Bangladesh have a legspin problem and their domestic system is to blame

They don’t have legspinners, and they don’t have batters who are successful against legspin

Mohammad Isam05-Mar-2023Adil Rashid dominating Bangladesh in the first two ODIs isn’t a surprise. He is considered one of the best wristspinners in the world and he had helpful conditions to bowl in. He was also up against a batting line-up that isn’t strong against legspin. Wristspinners like Rashid Khan, Kuldeep Yadav, Yasir Shah and Adam Zampa have troubled Bangladesh in the recent past.Rashid dismissed four middle-order batters in the second ODI, removing Shakib Al Hasan, Mahmudullah, Afif Hossain and Mehidy Hasan Miraz. He was crucial in the first ODI too, taking 2 for 47, a spell that brought England back in the game.Bangladesh’s problems against wristspin aren’t new. Kuldeep spun them out in Chattogram in December, Zampa was successful in the T20I series in 2021, and Rashid did it in September 2019.Their problems stem from the paucity of wristspinners in Bangladesh. Finding a needle in a haystack is easier than spotting a legspinner in the country. Jubair Hossain was only the second legspinner ever to play for Bangladesh but lack of game time in domestic cricket cut short a promising career. He has now been reduced to mostly being a net bowler whenever Bangladesh need one ahead of a home series.Related

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Aminul Islam Biplob played a little more than Jubair, and he isn’t even a full-time legspinner. He is a batting allrounder whose legspin was noticed in the nets by chief selector Minhajul Abedin a few years ago, around the time former Bangladesh coach Russell Domingo was in the hunt for wristspinners. Biplob is currently scoring some runs in domestic cricket and his legspin has been shelved for good.Bangladesh’s talent pipeline depends heavily on Dhaka clubs, whose officials (owners) and coaches don’t believe in wristspin. They rely largely on left-arm spin and that has had an impact on first-class and T20 cricket too. Therefore a top batter gets to face only a few deliveries of legspin per season in competitive matches.Bangladesh have been reluctant to change this culture, but their current opponents England were in a similar place around eight years ago. Among the major changes to their limited-overs set-up after 2015 was Eoin Morgan and Trevor Bayliss bringing Rashid’s legspin back as a wicket-taking option. Rashid flourished as a result and grew into a world-class legspinner despite being absent from international cricket between 2009 and 2015.After Rashid’s success, England have introduced more legspinners in the last few years, including 18-year-old Rehan Ahmed, who is in line for an ODI debut in Chattogram on Monday.In contrast, Bangladesh did not give their only legspinner of note in the last decade much of a chance. Back in 2014, Jubair was caught in a tug-of-war between Bangladesh’s head coach Chandika Hathurusingha, who was keen on developing the legspinner’s skills, and domestic coaches who simply refused to give him opportunities. His confidence was so badly dented that he bowled a delivery that bounced twice on T20I debut.Given wristspin’s prominence around the world, Bangaldesh have no easy answer to the problem of their batters struggling against legspin. They aren’t close to developing one of their own either. Former Sri Lankan left-arm spinner Rangana Herath, who is Bangladesh’s spin-bowling coach, has four legspinners in the nets during the series against England, including Biplob.”There’s always a process, which is why (Rishad and Biplob) are with the national team,” Herath said. “When they are having practice with us, they will learn a lot of things.”We need to understand the resources we have at the moment. If we don’t have it, we need to find ways to get the best out of them. That’s why we are working with Rishad and Biplob, so hopefully they will get better and be prepared for the challenge.”Herath said Bangladesh have to find a way to score against legspin even if it means losing wickets: “We don’t mind them taking wickets but we need to score off them as well,” he said.”Moeen Ali and Adil Rashid bowled well in the first two matches. They are quite experienced and knowledgeable about the sub-continent in franchise and international cricket. They are taking advantage.”Bangladesh spin-bowling coach Rangana Herath speaks to the media•Munir Uz Zaman/AFP/Getty ImagesHerath said that the current Bangladesh spinners have to develop skills to bowl defensively on batting-friendly pitches, something Tamim Iqbal said after the second ODI too.”Sometimes you don’t have to attack too much,” Herath said. “You can be defensive. Sometimes even the defensive options would be attacking. Those are the things we need to understand.”Tamim said Bangladesh’s bowlers need to develop defensive skills if they want to push for a place in the semi-finals in the World Cup later this year. “There’s always areas to work on but you have to accept how (England) got from one point to another. They looked like they were settling for a 250-260 score, but then they got to a position where they looked like they were heading towards 370.”We know it well that when the spinners are not getting assistance, you have to rely on the fast bowlers. We must have defensive skills too, if we want to play in the semi-finals or finals of the World Cup.”

Ladies who Switch: Nadine de Klerk special

Valkerie Baynes and Firdose Moonda hear from the SA allrounder tearing up English domestic cricket and look ahead to the Ashes

ESPNcricinfo staff07-Jun-2023As the lead-up to the Women’s Ashes gathers momentum Firdose Moonda and Valkerie Baynes hear from South Africa allrounder Nadine de Klerk about playing Test matches, tearing up the regional circuit in England and run to the T20 Women’s World Cup final. They also discuss Meg Lanning’s absence from the Australia squad and contenders for England selection.

