England in Pakistan: A history of controversy

Among the draws – all 18 of them – there have been protests, flare-ups and the odd moment of success

Andrew Miller29-Nov-2022After consecutive “home” series on neutral ground in the UAE, Pakistan are finally set to host England for their first Test visit in 17 years. It promises the renewal of a rivalry that has not exactly been packed with tense contests down the years, but has produced an extraordinary amount of controversy. Here’s a recap of England’s eight previous tours.1961-62 – England won 1-0
A curious itinerary greeted MCC’s first official tour of Pakistan, with the three-match series wrapped either side of a full five-Test visit to India – whose subsequent plans to tour West Indies had caused a fixtures rejig. And as it transpired, the one-off Test in Lahore in October could not have been further removed from the two follow-ups in Dacca and Karachi in January and February, where the tone would be set for a diet of lifeless decks over the subsequent two decades. By then, however, England were already 1-0 up in the series after a gripping final-hour win in Lahore, where the new captain Ted Dexter marshalled a high-tempo run-chase with the elan he would soon be bringing to the new-fangled Gillette One-Day Cup. It would be England’s only victory in the country for 39 years, and one of only two to date in 24 Tests and counting.Ted Dexter (second left) and members of the England touring party after returning from Pakistan in 1962•Hulton Archive/Getty Images1968-69 – Series drawn 0-0
South Africa had been England’s original winter destination, but the D’Oliveira Affair put paid to that prospect, and as MCC scouted around for a back-up plan, they hit upon a country that was lurching, with ever more volatile certainty, towards revolution. “The Pakistan tour was a fiasco”, Wisden intoned, at the end of a stalemate in which the three Tests became focal points for mounting unrest, from the first day of the series in Lahore, to the third and final day of the third Test in Karachi, where play was abandoned after a mob had torn down the gates and vandalised the pitch. In between, the schedule was controversially rejigged to send the teams 1100 miles east to Dacca (now Dhaka), where law and order was already breaking down ahead of the bloody war that would, two years later, lead to the birth of Bangladesh. With the city in a state of siege, it was left to a group of teenaged student leaders to guarantee the team’s safety. On the field, a quartet of England centuries were the tour’s stand-out performances: Colin Cowdrey in Lahore, D’Oliveira in Dacca, and Colin Milburn and Tom Graveney in Karachi, where Graveney struck two intruders on their backsides with his bat, and quipped: “They were the two best strokes I made on the whole tour.”1972-73 – Series drawn 0-0
An arduous four-month tour, encompassing five Tests in India, three in Pakistan and a first-class stop-over in the newly-renamed Sri Lanka, came to a dispiriting end on a trio of pitches in Lahore, Hyderabad and Karachi that, Wisden moaned, would still have ended as draws “had they gone on playing for the rest of their lives”. That said, England were twice obliged to guard against mishap after conceding challenging leads in the first two Tests, but on neither occasion were they bowled out in their second innings. The Karachi Test, once again, was marred by crowd unrest and pitch invasions, and was eventually abandoned early due to a dust-storm, after Norman Gifford’s five-for had briefly given England hope of a win against the head. The match also happened to be the last of Tony Lewis’s brief reign as captain – he would play one more Test back in the ranks before being dropped for good the following summer – but its most notable detail was arguably the fact that Majid Khan, Mushtaq Mohammad and Dennis Amiss were all dismissed for 99.Shakoor Rana and Mike Gatting infamously faced-off in Faisalabad on the 1987-88 tour•Getty Images1977-78 – Series drawn 0-0
By the end of another chaotic campaign, England had played 12 Tests across 16 years of touring in Pakistan, and drawn each of the last 11 – a record that Wisden attributed to various factors including food, accommodation, crowd indiscipline and “a shadowy political background” but, most of all, to the hosts’ “obsessive fear of defeat”. The emergence of the legspinner Abdul Qadir seemed to offer Pakistan the means to unlock their own benign surfaces – most particularly in the second Test in Hyderabad, where he exploited the rough created by Bob Willis’s heavy-limbed followthrough to take a first-innings 6 for 44. However, Wasim Bari’s overly cautious declaration killed off any remaining jeopardy, and not for the first time, the tour’s main talking points came off the field: the riots in Lahore that stemmed from a premature celebration of Mudassar Nazar’s century, then the threatened recall of the so-called “Packerstanis” – Imran Khan, Mushtaq Mohammad and Zaheer Abbas – all of whom had signed to play in Kerry Packer’s inaugural season of World Series Cricket, but whose arrivals in Karachi prior to the third Test caused uproar. It wasn’t entirely clear at whose behest they had turned up – it might even have been a publicity stunt from Packer himself – but at the eleventh hour, the Pakistan board confirmed that they would not be considered, and the threat of an England boycott fell away.1983-84 – Pakistan won 1-0
Qadir’s threat was no secret this time around, but his mastery of flight and variation remained unfathomable to England. Barely three days after arriving from a chaotic tour of New Zealand – one beset by injury, ineptitude and subsequent accusations of recreational drug use – England rocked up to the first “result” wicket that they had encountered in more than a decade of Pakistan tours, and finished a distant second-best in a misleadingly tight three-wicket loss. Nick Cook claimed 11 wickets to Qadir’s eight, but the legspinner’s bamboozling display was best epitomised by a stunning googly that Ian Botham was barely able to pick even after it had nestled in short-leg’s hands. “Only a philistine could watch Qadir without fascination,” wrote John Thicknesse in The Cricketer. He was briefly neutered on a dead deck in Faisalabad, but burst back to prominence with ten wickets at Lahore as the series ended amid a compelling tussle for the upper hand. Going into the rest day with England still trailing on their second innings, England’s captain David Gower – by now deputising for the injured Willis – promised positivity in a bid to square the series, and delivered in person with a magnificent 173. But, after Mohsin Khan and Shoaib Mohammad had matched that total in their opening stand, Gower rather went back on his word with a go-slow in the field, and it took a late five-for from Norman Cowans to guard against an unlikely defeat.Nasser Hussain and Graham Thorpe celebrate victory in the dark, Karachi 2000•Getty Images1987-88 – Pakistan won 1-0
Bad blood abounded in one of the most acrimonious series of all time. Mike Gatting’s infamous finger-jabbing row with umpire Shakoor Rana in Faisalabad was the image that flashed around the globe in an embodiment of the “it’s not cricket!” cliché that the sport still, somehow, clings to to this day. And yet, their stand-off was very much in keeping with the animosity that existed between England and Pakistan throughout the 1980s, as years of festering grievances home and away came to an inevitable climax. Barely four months had elapsed since Pakistan had prevailed on an ill-tempered tour of England, during which complaints about the home umpiring – specifically an old adversary, David Constant – had been batted away by the TCCB. Factor in a draining World Cup campaign in between whiles, in which England’s defeat in the final had matched Pakistan’s semi-final elimination on home soil in the anti-climax stakes, and the time was hardly ripe to renew such a fractious rivalry. The fuse was lit during the first Test at Lahore, where umpire Shakeel Khan gave – by England’s count – nine erroneous decisions, among them Chris Broad, who had to be persuaded to leave the crease by his opening partner, Graham Gooch. The irony was that, with 9 for 56 in the first innings, en route to a series haul of 30 at 14.56, Qadir hardly needed a leg-up to be the difference between the teams. Even so, when the flashpoint came, late on the second day in Faisalabad, it was with England in a position of rare dominance – with Pakistan five-down in their first innings and still almost 200 runs behind. But the loss of the third day’s play, with Rana refusing to officiate until Gatting had issued a grudging written apology, kiboshed any hope of a result.2000-01 – England won 1-0
Fresh from their first victory over West Indies in three decades, Nasser Hussain’s England sealed another famous series win, and in incredible circumstances too, with the winning runs in Karachi coming amid ever-encroaching darkness on the final day of the tour. The advent of central contracts and the appointment of Duncan Fletcher as head coach had been significant factors in a heightened team cohesion, but ultimately this tour was a triumph for Hussain’s hard-bitten leadership – in particular his insistence that England “stay in the game at all costs”, and wait for the pressure to tell on their hosts. Graham Thorpe epitomised this indomitability with a grindingly slow century in Lahore, which contained a solitary boundary in his first 100 runs and in the process thwarted Saqlain Mushtaq, whose eight wickets in the innings came at a cost of 164, and despite a wobble in Faisalabad, they were never seriously in danger of defeat. Then, in Karachi, Mike Atherton responded to Inzamam and Yousuf’s twin hundreds with a ten-hour 125, spanning 430 balls at a tempo slower even than his great Johannesburg rearguard – an effort that the Telegraph correspondent Michael Henderson had described as “insufferable”. Its impact, however, soon became apparent as Pakistan – in what would these days be acknowledged as a “tricky third innings” – chose neither to stick nor twist in stumbling to 158 all out. England’s target, then, was 176 in 44 overs, a chase that Atherton himself ignited with a sprightly 26 from 33. Moin Khan, Pakistan’s captain, was unconcerned, knowing full well that the fast-setting winter sun would come to his aid if he slowed the game down. But umpire Steve Bucknor was having none of it, and – with England’s 12th man Matthew Hoggard dispatched to sightscreen duties – Thorpe donned his night-vision goggles to seal a famous win with an under-edged cut through fine leg, and with mere minutes of serviceable light to spare.Marcus Trescothick bats during his 180-run stand with Ian Bell in Multan•Getty Images2005-06 – Pakistan won 2-0
After the extraordinary highs of the 2005 Ashes, England crashed back to earth in a thoroughly dispiriting fashion in Pakistan, with a brace of defeats – one agonisingly close, the other crushingly complete – that epitomised the sudden dismantling of a fleetingly world-class team. Already lacking Simon Jones through injury, the loss of the captain Michael Vaughan to a knee injury was a further grievous blow, although one that his stand-in Marcus Trescothick seemed to have taken in his stride in leading from the front with a brilliant 193 in the first Test in Multan – sadly the mental toll of that effort would only become apparent in hindsight. In between whiles, Andrew Flintoff bowled supremely to drive England towards victory, only for Shoaib Akhtar and Danish Kaneria – in a classical Pakistani pace/legspin double act – to swipe the match by 22 runs in a breathless finish. Inzamam-ul-Haq’s twin hundreds in Faisalabad scotched England’s attempts at a fightback, and when Mohammad Yousuf racked up a career-best 223 in the third Test in Lahore, the end was meek and inevitable. Despite the heightened security surrounding the tour, England’s first post 9/11, there was little sign at that juncture that they would not be returning for another two decades.

