Rain intervenes after India bowlers wreck West Indies

28-Aug-2016Johnson Charles blazed away at the other end and biffed a six and two fours off the next three balls of the over•BCCICharles was going strong until Mishra got him to hole out to long-on. He had scored 43 off 25 balls•BCCILendl Simmons was done in by R Ashwin, who fired a full delivery down leg to have him stumped with a wide•BCCIJasprit Bumrah and Ashwin combined to pick up the next three wickets to reduce West Indies to 98 for 6 in 13 overs•BCCIMishra added the scalps of Dwayne Bravo and Carlos Brathwaite to finish with 3 for 24. West Indies were eventually bowled out for 143 with two balls remaining in the innings•BCCIIndia reached 15 for no loss after two overs of the chase, before rain forced the players off the field, and eventually led to play being abandoned•BCCI

A series for bunnies, Starc and Sri Lanka's spinners

A look at the key numbers from the 2016 Warne-Muralitharan series which saw Australia suffer a 3-0 whitewash

Shiva Jayaraman18-Aug-201618.50 Bowling average of Sri Lanka spinners in the series; they took 54 of the 60 Australia wickets that fell in the series striking every 41.5 deliveries, with three five-wicket hauls from Rangana Herath and one from Dilruwan Perera. In comparison, Australia’s spinners took 24 wickets at an average of 38.29 with a best of 4 for 123 by Nathan Lyon.

Spinners in the Warne-Muralitharan Trophy, 2016
Team Wkts Ave SR 5wi/10wm
Sri Lanka 54 18.50 41.50 4/2
Australia 24 38.29 69.00 0/0

54 Wickets taken by Sri Lanka spinners – the most by them in a series. Their previous best was a tally of 50 wickets against New Zealand in a series at home in 1998.15.16 Starc’s bowling average – the best by a fast bowler to take at least 20 wickets in a series in Asia since Waqar Younis took 27 wickets at 13.81 in a series against Zimbabwe in 1993-94. Overall, Starc’s average is the eighth best for a fast bowler with 20 or more wickets in a series in Asia. The other pacers in this series took 13 wicket at an average of 38.61.24 Wickets taken by Mitchell Starc in this series, 11 more than other pacers in the series combined. This is the highest ever lead by a fast bowler over others in terms of wickets in any Test series. The previous best was by Richard Hadlee. He took 33 wickets in the Trans-Tasman Trophy in Australia in 1985-86 while other pacers from either side together took six wickets fewer.25.8 Starc’s strike rate in this series – the best for any bowler to take at least 20 wickets in any series in Asia. Muttiah Muralitharan’s strike rate of 26.0 in a series against Bangladesh at home in 2007 was the previous best. Including Muralitharan’s figures, the next three instances in this list are by spinners. Waqar Younis’ strike rate of 29.0 in a series against Zimbabwe in 1993-94 is the next best by a pacer.19.08 Average of Australia batsmen in the series – their lowest ever in any series involving two or more Tests in Asia. Their lowest before this had also come in Sri Lanka, in 1999, when their batsmen averaged 22.65 per dismissal.1978-79 The last time Australia batsmen averaged lower in a series involving two more Tests – in the Ashes in Australia when they managed just 17.99 runs per dismissal. Their average of 19.08 is the third worst in any Test series involving at least two matches since 1950.18 Single-digit scores by Australia’s top-order (No. 1 to No.7) batsmen in the series – their most in a series since 1900 and their fourth highest in any series involving three or fewer Tests. Overall, only one visiting team had had more scores under ten runs from their top-order batsmen in a series in Sri Lanka. West Indies had 19 such scores in a three-Test series in 2001-02.885 Runs scored by Sri Lanka’s batsmen at No. 6 or lower in the series – the second highest in a series against Australia in Asia and only two runs fewer than in the Border-Gavaskar Trophy in India in 2008-09. Sri Lanka’s last six batsmen averaged 32.77 in the series and made two hundreds and two fifties.13.16 Runs Australia’s last six batsmen averaged per dismissal – their lowest in any series in Asia. Their batsmen managed to score only 395 runs from 36 innings and the only fifty came from Mitchell Marsh in the first innings of the third Test. Overall, there have been only five instances for Australia – the last of which was in the 1978-79 Ashes – when their last six batsmen have averaged lower after 30 or more innings in a series.6 Number of top-order batsmen in this series from either side who got out to a bowler four or more times while averaging fewer than 20 runs against him. This equals the most such instances in a Test series since 2002. Dimuth Karunaratne and Kusal Mendis got out to Starc five times and Steven Smith also fell to Rangana Herath as many times. Starc’s five dismissals of Karunaratne were spread over just 39 deliveries and the batsman managed to average just 3.80 runs per dismissal. The 2013 Ashes also saw six such batsmen-bowler combinations from five matches.

