The millionaire family that built cricket in Oman

For over four decades, the Khimjis have contributed to the game as employers, administrators, cheerleaders and mentors

Peter Della Penna19-May-20175:49

‘We will do everything to move up the ladder’ – Pankaj Khimji

On the final day of the World Cricket League Division Five in Jersey last May, a promotion berth was at stake between Oman and Guernsey, who had a chance to cause an upset.After scratching their way to 141 for 8, Guernsey had reduced Oman to 13 for 4. The tension at the ground was immense as a group of schoolkids on their way to football practice, totally oblivious to cricket etiquette, started walking near the sightscreen, distracting the Oman batsmen at the crease. The bench was stirred up like a hornet’s nest, but a wise board member, standing behind the boundary rope at long-off, knew that any bee can catch more flies with honey than vinegar.”Hey kids!” he shouted out while approaching them. “If you want to cross the sightscreen that’s fine, but I need you to do me a favour first. Our boys out there really need your support right now, so on the count of three, I need you to shout, ‘O – MAN! O – MAN!'” The kids giggled at first, then after the next ball was bowled, obliged, following the middle-aged gentleman’s lead. An enthusiastic thank you to the kids followed. The Oman bench grinned at a man who is their friend, father, brother, boss and biggest fan: Pankaj Khimji.

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Over the course of the last decade, Afghanistan have been a shining example of the merit-based value of the World Cricket League structure, vaulting from Division Five in 2008 to Division One by the middle of 2009. For every Afghanistan, though, there has to be a team going in the opposite direction to keep promotion and relegation in balance. Argentina, who were in Division Two in 2007, experienced five straight relegations, eventually being banished back to regional qualifying, the feeder into Division Five.Oman has experienced both sides of the coin. After gaining admission as an Affiliate nation in 2000, they reached the 2005 ICC Trophy in Ireland, and were again a de facto Division One team, appearing at the 2009 ICC World Cup Qualifier in South Africa. A series of relegations, concluding with a bottom-two finish at 2014 WCL Division Four, saw them slide all the way back to Division Five.

“Khimji Ramdas is like family for us. We are always connected with them. Whenever we have a problem, they are always ready to help us, especially Pankaj , even at the local league”Oman fast bowler Rajesh Ranpura

Almost at rock-bottom, the side’s stunning resurgence began at the 2015 World T20 Qualifier in Scotland and Ireland, where wins over Afghanistan, Netherlands and Canada preceded a knockout win over Namibia to reach the 2016 World T20. A stunning win over Ireland in Dharamsala helped spark a rejuvenation in 50-over cricket as well, and by the end of the year the team had secured twin promotions from Division Five back into Division Three, now two steps away from getting back into Division One at the 2018 World Cup Qualifier. They have some familiar faces and some new ones to help get them there, but the one constant through all of the ups and downs in the Oman cricket journey has been one name: Khimji.”Cricket in Oman, all credit goes to the Khimji family,” says long-time Oman team manager Jameel Zaidi.The modern era of cricket in Oman began in the 1970s, spearheaded by the enthusiasm of the Khimji patriarch, Kanaksi, a man Zaidi refers to as “the godfather of cricket in Oman”. With the support of the Oman royal family, Oman Cricket was formally established in 1979, with Kanaksi as president and His Highness Sayyid Abbas Bin Faisal as patron-in-chief.Pankaj, Kanaksi’s 55-year-old son, who has been an Oman Cricket board member for more than 20 years and who was also elected to a position on the Asian Cricket Council executive board last year, says the Oman cricket story begins a little bit further back.”My father played school cricket and then played cricket in Oman in the early ’60s, and probably even late ’50s, against the visiting British naval teams when they used to anchor in our harbours and we’d give them a game of cricket,” Pankaj says. “One of our royal highnesses who studied in Africa had played cricket in the schools, so it was quite a passion amongst them.”I can say that the family definitely has played a significant role in developing cricket and making cricket a success story, and I would like to say this with the utmost humility. My father, my uncles, my cousins – we’re all a passionate cricket family.”We used to travel six hours by car to Sharjah to watch – the early days when Sharjah cricket and the Bukhatir league started. People would call us crazy.”It’s a particularly eccentric habit, considering the family seemingly had other more pressing interests to keep them occupied, in the form of the Khimji Ramdas business empire. A fifth-generation company first established in 1870, the company is omnipresent in Oman: from construction and manufacturing to restaurant and car-dealership franchising, supermarkets to shipping, insurance and travel agency divisions, residential and commercial real estate assets as well as schools (including Muscat’s first English language-instruction school, which opened in 1975).The Khimji family’s net worth has been estimated to be around US$900 million as of 2015. Kanaksi is labelled “the world’s only Hindu sheikh”. The honorary title – and citizenship – was bestowed upon the 81-year-old by the Oman royal family as a gesture to recognise the Khimjis’ impact on Omani society. Yet whatever free time the family has available is dedicated mainly to cricket.Pankaj Khimji (left) and his family have put in not only money but also their time and energies to lift Oman up from the bottom rungs of Affiliate cricket•Peter Della Penna”At every tournament, whether it is in Ireland, Jersey, India, [Kanaksi] is always with the team, coming there, supporting the team, taking them to dinner every day and Pankaj has come and joined us also,” Zaidi says. “These are the people who are running the show, absolutely. Their interest and the cricket, which has reached this level, is because of them.”Mashallah, they are corporate guys, they are millionaires, and the only thing is their interest in giving us a lot of things. Whenever we are short of funds, they pour their money in it. They take care of all of us like family members. So the boys have respect for them, and what they have done for cricket is absolutely amazing.”Kanaksi has maintained his role as chairman of Oman Cricket since its inception, a reign approaching 40 years. In some places, a board chief holding on to power for that long might be met with a cynical response. Mostly, though, Kanaksi is respected and admired for his stewardship, and in 2011 the ICC Development Programme gave him a Lifetime Achievement Award for his service to cricket in Oman.At the local level that includes the family’s involvement and support for the domestic cricket league, which is centred on a corporate structure. Muscat Cricket Club, a team run by Khimji Ramdas, includes many employees who also play for the national team, among them Swapnil Khadye, Vaibhav Wategaonkar, Munis Ansari, Jatinder Singh and Rajesh Ranpura. Having corporate backing allows them to earn a living while getting flexible work hours to train for the national team.”We are lucky in Oman that all the corporate companies understand what we are doing,” says Ranpura, who works as a production supervisor in a paint manufacturing plant for Khimji Ramdas. “Each corporate company has their own team and they practise in the afternoon. When a national team camp is there, in the morning we are doing fitness training, afternoon we do cricket training, and in the evening we have more training.”Khimji Ramdas is like family for us. I’m playing for him and it’s like a second home for us. We celebrate all the festivals together. We are always connected with them. Whenever we have a problem, they are always ready to help us, especially Pankaj , even at the local league. All the time, he and Kanaksi, whenever they are available, they are on the ground watching 50-over games and T20 games all the time.”The family’s modesty also stands out. A regular fixture at Oman’s various tournament stops around the world, Pankaj is enthusiastic but hardly bombastic in his support for the team from the sidelines. He is quick to deflect attention onto others, especially regarding the team’s resurgence over the last two years, for which he credits current coach and development officer Duleep Mendis.”That brought about a sense of preparation – a regime that made sure the team was always in a state of fitness, whether we are in a playing season or not in a playing season,” Pankaj says. “He kept on identifying the fast-development track players, who was on the out and who was on the swing up. Fitness became a very important role, so we had a few people in Oman who helped in building that.

