Here's All the History and Records A's Rookie Nick Kurtz Set in Historic Four-Homer Night

Athletics rookie Nick Kurtz had himself a night Friday as he powered his team to a 15-3 win over the Houston Astros.

He smacked four home runs out of Daikin Park in Houston, becoming the first rookie in MLB history to hit four homers in one game. It wasn't just the long ball, either. He wrapped up the night a perfect 6-for-6 from the plate with eight RBIs, 19 total bases and six runs scored.

The No. 4 pick in the 2024 MLB draft set plenty of firsts with his historic night, making a case for the best single-game performance ever. Here's a list of the feats Kurtz accomplished with his massive game:

First rookie in MLB history to hit four home runs in one gameFirst player in MLB history to finish a game with at least six hits, six runs and eight RBIsTies a single-game record for total bases (19, Shawn Green)Ninth game in MLB history with six or more runs scored (first since 2004)First player in MLB history with at least four home runs, six hits and eight RBIs in one gameBecomes the 20th player in MLB history with four home runs in one gameFirst player in A's history with a four-homer gameSecond A's hitter with at least five hits and three homers in a game (Jimmie Foxx, 1932)Second game with at least six hits and four homers in MLB history (Shawn Green, 2002)First player in MLB history to have a game with at least four homers, five extra-base hits, six hits, six runs and eight RBIs

Quite the night for the 22-year-old slugger. The wild evening continues what's been an amazing stretch for Kurtz. Per the A's, he's leading the American League in nearly every batting stat over the month of July, including batting average, OPS, home runs and RBIs.

His four home runs gives him 23 on the year. He's now slashing .305/.374/.686 with 56 RBI alongside the 23 dingers.

Look how close he was to becoming the first player ever to hit five home runs in a game, too:

World Series Game 5 Takeaways: Dave Roberts, Dodgers Running Out of Options

Game 5 of the World Series featured a pitching performance for the ages.

It just wasn’t authored by the player most would have expected it from.

Blue Jays rookie starter Trey Yesavage dominated the defending champion Dodgers, spearheading a 6–1 victory that brought Toronto one win away from its first championship since 1993. He struck out 12 batters and gave up just one run on three hits over seven innings, breaking the record for most strikeouts by a rookie in World Series history previously set by Don Newcombe of the Brooklyn Dodgers in 1949.

He outdueled Los Angeles ace Blake Snell, who gave up five runs on six hits and four walks in 6 2/3 innings.

The Blue Jays ambushed Snell, with Davis Schneider driving the game’s first pitch over the left field wall for a lead-off homer. Two pitches later, Vladimir Guerrero Jr. did the same, blasting the eighth home run of his historic postseason.

That start to the game took the air out of Dodger Stadium, and Yesavage made sure it never returned. As the series heads back to Toronto, here are four takeaways from Game 5.

Dave Roberts is out of lineup options

Their dominant pitching and sweep of the Brewers masked it, but the Dodgers bats haven’t been clicking for some time now. Los Angeles managed only 15 runs across four games in the NLCS, and has scored just 18 in the Fall Classic. And no matter what tweaks Roberts makes, it hasn’t seemed to make a difference.

For Wednesday’s game, Roberts tried to shake things up by moving Mookie Betts from second to the No. 3 hole, and shifting Will Smith up to No. 2. And after resisting for the entire playoffs, he finally decided to bench center fielder Andy Pages, who was 4-for-50 during the postseason with zero walks. None of it mattered.

Too many key Dodgers bats are slumping at the wrong time. Betts is 3-for-23 this series, and has just one extra-base hit in his last 52 plate appearances. Tommy Edman is 3-for-21. Since his home run in Game 2, Max Muncy is 1-for-13 with five strikeouts. Roberts can reshuffle things all he wants to, but with the Dodgers’ backs against the wall, none of it is likely to wake the lineup out of its prolonged, ill-timed slumber.

Trey Yesavage rises to the occasion

Blue Jays pitcher Trey Yesavage limited the Dodgers to one run on three hits in seven innings. / Kiyoshi Mio-Imagn Images

Of course, Yesavage was the main reason why the Dodgers’ offense struggled on Wednesday. With the way he threw the ball, few lineups would have put up much of a fight against him.

For the second time in this series, the rookie outpitched the two-time Cy Young Award winner. Yesavage, who made his big-league debut on Sept. 15, was simply brilliant. He struck out every Dodgers hitter at least once, and two of the three hits he gave up didn’t leave the infield. He struck out five consecutive hitters at one point, and after giving up a solo homer to Kiké Hernández in the bottom of the third, retired 13 of the last 16 batters he faced.

Of the 104 pitches Yesavage threw on the night, Dodgers hitters swung at 52 of them. They whiffed 23 times, marking the most swings-and-misses in a World Series game since tracking began in 2008.

It was a breathtaking performance, particularly considering the 22-year-old had made just three major league appearances before manager John Schneider opted to include him in his playoff rotation. Yesavage hasn’t flinched on the big stage yet, and his latest gem has the Blue Jays on the precipice of an upset title few predicted before this series began.

Dodgers’ bullpen will be their undoing

More and more, Game 3 is looking like the exception rather than the rule. In the 18-inning Dodgers win, their bullpen fired 13 1/3 innings and gave up just one run. Excluding that game, the group has allowed nine earned runs in 8 1/3 frames.

On Wednesday, Snell exited the game with runners on first and second and two outs, with the deficit still a manageable 3–1. Edgardo Henriquez came in and immediately allowed both inherited runners to score—one on a wild pitch and one on a single. He faced three hitters and retired none of them.

This appears to be another area where, no matter where Roberts turns, he finds himself with few attractive options (Monday’s Game 3 aside). With Yoshinobu Yamamoto set to take the mound in a do-or-die Game 6 Friday, it would surprise no one if he once again goes the distance and saves Roberts from having to choose from a series of bad options.

Vladimir Guerrero Jr. is your World Series MVP so far

Yesavage might have something to say about this after his historic performance, but Guerrero remains the greatest force of nature in this series. He’s reached base in every game, reached base multiple times in four out of five games and has run his Fall Classic slash line to .363/.500/.636. No Dodgers pitcher has made him look uncomfortable.

With star outfielder George Springer missing the previous two games and Bo Bichette still dealing with a knee injury, Toronto was down two of its biggest stars. Guerrero stepped up in their absences and then some, and, if the Blue Jays can scrape across one more win, he’ll have some hardware to show for it.

Giants vs. Braves Prediction, Odds and Key Players for Tuesday, July 2

The Braves will look to keep pace in the NL playoff picture while keeping another team out of it in the Giants.

