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.

Matthew Kuhnemann five-for guides Durham to dramatic final-day triumph over Worcestershire

Scott Borthwick, David Bedingham lay foundation for victory with 196-run partnership

ECB Reporters Network16-Apr-2023Durham 425 for 9 dec (Bedingham 118, Raine 71, Lees 70, Gibbon 4-92) and 242 for 4 dec (Borthwick 108*, Bedingham 86) beat Worcestershire 366 for 5 dec (Haynes 134, Potts 3-110) and 192 (D’Oliveira 42, Haynes 40, Kuhnemann 5-53) by 121 runsMatthew Kuhnemann claimed a five-wicket haul to guide Durham to a dramatic final-day victory over Worcestershire in their LV= Insurance County Championship Division Two clash at Seat Unique Riverside.Durham coach Ryan Campbell promised that his side would not settle for a draw, and his team were as good as his word. Scott Borthwick and David Bedingham laid the foundation of the victory with a 196-run partnership in a morning onslaught as Durham’s skipper scored his first first-class century in two years.The Pears required 314 to win from 70 overs after Durham declared. However, after being reduced to 3 for 2, the visitors were in a desperate scramble to rescue a draw. Kuhnemann provided the impetus with his skillful left-arm spin, and was supported by Matthew Potts and Paul Coughlin.Adam Finch and Dillon Pennington almost combined with a late rearguard action to deny the hosts, but Kuhnemann removed the latter to secure Durham’s first win of the campaign.Beginning the final day with a 155-run lead, Borthwick and Bedingham found their rhythm and were able to accelerate the run rate. Borthwick set the tempo and reached three figures for the first time since the 2021 season, and his first hundred at the Riverside since his return to the club.Whereas Borthwick’s innings highlighted his timing and touch, Bedingham offered a brutal assault, scoring four sixes, dispatching one onto the health club balcony, in his 87-ball 86 before being caught one ball removed after being skittled by a Finch no-ball.The declaration came 20 minutes before lunch, and there was time for Potts to make inroads as Jake Libby was caught at the second attempt by Michael Jones at first slip. Ed Pollock blasted the new ball in the first innings, but there would be no repeat performance as the left-hander was well caught by a diving Ben Raine at mid-on.Worcestershire needed to calm proceedings, and it fell upon their first-innings centurion Jack Haynes and Azhar Ali to temporarily halt the Durham charge. However, both Ali and Haynes would make mistakes against Kuhnemann, and two further brilliant diving catches from Raine at deep backward square leg put the pressure squarely back on the Pears.Kuhnemann’s impressive spell continued with a beauty to bowl Gareth Roderick to open up an end for the Durham attack. Matthew Waite and Brett D’Oliveira were in a desperate battle to stem the tide. They put on 44 for the sixth wicket, but Coughlin prised out Waite earning his reward for a tight line before Joe Leach became Kuhnemann’s fourth victim for an 18-ball duck.Durham needed something special to turn a promising position into a victory. It was no surprise that it was Potts that broke the game open. He displayed his international quality by moving the ball just enough to find D’Oliveira’s outside edge. Ben Gibbon was powerless to follow his skipper back the pavilion from the next delivery as Potts put Durham on the brink.Pennington saw off the hat-trick ball, but he and Finch faced the daunting task of fending off 19 overs to see out an improbable draw. The two tailenders put up a great fight and saw out 14 of the 19 overs, but Kuhnemann turned one past Pennington to secure a 121-run win for the hosts.

Mark Wood: 'I was trying to bowl fast, it could have gone either way'

England quick takes cues from how home attack went about their work

Matt Roller24-Sep-2022If you ever need a reminder of Pakistan’s fast-bowling culture, a quick glance at the honours board of five-wicket hauls in ODIs at Karachi’s National Stadium provides it. The first three names engraved read as follows: Waqar Younis, Wasim Akram, Shoaib Akhtar.Mark Wood’s name is not on that list just yet but his first outing in Pakistan was enough to set tongues wagging in the way those greats used to, as he nudged 156kph (97mph) on the broadcasters’ speed gun. Waqar and Wasim were close at hand, waxing lyrical on commentary about his express pace.”They are guys I grew up watching,” Wood said. “I look up to them a bit so if they give you any praise, you know you must be doing something right. I value their opinion. It seems like this country produces a lot of fast bowlers and when you look at the pitches, their skill level has to be really high to get wickets and they’ve got that deadly pace as well. They have a mystery about them that makes them deadly.”Wood spent the first two games of the series on the sidelines as England take a cautious approach to his comeback from double elbow surgery, but found himself studying Pakistan’s modern-day crop of fast bowlers in a bid to pick up some insight into how to bowl on the low, skiddy surfaces that have been served up.Related

