Shakeel lays claim to being one of Pakistan's middle-order mainstays

Batter shows promise in his first international century, against New Zealand in Karachi

Danyal Rasool04-Jan-2023The Karachi crowd has maintained the sort of healthy distance from the cricket this season that Marie Antoinette likely reserved for late 18th century Parisians, and it’s not like their team has given them much reason to reevaluate their life choices. Pakistan enjoyed their best day of the series. They scored 253 runs, and lost just six wickets. They won’t concede the huge lead New Zealand threatened to take when Imam-ul-Haq fell early this morning, even if victory seems just as far away as it did 24 hours ago. But there were scraps (of bread, not cake) for the smattering that turned up today.When – and it feels like a question of when, not if – Saud Shakeel goes on to become a steady presence in the middle order, very few will be able to truthfully claim they were there when in happened. For watching a Shakeel innings is like attending a winter wedding in Pakistan; you may not want to do it, but when you look back at it, you’re glad you ended up going. Unlike that Shan Masood innings, which is a party you can dip into, knowing it’ll end long before it stops being fun.Related

  • Saud Shakeel's maiden ton drives Pakistan but New Zealand make late advances

  • Shan Masood 2.0 cranks it up to eleven

Shakeel walked in having watched that Masood innings, and recognised that things which aren’t fun also sometimes need doing. Since then, he methodically went about stripping the excitement out of the game, and presumably New Zealand’s will to live alongside it. He didn’t get off the mark for 42 balls; Tim Southee and Matt Henry kept offering him tempters outside off stump, but they might as well have been offering beef steak to a vegan for all the success they had.It was a trend he continued at the start of the third day, and kept up right throughout. He would leave 75 of the 160 deliveries he faced from fast bowlers, and defend another 37; just 30 runs were scored off the seam all innings. He left Daryl Mitchell like he was prime Glenn McGrath, a middleman in what was effectively a throwdown between Mitchell and Tom Blundell behind the stumps. Of 38 balls he bowled to Shakeel, there was one scoring shot; 25 were let go.”They had a certain plan against me, the fast bowlers,” Shakeel said at the end of the day. “They started that way yesterday against me, too. It was a good plan against me, so I thought I would weather it and try and score runs from the other end. That might explain why I slowed down a bit because I didn’t want to fall into that trap.”Tim Southee was landing it outside off, and I kept leaving it. And if I took a chance against that ball, there was a risk I’d get out, and we’d already lost three wickets. Credit to them, they stuck to their plans and kept bowling that line.”Saud Shakeel left alone 75 of the 160 balls he faced against pace•APIt’s not as if he wasn’t scoring runs, though, because New Zealand’s first innings lead kept coming down. That might have had more to do with the canny counter-attacking that characterises Sarfaraz Ahmed at his best, but Shakeel’s contribution was – very slowly – building up too. Much of it came against spin; the sweep so emblematic of the games of both Karachi boys at the crease was deployed to great effect. He would be most productive against Ish Sodhi, swept as soon as he overpitched, and punched through the covers off the back foot when he overcorrected.And all through it, Shakeel never once worried about his strike rate. The results might be more prosaic than they are watchable, but his yardstick for success sees him pass with flying colours. He was in control of 93% of the 336 deliveries he faced, higher than any other player. He is the sort of person who would behave the same way no matter whose company he’s in, and bat for Pakistan in a Test match exactly like he would for Sindh in the Quaid-e-Azam trophy. Not for him the razzmatazz of Bazball, the shapeshifting strategies of Masood. This is how his batting was forged, and he’s not about to give up on it now. He may be like a Nokia 3310 in the age of the smartphone, with all the excitement that implies. But it also makes his defences significantly harder to hack.It’s difficult to remember when exactly the runs were made, because there are no phases to a Shakeel innings. The runs under his belt by this point almost feel like they’ve been worn down into joining his tally than actually made. There is no twitchiness when he starts, no eagerness to get to a half-century. Similarly, there were no nerves as he approached his first hundred for Pakistan. When Michael Bracewell pitched one up, there were no half-measures to the slog-sweep which brought him up to 99. This was where he got his maiden first-class hundred, and it’s where he scored his first in internationals.The milestone came up similarly uneventfully, a little nudge into the covers, but even that doesn’t kickstart another phase to the innings. If anything Shakeel slows down even more, adamant not to give New Zealand the satisfaction their plan to dismiss him might work. It perhaps doesn’t occur to him that keeping him tied up not scoring runs while they plug away at the other end might just be the real plan, after all. And while he scores just 15 runs off the 85 balls that follow his century, New Zealand pick up four wickets that see them poised for a handy first-innings lead.Pakistan might yet end this wretched home season with no Test wins, but with a batting order in transition, Shakeel’s emergence is like manna from heaven. As a cricket board – and a country – Pakistan seem to constantly look outward and abroad for quickfire miracle solutions. So the fact their brightest light this season is a man from this very city who would never substitute the grind of hard work for a short cut is perhaps something of a teachable moment.

England step on the gas, India stutter at the crunch, Bangladesh take a step up

Our first batch of team report cards for 2022 also includes Ireland, Afghanistan, West Indies and Zimbabwe

