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.

All you wanted to know about Riley Meredith, one of the most expensive uncapped players in IPL history

The Australian quick was bought by Punjab Kings for INR 8 crore (US$ 1.096 million approx.)

Matt Roller18-Feb-2021Early days
Meredith made his professional debut playing for a Cricket Australia XI against Pakistan in early 2017, and played a handful of games for Tasmania in the 2017-18 season. An injury to Tymal Mills gave him an opportunity to play in the semi-final and final of the BBL that year – the first two T20s of his career – in an attack also containing Jofra Archer.Breakthrough season
The 2018-19 period proved to be a breakthrough home summer for Meredith across formats. He took 27 wickets for Tasmania in eight Sheffield Shield appearances, and snared 16 in the BBL as the Hobart Hurricanes reached the semi-finals. By that stage, he was already being tipped for international selection by Warne, who has proved to be a vocal advocate of Meredith’s talents over the last three years.Australia call
A side strain limited Meredith to just six BBL appearances in 2019-20, though he bowled at high pace when he did make it on to the park, taking ten wickets with an economy rate of just 6.68 across the season, and he dismissed both David Warner and Steven Smith in a Marsh Cup game against New South Wales. By that stage, his performances had caught the eyes of Australia’s selectors, and he won a call-up to the expanded limited-overs squad to tour England in 2020, though was not afforded an opportunity to play.Recent form
Meredith again impressed with his pace and bounce in the 2020-21 BBL, taking 16 wickets and maintaining an economy rate of 7.82 despite bowling a significant chunk of his overs in the initial four-over powerplay and often returning at the death. He has been named in Australia’s squad for their T20I series in New Zealand later this month.IPL hopes
Meredith expressed his ambitions of playing in the IPL last year. “It’s the premier domestic T20 comp in the world,” he said on a BBC podcast. “The best players are playing in it and if you get an opportunity to play in it, you’re definitely grabbing it with both hands. If I got an opportunity at some stage it would be awesome to get over there and play.”Off the field
Meredith is instantly recognisably after growing a Fred Spofforth-style moustache during the lockdown. He owns a greyhound named Elton.The expert view
“There’s been a bit of chat around him for a couple of domestic seasons now. He bowls fast. I think that’s a great thing about him, he can just run in and express himself with the ball now. If he gets his chance in Australian colours I think he’ll take it with both hands.”

Stats – New Zealand fall to their joint-lowest T20I total

Also: four openers, four runs, and other eye-popping stats from New Zealand’s capitulation in Dhaka

Sampath Bandarupalli01-Sep-20211 – Bangladesh, on Wednesday, registered their first-ever T20I win against New Zealand. New Zealand had got the better of Bangladesh in each of their 10 T20I meetings before this match – New Zealand’s 10-0 record against Bangladesh was the best unbeaten head-to-head for any team in this format.60 – New Zealand’s total of 60 all out in this game is their joint-lowest total in the T20I format. New Zealand were also bundled out for 60 in Chattogram against Sri Lanka during the 2014 World T20.60 – Their 60 all out is also the lowest by any side in men’s T20Is against Bangladesh. The previous lowest total against Bangladesh was 62 all-out last month by Australia, also in Dhaka. Only one team has got a lower total in men’s T20Is in Bangladesh – 39 by Netherlands, against Sri Lanka, in 2014 in Chattogram.1 – Number of men’s T20I totals by Full Member nations that were lower than New Zealand’s 60. West Indies’ 45 all out against England in 2019 is still the lowest. New Zealand’s 60 is also the lowest total by any Full Member team in men’s T20Is while batting first; West Indies’ 71 all out was the previous such lowest total, scored against England in 2019.122 – Runs conceded by Bangladesh across their last two T20Is – they had rolled Australia over for 62 in their previous T20I appearance. These are the second-fewest runs conceded by a Full Member team in successive matches in men’s T20Is. The fewest is 116 by England in 2019, when they had West Indies for 45 and 71 in consecutive games.4 – Runs scored overall by opening batters in this match, the joint-lowest in a men’s T20I where all four batted. A game between Argentina and Brazil in 2019 also had an aggregate of just four runs from the openers.Related

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3.83 – Combined run rate of the two teams in the first T20I, the fourth-lowest in any completed men’s T20I and the lowest in a match between two Full Member teams. The previous lowest between two Full Members was 4.61 during a T20I in Port of Spain between West Indies and Zimbabwe in 2010.7 – Runs conceded by Ajaz Patel in his four-over spell, the second-fewest for New Zealand in a men’s T20I. The most economical four-over effort for New Zealand came from Daniel Vettori, who gave away just six runs against Bangladesh in 2010.2 – Cole McConchie became only the second New Zealand man to take a wicket with the first ball of his T20I career. Lockie Ferguson was the first to do so during his debut against Bangladesh in 2017. McConchie is also the fourth man from New Zealand to take a wicket with the first ball of his international career, joining Dennis Smith, Matt Henderson and Andrew Mathieson.

Here's your Ashes summary: England lose (again), let the beheadings begin

It’s that familiar time of decade again. We know the drill

Alan Gardner 15-Jan-2022″Football is a simple game: 22 men chase a ball for 90 minutes and at the end, the Germans win.” So said chucklesome crisp salesman, TV presenter and former goalhanger Gary Lineker, whose famous aphorism came to mind during England men’s ongoing tour down under. The Ashes are a straightforward concept: several dozen players and support staff traipse around a country playing Test cricket for six weeks and at the end, England conduct a review on where it all went wrong.That is certainly true for England’s efforts in Australia, where they have worse survival prospects than a box of snow cones left out on the Nullarbor Plain. Never mind that Australia has a reputation for its deadly fauna, after another bleak trip on which the Ashes were decided in just 12 days of competition (less time than England spent in quarantine during the build-up), you wouldn’t be surprised to tune in and find out that Jonny Bairstow had been ruled out of the final Test as a result of being savagely mauled by a quokka.England arrived, as always, with high hopes of winning – or at least not embarrassing themselves, their countrymen and their forefathers (again). But then Rory Burns was bowled behind his legs while doing the polka to the very first ball of the series, and to be frank, it would have saved us all a lot of bother if the old “generate innings” option had been available for the rest.Related

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It was a familiar crushing blow for fans following back home, and after England had performed so well in their warm-ups. By which we mean, lost three and drawn two out of six home Tests against New Zealand and India during the northern summer. Those two series were “perfect preparation” for the Ashes, in the words of Chris Silverwood, England’s head coach, who is beginning to look like an example of the Peter principle in action (although, in fairness, his side certainly have become accustomed to being beaten).”There are positives to come out of this,” Silverwood added in the wake of England being bowled out for 68 on day three at the MCG, to barely concealed incredulity in most quarters. Although given he became the latest member of the touring party to be forced into isolation a few days later, maybe he was just referring to Covid-19 tests.Then again, Australia have been dragging most Englishmen down to their respective levels of incompetence for some time now. Joe Root’s stellar 2021 with the bat was made to look all the more impressive by how small England’s pond has become – but the Australian attack provided a reminder that there’s always a bigger fish. Root, who has an otherwise decent record as captain, has now lost more times in Australia than Novak Djokovic’s immigration lawyer.

