Race to the WTC final: Australia in pole position; India and Pakistan bank on home advantage

South Africa have a tough route to the final after their series defeat against England

S Rajesh12-Sep-2022How has the 2-1 series defeat impacted South Africa’s qualification chances for the WTC final?
Before this series in England, South Africa were the table toppers with a win percentage of 71.43. They have now dropped to second place, winning 60% of the total points on offer from the 10 matches they have played so far. Their two remaining series in this cycle are in Australia (three Tests) and at home against West Indies (two Tests).If South Africa win three and lose two of those five matches, their percentage will stay at 60. However, that won’t guarantee them a top-two finish, as Australia, Pakistan and India can all go past 60. If South Africa win four out of five matches, their score will go up to 66.67, which might still not be enough.Does the series win give England a shot at qualification?
Unfortunately, no. England have only one series to go – three Tests in Pakistan – and even if they win 3-0, their percentage will only go up to 46.97, which would not suffice for a top-two finish.ESPNcricinfo LtdWhat about current toppers Australia? What do their qualification chances look like?
Australia have as many as nine Tests to go in this cycle, the most among all teams. Five of those are at home, across two series – two Tests against West Indies and three against South Africa. However, their away series will be their biggest challenge – four Tests in India.If Australia win all five at home and lose all four to India, they will drop to 63.16 and India will leapfrog them if they win all six of their remaining Tests. If Australia manage a 6-3 win-loss record in those nine matches, their percentage will improve to 68.42, which will almost certainly ensure qualification.What about India’s chances of qualifying for their second final in a row?
India are currently in fourth place, but they should fancy their chances of getting plenty of points and moving up the table in their last two series of this cycle – against Bangladesh (two Tests away) and Australia (four Tests at home).If India score a perfect six on six, their percentage will jump up to 68.06, which will be more than Australia’s score even if they win their five home Tests.India are currently fourth on the table, but with Tests against Bangladesh and a home series against Australia to come, they will fancy their chances of making the final•Associated PressDo Sri Lanka and Pakistan still have a shot?
Sri Lanka are currently third on the points table, but they have already played five of their six series slated in this cycle, and their only remaining games are two Tests in New Zealand. Even if they win both, their percentage will go up only to 61.11, a score that may not be enough.Pakistan, on the other hand, are better placed even though they are currently fifth. They are only marginally behind Sri Lanka and India, but their two remaining series are at home, against England (three Tests) and New Zealand (two). If they win all five, their percentage will shoot up to 69.05, which will ensure qualification. If they win four and lose one, they will finish on 61.9, which might still give them a shot if other results go their way.That means an India-Pakistan WTC final could still be possible if both teams win their remaining matches.What about New Zealand and West Indies?
Neither of those teams has a realistic shot. The best that New Zealand can manage is a win percentage of 48.72 if they win all four remaining Tests (two in Pakistan and two at home against Sri Lanka). West Indies can theoretically go up to 65.38, but they have two tough away series coming up: each involving two Tests in Australia and South Africa.

India vs England at World Cups: From Amarnath's heroics to an Adelaide cakewalk

We look back at six crunch encounters between India and England on the biggest stage

Andrew MillerUpdated on 25-Jun-2024From Sunil Gavaskar’s go-slow at Lord’s in the very first World Cup fixture in 1975, to Yuvraj Singh’s six sixes off Stuart Broad at Durban in 2007, and their famous tie in 2011, England and India have faced one another in several memorable matches on the biggest one-day stages. Only on a handful of occasions, however, has either team’s tournament fate rested on the result. Here, ESPNcricinfo revisits their six make-or-break encounters down the years. World Cup semi-final, 1983 – India won by six wickets
If, by common consent, India’s World Cup final victory against West Indies was the result that changed the course of cricket’s history, then their semi-final scuttling of the hosts England at Old Trafford was perhaps the first inkling that something significant was afoot. On a slow, low surface with plenty in common with the subcontinent, India’s unassuming array of canny medium-pacers made their hosts toil for runs – a mere 213 of them across 60 painstakingly strung-out overs. England remained confident that a potent attack led by Botham, Willis and Dilley could yet carry the day, but Mohinder Amarnath and Yashpal Sharma anchored the chase before Sandeep Patil romped to victory with a freewheeling half-century. Kapil Dev had already played the tournament’s most evocative innings to rescue India from ignominy against Zimbabwe in Tunbridge Wells, but that match had been missed due to strike action from the BBC’s camera crews. The semi-final and final, by contrast, were beamed in full fidelity to an Indian nation that watched as one – the first pan-national sporting event, following the popularisation of colour TV for the 1982 Asian Games. For England, it was the moment that the World Cup cut its apron strings. The mother country had hosted the first three tournaments since 1975, but India’s triumph emboldened their bid for the 1987 event, and the seeds of the modern game had been sown.Sandeep Patil fired India to victory in the 1983 semi-final against England•Adrian Murrell/Getty ImagesWorld Cup semi-final, 1987 – England won by 35 runs
England versus India at the Wankhede Stadium, with a place in the World Cup final in Calcutta at stake. The only way such a prospect could possibly have been any more tantalising for the hosts was if Pakistan could also have made it through their own semi-final, against Australia in Lahore. History chose the less romantic pay-off, however, and it was the Aussies who eventually bested England for the first of their six titles … with a little bit of help from Mike Gatting’s ill-timed reverse sweep along the way. But there had been no complaints about such cross-batted antics while Graham Gooch was sweeping all before him in Bombay three days earlier. England batters have not traditionally been renowned for their playing of spin, but Gooch had learnt his trade on uncovered county tracks in the 1970s, and trusted his technique to carry the day against India’s left-arm spinners Maninder Singh and Ravi Shastri. He was aided by some less-than-proactive captaincy from Kapil, who persisted with a more classical ring of fielders in the covers for the ball turning away from the right-hander, but Gooch kept hitting the many gaps on the leg side instead. He had one key let-off, when Kris Srikkanth at backward square spilled a top-edge off Shastri, but his 115 from 136 balls proved more than enough, as India struggled to 219 all out in reply, with only Mohammad Azharuddin’s 64 from 74 providing any lasting resistance.World Cup Group A, 1999 – India won by 63 runs
In England’s catalogue of World Cup horrors, the slow, agonising unravelling of their home campaign in 1999 offered a particularly comprehensive brand of humiliation. Every incremental detail of a chaotic month – on the field and off – came to a head in a grim and protracted denouement against India at Edgbaston, where, over the course of two rain-interrupted days, a mounting sense of unease gave way to an unconditional surrender. Going into the contest, England knew they were cutting things fine after a crushing loss to South Africa, but with three wins in the bank to India’s two, they were theoretically better placed to seal the third qualification spot … especially with the mighty South Africans expected to do a number on Zimbabwe, the other team still in the running. India, however, knew from their own three-run loss to Zimbabwe that a team powered by the Flower brothers, Heath Streak and Neil Johnson would be no pushovers, and when their seamers cashed in on a lunchtime downpour at Chelmsford to defend 234 with ease, the jeopardy at Edgbaston went off the scale. Chasing an eerily similar 233 for victory, the same band of drizzle reached Birmingham in the 19th over of England’s chase. Moments later, Nasser Hussain fell for 33, and nine balls after that, play was suspended for the day. England went to bed dripping with angst at 73 for 3, and when Graham Thorpe – their best remaining hope – fell victim to a leg-sided lbw from Javagal Srinath, their fatalism took hold. Another Srinath yorker to Alan Mullally sealed the match and India’s progression to the Super Sixes, as a pitch invasion from a largely Indo-centric second-day crowd confirmed that the carnival of cricket would carry on just fine, even though the hosts had quit the party early.India prevailed in the 2013 Champions Trophy final•Philip BrownChampions Trophy final, 2013 – India won by five runs
Another result that changed the course of history, although not immediately, and perhaps not as obviously as had been the case with India’s previous title-fight in England 30 years earlier. It’s easily forgotten now, given the ignominy to come at the 2015 World Cup, but right up until the moment that their tactics were shown to be obsolete, Alastair Cook’s one-day team seemed to be a match for any team in the right conditions. With a Test-match-themed attack, led by James Anderson and Stuart Broad, and with calm, accumulative batting from Cook, Ian Bell and Jonathan Trott, they offered up Mourinho-style anti-cricket, not least in their semi-final against South Africa, when they throttled the contest inside the first 20 overs before knocking off their chase at a rate of 4.5 an over. But then, after winning the toss in the final and choosing to go down the same route at an overcast Edgbaston, the heavens opened and the tone of the contest was transformed. When play finally got underway more than five hours later, it was as a 20-over match, and while England had their chances, India’s IPL savvy meant they were better prepped for the crunchy closing stages. Eoin Morgan and Ravi Bopara had the chase in hand with 20 needed from 16, but when Ishant Sharma bagged both in the space of two balls, R Ashwin and Ravindra Jadeja shut down the final overs to deliver MS Dhoni his clean sweep of ICC one-day titles. For England, the wait for their first 50-over success went on, but had they got over the line for this mini-World Cup, it’s hard to imagine how they could ever have evolved in time for the main event in 2019.Chris Woakes helped to hold off MS Dhoni in 2019•Getty ImagesWorld Cup group stage, 2019 – England won by 31 runs
Sure enough, by the spring of 2019, Morgan’s men seemed to be the finished article going into their home World Cup. The team had shed the reticence that had held England back at every tournament since their near-miss in 1992, and in the preceding months, they had set about embracing the pressure of being favourites. Their name was on the trophy, if only they could keep playing with the positivity of the previous four years. But then, after an early setback against Pakistan ramped up the jitters a touch, back-to-back defeats to Sri Lanka and Australia had left England’s semi-final prospects hanging by a thread. With Virat Kohli’s India unbeaten at the top of the standings, and itching to deliver the knockout blow at a packed and rapt Edgbaston, Jonny Bairstow then let rip in a sponsor’s event, telling the assembled journalists that the media was “waiting for England to fail”. It required a crisis meeting to get their minds back on track. David Young, the team psychologist, encouraged the team to address their vulnerabilities and embrace the fact they were no longer feeling bulletproof. And in keeping with his fiery character, no one took the message more to heart than Bairstow, whose 111 from 109 balls underpinned a cathartic innings of 337 for 7 – not riches by England’s pre-World Cup standards, but a score on the board nonetheless. Still the jitters remained as India took the game on through Rohit Sharma’s century and a belligerent 66 from Kohli, but with 10 an over needed in the final 11, and seven wickets in hand, Rishabh Pant fell to a flying catch from Chris Woakes on the midwicket boundary, and a magnificent contest tilted inexorably in England’s favour. They still needed to beat New Zealand to ensure their place in the last four, but that part of the bargain was now back to being a formality – for their group-stage encounter, at least…Jos Buttler and Alex Hales soak in their unbroken 170-run stand•Getty ImagesT20 World Cup semi-final 2022 – England won by ten wickets
England’s bid to become the first men’s team to hold the 50- and 20-over World Cups simultaneously went into overdrive on an extraordinary night in Adelaide. A tactically masterful bowling display, led by Adil Rashid’s four overs for 20 and backed up by Chris Jordan’s unrepentant diet of yorkers, gave way to a gallivanting run-chase from Jos Buttler and the rehabilitated Alex Hales, who between them swept past India’s target of 169 with scarcely a chance offered, and with a massive 24 balls left unused. For India, the inquest would be long and loud. Was the BCCI to blame, for denying its players the local knowledge that England’s had clearly gleaned from their enthusiastic patronage of the Big Bash? Was their batting approach obsolete? The notion of building slowly and cutting loose in the final ten overs (as Hardik Pandya, to be fair, did with reasonable success) had been banished from England’s lexicon ever since their own crushing loss at the Adelaide Oval, against Bangladesh in the 2015 World Cup. Or were India’s bowlers to blame, as Rohit Sharma intimated afterwards? Did they strain too full in search of magic balls, even though – as England had already demonstrated – the tackiness of the surface meant rewards were on offer for a more patient set-up? One thing’s for sure, Rohit himself took personal responsibility for the loss as he set about embracing risk from the get-go to instigate India’s reboot. Whatever happens in the Guyana rematch, he’s unlikely to churn out another 28-ball 27.June 26, 2024 – This article was updated ahead of the T20 World Cup semi-final in Guyana

