Marcus Stoinis picks up side injury, could be a doubt for second ODI

Australia have Cameron Green and Moises Henriques as back-up options in their squad

Andrew McGlashan27-Nov-2020Cameron Green could be a step closer to his international debut after Marcus Stoinis pulled up with a side injury during Australia’s opening ODI against India at the SCG on Friday.Stoinis left the field two balls into his seventh over and had a scan in the evening with a Cricket Australia spokesman saying it showed a “low grade side strain” which will be “managed accordingly.” The quick turnaround between matches – the second game is on Sunday – would seem to make it unlikely he will be available for it.Stoinis, who made a first-ball duck in Australia’s huge total of 374, has a history with side injuries having also suffered one at the 2019 World Cup.Green, the Western Australia allrounder, who has also been named in the Test squad, was picked largely on the back of his first-class record, with his List A numbers being more modest.”Fingers crossed [Stoinis] is okay, if he’s not someone has to come in and probably someone who has to bowl overs so perhaps Cameron,” Steven Smith said. “He’s started really well in the Shield season, he’s a bright talent.”I faced him for a couple of balls in the nets this afternoon before the game, it’s the first time I’ve seen him bowl and he bowls a heavy ball. He looks an impressive talent and if he gets the opportunity hopefully he can take it with both hands.”Ahead of the series, Australia coach Justin Langer had said Green would play in the ODI side only if he was able to be a full part of the bowling attack. And though Green returned to action with the ball for the first time in a year during the last two rounds of the Sheffield Shield, his role was limited to four-over spells.Another option Australia have in their squad is Moises Henriques, who was recalled for the first time since 2017, and is also a like-for-like replacement for Stoinis. Other names would be Sean Abbott as a pace-bowling allrounder or Ashton Agar which would provide another frontline spinner.

Scare for Australia as Will Pucovski retires hurt after Wriddhiman Saha saves Indians from defeat

Three-day tour game ends in a draw after Australia A give Indians a proper workout

Andrew McGlashan08-Dec-2020A significant worry was sent through the Australian camp late on the final day of the warm-up match at Drummoyne Oval when Will Pucovski was hit on the helmet by a short ball and was forced to retire hurt. It was later confirmed that he had experienced “mild concussion symptoms”.During the 13th over of Australia’s second innings, in the closing moments of the match after they had been set 131 to win in 15 overs, Pucovski got into a tangle going for a pull against Kartik Tyagi, and took the ball on the helmet. He was on his hands and knees at the crease for around 90 seconds before walking off the ground with the doctor John Orchard nearby.Pucovski has a long history of concussion with eighth previous occasions dating back to when he played junior football.He had seemed set to make his Test debut in Adelaide following the injury to David Warner, but that may rest on the outcome of assessments carried out by the medics over the coming days. In a positive sign, he was up and talking in the changing room when the match ended and walked with his team-mates to the bus.However, he has been ruled out of the day-night Australia A match starting at the SCG on Friday. He will remain with the squad when a group of the Test players head to Adelaide on Monday and be monitored by medical staff.”Will experienced mild concussion symptoms but was able to leave the field unassisted,” Orchard, Cricket Australia’s chief medical officer, said. “He was monitored in our medical room and was communicating freely with staff and teammates as well as family over the phone.”Wriddhiman Saha pulls one away•Getty Images

The blow to Pucovski means Australia may need to add another opening batsman to the Test squad – at least as cover – which would likely be Marcus Harris, who was batting with Pucovski at the time.A few minutes after Pucovski’s blow, hands were shaken on a draw. Joe Burns’ problems had also continued when he fell for a duck in the first over, dragging a drive into his stumps against Umesh Yadav, to leave him with 61 runs in seven innings this season.Pucovski could have gone cheaply as well when he flashed at Mohammed Siraj on 1 and was put down by a diving Prithvi Shaw at second slip. He also survived a very close shout for lbw against Siraj when on 16 before his worrying exit from the crease.When Siraj was bowled by Mark Steketee to complete his five-wicket haul, the Indians were just 84 ahead with 30 overs remaining, but Wriddhiman Saha and last-man Tyagi, in his second first-class match, were able to survive long enough and stretch the lead far enough that Ajinkya Rahane could call them in with an hour remaining.Still, it was an unconvincing day with the bat for the Indians ahead of the opening Test in Adelaide. They have one more warm-up match, a day-night match at the SCG starting Friday, to fine-tune their game. However, they can be comforted by the time in the middle for Rahane, who added 28 to his first-innings century before he was the first of three wickets for Steketee in three overs before tea.Cameron Green sent back the Indian openers•Getty Images

Travis Head opted to continue Australia A’s first innings rather than declare first thing, which allowed Cameron Green to extend his score to 125. The Indian opening pair swiftly chipped away at the lead before Green’s introduction with the ball had an impact, when Shaw fenced at his fifth delivery and sent a sharp catch to Pucovski above his head at gully.Michael Neser then produced the ball of the match to nip past Cheteshwar Pujara’s outside edge and take off stump – Tim Paine, watching closely, will hope his Test attack has a few of those ready – and then Green struck again in his third over when Shubman Gill carved a short ball to point. The Indians were three down without getting into the lead at that stage. Green could not have done much more to force the selectors’ hands.For 21 overs after that, Hanuma Vihari and Rahane chipped way and, with Australia A a bowler down in the absence of injured Jackson Bird, appeared to be taking the game towards a point where they may have been conversations about an early finish. But Vihari then nicked Neser to first slip and that was the beginning of a collapse of 6 for 24 which made an Indian defeat appear likely. After Rahane was given lbw, R Ashwin got a leading edge back to Steketee, who then had Kuldeep Yadav fending to first slip. After tea, he added Umesh Yadav, caught in the gully, and three balls later Siraj, who missed a wild swing.Saha, making his return from the hamstring injury he suffered at the IPL, farmed the strike well, although Tyagi was impressively resolute when needed and was angry with himself after one play and miss. Saha went to his half-century from 99 balls with the first of consecutive boundaries off Head, which signalled the declaration.