The worry is who Virat might end up targeting next, just to get the competitive juices flowing. Big Pharma? The United Nations? Greta Thunberg?

To add to the ignominy, Root’s opposite number, Pat Cummins, has even started being nice to England. “It’s been really tough for them,” he said. “We are really thankful they are out here as part of the series.” To which the Light Roller would reply: “Of course you are, Pat. The Poms weren’t going to beat themselves sat on the sofa back home, were they?” On second thoughts, maybe don’t answer that – just finish the job and we can allow the ritualistic bloodletting to commence.

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While Englishness is destiny in the Ashes, across the Tasman Bangladesh didn’t so much as buck a trend as briefly flip the whole space-time continuum on its coconut. Despite their justified reputation for travelling about as well as mango lassi, Mominul Haque’s side played the perfect Test to beat New Zealand on their own patch – where they hadn’t won so much as a game of tiddlywinks before. That is, No. 9-ranked Bangladesh, with five away Test wins in their history, casually knocking over the reigning world Test champions, unbeaten at home in five years. It didn’t take long for the elastic band of reality to snap back hard, however – and you could tell which way things were going when Ebadot Hossein, the hero of Mount Maunganui, somehow saw an outside edge end up being dropped for seven. Bangladesh were beaten by an innings inside three days in Christchurch, and the universe settled back into its groove shortly after.

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Virat Kohli has always – how shall we put this? – liked a bit of spice. An excuse to get riled up. The opportunity to gain the edge in a contest. But signs have begun to emerge on India’s tour of South Africa that he needs a bigger and bigger dose to get by. Having already become embroiled in a ruck with his own board, following the selectors’ decision to remove him from the ODI captaincy, Kohli finished the Test series by escalating a garden-variety DRS controversy into a head to head with the host broadcaster – and, by extension, the country of South Africa itself. Never mind the stump mics picking up sledging, now they’re being used to give feedback. The worry, of course, is who Virat might end up targeting next, just to get the competitive juices flowing. Big Pharma? The United Nations? Greta Thunberg? Never mind who’s in charge of the nuclear football, it’s Kohli’s buttons we need to be wary of pressing.

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.

West Indies crashed and burned in the 2021 World Cup. How do they turn their T20I fortunes around?

Their six-led approach has been in the firing line, but their selection was poor, and the bowling has not been up to scratch either

Matt Roller21-Jan-2022In five and a half years, West Indies’ men’s T20 team went from boom to bust.Carlos Brathwaite’s four sixes and Marlon Samuels’ shirtless celebrations felt like a distant memory, a pre-pandemic fever dream, when they crashed out of the 2021 World Cup in the Super 12s, with four defeats from five games and an unwanted blot on the legacy of their legendary generation of T20 players.Kieron Pollard, who retained the captaincy despite their early exit, suggested his side needed to “bin it and move on” after they were bowled out for 55 in their opening game against England. But subsequent defeats to South Africa, Sri Lanka and Australia – and a last-gasp win against a poor Bangladesh side – ensured that the inquest into their shortcomings would need to dig deeper.Related

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  • The six-hitting team (2019)

There were two key questions to address: how could a team containing so many short-form greats bow out in such ignominy? And how might they now go about putting things right in the 11 months between their debacle and the start of the first round of the 2022 World Cup in Australia?Six or bust is not always the best formula
From 2012 to 2016, West Indies won two World Cups, with a semi-final exit sandwiched in between. While they were a strong bowling side throughout, their defining quality was a revolutionary batting approach.Conventional cricketing wisdom highlighted the need to minimise the number of dot balls a team chewed up. West Indies recognised that the runs their power-hitters could score by focusing on hitting sixes far outweighed the marginal gains from running singles. “People say we don’t rotate our strike well,” Daren Sammy, their captain at the time, said before the 2016 final. “But first thing is, you have to stop us from hitting boundaries.”After their early exit in 2021, the narrative was that West Indies’ six-or-dot approach had been found out. “They’re playing a dated brand of T20 cricket,” Daren Ganga, who captained a Trinidad and Tobago side featuring Pollard, Lendl Simmons and Dwayne Bravo to the Stanford 20/20 title in 2008, said after West Indies’ defeat to Sri Lanka.”We had personnel that could do that [power-hitting] in 2016,” Samuel Badree, West Indies’ most economical bowler in the 2012 and 2016 campaigns, says. “Opposition teams weren’t quite ready for that and they didn’t plan for that back then. We caught a lot of teams by surprise. That worked in our favour, in addition to the smaller grounds and the conditions that were on offer.”When you fast-forward five years, teams were better prepared. We’ve seen other teams [England and Australia, for example] who have copied that style but they’ve added the elements of strike rotation and lower dot-ball percentage, while we were stuck in that same old mould from 2016. We are quite inflexible and have one style: hit or miss. That might win you one or two games, but you’re not going to win tournaments like that anymore.”West Indies hugely emphasised running singles in training ahead of the World Cup but it didn’t quite pay off•Indranil Mukherjee/AFP/Getty ImagesIn the run-up to last year’s World Cup, West Indies had the rare chance to play T20Is with the vast majority of their best players available. They had 17 home games between March and August – 14 of them in a six-week window – and while their final series against Pakistan was badly affected by weather, Cricket West Indies (CWI) was clearly prioritising World Cup preparations.Pollard emphasised certain areas of improvement. Before their series against South Africa in Grenada they held two net sessions in which the batters were encouraged to work on their “manoeuvring game… just rotating the ball”, and were penalised for hitting boundaries. The intention, Pollard said, was “to keep our strength our strength, and work on our weakness”. “For the last couple of months, everything was about ‘singles, singles, singles’,” Nicholas Pooran, West Indies’ vice-captain and most promising young batter, said before the World Cup.But data from the World Cup suggested the lessons had not been learned. About 2.6 balls West Indies faced every over were dots; from the Super 12s stage onwards, only Scotland and Namibia faced more. That figure was only a fraction higher than it had been in 2016, but their six-hitting frequency dropped sharply over the 2016 tournament. West Indies hit as many sixes as their opposition in all five Super 12s games, and more in three of them; they also faced more dots than their opponents in every game.Notably, their attacking intent had hardly changed: according to CricViz, West Indies played attacking shots to 56% of the balls they faced in 2016, compared to 57% five years later. The contrast in their results over the two World Cups does not mean that stacking a batting line-up with power-hitters has become a flawed strategy. Instead, it illustrates that it is a high-variance approach, and in a tournament as short as a World Cup, it can lead to extreme results.