The Giants had a successful trip to Los Angeles against the vaunted Dodgers, can the team keep it going against the Braves? The team will hope that rookie Hayden Birdsong can improve on his shaky first outing, but I'm banking on some optimism in his shaky start.

Keep reading to find out why I'm backing the Giants as big underdogs in Atlanta.

Giants vs. Braves Odds, Run Line and Total 

Run Line

Giants: -1.5 (-118)Braves: +1.5 (-102)

Moneyline

Giants: +168Braves: -200

Total: 8.5 (Over 100/Under -122)

Giants vs. Braves Probable PitchersGiants: Hayden Birdsong (0-0, 5.79 ERA)Braves: Raynaldo Lopez (6-2, 1.70 ERA)Giants vs. Braves How to WatchDate: Monday, July 1Time: 9:40 p.m. ESTVenue: Truist ParkHow to watch (TV): Bally Sports South, NBC Sports-Bay AreaGiants Record: 41-44Braves Record: 46-36Giants vs. Braves Key Players to WatchSan Francisco Giants

Heliot Ramos: Ramos appears to finally have a place to stay in the big leagues after going back and forth between the minor leagues in the prior two seasons. Ramos hit .304 in the month of June across 27 starts with eight home runs and 24 RBI’s, giving some life to the Giants mediocre lineup. 

Atlanta Braves

Marcell Ozuna: Enjoying a career year, the 33-year-old Ozuna is in shouting distance of a triple crown bid. He is hitting .300 with 21 home runs and 67 RBI’s as he has done his best to mitigate the loss of Ronald Acuna Jr. in the middle of the Atlanta lineup. While the Braves offense has fallen off as a whole, Ozuna has produced at a high level, which has helped keep Atlanta firmly in the postseason mix. 

Giants vs. Braves Prediction and Pick

San Francisco will start Hayden Birdsong for the second time. While he struggled in his first start, he showcased some serious velocity (85th percentile fastball velocity) and generated swings and misses. 

Against a free-swinging Braves team, Birdsong may be in line to put together a strong start with low expectations. Meanwhile, I’m interested in fading Reynaldo Lopez, who has a 1.70 ERA but an xERA of 3.98. 

Lopez has been outperforming expectations all season long, but I expect regression to settle in as the season goes on. He still has an above average walk rate of more than three batters per nine innings and has been limited to about five innings per start this season. 

With shaky control, Lopez will put a ton of pressure on a below average Braves bullpen, and I’ll side with the Giants group of relievers to do a better job backing up Birdsong and outperform this price.

Lastly, the Giants have been doing better than the Braves at the plate. San Francisco placed 12th in OPS last month while Atlanta was 17th in the same metric. 

I’ll take the big underdog in San Francisco. 

Shane Bieber to Return From Elbow Injury, Make Blue Jays Debut Friday

Two-time All-Star Shane Bieber is set to return to the mound this week.

Bieber, who has not played in over a year since undergoing Tommy John surgery for a torn UCL last April, will make his Blue Jays debut on Friday at Miami, manager John Schneider told reporters. Bieber has recently completed seven starts as part of his rehab assignment, posting a 1.89 ERA and 37 strikeouts across 29 innings.

Bieber was traded to Toronto in July at the deadline after previously spending his entire career with Cleveland, and will begin pitching for a Blue Jays' team that is second in wins and fourth in strikeouts, but just 23rd in ERA. He joins the rotation a little over a month before the end of the regular season, as the Blue Jays lead the American League East with a 73-52 record.

The 30-year-old pitcher has been one of the best starters in the league when healthy. In the COVID-19 shortened 2020 season, his best campaign, Bieber went 8-1 with a league-leading 1.63 ERA and 122 strikeouts and won the triple crown and Cy Young award. When he last saw significant playing time in 2023, he went 6-6 with a 3.80 ERA.

Josh Naylor Contract: Full Details of Five-Year Deal With Mariners

The Mariners made the first big splash of MLB free agency on Sunday night, agreeing to a long-term contract that will keep Josh Naylor in the organization for another five seasons.

ESPN’s Jeff Passan provided some further information on the agreement between Naylor and Seattle on Monday, indicating that the contract would be worth a total of $92.5 million. As such, Naylor will collect an annual average value of $18.5 million throughout the course of the deal. The contract does not include any deferred money. Additionally, Naylor’s deal to return the Mariners comes with a full no-trade clause.

The $18.5 million Naylor is due in 2026 would make him the third-highest earner on Seattle’s roster, behind only Luis Castillo ($24.15 million) and Julio Rodríguez ($20.19 million). His $92.5 million deal overtakes Ichiro Suzuki for the eighth richest contract in franchise history. Robinson Canó’s 10-year, $240 million contract still stands as the largest deal ever given to a Mariners player.

It’s a big commitment from the Mariners, but it shows just how highly regarded Naylor has become within the organization since arriving at the trade deadline in a deal with the Diamondbacks. Naylor quickly became a fan favorite in Seattle, and now he’s set to remain with the franchise through the 2030 season.

Last season, in 54 games with the Mariners, Naylor logged a .831 OPS with nine home runs, 33 RBIs and 19 stolen bases.

How Australia and India made their way to the MCG final

India have largely had a smooth ride, while Australia have overcome a sluggish start to get to the title round

Sruthi Ravindranath06-Mar-2020ESPNcricinfo LtdAustraliaLost to India by 17 runsAustralia were completely bewitched by Poonam Yadav’s legspin, but were left with one positive from their defeat. Their star opener Alyssa Healy, who had been going through a lean patch, hit a half-century in that match, and she has managed to carry her good form since then. The four-time champions will be looking to exact revenge on their in-form opponents, in front of what is expected to be a record crowd for a women’s game at the MCG on Sunday.Beat Sri Lanka by five wicketsIt seemed like Australia’s confidence had taken a major hit after the loss against India, as the No. 1-ranked side scrambled to a five-wicket win against Sri Lanka in their second group fixture after an almighty scare. Chamari Atapattu dazzled with a 38-ball 50 and made the hosts toil hard, and a number of handy contributions in the middle order took Sri Lanka to 122 for 6. The prolific fast-bowling duo of Udeshika Prabodhani and Shashikala Siriwardene bowled a probing spell with the new ball, which left Australia at 10 for 3 within the first four overs of the chase. Thanks to a 95-run stand between Rachael Haynes and Meg Lanning, though, Australia won the day with just three balls remaining.1:24