31-Dec-2022Englandby Andrew Miller
I’ll try to keep it brief… but good grief.This was a year like no other for the England men’s Test team, one where winning a World Cup to become the first team to hold both white-ball world titles at the same time was arguably not the greatest of their successes. It began amid existential despair at the Ashes, and ended with a triumph in Pakistan as absolute as it was unprecedented. It began with an abject record of one Test win in 17, and ended with nine incredible wins in ten. It began with Joe Root clinging on as Test captain because there were no realistic alternatives, and ended with Ben Stokes being hailed as England’s best since Brearley.And by the end of the year, England had desecrated Test cricket in the best and most literal sense – “Bazball”, as everyone bar the team themselves were describing Stokes and Brendon McCullum’s new liberated approach to the ancient format, had stripped back the pomp and unleashed that inner white-ball beast.Suddenly England were playing a version of the game in which nothing mattered bar the endgame – “Strip it back, it’s only you and the bowler there,” as Jonny Bairstow put it after his sensational century in the second Test against New Zealand at Trent Bridge, the moment at which it was clear that this England team had entered a collective zone quite unlike anything the game has ever before witnessed.For the women, it wasn’t quite such a cathartic year, for all that it began with a similarly shattering trouncing in the antipodes. Nat Sciver’s heroic century against Australia in the World Cup final ensured a dignified end to a gruelling winter, but it couldn’t disguise the sense that a champion team had reached the end of its road.At least in the likes of Issy Wong, Alice Capsey and Freya Kemp, the team had a knot of oven-ready starlets, honed in the Hundred and ready to step. But the Commonwealth Games in Birmingham came too soon for an exciting but raw side, and India proved too strong. With Heather Knight and Sciver missing key portions of the summer, it wasn’t until December’s tour of the Caribbean (under new head coach Jon Lewis) that they returned to regular winning ways. Unlike the men in Pakistan, however, their clean sweep raised barely a mutter of recognition.High point
Nine Test wins in ten, and every one of them a stunning display in its own right. But the Rawalpindi victory was in a different league entirely. That first-day total of 506 for 4, that last-day surge after Stokes’ impeccably judged declaration. And all achieved in spite of a debilitating sickness bug on the eve of the Test. All the recipes for instant greatness.Low point
Did the Ashes even happen this year? The midwinter misery of 2021-22 could not seem a more distant memory. But if we have to dredge into long-forgotten horrors, then the loss of ten wickets for 56 runs in 22.5 overs on the final day of the series in Hobart seems a suitably bum note to hit.ResultsMen
Tests: P15 W9 L3 D3
ODIs: P12 W5 L6 NR1
T20Is: P27 W15 L11 NR 1Women
Tests: P2 D2
ODIs: P21 W11 L10
T20Is: P18 W13 L4 NR1
India had some high-profile losses to contend with in 2022, including in the deciding Test of the England series, in Edgbaston•Associated PressIndiaby Sidharth Monga
Losing a Test series in South Africa, losing the decider of the Test series, brought forward from last year, in England, an early exit in the Asia Cup, losing in the semi-final of the T20 World Cup in Australia, losing an ODI series to Bangladesh in Bangladesh – this is hardly the honeymoon period either Rohit Sharma, the new captain of the men’s side, or Rahul Dravid, the new coach, would have hoped for. Especially after the heady highs of last year’s Test series win in Australia.The disappointment from both the fans and the board despite the best win-loss ratio among ICC Full Members in all international cricket should tell this team in transition that they aren’t expected to just get by but to win big Test series away and win ICC tournaments.The women finished fifth in a field of eight in the ODI World Cup. They played no Test matches. They lost a home T20I series to Australia. Musical chairs involving the coaching staff remained the stuff of intrigue. Two of their greatest players, Jhulan Goswami and Mithali Raj, retired during the year.Yet there were some silver linings: they made the final of the Commonwealth Games, beat England 3-0 in ODIs in England, and finally got a WIPL.High point
India Women went to the home of the ODI World Cup runners-up, England, as absolute no-hopers. However, after finishing the Commonwealth Games two shots from the title, they continued their good form in the bilateral ODIs against the hosts, providing Goswami with a perfect farewell . Harmanpreet Kaur, the captain, scored 221 runs while getting out only once, Renuka Singh emerged as a new fast-bowling hope, and they rattled a few cages by running out a batter who was backing up too far before the ball left the bowler’s hand.Low point
The men could smell a series win in South Africa. In fact, after the first Test, which they won comprehensively, and after three innings of the second, it looked like it was theirs. This team was known for winning if it won the toss, especially when it had well above 200 to defend in the last innings. However, they failed to defend 239 and 211 in that second Test and the one that followed, on spicy tracks. It was not just that they lost; they lost by seven wickets each time and conceded the runs in a hurry. India had a good attack but the pitches suited the taller South African bowlers more, costing the visitors their best chance at a series win in South Africa to date.ResultsMen
Tests: P7 W4 L3
ODIs: P24 W14 L8
T20Is: P40 W28 L10 T1 NR1Women
ODIs: P18 W10 L8
T20Is: P25 W14 L11West Indies’ first-round exit in the T20 World Cup was perhaps the nadir of an already dismal year in the format for the two-time tournament champions•David Gray/AFP/Getty ImagesWest Indiesby Shashank Kishore
Three wins and two draws in seven Tests, including a series victory over England at home, should count as a good year, but by the end of 2022, West Indies’ tendency to fail in Australia, where they haven’t won a series since 1992, once again elicited the age-old debates about their Test future.If the debacle in Australia to wind down the year was utterly predictable, their T20 fortunes – which plummeted to an all-time low with their failure to qualify for the Super 12s of the World Cup – is something many didn’t see coming.It all started with Kieron Pollard’s retirement in April following a testy relationship with the cricket board. No inkling of his stepping away was on the horizon even two months prior, when he led the team on their white-ball tour of India, but rumblings began after they were blanked 6-0.In ODIs as well, West Indies endured a horror home run, losing 2-1 to Ireland and New Zealand and 3-0 apiece to India and Bangladesh. They were equally poor away, losing to Pakistan, and being swept aside in India.West Indies only success this year overseas was in the Netherlands, where they won 3-0 with a young team under new captain Nicholas Pooran – though he eventually stepped down from the post after their ignominious World Cup exit. Their qualification for next year’s 50-overs World Cup a year out isn’t a done deal yet; they are tussling with three teams for one remaining spot.The women’s team perhaps exceeded expectations by reaching the semi-finals of the 50-over World Cup, but off-field issues were ever present. If Covid proved challenging, their immediate future without talismanic allrounder Deandra Dottin could be tougher yet.Dottin retired in the middle of Barbados’ Commonwealth Games campaign citing a less-than-ideal “current climate and team environment” and taking potshots at the administration.Like at the start of the year, West Indies cricket at large is once again at the crossroads and in need of a thorough rejuvenation.High point
Beating hosts New Zealand and England back to back to begin the Women’s World Cup with two massive wins many didn’t anticipate.Low point
The men’s home ODI series loss to Ireland, who would also knock them out in the first round of the T20 World Cup with a nine-wicket pounding.ResultsMen
Tests: P7 W3 L2 D2
ODIs: P21 W5 L16
T20Is: P24 W8 L15 NR1
Women
ODIs: P18 W5 L11 NR2
T20Is: P10 W1 L9Bangladesh pulled off an unprecedented eight-wicket Test win against New Zealand in New Zealand for the first time in their history•Getty ImagesBangladeshby Mohammad Isam
The numbers don’t suggest it but 2022 was one of Bangladesh’s most productive years in international cricket – they won more matches in 2021, but 2022 is comparable to 2015 in terms of the quality of the opposition they defeated.They beat New Zealand for the first time in a Test match, and in New Zealand at that. They also beat South Africa in the ODI series in March, in that team’s backyard. Bangladesh were previously winless in both countries, so these were two special performances. They rounded off the year with a second successive ODI series win at home against India, and nearly toppled them in their last Test this year, in Dhaka.Litton Das had a stellar year in all formats, while Mehidy Hasan Miraz established himself as a reliable allrounder for the team. The rise of Bangladesh’s fast bowling across formats has been noteworthy too.The sole highlight for the women’s team was the win over Pakistan in the World Cup. They struggled in the T20 Asia Cup later in the year, where, despite being defending champions, they couldn’t reach the semi-finals. Captain Nigar Sultana had a good year with the bat, topping the batting charts in ODIs and T20Is, while Salma Khatun and Nahida Akter were among the main wicket-takers.High point
The miracle at Mount Maunganui and the 2-1 wins over South Africa and India in ODIs were high-water marks in Bangladesh’s cricket history.Low point
Bangladesh lost to Zimbabwe in ODI and T20I series for the first time in nine years.ResultsMen
Tests: P10 W1 L8 D1
ODIs: P15 W10 L5
T20Is: P21 W6 L14 NR1Women
ODIs: P10 W1 L7 NR2
T20Is: P17 W10 L7Fazalhaq Farooqi took 3 for 11 in Afghanistan’s opening win over Sri Lanka in the T20 Asia Cup in August•AFP via Getty ImagesAfghanistanby Peter Della Penna
Afghanistan may not have the seismic upset results over the years that other teams have had on the pathway from Associate to Full Member status, but 2022 showed that they continue to make steady progress in gaining respect with a steady march up the global rankings.In the ODI World Cup Super League, they beat the teams they were supposed to (sweeping a pair of three-match series against Netherlands and Zimbabwe) as well as winning a few games that were not nailed-on results (winning one match each against Bangladesh and Sri Lanka). Their consistency in ODIs has helped secure an automatic berth into the 2023 World Cup with a guaranteed top-eight finish in the 13-team tournament, which is all the more remarkable considering they still have nine matches left to play.As for T20Is, they once again showed flashes of immense promise thanks to their factory line of T20 franchise stars. Afghanistan advanced to the Super Four of the Asia Cup, but stumbled once there. Their T20 World Cup experience was severely rain-affected, with two matches washed out, though they gave defending champions Australia a scare in what amounted to a consolation match to end the group stage. It showed that a victory over the Aussies, which may have seemed far-fetched a decade ago, is not so hard to envision anymore.High point
Beating eventual champions Sri Lanka and Bangladesh to top Group B in the first round of the Asia Cup.Low point
Continued inactivity for women’s cricket initiatives at domestic and national team level, which is part of the criteria to be a Full Member of the ICC.Results
Men
ODIs: P12 W8 L3 NR1
T20Is: P18 W8 L10Sikandar Raza’s three wickets in five balls helped Zimbabwe clinch a famous win over Pakistan at the T20 World Cup•Getty ImagesZimbabweby Firdose Moonda
A year of two halves started with Zimbabwe’s men’s team losing 11 of their first 14 international fixtures – including series defeats to Afghanistan and Namibia – before winning 13 of their next 25 matches. The difference? A change in coach.Dave Houghton, the country’s first Test captain, had an immediate impact after he replaced Lalchand Rajput – who moved sideways into the position of technical director – in June. Zimbabwe won the T20 World Cup Qualifier, held at home, a month later and earned a spot at an ICC event for the first time since 2016. They also had an impressive run through the T20 World Cup, where they got into the Super 12. They also beat Bangladesh in an ODI series for the first time since 2013 and won an ODI in Australia for the first time ever, but remain out of automatic contention for the 2023 World Cup.Zimbabwe did not play a single Test in 2022 and only have five scheduled in 2023 (two against West Indies and one against Ireland at home, and two against Afghanistan away). Their focus seems to be shifting to the shorter formats, and they will even host a T10 tournament in January 2023. They do, however, remain committed to long-format players. Gary Ballance, who was schooled in Harare and has played 23 Tests for England, opted out of his Yorkshire contract early and has signed a two-year deal with Zimbabwe Cricket.The women’s team did not play any ODIs in 2022, but came agonisingly close to qualifying for the 2023 T20 World Cup, their hopes being ended by a four-run loss to Ireland.High point
Zimbabwe stunned eventual finalists Pakistan in the T20 World Cup by defending an under-par 130 in Perth. Pakistan were on track on 88 for 3 before Zimbabwe’s man of the year, Sikandar Raza, took three wickets in five balls. Richard Ngarava and Blessing Muzarabani squeezed the Pakistan batting and Brad Evans defended ten runs off the last over to secure a massive upset.Low point
It’s tough being always eclipsed by South Africa, but imagine when even Namibia overshadow you? In May, Zimbabwe lost a T20I series to their lower-profile neighbours, but they did make up for it by qualifying for the Super 12 at the T20 World Cup when Namibia didn’t.ResultsMen
ODIs: P15 W4 L11
T20Is: P24 W12 L11 NR1
Women
T20Is: P15 W12 L3UAE qualified for the men’s T20 World Cup and prevented Namibia from making it to the Super 12s by beating them in Geelong•AFP/Getty ImagesUAEby Peter Della Penna
Having not played in a World Cup of any kind since 2015, UAE made a spectacular splash in 2022. Not only did they qualify for the men’s T20 World Cup by winning the qualifying event in Oman in February – a performance that included a pair of victories over Ireland in both the group stage and the final – they also managed to spring a surprise upset of Namibia to end the group stage of the T20 World Cup itself, a result that denied Namibia what would have been their second straight trip to the Super 12s.In ODIs, the year started off in positive fashion for UAE before tailing off significantly. The loss of form was not without consequences. After the team went winless on their ODI tour of Scotland, Ahmed Raza was sacked as captain and replaced with CP Rizwan. Initially the move was announced as a change for T20Is only, but Rizwan continued to lead UAE in ODIs in their next series, against Nepal, as well. That apart, long-time allrounder Rohan Mustafa was shockingly left out of the T20 World Cup squad despite having been one of UAE’s better-performing players in the Qualifier.The men were not the only team to make waves in the year. The Under-19 Women beat Thailand to clinch the Asia Regional Qualifying spot in the inaugural Women’s U-19 World Cup in South Africa. The senior women continued a streak that began in 2021, to ultimately win 18 T20Is in a row before the run was snapped by a loss to Thailand. Though they could not secure a spot at the T20 World Cup, the women scored a famous win over Zimbabwe at the qualifier in Abu Dhabi, winning off the last ball by four wickets.High point
Fighting off the cold in Hobart, and a talented opponent in Namibia, to win a match at the men’s T20 World Cup.Low point
Very nearly blowing a chance to reach the T20 World Cup in the first place with a two-run loss to Bahrain to end the group stage of the men’s qualifier in Oman.ResultsMen
ODIs: P21 W10 L10 T1
T20Is: P16 W8 L8Women
T20Is: P28 W16 L10 NR2Bilal Khan’s 76 wickets in the CWC League 2 were among the few highlights for Oman in an otherwise underwhelming year•Getty ImagesOmanby Peter Della Penna
After a spate of successes under the leadership of head coach Duleep Mendis, Omanwere underwhelming in 2022. Less than four months after being co-hosts of the 2021 Men’s T20 World Cup with the UAE, they could not secure a berth for the next edition of the tournament, despite hosting the qualifier. A loss to Nepal in round-robin play meant they finished as runners-up in Group B, pitting them against Group A leader Ireland in a crossover semi-final that wound up being fairly one-sided.In ODIs, they became the first team to wrap up the full slate of 36 matches in Cricket World Cup League Two, ending with two wins out of four against USA and Nepal in Texas to take 44 points from 36 matches. Though they will not finish as winners of the seven-team competition, their spot in the top three is nearly assured, which will put them into the ten-team ICC World Cup Qualifier in Zimbabwe in 2023. It will be their first appearance in the 50-over World Cup Qualifier since 2009, bringing them full circle from the depths of World Cricket League Division Five in 2016.On the women’s side, Oman won four of five T20Is on home soil to finish runners-up to the UAE in the six-team Gulf Cooperation Council Women’s T20 Championship. However, they were less successful away from home, losing all three completed matches at the Asian Cricket Council Women’s T20 Championship in Malaysia.High point
Bilal Khan finishing as the leading wicket-taker in CWC League 2 with 76 wickets.Low point
A clumsy chase against Ireland that saw Oman go from 68 for 2 at the halfway points chasing a target of 166 to 109 all out in the semi-final of the T20 World Cup Qualifier.ResultsMen
ODIs: P16 W7 L8 T1
T20Is: P15 W6 L9Women
T20Is: P9 W4 L4 NR1Scotland’s win over West Indies in the T20 World Cup was an epic moment for them, but that was their only victory in five T20Is in 2022•ICC via Getty ImagesScotlandby Peter Della Penna
Change would a recurring theme for Scotland in 2022, both on and off the field. Allegations by former spinner Majid Haq, among others, sparked an independent review that concluded that Cricket Scotland’s governance and leadership practices were “institutionally racist”. In anticipation of the report findings being made public in July, the entire Cricket Scotland board resigned en masse.Earlier in the summer, long-time men’s captain Kyle Coetzer stepped down from the national team captaincy and retired from T20Is. New captain Richie Berrington led his charges to a famous win over West Indies to start their T20 World Cup campaign in Hobart, but they were unable to sustain that momentum and were beaten by Ireland and Zimbabwe in successive matches to fall short of the Super 12s. Scotland’s ODI form, however, was mighty impressive and they ended the year in first place in the seven-team CWC ODI League Two competition.As for the women, they could not maintain the progress made in 2021, when they defeated Ireland to be champions of the Europe Regional T20 World Cup Qualifier. Two losses in Edinburgh in early September to Ireland were followed by another in a must-win match at the T20 World Cup Qualifier in the UAE, ending Scotland’s dreams of advancing to the Women’s T20 World Cup in South Africa. However, the junior women were able to defeat Netherlands to secure a berth in the inaugural Women’s U-19 World Cup.High point
Not just beating West Indies, but the manner in which they did it. A thumping 42-run win highlighted by Mark Watt’s trio of wickets off deliveries bowled from 25 yards away.Low point
Calum MacLeod abruptly announcing his retirement at age 32, following the end of the T20 World Cup after a summer in which he was in blistering form with the bat.ResultsMen
ODIs: P21 W15 L6
T20Is: P5 W1 L4Women
T20Is: P11 W4 L7More in our look back at 2022

