Agarkar shines as Mumbai squeeze Baroda

Mumbai buried Baroda under a mountain of runs on a flat track, and then watched irresponsible Baroda batsmen crumble under the weight

The Report by Sidharth Monga08-Jan-2013
ScorecardFile photo: Ajit Agarkar scored a quick fifty and followed it up with the wicket of Yusuf Pathan•Sportz Solutions

Mumbai buried Baroda under a mountain of runs on a flat track, and then watched irresponsible Baroda batsmen crumble under the weight. In reply to the hosts’ 645 for 9 declared, Baroda got off to a good start, but their batsmen played irresponsible shots to be reduced to 157 for 5, a predicament from which there seems no way back. Not against Mumbai, renowned masters of the game of not letting the opposition back down once.It has been thus right from the time Wasim Jaffer and Sachin Tendulkar came together to bat on the first morning. Abhishek Nayar carried their good work forward on day two, and while he could add only 10 to his overnight 122 on day three, their bowlers did the job, both with the bat and the ball. Nayar fell at 563 for 8, but Ajit Agarkar and Javed Khan attacked the tired Baroda bowlers with a 73-run stand in 13.1 overs.Agarkar, the better batsman of the two, relied more on finding gaps and picking twos while Javed hit four sixes, one of which resulted in a lost ball. Javed holed out just before reaching fifty, but Agarkar brought up his 16th in first-class cricket. Not many expected Mumbai to declare – what with the possibility of a sixth day in the match – but they asked Baroda to bat for 25 minutes before lunch.Those 25 minutes didn’t bring much nerves as openers Saurabh Wakaskar and Aditya Waghmode continued with what has been a fruitful season. The same continued in the post-lunch session, although the openers remained content in defence, reaching 93 for 0 by tea. After tea, though, Mumbai’s move of playing two left-arm spinners began to work. Debutant Vishal Dabholkar broke through soon after Wakaskar reached his fifty, and Baroda their hundred. He pushed at a length ball that didn’t turn enough, and moving to his right at slip, Wasim Jaffer took a catch more difficult than the kind Yusuf Pathan kept dropping at slip.Waghmode survived an easy stumping soon after, but his partner Abhimanyu Chauhan, who had shackled himself, didn’t enjoy such luck. Dhawal Kulkarni had pushed him back with short balls, Chauhan was stuck at 0 off 20 balls, but the 21st was pitched up, and snuck through the gap created by his staying on the crease. Not that Waghmode made much of his luck: he went to punch a ball rising higher than the waist and angling away, and managed a nick to provide relief to wicketkeeper Aditya Tare, who gleefully accepted the chance.Even before Yusuf Pathan could confound with his innings, Kedar Devdhar fell lbw to Dabholkar. Agarkar came back to account for the reckless Yusuf, who toe-ended a pull shot to mid-on. Ambati Rayudu, who had been off the field with illness, came to bat at No. 7, but he is left with too much to do.

Hoggard gives up one-day captaincy

Matthew Hoggard has stepped aside as Leicestershire captain in limited-overs cricket. Josh Cobb, aged just 21, has succeed him.

George Dobell11-Jul-2012Matthew Hoggard has stepped aside as Leicestershire captain in limited-overs cricket. Josh Cobb, aged just 21, has succeed him. Cobb captained the county in tourist games against West Indies and Australia and has taken over on a permanent basis for the CB40 game against Netherlands.Hoggard will continue to play limited-overs cricket but, aged 35, felt the time was right for Leicestershire to look to the future. He will continue to captain the County Championship side. Leicestershire have already been eliminated from the Friends Life t20 and are bottom of their CB40 group having failed to win any of their first five games.”Having seen how well Josh captained the side against Australia and the West Indies, Matthew Hoggard expressed a desire to hand over the one-day captaincy to him,” Mike Siddall the Leicestershire chief executive said. “With the group stages of the Friends Life t20 competition now finished, Matthew feels that the time is right for that change and he will continue to lead the team in the LV=County Championship.”Leicestershire have also announced that 32-year-old Ramnaresh Sarwan, who remains surplus to requirements by West Indies, has signed a new two-year contract which will keep him at the club until at least the end of the 2014 season. Sarwan has scored 608 championship runs at an average of 43.42 and is also seen as a good influence on the young batsman at the club, such as Cobb and Greg Smith.”Ronnie has created a tremendous impression since he joined us,” Siddall said. “We are delighted to have secured his services for another two seasons. He is a fantastic player and his influence on our younger players has been excellent.”

