'Can't see any other captain pulling off a title win like this'

Reactions to Chennai Super Kings becoming champions of IPL 2018

ESPNcricinfo staff27-May-2018

Who is Hanuma Vihari?

All you need to know about the 24-year-old middle-order batsman with the best first-class average among all contemporary cricketers

Shashank Kishore22-Aug-2018Did you know?Vihari is at the summit of a very elite list. Among all contemporary cricketers, Vihari has the world’s best ‘s first-class average of 59.45. Steven Smith, the next best, is at 57.27.What has he done to merit selection?The first sign of Vihari being on the selection radar came in June, when he was one of just four players to be picked in both the 50-overs and four-day squads for India A’s tour of England. He made the opportunity count by finishing as the third-highest run-getter in the one-day tri-series (253 runs in three innings with a best of 147 against West Indies A). In his most recent first-class game against South Africa A in Bengaluru, he struck a match-winning 148. He now has two fifties and a century in his last five first-class innings.Has he played overseas outside of his stints with India A?Vihari isn’t an IPL regular; he last featured in 2015. He has spent his recent summers either in England or Bangladesh playing league cricket. In England, he played two seasons (2014 and 2015) for Hutton CC in the Shephered Neame Essex First Division League, where he’s made six centuries. That aside, he’s been part of preparatory tours to Sri Lanka with Andhra, the state he now plays for after shifting from Hyderabad in 2016.What are his strengths?Sanath Kumar, now part of the India Under-19 and India A set-ups as bowling coach, has had a ringside view of Vihari the batsman in a two-year term as Andhra coach. “He is very strong square of the wicket on both sides, and that is a direct sign of good back-foot play,” Sanath told ESPNcricinfo. “His picking of lengths is a great strength; it gives him more time to play his shots.”In the 2017-18 red-ball season, he worked a lot on his bat-swing, playing straight and close to the body, in tough conditions. His discipline to leave and eliminate those extravagant drives got him the runs. If you purely go by the numbers, many others may have outscored him, but in terms of quality, he was right up there. In the shorter versions, there was some reluctance to bat higher initially, but his strike rates have improved tremendously without making a compromise on his methods.”What did the “good qualities” fetch him during the 2017-18 domestic season?He finished the Ranji Trophy season with 752 runs in six matches at 94.00, including a career-best 302 not out, his maiden triple-century, against Odisha. The highlight, though, came in the Irani Cup in March against Ranji Trophy champions Vidarbha. He top scored for Rest of India with a 327-ball 183, a stonewalling effort against a pace attack consisting Umesh Yadav and Rajneesh Gurbani, the leading wicket-taker in the 2017-18 Ranji Trophy season. He battled his way through with the lower order for company, and shared a 216-run seventh-wicket partnership with Jayant Yadav.What has he done in junior cricket?Vihari was an Under-19 World Cup winner in 2012. He wasn’t initially part of the squad, but was picked after Manan Vohra, the opening batsman, fractured his thumb a day before the team’s departure to Australia. In the subsequent year, he played for Sunrisers Hyderabad in the IPL and even dismissed Chris Gayle, after being asked to bowl his fastish offbreaks with the new ball.

Harmanpreet, the first Indian woman to hit a World T20 ton

India T20I captain Harmanpreet Kaur smashed 103 off 51 balls, becoming only the third woman to hit a century in the World T20

Shiva Jayaraman09-Nov-20182 Number of centuries made in the Women’s World T20 before Harmanpreet Kaur’s 103 against New Zealand. Australia’s Meg Lanning and West Indies’ Deandra Dottin are the other batsman to do so. Click here for a list of the highest scores in the Women’s World T20.97* The previous highest score by an Indian in women’s T20Is, which was made by Mithali Raj against Malaysia earlier this year. India’s highest individual score in the World T20 before this was by Harmanpreet herself; she had made 77 off 59 balls against Bangladesh in the 2014 World T20.8 Sixes hit by Harmanpreet Kaur, equaling the second-most in a women’s T20I innings. Dottin had hit nine sixes against South Africa in a T20I in 2010 which is the highest individual tally. New Zealand’s Sophie Devine had hit eight sixes against India in a T20I in 2015. The eight sixes in this innings are also the most by an Indian T20Is. Harmanpreet beat her own record of five sixes which she hit against Sri Lanka in September.201.96 Harmanpreet’s strike-rate in this innings – the third-highest in an innings of 50 or more runs in the Women’s World T20. Only Dottin has struck faster in the tournament history. Harmanpreet’s strike rate is the best by an India batsman in a score of 50 or more in all T20Is.305.88 Harmanpreet’s strike rate in the death overs; she faced 17 balls in the last five overs hitting 52 runs off them. Forty of those runs came in boundaries – four sixes and four fours. Harmanpreet had started her innings slowly, having scored just five runs in her first 13 balls before hitting the first of her eight sixes off her 14th. Harmanpreet bludgeoned 98 runs off the remaining 38 balls she faced in the innings at a strike rate of 257.89.191 for 4 The previous highest total in the Women’s World T20 – amassed by Australia against Ireland in the 2014 edition. India’s 194 for 5 in this match is also their second-highest in a T20I. They had hit 198 for 4 – their highest – against England in Mumbai in March this year.

