CPL 2022 – Mayers and Cornwall take top spots in Smart Stats list

Mohammad Amir emerges as the most impactful bowler despite finishing behind Alzarri Joseph on the wicket-takers’ chart

ESPNcricinfo stats team03-Oct-2022Jamaica Tallawahs won the CPL 2022 final against Barbados Royals against expectations, considering how dominant Royals had been through the league stage, losing just two games. So it is not a surprise that the Smart Stats honours at the end of the tournament were completely dominated by Royals players.Royals allrounder Kyle Mayers was the MVP of the tournament. He put together stellar performances with bat and ball, scoring 366 runs and taking eight wickets.ESPNcricinfo LtdAccording to ESPNcricinfo’s Smart Stats, which takes into account not just the runs scored and wickets taken, but also the match context and quality of those runs and wickets, Mayers had a total impact score of 669. He was comfortably in first place, ahead of his opening partner Rahkeem Cornwall, who scored 242 runs and took seven wickets.Mayers started the tournament exceptionally well. In the first game, against St Kitts and Nevis Patriots, Mayers scored 73 runs from 46 balls.His best performance came against St Lucia Kings in a rain interrupted game. On that occasion, Mayers took all four wickets of the Kings innings in just two overs, conceding just four runs.Cornwall had the second-highest impact in the tournament after contributing with bat and ball in critical junctures. His 91 from 54 balls with 11 sixes in Qualifier 1 helped Royals go past the Guyana Amazon Warriors comfortably.There is little to separate the rest in the list. Faf du Plessis struck at 168.52, while Sunil Narine continued his outstanding run with the ball going at just 4.8 runs per over. Shakib Al Hasan and Jason Holder complete the top six on the Smart Stats list.ESPNcricinfo LtdSmart Wickets
While the batters were impactful at various times, some bowlers stood out with match-winning performances and key wickets at crucial stages of the game.Mohammad Amir, who missed the final for Tallawahs, did well in their journey to the title round. He picked up 16 wickets and was the fourth-highest wicket-taker in the tournament. Although Alzarri Joseph picked up 18 wickets to be the highest wicket-taker, ESPNcricinfo’s Smart Stats placed Amir ahead of him.Ten of Amir’s 16 wickets were those of top-three batters. His economy in the powerplay was just 4.99, and he picked up nine wickets in that phase. Amir bowled in the tough phases and delivered almost each time. In contrast, Joseph took just five wickets of top-three batters and averaged 29.25 in the powerplay. In terms of Smart Wickets, Amir was the standout bowler in the CPL, where his 16 wickets were valued at 21 Smart Wickets.ESPNcricinfo LtdBest performances
Mayers and Cornwall also took the top two positions in the list of best individual performances.The match-wise top impact positions was dominated by top-order batters. Mayers’ all-round show against Kings took the top spot. Mayers scored 36 runs in 23 balls and picked up four wickets in just two overs to win the match for Royals then. Cornwall’s incredible hitting in Qualifier 1 against Guyana was the second most impactful performance in the tournament.

There were two performances from Brandon King that made the top five. One was in the tournament opener against Patriots, when he scored 89 runs from 57 deliveries. The other one, albeit in a losing cause, was against Amazon Warriors. King scored 104 runs from 66 balls in a total of just 166 then, and the second highest score for Tallawahs was just 15.

Jayasuriya's stunner in Singapore, and other outliers from ODI history

Instances when a player or a team stood out for performing way above, or below, the mean

Anantha Narayanan10-Dec-2022What is an outlier? A fairly acceptable definition is: “a data point that differs significantly from other observations”. However, I am going to use the definition with a little more freedom in this article. I will look for performances that stood out in an ODI, and also performances that stood out across the many years during which the game has been played.Let it not be forgotten that an outlier can be a positive one (a standout performance that shone among mediocre ones) or a negative one (a forgettable performance in a collection of good ones). I will feature both – often within the same table.

