Australia vs South Africa: Why Starc and Jansen should be in the firing line

Tactics board: Where the second semi-final between Australia and South Africa, in Kolkata, could be won or lost

Sidharth Monga14-Nov-20235:37

Finch on Australia’s champion mentality in World Cup knockouts

Australia are the second-quickest starters with the bat, and the second-most miserly starters with the ball. South Africa have been slow starters with the bat – even slower than Pakistan and Afghanistan – but explosive with the ball, taking more powerplay wickets than any other team. South Africa have recent form on their side, having beaten Australia in their last four encounters, including once in the group stages of this World Cup. Australia, though, have the momentum of having won seven matches on the trot, plus some knockout ghosts to remind South Africa of. These are some of the tactical moves to watch out for as they face off in Kolkata.What to do at the toss?
No secrets there. South Africa want to avoid chasing, and Australia want them to chase. Even when winning against Pakistan and Afghanistan when chasing, they huffed and puffed their way through. All their four recent wins against Australia have come batting first.There might be some respite for South Africa though. There is a forecast for some rain in the evening. If this forecast convinces Australia to chase or cuts short the duration of South Africa’s chase, it could mitigate South Africa’s chasing troubles.Related

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Still, expect both sides to risk the dew or the rain because the advantage to be gained by batting first is too big to ignore.Weighing up team combinations

Unlike India and New Zealand in the first semi-final, these teams have one selection doubt each. Australia have to choose between Marnus Labuschagne and Marcus Stoinis. Labuschagne brings more solidity to the middle after the explosive top three whereas Stoinis in theory brings both powerful hitting lower down the order and a sixth bowling option. Current form – and indeed sentiment – is with Labuschagne, especially with some solidity required in the middle overs, but expect Australia to play him only if they are confident in Travis Head and Mitchell Marsh helping out with the ball as their fifth bowler is Glenn Maxwell. Also, Labuschagne’s record against left-arm spin can go against him because he will have to face a lot of Keshav Maharaj in the middle.South Africa played Tabraiz Shamsi in their league game in Kolkata. Shamsi didn’t have a great game, but they did read the conditions well: there was enough in the pitch for him and other spinners. This will be a conditions-based toss-up between Shamsi and Gerald Coetzee, the latter bringing some hitting lower down the order.Put pressure on Starc

Mitchell Starc hasn’t had many chances to bowl with a moving ball this World Cup, which partly explains his economy rate of 6.55 and average of 43.9. It hasn’t swung or seamed much in Kolkata either. So, especially if they are chasing, South Africa might want to target Starc because we have seen that generally if you fall behind in a chase this tournament, there is no way back.Australia might go for Marnus Labuschagne over Marcus Stoinis as he brings more solidity to the middle•AFP/Getty ImagesMaxwell before Zampa?

In his last three matches against South Africa, Adam Zampa has averaged 63.25 and gone at 8.43 an over. Expect Australia to go to Maxwell before Zampa not least because Quinton de Kock hasn’t quite liked offspin of late. His strike rate against offspin this World Cup has been 78.37; his release shot against them, the reverse-sweep, has got him out twice in six attempts.The problem for South Africa is that Temba Bavuma has even worse numbers against offspin. If there does come a situation where de Kock is stuck against Maxwell, they will need Rassie van der Dussen and those following to compensate.Reverse-swing on the cards

South Africa’s plan has been to start steadily and keep constantly accelerating. They have been the most explosive side at the death. However, do remember that Pakistan found reverse in Kolkata. That means the square is dry. Getting the old ball going will be a must for Australia if they don’t take early wickets.South Africa will look for the same if they end up bowling first. So watch out for a lot of cross-seam bowling, and umpires stopping fielders from returning the ball on the bounce.Target Jansen

Marco Jansen has been one of the big reasons South Africa have been successful in this World Cup. Even when he is not swinging the ball, his height gives him a big advantage. However, there have been two games where he has gone for more than 90. Once when Kusal Mendis got stuck into him, and once when he started waywardly, possibly out of nerves, and then Rohit Sharma took advantage.The trends suggest that Jansen is a handful if he gets into his groove. Australia will likely want Head and Marsh to go after him and see if he cracks, while David Warner bats normally at the other end. The first ten overs of Australia’s innings promise to be delicious either way.Maharaj key in the middle

South Africa will hope that the quicks have got past the top three by the time they introduce Maharaj because Steven Smith and Labuschagne don’t quite prefer left-arm spin. Ravindra Jadeja got them both out in Chennai, and Mitchell Santner managed to shut them off in Dharamsala. Even Josh Inglis, who comes in after the pair, is a right-hand batter. In the last match between these two sides, Maharaj dismissed Maxwell and Labuschagne.

How Mandeep and Salvi joined forces to end Punjab's 30-year trophy drought

Perennial T20 trophy bridesmaids, Punjab met a familiar foe in the final, but on this occasion, they were prepared like never before

Hemant Brar09-Nov-2023Anmolpreet Singh has just taken two excellent catches in the final of the 2023-24 Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy. Running in from long-on and sliding in, he pouches Baroda captain Krunal Pandya. Two balls later, charging in once again and putting in a full-length dive, he sends back Shivalik Sharma.Anmolpreet’s brilliance has put Punjab on the cusp of victory in Mohali. But Mandeep Singh, his captain, is having flashbacks to the 2020-21 Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy semi-final against the same team.In that game, Anmolpreet misjudged a similar chance and it went over him for four. The reprieved batter, Kartik Kakade, went on to score a crucial half-century and steer Baroda to 160. It proved 25 too many for Punjab.”Anmolpreet is one of the best fielders in India; he has got great hands,” Mandeep says. “When he took those two catches, I got all those flashbacks, and how life comes full circle.”Related

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In the last four seasons, Punjab had reached the knockouts six times across formats. But they couldn’t make it to the final until Monday, when they beat Baroda by 20 runs, thus ending a 30-year trophy drought.Punjab’s previous domestic title was the Ranji Trophy in 1992-93. Thirteen out of 17 members of their current squad were not even born then. So what worked for them this time? According to Mandeep, winning crunch moments was the biggest difference. And to make that possible, the whole ecosystem worked together behind the scenes.”We wanted to win a trophy for a long time, especially for Yuvi [Yuvraj Singh] and Bhajju [Harbhajan Singh] as they had done a lot for the team,” he says. “Unfortunately, it couldn’t happen when they were playing. Sometimes the preparation wasn’t that good, sometimes, the team was going through a transition phase.”Still, we are a very talented bunch. But we were not able to win the crunch moments in knockout games. For example, in the quarter-final and semi-final this year, we lost three early wickets and needed to stabilise the innings. Earlier, that wouldn’t happen. This year, we did that. I think that was a big change this year.”And the Coach Saab had a big role to play in everything.”Aavishkar Salvi (here with Mayank Markande) joined as head coach in August 2022•Ishan Mahal/Punjab Cricket Association as Mandeep refers to Aavishkar Salvi throughout our conversation, took over the reins in August 2022. Under Salvi, Punjab made it to the knockouts of all three domestic tournaments that season: semi-finals of the Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy, quarter-finals of the Vijay Hazare Trophy and quarter-finals of the Ranji Trophy.”He is the backbone of our team,” Mandeep continues. “He has created a new value system. He also re-introduced the fitness culture. We set a benchmark for the Yo-Yo test. Last year it was 16.1; this time, we increased it to 16.5.”Salvi explains his philosophy: “Whatever the situation is, you think about the team first. I always thought that if you have a growth mindset, a strong work ethic and a brilliant attitude, then you’re talking business. And that’s what I gave the entire impetus on, to make these three pillars of our team.”He had a hand in getting Mandeep to lead the side once again as well. Mandeep became the captain of Punjab in 2012-13. When he started playing cricket, he had two goals: “To play for India, which I did in 2016, and to win a trophy for Punjab.””I had won three-four trophies at the junior level,” he says. “But when we were not able to win at the senior level, people started saying we could win only in juniors, not in seniors. Slowly, it started pinching.”Taking the losses to heart, Mandeep stepped down from captaincy in 2021, thinking a new leader with fresh ideas might change the results.”Last year, when Coach Saab came, he said I to lead and not think about all these things,” Mandeep says. “Honestly, he didn’t give me a choice .”For Salvi, it was a no-brainer: “Because if you see Mandeep, his work ethic is very strong, his attitude is superb, he inspires a lot of youngsters and seniors within the team, and he was still performing.”