  • Mark Wood: 'My role isn't to try and go for five, six an over, it's to try and get good players out'

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  • Wood focused on World Cup readiness despite stellar display on England return

“I feel that when teams come to England, they’ll look at how our bowlers bowl and learn,” he said. “You get a feel for bowling the right length and I noticed that the Pakistan bowlers were getting a lot of wickets ‘bowled’ from lengths that would not be a ‘bowled’ length in England. It was back of a length, and the ball was skidding through.”I knew my length could be half a yard shorter and it would still cause problems. I literally tried to whack the wicket as hard as I could from back of a length and some were going through hip-high, some were going through head-high. Last night, I could really let it fly and my margin of error was a little bit bigger because of that.”Wood has kept a close eye on Haris Rauf in particular. “He’s someone that’s my height, my pace, skiddy,” he said. “And he has an excellent slower ball. His arm-speed for his slower ball is very good and that’s something I’m not good at and would like to get better at. Maybe I’ll chat to him and see if he’s willing to share some secrets.”His first wicket on his return was Babar Azam, caught on the deep-third boundary by Reece Topley while slashing at a second successive short ball. It was his first wicket since cleaning up Lanchester CC’s Cam Metcalfe when he made an unsuccessful attempt at a comeback in club cricket for Ashington in July, and his first in an England shirt since dismissing Kraigg Brathwaite in the Antigua Test in March.Babar Azam was given the hurry-up by Wood•Getty Images

“Mo [Moeen Ali] told me: ‘I need you to be aggressive here,'” Wood said. “We’d spent the game before not bowling any bouncers. That was it. I let it fly. I was trying to bowl fast, really. It could have gone either way: they could have smacked me, but we got a couple of wickets. I just tried to charge in and make something happen.”The wicket prompted pin-drop silence from a sold-out crowd. “I was cheering so I didn’t notice,” he said, laughing. “It was loud, proper loud. Babar just walks out to warm up and they go mental. It’s crazy for us English people because obviously it’s not our main sport but here, it is. It means so much to so many people here.”Wood is 32 but a relatively inexperienced T20 bowler – Friday night was his 41st game in the format – and is still teaching himself how to stay “level” after games. “When I have a bad day, I’m disappointed, but I’m not, like, down in the dumps, he said. “If I had a good day then, look, it’s a good day, but I could easily have gone for runs.”He [Babar] could have cut that for six and all of a sudden, I’ve gone for four and six in my first four balls and I’m under pressure. I loved it. I enjoyed it so much, being back out there for England and I felt really happy to get them wickets. If I can bowl quickly and try and help the team that way, that’s what I’m going to try and do.”Wood is unlikely to play in Sunday night’s fourth T20I, suggesting that he arrived in Pakistan expecting to feature once in Karachi and twice in Lahore as England look to ensure he arrives in Australia fit and fresh ahead of next month’s World Cup. He admitted that he felt “rank” after his four overs on Thursday night and the next challenge will be backing his performances up.He hopes to be part of the Test squad that will tour Pakistan in December, having had a taste of the McCullum-Stokes era when he trained with them before the third Test against South Africa, and will take a red ball in his kitbag to Australia. “If they want me, I’ll be ready to go,” he said.

