'We're receiving reports of Aussies in trouble'

The Nottingham police take notice of the Ashes at Trent Bridge, and so does everyone else

Alex Bowden07-Aug-2015Did you see it?

He’s lying. He saw it. If nothing else, the hashtag’s a giveaway.Alastair Cook won the toss and bowled.

Nope.Matt Prior was useful behind the stumps, but not half as good as he apparently is in the stands.

Broad took two wickets in that over and pretty soon he had five more.

Ex-England rugby player Brian Moore rated the morning right up there in his hierarchy of life experiences.

Things were so violent at Trent Bridge that Nottinghamshire police considered intervening.

Pretty soon – well actually very, very, uncommonly soon – the tourists were nine down.

They couldn’t. Broad got another one.

Not sure there was actually enough material for a 30-second ad.The reaction among Australians was mixed. Dean Jones channelled Michael Vaughan in staying positive.

While Matthew Hayden indulged in some wishful thinking.

Yeah, that’s where Australia went wrong, Matthew – with the make-up of their bowling attack.I suppose we should probably take a look at events outside the first morning of the fourth Ashes Test as well.Chris Gayle had his usual demanding schedule.

So did Dale Steyn.

Kemar Roach had some more insightful advice.

And Jimmy Neesham had beard-growing advice.

But then got rid of it.

Finally, this is how Stuart Broad gained his superpowers. You can bet they weren’t in Nando’s.

Afghanistan, the fastest Associate off the blocks

Stats highlights from the fifth ODI between Zimbabwe and Afghanistan in Bulawayo, where the visitors created history by becoming the first Associate team to win an ODI series against a Full Member

Shiva Jayaraman24-Oct-20150 Number of times before Afghanistan that an Associate had won a bilateral ODI series against a Test team. Kenya had come closest to doing this in a five-match series in 2005-06, but the final match of that series was abandoned.1.0 Afghanistan’s win-loss ratio in ODIs; no other Associate has a better record from three or more ODIs. Afghanistan have won 28 of the 56 ODIs they have played, the most any Associate has won in their first 56 ODIs. Before Afghanistan, Ireland had registered 27 wins in their first 56 ODIs.6 Number of times Afghanistan have now won against Test teams from 20 ODIs, the most any Associate has won in their first 20 ODIs against Test teams. Kenya had won five of their first 20 matches against Test teams, which was the previous best. Afghanistan’s win-loss ratio of 0.428 against Test teams is the best among Associates.1.25 Afghanistan’s win-loss ratio in ODIs against Zimbabwe. They are the only Associate to have won more than they have lost against any Test team.41.90 Mohammad Nabi’s batting average against Test teams in bilateral series. No other batsman from Associate teams with at least 200 runs has a better average against Test teams. Nabi has scored 461 runs in 11 ODIs and has made one hundred and two fifties including his 53 in this match.6 Fifty-plus scores by Afghanistan’s top-three batsmen in this series; Zimbabwe’s batsmen managed only two. While Afghanistan’s top-three batsmen scored 607 runs at an average of 40.46, Zimbabwe managed just 339 runs at 24.21.23 Number of fifties Sean Williams had hit in ODIs before his hundred in this match, the fifth-highest number of fifties by any batsman before his first hundred in ODIs. Arjuna Ranatunga leads this list: he had hit 29 fifties before his first century.96 Williams’ highest score in ODIs before his 102 in this match, which had come against Ireland in the 2015 World Cup. The century today was Williams’ seventh fifty-plus score in ODIs this year, the most he has hit in any calendar year. He has made 802 runs this year at an average of 40.35. Overall Williams has 2589 runs at an average of 33.62.4 Number of wins for an Associate against a Full Member that have come with a bigger margin than Afghanistan’s 73 runs in this match. Afghanistan themselves had beaten Zimbabwe by 100 runs at the same venue in an ODI last year, which is the biggest by an Associate over a Test team.7 Times a Zimbabwe bowler had taken 10 or more wickets in a bilateral ODI series before Wellington Masakadza, who took 10 wickets at an average of 18.80 and a best of 4 for 21 in the first ODI. Graeme Cremer’s 15 wickets in a five-match ODI series against Kenya are the highest by a Zimbabwe bowler in such series.9 Wickets taken by both Amir Hamza and Dawlat Zadran in this series; there are only three other instances of a bowler from an Associate team taking nine or more wickets in a bilateral series. Nehemiah Odhiambo’s 12 wickets in a series against Zimbabwe in 2009-10 are the highest.223 Runs by Nabi, the highest in this series by any batsman and the third highest by any batsman from an Associate team in a bilateral ODI series. Khurram Khan’s 270 runs in a three-match series against Afghanistan are the highest. Noor Ali Zadran also made 200 runs in this series. Besides Nabi, Khurram and Zadran, only three other batsmen – Paul Stirling, Nawroz Mangal and Steve Tikolo – have aggregated at least 200 runs in a bilateral series.0 Four-wicket hauls Dawlat Zadran had taken in ODIs before this match. His 4 for 22 in this match was the third best figures by an Afghanistan bowler in ODIs. There are only six other instances of bowlers from Associate teams returning better figures in an ODI against Test teams. Zadran has 47 wickets from 34 matches at an average of 30.46.

