Stuart Broad nominated for BBC Sports Personality of the Year 2020

Stuart Broad is in the running for the prestigious BBC Sports Personality of the Year award, after claiming his 500th Test wicket during an eye-catching series of displays in England’s Test series against West Indies and Pakistan this summer.Broad, 34, was announced as a nominee on BBC Radio One Breakfast by the DJ and cricket fan, Greg James, and Joe “The Body” Wicks, and took to social media shortly afterwards to express his delight at “such a huge honour”.In the course of England’s bio-secure summer, Broad reaffirmed his status as England’s attack leader, alongside his long-term new-ball partner James Anderson, with 29 wickets at 13.41, including a ten-wicket haul in the decisive third-Test victory over West Indies at Emirates Old Trafford.However, he had started the summer out of favour despite an impressive showing in England’s winter series win in South Africa, and caused a stir midway through the first Test at the Ageas Bowl, when he took to Sky Sports to express his “frustration and anger” at being omitted from the line-up. But he soon backed up his words with deeds, marking his comeback with six vital wickets to help square the series in the second Test, then bettered that with his Player-of-the-Match display one game later – a match that also featured his 500th wicket, that of Kraigg Brathwaite on the final morning of the game, and a remarkable 33-ball fifty from No.10, the third-fastest by an England player.By the end of the summer Broad was seventh on the all-time list of Test wicket-takers, with 514 at 27.65 in 143 Tests.Although Broad is an outsider for the SPOTY crown, which was claimed by his team-mate Ben Stokes last December following his stellar displays in both England’s World Cup victory and the subsequent Ashes, it is the fourth year running that a cricketer has been nominated, following nominations for Anderson in 2018, and Anya Shrubsole in 2017.The first sportsman to be announced for this year’s award was the Formula 1 racing driver, Lewis Hamilton, who claimed a record-equalling seventh world title earlier this year.

Vengsarkar believes BCCI president Sourav Ganguly is 'undermining' selectors by speaking on their behalf

Former India captain Dilip Vengsarkar believes BCCI president Sourav Ganguly is “undermining the credentials” of both the national selectors as well as the IPL chairman Brijesh Patel “by sticking his neck out” and speaking on their behalf.Vengsarkar, who was chairman of national selectors between 2006 and 2008, said he was beginning to lose faith in Ganguly as president. “When the IPL dates and venues were being discussed and organised, he was speaking on behalf of the IPL chairman. Sadly, time and again he’s sticking his neck out on behalf of those who are capable of taking decisions and explaining them on their own. Is he undermining their credentials? Or does he feel he knows more than the others?”He said he wondered why Ganguly – who was elected as BCCI president in October 2019 – was speaking on team selections and player-fitness issues, which ideally should be addressed by the national selectors. Former India left-arm spinner Sunil Joshi is the current selection committee head and chaired his first meeting in October while picking squads for the Australia tour. Joshi has not spoken on the selections so far.”It’s quite astonishing to see Ganguly wearing so many hats as he speaks on behalf of the supposedly appointed chairman of selectors, Sunil Joshi, as to why ‘X’ was dropped and ‘Y’ was not selected and why ‘Z’ was not considered, besides how somebody is still not fit,” Vengsarkar told the on Monday.Vengsarkar has also questioned the “discrepancy” in the medical reports concerning senior India batsman Rohit Sharma. Sharma was not named in any of the three squads for the Australia tour due to a hamstring injury, but a BCCI announcement on Monday said he would rested for the limited-overs leg of the tour and included in the Test squad. He is currently leading the Mumbai Indians in the IPL.Last week, Ganguly had told PTI that Sharma had suffered a hamstring tear that could get “ruptured again” if he played too soon. As a precaution, the BCCI did not want to name him for the Australia tour. Ganguly also said then that that Sharma would travel to Australia if he “recovers”.Vengsarkar spoke on the issue of Sharma playing in the IPL with an injury while also not being selected for the Australia tour on those grounds. “Rohit [is] surprisingly dropped from the Indian team for the tour because the BCCI physio has ruled him out due to a hamstring injury. Now, the question is: How did the Mumbai Indians physio declare Rohit fit to play in the IPL? Why is there a discrepancy in the reports of two physios?”I really don’t know who calls the shots while selecting the squad. Is it the BCCI officials or the selectors?”

