India get the better of Australia, one flick at a time

A look at how this unglamorous shot made all the difference for India, and why Australia could not employ it effectively themselves

Karthik Krishnaswamy19-Feb-2023Cheteshwar Pujara faced five of the last six balls of the Delhi Test match. First, he levelled the scores with a flicked single to deep square leg after skipping out to Travis Head. Then, getting the strike back at the start of the next over, he played two more flicks off Todd Murphy, one to square leg, one to short midwicket.After another dot ball not involving a flick, Pujara hit the winning runs: down the track again, and a firm whip over midwicket for four.Five balls, four variants of the leg-side flick. And in that lay a story, perhaps even story of the 2022-23 Border-Gavaskar Trophy.The flick can be a delightful stroke to watch, but it isn’t always a glamorous one. ESPNcricinfo, for instance, runs a video series titled , where current or former players pick their favourite exponents of eight shots that circle the dial: straight drive, cover drive, cut, reverse-sweep, scoop, sweep, pull and the lofted hit down the ground. The flick, as you may have noticed, isn’t one of them.The flick, however, is the Test batter’s run-scoring lifeblood. Since the start of 2021, according to ESPNcricinfo’s data, the flick has brought batters more Test runs than any other shot – 17,697, to be precise – with the cover drive way behind in second place at 12,979.Related

  • Andrew McDonald: Australia batters wilted under 'perceived pressure'

  • Jadeja and Axar: Sweep and reverse sweep are difficult here

  • The ladders have gone, only snakes lurk in Rahul's Test path right now

  • India almost through to WTC final after beating Australia in Delhi

  • Rohit: 'The confidence Jadeja has in his ability is massive'

In that time, batters have played the flick a whopping 22,373 times. It’s in third place behind defended (62,637) and left alone (25,277), of course, but those aren’t scoring shots.The reason why the flick is such a key part of Test cricket is simple. Bowlers target the top of off stump constantly, and when they miss their lines and lengths at Test level, they usually only miss it by small margins. So while the rank long-hop and the wide half-volley are rare occurrences, the ball that’s a touch straighter than ideal, or a touch fuller or shorter, is more frequent. Test batters can flick balls from all sorts of lines and lengths – if the angle is just right, a back-of-a-length ball can be worked to deep backward square leg from a fourth-stump line.Spinners are particularly prone to getting flicked, and not just with the turn. Top batters can use their feet to get to the pitch of the ball, or go deep in their crease to give themselves time, and twirl their wrists to play the shot against the turn too. Because of the pace spinners bowl at, their margin for error is smaller, and the more turn there is, the smaller that margin becomes – the ball turning into the batter is likelier to end up on the pads, and the ball turning away is likelier to start from a line closer to leg stump.The first two Tests of the Border-Gavaskar Trophy have been played on pitches with plenty of help for the spinners, and the margins for error have consequently been fairly small.Over these two Tests in Nagpur and Delhi, India’s batters have been able to play the flick far more frequently against the spinners than Australia’s batters. They’ve also had to defend significantly fewer balls.There are many ways of looking at these numbers. You could say Indian batters are naturally wristy and fond of playing the flick. You could say they use their feet better to get down the pitch or go deep in the crease, to create opportunities to play the flick. You could say that the two teams have employed different batting gameplans, India’s revolving around positive footwork and shots down the ground or through the on side, and Australia’s around the sweep.This last argument is particularly compelling if you watched the closing stages of the Delhi Test, and watched and read the post-mortems. Australia lost a lot of wickets to sweeps and reverse-sweeps, and India barely ever played those shots. The experts shook their heads and told you how unwise these shots were on this third-day surface, where the ball was frequently shooting through low.But here’s the thing. Australia’s players and team management know this. They know how dangerous cross-bat shots can be on pitches like this. But R Ashwin and Ravindra Jadeja have bowled with the sort of control that has left them with few other scoring options. They’re certainly not getting drive balls and cut balls, and they’re not getting a whole lot of flick balls either.They’ve chosen two different responses to this challenge in the two Tests of this series. In the second innings in Nagpur, Australia defended for their lives and were bowled out in 32.3 overs. In the second innings in Delhi, they swept at everything and were bowled out in 31.1 overs. Their captain Pat Cummins said their batters had underplayed their hand in Nagpur and overplayed it in Delhi.Against spinners with the control of Ashwin and Jadeja and on pitches with both turn and natural variation, those can be the only options for visiting batters. Neither is the right answer, but there’s no real middle way either, unless the bowlers have an off day.In the given conditions, the sweep shot was fraught with danger, but Australia were left with little choice•Getty ImagesAnd in Delhi, the sweep helped Australia compete on a level footing with India over the first two days. It was a defining feature of Usman Khawaja’s 81 on day one, and of Marnus Labuschagne’s batting when Australia raced away to a quick start in the third session of day two.The sweep, therefore, was a symptom of Australia’s problems and not its cause.And the problem hasn’t been that they’re a bad team. The problem is that they’re just not as good as India in Indian conditions. You would only back a handful of teams over the game’s history to beat this Indian team in Indian conditions.Australia’s spin attack on this tour is among the best that has visited this country in a decade – Nathan Lyon is a world-class offspinner with more than 450 Test wickets, while Todd Murphy and Matthew Kuhnemann have bowled with terrific control for visiting spinners who’ve made their Test debuts on this tour. They’ve bowled with better control than a lot of overseas spinners who’ve come to India with a lot more Test experience, and they’ve barely bowled any long-hops or genuine half-volleys.But it’s only natural that Australia’s spinners don’t have the inch-perfect control of Jadeja and Ashwin on Indian pitches. The margins for error are tiny. Minute errors in line and length don’t leap at you in real time, but they all add up over the course of a series, one flick at a time.

'We know England are going to come at us. They're changing the way Test cricket is played'

Andy Balbirnie will captain Ireland at Lord’s this week and opens up on the challenges of his role

Matt Roller30-May-2023The magnitude of leading Ireland out in a Test match at Lord’s hit home for Andy Balbirnie when his dad picked his captain’s blazer up from the dry cleaner’s. “I was going away and asked him to leave it at the dry cleaner’s, because it was a bit dirty from Sri Lanka,” Balbirnie explains.”When he gave it back to me, he was like, ‘It’s kind of hard to believe you’re going to be leading Ireland out at Lord’s.’ I hadn’t really thought about it – it hasn’t sunk in really. It’s something which I’ll look back at and think, ‘Wow, that was a pretty special moment.'”When Balbirnie was appointed captain in November 2019, Ireland had a sporadic red-ball fixture list confirmed for the following four years. But the pandemic meant it took until April 2023 for him to lead them in a Test match. “I was genuinely concerned that I wouldn’t get the chance to,” he reflects. “Covid put it on the back-burner and it went on for so long.”The opportunity finally came in Bangladesh last month, with two further Tests following soon after in Sri Lanka. “I’m a well-hardened Test cricketer now,” Balbirnie jokes, when I bring up the fact he is the only man to have featured in each of their six Tests to date. “It’s not a lot – but they are six Test caps that I didn’t think I’d get at the start of my career.”

“If we get bowled out for 30 in both innings against England but qualify for both World Cups, that’s a win; that’s our most successful summer ever.”

