Roy's big score, and Plunkett's slow crawl

Also, best figures on debut, and keeping records in three-Test series

Steven Lynch05-Jul-2016Mitch Marsh scored 32 and conceded 32 runs in the tri-series final in the West Indies. Is this the highest identical number in an ODI? asked Rory Sackville from Australia

Rather surprisingly perhaps, Mitchell Marsh’s performance for Australia against West Indies in the recent tri-series final in Bridgetown – he scored 32 then took 3 for 32 – isn’t close to the top of this particular list for one-day internationals. There are 26 higher such doubles, nine of them 50 or higher. The highest of all was by Khurram Khan of the UAE, with 78 and 2 for 78 against Bangladesh in Lahore in June 2008. The highest for Australia was by Kepler Wessels, who scored 50 against West Indies in Perth in 1983-84 then, bowling what someone once described as “nude seamers”, took 2 for 50. The only other one higher than Marsh’s double was Brett Lee’s 38 not out and 4 for 38 against West Indies in Adelaide in 2004-05. In that match Lee and Jason Gillespie added 73 for the tenth wicket – then shared six wickets as Australia won by 73 runs.Was Jason Roy’s 162 the highest score by an opener in ODIs? asked Qudrat Ullah Rahimi from Pakistan

Jason Roy’s 162 against Sri Lanka at The Oval last week was the highest score by an England opener in one-day internationals, beating Andrew Strauss’ 158 in the tie against India in Bangalore during the 2011 World Cup. Strauss occupies the next two places on England’s list, too, with 154 against Bangladesh at Edgbaston in 2010, and 152 against them at Trent Bridge in 2005 (England have only four of the 66 scores of 150-plus in ODIs). Overall, though, Roy is well down the list: there have been 31 higher scores by openers in one-day internationals, including all six of the format’s double-centuries. The biggest of all is Rohit Sharma’s 264, for India against Sri Lanka in Kolkata in November 2014.No, that’s not a tray for drinks•BCCIIn one of the recent ODIs between England and Sri Lanka, the umpire was wearing some contraption on his hand. What was it? asked Surendra Daya from South Africa

The thing you’re referring to was worn by the Australian umpire Bruce Oxenford on his left arm during the second match of the recent one-day series between England and Sri Lanka, at Edgbaston. It’s a plastic shield, designed to protect the umpire in the event of the ball being smashed back straight at him – he can try to parry the ball away with the shield. Oxenford wore it during a match in this year’s IPL, and also in one of the warm-up games for the World Twenty20 – but this was the first time it had been used in a full international match.Liam Plunkett took his 50th ODI wicket in the series against Sri Lanka, ten years after his debut. Is this the longest for anyone to achieve this feat? asked Durgesh Kulkarni from India

Liam Plunkett reached 50 wickets when he dismissed Kusal Perera in the third match of the recent series against Sri Lanka, in Bristol. It took him 37 matches, spread over more than 10½ years since his debut in December 2005. That’s the slowest in terms of time for England apart from Graeme Swann, who took about a month longer. Swann, though, went wicketless on his debut, against South Africa in Bloemfontein in January 2000, then didn’t play another ODI for more than seven years, taking 1 for 47 in his second game, against Sri Lanka in Dambulla in October 2007.
Overall 11 men took more time than Plunkett to reach 50 wickets in ODIs. Pakistan’s Saleem Malik, who needed 203 matches spread over almost 12 years, took the longest of all. Most of the players concerned were not frontline bowlers, although there is a rather surprising name just above Plunkett: Imran Khan, Pakistan’s World Cup-winning captain in 1992, took five days longer to make it to a half-century of wickets, finally doing so in March 1985 after making his debut in 1974. He got there in style, though, with 6 for 14 against India in Sharjah – and it should be borne in mind that far fewer ODIs were played back then.It took Imran Khan more than ten years to take 50 one-day wickets•Getty ImagesJonny Bairstow took 19 catches in the recent Test series against Sri Lanka. Was this a record for a three-Test series, or against Sri Lanka? asked Tushar Mukherjee from the United States

The only wicketkeeper to make more dismissals in a three-Test series than Jonny Bairstow’s 19 was, by coincidence, a Sri Lankan: Amal Silva made 22 (21 catches and a stumping) against India in 1985-86. The only other keeper to make 19 dismissals in a three-Test series is Australia’s Ian Healy, at home to Sri Lanka in 1995-96 (17 catches and two stumpings). Gil Langley (for Australia in the 1956 Ashes series) and Junior Murray (for West Indies in Australia in 1992-93) both made 19 dismissals in three Tests, but those were five-match series in which they did not play in two of the games. The previous England record for a three-Test series was 17 (one stumping) by Geraint Jones at home to Sri Lanka in 2006.Which bowlers have the best figures on debut in Tests, ODIs and Twenty20s? asked Subas Karki from Nepal

The best innings figures on debut in Tests remain 8 for 43, by the Australian medium-pacer Albert Trott against England in Adelaide in 1894-95. Trott also scored 110 runs in that match without being dismissed … but, remarkably, played only four more Tests – two of them for England! The best match figures by a debutant are 16 for 136, by legspinner Narendra Hirwani for India against West Indies in Madras (now Chennai) in 1987-88. He just shaded the Australian swing bowler Bob Massie’s equally remarkable first-up figures of 16 for 137, in the 1972 Ashes Test at Lord’s. The best bowling figures on one-day international debut are 6 for 16, by the South African fast bowler Kagiso Rabada against Bangladesh in Mirpur in July 2015. The only other man to take a six-for on ODI debut is another fast bowler, Fidel Edwards, with 6 for 22 for West Indies v Zimbabwe in Harare in November 2003. And the best by someone in their first T20 international is 5 for 13, by the Bangladesh slow left-armer Elias Sunny against Ireland in Belfast in July 2012.Send in your questions using our feedback form.