“My father, my uncles, my cousins – we’re all a passionate cricket family. We used to travel six hours by car to Sharjah to watch – the early days when Sharjah cricket and the Bukhatir league started. People would call us crazy”Pankaj Khimji

“On tours, we had Derek Pringle, Rumesh Ratnayake, Sunil Joshi, who helped the team fine-tune themselves in those aspects of the game. Madhu Jesrani, who has been the secretary of cricket for many years, I think, is the heart and soul of our cricket. He keeps the team involved, he keeps the families involved as well.”Certain infrastructure improvements have also played a major role in Oman’s recent success. For years, cricket in the country was played on artificial wickets, before the inaugural turf wicket opened at Al Amerat, a facility on the south-eastern outskirts of Muscat, in late 2012. A second floodlit turf ground opened up in the same complex in late 2015, and a third ground, with practice facilities, is currently being developed at the site; it is scheduled to open later this year.The new turf wickets allowed Oman to host their first bilateral series, in April, with UAE visiting for three 50-over matches as part of Oman’s preparation for WCL Division Three in Uganda this month. If the third turf-wicket ground opens on schedule and Oman gain promotion to Division Two, they will have the requisite number of grounds to host the event and are expected to make a bid. Pankaj credits the royal family with making land and extra funding available to develop for cricket, both locally and for when the team is touring abroad.”A couple of years ago His Majesty gave us an endowment to develop the infrastructure of cricket in Oman,” Pankaj says. “That’s when we got our green grounds, and we’re now building a clubhouse with an indoor eight-lane practice wicket. Hopefully, by September 2017, we should have our clubhouse and our facility, which we can call the home of cricket in Oman. We got our qualification from the ministry of sports a few years ago, which meant we are now able to receive some funds to develop cricket, especially when we are going on overseas tours.”Another factor that helped them do well abroad was the Khimjis’ MCC connections. In familiar conditions at the 2012 World T20 Qualifier in the UAE, Oman went 0-7, finishing last in their eight-team round-robin group. Kanaksi and Pankaj are MCC members and their relationship with MCC director of cricket John Stephenson led to Derek Pringle coming on board as a key addition to the backroom staff ahead of the 2015 World T20 Qualifier, producing a dramatic reversal of results in alien conditions. Pankaj then helped bring an MCC touring squad to Oman early in 2016 in the build-up to the World T20, and a series of four matches between the sides helped Oman gear up for battle with Ireland.With all this financial and logistical help available, why are Oman’s cricketers still amateurs? Particularly after achieving T20I status in 2015, shouldn’t the board be arranging more fixtures and making efforts to turn players professional, especially as they approach this month’s WCL Division Three tournament in Uganda with an eye toward reaching the 2018 World Cup Qualifier and Division One status once more? The answer is not so simple, considering that the overwhelming majority of Omani players are Indian and Pakistani expats whose local residency is based on the work visas sponsored by their corporate employers.Oman celebrate their win over Ireland in the 2016 World T20•ICC/Getty Images”The ICC doesn’t organise bilaterals, and it’s not cheap,” Pankaj says. “There’s a cost and you must realise that most of our players are amateur players and they have work to do. It’s unfair for us to keep going back to their sponsors and employers to say, ‘Free them up.’ They might as well not work.”The government of Oman are already supporting us with infrastructure. Having two tournaments [a year] is good for Oman for the next couple of years so that we can focus on our own domestic cricket.”As a consequence, the daily grind is taxing, to say the least. For most players in the national squad, days start at 5am, with a two-hour session, before they head home to shower and be at work by 9am. Some can get away for another 90 minutes during a 1:30pm lunch break before going back to work and then coming back in the evening for another session. It means little time is left for family or social endeavours. But players like Ranpura don’t seem to mind, especially when they see someone like Pankaj standing by their side.”Pankaj sir is always there for us,” Ranpura says. “Whenever we require, he is with us. I’m working under him in the same company. Basically he is like a morale booster for our team.”