LV= General Insurance unveiled as new title sponsor of English cricket

New three-year deal will cover men’s, women’s and domestic cricket until 2023

ESPNcricinfo staff12-Jan-2021LV= General Insurance has returned to the sponsorship of English cricket for the next three years, by becoming the title partner for England Men’s and Women’s domestic Test Series, up to and including the 2023 Ashes, as well as the County Championship.The deal renews a long-standing association between the ECB and LV=, who sponsored the County Championship on three occasions from 2002, most recently between 2007 and 2015, after which it was replaced by Specsavers.The Specsavers deal was extended in 2018 to cover Test cricket as well, but elapsed at the end of the 2019 season, a situation which left English cricket without a title sponsor during the Covid-hit summer of 2020.Now however, LV= has returned to renew its association, which expands on a commitment in November towards the ECB’s #Runs4Funds campaign, a £1million joint investment between the ECB and LV= General Insurance to support focus areas of the grassroots cricket community impacted by Covid-19.The partnership will resume when the reconfigured County Championship gets underway on April 8, in a remodelled three-group format as agreed by the 18 first-class counties to help mitigate against further Covid-related disruption.Although the ECB are continuing to plan for cricket behind closed doors during the 2021 Test season, tickets have gone on general sale today for the five-Test series between England and India, which is scheduled to take place at Trent Bridge, Lord’s, Emerald Headingley, the Kia Oval and Emirates Old Trafford.Joe Root, England men’s Test captain, said: “LV= has been strong ally of cricket for as long as I can remember and it is great to have them back as a partner.”From a personal point of view when I was starting out in county cricket I was lucky enough to be awarded the 2012 LV= Breakthrough Player of the Year, which was made even more significant because LV= donated money to my home club in Sheffield as well as the Yorkshire Cricket Foundation.”Related

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Heather Knight, England women’s captain, added: “It’s great to be able to welcome back LV= to the cricket family. The next few years promise to be an exciting time for women’s cricket and to have a partner such as LV= who are committed to investing in all areas of the game is great news.”Tom Harrison, the ECB chief executive, said: “LV= has a long and proud history of supporting cricket and their return as a partner will benefit all levels of our game. The strength of our partnerships are vital and in LV= I know we have a partner that shares our ambition to support the growth of cricket from grassroots to our England teams.”Today’s announcement is great news for domestic and international cricket and builds on the £1million #Funds4Runs community initiative that we have jointly made with LV= to support areas of the recreational game hardest hit by Covid-19.”We are excited about the prospect of a summer of cricket that will feature the return of the LV= Insurance County Championship as well as a highly-anticipated LV= Insurance Test Series against India. We know how much our fans are looking forward to a summer of cricket and we continue to work closely with Government and plan for how we can safely welcome supporters back to our venues.”Heather Smith, Managing Director at LV= GI, said: “As a business we’ve got a strong heritage in cricket going back almost 20 years and this partnership with the ECB gives us a fantastic opportunity to build on what we’ve done already and deepen relationships across all forms of cricket.

Ishant Sharma reflects on 'rollercoaster' career: 'I've enjoyed it quite a lot'

Fast bowler confident India can chase down the target in the fourth innings

ESPNcricinfo staff08-Feb-2021Ishant Sharma acknowledged that his career has been “quite a rollercoaster” after becoming the third Indian pacer, behind Kapil Dev and Zaheer Khan, to get to the 300-wicket milestone in Tests – in his 98th match, against England in Chennai. Long hours out in the field as England made merry have left Sharma “a bit sore”, but he feels the Indian bowling unit has done a “pretty good job” considering the “road” England played their first innings on.England, after winning the toss, batted through the first two days before stopping at 578, and after taking a 241-run lead, added 178 more, leaving India to chase 420 to win the first of four Tests. India reached 39 for 1 by close on the fourth day, still 381 away from the target, but Sharma sounded a positive note.Related

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“First two days, actually I was feeling like we were playing on a road, to be very honest,” Sharma, who got to the 300-landmark when he trapped Dan Lawrence lbw on Monday, told the official broadcaster. “But then, on the fourth day, it started turning a bit, and then we caught a bit of a break. But I think we bowled pretty well, even those two days when nothing was assisting us as fast bowlers, and the spinners as well. I think we contained them 260 on a flat one on day one, I think we did a pretty good job.”[On the fifth day] I think it all depends how we start up tomorrow. If we get a good start, then I’m sure we can chase this down, because we have a batting line-up who are very fearless. So we are obviously very positive about this, so it’s just about the start, and then we look how we go through the innings.”Fortunately for Sharma, the England second innings lasted just 46.3 overs, giving him enough time to pick up the wicket he needed to get to 300 – the slowest of 35 bowlers to get to there in terms of matches played – but allowing the sore body to rest. He is, after all, coming back from an injury. After the 2020 IPL, where he played just one match, he had only played four T20 matches for Delhi in the Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy.”Quite a rollercoaster life till now – I enjoyed it, pretty much, a lot of experiences through my career,” Sharma said of the feat. “There’s a lot of mentors in my life, who taught me how to bowl in the subcontinent, and even when we go abroad, what kind of lengths you need to go to… so I think I enjoyed that quite a lot.”I’m a bit sore, just played a four-overs game, a T20 game, in domestic and then came back and bowled straightaway 35 overs in three or four days on the field, so you can say I’m a bit sore.”Paying tribute to his colleague, R Ashwin – at the other end of the spectrum among 300-plus wicket-taker as the quickest in the world to the mark, in 54 Tests – said at a press interaction, “Ishant has been one of the most hard-working cricketers I’ve seen in that Indian team. He’s worked extremely hard for more than just one reason, because being that tall itself requires a lot of facets to be managed through a career which has panned out almost 14 years, if I’m not wrong with the numbers.”From the Ishant that went to Australia, got Ricky Ponting out, and then has gone through so many other tours, he’s had his fair share of injuries. For a fast bowler to get close to 100 Tests in India is not a joke, and it’s a fantastic, fantastic achievement. And 300 club – he’s the third Indian fast bowler to get there and the only one closer to him after that is probably Javagal Srinath, who is match referee at this game. So I can keep going and keep complimenting Ishant. I really do wish to see him get to 400 and probably 500, which would be a sort of a roadmap for a lot of quicks going forward.”