“When Coach Saab came, he said we needed to decide whether we wanted to participate, or compete, or dominate. Last year, we felt we competed. So at the start of this season, we said we had to dominate this time”Mandeep Singh

Another thing that made a difference was the Punjab Cricket Association starting their own T20 league, the Sher-e-Punjab T20 Cup, in July. That laid the foundation for this season.Most players in Punjab’s T20 squad were already part of various IPL teams – including all 12 who played the Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy final. However, many of them didn’t get regular game time there. The Sher-e-Punjab T20 Cup provided that opportunity.”It was a fantastic initiative by our honourable secretary Mr Dilsher Khanna and our CEO Mr Deepak Sharma ,” Salvi says. “Our joint-secretary and, obviously, our president Mr. [Amarjit Singh] Mehta, all of them were behind conducting that. The boys were playing only district cricket against each other, but most of the superstars of Punjab cricket played in that tournament. And playing in Mohali under lights, live games, close finishes – it was a good learning curve for them.”Then, after a short break, Salvi conducted an off-season camp in Mohali. “I don’t think we have had such a camp before,” Mandeep says. “We were completely pushed out of our comfort zone.””In those 14 days, I wanted the players to challenge themselves in five aspects: tactically, technically, physically, mentally, and in life skills,” Salvi says. “There were a lot of activities from morning to evening. And in those activities, there were a lot of challenges thrown at them.”Mandeep goes into detail of some of the challenges: “At one side there was white-ball practice. For me, someone who bats in the middle overs, they would say it’s the last over of the powerplay, these are the next three bowlers, this is the field, and you have to play till the middle phase.”Once you are done with that, straightaway you go into the red-ball net. There the scenario is that you are batting with No. 10, you have to farm the strike, attack the first four balls and look for a single on the fifth.”For someone like Sanvir [Singh] and Raman[deep Singh], who are our power-hitters, they would do the white-ball simulation first. In the red-ball net, their target would be to save a match. Completely out of their comfort zone, but such situations can arise in a game.”Punjab beat Baroda in a high-scoring final to clinch their maiden T20 title•Mandeep SinghNone of this would have been possible without the association’s support, Salvi emphasises. “The kind of freedom our top management gave us is unmatchable,” he says. “They completely backed us and provided us with all the facilities we wanted – no questions asked.”At the same time, they were fully involved too. They took regular updates on what was happening on the ground, how the boys were shaping up, and if we needed further help. Bhajju , from the advisory board, and Dilsher Khanna, our secretary, were always there for us. It definitely helps when you have complete freedom and, at the same time, there is a lot of care shown as well by the stakeholders.”Punjab started their campaign with a defeat. Chasing 212 against Saurashtra, they were all out for 174. But they took positives from the fact that despite five of their top seven getting out in single digits, they got within 37 runs of the target.From there on, Abhishek Sharma found a purple patch. It started with 112 off 51 balls against Andhra when Punjab posted a tournament-record 275 for 6; he followed it up with scores of 82 off 38, 53 off 26 and 112 off 56. Punjab won their remaining group matches easily.The real challenge started with the quarter-final. Chasing 170 against Uttar Pradesh, they were 14 for 3, with Abhishek, Prabhsimran Singh and Mandeep back in the pavilion. This was one of those crunch moments Mandeep was talking about.Anmolpreet and Nehal Wadhera stabilised the innings, but Wadhera was struggling. At the end of the 13th over, when the asking rate was 12, he was on 25 off 29 balls. In the next ten balls, though, he hit two fours and two sixes, and with 53 needed from the last five overs, Sanvir and Ramandeep took the side home with five balls to spare.In the semi-final against Delhi, Punjab once again lost three early wickets in their chase of 184. Legspinner Suyash Sharma was the biggest threat and had just trapped Anmolpreet lbw with a faster one. But Abhishek and Mandeep neutralised him and Punjab won comfortably.

“If you ask me who my wicket-takers are in the middle overs, it’s Mayank Markande and Harpreet Brar; they have strike rates of 12 and 14 in that phase. But data and your conviction, you should blend both and come up with a decision”Punjab head coach Aavishkar Salvi

The final was against Baroda, a team that had beaten Punjab in the 2011-12 final and the 2020-21 semi-final. “It was not like we were seeking any revenge, but we had it at the back of our minds that they had beaten us a couple of times,” says Mandeep, who was part of both those losses.Put into bat, Punjab rode on Anmolpreet’s hundred and Wadhera’s unbeaten 61 off 27 balls to post a daunting 223 for 4. Baroda gave a tough fight, as Krunal and Abhimanyusingh Rajput brought the equation down to 76 needed from five overs.”One thought at that time was to give Arsh[deep Singh] an over,” Mandeep says. “But I trusted Ballu [Baltej Singh]. That was the most important over of the match because the Baroda batters knew Arsh had two overs left and Sid one. So they were looking to target that over. But the way Ballu bowled six yorkers on the trot, and conceded just one boundary, and ten runs in all, made me so proud.”The game was on the line again when Siddarth Kaul went for 24 in the 18th. Baroda needed 33 from two overs, with one of those overs likely to be bowled by left-arm spinner Harpreet Brar in dewy conditions. Arshdeep, though, all but sealed Punjab’s win with an excellent 19th over, in which he conceded just four runs and picked up three wickets.Apart from winning the crunch moments, what stood out was the attacking brand of cricket Punjab played. “When Coach Saab came, he said we needed to decide whether we wanted to participate, or compete, or dominate,” Mandeep says. “Last year, we felt we competed. So at the start of this season, we said we had to dominate this time. Play with full freedom without worrying about the result.”That fearlessness was reflected in Punjab’s batting. Of their seven regular batters, five had strike rates over 160. As a team, they hit a six every ten balls, and a boundary every four balls – the best in the tournament on both metrics. Overall, they hit 114 sixes; Assam were a distant second with 85.Anmolpreet was the biggest beneficiary of this new-found freedom provided. Before this season, he averaged 22.21 in T20 cricket at a strike rate of 115.61. Here, he scored at an average of 44.37 and a strike rate of 180.20. He almost doubled his six tally as well. Earlier, he had 21 sixes in 40 innings; here he smashed 20 in just nine.File photo: Siddarth Kaul, Baltej Singh and Arshdeep Singh – Punjab’s pace attack in the final•Ishan Mahal/Punjab Cricket AssociationSalvi is aware of all the numbers. It becomes even more apparent when he talks about Kaul, who is now the leading wicket-taker in the Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy, overtaking Piyush Chawla during the tournament.”Every eighth ball Siddarth Kaul has bowled in the tournament with the new ball, he has picked up a wicket. That’s a very difficult task. One might be expensive in the slog overs [Kaul’s economy this season was 9.17], but he is picking up wickets for you with the new ball, that is what you want in the powerplay. And that is what he has done successfully. And it’s not just one season; he has done it season after season.”In the last season, he was the highest wicket-taker. This year he is the highest for Punjab; in the top five overall. He’s been playing regularly for the last 13 years – to maintain that consistency is not easy. T20 is not a game where every year you will come up with the economical spells. But if you see his career economy, it’s brilliant. For a fast bowler to have a career economy under seven [7.02 in the Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy] is brilliant.”But Salvi likes to blend the data with instincts. “If you ask me who my wicket-takers are in the middle overs, it’s Mayank Markande and Harpreet Brar; they have strike rates of 12 and 14 in that phase. That’s something you should know as a coach. But data and your conviction, you should blend both and come up with a decision. And I think Mandeep is pretty good at that. At times you might be wrong, but at least there is some rationale behind our thought process.”For Salvi, too, it is his first BCCI trophy. And he is not the one to sit on his laurels. Two days after the final, he is busy preparing for the Vijay Hazare Trophy, working with Punjab’s back-up wicketkeepers Anmol Malhotra and Naman Dhir.He knows the journey has just started.

