Day 5 thrillers: What's with Pakistan and nail-biting Tests these days?

Dubai 2018, Dominica 2017, Brisbane 2016: just three from a growing list of final-day thrillers involving Pakistan.

ESPNcricinfo staff12-Oct-2018Australia’s last-gasp survival in Dubai was just the latest addition to a growing list of final-day thrillers featuring Pakistan. Except this time, their go-to man for such situations, Yasir Shah, couldn’t get the job done. Here’s a look back at their spate of recent nail-biting finishes.

'The chance to make a positive contribution to Pakistan was overwhelming' – new PCB MD Wasim Khan

Wasim Khan had two fantastic opportunities – one in England and the other in Pakistan – and he chose the one that was closer to his heart

George Dobell21-Dec-2018In the end, there wasn’t much of a choice to be made. Presented with two fantastic job opportunities – managing director of the PCB or managing director of England’s men’s teams – Wasim Khan found himself dreaming only about one of them.The England job paid significantly more. It was probably more straightforward, too. Yes, sorting out England’s centre of excellence in Loughborough may be demanding. But it’s a great deal easier than improving the relationship between the PCB and the BCCI (maybe that should read “between Pakistan and India”) and overseeing a return of high-profile international cricket to Pakistan. The England job didn’t involve his wife giving up her job or his children leaving their schools, either.But the heart wants what it wants. And the more Wasim thought about his options, the clearer his mind became.”My friends noticed that, when I talked about the Pakistan role, I was much more animated and excited,” Wasim says. “I knew they were both great opportunities. But the chance to make a positive contribution to Pakistan was overwhelming. It’s my passion. It’s been my passion for years.”So Wasim withdrew from the ECB process after the first round of interviews – he was all but assured of a second interview – and accepted the Pakistan job. While he briefly considered commuting weekly from Birmingham – there are daily flights to Lahore – he concluded it was important to demonstrate his commitment by moving. He will arrive in February, with his wife and two daughters, aged 11 and 9, following at the end of the academic year in July. All are said to be relishing the opportunity. It is, at present, a three-year deal.Wasim’s love affair with Pakistan cricket goes way back. While he was born in England in 1971, his family had moved from Pakistan (actually Pakistan-administered Kashmir) just three years previously and Punjabi was the main language of the household; he learned Urdu and English later. The first professional sport he saw was in 1982 when he climbed into Edgbaston – he couldn’t afford a ticket and football grounds were still not especially welcoming to people from Asian communities – to see Imran Khan take a seven-for in the first Test of the series against England.Inspired by what he had seen, he carved a crescent moon and star – the symbols on the Pakistan flag – into the bat that he had, in turn, cut from a fence panel. By the end of the summer, he had been spotted playing in the school playground and recommended for trials at Warwickshire. By the time Pakistan returned, in 1987, he was watching in the stands wearing a Wasim Akram t-shirt.Fast forward to May 1995. Playing his second first-class match, against Lancashire, he was grateful for the intervention of Akram. The pair had never spoken but, coming to the Warwickshire dressing room at stumps on the first day, Akram asked for a word with Wasim, who was opening the batting, and pointed out a flaw in his stance that made him susceptible to lbw dismissals. Wasim remedied the fault immediately and top-scored with 78 in the second innings.”I should never have told you,” Akram said with a smile as he trudged off at tea on the third day. He was one of the first to send a congratulatory text when this new role was confirmed. Shahid Afridi, Mushtaq Ahmed, Mickey Arthur and many more have done so, too.

We have international stadiums, great passion for the game. If we can get more foreign players coming to Pakistan, hopefully we can normalise playing in the country againWasim Khan