Up north, sans language or cap

Who goes to Raipur in May? Mad dogs and cricket correspondents

Alagappan Muthu14-May-2015May 8
First trip to the north of India, armed with shards of Hindi borrowed from cricket commentary on the radio. Not too sure ” shot” will help me with asking for directions. Trawl the internet for information on Raipur. May is the hottest month. Temperature on the day I land is forecast to hit a high of 43°C. Paste notes about packing my cap and sunscreen all around the house. Predictable facepalm moment en route to the airport when I discover I’ve forgotten both.The Swami Vivekananda Airport is astounding. Great walls of brick, steel, glass, and all-round posh. Read that it was one of the richest cities in India. Am standing in the evidence. Even if it is 15km from the city and out in the wilderness. Search for the tourism desk. It is unmanned, and most of places in the pictures aren’t quite in the city.Fifteen seconds is all it takes on the drive for a first glimpse of the IPL – Yuvraj Singh, Manoj Tiwary, Albie Morkel and a couple of other Delhi Daredevils on a billboard. The same one crops up three seconds later. In the air-conditioned cab, I’m busy revelling in beating the heat.May 9
Just couldn’t keep from gloating, could I? The mid-day sun stalks me now. But the bustle of Raipur offers enough distraction.The capital of Chhatisgarh looks more like a township striving incredibly hard to keep up its disguise. Little mom-and-pop stores everywhere, their wares spilling onto the street. Shop carts line the roads, selling everything from fruit to clothes. I’m reminded of a hard-working student concerned only with getting an A in the next exam. Hear that Raipur’s iron and steel resources are unrivalled in the country.I’m meeting a contact for match tickets. He is in town for the IPL as well, a scorer and statistician from Vidarbha. He tells me he has worked in cricket all his adult life. Laments that he wasn’t able to become an umpire. But then taps his chest and says, “It doesn’t matter. It’s the love of the game.”A patch of tiled ground? Game on•Alagappan Muthu/ESPNcricinfo LtdThe ground is over 20km away, nestled like a crown jewel in the government’s pet project – Naya Raipur. A railway station is planned. More bus routes are planned. The chief minister is hoping to make the capital a thriving hub of modernity. And if his visions are similar to the Shaheed Veer Narayan Singh International Stadium, it will be. Grand, imposing, one of the largest in India. Also, a long walk from the main road. My poor legs.About two-thirds of the 50,000 seats are full. There is dancing. There is cheering. There is heckling. There is a lust for the camera that threatens decapitation. The cricket is almost a sideshow. They spot the absence of the spidercam and the Pepsi VIP box sooner than I do.May 10
Cons of broken Hindi: getting lost, missing out on jokes, and haggling is impossible. Still no cap for me. Pros: an auto-rickshaw driver mistaking me for cricketer. I drop a few names and show him a picture taken with Graeme Smith. He nods and scowls: “But isn’t that the bad coach?”Outside, the traffic befits a capital, and the people have pieces of cloth tied around their heads and torsos to ward off the heat.I hide out at a restaurant that calls itself Food Xxpress. The room- service menu at my hotel asks me to “dail 777”. I wonder if I can make typo-eat a trend.May 11
“Pease Pulaw” is on the menu next. And more roaming.Chhattisgarh doesn’t have a Ranji team yet. It hasn’t hosted international cricket yet. The IPL hit it in 2013 and is back now. I’ve seen how the people have fun in the stadium. Now I want to know how the kids go about playing the game.There is an indoor stadium in Buddha Talabh. Its facilities are used for football, but there is a stretch of land out back that is perfect for gully cricket. For the structured version, the Chhattisgarh State Cricket Sangh conducts annual inter-district tournaments and 19 teams participate. They’ve also had sporadic success at the Under-19 and U-25 levels.I get a wicket first ball and in return I am bowled first ball. I’ve still got it.The crowd is always colourful (but mostly yellow when Chennai Super Kings are in town)•BCCIMay 12
Raipur is gracious enough to leave some ambiguity over their allegiance in the last game. MS Dhoni’s Chennai Super Kings roll into town and the stadium turns yellow. At neutral venues, the fans’ thirst tips towards getting a selfie with one of their stars in the background rather than bothering with the cricket and its nuances.That Zaheer Khan bowls 19 dots in 24 deliveries goes unnoticed. But every time Dhoni is on strike, the chant is deafening. He was 10 off 17, yet Raipur roared his name. Whether he believed one ball could bring his form back or not, these people sure did. Jayant Yadav, playing his second IPL game, is pestered for a wave at long-on. Who knows what’s happening to Yuvraj Singh at long-off.The DJ isn’t quite bothered about the cricket either. His concern is to butter up the Raipur crowd. “You wanna know what the local boys behind the cheerleaders say?” he asks, before providing the answer with the lyrics of “Hero [Your Hero’s Over Here].”After a low-scoring game with the Daredevils bowlers strutting their stuff, I walk to where the government buses queue up to take the people back to the city. The conductor has “CSK” painted on his cheek and I meet a staff member from my hotel. They draw me into a discussion of how boring the match was. No fun, is the consensus. “”