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After the scare early in their chase against Guernsey, vice-captain Aamir Kaleem bailed the side out by scoring a calm 35 before Khadye saw Oman over the line with an unbeaten 33, guaranteeing Oman promotion to Division Four. As Khadye walked off the field, the youth football practice on the adjacent portion of the FB Fields complex was let out and the same group of kids had begun making their way past the sightscreen again. Seeing the Oman players about to greet Khadye, the kids spontaneously began shouting “O – MAN! O – MAN!” once again.The players laughed and cheered back, clapping to show their appreciation, but nobody was more thrilled than Pankaj Khimji. The multi-millionaire missionary’s family zeal to proselytise for cricket in Oman knows no bounds. His countrymen are hoping such efforts will garner a few more disciples this month, when the team are in Uganda for WCL Division Three on their crusade back toward the top flight of Associate cricket.

'A great moment for Indian cricket'

There was plenty of praise for India’s Mithali Raj after she became the highest run-getter in women’s ODIs

ESPNcricinfo staff12-Jul-2017Mithali Raj went past Charlotte Edwards to become the leading run-scorer in women’s ODIs.

Raj, whose ODI career began with a century on debut in 1999, said she was “privileged” to hold the record.

WATCH – Has Dhoni's star begun to fade?

It seems like bowlers are having better success against one of one-day cricket’s greatest finishers

ESPNcricinfo staff02-Jul-2017The big hitter misses
It was a slow pitch, but should a target of 190 troubled a batsman of the calibre of MS Dhoni, one of history’s coolest chasers? But, as has been the case sometimes since 2014, he struggled to find his timing, and was outsmarted by rookie bowlers tying him down with changes of pace. Dhoni made 54 off 114 balls – the slowest fifty by an Indian batsman since 2001. India lost by 11 runs.Déjà vu
This series might not be very significant, but West Indies bowlers might have given clues for other teams to build on: Virat Kohli doesn’t like it up there, especially on slower pitches. Kohli has batted four times, and West Indies have given him a fair share of bouncers when he is just in, and Kohli has struggled initially before becoming comfortable. On Sunday, he didn’t look at ease at all, and eventually perished to the short ball.Holder’s dayIf there is one thing that defines Jason Holder, it is that he is a big-hearted trier. Despite a history of leaking runs towards the end of an innings, he continued to front up to one of the toughest jobs in cricket and on Sunday he got his just rewards. A match-winning maiden five-for that included two scorching yorkers.Learning new tricksHardik Pandya has shown in his brief career that he relies heavily on the short ball, but he showed another side to his bowling in Antigua. He got Shai Hope with a bouncer in the last match, and gave him a few short balls in this one too, but then floated that sucker ball outside off. Hope was caught on the back foot, and edged him through.Déjà vu all over again
Three innings in, West Indies are still not picking the left-arm spin of Kuldeep Yadav. A mere five balls into the contest, opener Evin Lewis ended up repeating his dismissal from the second ODI. He was stumped off a wrong ‘un then; today he lobbed it off the inside half of the bat to short midwicket. Roston Chase went one step ahead and produced an identical replay of his dismissal in the third ODI: beaten on the outside edge when looking to work to leg.

Chandimal and Mathews' Kotla marathon

Chandimal’s sprint to 10 Test centuries, the end of Mathews’ century drought, and other statistical highlights from the third day of the third Tet