In the table above, a batter’s strike rate and runs are contrasted with those of their team-mates. In 1996, in the unlikely location of Singapore, Sanath Jayasuriya scored at a rate of 271 while his colleagues plodded along at 57 – an amazing ratio of nearly 4.8. It was almost like two wildly contrasting games being played at the same time. A likely sequence of deliveries could have been: four dot balls, a single and a four or six. Thirteen years before that, Lance Cairns achieved something similar – a ratio of 4.4 against Australia. Who else but Shahid Afridi next? A ratio of nearly 4.0 in a 2015 match against New Zealand. At Headingley in 1982, Kapil Dev achieved a factor of just over 3.5. Unfortunately, in all four of these cases, the batter’s team lost. Since the outlying situation was within the same team, the opposing team name is not provided.In 2019, chasing a low total, Chris Gayle went berserk, outshining his team-mates by a factor of 3.45. In that instance, he won the match for West Indies. Arjuna Ranatunga’s ratio of nearly 3.4 in a 1990 game ended on the losing side. Three other innings are featured with ratios exceeding 3.3; of those, only Sandeep Patil’s and Michael Leask’s finished on the winning side.Now for the other end of the spectrum. With a minimum of 25 balls faced by the batters, I look at very low ratios of the batter’s strike rate to the team’s. Elton Chigumbura and Runako Morton scored no runsin 27 and 31 balls respectively, and finished with a ratio of 0.0. A few other batters scored one run in a fair number of balls and finished with strike-rate ratios of below 0.10. An innings that is not on the table deserves a few lines here. Opening the innings for Pakistan against West Indies in Sialkot in 1986, Rizwan-uz-Zaman scored 4 in 62 balls in an eminently forgettable innings that led to a low score and a loss. Compared to him, his team-mates looked like Shahid Afridis. And this was a strong Pakistan team with Ramiz Raja, Javed Miandad and Imran Khan.

Against Bangladesh in St Kitts in 2009, Andre Fletcher scored 50 of his 52 runs from 11 boundaries. Amazingly, he also played about 30 dot balls: a combination of extreme caution and extreme aggression. Gayle and Brendon McCullum, at Nos. 2 and 3, had identical figures as far as runs and boundaries are concerned, though their overall balls-faced figures were slightly different. Gayle played around ten dot balls and McCullum only seven. Matthew Hayden’s innings in Auckland in 2000 was perhaps the most amazing one – 11 boundaries, two singles and 36 dot balls. There are five other instances of batters exceeding 94% in boundaries, including another by McCullum. Can one think of such an analysis without the presence of Afridi? Interesting to note that he played only around eight dot balls in his Colombo innings in 2002 that features on the table.Now to those batters who appeared to believe that it was a crime to hit more than one boundary an innings. All the players in the bottom half of the table hit a single boundary in their innings, and appear on the table in descending order of their scores. Against New Zealand in 1993, Mark Taylor played 129 balls and hit one boundary. His is the only innings where less than 5% of the runs came off boundaries. Mohsin Khan managed to play 175 boundary-less balls in a World Cup game against West Indies. Not surprising to note that many of these stonewallers’ teams lost the games in question.Disclaimer: There is a problem when we look at the innings without boundaries. There are 59 instances of batters scoring 50 or more runs without hitting any boundaries. I fear that in most of these cases, we do not have all the data needed. Take the 1988 Asia Cup ODI between Bangladesh and Pakistan: Moin-ul-Atiq scored 105 in 117 balls, but his fours and sixes are not listed. In the same match, Ijaz Ahmed is shown to have scored a hundred with nine fours and four sixes. As such, I decided to exclude such innings from consideration. It is possible that there are genuine instances of fifties with zero boundaries, but I cannot confirm that. I have taken the view that if at least one boundary is shown, that scorecard has to be assumed to be correct.

The next set of outliers belongs to a grey area of records: matches where one batter accounted for an inordinately high percentage of the team score. I have also presented the next-highest score and the ratio between the two innings. In order to avoid fast cameos such as Brendon McCullum’s 80 (out of 95) dominating this chart, I have put in a condition that at least six wickets should have been captured.Viv Richards’ 189 at Old Trafford in 1984 has remained on top of the best-innings table for the past four decades and I can confidently say that it will never be unseated. Richards scored nearly 70% of his team score in this game. And given the next-highest score in the innings was 26, his support ratio is a huge 7.3. A tribute to, inarguably, the greatest innings of all time. That knock led to a comfortable win for West Indies, but David Warner’s magnificent innings, in second place, was in vain. Then comes Kapil Dev’s 175 at the 1983 World Cup, often the only innings to be talked about in the same conversation with that of Richards. Kapil’s share of India’s innings was over 65 and his ratio was fractionally higher than that of Richards.Tony Ura of Papua New Guinea sounded the bell for the smaller cricketing nations with a magnificent 151 out of a team total 235 in a World Cup Qualifier match against Ireland in 2018. A 25 from the No. 9 was all the support he got. Jaskaran Malhotra’s 173 (out of 271) for USA against PNG last year was an even greater innings, coming as it did from No. 5. The next highest score was 22.