How India made it to their maiden T20 World Cup final

Beat Bangladesh by 86 runs Australia were back to being the Australia we know as they made easy work of a sloppy Bangladesh line-up at Manuka Oval. On the back of a record 151-run opening stand – Australia’s highest first-wicket partnership in T20Is – between Healy and Beth Mooney, the hosts dominated big time. Chasing 189, Bangladesh lost their plot in the middle, and left Fargana Hoque to struggle all by herself, as they crumbled from 76 for 3 to 102 for 9. Megan Schutt was the destructor-in-chief as she bagged 3 for 21 with support from Jess Jonassen, who finished with 4 for 17.Alyssa Healy and Beth Mooney prepare to start the Australia innings•Getty ImagesBeat New Zealand by four runsIn the winner-takes-it-all contest, Australia showcased their big-match temperament as they edged New Zealand in a close contest at Junction Oval. The hosts put together a decent target and then defended it to bring New Zealand’s campaign to an early end. Mooney made yet another half-century, which helped put up a target of 155, following which a pivotal spell by wristspinner Georgia Wareham strangled New Zealand in the chase. She plucked out the dangerous Sophie Devine and Suzie Bates, and then sent back Maddy Green to stifle the run-flow in the middle overs. Scutt then picked three quick wickets in the end as Katey Martin’s lone fight went in vain.Semi-final: Beat South Africa by five runsAhead of the semi-final, Australia were left to grapple with the injury to star player Ellyse Perry as well as the possibility of a washout in Sydney, which would have given South Africa a pass to the final. Australia rose above it all, as they overcame a Laura Wolvaardt cameo to seal a final berth for the sixth consecutive time. Captain Lanning anchored the Australia innings, making a run-a-ball 49 against a disciplined South Africa bowling attack, which troubled the rest of the order. However, South Africa’s run chase fell flat after Sophie Molineux and Schutt left them at 24 for 3, as they fell short of the 134-run target despite the best efforts of Wolvaardt, who made a 27-ball 41.IndiaBeat Australia by 17 runsIndia could not have had a better start, as they opened their campaign with a comprehensive win against the defending champions and hosts. It was Poonam Yadav’s day, as the wristspinner bagged 4 for 19 to throttle Australia in their 132-run chase. India’s batting fell away in the middle after being put in, but a cool-headed Deepti Sharma made a 46-ball 49 to take India to a competitive total in front of a record crowd for a standalone women’s game in Australia. Ash Gardner and Healy tried their best for Australia, making 51 and 34 respectively, but Yadav, along with Shikha Pandey, stifled the opposition and removed eight batters for single-digit scores to guide India home.Beat Bangladesh by 18 runsIndia kept the momentum going with yet another comfortable win, this time against Bangladesh. Their batting show was powered by Shafali Verma and Jemimah Rodrigues, who put together an excellent powerplay, following which valuable contributions from the middle-order took them to 142 for 6. In the chase, Bangladesh were reeling at 66 for 4 in 12 overs but Nigar Sultana kept them in the game with a 26-ball 35. Bangladesh were also given reprieves throughout the innings but they never capitalised on them, with Yadav and Pandey starring once again with the ball for India.Go outside the off stump and swing to leg – Shafali Verma wants to try it all•Getty ImagesBeat New Zealand by three runsIndia survived an Amelia Kerr scare to march into the semi-finals after beating New Zealand in a close game. Pandey held her nerve as she defended 16 off the last over against a red-hot Kerr, who had just blasted 18 runs off Yadav in the penultimate over. But the day belonged to Verma, who wowed the Melbourne crowed with some spectacular shots on her way to a 34-ball 46, while the rest of the line-up struggled on the sluggish surface. India, in turn, turned the screw on New Zealand, resorting to bowling slow deliveries that gave them good returns to leave the opposition reeling at 77 for 4. In came Kerr at No. 6 as she set out to put up a one-woman show for her side, but her efforts went in vain as she ran out of effective batting partners at the other end.Beat Sri Lanka by seven wicketsVerma was one of the obvious choices in the ‘players to watch out for’ category, and she proved why she was one in the match against Sri Lanka. India’s spinners strangled their opponents and were left to chase a below-par total at Junction Oval. Radha Yadav, well supported by Rajeshwari Gayakwad and Sharma, picked up her career-best figures as Sri Lanka put up yet another timid batting show. Verma led the strong reply, displaying a range of shots as she made a 34-ball 47 and attacking the experienced Shashikala Siriwardene in particular to all but seal the game for India. A run-out ended the chance of her getting a half-century and left India at 88 for 3 in 10.4 overs, but with just 28 runs required to win, it was an easy job for the rest of the line-up from there.Semi-final v EnglandIndia were rewarded for their clean sweep in the group stage as they advanced to the final of the World Cup, for the very first time, after the semi-final against England was washed out. No reserve day meant India, who had one win more than their opponents in the group stage, got a pass to the final.

Kyle Jamieson's memorable debuts: 'Don't know if I can really believe how it all unfolded'

Runs and wickets in two formats launched the tall quick bowler’s international career