Inglorious batting keeps Dilruwan Perera incognito once again

Dilruwan Perera claimed another five-wicket haul to cap a successful series with the ball – not that you’d know it

Andrew Fidel Fernando at the SSC25-Nov-2018If you do not know much about Sri Lanka offspinner Dilruwan Perera, please acquaint yourself with some 100% accurate, rock-solid, absolutely-not-made-up facts about the man. As a reserve firefighter he routinely runs into blazes no one else dares go near. He has rescued nine infants, five cats and – though he hates to admit it – three members of parliament. As a teenager, angered by his school’s continued refusal to fix leaks in the classroom roof, Dilruwan broke in at night and set up the class furniture on the roof, as a protest. He was chaired around town by fellow students for his heroism and enterprise. Once, coming across an abandoned nest of baby birds, he ate a whole tree’s worth of mangoes and regurgitated them in order to raise the chicks to adulthood. He has a keenly developed eye for the human anatomy, and has helped police arrest dozens of public nudity offenders by looking at grainy social media photos and then picking out the culprits’ backsides from a crowd.Before you start preparing a libel lawsuit, I will confess immediately that all of the above are totally false, but there is a good reason for having made things up, and that is to somehow raise Dilruwan Perera awareness, even by peddling aggrandising lies. Some truths now. Did you know he has now appeared in 34 Tests? That’s 11 more than Mohammad Asif. Were you aware he now has 147 Test wickets? That’s 34 more than Ryan Harris.And are you aware that in this ongoing Test series against England, he is the highest wicket-taker, with 22 dismissals, and has very little chance of being caught? You’re not, are you? Completely unintentionally, for whom amongst us does not crave recognition, this is just how Dilruwan rolls. Forever overshadowed, perennially underappreciated.As a cricketer, over the past five years, it is difficult to think of anyone, anywhere who has been more incognito. When he gets a five-wicket haul, which he had done on seven occasions before day three in Colombo, there is always a tastier narrative. Maybe Rangana Herath took four at the other end and broke a record. Or was there a controversy about the quality of the pitch? Someone tampered with the ball, maybe. Someone else was called for a suspicious action. Wonder of wonders, Sri Lanka got their reviews right.Or maybe, as is most often the case for a Sri Lanka bowler, Dilruwan took a five-for, led the team off the field holding the ball aloft, then the batsmen came out and proceeded to put on one of their show-stopping, history-making, miss-an-over-and-they-are-nine-down collapses. Dilruwan has taken eight wickets in this game, but no one cares, because his team have produced passages in which they have lost 9 for 67, and then 4 for 37.Even when Sri Lanka were bowling, there was a bigger story – Lakshan Sandakan’s two reprieves of Ben Stokes, who was first caught at cover, then at slip, only to be recalled on both occasions because Sandakan had overstepped.Dilruwan Perera celebrates a breakthrough•Associated PressDilruwan has now been called upon to step into Herath’s shoes and lead this spin attack, but in so many ways he is more Herath than Herath himself. Where Herath was kept in the shadows by Muttiah Muralitharan until he was 31, Dilruwan was 36 before he received the spin-leader mantle. Only now does he stand a chance of playing on tracks where Sri Lanka field just one spinner. If Herath’s action was a throwback, Dilruwan’s is straight out of the 1920s – a brief straight-on amble, a gentle pivot, a velvet delivery.Dilruwan is not tall enough for it to be an obvious advantage, not short enough for there to be an against-the-odds angle, not slim enough to look athletic, not pudgy enough to be made fun of, and too quiet to deliver newsworthy lines. Herath is a banker, but even that seems too sexy for our guy. He’s more like a banker’s accountant. Or a banker’s accountant’s accountant.His strengths, as a bowler, which are substantial, are plain to see, of course. He bowls an accurate line, keeps it on a good length, reads batsmen well, mixes up his pace, turns some and slides others on to the pad.If all that sounds too boring to contemplate, perhaps it is worth contemplating Dilruwan anyway, even if in the form of a fabricated fantasy. There Dilruwan stands on a deserted island, shirtless, pecs glistening, spearing a fish from 20 metres. There he sits, an adoring crowd gasping at a feat of strength, as he cracks coconut after coconut between his thighs.Give him a few seconds of thought on a day on which he took another five-wicket haul. Because next time he does it, there might be a flood, or a brawl, or a hornet attack. In addition, obviously, to another Sri Lanka batting collapse.