Ben Stokes' England captaincy: what went into it before he took charge

A year into the allrounder’s groundbreaking tenure at the helm, a look back behind the scenes at the lead-up into his crowning

Vithushan Ehantharajah29-May-2023″Oh no, oh no, oh no.”When he was told by Joe Root that he would be stepping down as England’s Test captain after five years in the job, Ben Stokes relayed the news to his wife, Clare. Her response was immediate and dismayed. She knew what was coming and was understandably concerned.Stokes had returned to the side for the Ashes in Australia after a mental-health break during the 2021 summer and was just starting to feel like himself on the Caribbean tour that followed. Now, with Root stepping down, Stokes was the one standout candidate for the Test captaincy.Related

Gary Wilson: Focus on red-ball technique can aid Ireland's white-ball ambitions

McCullum: Anderson, Robinson will be 'fit for Ashes' but sit out Ireland Test

Stokes the Test captain could learn much from England's T20 World Cup campaign

Brendon McCullum: 'Scary' how good Ben Stokes' captaincy has been

Ben Stokes and the art of captaincy

The fear from those close to him was that it might be a bit soon, though they did not doubt Stokes had the skill sets for the job.”I hope Stokesy doesn’t mind me saying, but he was not in the greatest place himself when I started playing,” says Ollie Robinson, who first lined up alongside Stokes during that 2021-22 Ashes. “He was a shell of the person I’d seen in the [previous] 12 months.”The start of the Ireland Test on Thursday this week will mark a day over a year since Stokes first walked out at Lord’s as England men’s newly appointed Test captain. The journey since then has been as successful as it has been thrilling.For England to be where they are now – stable, thriving, comfortable in their skin – with thoughts of beating Australia later this summer, speaks of a remarkable turnaround. Those fears about Stokes’ capacity for the job have turned out to be unfounded.The month leading up to that first Test against New Zealand last year was uncertain. The top of England men’s cricket was being rebuilt after a number of departures. What has become clear since, however, is that Stokes was far more than just a brick in the rebuild. Rather, he was the scaffolding.

Stokes did not want to give the impression that the captain was above his players. His rationale was that he would do the things he needed to do, but none of it needed to be about him: the team comes first

Communication was a key part of his toolkit. He took calls, made calls, spoke to players, outlining how he wanted to be as a leader, talked about the cricket he wanted to play and the messages he wanted to purvey. Not all those conversations went well, not all the messages were crystal-clear, but by the time he walked out for his first toss as Test captain, the basic structure for the success that followed was in place.

****

In his last media interaction as captain, Root reiterated his desire to take the team forward. Privately, though, he was done. He officially stepped down on April 16, the day before Rob Key was appointed managing director. The timing was no coincidence – the two had had conversations when it became clear Key was to assume the role.Before the announcements, Key texted Root to see where he was at, assuring him that no conversation needed to happen straight away. Root had asked for time off following the defeat in the Caribbean and Key did not want to intrude.Root called him back a minute later. Over the course of an hour and a half, Root said he would be stepping down and gave his thoughts on a new direction for the team. In conclusion, he said Stokes might be the ideal replacement to affect necessary change.Just as well, because Key only had eyes for Stokes. He had already spoken to those around Stokes to gauge his readiness and to assess what would have to be in place to get the most out of him in a demanding role.As it happened, Stokes flipped Key’s first chat around and they spoke about how best to help Root continue through the summer. One aspect was the need to bring the team closer together. During the tough times, when England won just one Test in 17 before the 2022 summer, Root felt isolated from the wider group; the nature of being captain during this period meant some team-mates kept their distance.During the tour of West Indies last year, when England were far from their best, Stokes spoke to the dressing room in support of Joe Root and his captaincy•Getty ImagesStokes had always been sympathetic to Root’s struggles and was committed to helping him through the rut. At the end of the tour of the West Indies, as the squad were at their lowest ebb, anxious about their futures, and amid talk of a complete overhaul, Stokes took the floor and gave an impassioned speech about how there was no need for a fresh start. The talent in the room was more than enough to bring back success, he said.Stokes originally regarded even talking of replacing Root as an act of betrayal. That changed when Root informed him he did not want to do the job anymore. Thus, when Key broached the subject again, Stokes was all in. All in enough for Key to drive up north to shake on it and thrash out some ideas, such as bringing in Brendon McCullum as new Test head coach.Stokes made one final call to Root to ask for his blessing – though it was not Root’s to give. Stokes wanted to show loyalty to someone who had stood by him through thick and thin.Root could not have been more encouraging. From that point on, Stokes threw himself into the captaincy. ECB sources were surprised by the level of preparation he had clearly done. While Root, and Alastair Cook before him, were inquisitive to the point of being tentative at the start of their tenures, Stokes had a plan for how he wanted to deal with every facet of the role.He wanted to reduce the number and length of team meetings, particularly those on matters that did not relate to on-field performances. He wanted to cut out middlemen, especially when it came to selection, believing any decision he was responsible for needed to be articulated to the relevant parties by him.He also had a clear idea of how he wanted to approach the media. Not just in terms of how he presented himself but what that meant for the team. The tone was set on his unveiling.

“I said to Stokes, ‘Do you want to say much?’ He just turned to me and said, ‘No.’ That was it. I was like, ‘Well, I’m not going to say anything then'”Rob Key, England director of cricket, about a team get-together ahead of the New Zealand series in 2022

Stokes held firm on two things to do with his first media engagement at the start of May: the location, and what he would wear. His introductory press conference took place at Chester-le-Street, not Lord’s. He wanted to be true to Durham, and part of him also didn’t see the point in trekking down to London and back for a day.He refused to have his photo taken in an England blazer, opting to wear the track suit instead. Even that was a compromise, given his first choice was to do it in his civvies. To this day Stokes refuses to pose for staged photos at Lord’s in an England blazer – something of a tradition for Test captains.Stokes did not want to give off the impression that the captain was above his players. His rationale was that he would do the things he needed to do, but none of it needed to be about him: the team comes first.

****

Before McCullum arrived in the UK, England players and staff got together at England’s National Football Centre in St George’s Park, near Derby. With the New Zealand series a few weeks away, it was the first time the whole group got together with Stokes as captain.Over 48 hours, players underwent medical screenings, had headshots taken, and generally spent time with each other, bonding. Some dropped in for a few hours, others stayed for the full two days. James Anderson and Stuart Broad had returned after being axed for the West Indies, and were noticeably chipper. Similarly, an uncapped Matthew Potts, usually reserved, was at ease in this setting. The vibe was very much about opening a new chapter in English cricket. Things felt different.Key, though comfortable with the backroom staff and players, was unsure how to play things with the wider group. He wondered if as managing director he should say a few words.Shortly before he took over as director of cricket, Rob Key spoke to Joe Root, who endorsed Ben Stokes for the captaincy. It turned out Key himself had had his eyes on Stokes for the role•Alex Davidson/Getty Images”We had all just started. Our players, medical staff – everyone’s there,” Key says. “I said to Stokes, ‘Do you want to say much?’ He just turned to me and said, ‘No.’ That was it. I was like, ‘Well, I’m not going to say anything then.’ It was funny – he didn’t say a word.”It turned out Stokes had spoken with players privately, and all of them left those meetings raring to get back in an England shirt. What needed to be said had already been said. Key was impressed. “He’d had his conversations; he didn’t need to do it again. You don’t have to say a thousand words to get the point across.”His ethos had already been put across in his first media briefing as captain, when he asked for “ten selfless cricketers” alongside him. It was then embodied in his first first-class innings after the appointment, when he struck 161 from 88 deliveries against Worcestershire for Durham.Arguably the most profound impact was felt among those “above” Stokes. He impressed in his first selection meeting, which featured Key; McCullum; James Taylor, who was an England selector at the time; performance director Mo Bobat; and David Court (Player Identification and Talent Pathway Lead). Though Stokes was only one of three with a deciding vote on selection, along with McCullum and Key, he struck a balance between being respectful and willing to listen while knowing exactly who he wanted for that first Test squad. He was compassionate, empathetic, and most important, calculated.

****

After a round of golf during the 2021-22 Ashes, Ollie Pope was taken aside by Stokes for a quick word.The No. 6 batter had made 35, 4, 5 and 4 in the first two matches of the series. England were two down and something needed to change as a whitewash loomed large. Pope figured he was about to be axed.

Stokes struck a balance between being respectful and willing to listen while knowing exactly who he wanted for his first Test squad as captain. He was compassionate, empathetic, and most important, calculated

“You’re the man to bat five,” Stokes said. He explained that he himself would shift up the order to No. 4, with Pope moving up to slot in behind him. Pope was surprised.”He told me not to worry about selection issues,” he says. “He was obviously backing me to go in and bat No. 5, play the series and stop stressing. Which is what I was doing at the time – overthinking.”The next day, Pope was dropped.”It was a stinker,” he laughs.Stokes found Pope to apologise, saying it was a conversation they probably should not have had. Stokes was trying to be a good vice-captain to Root, and had not clocked a shift in the wind.Pope holds no grudge: “He did sell me down the river at the time, but not in a bad way. I wasn’t playing very well, I’m not surprised I got dropped.”Even if things did not happen the way Stokes said they would, the talk and subsequent apology fast-tracked their relationship. Pope appreciated how much Stokes rated him at a time when Pope did not rate himself. He also liked knowing he could pick up the phone to Stokes for an honest conversation. Which is exactly what he did in the second week of May 2022, when Stokes was about to select his first Test squad.Pope was trawling social media when he spotted a post from the Barmy Army about Root moving back to No. 4. Sensing an opportunity, he put in a call about the No. 3 spot.Though he had not done it before for Surrey, the call was not about selling himself, he says, more about making Stokes aware he was willing to do it. He said he would make the shift for his county in their upcoming Championship match against Kent.Under Stokes, Ollie Pope has made the shift up to No. 3, where he has thrived•Getty ImagesThe conversation was relaxed and straightforward, but Pope did not feel particularly good about it. “I left the phone call feeling very flat,” he says. “He didn’t say I wasn’t going to get picked, but he was like, ‘Stay at four for Surrey this week and just keep scoring your runs.'””It usually means someone doesn’t want to give you the bad news now. They’ll just tell you next week.”A week later, Stokes informed Pope he was in, and that he just wanted him to approach the next match with his usual verve without worrying about changing for a new role. “It took my mind off England stuff for that week,” says Pope, who scored 96 in his only innings against Kent, at No. 4. “Getting another score before that Test series was probably what I needed.”At the end of that Lord’s Test against New Zealand, Stokes told Pope over a beer he had always planned to pick him at three.”I assume it was a good, well-thought-out plan from Stokesy. Or the phone call put it on his radar. Let’s go with the first one!”The 25-year-old has gone on to average 41.63 at first drop, scoring two centuries, and is now Stokes’ official vice-captain.Pope regards himself as an indicator of how Stokes views selection and the game itself. “Like, who puts a guy at No. 3 who was struggling at five or six? It was clear to me after that first selection what he was about.”