Chinmay Vaidya11-Aug-2020When debutant Kyle Jamieson came to the crease in New Zealand’s second ODI of a three-match series against India they were 197 for 8 after 41.3 overs. Ross Taylor was at the other end, but needed some support to help New Zealand post a competitive total.So what was going through Jamieson’s mind?”If I’m honest, I wanted to get off the mark. I wanted to get a run and that was about as much as I was thinking,” Jamieson told ESPNcricinfo. “Just don’t get out, just try and get off the mark. At least you can say you got an international run.”Jamieson did slightly better than get off the mark. He contributed an unbeaten 25 to a 76-run stand to take New Zealand to 273.”We weren’t in great shape at that point,” Jamieson said. “It actually makes your role a lot simpler, [thinking] how do we get through the 50 overs and then as we move on, how do I keep getting Ross on strike?”ALSO READ: Who is the future of New Zealand’s batting? Peter Fulton picks four namesHowever, Jamieson’s job wasn’t done. Playing in the team as a bowler, he was largely responsible for defending New Zealand’s score. Although India’s usual openers Rohit Sharma and Shikhar Dhawan were out due to injury, Jamieson knew how dangerous youngster Prithvi Shaw was.”We were lucky we played an A series the week before which sort of enabled me to seen guys like Prithvi Shaw and play against them for a few times,” he said. “He took us to the cleaners in a couple of those games so I was just like, alright, don’t want to give him too much, don’t want to start off my international career from a bowling point of view going for too many boundaries.”Kyle Jamieson roars after getting a wicket in his first over on debut•Getty ImagesShaw, playing in his second ODI, started off strongly with six boundaries in the first four overs. New Zealand made their first bowling change and gave the ball to Jamieson. In his first over as an international bowler, he knocked over Shaw’s stumps to deliver the breakthrough.”To get that first wicket, [it was] very emotional, but it also just gets you into the game,” he added. “Right, I’m underway, I can come back to my role.”After dismissing Navdeep Saini late in the contest to pick up his second wicket, Jamieson was awarded Man of the Match. His 25 proved to be crucial in a 22-run win for the home side.New Zealand swept the one-day series 3-0 then attention turned to the two World Test Championship matches. Having come off a dismal tour against Australia – losing 3-0 with defeats by 296 runs, 247 runs and 279 runs – during which Jamieson was called up as an injury replacement but did not play, they needed to bounce back quickly against India.The No. 1-ranked Test side were still a major threat despite some injuries and appeared to be running away with the WTC six months into the competition. Given each match was worth 60 points in the standings, the series could’ve essentially sealed, signed and delivered India to the WTC final.For Jamieson, this was the next challenge. It’s one thing to perform well in two limited-overs matches; it’s another to bring that effort consistently over five days.As it turned out, five days ended up being too optimistic for India. Jamieson took four wickets on debut in Wellington, including Cheteshwar Pujara and Virat Kohli, but his signature moment arrived in the second Test in Christchurch when he claimed his maiden five-wicket haul.”As a fan of the Blackcaps team and watching the Test side being so settled for so long with some world class players, to kind of all of sudden be sitting in that dressing room and winning a Test match, it’s something that I’ll remember for the rest of my life,” he said. “Just being able to soak up that experience of playing such a world-class team like India and being in our dressing room and being able to find a way to contribute to a couple of Test wins.”The wickets were only part of Jamieson’s contributions. He made 44 in the first Test and came one run short of a half-century in the second. After his runs in his ODI debut, Jamieson was showcasing his batting prowess in the Test format.Kyle Jamieson scythes one through the covers•Getty Images”I think we saw in both those Tests how vital lower order runs can,” Jamieson said. “Whilst our main roles as bowlers is to take wickets and to restrict runs, if you can add 10, 20, 30 runs, it’s very important.”Jamieson sees himself developing as an allrounder, although he admits he’s more of a “net batter than a match batter” at this stage of his career. “I grew up as a batter mostly and it’s certainly one of my loves. I’m still trying to master it. I’ve got a passion for it and I love working on it.”All four matches Jamieson played resulted in New Zealand victories and he earned two Man of the Match awards. For the 25-year old, the stature of his team-mates was just as memorable as his early success on the pitch.”It’s pretty weird when you think about it, really. I remember that 2015 World Cup just how the whole nation got in behind that and it was such an awesome ride and I think everyone was so proud to be a Kiwi in that moment,” he said. “To play against those guys at the domestic level occasionally and then just to be sitting in the dressing room with guys that have been playing for a fair chunk of the time I’ve been watching cricket, being involved in bowling meetings, it’s pretty special. It’s what you dream of as a kid and it’s a ‘pinch yourself’ moment.”It is still to be confirmed when New Zealand will resume international action, although November is shaping as a likely start to the home season, but Jamieson’s future looks bright. “[It was] certainly a crazy three or four weeks,” he said. “I don’t even know now if I can really believe how it kind of all unfolded.”

Trent Boult: 'Reverse swing is a string I want to add to my bow'

The New Zealand quick on being a gun powerplay bowler in the IPL, adjusting to bubble life, and switching plans up in Tests

Interview by Vishal Dikshit24-Nov-20202:09

Shane Bond an ‘extremely good tactical coach’ – Boult

Man of the Match in the recent IPL final, Trent Boult played a pivotal role with the new ball to help the Mumbai Indians win their fifth title. After getting back to New Zealand from the UAE, he spoke about playing the final with a niggle, what makes the Mumbai franchise click, getting used to bubble life, and what he tries to do in Test matches when the ball isn’t swinging much.Let’s start with the first ball of the IPL final. You’re known for pitching it up and swinging it, but this one was short of a length and you surprised Marcus Stoinis with the bounce to dismiss him for a duck. Was that planned or something you came up with on the spot?
You probably dream about starting a spell like that or starting a grand final like that. It was just one of those things that seemed to happen. Yup, I like to pitch the ball up and use the swing as quickly as I can. That was a little bit shorter accidentally but it was nice to get that result.And you were coming into the game with a groin niggle. Did that affect your confidence or were you thinking of bowling those important overs in the powerplay and pushing the Delhi Capitals on to the back foot?
Yeah, I faced a bit of a niggle in the first semi-final [Qualifier 1] and it’s a tricky thing. Any aches and pains or any niggles, they’re at the back of your head, but I passed the fitness day the day before [the final], had some confidence going into that game, and of course, I wanted to be a part of such a big occasion. So it was a big trip over there, a long time, a lot of cricket was played, but it was brilliant to lift that trophy at the end of the tournament.You took 16 of your 25 wickets in the powerplay overs, a joint IPL record with Mitchell Johnson, who also did it for the Mumbai Indians in 2013. What was your plan when you landed in the UAE? You knew the pitches were probably not going to help your style of bowling, so what kind of preparation did you put in?
I’ve played a little bit of cricket in the UAE. To be honest, the conditions I’ve faced there have been different every time, from Test cricket to one-day cricket. It was very hot at the start of the tournament and the wickets played quite well, I thought, and there’s a bit of humidity at night. Then the wickets got a little bit slower and the ball seemed to swing around a little bit more.Just like touring anywhere in the world, the biggest challenge is the conditions and trying to work out a game plan that works best in those conditions. I really enjoyed my time with Mumbai. I felt like I was pretty clear about my role. Obviously, it was to start up, bowl the first couple of overs and try and get a couple of wickets. Some games were better than others, but that’s how it goes in that format.

“Having experienced three and a half months away from my young family, it’s a big sacrifice to just leave for a quarter of the year, and looking at tours next year, there’s potential to be away for nine to ten months”