Faf du Plessis 199 hands South Africa iron-grip on Test against depleted Sri Lanka

Day three was the day in which South Africa claimed an iron-grip on the Test.This was partly through Faf du Plessis’ sparkling 199, and the big partnerships he racked up alongside the lower middle order. But also, due to the injuries to Sri Lanka’s attack, which now have decimated their main bowling resources, in addition to having depleted their batting.With the hosts having established a 225-run first-innings lead, Sri Lanka are attempting to claw their way back, finishing 160 runs in the red, with only eight wickets in hand.They don’t have the services of their most fluent batsman in the first innings – Dhananjaya de Silva – and if they manage to make South Africa bat again, they are also now missing three bowlers. Kasun Rajitha, it is perhaps safe to say, is out of the match. Lahiru Kumara, who aborted his 22nd over and went off the field in the morning, seemingly with a groin complaint, may not bowl again in the game either. de Silva’s offspin is also unavailable.Although the injuries can be at least partially be attributed to Sri Lanka’s less-than-ideal lead-up to the Test series – a result of the pandemic, mainly – South Africa batted long in addition to scoring their runs quickly, and ensured the physical toll on Sri Lanka’s attack was substantial.du Plessis began the day on 55 and worked himself gradually back into the groove, collecting singles and twos while the old ball was in operation, before climbing into a more aggressive mode against the second new ball. He also fought through a sustained bouncer-barrage from Kumara in the morning session, during which he reached his 10th century, and will feel he earned the right to face the much worse bowling that came his way in the afternoon and evening sessions.Related

  • 'I've batted better' – Faf du Plessis on 199 against injury-hit Sri Lanka

Once he had warmed up for the day, du Plessis was severe on anything overpitched, driving confidently through the offside, though he also played the pull shot to good effect. At no stage did he back away from a challenge. When Kumara was bouncing him, he continued to play the ball, occasionally getting lucky with edges that fell into space, but largely playing controlled and productive strokes.He got to his hundred off 151 balls, and went at almost a run-a-ball to his 150, which he reached off the 205th delivery he faced.In the morning he had mostly been partnered by Temba Bavuma, who hit 71 and had been part of a 179-run fifth-wicket stand, that wrested decisive control of the match.Bavuma’s dismissal though, was strange. He played at a wide-ish Dasun Shanaka ball and began walking almost as soon as the ball hit the wicketkeeper’s gloves. Replays and snicko strongly suggested he had not edged that ball.Later, du Plessis also put on 77 with Wiaan Mulder, who made 36, and then the partnership that really winded Sri Lanka (if there was any wind to be taken following all those injuries) – a 134-run stand with Keshav Maharaj, who made his own career-best score of 73.The afternoon session was truly calamitous for Sri Lanka, who also lost legspinner Wanindu Hasaranga for part of it, after Hasaranga dived on to the ball while attempting a boundary save, and sustained what seemed to be a minor injury to his left leg.Through this period, captain Dimuth Karunaratne had to resort to getting seven overs out of Kusal Mendis who was a wicketkeeper in his younger years and bowls… lets call it legspin. Karunaratne also bowled 6.5 overs of trenchantly innocuous seam-up himself.du Plessis was playing by far the most productive innings of his Test career (his previous best was 137), and was facing the kind of bowling that might have struggled to trouble a second-division club batsman hungover from the night before.du Plessis seemed almost certain to reach a double century – the first for South Africa since 2016 – but somehow managed to blow the chance.Lungi Ngidi struck twice late in the day•Associated Press