****

Ollie Robinson was a little confused and a little pissed off.Key had just called him to tell him he would not be part of the Test series against New Zealand. It was not the news he was expecting, or what he had been told to expect.

“Looking back, it was probably best that I didn’t get selected for that [New Zealand] series. I think that gave me the drive to be like ‘Right, let’s sort this out and get on with it'”Ollie Robinson

“What’s going on?” Robinson said in a text to Stokes.A few minutes later, a reply: “Let me get out of this meeting and I’ll give you a call.”Robinson played no part in the tour of the Caribbean, thanks to a back issue. Having been pulled up on his fitness earlier that winter in Australia by the bowling coach at the time, Jon Lewis, the onus was on Robinson to hit the ground running in the summer.It didn’t quite go to plan. Illness meant his domestic season started late, with two matches for Sussex at the start of May, against Middlesex and Leicestershire. It was in between those two fixtures that Robinson – having taken 5 for 66 and 2 for 51 against Middlesex – had a first conversation with “Stokes, the captain”. They had only shared a dressing room for six months but had good rapport, established during the biosecure training bubble at the Ageas Bowl during the 2020 summer. Stokes had no qualms casually dropping in conversation that Robinson would feature from the off.”[Stokes] was like, ‘Just string a couple of games together and you can be in,'” says Robinson. “In my head, I thought, ‘Right, that’s good news. Just a couple of games and that’s me in for New Zealand.'”Even after pulling out of a match for a County Select XI against the touring New Zealand side, Robinson was relaxed ahead of Lord’s. So when Key called to tell him otherwise, he wanted a word with Stokes. What he thought might be an apologetic chat was quite the opposite.”At the moment you’re not quite ready for that [Test cricket]”, Stokes said. “Your fitness isn’t where we want it to be. We want you to bowl long spells and bowl all day and keep your pace as high as your first spell for the whole game.”Stokes dealt Ollie Robinson some tough love ahead of the New Zealand series last summer, and reaped the rewards for it later in the year•Steve Bell/Getty ImagesAt the end came an olive branch. “He said to me if I can get to that place, I’m in his team every single day of the year,” Robinson says.Since returning for the second Test against South Africa in August that summer, Robinson has taken 27 wickets at 21.25. Stokes has been true to his word, picking him for the last seven Tests, and regards him as a lock for the Ashes this summer.”Looking back, it was probably the best thing that happened to me, that I didn’t get selected for that [New Zealand] series,” says Robinson. “Because there’s no way I would have got to where I am now as quick. I think that gave me the drive to be like “Right, let’s sort this out and get on with it.”At that point I hadn’t actually had any clear knowledge or way forward from my back [problems], as well. We were still battling that at the time. That gave me the kick up the a*** to be like, ‘Come on, let’s sort this out. Let’s get some injections, get back training.’ It helped me get to where I am.”

****

Stokes eventually decided to give a speech to the whole group at the start of England’s first day of training at Lord’s, ahead of that first New Zealand Test. He spoke then of the need to play more freely and cast doubt from their minds. There was no talk about winning, ambitions to climb up the Test rankings, improving their World Test Championship position, or even about getting into a position to win the Ashes for the first time since 2015. It was all about feel.Stokes used batting as an analogy: that you bat your best when you are “nice and relaxed, and not gripping the bat too tight”. It was all about how he wanted them to feel. Then came something of a rallying cry.”The only voices that are important are the ones in this dressing room. This team is not going to be what is in the , the or Sky. It’s the England cricket team. Me, Baz and everyone else in this dressing room. The only voice you’ve got to listen to is this dressing room.”

England’s players and the team have not just mimicked Stokes’ approach to cricket but also his approach to all of them

Practical methods of applying those principles included turning off the television as soon as technical analysis of someone’s technique came up on the coverage. All that needs to be said, all that needs to be known, is right there in the room with you: these are the people looking out for you.The message was reiterated on the eve of Stokes’ first day in the field as captain. Graham Thorpe, England’s long-time batting coach, who had lost his job after the Ashes, was seriously ill in hospital. Stokes wanted to show Thorpe he was in their thoughts and asked for a shirt to made with Thorpe’s name and cap number, 564, on the back, to wear out to the middle for the toss.There was one slight issue – he had to wear a blazer. Stokes was adamant the shirt would get aired. In the end, he wore the blazer out to the middle, removing it to reveal the name and number as he flipped the coin alongside Kane Williamson.Speaking to the team the day before, Stokes said it was important Thorpe knew he had their support. That someone who had been so close, so loyal to the players during a tough run now needed them more than ever. He reiterated the importance of being true to yourself and the person next to you, not just the shirt and the cap.The rest – well, you know how that plays out. Ten wins in 12, famous victories over New Zealand, India, South Africa and Pakistan, all through a style of play in his image, underlined Stokes’ worth as a captain. The individuals and the team have not just mimicked his approach to cricket but also his approach to all of them.With the Ashes on the horizon, England’s values are due for the sternest examination of these principles. Can these tenets of enjoyment and selflessness survive defeat at home to Australia? We could be about to find out.What is certain is Stokes has done his utmost to bring the Test team to where they are today. As much through his work on the field as that first month off it.

Pujara – back to the grind, back to grinding bowlers down

On Friday, he scored his 60th first-class century and displayed all the qualities that have made him the rock he is in long-form cricket over the years

Shashank Kishore07-Jul-2023Tucked away far north of Bengaluru, Alur is like an idyllic-village setting where people go about their work minus the hustle and bustle. Even star presence – and there are plenty in this Duleep Trophy game, like Suryakumar Yadav, Prithvi Shaw and Cheteshwar Pujara – isn’t enough to draw people out on a week day.The few who climbed the boundary walls to watch were those on a short break from work at the nearby cement factory. The moment a siren went off, they were back to the grind. A bit like what Pujara was up to – he made a 278-ball 133, his 60th first-class century, on Friday.The only difference is, unlike those at the cement factory, this grind hasn’t been thrust on Pujara. It’s one he voluntarily chose to go through as soon as he found out he wasn’t going to be on the plane to the Caribbean with the India Test team.Related

Ajinkya Rahane's story fuels Hanuma Vihari's quest for India comeback

'Very few people are this close to being picked for India'

Four good men, four great opportunities missed

'Why make him scapegoat for our batting failures?'

Now, a 103-Test veteran like Pujara has little to gain from one, or maybe two, first-class outings at this stage of his career. You score and they go, ‘but hey, what’s new?’. You don’t and they would probably go, ‘this is why he isn’t in the team’.For Pujara, though, this sort of chatter hasn’t mattered at the best of times, so it’s unlikely it would now, when he’s playing to derive joy out of this grind. Of batting attacks into submission, running them into the ground and then cashing in at the first sign of vulnerability. It’s admirable for someone to put their mind over matter this way at 35, even when he knows the road back to the top may not be all that easy.He missed out in the first innings, playing a loose shot after doing the hard work. He wasn’t going to let another opportunity pass. On Friday, the third day of the semi-final, Pujara’s approach was of someone starting afresh, even though he was unbeaten on 50 overnight. There was an opening spell to see off and he was determined to make it count.In seaming conditions, with Shivam Mavi and Avesh Khan asking probing questions, patience was the need of the hour. With Shaw, Priyank Panchal and Suryakumar all dismissed, Pujara brought his experience to the fore.Only once in the entire first session, Pujara played a shot he regretted, to the extent that he let out a cry of anguish and quickly patted himself in an attempt to refocus. He had just chased a wide delivery, around sixth or seventh stump, off Avesh. Pujara walked down the pitch for some gardening, took fresh guard and tightened up.

What stood out about Pujara was the unwavering belief in his methods, even if at times it seemed ludicrous that a veteran with millions of runs would actually put himself in the ring and challenge himself the way he did

The bowling was disciplined to begin with, and in the first 75 minutes of play, Pujara added just nine to his overnight score. Those runs came off three scoring shots – two back-to-back punches for four through extra cover and a single. He went through seven overs without scoring a run, but with a 92-run lead in the bag for his West Zone team, runs weren’t the main focus at that point. Taking time out, weathering the storm was.Against Saurabh Kumar, he made a slight change. The intent to play the left-arm spinner with the bat was evident. Especially when he stepped out and got the bat out well in front of his pad, while also ensuring a loose bottom hand in case the ball spun more and lobbed off the inside edge.In any case, odd deliveries were jumping off a length for Saurabh, who can be metronomic with his left-arm spin. A bit like Ravindra Jadeja, except Saurabh’s usually a lot slower through the air. This in-between length accounted for Sarfaraz Khan in the first over of the day when he was drawn forward by the length, only for the ball to jump, catch the edge as Sarfaraz jabbed at it, and go to Upendra Yadav, the wicketkeeper.Pujara wasn’t going to give Saurabh another chance. In stepping out and lunging to negate those tossed-up deliveries on a length repeatedly, he got the bowler thinking. Saurabh immediately went flat, sensing that Pujara was ready with a counter. It was a win as Pujara profited from two cuts behind point before Saurabh reverted to Plan A.2:55

Can Pujara bat his way back into the India Test team?

This discipline was evident even when he was facing up to Avesh, as he repeatedly wove out of short balls by dropping his wrists. What stood out about Pujara was the unwavering belief in his methods, even if at times it seemed ludicrous that a veteran with millions of runs would actually put himself in the ring and challenge himself the way he did.Until he got into the 90s, Pujara was hardly flashy. And then, he flicked a switch. Out came an inside-out drive against the turn through extra cover off Saurabh* (earlier mentioned as Saransh Jain) and then the moment he dropped short, Pujara cut him behind square for back-to-back fours to raise his century.The celebration thereafter was typically Pujara. Quietly raising his bat towards the dressing room and a look up to the heavens before refocusing. It wasn’t until the eighth wicket fell that Pujara was happy to premeditate. He used his feet a lot more, and unlike earlier, where the intent was to defend, he was willing to swing clean and pick the gaps.There were sweeps, even an attempted reverse sweep, a wry smile as he clobbered a one-bounce four – all signs that the floodgates had opened. After more than four hours of defiance and self-restraint, Pujara was finally enjoying hitting the bit and clean.With rain imminent, though, Pujara had a rare brain freeze. In pinching a run to farm the strike, he tapped the ball no more than a few yards into the off side and set off for a non-existent run, only to find himself short. It was a rare act of indiscretion on a day where he showed all the elements that have made him India’s rock at No. 3 for the better part of the last 12 years.

New Zealand play with fire and come out unscathed

Three frontline bowlers and four part-timers against England might sound like a recipe for disaster, but New Zealand rolled the dice and won big

Sidharth Monga05-Oct-20231:22

Steyn: ‘NZ follow the basics, but they do it really, really well’

As the World Cup got off to a lukewarm start to empty stands in hot and dry Ahmedabad, a picture from the 1996 edition started doing the rounds on social media. It looked like a blast from the past, as events from 27 years ago should. It was the first match of that World Cup, played between the same two teams at the same ground although it was called something else back then. The stands were full in that picture taken in the morning. Not a seat was unclaimed.Not entirely by design, New Zealand played this World Cup opener like it was 1996 all over again. That was an era in ODI cricket when part-time bowlers bowled in the middle overs to batters who didn’t challenge them. In fact, that World Cup was won by Sri Lanka on the back of their part-time spinners. Now, though, with two new balls and an extra fielder inside the circle, no batter lets part-time bowlers operate.Related

  • Can Netherlands bring high-flying New Zealand back down to earth?