A while later, on New Year’s Day 1997, Wasim found himself representing Pakistan. Well, almost anyway. He had been wintering in New Zealand, playing club cricket in Wellington, but had three weeks off over the festive period and decided to travel to Australia to watch Pakistan play. Having gained some complementary tickets from the team management, he was sitting just in front of the dressing rooms when he felt a tap on the shoulder just before the toss.”They said they had some injuries in the camp,” he recalls. “And they wondered if I could act as a substitute fielder if required. Ten minutes later I was in the team talk in the dressing room lapping up every word.”He eventually spent nine overs in the field, wearing Mohammad Zahid’s shirt. So impressed were the team management that they asked him to take a fielding training session after the game.For a long time, it seemed that would prove the extent of Wasim’s involvement with Pakistan. Mervyn King, the former governor of the Bank of England, identified leadership skills that saw him installed as CEO of the Cricket Foundation – the organisation that runs the Chance to Shine charity – for the best part of a decade, before he was appointed as Leicestershire’s chief executive in October 2014 – making him the first non-white CEO of a first-class county. He led the club to financial profits in his first three years in charge (though they will declare a loss this year) and oversaw some progress on the pitch.But then, in September, Wasim emailed Ehsan Mani – whom he had never met – to congratulate him on his appointment as PCB chairman and offer his services. Within days, the pair had met for coffee, which led to an invite to apply for the role of PCB MD (to be changed to CEO following constitutional changes) in the coming weeks. There were 350 applications but, following interviews, Wasim was offered the job.He might not have accepted, he says, had it not been for his confidence in those around him. He has great faith in Mani and PCB COO, Subhan Ahmed. He is also clearly a staunch supporter of Imran Khan, now the country’s Prime Minister and who endorsed his appointment.”We all want to professionalise and improve the game,” he says. “I know that with people involved of that calibre, I will have the support to take tough decisions if necessary. I wouldn’t have taken the job if I didn’t have those people around me. I’m confident we can together improve the perception of the PCB around the world.”Imran and Wasim are yet to meet, though. Well, not properly, anyway. “On that 1982 tour, I learned where the team were staying,” Wasim says. “So I blagged a trip with someone I knew who was taking photographs at a dinner and remember going up to Imran, tapping him on the arm and offering a handshake. He looked at me, nodded and turned back to the people he was with.”So Wasim’s passion for the role should not be doubted. But lots of people can offer enthusiasm. If he is to make a success of this position, he will have to turn that into something more tangible.”I think there are three or four areas on which I will be judged,” he says. “The first is restructuring domestic cricket in Pakistan, the second is seeing a return of more high-profile fixtures – particularly international fixtures – to the country and the third is rationalising the headcount at the PCB. Those are some of my main areas of focus.”Security cameras being installed at the Gaddafi Stadium•Getty ImagesEach of them is a mighty undertaking. And in both cutting the headcount of the PCB – currently understood to be around 900 – and restructuring domestic cricket, probably along regional grounds, he is likely to make a significant number of enemies.”I’m not making decisions now,” he says. “I’m not informed enough. But I don’t doubt the contribution of many people and many organisations and I don’t doubt that many of them will continue to play a part in the future.”I want us to start with a vision of what we want domestic cricket to achieve. Then, once we have done that, we will decide what areas we need to improve or change in order to deliver that vision. Having a system whereby you move away from cricketers who play for Pakistan to a system which develops and nurtures Pakistan cricketers, is a subtle but important change in thinking.”I will start by listening. And we won’t be throwing the baby out with the bathwater. But just because things have always been done in a certain way and just because some attitudes are entrenched does not mean change wouldn’t be beneficial.”He is positive about bringing more international cricket back to Pakistan. On his return to Lahore, his first visit to the city in 10 years, he was struck by the many restaurant chains familiar to cities around the world. He was also impressed by the Gaddafi stadium which he described as being of the “highest quality in terms of its infrastructure and facilities”.”A lot of the problem is a perception issue,” he says. “I think some people expect Lahore to be a dusty and dry city where people live in ruins and there are security issues on a daily basis. It’s obviously nothing like that. It has a café culture. It has all the shops and restaurants you would expect to see in any major international city and it has been largely incident free for a while now. Yes, there are challenges. But we have seen incidents in London and Paris, too, and few people have suggested we stop playing sport as a consequence.”A first step will be inviting Australia to play in Pakistan in March. They are currently scheduled to play a five-match ODI series in the UAE but Wasim hopes the conversations that Mani has already started with Australia might persuade them to play at least a couple of games in Pakistan. There is also talk of inviting Leicestershire to come on pre-season – an arrangement that would require sponsorship from the PCB – and a potential tour from an MCC team in the near future. England are next due in late 2022.”I need to sit down with other boards and ask them: where are the gaps in our plans that worry you? he says. “What can we do to assure you? What do we need to persuade you to come back? I want to hear what concerns they have and find a way of meeting them.”We have international stadiums. We have a great passion for the game. If we can get more foreign players coming to Pakistan more often, hopefully we can normalise playing in the country again.”As things stand, there will be eight games in the next PSL played in Pakistan. We hope the number of foreign players coming to Pakistan will gradually increase and they will pass on their positive experiences to their team-mates.”I want to sit down with my counterpart at the BCCI and see if I can improve that relationship,” he adds. “But the complications go far beyond cricket and will require changes in thinking. I’d like to see Pakistan players welcomed into the IPL, though. That would be a big step.”Wasim Khan at the 2014 Asian Cricket Awards•Getty ImagesThere is another aspect to this. Wasim has been, for many years, something of a trailblazer in British sport. The first British-born Pakistani to be offered a county contract in 1990; the first non-white county chief executive; the only non-white chief executive currently running a professional sports club in Britain: he did it all. His departure leaves cricket – sport in general, maybe – dangerously underrepresented by the very community it says is reaching out to embrace. Might the ECB have done more to try to keep him?”I think that’s a harsh way of looking at it,” he says. “Both Tom Harrison and Colin Graves understood how big an opportunity this was for me and wished me well with it. I think they put my future before their own needs. And I’m grateful for that.”There’s been some progress in terms of BAME [black, Asian and minority ethnic] inclusion, but more can always be done. More people from BAME communities need to be given a chance to work in positions of influence. More women, too; there’s only one female chief executive [Lisa Pursehouse at Nottinghamshire] at the counties. Promotion must always take place based on merit, but equality of opportunity has to be an ideal to aim for.”You suspect he will be back to further that work. The Khans are not selling the family home in Birmingham and, in due course, when the ECB go looking for a new chief executive, Wasim’s name will surely feature high on any shortlist.He has mountains to climb in Pakistan first.

Twin collapses loosen Karnataka's grip

In a session’s worth of play – 14.1 overs upfront and the last 15 overs – Karnataka lost eight wickets, and with it the initiative in their semi-final against Saurashtra