Conditions in the UAE were a major factor. All four of West Indies’ defeats came in either Dubai or Abu Dhabi, where the boundaries were significantly longer than those they had encountered in India half a decade before. Back then, a 3-0 series defeat to Pakistan in the Emirates barely six months after their win in Kolkata had served to illustrate their tendency to struggle on slower pitches. While the involvement of many West Indians in the Abu Dhabi T10 should have helped them adjust to conditions, that tournament’s format does little to help with what Ganga calls “softer skills”.Ian Bishop, the broadcaster whose commentary will forever be associated with Brathwaite’s heroics in 2016, agrees that the change of venue from India to the UAE did not suit West Indies. “They have to evolve, they have to be versatile,” he says. “[At certain venues] it may not always be sixes, it may be fours. It may just be scoring off more deliveries.”Personnel was another key problem. West Indies opted to stick with the veterans who had brought them so much success, but the delay of a year to the tournament left some senior players clinging on. Chris Gayle, whose personality is ill suited to life in a Covid bubble, contributed 45 runs in five innings before his not-quite-retirement at 42. He started the tournament at No. 3, influenced by his success there in the IPL for Punjab Kings, but moved up to open the batting after two games. “That really threw the entire planning out the way,” Badree says. Lendl Simmons played the tournament’s worst innings, a 35-ball 16 against South Africa that left the finishers with too much to do.Lendl Simmons’ innings, and the subsequent inclusion of Roston Chase, who made his T20 international debut in the third game of a World Cup on the back of two solid CPL seasons, laid bare West Indies’ failure to identify a long-term replacement for Samuels, Player of the Match in the 2012 and 2016 finals and the glue that held their batting line-up together.No bang for buck: Chris Gayle made 45 runs at a strike rate of 91.83 in the 2021 World Cup•Gianluigi Guerica/AFP/Getty ImagesAnd yes, teams were better-prepared against West Indies’ batting line-up in 2021, making clear plans against their hitters and sticking to them. South Africa posted a fielder almost directly behind the umpire to counter Pollard’s strength down the ground, a tactic often used by MS Dhoni for Chennai Super Kings against Mumbai Indians. Pooran had shown his strength hitting with the spin in the IPL; in the World Cup, he faced only three balls of legspin.”Those analytics and match-ups evolved in that five-year period – where we didn’t have any T20 World Cups – to a large extent,” Bishop says. “It’s become a great part of the game now, and that’s another part of the game where the West Indies are going to have to get up to speed.”The warning signs had been there. The wider trend in T20 cricket away from yorkers and towards hard lengths had negated West Indies’ historic strength of hitting down the ground. Lockie Ferguson had exposed that by blasting them out with his pace at Eden Park just under a year before the 2021 tournament. Few players in the West Indies squad play the ramp or the reverse sweep regularly, making it relatively easy to plan against them.A batting line-up that looked ferocious on paper was feeble in practice. As Pollard made clear after last week’s ODI series defeat to Ireland: “We have a batting problem in the Caribbean at the moment.”And the bowling was not all that hot either

There was no doubt that West Indies’ batting cost them their first two games in the World Cup: no side has ever defended 55 in a full-length T20 international, and their 143 for 8 against South Africa was at least 15 runs short of par.Leggie Hayden Walsh Jr played nine of West Indies’ 17 games leading in to the World Cup, but he only played two matches in the tournament•Francois Nel/Getty ImagesBut their final two defeats, against Sri Lanka and Australia in Abu Dhabi, reflected the extent to which their bowling attack had declined: West Indies leaked 350 runs in 36.2 overs across the two games, taking only five wickets. In 2016, their bowling attack was strong enough to defend a par score more often than not; in 2021, the batters knew they needed to score significantly above par for the bowlers to have a chance of defending it.”That didn’t happen,” Badree says. “The expectation was that the batting would give the bowlers that sort of cushion. Maybe that put an additional burden on the batting – and we saw what happened with that throughout the tournament. At the moment, we don’t have those types of bowlers in this format who are wicket-takers, we have more defensive bowlers. That’s what won us those two titles: we had bowlers who could take wickets during the powerplay, through the middle and at the back end.”From the Super 12s stage onwards, no team took fewer wickets than West Indies’ 16; in 2016, by contrast, they were the tournament’s leading wicket-takers from the Super 10s onwards. Wickets in T20 cricket are more valuable the earlier they come in the innings, but West Indies managed only six in the powerplay across their five matches in 2021 – three of them against an England team batting ultra-aggressively, looking for a net-run-rate boost in pursuit of 56.Mahela Jayawardene, the Mumbai Indians coach who has worked extensively with Pollard, highlighted the lack of a genuine fast bowler and of either a mystery spinner or a wristspinner in the squad, but selection and availability were significant problems. Sunil Narine’s two-year absence from international cricket extended into the World Cup; fitness was cited as the reason for his absence, though there was talk he was not confident about his action passing un-scrutinised. Obed McCoy, the highly rated left-arm seamer, was injured after the England gameHayden Walsh Jr, the legspinner, was clearly not the finished article. But he was selected for nine out of West Indies’ 17 home T20Is heading into the World Cup, and took 12 wickets while conceding 6.87 runs an over. Picking him in only two out of five Super 12s games, while Akeal Hosein, a late replacement in the squad for the injured Fabian Allen, played in all five demonstrated the inconsistency in selection.ESPNcricinfo Ltd”West Indies played close to 18 T20s leading into that World Cup,” Badree says, “but when they selected their final XI in the first game, it said to me that they hadn’t really got what they’d wanted from those games: they didn’t know what their best XI was. Leading in to the next World Cup, we have to use them strategically.”Ravi Rampaul had not played a T20 international for six years before the World Cup but was thrown in at the last minute at the age of 37 on the back of a strong CPL season; he took two wickets in four games. When McCoy was ruled out, he was replaced in the squad by Jason Holder, only a travelling reserve despite consecutive strong IPL seasons. Holder then went straight into the playing XI, leapfrogging Oshane Thomas, who had been part of the original squad.Selectors Roger Harper and Miles Bascombe have since left their roles. Desmond Haynes and Ramnaresh Sarwan, who have replaced them, must make it a priority to ensure that their decision-making is internally consistent.How about a domestic tournament other than the CPL?