Siddle, Hastings join Australia A

Peter Siddle will be given a chance to warm up ahead of Australia’s Test tour of Sri Lanka after being called in to the Australia A squad that will fly to Zimbabwe on Saturday

ESPNcricinfo staff23-Jun-2011Peter Siddle will be given a chance to warm up ahead of Australia’s Test tour of Sri Lanka after being called in to the Australia A squad that will fly to Zimbabwe on Saturday. Siddle has been added to the four-day group and John Hastings will join the one-day squad after the Tasmania fast bowler James Faulkner was ruled out due to glandular fever.Faulkner, 21, was originally chosen in both formats after a summer in which he took 36 Sheffield Shield wickets at 17.72. He then headed to India and played with Pune in the IPL but he will have to wait for his big break in the Australia setup after succumbing to the illness, which will allow Siddle and Hastings some match practice in the middle of the Australian winter.The opportunity is especially valuable for Siddle, who was part of Australia’s attack during the Ashes and shouldn’t have a problem holding on to his place for the next Test series. He will be joined on the Zimbabwe trip by his Test colleague Ben Hilfenhaus as Australia aim to give their bowlers the best chance of being ready for the Sri Lanka trip in August.There will be extra competition for places in the attack for Sri Lanka, with the impressive Ryan Harris fit again after a fractured ankle ended his Ashes campaign early. The Australia A attack for the four-day games against Zimbabwe will be rounded out by Trent Copeland, Mitchell Starc and Luke Butterworth.”Unfortunately James Faulkner has been ruled out of the Australia A tour of Zimbabwe with glandular fever,” the chairman of selectors Andrew Hilditch said. “This is obviously very disappointing for James, he is a very exciting young player and the tour presented a great opportunity for him to display his skills at the next level.”The national selection panel has decided that John Hastings will join the Australia A tour for the one-day series and Peter Siddle will join the squad for the longer format games. Both John and Peter have had a reasonable period off cricket and the tour gives them a great opportunity to bowl at international level ahead of potential selection for the Australian tour of Sri Lanka.”The squad leaves Australia on Saturday for a triangular one-day series against Zimbabwe and South Africa A, before a pair of four-day games against the hosts.Australia A four-day squad Tim Paine (capt, wk), David Warner, Phillip Hughes, Usman Khawaja, Callum Ferguson, Nic Maddinson, Mitchell Marsh, Luke Butterworth, Jason Krejza, Trent Copeland, Peter Siddle, Ben Hilfenhaus, Mitchell Starc, Michael Beer.Australia A one-day squad Tim Paine (capt, wk), David Warner, Aaron Finch, Callum Ferguson, Nic Maddison, Matthew Wade, Mitchell Marsh, Luke Butterworth, Stephen O’Keefe, John Hastings, Trent Copeland, Nathan Lyon, Mitchell Starc.

Pakistan close in on rare Aussie victory

Mohammad Aamer produced another precocious spell of fast and aggressive swing bowling to nip Australia’s second-innings revival in the bud on the third morning at Headingley

The Bulletin by Andrew Miller23-Jul-2010Close
Scorecard and ball-by-ball detailsSteven Smith produced a wonderful counterattacking half-century to revive Australia, before Pakistan’s batsmen restored order to the proceedings•Getty Images