Bishan Bedi, 'a moral beacon for all those who knew him'

The cricket community mourns the death of one of its finest

ESPNcricinfo staff23-Oct-2023BS Chandrasekhar, Bedi’s longtime friend and fellow member of the great spin quartet, told PTI: “I have shared such a long friendship with Bedi. He was so much more than a teammate, a true friend whom I could call anytime and speak. It’s a huge personal loss.”He was a terrific bowler. His use of crease and angles were just stunning. Batsmen often were made nervous by the prospect of facing him, he had just about every trick up his sleeve, not to mention his flight.”Intikhab Alam, the former Pakistan captain, wrote in the , “I am heartbroken. I have lost a part of my heart today. I can’t express in words how I am feeling. I have lost a friend, a younger brother. Last year, around the same time, we met at the Kartarpur Sahib Gurdwara. He forced me to sing Louis Armstrong’s songs, held my hand, we smiled, we cried. Those were some of the most beautiful few hours of my life. I can still recall his smiling face, waving us goodbye once he crossed the border.”When contacted, Sunil Gavaskar said, “Sad news indeed. He was the finest left hand bowler that I saw.”On social media, Indian – and other – cricketers past and present spoke of the man they knew.

He was one of the most respected cricketers around the world, and not just for his cricket.

Déjà vu for Vijay Shankar as Tamil Nadu, Karnataka serve up another thrilling finish

Just like in the Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy final in 2019-20, this Ranji Trophy fixture provided thrills and spills

Deivarayan Muthu12-Feb-2024Vijay Shankar is on his haunches after completing a hard-run double in Chennai’s stifling heat. His childhood friend – and batting partner – B Indrajith had also rushed across to the other end.Tamil Nadu’s chase of 355 is like Donkey Kong. The C,D, and E stands, which have been thrown open to the public, are filling fast on Monday afternoon at Chepauk. There is still about three weeks to go before MS Dhoni arrives for CSK’s preparatory camp, but the buzz among the crowd for a Ranji Trophy league game is discernible.With R Ashwin and Washington Sundar away on national duty, and Sai Sudharsan out with a niggle, Vijay is the most recognisable face in this Tamil Nadu side. Plus, he shares his name with one of the most popular Tamil actors. When Vijay had walked out of the dressing room after stumps on day three on Sunday, a section of fans began screaming: ” Vijay (brother), selfie please!”Related

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Karnataka's Vyshak conjures reverse-swing to find Ranji success

is actor Vijay’s moniker, which means commander or leader.Vijay obliged the fans’ request with selfies and autographs along with Indrajith on Sunday evening. On Monday, Vijay and Indrajith thrilled the fans again, this time with a 125-run sixth-wicket partnership at a run rate of above four runs an over. They came together when Tamil Nadu were 199 for 5 with Karnataka pushing for victory on a fourth-day surface that was offering sharp turn as well as variable bounce.While Indrajith defended resolutely and protected one end, Vijay showed attacking enterprise and disrupted the lengths of Karnataka’s inexperienced spinners with sweeps and reverse sweeps.

Vijay isn’t too big on reverse sweeps, but he was ready to do something different on a turning track. After Tamil Nadu passed 300, there was a sense of panic in the opposition camp, with captain Mayank Agarwal, Manish Pandey and Devdutt Padikkal getting together for a mid-pitch conference.Agarwal then posted nine men on the boundary, including two at deep third and two at deep square leg. After Vijay and Indrajith had countered Karnataka’s spinners, the fast bowlers kept digging the ball into the pitch and hiding it away from the reach of the batters.Suddenly, a Ranji game had turned into a one-on-one shootout. After Indrajith was run-out for 98 off 194 balls by V Kaverappa off his own bowling, it was down to Vijay vs Vyshak Vijaykumar. Tamil Nadu needed 29 off the remaining 18 balls of the game, with the crowd right behind Vijay. Former India wicketkeeper and TN captain Dinesh Karthik was also in attendance at Chepauk towards the finish.Having packed the square boundaries on both sides, Vyshak’s plan was simple: keep it short, and take it away from the swinging arc of Vijay. Vyshak banged the ball into a hard length and darted it wide – it probably finished wider than a set of stumps outside off. Vijay managed to somehow reach the ball, but could only swipe it to Agarwal at the long-on boundary.Dismissed for 60 off 107, he was on his haunches once again before dragging himself off the field. In the next over, rookie S Lokeshwar holed out to long-off and Tamil Nadu ended up with a draw.Vijay Shankar obliged the fans at Chepauk with a selfie on the third day•Deivarayan Muthu/ESPNcricinfoIt was déjà vu for Vijay and Tamil Nadu once again. In the 2019-20 Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy final in Surat, Vijay had played a sparkling cameo, but he fell at the final hurdle as Karnataka won by one run. With four needed from two balls in that game, Vijay was run-out while returning for a second, and it’s something that still haunts him.”I really wanted to cross the line today because four years ago in that T20… even in that innings I was there. I got the team very close but couldn’t cross the line,” Vijay said after stumps on Monday. “Today again, we came closer to it, and I think it’s one of the finest chases that you can see. Fourth-day wicket, over 350 to chase, and I think it was a fantastic effort.”You have to go all out for the team. Having come so close, you don’t want to just play it off. When I was there, I wanted to back myself to hit those couple of sixes, but it was not an easy wicket to get those sixes… Even you would have thought the match would get over by lunch or so .”Despite not securing an outright win in Chennai, Tamil Nadu are still in contention for qualifying for the Ranji Trophy knockouts. They still have one league fixture to go. “When we play well as a team and when we fight against all the odds – the wicket and everything – it gives good confidence for the team to keep moving forward and that’s a lovely thing to have amongst the group,” Vijay said.Indrajith, too, was upbeat about Tamil Nadu’s chances, and toasted the gripping finish. “The atmosphere was brilliant. First of all, to play a Ranji game at Chepauk is a special feeling,” he said. “When I made my Ranji debut in 2013-14, I saw crowds like these, but after a very long time I’m happy that people came to support both teams.”When I was batting, there was good support for Karnataka also. Usually, Tamil Nadu vs Karnataka is a high-octane game, and we didn’t expect it to go this close. When I was inside, I thought I can cross the line and it would have been a good feeling, but we will take it (the draw) any day.”Indrajith and the rest of the Tamil Nadu players then chilled with Karthik in front of the Madras Cricket Club as the sun set in Chennai. Usually, Chepauk is a cauldron of emotion in March, April and May, but February 12 was fun too.