Ireland’s record in those games makes for grim reading: played six, lost six. The most recent three have been particularly tough, with eight players winning their first caps; in the case of spinners Matthew Humphreys and Ben White, their Test debuts were also their maiden first-class appearances.Since the pandemic, Ireland have not staged any domestic first-class cricket, instead focusing their energy and funds on the white-ball formats. “My overwhelming feeling is it’s not fair on the players,” Balbirnie says. “You’re asking guys who have no first-class or red-ball experience to go out and play in the toughest pressure situation you can imagine.”I know we have our constraints back home – and hopefully in the next couple of years, first-class cricket will start to filter back – but if we’re going to start playing more Tests, we have to have something in place. We need to look after our players a bit more and make sure that we don’t just completely throw them into the hot pot of Test cricket.”Even if it’s three games a season: North against South. It doesn’t have to be seven or eight games – just so you can pick a team and know what they’re like with a red ball in their hand. We were picking teams for the Tests in Asia based on what we’d seen in the nets and how guys went in the one-dayers.”Balbirnie made 95 against Sri Lanka in Galle last month•AFP/Getty ImagesAs a result, this week’s Test at Lord’s does not represent – as the board’s performance director, Richard Holdsworth, put it – a “pinnacle event” for Ireland. Instead, their main targets for this summer are the upcoming qualifying tournaments for the 2023 ODI World Cup (in Zimbabwe in June) and the 2024 T20 World Cup (Scotland, July).”We’re going to be playing a qualifier in Scotland in front of maybe 30 people against Italy, and it’s going to be far more important than the Test match,” Balbirnie concedes. “I don’t want that to sound disrespectful to England or the ECB because we’re going to do our absolute best to try to get a result, and it’s an honour to play at Lord’s against England – but it’s a one-off Test in the middle of the summer.”The Ashes is their most important thing. I’d imagine they’ll be looking at this as a glorified warm-up. If we get bowled out for 30 in both innings against England but qualify for both World Cups, that’s a win; that’s our most successful summer ever. I hope that doesn’t happen, but World Cups are where we get our most publicity on the world stage and back home – particularly for a tournament in India and what that brings.”Related

  • Balbirnie: Franchise raids on Ireland players will be 'knock-on effect of good cricket'

  • Ben Stokes reaps rewards of IPL gymwork after playing the 'John Terry role' at CSK

  • England and Ireland's Lord's appetiser lingers in shadow of future feasts

  • Stokes confident he can be England's Ashes allrounder after 'working nuts off' at IPL

  • One year of Bazball: Have England changed the Test game?

Despite Ireland’s rise over the last 20 years, cricket remains a relatively niche sport back home. “We’re getting there,” Balbirnie says. “There’s a lot more club teams in the country now. I still don’t think we’ll challenge rugby, football and GAA [Gaelic football and hurling] for a long time, if we ever do. But if we can be that fourth or fifth-biggest sport, that would be good.”I was away in West Cork last weekend with Kate, my wife, and I had two people come up to me and say, ‘You’re Andy Balbirnie!’ They were saying they were going to Lord’s; Kate couldn’t believe it. That’s cool – it’s a small step. I think there’s a lot of closet cricket fans in Ireland, who are too afraid to say they’re cricket fans because their mate from the GAA club will give them a slagging. But we are getting there.”The sticking point, as ever, is funding. Cricket Ireland are among the beneficiaries of the ICC’s proposed revenue distribution model for 2024-27, with their share of annual earnings projected to rise from around 2% to just over 3%; the ICC has also provided a $5 million loan to the board for 2023 “to ensure it can meet its current financial needs”.”We’re getting a fair bit more than we usually get. When the money comes through, there will be change for the better, I hope,” Balbirnie says. “The problem we have is that we don’t get a whole lot of money through sponsorship, which naturally the big countries get. They can live without the ICC money, potentially, whereas we rely on it so much; that’s our main income.”We see the numbers that India get and it’s just staggering. I do understand that they do a lot for the game; the IPL is huge and really important for the game. I get that. But take Ireland out of it: there are countries where we were 20 years ago, scrapping for their lives to keep an organisation afloat and to keep a team afloat. And they’re not even in the picture.”They get a tiny, tiny cut. I’m not sitting around the table but I think there needs to be a bit more of a share for the countries below the top teams, because it’s a world game. It’s a world sport – and I’ve been to places where it’s a small sport and they’re fighting for their lives. They need all the support they can get.””I’d love to sit in the stands one day with Stirlo and watch the young lads”•AFP/Getty ImagesChief among Ireland’s long-held ambitions is the desire to play home games at a new, purpose-built stadium in Abbotstown, on the outskirts of Dublin. Temporary infrastructure costs mean they lose money almost every time they play at Malahide, their main home venue, and the board hope that the new ground will be completed in time to stage fixtures during the 2030 men’s T20 World Cup, which they will co-host with England and Scotland. “I’m not sure it’ll happen in my career,” Balbirnie says, “but I’d love to sit in the stands one day with Stirlo [Paul Stirling] and watch the young lads go at it against some of the best teams in the world.”Those “young lads” include wicketkeeper Lorcan Tucker, an unused squad members on Ireland’s last visit to Lord’s, and Harry Tector, their brightest batting prospect who will be carded at No. 4 this week. Josh Little is a high-profile absentee, resting after playing in Monday’s IPL final, but Balbirnie believes his team can thrive on low expectations.”They potentially have a few players playing for places for the Ashes,” he says. “Their batters will be expected to get runs against us: that’s just the pressure that England cricketers are under from the media, the pressure that we don’t get. We have three or four journalists who follow cricket, and we don’t have a whole heap of players coming through the system.”It’s an amazing challenge: they’re changing the way Test cricket is being played, and we get a chance to play against them. It’s pretty cool. We know they’re going to come at us but as long as we can throw a punch back at that, that’s all we can really ask. No-one’s going to expect us to win whatsoever. We just want the guys to go out and play the game that we grew up loving.”Ireland’s last visit to Lord’s four years ago ranks as a career highlight for Balbirnie. “It was surreal,” he recalls. “I remember having lunch on that first day, putting the pads on and pinching myself: we’d just bowled England out for 80-odd – and their tail wagged.” Tim Murtagh took 5 for 13, and Balbirnie made a punchy 55 off 69 balls after lunch.”Looking back, it was probably a big opportunity spurned. It was a great time to get them because there was still that hype and buzz straight after the World Cup final, and they were playing a few shots. It was all doom and gloom for them after that first day but it’s a slightly different situation this time around.”Balbirnie made a first-innings half-century on Ireland’s last visit to Lord’s•Getty ImagesFor Balbirnie, the venue holds added significance. In his early 20s, he spent countless summer days at Lord’s, first as an MCC Young Cricketer, then as a Middlesex player: “I wasn’t necessarily playing – more running the drinks up and down from the changing rooms, and taking lads’ jumpers on and off in April and May.”I didn’t think I’d ever play a Test match at Lord’s and I’m about to play my second. I was chatting to a couple of the Bangladesh guys recently: Tamim Iqbal has played 70 Tests and has only played one of them at Lord’s, so we’re very fortunate to get the opportunity. It’s probably the best sporting arena in the world that I’ve been to.”In Galle last month, Balbirnie was dismissed five runs short of a maiden Test hundred. “Everyone has said to me, ‘Ah, just save it for Lord’s,'” he says with a smile. “I’m like, ‘OK lads, I’ll just go and get a hundred at Lord’s…'” It will be easier said than done, but Ireland and their captain are dreaming big.

Shanaka's Sri Lanka on the right track despite Asia Cup crash

Doom and gloom aside, Sri Lanka’s recent track record and international-cricket journey offers promise

Madushka Balasuriya18-Sep-20232:02

Maharoof: Sri Lanka exceeded the expectations of many by reaching the final

At any other point in Sri Lanka’s history, crumbling to 50 all out in an Asia Cup final would’ve left the captain standing on extremely shaky ground. Especially if he’s managed only two double-digit scores in his last 11 innings.Dasun Shanaka’s form with the bat is difficult to ignore. But there is more than meets the eye in this story.”Dasun works so hard on his game,” Sri Lanka head coach Chris Silverwood said on Sunday. “And as we know he’s a great man. So from my point of view we’re just trying to put confidence into him. We know what he’s capable of. He can be a very destructive batter, and we’ve seen in this tournament that he’s more than a useful bowler. So for me he’s one score away from flying again,” he said speaking after Sunday’s Asia Cup final.Related

  • Injured Chameera and Hasaranga miss out, Shanaka to lead Sri Lanka at the World Cup

  • Silverwood: 'A kick up the rear end not the worst thing going into a World Cup'