Saurabh Somani at the Chinnaswamy24-Jan-2019Jaydev Unadkat made the ball dart around both ways, from over the stumps or around them, at the outset. Karnataka’s batsmen flailed and poked, against both pace and spin, at the close. In the middle period, the trio of Manish Pandey, Shreyas Gopal and S Sharath held sway. But despite that middle period being twice as long as the start and the finish, the day was defined by how it began and how it ended.In a session’s worth of play – 14.1 overs first up and the last 15 overs – Karnataka lost eight wickets, and with it the initiative in their semi-final against Saurashtra.ALSO READ: Umesh claims seven as Kerala roll over for 106Unadkat was terrific, keeping the ball in the channel, working the angles to yank bat away from body and pad and into a poke, getting subtle movement and cranking up the pace when needed. But a batting line-up that has Mayank Agarwal, Karun Nair and Pandey among its first five batsmen but still finds itself at 30 for 4 after choosing to bat must ask itself questions. A lower order that has decent batting chops must also ask itself questions if the score tumbles from 232 for 5 to 258 for 9.When Pandey chose to bat first on Thursday at the M Chinnaswamy Stadium in Bangalore, he would have known that the first hour presented the most testing phase. The ball was new, the bowlers raring and the pitch fresh. He would have known equally, that if Karnataka could survive the opening hour, there would be runs for the taking. Except, Unadkat had other plans.”Honestly, there was nothing new in the plan,” Unadkat said. “We thought there was some moisture in the wicket. To take the advantage of that it was necessary to bowl in the right areas, on the top of off stump. That’s what we talked about after I bowled a couple of overs, and I told Chetan (Sakariya) as well that we’ll keep the off-stump lines and wait for them to commit errors. Looking at the way the pitch was behaving, it was the only plan that was there in my mind. I’m happy that we actually got those wickets. At times it doesn’t come even if you bowl in good areas and bowl good balls. Later on the spinners also capitalised in the end.”Unadkat’s opening burst brought three wickets in seven uninterrupted overs. He had taken out R Samarth with the third ball of the match. He then got a one to tail in late to account for KV Siddharth, Karnataka’s highest scorer this season. And the most crucial strike came when the plan to stifle Agarwal resulted in a poke that was snaffled by the wicketkeeper. The man who handled Mitchell Starc’s left-arm pace confidently on Test debut was undone by Saurashtra’s captain.”For Mayank I just had a set plan to bowl top of off stump, in the fourth-stump line. There was movement happening at that time, so for me it was just simple,” Unadkat said. “I had to bowl in the right areas and wait for him to commit an error. Because we were bowling in partnerships, and not giving him loose balls, not giving him boundaries – I think that was the reason he didn’t really get his shots and he just pushed at a good ball.”Pandey then took the onus on himself to carry his team out of trouble. Counterattacking from the start, he succeeded in making Unadkat change his plans. Once the spinners came on, the field began to spread, and more importantly, the bowlers couldn’t settle on a length because Pandey was using his feet and the depth of the crease.Unadkat had not bowled in the first session after a seven-over burst. He later explained this was because he knew he would have to spread out his overs across the day. He duly came back after lunch and got his man, setting him up with one that went away, and then bowling a quicker, fuller ball homing in on the stumps. Pandey wasn’t in position to play it, and brought his bat down too late, by when the ball had found its target.”After lunch, it wasn’t really moving much so I was trying to get something out of it,” Unadkat said. “I was bending my back as well. That particular ball, I think if you saw the one before that it was an outswinger and he got beaten. So I just had a feeling that if I bowl this ball up and get it to swing in, which it did, it could get him lbw or bowled and that happened.”What Unadkat started, Karnataka’s batsmen finished. In the final hour, Shreyas tried to swipe Kamlesh Makvana across the line and found that he had played for turn that wasn’t there, the ball merely going with the angle from around the wicket. Shreyas had stayed at the crease for more than four hours with exemplary concentration, so one lapse was understandable. Unfortunately for him, his first mistake was his last. There was no redemption in the other dismissals though. Both K Gowtham and Vinay Kumar have first-class centuries while Abhimanyu Mithun has a highest score of 89. They collectively scored 14 off 35 balls. Gowtham was dropped second ball off Makvana, but he wafted at one lazily outside off to give slip-catching practice. Both Vinay and Mithun played ugly slogs across the line – one was bowled, the other caught off a top edge.The lower order had fallen while copying Pandey’s counterattack but without his skill. This despite, Shreyas and Sharath putting on an exhibition of patience and classical long-format batting, and with Sharath watching from the other end while batting unbeaten on a maiden first-class fifty.Sharath conceded that he and Shreyas “were actually looking at 300” when they were together as a reasonable end-of-day score, so by their own measure 264 for 9 was considerably below par.Karnataka may have had the better of four hours out of six on the first day. But it’s the two hours they conceded that have made the most impact.

Australia leak runs, and Rohit-Dhawan topple Greenidge-Haynes

In putting together their 16th century stand, they did something that has been done only twice in World Cups against Australia

ESPNcricinfo stats team09-Jun-20192 – Instances of Australia conceding more than 300 in a World Cup. India’s 352 at The Oval is easily the most they have ever conceded; the only other instance, though, was in a chase when Sri Lanka managed 312 chasing 376 in 2015. For India, this is their fourth-highest World Cup total.ESPNcricinfo Ltd110.75 – Shikhar Dhawan’s ODI average at The Oval. In five innings, his scores read: 102*, 125, 78, 21, 117.2 – Hundreds by India’s openers in this World Cup so far. All the other openers put together have managed only one so far – by Jason Roy against Bangladesh.1273 – Partnership runs for Rohit Sharma and Shikhar Dhawan in ODIs against Australia. No pair has scored more: Rohit and Dhawan went past the West Indian pair of Gordon Greenidge and Desmond Haynes, who had 1152 runs from 29 innings. Rohit and Dhawan have scored 1273 in only 22 innings together. Their six century stands against Australia is also the best among all pairs.ESPNcricinfo Ltd3 – Century stands for the first wicket against Australia in 89 World Cup matches. The other two pairs to achieve this are Graham Gooch-Ian Botham (1992) and AB de Villiers-Graeme Smith (2007).16 – Century stands between Dhawan and Rohit in ODIs. Among opening pairs, only Tendulkar-Sourav Ganguly have more (21) while Matthew Hayden-Adam Gilchrist also have 16. Among all pairs, they are joint third, next only to Ganguly-Tendulkar (26) and Tillakaratne Dilshan-Kumar Sangakkara (20). India have lost only two games when Dhawan and Rohit have gone past 100, but one of them was at The Oval, against Sri Lanka in the 2017 Champions Trophy.ESPNcricinfo Ltd37 – Innings for Rohit to reach 2000 runs against Australia. No batsman has reached 2000 against an opposition in fewer innings: Tendulkar needed 40 innings to get there against Australia, and Kohli took 44 to reach that landmark against Sri Lanka.4 – Batsmen who have scored 2000-plus ODI runs against Australia – Tendulkar, Haynes and Richards are the others. Rohit’s average of 61.72 against Australia is the best among these four.

Will someone spare a thought for the poor, wee, enraged cricketers?