He moved largely unperturbed through the 190s, as Maharaj struck boundaries at the other end. And then, with one to get, he skipped down the track to Hasaranga (a ploy he hadn’t used much), and tried to launch him down the ground. He didn’t get to the pitch of the ball though. The catch went to mid-on, and du Plessis was left to trudge off the field, to a dressing room that seemed devastated on his behalf. That Sri Lanka’s players congratulated him on his way off would have seemed like mild consolation.Sri Lanka’s two remaining frontline bowlers wrapped up the tail quickly enough – Hasaranga taking 4 for 171 and Vishwa Fernando claiming 3 for 129, but the damage had already been done.For Sri Lanka, the day worsened, not least because there could be yet another injury (yes, you’re reading that right, another injury).Karunaratne was bowled for six by a Lungi Ngidi ball that kept deviously low, before Kusal Mendis edged Ngidi to slip to be out for zero. Any mild comfort that Sri Lanka gained from Kusal Perera and Dinesh Chandimal batting confidently until the close was sapped when Chandimal appeared to pull up lame while completing a single off the last ball of the day.Will he be able to bat on Tuesday? Who knows. The way this is going, someone is also going to bust a hamstring by sitting down too fast on the team bus in the morning.

Moeen Ali faces extended quarantine, set to miss second Sri Lanka Test

Moeen Ali looks set to be ruled out of both of England’s Tests in Sri Lanka after his period in quarantine was extended.Moeen, who tested positive for Covid-19 shortly after arrival in the country, has been in isolation since January 3. While he had hoped to be released on Wednesday, after ten days, authorities in Sri Lanka have insisted – with the full support and understanding of the England team management – he remain isolated for a while longer. As a result, he is now hoping to be released on Friday or Saturday.While that, in theory, might allow him time to recover before the second Test, starting on January 22, the England management have intimated they will take a cautious attitude towards his return. Moeen experienced mild symptoms of the virus shortly after he was diagnosed and, as a result, will need time to rebuild his fitness. The first Test against India, which is scheduled to start on February 5, is a more realistic goal.The news, though not entirely unexpected, is a blow to Moeen and England. He was England’s equal highest wicket-taker with Jack Leach on their last tour to Sri Lanka in 2018 and looked certain to play in this series. With England also missing Ben Stokes and, in all probability, Chris Woakes, they are without several of the all-rounders who might have helped them balance their side. Woakes was also obliged to spend a week in quarantine after travelling from Birmingham to Heathrow with Moeen in the same vehicle.Related

  • England lean towards three-seamer, two-spinner strategy for first Sri Lanka Test

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  • Dom Bess 'can't wait' to renew spin partnership with Jack Leach

  • England mull third spin option with Moeen ruled out of first Test

Equally, the series appeared to offer a fresh start for Moeen in this format. He hasn’t played a Test since the first match of the 2019 Ashes.England have yet to make a decision whether to formally add one of the standby players to the squad. They have three spinners among their reserve players – Matt Parkinson, Mason Crane and Amar Virdi – with Crane the only one of them to have previously played Test cricket. All three have been fully involved in training, though Virdi did not bowl in the warm-up match, and are considered available for selection.”Poor Mo, he’s had it a little bit tough,” Woakes said from Galle on Tuesday. “He had some symptoms, which I think he’s over now, which is good. But you wouldn’t wish this illness on anyone, so thankfully he’s recovered pretty well.”It’s definitely been a tough week or so. A lot of the guys have been touching in with him. I was in contact with him all last week, particularly whilst I was in isolation, and I know the guys are playing a lot of PlayStation with him and talking to him through headsets.”You try to keep busy as much as you can [in isolation], but it’s tricky, isn’t it? I’ve certainly not gone through that before. I know the docs are checking in with him very frequently, a good few times a day to make sure he’s okay, and we also have a psychologist here who is in touch with the players.”Despite sharing a vehicle with Moeen on the way to the airport, Woakes has not tested positive for the virus for which he credits the social distancing protocols.”It was like a minibus,” he said. “It was a relatively smart van to get all our kit in and then we were sharing the back of the van. It wasn’t a tiny vehicle but by no means was it a lorry size.”We took all the precautions: we wore masks; kept our distance as much as we could, and obviously tried not to touch anything. But you can only be so safe, I suppose. It was obviously the right thing to do to isolate once I arrived here and figured out that Moeen was positive.”