Hartley's comeback embodies England's away win for the ages

Turnaround triumph in Hyderabad combines defiance, class, risk, pluck and joy

Vithushan Ehantharajah28-Jan-2024Welcome, Hyderabad 2024, step right this way. I believe you know Adelaide 2010 and Karachi 2000? Pull up a chair next to Port of Spain 1974 and Kingston 1990. Hope you’re hungry – Brisbane 1986 is making pancakes.The ‘Best Away Wins by an England Men’s Test Team’ club has a new member. And as the dust settles on either end of the central pitch at the Rajiv Gandhi International Stadium, it is worth considering this as the greatest of them all. Pass the syrup, Sydney 1894.England bested an India who had lost just three Tests at home since the start of 2013. World number ones of the modern era, only lacking the World Test Championship mace to prove it, beaten by 28 runs in one of the most remarkable come-from-behind wins. The brilliance lies in its absurdity, like most of what this team do under Ben Stokes’ captaincy and Brendon McCullum’s guidance.India were 190 ahead going into the second innings, and the biggest first-innings lead they had previously squandered at home was 65 against Australia in 1964. They had looked far more controlled than England’s first effort of 246 housed within 65 overs on day one, which now looks oddly prescient given how rushed it seemed at the time.They responded to that deficit by putting together the ninth 400-plus score in a second innings against India on their patch. And it was Ollie Pope, who averaged 19.12 here on the 2021 tour, and began the match with 1 off 11, that drove them to it. Now bolstered by a positive result, the vice-captain’s 196, a pulsating Russian Roulette affair, need not be so shy pushing its case as England’s greatest one-man assault.Ollie Pope acknowledges the crowd after his 196•Getty ImagesThe way Pope blitzed the world-class spin trio of R Ashwin, Ravi Jadeja and Axar Patel was previously unfathomable. India coach Rahul Dravid, a generational great whom Kevin Pietersen once emailed for tips on how to play spin ahead of his own Indian epic in 2012, put Pope in a league of his own. “I haven’t seen a better exhibition of sweeping and reverse-sweeping ever, you know, in these conditions against that quality of bowling.”Setting their hosts 231 to win, England stomped all over India’s line-up despite the fact their primary spinner, Jack Leach, was unable to fully straighten or bend his left knee after suffering a deep bruise in the field on day one. Limited to four-over spells at most, Leach prised out the last ‘full-time’ batter in Shreyas Iyer to make it 119 for 7. Iyer is regarded as the best player of the turning ball in this India team. And here he was: this silky, Mumbai-reared savant, pressing forward and snicking to first slip off a one-legged man from Taunton.Even with Leach limited to one in each innings, 18 Indian wickets fell to spin. The missing two were run outs, including a charging, diving, back-handing direct hit from Stokes, who two months ago was on crutches following left knee surgery, to remove Jadeja, the fastest thing on earth with a vaudeville moustache.

“We’ve had some incredible victories. But considering where we are, and who we playing against, the position we found ourselves going into our second innings of batting… this is our best victory since I’ve been captain.”Ben Stokes‘ verdict on England’s 28-run win in Hyderabad

Perhaps most remarkable of all was the hero of the final day. With 7 for 62, Tom Hartley becomes the first England spinner to take as many on debut since Jim Laker, a Mount Rushmore cricketer as far as the English game is concerned.That Hartley is even here is its own unique chapter of this broader epic. He had just one five-wicket haul in 20 first-class matches for Lancashire – against a Surrey team who were pre-occupied with their extra-curricular activities over those four days, having sealed the 2022 County Championship the week before. Across 10 red-ball matches last summer, Hartley’s 19 wickets came at 44.84 apiece.Selectors picked on dating-app whims, opting for Hartley’s six-foot-four frame over squatter options with better profiles. His first date with destiny was a car crash: the first (and fourth) ball of his Test career smashed for six by Yashasvi Jaiswal.Sitting in the dressing room at the end of day one, figures of none for 63 from nine overs, the magnitude of it all dawned on him. Hartley offered Jeetan Patel, England’s assistant coach, an honest, “that was hard work”, cheeks still scorned by the harsh welcome. Fellow left-arm spinner Leach offered consolation before the rest of the group hyped up his six off Ashwin earlier in the day to pump up a deflated ego.Related

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72 hours on, having bowled in a fourth innings for just the seventh time in his career, he might have an altogether different take on playing cricket this level. Following a vital 34 in an 80-run stand with Pope that took England one away from the 420 they would end up with, Hartley set about etching some better history.Jaiswal pressed forward with too much vigour and nudged a sharp catch to Pope in close. Shubman Gill did the same two balls later. Having stepped into shots with relish a few days ago, Rohit Sharma put his best foot forward in the wrong place and found himself squared up for a plumb LBW. Then Axar, promoted up the order to combat the left-arm spin with the left-hand bat, misjudged the pitch of the ball and drove back to Hartley four balls after tea.That was the beginning of an eight-over spell – for 10 runs, featuring three maidens – brimming with threat and, crucially, control. The high release point pushed as the main reason for his selection that was ridiculed online was now being glorified. It was not quite the bounce, but the late dip from the balls on high that turned seasoned vets into pets.Resistance came from Srikar Bharat, but was soon broken by a slowed-down delivery that pitched on middle and took off stump. And he rounded out what will probably remain the most memorable day of his career with two stumpings, both caused by the tension he created.Hartley joins Will Jacks and Rehan Ahmed as the third spinner under Stokes to start their career with a five-wicket haul. It speaks to the environment that all three came into Test cricket with no first-class record to speak of and now have memories for a lifetime. Maybe that is how this result should be remembered. Not as the first of five matches, but one of one.1:03

Ben Stokes reflects on England’s ‘best victory’ since becoming captain

There will be a response from India, on several fronts. The opening win in 2021 elicited a swing in manufactured conditions and personnel, and England did not have the wares to copy or contend with them. The only thing more dangerous than a rampant India is a wounded India.Before the series began, Stokes discussed the glory of the previous two years, and the need to press on in exactly the same manner. To evolve. Winning 13 out 18 was great and all, but such a record should be built upon rather than preserved.”One thing I asked for this series, and stuff beyond that, was, ‘Can we stay committed to our process without becoming emotionally attached to the outcome?'” And now here they are, with what Stokes ranks as the greatest triumph of his tenure.”We’ve had some incredible victories,” he said. “But considering where we are, and who we playing against, the position we found ourselves going into our second innings of batting… just sitting here now and saying we’re 1-0 up, it’s a big reason as to why I feel this is our best victory since I’ve been captain.”The new cycle has begun with the most evocative of wins, borne out of defiance, class, risk, pluck and, ultimately, joy. England started quickly, fell way behind, clawed back into the contest, set a new tone and then grafted, with old and new side by side, to triumph over a juggernaut.Of all the stunning wins travelling English Test teams have accomplished, few, if any, have contained it all.