  • Coach Silverwood wants Shanaka, Dhananjaya 'to provide firepower' as finishers

  • ESPNcricinfo's Asia Cup team of the tournament

  • Siraj donates Asia Cup final prize money to groundspersons

“There’s more to being the captain than just scoring runs. Dasun is very good at it. He has the respect of everyone in the dressing room. He understands the players and shows them a lot of love and support as well. And that love and support is returned to him as well. But he’s not alone in there. He’s got a lot of support in that dressing room.”Shanaka took over the reins in early 2021. It was a change in leadership that coincided with a youth-driven overhaul of Sri Lanka’s white-ball sides – set in motion by the Pramodya Wickramasinghe-led selection committee and emboldened by the now-defunct technical advisory committee headed by Aravinda de Silva – one that culminated in that most unlikely of Asia Cup wins in 2022.That win might have set unrealistic expectations for the T20 World Cup later that year, but after another Asia Cup final, this time in ODIs, it’s hard to argue that this isn’t a side moving in the right direction. It just so happens that the setbacks thus far have been particularly brutal.But does that warrant tearing up the blueprint completely? Especially when that blueprint had accounted for such setbacks? Speaking to ESPNcricinfo prior to last year’s T20 World Cup, consultant coach Mahela Jayawardene had acknowledged as much.”The players know what their roles are in this team. What is being asked of them to do, that is important. But it’s very difficult for new guys to come in and straight away do that,” he said.”We have to give some time to cultivate that within the group, and you will see that they trust each other out there. They don’t blame each other for mistakes, they take their mistakes as a group not as individuals, and they move on.”For much of cricket’s history, the idea of player roles was anomalous – you simply played your best squad, be it in Test or ODI cricket. However, the advent of T20 has gradually ushered in the era of specialists, not just in formats but in positions. Jayawardene has long been a passionate advocate of role clarity, something he had identified as a key point to address even prior to joining Sri Lanka’s coaching set-up in an official capacity.Dasun Shanaka followed up Sri Lanka’s Asia Cup win with an appearance in the final•AFP/Getty Images”We had to be more prepared, the players needed more direction in terms of role clarity. There was a lot of things we needed to do, in terms of getting them to play a certain brand of cricket and giving them the freedom to express themselves.”The perception is that the pursuit of this new set of goals has set Sri Lanka up for pain in the short term, but the numbers don’t actually support that. Sri Lanka’s win-loss ratio has hardly budged over the past few years and even compares well with the halcyon days of 2007-2014.In terms of win percentage, Sri Lanka’s under Shanaka’s captaincy stands at 58% with 23 wins in 39 ODIs. How does that compare with previous regimes? Well, the longest in recent memory is Jayawardene’s, with his 129 games seeing 71 wins (55% win rate). In terms of best win rate, Kumar Sangakkara got up to 60% in 45 games. Angelo Mathews won 49 of his 106 ODIs as captain (46%). So Shanaka is generally par for the course, and even if you take Sri Lanka’s golden period in 2007-2014, their ODI win rate stood at 52%.Given that, a large part of the current malaise surrounding the team could be down to big-game performance. Despite that 52%, Sri Lanka would make a deep run in nearly every major tournament between 2007 and 2014, culminating in that 2014 World T20 win (their T20I win percentage in this period was 62.5%). Shanaka meanwhile has won 45% of T20Is under his captaincy, but since that includes an Asia Cup win, his record in the shortest format is viewed fairly favourably.Why, then, does this Sri Lanka side feel so much worse than those of yesteryear? Simply put, the opposition has gotten better.A fun aside surrounding Sri Lanka’s debacle against India: the entire ODI lasted 129 deliveries, putting it third in the list of the shortest completed men’s ODIs. The second, fourth and fifth spots in that list also include Sri Lanka – it’s just that on these occasions, they were the ones handing out the hammerings.Of those three thrashings, Zimbabwe were at the receiving end of two. Entire Bangladesh top orders have been ransacked by Chaminda Vaas alone. Even India have felt the burn that a red-hot Sri Lanka can inflict and social media was full of posts reminiscing about the good old days.This is at the heart of Sri Lankan cricket’s identity crisis at the moment. A string of wins in the qualifying tournament to a World Cup has been written off as minnow-bashing and losses to supreme white-ball outfits like India and England were viewed as conclusive evidence of Sri Lankan cricket’s downfall.The reality, though, isn’t quite so bleak. It is just that it seems so by comparison. There was a time when Sri Lanka could go toe-to-toe with even the best sides in major tournaments. It stings that they can’t do the same right now; that they’ve been left behind.Addressing this is where Sri Lanka are investing their energy. They’re trying not to make hasty decisions, and in that sense, the willingness to persevere with Shanaka might just be a signal of a greater shift in the mindset of those tasked with taking Sri Lanka cricket back to where they feel they ought to be.Perhaps then it’s time we stop pining for what Sri Lanka were and relearn to love them for what they’re trying to be.

Lyon's 500 by the numbers: 110 Ashes scalps, 121 against India

The offspinner averages just 31.14 in Australia, the second toughest nation to bowl spin

Sampath Bandarupalli17-Dec-2023With his five-wicket match haul against Pakistan in the home season’s opening game in Perth, Nathan Lyon has scripted his name alongside seven other bowlers to have bagged 500-plus wickets in Test cricket. Only two other Australians have achieved the milestone before him – Shane Warne and Glenn McGrath. Lyon enters the 500 Test wickets club to increase the tally of spinners to four, joining Muttiah Muralidaran, Warne and Anil Kumble.It took a while for Lyon to reach here, needing 123 Tests, by far the most among the four spin bowlers. Being a non-Asian spinner and often playing with a three-man potent pace-bowling unit has given Lyon fewer wicket-taking opportunities. However, Lyon has taken 24.04% of the wickets picked by the Australian bowlers in the matches he played. Only three non-Asian spinners with 150-plus wickets since 1980 have picked up a higher share of the team’s wickets.

Adding more to Lyon’s challenges, Australia has been the second toughest nation to bowl spin since his debut, as the spinners average 45.63 here, only better than 48.45 in New Zealand. Lyon’s average in Australia reads 31.14, a relatively high home average for a bowler among prolific wicket-takers. But his average at home is half that of other spinners in the matches he played in Australia, the best ratio for any spinner at home since his debut. While the average for spinners in the 63 Tests he played in Australia is 45.69, the average of other spinners (excluding Lyon) in those same Tests rises to 62.83ESPNcricinfo LtdIrrespective of the conditions, between August 2013 and June 2023, Lyon featured in all the 100 Tests played by Australia. But his streak ended when he suffered a calf injury in his 100th Test during the Ashes earlier this year.His injury forced Australia to play without a frontline spinner for the first time since 2012. Only five players have played 100 consecutive Tests for their teams before Lyon. Among specialist bowlers, no one else had a streak near to Lyon – the second best is Kumble’s 60 successive appearances for India between 1992 and 2000.

Since his debut, Lyon has missed only seven Test matches played by Australia, including their recent three in the Ashes, due to an injury. Among the bowlers with 500 Test wickets, no one has missed fewer matches than Lyon enroute their milestone. The next lowest is Courtney Walsh, who missed only ten of West Indies’ 139 Tests between his debut and where he took his 500th scalp.Lyon has excelled in the two most prominent bilateral competitions – The Ashes and the Border-Gavaskar Trophy, with 100-plus wickets each. A total of 116 of Lyon’s 121 Test wickets against India came in the Border-Gavaskar Trophy, the highest for any bowler. No other Australian has even picked up half of his tally in this competition that started back in 1996, as Brett Lee is the next best with 53 scalps.

In the Ashes, Lyon remains one of the only two spinners to bag 100-plus wickets since the World War II. The offspinner has taken 110 wickets, while Warne’s 195 are the highest in the history of the Ashes.Lyon’s success in the Ashes defines his greatness with the conditions seldom favouring spinners in Australia and England. There have been 33 Ashes Tests since Lyon’s first at Old Trafford in 2013, of which he played 30 matches and picked up 110 wickets. The remaining spinners across England and Australia collectively claimed 110 in 33 Tests.