Conor McKerr makes most of last-minute call-up to peg Warwickshire back

Leaders Surrey lose Dan Worrall to injury – but McKerr deputises with key strikes

ECB Reporters Network25-Jul-2022Warwickshire (Sibley 43, McAndrew 40*, McKerr 3-39) vs SurreyWarwickshire battled their way to 240 for 8, despite no one passing fifty, after being put in to bat by unbeaten Division One leaders Surrey in their LV= Insurance County Championship match at the Kia Oval.Seven of their top eight got to 22 or more, without going on to a significant score, although allrounder Nathan McAndrew remains 40 not out after a determined effort in the final session of a hard-fought day.Dom Sibley’s 43 was the best individual score, while Surrey’s five-man pace attack all impressed with 19-year old seamer Tom Lawes perhaps the stand-out bowler with figures of 2 for 38 from 20 overs.Surrey were missing their Australian spearhead Dan Worrall, who took 11 wickets in the game in last week’s win against Essex, due to a shoulder injury suffered in the warm-up.Related

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  • Michael Jones' career-best 206 not out drives Durham into ascendancy

Conor McKerr, called up to replace Worrall, ended the day with 3 for 39 and Jamie Overton took 2 for 47 despite having to lead the field for treatment to a sore finger on his bowling hand, sustained when hit a painful blow at first slip in mid-morning.15 minutes before the toss, McKerr had been at home in Weybridge getting ready for a day trip to London with his wife Paige, but was on the field of play two hours later. “It was a great telephone call to get, telling me to get straight to the ground, although obviously it was bad luck for Dan Worrall getting injured in the warm-up,” he said.”I think sometimes the best way is being thrown in like that, because you just go out there and concentrate on doing what comes naturally. I thought our whole seam attack bowled very well all day today, and everyone has a lot of confidence at the moment so we are all feeding off one another.”On a grassy surface, Warwickshire initially did well to get to lunch at 71 for 2 with Sibley twice dropped on 19 and 28 but always showing typical grit in the tricky conditions.Cameron Steel, on as a substitute fielder while McKerr travelled to the ground, could not hold a difficult low diving catch to his left at a widish fourth slip when Sibley edged Overton and later in the morning session the Warwickshire opener saw Ryan Patel spill a straightforward chance at third slip off Lawes.Surrey’s pace battery also beat the bat with regularity but their only successes before lunch came when Alex Davies, on 23, edged Lawes’ second ball to Overton at first slip and then, at 65, when McKerr – having taken the field just after 12.15pm – struck with the first ball of his second over to have Chris Benjamin held by Will Jacks at first slip for 7, pushing crookedly at one that lifted and left him.The first hour of the afternoon session was a particularly attritional affair and Warwickshire’s first innings looked in danger of grinding almost to a halt when Sibley’s defiance was ended by Lawes, who made a ball lift sharply to have the former England Test opener caught off the face of his bat by keeper Ben Foakes, and Sam Hain was dismissed seven overs later by Jordan Clark.Warwickshire were 107 for 4 in the 54th over when Hain, having made it to 27, edged the persevering Clark to second slip where Ollie Pope held on to the catch at the second attempt.McKerr’s second spell just before tea saw an increase, at last, in the scoring rate with his first three overs back costing 30 runs. But both Michael Burgess, twice, and Will Rhodes were fortunate to see short-arm pulls at the pacy McKerr result in top-edged fours over the keeper and slip cordon and Rhodes also thick-edged the same bowler between slips and gully for another streaky boundary.Burgess, however, fell for 22 to Overton’s fourth ball after tea, in the session’s second over, when he edged an outswinger to Foakes and McAndrew almost immediately needed an on-field concussion test when, trying to hook, he was hit flush on the helmet by Overton.Rhodes was livid with himself for flashing at McKerr, in the 76th over, and edging to Foakes to depart for a 74-ball 34, and Danny Briggs left shaking his head in disbelief when, after scoring a useful 23 in 46-run seventh wicket stand with McAndrew, he chipped a full toss from Overton straight back to the bowler.And Surrey were further boosted when McKerr won an lbw appeal against Brad Wheal, on loan from Hampshire, to dismiss the tailender for 4 with the day’s penultimate ball.

