Rain comes down after Lyon strikes twice

ESPNcricinfo staff08-Nov-2015Guptill and Tom Latham survived a few more appeals and nearly took their team to lunch…•Getty Images…Before a swinging yorker from Mitchell Starc trapped Latham in front of the stumps and rain brought on early lunch•AFPSolid as ever, Kane Williamson joined Guptill as the two put on a fifty stand to take the score towards 100•Getty ImagesHowever, Nathan Lyon came on, and found a troubling line after a few overs to make Guptill edge one to slip, for 23•Associated PressWilliamson continued and brought up his fifty to steer New Zealand’s innings again•Getty ImagesBut minutes before tea, Lyon struck Williamson in front of the stumps and the umpire raised his finger. Even though the batsman was hit around the groin, ball-tracking showed the ball just clipping the top of stumps and umpire’s call meant New Zealand were three down•Getty ImagesAnd just when Australia thought they had an opening, rain came down and wiped out the third session completely to give the visitors some relief and hope•Associated Press

When Gooch tamed Pakistan

The England batsman’s 142 in Karachi in 1987 was a lesson in mastering spin in the subcontinent

Rob Johnston07-Nov-2015The distance from Chelmsford to Karachi is roughly 5000 miles, and the conditions for cricket in either are about as divergent as it gets. Yet in November 1987, Essex’s Graham Gooch played an innings of such mastery in Pakistan’s largest city that you would have thought he had been batting there all his life.In 1987, the World Cup was held outside England for the first time, co-hosted by India and Pakistan. England were narrowly beaten in the final by Allan Border’s Australia at Calcutta’s Eden Gardens and just ten days later began a tour of three one-day games followed by three Tests against Pakistan.Coming so soon after the World Cup, it was unappealing to players and fans alike and was marred in controversy. It was the tour where Mike Gatting and umpire Shakoor Rana had a blazing row which required the intervention of the British High Commission to prevent the tour being cancelled.”We were so deflated after the World Cup. Picking yourself up and having another six weeks in Pakistan was tough going,” says Phil DeFreitas, a key member of England’s bowling attack. “You’re representing your country, so you just get on with it, but we didn’t feel that things went our way. It was a tough tour.”England’s players did not stay in the luxurious five-star hotels they do now. Jack Russell, on his first England tour, recalls: “We lived on Cup-a-Soup and baked beans. I volunteered myself to be in charge of the team microwave. I can still do a great Peshawar hotpot – microwave tinned stew and baked beans.”England won the first ODI in Lahore by two wickets. In Karachi for the second game, Gatting won the toss and batted. Pakistan were not at full strength, missing Imran Khan and Javed Miandad, but they had a trump card in Abdul Qadir. A spinner of real class, he had a dazzling repertoire of legspinners and the googly. Later, Gooch would remark that Qadir was harder to play than Shane Warne.

“We lived on Cup-a-Soup and baked beans. I volunteered myself to be in charge of the team microwave. I can still do a great Peshawar hotpot”Jack Russell

Realising that Qadir would be hard to score off on a dry pitch, Gooch drove the score on early, a cause helped by Wasim Akram pulling his groin after four overs. The quick but erratic Mohsin Kamal received punishment with the new ball, while Asif Mujtaba, bowling left-arm spin, was hit out of the attack after three overs that cost 25 runs. At 140 for 3, Chris Broad, Gatting and Neil Fairbrother had been dismissed for a combined total of 45, while Gooch approached his century.It was an era of one-day cricket played in whites with red balls, where a strike rate above 70 was considered good. “Nowadays, people play different shots, whereas then if you could hit a spot people would struggle to get you away,” says DeFreitas. On a slow surface, Gooch was scoring at better than a run a ball.The year 1987 had been a difficult one for Gooch. He had not played Test cricket for England since the previous August and had been dropped to Essex’s second team, after which he enlisted Geoffrey Boycott to help correct a technical flaw. But an upturn in form led to his selection for the World Cup, where he led the run-scoring charts with 471 from eight games.During the semi-final, Gooch made a brilliant 115, sweeping India’s spinners to oblivion on a turning wicket in Bombay. India knew Gooch would sweep occasionally but he swept hard and often from almost any line and length in a premeditated fashion. In Karachi, all but Qadir got the same treatment. While the legspinner finished with 3 for 30 from eight overs, the other spinners conceded 136 off 20.The mark of an accomplished operator in the subcontinent is lightness of foot and also quickness of mind. During the World Cup, Qadir had bamboozled England in Rawalpindi; in Karachi, Gooch saw him off. When he did attack, he stuck to his method. “Most of the team were struggling with Qadir’s fast legspin,” remembers Russell. “But Goochie attacked him by sweeping him hard, square, which Qadir didn’t like.’His success was no fluke. “He practised for hours sweeping the spinners because he knew that was going to be their attack,” says DeFreitas. “His preparation was unbelievable. Goochie was a true professional and he trained hard in Pakistan, which was him down to a tee.”Sweet to bitter: the one-day series may have been memorable for England, but the Tests weren’t•Getty ImagesEngland passed 250 with a hundred partnership between Gooch and David Capel before Gooch was finally dismissed by Qadir. Gooch had scored 142 off 134 balls, hitting 14 fours. England defended their 263 for 6 and won by 23 runs, Pakistan’s innings notable for Ramiz Raja being given out obstructing the field on 99.Gatting’s side completed a series whitewash in Peshawar, although they lost the Test series 1-0. “We were in good form. We should have won the World Cup, and the majority of the side was still there. It was due to pure frustration that we went on to win the one-day series 3-0,” says DeFreitas.Has any English batsman played spin in one-day cricket as well as Gooch did at that time? Graham Thorpe and Kevin Pietersen perhaps, but it would be tough to call. Gooch’s innings remains the second highest score for England in one-day cricket in the subcontinent and the only one-day century by an Englishman against Pakistan in Pakistan.For England’s players, the tour was a unique test of resolve. Putting Pakistan’s spinners to the sword in their own backyard is no mean feat, but Gooch’s fierce professionalism and skill inspired what is surely one of the great England one-day innings.