Everyone seemed to expect slow wickets in the UAE, and to think they would deteriorate towards the end of the league. So those pitches must have surprised you with the kind of help they provided fast bowlers throughout?
Yeah, I think the variation across the three grounds there… day games were definitely a lot different than the night games; a lot of dew came into play, and then the ball seemed to skid on in that second innings. Once again, being able to adjust to those conditions was definitely the most important part. And we were backed by a side with a very experienced bowling attack, and then obviously a very quality batting line-up as well.Everyone talks about your Test-match bowling more, but in this IPL you were one of the most impressive bowlers. Did you have to change your normal bowling plans by a lot for the tournament?
Test cricket is no doubt my favourite format; I definitely enjoy getting in the whites and getting the red ball in my hand. If you really want to [analyse] my performance in this IPL, it was probably similar to what I do in a Test match anyway – bowling the hard length and getting to swing it around with the new ball. It’s a challenging format: you can bring whatever game plan you want, you’ve got to be clear on what you’re trying to do and you’ve got to execute that pretty nicely. Because in a tournament like the IPL, you see the teams we’re coming up against, the players, the batters, you’ve got to be right on the mark. It was some good players, but that’s the best thing about it, really, to challenge yourself against the Warners, the Pollards, the Rohits, so it was good fun.ALSO READ: How the Mumbai Indians built their IPL empirePlaying for MI for the first time, you and James Pattinson had very well-defined roles in the powerplay, which allowed Jasprit Bumrah to bowl more at the death. Rohit Sharma said at one of the presentations that he and the management had a conversation with you and Pattinson about the MI culture and what they needed out of you. Could you tell us about that?
You go through your meetings and your planning for each opposition. To have that kind of diversity across that attack… You’ve got three very good spinners – Jayant Yadav, Rahul Chahar and KP [Krunal Pandya] – great craft bowlers through the middle overs, who can bowl with the new ball. To get the chance to bowl with James – [he’s a] quality new-ball bowler as well, hits the wicket hard, and then you actually sometimes forget that you’ve got Bumrah in your attack until he grabs that ball in the last ten overs. I’ve played a little bit with him over the years. He’s a phenomenal bowler, the way he goes out there, keeps it nice and simple and bowls straight on the spots.What is it about the MI culture that gets the best out of the players? Quinton de Kock has scored so much for two seasons in a row, and you have been their gun powerplay bowler this year.
Like I’ve been saying, they’re very well planned: they forecast what kind of players will have what sort of impact in what conditions. I’ve worked with Shane Bond a lot, so that relationship probably helps as well.Comparing it to other franchises, I suppose just having the opportunity to play a lot of the games back-to-back gave a bit of rhythm. That certainly helps. Having that tournament out of India, in conditions where you’re not going to the airport every day and on buses and all sorts of stuff like that, we just got into a nice rhythm and all the guys were playing well and they continued to play well across the ten weeks. It’s a hard thing to pinpoint, but definitely those couple of things have done big favours for that franchise.”T20 is a challenging format: you’ve got to be clear on what you’re trying to do and you’ve got to execute that pretty nicely”•BCCI You’ve obviously worked with Shane Bond in the New Zealand set-up, but did you see a different version of him here?
I’ve always said that Bond is an extremely good tactical coach. He comes up with good game plans and definitely puts in a lot of hours in terms of looking at where guys hit the ball and where their strong zones are and potential places to exploit weaknesses. Obviously to have a familiar face there, someone I’ve known for many years, definitely calmed me down a little bit and gave me a lot of confidence. He was brilliant and I’m here in quarantine at the moment in New Zealand, getting the chance to work with him in the nets as we prepare for the West Indies series. So it’s a good relationship.You also had Zaheer Khan in the coaching staff, a different bowler compared to Bond, which must have reflected in his coaching too. He’s also a fellow left-arm quick. What kind of advice did he offer?
I don’t know Zaheer too well, but he was brilliant – a left-armer a lot of guys looked up to over the years. I imitated his action a couple of times, which got a couple of giggles out of him. He’s very experienced, played a lot of cricket, T20 cricket as well, and it was nice to hear his way of doing things or how he used to do things back in the day.Great support staff there and Mahela [Jayawardene] led the team pretty nicely, he was pretty passionate. It was a good couple of months away and I built some pretty good friendships.ALSO READ: ‘Be aggressive and take wickets’ – Trent Boult on his T20 gameplanBefore the T20I series against England in November 2019, you said “being aggressive” was your T20 game plan. How do you define aggression in T20 cricket?
I think you’re trying to be aggressive in terms of trying to take wickets and pitching the ball up and taking a few risks every now and then. Everyone understands how big of an impact getting early wickets inside the powerplay makes, whether they’re chasing or trying to set a total. It’s a tough format, it’s a hard one to read too much into. You can bowl one way in a certain match and get 3 for 20 and bowl with the same game plan a couple of days later and you get none for 47. I try not to look into it too much, but I’m very clear on what a game’s wicket looks like to me. It was nice to grab a few in the UAE and make a bit of an impact.How much of that “being aggressive” mentality has got to do with Brendon McCullum’s captaincy in the 2015 World Cup, when you were bowling with a Test match kind of field. Has that mentality carried on for you and other New Zealand bowlers as well?
I think so. It was a big continuum point for white-ball cricket in New Zealand, I reckon. Back in 2015, to be running in in ODI cricket with four slips and no third man was probably not the norm. The facilities and the conditions you are in, the way the ball swings around, if it swings around a little or doesn’t at all, it kind of justifies that. Brendon was brilliant at instilling confidence in you and really backed you. I don’t know if that’s the new norm or anything like that but definitely good fun to see with the white ball swinging around and see the bat miss the edge and knock over a few stumps.

“In the IPL you’ve got to be right on the mark. That’s the best thing about it, really – to challenge yourself against the Warners, the Pollards, the Rohits”

