All posts by n8rngtd.top

You don't drop Kohli twice

Plays of the day for the IPL match between Delhi Daredevils and Royal Challengers Bangalore in Sharjah

Kanishkaa Balachandran17-Apr-2014The sitter
It’s common these days for captains to target Virat Kohli’s wicket early in a chase, with instructions to the fielders to grab even half chances that come their way. Delhi, however, were caught napping twice in an over, when Kohli was in his 20s. The unfortunate bowler was Wayne Parell. Jimmy Neesham didn’t have to move much at short fine leg but the ball somehow failed to stick. It drew comparisons to Lasith Malinga’s drop the previous night in Abu Dhabi. Later in the over, he was put down again, at deep cover, but Neesham’s drop will stick in memory for it was the simplest of takes.The ball
Whatever the benefits of the strategic timeout, it certainly didn’t help M Vijay today. He was batting on 18 off 19 balls and was looking to give the Delhi innings some stability at 35 for 3 before he was dismissed first ball after the break. Legspinner Yuzvendra Chahal gave the ball plenty of revolutions but to Vijay’s surprise, the ball didn’t turn. It straightened and shaved the off stump and Vijay, playing for the drive, slumped at the crease. He trudged back, unsure whether the ball struck the stumps first but replays confirmed it did. Perhaps the delivery itself had not yet sunk in.The shot

Parthiv Patel is not always known for clearing the rope, but tonight he proved he had enough muscle to smash the roof of the stadium. It was a long hop from the left-arm spinner Shahbaz Nadeem and sat up nicely to be hit. Parthiv rocked back and bludgeoned it over deep square leg and sent it out of the park. His captain Virat Kohli, at the non-striker’s end, was beaming from ear to ear as he applauded that shot.The golden duck
Delhi splurged the most to get Dinesh Karthik this season, with their star pick Kevin Pietersen second in the salary list. Karthik found himself leading Delhi for the injured Pietersen, but his first innings as captain was over before you could blink. Albie Morkel got one to land outside off stump and straighten but Karthik was squared up as he looked to drive through cover. The bowler deserved credit for bowling a teasing line to get Karthik playing at it and Delhi’s most expensive player was gone for a golden duck.

The challenge of building loyalty

The IPL’s future could well rest upon the ability of the league to build fan loyalty; Flippant team revamps and seasons without home games won’t help

Rahul Oak07-Jun-2014″Now that the IPL is over, I have no idea what I’m going to do after work. It was the one thing that kept the entire family interested – I love it, my wife preferred it to melodramas, even my six-year old son would rather watch the IPL than his cartoons. I suppose it’s back to soaps for my wife and cartoons for my son; what am I supposed to do with myself?” – One of my friends who lives in Mumbai told me this after the last IPL.Regardless of whether you are a steadfast Test lover who considers T20 to be strictly hit-and-giggle, or think the IPL should be the only acceptable form of the game, the fact remains that the IPL is here to stay. Personally, I’m somewhere in between. Although the quality of fielding and umpiring is sometimes atrocious, there is some high-quality cricket in between and the condensed format makes drama almost impossible to avoid. However, as I semi-passively followed the seventh season, I couldn’t help get the feeling that despite its widespread appeal, there are a few flies in the ointment. There is one really important element that needs addressing if the IPL wants the worldwide appeal and longevity of it’s inspiration, the English Premier League. Loyalty.For the average English or Spanish soccer fan, that is a simple question. His father or grandfather supported the local club and he ended up following weekend matches on their knees and the choice of which team to support was not so much a choice as it was a legacy that was handed down, like a worn jersey. The widespread reach of sport via television and the internet has meant a wider fan base and these days, a Manchester United cafe is as likely to sprout in Kuala Lumpur as in Manchester.Cricket, for the most part, has no history of club-based competition. T20 started this trend and the IPL has been the torch-bearer in pushing the franchise model to a point where every cricket-playing nation has tried to emulate its success. However, since there is no precedent, it is doubly important that the league breeds loyalty. You would imagine it depends on three major factors – where you grew up, where your team plays and where your favorite cricketer plays. The trouble is that the IPL makes it hard to support a team based on any of these counts.I grew up in Mumbai, and have supported the Indian team as far as I can think. I’ve grown up worshipping Sachin Tendulkar, admired Anil Kumble and believe Sourav Ganguly to be the best captain India ever had. Which team do I support then?I live on the other side of the globe now so I can’t physically go to games. Mumbai’s Ranji players have been spread out across various teams. I follow cricketers in every side and can’t see myself wishing for Ajinkya Rahane or Suresh Raina to fail when Lasith Malinga is bowling at them.I understand that I’m not really the target demographic. That is the kids who grow up in this T20 world and feel the kind of emotion about their IPL team that Preity Zinta feels towards Kings XI Punjab. And currently, there are two real problems that need to be addressed to ensure their continued support.Firstly, the IPL needs to decipher a sustainable model for player transfers. The auction-based approach worked fine for the first season, but entire teams being thrown away and new ones built in their place every three years makes my head spin. Consider Robin Uthappa’s journey: He began as a Mumbai Indian, got traded to Royal Challengers Bangalore, where he played for two seasons, before moving to the newly-formed Pune Warriors. After the Warriors were disbanded, he ended up moving to Kolkata Knight Riders where he recently won his first IPL title.Four teams in the span of seven years. Of course, his transfer from Mumbai to Royal Challengers was the result of an old-fashioned trade and, later, the fact that his employers ceased to exist was beyond his control, but I wouldn’t be surprised if Uthappa gets confused over whom to trade high-fives with, or whom to glare at in a heated moment. Why not allow teams to trade in order to balance the team without having to go through a complete overhaul?Chennai Super Kings, in particular, have reaped the benefits of sticking to a core and building a successful team dynamic. It’s natural that a string of losses brings out everyone’s inner Roman Abramovich, but a total reset is simply an escape hatch and you still need good players and an able team management to get the results. Don’t believe me? Ask the Delhi Daredevils about their 2014 season.The other issue is that the IPL tends to take the concept of home games rather lightly. The fact that Chennai did not play a single game at the MA Chidambaram stadium is a travesty. I find it hard to imagine the Milan clubs not playing at San Siro, or Boston Red Sox choosing a home other than Fenway Park. Though the elections pushed the tournament overseas twice, the organisers should be more meticulous, considering they know it happens once every five years.One of the stands at Barcelona’s Camp Nou display their famous slogan: or more than a club. Although a large part of this slogan is politically motivated, it represents what the club seeks to be – an institution, a tradition, a sporting dynasty and far more than just the beautiful football that’s played on a weekly basis. That’s the kind of commitment the IPL needs to build.If you have a submission for Inbox, send it to us here, with “Inbox” in the subject line