Also: are Sri Lanka brilliant or dreadful? Answers on a postcard

Andrew Fidel Fernando02-Nov-2019Why is nothing being done?
Sure, cricket has come a long way in the area of player safety. But if you think it can rest on its laurels, you’ve got another think coming. Even now, there are players out there unaware of the danger they are in. Did poor Mitchell Marsh know, for example, that when he was out for 53 in a Sheffield Shield game last month, he was only moments away from having his unsuspecting hand fractured by the dressing-room wall? Did he understand that he could hurt himself so badly, he is at risk of missing the first Test against Pakistan?And is it not a travesty that in the 21st century cricket still keeps failing to keep its comically enraged and stupidly volatile players safe? When will they be free from the tyranny of concrete structures, metal lockers, bar toilet windows, and the eye sockets of drunken homophobes.Maybe it’s time player areas were fitted with foam padding. Perhaps pavilions could be torn down altogether and replaced with cloth gazebos. And if all that sounds too expensive, there is also the option of lining dressing-room walls with South Africa bowlers, who, judging by the tour of India, are not currently capable of being a threat to anyone.The strike-out
It was a tumultuous month for Bangladesh star Shakib Al Hasan. Just last week he was the leading figure in Bangladesh’s player strike, threatening to pull out of matches against India, in order to get better pay from the cricket board. Later, he also failed to show up to team training sessions. Then he was suspended for at least a year, for not informing the ICC about phone contact with a bookie.Which means that although Shakib spent parts of last month failing to report to the cricket in order to send a message, in the end he got himself sent away from cricket for failing to report a message.Strap a turbine to this mess
Are Sri Lanka a decent team? Or are they terrible? Early in October, they went to Pakistan with a team missing several first-choice T20 players (including captain Lasith Malinga), and thrashed the No. 1 ranked team in the world. In the third match, they even made five changes to an already depleted XI, and still won comfortably. Then they went to Australia (where they have never lost a T20 series before) with a full-strength side, and have been steamrolled in profound and embarrasing ways.It’s been like this all year. They were thumped in Tests in Australia, weeks before they changed the captain, dropped a bunch of players, and became just the third nation to win a Test series in South Africa. They stank up limited-overs cricket for the first five months, before breathing life into the World Cup by beating England, and then crushed Bangladesh at home in a bilateral series soon after.It feels like global-warming energy challenges could be solved if we could just work out a way to harness the rate at which they oscillate from awful to awesome and back again, week by week. At the very least the collective blood pressure of Sri Lanka fans could power a major city.Forward planning
Congratulations to the ECB, who in retrospect produced a masterstroke in announcing the Hundred more than three years ahead of its scheduled start, ensuring that all criticism had time to wear itself out and become replaced by resignation by the time this revolutionary competition begins.What kind of smart are you?
Cricketers generally benefit from some of the best hospitality of any city they visit, but for Dean Elgar the hotels and food in “some of the smaller places” in India were not entirely satisfactory. “[India] is the one place I find where they are very streetwise and clever with the touring teams,” he went on to say. “They definitely push your boundaries and test you.” Which is fascinating because last year he had suggested that Sri Lanka had been “pretty streetsmart” for supposedly giving South Africa a flat surface for their practice match, before decking them on turning surfaces in the actual Tests.Is there a pattern here? Has someone really been unfluffing players’ hotel room pillows in the knowledge that it will correspond directly to low batting averages? Have showers been depressurised to ensure batsmen’s feet get tangled up against spin?And how much conniving exactly has gone into each of South Africa’s seven consecutive Test match defeats in Asia?Next month on The Briefing:- Dean Elgar reacts to getting a speeding ticket. “What I will say about the police is that they made this stretch of road very straight. They’re streetsmart like that, and that’s a learning I’ll take with me.”- The ECB pushes the Hundred back another few months to cleverly ensure even the last straggling critics will have lost interest by then.

Bumrah perfects his latest weapon: the outswinger

It turns out he always had the outswinger, but wasn’t going to bowl until he was confident with it

Sidharth Monga26-Aug-2019While Ajinkya Rahane and Hanuma Vihari piled on the agony for West Indies on a sleepy Antigua morning, their team-mates, it appeared, were looking at scores updates from the Ashes. The intensity, the quality, the attention, the hype even, has been on another level in the Ashes.The second of the Ashes Tests introduced to the world a bowler you could swear was Jasprit Bumrah’s twin: both were fast-tracked after limited-overs performances, you wondered if they could bear the load of Test-match bowling, and both quickly allayed those fears. Both derive pace from short run-ups, both seem faster than the speed gun tells you, and both have shown they have instincts of veterans.If anything, Jofra Archer received more hype than Bumrah probably because he made an impact sooner than Bumrah did. With the Ashes reaching the crescendo it did on Sunday, and with the Antigua Test turning into a sleepwalk for India, it would need something ridiculously sensational to even be talked about. Enter Bumrah.ALSO READ: Jasprit Bumrah completes a unique set of five-wicket haulsYou must remember the ball Bumrah bowled to get Keaton Jennings out lbw in Southampton in 2018. It was a landmark delivery in a way. Everything about Bumrah’s run-up and his action tells you he will bring the ball back into the right-hand batsmen. Until then, he used to bowl the legcutter or get some seam movement or sometimes do the job with the ball just holding its line. Against Jennings, he unleashed the outswinger, which swung back into the left-hand batsman.Forget Jennings’ shock at the ball now swinging the other way, this is a ball that should be nigh unplayable because of the bowling mechanics of Bumrah. It turns out he always had the outswinger, but wasn’t going to bowl it until he was confident with it. With the Dukes balls in the nets in England, he found that confidence to use it in a match. He has possibly spent the break between the World Cup and this series perfecting it.In the second innings of this Test, Bumrah unleashed the absolute fury of the outswinger. The numbers were staggering. To right-hand batsmen, according to broadcasters , Bumrah bowled seven outswingers every ten balls. The results were lethal. Shai Hope and Jason Holder were forced to play the angle and defend their middle stump before the ball swung away late to hit their off stumps. He also bowled the left-hand batsmen John Campbell and Darren Bravo through the gate with late swing. Kraigg Brathwaite was the only one who played an apparently poor shot, defending an outswinger wide enough to be left alone, but then again it is the Bumrah angle that makes you commit to playing the ball.Jasprit Bumrah sends Darren Bravo’s off stump cartwheeling•Getty ImagesThe outswinger didn’t make a random appearance. After trying to get seam movement on a flat track in the first innings – bowling with a slightly stiff back and hence low on pace – Bumrah saw the ball swinging in the breeze. Ishant Sharma bowled from the end that aided his inswing. Bumrah felt this was the perfect time to go with the outswinger. So out it came with the same freak whiplash of an action, now back to the same pace, with the same venom, but now moving it away against that angle.If India’s facile domination of West Indies didn’t have your attention till now, you had better watch Bumrah’s spell. West Indies were simply blown away by this magical mix of pace, skill and precision: four of his five victims were bowled. Just like that, with a spell of 8-4-7-5, Bumrah now has five-fors in all four places he has toured for Test cricket: South Africa, England, Australia and the West Indies. No Asian bowler has ever managed five-fors in all these countries. The great Pakistan quicks, Muttiah Muralitharan and Rangana Herath, Kapil Dev and Zaheer Khan and Anil Kumble, none of them managed it. And Bumrah has done this on his first trips to these countries.One of the things that has added to the legend of Archer, who will likely be Bumrah’s rival – and what a great rivalry it will be – in the years to come, are the random tweets in the past that have taken a life of their own with those events nearly repeating themselves in different contests and contexts. Bumrah might just have entered himself in that race. On August 18, the last day of Archer’s debut Test, Bumrah quote-tweeted a photo and a caption with a bulls-eye emoji.This is what the caption said: “This speed race wanted to know the fastest: the dogs or the cheetah. The cheetah did not move a finger and sat in place. People asked the co-ordinator what had happened. He responded: ‘Sometimes trying to prove that you are the best is an insult.'”Make of it what you will.