Dale Steyn and Harshal Patel: 'Let's see them pull the ball, not put their foot down and bully you down the ground'

How will the new allowance of two bouncers per over play out in the IPL? We asked two leading fast bowlers for their take

Nagraj Gollapudi20-Mar-2024Alongside the yorker, the type of delivery that has the potential and power to surprise and literally floor the batter is the bouncer.While the fast, climbing bouncer – like this Jasprit Bumrah rocket – can force a top- or leading edge while sending batters ducking and weaving out of harm’s way, the slower variety can equally, but in different ways, lead to a dot ball or a wicket.Though the power of the bouncer is potent in all cricket, in T20s bowlers have been allowed just one per over. That is going to change in the IPL from this season: the league has decided to allow bowlers two bouncers an over instead of the one that is the norm in T20 elsewhere, including in international T20 cricket.What impact will that have on bowling plans, and on batters?”It is a huge, huge advantage,” Harshal Patel, who will turn up for Punjab Kings this IPL, says. “The biggest advantage is, you can bowl them at any point in an over – as opposed to [having to think of] when is the best, when we had just one bouncer an over.”You can now go really hard early on: bowl a bouncer very first ball or second ball, then bowl a couple of length deliveries, then go defensive and close off the over. The more options you have, the better as a bowler.”I can package my over better now.”Related

  • How soon will we need to reconsider how essential bouncers are to cricket? (2021)

  • Carnage and fun – the madness at the death in T20 cricket

  • Harshal Patel: 'There's nothing wrong in bowling 24 slower balls in a T20 spell'

  • Death becomes him (2018)

  • IPL to allow two bouncers per over

More options for bowlers to sequence their overs
Generally in T20s, bowlers are known to follow a bouncer with a yorker. That is likely to change under the new allowance, according to former South Africa, Sunrisers Hyderabad and Royal Challengers Bangalore fast bowler Dale Steyn. Steyn was bowling coach at Sunrisers for the last two seasons (he opted out this year for personal reasons).”A bouncer and a yorker go hand in a hand,” he says. “If you get [the one] bouncer out of the way too early in the over, the next ball which immediately comes to your mind is the yorker, because now the batter knows you can’t bowl a length ball and he is not expecting anything short. Everything is now going to be in his half.”I know a lot of [batters] fear the yorker a little bit. But if you are bowling yorkers to batters like [MS] Dhoni, [Jos] Buttler, Surya [Yadav], they are able to access parts of the field where there is no fielder.”Against a bouncer, Steyn points out there are only limited pockets in a field the batter can hit to usually, as opposed to a yorker.”If you are bowling a yorker, the ball can go anywhere. If you don’t execute it well, Dhoni hits you for a six over long-on. You can bowl a perfect yorker and you can still get hit for a boundary over fine leg. Whereas with a bouncer, setting the field is much easier to control: you know the shot is potentially going to third man, deep square, fine leg. There are not many guys who can hit a bouncer over long-off or long-on – the percentages of that happening are extremely low.”Steyn agrees with Harshal that bowlers now have more options when planning an over.”Now, instead of being under pressure to bowl multiple perfect yorkers, [or thinking] ‘Do I bowl a wide or straight yorker?’ you can walk back to the mark calmly and follow the first bouncer with even a back-of-a-length ball, which offers all three types of dismissal. You can keep the batter guessing about when the second bouncer is coming. Now? Or is it going to be another length ball?Harshal Patel favours the slower bouncer, forcing the batter to generate the power to clear the outfield•Saikat Das/BCCI”The two bouncers allows the fields to be kept simpler, the bowler’s mind less clouded, which overall means his execution could be better.”Two bouncers: a weapon for attack or defence?
Harshal, the top wicket-taker in the 2021 IPL, fetched the highest bid for an Indian player at the auction ahead of the upcoming IPL season, when Punjab bought him for Rs 11.75 crore (US$1.41 million approximately). Over the years he has largely been used in the final ten-over segment, where his variety of slower balls, including a slower bouncer, have posed difficult questions for batters.”[The bouncer] can be both [attacking and defensive] depending on what lines you bowl or what pace you deliver at. If you want to go slower into the pitch, sort of wide-ish outside the off stump, then it can be a very good defensive option against batters who generally tend to drag to the leg side.”It can be also be an attacking option depending on whether you have the fine leg and square leg back and you bowl at the batter’s head and force them to hook you or hit you over the boundary. In a T20 environment very few batters will try to keep it down and try to hit the gaps, most will try and hook you over the line. So that always allows you to force an error.”While the fast bouncer has shock appeal, the slower variety that Harshal relies on can be a nearly equal threat. He talks about the Eliminator in the 2022 season between Royal Challengers Bangalore [his previous IPL franchise] and Lucknow Super Giants, where slow offcutters dug into the pitch were his stock delivery and fetched him Marcus Stoinis’ wicket at a crucial time in Super Giants’ chase.”Eden is a small ground, so I bowled wide slower bouncers to most of the specialist batters, including KL Rahul, Marcus Stoinis, Deepak Hooda. I had great success. [The other bowlers] were going ten an over while I was closing my overs for six or seven runs an over.”It’s important to pick the kind of batter to bowl bouncers to, Steyn says. “It’s about making sure the bowler doesn’t overdo the bouncer to guys who are able to take it on”•BCCIWhen and against whom will the two-bouncer rule be most effective?
Steyn believes bowlers will be best off using the new allowance mostly after the powerplay.”Maybe after at least the first four overs. Because with only two fielders out in the powerplay, you have less chance of setting the field. You are also trying to utilise that new ball – trying to swing it, use the hard seam better. So one bouncer is really good in the powerplay to keep the batter guessing. A second bouncer might mean, if he gets any bat [on it], it could fly into the vacant area. Outside of field restrictions, though, you have a different game plan, you have more fielders to play with.”Steyn would like to see bowlers target attacking batters more.”Anybody who is a power player. “[As a coach] you tend to tell bowlers, ‘Guys, stay out of their strike zone.’ Let’s see them pull the ball, as opposed to put their front foot down the track and bully you back over long-on or long-off.”Those kinds of batters knew they didn’t need to pull or hook, and [they could] just duck the [one] bouncer previously. They could catch up with consecutive sixes to counter that one dot ball. But now two dot balls… it’s a different story.”For Harshal, it is about attacking the new batter straight away.”You need to be very good with line: you want to be somewhere around the left ear or left shoulder, because that is the blind spot and batters don’t have control. Because when you try to hook and when the ball rushes on to you or comes a little slower, you end up gloving.”To his point about testing batters with the short ball, Steyn adds a caveat. “If you are bowling to Mitchell Marsh on a flat track in Delhi, the pace-on bouncer might not be the best option. Marsh grew up in Western Australia. I remember specifically a game in Delhi last year where Umran [Malik] tried doing that against Marsh and he didn’t do it high enough and Marsh dominated him. But if he is bowling against somebody else who doesn’t play the pull well, then I will suggest Umran bowl the bouncer more than once.The new rule should encourage bowlers to think more about how to place their fielders, Steyn says. Someone like Jasprit Bumrah can even fool batters by bowling a yorker after setting the field for a bouncer•Vipin Pawar/BCCI”If you are rushing a guy around nipple height and he is not looking to take on the pull, then you can get away with a full over by having the long-on and long-off up. It’s really about making sure the bowler doesn’t overdo the bouncer to the wrong batter – guys who are able to take it on.”Two bouncers, more thought about fields
Bowlers need to think about field placements themselves, Steyn says.”It’s going to be a more challenging field when you are going to force the batter to play more straight shots instead of just standing there and hacking. I want to see bowlers start thinking more as opposed to walking to the top of the mark and the captain telling them, ‘This your field’ and [the bowler goes] ‘All right.’ Over years and years of that they just stick to stock standard field settings. You see guys scoring 360 degrees around the park. We need a little bit more thinking. This [new rule] will allow them to tinker with their thinking now.”An example of a smart bowler of this sort, Steyn says, is an India and Mumbai Indians player who can bluff batters on any pitch across formats.”If you are a [Jasprit] Bumrah, who delivers an extremely good yorker, he can even bluff by going yorker and knocking your poles off while retaining a field for the bouncer.”Steyn thinks the two-bouncer rule will not impact totals in games drastically. “You are still going to see teams scoring 180, 190, 200. It’s not like teams are going to get all out for 120.”It’s going to be quite interesting how batters handle the bouncers. We are going to start to see a difference between how good some batters are versus how lucky some other batters sometimes get, where when they come in, they know that they are only going to get balls bowled in a particular area and they can score 30 off 20. We are going to see less of that.”In Test cricket a bowler has plenty of deliveries to set up a batter – a luxury not available in T20. Steyn believes the two-bouncers rule will change that.”You probably got two balls in T20s to work a batter over previously. Now you could potentially get three to four balls.”