As it happened – India vs England, 2nd Test, Chennai, 3rd day

Updates, analysis and colour from the third day of the second Test

Alan Gardner15-Feb-2021*Most recent entry will appear at the top, please refresh your page for the latest updates. All times are local

5.00pm: Stumps

As India flexed their muscle on day three, moving inexorably towards a series-levelling triumph over England, the second Chennai Test began to take on a carnival feel. Already well ahead in the game and with time to indulge, they served up an exhibition for a grateful Chepauk crowd. R Ashwin, the local hero, proved himself worthy of such billing with a fifth Test hundred and England were hanging on by stumps as the ball fizzed and the close catchers circled.After the subcontinental batting masterclass, followed closely by a trial against spin, now was the moment for England to contend with an Indian wall of sound. Despite scrapping hard to take five wickets during the morning session, they were steadily enveloped by the hoots, whistles and cheers from the stands, as first Virat Kohli and then Ashwin steadied India’s second innings, before the home spinners returned to their task with relish.Notionally, England needed 482 to win or two-and-a-bit days of rearguard resistance. Practically, they were merely searching for scraps of encouragement with which to accompany them on the road to Ahmedabad.There could be no more appropriate in the home team’s efforts to drive home their advantage than Ashwin. He came into this came having not passed 50 in a Test since 2017, but after taking an aggressive approach from the outset, he eventually reached a raucously received fifth Test hundred during the evening session – achieving the double of a century and a five-wicket haul in the same match for the third time. Just imagine the decibel level if Chepauk had been at more than 50% capacity.

4.45pm: Two in two overs

Poor shot from Rory Burns, caught at slip as he looks to work Ashwin into the leg side, and he has now made 78 runs in his last eight Test innings, dating back to the start of England’s series against Pakistan in August 2020. He’s looked badly out of nick in this series, and will be watching nervously over his shoulder with Zak Crawley likely to be fit for the third Test and Jonny Bairstow back in Chennai. And Jack Leach, in as the nightwatchman, then falls six balls later to the first one he faces: the ball turns from a length, and he can only nudge it to leg gully.

4.35pm: Lawrence lets loose

Dan Lawrence and his #wrists are in the building, and he has whipped Axar Patel for a couple of early boundaries through midwicket. Just as the TV cameras cut to England’s national selector and head coach – Ed Smith and Chris Silverwood – deep in conversation, Lawrence skips down the track and plants Ashwin over long-on. This innings is something of a free hit for him, with Zak Crawley and Jonny Bairstow both ready to return in the third Test – even a half-century might not save his place – and it looks as though Lawrence is not going to die wondering.

4.25pm: So it begins…

Dom Sibley and Rory Burns dash across for a single•BCCI

First wicket down, Patel strikes, as England’s struggle for opening partnerships continues. Between Sibley, Burns and Zak Crawley, they have managed one stand above 17 across eight innings in India and Sri Lanka this winter. Burns was missed before Sibley’s dismissal, a thin nick that Rishabh Pant put down, but England are at least looking to put pressure back on the bowlers this innings: Burns has swept and left his crease regularly, and Dan “Wrists” Lawrence came down to whip his fifth and seventh balls over midwicket for four.

4.05pm: Blow your whistle

England’s openers are out to face the music whistles of the Chepauk crowd at the start of their second innings. We’re getting the full effect of India playing in front of their fans here, and Virat Kohli is quick to jump aboard the #whistlepodu express, blowing through his fingers and geeing up the crowd as R Ashwin comes on to bowl. Just a couple of overs from Ishant Sharma and then it looks like it will be an extended audition against spin for Rory Burns and Dom Sibley, with Ashwin and Axar Patel doing the judging.

3.50pm: Delaying the inevitable?

India are in one of the most beautiful positions in all of sport, sitting on a whopping great lead, with two days left in the game, and a battery of well-rested bowlers ready to fight over ten wickets in conditions they know inside out. England, meanwhile, will already be looking ahead – to Ahmedabad, to the pink ball, to two more chances to bite the overdog.They will have reinforcements for the next game, too, with Jonny Bairstow, Mark Wood and Sam Curran rejoining the party in India. Bairstow spoke to Channel 4 during the tea interval from his windowless room in hotel quarantine, and following a “seven-and-a-half hour bus journey” without stops, on what approach England might take in their second innings in Chennai, having been set a notional 482 to win or two-and-a-bit days to survive.”Look, I think that it’s naturally going to be tricky. I think chasing over 400 in the final innings is going to be really [tough], but the way in which Ashwin, and Kohli have gone about it in this third innings … granted it has been a third innings where they haven’t really had a huge amount of pressure on them due to the state of the game, but the way in which they’ve gone about it is a really good way to think about it.”You got to be positive. You got to be positive because on a pitch like this there’s going to be a ball in there for you so I’m sure that the lads have their own game plans, will try and back their defence, back their techniques, but also look to be positive.”

3.40pm: All over

R Ashwin is all smiles after completing a fantastic hundred•BCCI

Played on, Stone gets the final wicket. R Ashwin walks off with 99 on his back and 106 to his name, as his India team-mates come down to congratulate him by the boundary’s edge. The Chepauk crowd were loving every minute of that 49-run stand between Ashwin and Mohammed Siraj, cheering dot balls and whistling their hearts out. They know their side are going to win this, the only question is how long will it take?