Shardul Thakur, when sublime, makes a strong case to be India's World Cup No. 8

The allrounder proved his value with both bat and ball in challenging circumstances against New Zealand

Deivarayan Muthu25-Jan-20233:05

Can Thakur be India’s third seamer at the World Cup?

Shardul Thakur can be quite extreme. He keeps oscillating between sublime and mediocre: like striking twice in two balls and giving up two leg-side fours in the same over. His back-to-back wickets of Daryl Mitchell and Tom Latham in the third ODI in Indore put a smile on Rohit Sharma’s face, but that was quickly replaced by frowns and a venting of frustration.Then, in his next over, Thakur changed the mood of his captain, and the course of the game, for good with another wicket. Rohit, Hardik Pandya, the Indore crowd – everyone wanted a slice of Thakur now.Related

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But India hadn’t wanted Thakur for their previous ODI series against Sri Lanka earlier this month, despite Deepak Chahar being unfit and Bhuvneshwar Kumar being dropped from the squad. They had Mohammed Shami batting at No.8 in the first ODI in Guwahati. In that game, Sri Lanka, for example, had allrounders Dunith Wellalage and Chamika Karunaratne batting at No.8 and 9. More recently, New Zealand had Mitchell Santner batting at No.8 and Henry Shipley at No.9.England, the gold standard of white-ball cricket at present, have batting depth all the way up to No.10 in ODIs. David Willey, who has opened for Perth Scorchers in the Big Bash League, slotted in at No.10 in England’s most recent ODI in November last year. You need such depth to win world tournaments, which is perhaps why India recalled Thakur for the ODIs against New Zealand.Thakur is no Willey or even Chahar, who was earmarked as a batting allrounder long ago by Stephen Fleming and MS Dhoni at Rising Pune Supergiant in the IPL. But Thakur is perhaps the best option that India have for No.8 right now. Rohit had said as much on the eve of the ODI series against New Zealand in Hyderabad.”It is going to be challenging for us.. to get a No 8, No 9 who can bat,” Rohit said. “His [Thakur’s] ability with the bat can give us the edge at No 8. But if you have seven good batters who can do the job for us – no matter what the situation is, then you can look at your playing combination as well. In India [at the World Cup], you are going to play all over the country – different pitches, different challenges.”On Tuesday in Indore, Thakur gave India the edge, both with bat and ball. After Rohit and Shubman Gill made centuries to give India a shot at a 400-plus total, New Zealand dragged them so far back that they were in danger of not scoring 375 at one point. However, some late hitting from Thakur pushed India up to 385.Shardul Thakur struck twice in two balls to derail New Zealand’s chase in Indore•BCCIEven that target didn’t seem safe when Devon Conway and Henry Nicholls laid into Thakur in the powerplay. He kept missing his lengths and kept disappearing – in front of the wicket and behind it – on a ground where the boundaries were only around 60 metres on average. The dew then set in, making it more difficult for India’s bowlers. The ball slid onto the bat nicely in the evening and when New Zealand were 184 for 2 in 25 overs, the chase was on.Thakur then returned and dismissed Mitchell with a head-high bouncer. Next ball, he had Tom Latham spooning a knuckle-ball full-toss to mid-off. Thakur ended the over with two loose balls that travelled for fours. In his next over, he found more bounce with a cross-seam delivery and had Glenn Phillips weakly flapping to Virat Kohli. Thakur’s variety was as delightful – and unpredictable – as the lip-smacking street-food at Indore’s Sarafa Bazar night market. He helped shut out New Zealand as India took the series 3-0.Rohit, who has seen Thakur’s evolution from a red-ball cricketer in Mumbai’s maidans to a utility white-ball player, spoke glowingly of his skills.”He has got the knack of taking wickets at crucial times for us,” Rohit said. “We have seen it, not just in ODI cricket but also in Test cricket. There are so many instances that I remember [when] there is a partnership building from the opposition and he came in and got us through. He is very critical to us, we know where we stand as a team, what he brings to us is very critical. I just hope that he keeps putting up performances like this and it will only do good for the team.

  • Replay of the third India vs New Zealand ODI is available on ESPN Player in the UK, and on ESPN+ in the USA in both English and Hindi.

“He is very smart, he has played lot of domestic cricket, he has come up through the ranks, and he understands what needs to be done. In this format you need to use your skill and Shardul definitely has some skills. He has a good knuckle ball; he bowled it to Tom Latham today, that was nicely planned in the middle by few players and I was not included in that (laughs). It was Virat, Hadik and Shardul; so it was a good plan. At the end of the day, if a plan works for the team, we all are happy.”It takes immense self-belief and courage to execute such variations on a flat, bash-through-the-line Indore pitch.”[At] some point, they’re going to come after you,” Thakur told after winning the Player-of-the-Match award for his spell of 3 for 45 and innings of 25 off 17. “But when they come after you, it’s important to stay in the moment and not get too ahead of yourself. At that point of time, I was just trying to tell myself that: ‘okay what needs to be done, I will go and execute the same ball.”Thakur has always been open to exploring different lengths and deliveries across all formats. When they come off, like they did in Indore, he becomes #LordThakur. When they don’t come off, he becomes a meme material. Since the end of the 2019 World Cup, Thakur has a strike rate of 29.8, one of the best among seamers from Full-Member nations with at least 20 wickets. During this same period, his economy rate of 6.25 is the worst among seamers. Thakur is ready to embrace both the highs and lows.”I don’t think too much because as a cricketer you need to be ready for all situations,” Thakur said. “You can be asked to bowl or bat at any point of time. And I think to be ready [for the challenge] is the key.”Shami had bowled a terrific spell in the second ODI against New Zealand in Raipur, but he might have to sit out once Jasprit Bumrah regains fitness. Playing Mohammed Siraj, Bumrah and Shami, along with a wristspinner, lengthens India’s tail. Thakur’s all-round success against New Zealand could potentially see him fit into India’s ODI World Cup plans as their No.8 batter and third seamer.

Points to ponder – what Australia need to do to revive a flagging campaign

There’s a lot at stake; not just the series against India, but their position in the WTC final, which is not quite confirmed yet

Andrew McGlashan25-Feb-2023After an extended period in Delhi following the swift conclusion to the second Test, Australia head to Indore on Sunday to try and rescue a tour where they have conceded the Border-Gavaskar Trophy in barely five days of playing time.However, there is still a huge amount at stake for Australia. To haul the series back to 2-2 would be a remarkable achievement, but the first port of call is to shore up their position in the World Test Championship final, which is not yet inked in. Should they lose 4-0 to India, they could still miss out if Sri Lanka were to turn over a struggling New Zealand 2-0 during March.There have been a number of departures since the second Test, including captain Pat Cummins for the heartbreaking reason of spending time with his seriously ill mother. Steven Smith will captain the side in Indore at least, while Australia would be reinforced by the availability of Mitchell Starc and Cameron Green.For two days in Delhi, Australia went toe-to-toe and were ahead of the game before it fell in a heap. Here are some talking points as they look to find just a second victory in 18 attempts in India dating back to 2004.6:46

Hayden: ‘When you sweep, you have to be absolutely certain the ball won’t hit the stumps’

Can captaincy inspire Smith?Smith was livid with himself when he fell sweeping against R Ashwin in the second innings in Delhi. It’s a shot he rarely uses, especially in Tests, and the dressing room knew how angry he was. It followed the opening Test in Nagpur where he had looked very good at the crease before being beaten by Ravindra Jadeja in the first innings, and it would have happened twice in the game but for a no-ball. One of Australia’s big mantras is don’t get beaten on the inside.Smith will be back in the captaincy seat in Indore, the third time he has filled in for Cummins. He does not need extra motivation to score runs, but having the leadership may help bring out his best. As captain he averages 67.33, and on the 2017 tour of India produced one of his finest series with 499 runs at 71.28.Related