Chaotic selections put Australia's World Cup at risk

With the team using 26 players over 11 matches in the last three series, stability is not the first word that comes to mind for the defending champions

Andrew McGlashan05-Jan-20195:53

Martyn: Like Lyon’s selection in ODI squad, not Siddle’s

The Australian selection meetings would make a fascinating fly-on-the-wall documentary. They certainly aren’t dull (and this isn’t even about Marnus Labuschagne).For example, here’s a quick recap of the last three ODI squads:England – June 2018:Tim Paine, Aaron Finch, Ashton Agar, Alex Carey, Travis Head, Nathan Lyon, Glenn Maxwell, Shaun Marsh, Michael Neser, Jhye Richardson, Kane Richardson, D’Arcy Short, Billy Stanlake, Marcus Stoinis, Andrew TyeSouth Africa – November 2018:Aaron Finch, Alex Carey, Josh Hazlewood, Ashton Agar, Pat Cummins, Nathan Coulter-Nile, Travis Head, Chris Lynn, Shaun Marsh, Glenn Maxwell, D’Arcy Short, Mitchell Starc, Marcus Stoinis, Adam ZampaIndia – January 2019:Aaron Finch, Jason Behrendorff, Alex Carey, Peter Handscomb, Usman Khawaja, Nathan Lyon, Mitch Marsh, Shaun Marsh, Glenn Maxwell, Jhye Richardson, Peter Siddle, Billy Stanlake, Marcus Stoinis, Adam ZampaThat’s potentially 26 players over 11 matches in those three series. Even taking into account the absence of The Duo (Australia’s one-day slump began well before the ball-tampering fallout), the inevitable injuries that occur, and wanting to look at bench strength, that is a lot. Less than five months from the World Cup, where they are defending champions, stability is not the word that springs to mind. Chaos perhaps does.”We believe the squad we have selected will give us a great opportunity to not only be competitive at home this summer, but it also allows us to start to build continuity leading into next year’s tournament” – National selector Trevor Hohns after naming the squad to face South Africa in November.”After a disappointing period in ODI cricket, the National Selection Panel along with team coaches have reviewed our performances across this format and we’ve identified a number of key areas that we feel we need to improve in order to help put this team in the best possible position to turn this period around. With this in mind and the World Cup looming, we’ve selected players we feel provide us with the flexibility to play a variety of roles at different stages of a match.” – Hohns after naming the squad to face India in January.Also see: Australia make wholesale changes, bring back Siddle and Lyon for ODIsThere are some caveats to the vast number of changes: the main three quicks – Mitchell Starc, Josh Hazlewood and Pat Cummins – have been rested/rotated/managed while Nathan Coulter-Nile has experienced some back pain. It is to be assumed that the big three come straight back for the World Cup, although they are far from the magic bullet as their presence has not helped arrest the one-day slide.Although Peter Siddle’s recall stands out – he last played an ODI in 2010 – it is perhaps a little less left-field than it looks given his reinvention as a fine T20 bowler in the BBL. All the other bowlers selected make some sense as well – or at least can be argued one way or another – although the selectors continue to go round in circles about whether Nathan Lyon is an ODI cricketer.The most interesting u-turn has been in the batting personnel. Steven Smith and David Warner remain on the outer and are all-but certain to be in the World Cup squad, but that doesn’t hide the shift that has taken place. The selectors don’t seem to know what they want or, perhaps, they know what they want but don’t know to get it.A year ago, (with, it should be noted, Warner and Smith in the XI) Australia couldn’t find the top-order tempo to match England. On the tour of England a few months later, a hotch-potch side was comfortably overpowered. So at the start of this Australian season, the focus was on power as Chris Lynn was recalled to much fanfare.David Warner and Steven Smith look on before the start of the match•Cricket Australia/Getty ImagesLynn made 57 in three matches against South Africa. One of those innings brought 44 at a run-a-ball, then he was asked to open and made a first-ball duck. It’s not much of a sample size. Usman Khawaja (last ODI January 2017) and Peter Handscomb (last ODI October 2017) are now back in the fold, Travis Head has gone from a one-day cricketer to a Test cricketer in the space of six months, and four ODIs have been enough to make a judgement on Short.Here’s Hohns again: “Usman is a batsman we know can put vital runs on the board at the top of the order, and Peter is not only a fine player of spin bowling, he’s also a batsman we know can hold an innings together while keeping the scoreboard ticking over.”Neither Khawaja or Handscomb were deemed the right men for the job previously. Khawaja’s List A numbers are very solid – an average of 45.76 – but it feels like clutching at straws if he is suddenly going to be the answer to revive the top order. Handscomb averaged 51.57 in the JLT, a much derided competition, but then Lynn averaged 75.33 with two centuries to Handscomb’s none. If Australia still believe totals of 280-300 will suffice, it’s putting an awful lot on the bowlers.We are in strange times. So much about Australia’s selections is a cross between a holding pattern and just hoping the next idea works. It might be, somehow, that it all comes together in England: Smith and Warner make the difference to the top order, Glenn Maxwell provides an x-factor, Alex Carey becomes a finisher, they work out what role the spinner should play, Starc rediscovers his swing and the juggling of the fast bowlers come out with a combination that can dismantle any opposition.It might, but don’t count on it.