Meet Uganda, the newest African kid on the block

They have waited a long time to strut their stuff on the world stage; now their chance has come

Firdose Moonda01-Jun-2024Forty-three year-old Frank Nsubuga, the oldest player at this year’s T20 World Cup, has been playing high-level cricket for around 27 years, and he’s willing to share the secret to his longevity.”Every morning, I wake up and do my own jogging, maybe above 10km. Then I stretch and we train together [as a team] from about 10am.”He stays away from alcohol, and thinks that keeps him going. “I am happy with my cup of tea or coffee or juice,” he says.Nsubuga made his debut in 1997 at an ICC Zone 6 tournament as a teenager and he remembers a time when Afghanistan were still battling in the lower rungs of the international game.In fact, Nsubuga played the decisive hand in a Division Three match between Uganda and Afghanistan in 2009. Batting at No. 7, he scored 62 off 44 balls and took 1 for 29. Uganda won by 14 runs. They and Afghanistan ended the tournament tied on points, but Afghanistan’s higher net run rate allowed them to advance further and eventually join the big boys at the top of cricket’s pyramid.Related

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43-year-old Frank Nsubuga in Uganda squad for 2024 T20 World Cup

Uganda had to wait another 15 years for their chance to compete on the global stage. Finally, their time has come. And though they may be an unknown quantity to many in the cricketing world, they have a rich history in the game, full of characters. Nsubuga is just one example.Circa 1940, when Uganda was a British colony, some cricket was played in the country, between the settlers and a growing Asian trading community, but it really took off after Prince George Mawanda, a member of the royal Buganda tribal household, who was exposed to cricket during his education in the UK and at Trinity College in Sri Lanka, founded the African Cricket Club.The club gave the local black population an opportunity to compete against members of other communities, and throughout the 1950s and ’60s, a pentangular tournament, organised on ethnic and religious lines, was played in Uganda among the British, the “Indians” (mostly Hindus who had come to work on the East Africa Railway), the Goans (Catholic settlers from western India), the “Moslems” (who were largely traders), and the locals.The different teams also played in exhibition matches, including a famous one between an All-African XI and a Uganda Police side in 1959 to inaugurate the Lugogo Cricket Oval in Kampala. That game was attended by Britain’s Queen Mother. Mawanda was the star of the match, taking 6 for 21 and then hitting a six to win for his team.

Legend has it the ball sailed over the perimeter wall and landed on the back of a lorry outside and was never recovered.Mawanda’s reputation soared with it, and he remains a celebrated figure in the Ugandan game. Since the 1990s, a tournament called the Mawanda Cup has been played in his honour, and he is considered the founding father of cricket among black Ugandans, who make up the majority of the national side.Unlike the United States or Canada, for example, Uganda’s international team is mostly made up of what we could call indigenous people: those whose families have lived in the country for generations. There are some exceptions, like Gilgit-born vice-captain Riazat Ali Shah, who moved to Uganda as a 16 year-old, but the Asian-heritage contingent in the squad is fairly small. That’s partly the result of the expulsion of Asians from Uganda during Idi Amin’s dictatorship from 1971 to 1979, and mostly due to an elite schooling system, which produces most of the country’s black cricketers.Busoga College Mwiri, in eastern Uganda is one of the best known of these schools. It is the alma mater of deposed Ugandan president Milton Obote, and former Ugandan cricketers Henry Osinde and Kenneth Kamyuka. Ntare School, in the west, is the other, which was home to the current president of Uganda, Yoweri Museveni, and of Rwanda, Paul Kagame, both of whom played cricket.Uganda’s players take a break during training ahead of this year’s World Cup in Kampala•AFP/Getty ImagesGiven the cost of equipment for the game, cricket mostly remained an elite sport in the country and one that was largely spread through family ties.Nsubuga, for example, has a brother currently in the Ugandan side – Roger Mukasa – and another who played previously, Lawrence Sematimba, now the coach of the national women’s team. Uganda’s top-run scorer in T20Is Simon Ssesazi and leading wicket-taker Henry Sseyondo are also brothers.Innocent Ndawula, a journalist for the Daily Monitor newspaper and current media manager of the Uganda men’s team, can reel off the names of various cricketing lineages in the country. “Cricket came through as a family affair – the Kakoozas, the Lutaayas and the Walusimbis …”That last name may be familiar to World Cup anoraks. Samuel Walusimbi was one of two Ugandans in the East Africa squad at the 1975 World Cup (the other was John Nagenda, perhaps more well-known for his contribution to journalism and literature in Uganda). Walusimbi’s son, Tendo Mbazzi, also went on to play cricket. So, strictly speaking, Uganda has had representation at a cricket World Cup before, but they have never appeared at a global tournament as a national team. And they never really thought they could.It was with the arrival of former South African Under-19 coach Lawrence Mahatlane in late 2020 that the idea of qualifying for a World Cup was born. Nsubuga recalls the conversation Mahatlane had with the team. “When he saw the talent, he just told us, ‘You know, you guys can qualify for the 2024 World Cup. ‘Yes, you can make it.’ We were surprised. For me, that changed a lot of things in the years I have been here. He worked so hard with us.”Frank Nsubuga has taken 55 wickets at an economy of 4.7 in 54 T20Is•Joel Ford/ICC/Getty ImagesMahatlane left his post in October last year before the Africa Regional Qualifier, where Uganda shocked Zimbabwe to book their place at the 2024 T20 World Cup. The result was completely unexpected even for the players – Uganda hadn’t even played a Full Member team before.”When we lost to Namibia [in the previous game], we said to ourselves: let’s take this loss away and focus on the Zimbabwe game because that’s the only game we need to win to take us through in the World Cup,” Nsubuga says. “The boys were focused and looking forward to that game, and when we beat Zimbabwe, we couldn’t believe it. We were awake until 4 o’clock in the morning.”There was little time for celebration, though, because they still had matches against Nigeria, Kenya and Rwanda – all of which they won. Their 33-run victory over arch-rivals Kenya underlined Uganda’s position as the now-dominant East African side.When they returned home, they realised the magnitude of their achievement. “There were parties,” Nsubuga says. “We have been doing a lot of interviews, people are calling us to go on TV, to go on radio, and when we walk around, people we meet want to sit with us to talk about the games.”The Lugogo Stadium in KampalaNow the next challenge awaits. At the World Cup, Uganda are grouped with co-hosts West Indies, their old rivals Afghanistan, New Zealand, and Papua New Guinea. They understand their limitations as a team that does not have out-and-out pace bowlers or natural power-hitters.”We don’t see ourselves as a big-hitting team,” Nsubuga said. “We just want to play as a team, take it one game at a time and see ourselves growing in the game.”But he also wants to see if he can walk away with something he never imagined as a possibility when he started nearly three decades ago: a win in a World Cup match.”It’s been my dream to play at this level. I don’t know for sure if I am retiring. I’ll see how I’m feeling, how my body is feeling and then I’ll decide. Let me first push, and then I’ll let the world know.”Uganda also want to let the cricketing world know that they are here to stay.”They may not win the actual event, but they want to leave an imprint,” media manager Ndawula said. “They want to be the best team at every other thing. They would like to be the team that signs the most autographs, gives the most interviews, the team that will leave its dressing room the cleanest, and the team that will play to the most of its ability to entertain like the game calls for.”

England need Bairstow at his best for T20 World Cup – they should bring him home from IPL

Despite a poor winter, Jonny Bairstow remains integral to England’s hopes of defending their 2022 title

Matt Roller22-Apr-2024Trevor Bayliss declined to take the easy way out when explaining Jonny Bairstow’s absence when his Punjab Kings side played Mumbai Indians on Thursday night.Asked in a pitchside interview whether Bairstow had “done a Glenn Maxwell” and asked to be left out of the side, Bayliss was unequivocal: “No, that was our call,” he said. “We just had to change things up. It was that time of the competition that we needed to do something a little bit better… just a little bit of a change to try and invigorate things.”It was an honest statement in an era when coaches often sugarcoat difficult decisions. Modern players are rarely dropped – rather rotated, rested or managed due to niggles. Kings opened with Sam Curran, their stand-in captain, instead of Bairstow and brought Rilee Rossouw into the side in his place.Related