Bharath Seervi04-Dec-2017476- Balls faced by Angelo Mathews and Dinesh Chandimal during their 181-run stand for the fourth wicket. It’s the longest partnership between a visiting pair in India in the last five years, and the second-longest stand for Sri Lanka against India. Overall, this is the longest partnership for any pair at the Kotla, trumping the 433 balls Gautam Gambhir and VVS Laxman faced together against Australia in 2008-09.10- Centuries for Dinesh Chandimal in 80 Test innings: the fastest Sri Lankan to the landmark. The previous quickest was Thilan Samaraweera, who notched up 10 centuries in 82 innings. Kumar Sangakkara took 101 innings for the same.2- Number of Sri Lanka captains to score a century in India. Before Chandimal, only Sangakkara had done so, at the Brabourne Stadium in 2009-10. Chandimal is the first visiting captain in over 30 years to score a century at Feroz Shah Kotla, after Viv Richards in 1987-88.36- Number of innings without a century for Mathews before the one in this Test. Mathews averaged only 27.80 in those 36 innings with six fifties. His last ton was also against India, when they visited Sri Lanka in 2015. Between 2014 and 2015, Mathews hit six centuries in 42 innings.1981- The last instance of two centurions in the same innings for an opposition side at the Kotla. Geoff Boycott and Chris Tavare each made centuries for England then. Chandimal and Mathews’ centuries make it the fifth such instance at the Kotla. This is only the second occasion of Sri Lanka having two centurions in an innings in India.ESPNcricinfo Ltd3- Partnerships to have lasted 400 or more balls for Sri Lanka in the last five years; Chandimal has been involved in all three. He partnered Karunaratne against West Indies in Galle in 2015, and with Dhananjaya de Silva against Australia in Colombo (SSC) last year. The last such partnership, before these three, came in 2011.3- Number of times Chandimal has played innings of 300 or more balls in Tests this year – the highest. Steven Smith, Cheteshwar Pujara and Dimuth Karunaratne have played two such long innings.2009- Last instance of Sri Lanka’s Nos. 4 and 5 both scoring centuries in the same innings, as Chandimal and Mathews did in this match. Mahela Jayawardene and Samaraweera had done it in Galle then.

The most wickets in a day of Test cricket in the Caribbean

There were some awesome stats for the bowlers – Jason Holder in particular – and some dismal ones for both teams’ top orders

Bharath Seervi26-Jun-201820 – Wickets fell on the third day in Bridgetown, which is a new record for Tests in the West Indies, eclipsing the 18 that fell during England’s tour in 2015. Here, Sri Lanka were 99 for 5 in first innings at the start of the day, and at stumps, they were five-down in the second innings.8-40 – Jason Holder’s match figures are already the second-best by a West Indies captain, behind Courtney Walsh’s 13 for 55 against New Zealand in 1994-95. Holder’s figures are also the second-best by any captain against Sri Lanka.9.71- Holder’s bowling average at Kensington Oval – the best for a West Indies bowler at a single venue (min 20 wickets) and fourth best for any bowler with the same criteria. He has picked up 21 wickets in four Tests, including five three-fors in eight innings and three of his best match-figures. At all other venues combined, Holder has managed only 43 wickets averaging 46.76. Ernie Toshack (Brisbane), Bert Ironmonger (MCG) and George Lohmann (SCG) are the three bowlers with better averages at a venue under condition of 20 wickets taken.

Jason Holder’s bowling numbers – Barbados v other venues

Venue Mat Wkts Ave SR 3+ wktsKensington Oval, Barbados 4 21 9.71 31.3 5All other venues 28 43 46.76 105.1 421.06- The West Indies fast bowlers’ average in this series, making it their best performance in 10 years. They have racked up 45 wickets in three Tests – 20 to Shanon Gabriel and 11 each to Holder and Kemar Roach.93- West Indies’ score in the second innings – their third-lowest total at home, behind the 47 against England in 2004 and 51 against Australia in 1999. Prior to their Bridgetown collapse, they were the only side not to be bowled out for less than 100 in Tests in last decade.93- is also the lowest total that Sri Lanka have kept a team to while playing away from home. Their previous best was 102 against Zimbabwe in Harare 2004. Also, the last time Sri Lanka dismissed their opposition for fewer than 100 was in 2009, against Pakistan in Colombo.226- Runs added by the first five wickets across the four innings of this match – the lowest such aggregate in any Test over the last 80 years, and the fourth-lowest in history. West Indies’ top five wickets added 53 and 14 runs in the two innings while Sri Lanka’s contributed 85 and 74.17- Runs added by West Indies’ first three wickets in this Test – nine in the first innings and eight in the second. It is the worst performance by their top order in any Test match. Only once has a team suffered a smaller contribution from the first three wickets: Zimbabwe’s top three wickets combined for only 13 runs against New Zealand in 2011-12.

What India women can expect from WV Raman

A hard taskmaster at times, an astute judge of the game, and someone not shy of voicing an opinion are the key traits of the new coach