Mitch Marsh is huge and is six-hitting his way to new heights

The Australia allrounder is now confident in his game and focuses on maximising his strengths instead of worrying about proving people wrong

Deivarayan Muthu07-Oct-2023
The extended mix of John Summit and Parachute Youth’s single plays in the background at the Chepauk nets during Australia’s practice session on Friday afternoon as Mitchell Marsh nails a lofted straight drive off head coach Andrew McDonald’s throwdown.Rain had delayed the start of Australia’s training session, but once the weather cleared in Chennai, Marsh got cracking immediately at the nets along with David Warner. Sure, it was just a routine practice session, but this version of Marsh has the clarity and ability to go – and go hard – from ball one across conditions, particularly in white-ball cricket. This is the best version of Marsh so much that Australia has warmed up to him and even fallen in love with him after he had earlier been a lightning rod for criticism. Marsh had also recently captained Australia during their white-ball tour of South Africa and could well be the frontrunner for the role on a permanent basis leading into next year’s T20 World Cup.And in this ODI World Cup, he is among the first names on Australia’s team sheet. With or without Travis Head, his imposing presence at the top of the order will be central to Australia’s success in the tournament. He has also resumed bowling, in the lead-up to the World Cup, which provides Australia’s attack greater balance.Related

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The last time Australia faced India at Chepauk, in March earlier this year, Marsh, the opener, hit a run-a-ball 47 to set up a memorable victory for his side and snap India’s four-year unbeaten streak at home in ODI cricket. Marsh had started that series as an opener only because Warner was injured. Marsh was so brutal with the bat in the first two matches that even when Warner was back for the decider, Australia’s team management decided to keep Marsh at the top and demote Warner to No.4.So, what makes Marsh brutal? His explosive power and clear thinking. Okay, Marsh has always had that natural ball-striking ability but has now stopped worrying about proving people wrong and has shifted his focus towards maximising his strengths: hitting sixes. Free off all the burdens, he has pumped 22 sixes in ten innings in ODI cricket this year. Among players participating in this World Cup, only Rohit Sharma (36), Shubman Gill (29) and Heinrich Klaasen (25) have struck more sixes than Marsh in ODIs this year.Captain Pat Cummins spoke glowingly of Marsh’s six-hitting on Saturday. “I mean first of all his size is huge and he’s always been a power-hitter,” Cummins said. “I think that’s kind of his most natural trait as a batter. He’s super powerful and can clear the ropes easily.”He had an amazing [T20] World Cup in 2021 and over the last couple of years, he’s had a few injuries along the way. But when he has played, he’s been top quality, so he’s one of those guys who is intimidating to bowl to. At the top of the mark, you look at him at the other end, you know he can hit the ball a long way. Hopefully, we will see plenty of that in this series.”1:32

Pat Cummins: Hopefully we can carry on Australia’s history in World Cups

When headline-hungry journalists pressed Cummins further for “spicy quotes” he responded: “Mitchell Marsh is huge! There’s your headline”.Seven months on from that bilateral series decider at Chepauk, Marsh will headline Australia’s batting along with Warner against India in the World Cup at the same venue. With Head still on the sidelines, Marsh could continue to open with Warner for the first half of the tournament. Marsh’s sample size as an opener is fairly small – he has only batted at the top in six innings as opposed to batting at No.5 or No.6 in 50 innings in ODs – but the numbers there are particularly impressive. Three hundred and seventy eight runs, including 21 sixes, at an average of over 75 and strike rate of 125.Marsh relishes pace on the ball and can damage oppositions in the powerplay even on challenging pitches like he demonstrated against India at the Wankhede earlier this year. His game against spin is still a work in progress, but he has learnt to put his ego away, play the slower bowlers out and then line up the quicks.In the 2021 T20 World Cup final against New Zealand in Dubai, Marsh, who batted at No.3, saw off New Zealand’s premier spinner Mitchell Santner and went after their fastest bowler on the night: Adam Milne. Marsh also targetted legspinner Ish Sodhi, but he did so while sticking to his strengths: hitting down the ground and over midwicket. That Player-of-the-Match performance in the final marked the beginning of a golden run for Marsh across formats. It changed perceptions around him, changed his own mindset, and changed his career altogether.Marsh is now so confident in his game that he can turn up from a holiday and Bazball Bisonball his way to a 102-ball century, in his first Test match in almost four years. He is now so confident in his game that he can bat anywhere in the line-up and wallop sixes, but Australia need him at the top right now in this ODI World Cup.That confidence also shone through during his hour-long stint at the nets, two days out of Australia’s World Cup opener against India. He then put in a decent shift with the ball to confirm his World Cup readiness. We could see more of the best version of Marsh over the next four weeks.

Vote for the best Kohli ODI hundred – Colombo 122* vs Nagpur 115*

A late-acceleration against Pakistan in the Asia Cup, or an all-out assault against Australia?

ESPNcricinfo staff04-Nov-2023Voting for this match-up has ended. The 115* vs Australia in Nagpur moves to the semi-final round.

122* (94) vs Pakistan, Asia Cup, Colombo, 2023

Every Kohli century was beginning to acquire an air of momentousness by this point, as they followed a barren run of form and sped up the countdown towards Sachin Tendulkar’s record 49 ODI hundreds. After rain interrupted India’s innings, Kohli began the reserve day on 8. The first part of his innings focused on accumulation, as he let KL Rahul be the aggressor. But towards the end, the Colombo crowd witnessed Kohli’s pace-hitting skills. From 88 off 77 balls at the end of the 46th over he ramped up to 122 off 94, clocking Faheem Ashraf for four, four and six to finish the innings. The lasting image was a back-foot loft over long-on for six off Naseem Shah that closely resembled his straight hit off Haris Rauf in the T20 World Cup the previous year.

115*(66) vs Australia, 6th ODI, Nagpur, 2013

Kohli walked in during the 30th over of the chase, with India 178 for 1 in pursuit of 351 to level the series at 2-2. After Rohit Sharma and Shikhar Dhawan had put on a 178-run partnership, Kohli continued his rich vein of form in the series, smashing four fours and a six in the first 18 balls he faced. In the 41st over, he hit a hat-trick of fours off Mitchell Johnson, who struck twice in his next over. From 62 off 48, the equation became 35 off 18, but five fours from Kohli in the next two overs helped India win with three balls to spare. Kohli’s hundred came in the 49th over and off 61 balls, the third-fastest by an Indian in ODIs, just two weeks after he had smashed the fastest.