A first glimpse of Gaikwad's Super Kings

MS Dhoni did have moments of influence over this game, but the headline belonged to someone else

Alagappan Muthu23-Mar-20241:01

Moody’s message to Gaikwad: ‘Make this your team’

Maheesh Theekshana was wondering where he was supposed to go. He was loitering somewhere at fine leg, halfway to the boundary, trying to catch the captain’s attention.Ruturaj Gaikwad was at mid-off, talking to the bowler Tushar Deshpande. It took a while for him to realise he was needed by somebody else but by the time he looked up, MS Dhoni has already taken care of it.Theekshana was sent to patrol the fence, although he did wait until the captain agreed with . This team has been the extension of one man’s will. A multi-million dollar manifestation of his personality. Until now there was never anybody else. And when there was, it didn’t really work.Related

  • Ravindra, and an unlikely Wellington reunion in Chennai

  • A season begins, an era ends, and life goes on for MS Dhoni

  • Gaikwad: Last year itself, Dhoni had hinted about captaincy

  • CSK vs RCB, Live blog: Mustafizur extends CSK's dominance over RCB

  • Mustafizur stars as Gaikwad's CSK start title defence with comfortable win over RCB

Stephen Fleming did say at the pre-match press conference that Dhoni had such a sense for cricket that it would be impossible to turn it off and foolish to let it go to waste. He had a chat with Ravindra Jadeja just before he came on to bowl on Friday. He had been active in setting fields, not necessarily deciding on positions, but the angles. Those 1m, 2m adjustments for which, last season, he said he liked the players to always keep an eye on him. It looks like that instruction might still be valid this year.Throwbacks had been the theme of the night starting with the opening ceremony, where the entertainment arrived on stage riding a zipline like it was 1996 and purveyed grade A nostalgia. A full house was treated to (1998), (1997) and (1998) and then a Chennai Super Kings win over Royal Challengers Bengaluru for the eighth straight match at the MA Chidambaram Stadium. Except in between all the same old things there was a little bit of a revolution.Ruturaj Gaikwad captained a CSK outfit with MS Dhoni in it•BCCICSK gave out four debuts for just this game. That’s only one less than the count for the entire last season. There were, of course, mitigating circumstances. Two of their first-choice players were injured so they had to be replaced. Daryl Mitchell has proven himself in international cricket and so merits a place. But Sameer Rizvi – born almost exactly a year before Dhoni played his first international – making it to a CSK XI on opening day is a significant change of track. Their current captain spent his entire first season with the side warming the bench.This team is changing. It has no choice.Gaikwad seemed to be enjoying his first few minutes rendering CSK in his own way. There were almost half a dozen little field changes in the first three overs and one of them made a lasting impact on the match. He made it together with Mustafizur Rahman. Third on the boundary came up. Cover went back to sweep. It was a response to a batter finding his runs a little too easily; a play made to complicate his process.This was a good surface with enough pace in it. So at the start, CSK assumed that if the ball were to fly, it would go behind square. Faf du Plessis, though, kept finding the boundary in front of it. He hit each of RCB’s eight fours in the first 4.2 overs. So a decision was needed. The bowler seemed to come up with it. The captain agreed. The wicket fell. It wasn’t necessarily a plan – or if was, it was aimed at making the batter access a different area of the field; it was a way to ask more questions of him. And that really is the gist of being captain. Just try to make the other guy mess up.2:54

What contributes to CSK’s winning culture?

That wicket was part of a period where only three of eight overs produced more than a run a ball. And at the end of it, Mustafizur had 4 for 7 and RCB were 78 for 5. Who had that on their bingo card? A fast bowler dominating a home game for CSK. And he still had 12 balls left. There was every chance he could become only the second seamer, since L Balaji in 2008, to pick up a five-for for the Super Kings. It wasn’t to be, but when his work was done, and he was heading off to field at short third, he came to a dead stop and turned around, like you would if someone from behind calls you. Dhoni was the one who was behind. He put his arm around Mustafizur and gave him a pat on the back. These two and their PDA.”I thought he bowled brilliantly,” RCB batter and Chennai boy Dinesh Karthik said, “In all three spells, he showed his skills. He’s bowling a lot quicker than he usually does. So that’s great for him personally. He hit the right lengths. His slower ball came out well. This was a very good pitch. It’s not the usually slow Chepauk turner that we are probably visualising in our mind. The ball skidded on a lot more and it was good for batting and he bowled really well. What makes It really tough is that he can bowl at 138-139kph and he’s got that slower ball which goes to 120-125kph, which makes it really hard to line him up”Towards the close, a packed house wearing yellow started hoping for a wicket to fall. When RCB appealed for a caught behind off Shivam Dube, they were joined by a chorus of thousands. They wanted the No. 6 wearing the No. 7 coming out to bat. They had already seen him do all the other things, including an acrobatic one-handed take where he seemed to just lift off from the ground. That brought the first roar after the first ball. Clearly, the more things change, the more they stay the same, but somewhere Dhoni himself would have been happy with the way this game ended. It contained bits of him – he took two catches and effected a run-out – but the headline belonged to someone else.

Saurabh Netravalkar and Harmeet Singh: two Mumbai boys living the American cricket dream

Home is now on the other side of the world for two bowlers who are squaring up against the side they once longed to play for

Nagraj Gollapudi and Shashank Kishore12-Jun-20243:55

‘We’re standing up for the national anthem, just on the other side’

“I did not know. That’s news to me.”Saurabh Netravalkar expresses surprise and delight on being told India head coach Rahul Dravid followed the Super Over he bowled against Pakistan while in the New York subway.Netravalkar, the USA left-arm fast bowler, successfully defended 18 runs by a comfortable margin to help his team record the biggest shock of the T20 World Cup 2024. It was the biggest day in the history of the game for USA, who had gained entry to the 20-team tournament as co-hosts along with West Indies.Related

  • 'Iceman' Netravalkar creates the moment, and then lets it pop out

  • Major League Cricket's conundrum: who exactly is an American player?

  • 'We are no walkovers' – USA's Harmeet Singh after win against Bangladesh

  • A day to believe cricket is not just an American Dream

  • From computers to cricket: how Saurabh Netravalkar coded USA's greatest script

On the surface, Netravalkar, who led USA between 2018 and 2021, showed no nerves through the over, which stretched to eight deliveries because of a couple of wides. The only thing he was concerned with, he says, was if he had got right how many runs Pakistan needed off the final delivery.”I actually confirmed two-three times with the umpire as to how many runs they need – six or seven,” Netravalkar says over a Zoom call from New York two days after the win. “When he said seven, I gave a sigh of relief that I just have to prevent him from hitting a six.” He sank to his knees in relief and joy after Shadab Khan squeezed out just a single.”I felt very grateful and relieved that, yes, we came over the line, because each individual in the playing XI had made very important – small, yet very important -contributions throughout the game.”Was it was the most important over of his career? Netravalkar has no doubt.”This was the closest game that I have played. And obviously the top-most quality team that we have played so far in our cricketing career. So yes, it was a really special game for each one of us and we will remember it for a long time.”Netravalkar in 2009, in a U-19 World Cup game against Afghanistan•Getty ImagesWhile the US players, who beat arch-rivals Canada in the tournament opener on June 1, soaked up the aftermath of their second win of this World Cup, celebrations were also underway in the middle of night in the housing society in the northern Mumbai suburb of Malad where Netravalkar’s parents live. While his mother Rama was in the US to watch the World Cup, Netravalkar’s “building friends” joined his dad Naresh in the revelry. “We grew up playing in the building, playing rubber-ball cricket in the streets,” he says. “They’ve all been part of this journey. So it’s really special to them as well.”Netravalkar got a second crack at playing top-level cricket when he qualified for the US, where he arrived in 2015 after having abandoned the dream of playing for India earlier that year. He represented India Under-19s in 2010, and made his Ranji debut for Mumbai in 2013, but decided to study computer science at Cornell University in New York in 2015 after he failed to secure a permanent berth in the Mumbai side.Netravalkar, who is now 32, developed his interest in cricket thanks to Naresh. Father and son avidly watched international matches together in the 1990s and early 2000s. Wasim Akram, Chaminda Vaas and Zaheer Khan were some of the fast bowlers Netravalkar imitated during those impressionable years.In 2009, he was picked for a camp organised by the National Cricket Academy in Bangalore for potential future India players. There he remembers bowling to Dravid, still an active international at the time. Netravalkar says Dravid was approachable despite his stature, and happy to pass on tips. “I was a big fanboy of the ’90s and 2000s cricket team. They are like my idols.”The following year Netravalkar was India’s leading wicket-taker at the U-19 World Cup in New Zealand, which also featured the likes of Josh Hazlewood, Jason Holder and Ben Stokes. India’s quarter-final loss to Pakistan meant the adulation Virat Kohli’s team received for winning the championship two years before did not greet the class of 2010, and Netravalkar quietly slipped back into the domestic grind.