After the defeat to Sri Lanka, Pollard expressed his frustration at what he saw as structural issues within West Indies cricket. “It’s something that has plagued us over a period of time, for the last ten years or so: we’ve had sort of the same guys playing T20 and dominating as we go along,” he said. “It’s the end of a generation, but there needs to be a lot of conversation on how you’re going to make the transformation from club cricket, or even CPL, to international cricket, because there’s a big step up.”In particular, Pollard highlighted how, since the start of the CPL in 2013, there has been no intermediary tournament to provide a stepping stone between club level and the CPL. “We need to have [a] tournament other than CPL where we can unearth new talents,” he said. “When we had the Caribbean T20 [which ran from 2010-13, without overseas players], that was an opportunity to bring you talent from different parts of the Caribbean to be able to have the nucleus for this last generation or so… Since CPL has come in, yes it’s a franchise-based system, but we’ve only had the opportunity to recycle the same players over and over again.”The CPL has done Caribbean cricket plenty of good, but in the absence of a domestic T20 competition beneath, West Indies have had problems surfacing good young players•Randy Brooks/CPL T20/ Getty Images”Other countries have a sort of feeder system but we don’t,” Badree says. “That means it’s the same guys you’re seeing year after year: Lendl Simmons, Andre Fletcher, Johnson Charles and these guys. We’re not seeing our young batsmen coming through because they’re not given an opportunity. As it is now, if you’re not known personally to a captain or a coach or an owner, you’re not going to get selected, and young players are suffering because of that.”The age profile of the 2021 World Cup squad reflected Badree’s point: of the 15 players available for the first game against England, only four were in the sweet spot between 26 and 32 where most players can be expected to peak. Of them, only Evin Lewis had more than 60 T20 appearances in his career.That split between the senior players and young talent could be attributed to the lack of a high-quality tournament in the region in the years between 2008 and 2013. While the disgraced Allen Stanford is despised by most West Indians, many players concede that his regional Stanford 20/20 tournaments in 2006 and 2008, and the Superstars team that played England in 2008, had a level of professionalism that had not been seen previously in West Indies limited-overs cricket.The Trinidad and Tobago side captained by Ganga and featuring the likes of Badree, Bravo, Narine, Pollard and Lendl Simmons starred in the Champions League in 2009, and won numerous short-form opportunities around the world as a result. But the generation coming through from 2009 through about 2013 – the likes of Holder, Lewis and Kyle Mayers – cut their teeth in the inter-island Caribbean T20, where a large number of teams and the absence of overseas players meant a wider player pool but a diluted standard.In the years since, the CPL has provided high-quality competition for those who have managed to earn contracts. Introducing a new inter-island competition alongside it would replicate the model seen in, for example, India, Pakistan and England, where the elite-level short-form competition (the IPL, the PSL and the Hundred respectively) is underpinned by a domestic tournament (the Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy, the National T20 Cup and the Vitality Blast), meaning young players have the opportunity to cut their teeth at a lower level before making the step up.In practice West Indian cricket’s financial situation means the imminent introduction of such a tournament is unlikely. Unusually, the CPL bought the rights to host short-form cricket from CWI (then the WICB) in 2013, meaning that any other league would have to be run in partnership with the CPL. While that might be seen to create an unnecessary barrier, the lack of commercial viability is the bigger stumbling block for a secondary league.Though they won the World Cup in India in 2016, later that year West Indies lost 0-3 to Pakistan in the UAE, where the pitches were slower and the boundaries bigger•Francois Nel/Getty ImagesBishop says that while the CPL has been outstanding in revitalising certain facets of the game in the Caribbean, it does not necessarily provide opportunities to unearth young players from the level beneath the franchise system. “In franchise cricket, teams are privately owned and owners are looking for performance, so there is limited room for players to cut their teeth.”We need to have either an academy for CPL to unearth and develop more T20 players, or a feeder system and scouting system throughout the territories to find more young players, including a lot of batsmen, to come into CPL and perform. If you could spend time in a club system in Barbados, Guyana, Trinidad or wherever, there are young players. They just haven’t been given an opportunity to develop as quickly for this particular format.”Bishop cites the example of Justin Greaves, the Barbados batter who made his ODI debut against Ireland last week but, at 27, has faced just 110 balls in his eight-match T20 career. “You want to win the CPL but you also have to look at the bigger picture [which is] the development of West Indies cricket,” Bishop says.There is also a long-standing debate about the merits of West Indian involvement in global T20 leagues, held up as a strength when they were twice World Cup winners but often now framed as a problem. Young players often face a trade-off: should they play across formats for their island or region, developing long-form skills that might transfer into their T20 game, or expose themselves to foreign conditions and new environments, earning significantly more money in the process?”If players are getting offered big money to play in a league here, a league there, and then West Indies have a couple of smaller tours clashing, how do you say to a couple of young men: you forego thousands of dollars, take a chance, and sit here as we build for something?” Bishop says. “These guys – Romario Shepherd, Odean Smith – haven’t earned a great deal of money yet..”The West Indies aren’t a wealthy cricketing nation [but] New Zealand have the same challenges and handle it well. Sri Lanka have the same challenges.”

At the same time, leading West Indies players have lost a competitive advantage. While other boards were initially reluctant to make their players available for global leagues, they have increasingly recognised the benefits, meaning that West Indians no longer dominate the overseas player pools in franchise T20 the way they once did.

