One win in 26 years – New Zealand's woes in Australia

Stats highlights of the Australian summer, which was headlined by Marnus Labuschagne and Nathan Lyon

Gaurav Sundararaman06-Jan-2020 896 Runs scored by Marnus Labuschagne in the Australian summer – Only two batsmen have scored more than him in a home season: Ricky Ponting and Matthew Hayden (twice). Labuschagne finished with an average of 112 with four hundreds and three fifties. While Hayden and Ponting played more than 10 innings, Labuschagne batted only eight times this summer with a lowest score of 19. Labuschagne has now scored 1459 Test runs from 23 innings averaging 63.43.ESPNcricinfo Ltd1 Ross Taylor is the leading run-scorer for New Zealand in Test cricket. He went past the Stephen Fleming’s tally of 7172 on Monday. Taylor reached the landmark in his 99th Test. He finished the innings with 7174 runs at an average of 46.28. Taylor and Fleming are the only cricketers from New Zealand to score more than 7000 Test runs.ESPNcricinfo Ltd 8 Instances in which Australia have won every Test in their home summer (condition of at least five matches played). They had a similar summer in 2004-05 when they won two Tests against New Zealand and three against Pakistan. Since 2013-14 this is the first instance of Australia whitewashing every opposition they faced at home. 1 Test win for New Zealand against Australia from 31 matches since April 1993. New Zealand have lost 22 and drawn seven in this period. They have now lost six in a row against Australia with their last win coming nine years ago at Hobart. 27.97 Difference in batting and bowling average for Australia – fourth-best figures for Australia in a home season with a minimum of three Tests. Australia’s domination was evident against both Pakistan and New Zealand, averaging 50.67 with the bat and 22.7 with the ball.41.8 Strike rate for Australia’s bowlers against New Zealand – their best for a home series with a minimum of three matches and the their best overall since the 2002-03 series against Pakistan. 19.25 Average runs per wicket for New Zealand this series – their worst for against Australia across all 21 tours so far. Their highest score this series was 256 – the lowest top total for an overseas team in a series of three or more matches in Australia. 3 Ten wicket hauls for Nathan Lyon in Tests. This was also the second-best match figures for an Australian against New Zealand, and the best by a spinner. Coming into this Test, Lyon did not have a five-wicket hauls at his home ground Sydney. Now he has taken two in a match taking his wickets tally to 36 – second-most for him at any venue. Lyon finished with 27 wickets at an average of 21.96 in the summer with three five-wicket hauls. 24 Centuries for David Warner in Tests, which places him ninth in the list of most centuries for Australia. In contrast to the Ashes where Warner made only 95 runs, he amassed 786 runs at an average of 131 with three centuries in the home summer. Warner now has 7244 Test runs and is among the top 10 for Australia. Eighteen of the 24 centuries for Warner have come at home. Only Hayden and Ponting beat him on that count. Interestingly, Warner’s lowest score in the series like Marnus is 19.

All hail the king of the Kolpaks

ESPNcricinfo rounds up the highlights from the latest matches in the NatWest T20 Blast

Will Macpherson17-Jul-2017The Championship success of Simon Harmer and Kyle Abbott, and the concurrently touring South Africans, means that Kolpak has rarely been a hotter topic. There’s one outstanding T20 cricketer, perhaps because he has been here a little longer and prefers the white ball to red (he will not play Championship next year), who flies a touch under the radar: Colin Ingram.With centuries on consecutive Sundays, Ingram provided a reminder of why he is the best white-ball batsman in the county game. First there was a 46-ball effort against Sussex to trump Luke Wright, then his T20-best 114 from 55 balls in the last-ball win over Essex.Don’t forget that in the Royal London Cup this season he also made three centuries and averaged over 70. Glamorgan have themselves a gem; perhaps the IPL, where he has played just three games, and as long ago as 2011, will come calling once more.He might be 31, and he might describe himself as “a journeyman,” but he admitted upon signing a new Glamorgan contract earlier this season: “I’d like to get out there and experience what’s on the world stage.”

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Noise is the answer for the Blast The Blast is on notice. We know that in 2020, it will not be the premier T20 competition in the land. With funding, resources and exposure largely shifting to the as-yet-nameless Dream Competition, the Blast will have to find its place and relevance in the world.It is worth looking at Old Trafford on Friday, where the Roses match drew the largest Blast attendance outside London. Before rain intervened to ruin a match in the balance, the Roses crowd was everything the Blast should aspire to be.Such was the raucousness of the Roses match that conversation on comms turned to how it was much like a football crowd: loud, packed, partisan and boisterous. The Blast, of course, is not always – or even often – like this, and it is worth noting that another derby, Sussex and Hampshire’s El Classicoast (excellently monikered but perhaps not well marketed?) drew a disappointing crowd at little Hove two nights earlier.But a noisy, partisan response to the action should be the direction of travel for the Blast, just as tranquillity best suits the Championship. The new Dream Competition, like the very family-friendly crowds of the BBL, will hone in on attracting kids and new fans. Meanwhile the Blast already has supporters, and teams with history: it must play on this, pack fans in, charge their glasses, voice those loyalties and get the party started.Perhaps, just perhaps, the two competitions can then co-exist harmoniously.