Top-order batsmen’s cheap dismissals to bowlers in this series
Batsman Bowler Inns Dis Ave Balls/Dis
Dimuth Karunaratne Mitchell Starc 6 5 3.80 7.8
Kusal Mendis Mitchell Starc 6 5 13.60 20.2
Steven Smith Rangana Herath 6 5 15.80 37.8
Angelo Mathews Nathan Lyon 5 4 12.25 18.3
Kusal Perera Nathan Lyon 5 4 15.25 24.0
Adam Voges Rangana Herath 6 4 4.75 25.3
Usman Khawaja Dilruwan Perera 4 3 5.66 14.3
Mitchell Marsh Rangana Herath 6 3 19.66 30.3
Mitchell Marsh Lakshan Sandakan 5 3 10.33 21.3
Peter Nevill Rangana Herath 6 3 9.33 31.3

16 Dismissals of openers for single-digits – including four ducks – in this series, which equalled the most in any series of three or fewer matches. There were 16 such instances in the series against India in Sri Lanka last year as well. Openers, of late, have been on shaky ground in Sri Lanka as illustrated in this piece by S Rajesh.11.08 Average opening stand in this series – the third poorest in any series involving 12 or more opening partnerships. The lowest average opening stand in any such series came during India’s tour of Sri Lanka last year, when teams averaged just 5.91 runs for their first wicket.10 Number of successful reviews against umpires’ decision in the series – equalled the second most in any Test series since 2010. Sri Lanka made six of these ten successful reviews. Angelo Mathews was more trigger-happy than Smith: Mathews made ten out of 14 reviews made by the fielding teams. Dilruwan Perera used the review three times while batting – the most by a batsman from either side – and was successful in overturning the umpire’s decision once. Australia’s home Test series against South Africa in 2012-13 had 11 successful reviews – the most in a series since 2010.

Decision reviews, Warne-Muralitharan Trophy, 2016
Review type Reviews SL AUS
Fielding team review – successful 4 3 1
Fielding team review – unsuccessful 10 7 3
Batsman review – unsuccesful 7 3 4
Batsman review – successful 6 3 3

Kusal Perera gamble at No. 3 pays meagre dividends

Sri Lanka rolled the dice in August by slotting Kusal Perera at No. 3, but eight innings in, his claim to the position may be in doubt after twin failures at Port Elizabeth

Andrew Fidel Fernando in Port Elizabeth29-Dec-2016In beholding Sri Lankan cricket’s last two decades, a prism of risk versus reward can sometimes be useful.In February 1996, for example, Sanath Jayasuriya averaged 19.73 as an ODI batsman, and his last ten innings as an opener had yielded 173 runs at a strike rate of 61.The risk, for Sri Lanka, was looking like lightweights in a showcase tournament they were co-hosting for the first time. In fact, you can imagine the foreign media’s paternalistic hand-wringing had Jayasuriya and Romesh Kaluwitharana failed.”Will Sri Lanka ever graduate from minnowhood?” they might have asked. “Are they diluting the quality of the World Cup? Should Arjuna Ranatunga be covered in oil and rolled down the Lord’s slope for this cricketing insolence?”Yet instead of playing to pre-tournament form, Jayasuriya gave left-arm spinner Richard Illingworth a rough and ready pounding and put Phil de Freitas onto the Faisalabad Stadium’s satellite dish.The reward for Sri Lanka was a semi-final, and two wins later a maiden World Cup title. The reward for ODI cricket was a revolution.

*****

When Muttiah Muralitharan was no-balled on Boxing Day 1995, he had 80 Test wickets at 32.76. Let us, for a moment, forget the myriad island marvels that had even brought Murali to the MCG stage, like how he was probably the world’s first wrist-spinning offbreak bowler and also had elbows like a rear-ended fender. Yet, Ranatunga and the entire Sri Lankan establishment formed an unwavering shield around him, knocking back jibe after jibe for years until the science caught up and he was, at least officially, redeemed.But the risk, for Sri Lanka, was their becoming a global cricket joke. No one in cricket’s pre-biomechanics age could deny that Murali looked like he was chucking. He looked like a javelin thrower if the javelin thrower had multiple joints in his arm. All Sri Lanka’s wins could be made to seem illegitimate. Routinely were they accused of being cheats.Meanwhile, the reward for Sri Lanka was its most joyful sporting career. The reward for cricket was the goggle eyes, and its greatest taker of wickets.