Pakistan’s quest for their first Test victory over Australia since November 1995 was firmly on track by the close of an engrossing third day of the second Test at Headingley, thanks to a 110-run stand for the second wicket between Imran Farhat and Azhar Ali that soothed the nation’s brow after another day of seismic fluctuations, during which Australia’s never-say-die spirit shone through at the moments when their fortunes with both bat and ball were at an absolute nadir.After tasting defeat in each of their last 13 Tests against Australia, including the recent debacle at Sydney in which a first-innings lead of 206 proved insufficient to secure victory, Pakistan were often battling themselves as much as the 11 men in baggy greens, and it showed. First came the swishing blade of Steven Smith, whose brilliant 77 hoisted Australia’s lead from 47 with four wickets standing to a defendable 180. Then came the bustling Doug Bollinger, who claimed two wickets in two overs – including the top-scorer Farhat for 67 – to inject new urgency into the day’s closing overs.Such was the anxiety in Pakistan’s ranks that, when the umpires called time on the dot of 6.30pm, it was Australia’s captain, Ricky Ponting, who remained in the middle, hoping to be allowed to utilise the extra half-hour. It was as if he felt more confident of claiming seven wickets in that time than Pakistan’s not-out batsmen, Azhar and Umar Akmal, did of knocking off the remaining 40 runs for victory.Surely, not even Pakistan can find a way to lose from here, however, because in between their jitters, they produced enough moments of class to leave Australia’s own frailties brutally exposed. First came the precocious Mohammad Aamer, whose devastating pace and late swing accounted for three wickets in the first hour, including the overnight stalwart Ponting for 66. Then later came Farhat and Azhar, who accumulated with great discipline, and waited for Australia’s bowlers to feed them their runs. Shane Watson, so devastating on the second day, repeatedly drifted onto Farhat’s pads, while Mitchell Johnson’s sorry campaign continued with nine wicketless overs for 39.Farhat did require a large slice of luck in his innings, however, when Watson dropped a regulation edge at first slip off Bollinger when he had made just 4. It was a costly moment so early in an uncomfortable run-chase, and though Ben Hilfenhaus soon accounted for Farhat’s captain and opening partner, Salman Butt for 14, courtesy of a thick edge to second slip, too few of Australia’s frontline seamers were able to locate the right lengths for the conditions. Bollinger got it right in the end, but by then, the match was surely beyond them.The disappointment of impending defeat will not detract, however, from a remarkable coming-of-age from Australia’s 21-year-old legspinning allrounder, Smith, who seized centre stage during the afternoon session with an onslaught of breathtaking audacity. While he was teeing off en route to a career-best 77 from 100 balls, the shift in belief from one dressing room to the other was as palpable as it had been on this very ground back in 1981, when Australia had themselves been on the receiving end of a memorably uncompromising onslaught from a bullish young allrounder.While Smith has some way to go to match the feats of Ian Botham, the fearlessness and certainty of his strokeplay was straight out of the Beefster’s top drawer, as he cracked nine fours and consecutive straight sixes, each one in the arc from extra cover to midwicket. It was not mindless slogging, however – far from it. Australia’s situation when Smith came to the crease was too delicate for out-and-out recklessness, after Aamer’s morning breakthroughs and the devastating post-lunch extraction of Michael Clarke for 76 had reduced them to 217 for 6, a lead of 47.But with the horrors of Sydney still fresh in Pakistan’s memory banks, Smith joined forces with another Test tyro, Tim Paine, to begin the long haul towards a defendable total. Paine, who had top-scored with 17 during the first-day rout, cracked Aamer through the covers twice in two overs as Pakistan dallied with semi-defensive fields in anticipation of the second new ball, while Smith telegraphed his own bubbly confidence by advancing down the track to Danish Kaneria in defence as much as attack, before finally slotting him over long-off for an agenda-setting boundary.With the lead at 76, Paine’s purposeful stay ended in flaccid circumstances, as Kaneria tossed up a rank long-hop that nevertheless turned and bounced upon pitching, for Azhar Ali to collect a toe-ended cut in the covers. Smith’s response, however, belied his 21 years and one-Test experience, as he chose his shots with the expertise of a veteran, using the hardness of the new ball to gain full value for each of his full-blooded mows through the covers and midwicket.At the other end, Johnson escaped a king pair to help add 37 priceless runs for the eighth wicket, before Asif nailed him lbw on the line of leg stump, while Hilfenhaus built on his Test-best 56 not out at Lord’s to crack 17 from 16, including three fours in a single over from an over-reaching Aamer.But it was the arrival of the No. 11 Bollinger that really showcased Smith’s cricketing brain, as he farmed the strike with calm confidence to limit his colleague to nine runless deliveries in 5.4 overs, while at the same time carving 29 priceless runs from 25. Pakistan were visibly twitchy as tea was delayed to accommodate his mood-changing performance, and Umar Gul’s clear reaction was one of relief when Smith finally dragged a slower ball onto his off stump with the score on 349.Pakistan’s confidence is fickle at the best of times, but they had been flushed with belief in the first hour of the day, after Aamer had produced another precocious spell of fast and aggressive swing bowling to nip Australia’s second-innings revival in the bud. Overnight the Aussies had been trailing by 34 runs overnight with Clarke and Ponting well set in their third-wicket stand of 81. But it took just 16 deliveries for the vital breakthrough to be made, as Ponting slashed ambitiously at a booming outswinger from Aamer, and snicked a thin edge through to the keeper.Buoyed by the early wicket, Aamer surged onto the offensive and added his second only two overs later, as Hussey was deceived by a cutter that gripped the turf, leapt at his gloves and ballooned tantalisingly to Umar Akmal at second slip. And he made it three in four overs when Marcus North (0) poked flat-footedly from deep in the crease to detonate his own leg stump with a fat inside-edge.Clarke eventually brought Australia into credit in the same over that he brought up his half-century from 99 deliveries, and by lunch he had produced the most composed innings of the match to date to move to 76 not out, only for Asif to strike with his first ball after the break, a perfectly subtle outswinger that grazed the edge through to the keeper. It was a timely reminder of the gulf in class between the two sets of seamers on display in this game. And that, in the final analysis, will surely be the difference between these teams.