Shashank Kishore21-Dec-2018Few men in India have covered the entire gamut of the coaching spectrum like WV Raman. He has coached Tamil Nadu and Bengal, been part of Kings XI Punjab and Kolkata Knight Riders and briefly even held the India A job in 2008, but the biggest validation of his coaching credentials may have come only recently, having played a key role in charting the revival of the National Cricket Academy in Bengaluru.Once touted by a now-retired domestic cricketer as a ‘paradise for good food and great weather in the summer’, the NCA was in an abyss until 2015. Physios, coaches and trainers didn’t know what they should do. There was a chairperson, but his duties were unclear. Also, there seemed to be little in sync between the NCA and the selectors.When he took over as batting coach in 2015, Raman, the former India opener, along with Narendra Hirwani, the bowling coach, demarcated responsibilities to methodically groom the next set of age-group talent, apart from working with senior players who have used the facility to regain match fitness.Outside of the NCA, Raman has been on a number of tours with India Under-19 teams, and has set up a new pathway for cricketers, many of whom have been fast-tracked for a higher honours. Raman has been pivotal towards the building of this assembly line, acting as a feeder for Rahul Dravid while he has been away on overseas tours as head coach of India A. Raman’s experience of being a well-travelled domestic cricket commentator too has come in handy.Handling young groups apart, Raman has a demonstrated history of dispute resolution. In his stint with Bengal in 2011-12, there were public differences between senior cricketers Laxmi Ratan Shukla and Manoj Tiwary. The fight for captaincy in the aftermath of Sourav Ganguly’s retirement from all forms of cricket threatened to derail the side. But he managed to tide over the crisis, with Bengal winning the Vijay Hazare Trophy, the domestic 50-over competition in 2012, by beating Mumbai in the final.Raman took over the Tamil Nadu job for the second time in the aftermath of personal issues between two senior players. To his credit, he managed to pull the side through the muddle and they reached the Ranji Trophy final in his second season, in 2014-15.Now with the women’s team, one of his first tasks will be to defuse a clash of personalities. While Mithali Raj may say publicly that “I have no problems with Harmanpreet Kaur”, there is enough evidence of a possible rift. Raman will only know too well a senior player feuding over batting positions can’t be the best way to begin an overseas assignment. They go to New Zealand in January while there’s only 15 months left for the next Women’s World T20 in Australia.As a coach, there has also been talk of Raman being a hard task-master and a disciplinarian prone to flashes of short temper. Former players he had coached termed him aloof when he first joined a team but that perception has also thawed.Abhinav Mukund, the Tamil Nadu captain until last season, said of Raman in an interview with ESPNcricinfo: “I have always felt he used to take a lot of pressure from external sources and protect the younger players from it. He would never give me any sort of bullshit, which is something I always appreciate. We had a lot of arguments about my technique. I could tell him that I wasn’t comfortable with it.”Even as captain, we used to have arguments about a certain player, but at the end of the day he would give me the player I wanted. A lot of people think he is extremely short tempered, but I genuinely feel he’s a reasonable man.”When it comes to the technicalities and an eye for talent, there are few that can match Raman. In 2008, he was convinced of Manish Pandey’s future as a batting star, even before the player had made his Ranji Trophy debut. A decade on, Pandey is on the fringes of India’s limited-overs teams but the impact he’s had for Karnataka, various India A sides and KKR are undeniable.As a coach, Raman is instinct-driven. Numbers and analytics only complement his style, and aren’t the sole criteria for his functioning. In 2013, soon after he was dropped from the Test side, Gautam Gambhir turned to Raman for one-on-one sessions. It was there that Raman suggested Gambhir bat with a slightly-open stance, a method that would define his batting for a better part of his next six years as a first-class cricketer.The jury may be out on whether the change brought Gambhir the kind of prolific returns he managed in the first half of his career. But that Raman wasn’t afraid to suggest something radical to an experienced cricketer – a two-time World Cup winner – indicated his strong personality and the respect he commands as an astute reader of the game.The women’s team is in need of someone who can take charge with a vision for the greater good. Raman has the credentials, and his test will be in how he manages to tide over the current clash between his ODI captain and the T20I captain. This conflict-resolution could define his legacy, which could yet mark the start of a defining period in Indian women’s cricket.

Will they don the Pakistan colours soon?

While much of the attraction came from high-profile international globe-trotting stars, here are four players who may make their international debut before PSL 2020