Jack Leach takes the risks, earns the rewards in embodiment of England's new world

No point in judging spinner by his statistics, but his central importance to team is clear

Vithushan Ehantharajah10-Dec-2022There is no question Jack Leach is a different bowler under Ben Stokes.The left-arm spinner is a far more accomplished and braver bowler. Stokes as captain spent the summer reinforcing his confidence with praise and testing his mettle by refusing Leach’s requests for boundary-saving fielders. He took the first ten-wicket haul of his Test career in the summer at Headingley against New Zealand, within that coming his first two five-wicket hauls on home soil.The overall numbers, however, do not reflect the strides he has made this year. Under Stokes, Leach currently averages 40.17, higher than his overall of 33.75, and his 31.88 under previous skipper, Joe Root. Even after his successes in the first innings at Multan, his strike-rate under Stokes remains nine points higher than it was under Root.Test cricket is the format that judges such stats more harshly than any other, but within the current England set-up – a team with such an absolute focus on winning that its bowlers are happy for their economy rates to go up so long as the opposition’s wickets are going the same way – Leach’s make for unusually misleading numbers. Even so, on day two in Multan, he finally got a haul that worked in his favour, figures of 4 for 98 in 27 overs that helped established a crucial first-innings lead of 79.”Don’t look at my stats,” Leach said, when asked how to disconnect the thriving cricketer from the questionable statistics. “Do you know what, I’ve never felt this so much – as a team, we just want to win. And we’ll do everything we can to do that.”I really start to understand that we’re going to take a few more risks to maybe take a wicket, and that might require going for a few more runs.”There is one piece of data, however, that underlines not just what Leach is doing well under Stokes, but the perseverance that he has required to do it. No spinner has taken a wicket immediately after getting hit for a boundary as many times as Leach. His dismissals of Saud Shakeel and Mohammad Rizwan on Saturday in Multan took him to 12 overall and four under Stokes alone. Moreover, they were Test wickets 100 and 101.It might seem a little convenient to extrapolate character simply through tuning the dials on Statsguru. And it is, no doubt, though only because the real takeaway is how much thicker his skin has had to become. Leach’s story is about plugging away in the face of adversity, whether through his battles with Crohn’s disease and the assorted ailments he has picked up as a result, or the professional bumps he has experienced since his debut back in March 2018. Now, 30 caps on, that thick skin is almost a weapon in its own right, especially in the midst of England’s new era.On Friday evening, with Pakistan still trailing by 174 after closing on 107 for 2, England’s attack reflected among themselves that they had been cut too often – and Leach himself had been a particular culprit, with a drag-down from the first ball of each of his first two new-ball overs. Returning on Saturday, they reiterated a plan to bowl straighter and force the batters to hit to areas that weren’t their first choice, with men waiting in the deep, strategically placed three-quarters of the way to the fence.Leach was right in the thick of things in the moment of victory in Rawalpindi•AFP/Getty ImagesIronically, their key morning breakthrough was nothing to do with this plan. Ollie Robinson, with only his second ball of the match, ripped an inswinger through Babar Azam’s defences to take out middle and off. That was the first of eight wickets to fall for just 60 runs, with Leach building on Robinson’s momentum by taking the next three.Saud Shakeel’s loft down the ground was followed, one ball later, by a drag to midwicket that James Anderson caught brilliantly running back towards the boundary. Leach had tucked his length back a fraction to force the left-hander to reach a little more than he’d have liked. The dismissal of Mohammad Rizwan, however, was a touch of class mixed with a bit of anger, after Leach had been driven immaculately down the ground.”It felt good coming out of the hand, definitely,” Leach said of a delivery that pitched on leg and took middle. “He’d just hit me for four over the top so I maybe tried to put a little bit more on that one. And when he went back, I thought, that’s good, I might have him in a bit of trouble.” He did.Mohammad Nawaz then chipped Leach to a gleeful Stokes at a catching mid-on, taking him to 103 wickets with plenty prospects of improving that figure before the Test is out.There was plenty generosity of that type on offer from Pakistan’s batters. But even so, from the drying-up of scoring opportunities to the subsequent clatter of wickets, it took a rare level of collective confidence to take such assured control of the game. And on a red-letter day for Leach, he was not only the main exponent, but for once the main beneficiary.He is, in many ways, the surprise totem of the McCullum-Stokes era, if only because he’s not outwardly the kind of cricketer you’d expect to fit in among this group. And no, it’s not because of the glasses. For starters, being a finger-spinner is hardly the sexiest pursuit, especially in a group that rally against convention.He has been the only bowler to play in every match under McCullum and Stokes – and that includes his concussion substitution in their very first match at Lord’s, which might have been an excuse to look elsewhere, but proved to be quite the opposite. Similarly, when it looked like he might miss the first Test in Rawalpindi with illness, Stokes went and visited his room to convince him to pull through. Leach ended up taking the final wicket of a famous win and went on to thank Stokes for his insistence earlier in the week.Their bond had existed long before their date with destiny at Headingley, but that day in 2019 took it to the next level. At the end-of-season PCA dinner, Leach bid £8,000 on a portrait of Ben Stokes from that innings against Australia, with the pair hugging like loons on stage when it was successful.Related