As noted in , Freddie Wilde and Tim Wigmore’s history of T20 cricket, the seven players with the most T20 appearances from 2012-16 were all West Indians; from 2017-21, they had only eight of the top 50. Before 2016, West Indian players had been ahead of the curve, picking up on trends and sharing information with their international team-mates, but since then, others have caught up.Rebuilding for 2022 (and 2024)

West Indies have nine months to turn their T20 fortunes around before this year’s World Cup in Australia, a task akin to running a marathon in half an hour. They are due to play 22 T20Is before the tournament starts in mid-October, starting with a five-match series against England in Barbados this week.Their first series after the World Cup ended in a 3-0 defeat to Pakistan last month – though that scoreline is worth taking with a pinch of salt, given the availability crisis in the squad due to a Covid outbreak. Since then, Lewis has been ruled out of the England series due to a positive test, McCoy is injured, and several players, including Shimron Hetmyer, Sherfane Rutherford and Narine are among those who did not meet the fitness criteria.Bishop identifies two players as the key men step up: Pooran and Hetmyer. “They should take centre stage,” he says. “They’ve been invested in, they’ve been around the scene now for however many years, playing in the IPL, playing internationally. They didn’t perform up to what I expected in the World Cup – they weren’t the cause of the poor World Cup, but now, in their mid-20s, is the time for them to stand up and say we can be two of the best players in the world game, following in the footsteps of the players who are the gold standard.”Both players are in their mid-20s and have been involved in the set-up for a similar length of time but are at different stages in their development. Pooran has drifted in and out of form over the last two years but is the T20I team’s vice-captain and one of the world’s most dangerous middle-order batters on his day. Hetmyer has generally batted at No. 4 for West Indies in T20Is and excelled as a finisher in the 2021 IPL for Delhi Capitals, but his fitness has been a major sticking point and Phil Simmons, the head coach, said he was “letting down himself and his team-mates”.”Sometimes I wonder if he himself knows how talented he is,” Badree, who has worked with Hetmyer at Delhi, says. “To get the sort of success that he got at such an early age, not everyone can deal with that… it might be a distraction for him. I really want someone close to him to guide him down the right path.Nicholas Pooran and Shimron Hetmyer haven’t quite delivered on their promise consistently in T20Is•Ashley Allen/CPL T20/ Getty Images”I’m hoping Shimron Hetmyer has an epiphany, because he can be a world-class talent if he wants to,” Bishop says. “If he can get his fitness going, he will take his game to another level. But to do that, he needs to get himself to optimum fitness levels, because that carries you at international level.”West Indies are also bringing through three promising seam-bowling allrounders who have excelled in the CPL and should win opportunities against England: Odean Smith, Shepherd, and Dominic Drakes (whose father, Vasbert, played 46 matches for West Indies between 1995 and 2004). Jayden Seales and Alzarri Joseph are both reserves for the series, and the Jamaicans Rovman Powell and Fabian Allen are both looking to secure spots in the lower middle order – where West Indies enjoy more depth than most international sides.”I’m seeing depth in the bowling but the batting depth, we are still searching,” Bishop says. “I’m seeing more promise in the bowling, but that still needs time with Bravo gone, and one or two others. Whether a year [between World Cups] is enough, only time will tell, but it must be a long-term venture. What we must acknowledge from a Caribbean perspective is that these guys still need time.”Badree highlights the 2024 World Cup, which West Indies are due to co-host with the USA, as a more realistic target than this year’s tournament. “Australia will be tough,” he says. “Much bouncier pitches than we’re accustomed to, and some massive boundaries. But if these young players can really develop their games over the next two or three years then there’s no reason why in 2024, we can’t win that title on home soil.”The luck of the draw
The accepted wisdom in West Indies cricket is that the failure to defend their title in 2021 was a long time coming: results in bilateral series had been poor, key players were in decline, and structural problems were not conducive to creating a side capable of competing against the best teams in the world.Three to watch: (from left) Odean Smith, Dominic Drakes and Romario Shepherd•Getty ImagesBut World Cups are short tournaments where the narrative can shift quickly. West Indies were infamously written off as “brainless” before their title in 2016 and widely considered too inconsistent to stand a chance, while India entered the 2021 tournament as strong favourites and were eliminated in the Super 12s after being thrashed in their first two games.Gaurav Sundararaman, West Indies’ analyst in the 2016 World Cup and now a senior stats analyst at ESPNcricinfo, says that T20 World Cups are “almost a lottery” given how short they are and the importance of the toss and venues. In 2016, West won six tosses out of six and chose to bowl every time, winning their five games under floodlights and losing to Afghanistan in the daytime; in 2021 they lost four tosses out of five, and were forced to bat first in all of them in a tournament were the toss was disproportionately important.”West Indies can win the World Cup in 2022 if things go their way,” Sundararaman says. “If they play at the right grounds on batting wickets and win the toss, they can. Nobody is going to criticise Pakistan’s or South Africa’s performance in 2021. What [West Indies] can do is set the path right and hope they go there, perform and make the semis [because] after that, it’s anybody’s game. It’s just the way the World Cup is. In 2016 they were very lucky; in 2021, they weren’t lucky at all.”Bishop shares a similar view: that if things click for a four-week period, anything is possible. “Who put their hand up six months ago and said Australia are going to be winning the 2021 T20 World Cup? Outside of Australia, nobody,” he says. “I’m excited about what the West Indies can do. I’m excited about the raw talent; I’m not going to write them off and say that they can’t compete.”There must be a long-term view to whatever we do. Phil Simmons and the board are going to try to develop these guys as best as possible. They’ll give it their all for this World Cup. The eight, nine months that they have, they have to give the team the opportunity to learn. They’ll play overseas, they’ll play together, they’ll play apart – but it could be a very exciting team.”