You once said you get “quite nervous” when New Zealand are bowling first in a Test match. Does it happen even when you’re bowling at home or, say, in England where you know the ball is going to swing?
At any point, I really get nervous the first morning of a Test match – [there are] a few butterflies when you’re not sure what’s going to happen, whether you bat or bowl, when you have a red ball in your hand on a nice, green wicket. Obviously you want to be straight on the mark. Test cricket is one of those things – there’s a lot of pressure on you, but as a bowler you want to set that tone and get the team off to a good start. A lot of work goes into preparing for a Test match, and it’s kind of a week-long event so that’s probably when I get the butterflies in the stomach, but I love it, it’s a great feeling.What are usually your plans B and C when you’re bowling in conditions that aren’t helping you? It could be in Asia or even at the Basin Reserve (Wellington) where the pitch becomes so much better for batting if you’re bowling second on the second or third day.
It’s one of the big challenges, having other plans up your sleeve when the ball doesn’t swing. Wickets can be pretty good in New Zealand – they kind of get better to bat on as the Test goes on rather than deteriorate or anything like that or like a subcontinental pitch where it turns and gets a little bit low. Reverse swing isn’t really a big thing in New Zealand, but it’s a string I want to really add to my bow and be able to do it in overseas conditions. I suppose the luxury of being a left-armer is, I can get funky with angles, coming around the wicket and using shorter balls and look at the bowling attack you’re bowling with. Myself, Timmy [Tim Southee] and Wags [Neil Wagner] have been doing that for a wee while now and a lot of credit goes to the way we pass the ball around between each other.ALSO READ: Shane Bond: Resting Trent Boult important ‘for his own sanity’Do you ever get tempted to use more variations in Tests in such situations because you’ve played so many ODIs and T20s now, or do you like to stick to the Test match kind of line and length and focus on accuracy?
I think you’re just trying to be as accurate as you can and not give too many loose balls and boundary balls to players. I don’t see too much room for knuckleballs and offcutters and stuff like that in Test matches. I think the biggest thing is bowling as a pack and sticking to keeping that pressure on and not letting them get too far ahead of the game.You and Southee support each other very well. What kind of conversations do you have – in any format – when the opposition openers are scoring freely and your plans aren’t quite working?
I think naturally you’re backing each other to be accurate, to be able to think on your feet. I suppose that comes with playing a lot of cricket – you offer a lot of experience, and Timmy is an incredibly experienced bowler. He’s been doing this for a long time. You’ve just got to keep it simple, in my opinion, and force the batters to play a good shot off a good ball. If you’re putting the ball where you want to put it, and if they’re playing good shots taking high risks, then sometimes at the end of the day that’s all you can really do. I don’t like to overcomplicate it too much and I’ve only got three or four balls that I can bowl – it might be a hard length, a bouncer, a yorker and a slower ball. It’s just about choosing which is the right one at what stage of the match, and keeping it nice and simple.”I get butterflies first morning of a Test match, when you’re not sure what’s going to happen, when you have a red ball in your hand on a nice, green wicket”•AFP / Getty ImagesHow do you plan for a batsman like Steven Smith in Tests, especially in Australia, where the ball is not swinging? He hits the ball to square leg even from outside the off stump.
I’d probably give the ball to Waggy [Wagner] pretty quickly and watch him bowl (). He’s obviously quite an unorthodox kind of player, hits the ball into funky areas, and he’s another guy that you give him a couple of boundaries and let him get off to a good start and he finds a good rhythm and he’s very hard to get out. Once again, it’s about adjusting to what’s in front of you – whether it’s a slow wicket or the ball is swinging or not, it’s kind of going to dictate your plans in a way. They’ve got some big players, the Australians, we had a tough lesson over there just recently with a Test series. It’s a big learning curve, so look forward to that next occasion when it’s coming up.Do you try to swing the ball into him as much as you do against other right-handers?
Yeah, I probably just figure out the best way to contain him, whether that’s bowling straight to him with straight fields… but the guy is very, very quality. He’s very strong off his pads and as soon as you overpitch, he can hit you straight down the ground, and if you bowl too short he can hit you through square leg. You’ve got to be nice and clear [with your plans] but it’s definitely a good challenge.ALSO READ: Hot Seat: Who gets to bowl first at Steven Smith?Players are also getting used to the bubble life now. Many players have already spoken about the kind of mental toll it could take in the long run. Do you also think it’s going to force players to pick and choose certain series to spend more time with their families?
I think it’s going to be a tough one to forecast. Having experienced three and a half months away from my young family – I have two young boys and a wife back home whom I haven’t seen – you can imagine it’s a big sacrifice to just pack up and leave for a quarter of the year, and looking at tours next year, there’s potential to be away for nine to ten months. I can’t speak for everyone, but it’s definitely going to play a big role in the game. Having to come back to New Zealand, you have to spend two weeks in a hotel before you can even be let out. It’s crazy what the world is facing at the moment, it’s almost surreal, and it’s going to be a hard one to say what guys are feeling and what they’re able to do. Speaking from playing in the IPL, it’s brilliant to be back out on the field and offer something for everyone to watch and it was closely followed all around the world. That’s the beauty of cricket, it brings everyone together, so I’m hoping it’s back to normal pretty soon.You have the Test series coming up against West Indies who also have a formidable bowling attack, with Jason Holder, Alzarri Joseph, Shannon Gabriel, Kemar Roach. Put together, they have everything – pace, swing, seam movement, bounce. Do you think it’s going to be one of the tougher challenges for New Zealand?
[It’s] always exciting playing the West Indies, they show a lot of character. They bring a lot of history with them, a lot of pride, and they’ll be here to put in a good performance. We’ll look forward to that, and then we move forward to the Pakistan series. Same thing again, some quality bowlers there. I’m sure it’s going to be exciting. [I’m] already getting nervous about batting – probably shouldn’t say that! – but it’s going to be good fun. It’ll be nice for the New Zealand public to watch some good cricket and to see some good, international cricket on our screens.Will New Zealand’s batting be the key because the bowling attacks of all three teams – New Zealand, West Indies and Pakistan – are really strong?
I think we’re going to have to bat extremely well. Probably the biggest confidence booster is that we played some pretty good cricket in New Zealand in the past wee while. We’re very clear with how the conditions react. I know the batsmen here are looking forward to a big challenge and a big home summer and hopefully we can continue that form that we’ve had over here, and play some good cricket and keep moving towards that World Test Championship pinnacle.

India in need of some more control from bowlers and some more luck for batsmen

They will be hoping to get at least Axar back, whose batting will allow them to play a more attacking spinner in Kuldeep

Sidharth Monga11-Feb-2021With the first Test of the series being India’s second home defeat in more than eight years, it had to be a rare event. While England played excellent cricket from the moment they won the toss, they needed some good fortune to go their way too. One hundred and sixty-six Tests have been played since the start of 2017. There have been results in 146 of those. Only five times has a team made fewer errors with the bat than India’s 102 in Chennai to lose a Test. To lose 19 wickets to just 102 uncontrolled responses is terrible luck – Cheteshwar Pujara got out in the first innings despite being in full control of the shot – especially when England’s first innings alone took 136 not-in-control responses to end.Given the toss, the conditions and England’s resolute batting, India had to work harder for their wickets. It’s the opposite of what happened in Australia when it was the visitors who enjoyed some luck in the last three Tests when the ball was in play.Events in the final innings of the last two Tests in Australia and also in the recent game between Bangladesh and West Indies in Chattogram might have had some impact on England’s lack of declaration and fans’ expectations, but the Test was – as most of them are – won and lost in the first two innings. Not only did India’s first innings feature three unlucky wickets and some sensational catching, but the surge in the effectiveness of bowling was also huge.Related