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Middlesex still can’t get it rightIt seems curious, given their star-studded side and big name new coach in Daniel Vettori, that Middlesex have won just one game (and they made a mess of that one, too) and that the youngsters seem to be doing some heavy lifting. In the loss to Somerset on Sunday, Nos 3-6 all got in, then got out, with Eoin Morgan the worst offender, making 33 from 31, leaving the potentially destructive Ryan Higgins in a no-hope position.One of those youngsters is the rather innocuous looking Nathan Sowter. His curious low leggies, all spindly variations, have proved expensive (8.73/over), but they get a wicket every 15 balls too. This was in evidence when he took 3 for 43 against Somerset.Daniel Vettori has been a fan since long before he joined Middlesex, and tried to sign him for Brisbane Heat this year. Sowter is Sydney-born, but turned the offer down because it would have rendered him ineligible for Middlesex.

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Tabraiz Shamsi: so very NorthantsNorthamptonshire have a way of doing things in T20, and it works. We know that by now. They look deep into the stats, then go low-key, high value and routinely pluck rabbits from hats. Moneyball, if that’s what you want to call it.So when Seekkuge Prasanna found himself back in the Sri Lankan fold, they turned to the South African left-arm wrist-spinner Tabraiz Shamsi for three games. One of them was rained off, but Prasanna returned with a niggle, so Shamsi stayed for a third match of a highly-successful spell, anyway. Another left-field pick has gone right.Having gone wicketless in the opening defeat to Derbyshire, Shamsi took 2 for 20 as Durham were strangled, then 2 for 24 to restrict Warwickshire to 156, a total Northants chased down off the final ball.Shamsi’s figures of 11-0-68-4 tell a tale and, judging by the joyous way in which he farewelled his new club on Twitter, he evidently made plenty of friends and fans. He leaves with Northants in fine shape (in the table, if not physically). Don’t be surprised if he returns.

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In Leicester, of all places, anything is possibleThe sides leading the two Blast groups have a different look about them. We should not be surprised by Hampshire’s ascension in the South. Having reached six straight Finals Days before missing out last year, they have a formidable T20 record, and have hardened up this year.The retention of Shahid Afridi was curious, but Abbott and Rilee Rossouw bulk them up, Reece Topley is finally fit and Mason Crane is actually playing. They might just have Liam Dawson back from England soon, too. T20 nous, in James Vince, Michael Carberry and George Bailey, teems through the batting.Also three from three, and atop the North Group, are the altogether more surprising Leicestershire. Theirs is, crucially, is a settled side (they have used just 11 players so far), with a well-travelled top order and a varied bowling attack.Clint McKay, a canny appointment as captain, took the club’s best T20 figures (5 for 11) as Worcestershire were swatted aside. In that game, Colin Ackermann made his second major unbeaten contribution in a chase (47 following 62 against Lancashire). Ackermann failed with the bat against Warwickshire on Sunday; never mind, he then took three for 21 to help defend 147.They are nothing if not resourceful, and they know better than anyone, in the city where Leicester won the Premier League barely a year ago, that anything is possible.

Lamichhane: Nepal's right-arm leg-break googly bowler

Like his idol Shane Warne, Sandeep Lamichhane appears to have the full repertoire. With a hat-trick against Ireland to seal Nepal’s place in the quarter-finals, he couldn’t have asked for a better start to his career

Mohammad Isam30-Jan-2016″I have leg-break, googly, flipper, top spin and zooter.”Sandeep Lamichhane’s idol is Shane Warne so it is hardly surprising that the Nepal spinner says that he has the full repertoire. On his Twitter page, Lamichhane describes himself as “RIGHT ARM LEG BREAK GOOGLY BOWLER”. So, now you know.Lamichhane took a hat-trick in his five-wicket haul against Ireland, who were soundly beaten by eight wickets in Fatullah. The win meant Nepal have now booked a place in the last eight of the Under-19 World Cup for the first time. It is hard not to imagine the madness back home in Nepal, where cricket is now considered the No.1 sport.In his first spell, Lamichhane removed Gary McClintock with a full delivery that the batsman drove straight to long-off. When he was brought back in the 32nd over, Lamichhane turned the game on its head with his hat-trick. The first of those wickets was that of Lorcan Tucker, who was caught by Dipendra Singh Airee at midwicket.Next ball, Adam Dennison edged to the wicketkeeper and captain Raju Rijal before Fiachra Tucker became the hat-trick victim after he missed a straight ball. Lamichhane later added the wicket of William McClintock in the 34th over as Ireland slipped to 83 for 7, with Nepal’s maiden quarter-final place nearly sealed.It is likely that Lamichhane’s hat-trick was the fifth in the Under-19 World Cup, after Jermaine Lawson (West Indies vs Zimbabwe, 2000), Kamrul Islam Rabbi (Bangladesh vs Ireland, 2010), Harry Conway (Australia v Nepal, 2012) and Kuldeep Yadav (India v Scotland, 2014). Lamichhane, who is from Chitwan in Nepal, however said that the win was more important than the hat-trick, which he was confident of grabbing after picking up the first two wickets in the 32nd over.”It was awesome,” Lamichhane told ESPNcricinfo. “When I got my third wicket, my single focus was on taking the hat-trick. This is my first time that I took one actually.”What was more important than the hat-trick was that we won an important game and qualified for the quarter-finals. I hope we can continue the same way in other matches.”Lamichhane first heard of cricket before actually watching it on television. He had earlier taken 1 for 41 against New Zealand in the first group stage match, having already taken five wickets in the warm-up games.”When I was young, I heard news of cricket in radio. And watched a lot of matches in television. My coach, the management and everyone in Nepal helped me in my cricket,” he said.In the space of two days in this competition, legspinner Lamichhane, left-arm spinner Mahipal Lomror and offspinner Wesley Madhevere have taken five-fors. It is as clear a sign as any that spin will slowly be more dominating in the tournament. Lamichhane, having got into the habit of taking wickets on Bangladeshi wickets, will no doubt be one to watch out for in the rest of the tournament.