Bangladesh discover new match-winners

Bangladesh have moved on from a one-man show to a team that has a new performer on a daily basis. That they won yet another home series without Shakib Al Hasan shows their progress

Mohammad Isam in Mirpur31-Oct-2013Bangladesh won another home ODI series against a higher-ranked team by believing in their abilities. They batted first after winning the toss in Mirpur where, in late October, dew is already a major factor, particularly for the finger spinners. They used four of those in their chosen conditions, the most effective of whom opened the bowling at one end. Their injury prone fast bowler also came through. They won the second match with unconventional, yet useful methods.Mushfiqur Rahim showed a lot of confidence in his main spinners, Sohag Gazi and Abdur Razzak, in deciding to bat first. Both bowled accurately, didn’t let the wet ball be too much of a distraction and ensured they remained calm after every big hit. The wicket of Ross Taylor was a good example of how much Gazi has progressed as an international cricketer, and how quickly he learns.Taylor had smashed him for a six, and like the first game on Tuesday, it would have been easy for Gazi to continue firing them in as a defensive ploy, hoping to restrict the batsman to ground strokes. This time he tossed it up outside the off stump, and Taylor chipped it down long-on’s throat. He was lucky to pick up James Neesham’s wicket with a short ball, but it was the build-up that often gets bowlers wickets. He also ended Anton Devcich’s misery (he scored 19 off 44 balls) with an easy caught and bowled chance and a few words.Razzak dismissed Grant Elliott, the highest-scorer from the first match, with a flattish delivery that went straight, the batsman caught plumb in front. Razzak may have contributed only one wicket, but his discipline and leadership skills have been recently praised by the Bangladesh management.Mushfiqur’s gamble with Mominul Haque also paid off, his two wickets a bonus for the team. These series wins are important for Bangladesh’s growth as they have done it without their main allrounder, Shakib Al Hasan. He was also out of the squad with injury when they won 3-2 last year against West Indies in the ODI series.The team should be most pleased with Mashrafe Mortaza’s performance over the two games. He is known for missing more international matches than playing during his 12-year career but this latest comeback has begun very well.He was the quiet performer in the first game, making sure his transition from injury to rehabilitation to match fitness was smooth. His three-wicket haul on Thursday was his first since April 2011, and his best bowling figures since July 2010. His first spell kept the two left-handed New Zealand openers on tenterhooks, and he soon accounted for the miserably out of form Hamish Rutherford. He continued to be accurate, but when he gave width to Corey Anderson in his second spell, the edge was snapped up by a diving Mushfiqur.When you have a player with a history of major injuries and one who has to resettle almost every year, exiting suddenly after a comeback, it has two different effects in a team. Mortaza and his team-mates have experienced both, like when he felt unwelcome more three years ago when he made a comeback. But Mushfiqur’s catch said that the team wanted to do something for their rickety warrior.Bangladesh have their concerns too. Like their counterparts, the Bangladesh batsmen struggled to convert good starts into big scores, were poor in the batting Powerplay and didn’t have the flourish in the end overs. They took a chance by handing Shamsur Rahman a debut in such a crucial match. The right-handed batsman didn’t have the best of starts but it was progressive thinking to break a winning combination, knowing fully well how the public and media would react if Shamsur failed like Anamul Haque.Mominul, Tamim Iqbal and the rest of the batsmen all flattered to deceive, as they didn’t bat for long or put together a big stand. Even during their problematic phase, at 173 for 6 in the 39th over, two batsmen stood up. Gazi and Mahmudullah added 48 precious runs that got them past the 200-run mark.Bangladesh have moved on from a one-man show to a team that has a new performer on a daily basis. Someone or the other stands up. Mominul and Gazi did so in the Chittagong Test while in Mirpur, Tamim batted out of his comfort zone to guide his team to safety. Rubel Hossain did it on Tuesday with his best performance in international cricket. Today it was Mortaza, Gazi, Tamim and Mominul.There was a lap of honour at the end of the game, with the players’ families converging in the field, and a majority of the crowd that stayed back. The word out was that the Bangladesh players don’t celebrate in the dressing-room as much these days. But one can imagine that the players nowadays toast each other’s success, rather than one man’s.

Kallis underappreciated no longer

Another big hundred, important wickets and safe hands – Jacques Kallis is finally getting some of the credit he deserves