What's the verdict on Cook and England? Take the quiz

The Annual End-Of-The-English-International-Summer Confectionery Stall Multiple-Choice Quiz

Andy Zaltzman09-Sep-2014The Annual End-Of-The-English-International-Summer Confectionery Stall Multiple-Choice Quiz
[tick as many or as few as you deem appropriate]Question 1: What conclusions can be drawn from England’s Test summer?A. England are right back on track. The Ashes meltdown was somewhere between a blip and a hoax.

B. England are still off track, but less far off the track than they were in January. At least the track is now visible.
C. England were off track and heading into a ravine until India kindly diverted them back towards the track. It remains possible that they will head back into the ravine upon encountering a team that does not spontaneously disintegrate at the first sign of adversity.
D. If Kevin Pietersen had still been in the team, they would have thrashed Sri Lanka, released an album of cover versions of 1970s love songs, been whitewashed 5-0 by India in the Test series, won all their ODIs by exactly 100 runs, and ended up with Pietersen and Cook sharing the captaincy one a one-game-on, one-game-off basis.
E. Sri Lanka are unbeatable.

F. None.
G. None yet.Question 2: What conclusions can be drawn about Alastair Cook’s captaincy?A. Cook is a good captain when his team is playing well, and a bad captain when his team is playing badly. Like, for example, most other captains.
B. Cook is good at some bits of captaincy, which are mostly the bits that are not visible in public, but not so good at other bits of captaincy, such as the bits that people pick over with a pundit’s toothcomb after a defeat.
C. It is easier to captain a team when you have James Anderson and your opposition has Pankaj Singh.
D. None. Yet.Question 3: Why were India so awful in the final three Tests?A. Destiny. Nothing they could have done about it. It was pre-ordained millennia ago by someone in admin.
B. Because of the IPL.
C. Because the fact that so few of them had played first-class cricket in England before, their schedule was a mixture of silly, cocky and wilfully inappropriate, and England had significantly better bowlers, caught up with them.
D. Because England were very good. Particularly at bowling out the Indian top order. And India responded to this challenge with the resourcefulness and strength of will of a cucumber in a microwave oven.
Question 4: Which five of the following seven cricketers should be nominated for Confectionery Stall Player Of The Test Summer award?A. Kumar Sangakkara. Technical perfection, statistical lunacy.
B. Angelo Mathews. Two centuries of brilliance and resilience, the latter – his 160 at Headingley – the greatest innings of the summer. Four critical wickets in the Leeds victory. One single figure score in his last 33 Test innings, dating back to November 2012, in which time he has averaged 70.

C. Garry Ballance. A 700-run debut Test summer which showcased his range of gears.
D. Moeen Ali. Played England’s finest innings in his languidly steely Leeds rearguard, and took 22 wickets at 28, when some had expected him to take 2 wickets at 228.
E. James Anderson. His 37 wickets at 20.8 were the most taken by an England bowler in a home summer since Steve Harmison’s 38 in 2004.

F. Joe Root. Lots of runs. Found life more to his liking batting at No. 5 rather than opening, and playing against teams that were not Australia, rather than Australia. A hopefully auspicious summer of regeneration, scarred by his contribution to England’s Lord’s meltdown – the third of three equally inane pull shots in 15 minutes of bare-faced lunacy that gave Ishant Sharma and India the victory that, it transpired, was some kind of cricketing Faustian pact.

G. Virat Kohli.Question 5: Was Ian Botham right about the IPL?A. No. He was barking up the wrong tree.
B. No. He was barking up the wrong tree, but at the right cat.

C. No. He was barking up the right tree, but at the wrong cat.
D. No. He was barking.
E. Yes.
F. I don’t know, but the thinking about the future of global Test cricket makes me feel a little nauseous.
G. Who cares? Remember 1981. He’s Ian Botham. He can say what he likes.Question 6: How can England stop the incessant speculation about Cook’s captaincy?A. Make Cook officially Captain For Life in all formats. It may not be the ideal solution, but it will stop the chatter.
B. Win the World Cup.
C. Lose the World Cup. Convincingly.
D. Allow Piers Morgan to captain the team via Twitter.
Question 7: Why did England decide to retain their strategy of having the same coach for all three formats?A. Because if you can ride a horse, you logically must also be able to ride a 900cc motorbike. Both involve sitting on something and making it go.