Kuhn and Dickson power Kent to victory

A first-class career best five-wicket haul for Ivan Thomas, giving the young seamer nine wickets in the match

ECB Reporters Network21-Aug-2018
ScorecardHeino Kuhn and Sean Dickson took full advantage of much improved conditions to compile an unbroken double-century partnership and steer Kent to a three-day victory in their Specsavers County Championship match against Leicestershire.Coming together when the visitors, chasing 253, had been reduced to 38 for 2, Kuhn and Dickson batted with impressive purpose and positivity in scoring at more than five runs an over.After two days of heavy cloud, under which the ball swung the air and nipped around on the previously used pitch, the weather cleared shortly after lunch. The pitch flattened quickly, and in the hot sunshine only Mohammad Abbas offered any sort of consistent threat.Kuhn, who had been first to his half-century, was overtaken by Dickson, who went on to hit three sixes and 12 fours in going to his century off 131 deliveries. He finished on 134 not out, with Kuhn unbeaten on 92, their third wicket partnership of 215 having been compiled in 41.3 overs.Earlier, a first-class career best five-wicket haul for Ivan Thomas, giving the young seamer nine wickets in the match, saw Leicestershire bowled out for 227 in their second innings.Resuming on 126 for 5, Leicestershire lost Ben Raine in just the third over of the day, Harry Podmore seaming a delivery away from the left-hander and finding the edge of the bat, giving Sam Billings a straightforward catch behind the stumps.Callum Parkinson was then bounced out by Thomas, gloving a bouncer to second slip. Harry Dearden, 61 not out overnight, had taken his score on to 74 when he tried to cut a wide delivery from Darren Stevens and succeeded only in top edging a catch to slip, where Dickson took a chest-high catch.Leicestershire were in danger of subsiding, but Dieter Klein put bat to ball, thumping a run-a-ball 41 to extend their lead past 200 before being adjudged leg before on the back foot to the legspin of Joe Denly, and Gavin Griffiths and Abbas added another 20 runs for the final wicket before Abbas slog-swept Denly into the hand of Thomas at deep backward square.Abbas, who had taken six wickets in Kent’s first innings, then had Daniel Bell-Drummond caught behind and flattened Grant Stewart’s off-stump to give the Foxes hope of forcing victory – a hope inexorably extinguished by Dickson and Kuhn.

CSK eye direct path to seventh IPL final

Three successive losses have sucked momentum out of Sunrisers Hyderabad. Now, they’ll have to get it together against a side that has made the playoffs in every season

The Preview by Shashank Kishore21-May-20184:41

Swann: Would stick with Brathwaite over Hales

First, they were called ageing warriors. Then, they had their home advantage taken away. But they were not to be denied a place in the playoffs. Chennai Super Kings have now been here in each of the nine years of their existence. Now, they return to the Wankhede – the venue of their reintegration, to take a step closer to the IPL title that has eluded them since 2011.MS Dhoni has accepted that they aren’t the most agile side. Given the age of their older players, he isn’t even sure they can last another two years. But he wants to make the most of the present. Sealing the final berth on Tuesday gives them two advantages: firstly, it gives them a four-day rest and the luxury of staying in Mumbai. Secondly, their record at Eden Gardens, where they could play hosts Kolkata Knight Riders if they get there, isn’t the most appealing.

Form guide

Chennai Super Kings: beat Kings XI by five wickets, lost to Daredevils by 34 runs, beat Sunrisers by eight wickets.
Sunrisers Hyderabad: lost to Knight Riders by five wickets, lost to RCB by 14 runs, lost to Super Kings byeight wickets.

Now, six losses in 10 games can be scoffed at for other sides, given how IPL dynamics of retention and squad building change over time. CSK, with their strong core, comprising Dhoni, Suresh Raina, Ravindra Jadeja, Faf du Plessis and Dwayne Bravo, have bucked that trend over the years. So it’s clear that taking the trip to Kolkata is a route they’d like to avoid.Sunrisers Hyderabad, meanwhile, are like that Formula One outfit that have clearly outpaced all their competitors at pre-season testing (read auction), qualifying stage (read league phase), but have had engine troubles at the start of the formation lap. It isn’t necessarily threatening their chances of clinching the race yet, but one they can’t completely ignore either. They finished top of the table in the league stage, but are heading into the playoffs having lost their last three games.They’ve been beaten by CSK on both occasions this season, and their bowling, visibly their stronger suit, has shown signs of wear and tear. Rashid Khan has gone wicketless in three of the last four matches, Siddarth Kaul, whose strong performances earned him an India call up for the England tour, has conceded 40-plus in three of the last four games, and Bhuvneshwar Kumar has looked a little rusty, following periods of rest to manage his workload.That isn’t their main concern yet. Their middle order hasn’t been able to sustain starts provided by the top three that has accounted for 60.3% of their total runs, the most for a side this season. Manish Pandey has underachieved, Deepak Hooda has failed to lend depth. An injury to Yusuf has added to their woes. Can they overcome these shortcomings and press the reset button before the three lights go off?