David Wiese: 'You can understand why players would want to get knocked out early from one T20 league to play another'

The Namibia allrounder plays franchise cricket all over the world and sees that the future is not fully sustainable

Matt Roller02-Apr-2024″I’m a bit of a mercenary,” David Wiese concedes in the first episode of his new podcast, . In the past 18 months, he has played for – deep breath – St Lucia Kings, Deccan Gladiators, Gulf Giants, Lahore Qalandars, Kolkata Knight Riders, Yorkshire Vikings, MI New York, Northern Superchargers, Joburg Super Kings and the Titans, as well as his second international team, Namibia.If you have ever mindlessly flicked on some T20, you have probably spotted Wiese. He is hard to miss: nearly two metres tall, wearing a top-knot and with a compression sleeve that covers his tattoos. He turns 39 in May and has no shame admitting that he is cashing in while his body allows him to. “If you’re not realistic about it, then you’re only bluffing yourself,” he tells ESPNcricinfo from his home in Pretoria.The podcast comprises regular chats between Wiese and presenter Sam Keir across last year when Wiese’s calendar was busier than ever. “People always have the perception that franchise cricket is all glitz and glamour, especially with the IPL,” he says. “But there is another side of it, the human side of it, being away from your family, not performing, and the pressures that come with playing franchise cricket.”People don’t know what goes on behind the scenes. The whole franchise league system can become a lonely place when things aren’t going well for you. Effectively, every single tournament is an audition for the next tournament. You have one, maybe two bad tournaments, and you’re gone. There’s nothing left for you to do. You’re basically retired.”Related

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Wiese could never have predicted the path that his career has taken. When he made his first-class debut in 2005, he was an internal auditing student at the University of Pretoria; England’s Twenty20 Cup was in its infancy, and there was no IPL or T20 World Cup. “I never really put that much pressure on myself,” he says. “It’s always been about the love of the game.”But that was tested at times last year, not least when leaving his young family at home. “My kids are four and two. South Africa’s not like the UK, where if you take them out of school, you get fined, so they did come away with me quite a bit last year – but it does still get tough. I’ve missed my eldest daughter’s birthday for the last three years; my wedding anniversary is almost non-existent.”I think if I’d had kids a little bit younger in my career, I probably wouldn’t still be doing this,” Wiese admits. “As they get older, it does get more difficult. My eldest daughter thinks that if she doesn’t say goodbye to me, I’m not going to leave, so she just refuses to say goodbye. Those are the small things that are tough – but they’ll also understand that it’s so I can set things up for their future.”He is considering a future in coaching, which he hopes will allow him to flip his work-life balance on its head. “I’m not delusional: I’ve probably only got one or two years left in me. If I can maximise that, it’ll mean being away from the family a little bit, but then I’ll be able to retire when my daughters are six and four and spend nine months of the year surrounded by family.”ESPNcricinfo LtdWhen he signed a Kolpak deal with Sussex in 2017, Wiese expected to spend the rest of his career playing all formats in county cricket. But when the UK left the European Union in early 2020, he became an overseas player rather than a local in county cricket, pushing him towards the T20 circuit and effectively ending his first-class career.Namibia, for whom he qualifies through his father, gave him a second international career in 2021 and have allowed him to take control of his schedule. He will play for them in a third successive T20 World Cup in June, where they will face Australia, England, Oman and Scotland in the initial group stage. “Since the opportunity first came up, Namibia have always been high on my agenda,” he says.”They actually gave me a platform again. Even though I was playing in the PSL, the CPL and other tournaments, I hadn’t been picked up in the IPL since 2016. I’d like to think that maybe having more exposure at the T20 World Cup playing for Namibia – we made the Super 12 stage [in 2021] and did well against the bigger teams – was the reason why I was picked up again last year [by Kolkata Knight Riders].”Wiese has been a beneficiary of the franchise boom, which has presented him and many other players with countless lucrative opportunities to play around the world, but he holds some reservations about the sport’s messy, unregulated landscape. “There are certain teams that dictate their own rules, bend things to suit them, and people just accept it and move on,” he says.Namibia’s run in the 2021 T20 World Cup, where they won three matches and qualified for the Super 12, possibly had a hand in Wiese making a comeback in the IPL for the first time since 2016•Francois Nel/Getty Images”There’s not one standard. There are leagues that let teams have six overseas players, some leagues have five, some four. If you can get to the stage where you kind of have an MoU [Memorandum of Understanding] that is standard across everything, that would help with it not being so confusing and guys not taking advantage of the system.”But until that happens… it’s a difficult one, because every single franchise tournament is governed by a different board and they can kind of do whatever they want to. If they want to change things to suit certain people, or if they want to do things to maximise their profits, you can’t stop that. They essentially own the league, right?”In February, Wiese’s Joburg Super Kings were knocked out of the SA20 in the second qualifier; days later, some of his team-mates were playing in the ILT20 or the Bangladesh Premier League. “I had opportunities that I turned down,” he says. “It doesn’t sit right, hoping you get knocked out of one tournament and then you can go to another. Whether the ICC can step in and try to regulate it, so that if you sign for one league you can’t play for another league that coincides with it, I don’t know… you’re opening yourself up to restraint of trade.Wiese suggests teams could consider incentivising the playoffs.”At this stage, you’ve got your contract, which you can divide across ten games, but if you make the playoffs, you’re just dividing it by 11 or 12 games; you actually get paid per game by making the finals… if you make the playoffs, the only way you’re actually going to get extra money out of it is by winning the tournament and [getting] the prize money.”The whole franchise league system can become a lonely place when things aren’t going well for you. You have one, maybe two bad tournaments, and you’re basically retired”•Getty Images”You can understand why guys would say, ‘Well, if we get knocked out early in this tournament, I can go somewhere else and make an extra $20,000-30,000 out of another tournament.’ And that is a true mercenary, right there. You’ll see it happening more often now, with teams owning more than one team in different leagues. You can’t stop it, unless you regulate by saying guys have to at least be there for a certain amount of round-robin games before they can play in the playoffs. It’s something they’re going to have to address at some stage.”It is rare to hear an active player nibbling – if not quite biting – the hand that feeds them. “Do you want to be the guy that stands up and says something and then tarnishes your reputation? You’ve got agents and players associations, and they’re the guys who should sort all those things out. If you go in and ruffle feathers somewhere, it might just cost you in the long run. It’s always been a case of keep your head down, do your job and you’ll get your rewards.”Wiese is not alone in having heard rumours about the prospect of a franchise league starting in Saudi Arabia, which he believes would be “a game-changer” for players. “We know what Saudi leagues have done for other sports and if they get involved in cricket, you could see astronomical numbers coming in.”But he is less optimistic about the prospects of other leagues. “I feel like the bubble’s got to burst at some stage. With all due respect, how much revenue can a Canada league bring in? I remember I played one year in the T20 Hong Kong Blitz [in 2018]. That only lasted for one year [the tournament was played for three seasons from 2016 to 2018], and you just don’t see [how they make] money… and I don’t know how much more it can take.”I know a lot of the numbers are not specifically about filling up stadiums. It’s more about viewership and how many ads they can sell. But for me, I feel like the bubble is going to burst at some stage, and there’s only going to be the main tournaments that are going to hold. All of these smaller tournaments, it’s going to be fly-by-night, one or two seasons – then it’s not sustainable.”I don’t know how it’s going to look in ten years, to be honest. It’s getting so condensed. I don’t know if it’s going to get to the stage where they follow football and actually have an international window, then everything else is franchise cricket; so you play your internationals, you’ve got your World Cups, and then everything else is franchise-based.”It might sound like a dystopian prediction – but there are few players more qualified than Wiese to make it.