The longest wait for a century stand

Stats highlights from the third day of the Delhi Test between India and South Africa

Bharath Seervi05-Dec-2015115 Partnerships in this series before Virat Kohli and Ajinkya Rahane came together and added the first century stand of the series, the most in any series before the first century stand. The previous highest was 112, in the 1965 series between England and South Africa: Ken Barrington and Colin Cowdrey added added 135 at The Oval, and that was the 113th partnership of the series. Among all Test series where there have been 115 or more partnerships, the only other series with just one century partnership was between India and New Zealand, also in India, in 1969-70.1999 The last time, before Rohit Sharma’s zero today, that an India No.3 batsman got a golden duck in Tests – VVS Laxman against Australia in Adelaide. In 2003-04 in Lahore, Rahul Dravid got a diamond duck, getting run-out without facing a ball. The last such instance for an Indian No.3 batsman in India was also in Delhi, when Raman Lamba fell first ball against West Indies in 1987-88. Overall, it is the 15th instance of an India No.3 batsman getting dismissed for zero facing zero or one ball.1094 Total partnership runs between Kohli and Rahane in 21 Test innings, at an average of 54.70. Since these two batsmen first batted together in Tests, in December 2013, they are the only Indian pair to aggregate 1000-plus partnership runs. Kohli is also the only batsman with whom Rahane has added more than 500 partnership runs in Tests, while Rahane is the second batsman – after Cheteshwar Pujara – with whom Kohli has added 1000-plus runs in Tests.1 Higher match aggregates by an Indian batsman batting at No.5 or lower in a Delhi Test than Rahane’s tally in this match. The only such instance was Laxman’s 259 runs (200 and 59, both unbeaten) against Australia in 2008-09.5 Consecutive Tests in India, excluding the washed-out match in Bangalore, which did not go past the third day. The sequence started with a Test in Delhi, against Australia in 2013, and is also ending here with this Test against South Africa.0 Captains younger than Kohli to make a 50-plus score in Tests in Delhi in the last 50 years. Kohli, at the age of 27 years and 30 days, is the youngest captain since Nari Contractor (26 years, 338 days) in 1960-61 to score a half-century at Feroz Shah Kotla. Overall, Kohli is the third-youngest captain to score 50-plus at the venue.15 Total runs by M Vijay in this match – 12 in the first innings and three in the second, his fourth-lowest match aggregate in Tests where he has batted in both innings. Also, this is only the third Test in which he failed to hit any boundary in either innings.5 Consecutive innings in which Shikhar Dhawan has scored ten or more. His scores during this period are 45 not out, 12, 39, 33 and 21. This is only the second time he has passed 10 in more than three consecutive innings – his first such sequence was the seven innings from his Test debut.1987 The last instance of a batsman scoring a century in the third innings of a Test in Delhi – Dilip Vengsarkar made 102 against West Indies. Since then, in the 10 Tests played before this game, there have been no centuries in the third innings. Kohli could break that sequence if he gets 17 more.

Dark skies offer South Africa a glimmer

After being completely outplayed on the opening day, South Africa would not have minded an extra day off to reflect on their mistakes and plot an unlikely coup to get back into the series

Firdose Moonda in Bangalore15-Nov-2015Rain is exactly what every South African wanted today. Back home, the country is facing its worst water crisis since 1992, five of the country’s nine provinces have been declared drought disaster areas, and water restrictions have been imposed. In Bangalore, the rain has poured like the blessing South Africans believe it to be.The entire second day was washed out, eating into the time India wanted to wipe away the first-innings deficit and begin building a lead. Even though the rain also munched away at the minutes South Africa could have used to start plucking Indian wickets – and in humid, overcast conditions their seamers would have hoped for some assistance – they would have preferred to lose time on this occasion.South Africa’s pace pack is depleted down to only one frontliner: Morne Morkel. The two who could have made use of any movement on offer – Dale Steyn and Vernon Philander – are injured and the replacement pair – Kyle Abbott and Kagiso Rabada – need some time to gear up for the magnitude of the task facing them.Rabada needs more experience – in less than two years he has gone from impressive schoolboy to international cricketer across all formats – but Abbott, who is a swing bowler, could have used the extra day off. Abbott was barely 36 hours off a plane when he was thrust into a Test match with his captain’s assuring words that “when he puts his boots on, he’s ready even if he got off the plane 10 minutes before he bowled the first ball.”The Abbott of day one was not quite ready. In his six-over spell, he found movement, beat the bat and held his length back. But even with Morkel testing the surface’s spongy bounce and Rabada poison-tipped with potential, Abbott could not create any pressure. India’s opening pair were very rarely made to feel as though they would be lured into making a mistake, much less that there was any menace coming from their opponents.South Africa’s batsmen are partly to blame for creating that sense of security of their hosts, who put them in – a rarity in Indian conditions – and then bundled them out. In the two-and-a-half sessions India spent out there, they would have seen there were no demons in the pitch, not even the sluggish, sleeping ones like they were in Mohali They would have known they could seize an advantage by batting carefully to the close.But in-game advantage is delicate and for India to hold on to it, they need to continue blunting South Africa’s seamers, who generally do not remain passive for extended periods and will have the importance of sharpening up stressed on them. Morkel will have to lead with a little more authority and a little more meanness. He will have to bowl fast and back of a length to extract the bounce that a bowler of his height can generate and make the Indian batsmen uncomfortable. Abbott will have to conjure up his inner-Steyn, in swing terms, and make the conditions work for him. Both of them have to be careful not to bowl too straight, but to make the batsmen play outside the offstump.Rabada will have to back both of them up by being the other half of Steyn: fast and furious. He will have to be the one who bends his back the most, bangs in the hardest and bears down on the batsmen the most. He already has the right bowling character to intimidate, now he has to trust it at the highest level and he has reason to. He has the backing of the best.During the first Test, Steyn posted a photo of himself in wicket-celebration mode with his steely, scary eyes trained on Rabada. “I am looking at the future of SA cricket!,” Steyn captioned it. “Remember this name, people. You gana (sic) be seeing a lot of it. Congrats on your Test debut bud. #fastbowlingpartner.”Steyn will not be on the field to guide Rabada or anyone else but his presence from the dressing room may serve as a reminder of what South Africa’s attack need to protect. Before the Mohali Test, South Africa had lost only one Test away from home – to Pakistan in Abu Dhabi in October 2013 – in five years. The team owes a lot of that form to Steyn, who before Saturday had not missed a match in six years since he sat out the first Test against England in December 2009.The stability Steyn provided in that time has meant South Africa have usually had the luxury of pushing for wins rather than settling for draws. They tended to prefer time in the game than time out, but without Steyn, that dynamic has shifted. Time out – and there could be more of it with rain also forecast on Monday and Tuesday – could allow them to save the blushes after their batting blunder. But it will also leave the series open wide enough for them to begin plotting an unlikely coup, even with their new attack.