****

During most of the Pakistan innings, USA left-arm spinner Harmeet Singh fielded on the boundary. The Pakistan green enveloped the Grand Prairie stadium.Harmeet Singh bowls in a schools game in Mumbai in 2007, when he was 14•Prasad Gori/Hindustan Times/Getty Images”It was very solid support for Pakistan throughout the game,” Harmeet says on the same Zoom call after we finish the chat with Netravalkar. “A lot of green shirts.”He says that as underdogs USA were not expecting big support despite being the host country. With cricket not on the radar of the average American sports fan, the support mainly comes from the South Asian diaspora. “Till the time we actually made 18 runs in the Super Over, the Pakistani fans were really loud,” Harmeet says. “But a lot of them live in the US, so I think you are pretty much able to convert a lot of Pakistani fans into US fans. From shouting ‘Pakistan ‘, by the end of the match I heard those change to ‘USA, USA.'”Harmeet moved to the US in the first year of the Covid-19 pandemic, 2020, when he received an offer from USA Cricket, who back then were making a concerted effort to recruit overseas players to play for them soon after getting ODI status.Harmeet decided he would take the plunge, and it proved a turning point for the talented left-arm spinner, whose career had stalled after a promising start. He has permanent-resident status in the US now, like Netravalkar. Also like Netravalkar, he comes from Mumbai. He played two U-19 World Cups for India – in 2010 and 2012. Among his contemporaries were Axar Patel and Kuldeep Yadav, who are currently playing for India in the World Cup.Having watched Harmeet during the 2012 U-19 World Cup, former Australia captain Ian Chappell, in column on this site, urged India to blood the spinner soon so he didn’t stagnate. It was prescient advice.In the 2013 IPL, where he was part of Rajasthan Royals, Harmeet’s name was dragged into the spot-fixing scandal. Although he was cleared by the BCCI subsequently, Harmeet struggled to find opportunities to play for Mumbai, his home side. He had stints playing for Jammu & Kashmir and Tripura in the Ranji Trophy, but derived no joy. So when USA Cricket called, he took the offer.Answered prayers: Netravalkar in a huddle during practice ahead of USA’s first game, against Canada•AFP/Getty ImagesFour years on, with the USA now one win away from making the Super 8, Harmeet says that back then if you had told him he would be playing in a World Cup, he would never have believed it.”When I made the move in 2020, mid-Covid, it was like investing in a property with no building [on it]. So I invested in just the land. And now we have structures. Now we have things coming up. The guys who came with me [team-mates from South Asia] – we all call ourselves early investors in USA cricket.”Like Netravalkar and the rest of his USA team-mates, Harmeet has played cricket mostly indoors over the years, worked day jobs (at times more than one, in the case of some players) and travelled around the country to play weekend cricket. All so they can be ready for big days like in Dallas against Pakistan last week.”Personally, thinking about a World Cup, getting into a World Cup from a situation where all the club cricketers were practising indoors, and then beating Pakistan on a world stage, it is a big deal,” Harmeet says. “Everybody’s goal is to play the World Cup for your country and win it and everything, which [playing for India] couldn’t happen for whatever reasons, but I’m trying to live my own dream in a different way.”

****

Netravalkar and Harmeet are part of a group of five players in the US World Cup squad who were born in India. The others are US captain Monank Patel, the player of the match in the Pakistan game, who moved from Gujarat; former Delhi batter Milind Kumar, who took a brilliant catch to dismiss Iftikhar Ahmed in the Super Over; and Nisarg Patel, who too was born in Gujarat.On Wednesday, Netravalkar and Harmeet get to play against the country they originally dreamed of playing for at the World Cup. Both men say it will be an emotional moment.Harmeet (second from left) does his thing for Mumbai in the Ranji Trophy in 2009•Getty Images”It’s been a very transformative journey for me, filled with ups and downs,” says Netravalkar, who works for software giant Oracle in San Francisco. After the Pakistan win, a screen grab of his Slack out-of-office message was all over social media. It said he would be away from work until June 17, when the group phase of the World Cup ends. Netravalkar is not thinking ahead to whether he might have to extend his leave of absence in case USA make it to the Super 8s. His employers have been cooperative and understand he has stretched himself to fulfil his responsibilities at work, he says.Netravalkar is a man of varied interests. Among other things, he plays the ukelele and sings along in Marathi. It was his “destiny”, he says, to become eligible to play for USA; in 2018, soon after he moved, the ICC relaxed the norms for a player to be able to represent an Associate country from seven years as a resident to three. “But [destiny] comes only when you have the right intent and you put in those extra yards that things then start aligning for you,” he says. “You can look back and connect the dots, but you can’t look forward. So the best thing you can do is be in the present moment and do the best that you can.”Harmeet, who is 31, lives in Houston with his wife and two young kids. In an interview with the before the World Cup, he spoke about the harrowing experience of watching his mother, Paramjit’s, last rites on a screen after she died of Covid in 2021. Back in Mumbai when he was a teenager with stars in his eyes, she regularly accompanied him from Borivali in the north of the city to Shivaji Park Gymkhana in Dadar – a trip of about an hour from their home – on the local train so Harmeet could get the best coaching possible. He says he is living her dream too, playing the World Cup.By Harmeet’s reckoning, the first turning point in his career came when he watched Rohit Sharma play the 2006 U-19 World Cup. Harmeet had enrolled at Swami Vivekanand International School in Borivali, the school Rohit had studied in, to help launch his cricket career. “He was someone who gave us the hope that this [dream of playing for the country] is achievable. And he was going out there like a rock star and performing as well. He played a big role in India winning the 2007 [T20] World Cup. At that point I said I want to play the U-19 World Cup. And in 2010, I lived that dream, and then 2012 again.”In 2009 when Harmeet made his Ranji debut, Rohit was in the Mumbai side. Does Harmeet fancy opening the bowling against his former team-mate and Virat Kohli, who are favourable match-ups for left-arm spinners in the powerplay? “Looking forward to catching up. Hopefully we get him out early,” Harmeet says, laughing.Netravalkar with his brothers in red, white and blue. “It’s been a transformative journey for me, filled with ups and downs,” he says•AFP/Getty ImagesNetravalkar wants to meet Rohit and Dravid, as well as Kohli and Jasprit Bumrah. He is also keen on meeting his good friend Suryakumar Yadav, his old captain at Mumbai, who put out a post on social media in appreciation of Netravalkar’s Super Over performance against Pakistan: ” [Respect, brother.] Very happy for you and your family back home.”

****

For Harmeet, Netravalkar, and every Indian in the US squad, it will be a proud day to play the mother country in the World Cup.Harmeet doesn’t want to get carried away by the emotion. He believes USA can look Rohit’s India in the eye. “I’m trying to think less about the India factor,” he says. “They are one of the best in the world, but it’s T20. It’s a helpful wicket.”I said this before the World Cup as well, especially for [playing against] India and Pakistan, that these morning games bring us big time into the game. In the morning you don’t see a lot of 200-run games. If you bowl half-decent, you can get someone [out for] 150 or 160. And if you get that, any Associate team or anybody feels that they can chase it because a couple of big overs and you are run a ball. Like you saw New Zealand upset [by Afghanistan]. On reasonable, helpful wickets Associate teams can do a lot of wonders.”The way we played the first two games, we’ve not worried about the results. We have been right up there on the body language. We have been right up there on the attitude. We have shown character. We have not panicked under pressure. We played the best of the best fast bowling now [Pakistan]. It just shows the world that US has so much potential and so much to offer.”Before the Pakistan match, you saw Netravalkar sing “The Star-Spangled Banner” and while he will do so again on Wednesday, he says he will also sing the Indian anthem. “Oh, absolutely! I mean, I’m an Indian, so I would put it like, ‘India is my [birthplace] and this is my [workplace]. So I respect both.”It’ll be nice for me, a great feeling for me.”