Firdose Moonda25-Jul-2012Jacques Kallis had waited 143 Test matches and 15 years to score his first double hundred. It was thought of as the only thing he could not do. When it eventually came, against India in Centurion at the end of 2010, most expected a flood of twin tons to follow. They were not far wrong.The second was scored just seven matches later and the third was not far off coming up on Sunday at The Oval. Had it done so, it would have been Kallis’ third double in 10 Test matches.With South Africa leading by 252, an advantage that would cushion them but could still be plumped, and the England attack meandering, there did not seem to be a reason Kallis would not get there. Unexpectedly, he was denied, left on 182. Graeme Smith made a positive declaration after consulting with Kallis, who gave his blessing that he would sacrifice an individual accolade for the team goal.A day later, Kallis and Gary Kirsten, South Africa’s coach, were tasked with the post-match media session after an emphatic win. Kallis was asked about the current South Africa bowling attack and how he ranked them compared with packs of the past.”In terms of variations, it’s right up there, as good as we’ve had,” he said. “We’ve got Vernon who puts the batsmen under pressure, we’ve got Dale Steyn’s pace and swing, we’ve got Morne with his bounce and we’ve got Immi [Imran Tahir] as a legspinner, which we haven’t had for a long time, to add attacking value, so we’ve got a nice balance.”Kallis ended his assessment there but Kirsten interrupted him. “And then we’ve also got some guy who has taken 280-odd Test wickets, I can’t think of his name,” the coach said, nudging Kallis in jest. Kallis only smiled.As one of the most under-appreciated players of his generation, he is used to being forgotten about when greats of the game are discussed. Occasionally a debate will spark that compares Kallis with Garfield Sobers, Ian Botham or Imran Khan and none is clear favourite for the ‘greatest allrounder’ tag. Even if there was a conclusion, Kallis wouldn’t care to know. He maintains that comparisons over different eras are irrelevant because “we play so much cricket these days”, and statistics may only mean something to him when he retires.Had he said something like that a few years ago, he may not have been believed because he was seen as man who played for himself before others. At the 2007 World Cup in particular, Kallis did all he could to portray himself as that type of person. He single-handedly turned the speeding car of a chase against Australia in the group stages into one whose engine had stalled.Perhaps it was performances like those that kept Kallis from earning the praise he deserved but in recent years the stodginess has smoothed. Evidence of that can be gleaned from something as simple as Kallis’ strike rate. In five of the last six years, he has managed to keep it over 50 in Test cricket, having been a steady lower 40s before that. Included in that period has been his fastest century.There is an interesting correlation between the time when Kallis started scoring quicker and his contribution to South Africa wins. Ten of his 19 hundreds scored since June 2006 have been in winning causes; before that, 11 out of 24 hundred contributed to victories. His new-found vitality in run-scoring has extended as far as earning him a recall to South Africa’s T20 squad, from which he was dropped in 2010.Along with his batting, Kallis has always made a telling but often overlooked contribution with the ball. To say he was quicker when he was younger, would be incorrect. He remains able to bowl at around 145kph, especially as his workload has been steadily decreased. While he once had to shoulder the considerable burden of being a wicket-taker, he now acts as a balancer to the other attacking options around him.Jacques Kallis showcased his all-round abilities in South Africa’s crushing win•Getty ImagesThat is not to be mistaken for saying Kallis is the holding bowler. He is the multi-faceted one. At times, he is called on to give the others a break and contain, at others as the reserve armoury, to come out and strike when no-one else and usually it works. At The Oval, it was Kallis who made the crucial breakthrough late on the first day when he removed Kevin Pietersen with a bouncer – one of the few short balls South Africa bowled on a sluggish track that day.Had England’s premier batsmen survived into the next morning, the match may have played out in completely different fashion. But Kallis changed the course of that and although he does not need that to recognised as a turning point, it ended up being one of the most significant.Ian Bell acknowledged it when he said: “Kallis on day one was important, when the ball swings he is as good as anyone in the world.” James Anderson paid homage to him in the London , saying Kallis “gives great balance to their team as a fourth seamer and he is one of the greatest batsmen there has ever been but somehow doesn’t quite get the credit for it.”That has been the story of Kallis’ career for as long as it has lasted. For more than ten years, from 2000 to late 2011, he was ranked the top allrounder in Test cricket. He lost that status to Shakib Al Hasan a few months ago and shrugged it off as no big deal. Today, Kallis regained that spot.Many will say rightfully so, after he conquered the one territory he had not been able to reach in the past. A century, an incisive showing with the ball and his usual safe hands in the slips have shown why Kallis’ all-round abilities are vital to South Africa’s quest to reach No.1 in England.

Dhoni will be tested by 'favourites' tag

India return to the scene of their World Twenty20 triumph but will have to cope with the burden of being favourites