*****

In the late 1990s, when Lasith Malinga was playing softball cricket on a Rathgama beach, no one in modern cricket had prospered with a truly round-arm action. Low arms mean inaccuracy, it was thought. In domestic circuits, round-arm bowlers were essentially gimmicks – effective briefly perhaps, but often fading once batsmen became accustomed to their actions.Yet, bowling coach Champaka Ramanayake took Malinga in and trained him. In Malinga’s version of the story, he bowled a trillion back-to-back yorkers at shoes glued to the crease.The risk was that Sri Lanka may be squandering coaching resources on a bowling experiment that has never been known to work.The reward for Sri Lanka was a World T20 win, and for world cricket the premier death bowler of the era.

*****

Like Sri Lanka’s first-class system, the island’s college cricket is also said to be in decline. When Kusal Mendis, winner of the 2013 Schoolboy Cricketer of the Year Award, was picked in the Test squad against West Indies last year, there was, as a result, consternation.Mendis was 20 at the time, and looked 16. In 13 innings in senior cricket, he had averaged 31.30, with only two scores over fifty.The risk for Sri Lanka, was the possibility that they may ruin a promising player forever by throwing him into Test cricket, to say nothing of the damage his inclusion could do to an already fragile top order.The reward for Sri Lanka turned out to be one of the greatest Sri Lankan innings in only Mendis’ 14th trip to a Test-match crease. Test cricket got one of its most promising young batsmen. Today he played the team’s most fluent innings, hitting 58.

*****

In Test cricket’s grand tradition, No. 3 batsmen have been the team’s most classically correct. Even in Sri Lanka’s history, it is the likes of Kumar Sangakkara, Asanka Gurusinha and Roy Dias who have held it, not Aravinda de Silva, Angelo Mathews or Duleep Mendis.In putting Kusal Perera in that role, with a young top order around him, Sri Lanka’s selectors were breaking with tradition. He bludgeons the ball, rather than times it; explodes at the crease instead of building, or manipulating.But what if breaking with tradition is sort of your own tradition? What if this tradition has brought great rewards?The rewards for Sri Lanka might have been a No. 3 who sapped the opening bowlers’ momentum, who bullied the opposition, who spread the field and aided even his teammates’ advance.The risk, as it happened in this Test, was two awful cut shots. The reward? Scores of seven and six.

Rahane, Dhawan headline rejigged T20 event

With the IPL auction to be pushed back by at least two weeks, the inter-state leg of the Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy, which begins on Sunday, could serve as an IPL shop window for India’s up-and-coming short-format players

Shashank Kishore28-Jan-2017Until two years ago, the Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy brought the curtain down on the domestic calendar. Players bemoaned the lack of context, considering the tournament was scheduled after the IPL auction. It gave unknown or less-known limited-overs specialists virtually no shop window to display their talents.That could have been the case this time around too – the IPL auction was originally scheduled for February 5, by which time the tournament would have barely completed a week. But due to a lack of clarity over the BCCI’s administrative structure in line with the Lodha Committee’s recommendations, the auction is set to be pushed back by at least two weeks, which is a blessing in disguise for players hoping to impress talent scouts of various IPL franchises.This year, the format has undergone a transformation. The latest edition, which gets underway across six cities – Chennai, Kolkata, Dharamsala, Nadaun, Jaipur and Vadodara – will start on January 29 as an inter-state tournament before becoming an inter-zonal competition along the lines of the old Deodhar Trophy. That means Uttar Pradesh, who beat Baroda in last year’s final, cannot defend their crown this year. To explain in a nutshell, members of the UP squad can at best aim to be picked in Central Zone’s squad in a bid to be a part of the winning team.While the format has undergone a tweak to help selectors streamline talent, the objectives of players aren’t likely to change. History is replete with players who have carved an identity on the back of impressive performances in the tournament – Jasprit Bumrah and Hardik Pandya the notable examples. For some such as Shikhar Dhawan, Ishant Sharma, Ajinkya Rahane, who are not part of India’s T20 squad, this is an opportunity to remain in the national reckoning.Dhawan, who was recovering from a thumb injury, wasn’t part of the Test squad against England and played the first two ODIs before being dropped for the third and final ODI. Ishant hasn’t played ODIs for a year now, hasn’t played a T20I since October 2013. Then there’s Pawan Negi, whose career has spiralled downward since being picked up for INR 8.5 crore by Delhi Daredevils in last year’s IPL auction. Both Ishant and Negi – who have been released by their respective franchises – will look to make an impression ahead of this year’s auction.For someone like the allrounder Vijay Shankar, who is captaining Tamil Nadu for the first time, it is an opportunity to prove himself as a leader. “Opportunities like the IPL will come on its own if we play these games well,” he told ESPNcricinfo. “There is no pressure. It is a dream for me to lead a team like Tamil Nadu. I just want to enjoy the moment and hope we do well as a team.”Yet, it can be hard to remain insulated from the IPL auction, as Vijay said. “Being part of the IPL is huge. You can see the difference between domestic players who feature in IPL and those who don’t. The whole thing towards the way you approach matches changes, as you learn a lot by even sitting in the dugout. You get to see the situations first-hand and learn from team-mates how they go about it.”Then there’s Cheteshwar Pujara, who hasn’t been part of the IPL for two seasons now. This is an opportunity to show he has a game that has transformed to meet the demands of the shortest format. Pujara, who has spoken of his determination to prove himself as an all-format cricketer, struck a century for Indian Oil in a corporate T20 tournament in Mumbai.”I am looking forward to play in IPL,” Pujara, who scored a hundred and two fifties in the tournament, said. “I have prepared well, especially when it comes to T20, I have more number of shots. I definitely want to make a mark in that particular format. I am very confident that I can play well in other formats of the game. If I play well in the Mushtaq Ali Trophy, surely there will be an opportunity.”I just will have to keep playing other formats and keep scoring runs and probably I will have to wait for my opportunity. I am improving, playing more shots and playing with higher strike-rate. So probably the stamp as a Test specialist is just a tag, a perception that will change in time to come.”Rahane, who will turn up for Mumbai, has also struggled to nail down a place in India’s limited-overs sides in recent times. He played just one of the three ODIs against England and was left out of the T20I squad.The tournament will miss a few big names. Suryakumar Yadav, vice-captain of Kolkata Knight Riders, has been left out by Mumbai after an inconsistent season, while Robin Uthappa, the Karnataka opener, will miss out with a back injury. Suresh Raina is unavailable for the first week of the tournament as he will be away on national duty, while a majority of other India internationals in the mix will sit out in order to prepare for the one-off Test against Bangladesh.