The feline mewment

Plays of the day from the third ODI between Afghanistan and Zimbabwe in Sharjah

Vishal Dikshit02-Jan-2016Purrfect visitorZimbabwe would have been somewhat pumped after Hamilton Masakadza and Graeme Cremer revived their innings to post 175. Their fielders walked out with energy and enthusiasm to defend the score and dispersed all over the field as the Afghanistan openers walked out. But just as Neville Madziva ran in to deliver the first ball, he had to pull out because a cat was spotted on the field. It was soon spotted on the camera too, and shortly sprang across the field, not too far from the pitch, and stationed itself in the deep to get a better view of the two wickets Madziva got off consecutive deliveries in the first over.Six and outBrett Lee would have probably hummed a song if he watched Masakadza bat in Sharjah on Saturday evening. Masakadza had resurrected Zimbabwe’s innings with his 30th ODI fifty and was looking to stretch the team score when he struck his third six of the innings in the 48th over. He had been pouncing on the short balls along with Cremer, but when he got a long hop from Mohammad Nabi, he rocked back and hammered the ball that landed on the roof of the Sharjah Cricket Stadium. Lee’s rock band would be proud.SikandarSikandar Raza was the fifth Zimbabwe batsmen to be dismissed. Peter Moor was lbw when he didn’t move his feet. Chamu Chibhabha poked at one away from his body for an edge. Richmond Mutumbami played an unnecessary sweep and Elton Chigumbura missed one when he unleashed a rash shot. But Raza got the best ball of them all when Mirwais Ashraf landed one just outside off and seamed the ball in beautifully to find the gap between bat and pad as Raza’s feet hardly moved. While most of the others before him gave their wickets away, Raza could probably say his (destiny or fate in Urdu) did not help him at all.Inzamam the singerVirender Sehwag was known to sing while batting, fielders do all sorts of bustling while talking to commentators in the Big Bash League, but singing while sitting outside the boundary…who does that? When Afghanistan were well and truly in the game and had nearly taken all ten Zimbabwe wickets, the TV broadcast showed Afghanistan’s head coach Inzamam-ul-Haq singing all by himself, sitting alone in the dressing room. Afghanistan’s grip on the match at that time was such that Inzamam could have afforded to croon a soothing song that went with his gentle-giant image, even as the DJ at the ground played Pitbull’s “Let it rain over me.”

Highest T20 score in Australia, and Kohli's run of form

Stats highlights from the final T20I between Australia and India in Sydney, which the visitors won to complete a series sweep

Bharath Seervi31-Jan-20163 Instances when India have successfully chased targets of 190 or more in T20Is, the most by any team. South Africa is the only other team to do it more than once. India had chased 207 against Sri Lanka in Mohali in 2009 and 202 against Australia in Rajkot in 2013. This is the first time India finished a successful chase off the final ball of a match and the 15th instance overall for any team.4 Clean sweeps in a T20I series of three or more matches; this is also only the second in a series involving two Full Member sides. The previous instance came in 2014 when Australia beat England 3-0 at home.124* Shane Watson’s score in this match, the second-highest score in T20 internationals after Aaron Finch’s 156. Finch’s innings came against England in Southampton in 2013. Watson’s score is also the highest in T20 matches in Australia beating Luke Wright’s 117 for Melbourne Stars against Hobart Hurricanes in Hobart in 2012.1 Virat Kohli is the first batsman to score more than two fifty-plus scores in a bilateral T20I series. Kohli’s tally of 199 runs in this series is also the second-highest by a batsman between dismissals in T20Is. Martin Guptill had scored 216 runs with scores of 91*, 78* and 47 in February 2012. Kohli’s aggregate is also the second-highest by a batsman in bilateral T20I series. Hamilton Masakadza’s 222 runs in the four-match series earlier this year against Bangladesh is the highest.119* The highest individual score by a captain in T20Is before Watson’s 124*, by Faf du Plessis against West Indies in Johannesburg in January 2015. Tillakaratne Dilshan is the only other batsman to score a century as captain in T20Is.98 The highest score by a batsman in his first T20I as captain before Watson’s 124*, by Ricky Ponting in February 2005 against New Zealand in Auckland. Another Australia captain is third on this list: Steven Smith had made 90 on his T20I captaincy debut, against England in Cardiff in 2015.0 Centuries scored against India in T20Is before Watson’s knock. The previous highest individual score against India was Chris Gayle’s 98 that came in Bridgetown during the 2010 World T20.71 Balls faced by Watson in this innings, the most by a batsman in T20Is. He surpassed Morne van Vyk’s 70-ball innings of 114 not out against West Indies in Durban in 2015.4 T20I centuries in a losing cause. Watson’s score is the fourth-highest in overall T20 cricket in a defeat.62.94 Percentage of runs scored by Watson in Australia’s 5 for 197 – the fourth-highest percentage contribution in a completed T20I innings. Kane Williamson’s 70% contribution against Sri Lanka in Chittagong in 2014 is the highest.93 Runs added by Watson and Travis Head, the highest fourth-wicket partnership for Australia in T20Is. The pair went past an unbeaten 84-run stand shared by Adam Voges and David Warner against Sri Lanka in Sydney in 2013.3 Number of Indians who have aggregated 1000 or more runs in T20Is. Rohit Sharma is the latest on the list behind Virat Kohli and Suresh Raina.24 Runs scored off a Shaun Tait over [third of the innings], the third-most expensive over against India. The most expensive one was bowled by Stuart Broad, who conceded 36 in Durban [19th over of the innings] in the 2007 World T20, followed by Rory Kleinveldt’s 25-run over in Gros Islet [18th over] in the 2010 World T20.