England reprimand Rory Burns for late-night tweet to Alex Hartley

England’s team management in India have given Rory Burns a reprimand for a late-night tweet following their defeat in the third Test in Ahmedabad.Alex Hartley, the left-arm spinner who played 32 times for England Women between 2016 and 2019, tweeted soon after the men’s team’s defeat: “Nice of the England boys to get this test match finished just before England Women play tonight” with four clapping emojis, and encouraged her followers to watch their second ODI against New Zealand on BT Sport, for whom she is working as a pundit.Related

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Burns had not tweeted for six months but took objection with Hartley’s post, writing: “Very disappointing attitude considering all the ‘boys’ do to support the Women’s game.” His tweet was published shortly before 1am local time, and was liked by several members of the Test squad including James Anderson and Ben Stokes before its deletion around 45 minutes later.Hartley replied to Burns, saying: “Think it’s been taken the wrong way/out of context. No offence was meant. We are all test match fans.”

Chris Silverwood, England’s head coach, said on Friday: “It’s not for me to judge on that one. That will be dealt with back in England, obviously. For me, I don’t worry about things like that. I’ve got more on my plate this end to worry about.”That’s what I’ll be encouraging the boys to do as well: keep their head in what’s happening here.” An ECB spokesperson subsequently confirmed to ESPNcricinfo: “Team management here in India have spoken with Rory.”Burns was dropped for England’s defeat in Ahmedabad, following scores of 33, 0, 0 and 25 in the first two Tests of the series, with Zak Crawley replacing him at the top of the order. He is on a red-ball central contract with the ECB.Hartley is not on a central contract and has not played for England since March 2019. She won a domestic contract with Thunder as part of the new regional structure at the end of last year, and the reported that she has been spoken to by Clare Connor, the ECB’s director of women’s cricket. Hartley is due to appear on BT Sport as a summariser in their coverage of Sunday’s third ODI between England and New Zealand, after Katie George replaced her for the second ODI as scheduled.Nat Sciver, the England allrounder, said: “I didn’t actually see the tweet but I did hear about it from some of the girls today. Obviously Alex has her opinions and that’s fair enough but maybe it wasn’t the best timing. If we had lost a Test match in two days, I would be pretty mad. Maybe not the best timing, but that’s Twitter for you.”

'The most outrageous hour I've seen in Test cricket' – Stuart Broad

Brendon McCullum urged England to “attack the danger” during their run chase in Nottingham, with the result being what Stuart Broad called “the most outrageous hour I’ve seen in Test cricket”.Broad was padded up and watching on from the dressing room at Trent Bridge as Jonny Bairstow blew the doors off England’s chase of 299, hitting 93 off 44 balls after tea on the final day. Comparing the game to Headingley 2019, when Ben Stokes guided England to victory after a 76-run partnership for the final wicket, Broad said the win over New Zealand had been just as astounding.”Baz’s team talk was very much ‘let’s attack the danger, let’s run towards the danger’ and every part of your mind is going for this win,” he said. “Whoever is to come, the changing room has full belief that you can do your job to get the win. So it was never really a case of, if we lose one we might shut up shop. It was always we’re going to win. And if it doesn’t work, don’t worry about it, but we’re going to go for the win.”But I didn’t quite expect to see what I saw from Jonny. It was the most outrageous hour I’ve seen in Test cricket from a partnership. Obviously Headingley had incredible nerves. I felt sick watching that tight thing with Leach and Stokesy. But that was just exhilarating, astonishing. Trent Bridge giving out free tickets, I’m sure there were people in this ground who have never watched Test cricket before. How inspiring is that?”At Headingley, you could cut the atmosphere with a knife and it felt very nerve-wracking, you were sick with seeing what’s coming. Whereas that was just about shouting every time a boundary happened. I saw a stat that showed in nine overs they scored 102 after tea. It wasn’t as if Baz said ‘go and whack it, go and slog it’. It was just play with the mindset that we’re going to chase these runs down. And Jonny just got hold of a few pull shots that got him going. That striking was… only a handful of players in the world can do that. Johnny is obviously in that group.”Related