  • Ferguson, Southee likely to be fit; Williamson remains on sidelines for Netherlands clash

  • England know they have to be England, and fast

  • Ravindra comes of age with an innings for the dreamers

  • Stats – Conway and Ravindra record NZ's highest ever WC partnership

With Tim Southee and Lockie Ferguson injured, you would have thought New Zealand would go for an attacking spinner in Ish Sodhi but they left themselves with three frontline bowlers and four part-timers to squeeze 20 overs between them. It is recipe for disaster against any team in today’s ODI cricket, but to do so against England is another level of risk. They have been the best in the middle overs since the start of 2022. England have averaged 40.66 and gone at 6.15 an over in the second powerplay in that period.Whatever they might have spoken in the meetings, you doubt they would have said let’s play it like it is 1996, but once they make the choice to trust Kane Williamson and Southee to be back soon enough, it is what it is. Not to reinforce a worn-out cliché, but if there is a side to give it a red-hot go in such situations, it is New Zealand.Matt Henry’s lovely control of length and the early seam movement, which has given ODI cricket a new dimension of late, gave New Zealand a foot in the door, but at 51 for 1 in 10 overs, with the long England batting line-up, with Trent Boult negotiated, things didn’t look pretty for New Zealand.Mitchell Santner, who has silently withstood the wristspin storm in limited-overs cricket, provided another wicket after he gnawed away at the batters with his nagging length and changes of pace. Now New Zealand rolled the dice. A fascinating period of play ensued.It was clear England were not going to let any version of dibbly-dobblies settle down. Harry Brook hit James Neesham for four first ball, and took two fours and a six from Rachin Ravindra’s first five. The next ball should have gone for a six but held up a little, and the ball was in England’s court again. Did they still fancy a go?Not only did they fancy a go, they promoted Moeen Ali to make sure Ravindra didn’t get cheap overs in to two right-hand batters. New Zealand raised them Glenn Phillips, and Moeen misread the length early on. Just to stretch the 1996 thing to a ridiculous extreme, it was almost like Sanath Jayasuriya and Aravinda de Silva taking wickets for fun. Little did we know then that Ravindra would go on to score runs at Jaysuriya’s pace, but even New Zealand must realise that 20 overs of part-time bowling can’t be much more than a makeshift arrangement.Forced to rethink their approach, England rebuilt for only four overs before Jos Buttler began to go after Ravindra and Neesham. Never mind the result, England were doing what has brought them success. They had to take risks. They couldn’t have idled through the middle overs.Matt Henry kept things simple, and made life difficult for England’s batters•Associated PressTom Latham knew when to leave the table. He went back to his strike bowlers. Some might say he actually raised the stakes even higher because now he was going to bowl part-time bowlers at the death.Everything – from execution to little slices of good fortune – had to go their way for New Zealand to get out of this one. Ravindra, quick to point out that he would like to be considered a proper allrounder, was honest enough to acknowledge the role of luck.”Probably didn’t come out as well as I would’ve wanted today, but look, that’s the beauty of cricket,” Ravindra said. “I think some days you have great days, some days you don’t, so we’ll sort of look at it and review it and hopefully go back again next game.”When asked if his mindset changes when he knows there are 20 part-timer overs behind him, Henry said they didn’t exactly look like part-timers. You can’t argue against it on the day, but there must have been a reason they went for just fingerspinners when you need to keep taking wickets through the innings.

“Not entirely by design, New Zealand played this World Cup opener like it was 1996 all over again. That was an era in ODI cricket when part-time bowlers bowled in the middle overs to batters who didn’t challenge them”

That the ball gripped for their spinners didn’t come as a surprise to Henry. “I suppose the research that we had in the analysis was that bowling into the wicket’s gonna be quite important, so just trusting that prep and, and going for it,” he said.That is perhaps why Ravindra kept bowling into the wicket after the first six. It might be a bit of a gag to talk about the part-timers, but the three frontline bowlers went for just 133 runs in the 30 overs between them. Not just that, they do make sure they work with the allrounders so that they can be ready when called upon to do a job.”I work very closely with Sant and Ish,” Ravindra said. “Being able to lean on those guys is pretty cool. Santner is a world-class spin bowler and obviously Ish is a very, very close mate of mine, so we’re able to talk a lot of cricket. Any sort of information or experience I can take from those boys who’ve played international cricket for a very long time is pretty cool.”New Zealand have now started 18 out of the 21 World Cups with a win. South Africa with 10 winning starts in 16 are the only ones that come close. Perhaps it is time we don’t get surprised that New Zealand started off well again. Then again, you can’t help it when they take one of the unlikeliest routes to that start.

New Zealand stockpile World Cup positives but face problem of plenty

Return of Kane Williamson and Tim Southee will pose selection questions after strong start to tournament

Firdose Moonda09-Oct-20231:25

McClenaghan: Ravindra could bat at No. 4 upon Williamson’s return

After the emotional release of their victory over England – the team that denied them the trophy four years ago – in the World Cup opener, New Zealand continued their campaign in almost surgical style against Netherlands. The runs were scored, the wickets and catches (mostly) taken, two points secured, NRR gains made and, most importantly, selection questions answered. It is the last of those that was their biggest takeaway from this win.New Zealand came into the tournament with only 12 of their 15-player squad available for the first game, with Kane Williamson and Tim Southee recovering from serious injuries and Lockie Ferguson suffering back stiffness. By the time they play their next match, on Friday, they should have all 15 players available and the performance against Netherlands could help them decide who to pick.Let’s start with the obvious: when captain Williamson is ready for competitive cricket, he’ll slot straight back in at No. 3, which would ordinarily leave room for only two of Devon Conway, Will Young and Rachin Ravindra. All three have put good numbers on the board at this tournament, Young becoming the latest to do so. He came back from a second-ball duck against England to score his sixth half-century this year and third in six innings, making a strong claim to continue as an opener.Related

Ackermann: Netherlands 'need to put together all three phases'

Ferguson, Southee likely to be fit; Williamson remains on sidelines for Netherlands clash

'Locals' Ravindra, Williamson bask in Hyderabadi familiarity

Live report – Netherlands vs New Zealand, World Cup 2023

Five-star Santner and batters make it two in two for New Zealand

As much as the runs mattered, the manner in which he scored them may end up counting for more. Young’s first signs of aggression came in the fourth over, when he took two fours off Ryan Klein to get New Zealand going, but a hallmark of this innings was his takedown of spin. His first six was a glorious, high-elbowed loft over long-on off Aryan Dutt. Later, he played a similar shot off Colin Ackermann. In total, Young scored more than half his runs – 39 – off the 38 balls of spin he faced and he did it at a good time. New Zealand’s next two matches are on spinner-friendly surfaces in Chennai against spin-heavy sides, Bangladesh and Afghanistan, and Young has shown the kind of form that merits a place.That means when Williamson returns, if New Zealand want to retain their current opening pair and Ravindra’s form, they will have to make some changes to the composition of their line-up. The most likely solution will be to bench Mark Chapman, who won the thanks-for-coming award in the England match (he did not bat or bowl) and then scored 5 against Netherlands, and to ask Ravindra to bat in the No. 6 spot. An alternative would be to allow Ravindra to bat at No. 4 and have the others move one spot down. Either way, Chapman is the most likely to fall away, according to ESPNcricinfo expert Mitchell McClenaghan.Leaving out Chapman and James Neesham – who made way for Ferguson against Netherlands – means that lower-order runs from Mitchell Santner hold significant weight. Batting at No. 8 in Hyderabad, Santner played a cameo that was the difference between New Zealand scoring 285 and 320; he took 18 runs off the last over as Bas de Leede lost his composure and Santner picked his slower ball. Although it was only a welcome top-up in this match, a contribution like that could be crucial in future contests.Rachin Ravindra and Will Young were both in the runs against Netherlands•ICC via Getty ImagesMatt Henry was with Santner for the final phase of the innings and contributed a four-ball 10, which should be a footnote but also adds to his case as New Zealand assess the make-up of their attack. That’s where a tough decision will have to be made between Tim Southee, Henry, Ferguson and Trent Boult. No team will mind having this kind of problem of plenty but New Zealand still need to figure out how to solve it.As things stand, Henry has made himself undroppable with six wickets in his first two matches and it’s not just the numbers that work in his favour. He has taken wickets with the new and old ball and consistently troubled batters in the channel and found the edge. In the last two years, Henry has 38 wickets at an average 25.18 and McClenaghan said he would pick him over Southee, even if Southee is fit.That would likely mean a longer run for Ferguson, who had recovered for this clash. He bowled eight overs, conceded at four runs an over and showed off his variations with but did not deliver anything in the 145kph-plus range, which is what New Zealand would want from him at this tournament. It may have been that Ferguson was being conservative on his comeback from injury but if he is not going to offer out-and-out pace, it could open the door for Southee to get some game time.”This is the option – in the next game against Bangladesh, do you want to get three wins in a row? He bowled really well against Bangladesh in the past – he troubled them with speed, but if the speed is not there in these conditions, he may not be as troubling,” McClenaghan said. “You’ve also got to think about if you’d rather get overs into Tim Southee in a competitive fixture, and is that going to be this next game against Bangladesh?”Whichever way New Zealand go, in Boult, Henry, and one of Ferguson, Southee or Neesham, they have an attack with the qualities to be among the best in the tournament and are stacking up fairly well albeit still early in the event. While McClenaghan was slightly concerned about some lapses in their intensity, especially in the field, where they put down five chances, none of them cost much. Even if New Zealand were going through the motions at stages, they got everything they needed from this match – including a bit of a test with the ball – to set themselves up for the ones to come.