3.35pm: Ashwin reaps batting rewards

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Sidharth Monga writes: R Ashwin spent the limited-overs leg of the Australia tour, which he was not part of, working hard on and frustrated with his batting. He was being left out of the side because of Ravindra Jadeja’s added batting advantage. It was not an unreasonable selection call: there was room only for one spinner in away Tests, and of late Ashwin had made a fast descent from could-be-an-allrounder to is-he-a-tailender zone. Consequenty India’s last four wickets were offering nothing.Like the earnest competitor that Ashwin is, he felt he needed to prove he was worthy of a place in the side. He would ask batting coaches what he needed to do and tell them he would do it. As it is, he was playing only one format for India, and there too he was at the risk of being limited to Tests in India only. If not for the injury and concussion to Jadeja in the T20Is, who knows if Ashwin would have played the Adelaide Test and got Steven Smith out in the first over to set the tone for the series?Vikram Rathour, the India batting coach, worked hard with him and after the work also asked him to not worry about the results for a while. In that Adelaide Test, there were signs of the return of Ashwin the batsman when he added 27 with Wriddhiman Saha in the first innings, but again he was part of that horrible collapse in the second innings. In Sydney, though, Ashwin the batsman had announced a full-fledged return with that heroic effort to draw the Test.In this Test Ashwin has not only put a cherry on the top, he has also taken away any chance the critics of the pitch at his home ground might have. Surely they couldn’t have doctored it to suit both his bowling and batting?

3.18pm: Ashwin does it!

Ashwin gets his hundred, Chepauk gets its moment! There’s a huge smile on his face as the Chennai boy runs through for his fifth Test ton, and first on his home ground (first against anyone other than West Indies, too). After Siraj snuck a single, Ashwin decided not to hang around, nailing a slog-sweep into the stands, poking two through the covers, and then advancing to hack a thick edge over slip and away. Third time he’s taken a five-for and scored a century, behind only Ian Botham. That’s iced the cake for India… would it be asking too much for Ashwin to provide the cherry, as well, with five more wickets in the second innings? Now that really is a select club.

3.08pm: Closing in

England have taken the second new ball, Ashwin is on 87 and the crowd has just cheered Mohammed Siraj through four dot balls against Moeen, so keen are they for the home boy to get to three figures. Do England have a party pooper in their ranks? A fierce cut off Leach and the hard ball flies away to take him into the 90s, but can’t get a single and now Siraj is on strike to Moeen again…

2.55pm: Can Ashwin ton up?

The full face of the bat is on show as R Ashwin sends one down the ground•BCCI

R Ashwin is rumbling on, looking to score a hundred and take a five-for in the same Test for the third time (he’s done it previously in Mumbai and Antigua) – but he’s going to need Mohammed Siraj to hang around and keep him company, after Ishant Shama skied a hack at Jack Leach to be ninth man out. An Ash-ton would go down well at Chepauk, you suspect…

2.50pm: The immutable law of Sod

2.15pm: Tea

R Ashwin and Virat Kohli put on a 96-run stand•BCCI

India 329 and 2 for 8 (Ashwin 68*, Ishant 0*) lead England 134 by 416 runs
India extended England’s period of detention in the field as they reached tea eight down and sitting atop an imposing lead. Virat Kohli and R Ashwin both scored half-centuries during a 96-run stand that kept the tourists toiling through much of the afternoon session.Ashwin, on his home ground, was the aggressor, outscoring his captain as batting became easier against the softer ball. Kohli was first to fifty, tucking a single off Moeen Ali, and Ashwin got there a few overs later when cutting Olly Stone for four – this was Ashwin’s first Test half-century since 2017, and the sixth time he has done so in the same match in which he claimed a five-for.Kohli had looked secure as a bank vault, but fell to Moeen for the second time in the match, lbw despite a review. Moeen also removed Kuldeep Yadav to pick up the eighth wicket of his comeback Test, but Ashwin remained unbeaten as India pressed on with plenty of time in which to begin the tourists’ second-innings examination.

1.50pm: Mo-mentum

If England can take anything from this game (and we await their efforts with the bat second time around), then a proper Test workout for Moeen Ali would be right up there. For the second time in the match he is one away from a five-wicket haul, having trapped Kuldeep Yadav lbw to leave India eight down. Moeen has got through more than 50 overs, as well as dismissing Virat Kohli twice, which ought to do plenty for his rhythm and confidence for the rest of the series. That Kuldeep wicket drew him level with Sydney Barnes for England, and puts him within sight of Jim Laker on 193.

1.34pm: Kohli Mo-ly Part Deux!

What was I saying? The pin-drop moment for Moeen Ali again, as he wins a decision against Virat Kohli! Trapped on the back foot, and up goes Nitin Menon’s finger… Kohli wasn’t convinced, with a bit more justification this time, but ball-tracking upheld the on-field call and India’s captain heads off for a pristine 62. Interesting to note it was Menon who told Kohli off for running on the pitch earlier in the innings, and got a spiky response. One to keep in mind when you’re hoping for “umpire’s call” in future.

1.30pm: Becalmed

Virat Kohli rocks back and plays late•BCCI

The tenor of this contest has changed completely in the hour or so after lunch. India’s lead is approaching 400, the 65 overs-old ball isn’t doing much for the spinners, and England have resorted to Stuart Broad bowling 130kph/80mph legcutters with Ben Foakes standing up to the stumps. It’s impressive skill from both, though kind of sums up England’s failings in this match at the same time.