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  • Michael Bracewell tests positive for Covid, faces five-day isolation period

  • Ben Stokes' England hurl themselves into riotous embrace of Baz-ball

Broad said that “there’s no doubt Baz has had an impact already”, with various members of the team having spoken already about the mantra of relentless positivity that has accompanied McCullum’s arrival as Test coach.”He was absolutely buzzing that we got 380 on day three,” Broad said. “It didn’t matter how many wickets, it was the run rate. How good is that? 380 in a day, well batted lads. It’s not just praising guys who get a hundred, it’s tiny little things, bits of fielding, momentum changes in the game. He will bring attention to that.”He looks like a guy who has a cricket brain that is working all the time. He is thinking how we can change the game. That doesn’t mean he’s saying ‘what about this or that’ every minute. I feel like he’s got an energy of not letting the game sit, where can we manoeuvre it to.”At tea today, the way he spoke two-three minutes before the bell, he didn’t say I’d prefer to lose than draw, but it was that mindset – it was going for a win at all costs. I want to win, find your way to do that. You have my full backing, Stokes’ full backing to go get the win.”The effect has been clear on both batting and bowling. England scored at a rate of 4.7 runs per over during the Trent Bridge Test, and continued to set attacking fields as New Zealand made 553 in their first innings. Broad struggled somewhat, with figures of 2 for 107, but saw chances go down off Henry Nicholls and Tom Blundell.”I didn’t bowl that well in the first innings, but it felt like any mistake I made on length and line it went for four,” he said. “I felt like it got even quicker as the game went on. Could we have bowled dry? Potentially, but that is a different day if we snaffle a couple of catches. [Daryl] Mitchell went down, Blundell, Nicholls. The mindset is, how do we get more fielders in wicket-taking positions rather than protection, which gives us a better chance of bowling them out?”In the second innings, Broad helped bring about crucial breakthroughs. On the fourth evening, Blundell was held by Stokes in a catching position at backward square leg to end another potentially pivotal fifth-wicket stand; then on day five, with New Zealand edging further in front, Broad’s short ball again did the trick as a change to the field tempted Matt Henry into hooking and opened up the game.”How it’s affected me is that rather than having the bloke 20 yards further back to stop the four, it’s if he strikes it well and he’s 20 yards in, he could catch it,” Broad said. “It’s a tiny little mindset change, but it’s about getting wickets, not stopping boundaries.”My role as a bowler [on day four] was how could we take 10 wickets here and get us over the line. Although it wasn’t the classical seven – it’s not like we guided them out with skill and pressure, we got seven wickets through the momentum of the game really. And once we got a sniff… I came this morning feeling very relaxed. I felt like we were going to win the game.”

Pieter Seelaar admits to 'frustrations' as key Netherlands players put county over country