Both England and Sri Lanka need to rebuild

The home side were thrown into a tour of India and got hammered 5-0 while the visitors are still searching for a way to consistently match the modern one-day game

Andrew Fidel Fernando25-Nov-2014There must be some miscommunication somewhere. Each year, Sri Lanka line up a tour around November, and almost invariably, the series is so beset by rain that most matches go unfinished, and the remaining games advantage the chasing side. With four such tours having taken place in the last five years now, the only viable solution is clear: it is time Sri Lanka’s weather took stock of the cricket patterns in the country, when it next schedules its monsoons.Angelo Mathews scored has maiden ODI hundred in India, but it was a rare high point for Sri Lanka•BCCISo England have arrived to kick off their winter season, dodging downpours like they were questions about Kevin Pietersen’s book, and pumping their words with the positivity they hope will shake up their ODI cricket. Widely touted to flop at next year’s World Cup, the visitors do at least acknowledge that their game needs an overhaul. Moeen Ali was bundled up the order for the warm-up match, and directed to launch a full assault, while batting coach Mark Ramprakash has laid out hopes that the rest of the top order embrace a little more panache themselves.England are after ideas. They want to redesign the ponderous ODI cricket they have stuck by for too long, into a nimbler, sleeker model that will catapult them into that leading group of World Cup contenders.On the surface, there is no better place to uncover that tactical gold than in Sri Lanka. Cricket is the most popular sport on the island, but thanks largely to a Civil War that drained the economy and shut an entire swathe of the country out, Sri Lanka’s talent pools are still among the thinnest around. That they have made five major finals in the last seven years (and two other semi-finals as well), is down more to out-thinking opponents, than outplaying them.England won’t mind if a few of the ambushes Sri Lanka routinely set at short cover, or the slow-chokes they apply to opposition chases, are absorbed into England’s own game. “Funky captaincy” has become a buzz phrase in the Alastair Cook v Michael Clarke Ashes era, but Mahela Jayawardene is the James Brown of that movement, having so often conned batsmen out of their wickets, rather than earned them. Angelo Mathews is a different kind of captain, but by dint of inheritance, the tactical flourishes are still there. Game plans are loose to begin with, then if things go awry, quickly reimagined.It is fitting then, that Sri Lanka would have liked to be a little more like England just a few weeks back, as well. They had had a clearly laid-out pre-World Cup schedule that appeared to be a good mix of match-practice and rest, but the India tour opened up on them like an afternoon thunderstorm, and they were pelted with sixes off India bats for two weeks.Sri Lanka had departed for that tour aiming to experiment, rather than to win the series, but conceding two totals over 350, an individual 264, and suffering their worst ODI whitewash in history, will have dented a few egos. The jettisoning of Nuwan Kulasekara, who had been a pillar of the ODI attack for more than five years, is evidence that damage has been sustained. A surprise tour is not the kind of situation England will ever expect to find themselves in. There are many positives in Sri Lanka’s flexibility, but they are also always teetering a little close to chaos.That the selectors have roped in some old hands is also the kind of conservative move, more often seen in the England playbook. At 32, batsman Thilina Kandamby gets an ODI recall after three years away from the top level, while others like allrounder Jeevan Mendis have been reinstated after a long break, as well.Sri Lanka know their batting has plenty of thrill-seeking pizzazz in their three senior batsmen and Mathews, but what they need now are the steady performers: batsmen who will hit a fifty off 70 balls every other match. England may worry they play a stone-age version of the game, but Sri Lanka would probably take a Geoffrey Boycott in the second opener’s position about now. In the last four innings put together, the men batting opposite Tillakaratne Dilshan have managed eight runs. Mathews has also made stability his goal for the series. By the seventh ODI, he would ideally have liked his World Cup first XI to have emerged.The cricket that Sri Lanka and England play usually stems from disparate philosophies, they’re barely playing the same sport. But in what may be a damp series in the approach to the World Cup, each team is looking for a little of what the other has got.

Underdogs England still possess bite

Peter Moores painted an optimistic picture of England’s World Cup chances as the team set off at the start of a gruelling year of international competition

George Dobell06-Jan-2015There is an old joke about a conversation between a pessimist and an optimist: the pessimist insists things are as bad as they can be; the optimist reassures him they can get much, much worse.So it is with England’s future. After a grim 2014 – a year in which they lost two coaches, a captain, the leading run-scorer in their history and far more games than they won – they embark from Heathrow on Tuesday at the start of the busiest year they have ever faced.It is a daunting challenge. Quite apart from a tri-series against two strong ODI sides, they go into the World Cup with a deserved reputation as underdogs, before returning to host an impressive New Zealand, an Ashes series against an opponent that beat them 5-0 in their last meeting, a series against Pakistan in the UAE (we all recall how that went last time) and, before Christmas, a trip to South Africa to play the No. 1 Test team. Even if the players can get through that physically – and the demands on the fast bowlers are clearly counter-productive to England’s long-term success – it is hugely demanding in cricketing terms. It could all become quite ugly.Yet 2015 is also the year of opportunity. England are unencumbered by expectation. They have a young batting line-up with few scars, no fear and the potential to hurt bowling attacks. And they have, in ODI cricket at least, a captain who seems prepared to live and die by the sword. They will play more aggressive, entertaining cricket and they will represent dangerously unpredictable opposition against sides who will be expected to defeat them. And, as Bob Dylan put it, when you got nothing, you got nothing to lose.At first glance, it is hard to be wildly optimistic of England’s chances in the World Cup. At second glance, too. They have won one of their last seven ODI series and three of their last 13 completed ODIs. Furthermore, Peter Moores, the coach, admitted in his departure media conference that he had still not settled on a starting XI; far from ideal in a form of the game where role-definition and familiarity is so important.