Now we move on to the bowlers. We start with the Balls per Wicket (BpW) measure. The comparisons are between the team and an outlier bowler. Andy Bichel had a BpW value of 8.6 in his magnificent 2003 World Cup spell against England, while the other Australia bowlers, headed by Glenn McGrath and Brett Lee, needed 240 balls to take the other wicket that fell. That is a huge ratio of 28. In a totally different situation, Darren Lehmann bowled three balls, claimed two wickets and secured a ratio of 25. In Trinidad in 1989, Kris Srikkanth needed only nine balls per wicket, while his more illustrious bowler colleagues needed 212 balls for the other wicket that fell.Against Zimbabwe in 2003, Fidel Edwards took six top-order wickets in seven overs while his colleagues needed 25 overs for the other wicket. In 2017, Akila Dananjaya took six India wickets in ten overs while the other bowlers managed all of a single wicket in 206 balls. The three other bowlers on this list had ratios of over 20, and all were casual bowlers. Not featured are the next four bowlers – Mohammad Hasnain, Joshua Holder, Hasan Ali, and Ravi Rampaul – who all had similar figures of five wickets in 60 balls, while their team-mates needed 240 balls for one wicket.At the other end of the list, in a World Cup game against Namibia, Brett Lee needed 36 balls for one wicket, even as the other bowlers picked up a wicket about every five balls. The ratio was a very low 0.2. Trent Johnston needed 60 balls for his single wicket against Netherlands, while his colleagues took 13.5 for each of theirs. Now come a slew of surprises. Look at some of the other bowlers who needed around four times more deliveries for their one wicket than their team-mates: Imran Khan, Trent Boult (twice), Muthiah Muralidaran, and Wasim Akram.

The next measure of comparison is the Runs per Over (RpO). First, we will look at the bowlers who were stingy as Scrooge in contrast to their team-mates. In September this year against New Zealand, Sean Abbott bowled five overs and conceded one run, while his compatriots, Mitchell Starc and Josh Hazlewood included, conceded 2.89 runs per over. That is a ratio of nearly 15. Steven Finn is the only other bowler with a ratio above 10. He achieved that in 2015 against Ireland, conceding 0.33 runs per over as against the other bowlers conceding 3.67. Courtney Walsh’s famous spell of 5 for 1 in 27 balls in 1986 comes in next – a factor of nearly 10.In the second half of the table, Len Pascoe conceded six and a half runs per over against India in 1981, while his team-mates gave away a mere 1.69. That is a ratio of 0.26. Roger Binny’s extravagant spell of eight runs per over against Pakistan in Sharjah was nearly four times that of his fellow bowlers. Danish Kaneria conceded a huge 12 runs per over while his fellow bowlers conceded just over three against Zimbabwe in the 2007 World Cup. The table contains all bowlers whose ratio is 0.3 or below.

The table above is about teams, and it straddles the grey area between being an outlier and being a record. The first is a list of high number of no-balls. These three teams conceded over 10% of the runs they gave away overall through no-balls. All these instances were in the 1990s. With the introduction of free hits as a punishment, no-ball numbers have come down drastically. Two Pakistan teams and one West Indian side, with their collection of aggressive fast bowlers, conceded a high number of no-balls. However, it is worth looking at how many runs these teams conceded – 150 and under in each case. In other words, they were aggressive and fast, and achieved their objective. The Pakistan teams won their matches defending low targets.Now for wides. Defending 149 in a tri-series final against England in 2000, South Africa went all out, bowling 21 wides (18.9%) but dismissing England for 111. In another tri-series two years earlier, India’s bowlers had a bad day, but only as far as wides were considered. They conceded 21 wides, but dismissed Bangladesh for 115. In an ODI in Brisbane in 1996, West Indies conceded 18 wides but dismissed Sri Lanka for 102. A common thread through this list of matches is that all the teams pitted against these seemingly profligate bowlers were dismissed for sub-200 scores, and most matches resulted in wins for the teams that conceded large numbers of wides.Onwards to a more general topic: the percentage of extras conceded. The Carlton & United Series match in 2000 between Australia and India was surely an outlier on this count. Australia conceded 32 extras out of an India total of 100; most of these extras were leg-byes and wides. The Australian bowlers conceded 68 runs in 36.3 overs and 32 in extras. A match straight out of