Danyal Rasool18-Mar-2019Fresh out of its fourth edition, there is no question the PSL will continue to be the most accessible window into Pakistan’s talent pool. Purists may argue it isn’t the best way to unearth potential cricketers, particularly for the longer formats, but the truth is years of dereliction have brought the domestic circuit in Pakistan to its knees. If a Pakistan domestic cricketer doesn’t perform in the PSL, do his performances really count? Does a selector see them as potential recruits for the national team, or is it only after an impressive PSL outing that people rush to their laptops to pull out stats from local tournaments they had barely heard of?Much of the attraction this season came from the high-profile international globe-trotting superstars that seem ready to participate in the PSL in ever-growing numbers each year. Shane Watson seemed to pick up where he’d left off last year, and is now the most prolific foreign run-scorer in the tournament. AB de Villiers played that audacious innings that culminated in a last-ball six from David Wiese to win Lahore Qalandars an incredible game, while Colin Ingram and Cameron Delport smashed the two biggest individual scores in PSL history. But while Pakistan was all too happy to be dazzled by these names lighting up their tournament, nothing quite lifts the morale as a local lad going toe to toe with the stars, and better still, coming out on top.Here are four Pakistan players yet to don their national colours, but who may well have done so by the time the next PSL season rolls around.Mohammad Hasnain celebrates Imam-ul-Haq’s dismissal•Pakistan Cricket BoardMohammad Hasnain (Quetta Gladiators)This one is a safe bet. The lanky, baby-faced, 18-year old fast bowler has already been called up to the national team, almost certain to make his debut in the five-match ODI series against Australia that begins next week. It isn’t difficult to see why Hasnain impressed the selectors so much. He didn’t play a number of the earlier games for Quetta Gladiators, but was one of the first names on the team sheet by the close. With a slender, tall frame, an attractive, repeatable action, and pace and accuracy to die for, Hasnain has already joined the list that is blessed and cursed in equal measure: “The next big thing among Pakistan fast bowlers.”He took 12 wickets in the tournament averaging under 18, and also bowled the fastest delivery of the tournament, clocked at 151 kph. As the occasion grew bigger, his performances continued to improve, culminating in three wickets in the final that earned him the Player-of-the-Match award. He is from Hyderabad in the Sindh province. If he makes his debut against Australia, he will become just the second Sindhi player from outside Karachi to play for Pakistan; Sharjeel Khan was the first.Umer Khan (Karachi Kings)AB de Villiers, Shane Watson, Luke Ronchi, Corey Anderson, Shoaib Malik, Rilee Rossouw and Cameron Delport. You might think this is someone picking a list of batsmen for their fantasy teams, or a league determining which players to sell under its most valuable category. But these are just some of the players 19-year-old left-arm spinner Umer Khan bested over the past three weeks during the PSL. Far and away the best local spinner across the tournament, Umer became one of Karachi’s talismans this year, and the fourth highest wicket-taker across the competition.Left-arm spinners have seen their stock rise exponentially as T20 cricket has matured. Mohammad Nawaz, Mohammad Asghar and Hassan Khan were among the trailblazers of the trade as far as the PSL is concerned, but consistency has eluded them all. Umer seems to be different. He doesn’t fizz the ball in, trusting himself enough to flight it up to the best of batsmen, looking to beat them with turn and drift. In that sense, he’s more aggressive than any of the left-arm spinners Pakistan currently have, and if this PSL is an indicator of his inherent quality rather than a mere purple patch, Pakistan have much to be excited about.Haris Rauf struck in the death overs•PSLHaris Rauf (Lahore Qalandars)Having played no domestic cricket, Haris Rauf was the first player to shine through Lahore Qalandars’ talent-hunt programme. He was sent to Australia to fine-tune his fast bowling skills, and in just his fourth T20, won the man-of-the-match award for a sensationally hostile 4 for 20 against Karachi Kings. He was among the leading lights early on in the tournament, with his flamboyance, aggression, and most importantly, genuine ability – a glittering positive in what was another poor season for the hapless Lahore side.He played all ten of Lahore’s games, picking up 11 wickets and keeping his economy rate under 7.5. His pace, however, doesn’t quite dovetail with accuracy in the way Hasnain’s does, and even though he’s five years older, the lack of experience within a professional system means he has some catching up to do. However, that means Rauf, already a very good bowler, can improve by smoothing out his rough edges. Should that happen over the next few months, it may not be just the green of Lahore Qalandars he sports in the year to come.Muhammad Musa (Islamabad United)Mohammad Musa is another 18-year old fast bowler on Pakistan’s conveyor belt. Without quite the accuracy of Hasnain or the temperament of Rauf, Musa’s mild-mannered demeanour belies his pace and burning ambitions. He impressed in short bursts through much of the tournament, but economy rate continues to be a serious problem for him; he went at 10.21 per over, by far the most expensive specialist bowler among the top 20 wicket-takers.But it is what he could bring to Pakistan that is so exciting. A tall, broad-shouldered young man with green eyes and an eye-catching hairstyle, Musa is a fast bowling marketability dream. With roots in a Chitral, never considered fertile ground for Pakistan cricketing talent, he could well serve as an inspiration to budding cricketers in the hinterlands of Pakistan, so often overlooked to the country’s detriment. His pace is already in the high 140s, and while a Pakistan debut in the following 12 months could be a step too far for the Islamabad United player, it is unlikely his aspirations would begin and end at the PSL.

Fifty shades of grey

Our correspondent goes looking for colour around the World Cup, and finds mostly one hue