The case for a bigger, better Women's T20 Challenge next year

With close to 30,000 people attending the four games in Jaipur, we wonder what a few sensible tweaks can do for the women’s game in India

Annesha Ghosh in Jaipur13-May-2019She has only ever played T20 cricket internationally, and has a batting average of 4.75 there from nine innings. But two-two-two-four off the last four balls from Amelia Kerr in the Women’s T20 Challenge final to clinch victory for Supernovas, and Radha Yadav is a star in the making now. Exactly what a platform like a kind-of-IPL is meant to do for women’s cricket in India.All told, it was a success. Four matches. Largely with good turnouts (13,000-odd were at the final). Three of the four games were played under lights, there was some excellent action and close finishes, Velocity choosing to play for qualification to the final instead of going for a win against Supernovas perhaps the only negative.Lots to celebrate then, but there are a couple of things to think about for the organisers and powers that be.Let there be light, as much as possibleIndia haven’t played a day-night or night-only home international fixture since March 2016. The first non-day match they played, at home or away, since that World T20 game in Mohali was at the 2018 World T20, in the semi-final, which they lost to England. Failing to account for the dew factor and the lack of an idea of the intricacies of fielding under lights – apart from other things – abetted their loss.ALSO READ: A high-quality advertisement for women’s cricket in IndiaAt the Women’s T20 Challenge, nearly a dozen catches were shelled – by Indian and overseas players, young and experienced. The swirling ball against the backdrop of the night sky posed all three teams a challenge. At the T20 World Cup next year, in Australia, two of India’s four league-stage games will begin at 7pm local time, the remaining two at 2pm. The 2021 ODI World Cup, too, will have a sprinkling of day-night and night games.With two world tournaments in the next two years, there is a case for the BCCI to consider hosting a few games under lights during the home series against South Africa later this year, and ensure a few night fixtures across all domestic tournaments, including the age-group competitions, in the upcoming season.”Playing under lights is actually challenging because the whole atmosphere changes, the way the wind blows, with the light and the way the ball travels on the field,” said India and Velocity batsman Veda Krishnamurthy, who took most catches (and, more importantly, dropped none) in the tournament. “So, at least if we start playing T20s in the evening [that will help] and also help bring in more crowd.”Around 13,000 people turned up for the final•BCCIThere’s no blockbuster without the publicityA standalone identity, in a non-metro city, held on the sidelines of the men’s IPL were all vital when it came to testing the waters for a possible women’s IPL, or a short three-team event to start with. If the response to the four-match competition – on social media and at the ground – is anything to go by, the Women’s T20 Challenge was more than a sleeper hit.Scheduling the final on the weekend, with a 7.30pm start, allowed appreciable prime-time viewership, the high-quality cricket in the final-ball thriller only bolstering the case for women’s cricket in India to have a bigger, a more expanded T20 league of its own.As crowd turnout goes, the attendance at Sawai Mansingh Stadium grew with each night fixture – from roughly 4,000 in the opening match to 7,000-plus in the second, to over 13,000 for the final. Even the only match with a 3.30pm start, in the sweltering Jaipur heat, had nearly 3,500 people in attendance at the stadium.Be informed, these are numbers for a tournament that didn’t even have much advertisement around the stadium premises. Locals – cab drivers, store owners, hotel owners, children and women – who came to watch the matches said that TV commercials, though sporadic, carried by the host broadcaster during the closing stages of the IPL’s league phase played a part in piquing their interest.Stick to the non-metrosImagine, then, what Women’s T20 Challenge signage at the airport (which had many Rajasthan Royals hoardings well after the team had been eliminated), the railway station, and in the immediate vicinity of the stadium could have done. No reason, then, for the BCCI to doubt the cricket-watching appetite – for women’s games – among Indians, right?”Smaller cities could work, because of the curiosity factor…,” Mithali Raj, who also called for an expanded competition, said. “We could add one or two more teams, but [making] it a double-leg [competition], where we could play each team twice, will make it more interesting because any team can beat any team in the league. That gives every player and team a few more games.”Back in the day, to promote the sport under WCAI [the now-defunct Women’s Cricket Association of India], we tried to play at smaller places where a lot of people came to watch maybe because of the curiosity factor, but we used to attract a lot of people. So that isn’t a bad idea.”Worth thinking about.

