we know he can deliver that turn games on the end, changed the game.”The session to which he referred was the one in which Overton removed Rob Yates, Michael Burgess and Henry Brookes in the space of 12 deliveries – the catalyst for a Warwickshire collapse from 107 for 4 to 146 all out, requiring Somerset to score what came down to 250 on the final day, with all wickets in hand.On a fourth-day pitch, it was never going to be plain sailing and after losing those three wickets in the morning session, with Davies, James Hildreth and Abell all departed, the early part of the afternoon could have seen the balance tip towards the home side.But Banton and Babar Azam battled through that phase, adding 90 for the fourth wicket, the former displaying maturity and adaptability beyond his years as he has on several occasions this summer. He faced 119 deliveries spread across two and a half hours for his 66, little more than a week after he hit five sixes in a 51-ball Twenty20 hundred.George Garrett, another prodigious talent, bowled impressively again on his Warwickshire debut and the wicket of Babar will join his first-innings dismissal of Bartlett in taking up permanent residence in his memory.Yet Warwickshire’s bowlers as a collective bowled less well than they had at times in the first innings, offering too many opportunities for runs. They remain next to bottom of the table, although it probably matters little given Nottinghamshire’s seemingly irreversible spiral towards relegation.Jeetan Patel found some turn, getting the wicket of Banton via an inside edge onto pad and a super catch by Tim Ambrose diving forward, but could not land the ball on the right spot often enough and Bartlett and Bess were able to turn the chase into a relative stroll by the end.

Nervous Gloucestershire grateful for Ben Charlesworth amid Bristol gloom

Gloucestershire 80 for 6 (Charlesworth 35*) v NorthamptonshireAny morning sense of foreboding around Nevil Road was easy to understand. Never mind the poor weather forecast or the strong form of Northamptonshire. Two unhappy facts seemed much more pertinent: Gloucestershire’s dreadful record at their headquarters and the guarantee that Northants would enjoy the best of conditions by virtue of being the visiting side.But even at their most pessimistic, members cannot have imagined just how precariously their side would be teetering after the opening skirmishes of a critical encounter. Needing nine points for certain promotion to the first division, Gloucestershire must now add 120 more runs for the last four wickets simply to secure the single batting point that could still guarantee their passage with a draw.It may well be that Glamorgan, their rivals, fail to beat Durham, or do so with insufficient points and enable Gloucestershire to progress. Equally, rain may bucket down in the right place for them at the right time, as it did here through Monday afternoon. Gloucestershire, though, have made the task harder than it needs to be through bad batting, misjudgements and a touch of sheer bad luck.None of which will bother Northamptonshire, who are halfway towards the four points they need to complete their own promotion. As expected, they eschewed the toss, bowling first at a ground which gives the seamers less and less help as play develops. And while they took until the tenth over to break through, they then lacerated a jittery top order to take control.Gloucester’s poor run at Bristol precedes the 2016 directive allowing away sides to insert the hosts. But results certainly haven’t improved since. Stretching back to 2014, they have won only four out of 31 games at headquarters, with ten losses and 17 draws. Both home victories this season occurred at Cheltenham; at Bristol they have a draw and two defeats.Yet opportunity springs from despair, and the unbeaten 35 by Ben Charlesworth allowed a little something to cheer. He is 18 (though he looks younger), left-handed and passed a more searching examination than anything in the A-level papers he recently sat. Composed and mature, he seemed to have time for his shots which included a couple of very stylish off drives.St Edward’s School, in Oxford, has a strong cricketing reputation. Alumni include Miles Hammond, batting at No. 3 in this game. Further back there is Teddy Wynyard, an Edwardian Test player and FA Cup winner with Old Carthusians, international tobogganer, WG Grace impersonator, Army major and feared martinet. He would have had something to say about certain dismissals here.Charlesworth, the latest product, is planning a more monochromatic career: despite grades of A-A-B in history, geography and economics he will not be heading to university. But he does anticipate going to Antigua and South Africa with England Under-19s this winter having completed the first year of a three-year contract with Gloucestershire. A county captain in the making, almost certainly.He took a realistic view of proceedings after play was called off at 3.50pm. “On another day, we might be 80 for three,” he said. “Three of the wickets were unfortunate and left us behind the eight-ball. I don’t think the pitch has a lot in it, it is not an 80 for six pitch by any means. There is plenty of batting to come and we can still get past 200, then we are right in the game.”David Sales, the Northamptonshire batting coach, agreed with Charlesworth’s assessment of the surface. “We thought it was a bit flat after the first two overs,” he admitted. “We thought it would be hard work and I guess we picked up a couple of lucky wickets with the run outs. We were delighted to have them six-down by lunch.”It was rather like a drill pushing against wood: slow, grinding work before the tool thrusts forward once through the hole. Gloucestershire saw Brett Hutton out of the attack and were dealing carefully with Ben Sanderson until James Bracey drove a little loosely to give Sanderson his 59th wicket of the season, thus starting a collapse of four wickets for five runs in 23 balls.Hammond edged to second slip where Hutton took a good catch low to his left before the critical run out of Chris Dent, Gloucestershire’s leading scorer this season. Gareth Roderick pushed into the off side and surprised his partner by running. Hesitation may have been slight but it allowed Luke Procter to collect from cover, set a steady base and throw down the stumps: an exemplary piece of fielding.Worse followed when Roderick was lbw next over despite Sanderson, the bowler, being slightly late with his appeal. And if Dent was partly culpable for his demise then George Hankins, who was playing capably, suffered terrible fortune when Doug Bracewell deflected a good return drive by Charlesworth on to the stumps at the bowler’s end for the second run-out.Charlesworth managed to put the dismissal behind him, but his job became harder again when Ryan Higgins fed square leg with an ill-advised pull off Bracewell. The sunshine of the first session gave way to gloomier skies during lunch and only two balls were possible on the resumption. Plenty of time for Gloucester to stew as Glamorgan made progress of their own in the north-east.