Bangalore aim for strong finish

Bangalore may have made it through to the semi-finals, thanks to a healthy net run-rate, but have every reason to go all out against Mumbai Indians

The Preview by Sidharth Monga16-Apr-2010

Match facts

Royal Challengers Bangalore v Mumbai Indians, Bangalore
Saturday, April 17
Start time 1600 (1030 GMT)Jacques Kallis is competing with Sachin Tendulkar for the orange cap•Indian Premier League

Big Picture

Royal Challengers Bangalore may have – for all practical purposes – made it through to the semi-finals, thanks to a healthy net run-rate, but have every reason to go all out against Mumbai Indians in their last league match. They are one of the few teams to have beaten Mumbai this season, and they will want to convert it into some sort of a hold, for another meeting between the two teams in immediate future cannot be ruled out. Moreover, if they lose, Bangalore leave themselves open to being No. 4 in the table, which would mean a semi-final against Mumbai, and back-to-back matches against a team who have just beaten them. Mumbai will want to forget all the permutations and maintain a winning run.

Form guide (most recent first)

Bangalore WLWLL
Mumbai Indians WWLLW

Team talk

It’s time for both teams to iron out final creases in their combinations before they get into knock-out territory. Bangalore have to decide between Ross Taylor and Cameron White, Praveen Kumar and Pankaj Singh, and Manish Pandey and any other opener. They are likely to continue trusting Taylor and Pandey, and Pankaj – after taking 2 for 27 in his only match of the season – could get another chance to present his case.Mumbai need to decide on which two overseas players to pick out of Dwayne Bravo, JP Duminy and Ryan McLaren. They have also broken up a successful opening combination, and might go back to Shikhar Dhawan after Sanath Jayasuriya and Chandan Madan didn’t perform. Ali Murtaza is giving R Sathish a run for the bowling allrounder’s slot, and the absence of a proper wicketkeeper could be a problem, with Ambati Rayudu, Aditya Tare and Madan being lotteries behind the stumps.

Previously…

Bangalore 3 Mumbai 2
Their earlier encounter was one-way traffic, with R Vinay Kumar and Dale Steyn slicing open Mumbai’s batting, and Jacques Kallis and Pandey leading the chase.

In the spotlight

Jacques Kallis followed up his captain’s criticism with 4-0-19-1 (Shane Watson’s wicket) and a duck in a simple chase against Rajasthan. Good enough on the day, but not the Kallis that set the first half of the tournament alight. It also meant that he didn’t follow the time-honoured tradition, one he and Sachin Tendulkar have been following, of taking the orange cap off each other’s head every time they bat.Dale Steyn has been terrorising batsmen with his pace, bounce and movement. In the first match against Mumbai, he went for only 26 in four overs and took three wickets. But even during that spell, Tendulkar clipped three boundaries off the three balls he faced from Steyn. In fact, Steyn’s previous tête-à-tête with Tendulkar was disastrous too, figures of 0 for 89 during the double-century in the Gwalior ODI. Add the century in the Kolkata Test, and Steyn’s beauty to get Tendulkar in Nagpur seems like an age ago. Can Steyn pull one back in Bangalore?

Prime numbers and trivia

  • Kallis has scored ten fifty-plus scores in the IPL (all seasons), Tendulkar is joint-second with eight. At 15 half-centuries, Kallis is five behind the overall Twenty20 record held by Brad Hodge.
  • Across all three IPLs, Harbhajan Singh has been the stingiest bowler, conceding an average of 6.41 an over. Anil Kumble is a close third, with 6.52.
  • Bangalore has been the most boundary-happy venue this year, with 57.66% of the runs scored there coming in boundaries. Only Cuttack has a higher ratio – 59.76%.
  • Mumbai have been the best batting side in the last six overs, scoring at 11.04 an over, and the best bowling side too, conceding 8.12 an over. Not surprisingly that difference of 2.79 is the highest, with Bangalore’s 1.19 being a distant second.

    The chatter

    “Our goal this time is to go one step further than what we did last season.”

    “I was never in doubt [that others apart from me are performing too]. People questioned me, but I was never in doubt.”