Dileep Premachandran in Centurion25-Sep-2009Just over two years ago, MS Dhoni led an unheralded and inexperienced sideto South Africa for an event the ICC considered a trial run. Sachin Tendulkar, Rahul Dravid, Sourav Ganguly and Zaheer Khan all stayed at home while the rest of the team followed up a full tour of England with participation in the inaugural Twenty20 World Cup.Few knew what to expect from the event, but a gripping first-round match between India and Pakistan that ended in a tie was followed by six sixes in an over [Yuvraj Singh against England] and a magnificent final where Misbah-ul-Haq and Pakistan fell five runs short. Overnight, the Twenty20 version became the talk of the town, and it could be argued that it was the frenzied interest created by those two India-Pakistan games that paved the way for the Indian Premier League, the Champions League and one-off games like the Stanford Super Series.It wasn’t just the Twenty20 game’s stock that went through the roof after that fortnight in South Africa. Dhoni went from being a maverick with an unorthodox array of strokes to the man who could lead Indian cricket past new frontiers. He was the anointed one, the leader who could give Indian cricket a standing on the pitch that was commensurate with its power off it.After the roughest of baptisms in a seven-match series against Australia at home [they lost 4-2], Dhoni has grown into the job. Tough on his players without being a bully, calm without being comatose and keen on leading by example whenever possible, he and his team have put together two years of solid achievement. It’s perhaps no coincidence that Indian cricket’s lowest point during that period came in the Test series in Sri Lanka that Dhoni sat out.Younis Khan, who will walk out to toss with him on Saturday, is certainly an admirer. “He’s doing a fantastic job as captain,” he said on the eve of the game. “When I first saw him, he was young and energetic and given to the grand gestures. Now he’s much calmer, and a real gentleman too. His performances have also improved with time, and he has done really well, for his country and himself.”Progress in the one-day arena has been especially impressive, with series victories in Australia, New Zealand and Sri Lanka, and home successes against Pakistan and England. Since January 2008, India have won 30 [and lost 12] of 46 matches, and they go into the game against Pakistan ranked No.1 in the world. Australia have fallen off their perch, hammered home and away by South Africa, while Graeme Smith’s side have experienced a blip of their own, thrashed 4-0 in England last year. There isn’t one side fit to be compared to the Australians that won three World Cups on the bounce between 1999 and 2007, and the frequent changes in the No.1 ranking reflect that state of flux.For Dhoni, the current challenge is perhaps the most tricky of all. Back in 2007, he captained a team of rank outsiders. Now, he leads a team considered the best in the world. That brings with it a pressure of its own, and other sides like South Africa have been unable to cope with it in the past.He’s also without three proven match-winners in Virender Sehwag, Yuvraj and Zaheer. Tendulkar and Dravid lend experience and class to the batting order, though it’s doubtful whether Dhoni had their names inked in when he was planning for the future. Some of the young tyros that he reposed so much faith in have failed to grab their chances, and at one level, he might find it galling that the old guard could be the difference between success and failure.The same is true of the bowling as well, with so much resting on Ashish Nehra, who made his debut a decade ago, and Harbhajan Singh. Ishant Sharma and RP Singh continue to veer between the brilliant and the abysmal, and with Yuvraj’s left-arm spin also out of the equation, one of Dhoni’s biggest tasks will be to cobble together an effective 50-over bowling plan.Off-field distractions are no help. The run-up to the World Twenty20 in England was full of media reports of a rift within the team, a charge that infuriated Dhoni to such an extent that relations with the reporters on tour reached an all-time low. They have arrived in South Africa with the same siege mentality, but that hasn’t stopped global headlines about the alleged dossier that encourages players to walk down the Keith Miller-George Best route of boudoir indulgence.These should be the best of times for Indian cricket, with the team having a great mix of young talent and proven performers, but with the media in particular going from singing hosannas to showing signs of the Tall-Poppy Syndrome, it’s also Dhoni’s biggest test.Ultimately, no one remembers the bilateral series wins, or what you do in various triangular series. Teams will always be judged by their performances on the big stage. Hansie Cronje won 99 of his 138 matches as South African captain, while capturing only one trophy of note. Now, in the country where Cronje was once so adored, Dhoni must avoid a similar fate. Without the trophies that matter, No.1 rankings aren’t worth the paper they’re printed on.

Rohit, Jadeja tons and Sarfaraz's 62 drag India out of trouble on day one

Sarfaraz’s 66-ball innings lit up the afternoon but ended in heartbreak after he was run-out with Jadeja seeking a 100th run

Sidharth Monga15-Feb-20242:41

Manjrekar: Rohit’s mental toughness was admirable

On the first day of the third Test, India’s batting finally came together but not without an early alarm. Down at 33 for 3 on a pitch that was full of runs and with two debutants to follow, India were looking at possible trouble. But a 204-run partnership between Rohit Sharma and Ravindra Jadeja for the fourth wicket – India’s first century stand of the series – took them to 326 for 5 at stumps. Rohit and Jadeja got centuries while Sarfaraz Khan made a sparkling debut, hitting 62 off 66, before being run-out.This was the first time since 1999 that India had three players in the top seven who had played fewer than two Tests. That in mind, Mark Wood gave England a leg-up when he got rid of Yashasvi Jaiswal and Shubman Gill – India’s only centurions this series before Thursday- with the new ball. Gill, in particular, got a ball that swung in and then nipped away, that took the outside edge. These two scalps doubled Wood’s tally of wickets in the first six overs of a Test innings.The early-morning moisture that had assisted Wood possibly helped Tom Hartley grip one in his ninth over, which took the front edge from Rajat Patidar. A day before the Test, Jadeja had said England were not a difficult side to beat. The team management asked him to go out and demonstrate it from No. 5 in the ninth over, the second-earliest he has walked in to bat in a Test innings, and the earliest in the first innings.Related

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A promotion to Jadeja made double sense: protect the debutant Sarfaraz and also introduce a left-hand batter. Coming back from possibly the first time he has missed a Test with a hamstring injury, and having to deal with a family dispute gone public, Jadeja would have been excused for having a lot on his mind when he joined Rohit, but he batted with the most unencumbered mind: just purely reacting to the next ball in an old-school fashion.Rohit, who had got off to a smashing start, had to do unconventional things at the start of the partnership. Wood tried to bounce him with a fine leg, a deep backward square leg and a deep forward square leg. For once, looking at the score and the situation, he decided not to hook and had to wear one in his helmet grille. He charged at James Anderson to cut down the movement, on one occasion chipping one just out of mid-on’s reach. With Hartley, he flicked in the air and against the turn. The first attempt brought four, the second an edge to slip, which Joe Root dropped.Mark Wood was the pick of the England bowlers on the opening day•BCCI