Pieter Seelaar, the Netherlands’ captain, says he has learned to live with the absence of leading Dutch players from his squad, with at least three first-choice players due to play in the T20 Blast rather than featuring in Friday’s marquee first ODI against England in Amstelveen.Colin Ackermann, Fred Klaassen and Roelof van der Merwe will all play for their respective counties on Friday night, while Paul van Meekeren would likely have done so but for an ankle injury. Timm van der Gugten and Brandon Glover, both members of the Netherlands squad for last year’s T20 World Cup, are not involved in the England series either.In theory, the KNCB (the Dutch board) can force counties to release players under the ICC’s “mandatory release” protocols but, in practice, players are unwilling to jeopardise their county contracts by missing large parts of the English domestic season. Klaassen, who will fly to Amsterdam on Wednesday morning before the third ODI after playing in the Blast for Kent on Tuesday night, described the situation as a “juggling act”.”It’s a question I’ve had to answer now on a number of occasions,” Seelaar said on Thursday. “It is frustrating, but you kind of get to live with it. We’ve played four [full] series in the Super League and you always want to have the best players available at all times which is, unfortunately, not true.”But it also created opportunities for other guys and I think we showed in the West Indies series that we can still be competitive without having – arguably – our best side out. That comes with heart from the guys who want to show how good they are and what they can do at this level. It’s frustrating, but it’s something we deal with.”It’s a tough one. We play cricket on a semi-pro basis, rather than a professional basis, whereas the guys who play in England, it’s their livelihood. Is there something different that can be done about it? Well, if you take away all the politics, then everyone should be playing at the highest level possible.”If you’re playing against England, you can’t get any higher than that. It would have been nice to have them but that’s not how it works nowadays. If something could be changed that would be nice, but I guess it’s very tough.”Seelaar described the prospect of playing against the defending world champions as “incredibly exciting” and said that the Netherlands would take heart from the fact that Scotland, a full associate nation, beat England in 2018 at the Grange – particularly because that game was played on an excellent batting pitch.”It was a game on true merit,” he said. “It wasn’t one of those dodgy wickets. It shows where Associate cricket as a whole has come to. When I started playing in 2005, it was a very different level, As Associates, we used to be happy to be on the park against these teams whereas now we look to compete.Related

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“If I said we were looking to win this series 3-0, I would be stupid, but in saying that, we’re looking to compete in these three games. That game has shown not only us, but every aspiring cricket country that it is possible, but everything needs to go your way.”Seelaar is the only survivor from the Dutch team that beat England in the opening game of the 2009 World T20 at Lord’s and one of three men – along with Tom Cooper and Logan van Beek – involved for them this week who played in the 2014 triumph in Chattogram, the teams’ most recent meeting in any format.Eoin Morgan, his counterpart, and Adil Rashid both made their England T20I debuts in the 2009 game, and Seelaar said that a third win at some point in this series would be a “fantastic” achievement. “It might be a scar for England but for us, it’s just joyful memories,” he said.

Sinking Sunrisers look for lift against rising Super Kings in Delhi

Big picture

The IPL caravan moves to Delhi, one of the worst-hit regions in the throes of a resurgent Covid-19 wave raging through India. The teams kicking off the eight-match leg in the city – the Chennai Super Kings and the Sunrisers Hyderabad – have set up camp for four games apiece and, like the other six sides, will be subject to tighter biosecurity restrictions, the onus, as per the BCCI, as much on winning as on catering to “something much more important…humanity.”Conditions at the Arun Jaitley Stadium have historically favoured both the Super Kings and the Sunrisers, each winning six out of their eight outings at the venue. On recent evidence, though, the Super Kings, on a four-match winning run, hold the edge as the Sunrisers suffered their fourth defeat in five games in a one-over shootout against the Delhi Capitals two nights ago.Pivotal to their turnaround since a seven-wicket loss in their season opener, vital contributions have come in fairly evenly from across disciplines in the Super Kings set-up. Ravindra Jadeja’s all-round tour de force at the Wankhede on Sunday that snapped the Royal Challengers Bangalore’s undefeated streak lent them a derring-do reminiscent of their title-winning campaigns of old.Related

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To stall a team high on confidence and revive their own season, the Sunrisers will need more than just their in-form overseas personnel in Jonny Bairstow, Kane Williamson and Rashid Khan to muster a fight. That their Indian bowling personnel have blown hot and cold remains as much a concern as their captain David Warner’s want of form and fluency at the top.