Bowlers set up thumping KKR win

10-Apr-2016Quinton de Kock promised much before holing out to Yusuf Pathan off Andre Russell for 17 off 10 balls. Four balls later, Russell removed Shreyas Iyer for a duck•BCCIThe slide seeped into middle order and Pawan Negi was dismissed by Brad Hogg for 11 off 19 balls•BCCICarlos Brathwaite momentarily broke the shackles with a six over midwicket before he was removed by Piyush Chawla•BCCIBy the time Chris Morris was bowled by Chawla, Daredevils had slipped to 84 for 7•BCCIThey were eventually skittled for 98. Brad Hogg and Russell finished with three wickets each•BCCIGautam Gambhir and Robin Uthappa put on 69 for the first wicket to flatten Daredevils•BCCIUthappa got into his groove with a brace of straight-driven fours before falling for 35•BCCIGambhir and Manish Pandey completed Knight Riders’ win with nine wickets and 35 balls to spare•BCCI

Play it again, Sam

Opener Sam Billings talks about how ambitious the limited-overs game has become, and how he’s making sure he’s in the reckoning for England selection

Jo Harman14-Aug-2016 for English cricketers. He speaks about his determination to make an England ODI spot his own, the “IPL experience” and where cricket goes next. “Why limit what you can do?” he says.It’s four years since Billings announced himself by scoring a run-a-ball half-century in a televised one-day match for Kent against Warwickshire. His dexterity and range of strokes led Michael Atherton to tip him as an international player in the making, the former England skipper even suggesting the selectors should chance their arm and pick him immediately. While his Kent teammates Sam Northeast and Daniel Bell-Drummond had been identified as prodigious talents at an early age, Billings had seemingly come from nowhere.”I’m a late developer,” Billings tells AOC as we sit in the sunshine outside the Lime Tree Café at the pretty St Lawrence Ground in Canterbury. “Rob Key said to me the other day when we were playing golf: ‘You were rubbish as a kid!’ Everyone knew about DBD [Bell-Drummond], everyone knew about Sam Northeast, and I was just this wiry little kid who turned up to practice and asked for a hit at the end of the day. He tells the story of when I went to Antigua on pre-season with the first-team squad. We had a practice game, Charlie Shreck was bowling bumpers at me and I smacked a fifty and all of a sudden Keysy said he realised there was something to work with.”Billings had to bide his time though, and when no offer of a professional contract was forthcoming, he decided his best chance was through the MCC University system at Loughborough. He describes it as the best thing he’s ever done.”Growing up I was definitely a keeper first and a batter second. I’d kept for England all the way through the age groups – Jos [Buttler] played as a batter – but I wasn’t good enough to get a full county contract when I finished school. During my first year at Loughborough we had a camp for the England under 19s. All the boys were staying in the ECB lodges and I just stayed in my halls. I was one of only a few that didn’t have a contract and I felt a bit on the periphery. It was only at Loughborough that I got an opportunity at the top of the order. My [first-class] debut was against Northants at Loughborough and I got a hundred, so Kent then knew I was good enough to play at this level.”A year later Billings was established in Kent’s limited-overs teams and he followed that eye-catching performance in front of the Sky cameras by smashing 143 from 113 deliveries against Derbyshire – the highest one-day score by a Kent batsman at Canterbury. In the time since he has developed a reputation as one of the cleanest and most innovative ball-strikers in the English game and he made his ODI and T20I debuts in 2015. He also took part in the inaugural Pakistan Super League earlier this year, turning out for tournament winners Islamabad United, before representing Delhi Daredevils at the IPL.

“Rob Key said to me the other day when we were playing golf: ‘You were rubbish as a kid!’ I was just this wiry little kid who turned up to practice and asked for a hit at the end of the day”

“I just saw it as a huge opportunity,” he says of his decision to put himself forward for the IPL auction. “Andrew Strauss has encouraged as many of us as possible to go and play in franchise tournaments around the world. He sees it as an opportunity to improve as individuals and in the long run that’s going to benefit English cricket as well. Even when you’re not playing you learn just as much as when you are. You’ve just got to soak it all up because it is a different world out there.”I was actually naïve going into it because I thought it was just cricket, there was training and you got plenty of time in between games. But there was something on every day! If you’re not training you’re doing photoshoots, you’re singing in adverts, you’re doing all sorts for the sponsors. I was quite lucky actually. They wanted the big guys’ faces on adverts and we had Brathwaite, Morris, Zaheer Khan, JP Duminy, Quinton de Kock. They didn’t have a clue who I was! They thought I was the physio.”Billings had made his peace with the fact that in such a star-studded roster he might not get a game but midway through the tournament he got his opportunity against Kolkata Knight Riders. “I was so nervous! The boys were taking the mickey out of me in the team meeting. I’m sitting next to the big man, Carlos Brathwaite, and when my name’s read out all the lads started clapping, and then Carlos looked at me and burst out laughing. I had these massive sweat patches, just from the nerves. I was wearing a grey t-shirt – not a good option! He found it hilarious. It was only because you care so much and you’re wanting to show the world what you can do. I think that’s how you’ve got to look at it: it’s a great opportunity as opposed to shying away from it.”The nerves didn’t show as Billings scored 54 from 34 balls in a Delhi victory. He followed that with a quick-fire 24 in his next innings and finished the campaign with five matches under his belt. “Hopefully if I get retained next year people now know what I can do. There’s not much more I could have done. It was a sensational, surreal experience. It was as much a life experience as a cricketing experience.””Andrew Strauss has encouraged us to go and play in franchise tournaments. He sees it as an opportunity to improve as individuals and in the long run that’s going to benefit English cricket as well”•BCCISo should we be trying to replicate that experience in England with our own city-based franchise model? “Franchise cricket was fantastic but it’s a different beast over here,” says Billings. “You’ve got the county system, which is so entrenched. The main thing from a player’s point of view is that we have to play T20 in a block. We’ve had two spells this season where we’ve played six days out of eight in three different formats. That’s not good for us as players: trying to survive in red-ball cricket and then having to try and whack it out of the park on a Friday evening. As players we don’t know what’s going on. We just load our cars up and have all the kit there in case it’s T20 or whatever! But also as a fan, it’s so hard to track a competition or team, or how a particular player’s going.”Billings isn’t afraid to speak his mind on a number of subjects and admits he was bitterly disappointed to miss out on England’s ODI squad for the recent series against Sri Lanka. He was selected for the one-off T20I but feels ready for a run in the 50-over team and the stats bear that out.”To be totally honest I was disappointed not to be in the ODI squad,” he says. “After James Taylor was unfortunately forced to retire due to his health issues and then Ben Stokes was out injured I thought I might get a go in that middle order. But I think it’s a great strength of English cricket at the moment that we’ve got so many decent players and I’ve just got to keep scoring runs. I’ve topped the averages in List A cricket for the last two years, at a strike-rate of 140, average of 86 – as long as I keep doing that then hopefully that spot becomes my own.”List A cricket is definitely my strongest format, simply because I’ve played so much of it from a young age. Where I bat in T20, it’s so volatile as well. It’s the strike-rate that’s the key thing as opposed to the average. For England I just hope that I get a good stint at it. In that Pakistan series [last November] I got a fifty off 23 balls, the quickest fifty from an Englishman in an international T20. If I get a good run at it, I’m sure that given a bit of time I can really go on and produce. J-Roy [Jason Roy] has had a good run at it and now he’s starting to show how good he is. And I’m so happy for him because he is . You’re not going to whack it out of the park every day straight away but given time I think you can definitely bed in, for sure.”