FAQs: The first ever women's T20 World Cup at a neutral venue

Why is the tournament being staged in the UAE amid the October heat, you ask? Read on to have this and other questions you might have answered

Shashank Kishore01-Oct-202415:17

Runorder: Can Australia be stopped at the Women’s T20 World Cup 2024?

Another Women’s T20 World Cup this soon?
Covid’s knock-on effects forced the 2023 edition in South Africa to be held a year later than originally planned. And so the smallish gap between both editions.Right. Why the UAE – weren’t Bangladesh slated to host?
The tournament has had to find a new home at short notice. It was originally slated to be held in Bangladesh, but anti-government protests leading to hundreds of deaths in July-August forced several countries, including Australia, England and India, to issue advisories against travelling to the country. This meant the ICC had to look for a Plan B, eventually deciding to host the tournament in the United Arab Emirates.Isn’t it going to be scorching hot?
It will be, but it’s not unusual for cricket to be played there at this time of the year; October is officially the start of the cooler months in the country, though day-time temperatures are still in the mid-30s on average. The men’s T20 Asia Cup in 2022 was held here in August-September. The men’s T20 World Cup in 2021 was held in October-November.Teams will be tested, as there are seven double-header days scheduled during the group stage of this World Cup, with games to be played at 2pm and 6pm. You can check out the full schedule here.Related

  • ICC launches AI tool for Women's T20 World Cup to protect teams from 'toxic content'

  • Catching in focus as Women's T20 World Cup enters the ring of fire

  • The Devine dilemma – to open or not to open?

  • Alyssa Healy: 'Not here to defend the title, here to win it'

  • Coach Leigh, spinner Kasperek: Scotland to New Zealand, twice over

Why was UAE chosen despite the testing weather?
In a way, the UAE emerged as the best option because India rejected ICC’s offer to host, citing their hosting of next year’s 50-over women’s World Cup. Sri Lanka wasn’t a viable option due to the monsoons. Zimbabwe stepped in with a late offer to host, but the ICC dialled the Emirates Cricket Board (ECB), who will work closely with the Bangladesh Cricket Board (BCB). The games will be played across two venues: Dubai and Sharjah.Don’t the hosts play? So will we see UAE at the World Cup?
No, they will not gain automatic qualification here, since Bangladesh qualified as hosts long before the tournament was moved. Six other teams – Australia, South Africa, India, England, West Indies and New Zealand – made it on the basis of finishing in the top six at the T20 World Cup in South Africa last year. Pakistan were the next-best team from the ICC T20I women’s rankings, while Scotland and Sri Lanka made it through the Women’s T20 World Cup Qualifiers, where they pipped Thailand and UAE – their closest competition – to take the final two spots.Right. So that’s how many teams participating?
Ten – same as in 2023. The only change is Scotland will replace Ireland, whom they pipped at the Women’s T20 World Cup Qualifiers earlier this year. This will be Scotland’s maiden appearance at a women’s global event.What is the format?
Teams are divided into two groups of five and will play the others in their group in a round-robin format, with the top two from each group qualifying for the semi-finals. India have a pre-decided semi-final venue (Dubai, on October 17), should they qualify. The second semi-final is slated for October 18 in Sharjah. The final will be played on October 20 in Dubai. All the knockout games have a reserve day.Give me a few interesting facts about this World Cup.

  • This will be the first women’s T20 WC at a neutral venue.
  • Dubai hasn’t hosted any of these ten teams in a women’s T20I previously.
  • An Indian team – men or women – will be playing in Sharjah for the first time in nearly 25 years.
  • This will be the first women’s global tournament since ICC announced equal prize money for both men’s and women’s tournaments. The winners will receive USD 2.34 million, an increase of 134% over what Australia were awarded for winning in 2023.


23:04

Who makes it to ESPNcricinfo’s best women’s T20I XI?

Let’s talk teams now. Can anyone challenge Australia?
Yes. But whether they can put it past them under pressure is the bigger question. India have shown they can dominate them – like their Test win in Mumbai or a nine-wicket hammering in the first of three T20Is this January. They’ve been working extensively with a sports psychologist as part of their tournament preparation, to help them get over the mental barrier.England are coming off a strong summer, having completely outclassed New Zealand and Pakistan. But they were given a reality check last year by Sri Lanka, easily among the most improved sides, who beat England for the first time in a T20I series. Sri Lanka also put one past India to clinch their maiden women’s Asia Cup title in July. So the field is narrowing, even though it does appear Australia are still clearly a cut above.What are some of the games I simply must not miss?
If you watched the women’s Asia Cup, you’d know why Pakistan vs Sri Lanka is a big rivalry. That game will be played at 6pm (local time) on the opening day (October 3). On a slow pitch in Sharjah, don’t miss Sri Lanka taking on Australia on October 5 – who knows, there could be an upset loading…Then there’s India vs Pakistan on October 6, which isn’t as big a rivalry as it is in men’s cricket but is nevertheless a broadcaster’s favourite. England vs South Africa – which was the semi-final fixture in the previous World Cup (October 7), Australia vs New Zealand (October 8), and India vs Australia (October 13) are some of the other big games.

Starc uses his favourite combination to give Australia just the day they needed

Pink-ball cricket at Adelaide Oval must be the stuff of Starc’s dreams, and today they added up to career-best figures against an opponent that has traditionally had the better of him

Andrew McGlashan06-Dec-2024It was the roar. Mitchell Starc has celebrated plenty of wickets across his decorated career, but it felt as though this one had a bit more meaning than many. The first delivery thudded into Yashasvi Jaiswal’s pad as the left hander played across it and, for the third time in his career, Starc had a wicket with the first ball of a Test match.The last time a wicket fell to the opening delivery of a men’s Test was when Starc extracted Rory Burns’ leg stump with the opening ball of 2021-22 Ashes at the Gabba. That brought a wild celebration, too, but with the context of this match Jaiswal’s wicket was quite the moment. The noise from a yet-to-be-full Adelaide Oval as he departed was something to behold.There has been a lot said and written both during and after the first Test about Australia’s performance; plenty of it has been fair and balanced – it was a defeat of rare proportions on home soil – but there were extreme views and the usual collection of hot takes among it. Alex Carey talked of some surprise at the reaction, Nathan Lyon said he found parts of it humorous. But the bottom line was, Australia needed a quick response.Related