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Play your gameOn the subject of that sweep shot from Smith, Australia’s batters need to recalibrate their approach. Cummins pretty much admitted there had been two extremes so far in the series: too cautious in Nagpur, too frenetic in Delhi. They need to find a middle ground. That will look different for every batter. And it doesn’t mean shelving the sweep entirely.Smith may ponder whether to play it again, and Alex Carey probably needs to consider whether the risk-reward has become too skewed. But Usman Khawaja is unlikely to stop playing it despite his dismissals in Delhi. Marnus Labuschagne had some success with the slog-sweep variety, hit hard along the ground through midwicket. It was notable that Travis Head did not play a single sweep; he stuck to his own strengths. Peter Handscomb also had an excellent balance in the first innings.Try and take a pause”Things move quickly,” is becoming one of the catchphrases of the series. It’s easier said than done against an opposition attack that swoops at the first sign of panic setting in, but Australia have to find a way that when a wicket or two fall, they can stop the bleeding before it becomes a match-losing collapse. Attacking is one option but is fraught with risk. It might mean just seeing out a few overs or reaching the next drinks or session break to take the sting out of the game.”It’s tough to try and gain momentum when the team is as good as they are and can exert that much pressure on you that it can crack,” Head said. “But that’s the challenge for us over the next couple weeks, when we find ourselves in those moments how can we draw it back. There’s enough experience in that room to know the right answers, it’s about when it’s a full stadium, there’s noise going [and] wickets falling.”Cameron Green has worked his way back to fitness while on tour in India•Getty ImagesAll-round boost, but be careful of expectations on GreenA lot has gone wrong for Australia on this tour, but one of more significant moments that had an impact happened on December 27 when Green suffered his broken finger against South Africa. That’s not to say results would have been different, but it knocked out of kilter so much of Australia’s planning around how they would balance the side.Now Green is back, having been delayed a little by a setback at the Bengaluru training camp, but this will be one of the biggest challenges of a still young international career. The 77 he made against Sri Lanka in Galle, an innings rated very highly by his team-mates, provided an example of how quickly he can learn – it’s worth noting that the sweep, not a natural shot for him, played a pivotal role.However, he hasn’t batted in a match scenario for nearly two months and the last two home summers have shown how he can take time to get into his groove. But he’s a player with many India tours ahead of him and the learning starts now.Don’t forget paceIt feels as though Australia’s quicks became a bit of an afterthought during the first two Tests. It’s a significant contrast to India, who, while dominating with their spinners, have had Mohammed Shami play a key role. As this piece points out, it continues a trend.There will be a new look to Australia’s quicks in Indore with Starc set to slot back in for the absent Cummins. Green’s availability gives them a second option regardless of whether they stick with three specialist spinners. It will be interesting to see how Smith uses them. Cummins was reluctant to bowl himself in Delhi. The ball has not reversed for the Australians as it did in Pakistan when it provided the series-breaking weapon, but equally they have not pursued the tactic for very long.

How Harry Brook aimed big, failed, and took off like a rocket

England’s new wunderkind makes batting look like a blast, but it wasn’t always easy for him

Jonathan Doidge29-Mar-2023For young Harry Brook, the last 12 months have been beyond the most wild of dreams. A T20 World Cup winner’s medal; Player of the Series awards for his exploits on England’s Test tours of Pakistan and New Zealand; and an IPL deal with Sunrisers Hyderabad for a whopping US$1.6 million, the third-highest fee paid by an IPL franchise for any England player, after Sam Curran and Ben Stokes.Like so many overnight successes, however, Brook’s route to the top has been far from plain sailing. In 2019, when his audacious bid to fast-track himself into contention as a Test opener failed, he was dropped from the Yorkshire first team and made to fight his way back in by scoring second-team runs.It was a rude awakening. He began that season opening the innings alongside former Test centurion Adam Lyth; he thought it might be a route to the elite arena. Instead, a string of starts ended in him requesting a move down the order.Related

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Stokes: 'Phenomenal' Brook can enjoy all-format success like Kohli

His coach then, Andrew Gale, was not about to bend over backwards to work the team around Brook, and left him out for a month or so before letting him back into the fold. It was all part of Brook’s education.”I learned a lot from 2019,” he reflects, when we spoke in Leeds this January about his story so far: “I put my hand up to open. Galey wanted me to open as well, and I said I definitely want to do it because there was so much uncertainty around England’s opening batters at the time.”I was only 20. The reality of me actually getting picked for England was very slim but I thought if I scored a few hundreds in the first few games, I might get a chance at Test cricket.”It completely threw me off. I didn’t stay in the moment. I wasn’t thinking about the next game, I was just thinking about if I could play for England. So over the last few years I’ve worked on trying to stay in the moment, concentrate on the next game and prepare for the next game.”Back then, Brook had already made a partial declaration of his abilities with a match-winning maiden first-class hundred in a bizarre championship game in 2018, when Essex bowled a stellar Yorkshire line-up out for just 50 in their first innings, only to go on and lose. That hundred came from No. 3, to where he had been dropped after opening in the first innings.Brook bats in a 2018 county game with Adam Lyth. “To me, he’s playing a different game [than] most people at the moment. Test cricket is not easy and he’s making it look pretty easy,” Lyth says of Brook•Gareth Copley/Getty ImagesFirst-class cricketing life didn’t get off to the best of starts for Brook, who learned his game at the Airedale and Wharfedale League club Burley in Wharfedale. He played just the one match in his first season, 2016, in which he was out for a golden duck against Pakistan A. The following year he averaged 13.66 from six innings in red-ball cricket.Even after the 124 at Chelmsford in 2018, he didn’t really kick on. A first-class average of 25 that year, and 21.76 in 2019, was not delivering the substance that his talent, fostered by many hours of childhood throwdowns by his grandfather Tony, had promised.In Brook’s story, 2020 was the lightbulb moment. There was a greater reliability about him as he took the first steps towards consistency in Yorkshire’s Bob Willis Trophy campaign. Despite no three-figure score, he averaged 43.He mentions a T20 innings at Headingley, where both he and Joe Root made half-centuries, as a turning point. “I used to try and power the bowlers and hit it wherever I wanted to and premeditate a lot of things,” he says. “I can remember Rooty coming down to me every over and telling me to watch the ball, to play it on instinct, and we ended up chasing a total down.”The gradient to his upward curve got somewhat steeper in 2021, when he made two hundreds in a season for the first time and finished with 797 runs. In T20s that year, he racked up 695 runs, striking at over 140. That and his 189 runs from five games for Northern Superchargers in the inaugural season of the Hundred piqued the interest of franchises worldwide. Spells in the PSL and the BBL followed, and this year he will no doubt debut in the IPL.Brook acknowledges the applause for his 48-ball hundred, the second-fastest in PSL history, against Islamabad United•PSLMartin Speight, Brook’s coach at his school, Sedbergh, in Cumbria, himself a former county wicketkeeper-batter with Sussex and Durham, thinks the way Brook has overcome several life challenges has stood him in good stead in building towards success at the highest level.He speaks of a conversation with James Bell, the England team psychologist, who called him to talk about Brook. “They’ve been working with the players,” says Speight. “They’ve been writing down lots of things, looking at what has created him [Harry] and two or three other young players, and then almost looking at [making them] futureproof.”They were looking at a mixture of upbringing, young age, love of the game, a family that are obviously cricket-mad – the fact that he could walk out of his Nan’s back door and straight onto the pitch.”As for the challenges, leaving Ilkley Grammar School, in the shadow of Ilkley Moor, was a real eye-opener for the teenager: “Sedbergh was not easy for him,” says Speight. “He wasn’t a natural athlete. Academically he found it hard, and he was forced at school to do his work. He was doing things he didn’t want to do.”He knew that if he wanted to make it, he’d have to stay there and board. He found that hard. He was a very quiet, shy lad when he first started. Although he was clearly a good cricketer, it’s all the challenges he had to face outside cricket as much as anything that have shaped him.”