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Independent of Stokes, he now commands a greater standing in the dressing-room, even if he was always a popular member of it. He’s not the most vocal, but appears to have taken Moeen Ali’s role as the king of the one-liner, breaking any tension with a wry comment here and there. After besting India comprehensively at Edgbaston, a fourth consecutive chase of the McCullum-Stokes era, Leach quipped to his skipper that “teams will be better than us, but they won’t be braver than us”. Stokes repeated the line in his post-match media engagements, with credit. It has since become a buzz phrase that the team has rolled out so often that Leach could have earned a central contract’s worth of royalties had he copyrighted it.He’s bought into the batting side of things, too. Once the proud owner of the longest, most revered single since Meatloaf, he’s expanded his horizons, with the switch hit now his weapon of choice. He was lamented by Somerset coaches for playing it in a Championship match earlier this year – it went for six – but he pulled it off again against South Africa at Emirates Old Trafford. Friday’s attempt in Multan was, frankly, an abomination, but the willing to exist outside of his comfort zone is clear.That extends to golf, an immensely popular pastime with both white- and red-ball teams – and cricketers full stop – but it’s something that Leach has little time for. Every now and again he’ll tag along, provided he can nab a free set of clubs from the course for the round. He is learning to embrace it, and is apparently eyeing up lessons in the new year.Ironically, it was because of Leach that England were able to approach their second innings with a degree of old-world sensibility. Commitment to the new brand would have meant a thrash and a declaration to be back bowling again at Pakistan before the day was out.Instead, there was a throwback to a more old-school third-innings canter: 89 for 3 after 25 overs at tea became 202 for 5 by stumps. No one struck in excess of a run a ball, Ben Duckett’s 79 off 98 was a slow-burn show of aggression by his recent standards. Harry Brook (74 from 108) and Stokes (16 off 25) will no doubt flex their wares on Sunday to bump their current lead of 281 up beyond Pakistan’s reach.The key here is, unlike Rawalpindi, England do not necessarily need the hosts to play ball. There are three full days remaining and Duckett’s dismissal – a ball from Abrar pitching back of a length and hitting as low as halfway up off stump – showed just how much the pitch has deteriorated already.The requisite ten wickets for a second victory, and a series win achieved with a match to spare, should not be too hard to come by. Not for the first time this year, Leach will be front and centre of that.

Bangladesh's leap of faith finally paying dividends

After much talk about their own brand of T20 aggression, Bangladesh prove their mettle

Mohammad Isam12-Mar-2023On a balmy Sunday evening at the Shere Bangla National Stadium, Bangladesh took a leap of faith to cross its first T20 hurdle. What started in the T20 World Cup last year, under a cloud of questions, is finally paying dividends. It is the leap of a new group of players who are embedded into a dressing-room in transition. It was the faith of being adventurous, a bit ruthless. Faith in releasing a lot of experienced players. Faith in “new Bangladesh”, a team that has finally bought into the idea that T20Is are just as important as ODIs.Mehidy Hasan Miraz, after his double miracle against India in December, got back into his match-winning ways at the right time against England. He took a valuable four-wicket haul, playing a key role in two batting collapses in their innings. England are aware of this Mehidy. On their last Bangladesh tour in 2016, he had taken 19 wickets in the Test series – seven on debut and a further 12 in his country’s first Test win over the visitors. But now he is a proper allrounder with match-winning abilities. He came out swinging at No 5, with the home side getting stuck in the chase.Najmul Hossain Shanto’s 27-ball half-century had stung England in the first T20I in Chattogram, but he played an anchor role in the second game. After all, this match was in Dhaka, where this otherwise-defunct style of top-three T20 batting has to be revived to play such knocks. Shanto watched wickets fall regularly at the other end, so he played to his strength, but didn’t overtly attack the England bowlers. Shanto’s 46 off 47 balls ended up being the slowest 40-plus score in a Bangladesh win, but it had substance. Despite a regular fall of wickets, his presence allowed Mehidy to attack with a 16-ball 20 before Taskin Ahmed and Shanto ran well between the wickets to bring them the victory.Taskin is another of these elevated cricketers in the Bangladesh team, and one who took a long time to become a match-winner. But he now looks out into the galaxy of fast bowlers, containing stars such as Shaheen Shah Afridi and Josh Hazlewood, and can consider himself to be one of them. He fields very well too, and finds the middle of the bat in crunch moments, such as the penultimate (and decisive) over of this game.Litton Das hasn’t scored regularly in this series but he is now an established member of the side, who broke plenty of batting records in 2022. Afif Hossain has quietly become the most regular T20I player in the Bangladesh team, beating Mahmudullah’s 54-game streak. Hasan Mahmud is growing into a white-ball role that many believed he has had the potential since 2020. Towhid Hridoy, Rony Talukdar and Shamim Hossain have been picked in this series purely based on their BPL performances.The catalyst for this shift in mindset within the group came during the T20 World Cup last year. The BCB shook things up by bringing in Sridharan Sriram, effectively as the head coach, while the likes of Litton, Shanto, Mosaddek Hossain and Yasir Ali were given the assurance that they can play with freedom. Bangladesh didn’t set the world on fire in falling short of the knock-outs, but there was visible progress in their mentality.”I thought we did well in the T20 World Cup,” said Mehidy. “We had big opportunities, like if we beat Pakistan, we would have played the semi-final. We were unfortunate to miss out. Everyone currently is playing positively, everyone is clued to the gameplan. There’s not much to think in T20s. You just have to react to every ball that comes your way. There’s risk and courage involved. Look at Towhid Hridoy. He doesn’t look like someone who is playing his first international series.Related

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“Look at Shanto. There has been so much said about him. Some really bad stuff. Now he is playing so well. He has turned around, and shown excellent mentality. He is being consistent too. He did well in the T20 World Cup. He was the highest run-getter in the BPL. He is doing well in this series. These small changes have been huge for the team.”Victories such as these, against big teams like England ,will strengthen the team’s -self-confidence, Mehidy added.”We have young players with us, so doing well against big teams will give us the mental edge,” he said. “We can get stronger. We now know how to fight against big teams. There’s nothing to lose against big teams, but a lot to gain. We won this series. We had nothing to lose. But the way we won this series, will certainly motivate us.”Despite needing just 118 to win, Mehidy said that Bangladesh’s Shakib Al Hasan had urged them to stay focused while mapping out their strategy during the mid-innings break. “We tried to be as calm as possible with the bat. We didn’t get too happy bowling them out. The captain said, don’t be happy just yet. We will celebrate after we win. We should be serious in every moment, and support those batting in the middle,” he said.Bangladesh frayed in that calmness on several occasions, but Shanto, Mehidy and Taskin have now faced these tough moments enough times to know exactly how to react. Shanto kept the chase going at one end, Mehidy ruffled the feathers at the other, before Taskin kept his nerve in the last two overs. New Bangladesh is a lot more about trust, confidence and positivity. But there’s going to be more. The next challenge awaits on Tuesday.