Lions and Warriors win first semi-finals

A round-up of the latest matches in the Pro20 competition, including the first leg of the semi-finals

Cricinfo staff27-Feb-2010While the administrators at the Gauteng Cricket Board continue to rumble in the concrete jungle, the Lions have finally turned their season around by sneaking into the semi-finals of the Pro20 competition. They went on to win the first leg of their best of three last-four clash with the Titans.First, it was a two-run win over the Eagles that helped the Lions advance to the knock-out stage of the competition. They racked up an impressive 184 for 6, with Jonathan Vandiar’s 56 off 40 balls taking the Lions from 18 for 1 to 138 for 3. The middle order chipped in with handy contributions from Richard Cameron (36 off 20) and Vaughn van Jaarsveld (37 off 23). The Eagles bowlers conceded their biggest total in the competition and only Johan van der Wath (2 for 22) and Jandre Coetzee (9 for 27) looked to be doing any sort of containing job.The Eagles lost Adrian McLaren with the score on just 16, but Morne van Wyk’s impressive run in the competition continued. He smashed 74 off 51 balls and when he departed the Eagles needed 35 runs to win off three overs. The Lions sank their claws into the Eagles three times in those final three overs, with Ethan O’ Reilly (2 for 36), Zander de Bruyn (1 for 21) and Shane Burger (1 for 46) all striking once. The Eagles needed 18 runs off the last three balls, and managed 15. Robbie Frylink had the best return for the Lions with 2 for 35, and kept his position at the top of the bowling rankings, which he shares with team-mate O’Reilly.In Centurion, the Warriors suffered their first defeat of the tournament and it was a hefty one. They went down by 55 runs to the Titans. The hosts scored 182 for 4 in their 20 overs. Jacques Rudolph was the main contributor with 69 off 37 balls, including six fours and three sixes. Gulam Bodi added 44 off 37 balls. Garnet Kruger (3 for 26) removed Rudolph, Bodi and took the opening wicket of Blake Snijman.The Warriors needed one batsman to go big but their highest scorer was Jon-Jon Smuts (34 off 29) and the rest of the batsmen failed to get out of the teens. Pierre Joubert took the wickets of the opening batsmen, Smuts and Ashwell Prince (13 off 11) before David Wiese mauled the Warriors with his 5 for 19. With none of the batsmen able to get going, the Warriors ended on 127. That result cut the Eastern Cape franchise’s lead at the top of the table to just one point. Ironically, it was the Titans who were nipping at their heels in second place.The first semi-final took place in Johannesburg, where the Lions left it to the last ball to beat the Titans by four wickets. The Titans batted first and lost two wickets in the fourth over to O’Reilly (2 for 18) to dent their charge. Heino Kuhn’s 35 off 27 balls along with Wiese’s 26 off 12 balls added late impetus for the visitors who finished on 143 for 5. Burger (2 for 24) was the only other wicket taker for the hosts.The Lions’ chase began in subdued fashion, with just 32 runs on the board in the sixth over when Vandiar (10 off 16) become Ethy Mbhalati’s (1 for 19) only victim. Neil McKenzie stayed calm, adding 35 off 34 balls, aided by the aggression of Richard Cameron (17 off 9) and van Jaarsveld (19 off 17). Faf du Plessis (3 for 18) removed McKenzie, van Jaarsveld and then captain Thami Tsolekile (20 off 10) to end as the Titans’ best bowler. Jean Symes hit 30 off 25 balls to take the Lions to the brink, but it was up to Frylinck to get a boundary off the last ball to win the match. The Lions go to Centurion next week with a massive advantage over their neighbours, being one up in the tie.In Port Elizabeth , Colin Ingram justified his inclusion in the national Twenty20 provisional squad with a fluent, undefeated 60 off 41 balls for the Warriors. They took on the Cobras in the second semi. The Cobras only made three inroads into the Warriors batting – the first two when Smuts (24 off 19) and Prince (5 off 12) departed by the sixth over and the only other when Justin Kreusch (11 off 16) fell to Robin Peterson (1 for 27). Davy Jacobs scored 42 off 32 not out as the Warriors totalled 149 for 3.The Cobras lost Andrew Puttick for just three in their reply. Peterson opened the innings with Puttick and he carried his bat to end on an undefeated 50 off 46 balls. His only assistance came from captain Justin Kemp (43 off 32 balls). The Cobras needed seven to win off the last four balls and looked likely to win the match, until Rory Kleinveldt was run out by Rusty Theron, who also took 2 for 23, off the penultimate ball. They ended on 146 for 8 and go to Cape Town one down in their tie.