South Africa's record chase, de Villiers sets the bar higher

Stats highlights from the second T20I between South Africa and England at the Wanderers where the hosts won the series 2-0 after chasing 172 in just 14.4 overs.

Bharath Seervi21-Feb-20161 Number of successful run chases of 150 or more in T20Is that have been faster than South Africa’s 88-ball chase in this match. Netherlands had chased a target of 190 in 13.5 overs against Ireland in Sylhet in the qualifying round of the 2014 World T20. South Africa have three of the five quickest such chases. They had chased 169 in 15.5 overs against Zimbabwe in Bloemfontein in October 2010 and 174 against New Zealand in Hamilton in February 2012.4 Consecutive bilateral T20I series without a win for South Africa at home, before this 2-0 win. They had last won against New Zealand by 2-1 in 2012-13. In four series before this, they had lost two and drawn as many. Overall, this was their fourth consecutive unbeaten T20I series played in any country.0 Number of higher successful chases in T20Is losing one or no wickets than South Africa’s win in this match. Only once has a team won a T20I losing one or no wickets when chasing 150-plus: New Zealand’s win against Pakistan in Hamilton earlier this year when they chased down 169 without losing a wicket.88 Runs scored by South Africa in the first six overs – the third-highest in T20Is. The top two in this list are: 91 by Netherlands against Ireland in Sylhet in 2014 and 90 by New Zealand against Scotland at The Oval in the 2009 World T20. Netherlands had to chase the target of 190 in 14.2 overs to qualify for the league stage of World T20 2014 and New Zealand’s was in a seven-over game of which only two were Powerplay overs..21 Number of balls required by AB de Villiers to complete his seventh half-century in T20Is – the fastest for South Africa. The previous record was also by him, in 23 balls against the same opposition in Chittagong in 2014. This is the second-fastest fifty against England in T20Is after Yuvraj Singh’s 12-ball effort in Durban in the 2007 World T20. De Villiers’ opening partner Hashim Amla also completed his half-century in 27 balls and got to his highest score in T20Is; only his second fifty in the format.134 Runs by South Africa in the first ten overs of the innings – the second-highest in T20Is. New Zealand had made 147 against Sri Lanka in Auckland in January this year which is the highest in any T20I in the first ten overs. New Zealand had chased a target of 143 in 10 overs in that game.18 Chris Jordan’s economy in 2.4 overs – the second-worst for a bowler to bowl at least 15 balls in a T20I. He conceded seven fours and two sixes in the 16 deliveries and went wicketless. The previous worst for England was by James Anderson when he conceded 64 runs in four overs – at an economy of 16 – against Australia at the SCG in 2006-07.14 Runs by England’s last six wickets – third-lowest in T20Is. They collapsed from 157 for 3 in 16.2 overs to 171 all out in 19.4 overs. They lost seven wickets in the last four overs of the innings. Only once has a team lost more wickets in the last four overs. Australia lost eight wickets in the last four overs against Pakistan at Gros Islet in the group match in the 2010 World T20.11 Sixes by England in this match – joint second-highest by them in a T20I. Their batsmen hit 15 sixes against New Zealand in Auckland in 2012-13. This was the fifth time they had hit 11 sixes in a T20I. England’s No. 3, 4 and 5 hit 10 sixes combined – two sixes by Joe Root and four each by Eoin Morgan and Jos Buttler. Only twice have there been more sixes hit by batsmen at those three positions for a team in T20Is.

Shanaka baits England's top order

He was the last of the seamers used by Angelo Mathews, and even Dasun Shanaka seemed a little surprised with the big fish he hauled in

Andrew Fidel Fernando at Headingley19-May-2016In January he was purveyor of record-setting brutality, clubbing 16 sixes and two fours in a domestic T20. In February, he bounced MS Dhoni out in Pune, en route to the game’s best figures of 3 for 16. The World T20 cameos came in March: 15 off 9 against England, 20 not out against South Africa.And though he’d seemed a strange presence in the May squad to England, he wangled his way into the XI with a swashbuckling 112 against Leicestershire. By lunch at Headingley he’d broken England’s top order open. Almost unheard of 12 months ago, now “where has this guy been all this time”, this is Dasun Shanaka’s 2016.Nuwan Pradeep may have brought swinging precision in the morning. Shaminda Eranga might have seamed it in either direction. Dushmantha Chameera was sharper, and pitched it shorter than both. Yet it was Shanaka’s 125-kph (77mph) drifting flower petals that lent the warmest invitation – that convinced the England batsmen to dance, or at least to drive.Shanaka is from coastal Negombo, in whose mangroves and lagoons multitudes of fish are spawned, in whose oceans entire schools are snared, and whose markets ring day-long with squawks of vendors hawking beautiful yellowfin tuna here, wriggling there, baskets of little in the corner.Sri Lanka to donate to flood victims

The Sri Lanka team will donate 1 million rupees (approx. USD $7,000) to flood victims in Sri Lanka, the team’s media manager said. Angelo Mathews and his side had made the decision on the morning of the first Test, and will be making their donation through Sri Lanka Cricket’s Cricket Aid initiative, which had been active following 2004’s Boxing Day Tsunami. SLC has also announced it will collect food and relief items at its Maitland Place offices.
The death toll from the landslides and floods has risen to 58, with over 132 more people feared dead, and as many as 300,000 displaced.