The Barramundis' big break

Papua New Guinea have impressed, despite their limited resources and talent. Now, as they head into their first ODI, they’re hoping for a brighter future

Tim Wigmore07-Nov-2014On November 8, Papua New Guinea will become the 23rd country to play a one-day international. One Papuan village will be watching especially closely.Hanuabada is on the northwestern outskirts of the capital Port Moresby. Houses are made of corrugated iron, lifted above the sea by stilts. It has no electricity and safe running water is hard to find. The coastal village is the home of cricket in PNG. Members of the London Missionary Society introduced the town to the sport in the late 19th century, and it has exerted a powerful hold on Hanuabada ever since.In an essay on Papuan cricket, Gideon Haigh recounts the former Tasmania legspinner John Watt’s observations of the sport in the early 1900s. “If you visit any native village about Port Moresby, small boys can always be seen playing cricket right on the water’s edge, with material of their own make,” Watt wrote. “Every other hit the ball goes into the water, while the two batsmen ‘run them out’.”A significant majority of all those who have worn the PNG baggy black have hailed from Hanuabada, which still dominates the national side today.”They just play on the road, and if you hit one house, you could be out. If you hit that house, it’s six,” explains Greg Campbell, the former Australia Test player who is now the CEO of Cricket PNG. “They have their own markings on the road, sometimes games are played with back-to-back to stumps. They’re just cricket-mad in the village – they grow up in it, they raise money to buy their own uniforms.”While the vitality of Hanuabada is remarkable for a village of 20,000, it also speaks of some of the obstacles cricket faces in PNG. Geography prevents easy transport links: the only way to travel between Port Moresby and Lae, the second largest city, is by air. “With the average wage, a lot of boys and parents can’t afford their kids to come from Lae to Port Moresby,” Campbell explains. Eighty seven per cent of the population lives in rural areas, and enthusiastic cricketers often endure arduous journeys by boat, bus and foot to play.Geography was not the only challenge Campbell faced when he arrived in PNG almost four years ago. On the day he arrived, initially as Cricket PNG’s operations manager before later becoming CEO, he stayed in a flat that had neither a bed nor electricity. He admits that for the first six months “there was a thought every week I should be out of there, but I always pride myself on not giving in”.

As far as the Barramundis have come, they remain hampered by inconsistency and a penchant for collapsing like a 1990s England cricket tribute act

His patience has been vindicated. Four years ago the Barramundis were ranked the 23rd best one-day side in the world. Now they are 16th. In January, they defeated Kenya, Uganda and Namibia in the World Cup Qualifiers. They finished fourth in the tournament, two places short of a World Cup berth, but gained ODI status for the next four years. And, as Campbell notes, while the squad used to “get there at 9.30 for a 9 o’clock training” they now arrive in time.

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In the 1982 ICC Trophy (the qualifier for the World Cup) PNG beat Bangladesh in the third-place playoff, effectively making them the tenth best side in the world. It should have been the Barramundis’ springboard, but as Campbell reflects, “there was nothing in the future for them”. This was a world without ICC regional officers or any coherent programme for non-Test sides. They essentially existed only to play in the ICC Trophy every four years. When PNG resurfaced in the 1986 ICC Trophy, Netherlands promptly thumped them by 219 runs in their first game.At least this time PNG have a decent base of fixtures to build on. Their performances in the World Cup Qualifiers ensured their place in the World Cricket League, and even more intriguingly, the Intercontinental Cup. In theory, this offers the winners the prospect of playing in the Test Challenge and earning Test status. In preparation for that, PNG are also playing a three-day game against Hong Kong this month: their first ever multi-day match against another international side.PNG have some recent experience of multi-day cricket. A couple of years ago, South Australia wanted to form a Premier League to bridge the gap between club and state cricket, and were keen for sides outside of the state to be included. Campbell put together a proposal and successfully lobbied his old Tasmania team-mate Jamie Cox to invite PNG to participate in the inaugural South Australian Premier League in 2013-14. “I guaranteed that we’d be very competitive in the T20 and 50-over games, and said when we start playing the two-day games, it will be a learning curve for us, because our boys have always been set up to play T20 and 50,” Campbell explained.Kids play cricket on the street in Port Moresby•International Cricket CouncilSo it proved. While PNG found two-day cricket a challenge, struggling to maintain their fielding intensity, they won the T20 competition. Participation in the South Australian Premier League does not come cheap – it involves around 50 days away and costs 380,000 kina (about US $150,000) – but no one disputes its value to PNG cricket. “You can only train so much but actually playing matches is the best way to improve your game and your cricket awareness and mental strength,” explains Chris Amini, the current national team captain. “We’ve come up against some international and first-class players and have learned a lot from them – just watching them go about constructing their innings or their approach to their game and how they prepare themselves.”Links have been cultivated with Australia in other ways. The most obvious is in personnel. Bill Leane was CEO from 2009 to 2011 and did much of the heavy lifting in transforming PNG cricket, including creating an annual Legends Bash tournament, which has hosted Arjuna Ranatunga, Dwaye Bravo, Kemar Roach and numerous Australians. One of Leane’s first steps was to appoint Andy Bichel as head coach. Bichel “provided the foundation” for PNG’s rise with his relentlessly high standards, according to Chris Amini. Peter Anderson, who was coach until he stepped down this year, is yet another Australian influence.The Brian Bell Future Stars Programme allows up to 14 players a year to play abroad for up to six months, with Australia by far the most common destination.Big Bash franchises have also cultivated Papuans: several have been signed, though a Papuan is yet to play a game. Thanks to some smart lobbying from Campbell with Cricket Australia, Papuans might not count as overseas players this year, increasing their chances of being selected. Lega Siaka, a 21-year-old opener from a fishing family in Hanuabada who scored two belligerent centuries in the World Cup Qualifiers in January, will sign for Melbourne Renegades this year.Links are being established with New Zealand too. Former Test offspinner Dipak Patel was appointed as Papua New Guinea coach in July. He is the first Barramundis coach to live in the country full time and have day-to-day contact with the squad.On September 1 this year, 16 leading players became full-time cricketers for the first time. PNG are not stopping there: they hope to pay a development squad of around 20 young boys and girls from next year, smoothing the transition to professional cricket. Campbell hopes that “in two or three years’ time, we’ll have a squad of 25 people that can play in our national team”.An A side is being formed to give the team more depth. Yet Campbell also remains conscious of the need to equip players with jobs beyond cricket. “We can help them with that, whether it’s learning to be a mechanic, accountant, driving a truck, working in a bakery, we’ll go out and do the player-welfare thing for them.”Increased professionalisation is one by-product of PNG’s increased financial clout. Tim Anderson, the ICC’s head of global development, praises their “ability to source their own income”: the ICC provides under 30% of PNG’s income, much less than for many comparable Associates. Cricket PNG has 14 sponsors, reflecting the skill of Campbell and Leane but also cricket’s huge national appeal. It survives on around 6.5 million kina a year (about $2.5 million).