What does Sri Lanka's win over England mean for the race to the final four?

The chasing pack needs England to lose all their games or one of them has to be flawless in terms of results in the final phase of the group stage

ESPNcricinfo staff22-Jun-2019Has the race for the semis been shaken up?
Not really. Though their win has brought Sri Lanka to within two points of England, they have just two wins compared to England’s four (two of Sri Lanka’s points have come from washouts). Since the first tie-breaker for teams joined on points is matches won, Sri Lanka need to go ahead of England on points. That means winning all their games or hoping England lose all of theirs. The rest of the pack are still quite far behind the top four and could be further behind once the Afghanistan v India match is over.How does the loss affect England?
England remain third on the table with eight points for the time being. But their three remaining matches are tough ones, against Australia, India and New Zealand. They need to win two of those games to guarantee a spot in the semi-finals.ESPNcricinfo LtdWhat happens if they win just one more game?
They are still fairly likely to make it through thanks to the number of wins – four – and their strong net run-rate. One more win will put them on ten points. So Sri Lanka will have to win all of their remaining games (or win two and tie one) to overtake them. Bangladesh, West Indies and Pakistan are all in the same position. They have to win all their games to reach 11 points. Even if one of the chasing pack manages to be flawless till the end of the group phase, England still have the hope that one of Australia, New Zealand or India will collapse and fail to reach 11 points.Can England get in even if they don’t win any more games?
It’s possible, but they would really need luck to go their way in terms of other results: Sri Lanka shouldn’t win more than one more game, and no one else must reach nine points. Pakistan and Bangladesh are in fairly good positions to get there, though.Where does the win leave Sri Lanka?
Their three remaining games are against South Africa, West Indies and India. Win two and they will be on ten points. They then have to hope that either England or New Zealand lose all their remaining games, or that India win just one more game, an unlikely scenario given India have five games left. The best chance for Sri Lanka is to win all of their remaining games. It still doesn’t guarantee them a place in the semi-finals as there are result permutations that would leave the current top four each on 12 points or more, but it would give them a shot.ESPNcricinfo LtdDo the rest of the chasing pack benefit in any way?
They do, but they still have a lot of work to do. The best hope for Bangladesh, Pakistan and West Indies is that England lose all their remaining games and that Sri Lanka win no more than one game. That would leave those two on eight points. Bangladesh then have to win two of their remaining games, which are against Afghanistan, India and Pakistan. Pakistan and West Indies will have to win three games each. England losing could lead to some fun scraps as West Indies and Sri Lanka still have to play each other, as do Bangladesh and Pakistan.And what about South Africa?
This result does kind of bring them back into the mix, but they are going to need other results to go their way, while also winning all of their games. They have to hope England lose all their games and Sri Lanka win no more than one. But it still doesn’t guarantee them anything. They have also got to hope no one else reaches nine points with a better net run-rate.So who outside the top four has the best chance?
Apart from Sri Lanka, Bangladesh and Pakistan have benefitted most. Both have good shots of making it to nine points, if not 11. Bangladesh would have to beat Afghanistan and Pakistan or India. Pakistan would have to beat either South Africa or New Zealand and then win their last two games, against Afghanistan and Bangladesh. But remember, nine points is only enough if England lose all their games from here.