Shanaka baited the hook against Alastair Cook in the first over, sliding a full one across him. Then he floated it fuller and slightly wider at the beginning of the second, and Cook bit down – the 10,000-run milestone having to wait. Nick Compton was soon lured into a crab-trap: prodding awkwardly forward to meet the seaming ball, but prodding not quite far enough. Joe Root’s stay was almost as brief. It was the net Shanaka and Angelo Mathews had set down between the keeper and backward point that snared this big fish.In between this sublime eight-ball burst in which he claimed more than 10% of his first-class wickets, this debutant rejoiced in the time-honoured Sri Lankan seamers’ way. Cook’s wicket was one he would “remember until the end”, Shanaka said, but at the time there was merely a limp holding aloft of gangly limbs and a goofy -almost bashful – grin. When Lahiru Thirimanne held Compton’s edge close to the ground, he performed a pirouette to check if the umpire would give the batsman out, then rushed to his team-mates to miss high fives.Even the wicket of Root – an established Sri Lanka tormentor – prompted only more of the same. It was excitement rather than aggression. No snarling pumps with clenched fists. Lasith Malinga had been like that long ago. Chaminda Vaas too, at the start of his career. Eranga and Pradeep still produce the overeager sprint to the slips, though they’ve had a few years in the game, but at times Shanaka appeared as shocked by his success here as most who have studied his career bowling statistics would have been.Like Shanaka, Pradeep is a Negombo native, but it was with Chameera that Shanaka went to school and played first XI cricket with, on the field with a view of the main Negombo road, opposite a petrol shed, and not far from the centre of the cluttered town. Maris Stella College’s 2010 scorecards feature both names heavily; Chameera claiming the wickets, Shanaka giving occasional support with the ball, but bruising runs more often. His old team-mate was bowling at over 140kph (87mph) at the other end when each of Shanaka’s wickets came.”We all know that Dushmantha is naturally attacking,” Shanaka said. “I had to stick to the basics and make sure I did my part as his bowling partner. We’ve had a good understanding since school about how to go about that. Anyway with my bowling it can move both ways, so the instructions were to keep it on the spot.”When England had been 49 for 0 in the second hour, it appeared they had weathered the attack’s worst, and were settling in. The day could have so easily gone as badly for Sri Lanka as most had expected their series to. But they emerged with credit on the first day at least, and Shanaka’s unassuming seam-up sprung the first of what Sri Lanka hope will be a great many surprises.

Is India's need for speed too costly?

Under Virat Kohli, India have tended to go for quick-scoring batsmen at the expense of solid players. Is it an error in judgement or a larger sign of flexible thinking and practices?

Nagraj Gollapudi17-Aug-2016After clinching victory in the third Test, in St Lucia, India’s captain Virat Kohli made a revealing statement. He said that he would continue batting at No. 3, one step up from his usual position in Test cricket. In conversation with Sanjay Manjrekar at the post-match presentation, Kohli said that the reshuffle in the middle order was to accommodate Rohit Sharma at No. 5. Meanwhile, Cheteshwar Pujara, the original No. 3, who has averaged 45.44 since his latest comeback, has been dropped to accommodate Rohit.”We understood Rohit needs to be backed at a particular position,” Kohli told Manjrekar, who was curious to know if Kohli would bat at his new position going forward. “I batted at No. 3, Jinks [Ajinkya Rahane] at No. 4. Rohit is dangerous at No.5. That means I take up the extra responsibility at No. 3. I don’t mind that and someone like Ashwin is batting well. And we can play five bowlers.”Rohit, Kohli reckoned, had the potential to influence the game with his aggression; the often-used phrase is “he can change a Test in a session”. So, in St Lucia, it was not only Pujara who had to sit out. Also missing was regular opener M Vijay, who was fit after a hand injury had kept him out of the second Test. The team management retained KL Rahul, Vijay’s replacement in Kingston, to open with Shikhar Dhawan. The incriminating statistic that possibly explains the common fate of Pujara and Vijay is their strike rates – Pujara’s strike rate since his comeback is 43.51 [48.2 overall] and Vijay’s career strike rate of 46.88.Rohit on his role in India’s line-up

“I’ve batted in many different positions and again I’m willing to do that here. It’s not my choice, I’m not the captain or the coach to decide where I want to bat,” Rohit told bcci.tv. “It’s up to the management and what they feel is the best for the team.
“The message was very clear, ‘there will be times when you have to change the course of the game’, and I am ready to do that. I am willing to take up the challenge and get the team into the best position. My natural game is to attack. Whether I play the first ball or last ball of the game, or in the middle, whenever I see that opportunity I’m ready to take it and put the pressure back on the bowler.
“I wont let all these things (scrutiny on place in the team) affect me. It doesn’t bother me. I’m just focusing on staying happy, staying positive and not letting these things affect me. Where I am right now, I should be happy and grateful that I’ve come till here.”