Speight cites Brook’s failures with Young England as an 18-year-old and his poor second full season in county cricket as reasons for his current success.”He went away after those disappointments and decided he had to work it out. He made the decision to start again himself. I didn’t ring him. He phoned me and asked me to help. He was determined enough to do that and he wanted to succeed.”Although he has worked with the likes of Gale, Paul Grayson, Ottis Gibson and Ali Maiden in his time with Yorkshire, Brook continues to go and see Speight from time to time.”They’ve got a wonderful understanding and a connection, which I think is really healthy,” says Lyth, Brook’s Yorkshire opening partner, “and Speighty probably knows his game as well as Harry does.”Opening the batting has actually probably made him a better player and more equipped for him to go into the middle order.”He trusts his defence a lot more now. He’s got such a solid defence and you need that to play first-class cricket, let alone Test cricket, but then what he also has got is the attacking game and a natural flair, which comes out a hell of a lot when he’s batting.”Nortje who? Brook pulls the South Africa quick bowler during his 80 in his second ODI, in Bloemfontein earlier this year•Marco Longari/AFP/Getty ImagesThe fruits of Brook’s labours during his early years in the first-class game began to ripen in 2022. It now appears to have been foreordained that just when England’s Test fortunes were entrusted to Brendon McCullum and Ben Stokes, Brook would have jaws dropping with his own exploits.His profile looked ideal for the new style, and he had all the shots of a high-class white-ball game to call upon. He made 967 championship runs at 107.44, hammering three hundreds and six fifties in his 13 innings in Yorkshire’s ill-fated campaign last year.”I think I probably fit the script fairly well,” Brook suggests. “Just the way I play positive cricket, trying to always put the bowler under pressure.”Even so, he was made to wait until his county colleague Jonny Bairstow’s freak golfing injury allowed him a first opportunity.His Test debut, against South Africa, was all about the experience rather than the runs. “I think the goosebump moment was actually walking out to do the national anthem,” he says.”Because the Queen had died, we walked out and I’ve never felt or heard anything so silent. You could hear a pin drop. Then, obviously, as soon as we started the national anthem, it erupted.”Annus horribilis: Brook made a hundred in the 2019 county season but ended up averaging just 22, with 12 scores of under 20 in his 17 innings•Alex Davidson/Getty ImagesThat England won inside two days is now part of Bazball folklore. That Brook went on to score four sumptuous centuries in the space of eight Test innings may, in time, become part of his legend.His magnificent Test-best 186 from just 176 balls in the first innings of the Wellington Test this year was followed by his first Test wicket (New Zealand’s greatest Test run-scorer, Kane Williamson), before the cricketing gods reminded him of the Ts and Cs of the sport with a diamond duck – he was run out without facing a ball in the second innings.It’s hard to believe this is a man who averaged just 28 in first-class cricket prior to 2022 and only had an average of 36 runs per innings from 56 first-class matches as recently as when he made his England debut last September.”It’s been a bit of a stellar year,” he says. “I don’t know if I’m ever going to be able to top it, to be honest. The last few months have been like a dream come true. The main thing was to come home with a medal and be a world champion.”Having seen his influential input at international level thus far, few now doubt Brook’s ability, least of all Speight.”Back in school days, he’d come in on a morning, before lessons, and have an hour and 40 or an hour and 50 minutes, every day. He loves the game. He loves batting.With Yorkshire team-mate Joe Root in a Blast game against Worcestershire last year, where they sealed a win with a partnership of 87 off 44 balls•Getty Images”His whole mindset is that if it’s not right, he’ll work and work and work to get his basics right before he goes on and does anything else. When he came to see me [in January] before he went to South Africa, he spent 20 minutes at the start just getting everything right. Then he wanted to work on pulling and whacking over wide mid-on, midwicket, back-of-a-length balls, which we worked on.”Then he went back, had a couple of chats, then he had another 20 minutes going right back to the basics again.”Those basics have changed since Brook began to put his front foot forward in first-class cricket. “When he was at school Harry stood still,” says Speight, who also works with other Yorkshire players.”He didn’t trigger or have a pre-delivery movement. I made sure that his alignment was perfect and he didn’t twist out towards midwicket. We didn’t want his bat coming across the line of the ball. We did that every day for four years.”If you look at his innings at Lord’s in 2017, against the likes of Steven Finn, he was fine [Brook made 38 in Yorkshire’s first innings against Middlesex] but over the next year or so he started coming out of alignment. His hips would open up and his shoulders would open more. A bit like a piece of fusilli pasta. His bat ended up sliding across third, fourth or fifth slip, and anything moving, he ended up nicking it or missing it. Even a straight ball on occasions.”If you’re a fraction early, you’re going to end up nicking it. If you’re a fraction late, it’s going to go through the gate.”In 2018, Brook called Speight for help. Grabs from some of the messages exchanged between the pair provide fascinating insight, both visual and verbal, into those technical changes”He sent me the videos from earlier in the year. We looked at that and decided he’d try using a trigger movement.”Brook’s stance in 2018, at the time of delivery and immediately after it, with his shoulders and hips opening up and bat coming down from slipBrook had already done some research and found a video of AB de Villiers talking about his triggers. He decided he’d take a page out of the AB book.”We started work on that and continued all the way through Covid,” Speight says. “By putting a trigger in, it loaded his core up ready to move and helped to align his body properly so that his bat could come down in a straight path.”It worked, in part: “Then in Covid year they played four of five games [in the Bob Willis Trophy]. He did well at Durham and got runs against Nottinghamshire but then he didn’t kick on.”He was opening his hips up too much, so we fine-tuned that. Once we sorted that trigger out and got his weight 60-40 to his front foot, we got his head over the top of his body instead of drifting outside off stump. We worked hard on that on an ongoing basis.Brook in 2019 (left) and a year after”He realised that if his head was in the right position and his trigger was right, he shouldn’t miss it, and that’s still the basis of his game.”I watched the dismissal in the first one-day international in South Africa and his toe had gone an inch too far outside off stump. As a result his head got slightly out of line and of course, he played round it rather than hitting through it.”And of his innings in the Wellington Test, Speight says: “All that happened there was that he and Joe [Root, who also got a hundred] worked out that if they stood still where you normally would, one foot either side of the crease, there would be a ball with their name on it.”So Brooky tried to move outside the crease. He was all over the place in terms of his starting point but his movement remained the same from whatever starting position he set himself and he was able to master them.”It gave the New Zealand bowlers little margin for error, because when there was any width through the off side, he was so well balanced, he was able to deal with both back-foot and front-foot shots with equal precision.”Ultimately Brook’s desire and willingness to work hard at his game, and his belief in Speight’s methods and his eye for detail, have brought him rewards.”He’s just got an all-round game for both red and white that is absolutely perfect,” says Lyth, himself a superb exponent at the top of the order in all formats. “I’m sure he’ll be an all-format cricketer for England for a long time. He’s got everything. The only things he can’t do are bowl and play football.”It doesn’t take long for comparisons to surface where players enjoying success are concerned. Both Lyth and Speight separately suggest that Brook is showing a Kevin Pietersen-like aptitude for his batting.”To me, he’s playing a different game [than] most people at the moment. Test cricket is not easy and he’s making it look pretty easy,” Lyth says.He also thinks Brook will face his biggest challenge yet this summer. “Ashes cricket is different, but knowing Harry like I do, he will relish that challenge. He plays pace bowling really well and he plays spin well, so it will come down to him making good decisions for long periods of time.”In Test cricket he’s already done that, so for me it’s just a case of him carrying on playing as he is and he’ll be fine.”Elite sport demands more than just ability and hard work. It also requires a good temperament to ride the inevitable troughs that punctuate the peaks. Speight says Brook is well equipped on that front. “He has an innate self-belief. He doesn’t look nervous when he walks out to bat, does he?Take cover: Brook lashes one square in the Karachi Test, where he made 111 and England won the series 3-0•Matthew Lewis/Getty Images”So whether he is or he isn’t nervous, he trusts himself from ball one. To be successful, you have to have that. It’s what separates the best few players from the rest.”When you look at Kevin Pietersen, how many times did people question his temperament? Yet look at what he produced. Harry will make mistakes, lots of them but if you look at his temperament, he doesn’t seem to have too much trouble getting in. If he gets in, he will score runs just like [Pietersen] did.”In the dressing room, Brook says his former team-mate Gary Ballance was someone he particularly looked up to and who helped him most of all. “I used to spend quite a lot of time with Gaz. We had loads of conversations. Stats don’t lie and his stats are probably some of the best you’ll see in county cricket ever.”Just talking to him about how to score runs, how to convert those twenties and thirties into sixties and seventies and then trying to kick on and get big hundreds – I just picked his brains really, and tried to learn how he scored runs.”Taken across individual scores, Brook’s personal manhattan might have begun as a series of single-storey buildings with an occasional landmark structure popping up, but now the skyscrapers are beginning to cluster.The personal hiatus before his country came calling looks to have been perfect for him. As his game was changing, so too was England’s, and particularly in Test cricket. “They’re making us feel like we can do anything when we go out there,” Brook says. “We’re trying to put the bowlers under pressure but we’re not being reckless. We’re trying to soak up pressure in the pressure situations.”There’ll doubtless be a few of those when Australia come over in the summer and it will be fascinating to see how Brook and England handle them. It’s a pretty safe bet that there are unlikely to be any dull moments.

Is the ICC's pitch-rating system fit for purpose?

Why is Brisbane 2022 below average, while Ahmedabad 2021 is not? Here’s why using technology to assess pitches would help weed out many of the shortcomings of the current process

Scott Oliver30-Mar-2023No other sport obsesses quite as much as cricket over the surfaces on which it is played. Pitches are not only a perennial object of fascination but also the subject of controversy. Take the preliminaries for the Border-Gavaskar Trophy series, with the usual dance of pre-emptive suspicion and defensiveness. A bullish Ravi Shastri called for pitches that turned from the outset, and Ian Healy talked up Australia’s chances thus: “I think if they produce fair Indian wickets that are good batting wickets to begin with… we win. If they’re unfair wickets … then I think India play those conditions better than us.”Then the covers came off in Nagpur and it was apparent that the pitch had been selectively watered, mowed and rolled, and that this “differential preparation” – which left bare patches outside the left-handers’ off stump on a spinner’s length at both ends – had ostensibly been tailored to suit the home team, who had one leftie in the top seven to the visitors’ four, and two left-arm spinners to the visitors’ none. Australia’s players maintained a strategic silence, but was this pushing home advantage too far?The match referee, Andy Pycroft, ultimately decided that the pitch was not worthy of sanction, yet questions around pitch preparation were nevertheless again brought into sharp focus. In the age of bilateral series, with World Test Championship points on the line, will pitch-doctoring become an ever greater temptation, as Rahul Dravid observed recently? And, more broadly, what is a “good” or “fair” pitch, and how is it determined?Related

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How the ICC’s pitch-rating system works now

The ICC’s Pitch and Outfield Monitoring Process was introduced in 2006 and updated in January 2018 in an effort, they say, to reflect the variety of conditions worldwide and make member boards more accountable for the pitches they produce, as well as to introduce greater transparency in the rating of pitches.One of six potential ratings applies to both pitch and outfield for each game: very good, good, average, below average, poor and unfit, with the bottom three incurring demerit points (1, 3 and 5 respectively for the pitch, 0, 2 and 5 for the outfield). Pick up five demerit points in a rolling five-year period and your ICC ground accreditation is suspended for 12 months. Pick up ten and it is two years without international cricket. Hugely consequential for the local association, perhaps less so for the national board. In situations where a pitch underperforms, match referees must consult umpires and captains before assigning a rating.The Rawalpindi pitch for the England Test in 2022. Below average? Okay. No, wait…•Anjum Naveed/Associated PressA pitch is deemed to be “below average” if there is “either very little carry and/or bounce and/or more than occasional seam movement, or occasional variable (but not excessive or dangerous) bounce and/or occasional variable carry”. Fine, but how do you determine this?A pitch is deemed “poor” if it “does not allow an even contest between bat and ball”, whether that favours batters or bowlers. The ICC’s guidance goes on to invoke “excessive seam movement”, “excessive unevenness of bounce”, “excessive assistance to spin bowlers, especially early in the match” and “little or no seam movement or turn at any stage in the match together with no significant bounce or carry” as well as “excessive dryness” and “excessive moistness”. Fine, but how exactly do you determine all that?The notes for “clarification” in Appendix A to the ICC’s literature for the ratings tell us that “Excessive means ‘too much'”. Sure, but how exactly do you measure that?