Previous meetings

Ambati Rayudu clearly loves the franchise from his hometown Hyderabad. He’s handed Sunrisers a pounding both times the sides have played each other this season. In the most recent outing, on a spicy Pune surface, he walloped a century to shave off a 180-run target without fuss. In their first meeting in Hyderabad, he made a 37-ball 79 to set up a strong total, which was just about enough as Dwayne Bravo defended 19 off the final over. CSK won by four runs.

Strategy punt

Sam Billings has managed just 108 runs at 13.5 this season. Dhoni isn’t one for unnecessary rejigs, but experience of being in a playoff situation before merits continuing with Faf du Plessis. Given Watson will slot back in to open, du Plessis could be used as a floater. This could allow the in-form Rayudu to continue as the second opener, even though his strike rate of 92.3 and 121.7 against Sandeep Sharma and Bhuvneshwar Kumar respectively is significantly lesser than against the other Sunrisers bowlers.Last week, lack of muscle in the lower order, especially in the absence of the injured Yusuf Pathan, cost Sunrisers a chase against Royal Challengers Bangalore. On Saturday, the decision to leave out Alex Hales and promote Shreevats Goswami to the top opened up a spot lower down for allrounder Carlos Brathwaite. He not only hands them an extra bowling option to an already balanced attack, but could also find the Wankhede’s square boundaries and the surface, where there’s bounce and zip, more suited to his batting. With Kane Williamson and Shikhar Dhawan accounting for 661 and 437 runs respectively, and Goswami offering hitting ability, they wouldn’t necessarily miss Alex Hales, the opener, who is yet to make a half-century in six outings this season.

Stats that matter

  • CSK are the only side to have beaten the others at least once this season.
  • In the playoffs, Raina has made eight 30-plus scores, seven of which have been converted into a half-century. His 636 runs in 19 matches are the most in the playoffs.
  • Lungi Ngidi has quickly established himself as a useful death bowler. He’s conceded at an economy of just seven in the six overs he’s bowled at this stage. The other CSK bowlers have gone at 11.40.
  • Harbhajan Singh is one short of 50 IPL wickets at the Wankhede Stadium. Only Lasith Malinga, his former Mumbai Indians team-mate, has more (58).
  • CSK’s top three have negated the Rashid Khan threat brilliantly. Rayudu (38 runs off 25 balls) and Watson (14 off 10 balls) have gone after him in the Powerplays. Suresh Raina has been out once, but Rashid’s 15 deliveries have fetched 27.

Likely XIs

Sunrisers Hyderabad: 1 Shikhar Dhawan, 2 Shreevats Goswami, 3 Kane Williamson (capt), 4 Manish Pandey, 5 Deepak Hooda, 6 Shakib Al Hasan, 7 Carlos Brathwaite/Alex Hales, 8 Bhuvneshwar Kumar, 9 Rashid Khan, 10 Sandeep Sharma, 11 Siddarth Kaul Chennai Super Kings: 1 Ambati Rayudu, 2 Shane Watson, 3 Suresh Raina, 4 MS Dhoni (capt, wk), 5 Sam Billings/Faf du Plessis, 6 Dwayne Bravo, 7 Ravindra Jadeja, 8 Deepak Chahar, 9 Harbhajan Singh, 10 Shardul Thakur, 11 Lungi Ngidi

Fantasy pick

Shakib Al Hasan should be your first choice. He lends balance by offering four overs, can provide lower-order batting depth, and has shown consistency this season: 176 runs, mostly lower down the order, and 13 wickets. If you’re looking for a pure batsman, look no further than Rayudu, who has made 179 runs in the two innings he’s played against Sunrisers, without the worry of law of averages. His failure in the final league game against Kings XI Punjab is enough to reignite his hunger.