Kohli and Rahane, who had finally found home at No. 5, having lived an itinerant life in the Indian middle order, moved up a slot each. Kohli endured his lowest match aggregate in Tests, but Rahane had a good Test, scoring 35 and an unbeaten 78. Yet India did leave themselves vulnerable at 126 for 5, and were rescued only by a long and slow partnership between R Ashwin and Wriddhiman Saha. The extent to which India will go to accommodate Rohit at No. 5 has drawn various reactions from experts.Former India captain Sourav Ganguly disapproves of the decision. Writing in the , Ganguly made a case for both sidelined batsmen. “If Murali Vijay is fit, he should be the first-choice opener,” Ganguly wrote. “I would still advocate for Pujara at three. One has to remember this position is not only about scoring. Many a time, the No. 3 has to wear out the new ball to make life easy for the rest. Rahul and [Shikhar] Dhawan tend to score briskly, but there will be times when someone will have to bear the brunt of the new ball. For that, Pujara should bat at three, followed by Virat and Rahane at four and five.”As a captain, Kohli has made his motive clear: dominate the opposition by playing positive, aggressive cricket. And these selections are consistent with that plan. Experts who have followed Kohli closely believe he is a keen captain and if there is a toss-up between two players, he shows a preference for the more attacking one.It is also no secret that Kohli has been a fan of, and has a lot of faith in, Rohit. Despite all his talent and skills, Rohit, the Test batsman, polarises opinion. As many backers as Rohit has within the Indian camp, there are an equal number of – if not more – sceptics outside who do not quite understand the team management’s fascination for him. One expert calls it an “obsession” with Rohit. He has batted at every position in the middle order, from 3 to 6, with most of his runs coming lower down, including centuries in his first two Tests. His performance in Test cricket – an average of 32.62 with just those two centuries to his name – does not match this hype, but perhaps Kohli puts it down to his not getting a string of matches in a row.Still, there are observers asking why a similar amount of patience has not been shown with Pujara, who has shown his mettle in tough situations. It’s well known that he scores quick runs after getting himself in. Why not wait for such innings from him, the way they are waiting for Rohit to come good? The team must believe that when Rohit comes good, it will be exceptional, because Kohli is ready to put himself in a position that is not his preferred station. He is still not watertight against the moving new ball, a job the No. 3 often has to do. Many believe Kohli is still fallible outside the off stump, a weakness that was thoroughly exposed on the England tour in 2014.There is a another school of thought, though, which contends that it is not about Rohit or Pujara or individual players. It is about figuring about the best combinations when challenges tougher than a rebuilding West Indies arrive. Former India and Bengal wicketkeeper-batsman Deep Dasgupta is a fan of this experimentation. “You can’t have someone like Rohit Sharma travelling with the team and not getting a chance, and suddenly he gets a chance and you expect him to score,” Dasgupta says. “So it is not a bad idea. This was the opportunity the team management had to try things out, to work out what is your best XI.”Surendra Bhave , a former national selector, sees a larger good coming out of this move. According to him, Asian teams and players have always had an attachment to particular positions in the batting order. He finds it refreshing that Kohli is breaking that mould, and is himself making the most uncomfortable move. “What he is saying, essentially, is you have to be detached from a particular number,” Bhave says. “There should be flexibility.”Bhave agrees with Kohli’s point that if India have to win a Test he has to pick the best combination for those conditions and that opposition. “Putting out the best combination is the most important thing,” Bhave says. “And if that means that I have to bat 3 or open, I am willing to do that. That is what he said. I see that as a very positive thing.”As long as the openers’ positions are not shuffled, Bhave does not mind keeping the positions of the rest of the middle order flexible. According to Bhave, a former Maharashtra opener and captain, in first-class cricket batsmen have moved up and down the order regularly to bat at whichever position is vacant in the national team. Hence, he says, there is no point being too harsh about India now shuffling their middle order.As much as he backs Kohli’s plan, Bhave says it will not work without conviction. “You have to remain consistent with it,” Bhave says. “And the reason behind changing the batting order should never be other than for the team’s cause. It is a step forward.”Dasgupta is impressed with Kohli’s selfless move up the order. “You are talking about a different mentality here,” Dasgupta says. “You are pushing yourself in terms of extending your boundaries, try and get out of your comfort zone. And the best way to do it as a captain yourself. Not just talking in the dressing room, but actually going out there and doing it.”Such a move, Dasgupta says, sends a signal to rest of the team saying, “Keep an open mind, I am there with you, I am backing you to the hilt, let us try out a few things, let us not be stuck in our cocoon and be comfortable where we are.”

Dhoni's electric glovework, Taylor's costly spill

Plays of the day from the third ODI between India and New Zealand in Mohali

Karthik Krishnaswamy23-Oct-2016Guptill’s monster hitMartin Guptill has a thing for hitting roofs. His sixes have twice hit the roof at the Westpac Stadium in Wellington and once at Auckland’s Eden Park. Stepping out of his crease to Hardik Pandya, he hit the first ball of the fourth over of the match for a humongous six that would have exited the PCA Stadium had he aimed towards the single-tier stands behind wide long-on. Instead, he launched the ball over the bowler’s head, and ended up pinging the front wall of the third tier of the stand behind the straight boundary.Those Dhoni handsAmit Mishra had just dismissed Ross Taylor with a superlative bit of flight, slowing the ball down to bring the batsman forward, getting it to dip to make him stretch and drag his back foot out of the crease, and turning it past his outside edge. MS Dhoni, as he so often does, wasted no time in getting the bails off.Dhoni’s task was just a little harder in Mishra’s next over, though, when he spun another legbreak past a groping batsman. This time, though, Luke Ronchi’s foot did not slide as far out of his crease as Taylor’s had done, and the ball turned from a little wider outside off, which meant Dhoni had a greater distance to cover between collecting the ball and stumping Ronchi, with less time at his disposal. But in his inimitable, non-textbook manner, he collected the ball without drawing his gloves back an inch, and whipped the bails off before Ronchi even knew what had happened.The spillIndia lost Ajinkya Rahane in the third over of their chase. Virat Kohli, new at the crease, had just shown what kind of form he was in, driving Matt Henry to the cover point boundary off the third ball of the fifth over. The next ball was shorter, and Kohli went on the back foot, looking for a dab to third man. He had not accounted for the presence of a catching fielder at wide slip, however, set for precisely that kind of shot. The ball went low to Taylor, one of the better catchers in world cricket. He fell to his right, got both hands to the ball a couple of inches off the turf, and dropped it.Those Kohli wristsRight through India’s chase, the only trouble their batsmen encountered from a flat Mohali pitch was the occasional tendency for the ball to stop on them. Rahane and Dhoni were both out caught at short cover, playing too early and having to check on-the-up drives. In the 33rd over, James Neesham got a shortish ball, angled into Kohli’s body, to stop on him. Kohli adjusted brilliantly, standing still for an instant to let the ball get to him before whipping it off his hips to the midwicket boundary, nearly getting it to carry all the way over the rope.