“We could build something like the Allan Border Field, just a nice little ground which can hold 10-15,000 people but with great facilities”Greg Campbell

“We make sure that money goes a long way, and the money we get is tagged for specific projects,” Campbell explains. The money is sufficient to fund a significant development operation. Nearly 200,000 children a year participate in the BSP School Kriket program, a sort of Papuan version of Kwik Cricket. “They have a huge junior participation base and are working hard to transition those big numbers into regular hard-ball players,” notes Adam Cassidy, the ICC’s regional project officer for the region.

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When the Barramundis make their ODI debut, they will do so in Townsville, in Queensland. This reflects one of PNG’s most fundamental problems: no ground in the country has yet obtained ODI status. Campbell is optimistic that this will soon change and Amini Park (named after the brother of Chris Amini’s grandfather for his Australian Rules prowess) will soon be granted ODI status. It has only acquired turf wickets in the last four years.”We could build something like the Allan Border Field, just a nice little ground which can hold 10-15,000 people but with great facilities,” Campbell believes. “We need to have something concrete that we have an international team coming in, because then you can push the right people in PNG to make it happen.” ODIs against the lowest-ranking Full Members would help to convince the Papuan government to invest in a flagship national ground: it is remarkable that the Barramundis’ progress to ODI status has come without any direct investment from the government. “It’s only an hour and a half from Cairns, so we could look at a Zimbabwe or a Bangladesh coming out to PNG to play,” Campbell says. “We want to hold these games in PNG to get crowds in and showcase our players.”One member of the side will not be celebrating his first ODI but his 50th, 3052 days after his 49th. Former England keeper Geraint Jones spent the first six years of his life in Papua New Guinea until the deteriorating security situation led to his parents uprooting from the capital. “It’s not got a great reputation, Port Moresby. But from what I understand from the guys it’s getting better,” he said.After the end of his England career, Jones began playing for PNG at the start of 2012. His second international career could hardly be more different from his first: he receives only a modest allowance, accommodation and travel fares for playing for the Barramundis. “He doesn’t want money,” said Campbell. “He wants to give something back, and he enjoys playing.” While Jones bats in the middle order, his role is almost akin to that of a player-coach. “Jonesy’s there to calm them down and say, ‘Right, now, just think through this,'” Campbell explains. “They feed off him big time.” The hope is that Jones will be involved in a coaching or ambassadorial capacity in PNG when he eventually retires.Cricket in PNG is at an intriguing juncture. While rugby league continues to outstrip it in terms of crowds and media attention, cricket is narrowing the gap. It may now even be the biggest participation sport in PNG. Although cricket is strongest in Port Moresby and the surrounding Central Province, it has a genuine cross-class appeal. Thousands of children play Lik Lik cricket in tournaments on roads in Hanuabada every Saturday. Wealthier families like the Aminis have also embraced cricket: both Chris and his brother Charles benefited from spending three years in Melbourne when their father worked for Shell. He himself also played for the Barramundis, and his father, Brian, was the first native Papuan to captain the national team in 1977. With the exception of Jones, the side today is completely made up of indigenous players.The challenge now is to expand the cricket-playing base beyond Port Moresby and establish an infrastructure to harness PNG’s copious talent. Training facilities, including an indoor centre, synthetic nets and more turf wickets are all being developed. Campbell believes Test cricket “could be ten to 15 years away from us, and it might be longer. We’re realistic: you’ve got to have the facilities, you’ve got to have the set-up to do it in the country. We just want to climb that ladder of the rankings.”Cricket PNG’s most pressing aim is to retain ODI status in the next four-year cycle.As far as the Barramundis have come, they remain hampered by inconsistency and a penchant for collapsing like a 1990s England cricket tribute act. PNG lost a playoff to reach this year’s World T20 despite reducing Hong Kong to 19 for 4. “The boys were very disappointed, you saw a few of them had tears,” Campbell reflects. “It was a case of probably not knowing how to do it or what to do, when to do it, and just playing some bad shots at certain times.” After a sterling start to the World Cup Qualifiers this year, PNG lost their last three matches.Lega Siaka, a rising PNG star, will soon feature in the Big Bash•ICC”The boys haven’t played enough top-quality cricket to understand that the tour goes from day one to the end of the day,” Campbell said. “They start really well, then they have a bit of a downward pattern, and that could be homesickness, so we’ve got to work on that, and all that comes with experience of playing more and being at the top level.” Charles Amini, who was in the Sydney Sixers squad last year, admits: “We have to be smarter for longer periods of time”.PNG’s location in the world is also problematic. They are easily the strongest Associate side in the East Asia-Pacific Region. Cricket PNG made overtures to try and join the Asia region – which would also open up the possibility of qualification for the Asia Cup – but are now resigned to staying where they are. Extra emphasis will be put on maximising gains from the geographical proximity to Australia and New Zealand. PNG are lobbying to be included in future A team tournaments in Australia, and the Papuan prime minister, Peter O’Neill, will attend this year’s Australia-India Test at the Gabba.The sense is that more achievements are within tangible reach. Campbell believes that the effect of a Barramundis player thriving in Australian cricket could be transformative. “We just need a boy to crack a KFC Big Bash game, or even a Shield game, and then it’s like everything – once you see someone playing on telly, you keep saying, well, I want to play that game.” Qualification for a global event could have a similarly galvanising effect on the game, although with the 2019 World Cup reduced to ten teams, making the 2016 World T20 in India is PNG’s only realistic chance of doing so this decade.Cricket has already had a profound impact on Papua New Guinea. “Make a lifestyle for these boys, change their lives that way, make a better life for their family – that’s what cricket can do,” Campbell asserts. His first night working for PNG, bereft of a bed, now seems an age ago. “I definitely make sure that doesn’t happen to anyone else who comes up here to PNG. We’ve moved on a long way since then.” If exactly where the Barramundis go next remains unclear, theirs is a tantalising future.