A rare first-innings lead away from home for Bangladesh

Stats highlights from the third day of the second Test in Colombo where Bangladesh added 269 runs for their last-five wickets.

Shiva Jayaraman17-Mar-2017109 The previous highest first-innings lead for Bangladesh in away Tests, which they took against Zimbabwe in Harare in 2013. This is only the third occasion when Bangladesh have taken a lead of 100 or more runs in away Test. The first such instance came against Pakistan in Multan in 2003 when they took a lead of 106 runs.6 Number of times before this Bangladesh had taken a first-innings lead in an away Test. The previous instance had come recently in Wellington, where they ended up losing the match. Out of the six previous instances when they have taken a first-innings lead in an away Test, they have won only once: against Zimbabwe in Harare in 2013.5 Number of Bangladesh batsmen to have scored 500 Test runs in a calendar year before Shakib Al Hasan. Shakib has made 535 runs in just nine Test innings in 2017, hitting two hundreds and two fifties while averaging 59.44 this year. Mushfiqur Rahim fell just seven short of completing 500 runs this year. He averages 82.16 in Tests this year and has made two hundreds and two fifties in just seven innings.0 Number of times before this Test Bangladesh have had seven of their batsmen scoring 30 or more runs in an innings in an away Test. This was the first such instances for them and only the fifth such instance anywhere. The previous four instances had all come at home, the last of which had come against West Indies in Mirpur in 2012-13.1 Number of instances when Bangladesh have made more runs for their last-five wickets than the 269 runs they made in their first innings. That instance had come at home against West Indies in Khulna in 2012-13, when they added 289 for their last-five wickets.Bangladesh took a lead after batting second for only their second time in Tests outside home•Associated Press1 Number of seventh-wicket partnerships for Bangladesh higher than the 131-run stand between Mosaddek and Shakib. Mahmudullah and Shakib had added 145 runs in the first innings of the Hamilton Test in 2009-10.245 Runs scored by the seventh wicket for Bangladesh in this series – the second highest by any wicket for them. The century stand between Shakib and Mosaddek was Bangladesh’s second of the series for the seventh wicket, which averages 81.66 for the series. Only Bangladesh’s first wicket has made more runs in the series for them.2 Number of away totals higher than Bangladesh’s 467 in this match. Their highest had come in 2012-13, also against Sri Lanka, in Galle when they had amassed 638 runs. Earlier this year, they had declared on 595 for 8 against New Zealand in Wellington, which is their second-highest total in away Tests.8 Number of Bangladesh batsmen to make a fifty on their debut in away Tests before Mosaddek Hossain . The previous batsman to achieve this was Mominul Haque who also did it against Sri Lanka, in Galle in 2012-13. Including Mosaddek and Mominul, five of Bangladesh’s nine batsmen to make fifty or more on debut in Tests have done so against Sri Lanka. Mohammad Ashraful, Hannan Sarkar and Tapash Baisya are the others. Click here for the complete list.3 Number of times in a Test series in Sri Lanka that have witnessed five or more opening stands of fifty or more runs. While Bangladesh have had an opening stand of fifty or more runs in each of their three innings in this series so far, Sri Lanka’s openers put up 69-run stand in their second innings in Galle and their second innings in this Test. Before this, the Sri Lanka-India series in 2010 had five such partnerships from the openers.