Mayes seals chase as England U19s land consolation victory

Seamers restrict free-flowing India before top-order knock off target with 113 balls to spare

ECB Reporters Network supported by Rothesay07-Jul-2025England U19s ended their Youth ODI series against India on a high with an impressive seven-wicket victory at Visit Worcestershire New Road.The tourists took the series by a 3-2 margin but England deservedly won the final game after an excellent bowling display restricted India’s power-packed batting line-up to 210 for nine. A strong collective effort saw all six bowlers take wickets with Ralphie Albert (two for 24) and Alex French (two for 37) most impressive. Only RS Ambrish (66 not out from 81 balls) passed 40.England then cruised to 211 for three with 113 balls to spare. Ben Mayes (82 not out ,76 balls) and Thomas Rew (49 not out, 37) saw their side home at a canter after Ben Dawkins (66, 53) laid the platform with his third successive score in the sixties.After India chose to bat, England’s rejigged seam attack began superbly with French and Matt Firbank each striking in their first over. Ayush Mhatre’s unproductive series concluded with a careless flick to mid-on off Firbank before French added the big wicket of Vihaan Malhotra. Scorer of a high-class century in the previous game, Malhotra edged a superb delivery to wicketkeeper Rew.Fourteen-year-old Vaibhav Suryavanshi, 322 from 162 balls in the first four games in the series, this time lacked fluency. He hit Firbank for successive sixes but was well-contained apart from that before, on 33 from 42, slicing Sebastian Morgan to deep third.Leicestershire seamer Alex Green maintained the pressure and was rewarded with the wicket of Rahul Kumar, well caught on the long-leg rope by Dawkins. When England turned to spin, Albert soon ousted the dangerous Harvansh Pangalia (24, 37) lbw, sweeping,Albert added the wicket of Kanishk Chouhan, slickly stumped by Rew having been lured down the wicket, and it was left to Ambrish to ensure the innings filled its 50 overs. He did so with a skilful half-century, shepherding the tail.England’s reply took an early hit when Joe Moores bottom-edged a pull at Deepesh Davendra to wicketkeeper Pangalia, but Dawkins and Mayes broke the back of the chase with a stand of 107 in 13 overs. Dawkins batted with increasing authority until, in pursuit of his fourth six, he lifted Naman Pushpak to long-on where Chauhan took an excellent running catch.When Pushpak turned one through the gate of Rocky Flintoff, India had a glimmer of hope, but captain Rew reached the crease with the equation still very favourable to England – 90 needed from 31 overs. Mayes reached his half-century from 48 balls and stayed strong to unfurl an immaculately organised innings while Rew ended the match with a flurry of boundaries against a flagging attack in an unbroken stand of 90 from 73 balls.

India, South Africa move on from World Cup heartbreak as Wanderers turn pink

Sandwiched between a T20I series in a T20 World Cup year and a Test series, the ODI series will see teams missing several big names

Karthik Krishnaswamy16-Dec-20232:48

Manjrekar: Wouldn’t want to change Rahul’s batting position

Big picture

A month ago, South Africa and India lost ODIs that may have felt like the most pivotal matches of their lives. On Sunday, they will return to the format for the first time since Kolkata and Ahmedabad, and things will feel a lot less life-or-death.This ODI series is sandwiched between a T20I series in a T20 World Cup year and a Test series, and will for that reason miss a large number of household names. It will feature, instead, a cast of characters of whom many won’t be too well known outside their home countries. South Africa’s squad includes five players who have played ten or fewer ODIs, and India’s as many as nine.The series will give these players a chance to make selectors’ lives a little more difficult the next time they sit down to pick a squad for a higher-profile series. This isn’t to say that this one lacks profile entirely – the Wanderers will turn pink on Sunday for breast-cancer awareness, and a sellout crowd is expected to pack the stands.

Form guide

South Africa LWLWW (last five ODIs, most recent first)

India LWWWW

In the spotlight

With Quinton de Kock retired from ODIs, Reeza Hendricks is set to enjoy an unbroken run of games at the top of the order. He will want to make full use of that chance, though. While he has been in tremendous form in T20Is – he has scored seven fifties in his last 13 innings in the format – he has been less assured in ODIs so far, averaging under 30 after 31 innings. A 75-ball 85 against England during the World Cup showed just how gifted he is, but he still needs to show he can be consistent as well as eye-catching in the 50-overs format.KL Rahul didn’t feature in the T20I series, and he will want to remind the selectors of what he is capable of in that format, with a T20 World Cup on the horizon. He has been out of India’s recent Test XIs, but he is in their squad, auditioning for a role – keeper-batter – that he’s only played once in a first-class game. It’s pretty much on point for Rahul’s career that he is captaining India in the middle-length format while trying to stake his claim in the shortest and longest ones.