'Will never forget Tendulkar's dropped chance' – Nadeem

Delhi Daredevils’ left-arm spinner Shahbaz Nadeem shares his regret over dropping Sachin Tendulkar’s catch and is optimistic about Delhi Daredevils’ chances in IPL 2013

Amol Karhadkar22-Apr-2013Shahbaz Nadeem isn’t a party animal. Still, the left-arm spinner was awake till 4am the morning after Delhi Daredevils thumped Mumbai Indians on Sunday. He was, obviously, “relieved” to have finally ended up on the winning side, but the two dropped catches – especially the return catch offered by Sachin Tendulkar – were weighing on his mind.”I am no different from all the players of my generation when it comes to that man,” Nadeem told ESPNcricinfo. “We have all grown up watching and idolising Sachin Tendulkar. So naturally playing with or against him is in itself an achievement for someone like me. But to earn his wicket is something that I aspire for as a bowler.”Before the match, I prayed. Even before bowling that ball, I prayed, (God, please get me his wicket)’. And then to create an opportunity against him and let it go is something that will be on my mind forever. I don’t know whether I will get another chance to get his wicket.”The two dropped catches, however, haven’t overshadowed his good run with the ball. After impressing the Daredevils team management in his limited outings last year, Nadeem has been persisted with as the leading spinner from the start of the season. And he hasn’t let them down, taking six wickets in seven match and bowling at an economy rate of 5.96.In between the two IPL seasons, he had a good domestic season. Not only did he lead Jharkhand’s charge into their maiden Ranji Trophy quarter-final, but also finished the premier domestic first-class championship as the most successful spinner, and the fourth-highest wicket-taker, with 42 wickets at an average of 25.97.With such a strong performance, it wasn’t surprising that Nadeem entered the IPL with the most vital ingredient a professional requires for any important assignment: confidence.”I got used to the Daredevils set-up in the first year and then, picking so many wickets in the domestic season made me confident and relaxed,” he said. “I hoped that I would get an opportunity and I am happy to have delivered so far.”With the team going through such a torrid time early on in the tournament, Nadeem was touted as the odd man out in a pack that was consistently failing to deliver. That made him all the more determined to “not experiment too much”. About the morale in the side with the continuous failures, he said: “Delhi Daredevils is such a formidable unit that all we knew was that we had to continue with our efforts and do the right things till they fell in place.”While some experts might have been taken aback by the manner in which Daredevils stunned Mumbai, with Virender Sehwag making his presence felt for the first time this year, the side was unfazed by the outcome. For them, it was just one of the nine victories they require to make it to the playoffs.”It was important to start winning. Before the Mumbai match, we discussed that we had ten matches and we had to win nine of those. With one win under our belt, we have to win eight more from nine games. And if there’s one team that’s capable of doing this, it is Delhi Daredevils,” Nadeem signed off.