Jason Gillespie: 'I want people to be able to say, yes, this is the style of cricket Pakistan are playing'

Tough love, a strong identity and an authentically Pakistani way to play – these are the things on the agenda for Pakistan’s new red-ball coach

Danyal Rasool25-Jul-2024″In Pakistan cricket,” Jason Gillespie, the side’s new Test coach, begins, weighing his words carefully even though what he’s about to say is undeniable, “I know there’s been a lot of change in all facets. Gary [Kirsten, Pakistan’s new white-ball coach] and I both get that. We’ve had some really good conversations and good discussions with the PCB about how we can put structures and systems in place so that while we’re moving in the right direction short term, in the medium and long term, Pakistan cricket is going to be healthier.”Gillespie could scarcely have described the last few years in Pakistan cricket more pithily. Since December 2022, the PCB has had five chairmen. In that period, Saqlain Mushtaq, Grant Bradburn, Mickey Arthur, Mohammad Hafeez and Azhar Mahmood all served as either team director or head coach. Batting and bowling coaches came and went, and half a dozen chief selectors picked at least one squad each.The results in Test cricket have taken the sharpest nose dive; since the start of 2022, Pakistan have won just three and lost eight of 15, with all three wins coming against Sri Lanka. They have not won a home Test in more than three years.Related

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“You want to get systems in place,” Gillespie says. “To get the right players, you need the right people around the organisation, and you need the pathway. That’s when you’re moving forward. It’s very easy when you’re coming into jobs; you’ve got a two-year contract or a one-year contract. You make short-term decisions to look after your own back. But that doesn’t help anyone, because if everyone has that approach, nothing long-term gets done.”Pakistan fans might be excused for sighing wearily at this point. That is no fault of Gillespie’s, of course, but various chairmen and coaches have attempted, with varying degrees of success, to make positive changes to the national team and its infrastructure. Under Ehsan Mani, Pakistan adopted a domestic first-class structure that did away with bloated departmental teams; those sides are now back and Mani is long gone. During Mickey Arthur’s first stint as head coach, he and Steve Rixon successfully transformed Pakistan’s fielding and fitness standards, but the days of Pakistan having suddenly emerged as an elite fielding unit now almost seem illusory.

****

Gillespie is on his way to the National Stadium, in a bulletproof van flanked by an armed police escort, charging through Karachi’s bustling evening traffic. Pakistan Shaheens are to be put through their paces for four days at a training camp in preparation for their (currently ongoing) tour of Darwin, Australia, where they play a pair of practice games against a Bangladesh A side ahead of the Bangladesh senior squad’s visit to Pakistan for two Test matches in August.Gillespie sat contemplatively in the back of the vehicle. He may not have been surprised at the security; he’d been told by fellow Australians who previously worked in Pakistan cricket that he’d be extremely well looked after.His job here is rather different from the ones he quit a year early to accept: a nine-year stint with Adelaide Strikers in the BBL, and four years with the state team, South Australia. That state’s population is over ten times smaller than the city whose roads he now speeds along, the scale and nature of media attention in a single-sport country like Pakistan rendering the two roles barely comparable.6:12

‘I’d ask the players how they want to be seen in the cricket world’