Team news

Left-arm quick Nandre Burger made his South Africa debut during the third T20I on Thursday, and looks set to get an ODI cap as well. It remains to be seen if South Africa pick both their spinners or leave one of Keshav Maharaj and Tabraiz Shamsi on the bench.South Africa (probable): 1 Reeza Hendricks, 2 Tony de Zorzi, 3 Rassie van der Dussen, 4 Aiden Markram (capt), 5 Heinrich Klaasen (wk), 6 David Miller, 7 Andile Phehlukwayo, 8 Wiaan Mulder, 9 Nandre Burger, 10 Keshav Maharaj/Tabraiz Shamsi, 11 Lizaad Williams3:33

KL Rahul: Samson will bat at No. 5 or 6

Rinku Singh may have staked a claim for an ODI debut following an impressive T20I series, with Sanju Samson India’s other option at No. 6. And unless a non-regular opener is pushed up the order, it seems likely that B Sai Sudharsan will also receive an ODI cap. Tilak Varma is likely to feature in the middle order and give India a sixth bowling option.India (probable): 1 Ruturaj Gaikwad, 2 B Sai Sudharsan, 3 Tilak Varma, 4 Shreyas Iyer, 5 KL Rahul (capt & wk), 6 Rinku Singh/Sanju Samson, 7 Axar Patel, 8 Arshdeep Singh, 9 Avesh Khan, 10 Kuldeep Yadav, 11 Mukesh Kumar

Pitch and conditions

The Wanderers is usually a high-scoring ODI venue thanks to its true bounce and the rarefied Highveld atmosphere. Three of the last four games here have produced 300-plus first-innings totals. A largely clear day is expected in Johannesburg, with temperatures in the high 20s (Celsius).

Stats and trivia

  • The last three ODI series South Africa have hosted against India have all turned out one-sided. South Africa won 2-0 and 3-0 in 2013-14 and 2021-22, and in between India won 5-1 when they visited in 2017-18.
  • Kuldeep Yadav (17 wickets at 13.88) and Yuzvendra Chahal (18 at 22.72) have terrific ODI records in South Africa.
  • Shubman Gill, who has been rested to help him prepare for the Test series, has lost a chance to claim a coveted ODI record. He ends 2023 with 1584 ODI runs at an average of 63.36. Three more innings may have given him an outside chance to go past Sachin Tendulkar’s record tally of 1894 from 1998.

Quotes

“It’s never nice to exit a World Cup like that. I thought we had something really good going and that does filter into this team – from the good side of things. I would say most guys are over it. The nature of cricket nowadays is the schedule is so hectic you are almost forced to move on as quickly as possible so we are pretty much past it and looking forward to the series.”

Smith's 64 sets up nervy win to keep Rockets in contention

Phoenix remain winless as they fall short in another run chase

ECB Reporters Network19-Aug-2023Trent Rockets kept their hope of qualifying for the knock-out stages of The Women’s Hundred alive with a decisive win against Phoenix by 3 runs at Trent Bridge, defending 134 for 6 after Bryony Smith smashed a 64 off 40 balls.A strong performance from the home side’s bowlers gave their side a chance, restricting the Phoenix to 131 for 4 to win by a narrow margin of three runs despite Amy Jones hit 46 not out off 30 balls.Rockets still need to win their final game at The Oval on Monday afternoon, and hope Welsh Fire lose their final two games, with all three results creating a big enough margin for them to leap ahead on net run-rate.

In a must-win game, the Rockets tried to play more positive cricket in the Powerplay, scoring 44 runs off their first 25 balls and losing just one wicket. Smith, the opener, did most of the scoring, picking up five fours and a six while scoring 34 runs off 16 inside the Powerplay and losing the wicket of Lizelle Lee, chipping to cover off Sophie Devine for 3 off 8 balls.Nat Sciver-Brunt added further impetus to the innings with 18 runs off 11, but her Rockets side stumbled in the middle phase: Sciver-Brunt was bowled by Emily Arlott, who then extended Harmanpreet Kaur’s poor run of form by trapping her lbw on review.Smith brought up the fastest half-century for a Rockets Women player off 28 balls and was the backbone of their batting performance, but was stumped off Katie Levick as Phoenix took pace off the ball to good effect. Levick also bowled Fran Wilson on the reverse, while Arlott backed her slower balls at the death to finish with 3 for 15 from her 20 balls and restrict Rockets to 134.”We were happy with the way we dragged it back after at one point it was looking like they might score 180 or 200,” Arlott said. “We clawed it back after we got Bryony out.”We took the pace off and that made it much harder for them to get the ball away. They have a strong batting line-up and when you have a top order that are scoring runs so heavily, it helps and that sets a platform for the rest of the team.”Phoenix fell behind the required rate in the run chase, with Eve Jones (20 off 20) and Sophie Devine (29 off 24) struggling to get the ball away. Alexa Stonehouse was particularly impressive, swinging the new ball and conceding only two runs as she bowled the first 10 balls of the innings.