Vinod Rai trying to make associations 'adopt a servient attitude' – N Srinivasan

Former BCCI president N Srinivasan has challenged Committee of Administrators’ chairman Vinod Rai’s assertion that the Tamil Nadu Cricket Association (TNCA) stands to be disqualified from attending the BCCI elections, scheduled for October 23, if its constitution is not amended in line with that of the board.Srinivasan, also a former ICC chairman but not an official in either the TNCA or the BCCI anymore, argued that the CoA was attempting to force state associations to comply with the BCCI constitution as a “pressure ploy”, but that would only mean members losing their legal rights.”I, for one, am not able to connect the eligibility to vote as a Full Member in the AGM and amendments to the members’ constitution unless the BCCI elections are being held as a pressure ploy to get the members to give up their legal rights and adopt a servient attitude,” Srinivasan was quoted as saying by Sportstar on Sunday. “I’m reminded of a quote by Robert A. Heinlein: ‘There is no worse tyranny than to force a man to pay for what he does not want merely because you think it would be good for him’.”Srinivasan, who was TNCA president for more than a decade, had to step down after the Supreme Court approved the RM Lodha Committee recommendations on structural reforms. However, last week, Rupa Gurunath, Srinivasan’s daughter, became the first-ever woman to head an Indian state cricket association when she was unanimously elected as the new TNCA president.Rupa also happens to be the wife of Gurunath Meiyappan, a former official at Chennai Super Kings – owned by Srinivasan’s India Cements – who was banned for life by the BCCI after it was established that he had breached the anti-corruption code.On the same day the new TNCA administration took charge, the CoA told the TNCA that its constitution was not compliant with the BCCI’s, with several eligibility criteria flouted. This was followed by an email by BCCI electoral officer N Gopalaswami sending out an email to all state associations stating that non-compliant members would not be allowed to attend the BCCI elections and the annual general meeting, and disqualified state representatives would not be able to participate in the board’s polls. Rai reiterated the same.According to Srinivasan, the final say on the matter can only be taken by the court, which had passed an order on September 20 allowing TNCA to conduct its polls, but said the results would be held in abeyance until its final order.Srinivasan also said that P Narsimha, the amicus curiae who had been asked by the court to act as a mediator to facilitate the states to comply with its original order, had been “receptive” to the TNCA argument. “I’m told that the learned amicus curiae was receptive to many of the requests of the TNCA and has filed an interim report in court which is yet to be seen by the Supreme Court,” Srinivasan said. “Therefore, abide by the directives of the CoA, or forfeit your right to vote in the AGM is not a stand which Mr Vinod Rai can take. He nor the CoA can substitute their wisdom for that of the Supreme Court.”Srinivasan said the court was yet to hear the TNCA case as well as the pleas of other states at length, so the CoA could not pass any diktat right away. “The CoA was told elections would go on and all matters would be decided later, including the outcome of the elections,” Srinivasan said. “Earlier, the TNCA had made clear its stand on three basic issues: having at least two vice-presidents, one representing the 150 city club members and another from the 30 district associations, opposition to the applicability of eligibility criteria for committee members and the stipulation that for any amendment in future, the Supreme Court’s approval was necessary.”