What makes a good close-in catcher?

Murali’s men, who crowded around already nervous batsmen, talk of the fearlessness and intelligence the profession needs

Andrew Fidel Fernando05-Apr-2017

Tom Latham on

How the catch came about: It was something where the instincts sort of took over. I do bit of training at forward short leg, where someone might hit the ball to me at different heights, but that particular movement wasn’t trained at all. Fortunately I managed to get the timings right, and I managed to get it to stick in my right hand.
On picking the paddle sweep: When you see someone go down to lap or paddle, you can anticipate the movement. The hands go out in front when it’s a lap or paddle, and the batsman tries to hit the ball on the full. The beauty of that day was that they weren’t sweeping.
On the future of close catching: I think that kind of catch will be seen more. Now short leg is probably a specialised role, where in the past it’s probably been the young guy that does it. The work that I personally do around it – and I’m sure other guys around the world as well – it’s probably becoming a specialised role.

Before Faf du Plessis has even planted his front foot, Tom Latham has pushed off the ground with his hands and has begun darting right. In ages past, short-leg fielders ducked and turned and cowered when batsmen shaped to sweep. But this is not just a different age, it’s a different sweep. The ball comes off the dead middle of du Plessis’ bat. Latham tracks it, briefly waves his hands about his face, but eventually shoots out his right arm. He clings to the ball like an action hero to the side of a speeding truck – shades and all, body trailing behind him, limbs photogenically extended.If the case is being made that this is the best short-leg catch ever, it is a compelling one. Short of levitating towards the ball, or performing a somersault as he caught it, Latham’s every move was near-perfect.”What Tom did there was anticipate when Faf was going to play the sweep shot, and that’s the thing: understanding the shots a batsman plays,” says Mahela Jayawardene, former Sri Lanka captain, close-catcher extraordinaire, and current coach of Mumbai Indians. “The way Faf went down there, you knew it was going to be a paddle sweep – it wasn’t going to be a flat, hard sweep. Those kinds of attributes go towards being a good short leg fielder.”What else makes a good close catcher? Few ought to know as well as Jayawardene, because arguably short legs and silly points have not known a harvest like in the roaring noughties in Sri Lanka, when Muttiah Muralitharan routinely baffled batsmen on tracks designed specifically to amplify his threat. Jayawardene usually stood at slip directing his troops, but he was not an uncommon presence at silly point himself. Between him, Hashan Tillakaratne, Russel Arnold and Tillakaratne Dilshan, Sri Lanka had a sharp close-in phalanx.Wanted – quick reflexes, grace optional: Michael Vaughan is caught by Jehan Mubarak at short leg, 2007•AFPFearlessness
“The No. 1 thing when you’re fielding there is not being afraid to get hit,” Jayawardene says. “You can see with the way Tom reacted that he was feeling very comfortable fielding there. The guy who’s not afraid of getting hit – the first thing will be that his weight and everything will be going forward, because a lot of the catches will come down at you. The guy who’s a bit worried, the first reaction is always going to be to fall back or turn around. Then that limits you.”Rangana Herath, who, since effectively taking over from Murali, has not quite had the fielding support his predecessor enjoyed, puts it rather more bluntly: “If you’re constantly worried – if you’re always thinking: ‘Will it hit me? Will it hit me? Will it hit me?’ – then, honestly, there’s actually no use in putting that man there.”But if fearlessness is a close fielder’s most vaunted quality, then the bowler also has a role in putting catching men at ease in their workspace. Arnold, who was regularly at silly point during the Murali years, remembers the difference a good bowler made.”For me to be in there, if the bugger is bowling crap, I’m worried – that’s the natural instinct,” he says. “During our time, we had the luxury of Murali, and I don’t think I ever felt unsafe when he was bowling. Me, Dilshan and Mahela used to do so many things. We were falling on the pitch every ball when batsmen were squeezing the ball between bat and pad. We were just jumping around everywhere, getting ourselves in the way of the ball. When one sticks, you’ve got a wicket.”Actually when you have a bowler that’s that good, and you know the batsmen aren’t going to try anything, suddenly what seems like a dangerous position can be enjoyable. I remember one time when Jacques Kallis was trying to hammer him, Dilshan jokingly yelled out: ‘, [This p***k is trying to hit me, please say something to him’] – because Dilshan’s English wasn’t that great at the time.
We had a lot of fun because we honestly felt safe. How else are we going to be cocky like that?”Russel Arnold: “There’s nothing to say that the ball’s going to come to you. It’s about getting yourself into a position to give you a chance of taking the catch or making the stop”•Getty ImagesGame awareness