****

It’s a sign of the times that 40 minutes into our interview, we’re yet to discuss Billings’ red-ball cricket. He’s only played 40 first-class matches in his career so far and, remarkably, just two in the last 11 months. He’s batted once in that time.

“See 400 as a realistic option. It sounds ridiculous, but it is. The last 20 overs, you can get 200. Why not? And then you’ve 30 overs before that. I reckon we will see 500 one day”

Young cricketers coming through in this country still generally proclaim Test cricket to be “the pinnacle”, almost as a reflex. But in the case of a player such as Billings, whose career thus far has been so focused on, and defined by, white-ball cricket, can that really still hold true?”There’s something special about a Lord’s Test match. That is the purest form of cricket. But I think we’re very lucky to have a sport which has three formats that are so different. There’s not one that’s more important than the other. That’s quite important I think. If you see it from my perspective, don’t get me wrong I would love to play a Test match – putting on that blue Three Lions cap and walking out for a Test match would just be unbelievable – but it’s just different. I feel so far away from Test cricket because I just haven’t played enough four-day cricket in the last year. It’s frustrating because I would love to play it, but it’s just finding a balance. Red ball and white ball cricket are two different games nowadays and people have got to realise that. It’s just the way it is.”Billings talks with real passion about the game’s future and given the opportunities available to him, it’s easy to see why. “I think the game’s moving forward quicker than it ever has done,” he says. “The face of cricket is changing all around the world with different competitions popping up everywhere. We’ve just got to keep growing the game.”I think that ODI series against New Zealand [last summer] was actually one of the best, not only for the England team but for the whole cricket world because it had two teams just going out there without a care in the world. In the deciding ODI, Morgs [Eoin Morgan] came in against the left-arm spinner and tried to take him down. That’s the way you have to play nowadays, because 300’s not good enough. It’s that mindset of taking it on, whether it’s first ball or last ball: have no regrets and go with the flow. See 400 as a realistic option. It sounds ridiculous, but it is. The last 20 overs, you can get 200. Why not? And then you’ve 30 overs before that. I reckon we will see 500 one day.All Out Cricket”I should have brought one of my bats down. It is . It’s actually absurd. They are unbelievable but the game moves forward. It’s going to push the standard higher. Batsmen are now paddle-sweeping fast bowlers. Why limit what you can do? We’ve got one of the best bowlers in the world here [at Kent] in [Kagiso] Rabada, who for a 21-year-old is just phenomenal with the skills he’s got. He’s come up with ways to combat a batsman. You have to. It will have that knock-on effect where the bowlers will catch up again.”Gareth Andrew [the Hampshire allrounder] has a brilliant thing where he has the ball in his left hand while running up to bowl and as he’s getting into his delivery stride he chucks the ball up with his left hand and catches it with his right. As a batter you’re like: ‘What’s he done?’ Why limit that? That’s great for the game. Gone are the days where you set a field and everyone knows where you’re going to bowl. If you’ve got the field set for a yorker you’re going to double bluff and hit the bloke on the head. If he top-edges it for four or six over third-man, then that’s the game. Batsmen gamble, and bowlers have got to gamble as well now.”

****

Billings’ immediate focus is on winning back a place in England’s ODI squad for the forthcoming series against Pakistan and cementing his spot in the T20 side. He’s going the right way about it. Given the plum role of No.4 for the England Lions’ one-day tri-series, he followed up a 34-ball 68 in a victory over Sri Lanka A with a career-best 175 against Pakistan A – 139 balls, 21 fours, four sixes (one of those a pull over mid-wicket from a left-handed stance). It was a role that Billings had discussed with England Lions batting coach Graham Thorpe during the winter tour of South Africa. “Thorpey said they wanted me to bat four because if you have that adaptability where you can bat anywhere in the top six or seven, then as a coach or selector it gives you so much more, especially if you can hopefully be one of the better fielders and offer an option with the gloves as well. I’m trying to offer as much as I can to the team in different situations.”It’s an offer that England’s 50-over team can surely not turn down for much longer. After years of inertia, England have finally woken up to what’s possible in white-ball cricket. Billings has the skill and tenacity to help them achieve it.

'Getting Sri Lanka back on track is a long, slow process'

Graham Ford, the team’s coach, wants the island’s special brand of cricket firing through his young team again

Interview by Andrew Fidel Fernando07-Jun-2016What drew you back to Sri Lanka?
I’ve talked about how I’d thoroughly enjoyed the first stint. I enjoy the players’ attitude and a lot of their approach to the game. Though I moved away from Sri Lanka, they were pretty much my team as far as the international competition went. I was supporting Sri Lanka, following them, and staying in touch with quite a few of the boys.Going back to coach Sri Lanka was something I had to think long and hard about because I was really enjoying what was going on at Surrey. But in the end – weighing all sorts of things up – I decided that at this stage of my career it would be nice to take on a huge challenge, in that there’s a lot of improvement that’s required. But I think good things can be achieved with the kind of attitudes and the kinds of people that I work with.Has anything surprised you during the second stint? What has stayed the same and what has changed?
Quite a lot has changed. In the last stint the senior players helped the youngsters along and set the tone in the matches. Now suddenly the young players have to make their own momentum. As you get older in your coaching career, you realise that you have to adapt your coaching style to the group that you’ve got.There is a general understanding that there is quite a lot of work to be done, and there is a decent amount of patience, which is very important.What sorts of changes have you made to your coaching style with this team?
When you have senior players, you’re more of a facilitator – more of a behind-the-scenes-type supporter. When it’s a younger group, you’ve got to be more out in front. More instruction is required. There’s more involvement in the decision-making as to how the game is going to be played.