Youngsters make use of 'once-in-a-lifetime experience' with Dravid at NCA

In October, 35 young cricketers from 16 Commonwealth countries travelled to NCA for a month-long training camp

Sruthi Ravindranath in Bengaluru30-Oct-2019Shafina Mahesh, the Singapore women’s team captain, cannot stop pinching herself. With childlike enthusiasm, she has been taking advantage of the golden ticket that has brought her to the National Cricket Academy (NCA) in Bengaluru, where she has been given the opportunity to train under one of the legends of the game: Rahul Dravid.Shafina is one of 35 young cricketers from 16 Commonwealth countries who have travelled to NCA as part of a month-long training camp initiated by the Indian government and facilitated by the BCCI. The group comprises players of varied age groups: while Shafina is one of the older players – she is 20 – there are trainees as young as 12, coming from countries like Kenya, Mauritius, Nigeria, Rwanda, Malaysia, and Jamaica, to name a few.”Just seeing him (Dravid) around here every day is inspiring,” Shafina says excitedly. While it has been an overwhelming experience for her, Shafina is not losing sight of her goal, something she reckons this short stint in India has already started helping her with: “I want to be like MS Dhoni. I’m a wicketkeeper. Wicketkeeping is what I’ve been focusing on here at this camp too.”Luckily, Shafina has been able to get a more focused coaching experience because she is one of the two women wicketkeepers in the group.”There’s a lot we have learnt about our stance, how we get up with the ball, stumping, foot movement, reaction time and other things,” she says. “But for me as a batsman, it’s been more about going back to basics here. Getting the foundation right and strong because that is the only way to move forward, I’ve learnt.”Alexander Volschenk poses with Rahul Dravid•Alexander VolschenkAlthough the programme is supervised by Dravid, other NCA coaches including Apurva Desai, Kalpana Venkatachar, T Dilip and Ragini Malhotra have worked with the group, helping the youngsters understand their skillsets better and widen their knowledge.Coming from countries where the infrastructure is sparse and, in many cases, the game itself is still developing, the challenges are manifold for all these players. The other big challenge is most players in the group are inexperienced, or too young. And that, Dravid points out, is something he himself was uncertain about when the programme commenced.”The passion and enthusiasm has been terrific,” Dravid told ESPNcricinfo. “It’s not easy for some of these boys and girls. Some are 12 and 13, most of them are under 16 years, they’re leaving their country and coming for the first time to spend a month here. They probably didn’t even know what to expect. Initially, I thought they might struggle but they have the enthusiasm, passion and the desire to play the game.”This enthusiasm has helped Dravid and the coaches to quickly find a connect with the youngsters. “They’re always in the indoors [facility], throwing a tennis ball or something. It’s been heartening. All the coaches have mentioned that they’re happy with the response they’ve got from these boys and girls, which is all you can expect.”The BCCI has been involved in exchange programmes for a long time with major cricketing countries like Australia and England, which has paved the way for players to upgrade their skills in a professional set-up. The NCA has been key in the BCCI’s vision of developing such programmes, especially with Dravid’s recent appointment as the academy’s head.The young trainees acknowledge that the state-of-the-art NCA facilities have been eye-opening.”It’s a new experience to train here and learn,” 14-year-old Namibian batsman Alexander Volschenk says. “In my country, we practice on concrete pitches and not on turf. So when we actually go and play in