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Bayliss also made clear that Bairstow was not best pleased with the management’s decision. “Jonny, over my right shoulder here, thinks he probably should have got a bit longer… it’s a difficult one. We want to try and give guys as much of an opportunity as we can but with the situation we find ourselves in, we had to make a bit of a change.”It has been a long offseason for Bairstow, who first flew to India in late September ahead of the World Cup and will have spent the best part of six months there by the time he arrives home after the IPL. He is the only England player who has been involved in the 50-over World Cup, the Test series earlier this year and the IPL, and has struggled to make an impact in all three.He has batted 25 times in India this winter across three formats and has hit only two half-centuries, against Bangladesh and Pakistan in the World Cup. His averages in the World Cup (23.88) and in the Test series (23.80) were almost identical, and in the IPL he has managed 96 runs in six innings, averaging 16.00 with a strike rate of 131.50. It has been tough going.Bayliss stressed Bairstow’s tournament is not necessarily over and Rossouw, his replacement, has made 10 runs in his first two innings. “There’s a couple of guys missing out at the top of the order from this game, but that’s not necessarily the end of it for those guys,” Bayliss said. “We know they’re quality players.”But there is an argument that it would be in Bairstow’s – and England’s – best interests for him to return home for a short break before the T20 World Cup. He is likely to be part of the squad that faces Pakistan in four T20Is at the end of May, and ending his IPL early would give him the chance to refresh mentally and physically ahead of an intense tournament in June.England’s selectors will meet in the next few days to pick a provisional squad for the World Cup, which will be released next week before the ICC’s May 1 deadline. They can make changes before May 25, but after the debacle of Harry Brook’s initial and Jason Roy’s eventual exclusions last year, clear communication is essential.The ODI World Cup, a five-Test series and the IPL – Bairstow has spent close to six months in India this winter•Getty ImagesThere has been no indication that Bairstow is about to be dropped. He has hardly played T20 cricket since returning from his horrific leg injury – just 15 games in the last 12 months – but was player of the series in his most recent T20Is against New Zealand in September, which provided a reminder of how destructive he can be when he is anywhere near his best.Rob Key, England’s managing director, chairs selection meetings and told Sky’s Cricket Podcast last week: “… we need to balance out some of the younger guys, like Will Jacks and Phil Salt coming into it and adding a bit of life. It’s not about all young [players], it’s about having a balance. That’s where we’re seeing the T20 World Cup.”With Ben Stokes making himself unavailable, Alex Hales retired from international cricket and Dawid Malan out of favour, England will need Bairstow – a senior player at 34 – to achieve that balance. He is likely to be carded at No. 4 in a middle order that will have to be flexible: in Stokes’ absence, they are short on left-handed batters, but Bairstow’s versatility has always been a strength.England believe that T20 in the Caribbean rewards power over touch and will set their side up accordingly. Ben Duckett lasted one match in their 3-2 series defeat to West Indies in December before he was deemed surplus to requirements. Bairstow should fit effortlessly into a line-up of six hitters alongside Jos Buttler, Salt, Jacks, Brook and Liam Livingstone.Bairstow has a clear preference to open the batting and generally does so in franchise T20, but England have always valued his ability to hit sixes against spin through the middle overs. Since December 2020, the majority of his T20I appearances have been as a middle-order batter and he can set games up for Brook and Livingstone as finishers.Key often frames selection as making decisions based on what players are like at their best, not their worst. The question for England now is how they can help Bairstow get back to being the best version of himself. The answer? Bring him home from India, give him three weeks off and help him refresh before a shot at the World Cup.

'It can be tough to do both skills full out' but Kapp will do it for South Africa

With a limited time left in the game, Marizanne Kapp is focusing on how much she can still do and not how much she shouldn’t

Firdose Moonda03-Oct-2024If you, like me, have wondered what the point of women playing one-off Tests – often with no red-ball domestic structure to help them prepare – is, Marizanne Kapp has the answer.”That 150 against England, when we were in so much trouble, changed the way I approached batting,” she told ESPNcricinfo. “Just prior to that, I started working a lot with [former New Zealand men’s international] Kruger van Wyk, who is our fielding coach. We just worked on a few mental things and upped my game. I used to be someone that had to hit and bowl a million balls before games and I really worked hard to taper down on that so that by match day I am not so fatigued. I’ve also really worked on just being a little bit more aggressive and if it’s in my area going after the bowlers.”The match Kapp is referring to took place in June 2022 in Taunton and was South Africa’s first Test in more than seven years. They were put in to bat and found themselves 47 for 4 when Kapp got to the crease. She batted for most of the rest of innings – four hours and 26 minutes in total – and faced 213 balls for her 150, and then everything changed.Related

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In 20 ODIs after that knock, Kapp scored a staggering 836 runs at an average of 59.71 (compared to a career-average of 34.33) including two of her three hundreds. In 23 T20Is, she scored 486 runs at 27.00 (up from an overall average of 20.98), improved her strike rate from 103.58 to 130.99 and decreased her balls-per-boundary rate to 5.62 from 11.73 in the three years prior to that.That means Kapp has gone from scoring a boundary every two overs, to one every over, which in the shortest format makes a massive difference, and proves she has joined the women’s power-hitting revolution. “I’ve really started to back myself in hitting the ball, whether it’s my first three balls or whether I’ve faced 30 balls,” she said. “These days you have to adapt, be more aggressive, and keep on working on your game. I feel like in T20 cricket or even in ODI cricket if you look, the girls are starting to reach scores of 280, 300 and above. It’s not the same as years ago where you [could] just take your time.”Kapp’s own role is also not the same as it was a few years ago, where she slotted into South Africa’s middle order after the likes of Lizelle Lee, Dane van Niekerk and Mignon du Preez. All three are now retired, which presented South Africa with the opportunity to play Kapp up the order at No. 3, where she has been since January last year. And that wasn’t the first time she found herself in such a key batting position. She was initially put there in 2017 by Surrey Stars in the Women’s Super League in England. Kapp was the competition’s fourth-highest run-scorer, behind Rachel Priest, Suzie Bates and Ellyse Perry, and later had some games in the same position in the WBBL and WPL.”I’m a big believer in the leagues even though it takes so much out of me. I feel like the leagues are probably the reason that I’ve really started to put in big performances in international cricket,” Kapp said. “The leagues bring a different level of competitiveness. You bowl and bat in different areas in a game in these leagues. You get used to playing in semi-finals and finals with massive crowds. I’ve learned how to finish games in leagues. If you look at our international schedule, even if you play all the games, how many times will you find yourself in a situation where you have to finish off a game? It doesn’t always work out that way. In the leagues, I’ve been in that situation a lot.”

“I take most of my wickets in the powerplay and we need me to strike and almost protect those younger bowlers a little bit more, so that they can come in after the powerplay, where they can have their four fielders and bowl to their plans”Marizanne Kapp