Too much is left to interpretation in the pitch-marking process

The truth is that it is rare for pitches to be given any of the bottom three marks. From the men’s World Cup in July 2019 to the end of 2022, only six Test pitches out of 135 (and one outfield) were given a “below average” rating, five of them in 2022.
Two of 2022’s “below average” marks were for Rawalpindi. The first was given by Ranjan Madugalle when Australia’s visit in March produced 14 wickets across the five days for 1187 runs. The second was given by Pycroft after England’s visit last December, although this was subsequently overturned on appeal, which is heard by the chair of the ICC’s Cricket Committee, currently Sourav Ganguly, and the ICC general manager for cricket, currently Wasim Khan, the former CEO of the Pakistan Cricket Board. How did they arrive at this judgement?Ahmedabad 2021: A mini dust storm when the batter plays the ball? No problem, that’ll be an “average” rating•BCCIThe official explanation was that, “having reviewed footage of the Test Match, the ICC appeal panel […] were unanimous in their opinion that, while the guidelines had been followed by the Match Referee […] there were several redeeming features – including the fact that a result was achieved following a compelling game, with 37 out of a possible 39 wickets being taken. As such, the appeal panel concluded that the wicket did not warrant the ‘below average’ rating.”This is a curious logic. Ben Stokes’ team scored at a historically unprecedented rate (921 runs at 6.73 runs per over) to “put time back into the game”, thus drastically increasing the chance that wickets would be lost (every 43.2 balls to Pakistan’s 75.6), and they won with just ten minutes’ light remaining on the fifth evening. It is almost certain that England’s strategy was devised after contemplating the Australia Test match in March. Is the ICC saying that such a pitch is adequate provided the Bazball approach is adopted?When approached, in the spirit of transparency, about exactly how much of the match footage was reviewed, the ICC would only refer to the press release.According to the pitch-ratings guidelines, an “average” pitch “lacks carry, and/or bounce and/or occasional seam movement, but [is] consistent in carry and bounce”. Fine, but consistency is a property determined by frequency, and adjudicating on this implies one would watch the whole game – that is, have the full data set, as would a match referee – to be able to assess how regularly deliveries misbehaved. Was this done by the appeal panel?What emerges from all this is a sense that the process for marking pitches contains too much “interpretative latitude” in the criteria, and as such, lacks empirical robustness – borne out by how the judgement of a person who watched an entire game (and, presumably, consulted umpires and captains, as per ICC protocol) can be overturned by those who did not. This makes it likely that a match referee who has had a “below average” mark rescinded on appeal will, the next time he finds himself deciding between “average” or “below average”, be inclined to play safe, not least because the criteria plausibly allow it. Why put one’s neck out?The Indore pitch from earlier this year on the morning of day two of the Australia Test•Getty ImagesPycroft’s next two Tests after the Rawalpindi appeal verdict was returned in January were the first two of the Border-Gavaskar series. Both the “differentially prepared” Nagpur strip (on which a wicket fell every 47.1 deliveries, albeit with Australia only selecting two frontline spinners, one of whom was a debutant) and the pitch in Delhi (a wicket every 38.8 deliveries, both sides playing three front-line spinners) were marked as “average”.The pitch for the third Test, in Indore (a wicket every 38.5 deliveries, same spin-bowling line-ups) was rated “poor” by Chris Broad, initially incurring three demerit points. The strip for the bore draw in Ahmedabad (a somnolent 1970s run rate of 2.9 and a wicket winkled every 115.7 deliveries, 22 in five days on a surface that barely changed) was rated “average”, entirely understandable after the Rawalpindi overrule but surely not healthy for Test cricket.The BCCI appealed the Indore decision; Ganguly had to recuse himself from the review process, nominating a proxy, Roger Harper. It mattered little, as the outcome was again the same: Wasim Khan and Harper “reviewed the footage” of the match and despite feeling that “the guidelines had been followed” by Broad, ultimately decided “there was not enough excessive variable bounce to warrant the ‘poor’ rating”. Not enough. Okay then.As opaque as all this sounds, it was evidently a good outcome for the BCCI, although one can imagine circumstances in which it may not even have bothered appealing – after all, it is not really the national board that is being sanctioned but the local association, which loses both revenue and prestige. And here is where the scope for abuse lies: Crucial matches with WTC points at stake could, in theory, be assigned to a country’s second-tier grounds, with instructions to produce doctored, advantage-seeking pitches in full knowledge of the risk, or even likelihood, of demerit points, and the venue’s potential loss of ICC accreditation – taking one for the team, as it were – would be duly compensated by the board.

Why not use ball-tracking to refine and add precision to the pitch-rating process?

Ultimately, the subjective, interpretative element, the lack of empirical rigour in the pitch-ratings criteria, does little to help match referees (none of whom are permitted to express an opinion about the system), and in some instances could place them under an onerous degree of “political” pressure. Presumably, then, they would welcome a more objective and data-driven framework for their assessments.The solution, potentially, is staring cricket in the face: not neutral curators but the ball-tracking technology that has been a mandatory part of the infrastructure at all ICC fixtures since the DRS was introduced in November 2009.Essentially, match referees are rating a pitch’s performance properties: pace, bounce, lateral deviation, consistency, deterioration over time. The majority of these are already measured by ball-tracking technology providers for use in their broadcasts. It is not beyond the realms of technological possibility that these properties could be given precisely calibrated parameters, within which pitches must fall to attain the various ratings, beyond which they are considered extreme.How much better would the pitch-ratings system be if its judgements were based on data from Hawk-Eye’s ball-tracking?•International Cricket CouncilThe first step would be a deep dive into those 13-plus years of ball-tracking data (565 Tests and counting), establishing the relationships between the quantified performance properties exhibited by the various pitches and the marks assigned them. Cricketing common sense would suggest that there ought to be a fairly coherent set of correspondences between referees’ verdicts and the data.From there, you start to build the parameters. There would be some complexity here, even if some of the variables ought to be straightforwardly amenable to “parameterisation”. In particular: loss of pace after pitching, consistency of pace loss (and its deterioration across the match), bounce, consistency of bounce (and its deterioration). Beyond certain thresholds, pitches would be sanctioned accordingly.Less amenable to parameterisation, and thus more difficult to use to build a regulatory framework, would be lateral deviation, for both seam and spin (even if one would expect the deep dive to yield strong correspondences between pitch ratings and the ball-tracking data for sideways movement). Deviation upon pitching is immediately visible, of course, but the bowler’s skill plays a big part. For spinners, the relevant input variables producing the degree of turn are numerous: the revolutions imparted on the ball by the bowler, the axis of rotation, the pace of the delivery, the angle of incidence with the pitch, and the age of the ball.These variables can overlap and interact in ways that offset each other and potentially resist any one-size-fits-all parameterisation. For instance, a pitch may show “excessive” turn (once this has been defined) but it might be fairly slow turn with relatively uniform bounce. One might, in this instance, use the technology to model a relationship between pace loss and degree of turn for spinners, which would be calibrated against consensus notions of bat-ball balance.For all the complexity around lateral deviation (where do you set the parameters, and how rigidly?), a couple of things need to be said here.First, however difficult it is to create the framework, none of this lies beyond the scope of the existing technology. (Whether for contractual or commercial reasons, Hawk-Eye declined to comment on the viability of using its technology to assess pitch performance.)How green was my valley: the Brisbane pitch for the South Africa Test last year tries hard to blend into the background•Bradley Kanaris/Getty ImagesSecond, the goal is to improve the existing system, not make one that is absolutely prescriptive and infallible. The difficulties in devising an all-encompassing model should not be seen as a weakness but rather a simple recognition of complexity. Seatbelts don’t prevent 100% of road-accident fatalities, but having them is better than not. Thus, while it might be justified to mark down a surface on the basis of a precisely quantified pace loss after pitching, it might not be desirable to do so automatically on the basis of a fixed amount of lateral deviation. Other factors would have to be weighed up – but this would be done, precisely, by using the information provided by the ball-tracking technology.Third, nothing is necessarily going to change. These are heuristic tools that make for a more robustly scientific way of using the criteria that are already in place and the values set out there in relation to the balance of the game. However, by supplementing the qualitative (the ICC’s pitch-ratings criteria descriptions) with the quantitative (ball-tracking data), you would inevitably increase match referees’ confidence in their assessments, particularly in the face of querulous and powerful national boards, and thus boost the public’s confidence in the process as a whole. As such, those 565 Tests would perhaps serve as “legal precedent” of sorts: “Pitch X was marked ‘poor’ because it exhibited an average of n degrees of lateral deviation for seamers’ full-pace deliveries on the first day, similarly to Test Y in city Z.” And these verdicts would be reached independently of how the teams played on the wicket, since the latter involves facets of the game such as intent, strategy and competence that ought to be extraneous to the pitch-rating process.Will developing a technology-backed framework for marking pitches mean pitches become homogenous across the international game, bleeding it of variety? No. The ball-tracking technology would simply establish a set of rigorous performance parameters a pitch would need to reach in order to be classified as “average”, “good”, “very good”, and so on. It then becomes a question of the optimal way of achieving those in any given environment – which would also build knowledge about pitch preparation that could be hugely beneficial to the emerging cricketing nations, where such expertise is thinner on the ground.