The cockiness itself may help the fielder gain some psychological ground on the batsman, but if attitude can be allied to a sharp cricket mind then all the better. In addition to attempting to change the way a batsman plays, close catchers must log information on what the bowler, the pitch and the batsman are doing, then play these variants off against each other in order to compute their optimal position.Imagine, for example, that an offspinner is bowling to a right-hand batsman. At the start of the match, while the pitch is still new, the ball is likely to fly quickly off thick inside edges, so the short leg might do well to position himself straighter – well in front of the crease. As the track begins to take more turn, the chances of it collecting a thinner edge increase, so he might find the catches flying finer. The reverse applies for a left-arm spinner bowling to a right-hander: short leg might start the match square, and incrementally move straighter as the pitch slows up.”The bowler knows where the ball is likely to go, and the fielder should know that as well,” Herath says. “It’s a percentage game. If there are three balls that go through there, you’ve got to give yourself a chance of catching at least one. You’ve got to always be thinking what kind of bowler is operating.”I bowl wicket to wicket usually, and so the chances of it going to the off side, for a right-hander, are slimmer. The ball naturally goes in. You can’t just be passive in those positions. You have to work out in your head where the catches are coming and be proactive.”The batsman’s defensive technique also plays a role in positioning. “I took a catch one day at Galle,” Arnold says, “diving across Daryl Cullinan – maybe halfway on the other side of the pitch. Watching Cullinan play, he squeezes the ball between bat and pad. The ball will always just drop, and with Murali, they wouldn’t try things.”So, from silly mid-off, every ball I was diving across, and one stuck. But someone like Jonty Rhodes or Nasser Hussain, you can’t come in, because they lunge at the ball. Bang! It comes out quick. For them you have to stand a little further back.”Diving across the pitch? It’s not only to take catches and keep the batsman on his toes•AFPEnergy and gamesmanship
Beyond the catching, and even the blocking of shots, the close fielders’ access to the batsman throws open further modes of attack. “Some batsmen don’t like fielders in their eyeline when they try to play a spin bowler,” says Herath. Occasionally, he finds, a batsman begins to falter simply because the short leg has been moved over to silly point. And with so many fielders ringing the one opposition man, there is also the opportunity for a little theatre – all of which endeavours to make the batsman feel besieged.”If you’re being lethargic, the batsman is also calmer, but when things are happening, even the boru [fake] show can work,” Arnold says. “That’s why they say, always ping the ball back to the keeper – make the batsman move even. The idea is not to hit him but to show him that even after he’s hit it, he can’t relax. If he thinks: ‘Bloody hell, the bugger’s trying to hit me’, it just adds a weight. Sometimes Dilshan would break the wicket and shout for no reason. Then the batsman is not thinking of the next ball – he’s thinking of this idiot’s mischief. It’s about upsetting that batsman’s thought process.”There is one other thing that catchers have access to, and in their use of the following strategy, Sri Lanka’s noughties team achieved a higher plane of mischief than most manage. In any case, the tactic requires a talent for misdirection that seems beyond the skill of the current team.”When Murali was bowling, we had the understanding that if I’m at silly mid-off, and it goes to the leg side, then I’m getting it. If it’s on my side, the guy on the other side runs across to get it. Why?” asks Russel.Easier to run forwards?”No, men – running on the pitch! If it comes to my side, I’m looking lazy, and that bugger is being proactive, so he runs on the pitch to come across.
We had a lot of those things going on. Other teams run on the pitch also, but I don’t think any of them did what we did.” Also, who is to say that when the ball falls on the pitch, the man who swoops in to field it might not, on occasion, make a slyly positioned turn here, or drag his heels there?Graeme Hick survives an attempt at short leg in a tour game in Colombo, 2001•Getty ImagesCan the position evolve?
Latham’s catch – a first of its kind in international cricket – may prompt more close fielders to attempt more of those intercept catches. The paddle sweep and the reverse paddle are especially vulnerable to interceptions, as the stroke is relatively easy to read, generally sends the ball into the air for a short distance, and does so without generating much extra power off the bat. Wicketkeepers have been blocking those shots for years. Although Misbah-ul-Haq has devised a “feint paddle”, which sends keeper and slip running towards the leg side, only for Misbah to change the shot and deflect it fine of third man, the innovation has not spread further afield.”If the batsman is playing those sweeps and paddle sweeps, you should push the short leg back by a few yards to give them an opportunity – at least for a short period – to anticipate and go and take those catches,” Jayawardene says. “That’s going to play on the batsman’s mind as well, and maybe you can get him out in a different way.”In fact, in Bangladesh’s recent Tests in Sri Lanka, Niroshan Dickwella was out playing a reverse paddle in the first Test and a paddle sweep in the second – intercepted by the wicketkeeper, though, on both occasions, the close fielders also began to move in the direction they expected the ball to head in.”It’s just like anything else at short leg or silly point,” says Arnold. “There’s nothing to say that the ball’s going to come to you. It’s about getting yourself into a position to give you a chance of taking the catch or making the stop.”