  • Stats – Starc gets to Adelaide fifty, Bumrah to 2024 fifty

They could not, therefore, have asked for a better start than removing the batter who had made 161 in the second innings in Perth. Jaiswal had shown his willingness to get into a duel by suggesting to Starc that he wasn’t bowling fast enough, although in the subsequent press conference spoke of his respect for Starc and thrill of facing him. He had, however, begun Perth with a duck courtesy Starc before making his presence felt. It is shaping as one of the battles of the series.For a little while after the early breakthrough, it appeared as though Australia were losing their way. Scott Boland denied himself a first-ball wicket in his first home Tests for two years when he overstepped having removed KL Rahul – in a bizarre twist Snicko suggested there was no nick despite the batter beginning to walk before the no-ball call. Later in the same over, Usman Khawaja spilled a catch at first slip to give Rahul a second life.Mitchell Starc is a pleased bowler, walking off with a career-best 6 for 48•Associated PressIndia reached 69 for 1 by the final half an hour of the session when Starc returned, having Rahul fending into the gully and then drawing Virat Kohli into edging a rising delivery to second slip in a similar manner to his dismissal in the first innings in Perth. Both Kohli and Starc love Adelaide Oval, but it was the latter who took the honours this time. When Boland trapped Shubman Gill lbw with a full delivery, India were 81 for 4 at the dinner break.On the one hand it was no surprise that Starc was Australia’s main man, but on another it went against the grain. He has a phenomenal record in pink-ball Tests – by the end of innings it read 72 wickets at 17.81, including 4 for 53 in the corresponding Test in 2020-21 – but overall against India in Tests it’s been more of a struggle: before today he had 51 wickets at 38.72 and never more than five in a game. They are comfortably the opponents he’s been least productive against.So, in a sense, it was using one of his favourite combinations – Adelaide and the pink ball – to overcome a more stubborn obstacle. He has been in excellent rhythm this season even if he took some punishment during India’s big second innings in the first Test. “I said last week in Perth, I thought he looked as good as he’s looked in a long time,” Ricky Ponting said on .Midway through the second session Starc returned and for the third time in the day and struck in his opening over in a spell when he trapped R Ashwin lbw with a full delivery which swung back (and also caused some damage to Ashwin’s foot). The movement was again on show when he ripped one through Harshit Rana as he continued producing significant shape with a ball 39 overs old.”Ash’s dismissal was a very good example of why he is so effective with the pink ball,” India’s assistant coach Ryan ten Doeschate said. “He’s someone who presents the seam nicely. He obviously uses that other ball very well in setting up batters. When the ball swings back to a certain degree – a lesser degree – the batters can generally figure it out. But when you’re guessing on both sides, it makes him far more effective.”When Starc closed India’s innings by ending Nitesh Kumar Reddy’s boisterous counterattack it gave him new career-best figures of 6 for 48. It bettered the 6 for 50 he took against Sri Lanka, in Galle, in 2016, which in a neat twist was the first occasion he had taken a wicket with the first ball of a Test. With his Jaiswal wicket, Starc became the second bowler to achieve the feat three times after Pedro Collins, who has the wonderfully quirky distinction of removing the same batter – Bangladesh’s Hannan Sarkar – on each occasion.Scott Boland got among the wickets after Mitchell Starc started the collapse•Getty ImagesIt was also notable that Starc’s best analysis came in his 91st Test. Only two frontline bowlers have achieved a new high watermark later in their careers in terms of matches played: James Anderson in his 128th outing and Glenn McGrath in his 103rd.But while 180 all out looked like a job well done, we’d been here a couple of weeks ago in Perth when India were bowled out for 150 leaving Australia with the final session to bat. That did not go well for the hosts and here they not only had to contend with Jasprit Bumrah, but also the night-time session.The outcome was as good as could have been hoped for. Usman Khawaja edged Bumrah to slip – meaning his form remains a watching brief – but the inexperienced Nathan McSweeney, on his adopted home ground, and the under-pressure Marnus Labuschagne made it through to the stumps.McSweeney, who was dropped on 3 by Rishabh Pant, had been goaded by Rana during the early stages of his innings, which appeared to lure him into a pull that wasn’t far from being dragged on, but he retained his composure impressively beyond that, even when the floodlights twice when out in quick succession. As the final half hour approached, McSweeney slotted away consecutive boundaries against Reddy, and in the closing moments pulled the chirpy Rana for another.A day that started with a roar for Starc, ended with cheers for a local star doing the hard yards to make sure Starc’s work didn’t go to waste. Australia needed a good day; they had an excellent one.

RCB have the (Hazle)wood on their opponents now

With RR needing 18 from 12 balls, Hazlewood conceded only one in the penultimate over and also took two wickets

Ashish Pant25-Apr-20252:12

What makes Hazlewood a much-improved T20 bowler?

Being at the M Chinnaswamy Stadium is an experience. When things are going the home side Royal Challengers Bengaluru’s (RCB) way, one needs to strain his ear to listen to the person next to him inside a soundproof room. When it’s not, the silence can get disconcerting.On Thursday, at the end of the 18th over, the Chinnaswamy Stadium got really quiet. The 30,000-strong crowd had just witnessed their star bowler Bhuvneshwar Kumar being thrashed for 22 runs by Rajasthan Royals’ (RR) Dhruv Jurel and Shubham Dubey. The RCB chants weren’t ringing around the ground anymore, there were no flags waving. With 18 needed off 12 balls, this was now RR’s game to lose. Were RCB about to go down at home for a fourth straight time? Surely nine an over at the Chinnaswamy is a cakewalk.Enter Josh Hazlewood. A solitary run off the 19th over, two wickets, and RR did not know what hit them. It was a classic case of sticking to the plan: hard lengths mixed with the occasional yorker and change of pace. And just like that, Hazlegod (that’s what the RCB faithful call him) had flipped the narrative again, and the crowd found its voice… big time.Related

  • RCB finally get the 'monkey off their back' as RR go nowhere

  • Kohli and Hazlewood break RCB's home duck

  • Kohli: 'Applied ourselves well after three average games at home'

  • Parag: We didn't show enough intent against the spinners

Hazlewood has always been a frugal powerplay bowler, and it’s no different in the IPL. His high release points, because of which he generates the extra bounce, coupled with the subtle movement off the deck have often been a nightmare for batters. In IPL 2025, he has also been a death-bowling sensation.Entering the tournament, Hazlewood had bowled 141 balls in the death since the first time he played in the league in 2020. Off those, he picked up 13 wickets at an economy of 10.00. This season, he’s already bowled 59 balls in the death and picked up six wickets. Only Matheesha Pathirana (seven) has more wickets than him, while his economy of 8.23 is the third-best for any bowler with a minimum of five overs in the death.What’s crucial is that Hazlewood seems to have gotten a hang of the Chinnaswamy surface. He had a tough beginning here, going for a combined 83 runs in 6.5 overs in the first two games against Gujarat Titans and Delhi Capitals. But the rain-shortened game against Punjab Kings, where he almost broke open the game, helped him find a template.ESPNcricinfo LtdAgainst RR, 17 of the 24 deliveries that he bowled were short of a good length, which fetched him wickets of Yashasvi Jaiswal, Shimron Hetmyer and Jofra Archer. It wasn’t the easiest of starts for him here as well, with Jaiswal laying into him (26 off 11 balls), but Hazlewood stuck to that hard-length plan and hit the jackpot.”It’s just sticking to your strengths,” Hazlewood said after his four-wicket burst gave RCB their first win at home. “The bounce here has been quite steep throughout the whole tournament so far and that hard length was still hard to hit, so I was just about mixing it up with, you know, the odd yorker, the odd bouncer, change of pace, so the normal stuff, but it’s just the order in which you apply those balls.”I think for that six to eight metres [length], the strike rate was about 100. If you can hang around there more often than not, bring the batsman forward, without bowling the half-volley, I think that’s the way forward for us.”

“From 18 in the last two overs, it is very much in the batters’ favour and they should win the game from there. I think that almost relieves you a little bit”Josh Hazlewood

But what about the pressure when he is bowling to two set batters with the required rate only at nine an over? “I think it almost takes the pressure off to a degree,” Hazlewood said. “From 18 in the last two overs, it is very much in the batters’ favour and they should win the game from there. I think that almost relieves you a little bit.”[If] you have 25 or 27 to play with, then the pressure is on the bowling team. I felt that I could [be] nice and relaxed, stick to my strengths on this wicket. It was a hard ball to hit that back of a length and then mix it up with the odd yorker. So [I was] happy to execute that and sort of get monkey off the back of that first win at home.”While Hazlewood’s one-run 19th over will remain the talking point, his 17th over was equally important. With RR needing 46 off the last four overs, with six wickets in hand, he got the key wicket of Hetmyer and conceded just six. Those two overs, which went for just seven, softened the impact Bhuvneshwar’s 22-run over created.1:53

Are RCB looking good for the playoffs now?

“I think both those overs showed the class of the guy,” RCB head coach Andy Flower said after the game. “He’s a class operator and he’s a world-class bowler. He is great under pressure in any format of the game, he thinks clearly and he’s got great skill. I know he’s known for his heavy length bowling but he’s got some great all-round skills.”He mixes in those yorkers, wide yorkers, slower balls and he seems to know what type of ball to bowl at the right time. So it’s great having a guy like him in our side, in our squad and part of a very strong three-pronged attack.”Minutes after the dust had settled on the contest, and the players were congratulating each other, the cameras panned to Virat Kohli. There was a sheepish smile on his face as he jogged towards Hazlewood with childlike enthusiasm and then picked him up with the bowler breaking into a wide grin.Out of the 16 wickets Hazlewood has picked this season, 13 have come in the second innings with RCB defending a score. Not all these wickets have come in a winning cause, but in Hazlewood, RCB know they have a rare bowler who can be destructive in the powerplay and the death. Can he be the ticket to their maiden IPL trophy?

Game
Register
Service
Bonus