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England enjoyed at least a bonus day of batting before the ball started to misbehave at all, which is not how the other Tests in the aforementioned list played out. Four out of the five Tests mentioned earlier were typically low-scoring affairs, the fifth was between India and Afghanistan.The penalty for batting errors went up considerably day three onwards in Chennai. The first innings took 13.6 false responses for a wicket to fall, the next three took 6.8, 5.7 and 4.1 respectively. Interestingly, the frequency of false responses didn’t really follow a linear pattern: there was one false response every 10.7 balls in the first innings, and every 9.4, 4.9 and 8.5 balls in the subsequent ones. Arguably, England were batting for a declaration in the third innings and played a few shots too many, which might be reflecting in poor control percentage on the fourth day; or perhaps India saw something in how England tackled the misbehaving ball on day four, which gives them confidence for the rest of the series.This points to two factors other than dumb luck. England could afford to bowl more attacking lengths because they had the runs on the board and a more responsive pitch to bowl on. While the economy rate went up, the errors were likelier to bring them wickets. Also, on more difficult pitches, you pay more for your errors. And this pitch got really difficult after the first two days. This was perhaps the kind of pitch that MS Dhoni used to rail against because it made the toss crucial, especially when Anil Kumble had retired and he had just Harbhajan Singh as the settled spinner.Washington Sundar might have to sit out despite his batting hand in the last Test if India play both Axar Patel and Kuldeep Yadav•BCCIThis is not to say that this is the first time a team has enjoyed good luck in Test cricket. India did so in Australia. England did so when they were in India last time, winning three tosses and having to induce fewer false responses for a wicket, but this time they backed it up with the big runs to make any slice of luck became significant.This time around, England are more determined to grind India out if they get to bat first, which shows in their squad composition. India are missing a key bowler: with a complete and relentless attack in the past, India could contain teams to 450-500 instead of the 578 England got here. Also, India are towards the end of a long season, which began with the IPL and carried into the gruelling tour of Australia. In the absence of Ravindra Jadeja, the fitness of the other bowlers will continue to be tested should England win the toss on a similar pitch again.Good examples of how India negated the toss disadvantage by restricting the opposition to 400-450 include the Mohali Test against Australia in 2013, the Mumbai and Chennai Tests against England in 2016, and the Ranchi Test against Australia in 2017. They will be hoping they get at least Axar Patel back, whose batting will allow them to play a more attacking spinner in Kuldeep Yadav. That might mean Washington Sundar might have to sit out despite his batting hand in the last Test, but when playing a spinner at No. 7, you are looking more at his bowling than batting.Virat Kohli’s press conference after the first Test betrayed a hint of annoyance at questions looking for any larger issue with the team. Kohli himself made just nine mistakes when he batted, and was out two times. The team knows they were in a tough situation, the kind they have made look easy in the past.Should they lose the toss again and find the pitch to be similar – the latter is less likely to happen – India will ask for better control from their bowlers and a little bit more luck when they bat in the first innings. For the first time in four years, India have been properly challenged at home. The next three Tests will make for fascinating cricket.

Beth Mooney: 'No situation gives me stress when I'm batting because I feel like I can control the game'

The pressure-specialist batter talks about how she – and Australia – gets going when the going gets tough

Interview by Andrew McGlashan26-Feb-2022Beth Mooney was part of the Australia side left shell-shocked by their exit from the 2017 ODI World Cup, and has since been a central figure in a team that has taken the format to new heights. Ahead of this year’s World Cup in New Zealand she spoke about lessons from the past, her development as a batter and the challenge ahead.What does the Australian team feel like now compared to the 2017 World Cup side?
It was very different. Not in a negative way or anything – it was just there were some people that had been around for a really long time and had done things in a particular way and perhaps we didn’t really adapt quickly enough to situations that were thrown at us. Obviously it’s well documented about Harmanpreet [Kaur] tearing us apart and Chamari [Athapaththu] in the round game, so we didn’t know how to adjust as quickly as we could. You look at our team now and, especially in the last six months, it just seems like any situation that’s thrown at us, we’ve always got an answer. Whether it’s Meg [Lanning] out there making decisions as the captain – she’s done an exceptional job in the last two years – or batters trying to come from behind and win a game. It’s been an unbelievable turnaround for this group. That’s probably the biggest change I’ve seen – the ability to problem-solve as well as adapt when we’re under fire a bit.Related