Though Kapp is an advocate of prioritising leagues in the schedule, like most cricketers she still thinks there is “nothing better than playing for your country and playing in World Cups”, especially as South Africa continue to improve.Last year, they reached a final for the first time even though “we probably didn’t play our best cricket” but “managed to rock up on the day of the semi-final and performed”.This year, there’s expectation growing at home that they can go one better, even though they are without a key member of their last squad, Shabnim Ismail, who has retired. Without her, South Africa have lost significant bowling experience and quality and Kapp, once again, finds herself in a position of increased responsibility.Along with her higher batting role, she also expects to continue opening the bowling. “I still believe I have a massive role to play with the ball. Experience is something you can’t buy and we saw that with Shabnim leaving, it leaves a big hole in our bowling line-up,” Kapp said. “Our bowling line-up has always been world-class but we’ve had a few changes. I take most of my wickets in the powerplay and we need me to strike and almost protect those younger bowlers a little bit more, so that they can come in after the powerplay, where they can have their four fielders and bowl to their plans.”Kapp’s understanding of her new-ball job is spot on. Since the start of 2023, she has taken 70% of her total wickets in the first six overs – 48 at an average of 16.31 – and it is also where she is most difficult to get away. She goes at 5.36 runs per over in the powerplay, and 7.94 from overs seven to 20. Her ability to find swing upfront continues to make her a big threat and in T20s, she is open to bowling her full complement of overs early. “If it’s going well and it’s my day, we’ve been letting me bowl three or even four overs sometimes. If you can get one of those big sides on the back foot, you’re halfway there.””It just took me one or two knocks against the big sides and my confidence just doubled”•BCCIBut that doesn’t mean Kapp hasn’t taken stock of what she’s putting herself through. “If you have to look at allrounders at the moment, your big allrounders all over the world, none of them really still opens the bowling and bats top order like what I’m doing currently,” she said. “So even if I was younger, it’s a big ask and a tough ask in international cricket.”Especially for someone like her, who has also had health struggles. Kapp had Covid-19 four times and has also missed matches with other illnesses. She thinks some of it is down to her diet as a vegetarian, but has seen improvement since the team added a doctor to the permanent support staff.”We’ve had the doctor for quite a while and she’s been guiding me and helping me and making sure that my food is sorted,” Kapp said. “I’m getting older and my body is getting older in the sense that if you look at the amount of cricket I play, for example. This is going to be my tenth year of Big Bash and it can be tough to do both skills full out.”It can also be rewarding and with a limited time left in the game – Kapp is thought to be eyeing next year’s 50-over World Cup as a swansong of sorts – she’s focusing on how much she can still do and not how much she shouldn’t. “It just took me one or two knocks against the big sides and my confidence just doubled. Now, I believe I can do it as a batter as well, not only as a bowler.”

Switch Hit: Baz Supremacy and Root maths

Alan is joined by Miller and Fidel to discuss England’s victory at Lord’s and a promotion for Brendon McCullum

ESPNcricinfo staff03-Sep-2024England sewed up another series win, as well as a fifth consecutive Test victory, beating Sri Lanka by 190 runs at Lord’s. The ECB then announced two days later that Brendon McCullum would add the white-ball remit to his job as head coach. On this week’s Switch Hit, Alan Gardner was joined by Andrew Miller and Andrew Fidel Fernando go over the talking points – from Dhananjaya de Silva’s decision at the toss, the outstanding performances of Joe Root and Gus Atkinson, what to expect at The Oval, and whether adding to McCullum’s workload makes sense.

What does Test cricket mean to the Test teams outside the World Test Championship?

Zimbabwe, Afghanistan and Ireland have no pathway to break into the league of nine teams and play few Tests. What does their future in Test cricket look like?

Ekanth03-Feb-2025The sky was blue, Afghanistan were in whites, ready to re-acquaint themselves with the red ball. They were back in Greater Noida, their old home outside Delhi, for their first Test against New Zealand. New Zealand would likely have been excited by a new opponent, but they were probably looking at the game more as prep for their forthcoming Tests in Sri Lanka and India.On the surface, there were uncontrollable reasons – mainly rain – for the Test being abandoned without even the toss having taken place. Still, the first two days being washed out due to the after effects of rain outside the hours of play was hard to explain.Gary Stead and Jonathan Trott, New Zealand’s and Afghanistan’s respective coaches, expressed their disappointment and acknowledged the compromises involved in the organisation of the Test. And so a rare opportunity for Afghanistan to play a Test match went almost literally down the drain.

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When the ICC first approved the idea of a World Test Championship in 2010, Zimbabwe were supposed to be among the ten participating teams in the league when it kicked off three years later. However, it was postponed and only actually approved in 2017.Related

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When the WTC was finally launched in 2019, only nine Full Members were included. Zimbabwe, as well as the latest Full Members, Afghanistan and Ireland (who were awarded that status in 2017) missed out. No specific reasons were given for their exclusion, but it was thought to be because both the latter two members were newly inducted and Zimbabwe had lost their way because of the political interference in their cricket in the 2000s.Those three teams (with the major ones) got spots in the ODI Super League, which did provide regular opportunities to lower-ranked sides, and an Associate team, to play against Full Members. But that league was discontinued after the 2023 ODI World Cup, with just one cycle completed. The Intercontinental Cup, once a steady source of red-ball exposure for Associate teams between 2004 and 2017, had also been scrapped by then.Three cycles into the WTC, there still is no pathway for a new team to enter the championship. There is no system of promotion and relegation, or any other meritocratic provision to challenge the positions of the existing teams.”For you to be a Full Member, you need to play all three formats. That’s an eligibility criteria,” Tavengwa Mukuhlani, Zimbabwe Cricket’s chair, says, “So every member must have an equal and fair opportunity to play the three formats, without discrimination. The current set-up defeats the purpose of being a Test-playing Full Member.”

“The more Test matches that Afghanistan play, the better, the more first-class cricket they play, the better they’ll be”Jonathan Trott, Afghanistan coach

Since the start of 2018, the year Afghanistan and Ireland played their first Tests, the three non-WTC teams have played 28 Tests collectively. That’s an average of under four Tests between the three of them per year.Last year, which offered the three sides six Tests between them was kind to them. Ireland won both their matches and hosted one for the first time in six years – although that needs to be weighed against the cost of giving up the chance to host the Australia men’s side for the first time. The Boxing Day Test, Zimbabwe hope, could grow into a tradition. Afghanistan played three Tests in three different countries.Trott hopes that the Test team can follow in the footsteps of their high-achieving white-ball team which beat England, Sri Lanka, and Pakistan in the last ODI World Cup and made the T20 World Cup semi-final last year. But that seems a lofty ambition.The abundant talent they are blessed with has helped Afghanistan progress farther and faster than their non-WTC counterparts. However, they are more affected by the proliferation of franchise leagues, where their players are in demand. Rashid Khan, for instance, Afghanistan’s captain and go-to match-winner, is a mainstay across multiple T20 leagues.Afghanistan are scheduled to play 21 Tests between 2023 and 2027, Zimbabwe 20 and Ireland 12 apiece under the ICC’s men’s Future Tours Programme (FTP). However, Afghanistan have played only five so far (New Zealand Test included) about halfway into that four-year period.The cost of one lost Test is magnified when you factor in other changes to their calendar. Afghanistan were set to play two Tests against Bangladesh in June 2023 but only played one, due to scheduling issues. They then had a multi-format series against Zimbabwe in July 2023, where too a Test was dropped (scheduling issues again). Their multi-format series against Bangladesh in 2024 was initially postponed and then turned into a three-match ODI series.Andy Balbirnie of Ireland: “A lot of the top nations are picking [players] on first-class records, whereas we can’t do that”•Michael Steele/Getty Images”It’s the FTP,” Trott says. “You deal with it as and when it happens, and when Test matches come up and first-class cricket comes up, you want players to perform.”Trott says Afghanistan’s high-performance centre looks after player development across age groups and formats in the country, and that the team has access to very good facilities in the UAE. However, only regular participation in first-class cricket and Test wins against the top teams can make for a pathway into the WTC, he says.”It’s just that white-ball cricket is more what they’re used to, and they’ve played a lot more of it. And that’s the only reason why I think the more Test matches that Afghanistan play, the better, the more first-class cricket they play, the better they’ll be.”While Afghanistan have had the Ahmad Shah Abdali 4-day Tournament, a multi-day competition running since 2011, which gained first-class status in 2017, the number of teams participating in it has come down from six to four. To its credit, the competition survived Covid.But the ability to fine-tune players for Test cricket – on demand – is still not within their grasp, as perhaps reflected in their loss to Ireland in Abu Dhabi in a close Test in March 2024. “We could’ve easily won that one if we’d played a little bit better,” Trott says.Ireland registered their first home Test win when they beat Zimbabwe in July, in another seesawing Test.