South Africa or somewhere else, we’re not used to any of that. When we bowl, we end up bowling wides, and we bat inconsistently. But here it’s not that way. It’s a once-in-a-lifetime experience.”Our national teams have brought in some professional guys but in India they groom players from Under-16 itself. In our country, the focus is more on national players. In India, you have Virat Kohli and four-five other Virat Kohlis in the making, waiting to go. But that’s not the case in places where cricket is still coming up.”To smoothen the understanding, Dravid has kept the programme simple and personalised it for each participant, based on his/her background, age, skills, level of cricketing competence, and experience.Shafina Mahesh”In other camps, most of them have similar abilities, similar sort of experiences of having played the game,” Dravid says. “Here you have some people who have more experience, people who haven’t played the game, some with very little experience. So we had to tailor-make these things based on every individual’s requirements, both on skill side of things and the physical fitness side.”What each one ends up achieving might be different because they come with different skillsets. In the end, the idea was to give them all a good experience. It was a challenge for our coaches that way. It’s been a good exposure for some of the players because they’ve never had a chance to experience some of these facilities. They’ve hopefully benefited from it.”While the trainees’ visible enthusiasm suggested that the camp was nothing short of a hit, one wonders whether a one-off camp like this one can actually have a long-lasting impact.”We [at the NCA] would like to be in a position where we can make the maximum impact,” Dravid says. “We believe we have the facilities and the know-how to make a real impact on young boys and girls. With better planning, better things can definitely be done.”Just like Shafina, Volschenk wants to go home with new tricks that would serve him well in the future. “I was standing too much on my heels, too upright, they told me how to play by putting more weight in the middle of my feet so that became easy for me,” Volschenk says. “But the biggest takeaway would be my bowling, which has improved.”The camp ended on October 30, a bit too soon for teenaged Malaysian quick bowler Dhanusri Muhunan, who says, “To be honest I want this camp to be longer. But I hope they have another camp like this so the ones who’ve missed out also get a chance.”When they had landed in Bengaluru for the camp starting on October 1, the group was uncertain and anxious: being in a completely new place and learning from people whom they have never met before. But the nerves vanished when they started training alongside some of the best names in Indian cricket.They met openers Shikhar Dhawan and Smriti Mandhana, and fast bowler Bhuvneshwar Kumar. Some wished they would run into India captain Virat Kohli, who, unsurprisingly, is who most of them aspire to be like.”I would like to play for West Indies one day and I want to bat like Kohli,” 14-year-old Adrian Mahase from Trinidad and Tobago says. “I want to make use of this opportunity to become like him in the future.”As far as Dravid is concerned, though, the best thing would be for the youngsters to return with more of what they came to the camp with: love for the game.”I just want them to take back the love for the game,” he says. “Different people will take different things. Some of them might have had great facilities here but go back to no facilities or matches, but we can’t control that. What we can control is for them to get a taste of what’s it like to play cricket with such facilities and some improvement in some skills – be it fitness or anything.”We’d be happy if there’s some improvement somewhere. And hopefully some real love for the game, some friendships and good memories.”