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That 2017 semi-final is often cited as a turning point for Australia. Was there a moment in the field where you thought it was getting out of control and since then, when games have got tight and you’ve been under pressure, have you recalled what was learnt?
Certainly there were moments where Harmanpreet was just hitting it over the boundary with ease where I thought, geez, this could be a big innings. It was probably only about half an hour before that I thought, this is good, we won’t be chasing that much and myself and Bolts [Nicole Bolton] can get us off to a good start. The game obviously took a pretty dramatic turn towards the back end of our bowling innings, when she was playing out of her skin and playing an unbelievable one-day knock.There’s been plenty of times since then we’ve been put under the pump. I look back to that T20 World Cup when we played New Zealand and we had to win that game to make the semi-final. We were under a lot of pressure defending a pretty mediocre total and Sophie Devine was still out there, who can do what Harmanpreet can do. We had better plans to adjust and a few more options that we believed that could work.The semi-final at the T20 World Cup is another example. DK [Delissa Kimmince] coming on there in the 11th over out of 13 and going for five runs. That was probably the difference.The Mackay win: Mooney took Australia over the line with her 125 not out in a last-ball thriller•Albert Perez/Getty ImagesHow soon did the conversations start after that loss to India in 2017?
It was a pretty sombre dressing room. People were hurting. That wasn’t the story we wanted to tell for that team. We essentially had an extra day in England that we didn’t want. We wanted to get out of there pretty quickly and then we basically disappeared for a couple of months in the winter in Australia. The next time we got back together was just before the Ashes, in October 2017.Pete Clark, our psych, and Motty [head coach Matthew Mott] decided to replay some of the highlights of India winning in this dark room at the National Cricket Centre in Albion. A lot of us spoke about how it felt immediately afterwards. There were a lot of people who felt embarrassed, a lot of people who were disappointed. A lot of people were angry. A lot of people who felt a certain amount of shame, as well, for that result. But it all just allowed us to realise that we were all feeling similar things and we all knew what needed to change. We made a commitment to change in that moment.Certainly it is a confronting thing to do when you’re trying to park something that is so fresh in your memory. Then you see it on the big screen in front of you and talk about how it makes you feel. For us it was just about watching it all over again and making sure we could let it go and commit to something completely different to what we delivered that day.Has it felt like a long time to get a chance to make amends?
Yeah, it has been a long wait. Even during the [2021-22] Ashes, there was a lot of anxiety about catching Covid in Melbourne and Canberra and not being able to get on the plane and missing the opportunity to rectify some things that went wrong in the last one. So it felt like a long time.There’s a lot of things that we’ve achieved in that time that people probably didn’t expect us to, but certainly within our group it’s very different. I think we’ve got a good balance of people who were a little bit scarred from that last World Cup and some people that have no idea what it feels like to bomb out of a World Cup like that.With head coach Matthew Mott during the Ashes. Mott and the team psychologist conducted a post-mortem of the 2017 World Cup semi-final loss that Mooney says sparked a commitment to do things differently•Getty ImagesOne of the things you’ve achieved since then is the 26-match winning streak in ODIs. Did you realise what you were doing as it was happening? “This is No. 20, 21” etc?
We didn’t really talk about it until we were in New Zealand this time last year and there was a lot in the media about going past Ricky Ponting’s team’s record in ODI cricket. Our whole mindset after the 2017 World Cup was making sure that we played each game in isolation. We would win an ODI series and be 2-0 up, then lose the third game and that sort of leaves a bit of a bitter taste in your mouth.That was essentially how we ended up getting to so many ODIs wins because we didn’t want to ruin the vibe that we’d created in making sure that we put the nail in the coffin, so to speak, on tours.You’ve played a couple of innings that have defined matches this season – the century in Mackay and 73 in Canberra – both from tough positions. Is that something you pride yourself on, being at your best in the most challenging situations?
You could say it’s easy to go out there and score runs when your life is going easy outside of cricket, when the wicket is a batting paradise and it’s one of those days where things feel like you can do no wrong, but the innings you remember as a batter are the ones that you have to really grind out. Being able to get the team into a position to win a game that people think we can lose, I really pride myself on.Bringing people along with me as well. Tahlia [McGrath] has been doing a great job and found herself out there with me a couple of times when we’ve been under the pump. Just having that belief within the dressing room and within myself that you know nothing’s ever too far gone for us to come back, so if I can hang on and get the team into a better position than when I walked out there, then I’m doing the job that they expect of me and I expect of myself.On the run-chase scenario: what’s your mindset when you are in a position like that? And is it something you found has come naturally or have you developed it over the years?
It’s been more about just calmness at the crease, whether I’m opening in WBBL or batting in the middle order in one-day international cricket. No situation really gives me any level of stress when I’m out there because I feel like I can control the game a little bit.This group of coaching staff and Meg and Rach [Haynes], they value the fact I understand the situation and what’s required. I probably initially didn’t think that I was very good at that. But over the last couple of years I’ve got a little bit more data to suggest that I’m doing something right in judging what’s in front of me.With Tahlia McGrath, who in Mooney’s words has “found herself out there with me a couple of times when we’ve been under the pump” in the third ODI against New Zealand in Brisbane in 2020•AFP via Getty ImagesI think it’s just this quiet calmness and quiet confidence about the process that I go through when I’m batting, and making sure that I stick to that as often as possible. The realisation that no game is ever really too far gone if you don’t believe it is so.Certainly that game in Mackay, I probably didn’t look at the scoreboard for about 15 overs of it, and when I did, we needed about 180 off 150 balls. I thought, “Actually that’s not too bad.” Once I work things out like that, dumb it down a little bit and make it sound a little less scary in my own mind, it makes my life a bit easier.Has the amount of T20 cricket you’ve played – both individually and as teams – broadened the mind about what is possible in the 50-over game?
Definitely. That game [in Mackay] is a classic example. We were chasing eight or nine an over for the last 15-20 overs, which five years ago you were probably never going to chase down, but given the pressure situations you find yourself in in T20 cricket, sometimes needing ten an over in the last five overs, it’s a totally gettable number. The evolution of T20 cricket will find its way into women’s one-day cricket and we’ll see we’ll see a lot more games like in Mackay that day.Was there someone growing up that you modelled yourself on as a batter and thought, “I’d like to play like that”?
I had a couple. I had lunch with him a few weeks ago, before the first Ashes Test in Brisbane, and told the story. I think he got a bit embarrassed but I used to love watching Mike Hussey bat in Test cricket. Just the determination and grit – he seemed to always find a way to score runs. He had to do it the hard way as well. It took him a long time to debut for Australia, but once he got there, he never let anyone have a sniff at the spot he had in the side. So I thoroughly enjoyed watching him play, as well as Adam Gilchrist, who I have a bit of correspondence with. It’s kind of nice to think that two blokes I watched and admired growing up, I can send them a text and check in and ask questions. I probably tried to model my cover drive a little bit on Mike’s.Is it a nice thought, with the women’s game much more visible now, that there is a generation of young children coming through who will want to bat like Beth Mooney?
It’s certainly a bit of a surreal moment when kids say that. Usually my response is, “You can do better than wanting to bat like me, surely!” Which I think they get a little bit offended about. While I do shy away from that public nature of things, it is a real sign of what’s changed in the world. Some girls might want to say they bat like me, and that’s amazing. But the thing that really stands out for me is watching dads bring their young boys to female games where there’s no male game afterwards. There’s certainly going to be a lot more of that moving forward just with how much exposure women’s cricket is going to get in the next six months with the World Cup and the Commonwealth Games.Mooney with Georgia Redmayne (batting) and Darcie Brown play with kids at a launch event for the series against India last year•Bradley Kanaris/Getty ImagesIn this phase of your career is there someone who you lean on for advice from outside the Australia coaching group?
She’s probably not someone I would ring up about my batting because she probably knows all about it, but Kirby Short I’ve got a really good relationship with, post her playing career. She tends to give me a little bit of tough love at times, but also some perspective about how I’m going on and off the field, and she can usually read my body language even if we’re not in the same country. She’s had a huge influence on how I go about my business and the calmness that you see out there on the field. She’s taught me a lot, so if I’m ever feeling like things are getting out of control, she’s easily one of the first people I’d get on the phone with to just to share how I’m going. She’s got a pretty good reputation around the cricket circle of being a bit of a leader and a mentor, so it’d be silly of me not to use that where I can.As a team you’ve needed to come through some challenging situations this summer. Does that stand you in good stead going into a World Cup?
I think any games you can draw on that you’ve got yourself out of the s**t basically and found a way to win certainly helps. But we’re under no illusions that everyone starts from scratch. It means absolutely nothing that we’ve won the Ashes and we had that earlier streak of 26 games, because we’re all starting from square one. So if we’re not on our game from day one on March 5, then we’re already one step behind everyone else. I think the next few weeks will be really interesting to see how it all unfolds and I think everyone’s just really excited to get started.I’m sure you’d like this tournament to be less stressful than the T20 World Cup campaign, but it’s rare for a competition to go without a glitch or a setback. Having gone through that experience, are there things you can draw on?
Even the Ashes didn’t start well, did it. I broke my face, Tay [Vlaeminck] was out again with a foot injury. It seems that we can’t go on any tour without some kind of hiccup along the way.We’ll always look back at that T20 World Cup and wonder how we got through it in one piece. I certainly can’t afford for it to be as stressful this time because I lost a lot of weight during that World Cup and I’ve probably got nothing left to lose after my surgery.

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