This is not the well-drilled, experienced squad England hoped to send to this World Cup but it is dangerous and it might yet create a shock or two before their race is run

Indeed, it was the sort of media conference – full of expressions such as “if we can get on a roll” and “we need to execute our skills better” – that could have been held before every World Cup dating back to 1996. The sort of media conference where hope and hubris are used to disguise results and logic. For all the miles they travel, it sometimes seems that England haven’t gone very far.It remains a nonsense that, for all the years of planning, for all the effort of rescheduling an Ashes series so they could go into this World Cup well-prepared, they have a new captain and may field a top-order of James Taylor, Moeen Ali, Alex Hales and Gary Ballance boasting just 37 caps between them. That is almost 400 fewer than Mahela Jayawardene has managed on his own. Really, whichever way you look at it, the selectors have wasted that preparation period.Yet if you scrape away the debris of Alastair Cook’s ODI career, it was just about possible to identify the nucleus of a new, more potent, England side emerging from the defeat in Sri Lanka. Moeen justified the decision to promote him to the top of the order, Taylor justified the decision to bring him in at No. 3 and Eoin Morgan and Jos Buttler, despite recent ups and downs, remain a dangerous middle-order. Joe Root has developed into a top player capable of rebuilding or accelerating an innings and the return of James Anderson and Stuart Broad to bowl at the death and in the Powerplays should improve the attack markedly.And, while experience is beneficial, it is not everything. England won the World T20 in 2010, the only global limited-overs title in their history, with a team including several called up at late notice. Five of that squad had four caps between them and neither of the opening pair, Michael Lumb and Craig Kieswetter, had played a T20 international.It all renders them significantly better than they looked in Sri Lanka. They are not the no-hopers their recent record might suggest.Certainly that was the view of Moores as he boarded the plane. While admitting a fair few things had to fall into place if England were to challenge at the World Cup – not least the relationship with Morgan who will have a major say in the selection of the side – he insisted that England did not have to change the way they played ODI cricket; they just had to play it better.Peter Moores: “Yes, we are contenders because we have good enough players. We have to play better but we know if we start to put those individual performances together we will be a very good side”•Getty Images”Yes, we are contenders because we have good enough players,” he said. “We have to play better but we know if we start to put those individual performances together we will be a very good side. That’s the beauty of the World Cup: if you get on a roll you can do very well.”We don’t have to change our approach from the way we played in Sri Lanka. Anyone who watched us bat will know we played in a different style there. We didn’t always execute it perfectly because we got bowled out. But we scored at a quicker rate than Sri Lanka in most of the games, we promoted Moeen Ali to bat at the top of the order and we got two bowlers in the top five as we tried to create some flexibility.”That change of mindset has already happened. Eoin will drive that really hard and that’s a good thing. He plays his cricket like that, he wants to be aggressive and look for positive opportunities.”Morgan’s involvement with the Big Bash has limited opportunities for him and Moores to plan and it remains unclear whether Ian Bell or Hales will open the batting with Moeen at the start of the tri-series tournament. While both could also bat at No. 3, as could Ballance, it is the decision over the opening position that will most obviously define the approach the new management are going to take. Hales would be the bolder choice, certainly, but Bell might be considered more appropriate for a team that has been bowled out within 50 overs in nine of its last 12 ODIs.”Eoin will have a strong view on what he thinks the starting eleven should be and we’ve not discussed it yet,” Moores said. “It is important we give ourselves that time.”There are different permutations of teams that we can go with. I can write down three or four teams and they all seem really strong, which is good for us. But it is important that we identify our shape early and we’ll do that as soon as we get to Australia.”Eoin has been with us while I’ve been coaching the one-day side and has been captain when Alastair hasn’t been available. He’s been very involved in all the decisions anyway because Alastair is close to him and he has a very good cricket brain.”It will be exciting to work with Eoin, I think he will bring a lot to the team. He is a very straightforward captain which will be a good thing for us. He has a very strong desire to go out there and show how well he can play and how well we can play as a team.”What I can say to everybody is we will go for it. My message to the players is first it is a great place to play cricket, and second, let’s go for it, let’s go and play good, hard cricket and enjoy playing for your country.”This is not the well-drilled, experienced squad England hoped to send to this World Cup. But it is dangerous, it has potential and it might yet create a shock or two before their race is run. As ever, though, it seems that, on the eve of a global event, England are preparing not for the World Cup that is six weeks away, but the one that is four years away.