“The current set-up defeats the purpose of being a Test-playing Full Member”Tavengwa Mukuhlani, Zimbabwe Cricket chair

“The more that we play international cricket,” Warren Deutrom, Cricket Ireland’s CEO, says, “the more the players get used to the rhythms of international cricket. The wins show that our players are learning very quickly, and our players are very talented, and I think you ask any player, they love playing Test cricket.”Not that he thinks putting a large amount of Test cricket into the crowded international calendar is the best thing to do. “I think we would prefer to potentially increase it gradually, over a period of time. I don’t subscribe to the theory that more content automatically makes for a better FTP.”The Emerald Challenge match was Ireland’s only domestic first-class game in 2024, and that was washed out. For the Test they played against Afghanistan, Ireland captain Andy Balbirnie says they spent about a week or so in Dubai just practising with the red ball to get used to it.Having to rely on instinct for selection is also a problem, because of the lack of data. “We’ve had selection meetings that have been based on how the person has performed in the nets, in the build-up to a Test match,” Balbirnie says. “We can’t go on anything else. A lot of the top nations are picking [players] on first-class records, whereas we just don’t do that. We can’t do that.”Do we have a hunch? Is someone looking like they could do something in Test cricket? So we have some very interesting selection meetings where a lot of names are thrown around.”Be that as it may, Balbirnie and many of his team-mates have demonstrated that regular exposure to the longer format can lead to a sustainable career. “My international game was developed by playing nations like Scotland, Netherlands, Oman, Namibia, all these teams [in the Intercontinental Cup],” he says. “And there was nothing between the teams, it was always close cricket. And then, from nowhere, [Ireland] got out of it into the next level, for whatever reason – I don’t know if it was [because of] a good salesperson in the meetings, a good CEO, someone who could sell us as a team.Players train at Afghanistan’s high-performance centre in Kabul. The team also has access to top-of-the-line facilities in the UAE, but lack of actual Test match play hobbles their development•Ahmad Sahel Arman/AFP/Getty Images”Obviously we’ve put in good performances, but it didn’t seem that fair that we just went up above and left everyone low below us, because even now, when we play Scotland and Netherlands, there’s not a lot between the teams. There are bowlers in the Netherlands team, the Scotland team, that are as great as these [Ireland] guys. If you put them on the Test stage, you’ll see good cricket.”I feel like there’s a place in Test cricket for Associate Nations. I can’t see it happening before I finish playing, but hopefully in time, as the game develops, that will be the only way it can go.””Six-seven years, eight years” is how long Trott hopes it will take for Afghanistan to become part of the WTC. “Look at Bangladesh and their development.”Bangladesh, who played their first Test in 2000, had to wait 34 Tests over 17 series for their first Test-match win (against Zimbabwe). Despite having taken large strides, they are in the bottom triad of the WTC club a quarter of a century into their life as a Test side. Glacial progress in Test cricket isn’t a new or unique problem.”A lot of the Afghan players played probably 30 first-class games” Trott says, “and [about] ten of those have been Test matches. So, experience-wise, they don’t play enough four-day cricket. That’s where you’ll learn, out in the middle.”

Three cycles into the WTC, there still is no pathway for a new team to enter the championship. There is no system of promotion and relegation to challenge the positions of the existing teams

An additional wrinkle for Afghanistan is the issue of women’s participation – the lack of which, thanks to Taliban rule, has been a point of contention over the last few years, leading to the team’s status as a Full Member being questioned (the ICC constitution requires all Full Members to have a women’s team). It is why the Australia men’s team currently do not play bilateral cricket against Afghanistan. There is no long-term resolution in sight. So far the ICC board has resisted taking away Afghanistan’s Test status, arguing that the ACB is bound to follow the Taliban’s edicts, regressive as they may be.Zimbabwe for their part have a talent-drain issue, as well as the lingering spectre of corruption and political interference. Mukuhlani says he recognises the importance of structures and transparency in the running of the board, which received an unqualified or clean audit opinion for their financial statements in 2023. He also knows the importance of maintaining a solid first-class structure.”Our Logan Cup, which we run with five sides, is improving every season and is bringing in foreign players,” he said. “But the biggest challenge, one which we have experienced in the past too, is that all our good players we have an opportunity [to bring into the Zimbabwe national set-up] will end up in England [mainly but also other foreign countries].”Tom Curran (England), Gary Ballance (who played for England and then returned to represent Zimbabwe), and Colin de Grandhomme (New Zealand) are examples, among others. While Mukuhlani appreciates that players are free to migrate, he says it can’t be at the expense of Zimbabwe’s development programme.”I think if a player has played for a nation in Under-19s, particularly if they’ve played in a World Cup team, [and] if they are to switch citizenship, the receiving board must pay us for development. It can’t be for free.”While Ireland are trying to create systems for cricket in the country, they are far from being immune to existential threats. They offer players casual and retainer contracts to build their talent pool but are arguably better off having players play county cricket or franchise leagues as part of their development.Warren Deutrom of Cricket Ireland says the World Test Championship needs to evolve into a format based on divisions or conferences – which will not happen without a lot of political will from those involved•Sportsfile via Getty ImagesFor Ireland, playing a Test at home is more expensive than doing so at a neutral venue, because real estate is expensive in the country. In recent days it has been driven home just how resource-intensive building a stadium can be. Given they took big strides in the 2010s in ODIs, they are perhaps the team hit hardest by the previous two ODI World Cups being reduced to ten teams.What does their ideal future in Tests look like?”Ultimately, I believe all international cricket should be played with context,” Deutrom says. “That being the World Test Championship. When that needs to happen, how the World Test Championship needs to evolve, whether it’s divisions, whether it’s conferences [splitting the 12 teams into two equally weighted groups], I don’t know.”Deutrom points out that these potential configurations pose their own tough questions. “Is there going to be a conference in which you’re not going to have icon series taking place? Can you envisage any environment where England, India or Australia won’t be playing each other in Test cricket? So it’s very difficult to understand or to see how it could happen without very, very significant political will.”A recent newspaper column by Ravi Shastri advocating a two-tier Test system has reignited discourse around the topic, but political will is lacking, as seen in the remarks of the exiting ICC chair, Greg Barclay, who stepped down after four years in charge late last year.”Why are Ireland playing Test cricket?” he said to the Telegraph during a conversation where he suggested structural changes to cricket in lower-ranked countries and regions.

Ultimately, a quarter of the Full Members do not know what they need to do to be part of the whole

So should Ireland and similarly placed teams just focus on white-ball cricket and international tournaments instead?”We became a Test member seven years ago,” Deutrom, who spoke for this article before Barclay’made his comments, says. “Just because we’re not in the World Test Championship, it doesn’t mean that we’re not playing the format or improving at the format, winning at the format. I don’t see a need for us to have to relinquish it.”There’s no burning platform that says, ‘Well, unless Cricket Ireland makes a decision tomorrow about what the next ten years of Test cricket looks like, we should give it up.'”Yes, we’re not in the World Test Championship. And yes, we’re not playing ten Test matches a year, but so what? I can’t see that us not doing that is somehow negatively impacting the world game, negatively impact[ing] our players, [or] is somehow diminishing the credibility of world cricket. So I don’t understand why, just because we don’t have a definitive road map, based on our current requirements, whether it be in terms of money or permanent infrastructure, we have to make a definitive decision. We don’t.”Most Full Members find the current system the most effective. And so, Test cricket’s context-free era – albeit not as context-free as in the past – continues to linger. Ultimately, a quarter of the Full Members do not know what they need to do to be part of the whole. There are no definitive answers. Not yet.

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