Stats – Australia hit record low, Ashwin at par with Kumble

It was also a sorry state of affairs for Australia’s left-hand batters, who recorded a combined average of 6.7, while both India’s left-hand batters hit fifties

Sampath Bandarupalli11-Feb-202391 – Australia’s second-innings total in Nagpur was their lowest in Tests in India. Australia’s previous lowest total in India was 93 all out in Mumbai in 2004.The 91 was also Australia’s second-lowest Test total against India, behind the 83 all out in Melbourne in 1981.268 – Australia’s match aggregate in the Nagpur Test was their lowest in a Test against India when bowled out twice. Their previous lowest aggregate was 296 in Mumbai in 2004, when they bowled out for 203 and 93.The aggregate of 268 was also the second-lowest by Australia in a Test match in Asia, behind the 267 against Pakistan in Karachi in 1956.ESPNcricinfo Ltd5 – Number of innings wins for India in Test cricket against Australia, including the latest win in Nagpur. The last of their previous four innings wins came during the 2013 home series against Australia in Hyderabad.25 – Five-wicket hauls for R Ashwin in Test cricket in India, the joint-highest with Anil Kumble. Only two players have claimed more five-wicket hauls at home in Tests: 45 by Muthiah Muralidaran and 26 by Rangana Herath.6.7 – Batting average of Australia’s left-hand batters in Nagpur. It’s the second-lowest average recorded by a team’s left-hand batters in a Test match (minimum ten dismissals). The lowest is 5.8 for New Zealand against Australia in the 2019 Perth Test.The five left-hand batters in Australia’s playing XI scored 67 runs across both innings, while the two India left-hand batters totalled 154 runs, with two fifties.

10 – The total lbw dismissals for Australia in Nagpur, the most for them in a Test match. Australia’s previous highest was nine – against India in Kolkata in 2001 and against Sri Lanka in last year’s Galle Test.These are also the joint-highest lbw dismissals effected by India in a Test match. Six of the ten dismissals came in the second innings, the joint-highest for Australia and the joint-highest for any team against India in a Test innings.49 – Marnus Labuschagne’s score in the first innings, the highest individual score for Australia in this Test match. It was the first instance when no batter scored a fifty for Australia in a Test match in India. It was also only the second completed Test where India did not concede an individual fifty against Australia.

Ireland come into Bangladesh T20s with plenty of ground to make up

The conditions in Chattogram should bring spin into the contests more, but the match timings might not be ideal for the fans

Mohammad Isam26-Mar-2023Bangladesh’s enviable home runBangladesh have a strong record at home; apart from the ODI hiccup against England at the start of March, they were at a different level, knocking off world champions England 3-0 in the T20I series and carrying that confidence to the ODIs against Ireland. In conditions that were rather un-Bangladeshi, they posted huge scores – 338 for 8 and 349 for 6 – on the occasions they batted first. When they bowled first, they bowled Ireland out for 101, with the fast bowlers taking all ten wickets. The spinners took a backseat for a change, bowling the lowest number of overs in a home series.The home team’s fielding has improved too, perhaps their most attractive aspect in recent times. It is not spectacular catches or effective dives but basic fielding that has often escaped this team. This month, they have done that right, giving their bowling attack an extra bit of cushion.Ireland’s best format to shineIreland don’t have form on their side, losing their only T20I series so far this year, going down 1-2 against Zimbabwe in January. But they beat West Indies and England in the T20 World Cup last year, giving them some good memories to work with.Related