Team news

Manish Pandey could slot back into the line-up as the Sunrisers’ middle-order troubles continue, after Warner described his omission in the fixture against the Capitals as a “harsh” call by the team’s “selectors”. Pandey’s replacement, 23-year-old Virat Singh, who labored to a 14-ball 4, could be on his way out.The Super Kings had opted to “err on the side of safety,” according to Robin Uthappa, by resting Moeen Ali in the last game because of a tight hamstring. The England allrounder is expected to recover in time for the face-off against the Sunrisers, who missed the services of Bhuvneshwar Kumar in their last match owing to a thigh strain he suffered on April 21.

Likely XIs

Chennai Super Kings: 1 Faf du Plessis, 2 Ruturaj Gaikwad, 3 Suresh Raina, 4 Ambati Rayudu/K Gowtham, 5 Ravindra Jadeja, 6 MS Dhoni (capt, wk), 7 Sam Curran, 8 Moeen Ali/Dwayne Bravo, 9 Shardul Thakur, 10 Imran Tahir, 11 Deepak ChaharSunrisers Hyderabad: 1 David Warner (capt), 2 Jonny Bairstow (wk), 3 Kane Williamson, 4 Virat Singh/Manish Pandey, 5 Vijay Shankar, 6 Kedar Jadhav, 7 Rashid Khan, 8 J Suchith, 9 Bhuvneshwar Kumar, 10 Sandeep Sharma/Khaleel Ahmed, 11 Siddarth Kaul

Strategy punt

  • Warner strikes at over 150 against both Jadeja and Tahir in T20s and at 150 against Ali but struggles to put away the likes of Sam Curran, Deepak Chahar and Dwayne Bravo, against whom his strike rate hovers between 76 and 112. He scored only 6 in the last match and has just one fifty in five innings in this edition, so the Super Kings may be tempted to feed him pace early on. If he is able to counter that ploy, though, his sixth straight 50-plus score against the Super Kings in India and the distinction of the first batter to 50 IPL half-centuries could be there for the taking.
  • Since the start of IPL 2020, the Super Kings have scored 43 runs on an average in the powerplay. In instances where they scored better in that phase, they ended close to 180, with a success rate of 80% in those matches. In contrast, a score of under 43 in the first six overs have translated to scores of 150 runs or fewer, the success rate dropping to a mere 25%. Powerplay specialist Sandeep Sharma, who has the most wickets in the first six overs in IPL history, with an economy rate of 6.7 since last season to boot, may be the Sunrisers’ best bet to keep a check on the Super Kings’ run flow in that phase.

Stats that matter

  • If Pandey returns to the XI, Wednesday’s match will mark his 150th appearance in the IPL.
  • Teams winning the toss have opted to chase 42 times in 74 outings at the Arun Jaitley Stadium.
  • Jadeja is two hits shy of a ton of sixes in T20s.
  • Bairstow needs 71 to become the fifth player with 1000 runs in the tournament as a wicketkeeper.

Luke Fletcher claims career-best as Nottinghamshire crush winless Worcester

Luke Fletcher returned career-best figures for the second consecutive match as Nottinghamshire crushed winless Worcestershire by an innings and 170 runs to take maximum points and go top of Group One in the LV=Insurance County Championship.Fletcher, the 32-year-old pace bowler, took 7 for 37 as Worcestershire were skittled for 80 in their first innings, ending with ten wickets in the match, another career first, as the visitors crumbled to 150 all out following on.Only Jake Libby and Brett D’Oliveira offered anything close to meaningful resistance, Libby making 64 to go past 600 runs for the season – only Durham’s David Bedingham has more.But after he was dismissed by England’s Stuart Broad the last seven Worcestershire wickets fell for 47, South African seamer Dane Paterson taking 4 for 49, his best figures for the county so far.Related

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  • Danny Briggs, Will Rhodes guard against drama as rain has final say at Chelmsford