'Pujara is priceless for the team' – Kohli

The Indian captain said Cheteshwar Pujara and Wriddhiman Saha deserved credit for taking India 152 runs ahead in Ranchi

Karthik Krishnaswamy in Ranchi20-Mar-2017Following the drawn Test in Ranchi, Virat Kohli has hailed Cheteshwar Pujara and Wriddhiman Saha for overcoming a difficult situation and taking India to a position from where they could have won the match. When Saha joined Pujara in the post-tea session on day three, India were 328 for 6 in reply to Australia’s 451. They went on to add 199, and India eventually declared with a 152-run first-innings lead.Australia were four down and still trailing by 89 runs at one stage on the fifth day, with more than two sessions of play still left, but India couldn’t quite push on and win, with Peter Handscomb and Shaun Marsh batting out 62 overs while adding 124 for the fifth wicket. Kohli said he wasn’t surprised Australia, the world’s second-ranked Test side, fought the way they did.”Everyone has to take responsibility equally on the field and our players want to do that,” Kohli said in his post-match press conference. “Conditions were such in the first innings that it wasn’t easy for the bowlers, the pitch was very good. It played very well in the first two innings. In the second innings, [Australia] batted well so it ended in a draw.”But where we were in the first innings, 450 [451] was the [Australian] score and we were 320-odd for 6. From there to make 600 was a very difficult task. We put ourselves in a position to win, so we feel it was a very good effort from us to get into a winning situation.”But then again, if you are playing against the No. 2 side, you will expect that they will come out and fight, not just roll over. Everyone has his point of view. We will look at our positives and we are happy with where we brought the game to after just one innings. We didn’t need to bat in the second innings. But they had to play for a draw. Like I said, they will look at their positives, we will look at our positives and move forward. There is still one match to go, both [teams] will give it their best.”Kohli said the bowlers had struggled to extract help from the pitch when the ball grew older and softer, but did not want to stress the point and take credit away from Handscomb and Marsh.”They batted very well,” Kohli said. “Four down by lunch, and after that they didn’t lose a wicket in the entire session. So credit to them, when someone plays well, you have to give them credit, we understand that.”But we are also very happy with our efforts. [Ravindra] Jadeja’s bowling was outstanding in this match. All the bowlers bowled very well but Jadeja in my opinion was standout. If you look at his economy, on this pitch it was high-class bowling and showed why he is the joint No. 1 bowler [in the ICC rankings for Test bowlers] alongside Ashwin.”Kohli: ‘Saha is one guy who is always willing to do anything for the team’•Associated Press

Pujara won the Player-of-the-Match award for his innings of 202 off 525 balls, which was the longest ever by an Indian batsman (in Tests with ball data available). That knock took Pujara’s tally for 2016-17 to 1259 runs at an average of 66.26.”You know, sometimes I really feel bad for him,” Kohli said, when asked about Pujara’s contributions through the season. “People don’t understand his importance so much in this team and what a valuable player he is for us. He is the most composed player we have in the team, he is willing to grind for his runs, he doesn’t mind batting under pressure, he likes to take a challenge of batting.”So someone like that is priceless to have in the team. When the pressure situation comes up, he is someone who will put his hand up and play long for the team and hold up one end, which I think is a great quality in him. This season he has been outstanding. I don’t know the number of runs he has scored but he has contributed throughout. He has not been spoken about much or has been in the focus too much but he deserves much more than that. People need to stand up and take notice of what he has done this season, he has been outstanding with the bat and hopefully he will continue that in the last Test.”Saha, Kohli said, was similarly underappreciated. “See, Saha’s knock again was brilliant for us. He’s always stood up when the team needs him and this game was no different. His partnership with Pujara was the reason we had a go at winning this Test. A lot of credit goes to him also.”Again, [he has] not been mentioned too much but he deserves a lot of credit. He’s one guy who is always willing to do anything for the team. Wherever we ask him to bat, he bats. He has no problems in batting after [R] Ashwin, before Ashwin, whenever we want him to do it. He plays any kind of role – positive, defensive, you know, whatever we ask him to do, he never says no.”So you really really feel glad for a guy like that. He’s willing to do anything for the team and put his best foot forward. As I said, I’m really happy he performed in a big pressure match, in a difficult situation and put us in a position to have a shot at winning the game.”Mohammed Shami, who has not played for India since suffering a leg injury during the Test series against England, is making a phased return to action. He bowled in the nets in the lead-up to both the Bengaluru and Ranchi Tests, but has not been named in India’s Test squad yet. He has also played 50-over games for Bengal in the Vijay Hazare Trophy, and on Monday took four wickets in the tournament final against Tamil Nadu. Kohli said he hadn’t spoken to the selectors yet about Shami’s availability for the fourth Test in Dharamsala, but hinted that it could happen.”Yeah, Shami also we sent him to play [the Vijay Hazare Trophy] because we saw him bowling 10-12 overs in a go, and we wanted to give him some match practice.” Kohli said. “I don’t know [about his selection], I haven’t spoken to the selectors still. All kinds of possibilities approaching the next Test.”