New-look Sunrisers Hyderabad packed with power and pace

While they have plenty of fast-bowling options, their spin stocks are thin in comparison

Abhimanyu Bose25-Mar-2023

Where Sunrisers Hyderabad finished last season

Eighth. They won six games and lost eight, finishing below Kolkata Knight Riders on net run rate.

SRH squad for IPL 2023

Abhishek Sharma, Mayank Agarwal, Rahul Tripathi, Aiden Markram (capt), Harry Brook, Abdul Samad, Anmolpreet Singh, Glenn Phillips, Heinrich Klaasen, Upendra Yadav, Nitish Kumar Reddy, Washington Sundar, Vivrant Sharma, Sanvir Singh, Samarth Vyas, Mayank Dagar, Adil Rashid, Mayank Markande, Akeal Hosein, Bhuvneshwar Kumar, Marco Jansen, Kartik Tyagi, Umran Malik, T Natarajan, Fazalhaq Farooqi

Player availability – Only five overseas players available for first game

The three South African players in the squad – Aiden Markram, Marco Jansen and Heinrich Klaasen – are likely to join the team on April 3, after their ODI series against Netherlands. That means Sunrisers will have only five overseas players to pick from for their tournament opener against Rajasthan Royals on April 2.Related

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What’s new with SRH this year

Sunrisers have new leadership this year, having released last season’s captain Kane Williamson ahead of the auction. Aiden Markram, who led Sunrisers Eastern Cape to the title in the inaugural SA20, will lead the Hyderabad franchise this year.Sunrisers bought Mayank Agarwal to boost their top order, and in Harry Brook they signed one of the most exciting young players in the game. The 24-year-old has been earmarked for success across formats by his Test captain Ben Stokes and is expected to play a huge role in the middle order. He comes into his maiden IPL season with 2432 runs from 99 T20s at a strike rate of 148.32.Will England’s Harry Brook make a splash in his maiden IPL season?•Matthew Lewis/Getty ImagesBrian Lara, who was the team’s strategic advisor and batting coach in 2022, has replaced Tom Moody as head coach. While Dale Steyn (fast-bowling coach), Muthiah Muralidaran (spin-bowling coach) and Simon Helmot (assistant coach) retain their roles, Netherlands head coach Ryan Cook has been appointed the fielding coach. He replaces Hemang Badani, who has become the batting coach after performing the same role for the franchise at the SA20.

The good – SRH bat deep

A top order of Mayank, Abhishek Sharma and Rahul Tripathi and a middle order that could feature Markram, Harry Brook and Glenn Phillips or Heinrich Klaasen gives Sunrisers great batting depth, especially when you add Washington Sundar and Jansen to the mix.Sunrisers also have a strong Indian fast-bowling attack. Apart from the experienced Bhuvneshwar Kumar, they have Umran Malik, T Natarajan and Kartik Tyagi. Add Jansen to the mix with Fazalhaq Farooqi in the reserves, and they have plenty of depth.

The not-so-good – The spin stocks?

If Adil Rashid struggles to get a game, Washington, Markram and Abhishek become the main spin options in the team. They do have Mayank Markande in the wings, though.

Schedule insights

Sunrisers’ schedule is packed at the back end of the league stage. Their last four matches take place in the space of nine days – from May 13 to May 21.

The big question

How Chennai Super Kings filled the Dwayne Bravo-sized hole in death overs

After his IPL retirement, the question facing CSK was: who would bowl the difficult overs?

Deivarayan Muthu22-May-2023Dwayne Bravo usually came to life at the death during his ten-season IPL stint as a player with Chennai Super Kings. Is it really a surprise then that the team he is now coaching has the joint-most wickets in the death overs in IPL 2023?April 3, 2023. CSK are back at Chepauk after four years, and the noise from the crowd is deafening. Tushar Deshpande would later admit he “couldn’t hear anything”. Lucknow Super Giants are 136 for 5 in 14 overs, chasing 218. Nicholas Pooran has zipped away to 18 off ten balls. CSK take a strategic time-out. Bravo runs on to the field with a message for Deshpande for his battle against his CPL team-mate: stack the off side, and bowl wide yorkers.The yorker doesn’t come naturally to Deshpande, but Bravo, having worked with him since IPL 2021, when Deshpande was a net bowler with the side, backs his rookie seamer to execute the plan. Immediately after the time-out, Pooran lays into the left-arm fingerspin of Ravindra Jadeja for two sixes.Related

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  • Malinga on Pathirana: 'I want to make this guy even better than me'

Despite that 14-run over from Jadeja and despite Deshpande leaking 18 runs in an 11-ball over in the powerplay, CSK stick to the plan. MS Dhoni gives Deshpande three fielders on the off-side boundary – deep point, deep cover and long-off – including two of his best in Mitchell Santner and Ben Stokes.Deshpande nails the wide yorker and has Pooran carving a catch to Stokes at wide long-off. Job well done. Rajvardhan Hangargekar also executes the wide-yorker plan well in that game. Two uncapped Indian seamers were performing the most difficult role in T20 cricket with remarkable composure.”I feel he is a legend,” Deshpande recently told CSK TV about Bravo. “He’s the No.1 [now No. 2] wicket-taker in the history of the IPL. So he’s got tons of experience to share with our bowling group. He’s pretty chilled out, so whenever he’s around you or standing near your bowling mark, you feel that you’re clear on top of your mark.”Just when it felt like pieces were falling into place in CSK’s bowling jigsaw, injuries to their spearhead Deepak Chahar and Sisanda Magala, a death-bowling specialist for South Africa and Sunrisers Eastern Cape in the SA20, shook things up. CSK were already without Mukesh Choudhary and Kyle Jamieson, who were both sidelined from the entire tournament with injuries. Matheesha Pathirana wasn’t rushed into action because he was on the road to recovery, having tested positive for Covid-19 in New Zealand.Powerplay wickets in IPL 2023 league stage•ESPNcricinfo LtdPathirana slotted into the side for the game against Royal Challengers Bangalore at the Chinnaswamy Stadium. Despite a blazing start from Faf du Plessis and Glenn Maxwell, Pathirana closed out the game for CSK with his variations from a unique side-arm action.Whenever Deshpande or Pathirana have operated at the death this season, Bravo has walked out of the dugout and stationed himself at the boundary to keep a close eye on his boys. At Chepauk, he often sits down near the straight boundary along with the ball boys, and watches Pathirana and Deshpande do the dirty work that he himself used to do.At the CSK nets too, he gets Pathirana and Deshpande to execute yorkers with the old ball while Eric Simons, the bowling consultant, polishes their new-ball skills.Even at the CPL, during his stint with St Kitts & Nevis Patriots, Bravo often posted himself at mid-on or mid-off, and mentored left-arm seam-bowling allrounder Dominic Drakes. Bravo has also mentored young West Indies bowlers at the Super50 competition, and has become the go-to man for the up-and-coming bowlers across the world.When Chahar was out injured, Bravo helped Akash Singh settle into the side. The camaraderie between the two was on display when Akash pulled off an impersonation of Bravo’s jig on his 21st birthday. This video, released by CSK, ends with Bravo joking, “I’m not teaching you anything again”.Like Pathirana, Akash wasn’t rushed into action. After Chahar had hurt his hamstring, he had recommended his former Rajasthan team-mate Akash’s name to the CSK management. Akash had a fairly smooth initiation: after trialling with CSK, he bowled regularly at their nets and gained confidence before making his franchise debut for them this season.Death-overs wickets this season•ESPNcricinfo LtdAkash joined Deshpande, Choudhary, Prashant Solanki and Nishant Sindhu as net bowlers who have recently made it to the main side. And at a press conference, Simons suggested that they’re big on the growth of their net bowlers.”We often talk about trying to create a family at CSK, and part of our family are the net bowlers,” Simons had said earlier this month. “They’re not just guys who just come and bowl. We chat with them, and we advise them as much as we can. All the time we’re looking [for the next CSK bowler].”In this country, there are so many unbelievable cricketers out there who bowl to us in the nets, and sometimes you unearth them for different reasons. Sometimes it’s just their mindset, sometimes it’s the way they do certain things, but I like to believe they feel comfortable in our environment, and feel it’s not just a case of serving the batsmen but also serving for them to grow. That environment is the initial simulation for them.”Once Chahar was fit again, he took over from Akash and took care of the powerplay, which allowed Dhoni to reserve Pathirana for the second half of the innings. Chahar’s return also enabled Dhoni to hold back an over or two of mystery spinner Maheesh Theekshana for the death. And as the season progressed, Deshpande improved in the slog overs. In the first seven games of the season, he conceded 12.32 an over during this phase, but that economy rate dropped to an acceptable 9.81 in the second half of the league stage.”I think when it comes to death bowling, confidence is a very important factor,” Dhoni said after CSK had sealed their playoffs spot. “If you see Tushar from the first game till now, he’s somebody who has developed that death-overs bowling. And I feel the main reason is that confidence. They all execute what is needed but how many times you can execute under pressure – that’s the main thing. When you have that confidence behind you, you can execute more often than not.”So I feel when you keep playing with the same guys… that also helps. But behind the scenes, a lot of work goes on death bowling as to what needs to be done, and I feel the bowlers have taken that responsibility. Not to forget, Pathirana is someone who is quite natural when it comes to the last three-four five overs, so that is one less headache.”After Bravo’s IPL retirement – and the auction that followed – the biggest question facing CSK was: who would bowl the difficult overs for them? A rookie Sri Lankan fast bowler, who has a bit of Lasith Malinga about him, and an uncapped Indian seamer, who has a bit of Shardul Thakur about him, have answered that question, with help from Bravo himself.