  • Ben Aitchison takes career-best 6 for 28 as Derbyshire draw with Durham

Nottinghamshire ended a barren run of almost three years without a Championship victory when they beat neighbours Derbyshire three weeks ago. Now they have won three in a row, completing this one inside two days after weather wrecked days one and two.Worcestershire, reeling at 54 for 6 overnight, folded in 74 minutes this morning.Fletcher, who took five wickets in 42 deliveries on Saturday evening, needed just eight more balls to record the second six-wicket haul of his career, the first having come against Essex only two weeks ago, producing a swinging delivery to nightwatchman Josh Tongue that took the outside edge. Just 10 balls later he was celebrating his maiden seven-for as Alzarri Joseph edged a drive. Fletcher would have had eight had Joe Clarke not dropped Joe Leach at first slip on five.Broad, in his last appearance before England’s Test series against New Zealand begins a week on Wednesday, claimed the last two wickets as Ben Cox chased a wide one and Dillon Pennington nicked to second slip.Batting again, Worcester lost opener Daryl Mitchell before lunch as he nibbled at Fletcher to be caught behind for one. By tea, they were 114 for 4, Fletcher having struck twice more as Tom Fell clipped to short leg and Jack Haynes drove straight back to the bowler.Broad’s tactic of positioning five catchers on the leg side in a hostile spell to Libby paid off via a superb low catch by Paterson at square leg.Paterson ended a gutsy effort by D’Oliveira via a leading edge to mid-off in a spell that saw him take four of the last five wickets to fall. Lyndon James had made his mark as Riki Wessels wafted at one outside off stump to be taken by second slip Ben Duckett, whose unbeaten 177 was the match-winning performance with the bat, while Broad removed Joseph to give him five in the match.

Josh Inglis hundred sees Leicestershire claim first win of campaign

Josh Inglis struck a T20 career-best 103 not out as Leicestershire beat Northamptonshire by 34 runs to record a first Vitality Blast win of the campaign.The Australian thrashed four sixes and 13 fours in a stunning 62-ball knock, sharing a century stand with skipper Colin Ackerman for the third wicket as the previously winless Foxes piled up 200 for 2. Callum Parkinson, with 2 for 19, and Gavin Griffiths, 2 for 23, made sure still winless Northamptonshire fell well short, finishing 166 for 7 despite an unbeaten 50 from Rob Keogh.Inglis dominated from the get go, his six over midwicket off Ben Sanderson in the second over a sign of things to come.Fellow opener Scott Steel left early after splicing Tom Taylor to mid-off and the hosts were left to regret skipper Adam Rossington missing a chance to stump the new batsman Arron Lilley when he’d made just 12, Nabi the unlucky bowler.Lilley made the most of the reprieve, hitting Graeme White for successive sixes, the second landing in a nearby garden, as he made 44 off 29 balls in a second wicket stand of 67 with Inglis before holing out at mid-off.Inglis, starved of strike during that stand, picked up where he’d left off, going to 50 off with a glorious straight six off White. With Ackerman content to play second fiddle, Inglis unfurled nine more fours, finding all parts of the boundary in a stellar display of improvisation. He would also outdo team-mate Lilley in smiting the biggest six of the day before dinking Sanderson over fine leg to reach three figures in the final over.The Steelbacks soon lost skipper Rossington when he sliced one skywards to backward point from the bowling of Parkinson. Richard Levi responded by bludgeoning Ackerman over the ropes at cow corner, but the visitors struck again when Naveen-ul-Haq produced a brute of a yorker which struck Ricardo Vasconcelos on the foot leaving him plumb lbw.Levi was castled by a flighted delivery from Ackerman before Griffiths struck twice in three balls, removing Wayne Parnell for 15 and Saif Zaib for a duck to leave the hosts 69 for 5. Nabi hit a six onto the pavilion roof and Keogh reached his half-century from the last ball of the match, but the game was long gone.

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