Vettori's 300, and Shenwari's fifties

Stats highlights from the New Zealand-Afghanistan match in Napier

S Rajesh08-Mar-2015302 ODI wickets for Daniel Vettori. He is the leading wicket-taker for New Zealand with 294 (eight wickets were for ICC World XI), and three short of equaling Jacob Oram’s 36 World Cup wickets, which is New Zealand’s best.12 Wickets for Vettori in five games in this World Cup, next only to Trent Boult and Tim Southee’s 13. In 45.2 overs, he has figures of 12 for 136 – an average of 11.33, and an economy rate of 3.00. In the five matches leading up to the World Cup, against Sri Lanka and Pakistan, he had figures of 1 for 196 in 46 overs.229 Runs scored by Brendon McCullum in the first ten overs in this tournament, out of his tournament aggregate of 249. He has scored those 229 runs in 108 balls, giving him a strike rate of 212 in the first ten overs. The next best aggregate in the first ten in this tournament belongs to David Warner, who has scored 112 in 104 balls (strike rate 108).9.32 New Zealand’s run rate in the first five overs in this tournament – they’ve scored 233 runs off 150 balls, and been dismissed only twice. The next best run rate in the first five overs is 6.80, by Australia.621 The sum total of balls to spare after New Zealand’s last four wins. They won with 151 balls to spare against Scotland, 226 versus England, 161 against Australia, and 83 against Afghanistan.10 Number of 50-plus scores for Samiullah Shenwari in ODIs, the best among Afghanistan batsmen. He is three clear of Mohammad Nabi, who is in second place with seven such scores.0 Number of century partnerships in this tournament for Afghanistan. They are the only team in the World Cup without one. South Africa and Sri Lanka are on top with five each.86 The partnership between Najibullah Zadran and Samiullah Shenwari, Afghanistan’s best by far for the seventh wicket in ODIs – their previous best was 55. It’s also their second-highest in the tournament so far, falling just two runs short of the Asghar Stanikzai-Shenwari partnership of 88 against Sri Lanka. There have only been four bigger partnerships for the seventh-wicket stand in World Cup history.49.09 Shenwari’s strike rate in his 110-ball innings, which is one of only five World Cup innings of 100 or more balls since 2003 to finish with a strike rate of less than 50. Three of them are by players from non-Test teams.50 Number of wickets taken by New Zealand in five games. The only other team to bowl the opposition out every time in the tournament so far is India – they’ve taken 40 wickets in four games.

The Pollard-Henriques contest

One of the subplots during the game between Sunrisers Hyderabad and Mumbai Indians will be the contest between Moises Henriques and Kieron Pollard, in a familiar setting

Amol Karhadkar16-May-2015Kieron Pollard and Moises Henriques have emerged as prime allrounders for their respective teams – Mumbai Indians and Sunrisers Hyderabad – in IPL 2015. The match on Sunday at the Rajiv Gandhi International Cricket stadium in Uppal, is likely to be the most crucial game of the season for the two teams, but it will also be a return to a mini-battle between the two allrounders.Both were born in the same year on different continents and their paths crossed for the first time at the same venue in October 2009. The cricketing world took notice of a new KP in world cricket, while the game would prove to be a turning point for Henriques.Pollard’s 18-ball 54 against a formidable New South Wales helped Trinidad & Tobago chase down 171 from a position of 77 for 4, and the bowler who suffered the most during Pollard’s onslaught was Henriques – Pollard smashed 42 off nine deliveries bowled by Henriques, including 27 in an over. The innings made him an overnight sensation and made T20 teams all over the world take notice. Three months later, he was the most expensive signing in the 2010 IPL auction and has since emerged as one of the marquee players for Mumbai Indians and one of the most sought-after T20 freelancers in the game.Moises Henriques’ efforts have set up Sunrisers Hyderabad’s revival this season•BCCIHenriques has followed a different trajectory. He did feature in an ODI for Australia a fortnight after being clobbered by Pollard, but has since then emerged primarily as a batting allrounder. Henriques has been a revelation for Sunrisers in IPL 2015 and his consistent performances, especially with the bat at No. 3, have allowed Sunrisers to resurrect themselves in the latter half of the tournament. He has also come up with valuable bowling spells in their last two games.Pollard is Mumbai’s trusted finisher with the bat but earlier this week, he also displayed his bowling skills by comfortably defending 12 runs off the last over against reigning champions Kolkata Knight Riders.It won’t be the first time since that night in 2009 that the duo will be up against each other. Since then, they have faced each other seven times in T20 cricket and in one game, Pollard meted out the same treatment to Henriques. In a Big Bash League game in January 2011 Pollard blasted three sixes and a four in an Henriques over to turn the game for South Australia.Even last year, both allrounders were on opposite sides during a league game, but neither player had much impact. Come Sunday, the duel between the two could end up being the decisive factor in deciding the fourth team to qualify for the IPL 2015 playoffs.