Reverse-sweeps that went wrong

Plays of the Day from the IPL game between Rajasthan Royals and Pune Warriors in Jaipur

Nitin Sundar01-May-2011The reverse-jinx
It wasn’t a good day for practitioners of one of the most popular unconventional shots in the game. Robin Uthappa got more than half his runs against Rajasthan against spin with that shot. Johan Botha got half his runs in IPL 2011 playing that shot. But today, both of them perished attempting the reverse-sweep. Uthappa had already reverse-swept Shane Warne for two fours in seven balls when he went for the shot again, to a ball landing well outside leg stump and bouncing. He top-edged, and the wicketkeeper completed the catch. During the chase, Botha had already reversed his stance to redirect Yuvraj Singh to third man, before trying the same against Rahul Sharma. It was fuller and quicker than he thought, though, and jammed into his boot before the bat could come down, leaving him plumb in front.The lull after the storm
Uthappa v Warne was one of the most exciting mini-battles of the season. In eight balls of thrill-a-second action, it included two reverse-sweeps for fours, one sweep for four, one lofted flick for four, three near lbws, and finally a wicket. With Yuvraj walking out at Uthappa’s dismissal, one expected the excitement to continue. Warne played along, tossing one up full and wide outside off. Yuvraj leaned out with intent, and the anticipation was unmistakeable. Will he drive against the spin? Will he loft him straight? Will he pop a return catch? None of that happened. Yuvraj shouldered arms. Anticlimax.The imitation
From the moment Ashok Menaria first appeared on the scene, he has been compared to Yuvraj. The same build and gait, the same demeanour, the same swagger that suggests extreme confidence, and even the tendency to bowl seemingly innocuous left-arm spin. Today Menaria played a shot straight out of the Yuvraj book of audacity. It was a pacy ball from Jerome Taylor, homing in on the pads from a length. Crouched stance in place, Menaria calmly skipped inside the line, and whip-lashed it with minimal effort for one of the biggest sixes of the match. It wasn’t helping his team’s cause, but the opposition captain would have approved of the execution.The namesakes
Rahul Sharma got only two balls at the most illustrious Rahul to have played for India – Rahul Dravid. He dismissed him with the second, despite dropping it really short. Dravid went for the pull and hit it hard, but straight back at the bowler. Later in the day, the Taylors – Jerome and Ross – went up against each other. This time, Jerome could have dismissed Ross almost immediately. It was a length ball on the stumps, and Ross went for his bread-and-butter slap-slog over the leg side and mis-hit it. Two fielders converged from the deep, but it landed safe.The unintended seamer
Not too many balls moved off the pitch on this slow and low Jaipur wicket, where both teams opened with spinners. Rajasthan’s medium-pacers did not look to get the ball to move much, with Siddharth Trivedi resorting to slow offcutters, and Shane Watson to a bumper barrage. Later in the evening, though, one ball moved away magically off the seam. Alfonso Thomas angled in from slightly wide of the crease, and nipped it sharply away from Watson, who went for the drive and ended up edging it behind. Funnily, though, replays revealed that the movement was accidental. Thomas had released the ball with a crossed seam, and it happened to land on the thread and jag away.

Give Gilchrist his ball back

Children at Bellerive Oval pleaded for the mystery ball snatcher to return it to Adam Gilchrist

Cricinfo staff22-Nov-2007

Children at Bellerive Oval pleaded for the mystery ball snatcher to return it to Adam Gilchrist after he re-entered the ground with the prize possession.Gilchrist slog-swept Muttiah Muralitharan on Saturday to become the first to 100 Test sixes, but his call for the treasure to be given back has been ignored. The spectator Anandan Reddy captured this image of the man, dressed in the fluro red jacket, who collected the ball after it rolled down Church Street.The man did not respond to calls from the children at the fence and did not throw it back on the field when he came into the oval. Gilchrist does not expect to see the ball again, but would really like to get his hands on the memento.Let us know via the feedback link if you have any idea where it is.

Sam Whiteman's rearguard ton holds off Somerset at Taunton

Northamptonshire 255 (Vasconcelos 70, Sales 57, Leach 3-15) and 311 for 8 (Whiteman 130*, Taylor 53) drew with Somerset 412 (Kohler-Cadmore 130, Rew 89, White 5-103)Skipper Sam Whiteman’s first Northamptonshire century batted them to safety on the final day of the LV= Insurance County Championship match with Somerset at Taunton. The visitors managed to extend their second innings from an overnight 66 for 1 to 311 for 8, the rock-solid Whiteman leading from the front with an unbeaten 130, off 269 balls, with 14 fours and a six.Whiteman, in his first season as a Championship player, batted throughout the day, receiving excellent support from Tom Taylor, who contributed 53 to an eighth-wicket stand of 79 that finally frustrated a Somerset attack, who gave their all on an unhelpful pitch. Jack Leach finished with 3 for 77 and match figures of 6 for 92.By the time the players shook hands at 5.40pm, Northamptonshire had a lead of 154, with a possible 11 overs remaining. They took nine points from the rain-affected contest, while Somerset, yet to win this season, claimed 12.The home bowlers expected to have to toil for every wicket as Northamptonshire began the day needing 91 to avoid an innings defeat, with nine wickets in hand. So it proved, on a pitch, which had offered little in the way of seam movement or turn on day three. The opening attack of Craig Overton and Lewis Gregory went past the bat several times early on, but Whiteman and nightwatchman Jordan Buckingham survived and started to look increasingly comfortable.Buckingham marked his Northamptonshire debut with an invaluable contribution, sharing a half-century stand with his skipper and facing 66 balls for his before being bowled advancing down the pitch to Leach.By then Whiteman had reached a 104-ball fifty, with five fours and a six over midwicket off Leach. More importantly, 20 overs of the day had elapsed before Somerset made the breakthrough.There was no shortage of effort or accuracy from the bowlers. Leach struck another blow when Hassan Azad, who had retired hurt with a hand injury the previous evening, offered a low return catch, having made only 4. It was 147 for 3 at lunch, with Northamptonshire still ten runs behind. A Saif Zaib reverse sweep off Leach early in the afternoon session levelled the scores.A draw was looking increasingly likely. But, having moved confidently to 33, Zaib carelessly lifted a ball from Overton to fine leg where Leach held a testing catch. At 174 for 4, Northants were only 17 in front. But Whiteman was well set and a pulled boundary off Gregory brought up the 200.With a further ten added, Rob Keogh, on 14, failed to keep down a leg glance off Kasey Aldridge and Gregory held a sharp catch at backward short leg. It was 211 for 6 when a thinner glance saw James Sales depart for 1 to Gregory, wicketkeeper James Rew diving full length to his left to hold a one-handed catch inches off the ground.Harry Gouldstone quickly followed for a duck to another fine catch, this time by Tom Kohler-Cadmore at first slip, his task made more difficult by Overton diving in front of him to try and take the ball at second slip.The lead was only 62. But Whiteman had just completed his hundred, a study in concentration occupying 179 balls, and found a more reliable partner in Taylor, who helped take the score to 254 for 7 at tea.Somerset’s last hope was the second new ball, available one over after the interval. A chance slipped by with three runs added as Cameron Bancroft failed to hold a low catch offered to his left at second slip by Taylor, on 30, off Gregory.It was an error the hosts could not afford. Taylor progressed to a 96-ball half-century, with 8 fours and a six, and by the time he was well caught by Rew down the leg-side to give the tireless Peter Siddle his first wicket, the lead was 141. But it was Whiteman’s day. Unbeaten on 29 at the start of play, by the close he had occupied the crease for more than six and three-quarter hours, offering just one difficult chance to slip off Leach with the draw all but secured.