Sixers hold on to clinch six-wicket win against Renegades

The Sixers pulled off the highest successful chase at the SCG to beat the Renegades amidst a confusing last over

Will Macpherson at the SCG09-Jan-2017
Scorecard

Amid a confusing conclusion, Sydney Sixers pulled off the highest successful BBL chase at the SCG – hauling down Melbourne Renegades’ 170 with three balls to spare – to move a step closer to finals qualifications.Finch starvedAaron Finch spoke after Renegades’ defeat to Stars on Saturday about how he was frustrated to keep falling in the 20s and 30s. So, having won the toss and chosen to bat (just the third time that has happened this BBL) he will have been pleased to make 57, his second – and Renegades’ third – half-century of the season. Only problem is, he was starved of the strike when at his most dangerous – in the Powerplay. He faced just eight balls for 12 runs in the first six overs as Sunil Narine, and then Cameron White, were dismissed without making a huge impact.Finch grew into his innings, but with the field spread and the boundaries fairly long, he was unable to accelerate as he would have hoped. Indeed Renegades’ efforts to clear the ropes were not limited to their captain – they hit more twos – 18 – than they did fours and sixes – 17.Ferguson shows his worthMuch has been made of the fact that Australia used four No. 6 batsmen in their six Tests this summer. Well, two of them were on show – and looking in good touch – here. The forgotten man, Callum Ferguson, was perhaps lucky to be retained in the Renegades team ahead of Marcus Harris, but after a slow start he anchored the rest of the innings well. Renegades had gone ten overs without taking ten from an over, but Ferguson – know for his classical strokeplay – smote the first two balls of the 20th over from Sean Abbott into the Bill O’Reilly Stand, with the first travelling 108m, the second longest six of the tournament.Is there anything Aaron Finch can’t do?Opening batsman, captain, death bowler. Now, wicketkeeper. Finch has done the lot this season. Rainfall had made the ground wet and Peter Nevill was hit on the forehead by a skidding throw from the deep and – after a lengthy delay – was asked by the doctor to leave the field for a concussion test. Much to the enjoyment of his team-mates, Finch strapped on the gauntlets. Just an over later, Nevill was cleared to return, but the trick worked – Sixers had been cruising to their target before the incident, but a ball after Finch padded up, Michael Lumb sent Thisara Perera straight to Narine at short third man!Sixers chase – and that thrilling final overSixers’ chase went to the final over because the weight was spread and none of the top four capitalised on impressive starts. Openers Daniel Hughes and Michael Lumb set things up with a stand of 72. Then Nic Maddinson and Moises Henriques both got themselves in and got themselves out, with the former stumped off Narine and the latter picking out the man on the fence off the excellent Perera, whose variations and defensive bowling were outstanding in his first game for the Renegades.And so came the confusing final over, from which Sixers required nine. With Brad Haddin set – but not striking the ball well – James Pattinson found a dot ball. Haddin threw his hands at a shortand wide ball, and got four through point, then – with the umpire’s arm outstretched for a no-ball – scrambled two into the legside. Sixers needed two from three, and from the resultant free-hit, Haddin was brilliantly caught on the fence at long-on by Cooper, but they sprinted through for two. As the umpire incorrectly signalled six, and Finch called for him to check Cooper’s foot, neither team appeared to know the game was over. But after the game, Haddin explained the ingenious strategy he and Jordan Silk used, and made it clear they knew what was happening.”It wasn’t confusing for us!” said Haddin. “Silky just said to get it as high as I can off the free hit and we will run two, which would win us the game. I actually thought that Tom Cooper trod on the fence, but we knew exactly what we needed.”The Renegades were a bit more confused, however. Captain Finch said after the game, “I thought they needed three when Jimmy [Pattinson] bowled that last ball!”

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