Langer's bid to turn Australia into a T20 fortress

In a lot of ways, T20 appeared to be the best developed element of Justin Langer’s coaching repertoire when he replaced Darren Lehmann some 18 months ago.In Western Australia, he had played a large role in making the Perth Scorchers the most feared T20 team in the BBL, turning the WACA Ground “furnace” into a fortress, mastering all the defensive skills of the game, using game analytics effectively and also making shrewd use of the parallel Scorchers and Western Australia programs to keep his playing list strong.Yet for all the dramas surrounding Australia’s Test team in the wake of Newlands and then the ODI team’s underperformance since winning the 2015 World Cup, it is international T20 that has long looked to be a blindspot. They have never won the T20 World Cup, nor been much more than a middling team in the scattered bilateral series.So when Langer looks to the method for success in the format where Australia will next have an ICC global event, in October and November next year, he will be leaning heavily on his experiences with the Scorchers, allied to the trove of lessons he has taken on board at international level. To attempt to win a World Cup at home carries great expectations, but also more than a few in-built advantages for the hosts.”As we saw with the 50-over World Cup there’s obviously some home ground advantage because we’re used to the conditions, we’re used to the dimensions of the grounds, we’ll have a good mix of players who play Big Bash at all the different venues,” Langer told ESPNcricinfo. “But to win the World Cup it’s like winning an AFL Grand Final, everything’s got to go right at the time.”What we can look after at the moment is how we lead up to it, guys getting their job in the team. We’ve shown by selecting this team, very role specific, we want them in the short term, these six games coming up, but over the next year and couple of years to become the best in the world at what their role is, whether it’s bowling at the death or finishing in the middle of the innings. The non-negotiables are still our fielding, that’s got to be sharp.”But if our guys can get really great at their roles, my experience of Big Bash and T20 cricket, is if you’ve got specialists who do their roles really well, you’ll win more games than you lose.”Getting the best out of Steven SmithSteven Smith cracks one to the off side•BCCI

Anyone who watched the Ashes for more than an hour or two would have been left with the conclusion that the game has seldom seen a genius like Smith, but a few weeks later and his selection in the T20 squad ahead of the likes of Chris Lynn raised a few eyebrows. In truth, Smith has been a fair proxy for Australia’s fortunes in the format, occasionally dominating, but more often looking distracted between Test or ODI assignments.ALSO READ: Chris Lynn ‘crystal clear’ on his T20I position – Justin LangerIn seeking to get the best out of Smith, Langer believes that continuity in the format will allow him to focus his brilliant knack for problem solving with the bat, while at the same time becoming more of an area of personal hunger due to the trophy missing from Australia’s cabinet. Equally, Langer’s belief in a more unified white-ball squad between 50 and 20-over cricket – once again after the fashion of the Scorchers – will help Smith find the sense of normality that has always aided his batting.”The two ways I’ve described Steve Smith are his hunger for the game and that’s his batting in general and runs, but also his ability to solve problems,” Langer said. “T20 is no different, you’ve got to solve a lot of puzzles and he’s got this incredibly intuitive mind where he wants to solve the problem. I’m really confident he’ll be a great success there. The only thing we have to manage with him and Dave Warner and a couple of the quicks is the fact they are in all three forms of the game and that can be a challenge in itself.”My view is that in white-ball cricket, the closer we can get the two squads together the better, because you can use skills for both 50-over and T20 cricket if that makes sense. That’s more how I look at it than one-day cricket taking a backward step. We’ll probably use as many experiences in 50-over cricket to help us become better in T20 cricket and vice versa.”Moneyball methodsPerhaps the most significant contract signed before the start of the summer was not those for any of Langer’s assistant coaches or even a new selector to join him and Trevor Hohns on the national panel, but instead a new deal with the cricket data analytics company CricViz for their extensive suite of information on Australia and their opponents.CricViz is no stranger to Australian cricket, having worked closely with broadcasters and also teams such as the Melbourne Renegades (led by captain Aaron Finch and the coach Andrew McDonald), but the new partnership is a first for the national team. Over the years, CA has accessed intelligence from the likes of Cricket21 in addition to the work of the team analyst Dene Hills and his colleagues.Langer, who relied heavily on the insights of the Scorchers’ performance analyst Dean Plunkett, described CricViz and its work with Hills and company as “the Rolls Royce version” of what he had in Perth. “The data these days is incredible,” he said. “Some of the stuff they give to us is unbelievable. What the trick is though, is to siphon it down and get the little gold nuggets that you work out for selection and that you can sell to the players, which makes sense to them, ‘okay if you do this well, then you win a lot of games’.”Justin Langer in the Perth Scorchers dugout•Getty Images