Andrew Fidel Fernando22-Jun-2019June 1
Having arrived at Heathrow at 8.30pm the previous night, and having stayed up past 2am writing in my London hotel, I was hoping I could catch a couple of hours’ sleep on the early-morning train to Cardiff for the Sri Lanka v New Zealand game. Unfortunately, the train is full of travelling match-goers and, as there are no seats available, I have to stand. Among the passengers I hover over is a fan wearing a Sri Lanka jersey, reading the article I stayed up late writing. He shares it with friends on WhatsApp, which is nice. Could have given me his seat instead, though.June 2
Another day, another train. This time a much more pleasant ride through the south-east, glades gliding by, rivers glimpsed through the gaps in roadside copses. There are few cricket nations in which inter-venue travel is as pleasant as in the UK. Instead of airports, check-ins, baggage belts and cramped seats, you can just rock up to the station five minutes before the train is due to leave, hop aboard and find a comfortable little corner. Some people chat. Others read or watch videos. Yet more fall asleep, wake up suddenly at their destination, and have to rush off before they can adequately wipe up the puddle of drool they bequeathed upon the table in front of them. And nobody can prove that last one was me.June 5
The Hampshire Bowl is a nice enough ground, but there is only one tiny road in, and on the morning of India v south Africa, this is so abominably packed that the taxi I am in finds itself lodged in an unmoving clot, stationary vehicles as far as the eye can see. It takes me 80 minutes to travel the roughly four kilometres to the ground. It would have been faster to walk it. Or to do the worm all the way from my hotel room to the press box.June 6
I check into my room in Taunton, which smells of paint, because the hotel is renovating. I can’t open a window to let the fumes out, because apparently it is painted shut until it gets a second coat. The hotel does, however, gives me a flask filled with 1.5 litres of fresh milk. What is it for? To bathe in?Sri Lankan food in Bristol: it’s not all that•Andrew Fidel Fernando/ESPNcricinfo LtdJune 7
My editors and colleagues want me to send them stories and videos that bring to life the “colour” from the towns hosting the World Cup. I haven’t the heart to tell them that the only colour I’ve really got to know so far is grey. It was overcast when I arrived in Cardiff. Raining when I left. Raining when I arrived in Southampton. Raining when I left. Taunton has been in non-stop drizzle mode in the first 24 hours.This might be just as well, though, because my hotel doesn’t offer a laundry service, and the nearest laundromats are busy for the next few days, so at least I have the option of taking the clothes on my back for a spin on walks around town. If I was really keen on the washing-machine experience, I could even have sprinkled a few granules of laundry powder on myself and performed a few cartwheels to and from the ground.June 9
Despite the many wonderful things about the UK – the gentle pastoral landscapes, the friendly locals, and best of all, its great writers, there is one failing for the traveller. Many colonial offensives have been waged on nations with vibrant cuisines, and yet, somehow, with all that food to draw from, the UK is where flavour comes to die. I don’t mean there are no good meals to be had – only that the baseline is low. A Thai restaurant in Bristol, for example, is reliably worse than a Thai joint in, say, Hamilton. Without solid recommendations, you’re flying blind.Having had awful culinary luck over the past week, my Uber Eats orders began to grow increasingly desperate. Seeing as how more depth of flavour seemed like an unreasonable thing to ask for over an app, I began to make escalating requests regarding heat. Starting off with “Very spicy” in the “Notes” section of the order, I moved to, “Please make it extremely hot – I’m Sri Lankan” before pleading, “Use all the chilli you have.” I even tried a Sri Lankan restaurant after getting to Bristol. I regret to say nothing quite hit the spot.June 10
Traipsing around Bristol in the morning, and oh, what unspeakable joy, I stumble across one of modern cricket’s most hallowed sites – the mBargo nightclub, out of which Ben Stokes stumbled on that storied September night and properly decked that one guy. Just walking down the street you can feel that it is a special place. You feel it in the pit of your gut, almost as if it is receiving repeated kicks. There are rumours that if you speak a word against any historically disenfranchised group of people in this neighbourhood, the ghost of Stokes – even though he is still alive – will jump out at you and pop you right in the mouth. I observe a minute’s silence, and lay a bouquet of flowers on the roadside. I don’t know who for, but it seems like the right thing to do.A crawlspace for a bedroom, fruit crates for a headboard – cricket writers travel in luxury•Andrew Fidel Fernando/ESPNcricinfo LtdJune 11
Not for the first time in the UK, I’ve been duped. In 2013, I had a mobile phone stolen out of my hand in London. (Yes, I know I’m a moron for letting this happen.) In 2016, a vending machine that was supposed to spit out a sim card did not deliver its payload until it ate up a second £20 note. This time, I was sure my telecom issues were under control, because I had bought my local sim from a store inside Heathrow airport, and paid £30 for 20GB of data. Yet, weirdly, the night before the Bangladesh v Sri Lanka game, my data runs out, and when I look into my account, it suggests that my sim had only been loaded up with 3GB.I attempt to rectify this injustice at a store belonging to the offending multinational telecom company in Bristol the next morning. They tell me that as I bought the sim and plan from “a kiosk” and not one of their trademark stores, they could not help me. They give me a number, through which I can “escalate the issue”, but this turns out to be manned by a glorified answering machine.Everybody knows that the most productive way to deal with this kind of thing is to lose your cool and yell at the staff, so this is exactly what I do, and the moment my swear words impress upon them exactly how annoyed I am, they smilingly acquiesce to 100% of my demands, no questions asked.June 12
Clearly, by this stage, and having seen what seems like a trillion hours of drizzle since I’ve arrived in the UK, I need something to improve my mood. Instead of heading straight to Cardiff, which hosts the next match I’m due to cover, I take a train to London instead, to crash with friends for a couple of nights. They know exactly what I need.That evening we go to an unassuming joint that serves outstanding northern Sri Lankan cuisine. The mutton stir fry is glorious. The fish-and-egg rolls taste just like they do in the Colombo suburb down the road from home. The (string hoppers) soaking up the (coconut curry) are warm and fluffy. I’m internally weeping tears of joy as we exit the restaurant.Birmingham’s 35 miles of canals are set against lowering skies and industrial car parks – and you thought Venice was romantic•Andrew Fidel Fernando/ESPNcricinfo LtdJune 14
I do eventually have to rejoin the cricket tour, so I make my way to Cardiff, where the apartment I have hastily booked is unlike any place I have ever stayed in. An Elton John concert in town has ramped prices up, so my “loft apartment” has a glorified ladder leading up to a “bedroom”, which is essentially a crawlspace with a mattress, with some pretty lights attached.June 15
Some people don’t believe me when I tell them that on my first night ever in Cardiff – a Friday in 2013 – I came out of a bar with a bunch of journalists and saw a post-fight brawler being attended to by paramedics, three revellers synchronised-vomiting, and a couple unsubtly going to second base in an alley, all within two or three minutes of each other. After our work at the Afghanistan v South Africa match wraps up, colleague Alan Gardner and I head into town with a bunch of South African journalists for a couple of post-match drinks. En route to the bar, in a stretch of about 100 metres, we spot a guy throwing up at a bus stop, another being pinned to the pavement by five bouncers, and a couple engaged in public heavy petting. Not quite the bingo card of that first Cardiff night, but a decent approximation.June 17
I’ve arrived in Birmingham, where locals like to brag that the city has more canals than Venice.It’s also way more beautiful.June 18
Cricket South Africa have very graciously adopted myself and colleague Sidharth Monga as honorary South Africans and take the whole travelling South African media pack to dinner at an Indian joint. The evening ends at another of cricket’s most revered sites – the Walkabout bar, where David Warner took a swing at Joe Root and missed, in 2013.Cards are written. Hymns are sung. This is the kind of history every cricket tour to England should be about.June 20
I’m traveling south again following the exciting conclusion to the New Zealand v South Africa game the previous night. It’s raining in Birmingham as I leave, but when I arrive in Southampton, there is birdsong in the air, the smell of flowers on the soft breeze, and the city is bathed in glorious sunshine.Haha. Just kidding. It’s raining, windy and cold in Southampton as well.