'I would like to see England attack a bit more'

Mike Brearley looks ahead to the Ashes: Cook’s captaincy, dealing with difficult players, and more

Jon Culley07-Jul-2015When Mike Brearley led the players through the Long Room at Lord’s on his first day as England captain, in 1977, he was already 35 years old. He had 16 years of first-class cricket behind him, the last six as captain of Middlesex, and was spending his off seasons working with disturbed adolescents as he prepared for a new career as a psychoanalyst and psychotherapist. When Alastair Cook steps on to the field in Cardiff on Wednesday it will be his 34th Test as England’s leader, yet he is only 30 even now. Apart from leading MCC in the 2007 season curtain-raiser against Sussex, he has never captained any team save England in a first-class match.It is a contrast worth musing upon, as Brearley did when we chatted over a coffee close to his north London home, where he had agreed to share his thoughts on cricket and leadership, 30 years after the publication of his seminal work, , which is on sale again this summer in an anniversary edition.”It is a difficulty for today’s captains,” Brearley said. “If they get picked by England at a young age, as Cook did, they don’t get any practice with county sides.”And it is not likely to happen very often now, partly because they are contracted to England and hardly play for their counties, and partly because they spend so much time playing international cricket. It makes picking the right man to be England captain very difficult.”Brearley admires Cook as a man, and you sense he will be willing him this Ashes series to make a point to some of his doubters, of whom Brearley has been one.”I’ve wondered if he lacks a bit of flair. I think from time to time he has been too defensive, too quick to put one back, a deep cover, a deep square leg, too quick to take third slip out and put in an extra cover or midwicket, too rarely to have a short leg.

“There is a kind of style, bravado and assertiveness in white southern Africans that I think goes against the grain of English players and what you might say is their false modesty”

“But there were signs in the New Zealand series that he was becoming a bit more positive not only in his batting but with his field placings and his bowling changes. Perhaps some of Brendon McCullum’s approach rubbed off on him a little.”I think you need to be prepared to be a little more bold in your tactics. By that I don’t mean being prepared to lose, because no one wants to lose. One of the arts of captaincy is balancing risk against caution, attack against defence.”It is not an easy job. You would not expect someone to be at their best as a theatre director in the first year they were doing it. There is no reason why he should not be improving.”An important difference in the challenge Cook faces against Australia this time compared with 18 months ago is that the distracting sideshow surrounding Kevin Pietersen will not be part of it. Pietersen’s exclusion is seen by some as a failure on England’s part, and there is an assumption that Brearley, the master of man management, the captain who coaxed out of a deflated Ian Botham and a labouring Bob Willis two of the most extraordinary performances in Ashes history at Headingley in 1981, would have dealt with him differently, and that Pietersen would still be in the team.Yet Brearley is not sure the outcome would have been different had he been faced with a similarly difficult character, even though his observations might give some of the parties involved pause to reflect. He sees some parallels in his own well-documented difficulties with Phil Edmonds, the Middlesex and England left-arm spinner, a different character but who shared Pietersen’s southern African background.”I liked Phil, don’t get me wrong,” Brearley said. “We had lots of good discussions, he is very intelligent and articulate. For the most part we got on quite well but there were moments where I would feel he thought I was an idiot and I would feel he was contemptuous and we would have these stand offs when he felt I did not respect him.Brearley on Edmonds: “I think he might have been better with a captain such as Ian Chappell or Geoff Boycott rather than me”•Getty Images”He was a different personality from Pietersen but perhaps there is an element that is common. There is a kind of style, bravado and assertiveness in white southern Africans that I think goes against the grain of English players and what you might say is their false modesty.”It can come between not only the captain and the player but the dressing room and the player. On the one side you have someone who can be arrogant, although sometimes covering up his insecurity, and on the other side an attitude that is sometimes a bit snide and does not confront the problem directly.”We heard the story with Pietersen about the fake Twitter account and the supposed involvement of some players. That is the kind of thing that rings a bell. It is anonymous, behind the back of the hand rather than face to face. The recipient would probably sense something was going on, even if he did not know exactly what, and would feel pushed to one side. Maybe that was true with Pietersen but maybe he invited it in some way too by something that came from him.”He spoke of cliques, but he might have played into that by siding with the younger players, who would be respectful, to whom he would be a big figure who had something to say. His intentions would be perfectly honourable in wanting to help them become better players. But he might have been consciously or unconsciously wanting to have a little clique of his own.

“In the Middlesex dressing room we were pretty upfront with Phil. We nicknamed him Margaret after Margaret Thatcher, who was leader of the opposition at the time. That’s how we saw him”