England's misery, Netherlands' delight, Pakistan's chaos

Our first batch of team report cards for 2023

28-Dec-2023

New Zealand

by Deivarayan Muthu
New Zealand continued to do New Zealand things – with or without Kane Williamson, who featured in only 14 of their 61 internationals in 2023. Like making another ODI World Cup semi-final, where they gave tournament favourites India a mini-scare. Like toppling Bangladesh on a raging turner in the Mirpur Test in December.In an ODI World Cup year, New Zealand won their first bilateral ODI series of at least two matches against Pakistan in Pakistan.Glenn Phillips, Daryl Mitchell, Mitchell Santner, Rachin Ravindra all then played starring roles for New Zealand in the World Cup. Trent Boult, who had given up his New Zealand’s central contract in order to become a free agent, returned to the national team and also played his part in New Zealand’s run to the knockouts.A 267-run defeat to England in Mount Maunganui in February was a hard knock on New Zealand’s proud home record, but they won the next Test in Wellington by the barest of margins – one run – after being asked to follow-on. As far as T20Is were concerned, New Zealand largely fielded experimental sides, handing debuts to Adi Ashok and Ben Lister among others as they plan for life after Ish Sodhi and Boult.New Zealand Women, meanwhile, failed to qualify for the knockouts of the T20 World Cup in South Africa, where they carded their second-lowest total overall in T20Is. And they ended the year with a heart-breaking T20I series loss to Pakistan at home.High point
Of course, the Black Caps qualifying for the World Cup knockouts for the fifth time in a row since the 2003 edition of the tournament. It all started with a rematch of the 2019 final in Ahmedabad, where New Zealand walloped England, despite injuries to Lockie Ferguson and Tim Southee. This game also marked the arrival of Ravindra on the world stage.Low point
Folding for 98 against Bangladesh men in what was arguably the most un-New Zealand performance of the year. This was New Zealand’s first defeat to Bangladesh at home in 19 ODIs. They also suffered their first-ever defeat against non-Test playing nations across formats when they lost a T20I to UAE in Dubai.Men
Tests: P7 W4 L2 D1
ODIs: P33 W15 L17 NR1
T20Is: P18 W9 L7 T1 NR1
Women
ODIs: P9 W4 L4 T1
T20Is: P13 W6 L6 NR1
A World Cup defence where nothing went according to plan•Alex Davidson/ICC/Getty Images

England

by Andrew Miller
At least the Moral Ashes are safely locked away for another year. As for more tangible, traditional silverware … best look away now.Despite the thrills of Bazball, and a hot run of Test form that contributed to one of the greatest Ashes series of all time, England’s men won just four out of a possible 11 bilateral series across formats in the course of 2023 – two of which were effectively one-off wins, in a Test and ODI respectively, against a distracted Ireland.England’s women, similarly, hit the heights with their own Ashes fightback against Australia, but still left the drawn points series empty-handed thanks to defeat in the one-off Test at Trent Bridge – a recipe that they more or less replicated in their end-of-year trip to India, in which an impressive 2-1 win in the T20Is gave way to an almighty 347-run loss in their Test in Navi Mumbai.And where do we start with their respective World Cup campaigns? In retrospect, England women’s shock T20 semi-final exit against hosts South Africa in February now looks like over-achievement when you consider the men’s moribund effort in India last month: arguably the most miserable title defence in the history of international sport.Throughout the year, the gulf between the highs and lows of England’s teams was stark and startling, and – much as the Bazball phenomenon had been triggered by a change of attitude from broadly the same pool of players that had won one Test in 17 prior to Brendon McCullum’s arrival – the extent to which mind dominated matter was palpable. Sprinkle any given line-up with good vibes and give them licence to forget the context of their endeavours, and remarkable things could still be achieved.This was even the case in the team’s final engagement of the year in the Caribbean. For two glorious games, while Phil Salt was smoking back-to-back centuries to overturn a 4-1 losing streak across white-ball fixtures, it seemed that Jos Buttler’s men had finally shed the diffidence that had paralysed their efforts all year long. But then, two days later, they stumbled to another meek defeat in the T20I decider in Trinidad, to rob their under-pressure head coach Matthew Mott of some much-needed festive cheer.At least England’s Test team never stopped believing in the power of a positive mental attitude. Some might argue it would have been prudent to do so at times, particularly for that fateful declaration with Australia on the ropes in the first Ashes Test. In the year’s final analysis, England won only half of their eight Tests, including a one-run loss to New Zealand in Wellington that would surely have been a comfortable win had they not got funky with the follow-on.Nevertheless, were we entertained?High point
Stuart Broad’s glorious march into the sunset on the final day at The Oval was pure theatre – even down to the panto-voodoo nonsense of his bail-switching. And yet, when the euphoria of the moment died down and Australia were left to lift the Ashes urn once more, it was clear that the journey, rather than the destination, had been the true thrill of England’s year. For that reason, nothing could top Zak Crawley’s preposterous 189 at Old Trafford. No Australian Test attack has ever been hit harder or faster, and for three extraordinary days, it felt like a prophecy was unfolding before us. But then, of course, it rained…Low point
Nothing can match the misery of that World Cup campaign… but which micro-humiliation would you wish to zoom in on? The opening-day demolition in Ahmedabad, when New Zealand – freshly seen off 3-1 on home soil – cantered to a sweat-free nine-wicket win in front of a non-existent crowd? That guileless maiden defeat to Afghanistan in Delhi, where England’s solitary six came in the 31st over of their flatlining run-chase? Or the trio of losses to Sri Lanka, Australia and India that left England scrambling even for a top-eight finish and a place at the 2025 Champions Trophy? Nope, the nadir came in Mumbai, where England witlessly elected to bake themselves alive on the most sweltering day of the tournament, leaving Heinrich Klaasen’s magnificent century to set South Africa up for a whopping 229-run win.ResultsMen
Tests: P8 W4 L3 D1
ODIs: P24 W11 L12 NR 1
T20Is: P12 W4 L8
Women
Tests: P2 L2
ODIs: P6 W4 L1 NR1
T20Is: P14 W9 L5
Defeating England in England, New Zealand at home and taking silver at the Asian Games – Sri Lanka women went where they’ve never gone before•AFP/Getty Images

Sri Lanka

by Andrew Fidel Fernando
We will lament the state of the men’s team soon enough, but Sri Lanka women have had their best year ever, and this is worth celebrating. In February they delivered one of the surprises of the tournament when they defeated South Africa early in the T20 World Cup. In July they defeated New Zealand in an ODI series at home – the first time they had ever defeated the side in any format. In September they came from 1-0 down to England to secure a 2-1 series victory, in England. And in September they made the final of the Asian Games, losing the gold-medal match to India.Much of this success is down to Chamari Athapaththu, who had the finest year of her glittering career, despite the lack of interest from the Women’s Premier League. Athapaththu, by the way, capped her year by becoming Player of the Tournament at the WBBL – a tournament she only went to as a replacement player. Where Sri Lanka tended to lose even when she scored heavily in previous years, this time around, Athapaththu found just enough support from the likes of Harshitha Madavi, Nilakshi de Silva, and occasionally the teenaged Vishmi Gunaratne, to push Sri Lanka to victory.The men have less to crow about. They made the final of the Asia Cup but were largely abysmal at the World Cup, and have now failed to qualify for the 2025 Champions Trophy as a result. Their T20 record was modest too, having lost away series to both India and New Zealand. And in Tests, their only wins came at home against Ireland, who were touring for the first time.As poor as the team was, however, the running of the game at the back end of the year was the most shameful aspect of cricket in Sri Lanka in 2023. The board had itself suspended by the ICC in order to head off further interference from an antagonistic sports minister.High point
Beating England in England was impressive, but that had been a depleted England side attempting to blood new players. Defeating a largely full-strength New Zealand team in the ODIs at home felt like a significant moment for the development of women’s cricket, particularly when that win was aided by good performances from the likes of Gunaratne.Low point
Sri Lanka losing their hosting rights for the 2024 Men’s Under-19 World Cup as a result of the suspension SLC officials have themselves had helped orchestrate. SLC president Shammi Silva then attempted to paint the loss of those hosting rights as not a particularly big deal, at a press conference.ResultsMen
Tests: P6 W2 L4
ODIs: P31 W16 L15
T20Is: P7 W2 L5
Women
ODIs: P8 W3 L3 NR2
T20Is: P16 W9 L7
It was that kind of year for Pakistan•Getty Images

Pakistan

by Danyal Rasool
It was a year of mayhem, and though chaos is often a seasoning ingredient for Pakistan cricket, there was little positivity to be gleaned amidst the madness. The year was always going to be defined by the World Cup, and, Pakistan fizzled out with something of a whimper. A loss to Afghanistan and a walloping against India doomed both their points and net run rate, and there was no recovering from either.The Asia Cup that preceded it was even more dispiriting, with Pakistan finishing bottom of the Super Fours and their bowlers picking up injuries that continue to hamper them. That Pakistan finished the year with a positive win-loss record in the format was more down to the kinds of opposition they faced than any improvements they made, with five of their 14 wins coming against a second-string New Zealand side, and another seven against Afghanistan, Bangladesh and Netherlands.A series win against Sri Lanka away was the highlight of the red-ball year. a loss in Perth to start off a series against Australia in December provided a reality check.All 11 T20Is during the year came against limited or weakened sides, but even so, four wins and six losses, including a first-ever series defeat to Afghanistan, sums up Pakistan’s year.There was unprecedented chaos off-field, too, with Najam Sethi, who arrived just before the start of the year, resigning due to political reasons midway through the year, and Zaka Ashraf appointed on a caretaker basis. The start of his tenure was tumultuous, including the reluctant resignation of Babar Azam as captain, with Shan Masood and Shaheen Afridi appointed in his stead.High point:

The women’s team might not have had a great ODI year or T20 World Cup, but the away series win in New Zealand – they became the first Asian side to achieve one – went some way towards lifting the pall of gloom that had descended over Pakistan cricket late in the year. Spearheaded by breakout star Fatima Sana, Pakistan clinched the T20I series 2-1, before being shaded 1-2 in the ODIs. It was something of a breakthrough year for women’s T20 cricket in Pakistan: there was a 3-0 home clean sweep against South Africa, and three exhibition matches before the PSL raised hopes of a future women’s T20 league in the country.Low point
There are plenty to choose from, but the Asia Cup probably edges everything else out. Just as Pakistan’s fearsome pace trio of Shaheen Afridi, Naseem Shah and Haris Rauf looked like they were approaching their white-hot ODI best, injury struck. In a game against India, all three bowlers went off with injuries at various stages, with Naseem later picking up a knock that ruled him out for several months. Afridi’s pace has never quite recovered, and Pakistan lost that match to India by 228 runs – the heaviest in the history of the rivalry. They would go on to lose to Sri Lanka and end with their worst Asia Cup showing ever.ResultsMen
Tests: P4 W2 L1 D1
ODIs: P25 W14 L10 NR1
T20Is: P11 W4 L6 NR1
Women
ODIs: P12 W2 L8 T2
T20Is: P17 W7 L10
Logan van Beek’s performance for the ages against West Indies in the World Cup Qualifier fetched Netherlands an unlikely win•Johan Rynners/ICC/Getty Images

Netherlands

by Nagraj Gollapudi
Having raised the bar last year by qualifying for the 2024 men’s T20 World Cup owing to their top-eight finish in the 2022 tournament in Australia, Netherlands’ objective for the 2023 ODI World Cup was ambitious: to make the semi-finals. Scott Edwards’ team was not indulging in wishful thinking. Their confidence came from two years spent in the ODI Super League, where they played some of the top teams, and while they won just one series in the league, they put up a decent fight against the likes of Pakistan, West Indies, Zimbabwe, and even New Zealand.As they had done in the T20 World Cup in Australia, Netherlands shocked South Africa again, and two games later, produced another upset, defending 230 against Bangladesh. With those wins they doubled their tally of matches won in their five ODI World Cup campaigns, going back to 1996. At one point in the 2023 tournament, the Dutch were eyeing a top-eight finish, which would have fetched them a ticket to the ten-team Champions Trophy in 2025. But the dream fizzled out and they eventually finished last with just the two wins from their nine matches. Some more resolve from the specialist batters might have earned them at least a couple more wins.Though disappointed, they will also have been proud to have made the World Cup via the Qualifiers, where they were without some of their best players. With the ICC retiring the Super League, the Dutch now return to the World Cricket League – their pathway to qualification for the 2027 ODI World Cup.As for the women’s team, there was an uptick in performance, including making the global Qualifiers (to be played in April next year) for the 2024 T20 World Cup in Bangladesh.High Point
The wins against South Africa and Bangladesh top the list, but before that came the fairy-tale twin victories against West Indies and Scotland in the World Cup Qualifier in Zimbabwe. Logan van Beek wrote his name in lights, pulling Netherlands back from the brink in their chase of 375 against West Indies and forcing a tie, and then blasting three sixes and three fours in the Super Over, delivered by Jason Holder. In the must-win match against Scotland, needing 278 to win inside 44 overs, Bas de Leede became only the fourth player to take a five-for and score a century in the same ODI, to get Netherlands to their first 50-over World Cup in over a decade.Low Point
Losing the second match of the three-game ODI series in Zimbabwe. Set 271 to win the series – which would have been their first away series win against a Full Member team, Netherlands fell short by one run in an agonising last-ball finish in Harare.ResultsMen
ODIs: P22 W7 L14 T1Women
ODIs: P2 W1 L1
T20Is: P16 W9 L6 NR1Bangladesh capped their World Cup with a loss to Australia – their seventh defeat in nine matches at the tournament•Associated Press