“If Chameera can get some lateral movement in the air at that pace, then he becomes something really, really special”

Your senior players know their game and what they need to work on. They might just ask you to monitor one or two things to make sure they’re in place. You are more guided by the player, whereas with a younger player, you have to let them know the important areas they have to work on, and sometimes insist that they do have to work on certain areas.Do you find younger players come to you with areas they personally want to work on?
I’ve tried to encourage a really good work culture. And it was one of the first things we had to establish. I feel they are getting towards where we want to be. If we’re going to close the gap on some of these teams, we have to work harder than the other teams simply because of where we’re at. The boys are starting to get on with the work on their own and also starting to ask for opportunities to work on certain areas they know they need to improve on.You wanted the job till 2019. Is that a reflection the fact that this team had a long way to go?
It was pretty clear to everybody that we spoke to that it wasn’t going to be a quick fix. It was something that needed to be built on a solid foundation. It’s quite a long, slow process. If it’s done properly, then hopefully it stays strong for a long time.Do you buy into the idea of the “Sri Lankan brand of cricket”?
You’ve always got to keep a good eye on the simple basics, but after that, if you want to get the edge, doing something different, playing with flair and taking the attack to the opposition are all things Sri Lanka has used.Sri Lankan players don’t play according to the coaching manual, but they find something different and effective. A lot of people around the world have always enjoyed Sri Lanka because it’s a small island with a small population and a small budget, yet they’ve always been able to go toe to toe with the big guns. They’ve been brave even when opposition has been bigger, taller and more imposing. I think that’s what Sri Lanka is all about, and we need to get that all firing again.” Sri Lankan players don’t play according to the coaching manual, but they find something different and effective. It’s a small island with a small population and a small budget, yet they’ve always been able to go toe to toe with the big guns”•Getty ImagesWhat discipline requires the most improvement?
I’m not sure we’re at a stage where we actually know who our best players are. That also takes some time because you need to give players a decent run and find out a bit about them. We have got a good amount of cricket ahead of us, so after a 12-month period we’ll have a good idea of who has the technique and the mental strength for a long run in international cricket. Or if they don’t cut it, we’ve got to go elsewhere – but we’ll know for sure that that player’s not up to it.I think [chief selector] Sanath Jayasuriya has been brilliant with that process. He’s really trying to explore talent as quickly as possible with lots of trial matches and things. But those only take you so far, because there’s quite a step up from a trial match to an international.In terms of which areas require attention – it’s pretty clear we need to improve all of them. We need more allrounders, because we have a long tail, always. We don’t have seam-bowling allrounders in particular. We need to develop a solid top order, where there is a lot of talent. We also need to find some good pace – someone to partner Dushmantha Chameera. We need to find depth in the fast-bowling unit as well, to account for injuries. There are also some talented young spin bowlers, but when Rangana Herath finally stops, we haven’t got what we’ve had for so long with Muttiah Muralitharan and Rangana. There are a few spinners who could get there, but they need some time to develop.Chameera is someone a lot of coaches are excited by. What does he need to work on to realise his potential?
He is a brilliant athlete. I remember seeing him bowl as a net bowler down at Galle some years back, and he just kept getting all our guys out. I think that maybe if he can get some lateral movement in the air at that pace, then he becomes something really, really special. On some of the Test match surfaces which are not offering much, you do need to do something in the air.

“After a 12-month period we’ll have a good idea of who has the technique and the mental strength for a long run in international cricket”

The batting has been fragile recently. Is that to do with skill, temperament or something else?
I can’t say exactly what’s causing the problem. If we’re talking about playing in England, quite a number of them have had to make adjustments to their technique, which is a hell of a difficult thing when you’ve played one way all your life. It’s tough to stick to those changes when the adrenaline’s pumping and the ball is whizzing around. You revert to what’s natural to you.Going forward, it seems as though the board’s vision is for the coaching at the emerging and development levels to be really good. Hopefully the necessary technical requirements are well entrenched by the time they get to the national level.Kusal Mendis has made an impact on this tour. What does he have to do to establish himself in the team?
He established himself – he’s got a wonderful technique. He’s one of our guys who’s really got a technique that can survive wherever he goes in world cricket. Whoever has coached him as a young lad has done a magnificent job. He is still learning and needs to get to a stage where he turns his exciting starts into bigger contributions.For such a young guy to be batting at No. 3 in Test cricket is very exciting. Ideally you’d break a young guy like that in at No. 6 and let him bat for a while in a position where the tone is set by the specialists, and the ball is older. But he’s having to be the tone-setter, and he’s shown that he can do it.”Kusal Mendis is one of our guys who’s really got a technique that can survive wherever he goes in world cricket”•Getty ImagesWhat excites you about his technique in particular?
Playing in this country, your shoulder alignment has to be good so that it’s really in line with your eyes. Once you have good shoulder alignment and have the front side working, you can play with a much softer bottom hand, which absorbs the energy of the ball. If you keep pushing hard and there’s a lot of energy with the bottom part of the bat, you end up playing away from your eyes and the nicks fly. Kusal’s got lovely shoulder alignment, great arm work and a lovely soft bottom hand when defending. He always gets his eyes close to the contact point.Over the last couple of years, Sri Lanka have got to good positions in many matches, only to let games slip. Is there a strategic weakness there?
That’s something that you can’t really coach. That’s something that develops over a period of time, as these guys develop. As these guys become tougher and play together more, those sorts of issues will sort themselves out. Patience is important. The board have planted the seeds for growth with certain appointments that they’ve made. Now it’s time to watch it grow.Would you like to see the team be more attacking with their strategy and tactics?
From session to session that could be different. It’s easy to say, “You should be more attacking”, but it also depends on the bowlers and firepower. There are a lot of things to factor in.What are some of Angelo Mathews’ strengths as a captain that we don’t see on the field?
On match day he leads from the front and he’s got a record that shows that. He’s got massive respect from the opposition. It’s always great when your leader has that. He’s also got respect from the young players. He’s also had the benefit of playing with so many really good greats of the past, and he’s been able to share that with the lads, which he’s brilliant at.Would you like to see Kumar Sangakkara and Mahela Jayawardene involved in some way with the side?
They’ve both got so much to offer. They have cricket brains like you can’t believe. It would be sad to see them not getting involved along the way, because they certainly would make a difference.