“It was a pretty simple decision in the end,” Gillespie says. We meet at the Marriott, where he is staying. He only got back to Karachi from Lahore in the small hours of the morning, after an unscheduled emergency meeting with PCB chairman Mohsin Naqvi necessitated a last-minute hop over to Lahore. Having taken the flight over from Lahore myself the previous day, I note we could have met in Lahore after all. He appreciates making the effort to conduct the interview in person. “It’s so much better than Zoom,” he says.His family was excited when he was offered the role – his kids were “just in wonder”, he says. His 18-year-old son Jackson, a 6’6″ fast bowler for the South Australia Under-19 side and a “mad cricketer”, thought it was brilliant. There was a more measured conversation with his wife and the rest of his family, who are back in Australia. Though Gillespie won’t be in Pakistan full time, the busy upcoming schedule means he will be away from home for long stretches. But his heart was set on this assignment.”Pakistan is an exciting cricket team and has a passionate fan base,” he says. “And this is an opportunity to be involved in international cricket and work with the best players. Having not been on the international circuit for a while since I finished playing, it’s going to be a new experience and a new challenge, which I’m really excited about.”It wasn’t as straightforward a decision for Pakistan, though. Having agonised and deliberated over coaching appointments, they sounded out Shane Watson and Daren Sammy, among others, before finally agreeing terms with Gillespie and Kirsten. This is the first time Pakistan have trialled split-format coaching.Gillespie has never coached an international side full-time before. He’s from the right country, of course – Pakistan’s predilection for Australians in leadership positions is legendary by now. And he has only ever spent extended periods of time with a side – he has never served as a full-time coach of a team for fewer than two seasons; that appears to have shaped his views on how coaching success is defined.According to Gillespie, while infrastructure and coaching diktats are reversible, identity cannot so easily be dispensed with. He suggests England’s mentality shift in white-ball cricket in 2015, and eventually Test cricket with the arrival of Brendon McCullum, are not as dependent on individual talents, and therefore stand a chance of surviving long after their original architects have moved on. While he might in part have the job because Pakistan long for that fabled Australian winning mentality, he wants to find out how to play a style of cricket that is “authentic to Pakistan”.”I’m happy to admit I don’t have the answer to what that is,” he says. “I just got here. I want to engage the players and the coaches around and get as much information as I can. We see other countries around the world and it’s very clear how they want to go about their play. Whether they’re successful or not, at least you know their identity exists.”If being honest is telling a player something they might not want to hear, well, then I’m willing to do that”•AFP via Getty Images”So that’s what I want us to ask – how do you want to play and how does it fit in with our squad and our team – and go from there. Then, if you have buy-in from all the players and if players and coaches and the PCB are on the same page and moving together as one, surely that will give us more chance of having progression and success.”I want both the Pakistan public and the media to be able to watch us play and go, ‘Yes, this is the style of cricket Pakistan are playing.'”The simple example is England. No one’s left in any doubt how England will play. Everyone’s pretty clear how Australia go about their work. That’s all I’m looking for from our team. I think it’s really important that, as a coach, I don’t just come in and say, ‘This is how we are going to play.’ It’s got to come from the players. My role is to support that and how I can help us go about that in the best and most effective way.”Famously his own man in what was viewed as a fiercely tribal Australian team, Gillespie makes no secret of his wish to prioritise identity and style over context-free win-loss records as a catch-all measure for success.He cultivates a wide range of interests that extend beyond the game of cricket, and – as a practising vegan – could just as easily have a nuanced discussion on the ethics of industrial meat and dairy consumption as on the intricacies of what makes a Dukes cricket ball move sideways. It’s a outlook that has marked the course of his coaching career.Gillespie’s stint with Yorkshire remains his biggest success, when he took over a second-division side and coached them to two successive first-division titles, in 2014 and 2015. He was, at the time, a leading candidate for the England head coach job. But even in times of relative famine, like in his recent stint with South Australia – he termed it his “dream job” – where the side finished in the bottom half during each of his four seasons in charge, he feels comfortable he left the team “in a much better place” than he found it.Gillespie coached Yorkshire to two successive County Championship trophies, and was instrumental in their promotion to Division One•Sarah Ansell/Getty ImagesHe takes particular pride in having helped groom elite players for the Australian national side – Travis Head, Alex Carey and Jake Fraser-McGurk were all nurtured at South Australia and have seen their international fortunes soar over the past four years.”We played some really good cricket [at South Australia],” Gillespie says. “Last year we played ten first-class games and had nine results. More results didn’t go our way [three wins, six losses], but if you actually looked at the games, there were some very close contests. There were games within a couple of wickets or a couple of runs. The numbers could have been the exact opposite; it was just those key moments in games. The positives were that we were playing result [oriented] cricket.”While there was disappointment in one sense, there was a lot of pride because we got opportunities at the highest level for some players. I’m not sure you can judge a domestic coach on just the win-losses.”Gillespie feels confident the PCB chairman and the board share his and Kirsten’s vision for the team, and there are already signs of a shift in tone and substance. When told Shaheen Shah Afridi was slated to play the Global T20 in Canada just days before the two-Test match series in Bangladesh started, his response was suggestive: “Is he? Are you sure about that?”A few days later it was announced the PCB had decided against issuing NOCs to Naseem Shah for the Hundred, and to Shaheen, Babar Azam and Mohammad Rizwan for the GT20. It is a process he admits needs careful navigation, but Gillespie is crystal clear on the primacy of the international side.”Players are centrally contracted and getting compensated really well. We have the right to be able to say, ‘Look, in this situation, we need you to rest or have some downtime to give your body and mind a break, be ready for the next challenge for Pakistan.’In his time with South Australia, Gillespie oversaw the development of future Australia stalwarts like Travis Head•Cricket Australia/Getty Images”We want players to go and play in these leagues and have these great experiences. But if we believe it’s going to be to the detriment of representing Pakistan in an upcoming series, then we’ll have a discussion and have a decision to make.”These are honest and difficult conversations. Ultimately, we’re tasked with doing what’s right by Pakistan cricket.”In times such as these, when the bond between the national team and its supporters appears to be fraying, the idea that the team needs a hard-nosed strongman to control the players with an iron fist often gains traction in Pakistan. And while Arthur, Pakistan’s longest-serving overseas head coach over the past decade, managed to form a particularly close bond with the core of the side, he also possessed a schoolmasterly streak he could always draw on. It played well in front of the television cameras, which appeared to take an almost prurient interest in his emotions when Pakistan were struggling.Gillespie, though, is far removed from that style of coaching, emphasising the need to build relationships that enable tough, honest conversations. “If being honest is telling a player something they might not want to hear, well, then I’m willing to do that. I want to help them be the best player and person they can be.”Gillespie recalls the days he played against Pakistan, and the sense of joy and fun he felt Pakistan took in their cricket. “I remember this training kit the Pakistan boys had. They had all the logos on, and on the back, it said ‘Proud to be Pakistani’. Do you remember those shirts? That stuck in my head. That was 20 years ago! And for me, that really resonated. I thought, ‘That’s cool.'”That pride is how I felt representing my country, putting on that cap and wearing the shirt with the Australian coat of arms. It meant the world to me. Playing for your country is the best thing in the world – it’s awesome.”It’s an honour and a privilege for me to coach Pakistan, and it’s an honour and a privilege for each and every player to represent Pakistan. That for me, is something that’s always stood out. I know when I played against Pakistan, that came through.”