Balbirnie rested for Bangladesh T20Is; Stirling to lead in his absence

Uncapped Rishad Hossain, Jaker Ali in Bangladesh T20I squad

Why Bangladesh should play more in Sylhet and Chattogram

And at the current moment Ireland will take anything positive they can get their hands on, even if it is merely good memories. They have had a difficult time on this tour so far, getting hammered in the ODIs. In the two innings they batted, they couldn’t get to 160. It wasn’t even spin that got them, it was Bangladesh’s impressive fast bowling attack in conditions that were nearer to what Ireland usually play in.Chattogram Bangladesh’s haven, but what about the match timings?The Shere Bangla National Stadium in Mirpur hosts most of the T20Is and T20s in Bangladesh, being the premier venue in the country. But the Zahur Ahmed Chowdhury Stadium in Chattogram boasts arguably the best batting pitches. Often, they provide relief for the Bangladesh batters, and the spinners too will have more of a say on pitches that are going to be slower than what was on offer in the ODIs in Sylhet.Legspinner Rishad Hossain to Bangladesh’s squad, although he has only bowled five overs in domestic cricket this season. The selection might be daring, but there are choices to fall back on with Shakib Al Hasan, Nasum Ahmed and Mehidy Hasan Miraz also around.The 2pm start time should also offer the batters the best batting conditions in Chattogram, and the spinners will not have to worry about dew. Whether these timings will bring in the crowds, though, remains a concern. The matches are being played during Ramadan and end just an hour before time, with the stadium located at the backend of an industrial area; it will be tough for most ticket-holders to return home in time to break fast.Bilateral T20Is after 11 yearsBangladesh won the only bilateral series between the two sides in 2012. Ireland’s only win over Bangladesh in this format was in the 2009 T20 World Cup. So there’s not much history to this series, but both teams will have motivation enough: Bangladesh so they don’t lose their white-ball momentum, and Ireland so they have something to show for their travels.

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

  • Tamim wants Bangladesh to play more, and better, on 'true wickets'

  • Hathurusingha: Overcoming England's pace-bowling challenge will be Bangladesh's biggest test

  • Bangladesh pick Rony Talukdar after eight years for T20Is against England

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.

Scenarios – How Royal Challengers, Giants and Warriorz can qualify

We also break down how Capitals could sneak past Mumbai into the top spot

S Rajesh17-Mar-20236:40

Giants win and spice up qualifying scenarios

Are Delhi Capitals through to the playoffs?
Capitals are currently on eight points from six games, with matches coming up against Mumbai and UP Warriorz. If they lose those two matches, it is possible that Warriorz and Gujarat Giants can catch them on eight points. However, Capitals are so far ahead on net run rate that they are certain to finish among the top three.Currently, they have an NRR of 1.431, compared to -0.196 for Warriorz and -2.523 for Giants. For Capitals to finish fourth, their NRR will have to drop below both their rivals. While it is possible for Warriorz to go past Capitals on NRR, it is almost impossible for Giants to overcome the huge deficit in just a couple of games.If, for instance, Capitals lose their last two games by a combined total margin of 200 runs (chasing 160 each time), their NRR will only drop to -0.311. Giants will then have to win their two games – against Royal Challengers Bangalore and Warriorz – by a combined total margin of around 235 runs to go past Capitals’ NRR. Apart from such margins being almost impossible to achieve, a huge defeat for Warriorz will also adversely impact their NRR, which they will then have to make up through big wins against Mumbai and Capitals.Thus, it’s safe to infer that Capitals are almost certainly through to the playoffs. Their best case, though, will be for Mumbai to lose their last three games so that they can somehow sneak the top spot.1:12

Team mentor Sthalekar believes Warriorz have the best spin attack

Can Royal Challengers Bangalore qualify?
Giants’ win against Capitals has made it tougher for Royal Challengers, since four teams can now get to eight points. The best case for them will be for Warriorz to lose their remaining games and stay on four points, and for Giants to beat Warriorz and move to six. Then, if Royal Challengers win their last two, they can get to six points and take the third place ahead of Giants on NRR, since their current NRR of -1.55 is better than that of Giants.If they lose on Saturday then they are out of the tournament.What about the qualification chances of Warriorz and Giants?
Both these teams are locked on four points, though Warriorz clearly have the advantage, with an extra game in hand and a much better NRR. Both teams play on Saturday – Warriorz take on table-toppers Mumbai while Giants face bottom-placed Royal Challengers. Even if Warriorz lose, they’ll still be in the mix, but if they win and Giants lose, it’ll almost certainly be the end of the road for the latter.

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

  • Cummins: No doubt expecting a big tournament from Maxwell

  • Stoinis 'touch and go' for Australia's opening game

  • Gill down with dengue, but not yet ruled out of India's World Cup opener vs Australia

  • Can Ashwin script a new chapter in his ODI career starting – where else – at Chepauk?

  • India vs Australia: when the World Cup bursts into life

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.