Rohit will argue this was just the luck he needed after the lack of it in the first two Tests. By then, the early movement had begun to die down. Just after that miscued chip off Anderson, Rohit went back to punch him through extra cover for four, an emphatic sign that he was in.Jadeja never looked less than in. The two took India to lunch without further bother. Just after lunch, Rohit became the 14th man in this series to hit a six. The added responsibility of being the leader of an inexperienced line-up had messed with his approach a little, but now though, we were seeing the usual Rohit. There were timely lofts, some paddle sweeps, and a lot of back-foot runs. His second six took him past MS Dhoni’s 78, with Virender Sehwag as the only Indian ahead of him.Once there was spin from both ends, Jadeja began to catch up too, hitting a six in the final over of the middle session, the first wicketless session of the series. Immediately after tea, Rohit brought up his 11th hundred with two easy couples off two short balls from Rehan Ahmed. For a long time, the team management would have hoped for the batters to not take risks and just benefit from the inevitable loose balls the inexperienced spin attack was bound to dish up. A little like how Rohit brought up his hundred.It was happening now with ease, especially for Jadeja. England had to go back to Wood’s pace. A top edge from Jadeja cleared long leg, who was 20 yards in off the fence. Rohit was getting freebies from Rehan. Fifty runs came in 11 overs after tea without having to break a sweat. Then Rohit pulled one off Wood that was probably not short enough to pull. It skidded on, got big on him, and was caught at midwicket.Sarfaraz Khan picked the lengths early against spin•AFP/Getty Images

Out came Sarfaraz with whispers already around his game against quick short-pitched bowling. That Wood began with a deep fine third, two men deep on the hook, a short leg and a catching forward square leg suggested it was not a mere whisper. Around the wicket he went and looked to bounce Sarfaraz. He ducked the first three nonchalantly. Towards the end of his spell, Wood insisted on one more over. Sarfaraz ducked again before bunting the surprise yorker down the ground.With pace out of the way, Sarfaraz displayed remarkable skill against spin, helped no doubt by Ben Stokes’ attacking fields. A series of one-twos followed: a loft over the infield followed by going deep into the crease to take a single off the seemingly inevitable shorter delivery. The feet moved perfectly according to the trajectory of the ball, the sweep was out early, and the lofts down the ground were executed perfectly. Before one realised, Sarfaraz had a fifty off 48, the joint second-quickest for an India debutant.Another byplay had begun to develop. Jadeja had got stuck in the 80s and 90s. In the time that Sarfaraz scored 50, Jadeja had got only 12. He had three hundreds, but four dismissals between 80 and 99. He almost became passive. Had Hartley reviewed his lbw shout against Jadeja, he would have got him out lbw pad-first on 93.Finally, on 99, Jadeja called Sarfaraz through for an impossible single and unsuccessfully sent him back. Looking at India still leaving the door ajar, Rohit threw his cap in disgust in the dressing room. Jadeja got to the hundred next ball, but the celebrations were subdued since Sarfaraz was gone just one delivery before. Jadeja knew there was more work to do on day two, walking back unbeaten on 110 with Kuldeep Yadav by his side.

Man Utd's stance on Ruben Amorim's future if Red Devils lose Europa League final to Tottenham revealed

Manchester United are unlikely to part ways with manager Ruben Amorim even if the club lose the Europa League final against Tottenham.

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  • Man Utd's stance on Amorim revealed
  • Red Devils face Spurs in Europa League final
  • United next face Chelsea in the Premier League
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  • WHAT HAPPENED?

    The Red Devils have endured a nightmare journey in the 2024-25 campaign as they have lost 17 matches in the Premier League and are 16th on the points table, their worst league position since the 1973-74 season. Amorim, who replaced Erik ten Hag in November, failed to uplift the team's performance domestically as they also faced elimination from the FA Cup and the Carabao Cup after losing against Fulham and Tottenham, respectively.

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    THE BIGGER PICTURE

    In the Europa League, however, the Red Devils have shown consistency and have beaten some quality opposition like Lyon and Athletic Club to reach the final of the competition, where they will face fellow English club Tottenham. reports that irrespective of United's result in the final, the club will continue with the Portuguese coach as they believe the manager should get at least the summer transfer window to sign new players that suit his system.

  • DID YOU KNOW?

    After the club's latest defeat against West Ham in the league, Amorim had sent out a message to minority owner Sir Jim Ratcliffe as he said: "We need to be really strong in the summer, we need to be brave."

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    WHAT NEXT FOR MANCHESTER UNITED?

    Before the all-important Europa League final next week, United are scheduled to face Chelsea at Stamford Bridge on Friday.

حازم إمام: لاعب الزمالك سيكون الأفضل في مصر.. والفوز على فاركو ينقصه شيء واحد فقط

كشف حازم إمام، لاعب الزمالك السابق، عن مشكلة يعاني منها الفريق، رغم الفوز على فاركو وتصدر جدول ترتيب الدوري المصري الممتاز.

وفاز نادي الزمالك على فاركو، بهدف دون رد، في المباراة التي أقيمت بينهما مساء اليوم الثلاثاء، ضمن منافسات الجولة الرابعة لبطولة الدوري المصري.

وقال إمام خلال تصريحات عبر قناة “أون سبورت”: “الجميع كان يقلل من الزمالك في الموسم الماضي، لكن الزمالك يبقى الزمالك”.

وأضاف: “كنت أرغب في زيادة عدد الأهداف أمام فاركو، لاعبو الزمالك أهدروا فرصًا كثيرة، كان لا بد أن يُسجلوا أهدافًا أكثر ليعطوا رسالة بأنهم جامدين”.