Jadeja, the bowler, is a health indicator of CSK

CSK have won five of the seven matches in which the allrounder has bowled his allotment of overs

Sidharth Monga05-May-20242:15

Jaffer: Jadeja kept piling up pressure from an end

A barometer of how Chennai Super Kings (CSK) are doing in IPL 2024 is Ravindra Jadeja’s performance. More specifically, his bowling. Even more specifically, if he has bowled four overs. Or, rather, if the conditions are suited enough for him to bowl four overs. Jadeja has bowled his allotment seven times out of 12 this IPL. CSK have won five of those matches.With the depth in their squad and with the Impact Player rules, CSK have the luxury of not bowling Jadeja out should the pitch be not helpful or should there be too much dew. Or if there are two left-hand batters around or if he is being attacked. There are always options for such times, but this is also true: CSK have won only one match out of five in which Jadeja hasn’t been able to bowl his four overs.Jadeja is a critical player in this CSK squad. He is not the perfect T20 player, but he does more than enough things right to warrant some protection. CSK don’t bowl him in the powerplay, for example. Then he almost always gets done before the death overs. Similarly, with the bat, if you protect him from spin, he can be brutal against pace at the death. That is a lesson CSK have hopefully learnt after the brief experiment with sending him up at No. 4.Related

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It is with the ball, though, that Jadeja indicates CSK’s health the best, especially from the time the Impact Player came in and bowling Jadeja out stopped being mandatory. ESPNcricinfo’s Shiva Jayaraman has worked out the link between Jadeja’s bowling and CSK’s fortunes even better: since the start of IPL 2023, CSK have won 68.42% of full 20-over matches in which Jadeja has at least started his fourth over; no other bowler bowling out has coincided with such a high percentage of wins.And it is not like Jadeja is called upon to bowl only on turners. He has bowled out in 70.37% of the matches, which is a decent ratio. It is not quite Rashid Khan-R Ashwin territory – they bowl out in 90% of their teams’ matches – but Jadeja still does so more often than Ravi Bishnoi, Piyush Chawla and Mohit Sharma, to name a few frontline bowlers.Take one look at Jadeja’s figures, and you will know why he is so central to CSK’s plans. It is not in taking wickets that Jadeja’s importance lies – he has taken only eight of them this year, but has gone at just 7.26 an over. On four separate occasions this IPL, he has bowled his four overs for less than a run a ball. You can adjust that economy rate for the absence of powerplay and death overs, but at a time when even the middle overs are being targeted, a banker of a bowler in seven out of ten matches is a luxury.1:32

Jaffer: Punjab’s batters messed up big time

To not let Jadeja bowl is precisely why Prabhsimran Singh and Shashank Singh took risks against him early on. They had staged a comeback from the two early wickets, were going at a decent rate, were not chasing a huge total; they could have taken a moment once the field spread, but they knew the pitfalls of letting Jadeja settle. Shashank took a massive swipe at the first ball Jadeja bowled, and was lucky to survive. At the end of the over, Prabhsimran gave away his stumps and took a risk to score a boundary.Jadeja, though, kept plugging away: turn the ball hard, attack the stumps, don’t bowl half-volleys or long hops. When Prabhsimran tried the inside-out drive the second time, he ended up hitting Jadeja straight to long-on. By now, Jadeja was hurrying the batters and the asking rate was jumping big time with every dot and single. Wickets are incidental in this format, but they came today, to go with his runs and earning him the Player-of-the-Match award.With the bat, Jadeja is back in the lower-middle order, which is more suited to him. He had to come in early thanks to a Rahul Chahar double-strike, but Punjab Kings (PBKS) perhaps missed a trick there by not bowling an extra over of spin at Jadeja. They were perhaps looking to save Chahar for later when MS Dhoni would be batting, but as a result, Jadeja faced only three balls of spin early on in his innings. By the time Chahar came back, Jadeja was set.If you are a CSK opponent and there is no dew, try to keep a left-hand batter in the middle overs if you can. Try to take Jadeja down early but it might not always come off. But do just try to push CSK to try other bowlers in the middle overs because if you let Jadeja run through the middle overs, he ends up creating enough impact to help CSK win.

Awesome in Australia: Pujara's 11-hour resistance vs Shardul's all-round heroics

Vote for the best individual Border-Gavaskar Trophy performance by an Indian in Australia since 2000

ESPNcricinfo staff21-Oct-2024Update: This poll has ended. Cheteshwar Pujara’s performance goes into the quarter-finals. Check the other polls here.ESPNcricinfo LtdCheteshwar Pujara was the rock Australia could not budge in Adelaide•Getty Images and Cricket Australia

Cheteshwar Pujara – 123 and 71 in Adelaide, 2018

India won by 31 runs, lead series 1-0Mitchell Starc was swinging the ball again. At 145 kph. Some of the quickest bowling ever seen in Australia in 2018 had India 127 for 6 on the first day of a long tour. But it still wasn’t enough to dislodge Cheteshwar Pujara. It barely even made a dent. In an age where batting is nothing if it doesn’t look sexy, one man stood up to show the world that “when you defend confidently you know you are in command, you are on top of the bowler, and he doesn’t have a chance to get you out.”Pujara batted for more than six hours to contribute 123 to India’s first-innings total of 250 in Adelaide. He then wore Australia down for nearly another five hours in the second innings; his 71 putting India on course to set a target of over 300. They won by 31 runs, and went on to take the series 2-1, their first ever triumph on Australian soil.
By Alagappan MuthuWatch the highlights of these performances on the Star Sports network at 10am, 1pm, 4pm and 7pm IST, from October 22 onwards.Shardul Thakur delivered with runs and wickets to keep India in the Brisbane Test•Getty Images and Cricket Australia