Most runs, most sixes, and two seriously quick hundreds

Stats highlights from a run-fest in Lauderhill

S Rajesh27-Aug-2016489 The match aggregate, which is the highest in any T20 game, going past the previous best of 469 in an IPL game between Chennai Super Kings and Rajasthan Royals in IPL 2010. In T20Is, the previous best was 467, in a South Africa-West Indies game in Johannesburg in 2015. (Click here for a full list of highest aggregate runs in a T20Is.) The two totals of 245 and 244 are third and fourth in the list of highest totals in T20Is, while India’s score is the most in a run-chase by any team in all T20 matches.32 The number of sixes in the match, which is the highest in any T20I, going past the previous record of 30 in an Ireland versus Netherlands game in the 2014 World T20. The record in any T20 game is 33, in a match between Colombo Cricket Club and Colts Cricket Club earlier this year. Twenty-one of those sixes were from the West Indian batsmen, which equals the most in any T20 innings: Royal Challengers Bangalore also hit 21 in the IPL game against Pune Warriors when Chris Gayle scored 175. In a T20I, the next best is 19, by Netherlands against Ireland in the 2014 World T20. West Indies also walloped 178 runs in boundaries (21 sixes and 13 fours), the joint third best in a T20I innings.46 Balls for KL Rahul’s century, the second fastest in T20Is, and just one ball behind the record of 45, by South Africa’s Richard Levi. West Indies had a sub-50-ball hundred as well, with Evin Lewis’ scoring one off 48, the sixth fastest in T20Is, and the second best by a West Indian. The quickest for them is 47 balls, by Chris Gayle.32 Runs that West Indies scored off Stuart Binny in the 11th over of the innings – Lewis struck five sixes and took a single, while one ball was a wide. Only once have more runs been scored in an over in T20Is, when Yuvraj Singh slammed six sixes off Stuart Broad in the 2007 World T20. There are also two other instances of 32 runs being scored in an over, both by England, in consecutive matches in 2012: off Wayne Parnell at Edgbaston, and off Afghanistan’s Izatullah Dawlatzai in a World T20 game in Colombo.248 Runs scored in the first ten overs by both teams in the match – West Indies scored 132 to India’s 116. It is the most runs that each team has scored in the first ten overs, while the aggregate is the second best in any T20I, three runs short of the record of 251 in a South Africa-West Indies game in Johannesburg in 2015.13.26 The run rate during the 126-run stand between Johnson Charles and Lewis, the sixth highest for any century partnership in T20Is. India had a similar century stand, with Rahul and MS Dhoni adding 107 off 8.1 overs, a rate of 13.10. The fastest 100-plus stand in T20Is is also in Lauderhill by West Indies, when Gayle and Kieron Pollard added 108 in 6.5 overs against New Zealand in 2012, at a rate of 15.80. Three of the seven fastest 100-plus stands in this format have come in Lauderhill.6 Number of runs India scored in the 20th over; only two overs in the entire match yielded fewer runs: the 11th of the West Indies innings, by R Ashwin, which went for four, and the first over of India’s innings, by Andre Russell, which went for five.325 International matches in which MS Dhoni has been captain, the most by any player in international cricket. Dhoni went past Ricky Ponting’s mark of 324. Ponting remains the most successful captain, though, with 220 wins, while Dhoni is next on 175.2 Number of players from the West Indies XI who played the Test series – Marlon Samuels and Carlos Brathwaite. India had eight players from this team who also played in the Tests.

Pitfalls of Australia's natural batting game

The increasingly homogenised method of Australian batting across all formats is a growing concern. How many of Australia’s current batsmen are truly good enough to make such an approach work?

Daniel Brettig in Hobart11-Nov-2016For many years after World Series Cricket ushered in a wide proliferation of limited-overs matches in Australia, there remained a deep divide between the methods used for those games and Tests. A superior ODI performer like Simon O’Donnell could be viewed as a Test match liability, likewise a Test banker like Mark Taylor viewed with scepticism in a coloured clothing context – until captaincy made him a fixture.Even if players were in both Australia sides, their methods could contrast wildly between formats. Dean Jones penned a book in 1991 called , where he outlined the shots he played in one-day matches but not Tests, and pre-emptively mourned the death of spin bowling in the limited-overs arena. While scoring rates were overall lower during this period, there remained a gap between those commonly seen in Tests (often around 2.5 runs per over) and ODIs (4-4.5).Intrinsic to this disconnect was the fact that batsmen played plenty of matches in both formats at both domestic and international levels – they had time in Sheffield Shield matches to hone their long-form methods, while the ODI schedule afforded plenty of opportunities to work out more expansive plans and techniques for one-dayers.Thus it was possible for a batsman like Mark Waugh to play innings as contrasting as a match-saving century at Adelaide Oval against South Africa in January 1998, and a freewheeling hundred opposite Michael Di Venuto in an ODI at the same venue earlier in the same summer. The same was true of Steve Waugh, who crowned his first ODI hundred, against Sri Lanka at the MCG in 1996, with a towering straight six before steeling himself to soak up 273 minutes and 221 balls for 67 against India on a fiendishly difficult Delhi pitch a few months later.Twenty years on, however, a rather different picture has emerged. A treadmill of a schedule, the rise of domestic T20 tournaments, and increasing emphasis on positive, assertive batting rather than sound defence have meant that there are now few discernible differences between the way Australia’s batsmen play across Test and ODI formats. It appears as though certain arts of batsmanship are being lost at the altar of “playing my natural game”.The most salient example of all this has cropped up in the gap between Australia’s ODI tour of South Africa immediately preceding the present Test series. Australia’s planners deemed the tour unimportant – or inconvenient – enough that Mitchell Starc and Josh Hazlewood were both kept well away from it. Yet it was across those five matches that the Proteas gained a couple of critical advantages, both mental and tactical.