1.20pm: Very very special

1.05pm: England expects

Jack Leach offered England reasons to smile on the third morning•BCCI

Spoiler alert: England have already lost this Test. But what did you think of their efforts with the ball this morning?
I thought they reflected their efforts throughout: there were lots of good balls but too many bad. India scored more than a hundred in a session. While some of that, no doubt, was due to good batting, there were far more loose balls than India’s spinners will be bowling later in the day. To be fair, Moeen, in particular, has come into this game without the requisite preparation. Sometimes it’s shown. The frustrating thing is that the good balls, from Moeen and Leach, have been very, very good. But life’s not just about what we do, is it? It’s about what we don’t do. And you can’t bowl this many full-tosses and keep a team under pressure.Moeen’s economy is looking a bit better, and he’ll improve for the workout, you’d think. But the standout performer was the man behind the stumps
I think we sometimes forget what really good wicketkeeping looks like. We’ve been accustomed to lower standards, with teams favouring the ability of keepers to score runs. So Ben Foakes has provided a reminder of the difference a top-class keeper can make. He has been magnificent. And without him, three of those dismissals taken in the first session (the run-out and the two stumpings) probably wouldn’t have happened. Imagine that impact extended over a whole series. And it wasn’t just against the spinners: he stood up to Stuart Broad, too. And he was England’s top-scorer in the first innings. It’s absurd he isn’t in the side as a first choice. Speaking of his batting… What sort of approach should England take when their turn comes? They have a snowball’s chance of chasing/blocking for two days, but there’s the rest of the series to think about
I’m not sure about the idea that you have to take ‘an approach.’ You bat. And part of batting, is playing the ball on its merits and earning the right to face the poor ball. The one thing we have seen is that batting gets easier. If they can get through the first 25 overs, the next 55 will be more comfortable. So Sibley and co just need to bat. There’s no hurry. Yes, you might want to hit the bowler off their length, but you have to be aware that, with the ball bouncing more than normal, the top-edge is a major risk. And you have to be aware that singles and strike-rotation can be as effective as boundaries. Virat is providing a master-class in all this at present. Let’s be clear: England have hit the iceberg in this game. They are going down. But it is an opportunity to learn against this attack going into the second half of the series. If the want an example, consider the Alastair Cook century in Ahmedabad in 2012. Sure, England lost. But it sowed the seeds for the victory in Mumbai.

12.57pm: Allrounder Ash

R Ashwin hit a fifty to go with his five-for in the game•BCCI

And that’s a half-century for R Ashwin, too, from just 64 balls! He gets there with a crabby cut for four as Olly Stone tries to rough him up with short stuff. Sixth time he has scored fifty and taken a five-for in a Test, behind only Ian Botham and Shakib Al Hasan. Nice touch at the end of the over as he raises a hand to the crowd and gets the love right back… The going has been easier since lunch, Inda’s seventh-wicket stand once again emphasising that batsmen can succeed on this surface.Shiva Jayaraman writes: “If anyone is wondering why Virat Kohli and R Ashwin have looked more comfortable against spinners than the other batsmen earlier in the day: this pitch has offered more to spinners when the balls has been relatively new. In the first 30 overs with the new ball, spinners have taken 12 wickets in the match at an average of 17.58 runs per dismissal. After the 30th over, they have managed just eight wickets at double that average, of 35.62 (till the 56th over of India’s second innings).”And when you lose five wickets before the 30th over, as England did in their first innings, it can make it pretty hard to compete.

12.36pm: Kohli fifty

Virat Kohli has raised his bat for the second time in the series, this time with a crowd in to acknowledge his efforts. His focus has been unbreakable as India push England deeper into the dirt, mixing ironclad defence with the occasional flourish – a rattling on drive against Leach before lunch stood out, and he has also unfurled the cover drive off Moeen’s bowling again, confident that it won’t bring his downfall after shifting his guard across to face the offspinner. The middle session has tended to be quieter in this Test so far, and Kohli won’t be giving it away when there are runs (and psychological points) to be scored.

12.25pm: Jolly good Foakes!

Isn’t it nice to have spectators at the game?

11.35am: Lunch

Ollie Pope puts in a dive to catch out Ajinkya Rahane•BCCI

Five wickets fell during the morning session on day three at Chepauk as India built themselves a comfortable cushion ahead of an expected trial by spin for the tourists. England scrapped valiantly, with two wickets apiece for Jack Leach and Moeen Ali and some fine work behind the stumps by Ben Foakes, but they were left staring at an nigh-insurmountable deficit as Virat Kohli guided his side to lunch six down.England claimed a wicket in the first over the day, Cheteshwar Pujara slightly unfortunate to be run out after trying to regain his ground only for his bat to get stuck in the pitch. Foakes then pulled off a brace of stumpings to remove Rohit Sharma and Rishabh Pant, before Moeen had Ajinkya Rahane caught at short leg and Axar Patel lbw. But R Ashwin played positively, with liberal use of the sweep, to score 34 from 38 and add an unbroken half-century stand with his captain that swelled India’s lead above 350.

11.20am: Chennai of the tiger

Virat Kohli had a steadying effect on India’s innings•BCCI

Virat Kohli has played with steely intent in India’s second innings – no chance of him getting bowled playing an expansive drive this time around. He took 20 balls to get off the mark (and off a pair) but has looked virtually impregnable since, which is quite something on this surface. With R Ashwin playing his shots at the other end, India have pushed their lead on towards 350. Stuart Broad has just surfaced with the ball for the first time since day one, bowling with Foakes standing up to the stumps, only to see Ben Stokes put down a sharp, reaction chance at slip off Ashwin.

11am: This one’s a keeper

2:32

‘I want the batsmen to know that if they leave the crease, they’re gone’

Since we’ve been treated to a display of slick glovework behind the stumps from an English wicketkeeper, here’s one of the all-time great stumpers, Sarah Taylor, speaking to ESPNcricinfo a couple of years ago.