Kohli fastest to 8000 ODI runs

The India captain took seven innings fewer than AB de Villiers to get to the landmark

Gaurav Sundararaman15-Jun-20177 Number of appearances for India in finals of ICC ODI tournaments. This is their fourth Champions Trophy final. They won in 2013, shared the trophy in 2002, and lost in 2000. India will play Pakistan for the first time in the final of an ICC 50-overs event. They beat Pakistan in the final of the World Championship of Cricket in Melbourne in 1985, a tournament contested by the top seven ODI teams at the time.175 Innings taken by Virat Kohli to reach 8000 ODI runs – the fastest for any cricketer. He went past AB de Villiers, who got to the landmark in 182 innings.ESPNcricinfo Ltd680 Runs scored by Shikhar Dhawan in Champions Trophy matches – the most by an Indian. Dhawan is currently fourth in the list of all-time run-getters in this tournament.16 Wickets for Ravindra Jadeja in the Champions Trophy – the most by an Indian. Zaheer Khan is second with 15 wickets in the same number of matches (nine).ESPNcricinfo Ltd264 Highest target successfully chased at Edgbaston in a 50-over match. Before Thursday’s game, 261, by England against Australia in 2004, was the highest score chased down.11 Centuries for Rohit Sharma in ODIs. He is now joint seventh along with Gautam Gambhir in the list for most centuries by Indians.19 Wickets taken by India between overs 11 and 40 in this Champions Trophy, the most by any team in this tournament. Pakistan are second with 18 wickets in this phase.3 Fifty-plus scores for Tamim Iqbal versus India in ICC tournaments – joint second-most for any batsman against India. Ricky Ponting has three. Tamim now has four fifties from his last five innings. In this tournament Tamim scored 293 runs from four innings at an average of 73.25.

Brotherly hundreds, and Crane's record

Stats highlights from another day at the SCG completely dominated by Australia

S Rajesh07-Jan-2018Shaun and Mitchell Marsh joined the illustrious pair of the Chappell and Waugh brothers in becoming only the third Australian brothers to scored hundreds in the same Test innings, piling on England’s agony in the field on the fourth day in Sydney. The Chappell brothers achieved this feat three times – twice, incredibly, in the same Test in Wellington in 1974 – while the Waugh brothers achieved it twice. Two of those previous five instances were against England – by the Waughs in 2001, and the Chappells in 1972 – and Australia won both those Tests.Getty ImagesEngland’s hard yardsAustralia’s total of 7 for 649 declared is the seventh-highest total conceded by England in away Tests. Four of the top ten such totals have come in their last seven overseas Tests. During this period, they have conceded 759 against India in Chennai, 662 in Perth, and 631 in Mumbai.

Highest totals conceded by Eng in away Tests
Total Overs Opposition Ground Year
759/7d 190.4 Ind Chennai 2016
751/5d 202 WI St John’s 2004
749/9d 194.4 WI Bridgetown 2009
681/8d 198.4 WI Port of Spain 1954
662/9d 179.3 Aus Perth 2017
659/8d 173.0×8 Aus Sydney 1946
649/7d 193 Aus Sydney 2018
645 158.6×8 Aus Brisbane 1946
636/8d 156.2 Pak Lahore 2005
631 182.3 Ind Mumbai 2016

Australia’s run-festFor only the third time in their Test history, Australia’s Nos. 3-6 all scored more than 75. All three such instances have been against England, but the last one was way back in 1946. In fact, both such previous instances happened when Don Bradman was captain, in 1946 and in 1937. Australia’s total was their ninth best against England.Crane’s debut recordMason Crane, meanwhile, went for 193 runs in the Australian innings, the most conceded by an England bowler on debut. The previous highest was 166, by Devon Malcolm, also against Australia in 1989. Crane is in the all-time top five in this list, though the highest remains Suraj Randiv’s 222 conceded against India in 2010.