Bangladesh

by Mohammad Isam
In a year when Bangladesh’s men’s side floundered spectacularly in the 50-over World Cup, the women’s team took big strides. They drew the ODI series against India at home in July, when they tied the third game of a thrilling series. They also made history by beating South Africa in their backyard for the first time in a T20I and an ODI.The major talking point, of course, was the dismal World Cup showing by the men. The side started the year by beating England 3-0 in a T20I series, a significant result against the reigning T20I world champions. They then dominated Ireland over ten internationals.But during the home ODI series against Afghanistan, the wheels started to come off. Tamim Iqbal retired and un-retired in the span of 24 hours, before resigning from the ODI captaincy. Shakib Al Hasan publicly spoke out against Tamim, but it ended up affecting the team at the World Cup. They started well by beating Afghanistan but then beat only Sri Lanka over the next eight games.A Test win over New Zealand at home helped somewhat with the World Cup disappointment, but it was a one-off. So was their ODI win in New Zealand, after conceding the series. It was that kind of year for the men’s side.High point
The women’s side drawing the ODI series against India and the T20I series in South Africa. They also beat Pakistan at home.Low point
The men’s team winning two out of nine matches in this year’s World Cup.ResultsMen
Tests: P4 W3 L1
ODIs: P32 W11 L18
T20Is: P11 W9 L2
Women
ODIs: P11 W3 L5 T2 NR1
T20Is: P18 W6 L11 NR1
Zimbabwe’s brightest spot in a dismal year were the fans who showed up in numbers for home games•ICC/Getty Images

Zimbabwe

by Firdose Moonda
A devastating 12 months saw Zimbabwe’s men’s team fail to qualify for a 50-over and a T20 World Cup, which has thrown their short-term future into uncertainty. They are not part of the World Test Championship and will not play in a men’s ICC event until at least 2026, leaving them with even fewer fixtures than usual.Zimbabwe played just one two-Test series in 2023, which they lost to West Indies, who they later beat at the World Cup Qualifiers in one of the upsets of an entertaining tournament. That victory buoyed belief that Zimbabwe would qualify for the ODI World Cup in India but they lost to Sri Lanka and Scotland in the Super Six round and just missed out. Five months later, they had the opportunity to try for a different tournament – the 2024 T20 World Cup – for which they were favourites in the African qualifier. But a shock defeat to Uganda denied them again. The year ended in ignominious fashion, with ODI and T20I series losses to Ireland, and with the head coach David Houghton resigning.The women’s team fared better, won six out of eight T20Is this year, and will head to the World Cup Qualifiers in the UAE early in 2024.High Point
With very little to choose from, this will feature people and a place, rather than players or an event. Zimbabwe’s fans and the famed Castle Corner, filled out venues at international matches, and sang from start to finish for their team and the opposition (mostly Max O’Dowd) alike. The Takashinga Cricket Club, the home of black African cricket in Harare, hosted its first ODIs at the World Cup Qualifiers and showed why it should have many more. The pitches offered a good balance of runs, bounce and turn. The outfield was a picture and the numbers of school children who came to games was enough to know the next generation were inspired.Low Point
Houghton called it “awful”, “embarrassingly bad”, and “one of the worst games I have ever been associated with in a Zimbabwean jersey”, and that wasn’t even the lowest point. His comments came after Zimbabwe lost to Namibia in the T20 World Cup Qualifier. Three days later, they lost to 23rd-ranked Uganda and their T20 World Cup hopes were all but over. On both occasions, Zimbabwe could only set totals in the 130s and none of their batters got a half-century. Zimbabwe are only the only Full Member country who will not be present at the 20-team event.ResultsMen
Tests: P2 W0 D1 L1
ODIs: P18 W8 L6 NR2
T20Is: P17 W9 L8
Women:
ODIs: P3 L3
T20Is: P8 W6 L2
Report cards for the other top teams
More in our look back at 2023

Stats – Warner and Marsh's record stand in a six-hitting blitz

All the ODI records that were broken in Australia’s innings of 367 for 9 against Pakistan in Bengaluru

Sampath Bandarupalli20-Oct-2023259 – Partnership runs between David Warner and Mitchell Marsh, the second-highest opening stand in men’s ODI World Cups. The highest is 282 between Tillakaratne Dilshan and Upul Tharanga against Zimbabwe in 2011.ESPNcricinfo Ltd1 – The Warner-Marsh partnership is the first 200-plus runs stand against Pakistan at the men’s World Cup. The previous highest was the unbeaten 175-run opening stand between Brian Lara and Desmond Haynes in 1992.The 259-run stand is also the second-highest for Australia at World Cups, behind the 260 partnership between Warner and Steven Smith for the second wicket against Afghanistan in 2015.367 for 9 – Australia’s total in Bengaluru is now the highest by any team against Pakistan at men’s ODI World Cups. Sri Lanka’s 344 for 9 earlier in the tournament in Hyderabad was the previous highest. It is also the second-highest ODI total for Australia against Pakistan, behind the 369 for 7 in the 2017 Adelaide ODI.4 – Consecutive ODI hundreds for Warner against Pakistan. He is only the second batter with four straight ODI tons against an opponent, joining Virat Kohli, who did it against West Indies.5 – Hundreds by Warner in ODI World Cups, the joint-most for Australia, alongside Ricky Ponting. Only two batters have scored more than five hundreds at men’s ODI World Cups – Rohit Sharma (7) and Sachin Tendulkar (6).3 – Number of 150-plus scores by Warner at ODI World Cups. No other batter has more than one. He scored 178 against Afghanistan in 2015 and 166 against Bangladesh in 2019. Warner now has seven 150-plus scores in ODIs, only one behind Rohit’s eight.ESPNcricinfo Ltd19 – Sixes by Australia on Friday are the joint-most they have hit in an ODI innings. They also struck 19 sixes against India in 2013 during an ODI at the same ground.These 19 sixes are the most that Pakistan have conceded in an ODI innings and also the joint-second by any team in a men’s ODI World Cup game, only behind England’s 25 sixes against Afghanistan in 2019.18 – Total sixes struck by the Australian openers – nine each by Warner and Marsh. These are the most sixes hit by opening batters in an ODI innings, surpassing the 16 by India (all 16 by Rohit) against Australia in 2013 and West Indies (all 16 by Chris Gayle) against Zimbabwe in 2015.1 – Warner’s 163 is the highest individual score against Pakistan at men’s ODI World Cups. The previous highest was Andrew Symonds’ 143* in the 2003 edition in Johannesburg. Warner is also the first batter with two hundreds at World Cups against Pakistan, as his first (107) came in 2019.2 – Batters with a century on their birthday at men’s ODI World Cups, including Marsh, who turned 32 on Friday with his 121. Ross Taylor was the first to score a World Cup hundred on his birthday – 131* against Pakistan in 2011 when he turned 27.

Shoaib Bashir's rock-solid marathon stint shows he's here to stay

The young offspinner, who’s shown his maturity and nous on a high-profile tour, is setting England on a course for a much-needed Test win

Vithushan Ehantharajah24-Feb-20241:17

Manjrekar: Bashir has been the most accurate of all England spinners

There is a story from Shoaib Bashir’s stint in Australian grade cricket over the 2022-23 winter that his Somerset team-mates love bringing up to embarrass him.Bashir was playing in Sydney, for Linfield District Cricket Club, sharing accommodation with team-mates around the same age. One day, he felt generous and offered to cook for the group, which, as you can imagine, was gratefully received by a mix of late teens and young 20-somethings.It did not take long for Bashir to regret the offer. When it came to dinner time, his housemates were instead greeted by an exasperated Bashir, fuming that the pasta he had on the hob for close to half an hour was nowhere near done. The rest shared his bemusement until they quickly spotted the problem. He had not added any water.Related

  • Shoaib Bashir on fast track as Ashes mission begins in earnest

  • 'To get Rohit as my first wicket was very, very special' – Shoaib Bashir

  • Spinners put England in sight of huge lead

  • Joe Root: 'It means the most when you really have to work for it'