10.45am: Moeen strikes

Axar Patel is next to go, with India’s lead a tick above 300, and Moeen Ali has now picked up six wickets on his return to Test cricket after 18 months out of the side. He spoke before play today about how he thought he had bowled “better as the days wore on” and his enjoyment at bowling Virat Kohli for a duck in the first innings: “Pretty happy with that wicket.” He also said that England would need to keep fighting, despite facing defeat in this game, with two Tests still to play.”It’s been tough. You never want to make excuses. But I haven’t played any games. Training has been difficult as I ripped my finger a few weeks ago, so I couldn’t really bowl too much in the build up to the game. When you play games you get better. Bowling in the nets is completely different to bowling in games and being under pressure. I felt like it’s got better as the game has gone on.”We just need to fight. It’s going to be tough for us to win or even draw the game. It doesn’t mean we’re going to give up. We need to take the game as long as we can. Put in a performance we can take into the next game. We need to show some fight with the ball and the bat. The toss is massive here. The different between the sides was Rohit’s innings. It was fantastic and he took the game away from us.”

10.20am: Moving on, moving on

Moeen Ali accounted for Ajinkya Rahane•BCCI

England have their fourth wicket of the morning, Ajinkya Rahane caught at short leg by the diving Ollie Pope. That’s the seventh time Moeen has dismissed Rahane in Tests, second only to Nathan Lyon. India, though, are sitting on a 280-plus lead and might already be thinking about how quickly they can finish England off…

10.15am: Foakes hero

Birthday boy Ben Foakes is doing his best to blow out India’s candles on the third morning in Chennai. He now has two stumpings to go with a run-out, and the last of the three was the best of the lot – unsighted after Rishabh Pant charged down at Leach, only for the ball to go explode off the surface and beat his wild swing, Foakes collected down the leg side and applied the rubber stamp with the efficiency of a post office clerk. He missed one yesterday, but now has three stumpings in the match – the first time an England wicketkeeper has done so in men’s Tests since Alan Knott in 1968. The man Foakes replaced in the side for this match, Jos Buttler, has one stumping in 30 Tests as keeper (completed last month in Galle).

9.45am: And heeeerrrre’s Rishabh

Ben Foakes has picked up two stumpings in the Test•BCCI

This time the third umpire sides with Foakes, as Rohit Sharma is stumped after dragging his back foot over the line (pulling down Rohit’s home Test average to a mere 80.52). Excellent hands from Foakes, who turns 28 today and has earned himself an extra slice of cake – the delivery from Jack Leach came through at almost shoulder height, but the keeper took it and smoothly whipped off the bails in one movement. India’s response to two early wickets has been to send in Rishabh Pant above Ajinkya Rahane, to take the attack back to England.

9.35am: Heeeerrrre’s Virat (on a pair)

It’s been hard enough for most batsmen on this pitch, but Cheteshwar Pujara has lost his wicket in most unfortunate fashion to start the day, run out in the first over by short leg after dropping his bat trying to regain his ground. Although, as Sunny Gavaskar has just said on commentary (with tongue firmly in cheek), “you have to blame the pitch” after Pujara’s bat jammed the crease line but not it, with Ben Foakes collecting Ollie Pope’s throw to break the stumps before the lunging batsman could get his foot back. Time for India’s captain to have another crack.

9.30am: #PoliteEnquries

What better way to start the day than a fresh, hot injection of George and Raunak into your eyeballs?

9.20am: Signed, sealed… delivered?

Ajinkya Rahane completes a diving catch to see the end of Moeen Ali•BCCI

Hello again, folks. Day three is often moving day of a Test – but you sense this one has already unloaded the van and is getting comfy in its new surroundings. Pretty much everything India have touched has turned to gold this time around in Chennai, and they will be backing themselves to wrap up a series-levelling win at some point later today or tomorrow. England, barring Headingley-plus-plus miracles, know this game is probably beyond them… but there’s still a series to fight for, battles to be won and lost.

Eoin Morgan: 'Shakib Al Hasan gives us a different dynamic in the team'

Knight Riders captain also shows faith in Narine, saying the allrounder can perform “in big moments of the game”

ESPNcricinfo staff10-Apr-20213:35

Eoin Morgan: ‘We’ve made some good recruiting decisions’

The Kolkata Knight Riders captain Eoin Morgan believes the addition of Bangladesh allrounder Shakib Al Hasan has given them a “different dynamic” in the squad, especially considering all the teams will be playing on neutral venues this IPL.”Shakib Al Hasan gives us a different dynamic in the team,” Morgan told kkr.in. “Given that we play at different venues where the conditions change quite a lot, you have a spin-bowling allrounder who had success in international cricket and IPL at different stages. If called upon, he can definitely deliver.”The Knight Riders start their campaign on Sunday against the Sunrisers Hyderabad and will play across Chennai, Mumbai, Ahmedabad and Bengaluru this time. Morgan also said the other fresh additions will add further depth to their squad. Other than Shakib, the Knight Riders bought experienced spinner Harbhajan Singh, middle-order batsman Karun Nair, and allrounders Pawan Negi and Ben Cutting in the recent auction.Related

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“I think considering the possible holes we had in our squad last year, we had a very good auction this year, made some good recruitment decisions and managed to get people on board with a small budget, giving us a lot more depth around the squad,” he said.Shakib could be a like-for-like replacement in the XI for Sunil Narine, who had an underwhelming season with both bat and ball last year, scoring only 121 runs from nine innings while taking five wickets in 10 games. Narine was also reported for a suspect bowling action last IPL, which had placed him on a warning list that could have had him suspended from bowling if he was reported again. But Morgan showed faith in Narine by saying the allrounder could be trusted to perform in crucial situations.”In big moments of the game, particularly last year, you would throw Sunil the ball or you would get him in with the bat because he has been in that situation over and over again; he believes in himself and in the team to go and get through and win that situation,” Morgan said.Having taken up captaincy midway last season, Morgan said his predecessor Dinesh Karthik still offered a lot to the Knight Riders’ set-up and that he continued to provide Morgan with the required support. Karthik cracked 183 runs in six innings in the Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy, India’s domestic T20 tournament, at a strike rate of 157.75, to lead Tamil Nadu to their second domestic T20 title.”He has been in fine form, and he is always one of those players who if you watch him train and particularly bat, he times the ball beautifully and hits the ball further than most of the guys,” Morgan said. “He offers a huge amount of support to me on the pitch and off the field as well. [I am] very grateful that he is in good form and in our team.”Apart from the cushion of the experienced names, Morgan said younger players like Prasidh Krishna and Shubman Gill brought a lot of “confidence” with them, especially by achieving considerable success while representing India in recent months.”If you look at Prasidh and Gill so far, they want to build on that confidence,” he said. “Particularly Gill, coming on the back of winning an away Test-match series in Australia is a huge achievement early in your career. And to have him in your squad on the back of that win is fantastic.”