Bring on the pressure, dot-ball devil Mitchell Santner is up for it

‘Build pressure and try and get wickets that way,’ says the New Zealand left-arm spinner of his plan against England in the World Cup final

Nagraj Gollapudi at Lord's13-Jul-2019Mitchell Santner will be up against it at the World Cup final, where New Zealand will face the might of England; all England, really, as the stands at Lord’s are going to be rooting for Eoin Morgan’s men. And when it comes to Santner, England have hurt him in the past, and got away with it too.The left-arm spinner’s overall average against England’s top-six batsmen is 61, and his economy rate is 6. All of England’s batsmen have strong numbers against left-arm spin in the last four years, since the 2015 World Cup, and Lord’s can be unkind to spinners, especially finger spinners.But there are few players that can absorb pressure better than Santner. Two examples from the recent past. The first: on a sweltering April evening in Jaipur, on a day when even the coolest mind in cricket, MS Dhoni, lost his temper, Santner sealed victory for Chennai Super Kings with a last-ball six.ALSO READ: The serenity and resilience of being New ZealandThe second, last Wednesday, when Santner choked the Indian middle-order in a spectacular first spell. Making use of a two-paced pitch that was taking spin, Santner built pressure with his dot balls. Rishabh Pant and Hardik Pandya had slowly started rebuilding the innings after a series of early setbacks. His first over to Pandya was a maiden. In his second, he kept Pant rooted to his crease on the first four balls. Next delivery, Pant walked out, and slogged into the hands of deep midwicket. Pandya, too, would pay the price for impatience soon. Santner’s first spell read 6-2-7-2. It was match-wining spell that not just suffocated India, but also broke their confidence and momentum. Matt Henry won the match award, but Santner got a “world-class” badge from his captain Kane Williamson and head coach Gary Stead.Now, Santner has to do it all over again. Against the most feared batting line-up, one that, seemingly, never ends. Santner’s quota is key, and New Zealand would want to bowl all of it, as that will take some of the pressure off Jimmy Neesham and Colin de Grandhomme, whose medium-slow deliveries England might have identified as the weakest link.Of the 141 overs bowled at Lord’s this tournament, spinners have managed just 13 wickets, while bowling just two maidens. But Santner will gather confidence from the fact that the economy rate for spinners at Lord’s has been a good 4.97. It is closer to his own World Cup 2019 economy of 4.87 – his corresponding career number is 4.89 – which is only behind the Afghanistan pair of Mujeeb Ur Rahman and Mohammad Nabi for spinners in the tournament (minimum 40 overs).Mitchell Santner has an economy rate of 4.87 at the World Cup•Getty ImagesSantner is not a big tweaker of the ball. His strength is in his smart lengths. He judges the pitch, and the best pace for each surface, as he did against India, and varies his lengths accordingly. He has a good arm ball, and if he can float it at different speeds, he might make the English batsman think twice.”Over here, there is a not a lot of spin, especially for a finger spinner, so my role through the middle is to build pressure and try and get wickets that way,” Santner told ESPNcricinfo on Friday.But, as mentioned before, the English batsmen like Santner. His most expensive figures at the World Cup came against them during the group phase, when he finished with 1 for 65, having bowled the first over of the match in which he conceded five runs.He knows England might target him, but spots an opportunity there. “It can go one or two ways. That means you are always in the game rather them trying to block it out,” he said. “It is a going to be a tough test. The role of spinner is bring your length back, bowl in to the wicket, rather than overpitch. Spinners get hurt when they overpitched, especially to Jason Roy, who can hit it 30 rows back. On smallish grounds, you have got to be real, real tough with your length.”It is not just Roy. Jonny Bairstow, Joe Root, Morgan, Ben Stokes and Jos Buttler all play spin well, and run well. When not trying to smash it, they would look to manoeuvre the ball into the gaps and rotate strike and build pressure.It’s a bit like T20 cricket, and Santner admitted that he would make use of the experience of bowling in the IPL recently, where the pressure is constant across the 24 deliveries. “If you can build pressure, build dots in those shorter formats… the way England play it is a bit like that,” he agreed. “So if you get a couple of dots and you are thinking, ‘Hey, what’s he gonna do? Is he going to charge? What’s my best to ball to get hit for one even, rather than going for a six or a four.'”It is this understanding of not just his own game but the game itself, how to be smart in different match situations, that Stead feels makes Santner stand out. “He is a special bowler for us,” Stead said on Friday. “He has got really good control of line and length. His ability in T20 cricket helps him in 50-overs cricket as well: being able to defend himself when people come after him.”On Sunday, at Lord’s, Santner and his team-mates will get live their schoolboy dream of playing the World Cup final. Santner is not nervous. He knows his role well – honest defence; keep it tight, build pressure.

'Bloody beauty. This Test cricket isn't bad is it?'

Reactions on social media after Australia retain the Ashes at Old Trafford

ESPNcricinfo staff08-Sep-2019Ashes retained. Celebration time for Australia.

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Ashes are coming home! Outstanding performance by the Baggy Greeners -nothing better than a winning change room!! #ashescricket2019 #proud #aussiepride #spirit #mateship @ryanpierse @gettyimages

A post shared by Steve Waugh (@stevewaugh) on Sep 9, 2019 at 12:21am PDT

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Congrats Australia, well played boys & what a wonderful series it’s been ! #Ashes

A post shared by Shane Warne (@shanewarne23) on Sep 8, 2019 at 11:04am PDT

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Bloody proud Australia!! #ashes

A post shared by Aaron Finch (@aaronfinch5) on Sep 8, 2019 at 2:29pm PDT

Australia have been the better side over the four Tests. Agree?

Even Dr. in the House gave his congratulations

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