Jemimah Rodrigues: Hundred can thrive in WPL world – it's not about the money

She went unpicked in March’s draft but then returned to Superchargers as Heather Graham’s replacement

Matt Roller02-Aug-2023The leading women’s cricketers in the world still want to play in the Hundred, despite salaries paling in comparison to those on offer in the Women’s Premier League (WPL) in India. That is the view of Jemimah Rodrigues, the Indian batter who will represent Northern Superchargers for a third consecutive season.The first WPL auction, which took place ahead of the inaugural season in March, saw players signed on contracts worth up to INR 3.4 crore (£340,000) for four weeks’ work – far outstripping the top salary of £31,250 available to players in the Women’s Hundred.A handful of players – Rodrigues included – are due to earn barely 10% of their WPL salary in the Hundred this year, but have signed up for the competition regardless. Among that category is Smriti Mandhana, the highest-paid player in the WPL, who was retained by Southern Brave and top-scored in the opening game on Tuesday.Leading Australia players are conspicuous by their absence, with Alyssa Healy and Ellyse Perry withdrawing at short notice through injury and Tahlia McGrath and Ash Gardner among those who decided not to enter the draft in anticipation of a draining Ashes series immediately before the competition.”For us as players, it’s not about the money,” Rodrigues told ESPNcricinfo. “All of us love playing in the Hundred. It’s a different format, it’s exciting, and the way the ECB organises it – getting the crowds and kids involved – is something different. We love coming to England for it.”Each league has its own place… every country’s league is different: the WPL, the Hundred, the WBBL. If the end goal is to improve women’s cricket, then all three leagues are equally important – and so are all the other leagues in the world.”It’s very exciting that I’m getting the opportunity to experience them. Everyone has different cultures but it’s cricket that unites us and gets us together. I’m lucky that I’ve got this experience at a pretty young age.”Rodrigues says that the crowds have been the best thing about the Hundred. “I was there for the first season, and I think it has come a long way. More than anything, I love seeing little children coming in those oversized jerseys – like they’re floating in it – and asking for autographs.”You speak to their parents and they’re like, ‘My daughter wants to play.’ And it’s not just girls – it’s young guys getting inspired to play cricket through watching a women’s game. That’s the most exciting part for us, about playing in the Hundred.”Rodrigues was “a little bit disappointed” that she went unpicked in March’s draft, having been released over the winter, but was approached with an opportunity to return to Superchargers while touring Bangladesh with India last month. She has replaced Heather Graham in their squad and arrived in Leeds on Saturday.Jemimah Rodrigues has rejoined Northern Superchargers in the Hundred•Getty Images”It’s good to be back, especially with a team I’ve spent a lot of time with,” she says. “Whenever I come here, I feel like I’ve come back home. I have a lot of friends here; it’s like family to me. I love being in Leeds and the thing I love about the Superchargers is they always have a good time; they like to have fun.”Before joining Superchargers two years ago, Rodrigues previously played for Yorkshire Diamonds in the Kia Super League. There, she learned about the trans-Pennine rivalry – and was therefore as baffled as anyone when Kate Cross, Manchester Originals’ captain, was signed by Superchargers in the draft.”She was the first one who reached out to me. She said, ‘I can’t wait to play with you,’ and I was like, ‘Same here.’ And my next message was, ‘Isn’t it going to be weird for you to play against Manchester?!’ We know the rivalry that Yorkshire and Lancashire have – but it’s going to be fun for her.”Rodrigues arrives after a challenging tour for India in Bangladesh, one which culminated in a controversial tied ODI. After a quiet WPL, she found form in the ODI series in a new role at No. 5 – though is looking forward to playing in more batter-friendly conditions over the next four weeks than those encountered in Dhaka.”I was so happy: the first ball I middled in the nets, I was like, ‘This is heaven!’ England is a place where you get good value for your shots and I love the ball coming onto the bat. The wickets here are a little faster compared to back in India and I love that. It’s great to be back.”Superchargers will play their first game of the season on Thursday, against Birmingham Phoenix at Headingley – though after back-to-back washouts in the women’s competition, the game is at the behest of the weather. “I’m going to pray the rain stays away,” Rodrigues says. “I can’t wait for the season to start.”

Podcast: Dale Steyn on acting, skateboarding and taking wickets

Listen in as the former South Africa speedster bares it all in this chat with ESPNcricinfo

ESPNcricinfo staff18-Oct-202344:21

Stump Mic podcast – Acting, skateboarding and taking wickets: Punk-rock cricket with Dale Steyn

How can fishing teach you about waiting for a catch at slips? Was it difficult to choose between cricket and skateboarding? What music does a fast bowler listen to?Former South Africa pacer Dale Steyn joins Kaustubh Kumar and Karthik Iyer to discuss everything from his acting with Adam Sandler in Hollywood and his travels around the world to that iconic Grant Elliott photograph from the 2015 World Cup semi-final.

Game
Register
Service
Bonus