Most runs conceded by a bowler on Test debut
Player Overs Runs Wkts Opp Venue Year
S Randiv 73 222 2 Ind Colombo (SSC) 2010
JJ Krejza 43.5 215 8 Ind Nagpur 2008
OAC Banks 40 204 3 Aus Bridgetown 2003
NM Kulkarni 70 195 1 SL Colombo (RPS) 1997
MS Crane 48 193 1 Aus Sydney 2018

With Moeen Ali conceding 170 as well, this is only the second instance of two England bowlers conceding 170 or more in a Test innings; the previous instance was in Mumbai in December 2016, when both Adil Rashid and Moeen went over 170.Spin woesEngland’s spinners have collectively taken eight wickets for 900 runs in this series, in the 266.5 overs they have bowled. The average of 112.5 is their worst in the 132 series in which they have bowled at least 200 overs, and also the first time in these series that their average has exceeded 100. The previous worst for them was the 1999-2000 series in South Africa, when they averaged 82.85.

Worst ave for Eng spinners in a series (Min 200 overs)
Series Mat Overs Runs Wkts Ave SR
Ashes, 2017-18 5 266.5 900 8 112.50 200.1
Eng in SA, 1999-2000 5 214.4 580 7 82.85 184
Ashes, 1907-08 5 317.4 971 13 74.69 146.6
Ashes, 2013-14 5 261.5 1014 14 72.42 112.2
Eng in WI, 1980-81 4 250.0 572 9 63.55 166.6

AB de Villiers: A genius in two formats

Ten numbers that illustrate AB de Villiers’ greatness in Tests and ODIs

S Rajesh and Shiva Jayaraman23-May-20181 – AB de Villiers is the only batsman who has played 50-plus innings at a 50-plus average and a 100-plus strike rate in ODI cricket. The batsman who comes closest is MS Dhoni, who had a 50-plus average and a 100-plus strike rate after 42 ODI innings.ESPNcricinfo Ltd324.15 – The difference in strike rate between de Villiers’ fastest ODI innings (min 40 balls) and his slowest Test innings (min 100 balls), the highest among all batsmen. In his 44-ball 149 against West Indies, in 2015, he had a strike rate of 338.63, while he had a strike rate of 14.48 in his 43 off 297 balls against India, also in 2015.5 – ODI hundreds when coming in to bat after the 25th over; no other batsman has more than two such hundreds (Virat Kohli and Jos Buttler have two each). De Villiers also has 21 ODI hundreds at No. 4 or lower; the next best is 17, by New Zealand’s Ross Taylor.ESPNcricinfo Ltd31 – Balls taken by de Villiers for his century against West Indies, the fastest in ODIs. He also holds the record for fastest ODI fifty (16 balls), and fastest ODI 150 (64 balls)2 – Batsmen who have scored 5000-plus runs at 50-plus average in both Tests and ODIs: de Villiers and Virat Kohli.1 – De Villiers is the only wicketkeeper-batsman to have completed the double of effecting 10-plus dismissals and scoring a hundred in a Test. He did so against Pakistan in Johannesburg in 2013.57.68 – AB de Villiers’ Test average since the start of 2008. Among batsmen with 5000-plus runs in this period, only two have a higher average: Steven Smith and Kumar Sangakkara20014 – Runs made by de Villiers in international cricket. In the period since his debut in December 2004, only Sangakkara (21,437) has scored more international runs.62.11 – De Villiers’ Test average at No. 5, the best among all batsmen with 2500 or more runs at this position. Michael Clarke is behind the South Africa batsman with an average of 60.80.71.16 – De Villiers’ average in his last Test series, the second highest among among batsmen who have scored 300-plus runs in their last series, in the last 30 years. Only Brian Lara signed off with a greater flourish, averaging 89.60 in his last series, against Pakistan.

Top averages in last Test series in last 30 years (Min 300 runs)
Batsman Opp Runs Inns Ave
Brian Lara PAK 448 5 89.60
AB de Villiers AUS 427 8 71.17
Chris Rogers AUS 480 9 60.00
Sourav Ganguly AUS 324 8 54.00
Viv Richards ENG 376 8 53.71

ESPNcricinfo Ltd

Game
Register
Service
Bonus