A technology-backed pitch-ratings method would reduce cultural tensions

Of course, if sanctions for substandard surfaces impacted national teams (through the docking of WTC points), it would immediately remove the incentive for their boards to “request” egregiously advantage-seeking pitches whenever it became expedient – be that for sporting, political or other reasons.Less conspiratorially, developing a more precise, data-backed framework would increase the confidence of and in referees around what is often a politically charged issue. This might prove analogous to the introduction of neutral umpires (or even the DRS, which potentially obviates the need for match officials needing to be seen to be neutral).And here is arguably the most important, though perhaps least tangible, benefit: The type of cultural tensions that crop up when pitch ratings are discussed – the defensiveness and suspicion, the accusations and denials – would be deprived of most of their oxygen. Sensitivities would be defused. This is not a trifling point in the age of social media, which have proven to be state-of-the-art antagonism machines. As the not-so-old joke has it, in a poll asking whether society had grown more divided, 50% said yes and 50% no.An example of these simmering sensitivities being stirred came with the most recent pitch before Indore to pick up a demerit point: last December’s Brisbane Test between Australia and South Africa, completed inside two days. Close observers were quick to point out the game’s almost identical duration (especially the distribution of overs across the four innings) to the day-night Ahmedabad Test between India and England in February 2021.

Before the Gabba pitch had even been marked, the defensiveness and pre-emptive sense of grievance kicked in. Wasim Jaffer tweeted a meme comparing likely reactions to a two-day pitch in the SENA nations (South Africa, England, New Zealand, Australia) and the subcontinent, in essence implying that if that two-day Brisbane result had come on an Indian wicket, the cricket world would be up in arms. If social media is an animosity amplifier, Jaffer was perhaps equivalent to the populist leader using a straw man to roil up a sense of victimhood among his base (1.2 million Twitter followers now) – though the idea of victimhood is a somewhat quaint notion for Indian cricket in 2023.

If a subcontinent Test would have finished in 2 days, the reactions would be quite different to say the least. #AUSvSA pic.twitter.com/yvcH0rWweL

— Wasim Jaffer (@WasimJaffer14) December 18, 2022

Of course, the irony is that Brisbane was marked “below average” by Richie Richardson, with both sets of players and even the curator agreeing it was wholly merited, whereas that Ahmedabad pitch – the shortest Test since 1935, a surface on which Joe Root took 5 for 8 – was rated “average” by Javagal Srinath, standing as match referee due to Covid travel restrictions.This is not to suggest anything improper from Srinath. After all, a year later he assigned a “below average” rating to the Bengaluru Test pitch, a day-night match that lasted 223.2 overs. It is simply to emphasise how, given the interpretative latitude baked into the ICC’s pitch-ratings criteria, any referee’s assessment of a pitch teetering between “average” and “below average” ratings might ultimately be a matter of perception, unconsciously influenced or conditioned by cultural background (“This isn’t a turner, mate!”), a point on which Jaffer is inadvertently correct.A further factor here is that, although the Gabba surface was overly damp to begin with and thus became pockmarked, producing variable bounce at speed as the surface baked, in general terms, pitches with excessive seam movement early in the game are not equivalent to those with excessive spin. In theory, the former can improve as the game develops. A pitch that is excessively dry and crumbling at the outset is not going to get any better. (Nevertheless, where a pitch has been prepared in rainy conditions and the curator is fully aware that it is overly damp to begin with, and thus fearful of a demerit, yet the umpires are keen to start the game in front of a full stadium, there would have to be some latitude in the referee’s pitch rating to reflect this expediency.)

A more objective pitch-rating process would help prevent abuse of the system

One would hope that the ICC has a keen interest in tightening all this up, in using the resources that are already available. Because ultimately there could be far more on the line than defusing cultural sensitivities or preventing WTC chicanery. Relieving the potential pressure on referees to reach the “correct” verdicts in certain circumstances might be about protecting the pitch-ratings process from possible abuse or even corruption.The Rawalpindi Test produced the result it did largely because England Bazballed their way through it•Aamir Qureishi/AFP/Getty ImagesConsider the following hypothetical scenario. A massive stadium named after a firebrand populist leader finds itself on four demerit points six months out from that country hosting an ICC tournament in which the stadium has been earmarked to host several games, including the final. Before then, however, the ground stages a marquee Test match and produces another slightly questionable surface, jeopardising its ICC accreditation. Given sport’s utility as a vehicle for a regime’s “soft power”, the wider interest in the rating assigned to the pitch in these circumstances would be intense, the pressure on the match referee potentially overwhelming.Or another hot-potato scenario, more economic in nature. A ground on one of the Caribbean islands sits on the precipice of suspension. It is hosting various games in the Under-19 World Cup, but in a few months’ time will stage a Test match against England, with 10,000 Barmy Army members expected to visit. Should a fifth demerit point be accrued, the hit to the economy would be substantial. Again, one imagines local politicians would be unusually invested in the difference between a prospective “average” and “below average” pitch rating in one of those U-19 World Cup games.Even if a match referee were impervious to whatever pressures might be exerted, as well as to any temptation to play safe (which surely increases every time a pitch verdict is overturned), a national board can always exercise its right of appeal and potentially bring its influence to bear. After all, if Pycroft can watch every ball of the Rawalpindi Test and have his considered judgement overruled by officials deducing the nature of the pitch from the scorecard, tail wagging dog, then why not roll the dice and appeal? If Broad, having seen a ball in the first over of a game he watched in its entirety explode through the surface and rag square, only to have his verdict overturned by administrators watching “footage” and deciding on that basis whether the variable bounce was acceptable or “excessive”, then why not see if those wholly unscientific definitions can be stretched and bent a little more favourably?Both Rawalpindi and Indore show that the pitch-ratings system urgently needs greater empirical heft and objectivity, not least to save match referees from being regularly thrown under the bus, but also to prevent a wider loss of credibility in the system. The ICC for its part says it is comfortable with the process that’s in place, but does its executive really have the clout to change things for the better, even if they wanted to?In the end, the barrier to reform may well be precisely what the Woolf Report identified in 2012: that the ICC executive is ultimately toothless in the face of the national boards, and the latter – notionally equal, though some clearly more equal than others – might not want change, whether it helps the game or not. It simply may not be in the interests of some powerful members to close off the possibility of a little pitch-doctoring, a little advantage-seeking skulduggery, particularly those with a surplus of international venues and the potential, therefore, to game the system.In such circumstances, the canny, careerist member of the ICC executive may reckon that the smart move is to rock the boat as little as possible, to keep the big boys sweet, to take the path of least resistance. Without any real regulatory bite over bilateral cricket, the ICC effectively becomes what Gideon Haigh described as “an events management organisation that sends out ranking emails”. And so inertia reigns and, as far as marking pitches is concerned, vagueness prevails, with the result that grievance festers and cricket, ultimately, loses.

Smart Stats IPL 2023 Team of the Tournament: Mumbai Indians batters, Gujarat Titans bowlers dominate

What does the XI – or XII – look like? Did the highest run-getters and wicket-takers make it? Take a look

S Rajesh31-May-20231:13

Manjrekar: Gill’s game built on strong fundamentals

Faf du Plessis
Du Plessis was the MVP of IPL 2023 according to ESPNcricinfo’s Smart Stats, which gives a contextual rating to every batting and bowling performance. The standout aspect of du Plessis’ season was his consistency: eight 50-plus scores, only one dismissal under 20, and a lowest score of 17. And he did all this without compromising on strike rate, going at 153.68 over the tournament, and 162 in the first ten balls of his innings.His opening partnership with Virat Kohli was batting combination of the tournament: the pair scored 939 runs for the first wicket, equalling the record for any pair in any IPL edition, after Kohli and AB de Villiers had also scored as many runs together in 2016. To add to that, du Plessis was outstanding in the field with his athleticism and agility, and led the team with calm authority.Related

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Shubman Gill
You can’t argue with a season that produced 890 runs and three hundreds. Gill’s tournament was the stuff of dreams: seven times he passed 50, and in six of those innings his strike rate topped 160. In terms of impact numbers, his 60-ball 129 against Mumbai Indians was the second best in terms of batting impact points (164.45), next only to Yashasvi Jaiswal’s century against the same opposition.But while that hundred against Mumbai Indians in a knockout game was terrific, it was Gill’s sheer consistency and all-round strokeplay – all done with artistry and elegance – that marked him out as a batter for the ages.ESPNcricinfo LtdCameron Green
After a slow start to the tournament, Green came into his own with an unbeaten 64 off 40 balls against Sunrisers Hyderabad, and never looked back. In his last 12 innings, Green averaged 59.57 at a strike rate of 161.62, and was only once dismissed under 20. His bowling returns were underwhelming, but he more than made up for that with the bat. Five times he had an impact score of more than 50 in a game, and thrice more than 100.Green’s 161 runs in the powerplay were the most by a non-opener, while his strike rate of 175 in that phase was second-best among the 31 batters who faced more than 60 balls.Suryakumar Yadav
Like Green, Suryakumar had made a sluggish start to IPL 2023, scoring 16 runs in his first three innings, and 66 in his first five. But then he struck form and batted like only he can, and Mumbai Indians looked a completely different batting unit. In his last 11 innings, Suryakumar averaged 59.88 at a strike rate of 187.8, with six 50-plus scores, suggesting that normalcy had returned. Thanks to Green and Suryakumar, Mumbai were the only team whose Nos. 3 and 4 aggregated more than 1000 runs this season; they totalled 1195, with the next best being 921.
Mumbai had a patchy start with the bat this season, but the one batter who started and finished strong was Tilak. He began the tournament with a stunning unbeaten 46-ball 84 against Royal Challengers Bangalore, contributing 49% of the total from No. 5, and finished with a 14-ball 43 that threatened an imposing target of 234 in the second qualifier against Gujarat Titans. Had he not missed five games because of an injury in the second half of the tournament, those numbers might have looked even better.2:42