In Green, Australia have a batter who will shape their middle order for years to come

Whether he reaches the levels of greatness many believe is his destiny only time will tell, but the signs are that he will give it a damn good go

Andrew McGlashan10-Mar-20232:01

Tait: A bit of Jacques Kallis about Cameron Green

India are playing a big part in Cameron Green’s career. They were the opposition when he made his debut. The brace of T20 fifties he crunched in September earned him more than AUD$3million in the IPL auction. Now he has scored his maiden Test century against them, an innings of such composure and class that if you didn’t know it would be easy to think he had done it many times before.Until tickling a sweep down the leg side off R Ashwin, it was a virtually faultless display. At most there were probably two moments of genuine unease. A bouncer from Mohammad Shami on the first evening which he fended short of gully and an outside edge today when he was in the 90s which flew inside the lone slip fielder.Related

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The closest Green had previously got to three figures was also against India, in just his third Test, but that afternoon at the SCG he was chasing a declaration. He had, though, four times fallen in the 70s when there was less time pressure on his innings. It would, therefore, have been fair to be feeling some nerves when he went to lunch on 95. “That 40 minutes felt like an hour 40,” he said.But he did not have to wait long after the break, in the third over of the session putting away a short delivery from Ravindra Jadeja through the off side. As he reached the non-striker’s end there seemed a moment where he was slightly uncertain how to celebrate before removing his helmet, giving a triumphant swing of the bat towards the Australia dressing room and the dug out complete with beaming smile.How big of a factor was that broken finger he suffered at the MCG in Australia going 2-0 here before he had recovered? We’ll never know, but the team immediately felt better balanced when he returned in Indore even though his bowling was only needed for two overs. Don’t gloss over the 21 he battled to in the first innings of that match. He had not been in the middle for two months and was faced with one of the toughest surfaces you could imagine.Green has responded to each new challenge of Test cricket with aplomb. In consecutive home summers, he has started slowly before finding a way through. In the 2021-22 Ashes he produced a counterattacking display on a juicy Hobart pitch having walked in at 83 for 4. This season he was finding his feet against South Africa, claiming a maiden five-wicket haul at the MCG, before the broken finger struck but he still battled to a half-century.Cameron Green was solid, proactive, and stylish as he scored his first Test century•BCCIBetween those two home campaigns he stepped into the subcontinent for the first time. He produced key innings in both Pakistan, a vital 79 in Lahore where the series was won, and his most impressive hand before this hundred when he adapted his game, sweeping his way to a match-winning 77 on raging turner in Galle. The recently released season two of provided a glimpse into how impressive even his team-mates were with the way he adapted in Sri Lanka.The surface presented for his century was more Lahore than Galle but there is now a weight of evidence that he has a game capable of success in all conditions. It was the authority of the innings that stood out, almost from the moment he took guard with Australia at an uncertain 170 for 4 and threatening to waste a good batting surface. His first boundary was a classic cover drive off Shami and his positivity made India’s decision to take the second new ball late on the first day appear a mistake. In what became a masterclass of driving, 10 of his 18 boundaries came between mid-off and cover. He took advantage of India’s quicks, striking at a combined 119 against Shami and Umesh Yadav, while showing more restraint against the accurate spinners.In all this, it is worth remembering Green’s career arc and really how rapidly it has happened for him. He made his first-class debut in early 2017 as a pace-bowling allrounder batting at No. 8 and 9 for Western Australia then back trouble meant he missed the 2017-18 season. His breakout batting performance came against Queensland at the Gabba where he made twin unbeaten scores of 87 and 121 in 2019.It was around this time that he suffered a further stress fracture of his back which prevented him from bowling for a year, but the batting flourished. A rise to No. 6 became No. 5 and then No. 4. The latter could well become his Test berth in years to come. His ability to churn out big hundreds quickly became clear: scores of 158 not out, 197, 168 not out and 251 were among his centuries over the next two seasons. This best young batter since Ricky Ponting said Greg Chappell said in 2020, and this guy could bowl at 140kph as well.One of the themes of this current Australian Test team is how they manage the transition into the next generation. Particularly in the batting, it would be a challenge if David Warner, Steven Smith and Usman Khawaja all went in a short space of time. They will leave some sizeable holes to fill, but in Green they have a batter who will likely shape their middle order for years to come. Whether he reaches the levels of greatness many believe is his destiny only time will tell, but the signs are that he will give it a damn good go.