طالع | ترتيب الدوري المصري بعد انتهاء الجولة الرابعة

وتابع: “الزمالك لديه مشكلة في الهجوم، لكن هو أحسن في الوسط والدفاع، يُعاني من قلة تهديف لا يوجد لاعبين في المنطقة ولا توجد زيادة عددية، من المفترض طوال المباراة أن يكون العدد داخل المنطقة كافيًا وهذا يجب أن يعمل عليه فيريرا”.

وأتم: “الحارس محمد صبحي يُعجبني جدًا تحسن بشكل كبير وسيكون من أحسن الحراس في مصر، كان ينقصه التركيز فقط، لكنه يركز بشكل كبير في هذه الفترة”.

ويتصدر نادي الزمالك، جدول ترتيب الدوري المصري، بعد مرور 4 جولات، برصيد 10 نقاط، إذ حقق الفوز في 3 مباريات وتعادل في لقاء.

'Too much negative attention!' – Emi Martinez questioned as 'big character' amid Aston Villa goalkeeper's transfer links to Chelsea & Man Utd

William Gallas has questioned whether Emi Martinez would be a good fit for Chelsea, admitting he doesn't like the Argentinian's attitude.

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  • Martinez linked with Chelsea and Man Utd
  • PL winner admits Argentinian is a 'good keeper'
  • Gallas: "I'm not sure he's a good fit"
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  • WHAT HAPPENED?

    The Premier League legend was speaking about his former club with . When asked whether Martinez would be a good signing, the French defender was blunt in his assessment, saying he did not know if the Argentinian would "be a good fit for Chelsea". The Stamford Bridge outfit have been linked with the player over the past week.

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    THE BIGGER PICTURE

    Gallas referred to some of Martinez's divisive antics on the pitch, questioning whether they are emblematic of a top keeper. While he conceded the Villa stopper has been successful with Argentina, he still reported "serious doubts" about his temperament. The ex-Arsenal defender then also name-checked some of the stoppers he played with, suggesting Martinez did not stack up against them, thanks in part to his bombastic nature.

  • WHAT GALLAS SAID

    When asked if he thought adding Martinez to the Chelsea changing room would be a risk for Enzo Maresca, Gallas said: "I don't know if Emi Martinez would be a good fit for Chelsea."

    He added: "He’s a good goalkeeper. Obviously, he was a key player for Argentina. He’s done well at Aston Villa since he joined them from Arsenal those years ago, but I have to admit, I have some serious doubts about whether he would be a good fit for Chelsea.

    "I don't know if he’s got the right profile to be the goalkeeper of Chelsea. When I think about his antics, I just don't think he would be a positive addition to the club.

    "People talk about his personality, his passion, I’m not sure that is a good fit for the club. I don't think he would be the right goalkeeper.

    "Chelsea need a goalkeeper that is as good as him or maybe better, but with a different profile. Someone that does their job without doing all of the other stuff that Martinez does.

    "I'm sorry but give me the name of one goalkeeper with the same profile. Name another goalkeeper who grabs his crotch and dances around when he makes a save, one goalkeeper who has done that who has played for a big club. You won’t be able to name one.

    "Goalkeepers are crazy. Jens Lehmann, he was crazy. Carlo Cudicini, he was crazy. Cech was cool. Lehmann would never behave like Martinez – Martinez brings too much negative attention. You want a goalkeeper to make saves, keep clean sheets and leave the pitch. Martinez doesn’t do that."

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    WHAT NEXT FOR MARTINEZ?

    Regardless of Martinez's antics, the fact remains he backs those less savoury moments up with high profile, match-winning performances. That will make him a hot commodity if Villa are compelled to move on. Should Chelsea follow Gallas' train of thought, Manchester United fans will be happy to welcome the Argentinian to Old Trafford.

'You play for something more' – Dominant Diego Luna helps overcome gonzo Guatemala crowd, pressure-packed moments: Winners and losers as USMNT reach Gold Cup final

In an emotionally charged match, Luna silenced the crowd with two goals in the first 15 minutes, putting U.S. in final

ST. LOUIS – Less than a year into his U.S. men's national team tenure, coach Mauricio Pochettino is encountering some things for the first time. Wednesday night was the latest example. When he and the U.S. walked out for their Gold Cup semifinal, they weren't greeted by red, white and blue – they were overwhelmed by blue and white, horns and chants of "Si Se Puede" ringing out throughout Energizer Park.

These weren't the colors of Pochettino's native Argentina, but rather of Guatemala, the Central American nation that took over this city. Still, despite the cheers and the chanting and the excitement, there's only one of the two teams bound for a Gold Cup final. And it's not Guatemala.

The U.S. found their win, riding two first-half Diego Luna goals to defeat Guatemala, 2-1, and advance to Sunday's deciding game in Houston, where they will face Mexico for the eighth time in a Gold Cup final.

It was an emotionally charged match from the first whistle, although Luna did seemingly silence the crowd with two goals in the first 15 minutes. Guatemala, though, wouldn't give up and, with the backing of their fans, they had no reason to.

"This was good for our players because when you talk about the future, about seeing the team and how to fight, how to come here, how their fans behave, that is an important thing we have to learn in this country," Pochettino said. "I am not telling anyone to do this or do that. No, we talk about culture. I come from Argentina. In Argentina, it's not the same. We don't lose, because the consequences were massive."

The U.S. didn't lose. They kept their tournament going, earning a fifth straight win after losing four in a row entering the Gold Cup. The final will also present a hostile atmosphere, one that will be even louder and fiercer than Wednesday night.

Pochettino and his team believe they're ready for it, though. Having cleared their latest hurdle, the USMNT have a chance both to make a statement and to lift a trophy.