Crafty Williamson cracks the Bumrah code

The New Zealand captain improvised to hit the previously un-hittable fast bowler for three consecutive boundaries

Karthik Krishnaswamy29-Jan-2020Four overs to go, 43 to get, six wickets in hand. These are situations that usually favour the batting team, but things are a little different when Jasprit Bumrah has the ball.The first ball of the 17th over, Bumrah’s third, is a case in point. It’s the ball that has troubled New Zealand throughout the series – the wide, dipping slower ball that batsmen seem to pick up a fraction late from his whirling-limbs action. Tim Seifert looked to hit one of these over the covers in the first T20I, and ended up dragging a catch to long-on, reaching for the ball and losing his shape completely.Kane Williamson is on strike, on 71, and even he doesn’t pick it up properly. He goes for a big off-side whack, and fails to connect.The next ball is another slower one, but fuller. Williamson doesn’t really time his lofted drive. He slices it closer to deep cover point than he perhaps intends, and if he’d hit it a few inches higher, a few inches closer to the fielder, who dives desperately to his right… well, he hits it where he hits it and it streaks away for a lucky boundary.Two balls, four runs, moral victory to the bowler, but those don’t count for anything. New Zealand now need 39 from 22.Williamson’s innings has already contained a number of brilliant hits. In the 16th over, he had lofted Shardul Thakur for an effortless six over long-off, inside-out, after skating away from the line of the ball. If that ball, landing right in his hitting arc, was a bit of a gift in terms of its length, Williamson’s two previous sixes had required a lot more work on his part.These came off Ravindra Jadeja in the 15th over. First, he got a wide-ish delivery outside off stump, on a more-or-less typical Jadeja length and at a more-or-less typical Jadeja pace. Williamson hit it back over the bowler’s head for six. The length wasn’t full enough for the regulation lofted drive, so he ended up playing something like a straight slog-sweep. He stretched his front foot an unusually long way forward, and planted it to the leg side of the ball, to ensure he was close to its pitch while still having enough room to swing his bat through a powerful arc.Getting near the pitch of the ball was vitally important on this Seddon Park surface, where the ball was gripping and turning considerably. Jadeja, when he bowled that ball, must have been pretty confident Williamson wouldn’t be able to.With that one massive stride, Williamson did two things. He hit that ball for six, and he messed with Jadeja’s mind. If a batsman can get that far forward – Williamson had done it earlier too, to slog-sweep Yuzvendra Chahal, so this wasn’t a one-off – a bowler’s natural response is to look to bowl a little shorter, which is what Jadeja did. It wasn’t a genuinely short ball – it was back of a length, and sliding into the stumps with the angle, but Williamson expected it, rocked back in a flash, and pulled it for six more.Thanks to shots of that nature, Williamson was scoring at an absurd rate on a pitch that wasn’t straightforward to bat on. He scored 26 off 15 balls when Mitchell Santner made 9 off 11 at the other end. He clattered 44 off 20 when Colin de Grandhomme plodded to 5 off 12.Those two Bumrah deliveries, then, infuse proceedings with a bit of tension. What’s he going to do next? How will Williamson respond?The third ball of Bumrah’s over is one of the defining balls of the match. Williamson takes a back-and-across step just as Bumrah delivers it, so his back foot is outside the line of off stump at release. The ball is on a length, at full pace, angled in but directed at a fourth- or fifth-stump line, and Williamson, with his step across the stumps, is able to hoick it over the leg side, into the big gap between deep backward square leg and deep midwicket.Getty ImagesOn TV, Mike Hesson, the former New Zealand coach, suggests this step across the stumps is pre-planned. New Zealand, he surmises, have sussed out that Bumrah has bowled most of his full-pace balls at the stumps or just outside off, and his slower balls on a wider line. By getting closer to the line, Williamson should be able to hit the slower balls with more power, and use Bumrah’s natural angle to hit the quicker ones into the leg side.At his post-match press conference, Williamson denies – or refuses to disclose – that any such plans were in place. “I don’t know,” he says. “Maybe ask like AB [de Villiers] or some of these guys that are superstars that might have some bits of gold for you. For me, it was trying to look for areas in the moment on that surface.”The leg-side boundary, from the end Bumrah is bowling, is significantly shorter than the opposite square boundary, so that may well have been the simpler explanation.Either way, Williamson’s movements have got into Bumrah’s head now. In what might be (remember, this is all conjecture) an effort to surprise Williamson and serve up something he may not have planned for, he goes for the wider line again, but at pace. Maybe he’s looking for the wide yorker. If that’s the case, he misses his length, and doesn’t bowl it full enough, and Williamson hits it over cover. Four more.Williamson has hit the previously un-hittable Bumrah for 4, 4, 4, and New Zealand need 31 from 20.Kane Williamson blasted 95 off 48 balls•Getty ImagesThe feeling that New Zealand have a plan against Bumrah resurfaces in his next over, when Ross Taylor mimics Williamson’s movement across his stumps, picks up a length ball from just outside off stump, and wallops it to the square leg boundary.Then Williamson gets on strike again, and plays what could well be the shot of his innings. Bumrah has sent fine leg back, and this perhaps tells Williamson that his line is going to be straighter. He shuffles across anyway, and meets a middle-stump yorker with an impudent flick. If he misses, he’s bowled. He middles it, and the fielder at fine leg, sprinting desperately and flinging himself to his right, can’t cut off the boundary.New Zealand need 11 off 8 now, and it becomes 9 off 6, and 3 off 5, and 2 off 4, before… You know what happens next, but that is immaterial, or should be, when you evaluate Williamson’s innings. He’s scored 95 off 48 balls and, in his time at the crease, the batsmen at the other end, plus extras, have made 36 off 35. When he’s dismissed, he leaves New Zealand two runs to get off three balls. Whichever way the result may have eventually gone, that’s the definition of a match-winning innings.