Shardul Thakur – 67, 3-94 & 4-61 in Brisbane, 2021

India win by three wickets & win series 2-1Shardul Thakur had played one Test match before Brisbane 2021, but he may as well have not played that game, with a groin strain restricting him to delivering just 10 balls against West Indies in Hyderabad in 2018. Thakur wasn’t part of India’s original squad in Australia, and it’s hard to say exactly where he stood in their pecking order of bowlers, because when he did get his chance at the Gabba, India were without their entire first-choice attack: over the course of the tour, injury had ruled out Ishant Sharma, Mohammed Shami, Jasprit Bumrah, R Ashwin and Ravindra Jadeja.Miraculously, the series was still alive at 1-1. And miraculously, an India XI that included Thakur and five players who made their debuts on this tour kept trading punches with Australia’s first-choice star cast. Thakur was in the middle of it all, with ball and bat. First, he picked up three wickets with his outswing and attacking lengths to help restrict Australia to 369 in their first innings. Then he walked in with India 186 for 6, and hooked Pat Cummins for six off his third ball to score his first runs in Test cricket. The shots kept flowing in an audacious 123-run stand with Washington Sundar, as India narrowed Australia’s lead to a mere 33 runs.Then India kept finding a breakthrough every time Australia threatened to pull too far from their reach in the second innings. Thakur was in the middle of it all again, getting the ball to kick awkwardly from just short of a length to pick up four wickets. All this left India with 328 to get, 324 of them on day five. All they needed now, after four miraculous days, was one final miracle.By Karthik Krishnaswamy

How many bowlers have taken multiple ten-wicket hauls away at the same ground?

And was Bangladesh’s 159 in Chattogram the lowest innings total to include a century partnership?

Steven Lynch12-Nov-2024Ajaz Patel has played two Tests at the Wankhede Stadium, and taken at least ten wickets in both. How many other bowlers have multiple ten-fors on a single ground away from home? asked Ahmedul Kabir from Bangladesh

The New Zealand slow left-armer Ajaz Patel has played two Tests against India in Mumbai – the city of his birth – and taken 25 wickets there: 14 for 225 (including all ten in the first innings) in a defeat in December 2021, and 11 for 160 as New Zealand completed their unprecedented 3-0 whitewash at the Wankhede Stadium last week.Only seven other bowlers have taken two ten-fors in Tests on the same ground away from home. The first was England’s George Lohmann in Sydney, and he was followed by the Australian Hugh Trumble at The Oval, a pair of Englishmen in Colin Blythe (Cape Town) and Sydney Barnes (Durban), Lance Gibbs of West Indies (Old Trafford), and the Australians Dennis Lillee and Shane Warne at The Oval. Barnes did it twice in the same 1913-14 series, with 10 for 105 in the first Test and 14 for 144 in the fourth at the old Lord’s ground in Durban.Was Bangladesh’s 159 at Chattogram the lowest Test total for an innings that included a century partnership? asked Tarif Sherhan Shuvo from Bangladesh via Facebook

Bangladesh were bowled out for 159 in the first innings of their second Test against South Africa in Chattogram last week despite a ninth-wicket stand of 103 between Mominul Haque and Taijul Islam, which rescued them somewhat from 48 for 8.It’s not quite the lowest all-out Test total to include a hundred partnership: New Zealand’s 158 against Australia in Auckland in March 1974 began with an opening stand of 107 between Glenn Turner and John Parker. West Indies were all out for 160 against Sri Lanka in Galle in November 2021 despite an seventh-wicket stand of exactly 100 between Nkrumah Bonner and Joshua Da Silva.When South Africa were all out for 140 at Lord’s in July 1907, Dave Nourse and Aubrey Faulkner put on 98 for the fourth wicket (no one else scored more than six).The lowest completed innings in a one-day international to include a century stand is Pakistan’s 161 against Sri Lanka in Karachi in January 2009, when Salman Butt and Shoaib Malik put on 108 for the fourth wicket.Mominul Haque was out twice in a session during the Chattogram Test. Was this unique? asked Neville Flood via Facebook

After top-scoring with 82 in Bangladesh’s first innings in the second Test against South Africa in Chattogram last week, Mominul Haque was out for a two-ball duck in the follow-on. There were only 14.3 overs between the two dismissals, which both came in the middle session of the third day.The Australian statistician Charles Davis, the king of the ball-by-ball scorecards, says of being out twice in a session: “It happens occasionally in Tests, but is not common. The previous one was Lorcan Tucker of Ireland, against Sri Lanka in Galle in April 2023 – he was out twice in the first session of the third day.”A related statistic is the fastest pair bagged in a Test. For years I thought this was by Pakistan’s MEZ “Ebbu” Ghazali, against England at Old Trafford in July 1954 – he was out twice in the space of about two hours – but actually it seems the record is held by the South African wicketkeeper Tommy Ward, who marked his Test debut in May 1912 by becoming the final victim in both Jimmy Matthews’ hat-tricks for Australia at Old Trafford. Ward collected a king pair within the space of 110 minutes’ playing time.Clem Hill got within touching distance of a hundred in three successive Tests, only to fall for 99, 98 and 97•Getty ImagesApparently someone once had successive Test scores of 99, 98 and 97. Who was this? asked Pete Spencer from England

This unlucky batter was the Australian left-hander Clem Hill, who would have improved on his career total of seven centuries in 49 Tests with a little more luck. In the second Test of the 1901-02 Ashes series, in Melbourne, he was caught by Arthur Jones off the bowling of Sydney Barnes for 99. Then in the next Test, on his home ground in Adelaide, Hill was caught by JohnnyTyldesley off Len Braund for 98, and bowled by Gilbert Jessop for 97.In Hill’s reminiscences, which appeared in an Adelaide newspaper in the 1930s and were later published in book form, he claimed it wasn’t really a case of the nervous nineties. “In the first of them I was in with [Reggie] Duff. He and I had not been partners before, and did not know each other’s ways in running between the wickets. When I was 99, I asked him to be on the move to run a short one. Barnes sent up a short-pitched ball, which I could have square-cut to the boundary – but uppermost in my mind was the thought that I had told Duff to be ready for a single. I attempted to pat it down to third man, but instead touched it into the slips.”The second dismissal was on the Adelaide Oval. I hit a ball from Braund to the north-eastern boundary, where Tyldesley stepped on to the asphalt cycling track, threw out his left hand, and caught the ball. He did not know that he had brought about my dismissal. The arrangement used to be that if a fieldsman took a catch with his foot on the asphalt the batsman was not out. As, however, the umpire could not always tell if a fieldsman’s foot was on the paved track, it was decided by the captains that a catch anywhere on it was out. I knew this, but nobody had told Tyldesley about it.”I was dismissed the third time when facing Jessop, a fairly fast bowler. He bowled one just outside my leg stump. I went to glance it fine but played it onto my pads. The ball rolled between my legs and I watched it go slowly towards my wicket. It was some seconds before the bails fell off.”During New Zealand’s recent historic 3-0 win in India, there were only two centuries scored. Is this a record low for a Test series of three or more matches? asked Matthew Walsham from New Zealand