“I think Phil Edmonds might have been better with a captain such as Ian Chappell or Geoff Boycott rather than me. Boycott would play against Edmonds in the nets and play a shot off the back foot and taunt him by saying, ‘Another bloody four’, and Edmonds would bridle and bowl better.”In the Middlesex dressing room we were pretty upfront with Phil. We nicknamed him Margaret after Margaret Thatcher on the basis that she was leader of the opposition at the time and that’s how we saw him. It was witty and he would grin and we would get on with things.”Perhaps something a little bit brusque and direct from the England team and the captain might have worked better with Pietersen.”But looking at it from the outside, the first thing to say is that you don’t know what happened. I respect the people whose skins he got under – Andy Flower, Andrew Strauss, Alastair Cook. It is a very qualified view, but if I had to come down on one side I would come down on theirs.”And they got 104 Tests out of him in eight years, 8000 Test runs and quite a lot of ODIs. So you could say they were pretty successful.”Cook’s England side, moreover, is not short of exciting stars, in Brearley’s view. “If you look at No. 5 to No. 8 – Joe Root, Ben Stokes, Jos Buttler and Moeen Ali – you have four aggressive batsmen who need to be given their heads. That is exciting. Adam Lyth is a well organised player but he likes to play his shots. Cook we hope is back in form again now.”I respect the people whose skins Pietersen got under – Andy Flower, Andrew Strauss, Alastair Cook. It is a very qualified view, but if I had to come down on one side I would come down on theirs”•Getty Images”I like the look of Mark Wood, and if the ball swings we have the best swing bowler in the world in Jimmy Anderson. I like Stokes as a bowler too – I think he can bowl in an uncomplicated way.”Against Australia I would like to see us attack a little bit more when the ball goes through, and say to ourselves that this is when we are going to win the match, or at least go 80% towards winning the match, when we might take four wickets in 10 overs and have them 30 for 5. A little bit of flair and aggression.”You can’t criticise Anderson, taking 400 Test wickets, but I do because he can sometimes be swinging the ball sharply and he’s still got a midwicket and mid-on and deep long leg and maybe an extra cover. I would like to see him bowl with three or four slips and a gully, no midwicket, maybe a short leg rather than a midwicket, and no extra cover. Sometimes he may get smashed through extra cover but the batsman is giving you a chance of getting him caught at third or fourth slip.”Brearley is not sure the Australia bowlers, in English conditions, will be as effective as at home, although he rates Michael Clarke as another formidable opponent for Cook as captain.”He is pretty good. He has the side behind him and they are a tough, cohesive side. He makes a lot of right decisions on the field and is willing to attack most of the time. I think he is probably up there with Border and Waugh.”As for the book, even 30 years on, for all that the game has evolved, with skills taken to a new level, there is little about the philosophy it attempts to put across that Brearley would change.”If there was one thing, it would be to stress to players the need to enjoy the game, to be yourself, rather than analysing everything and thinking too much,” he said. “And to realise that compared with what some people have to confront, the anxieties of cricket are small beer.”The 30th anniversary edition of , by Mike Brearley, with a foreword by Ed Smith, is published by Pan

The Seinfeldian nature of BCCI-PCB relations

All the talk of resuming talks on India-Pakistan bilateral ties seems to be a lot of noise yet so little else

Osman Samiuddin21-Oct-2015Buried deep inside the many complications of India-Pakistan (and yes, Pakistan-India) there is a plot. The two need to talk but they do not talk and instead they talk about whether they should or should not talk.Or, how they should talk? Where should they talk? Here? Kidding right? There? No chance. What should they talk about? This? Never. That? Hmmm, maybe. Would it be better to just wave at each other? Or maybe shake hands silently? Or tweet?Ultimately, they go the long way round to doing nothing and it is not, sadly, funny along the way. The cricketing relationship between the two is only slightly less Seinfeldian, never more than over this last year: so much noise and yet, so little, well, anything.Currently we are at an especially absurd state of high-pitched nothingness. The new head of the BCCI, Shashank Manohar, invited a delegation of the PCB officials to meet him on Monday.Before they could meet, Shiv Sena protesters had reached the BCCI HQ in Mumbai and protested against any resumption of ties with Pakistan. The meeting was cancelled. Two PCB officials flew back to Dubai. The chairman, Shaharyar Khan went to Delhi and returned to Pakistan on Wednesday. Nothing happened.Or, well, one thing did happen. Shaharyar Khan was riled and is now as close to angry as it is possible for him to get. Public expressions of his anger are rare, if not entirely make-believe, because even by the levels of career diplomats, his equanimity is notable.You can see why too, both from the details of this latest episode and in the bigger picture of his efforts to revive this contest. He claims Manohar made the invitation during a phone call – Shaharyar initiated the phone call after he had convinced the ICC chairman N Srinivasan at a board meeting in Dubai of the need for re-engagement.The PCB offered to have a meeting outside Mumbai, in Delhi or Nagpur, but was told Mumbai is fine. Once the meeting was cancelled, the BCCI made no further contact or effort to reschedule, at a different time or venue. Why, asks the PCB, invite us and then make no effort to meet?Then, in a separate press conference on Monday, Anurag Thakur, the BCCI secretary, seemed to suggest that Shaharyar had invited himself, for the non-specific purpose of merely establishing contact with Manohar. For what it is worth, there is an official, physical invitation from the BCCI, though admittedly it could be meeting a pure bureaucratic need – for most Pakistani citizens to travel to India, an official invitation letter of some sort is needed.Is this too , trying to find out who invited whom? It is a sensitive point, because in Pakistan the PCB has been criticised for running after the BCCI for a series. Shaharyar made the running, though it is understandable. He was the chairman the last time the two played regularly and he saw, first-hand, the benefits of it.But it is also a useless point, hung, as ever in matters between the two, on egos and a hypersensitive sense of national pride. What matters is not who invited whom but precisely what mattered before the meeting that did not happen and what has mattered ever since the two boards signed an MoU for future series in May 2014: is the BCCI going to play in a series that is supposed to take place in just over a month’s time?That is all the PCB wants to know. If the series is dependent on the Indian government, find out (as an aside, one PCB official has asked whether legally, or technically, government permission is actually needed, given that the India team will not be travelling to Pakistan, but to neutral territory in the UAE). Whether the BCCI tells the PCB in person, with or without invite, via email, fax, Snapchat or a non-spying pigeon, does not matter. Any answer, as long as it is an answer, will do.The BCCI’s refusal to give that answer is not an indictment of relations between the two countries, as much as it is of itself. Whatever their compulsions – the political atmosphere, the shuffles within the board – how difficult should it be for them to find out whether or not the government is fine with them playing Pakistan?Instead they have been duplicitous. On Monday, Thakur said that the final call on a series would be taken after talking to the government. Minutes later, in the same press conference, he said that the boards would have to agree first and only then would the government be approached. That stage, he said, had not yet arrived.So which is it? Does the BCCI need to approach the government first before they can commit a series to Pakistan, or do they need to commit to a series first and then approach the government? And what is to be made of the reportedly positive vibes Thakur gave at the ICC board meeting in October, in which the BCCI expressed its willingness to engage more wholeheartedly in bilateral ties with all members?There is some suggestion that contact continues, that a deeper game is afoot. The BCCI could be waiting for Sunday’s ODI between India and South Africa, in Mumbai, to pass without incident before making a definitive statement about a Pakistan series (the implication being that the Shiv Sena could disrupt that match and turn this into a bigger problem for the BCCI).There is no way of knowing this but so convoluted are the ways in which these two operate, it cannot be ruled out.What we do know is that the shemozzle shows up the lies that underpinned the Big Three restructuring from last year. One of its selling points, the spin doctors said, was the prospects of a revival of ties between these two: sign up, they told the PCB, and presto, resume ties with India.That was a lie then, as it is now. There was no greater prospect of a series happening before than after. It remains as dependent on political ties as it was then, and it remains as impossible for world cricket to do anything about it. The PCB ultimately would have signed even if the lure of resumption was not specifically on the cards – realistically, what else could it have done?The only thing it can do now is wait and remind itself that it has survived eight years without substantial bilateral contests with India. And that, in the long-term, a successful Pakistan Super League is, potentially, of as much if not greater significance.This article was first published in the