The matches that made Alastair Cook a record-breaker

Alastair Cook is to retire after making more than 12,000 runs in an England-record 161 Test appearances. ESPNcricinfo looks back at the landmarks

Andrew Miller19-Oct-20161:31

Alastair Cook achievements – By the numbers

Alastair Cook has announced that he will retire at the end of the Oval Test against India, after making more than 12,000 runs in an England-record 161 Test appearances. ESPNcricinfo looks back at the landmarks of a legendary Test careerTest No. 1 – Debut century at Nagpur
One hundred and two cricketers have made a century on Test debut, including ten Englishmen since the Second World War. But few have given such definitive proof of their poise and purpose as Cook, England’s emergency replacement on the tour of India in 2005-06. After Marcus Trescothick’s breakdown on the eve of the first Test, and at the age of 21 and with no acclimatisation whatsoever, Cook brushed off the effects of a 24-hour, multi-transfer, journey from Antigua to Nagpur to make 60 and 104 not out. All told, he batted for nine and a half hours in the match against an India attack boasting two of their greatest spinners in Anil Kumble and Harbhajan Singh.Test No. 6 – Maiden home Test hundred
Trescothick’s return in the summer of 2006 forced Cook to bed in at No. 3 in the short term, but he scarcely missed a beat in his first full season as an England batsman. At Lord’s in May, he missed out on his second Test century when he fell for 89 against Sri Lanka. But two months later, he made no mistake at the same venue, etching his name on the honours board for the first of what would end up being four occasions. For good measure, he followed up with his third century, 127, in the next match at Old Trafford.Test No. 12 – First Ashes hundred
If India had been a steep learning curve, then it was nothing compared to the winter of 2006-07, when Cook was thrust into the front line to withstand Australia’s Ashes vengeance mission. Restored to the top of the order, he encountered Glenn McGrath and Shane Warne still smarting from the events of 2005, and hell-bent on setting the record straight before waltzing into retirement. Unsurprisingly, he struggled, particularly outside off stump where his judgment was challenged mercilessly by the metronomic brutality of McGrath and Stuart Clark. But, with the Ashes all but surrendered as England chased 557 in the second innings at Perth, Cook knuckled down on the eve of his 22nd birthday to make 116 from 290 balls. It couldn’t save the day in the short term, but it laid a notable marker for events further down the line…Jumping for joy: Alastair Cook’s maiden Test century at Nagpur•AFPTest No. 24 – Face-saving hundred in Galle
Things would get worse before they got much better for England’s chastened cricketers. A home series loss against India was swiftly followed by a capitulation in Sri Lanka where, with the series level going into the third Test at Galle, they collapsed to 81 all out in reply to the home side’s 499, and inevitable defeat. Nevertheless, Cook’s bloodymindedness came bubbling to the fore in the follow-on, as he dug in against Muttiah Muralitharan to make a six-and-a-half hour 118. It wasn’t enough to impress certain members of England’s travelling support, who draped a banner over the walls of the historic Galle Fort to declare “England: Hang Your Heads in Shame”. But Cook, at least, was able to fly home to celebrate his 23rd birthday with his own held high.Test Nos. 25-36 – The summer of sixties
By the end of 2008, it was clear that Cook was a prodigy with purpose. In New Zealand in March he had become the youngest England batsman to reach 2000 Test runs (at the age of 23 years and two months) but for the rest of that year he seemed to hit something of a plateau – in the entire calendar year, he made eight fifties in 21 innings (an impressive effort), but had been unable to convert any of them to three figures. With scores of 60, 61, 60, 60, 76, 67, 52 and 50, it was time to turn to his mentor Graham Gooch, with whom he began working on the technical changes that he believed he needed to take his game to the next level.Cook’s Durban century set up a famous innings win•Getty ImagesTest No. 43 – Wisden Trophy regained
Cook broke his centuries drought with an eighth Test hundred against West Indies in Bridgetown, but given that the match had featured 1349 runs across its first two innings, including 291 for Ramnaresh Sarwan, his second-innings game-killer wasn’t much to write home about. Of greater significance, however, was his career-best 160 at Chester-le-Street two months later. After England’s shock surrendering of the Wisden Trophy in the Caribbean, courtesy of their 51 all out in the first Test at Sabina Park, Cook’s innings set up a pummelling innings win, and a 2-0 series victory, against a dispirited opposition.Test No. 50 – Innings win in Durban
Cook played a low-key role in England’s home Ashes win – his most significant contribution was a first-day 95 in the second Test when, in harness with Andrew Strauss, he took full toll of Mitchell Johnson’s stage fright to set up England’s first win against Australia at Lord’s for 75 years. But in Durban later that year, he was back to his obdurate best. Fresh from celebrating his 25th birthday, Cook dropped anchor with 118 from 263 balls, setting the stage for the coming of age of his team-mate, Ian Bell. England declared on 574 for 9, before routing South Africa for 133 in their second innings.Test No. 53 – Captain’s best 173
If there was any doubt that Cook was England’s anointed man, then the tour of Bangladesh in 2010 dispelled it once and for all. With Strauss taking a sabbatical ahead of England’s Ashes defence in Australia, Cook was tasked with leading England in his absence, on a potentially awkward campaign against an ever-improving opposition. He set the tone with a brace of 60s in the three-match ODI series (he was recalled as captain for that leg as well…) then laid down his marker by milking Bangladesh’s spin-dominant attack for 173 in the first Test in Chittagong. A week later, he had wrapped up a clean sweep in all five internationals by anchoring England’s run-chase in Dhaka with 109 not out.Test No. 59 – Last-chance saloon at The Oval
Cook, famously, has missed just one Test match in his entire career, and none for more than a decade since a stomach bug denied him a third cap on his maiden tour of India in 2006. But that record would surely have been interrupted but for this show of defiance against Pakistan at The Oval in 2010. All summer long, Cook had been hounded by the relentless pace, movement and accuracy of Mohammads Amir and Asif, and was braced for the drop after making 6 in the first innings of the third Test. But then he decided to throw caution to the wind, and cast aside the tinkerings that had left him so vulnerable outside off stump. “I wasn’t going to die wondering,” he said afterwards.Brisbane Heat: Cook reaches his double-hundred•Getty ImagesTests No. 61, 62 and 65 – 517 for 1 and all that
In the build-up to a seismic Ashes tussle in the winter of 2010-11, Australia’s focus had been entirely on one man. Kevin Pietersen was front and centre of their strategies as they sought to avenge England’s victory in the 2009 campaign; but hardly a breath of interest had been wasted on an opening batsman who, up to that point, had scored fewer than 500 runs in ten Ashes Tests, at a distinctly mediocre average of 26.21. But Cook made it his business to punish Australia’s oversight, racking up 766 runs in a 3-1 series triumph, including three vast hundreds. The biggest of the lot also doubles as his defining performance – an invincible innings of 235 not out in the cavernous hostility of the Gabba that turned the momentum of the series on its head. By the time he fell for 148 in the second Test at Adelaide, Cook had batted for 1053 minutes and 383 runs between dismissals, and an entire nation was sick to the teeth of his implacable leave outside off stump.Test No. 71 – The Edgbaston grand-daddy
Notwithstanding his heroics Down Under, Cook was soon back to the grind of an English pre-season, out on dawn runs in the woods in Chelmsford, carrying a rucksack of bricks and being pursued by Gooch on a bicycle. The message from his mentor was simple but effective: when you are in the form of your life, there’s even more reason to put in the extra groundwork. And his efforts would bear fruit in the third Test of England’s crushing home series win over India. Cook’s returns for the rest of the summer were relatively modest, but he made his indelible mark with a 12-and-a-half hour 294 at Edgbaston, his highest Test score. He faltered, finally, in sight of what would have been England’s first triple-century since Gooch in 1990, but in making his innings a “grand-daddy”, he had lived another of the great man’s mantras to the max. “There’s a tinge of disappointment,” Cook admitted, “but if I’m being realistic, I’m absolutely thrilled.”Cook’s three hundreds in India in 2012-13 turned the series on its head•BCCITests No. 84, 85 and 86 – The jewel in the crown