After IPL postponement, UAE becomes contender for T20 World Cup

IPL 2021 was meant to be a test case for the BCCI to understand if the T20 World Cup could’ve been held in a ‘caravan model’

Nagraj Gollapudi04-May-2021Will the postponement of the IPL have an impact on the 2021 men’s T20 World Cup, scheduled in India later this year?It is clearly too early to say as the fallout from the postponement of the IPL is yet to settle, after the number of cases inside the bubble began to rise over the last few days. But ESPNcricinfo understands that while the ICC continues to monitor the situation in India, the UAE, which has been slotted in as a back-up venue, is now becoming a more realistic contender to host the global tournament.As it stands, the T20 World Cup, comprising 16 countries, is scheduled to be played in India between late October with the final on November 14.The BCCI recently shortlisted nine venues in India, which were proposed to the ICC, the host for global tournaments. An ICC team of experts from the biosafety, events and security wings was scheduled to visit India from April 26 to do an inspection of the venues but was forced to shelve that plan due to the travel ban imposed by the UAE to and from India.Related

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This week India crossed the 20-million mark for positive Covid-19 infections, and has been brought to a standstill by a raging second wave. The numbers were significantly high even in March, when the BCCI announced the IPL schedule comprising of six venues.Unlike in the past where all eight teams played on a home and away basis, this season the BCCI decided the IPL would be played on a caravan model, with two venues in operation at a time and the tournament itself split into four legs. The BCCI was utilizing the IPL as a dry run for the T20 World Cup.However, concerns among overseas players and teams as well as their countries are bound to rise in the wake of the IPL bubble being breached. Several countries had banned travelers, including their own citizens, if they were traveling from India, in addition to imposing stiff quarantine norms.Such measures left the overseas contingent in the IPL uneasy. Two players each from Royals Challengers Bangalore and Rajasthan Royals immediately left the IPL bubble to return home and left many more anxious.The ICC is keen to avoid such a scenario. On March 5, two days before the IPL announced its schedule, Manu Sawhney, the then ICC CEO, had pointed out that the risks associated with organising a 16-team World Cup were “exponentially larger” compared to T20 franchise leagues like the IPL or bilateral cricket.On Tuesday, a senior BCCI official said the T20 World Cup was “too far away” to make a call about whether it will have to move. The status of the pandemic in the country will be the key factor, but the question is how long can the ICC now wait? Normally, the ICC finalises venues at least a year in advance. The other key question for the ICC to determine is whether it can allow crowds into the tournament. The BCCI has said that even if the tournament is moved to the UAE, it will want to run the event, which would mean in case the crowds are allowed, the ticketing revenues will go to the Indian board.From May 1, the Indian government opened vaccination for all adults over 18 years of age. However, currently, India is facing a vaccine shortage with reports stating several states will not be able to procure enough vaccines until June or July. The BCCI did consider vaccinating players at the IPL but were wary of the optics of such a move.While the next formal meeting of the ICC Board is not until its annual conference in July, it is likely the global body will ask members to meet before that to get a sense of how they are feeling and discuss options.

Craig Overton takes timely four-for as Gloucestershire, Somerset draw

Both sides have a strong chance of qualifying for Division One

Paul Edwards23-May-2021
The weather forecast is bleak beyond contention yet the cricketers are still practising in their morning nets. Most days in the summer and many in the winter you will find them there or indoors, preparing not merely for the next few hours but for the next game, the next week, the next season. They say Tom Graveney had a net every day of the season; an artist ensuring he could still draw a perfect circle. And here are Graveney’s heirs on a ground he once called home. One feels strangely honoured to watch them on this dull Sunday morning when there’s not a hope in hell of three sessions’ play…But it was not just professionalism and a hard-earned distrust of meteorology that informed the players’ warm-ups at the County Ground. There remains every chance that both these counties will qualify for Division One of the County Championship in late summer. If so, they will not meet again in another West Country derby but will play only the other four teams in the top division. However, they will carry through half the number of points they gained in the two matches they have played against each other in the conference stage. This meant that when Craig Overton pinned Tom Smith with the seventh ball of the day the bonus point Somerset gained for taking three wickets will be worth half a point at the sharp end of the summer, always provided, of course, that Gloucestershire also qualify for the top division.And Somerset’s bowlers were not finished. Two balls after Smith departed Tom Lace was strangled down the leg side, which, to judge from his reaction, was more or less what the former Middlesex batsman would have liked to have done to Steve O’Shaughnessy the instant he saw the finger go up. Next over Kraigg Brathwaite clipped Josh Davey very low to short midwicket where Tom Abell took a good catch to his left. The trap could not have been more obvious had Somerset’s captain carried a large sign round his neck with the words: “This is a trap” written upon it. Baldrick would probably have considered the ruse beneath his dignity. Either way, Gloucestershire were 21 for 5, Somerset needed one more wicket for another point and nobody needed to visit the moral maze to guess which team welcomed the rain that began a few minutes later.Related

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In truth they were the lightest showers, psiloi compared to the hoplites that rolled in later. The umpires went out to the talk to the ground staff, although maybe O’Shaughnessy was just keeping out of Lace’s way, and cricket began again at noon. Only eight balls could be squeezed into this session but even they were significant. Ian Cockbain played on to the last of them, thus giving Somerset their fifth bonus point of the match and Overton his fourth wicket with the new ball, a fact that Chris Silverwood will have noted with interest. There was little to detain any of us thereafter. An early lunch was called and the abandonment was announced at 3.10. Having beaten Somerset at Taunton, Chris Dent’s side will take 16 points into Division One compared with their opponents’ 9.5, always providing both teams get that far.But a very wet game did produce one undisputed victor: Gloucestershire have not just accommodated spectators on these extraordinary days; they have made them welcome and that warmth has extended to the media and the rest of cricket’s caravan. Any necessary regulation has been light touch and enforced with the greatest good humour. As much as the spectators who turned up to watch the match, the Gloucestershire staff who made it possible for them to do so are a credit to the game.