Moody: Rinku a certainty for 2024 T20 World Cup if he performs like this

Heinrich Klaasen (wk)
Klaasen missed the first couple of games as he was on national duty, but made an immediate impact in the middle order for Sunrisers as soon as he came in. Batting at Nos. 4, 5 and 6 in T20s in India isn’t easy, but Klaasen showed superb consistency and urgency. His lowest dismissed score in 11 innings was 17, and in eight of those innings he had a strike rate of over 150, including four over 200. No batter dominated spin as Klaasen did: he struck at a rate of 191.3, and an average of 132. Among the 40 batters who faced at least 75 balls of spin, no one did better.Rinku Singh
Five sixes from five balls in the last over against Titans made Rinku a household name. But even outside of that, Rinku had a remarkable tournament: he passed 40 seven times in 14 innings, no mean feat for a batter in the lower half of the middle order. He couldn’t always go at fifth gear from the start because of Kolkata Knight Riders’ relatively weak top order – their top four had the lowest average among the ten teams – but despite that handicap, Rinku adapted wonderfully.His last two innings were perfect examples of his impact: a 43-ball 54 in a tricky run chase in Chennai after KKR had slipped to 33 for 3, followed by an unbeaten 33-ball 67 which nearly pulled off a requirement of 41 from 12 balls.Ravindra Jadeja
Only three spinners took more wickets than Jadeja in the tournament. In the middle overs, though, Jadeja’s 20 wickets were the joint highest with Piyush Chawla. He was the go-to spinner for MS Dhoni, especially in the favourable home conditions at the MA Chidambaram Stadium, where his 11 wickets came at an average of 16.45 and an economy rate of 6.7. With Maheesh Theekshana having a relatively disappointing run, Jadeja’s four overs became even more crucial, and he delivered more often than not.Jadeja was lethal against right-handers, dismissing them 12 times at an average of 16.91 and an economy rate of 6.65. Among the 66 bowlers who sent down at least 60 balls to right-handers, no-one had a better economy rate. Jadeja the batter had a relatively quiet tournament, but chipped in with crucial 20s, and the six and four he hit off the last two balls of the final was the difference between a fifth title and a sixth runners-up finish for CSK.ESPNcricinfo LtdRashid Khan
Rashid wasn’t his usual thrifty self in IPL 2023. His economy rate of 8.23 was easily the poorest of his seven IPL seasons; he had never gone beyond 6.73 in his previous six. He twice conceded more than 40 runs in a game, including a forgettable final where he was hit for 44 in three overs. However, Rashid exchanged economy for wickets this time – his 27 wickets was much better than his previous best of 21, and he struck every 14.8 balls (previous best being 18.6).He struggled in the powerplays – with figures of 2 for 114 in 12 overs – but relished the death-overs challenge, with 8 for 90 in ten overs. He was also more than handy with the bat, striking at over 200. Rashid’s all-round performance in the league game against Mumbai – 4 for 30 and 79 not out off 32 balls – fetched 192 impact points, the second highest for any player in a match this season.Mohammed Shami
Shami was the leading wicket-taker of the tournament, and an absolute terror in the powerplay. The 17 wickets he took in that phase – at an average of 19.41, and an economy of 7.5 – is the highest that any bowler has taken in the powerplays in any season in IPL history. His relentless hard lengths, seam movement and pace tested batters’ techniques in a format where they are used to making room and hitting through the line.Sixteen of Shami’s 28 wickets were of top-three batters. According to Smart Stats, which takes into account the quality of batters dismissed as well as the match context, those 28 wickets were worth 34 Smart Wickets. Shami was a nightmare, especially for the right-handers, dismissing them 20 times at an average of 14.25.
Eight bowlers took more wickets than Siraj, but in terms of Smart Wickets, he was ranked fourth, with his 19 wickets being worth 26. Like Shami, Siraj too was terrific in the powerplay: his ten wickets came at an average of 17.8, and an economy rate of 5.93. Among the 57 bowlers who delivered at least five overs in the powerplay, Siraj is the only one to concede fewer than a run a ball.Siraj also has two entries among the top-six most impactful bowling performances this season: his 3 for 22 in a high-scoring match against Lucknow Super Giants – where they had chased down 213 – ranked second, while his 4 for 21 against Punjab Kings is sixth.2:25

Tait: Jaiswal has shown he is confident and assured of what he is doing

Mohit Sharma
If Mumbai Indians dominate the batting line-up of this XII, then Titans have a stranglehold over the bowling, with their top three wicket-takers all finding a place. Mohit was one of the revelations of the tournament. His exceptional control over his length and pace made him an extremely difficult bowler to get away in middle overs, where he got 14 wickets at an economy rate of 8.07, as well as at the death, where he took 13 wickets at an economy of 8.10.In a cruel twist of fate, Mohit ended up conceding ten runs off his last two balls of the tournament to concede the IPL to his former team. But that shouldn’t overshadow what was a splendid tournament for him.

Those who narrowly missed out

Yashasvi Jaiswal
In a tournament dominated by some standout performances by openers – six of them scored 590 or more runs, and all of them at strike rates greater than 139 – it was obvious that some of them would miss out. Jaiswal was probably the unluckiest of them. His 625 runs came at a tremendous strike rate, but he was third in terms of impact among all batters, behind the two most prolific openers of the season.Shivam Dube
Dube had a wonderful tournament as a middle-order hitter, but he lost out to Tilak, another left-hander with slightly better numbers. Dube was terrific against spin, striking at 176.47 and hitting them for 22 sixes, the most by any batter in the tournament. Similarly, Ajinkya Rahane was in contention too, but lost out narrowly to Green.2:59

Bishop can’t wait to see Pathirana in three years’ time

Piyush Chawla
Like Mohit, Chawla surprised most pundits with a stellar season and was in contention for the main spinner’s slot, but Rashid pipped him to that spot with more wickets and crucial contributions with the bat.Matheesha Pathirana
Not yet 21, Pathirana did the toughest job in T20 cricket – bowling in the death overs consistently in the biggest league – but he pulled it off, taking 18 wickets in that phase at an economy rate of 8.01. He lost out to a resurgent Mohit, but his time will surely come.Axar Patel
Axar had a slightly better overall impact than Jadeja, but Jadeja won the spin allrounder’s slot on the basis of his better bowling numbers; his bowling impact was 37.79 compared to Axar’s 28.18. So in a team which has Rinku at No. 7, it made sense to select the stronger bowler of the two (based on numbers from this tournament).

Murphy's maturity, Khawaja's redemption, Head's promise among Australia's takeaways

Australia fought back in the series from being 2-0 down with some excellent cricket. Here’s a look at what they take back home

Andrew McGlashan13-Mar-20232:22

Chappell: Australia didn’t learn a lot about their play in this series

Mature Todd Murphy provides future assuranceOver the last few years in Australian cricket there had often been the question asked: if not Nathan Lyon, then who? Now we have the answer. Todd Murphy’s first series was a remarkable performance. His Test debut in Nagpur was just his eighth first-class match and he collected seven wickets. He did not gather another such haul, but he bowled beautifully through the rest of the series. His control stood out, there was rarely a bad ball. The contest with Virat Kohli was one of most absorbing parts of the series and he claimed his scalp four times, albeit the last one was a heave into the deep.When Murphy next plays Test cricket is uncertain. Conditions in England for the World Test Championship final and Ashes are unlikely to demand two spinners and back home in Australia it is only the SCG that may, sometimes, call for a twin spin attack. Lyon has a number of years ahead of him depending on how long he wishes to keep playing, but there can now be confidence that when the transition of eras does com, Australia will be well served.Related

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Nathan Lyon’s greatnessSpeaking of Lyon, he had an outstanding series. His haul of 22 wickets made it the most successful of his three tours to India. He was let down by the batters in Delhi, but in Indore the eight wickets in the second innings wrote another notable chapter in a Test career where the next landmark is 500 wickets. Although rewards were harder to come by on the docile surface in Ahmedabad, his versatility and craft were demonstrated by the way he trapped Shubman Gill lbw from over the wicket.At 35, he probably won’t have another India tour in him, but he has certainly left a mark on Test cricket in the country. “I haven’t played guys like Murali or Shane Warne. But among the current crop, he would probably be the No.1 overseas bowler to come and play in India,” Rohit Sharma said.Usman Khawaja’s redemptionUsman Khawaja lifted his game in Asia yet again•BCCIUsman Khawaja is certainly making up for his lost years as a Test cricketer. Having not played a single Test on his two previous tours of India, his tour-de-force since the recall early last year continued with 333 and runs at 47.57. As much as the 180 he forged in Ahmedabad was the pinnacle – and a moment, he admitted, never thought would happen – it was the innings in Delhi and Indore, particularly the latter, which really stood out. He is now a wonderfully versatile batter as shown by the runs over the last 15 months in Australia, Pakistan, Sri Lanka and now India. Providing the leg injury he suffered is not serious, and the signs were encouraging, there is now a chance to return to England for another Ashes, the scene of where he was left out midway through the 2019 series.Travis Head’s rapid change of fortuneNot everything happened by design for Australia, but they have some blueprints for future series on the subcontinent. Leading the list of what they’ve learnt comes from Travis Head’s success at the top of the order after he replaced the concussed David Warner in Delhi. His punchy 43 in the second innings of that match had put Australia on top before they crashed in a heap on the third day. In Indore, he calmly ensured there were no jitters in knocking off 76 then in Ahmedabad looked set to cash in with a final-day century before being defeated by Axar Patel. Although it was possible to make a case based on his numbers, it felt an odd decision to leave him out in Nagpur. The middle-order beckons again in the near future, but he could well find himself back at the top in Sri Lanka in early 2025.Australia’s pace bowling struggleIt was obviously a series dominated by spin, but the lack of impact made by Australia’s pace bowlers was a disappointment. Between them, Mitchell Starc, Pat Cummins, Scott Boland and Cameron Green managed five wickets. In the first two matches Cummins at times appeared reluctant to bowl himself. Starc and Green had precious little to do in Indore but were expensive in Ahmedabad, albeit on a pitch that offered nothing. On the whole, Australia could not get the ball to reverse swing to major effect as they did in Pakistan last year where it became the defining factor of the series.Cameron Green was solid, proactive, and stylish as he scored his first Test century•BCCICameron Green can shape the futureThere was already a sense of how important Green will be to Australian cricket, but the three recent Tests he has missed due to a broken finger just reinforced the notion. There was a glimpse of the headaches it created against South Africa at the SCG and they were magnified in the first two matches of this series where the selectors had to make compromises each time. His maiden Test century in Ahmedabad was an imperious display, the highlight being his front-foot driving, after he had fought impressively on his return in Indore. Life was tougher with the ball, but perhaps a little rhythm was lacking after the layoff. The challenge now for Green is one of workload as the IPL nears followed by the WTC final and Ashes. He isn’t due to go home until August.Not losing their heads (after losing their heads)Australia’s collapse of 8 for 28 in Delhi will live in their house of horrors but from there the tour did not descend into further chaos as could easily have happened. For tragic reasons they lost their captain while David Warner (elbow) and Josh Hazlewood (Achilles) flew home injured. Ashton Agar also left the tour after confidence was lost in his bowling. However, a longer gap between the second and third Tests allowed the squad to regroup and in Indore they secured a famous victory. There was a sense of vindication within the team that their plans and tactics had been correct.But it is worth at least pondering the preparation. Andrew McDonald and Steven Smith have been insistent that the brief Sydney camp and few days in Bengaluru was the right way, but they were off the space in Nagpur. There is rightly some cynicism about the value of warm-up matches, and the schedules make it tough to squeeze them in, but perhaps there is a way countries can agree to assist each other for the betterment of the contest by committing to conditions and quality of opposition.