Determined Al-Amin re-emerges stronger

After a promising start, the Bangladesh fast bowler ran into problems with his action and off-field discipline. But he kept fighting, and that’s now paying off for him and his team

Mohammad Isam10-Nov-2015What does a team take away from winning five consecutive ODI series? In Bangladesh’s case, their biggest gain has been the collective mindset over the last 12 months. On Monday, as they crushed Zimbabwe for a second time in as many games to take an unassailable lead in the three-match series, another Bangladesh player provided an instance of mental strength triumphing.Al-Amin Hossain took the wickets of Sikandar Raza and Elton Chigumbura in the 34th and 36th overs, just when Zimbabwe looked to be on track towards Bangladesh’s modest total. At the start of the over in which Raza got out, the visitors needed less than a run-a-ball for 17 overs, with six wickets in hand and two set batsmen at the crease. Al-Amin planned well at that point, bowling shorter and keeping Raza on the backfoot before giving him one to loft towards mid-on. It was an easy catch for Imrul Kayes.It was Kayes again who took the catch of Chigumbura, this time at third man after Al-Amin got another to lift past the Zimbabwe captain. Al-Amin didn’t do anything extraordinary but he smartly tested the batsmen with lengths. Nothing special, but quite effective given the circumstances. Those wickets signalled the end of Zimbabwe’s challenge.He ended with 2 for 22 from eight overs, to follow his 1 for 15 from five overs in the first ODI. These are not eye-catching numbers but it is important to understand what Al-Amin has gone through in the last 14 months; if he had thought that his career was over, it wouldn’t have been a surprise.From being the only bowler worth noting in Bangladesh’s disastrous 3-0 loss in the ODI series to West Indies last year, Al-Amin quickly found himself giving a bowling action test after being reported for a suspect action. He was cleared by the ICC two months later but it left a scar in his psyche that was amplified after he was sent home midway through the World Cup.While the BCB never really said that he was banned, there seemed to be an unwritten embargo on picking him since the World Cup. It seemed he had become a pariah amid all the people he knew in Mirpur. He spent months going through training sessions and trying to find out if he would be picked again. He played first-class cricket but wasn’t noticed. Whenever he saw someone who was willing to speak to him, Al-Amin took time to explain his situation. If the authorities were testing him, they had every right to. From the details that emerged from the incident in Brisbane, fault seemed to have been with him.But in a country where pace bowling is a rarity, Al-Amin had to be recalled in some capacity, and soon. He had done well in his first spell of international cricket, earning the trust of the senior players. He was included for Bangladesh A last month and he bowled quite well during the short tour to South Africa. The big recall then came when Rubel Hossain and Taskin Ahmed were ruled out through injuries. So far, Mustafizur Rahman, Mashrafe Mortaza and Al-Amin have not let Bangladesh miss Taskin or Rubel, who had proven to be two very effective bowlers.Mashrafe said that Al-Amin showed mental strength to come back and provide the crucial wickets. “Before his action was questioned, Al-Amin was the best pace bowler in the team,” Mashrafe said. “Then he had to come back from the World Cup, which gave him a break in his life. It is always hard to come back from such a break. One has to take a lot of mental pressure during these times. He went through a tough time but he was mentally strong. I think he understood his mistakes and he will take it forward from here.”Mashrafe said that pace bowling has played a huge part in Bangladesh’s success, particularly in good batting conditions against India and Pakistan earlier this year. “Our bowling unit has helped us win most of the games for the last 12 months. We have a lot of variety in the attack. If everyone can perform their respective roles, it becomes hard for the opposition. The pitches were critical against South Africa [in July] but against India and Pakistan, we played on good batting wickets. Our bowlers did well in those two series.”The improvement in pace bowling is going to be an advantage for Bangladesh when they play abroad. What they now need to work on is having more depth in the pace attack, and by restarting the pacer hunt programme, the BCB seems to be serious about this.

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