Jenny Gunn, Katherine Brunt shine as Diamonds polish off Lightning

Lightning narrowly fall short in chase having earlier reduced visitors to 50 for 6

ECB Reporters' Network31-May-2021The Northern Diamonds bounced back from defeat in their opening match by beating Lightning by six runs in the Rachael Heyhoe Flint Trophy at Kibworth in Leicestershire.Past and present England stars were the match-winners for Diamonds, veteran allrounder Jenny Gunn top scoring with 40 as Diamonds recovered from 50 for 6 to total 151 before pace bowler Katherine Brunt took 4 for 23 as Lightning fell just short, bowled out for 145 in the 49th over.Kathryn Bryce took 4 for 16 for Lightning but Gunn’s 81-run seventh-wicket partnership with batting allrounder Alex MacDonald, who made 39, was ultimately the decisive passage of play, 35-year-old former Lightning player Gunn hitting six boundaries.Put in after Lightning won the toss, the Diamonds began badly. Kathryn Bryce’s second ball removed Lauren Winfield-Hill, who made 110 in the Diamonds’ opener against the Central Sparks, via a catch at cover and the medium-pacer soon had captain Hollie Armitage caught at midwicket, with new-ball partner Sophie Munro striking another big blow when England star Nat Sciver drove her straight to mid-off.Brunt’s leading edge gave Bryce an easy return catch and when Teresa Graves bowled Sterre Kallis and Ami Campbell was caught at mid-on in the same over, Diamonds were six down and struggling.Left-arm spinner Kirstie Gordon, who took four wickets against champions the Southern Vipers on Saturday, went wicketless this time and it took the returning Bryce to account for Gunn via a top-edged pull to midwicket.With the partnership broken, Diamonds lost their last four wickets for 20. Yvonne Graves had Beth Langston caught at mid-off, fellow offspinner Lucy Higham bowled MacDonald for 39 and followed up by having Katie Levick caught behind.Lightning were rocked by a brilliant opening burst by Brunt, who knocked back opener Sarah Bryce’s off-stump for a second ball duck – the second in as many matches for Lightning’s top scorer in 2020 – and had Kathryn edging behind.Abbey Freeborn helped England opener Tammy Beaumont add 44 for the third wicket but then Lightning lost three wickets for six runs in 11 balls to be 57 for 5. Freeborn was caught behind off bat and pad, Higham chipped Levick’s legspin straight to extra cover before Beaumont was given out leg before to Sciver.Lightning took the result closer than expected from that point but the Diamonds attack kept chipping away. Shachi Pai was lbw to Levick and Brunt returned to have South African Michaela Kirk leg before.Late runs from Gordon and both Graves sisters kept Lightning in the chase but after Yvonne Gordon holed out to mid-off off Brunt, Langston had Gordon caught behind to clinch victory in the 49th over.

Jack Leach turns screw on Surrey as Somerset confirm top-flight progress

Spinner takes five after Stoneman, Burns fifties to open prospect of final-day win

ECB Reporters' Network13-Jul-2021Jack Leach took five wickets as Somerset celebrated securing their place in the first division by putting Surrey under pressure on the third day at the Kia Oval.The England left-arm spinner finished with 5 for 42 from 33 including 19 maidens as Surrey reached 239 for 8 in reply to Somerset’s 429.Hampshire’s failure to secure maximum batting points against Gloucestershire ensured Somerset’s place in the top-flight when the LV= Insurance County Championship concludes in September, and Leach bowled outstandingly to give them an outside chance of finishing Group 2 with a victory.Surrey still require 41 runs to avoid the follow-on after Somerset chipped away once opening pair Rory Burns and Mark Stoneman had been parted with the score on 98 in the last over before lunch.It was their other slow left-armer, Roelof van der Merwe, who made the breakthrough when Burns top-edged a sweep shortly after reaching 50 which included a reverse-sweep for six off Leach and six fours.It was about the only occasion when Leach was collared as settled into a good rhythm, providing control and getting the ball to turn on a slow surface. In six previous Championship games this season he bowled 130 overs in total and clearly relished three long spells here.Stoneman had played nicely for his 67, with ten fours, when he was deceived by Leach’s arm ball with the total on 136 before Leach picked up the key wicket of Hashim Amla. The South African faced 278 balls for an unbeaten 37 against Hampshire last week and was settling in for another long vigil when he was caught and bowled off a leading edge for 16 from 66 balls.Leach switched to the pavilion end to snap up Jamie Smith who was caught behind off one that turned just before tea. Immediately after the resumption Ravi Ashwin edged his first ball to second slip and Leach had his five-for when Devon Conway ran back from mid-wicket to take a great catch over his shoulder off Ryan Patel’s top-edged sweep.Somerset delayed taking the new ball, preferring to let Leach and van der Merwe probe away, but when they did Jordan Clark and Rikki Clarke batted sensibly to put on 42 in 21 overs. Clark had made 33 when van der Merwe, who gave Leach good support with 3 for 54, returned and had him caught at second slip before bowling Jamie Overton around his legs in the last over.

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