Abhimanyu Easwaran: 'Very few people are this close to being picked for India. That gives me confidence'

The Bengal and India A batter, who recently missed out on being picked for the national side again, is looking to accentuate the positive

Interview by Shashank Kishore06-Jul-2023Abhimanyu Easwaran has been on the fringes of the Indian team for three seasons now. His India A numbers are mighty impressive: an average of 47.27 across 34 innings as an opener, with six centuries and a best of 233.Barring one season, the 2019-20 Ranji Trophy, where he made just 258 runs in 17 innings, Easwaran has also been a prolific run-getter for Bengal. Yet, when the India squad was announced for the West Indies tour, which marks the beginning of the new WTC cycle for the team, Easwaran found Yashasvi Jaiswal and Ruturaj Gaikwad had leapfrogged him.Easwaran has taken the latest setback in his stride as he gets ready for the new domestic season. In Bengaluru, having finished playing for East Zone in the season-opening Duleep Trophy, he spoke at length about channelling his disappointments, how preparation matters, dealing with perceptions of being a one-format batter, and his fitness work, among other things.Related

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It must be disappointing to miss selection for the West Indies series. How do you channel it?
It’s all about that dream I had as a kid. Whenever things don’t go my way, I just think about why I started playing the game. Because I enjoy it and want to play for the country. Small things like not getting runs in a game won’t change the work I’ve put in for the past 15 years. Or if I don’t get picked in a squad, it won’t affect my passion or the hard work I’m going to put in going forward. The dream will always be to play for the country and win games. That drives me. No matter what happens, I ensure I wake up every day and do what I should to improve as a cricketer.How big is preparation for you?
Preparation is the key. I feel if I’m well prepared, I go into a game confidently. I try and ensure that I prepare according to conditions. Before the Duleep Trophy, I arrived in Bangalore early and trained at Just Cricket Academy for ten days on similar wickets to the one I was to play on here. I feel if I’ve prepared according to the conditions, it gives me the best chance to perform in any tournament.How have you gone about putting your preparatory process in place?
I’ve been working with Apurva Desai [currently batting consultant at the National Cricket Academy] for ten years now. His input has been massive in trying to help me adapt to different venues and conditions.Easwaran made a hundred in the first innings of the first unofficial Test against South Africa A in Bloemfontein in November 2021, against an attack that included Marco Jansen, Beuran Hendricks and Lutho Sipamla•Cricket South AfricaIf we’re playing at Eden Gardens, what are the kind of plans I should go with? What are the options I can give myself as a batter? We work on game plans, tactics, different shots and technical tweaks. We discuss the kind of preparation needed for every tour. Prior to the India A tour to South Africa in 2021, I trained on Astroturf because the ball zips through there. I trained with synthetic balls, just to get the hands high, because I would be facing extra bounce. We discuss everything in cricket. If I go into the ground, I want to be the best-prepared player. I may not be the best player in terms of runs in the match, but can I be the best-prepared? I always ask myself this.When you were coming up the ranks, did you always want to be a “pure Test-match type batter”?
No, that’s just a perception. I wanted to play all formats.There’s also a perception that you need IPL runs to go with domestic performances.
I’ve always wanted to be an all-format batter. I played T20s pretty late for Bengal, but I’ve constantly worked on that side of the game. In the off season I worked on a few shots, which hopefully will come off well this season.It’s not that I just love one format. Yes, Test cricket will always be special but it’s also the most challenging. But in terms of my game, I am constantly working on my T20 game. I wish to play IPL soon – it’s another dream, to play in the biggest league.You had a chance to trial with Delhi Capitals mid-season. How was it like?
I wasn’t expecting it, honestly. If you don’t get picked at the auction, you don’t think there’s a chance. Their fast bowler, Kamlesh Nagarkoti, got injured. You’d think they’d replace him with another fast bowler. But since their batting wasn’t going too well, they probably felt like strengthening that department. It was good to be part of the set-up, even if it was just for a few days. Just to see how people go about things – like, how David Warner prepares. They weren’t winning a lot of games at that point, but you could see guys wanted to put their hands up and win games.Within touching distance: Easwaran with India coach Rahul Dravid at a net session during the Bangladesh tour•AFP via Getty ImagesDid you get a chance to interact with Ricky Ponting, the Capitals head coach?
I didn’t get a lot of time to talk to him because he was busy with the entire group. But he was behind the nets, watching us bat, and would appreciate a good shot. He watched me and Priyam Garg [who was also called up] closely. I didn’t get really get a chance to speak about my batting or my game, but in the huddle, he welcomed us. It was nice.Does it bother you that you don’t get picked in the IPL?
I won’t say it bothers me. I still have a fair chance to be picked. It’s not like this is the last year I’m going to play. I’m just 27, I have enough time. If I get runs in the Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy, Deodhar or Vijay Hazare Trophy, that gives me a good chance. Again, it comes back to preparation and going into the game giving myself the best chance. That’s what I am focusing on.You’ve spent nearly a decade as a first-class cricketer. Is there a phase you look back fondly?
Yes, there have been a few but the one that stands out is from the 2019-20 season. I was made Bengal captain that year for the first time. I’d scored 861 runs in six matches [11 innings] the previous year. I then got a double-hundred for India A, I got a hundred in the Duleep Trophy final. So I was on a high, but I couldn’t buy a run the next season. I made 258 runs in ten games, but we were in the final. On the one hand, here’s my team doing well and making the final, on the other, I wasn’t able to contribute. Not being able to win the title was more disappointing, but to come back from that and get runs, bat the way I do, was special. That phase was challenging.When you’ve been so near yet so far for three years, it must hurt from within. Does it?
It sure does. But given the population we have, there are very few people who are this close to being picked for the Indian team. So I’m taking it in a positive way, that I’ve got to a place not many can. That gives me confidence. If I can keep putting in the work I’ve done, I’m still pretty close, I could get picked soon.There have been a few times when you came close to getting the India cap. When do you think you came closest?
I got twin hundreds for India A in Bangladesh last December, just prior to the Tests. I did well on the India A tour of South Africa in 2021.Easwaran with Priyank Panchal, whom he opened with and who captained Easwaran’s side, India Red, in the 2019 Duleep Trophy final•Saurabh Somani/ESPNcricinfoBut I think I was closest probably in 2021 in England. I was the reserve opener, and we had a tour game prior to the first Test. Not playing in that tour game because I was a close contact of one of the support staff who had Covid meant I had to quarantine for ten days. I lost that chance in that practice game before the first Test. Mayank Agarwal was concussed before that first Test. Maybe had I played and got runs, I would have earned the cap. All that time spent instead quarantining and isolating even though I didn’t have Covid was really tough.You spoke of on-field preparation. What about off-field preparation?
It’s as important as what you do on the field. You can’t eat what you like and say, “I’ll make up for it.” There’s a balance to maintain. Around 2015-16, I discovered I wasn’t feeling too well after breaks. There was a pattern where I used to get out soon after lunch or tea breaks. I found I wasn’t so switched on, even though I’d be batting on 50 or 70. I had a chat with a friend who told me about a genetic medical test. That told me I was gluten-intolerant. From that day to now, I have only had gluten probably twice or thrice a year. That’s after a tournament finishes and I have a break for more than a week, because I can afford that – I won’t be training the next day. That involves , soya. I gave up soft drinks ten years ago. I felt the dream is bigger than this. If I don’t have Coke, it doesn’t matter.How has fitness transformed your outlook to cricket?
During Covid, I felt there was something I needed to work on, because the seasons were getting longer. I was playing all formats and also for India A, so I didn’t have breaks. Usually during the off season, you get a couple of months off, but I wasn’t getting that because of India A commitments. I realised the need to get stronger.I had a lot of things in mind: Do I have the fitness to last an entire Ranji season, if we reach the final? Do I have the fitness to push beyond a double-century? Can I be fresh on day five of a match? That was the time I started working on fitness with Soham Desai [current India trainer]. Since then, I’ve been able to feel that change. Last year also, after fielding for around 155 overs against New Zealand A, I was batting probably the best I had in the last three years. My feet were moving well, so well that I was enjoying it a lot, and I wasn’t feeling too tired. I could feel the difference and that made me enjoy what I was doing.You may have not played a Test, but you probably have some fond memories of travelling with the team?
Without a doubt. It’s an honour to wear that jersey. I still remember when I received the team kit before that England tour in 2021, I just didn’t want to take it off all day. I cherish the chats I’ve had with Virat Kohli on preparation and Cheteshwar Pujara on single-mindedness. Being a part of the Test squad that won at Lord’s was a special memory. There was so much passion, so much fire. Shami, Siraj, Bumrah with their tails up… bundling them out inside 60 overs, it was amazing. I think those are situations you train and play for. It was great to be part of a side that won in England. You want to win overseas, at home, everywhere. It’s something every cricketer dreams of. Hopefully I’ll have that chance soon.