Com crise e lesões, São Paulo terá que 'correr contra o tempo' se quiser reforços antes de Sul-Americana

MatériaMais Notícias

Esta semana foi extremamente conturbada para o São Paulo. Logo no início, eliminado pelo Água Santa nas quartas de finais do Campeonato Paulista. Nesta mesma partida, duas novas lesões para a lista: Giuliano Galoppo e Welington.

RelacionadasSão PauloSão Paulo pode reencontrar rivais de títulos continentais na primeira fase da Sul-AmericanaSão Paulo18/03/2023São PauloJhegson Méndez é convocado pela seleção do Equador após eliminação do São Paulo no Paulista; Arboleda fica de foraSão Paulo18/03/2023São PauloDupla senegalesa assina com Sub-20 do São Paulo para reforçar elenco de BellettiSão Paulo18/03/2023

Mas é o ditado: não há nada tão ruim que não possa piorar. Nos dias seguintes à eliminação, o clima começou a esquentar no CT da Barra Funda. No caso, Rogério Ceni se desentendeu com Marcos Paulo e isso teria iniciadouma grande discussão entre o elenco e o treinador. Inclusive,ao que tudo indica, um abaixo-assinado pedindo sua saída começou a circular entre membros da cúpula tricolor.

Queda para o Água Santa no Paulistão é 14º vexame do São Paulo em mata-mata nos últimos dez anos

Veja tabela do Campeonato Paulista e simule os próximos jogos

Esta foi somente a primeira semana da ‘intertemporada’ do Tricolor, que só deve voltar a jogar no dia 5, quando pode estrear pela Copa Sul-Americana. Na semana seguinte, estreia no Campeonato Brasileiro.

Porém, com a longa lista de lesões – que envolve peças importantes do elenco -, a incerteza sobre o futuro de Marcos Paulo e o afastamento de Pedrinho – que está envolvido em uma investigação de violência doméstica -, caso o São Paulo queira se reforçar, terá que fazer ‘na velocidade da luz’.

O prazo para novas contratações é curto. A janela de transferências fecha no dia 4 de abril, um dia antes da possível estreia. Depois disso, não será mais possível inscrever novos jogadores. A nova janela abre somente no segundo semestre, no dia três de julho.

Ao todo, são onze lesionados. Entre estes, alguns casos cirúrgicos que devem perder boa parte da temporada – como Galoppo, Ferraresi e Igor Vinícius. Sobre Marcos Paulo, o LANCE! entrou em contato com o estafe do atleta, que confirmou que – mesmo com o atrito -, treina normalmente, mas ainda não é possível cravar sobre seu futuro.

Veja a lista de desfalques do São Paulo até então:

1 – André Anderson – não atua desde 5/01/2023 – motivo: Pubalgia – situação: faz tratamento no Reffis. Não deve jogar mais pelo São Paulo

2 – Caio Matheus – não atua desde 16/06/2022 – motivo: Cirurgia no joelho direito – situação: treinou com o elenco

3 – Calleri – não atua desde 05/03/2023 – motivo: Lesão no tornozelo direito – situação: fez tratamento no Reffis

4- Diego Costa – não atua desde 06/10/2022 – motivo: Cirurgia no joelho esquerdo – situação: em transição, iniciada em 20/2, treinou com o elenco

5 – Ferraresi – não atua desde 26/01/2023 – motivo: Cirurgia no joelho direito – situação: fez tratamento no Reffis. Volta apenas no segundo semestre

6 – Galoppo – ruptura de ligamento do joelho – deve passar por cirurgia e voltar só em 2024

7 – Igor Vinícius – não atua desde 22/01/2023 – motivo: Pubalgia – situação: passou por cirurgia e deve voltar só no segundo semestre

8 – Moreira – não atua desde 01/11/2022 – motivo: Cirurgia no joelho esquerdo – situação: faz tratamento no Reffis

9 – Rafinha – não atua desde 26/01/2023 – motivo: Entorse no tornozelo esquerdo – situação: fez tratamento no Reffis e realiza corridas leves no gramado

10 – Talles Costa – não atua desde 05/03/2023 – motivo: Cirurgia no joelho direito – situação: fez tratamento no Reffis

11 – Welington – Entorse no tornozelo direito

12- Pedrinho – afastado por conta de investigação policial.