How many bowlers have taken a wicket with the first ball of their careers?

And who’s the only teenager to score a double-century in a Test?

Steven Lynch17-Dec-2019Marnus Labuschagne has just scored three centuries in successive innings. Has anyone else done this for Australia? asked Michael Brossetti from Australia

Marnus Labuschagne’s 143 in the first Test against New Zealand in Perth was the 38th instance of a batsman scoring three centuries in successive Test innings. That includes the three men who scored four in a row – Jack Fingleton for Australia in 1936, South Africa’s Alan Melville in 1938-39 and 1947, and Rahul Dravid of India in 2002 – and the one man who went on to make it five, Everton Weekes of West Indies in 1948.Apart from Labuschagne and Fingleton, the other Australians to score three successive Test centuries are Warren Bardsley, in 1909 and 1910-11, Charlie Macartney in 1926, Arthur Morris in 1946-47, Don Bradman in 1947-48, Adam Gilchrist in 2004-05, Adam Voges in 2015-16, and David Warner, who achieved the feat twice – in 2014 and again in 2015.Somerset’s Lewis Gregory took a wicket with his first ball for England recently. How many others have done this? asked Harry Tregoning from Somerset

Lewis Gregory bowled New Zealand’s Colin de Grandhomme with his opening delivery in the recent T20I in Wellington. He was the 17th man to take a wicket with his first ball in T20Is, as this list shows, but only the second for England, after Joe Denly, who dismissed South Africa’s captain Graeme Smith in Centurion in 2009-10.The others to take a wicket with their very first ball in international cricket for England were Bill Bradley (1899), Ted Arnold (1903-04), Jack Crawford (1905-06), George Macaulay (1922-23), Maurice Tate (1924) and Dick Howorth (1947) in Tests, and Rikki Clarke (2003) in a one-day international. Although Richard Illingworth took a wicket with his first ball in a Test, in 1991, he had already bowled in ODIs; Geoff Arnold struck with his first ball in ODIs, in 1972, but had already bowled in Tests.Regarding last week’s question about people who captained in their first Test, Lee Germon played 12, all as captain. Has anyone had more than this? asked Murugan Balasubramanian from the United States

In all there have been 25 men who played all their Tests as captain, including Ireland’s William Porterfield, who recently stood down, so may yet leave this list. The only one to have played more Tests all as captain than Lee Germon’s 12 was the South African wicketkeeper Percy Sherwell, who skippered in each of his 13 Tests between 1905-06 and 1910-11. Jackie Grant of West Indies also played 12 Tests all as captain, during the 1930s – the same decade in which Herby Wade led South Africa in each of his ten Tests.Although Abdul Hafeez Kardar captained Pakistan in all his 23 Tests for them in the 1950s, he had previously played three for India, not as captain. Similarly, Kepler Wessels skippered in all his 16 Tests for South Africa, but had previously appeared in 24 for Australia as a player alone.Five men captained in what turned out to be their only Test, most notably the future Hollywood movie star Aubrey Smith.England’s Mike Hendrick is the bowler with the most Test wickets (87) without ever getting a five-for•Getty ImagesWho’s the only teenager to score a double-century in a Test? asked David Dudgeon from Hong Kong

The answer here is Pakistan’s Javed Miandad, who was around 19 years five months old when he hit 206 against New Zealand in Karachi in 1976-77. He broke the record established by George Headley, who was 20 when he scored 223 for West Indies against England in Kingston in 1929-30. He’s still the second-youngest, with 21-year-olds Vinod Kambli third and Garry Sobers fourth. For the full list, click here.Further to last week’s question about the late great Bob Willis taking 325 Test wickets without a ten-for, what’s the most taken by a bowler who never managed five in an innings? asked James Lewcock from England

The answer here is another man who played alongside Bob Willis for England: Mike Hendrick took 87 wickets in 30 Tests, with a best return of 4 for 28 – one of five four-fors – against India at Edgbaston in 1974. Mashrafe Mortaza of Bangladesh came close to beating Hendrick’s tally: he took 78 wickets in 36 Tests, with a best of 4 for 60 against England in Chittagong in 2003-04. Although Mortaza captained Bangladesh in the 2019 World Cup, he last played a Test in July 2009.For a full list of the most Test wickets without a five-for, click here.Use our
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Taken: a love letter to the art of wicketkeeping

There are only some among us who can truly embody this quiet, self-effacing role

William Fiennes19-Dec-2019My father had been a wicket-keeper, widely admired, playing at Lord’s aged 18 in the summer of 1939, maybe good enough for a county trial if war hadn’t barged in, and it was still in his bone and muscle memory in his eighties and nineties, throwing an apple up and catching it and nudging the bails off, or just miming a take to one side of the body, his fingers and palms opening into a bowl or cradle, a little give with the elbows as the ball invisibly landed, not “caught” so much as greeted and received, the evidence there when he held his hands up and you could see the fingers all crooked where balls had crocked the joints, corroborated too when old friends of his encountered with Rover tickets in the Warner or Allen stands would look down at me and remember not just my father’s batting but his keeping too: “A wicket-keeper, your father…”So when at school they asked for a volunteer, I raised my hand. The gloves in the communal kitbags were huge, cumbersome gauntlets, sweat-soaked leather hardened in the off-season, the plastic finger guards like burly thimbles, the pimpled catching surface worn smooth and shiny. The chamois inner gloves were hard and creased when you first put them on but would melt and soften with sweat from your hands so that after a short sequence of catches the paraphernalia of inner and outer gloves seemed to meld with your own body and be forgotten. I don’t remember any coaching, it was more a matter of imitation, mimicking the squats and nimble sidestep dances of Bob Taylor and Jeff Dujon, relishing not just their diving one-handed catches but the lovely soundless grace of the task done right, understanding from Dad that the point was to go beneath notice, taking each catch so cleanly the ball made no sound in the gloves, the good wicket-keeper dissolving into each passage of play with Zen-like self-effacement. That was my father’s ideal, increasingly remote in an era when keepers were expected to lead the psychological attack, being right under the batsman’s nose and eyes, mouth in his ears, lips almost brushing the stump mic, expected to chirp and heckle like Healy, Boucher, Prior, Nixon, Wade, even the ineffably dignified Kumar Sangakkara haranguing Shaun Pollock with some entry-level psy-ops in the 2003 World Cup: “Lots of pressure for the skipper now, yeah? Gonna let his whole country down if he fails! Oh man, the weight of all these expectations, fellas! The weight of the country, chaps! Forty-two million supporters right here!”