There are now few discernible differences between the way Australia’s batsmen play across Test and ODI formats. It appears as though certain arts of batsmanship are being lost at the altar of “playing my natural game”

For Kagiso Rabada, fast emerging as the finest pace bowling prospect of his generation in the world, the series offered a priceless chance to get his impressively mature head around the concept of bowling to Australian batsmen, both the leadership duo of Steven Smith and David Warner but also antipodean willow wielders in general. As he said after the Perth Test:”It definitely did help in terms of strategy. You tend to develop a sense of where to bowl to different batters and it helped in that regard. But you still have to come and execute. Aussies play pace well, they grow up playing on quick wickets and facing quick bowlers.”So it was a learning curve for me in the ODI series in terms of different batters hitting the ball different places, so it was key for me now and for other bowlers to come and execute the plans, and we still have to do it leading into the next two matches.”Australian vulnerability against the moving ball, or even merely straight ones, was writ large across the WACA Test. South Africa’s bowlers claimed no fewer than eight lbw verdicts against their opponents’ zero, a trend arguably more alarming for Australia than the quirks of the fates befalling Smith (well down the pitch) in the first innings or Mitchell Marsh (pinned on the toe by a sharp inswinger) in the second. Similar differentials had been seen in Sri Lanka this year, and the UAE in 2014, and their emergence down under suggests a worsening problem.Allied to the issues of covering up adequately in defence were those of picking the right tempo for the right moment. That was the sort of skill mastered by the former Test batsman Michael Hussey, who relied upon a highly tactical and adaptable method to see off various bowlers in differing situations. South Africa, of course, are a team well known for having the ability to stonewall when needed.South Africa’s bowlers claimed eight lbws during the Perth Test; Australia’s bowlers not a single one•Cricket Australia/Getty ImagesIn the words of Dean Elgar: “I think it’s a good thing for us to have an array of flexible players within our batting unit. A guy like Hashim didn’t contribute much in the first Test and we know what he can achieve as well. So having a lot of guys put up their hands and make a big play for the team is very important for us. It’s very important to us to have those different kinds of players in our team, it’s a good dynamic and a good build for the batting unit.”Elgar’s particular brand of batting is of a kind almost unheard of in Australia circa 2016. He is a grinder and a fighter, not overly fluent or expansive, and able to work doggedly in the company of others. His hundred was a source of some irritation to the Australians, grinding them down in a way the hosts cannot really replicate.”It’s just my nature to try to irritate the opposition – I don’t think I’m practised in it, I think it comes naturally,” he said. “But if that’s the way they feel about it, it’s not a bad thing. It’s an objective that I achieved in the last Test, and it’s going to be something that I’ll try to work more going into the second Test and possibly the third Test as well.”Interestingly, the increasingly homogenised method of Australian batting, across all formats, mirrors no one so much as the coach Darren Lehmann himself. As a prolific batsman for South Australia, Yorkshire and sporadically Australia between 1996 and 2005, he demonstrated the advantages of an unshakeable belief in a positive method, going after bowlers and manipulating fields. Yet his pathway was a narrow one shared by few of his generation. Lehmann was, in one former team-mate’s words, “a freak”.The current batting coach, Graeme Hick, was another who tried to bat in a similar way more or less each time he went out to bat, using his height and power to commanding effect. This resulted in a prolific and dominant county career but an underwhelming record in Tests. The pressing question for Lehmann, Hick, Smith and the rest of the nation’s batsmen is this: how many of them are really good enough to take the same approach, come what may?

West Indies' new CEO wants to put fans first

Johnny Grave’s inbox, at what used to be Allen Stanford’s ground in Antigua, is pretty full but he is relishing the challenge ahead

George Dobell03-Mar-2017It’s probably appropriate that Johnny Grave, the new WICB chief executive, is making his new base at Coolidge, the old Stanford ground, in Antigua.It’s a place that had become a symbol of West Indies’ decline. At the start of January, it was overgrown and boarded up. Shrubs had grown on the outfield and the grass was knee high. It provided nothing more than a painful memory of the time West Indies cricket (and English cricket, to be fair) jumped into bed with Allen Stanford.But it might also become a symbol for Caribbean cricket’s resurgence. It might also reflect Grave’s ability to take something that appears broken and make it into something good. Because, right now, the WICB are, in partnership with the government of Antigua & Barbuda, in the process of buying the ground from Stanford’s receivers.When the deal is complete, the site will be the new base for West Indies cricket. It will house the high performance centre, the corporate offices and most other departments of an organisation that has a turnover of around USD40m and employs 45 people. The old Sticky Wicket restaurant, where Stanford used to entertain, will be rented out to provide income. The ground, with its pleasing grass banks and capacity of around 8,000, has already hosted some Super-50 games, including this year’s final. It is slowly coming back to life. Maybe West Indies cricket is, too.Grave admits he has a long ‘to do’ list. But while he is keen to address match start times (international T20 games had been scheduled to start at 9.30am to appeal to the international broadcast market), ticket prices (prices for the ODI series against England are around USD75, which may be okay for England’s travelling supporters, but is steep for the local market) and securing the future of an organisation with no assets and, tied to a 50-year – yes, 50-year – CPL commercial deal, he has one priority that is more pressing than all: he wants to reengage with West Indies cricket supporters who may have lost faith in both the board and their team.”I thought my biggest challenges would be improving our relationship with the players and attracting more commercial income,” he says. “But I now believe it’s improving our relationships with our supporters and repairing the brand.To that end he intends to prioritise West Indies’ supporters in future decision making. “I do understand the importance of our overseas broadcasters but what about our home market?” he says. “Who comes to watch T20 at 9.30am? We must find the right balance.”And yes, we need to invest in grassroots cricket to stop the longer form of the game from dying here. But when you see only 400 people attend the first day of a Test, you do wonder if in some islands it’s dead already.”