Meet Diana Baig, Gilgit-Baltistan's sole player at the 2022 Women's World Cup

The fast bowler talks about growing up in the mountains, her “royal” name, and wanting to take her team to at least the semi-finals of the World Cup

Firdose Moonda04-Mar-2022Gilgit-Baltistan in northern Pakistan is home to a number of mountain peaks taller than 7000m, several large glaciers, thousands of ancient rock artefacts, and just one international cricketer: Diana Baig. It’s hardly a surprise that she is a force of nature.Baig is named after royalty (the princess, y’know?) and she has defied both conservative culture and absent facilities to move mountains. She is a double-international, capped in both cricket and football for Pakistan, has a degree in health and physical education, eyes a long-term future in coaching, and has immediate goals to take Pakistan further than they have ever gone at a women’s cricket World Cup. And she’s doing it all because she was inspired by a story in a magazine more than a decade ago.”In 2010, I was looking at a magazine and saw that the Pakistan team had won the Asian Games – a women’s team. There were pictures of the team in the magazine, and when I saw that, I got very inspired,” Baig says from New Zealand, where she has completed her quarantine ahead of the World Cup.Related

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At the time, the sports-obsessed Baig was throwing javelin and shot-put for her region but not so much into cricket.”Where I come from is a beautiful place, but there are a lot of conservative people there. They don’t support sports,” she said. “As a child, you are not allowed to play outside your home on the road. If you are a girl, you should play inside your home, and even if you are playing inside, they will ask: ‘Why are you playing?'”When I was a child, I didn’t have a role model and I never thought about playing international cricket. I watched men’s cricket at that time. My family loved cricket and we all loved to watch cricket. Once, I saw a Pakistan-India women’s match on TV. In my mind, I started imagining that someday I will play. I was just imagining, but I didn’t have hope.”The idea that she could become a cricketer took shape when her athletics coach turned her towards the game.”My coach told me there was a team going to play cricket and he asked, since I throw shot put, do I know how to bowl. He asked me to try and I did. After a while, he told me I was doing great and I went to Islamabad with the team. We played against Islamabad and I got selected for the Islamabad region.”I played my first national championships [in 2009-10, at the age of 14] and saw the women I had seen in the magazine – Javeria Khan and Sana Mir and Nida Dar. It was a dream come true.”

“Whenever I think about my journey, I always think about my father, how he encouraged me. He was always excited for my success and wanted me to push hard always”

What Baig didn’t know then was that the Asian Games win had prompted the Pakistan Cricket Board to professionalise the women’s game. It eventually paved the way for her to make a career in cricket, but via football.”In 2014 there was a team going to Lahore for the [football] national championships and there was a shortage of players. They asked me to play. I went to Lahore to join the team. I played my first national championships in football there.”After that, I got selected for a national football camp. There were about 50 girls in the two-month camp. Eighteen of us were selected and I was a defender. I played some international tours, but in 2015, the Pakistan Football Federation [PFF] was banned, so I stopped playing.”She didn’t stop watching, though, and continues to support any team Cristiano Ronaldo and Lionel Messi play for, but often has to cheer alone. European football is not well followed in her home town and the local scene has died down as the PFF has fallen in and out of FIFA’s favour. At the time of writing, it remains banned over government interference and there are fears of development stalling and players being lost to the sport. In Baig’s case, football’s loss was cricket’s gain as she turned her full attention to bowling after the 2015 football sanctions.With nowhere to practise in Gilgit, which has “no ground and not a single net”, Baig moved to Lahore, where she could study and train at elite facilities. “I went to Lahore in 2016 and I started my studies at Lahore College for Women University. I selected that university for cricket. They have their own cricket ground and nets.Baig on the Pakistan team: “We are quite religious. We also really enjoy each other’s company. We respect each other and know each other’s moods. It’s fun together”•Ryan Pierse/Getty Images”We studied in the morning and after that we’d go for practice. I managed to get regular practice, which I didn’t have before. Then I played at the 2017 World Cup and it changed my whole life and career. I became a permanent part of the team after that.”Before that World Cup, Baig had played two ODIs and a T20I for Pakistan in two years. In the World Cup, she played five matches and took wickets in all of them but was benched for the final two games. She was their joint second-highest wicket-taker despite playing fewer matches than anyone else in the front-line attack, showed an ability to swing the ball both ways, and established herself as an energetic fielder and charismatic cricketer who could nail down her place in the team.Baig has played in 28 of Pakistan’s 34 ODIs since and was their joint-highest wicket-taker at the 2020 T20 World Cup.”I just try to bowl consistently in one area but I am working on my variations too. Sometimes I don’t execute them very well, so I try to do a lot of repetitions to get them right.” She sees her ability to bowl variations as crucial to her role as one of Pakistan’s emerging core of senior players.

“In 2010, I was looking at a magazine and saw that the Pakistan team had won the Asian Games. I got very inspired”

“In our team, we have people of the same age group. We have some seniors, but we don’t have that much experience, and I feel like I need to take responsibility. I will try in every game to do my job well and help the team to win, especially because at the last World Cup, we didn’t win a single match.”This time, we are here for something. We will not repeat that [result] again. This is not the same Pakistan team from four or five years back. We are here to prove that we are a different team now and we will fight in all our matches.”Baig’s goal is to make it to the semi-finals and she thinks it’s realistic, given how the squad has grown into a group of players who know each other well and like being together, on and off the field.”The one thing about our team environment is that we are quite religious,” she said. “In our team, the priority is namaz. Everybody, when going for practice, will be sure we’ve done our namaz first and then we start. And when we come back, we do namaz as well. We also really enjoy each other’s company. We respect each other and know each other’s moods. It’s fun together.”A quick glance at the PCB’s YouTube channel confirms the women’s team is having a good time and that Baig is the life of the party. She interviews her team-mates, leads the volleyball warm-ups, and provides diary-style snippets of what the team is up to. She even had a bowl-out challenge with fellow fast bowler Fatima Sana, the ICC’s Emerging Women’s Player of the Year.

If you think that means Baig is gearing up for a post-playing career in broadcasting, think again.”I have a degree and I will study more because my future plans are to go into coaching,” she says. “I would love to coach women. And I would also like to build facilities in my area, in Gilgit. There are a lot of things that need to be fixed. You need a proper plan for that area.”That plan may even include education about women’s empowerment, which Baig identifies as crucial to the people in the Gilgit-Baltistan region.”In the area I come from, you need support, and if your parents are not supportive, you can’t do anything. You can’t even study if they are not supportive.”My parents are – alhumdulilah – very supportive. Whenever I think about my journey, I always think about my father, how he encouraged me. He was always excited for my success and wanted me to push hard always.”It was Baig’s father who gave her the name Diana, an uncommon name for a Muslim girl in Pakistan. “I was born in 1995. At that time Lady Diana [Spencer, Princess of Wales] was very popular. My father liked the name, so that’s the name he gave me.”It’s just one of the things that make her stand out in Pakistan. “I also have a different haircut, so a lot of people recognise me,” she says, patting her shoulder-length locks, shorter than most of her team-mates wear their hair. “People do know who we are, because people care about cricket.”Luckily, she doesn’t get recognised on the streets to the point where it has become stifling. She still gets to go out and do the things she loves, like hitting Joyland, an amusement park in Lahore, to “ride the same rides again and again”, or going home, to remind herself of where she’s from and how far she has come.”I go for trips and to get a break when I can. I just love the mountains. It’s my home. And still, I am the only international cricketer to come from that area – man or woman – and I am proud of that.”