Defensive skills of an attacking gameSomething that Australia pioneered in the 1980s was an identification of the fact that limited-overs cricket, while commercially devised to showcase more aggressive skills to a new audience, was actually best played through rigid adherence to many of the game’s less glamorous fundamentals. Tight fielding, alert running between the wickets and taking singles, and keeping wickets in hand were all hallmarks of the former coach Bob Simpson and the unfancied but ultimately victorious 1987 World Cup team.Similarly, Langer’s Scorchers were rigorous Roundheads as opposed to the Cavaliers back east, fighting out every game and often strangling the life out of opponents before they got room to free their arms and swing for the fences. For Langer the T20 game is a pressure contest every single ball, so anything that can enhance the sense of pressure or even claustrophobia on an opponent is, as he would put it, “like gold”.”That’s just a good blueprint for playing great T20 cricket,” he said. “I’ve said all along one of my important KPIs is how we throw, because it’s indicative of our attitude and our athleticism. Our fielding and the defensive game – back then we had a very good bowling attack. We had Alfonso Thomas, we had Yasir Arafat who could bowl at the death particularly, and I think that helped guys like AJ Tye and Nathan Coulter-Nile to learn. And we were really good up front as well at the WACA.”We had swing bowlers like Jason Behrendorff, we also recruited David Willey, we had Mitchell Johnson. So the blueprint’s there, the next plan is to execute it really well. The running between wickets back then was something we prided ourselves on, it also puts the opposition under huge pressure when you’re not only hitting boundaries but running hard between wickets.”We also know that the rotation of strike is an incredibly powerful statistic in T20 cricket, and in fielding you’re under the pump because you can’t afford to make mistakes.”Leadership and learningThe humble beginnings of the Australian team last year after the Newlands scandal meant that new ways of playing, winning and conducting business all got the chance to grow without too much pushback about “this being the way it’s always been done”, and the T20 team have a similar opportunity. Under Finch, who grew in global respect as leader of the World Cup team having already fashioned a strong reputation as a leader with the Renegades, the Australian team should not be overly beset by ego or an unwillingness to learn.At the same time, the fact that Australia were able to come through the trials of a long England tour that took in a World Cup and the Ashes, registering more than creditable results in each, has imbued Langer with quiet confidence that, given a year’s run at it, they can build a winning T20 combination first on home soil and then again in India at the next T20 World Cup in 2021.”There’s still growth for the group, and it’s the same with our captains, whether it’s Finchy or Tim Paine they’re doing a tremendous job for us and there’s still growth in both of them,” Langer said. “That’s exciting for us, it’s exciting for them, that’s what gets us out of bed every day, doesn’t it.”But one of the things I love about the role is you’ve got to keep learning and keep getting better. The last 18 months I’m learning so much and that’s what’s exciting. Despite it being tiring and despite it being different pressures, I’m learning so much from this gig and in terms of leadership I’m loving that part of it.”

Ollie Pope keen to prove he's a keeper

Ollie Pope is keen to prove himself as a world-class wicketkeeper after he was parachuted into the role as for the second Test against New Zealand as cover for the injured Jos Buttler.Pope, who went into the match in Hamilton having kept in just five first-class matches previously, scarcely put a foot wrong for the entire opening day, producing some athletic takes along the way despite being slotted into the role in the absence of a specialist back-up keeper and experiencing limited exposure at Surrey, where the No. 1 keeper is Ben Foakes.”I’ve seen a lot of talk on social media the last few days,” Pope told the BBC. “I’m a keeper, I’ve kept since I was eight years old.”Since I’ve become a professional it’s obviously just been limited, the amount I’ve done, with Foakesy being at Surrey, but it’s something I’ve had on my radar since the moment I got told I was coming on this tour. So if the opportunity were to come around I just made sure that I was ready and hopefully that shows in my performance.”In terms of keeping wicket for England as well as batting – the latter being the reason he was included on the tour of New Zealand – Pope said he would take any opportunities that arose.”At the moment my focus in on my batting going forward but at the same time at Surrey we’ve got Foakesy so the amount of game time I get I don’t know,” he said. “I’m going to keep going as much as I can, if I’m not getting the game time hopefully the training will look after itself and then if I do get a go in the games whenever it does happen hopefully I can do a good job.”Pope, playing just his fourth Test, was confident in offering his opinion on whether to use DRS and said he would continue to do so as he had “the best seat in the house for it”. Having learned he would stand in the night before match eve after Buttler suffered back spasms in the gym, Pope also revealed he had pulled up well after a rain-interrupted first day on which play was halted shortly after the tea break.”It was a different role, I feel pretty good this morning,” Pope said. “The body feels good. A bit of a surprise but I always had it on my radar that something like this could happen so yeah, I was prepared for it.”I like keeping, I still see myself as a keeper. Obviously I haven’t done a massive amount … but it’s still something in my game I want to keep going so I was excited and ready to go.”Pope is also keen to improve on his “frustrating” first-Test performance with the bat after making a 29 and 6.”I’m feeling really good in the nets,” he said. “I played well in the warm-up games so to get out in the fashion I did in that game was probably the most frustrating thing for me.”But at the same time there’s some good lessons for me as well and watching how these guys go about their stuff, how they bounce back, it’s a good thing for me going forward so hopefully I can take those lessons into this game and into the future.”