  • Ranchi's low bounce catches India off-guard

We’ve all been there; 19, first time away from home, trying to do grown-up things, failing miserably, mocked by your mates, never to live it down. It’s only been a year, to be fair, so there will be more juice to squeeze from that anecdote.But Bashir need not worry. For starters, he has the team chef out here in India to sort him all the al dente rigatoni and fusilli he could ever want. And regardless of a lack of nous in the kitchen, he was cooking in Ranchi.On just his second appearance in Test cricket, the rookie off-spinner built on Joe Root’s unbeaten 122 to tilt this fourth Test further England’s way. With four wickets – for now, at 84 – Bashir has new career-best figures in first-class cricket. It was a spell that has the tourists a step closer to squaring the series 2-2, with India ending Saturday seven down, still trailing by 134 on first-innings runs.And it really was a spell, by the way. A mammoth 31 overs were delivered unbroken from the Amitabh Choudhary Pavilion End. The most on the bounce since Graeme Swann’s 32 overs at Headingley against New Zealand in May 2013.A maiden before lunch got him a taste, before going right through to tea, then out the other side and deep into the third session. He was eventually taken off with three overs to go, only to re-emerge at the Media Box End to bowl the penultimate set of six. In a career now just eight red-ball appearances old, he has, in one day, bowled more overs than he had in three previous matches.The 53 overs on debut in Visakhapatnam slots in at number two on that growing list, which included 28 overs on day one. He grafted for 4 for 196 in the match, and has already doubled that tally. How about that for exponential brilliance?England learned plenty from that outing about his consistency and durability, which is why Ben Stokes had no qualms pushing him through today’s marathon stint. For the most part, there were no offside fielders between first slip and extra cover to right-handers, with the leg side dotted around in the odd catching and single-saving position.It relied on Bashir maintaining a straight attacking line. He did that like someone who had taken 67 County Championship wickets at an average of 10, not the other way around. A burst of cramp in his 24th over, chasing to stop the ball after James Anderson’s throw ricocheted off the stumps, and the occasional dropping of his right arm in delivery were the only signs of tiredness. The spirit, throughout, was rock solid.Naturally when sticking so diligently to an off-stump channel, the dismissals came. Shubman Gill was trapped in front (just) with drift getting the No.3’s front foot set before enough turn to strike the pads. It ended a stand of 82 between Gill and wunderkind Yashasvi Jaiswal that had England worrying their 353 might not be enough.It was just the second lbw dismissal of Bashir’s professional career, after snaring Nottinghamshire’s Joe Clarke that way last summer. Leg before number three soon arrived, as Rajat Patidar misjudged length, perhaps because of the dip, going back to a ball he should have gone forward to, and subsequently wearing a low-bouncing delivery halfway up his shin.Ravindra Jadeja, having sent Tom Hartley for back-to-back sixes, was soon on his way, pressing forward to a delivery from around the wicket that bounced more than anticipated and found some bat. Ollie Pope took the catch at short leg. At this point, Bashir was in a groove; those three dismissals coming in a 41-ball period for the concession of just five runs.Sarfaraz Khan joining Jaiswal was as good a time as any for India’s counter-attack. A brace of fours from Jaiswal in Bashir’s 18th over – the first slashed wildly beyond first slip – doubled the number of boundaries conceded in his previous 17. Jaiswal carved one more boundary off him before that six-foot-four action found a spot with not enough bounce to force the left-hander to bunt the ball into the ground and back onto his middle stump. It was Jaiswal’s first false shot played against Bashir off the back foot.Bashir’s evolution in the last month alone has been something to savour for a group who, all told, did not know all that much about him. That is, beyond the clip of him doing Alastair Cook a couple of times on his first class debut, that Stokes shared with Rob Key and Brendon McCullum.Ben Stokes and Ben Foakes surround Shoaib Bashir as Rajat Patidar is dismissed•Getty ImagesHe impressed with the Lions, earning a full call-up on attributes rather than statistics. The respect of his peers came on the pre-tour training camp in Abu Dhabi. Beyond the undoubted skill and purchase he could get on the ball with his long fingers, there has been a growing admiration for his toughness and disposition.”The way he bowls is a good indication of his character and personality,” Root said on Saturday evening. “He’s cheeky, he’s funny – a great lad to have around the dressing-room and I really enjoy his company.”Perhaps the best example of all those traits is contained within the visa issues England have encountered on this tour.Bashir, who is of Pakistani origin, was unable to travel out with the squad on the Sunday before the first Test in Hyderabad because of a delay in receiving his paperwork. After staying in the UAE for a few days, he returned to London, where his British passport was issued, to get the final, necessary stamp. He eventually joined his team-mates a week later, receiving a hero’s welcome as he entered the away dressing-room at the Rajiv Gandhi International Stadium on the morning of day four and stuck around to see them go 1-0 up in the series.Bashir took the rigmarole in his stride – “It was a bit of a hassle, but I’m here now” he beamed after his first day as a Test cricketer – training hard and back mixing with the squad like it was nothing. When Rehan Ahmed first discovered he would not be allowed to re-enter India at Rajkot airport after the mid-series break in Abu Dhabi because he only held a single-entry Visa, Bashir cut the tension with a quick-witted response: “Ah well, enjoy your trip back to London mate!” A few hours later, Rehan rejoined his tour buddy at the team hotel.It speaks of the environment within the team that someone so young can feel so at ease in such a high-profile, high-pressure tour. Likewise for Rehan, who played the first three Tests before having to return home for an urgent family matter, and Hartley, who, with two dismissals on day two, is now the leading wicket-taker of the series with 18, one ahead of Jasprit Bumrah who was rested for this match. Considering Stokes’ go-to spinner Jack Leach had to return home after playing just the opening Test because of a left knee injury that has now required surgery, the trio have stepped up and shown maturity and nous beyond their years.”I think it’s the environment that’s been created by Ben,” Root said. “Shane Warne used to say ‘so what’ if you get hit for six – you’ve got another chance, you’ve got another opportunity and if you take a wicket, the game looks very different. And that’s something Ben’s brought into the way we approach things out there in the field.”It’s great to see those young lads responding so positively to it and putting in big performances in foreign conditions against some of the best players of spin in the world.”Beyond Stokes’ feel for people is his tactical acumen, which was on show again today. Root cites Hartley’s dismissal of Sarfaraz Khan as a perfect example of this.”Randomly after two balls (in the 52nd over) he chucks deep cover out – then he (Sarfaraz) tries to knock it there for one, gets a nick, caught first slip,” Root, who completed the dismissal diving to his left, said. “Great catch as well.”From being released by Surrey at age-group level and hustling back into the 18-county system via national county cricket with Berkshire and club cricket in Guildford, Bashir’s story is as inspiring as it is rare.Of course, there has been some luck. What if Stokes had not been idly scrolling social media on the afternoon of June 11, 2023?”Imagine being 15 or 16 years old, a young spinner, and hearing Bashir’s story?” Root said. “It just shows how close you can actually be, how you should keep dreaming and chasing it, keep giving yourself the best chance to work at your game. Because you never know where you could end up.”Right now, a new chapter is being written in a story of perseverance and belonging. Of a 20-year-old offspinner setting England on a course for a much-needed Test victory to keep this series against India alive.

Inside the Maharaja Yadavindra Singh Stadium, Punjab's new open-air venue in Mullanpur

Spread across 40-plus acres and with a capacity of 33,000, the ground is expected to host five of Kings’ seven games

Nagraj Gollapudi22-Mar-2024March 23 will be a significant day for Rishabh Pant. On Saturday, he is set to play his first competitive match after surviving a horrific car crash in December 2022 and will lead Delhi Capitals in their IPL opener in an away match against Punjab Kings. Pant’s return will happen at the Maharaja Yadavindra Singh International Cricket Stadium, which is located in the village of Mullanpur (pronounced with ‘n’ silent), on the outskirts of Chandigarh, and is the new home base of Punjab franchise.Yadavindra Singh, who played a solitary Test for India in 1934, was the son of Maharaja of Patiala – Bhupendrasingh Rajendrasingh, who donated the Ranji Trophy, in honour of KS Ranjitsinhji, in 1933. However, the venue is popularly known as just Mullanpur or New PCA stadium.The Mullanpur venue, which in the last year received clearances from BCCI and ICC to host international matches, is expected to host five of Punjab’s seven home matches. Owned by the Punjab Cricket Association (PCA), the approximately 33,000-seat ground is about 45-minute drive north of Mohali in northern Indian state of Punjab.Related

Chennai to host IPL 2024 final on May 26

'Jittery, nervous, excited' – Pant ahead of his comeback

Pant's return eclipses all else as Kings vs Capitals launches IPL's 36th venue

IPL 2024 FAQs – New captains, record buys, Smart Replay System, and more

IPL introduces Smart Replay System for quicker, more accurate reviews

Planned around 2010 by IS Bindra, former PCA and BCCI president, the Mullanpur venue has been in the making for several years after building works commenced in 2017. It was meant to be opened by 2020, but the Covid-19 pandemic was among several other reasons behind the delay. While it has already hosted several domestic matches since 2021, including Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy (23 matches in last two seasons) and Vijay Hazare Trophy (five in 2021-22 season) as well as one Ranji Trophy match this January, the venue will be officially inaugurated on Saturday.Incidentally, Bindra’s other brainchild, the eponymous IS Bindra stadium in Mohali, was the original all-stop cricket destination in Punjab. That venue, which is still functional, was a pioneer of modern cricket grounds in India when it opened in 1992. Low-level open-air seating, complemented with pace-friendly pitches prepared by former BCCI chief curator Daljit Singh had made cricket at Mohali an enjoyable experience.However, that ground, which housed 25,000 spectators and hosted several memorable matches, both bilateral and World Cup including the India-Pakistan semi-final in the 2011 World Cup, and individual records like Sachin Tendulkar overtaking Brian Lara as Test cricket’s leading run-maker in 2009, faced a few significant challenges on match days.Based in a residential area, crowd management and traffic control were a huge hurdle. Crowds were asked to walk for a couple kilometres at times to get an entry while their vehicles were parked roadside, thus creating a traffic snarl. The other big issue was that the old ground is located close to the airport. Consequently, the floodlights in IS Bindra stadium were positioned low to ensure they didn’t obstruct flights which frequently droned overhead during live cricket.Significantly, the low floodlights – which were 18 in total (due to low luminosity) – led to fielders being blinded while attempting high catches. The Mullanpur venue doesn’t have any such deterrents. With an expansive parking space that can accommodate over 1500 vehicles, the ground is located adjacent to the Baddi highway which PCA officials say is an easy drive from Chandigarh airport and some of the neighbouring cities – including Delhi, which is a three-plus-hour drive on clear-traffic days – as well as some of the towns in the neighbouring state of Himachal Pradesh.A cloud of dust trails you as you ride along the unpaved path leading to the ground. Unfinished road and construction work remains an eyesore both outside and inside the venue, but you can expect a finished product come the 2025 season.The size difference between Mohali and Mullanpur grounds is easily evident: while the former is spread across about 14 acres, this new venue is built on a 40-plus acres of what was originally a farm land. Acres of wheat gleams in the afternoon sun, ripe for harvest during Baisakhi, which is a festival celebrated in Punjab in mid-April.As you enter the ground, you immediately get the vibes of being inside a football stadium in England. It is an open-air ground right now which, according to PCA secretary Dilsher Khanna, will have canopies ready by 2025 IPL season. It begs the question: what happens to fans during peak summer in afternoon matches?Currently in the first set of the schedule released by the IPL, Mullanpur is hosting a solitary afternoon match – on Saturday. The spectator stands climb to three tiers with the walking terrace around the rim of the ground. The lower tier is designed close to ground level allowing the fan an intimate view of the field. Khanna boasts about the venue having 49 corporate boxes, probably the highest at Indian cricket grounds, which he says will allow “premium vision”.The ground is expected to host five of Kings’ seven matches•Nagraj Gollapudi/ESPNcricinfo LtdPlayers have to walk about 44 steps and down a fibreglass-covered ramp to get to the ground. The standout bit about the dressing room, which is housed in the Harbhajan Singh Pavilion, is the wide open terrace outside the change rooms which have a side-on view of the pitch. The artificial turf mat covering the floor of the terrace, which runs across both dressing rooms, is wide enough for players to engage in a throwdown.On Wednesday, when Capitals came for their first practice session, which was optional, the ground sparkled under the six towering floodlights. Ricky Ponting, Capitals’ head coach, twinkle-toed to test the two middle pitches of the overall seven. There are seven more on the B ground along with 11 practice pitches. However, the square where they are housed is not completely ready yet so both teams have been training on the four pitches in the main square.Just like the IS Bindra stadium, which was among the leading fast-scoring grounds in previous editions of IPL, Mullanpur pitches have also been batter friendly. In the 2023-24 Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy (India’s domestic T20 competition), Mullanpur ranked fourth on the list of venues with highest overall run rates at 8.51 with a cut-off of five matches. IS Bindra was second at 8.87.Punjab Kings will hope that their fortunes change at their new home base following a poor home record at the IS Bindra, where they won just one out of the five home games in 2023 IPL.On Wednesday, the franchise conducted the traditional pooja [prayer] for a prosperous season on the field. PCA’s chief curator Rakesh Kumar is hopeful about the new venue’s prospects, “I wish the opening ceremony happens next IPL in Mullanpur. For that Punjab need to win the IPL.”Saturday is indeed a big day, not just for Pant but also for cricket in Mullanpur as a whole.