The game continually circulated the ball through the keeper like blood through the heart

And not just the relentless dreary chiselling at the batsman’s sporting and sexual self-esteem – now the keeper had to be chief of geeing-up and morale-boosting too, as if he were the afternoon’s host and compère, calling everyone “buddy” and filling the pauses – “Good areas, Frankie!” – like a radio DJ scared of dead air. Of course no one’s better placed to jab the needle, but even Paul Nixon must have felt something more complicated than enmity for the batsman standing just across the line. You’re so close to the batsman’s talents and shortcomings it’s hard not to feel solidarity as well as opposition, so that the celebrations of a stumping might simply be a way of disguising the feeling you’d betrayed a friend. You can hear them breathing, hear the mantras of concentration and self-reproach they murmur to themselves, read forearm tattoos and bat labels, see where they take guard and how they mark it, how their feet settle and shuffle. When the ball approaches, keeper and batsman are alone together inside a world of movement and sound – the flurry of backlift and batswing, the faint creaking of leather boots and pads, the fabric swish and rustle, the expulsions of breath, the bat-and-ball percussion all bursting out of the still, silent moment when you and the batsman waited together in squat and stance.Baseball has a catcher, cricket has a keeper: you keep wicket, like a diary or a secret, the verb rich with suggestions of ownership and intimacy. The keeper standing up to slow or medium-paced bowling is eye-level with the bails’ rolled beads and spigots, breathes woody stump varnish, knows each agricultural miniscape of grooving and abrasion made by bat toes and dragged studs across the batting crease – the guards, guidelines and small August dust bowls. The idea was to stay low and rise with the ball, weight in the balls of your feet, thigh muscles driving out of the squat to spring to left or right. I liked the athletic possibilities of standing back to quick bowlers – at university I took one off the inside edge, a fast Neil Coulson out-swinger that first had me moving slipwards before a drive scrambled the trajectories and I dived full-length down the leg side, the ball landing snug in my left glove, just off the ground. And how about that flier off the outside edge at Burleigh Park, right-handed, slips dispersed to boundaries for a batsman on 99, or that guy trying to cut a wide one at Stonor so I was already moving in front of first slip and could plunge in front of second to land it one-handed inches off the grass… Now approaching 50, I’m aware of those reflexes waning, balls diverted off the edge already yards past me before my nerves convey the message of a chance, and sometimes I watch the YouTube clips – Tim Ludeman’s full-stretch zero-gravity left-hander, a Brad Haddin screamer in front of first slip, where in slo-mo you can see Shane Watson raising his hands in awe or prayer at the flying man under his eyes – and dream of just one more before it’s over.Jack Russell was “tidy” behind the stumps – perhaps the highest praise for a keeper•Getty ImagesAged 12 I got Gordon’s Gin’s Wicketkeepers of the World by Godfrey Evans for Christmas, and the author’s Dickensian white muttonchops and ritual siesta in the lunch interval seemed part of a strain of eccentricity running through English keepers, via Alan Knott who warmed his hands in hot water before taking the field and reinforced his chamois inners with strips of plasticine, and Jack Russell who drove between games wearing a specially adapted sleeping bag to keep his back and legs warm, and reportedly used the same tea bag through all five days of an Oval Test against Australia, which Derek Randall estimated amounted to a hundred cups. Dad liked Russell especially for his “tidiness”, and I’d absorbed the idea that this was the highest accolade available for keepers, whose mistakes – a drop, a bye, a fumbled stumping chance – could loom so unfairly over hours of quiet, unnoticed competence. This was the goalkeeper’s burden too, and both keepers shared that Wim Wenders existential loneliness, the only one of their kind: a handful of batters, a handful of bowlers, only one keeper. And added to this was the way the game continually circulated the ball (and so also the focus of players and spectators) through the keeper like blood through the heart, not just when batters played and missed or let it go, but almost every time fielders gathered and sent it back in, as if the keeper were really the ball’s home, the place to which it always returned.My Godfrey Evans book featured Jeff Dujon – who could go a whole innings without standing up to the stumps, at home midway between wicket and boundary while Marshall, Holding, Garner and Croft took turns stretching him like a goalie to posts, top corners and crossbar – and Farokh Engineer, who could go a whole day anchored to the stumps by the spin quartet of Bedi, Prasanna, Chandrasekhar and Venkataraghavan. Hard to imagine a book like that now, in the post-Gilchrist era, when keepers earn their place as much for their batting as their glovework, and when keeping is more an interchangeable athletic discipline than an art for which you might have a natural gift and style. Admirable sportsmen, of course, but who’s talking about “art” or “style” in the keeping of Ramdin, Karthik, Pant, Watling, Bairstow, Wade, Paine? The speed of Dhoni’s hands in a stumping off Harbhajan is objectively astonishing, but there’s a stiff, machine efficiency to the transaction that leaves me cold. Give me Sarah Taylor standing up to Nat Sciver or Anya Shrubsole, moving to leg as Ellyse Perry or Trisha Chetty or Suné Luus shape for a glance or flick but get nothing on it. Taylor has spoken of “flowing with the line” and it’s true there’s something silky or liquid in the way her hands and body track the angle to make the catch then spirit the ball back as if through her own slipstream to the bails, batter teetering off-balance, Taylor already rushing towards teammates with arms fully outstretched, beaming.