Peerless Perry's stature soars after fantastic Canterbury tale

The Australia allrounder bowled a searing spell with the new ball to bag 7 for 22 in the third ODI on Sunday, helping bowl out England for 75

Annesha Ghosh08-Jul-2019Ellyse Perry’s 7 for 22 in the third women’s Ashes ODI in Canterbury – the best figures by an Australian woman in the format – really began to take shape in the series opener last Tuesday. Perry struck with her second ball, returning match figures of 3 for 43, and followed it up with 1 for 40 in the next game, setting herself up for the Sunday blockbuster in the third and final ODI of the multi-format Ashes.Ten overs, four of them maidens – there were 49 dot balls overall – from Perry proved too much for England, who rolled over for 75 in a chase of 270. Along the way, she bested current assistant coach and former Australia allrounder Shelley Nitschke’s 7 for 42, from August 2005. It was also the ground where, in the 2015 Ashes Test, Perry had bowled a match-winning spell of 6 for 32 on the fourth day to return match figures of 9 for 70.This one helped Australia get a 6-0 lead on the points table.”You can call me what you like, but I’m not sure that’s the case,” Perry laughed when asked, after the match, if she considered herself the best allrounder in the game. “I honestly think today just went my way, which is nice, but across the series there has been some great performances. For us to start [the Ashes] the way that we have, and be six points clear, is the absolute dream start so all of us are really chuffed and myself especially.”Consistently clocking upwards of 70mph through the three ODIs, capitalising on the movement on offer, and often punishing the largely inconsistent England top five, Perry chipped away at the opposition line-up with an unbroken seven-over opening spell that fetched her an ODI best of 5 for 18. The pick of that haul – Sarah Taylor’s wicket – came via an incisive outswinger that rose late after landing, leaving Taylor in two minds with her footwork and eliciting a feather.”Fortunately I’ve played here [at the St Lawrence Ground] before,” Perry said at the post-match presentation. “The slope works really well for us, so it was nice to attack the stumps and let it swing down the hill a bit.”Ellyse Perry holds the record for Australia’s highest women’s Test score•Getty ImagesBefore snaring her sixth and seventh wickets – Anya Shrubsole and Sophie Ecclestone respectively – in her second and final spell starting in the 19th over, Perry had Amy Jones spoon one to substitute Nicola Carey at mid-on for her first wicket. The dismissal meant Jones, featuring in the line-up as a specialist batsman and not designated wicketkeeper in the presence of Sarah Taylor, with ODI scores of 79, 54, 76, 91, 18 and 80 to her name since the Sri Lanka tour in March, fell to Perry for a third time in her opening over in as many games. Jones’ scores in the series now read: 0, 5 and 0.”I don’t really think about Amy, to be honest. It is more about having some really clear plans about the way that we want to start,” Perry said when asked about strategies for the England opener.Perry attributed her success with the new ball to the work she has been doing with Australia’s bowling coach Ben Sawyer, who joined the support staff in September last year, ahead of the home series against New Zealand, replacing Ashley Noffke. He is also the head coach at Sydney Sixers, the WBBL side that Perry plays for.”Ben Sawyer has been absolutely brilliant since he came in to work with the group,” Perry said. “I worked with him back home in Australia too – he is the head coach at the Sydney Sixers and I think that he has really helped develop a lot of our players.”Perry has shared pace-bowling duties with Megan Schutt and Delissa Kimmince so far this Ashes, and they have had their share of success with the new ball and in the middle overs.”It seems like there is a real clarity in the way that Shooter [Schutt] comes out and bowls, and myself and then if Nic [Carey] or DK [Kimmince] or Tayla [Vlaeminck] are playing, everyone just knows their roles and that has been really nice,” Perry said.Now if the allrounder carries the batting form she showed glimpses of in her 62 in the second ODI into the upcoming Test in Taunton, starting July 18, an encore of her record-breaking 213 not out – the highest Test score by an Australian woman – from the 2017 Ashes Test might well be on the cards.

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