The only three-figure scores in the recent series in India both came in the first Test in Bengaluru – Rachin Ravindra’s 134 for New Zealand, and Sarfaraz Khan’s 150 for India.But this isn’t very close to the record: there were no individual centuries at all in the three-Test series between Australia and England in 1882-83 and 1888, India vs New Zealand in 1969-70 and 1995-96, Pakistan vs West Indies in 1986-87, and Pakistan vs Zimbabwe in 1993-94. There are 13 series that featured only one century, and 27 others with two (that includes four series of four matches: West Indies vs England in 1934-35, England v Pakistan in 1954, Pakistan vs West Indies in 1980-81, and India vs South Africa in 2015-16).Shiva Jayaraman of ESPNcricinfo’s stats team helped with some of the above answers.Use our feedback form, or the Ask Steven Facebook page to ask your stats and trivia questions

Bumrah uses money in the bank for Lord's honours

Saved for the Lord’s Test with a long break on this tour, Bumrah took his 15th five-wicket haul on the second day to make his place on the honour’s board

Sidharth Monga11-Jul-2025

Jasprit Bumrah picked up his first five-for at Lord’s•Getty Images

Jasprit Bumrah’s favourite phrase is “money in the bank”. Not sure he follows professional wrestling, but in WWE, “Money In The Bank” is a briefcase that contains a contract entitling the holder to a title shot anytime, anywhere. So the champion could have just survived an hour-long Iron Man and you could cash in at that moment and beat him.Bumrah walks around with the air of a man carrying an invisible briefcase that guarantees wickets anytime, anywhere. Or he has the air of a man who knows he is a genius fast bowler.In Bumrah’s world, money in the bank is days when he bowls well without results. He believes the results will show up sooner or later. Unlike Money In The Bank in WWE, which can be cashed in anytime, money in the bank in cricket depends on various elements not in a bowler’s control: luck, batter’s intent and conditions, to name a few.Related

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Bumrah respects the occasional disconnect between effort and outcome in cricket and bides his time. He hardly goes searching because he believes he deserves more wickets in a certain spell or on a certain day. He doesn’t risk releasing pressure and ruining it for the bowlers who follow.His body, though, is beginning to test his patience. There is this whole unfortunate scenario in the aftermath of his back stress reaction at the start of the year. He is playing only three of the five Tests in this series. There has been too much focus on “will he, won’t he”. It is not the kind of attention he wants.Bumrah has not been pleased with all of it. His demeanour has been a little testy, only a little. There have been suggestions he wanted to play at Lord’s, and so did not play at Edgbaston despite India trailing 1-0 in the series and having more than a week off before that Test. The matches he plays and misses is not his call alone but that of the team in discussion with him.Jasprit Bumrah picked up his first five-for at Lord’s•Getty ImagesAs India won without Bumrah at Edgbaston, two curious but eventually shallow bits of stats did the rounds: Mohammed Siraj’s bowling average improves from 33 to 26 in his absence, India’s win percentage goes up from 40 to 70.It is in this context that the first day of money in the bank at Lord’s becomes a little curious. Bumrah started it by drawing an edge with the first ball he bowled to Ben Duckett only to see it not carry. He swung the ball bewitchingly late, paired it with nip off the pitch, and made a few batters look incredibly silly. He induced a false shot once every three deliveries, sprayed the ball a little on a few occasions, and ended with just one wicket in 18 overs. You wondered if he took this day with the same equanimity and considered it more money in the bank.A teaser of what was to follow was seen late on day one when Bumrah went for the mightiest of tricks in fast bowling: swing one way, seam the other way, and hit the top of off. It is arguable whether it is physically possible for batters to react to this kind of movement. Mostly they hope the ball misses the stumps. The beauty of that Harry Brook dismissal was that Bumrah had tried each end without luck. He then went back to the end with lower bounce, and bowled the exact length needed to hit top of off, which had shortened by a metre since the first session. That is the extent of how soft the balls are going.2:43

‘Don’t want to be fined for making statements about ball change’

On the second morning, Bumrah repeated the trick twice from the bouncier Nursery End with the second new ball. He made the length adjustment again. To Ben Stokes, he went slightly closer on the release from around the wicket. To Joe Root, he swung the ball away a lot, pitched it up, then found seam movement against that angle; it would have just missed off but the inside edge took it on to uproot middle stump.With three swipes of genius, he ripped out the heart of England’s batting. Then came the ball change, which resulted in a quiet period with the replacement ball. He came back after lunch, went closer on the release to Jofra Archer, got awayswing and then seam back in, and hit the stumps three-fourths of the way up.Patient as Bumrah is, this five-for – his 15th in 47 Tests – had a bit of “I’m cashing in” than relying on circumstances to change while he keeps bowling good length and line. He still hit the good length with 54% of his deliveries but went into the 6-7metre band 30% of the time, which is slightly high for him. Perhaps he was just a little impatient. Perhaps he wanted to hit the stumps more often: eight times in 18 overs on day one to seven times in nine overs on day two.The attention will remain on Bumrah. Whatever the result at Lord’s, as the fourth Test in Manchester approaches, people will start asking which of the remaining matches he will play. And if it is 2-2 after Old Trafford, and he’s already played three Tests, there will be questions about whether he should push himself and play the finale. There is no way around it. The good thing is, Bumrah still has plenty of money in the bank, and not the WWE version, which you lose when you cash it in for a title shot.

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