“If you are a young player looking at a career in the game, the possibility of spending the last few years of your career as a Kolpak makes the proposition of a life as a professional cricketer more realistic”

Yet optimism abounds. Aged 40, Grave has the energy and positivity of a man who has yet to be disappointed by bureaucracy. He has the ambition to prove himself and the experience, both commercially (he spent seven years with Surrey’s commercial department and, after that, 10 in the Professional Cricketers’ Association) and as a union employee, to build bridges and relationships with sponsors, players, spectators and broadcasters. It’s not hard to see why he was chosen for the job.”I don’t think people in the Caribbean have fallen out of love with cricket,” Grave says. “But they may have fallen out of love with the WICB. We are going to have to work hard to regain their love. We have to repair that relationship and reignite their love for West Indies cricket.”There are already practical steps being taken to turn the talk into action. The WICB has appointed a centrally contracted curator (or groundsman, depending on where you live) to travel through the region providing advice and assistance on the surfaces required for international cricket, in particular. The days of West Indies offering painfully slow, attritional wickets are, according to Grave, going to end. Jimmy Adams and Stuart Law, the new director of cricket and coach, want the quick, bouncy surfaces which used to characterise Caribbean cricket. As he puts it: “West Indies cricket is popular around the world for the style and excitement it offers. But you can’t have carnival cricket on the some of the wickets we’ve had in the past. It has to change.”Meanwhile, an olive branch has been offered to Darren Bravo. And, contrary to reports elsewhere, his NOC was signed “within five minutes of receiving it” according to Grave. “We’re not going to be withholding NOCs,” he says. “There’s no future in that.” Bravo will, therefore, be free to travel to the IPL and welcome to return to the West Indies fold upon his return. Yes, there will have to be a form of public apology – perhaps from both sides – but there is no attempt to humiliate or shame. Just resolve.Perhaps most importantly, Grave is open to looking into a new system of central contracts subject to financial and board approval. Instead of three different bands, he suggests three separate contracts for each of Test, ODI and T20I cricket may be more suitable. He is realistic about the competing demands of overseas T20 leagues and has no intention of going head-to-head with the IPL – “it may well be our season has to stop before the IPL starts,” he says – but feels that, with just a bit of compromise, this can be “a win-win” situation for the players, the board and, most importantly, the spectators.He also favours cricket’s return to the Olympics, a Test Championship and a World T20 every two years. “[The Olympics] is the only way we’ll crack the American and even Chinese markets,” he says. “I know there will be practical problems, but we can find a resolution, I’m sure. It’s essential if we really want to be a global game.”Having attended his first ICC meeting, where Test cricket was high on the agenda, he says “there was a remarkable level of consensus about the need for context”. The 50-over World Cup will, he believes, continue well beyond 2019 but West Indies may already have played their last Champions Trophy match. Meanwhile the start time of T20 games against Pakistan will be put back to 12.30pm, the latest the current broadcast deal will allow, and in future ticket prices will be aimed at the local market.”If we can communicate what we’re trying to do with everyone involved, I hope we can take them with us in the direction we need to go”•WICB Media Photo/Randy BrooksWhile Richard Pybus’ reputation divides opinion – his hard line stance towards selection has caused some division and looks certain to be reviewed – Grave is quick to praise his contribution as director of cricket in other areas. Certainly Pybus’ work in establishing professional leagues for the game in the Caribbean should be his real legacy. It’s less glamorous than the work around the international teams, but it provides the foundations upon which future West Indies teams can be built and has meant, for the first time, that regional players are employed on a professional basis earning between USD15,000 – 30,000 a year. His successor, Jimmy Adams, may well come to be grateful for that aspect of Pybus’ efforts.There are going to be no threats or ultimatums against those playing in T20 leagues or taking the Kolpak option, either. Instead Grave hopes to persuade the majority of Caribbean players that their future can be more rewarding within the fold.”I see the Kolpak situation as advantageous to West Indies cricket,” he says. “If you are a young player looking at a career in the game, the possibility of spending the last few years of your career as a Kolpak makes the proposition of a life as a professional cricketer more realistic. Yes, we may lose some players towards the twilight of their careers – the likes of Ravi Rampaul, who has served West Indies cricket well but has an opportunity to make some decent money in the last few years of his career – but we may also keep a few who otherwise might have thought the risk of playing cricket too big to justify.”But what of the prospect of losing younger players to Kolpak or T20 leagues?”I don’t know how many of them, if any, would be better off doing that,” he says. “By the time you’ve paid your agents fees and taxes, you don’t make as much money as you think. And to rule yourself out of international cricket and the shop window that represents… I’d have thought any young player going that route had been poorly advised.”Can we really compete on the global stage without our best players? I’d think the answer to that is no.”But we’re not going to be held to ransom. People have to be reasonable in their expectations. But if we can communicate what we’re trying to do with everyone involved, I hope we can take them with us in the direction we need to go. We all want the same thing. If we work together, we have a much better chance of achieving it.””And while I had heard quite a lot about the tensions between the board and players, my impression so far has been very positive. Jason Holder brought the whole team into the office last Friday and introduced them to all the staff. It was their day-off but he felt it was important and they spent several hours here. It was very impressive and very encouraging.”

“I don’t think people in the Caribbean have fallen out of love with cricket. But they may have fallen out of love with the WICB. We are going to have to work hard to regain their love”

It all sounds great, doesn’t it? But we’ve heard encouraging talk before. Grave certainly isn’t the first well-intentioned cricket administrator. Might he find his ideas thwarted and frustrated by board and committees and grievances of which he knows nothing and which go back years?”I don’t get that impression at all,” he says. “The President [Dave Cameron] and I share the same vision and so far he’s entrusted me to get on with the job. He’s been very supportive. I think the board want to empower the executive to make decisions and that’s the message I’m passing on to everyone who works here. There is a lot to do, but we can do it. I’m very excited by the possibilities.”Look, I don’t yet know much about the differing characteristic of each of the territories or the tensions that might exist between them. I’ve no baggage and I don’t want any of us to be weighed down by that stuff. We need positive relationships with all of our stakeholders and we all have to look forward.”Just about every Caribbean dawn is spectacular. But this feels different. It feels like a new start. These are early days and there will, no doubt, be snags along the way. But for the first time in many years, it feels as if there is cause for optimism in Caribbean cricket.

Game
Register
Service
Bonus