Eoin Morgan's endgame approaches as England prepare to do without him

Unscheduled break puts spotlight on captain’s faltering form in recent months

Matt Roller28-Jan-2022Are we heading into the final stages of Eoin Morgan’s England captaincy?Morgan was so quick to confirm his desire to stay on after the T20 World Cup semi-final loss to New Zealand in Abu Dhabi that his future has hardly been raised. “I’m still offering enough to the side,” he said in the post-match presentation; Chris Silverwood, England’s coach, later revealed that Morgan had been making plans for the 2022 tournament on the team bus back to Dubai after that defeat.But Morgan’s absence from the final three games of England’s series in Barbados – he has been ruled out through a minor quad injury – does beg the question. He turns 36 in September, a month before the T20 World Cup in Australia, and Jos Buttler – his heir presumptive – is at a natural inflexion point in his career with his Test future in doubt.Morgan’s batting has reached a point where it is increasingly difficult to justify his place in England’s middle order. Since the start of 2021, he has averaged 16.36 with a strike rate of 108.43 for England. It is still a relatively small sample size, but the evidence at domestic level has been not better: across 28 innings for Middlesex, London Spirit and Kolkata Knight Riders, he has averaged 18.13 with a strike rate of 118.13.Morgan has always been a streaky player. His peaks and troughs have been extreme across a 15-year T20 career, and the volatility of middle-order batting in T20s – particularly since he shuffled down from No. 4 to No. 5 or 6 – has created what Buttler called “a myth” around Morgan’s form. “I think the longer you go without contributing a significant score, the closer you are to actually contributing – and that’s coming from experience,” Morgan said before the World Cup.And it was not long ago that Morgan was in the best hitting form of his career. In 2019 and 2020, he averaged 40.71 with a strike rate of 158.32 in T20 cricket, the third-highest in the world behind Andre Russell and Kieron Pollard among those who batted 40 times or more. At 5.25 crore (£560,000 at the time) he was one of the bargains of the auction for the 2020 IPL.But his recent run has been a tough watch. There have been occasional glimmers of form – five sixes in a Hundred game at The Oval, a cool-headed finish in the IPL and a late swing for victory at Old Trafford – but for the most part it has been a struggle, as highlighted by his only real innings of note for England: 40 off 36 balls on a slow, low Sharjah pitch, playing second fiddle to an extraordinary century from Buttler.His performances in Barbados continued the trend, with 30 runs off 41 balls across his two innings. In the first, he came in at 10 for 3 and missed the first six balls he faced in a maiden from Jason Holder, eventually scoring off his ninth ball thanks to a thick edge. The pitch was tough, but much flatter in the second game, when he picked out long-off for 13 off 12 balls – and then dropped two catches, one of them straightforward, during West Indies’ run chase.Perhaps all he needs is a break. Morgan’s schedule in the last year has been relentless: India tour, IPL (first half), isolation at home, T20 Blast, England’s home summer, yet more isolation, the Hundred, a short break, IPL (second half), World Cup, Abu Dhabi T10. He admitted towards the end of the Hundred that he was exhausted, and opted against playing in the BBL or PSL either side of this tour in favour of time off.Related

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“The break for every player, coach and support staff gets more necessary with all the restrictions around Covid,” he told magazine last month. “If I’ve ever gone through a rough patch and had the chance to take a break from it, I’ve always put the bat down and gone and enjoyed the rest for what it is.” Depending on February’s IPL auction – where he has a base price of Rs. 1.5 crore (£150,000) – he may yet get a longer break than anticipated.As for Morgan’s captaincy? It is impossible to put a value on the intangibles of leadership but there have been the first hints of cracks appearing. Morgan said at the toss in the first T20I that he was hoping to bat first, having chosen to bowl 23 times in a row dating back to September 2016 – a tacit admission that his insistence on chasing had been a factor in England making a par score of 166 for 4 in November’s semi-final defeat when their batting-heavy strategy and the conditions meant they needed more.Their death bowling has been poor for a while. Morgan was widely given credit for his calming influence on Jofra Archer in the Super Over in the 50-over World Cup final in 2019, having learned from Ben Stokes’ nightmare in Kolkata three years earlier; but that same influence could not stop Chris Jordan (twice), Chris Woakes and Saqib Mahmood all conceding 20 or more runs in a single death over during Morgan’s last three T20Is.What would England’s limited-overs set-up look like without Morgan? Phil Salt’s assertive debut half-century on Wednesday, out of position at No. 6, underlined the depth of talent in England’s T20 batting. Buttler is an inexperienced captain, but Morgan’s implementation of a signalling system with Nathan Leamon, the white-ball analyst, has made him replaceable. It is often assumed that Morgan would move to a coaching or mentoring role, but he may prefer to spend his thirties cashing in on the franchise circuit – or spending time out of the game altogether.Morgan’s legacy as England’s greatest-ever white-ball captain is already secure and has been reinforced by the depth of talent coming through the ranks under his watch. With a men’s ICC event scheduled for each of the next 10 years – including the defence of England’s 50-over title in 2023, by which stage he will be 37 – there is no perfect time for Morgan to step down. But it feels increasingly like this winter’s T20 World Cup is his natural endpoint.

Ugly is beautiful for Dwaine Pretorius the batter as he gets going, one tick at a time

The allrounder’s quick runs from No. 3 in the first T20I was no surprise – he’s done it before, after all