The fast bowling poetry of Naseem and Afridi

They haven’t played together often but seeing them operating in tandem on a famously spin-friendly pitch was nothing short of spectacular

Andrew Fidel Fernando16-Jul-2023Shaheen Shah Afridi surges in for his first Test-match spell in a year, nips it away from the right-handers, zips it into the leftie, beating edges, eliciting jittery prods. If there is a first over you don’t want to miss in world cricket, he is most-often the one bowling them.Naseem Shah doesn’t quite have Afridi’s record, doesn’t quite have his height, or his control. But he does have that action. He doesn’t just run to the crease, he races. At the crease he is a throwback delight, the back unloading like a slingshot.They haven’t been seen together much over the past three years, in this format at least. Afridi hasn’t played in whites since tearing a ligament in his knee at the same venue he is currently playing at, in July last year.Largely owing to injury, Naseem bowled in only the single Test innings in 2021. All up, they’ve bowled in 19 Test innings together. Even in those, Naseem has often been used first-change, where Afridi operates with the new ball.Related

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But this being Galle, the world’s leading venue for ritual shaming of batters at the hands of spin bowlers, no one dares play more than two seamers. And so, you get Afridi and Naseem tearing in, in tandem. For most of two hours, split by a long rain break, they were a fast-bowling spectacle – the kind that greater Pakistan teams than this one had made the pillar of their identity.Afridi didn’t quite send an opener packing in his first over, but it didn’t take much longer – his seventh ball of the day nipping away, effectively setting up the wicket he claimed on the eighth. Nishan Madushka was first beaten, then edged one feeling for it away from the body, to become Afridi’s 100th Test victim.ESPNcricinfo LtdKusal Mendis should have been out first ball of Afridi’s fourth over, only Pakistan had not installed a third slip, who would have swallowed the edge off the bat. When an extra slip comes in after a potential catch goes through a vacant area, the commentary cliche is to suggest that there is no point shutting the barn door after the horse has bolted. But such was the quality of this over from Afridi, he re-caught the horse and put the padlock on the door himself. Fourth ball, pitching just outside leg, darting it away with the angle, Afridi collected Mendis’ edge.Naseem would not make a breakthrough until later, but right through their opening spells (which the rain break helped extend), they fed off each other’s menace, Afridi roughing up a batter with a short ball, before Naseem tested him with a yorker, the Galle pitch offering some semblance of pace and carry for once.Between them, they decked Sri Lanka’s top order, Afridi getting three, as Sri Lanka slid to 54 for 4 before lunch, having chosen to bat.”They were very nippy,” Angelo Mathews said after play. “They were seaming and swinging the ball both. It was high-quality bowling. They were landing the ball on the seam, and most of the time you saw the wicketkeeper take the ball above the waist.”Shaheen showed his quality. To bowl like that on a deck like this – I haven’t seen too many fast bowlers do that.”Pakistan’s effort deflated after that, the spinners unable to match the tension created by the riveting new-ball spells. Mathews got past fifty; Dhananjaya de Silva moved into the nineties by the end of a rain-hit day.There is no telling if we are in the early days of an Afridi-Naseem dynasty, because cricket doesn’t work like that for fast bowlers who bowl at this pace. Pakistan cricket careers especially are wild, winding, capricious things, players headed for the stratosphere one moment, plummeting spectacularly the next.So let’s just live in the moment and say that on a morning in which Pakistan had lost the toss, and with an inexperienced spin attack in their ranks, Afridi and Naseem put their side in the match. With the new-ball, they were intense together.

Virat Kohli is not Tendulkar, he's an all-too-human hero of a different sort

From a brash young upstart he has turned into a legend of the game – in a manner decidedly different from the man whose heir he is

Andrew Fidel Fernando28-Oct-2023In the last match he played, second-to-last ball of the opposition innings, Virat Kohli takes a straightforward catch at the long-on boundary, punches the air, and when the crowd clocks who the fielder is, he turns to them, springs up on his feet and thumps his chest, roaring.This is who he has always been. Always revelled in being. Balls to the wall, across all endeavours, every second of his existence.So much so that for many non-Indians (and not a few Indians) early-career Kohli was a brat. At home, this young batter of significant promise had obviously endeared himself, not least when after the 2011 World Cup final he proclaimed that Sachin Tendulkar had “carried the burden of this nation for 21 years, so it’s time we carried him”.Related

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But abroad, he was the rat who threw up a middle finger at an Australian stand, retaliated when other crowds were hostile, made it a point to celebrate wickets more animatedly than any of his team-mates, became a figure of impotent fury when India lost and a finger in the eye of opposition fans when they won.Kohli? On par with Tendulkar? One of the best ever? Get out of here. He’ll burn himself out. No one can sustain this. Let him learn to behave himself first.It is a reflection of how hot Kohli burned that the era of the sceptics was short-lived. Very quickly he was the heir of an incomparable. Even when Kohli’s greatness was only incipient, Tendulkar’s mantle was thrust upon him at home, a surprise to many of us looking on.In the years since, as India’s economy has exploded, as its space programme has made giant leaps, the Sachinification of Kohli has made more sense. Perhaps it is a vacuum that demanded to be filled. Tendulkar brought a measured, old-world sensibility to his rise, which reflected India’s newfound prominence in the world. Kohli’s advance, 20 years later, seemed to demand to be the shining centre of attention. Here was a tornado of a cricketer, blown into existence by the same winds that were rousing India’s newest transformation.

Kohli, still thumping his chest, still yelling into the night, still picking fights with opposition players, has found his own style of maturity