"Winning helps," said Tim Ream. "I also think guys like Diego Luna help, guys like Malik Tillman. You're seeing these guys get more and more experience and understanding of how to win games. None of this is going to happen unless we win and continue to win. And, for us, what's the hallmark of a U.S. team? Fighting and togetherness. That's what we're finding and doing in this tournament."

GOAL breaks down the winners and losers from Energizer Park.

Getty ImagesWINNER: Diego Luna

Throughout his young UMSNT career, Luna had influenced games, but he had yet to truly take one over. There were big plays here, an assist there, his goal against Costa Rica – all moments in which he'd make a mark. But this was more. This was domination.

It took just four minutes for Luna to find the back of the net, easing any nerves that anyone in the U.S. may have had. It was a finish defined by Luna's biggest asset: his hustle. Once Kenderson Navarro spilled Luca de la Torre's shot, there was no doubt who'd be the first one to it.

His second, though? A thing of beauty. After dribbling right on past a defender, Luna rocketed a shot into the back of the net. His shot wasn't curled or placed; it was thumped via sheer force of will. His celebration was as emphatic as his finish. Rightfully so.

"It’s an honor, I’m extremely grateful," he told Fox Sports of sporting the U.S. crest. "Every single one of these players think about it the same way I do. This is the No. 1 dream we’ve had as a kid and we’re going to fight for this to have as many chances to wear it as we can."

Time and time again, Luna continues to prove he's the man for the big moments. And with bigger opportunities ahead, there's no doubt about whether Luna should be involved.

AdvertisementGetty ImagesLOSER: Tim Ream

Everyone has an off game now and then, including 38-year-old veterans.

Ream, to be fair, didn't even have an off game, but rather an off half. For the first time in recent memory, Ream looked a step off in the first half this semifinal, and he was beaten several times by Guatemala's attackers. Rubio Rubin, who once played for the USMNT, got him once, forcing a tough save out of Matt Freese.

And there was a shaky moment a few minutes later that again led to a Guatemala chance. In the second half, though, Ream cleaned it up. Still, if Guatemala had a bit more quality, the U.S may have been punished. Ream knows that as well as anyone. He's been doing this for a long time and, if all goes well, he tends to do this a little bit longer. He certainly has the quality and smarts.

"I love watching these guys grow up right before my eyes, starting to understand and create connections," Ream said. "It's those two things that are worth keeping at it: these atmospheres and helping these guys become better players and better people. That's what putting on this jersey is all about and the pride that I have for it will never change. It won't change until I'm done, completely done. I'm so happy with this group and happy that I can still help."

Ream can still help. He's been proving it for years and has continued proving it all summer long. That doesn't mean he's immune from an off night, and this was a reminder of that.

Getty ImagesWINNER: Guatemala fans

All tournament long, the Gold Cup has been criticized for a lack of atmosphere. There are reasons for that: ticket prices, the ongoing Club World Cup, the upcoming World Cup.

But make no mistake – the atmosphere on Wednesday night was electric. The traveling Guatemala fans ensured that was the case.

The nation's supporters were loud and proud in Minneapolis for their win over Canada in the quarterfinals, seemingly willing their team to victory in the upset of the tournament. On Wednesday night, they were even louder. The crowd in St. Louis was largely pro-Guatemala and, even hours before the opening kick, they made themselves heard.

It didn't result in victory this time, but credit to Guatemala's fans for their energy. This game and this tournament were made better by it.

"It was an unbelievable energy, and that is football," Pochettino said after the game. "That is football! When we see the connection between the fans and the team, that is the connection that we want to see in the World Cup. We can talk about soccer, many things, different sports. But we cannot compere football to another sport.

"Do you think today was just a sport? Just a team playing? No, you play for something more. You play to be happy, be sad. I saw players from Guatemala crying. That is the way that we need to feel, and our fans need to feel the same. It's good for our players, because when we talk about culture, that is culture. That is an important thing that we need to learn here in this country."

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Getty ImagesLOSER: U.S. control

In a perfect world, the U.S. would have been able to see out the game easily. They would have found a third, maybe a fourth goal and put this game to bed. Even if they couldn't find it, they would want to keep some semblance of control, allowing them to play through the match on their terms.

That didn't happen. The moment Guatemala scored, and even at times before it, the U.S. lost control of the game. Guatemala couldn't quite seize it, but again, the U.S. didn't make this easy for themselves.

"It's a learning experience," Ream said. "Will it all happen as quickly in the next game as it did today after the second goal? Probably not. I think the guys understand it better. They can say, 'OK, I do actually have more time than I realize.' It's just talking about experience and it comes with playing in these environments and in these games."

Some of it was, as Ream said, inexperience. Some of it was personnel. Tyler Adams was taken off in the second half as a precaution as he dealt with hamstring tightness, leaving the U.S. without its most veteran presence in midfield. When John Tolkin went into the game, the U.S. was playing with two left-backs, which led to some moments of chaos before Walker Zimmerman replaced Max Arfsten to settle things down.

"In that moment, the stress and the noise make it a difficult moment," Pochettino said. "What you need to understand is how difficult it is to come off the bench in that moment. It's not easy. The rhythm of the game was really fast and it was difficult to communicate. It's not easy."

As Ream said, the U.S. need to slow things down. They need to breathe, take back control and see things out. Their inabilty to do that made this game more stressful than it should have been – he U.S. just needed to keep things tighter.

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