Baseball has a catcher, cricket has a keeper: you keep wicket, like a diary or a secret, the verb rich with suggestions of ownership and intimacy

Standing back, each ball had the glory-potential of a one-handed grab; up close, I could only dream of leg-side stumpings like Taylor’s. Maybe you have to have kept wicket yourself to grasp the challenge: you’re in a squat outside off, and when the bowler sends it down leg it’s not just that you have a fraction of a second to adjust position, body following the advance party of your hands, but for a large fraction of that fraction the ball will be completely invisible behind the batsman, on the dark side of the moon, your hands moving blind, by dead reckoning. So it’s not just an exhibition of physical speed and balance, but a computational miracle that Taylor can “know” where and when the ball will arrive and be there to meet it. Sciver couldn’t have been bowling more than 70mph, so think about Jack Russell in early January 1991, the third Test against Australia at Sydney, when Dean Jones on 60 has been batting out of his crease, so Russell is standing up (no helmet!) to Gladstone Small to keep the batsman honest. Small fires it at 80-odd clicks down leg, Jones tries to glance but misses, and in blink-speed Russell has followed his hands blind a couple of yards to his left and the bails are gone, Jones already walking. No way Jack Russell ran out that morning wondering how he was going to “get in the batsman’s head”. And Russell was dropped for the next Test, replaced by Alec Stewart, the superior batsman…”Well taken”: I must have learned the phrase from my father, and that verb had resonance too – not “caught” but “taken”, as if each ball were a criticism or compliment the keeper had to absorb and process. It was more than catching. You made your broad, webbed hands into a berth or nest, and gave with the elbows to cushion the landing. The technique evolved to protect the palms from repeated heavy impacts – the ball a meat hammer tenderising the fillets – but origin stories didn’t matter when you saw or made those cradle shapes in the arms and the ball sank home so naturally you barely felt it. I don’t remember when I last really talked about wicket-keeping with my father. Maybe it was around the time Russell faded from view, and Adam Gilchrist’s phenomenal impact as a batsman forced everyone to think differently about the keeper’s role – who cares about “flowing with the line” when you can score an Ashes century off 57 balls? But the conversation was still there when he lobbed an apple in the kitchen and made the stumping (Mum said he did the same when she threw him a pair of balled-up socks to put in his sock drawer) or held up his hands in silhouette with the window behind them, his fingers crooked like an old oak’s staghead branches, and in those dreamy bye-less afternoons when each catch landed true, all the half-volley throws, wides and leg-side surprises, Dad’s voice among my teammates’ saying: “Well taken, Will. Well taken.”Nightwatchman

McKenna must now unleash Ipswich "animal" who's his own Kerkez

While most fans dislike the international break, it was probably a welcome distraction for the Ipswich Town faithful.

Kieran McKenna’s side have played some great football at points this season but have lost their last five games in all competitions and sit in 18th place in the Premier League with just 17 points to their name.

Yet, while it’ll be a Herculean task, there is still a faint chance that the Tractor Boys could overturn the nine-point advantage Wolverhampton Wanderers have over them in 17th.

Premier League

Palace

1-0 (Loss)

Premier League

Forest

4-2 (Loss)

FA Cup

Forest

1-1 (5-4 Loss on Pens)

Premier League

Man Utd

3-2 (Loss)

Premier League

Spurs

4-1 (Loss)

However, to do that, McKenna’s men need to start picking up wins, including tonight away at Bournemouth. To give his side the best chance of doing so, he should unleash Ipswich’s answer to Milos Kerkez.

Ipswich's record vs Bournemouth

Since their first encounter in September 1936, Ipswich have played Bournemouth 39 times in all competitions, winning 14, drawing 13, and losing 12.

AFC Bournemouth's DeanHuijsenin action with Ipswich Town's Ali Al-Hamadi

However, while their overall record against the Cherries makes for sweet reading, the Tractor Boys have not fared so well in recent encounters.

In fact, four of their last five matches have ended in a draw, with their most recent being an away win for the south coast side earlier this season.

It was a particularly painful result for the hosts. A 21st-minute goal from Conor Chaplain gave them the lead, which they held onto until Enes Unal came off the bench to score an equaliser in the 87th minute and snatch away the chance for a first home win of the season.

Then, as if that wasn’t demoralising enough, another substitute, Dango Ouattara, ended up scoring the winner in the 95th minute.

Chalkboard

Football FanCast’s Chalkboard series presents a tactical discussion from around the global game.

So, it would probably be fair to say that the Blues will be out for revenge tonight, and to make sure his side have the best chance of getting it, McKenna should unleash his answer to Kerkez.

Ipswich's answer to Kerkez

There are a few dangermen that Ipswich have to be aware of tonight, including the obvious, like Justin Kluivert, Antoine Semenyo, and Evanilson. On top of that, Kerkez is also someone who can’t be allowed to roam freely.

The Hungarian left-back has been one of the most exciting full-backs in the Premier League this season, racking up a tally of two goals and six assists in 29 games, which has been enough to catch the eye of top sides like Liverpool.

However, while the 21-year-old is undoubtedly someone the team will have to monitor at all times, McKenna has his own version of the ace he can unleash in Leif Davis.

The former Leeds United ace might not be getting the same level of attention from other clubs and fans, but over the last few years, he has proven himself to be a sensational attacking full-back.

For example, since moving to Portman Road, the incredible “animal,” as former manager Scott Parker dubbed him, has racked up a brilliant haul of six goals and 38 assists in 118 appearances, which works out to an average of a goal involvement every 2.68 games.

Appearances

46

44

28

Goals

3

2

1

Assists

14

21

3

Goal Involvements per Match

0.36

0.52

0.14

Moreover, despite playing in a newly promoted team, he’s scored one goal and provided three assists in 28 games this term, which is seriously good going.

Finally, in addition to his output, the £25k-per-week ace has some impressive underlying numbers as well, with FBref placing him in the top 4% of full-backs in the Premier League for key passes, the top 7% for shot-creating actions, the top 10% for crosses, and more, all per 90.

Ultimately, Ipswich are undoubtedly going into this game as big underdogs, but with talents like Davis in the side, there is every chance they can snatch all three points and kickstart their great escape.

He cost just £1.5m: Ipswich already have their perfect Delap replacement

Ipswich Town might not need to splash the cash if Liam Delap departs.

ByKelan Sarson Apr 1, 2025

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