Rockets were sloppy in the field but their first wicket came thanks to Stonehouse’s direct hit, racing in from short fine leg to find Jones short of her ground at the bowler’s end after she had survived a stumping chance. Devine fell five balls later, edging Kirstie Gordon behind while slog-sweeping.After Erin Burns hacked a full toss to deep midwicket, Amy Jones kept the game alive, hitting Stonehouse for three fours in a row to take an equation of 24 off 10 balls down to 12 off 7. But she was starved of strike at the death and Sterre Kalis could only manage seven runs off the final set, with 11 required.This was the retiring Katherine Sciver-Brunt’s final game at Trent Bridge, in front of a record 10,350 crowd. She returned figures of 0 for 32 from her 20 balls, bowling off her short run-up, and effected the run-out of Arlott before leading the team on a lap of honour.

Beating Afghanistan will help Bangladesh cricket 'start becoming normal' – Shakib Al Hasan

Despite both teams being packed with spinners, the two captains agree that it’s the batsmen who will decide the result of the one-off Test

Mohammad Isam04-Sep-2019Shakib Al Hasan has set his team’s agenda ahead of their one-off Test against Afghanistan: bring back the good times to Bangladesh cricket, given most of the men’s representative sides have produced poor results over the last few months.The senior team didn’t meet expectations at the World Cup, where they failed to reach the knockouts, and then had a shocker of a tour of Sri Lanka, where they lost all three ODIs. The A team, meanwhile, struggled against Afghanistan A at home, and a BCB XI couldn’t reach the final of a red-ball pre-season domestic tournament in Bengaluru.ALSO READ: Preview – It’s spin v spin and Shakib v RashidIt was only the Under-19 side that made good strides in a tri-nation tournament in England, finishing runners-up, and the under-performance of most of sides is seen as a wider malaise within the country’s cricketing set-up.Shakib, the captain of the T20I and Test sides, said that a win over Afghanistan would act as a balm.”Except the Under-19 side who made it to a tournament final, we haven’t really had a good time of late,” Shakib said. “We [the senior side] didn’t play well recently, and neither did our A team. So if we win this game, things will start becoming normal.”Shakib was critical of those who have questioned the senior team’s all-spin tactic for the Test, but he maintained that the Test match would be won and lost by how the batsmen perform. “We don’t criticise England and Australia for picking four seamers and no spinners,” he argued. “So I am not too bothered about it. We will try to win with one, two or three seamers, but we must stick to our plan.”Whenever our spinners have got their preferred type of pitches, they have done well at home. Having said that, they [Afghanistan] also have quality spinners. I feel the batting of both teams will make the difference.”Rashid Khan catches up with Bangladeshi legspinner Jubair Hossain•BCB

Rashid Khan, who was appointed Afghanistan’s all-format captain last month, agreed that the batsmen would decide the fate of the Test in Chattogram, but, more crucially, he was hoping for more improvement from the side that now has a 50-50 Test record; a loss against India and a win over Ireland in their first two outings.”We are new in this format,” Rashid said. “We cannot be expected to beat Australia in our third or fourth game. I think over time we will get better, like we saw Bangladesh beating Australia. Once we get everything right, we can beat other teams.”But experience-wise, you need to play more matches in this format. We have the experience and knowledge of ODIs and T20Is, but it takes time in Test cricket. The quicker we learn, the better we will become.”ALSO READ: Five challenges for new Afghanistan captain Rashid KhanRashid jogged his mind back to Afghanistan’s underwhelming performance in their inaugural Test last year, against India, but underscored how, against Ireland earlier this year, his side gave a much improved performance.”Our first Test was a bad game, against India,” Rashid said. “To be honest, we didn’t know what was happening in that game. It was surprising for us. It looked like a dream for the players and the country. But we didn’t control our nerves in that game. We improved vastly in the next game, against Ireland. We will get better as we play more.”Rashid made it clear that now, as captain, he would not put himself under any additional pressure. “Captaincy won’t be a burden on me,” he said. “Senior cricketers [Mohammad] Nabi and Asghar [Afghan] are always helping me.”I won’t put myself under extra pressure. I am focused fully on my bowling, and I don’t know who is the captain. I will try to keep enjoying what I do, be relaxed and as cool as possible. If I take pressure, it will affect my performance and put my team under pressure too.”

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