There was the brashness, of course, but also a refusal to back down, and an assiduous eking out of every advantage. There was also constant evolution – one poor Test tour of England in 2014 prompting a rethink of his batting strategy (going forward more, batting outside the crease, giving up a portion of his back-foot play) that emphatically reversed the suggestion that he couldn’t contend with the swinging red ball. In T20 he always had gears, but he began to move through them more proactively.Through the middle of the last decade, you began to get a sense that there was no challenge Kohli could not overcome. Rohit Sharma had his double-hundreds and Steven Smith dominated Tests. But in ODIs there was no greater mass producer of hundreds. Kohli seemed destined not just to overhaul Tendulkar’s record of 49 tons but to speed past it.Here, perhaps, is where the two are most unlike each other. Tendulkar, whose humility was chief among his non-cricketing virtues, who accepted the adulation but did not overtly rejoice in it, whose private life was largely his own, was almost divine. Kohli, who wasn’t a Test batter at 16, whose flaws were public, whose language was aggression, whose social media documented every act, and whose wife, the actor Anushka Sharma, is a massively followed public figure in her own right, was supremely human.And also a supreme human, because in pursuit of his ambitions, he changed his diet, worked out relentlessly, performed Olympic lifts, documented all of it, sold it to companies, made profits, and appeared in ads that turned his drive into rupees. Through all of this, he also scored runs, took catches, and celebrated wickets more ecstatically than the bowlers themselves, which is something his wife has publicly made fun of, much to the amusement of Kohli himself.In the latest era of Kohli, post-captaincy, post-century drought – another nod to his humanness – that coincided with the Covid pandemic, Kohli has retained almost all of the heat that made him so divisive early on, but there have also been bracing revelations. He has spoken of mental-health battles. A man whose actions radiate hyper-masculinity speaking out about the softest, most vulnerable parts of himself. In his relationship and marriage to Anushka, who is no less a superstar though from a different galaxy, Kohli has also publicly been doting, generous and gentle.Starry, starry day: Kohli and his wife Anushka Sharma with Roger Federer at the Australian Open in 2019•Getty ImagesAnd whatever aspects of 21st-century India Kohli has embodied, he has never reflected a certain aspect of India. When Mohammed Shami was attacked for his religion after India lost a game to Pakistan, Kohli issued a full-throated defence of his team-mate. He called those who derided Shami for his faith not just misguided but “spineless” for doing it on social media. He called the attacking of a person (in general terms) not merely unfortunate but “pathetic” and “the lowest level of human potential that one can operate at”.”Religion is a very sacred and personal thing to every human being,” he said. “That should be left there.”Though a white-ball monster first, Kohli also brought his furious energy to the Test format. He not only raised his own red-ball batting to the dizzying standards he was setting in the shorter forms, but maintained without relent that Tests were the pinnacle. He was no less intense in the empty stadiums often seen in Test cricket.Perhaps he has not embraced late-stage statesmanship as many other great cricketers have. Ricky Ponting became almost cuddly towards the end of his career; Kumar Sangakkara had left the young, mouthy version of himself in the rear-view mirror.But Kohli, still thumping his chest, still yelling into the night, still picking fights with opposition players, has found his own style of maturity.You can be patriotic without being a rabid nationalist. You can be hyper-masculine and see your wife as an equal. If these do not seem like especially brave or admirable positions, that is to take Kohli out of his social context.He sits now on 48 centuries, one short of Tendulkar. If cricket is a religion in India, Kohli is decidedly not its god. That position has been filled and Kohli has never had those ambitions anyway. He has been human. Has tried to be the best of humans, the most productive of humans, and cricket-wise the most aggressive of humans even.This, unapologetically, is who he has always been. Always revelled in being.

Franchises tend to overpay at T20 auctions for World Cup stars, and probably will this year too

Expect the players who did well at the 50-over World Cup recently to go for large amounts. Never mind that recency bias is at play

Matt Roller17-Dec-2023On Tuesday, an allrounder who averages 16 with the bat and 27 with the ball across his 53 professional T20 matches will be bought by an IPL team for the first time in his young career.A top-order batter will also be sold, picking up his first contract since 2017 despite a record of a single T20 half-century in the last three years, and a strike rate of 126 in that time.And a fast bowler who has not played a T20 international for 14 months will spark a bidding war so fierce that he could become the best-paid player in the league’s history.All of the players in question – Rachin Ravindra, Travis Head and Mitchell Starc – have modest recent T20 records. Yet auction insiders expect them to attract substantial interest between the ten franchises: they could fetch something in the region of Rs 35 crore (US$4.2m approximately) between them. Those involved in the auction in Dubai’s Coca-Cola Arena will not be surprised to see them sell for huge sums.For the second successive year, this IPL auction takes place immediately after a World Cup: the 2022 T20 World Cup in Australia, and the 2023 ODI World Cup in India. Last year, franchises had to consider how much stock they should put by performances in conditions different to those found in the IPL; this year, they must take the change in format into account.Recent precedent suggests there will be a premium rate for players who thrived at the World Cup. Last December, Punjab Kings spent Rs 18.5 ($2.2m) crore to secure the services of Sam Curran, hoping he could replicate his Player-of-the-Tournament feats for England when he arrived in India the following year. Curran had a middling IPL record to that point, but starred in the World Cup in Australia – not least in a new role as a death bowler.In practice, Curran’s performances for Punjab in 2023 were merely an extension of what had come before in the IPL. Perhaps his natural length and his variations were better suited to the bigger grounds in Australia; perhaps he had simply been in better form at the World Cup than he was four months later. Either way, it was hard to avoid the conclusion that Punjab had overpaid.The phenomenon is not exclusive to cricket: in football, major international tournaments typically take place immediately before a transfer window, with a similar effect. While the dynamics of recruitment are different between club football’s open market and the IPL’s auction, in both cases, performances at a World Cup are often overvalued.Research by Twenty First Group, a London-based sports consultancy, has found that players who score at least one goal at a football World Cup sell for around 20% more than their expected value in the subsequent transfer window. “Scouts, owners and CEOs at top clubs might not be watching the average game in the Austrian Bundesliga,” says Omar Chaudhuri, the company’s chief intelligence officer. “They’re definitely watching the World Cup.”In 2014, Colombia’s James Rodríguez won the Golden Boot at the World Cup after scoring six times, but struggled to replicate that form in club football after moving from AS Monaco to Real Madrid for €75m (about $81m). Earlier this year, Chelsea spent €121m ($131m) on Argentina’s Enzo Fernández, after his impressive 2022 World Cup performances – a sum estimated to be more than double his market value by the website Transfermarkt, and one he is yet to justify.Sam Curran was bought for over $2 million in the auction before the 2023 IPL on the strength of what he did in the T20 World Cup, but he didn’t exactly set the league on fire, making 276 runs and taking ten wickets across 14 games•Associated Press”There are market dynamics that sit behind those fees,” Chaudhuri says. “But clearly, playing well on that stage ramps up the price. For most football fans, the World Cup is the pinnacle, but it’s not necessarily the highest-quality competition. Look at some of the teams in the 2022 World Cup – performances against them aren’t necessarily the best basis to make a decision on a player’s ability.”The single most important concept in recruitment in any sport is the idea that the output that you’ve seen isn’t necessarily true to what is likely to happen in the future: recruitment experts try to establish the mean level of performance that a player will regress towards,” Chaudhuri says. World Cups alone do not provide clubs with sufficient information to do so.The parallels across sports are obvious, even if a smaller number of teams at cricket’s World Cups means that talent is more concentrated. If anything, Chaudhuri suggests, the premium on World Cup performances might be greater in cricket than in football, given the latter is a team sport that allows individuals great scope to dominate games.That is not to say that franchises should disregard World Cup performances altogether ahead of Tuesday’s auction. Clearly, Ravindra’s success against some of the world’s best bowlers in Indian conditions points to a young player with immense potential, and one far better than his statistics from New Zealand’s domestic T20 competition might suggest. Recruitment is never as simple as plugging numbers into an algorithm.But throughout the IPL’s 16-season history, teams have fallen victim to recency bias at the auction table, picking based on what they have seen in the immediate build-up rather than making a holistic assessment of players to predict how they will fare in a specific role in their side. Does Head’s recent success opening for Australia in 50-over cricket make him a viable No. 4 for an IPL franchise?In fact, Chaudhuri suggests, the smart play for franchises might be to sign a player who at the World Cup. “Say Jos Buttler was up for auction: his price would probably be depressed because he’s not been playing well recently. But what are the odds of that rut persisting over a 14-game IPL season in the spring? You might take your chances on him coming out of it.”Ravindra, Head and Starc are all exceptional cricketers, and there is every chance that one of them will prove to be the missing link that a team needs to secure the title in IPL 2024. But franchise owners, beware: the World Cup effect means they will come at a substantial cost.

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