Cook may never receive more acclaim than for his performance in the 2010-11 Ashes, but his efforts in India two years later were surely his finest hour. He’d inherited a divided team following the retirement of Andrew Strauss in the summer, and having fought for the rehabilitation of Pietersen following the text-gate scandal, the opening exchanges of the first Test at Ahmedabad were ominous in the extreme. England slumped to 191 all out in reply to India’s 521 for 8 declared – Cook himself was sixth man out for 41, but thereafter he made it his mission to coax a performance from his team, come what may. His nine-and-a-half hour 176 in the follow-on wasn’t enough to prevent a nine-wicket defeat, but it transformed the horizons for his side. His subsequent first-innings scores of 122 at Mumbai and 190 at Kolkata frogmarched England into an astonishing 2-1 series win – aided and abetted, of course, by world-class support from the spin pairing Graeme Swann and Monty Panesar, and inevitably, that man Pietersen.Test No. 100 – Ashes humiliation
At The Oval in August 2013, Cook experienced one of the proudest moments of his career, as he led his England team to their fourth Ashes victory in five series, a 3-0 triumph that hindsight now confirms looked more emphatic than it actually was. Four months later, those scenes of jubilation must have felt like a figment of his imagination, as Australia tore back the urn with a savagery that surpassed even the trauma of 2006-07. Cook’s personal nadir came in the third Test at Perth, the scene of Australia’s series-seizing win. In the first innings he battled through his own lack of form to make 72, his highest score for eight Tests. In the second, however, and chasing a forlorn 504 for victory, he received surely the best ball of his career – a sneering, swinging, seaming snorter from Ryan Harris that curled in, then zipped away to trim his off bail and send him on his way for a first-ball duck.Cook was a man under fire throughout the 2013-14 Ashes whitewash•Anthony Devlin/PA PhotosTest No. 107 – Southampton sympathy
There has surely never been a post-mortem to rival it. The fetid fallout from England’s Ashes whitewash contaminated every facet of the England team – not least the crassness of Pietersen’s sacking, which heaped cruel and unwarranted pressure on Cook, a consummate team man who had been conditioned throughout his career never to take a backwards step, and was damned if he was going to start now, even in the midst of the most barren spell of form imaginable. By the start of the third Test against India, he had gone 14 months without a century, and when his first ball of the match, from Bhuveshwar Kumar, was edged inches short of slip, followed soon after by being dropped on 15, the entire crowd feared the worst. And yet he clung to his wicket for dear life and when, by lunch, he had creaked his way to 48 not out, the crowd rose as one in acclaim. He fell eventually for 95, an apt reflection of how even his best efforts were suddenly falling short.Test No. 112 – A century at last
England’s tour of the Caribbean in the spring of 2015 existed in a curious twilight zone, sandwiched between their humiliation in the World Cup (in which Cook played no part, having been dropped from the one-day squad at the eleventh hour) and the termination of Peter Moores’ ill-fated second coming. But Cook was grateful for the contests nonetheless, as he finally hauled a hulking great monkey off his back, and racked up the 26th Test century of his career, and his first for nearly two years.Sweeping all before him during his 263 against Pakistan in Abu Dhabi•Getty ImagesTest No. 120 – A whopper in Abu Dhabi
Cook’s record in Asia surpasses that of many home-grown batsman – eight centuries in 21 Tests to date, at a towering average of 60.86. And the heftiest of the lot came in the opening exchanges of England’s tour of the UAE in 2015-16, from a position of familiar peril. Pakistan had spent the first two days of the series racking up the small matter of 523 for 8 declared, with Shoaib Malik chipping in with a career-best 245. Cook, however, retorted with a 14-hour 263 – an innings so stultifyingly brilliant that it all but stole the contest. Pakistan imploded second-time around, leaving England a teasing chase of 99 in an hour’s worth of daylight. They were halted at 74 for 4 after 11 overs, with Cook banished to No.7 to allow his flightier colleagues to have a slog.Test No. 128 – 10,000 Test runs
At 3.15pm on the fourth and final afternoon of the third Test against Sri Lanka at Chester-le-Street, Cook nudged Nuwan Pradeep off his pads with that familiar shovelling followthrough, all the way to the midwicket rope to become the first England batsman to reach 10,000 Test runs. He had kept his audience waiting for the moment – he had been within striking distance of five figures for the best part of five months – but the flamboyant gesture has never been his style. “You need something tucked away to drive you to get up go running in the morning or bat in the nets with Goochy,” he said. “I am still hungry to achieve stuff.”Test No. 134 – England’s most-capped cricketer
In an appropriate echo of the circumstances of his maiden Test appearance, at Nagpur ten long years earlier, the occasion of Cook’s record-breaking 134th Test was marked by another trans-continental dash. This time he had flown out to Bangladesh early to acclimatise with the one-day squad, before legging it back home for a 36-hour stop-over, to attend the birth of his second daughter. The upshot wasn’t quite as remarkable as that debut performance, however, as Cook mustered scores of 4 and 12 across two innings at Chittagong. He did, however, lead his side to a memorable win, as England held their nerve in a tense fourth innings to squeak to victory by 22 runs.Test No.145 – A pink-ball daddy
Cook’s five-year captaincy reign came to an end in the wake of a torrid tour of the subcontinent, and with England pre-occupied by white-ball cricket in the build-up to the Champions Trophy, it would be seven long months before he completed his return to the ranks in the home series against South Africa and West Indies. His returns, at first, were unremarkable, but then – under the floodlights at Edgbaston – he marked England’s first experience of day-night Test cricket with one of his trademark whoppers. A magisterial ten-hour grind produced a match-winning 243 – his fourth double-hundred and second in Birmingham – as West Indies were overwhelmed by an innings and 209 runs.Alastair Cook poses with his name up on the wall at the MCG’s Percy Beames Bar•Getty ImagesTest No.151 – An Ashes last hurrah
To Cook’s intense chagrin, he proved powerless to resist as England slumped to a quickfire Ashes defeat: he amassed 83 runs in six innings in consecutive defeats at Brisbane, Adelaide and Perth. But then, in the Boxing Day Test at Melbourne, he showcased the intense willpower that remained, even in the twilight of his career, his most enduring attribute. The pitch was unnaturally placid, but his concentration refused to waver, as he ground his way through records galore, matching Wally Hammond and Brian Lara as the only other tourists to score two double-hundreds in Australia, before surpassing Viv Richards’ 208 as the highest score by a visiting batsman at Australia’s most iconic venue. His unbeaten 244 spanned 409 balls and more than 10 and a half hours, and though England were unable to press on to a consolation win, he had at least stopped their series rot.Test No.156 – Border’s endurance record falls
Cook was legendary for his crease occupation, but no less extraordinary was his outstanding fitness record that spanned almost the entirety of his career. After missing the third Test of his maiden tour of India in 2005-06 with a stomach complaint, he has been omnipresent in each of his subsequent 158 matches – a tribute to his strength of mind and body alike. And, in the second Test of England’s summer campaign in 2018, he surpassed the greatest Aussie battler of them all. Allan Border, like Cook, grafted a career from granite, making the utmost of his limited technical attributes to become a world-beater and an inspiration to team-mates and opponents alike. And against Pakistan at Headingley, Cook went past Border’s record of 153 consecutive Test appearances. His first-innings 46 was not riches, but it would prove a vital factor in England’s series-levelling win.