Rahkeem Cornwall's illness deals double-blow to West Indies' hopes

He was off the field on day two because of a chest infection and when he was back on the third morning, the playing conditions didn’t allow him to bowl

Karthik Krishnaswamy14-Jul-2023For three sessions amounting to 97 overs of India’s first innings, West Indies were unable to use their most dangerous bowler on a slow turner in Dominica. This was partly because Rahkeem Cornwall was off the field, nursing a chest infection, during the second and third sessions of day two, and partly because he wasn’t allowed to bowl during the first session of day three even though he was back on the field.Cornwall couldn’t bowl on Friday morning because the ICC’s playing conditions for Test cricket require players to spend as much time back on the field (capped at 120 minutes) as they spent off it before they are allowed to bowl again. One exception to this rule is if a player suffers an “external injury” resulting from a blow suffered on the field. In this case the player can bowl as soon as they return to the field.The umpires can also waive the requirement of penalty time if they feel the player was off the field “for other wholly acceptable reasons, which shall not include illness or internal injury.”Related

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Illness was Cornwall’s reason of absence, which meant he had to serve out his 120-minute penalty time before he was able to resume bowling.Cornwall’s absence had a significant impact on West Indies’ fortunes in Dominica. At the time he went out of their attack on day two, he had bowled 11 of India’s first 46 overs, during which time they had scored 128 for no loss in response to West Indies’ 150 all out.For one, they were forced to use part-time bowlers for a total of 31 overs. India only scored 94 runs in those part-timer overs, thanks to the slowness of the surface, but they only lost one wicket. Cornwall resumed bowling soon after lunch on day three, and made an almost immediate impact, getting the first ball of his second over to kick at Virat Kohli to have him caught at leg gully. By this time, though, India’s lead had already passed 250.All of West Indies’ bowlers were wicketless at that point, but Cornwall had looked their biggest threat, troubling both openers with sharp turn and steep bounce. Over those first 46 overs, Rohit Sharma and Yashasvi Jaiswal had managed a control percentage of 78.5 against Cornwall – they had gone at 83.3% against both Kemar Roach and Alzarri Joseph, and at over 90% against Jason Holder and Jomel Warrican.9:15

Is it time to introduce injury substitutions in Test cricket?

India eventually built a first-innings lead of 271 before declaring on the third afternoon. West Indies were always at a disadvantage after being bowled out so cheaply on day one; Cornwall’s prolonged absence from the bowling crease probably took away most of their hopes of fighting back.If the playing conditions hadn’t forced Cornwall to wait those two extra hours before he could bowl again, he could have been operating at the start of day three, when India’s lead was 162. Cornwall’s illness had already put West Indies at a disadvantage; it was an extra dose of punishment that they couldn’t use him even when he was available to bowl.At a wider level, the Cornwall situation highlights the peculiar distinction that the playing conditions make between external injury, internal injury and illness. Thanks to this distinction, a player who has suffered a bruised finger in his non-bowling hand while effecting a stop on the field would be exempt from serving penalty time while a player who has strained a hamstring would not, even if both spent the same amount of time off the field.This distinction possibly stems from the fact that umpires are immediate eyewitnesses to injuries arising from blows suffered on the field, while they may not be able to confirm or refute claims that a player has a muscular injury or a stomach bug. By not exempting internal injuries and illnesses from penalty time, the playing conditions deny teams a loophole to exploit if they want to rest a bowler on a tiring day.It’s possible to do away with this distinction, though, by having an independent medical authority present at the ground to assist the match officials. It would ensure that teams do not suffer doubly for losing bowlers to unexpected injuries or illnesses. It would ensure that teams are able to use their best bowlers when they are fit and available, which would help safeguard the competitive balance of Test matches as well as their lustre as a spectacle.There’s a case to go even further here, and call for cricket to have a serious think about injury substitutions. At present, teams can bring on a like-for-like substitute for players who have suffered concussions. Why not allow substitutes if, say, a key bowler is seriously incapacitated by a calf injury sustained on day two of a Test match, as Nathan Lyon recently was at Lord’s. It may be a discussion for another day, but that day can’t be too far in the future.

Rinku Singh isn't just an IPL star, and he is more than those five sixes

But “life has changed quite a lot after those five sixes”, he admits after a Player-of-the-Match award for his first international innings

Shashank Kishore22-Aug-2023Alur, July 6, 2023. It’s a day after India’s squad for the T20Is in the Caribbean was named. Rinku Singh, who was seemingly in with a fair chance of making the cut, has missed out. But as he walks off the field after play in a Duleep Trophy game, there’s a distinct sense of calm around him. He indulges in some banter and mimicry that earns peals of laughter from his team-mates. It’s as if he’s wired to not think or worry about the things he can’t control.A handful of journalists present at the venue put in a request through a member of Central Zone’s support staff for a chat with Rinku. He declines politely. You couldn’t possibly have branded him arrogant or rude; he is just a shy person. Perhaps Rinku knew questions over his non-selection would come up.”He’s disappointed, but he says he’s seen far more challenges,” a support staff member told us. “Not getting picked for West Indies isn’t a cause for dejection. He wants to enjoy his game and do well here in Bangalore. He’s happy to speak later.”Related

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Later didn’t come in the two weeks he spent in Bengaluru for the Duleep Trophy. What did, however, was an India call-up, first for the Asian Games in Hangzhou, China, and then the T20Is in Ireland.As mentioned, Rinku is a man of few words even when he does speak. Like you saw at the post-match presentation ceremony in the second T20I against Ireland, when he was awarded the Player-of-the-Match award for a superb 38 off 21 balls.It was an innings of two parts. Initially, he took his time and set himself up, in the face of a mini-collapse, knowing well that India didn’t have much batting after No. 8. Then when he got to a position where he knew he had to go, there was clarity in his striking plans and the areas he wanted to pick.For 15 deliveries, Rinku had gone at a run-a-ball. Barring the one boundary off a ferocious sweep to legspinner Ben White, he seemed content nudging and milking singles. But in the 19th over, he got stuck into Barry McCarthy, first scything a wide yorker with precision behind point for four and then reading a slower offcutter early and depositing it beyond long-on for six.Rinku has a strong base; there aren’t too many premeditated movements to try and throw bowlers off. It’s the belief in his power to clear the ground that drives him. The effect of those hits was McCarthy suddenly feeling the pressure – he delivered two successive wides in trying to second guess the batter.

“Life has changed quite a lot after those five sixes. People only remember me because of that. It feels good”Rinku Singh

After that, perhaps a little frazzled, McCarthy ended up erring in length as he attempted another wide yorker. Having carved one behind point, Rinku knew with the third fielder quite square, he had to pick his spot. He did, showing remarkable timing and placement in the process as he went inside-out over extra cover to clear the longest boundary. The over went for 22 and India had the momentum on their side.Rinku’s innings helped Shivam Dube, too. From 9 off 13, he began the final over with two sixes. When the third ball went for a single, the Indians in the crowd went quite ballistic. Their man, Rinku, was on strike, and he didn’t disappoint as he sent one sailing over deep-backward square. The wrist, the pick-up, the muscle – all excellent.The fun ended next ball when he top-edged a pull, but he’d transformed a middling 160 score into a potentially match-winning 185.Rinku’s manner of flicking a switch from accumulator to beast was a proper throwback to that knock in Ahmedabad, when his career, and perhaps more, turned around. The quiet, shy Rinku, an afterthought in an XI boasting T20 legends such as Andre Russell and Sunil Narine, was suddenly at the front and centre of Kolkata Knight Riders’ plans.But, contrary to perception, Rinku isn’t an IPL wonder. As tempting as it may be to bracket his India call-up to his IPL 2023 exploits, it does little justice to the work he has put in at the domestic level for Uttar Pradesh.Rinku Singh isn’t an IPL baby – he averages close to 58 in first-class cricket and has been a star in India’s domestic circuit•Ekana cricket mediaIn the 2018-19 Ranji Trophy season, for example, Rinku was the second-highest run-scorer in the Elite division. He scored 953 runs in 13 innings at an astounding average of 105.88. This included four centuries and three half-centuries. At the List A Vijay Hazare Trophy in 2021-22, Rinku single-handedly steered Uttar Pradesh into the knockouts, notching up 379 runs in six innings, including four half-centuries and a century, at a strike rate of 94.75.These underline his all-format stature and how it isn’t just that one innings that propelled him to the national team. What it did give him, though, was visibility, which his toil and all the runs at the domestic level didn’t. It makes a massive difference, and Rinku knows all about it.”Life has changed quite a lot after those five sixes,” Rinku told the BCCI website when asked by Ravi Bishnoi about fans rooting for him in Dublin. “People only remember me because of that. It feels good.”Rinku has seen his fair share of struggles, but his modest upbringing has given him enough perspective about life – he knows that fame can be fickle. And when he takes the field on Wednesday, it’s likely he will be over Sunday’s performance.There’s a T20 World Cup coming up next year, and Rinku may have personal aspirations of making the squad. But it’s unlikely to make him lose sleep; just like being a run-a-ball 15 amid a slowdown in Dublin on Sunday didn’t.

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