Deivarayan Muthu11-Jun-20220:45

van der Dussen: Dwaine is probably one of the hardest hitters

At the IPL, which he described as part of his “bucket list”, Dwaine Pretorius got the opportunity to work with Chennai Super Kings batting coach Mike Hussey, who has had a strong influence on his approach.When Pretorius asked Hussey what made him tick, the former Australia batter said that he used to make notes of the things that worked for him over a period of time and repeat those at the crease. Pretorius took a leaf out of Hussey’s playbook at the IPL and made his own list of five points, on his personal website, that were “very important” for him while batting.I believe whenever my body language is good and my energy is up and my mind is alert. Then that is when I play my best cricket so the first one as I’m walking out onto the field is to charge out for like five or six meters, have good intensity, run, lift my legs up, or whatever it is that makes me tick on the day but just get my energy up and I’m saying go let’s go.The second one is the method, what am I going to do now in the next 3 balls? Take my time or am I going to play? What is my method? What am I thinking? Yeah, and then after that I have decided my method.I get clarity on what type of shots I’m looking to play. Am I looking to go aerial? Am I looking to just defend it? Am I looking to get through the next three balls or am I looking to explode in the next three balls? This creates a lot of clarity for me.Next, my fourth thing that I really make sure that I remember is a very important thing for myself and that is when I’m triggering I need to trigger quite early. So for me, the word that I think of is Get ready.The last one is to watch the ball onto the bat or make good contact with the ball. That is the last thing that I would tell myself as the bowler is running in to make good contact.Bumped up to bat at No. 3 in a steep chase of 212 against India in Delhi on Thursday, Pretorius ticked most of those points while clattering a 13-ball 29, which set the scene for South Africa’s highest successful T20I chase. According to ESPNcricinfo’s Smart Stats, which adds context to every performance, Pretorius’ knock was worth 38 runs.Related

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In the Covid-19-enforced absence of Aiden Markram, South Africa had promoted Pretorius as a pinch-hitter after they lost Temba Bavuma in the third over. What stood out from the get-go was the third point: clarity. Pretorius scythed his second ball, from Bhuvneshwar Kumar, for four and then he unsettled India’s premier spinner Yuzvendra Chahal by slog-sweeping his second ball over midwicket for six.India turned to Hardik Pandya, fresh off a sensational spell for Gujarat Titans in the IPL final. Hardik’s first ball burst from a short of a length and whizzed past the shoulder of Pretorius’ swinging bat. Some balls were zipping through like that while others didn’t come on to the bat on a tricky track, but that didn’t cloud Pretorius’ clarity of thought.Despite the presence of deep square-leg and long leg, Pretorius launched three leg-side sixes in four balls, taking South Africa up to 60 for 1 in five overs. When Pretorius tried to maximise the last over of the powerplay, Harshal Patel castled him with a signature slower dipper. Pretorius had done his job, though, as David Miller and Rassie van der Dussen launched from the platform he had laid.Pretorius’ promotion shouldn’t have come as a surprise to the South African audience. After all, his highest T20 score of 77 not out came from No. 3, against Sri Lanka at the Wanderers in 2019. In the Mzansi Super League final the same year, he marked his return from a hand injury with a 21-ball 43 in a similar pinch-hitting No. 3 role, helping Paarl Rocks secure the title.ESPNcricinfo Ltdvan der Dussen, Pretorius’ former team-mate at Lions and Jozi Stars, certainly wasn’t surprised with what he saw. “I think Dwaine is probably one of the guys in world cricket that hits the hardest, if you look at his domestic and international stats,” he said at the post-match press conference. “No. 3 is a position that he has been successful at before and the thing tonight [was] he had clear instruction to go in and put the bowlers under pressure.”A total of that nature you sort of know you have to go hard for 20 overs. And we know when Dwaine gets it right it’s really, really tough to bowl to him because he’s just so powerful. He played brilliantly and got out to a really good ball from Harshal, but I think he will take a lot of confidence from that and going into the series, I think he’s definitely going to put the bowlers under pressure.”With Markram still recovering from illness and young Tristan Stubbs just working his way into international cricket, Pretorius will have greater responsibility with the bat in a thin line-up during this series in India.At the T20 World Cup last year in the UAE, Pretorius had called bowling at the death as an “ugly job”. Similarly, you don’t have to look pretty while batting in the powerplay. If Pretorius can keep doing that job – with bat and ball – and keep ticking things off that list, it will give South Africa a leg-up, in the lead-up to another World Cup.

Stats – England smash record for highest-ever total in ODIs

Jos Buttler the wrecker-in-chief with his third ODI century in 50 or fewer balls

Sampath Bandarupalli17-Jun-2022498 for 4 – England’s total in Amstelveen is the highest-ever in one-day internationals. The previous highest was 491 for 4 by New Zealand Women against Ireland in 2018, while the previous highest in men’s ODIs was also by England, when they posted 481 for 6 against Australia in 2018.ESPNcricinfo Ltd0 – Number of team totals in men’s List A cricket higher than England’s 498 for 4. It is now the highest total in the format, surpassing 496 for 4 by Surrey against Gloucestershire in 2007.

26 – Sixes hit by England, the most by any team in an ODI innings. England broke their own record, which was 25 sixes against Afghanistan in the 2019 World Cup.1 – England became the first team to aggregate 300-plus runs through boundaries in an ODI innings. Their total of 498 for 4 included exactly 300 runs via boundaries – 36 fours and 26 sixes.3 – Players to have scored a hundred for England in this game – Phil Salt, Dawid Malan and Jos Buttler. It is only the third instance of three centuries in an ODI innings. The previous two were by South Africa in 2015 – against West Indies in Johannesburg and India in Mumbai.ESPNcricinfo Ltd164 – Runs scored by England in their last ten overs, the most by a team in this phase in a men’s ODI (where ball-by-ball data is available). South Africa’s 163 runs against West Indies in 2015 in Johannesburg was the previous most runs in this phase in ODIs.3 – Number of hundreds in 50 or fewer balls for Buttler in ODI cricket – he is the only player to do this three times. He got to his century in 46 balls vs Pakistan in 2015, 47 balls vs Netherlands today, and in 50 balls vs Pakistan in 2019. All three hundreds are the fastest tons for England in ODIs.ESPNcricinfo Ltd65 – Deliveries Buttler needed to bring up the 150-run mark today, the second-fastest individual 150 in ODI cricket. The record for the fastest 150 remains with AB de Villiers, who took 64 balls to get there against West Indies at the 2015 World Cup.17 – Deliveries taken by Liam Livingstone to get to his fifty, the fastest for England in ODIs. The previous quickest was 21 balls by Eoin Morgan against Australia in 2018 and Jonny Bairstow against Ireland in 2020. Livingstone’s 17-ball fifty is also the joint-second fastest in ODIs, behind only AB de Villiers’ 16-ball effort – separate to that World Cup blitz – against West Indies in 2015.108 – Runs conceded by legspinner Philippe Boissevain, the fourth-most by any bowler in a men’s ODI. These are the second-most runs conceded by a spinner in the format, behind 110 by Rashid Khan in the 2019 World Cup game against England. Boissevain is the first Netherlands bowler to concede 100-plus runs in an ODI.

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