Warner only fifth to score century before lunch on first day

A look at the top statistics after David Warner raced to a century before lunch on the first day at the SCG

Bharath Seervi03-Jan-20175 Batsmen to score centuries before lunch on the first day of a Test. David Warner became the latest to join Victor Trumper, Charles Macartney, Don Bradman and Majid Khan to achieve this feat. The last such instance was more than 40 years ago when Majid did it against New Zealand in Karachi in October 1976. The first three were all before World War II.1 Instance of an individual scoring 100 or more runs in the first session on any day of a Test in Australia. Warner is the first to do so. The previous highest was 98 by Clive Lloyd at the WACA in the first session of the third day in 1975-76. The previous highest by an Australia player at home was 95 by Adam Voges against West Indies in Hobart in the first session on second day in the last season.78 Balls in which Warner completed the century – the fastest by any player at the SCG. The previous record was off 82 balls set by himself in the last New Year Test against West Indies. This is Warner’s second-quickest Test century after his 69-ball effort against India at the WACA in 2011-12. Overall, this is the fourth-fastest century among Australia batsmen.

Fastest Test centuries for Australia (top-five)

Batsman Balls Against Venue YearAdam Gilchrist 57 England Perth 2006Jack Gregory 67 South Africa Johannesburg 1921David Warner 69 India Perth 2012David Warner 78 Pakistan Sydney 2017David Warner 82 West Indies Sydney 20161 Quicker centuries against Pakistan by any batsman compared to Warner’s 78-ball effort. Brian Lara had scored one off 77 balls in Multan in 2006-07. Brendon McCullum also scored in 78 balls in Sharjah in 2014-15.2 Australia openers younger than Matt Renshaw, who is 20 years, 281 days, to score a Test century – Archie Jackson at 19 years, 149 days and Phillip Hughes 20 years, 96 days. Overall, Renshaw is the seventh-youngest centurion for Australia. Among openers overall, he is the fourth-youngest to score 150 or more in an innings.3 Higher scores by Australia openers at SCG than Renshaw who is unbeaten on 167 at end of the day. The highest is Sid Barnes’ 234 in Ashes 1946-47. Among all openers, Renshaw’s score is the tenth-highest at the SCG.18 Test centuries for Warner – the most by any player since his debut in December 2011. However, he has converted only three of those hundreds into scores of 150 or more.240 Previous highest aggregate by Australia openers in an innings at the SCG, against England in 1987-88. Warner and Renshaw have already added a combined 280 runs. This is also only the third instance of both home openers scoring centuries in the same innings at the SCG and the first since Justin Langer and Matthew Hayden did so against South Africa in the 2002 New Year Test.3 Consecutive centuries by Warner in New Year Tests. He had also made 101 against India in 2015 and 122 not out against West Indies in 2016. He is only the fourth player after Wally Hammond (four), David Boon and VVS Laxman (three each) to score centuries in three consecutive Tests at the SCG. Warner now has three centuries each in Adelaide, Brisbane, Sydney and Perth.150.33 Australia’s average opening stand in the first innings of last three SCG Tests. Chris Rogers and Warner added 200 runs against India in 2015, Warner and Joe Burns shared 100 against West Indies in 2016 and now Renshaw and Warner added 151 runs in this innings. Before these three Tests, they had only one century stand in 21 innings in 11 Tests.

Game
Register
Service
Bonus