Shanto wants Mahmudullah and Shakib to 'spread their experience' around the team

Captain Najmul Hossain Shanto and coach Chandika Hathurusinghe are concerned about Bangladesh’s batting, but that hasn’t led to any late changes to the T20 World Cup squad. As a result, Litton Das has survived despite scoring just 79 runs in his last six T20Is, all played this year.Litton’s T20I form had dipped so much that he lost his place in the side after scoring 1, 23 and 12 in the first three T20Is of the five-match series against Zimbabwe. His last innings ended when he missed with three consecutive attempts at scooping Blessing Muzarabani, dragging the ball on to the stumps off the last one.”Litton is a very important player in our team,” Shanto said in a press interaction on Wednesday. “He hasn’t had a good time recently. It can happen to any cricketer. But we didn’t want to bring in a new player for such a big event. We valued Litton’s experience. I wouldn’t have dropped him.Related

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“We were already discussing our World Cup team combinations during the Sri Lanka series. We wanted to be prepared by playing matches at home but the success in those matches was subjective. We were clear that we won’t change anyone only because he did badly in these home matches.”We didn’t bat on good wickets in the T20I series [against Zimbabwe in Chattogram and Dhaka]. We had to go on and off from the ground due to rain in some of the matches too. But Litton and I should score runs in every game. We have clarity in the team, so we hope we will deliver at the World Cup.”Hathurusinghe admitted that the top and middle order didn’t combine as well as expected against Zimbabwe, but felt there were occasions when they did fire to win games – they won the series 4-1, after all.”We managed to get a good start in some matches, and when we didn’t get a good start, we managed to finish strongly in some matches,” Hathurusinghe said. “So everybody got an opportunity to bat in the middle, that was a positive. Yes, individually, some of the players would have loved to spend [more] time in the middle, score runs, but in T20 cricket, anything can happen because it is a very different game to the other two formats.”We would love our top order to score all the time – in that kind of scenario, it takes a lot of pressure out of the other players. I am confident that – we have five matches leading up to the first game – we will be able to get those areas of concern sorted.”Bangladesh will play a three-T20I series against T20 World Cup co-hosts USA at Prairie View later this month and then the warm-up fixtures.Mahmudullah is back at his familiar finisher’s position and doing well•BCB

‘Want to give Mahmudullah and Shakib good memories’

Both Shanto and Hathurusinghe said that the batters should take inspiration from Mahmudullah. The senior batter, who is part of the 2024 squad, was dropped ahead of the 2022 T20 World Cup but returned to the fray just before the 2023 ODI World Cup, in which he was Bangladesh’s best batter. Mahmudullah has struck two fifties in T20Is this year in his familiar finisher’s role and had just one failure, a first-ball duck in the third T20I against Sri Lanka.”He’s been playing regularly. He made a strong comeback. Lately he’s playing his best cricket,” Hathurusinghe said. “He’s changed his approach to batting a lot. His role is going to be in the middle order, probably be the enforcer in the middle as well as a finisher role, which he has done remarkably well lately in all formats, in the domestics as well.”Shanto said that he was looking forward to Mahmudullah and Shakib Al Hasan, the most experienced cricketers in the squad, to share their experience with the other players.”The team is benefiting from [Mahmudullah’s] role in the batting line-up, at No. 5 or 6,” he said. “It gives the team an extra advantage. He is an inspiration for the youngsters. He has shown how to come back from such a tough situation.”We want to give them [Mahmudullah and Shakib] good memories at the World Cup. It is our responsibility as the younger players. I want them to perform their normal roles but, at the same time, if they can spread their experience with the rest of the team, it will help us.”Chandika Hathurusinghe: “Taskin is a very important member for us. He’s a leader”•AFP via Getty Images

‘Taskin is our leader of the pack in fast bowling’

Bangladesh are also hoping that their new vice-captain, Taskin Ahmed, gets fit in time to have an impact – Taskin was included in the squad despite a side strain.”Taskin is our leader of the pack in fast bowling,” Hathurusinghe said. “The rules of the tournament allow us to carry someone [reserve players], and then we can make a decision. We are giving him the best chance to be fit to play.”Taskin is a very important member for us. He’s a leader. That’s why he’s the vice-captain as well. We have the best medical and recovery procedures in America so we are going to use those resources and then give him the best chance of be fit for the first game.”Despite the question mark over Taskin, Shanto believes the bowling attack can win them games at the T20 World Cup.”We have a much improved fast-bowling department,” he said. “There’s a higher possibility of winning a T20 match if the bowling unit does well. We are also likely to play in conditions that may aid spin, so given our variation, they should also do well. Bowling is our strength.”At the 2022 T20 World Cup, then captain Shakib and the coaching staff led by S Sriram had overseen a new, fearless approach from the players, which gave Bangladesh two wins. They have struggled at global tournaments on the whole, though, but Hathurusinghe is being quietly optimistic.”I understand that we have high aspirations as a country. We have been playing good cricket generally out of the ICC events,” Hathurusinghe said. “As players and coaches, we also have high expectation. The first step is to get through this difficult group stage. We are in a very strong group so getting out of it is the main target.”Bangladesh are in Group D, with Nepal, Netherlands, South Africa and Sri Lanka, and start their World Cup on June 8 with a fixture against Sri Lanka at Dallas’ Grand Prairie stadium.