Sangakkara, Dilshan two good for Scotland

ESPNcricinfo staff11-Mar-2015But Tillakaratne Dilshan set about to ensure Scotland’s joy was short-lived•Getty ImagesPartnering him in the endeavour was the in-form Kumar Sangakkara. After easing themselves in, the duo began to unwrap their range•AFPThey brought up their hundreds off successive deliveries. Sangakkara became the first man in ODI history to score centuries in four consecutive innings, even as his partner completed his second ton of the tournament•Getty ImagesDilshan and Sangakkara put on 195 runs for the second wicket before Dilshan was removed by Josh Davey•AFPSangakkara, though, continued to assert himself, playing some audacious strokes•Getty ImagesBut a few quick wickets, including those of Sangakkara and Mahela Jayawardene, threatened to disrupt Sri Lanka’s momentum. Captain Angelo Mathews came to the rescue, however, and blasted the second-fastest 50 of this World Cup, of 20 balls, to help his team finish with 363•Getty ImagesScotland’s chase was dented right at the start after Kyle Coetzer was caught and bowled by Lasith Malinga off the second ball of the innings•Getty ImagesThen, in the eighth over, Nuwan Kulasekara went past Calum MacLeod’s defence•Getty ImagesWhen Matt Machan was lbw to Dilshan, Scotland had lost their third wicket for 44, and captain Preston Mommsen began the process of rebuilding•AFPMommsen found in Freddie Coleman – who had earlier taken three catches – the perfect ally•AFPBut after having added 118 runs together, Mommsen was dismissed by Thisara Perera. Coleman continued to battle it out along with Richie Berrington•AFPHowever, when Kulasekara sent Coleman back, the game decisively swung Sri Lanka’s way. The rest of the batsmen didn’t contribute much, and Sri Lanka sealed a 148-run win, with Kulasekara and debutant Dushmantha Chameera claiming three wickets apiece.•Getty Images

Mukhtar, Shehzad guide Pakistan home

ESPNcricinfo staff22-May-2015Pakistan President Mamnoon Hussain greeted both squads before the start of the first T20 international•AFPThe visitors chose to bat at the Gaddafi Stadium in Lahore and got off to a steady start with openers Hamilton Masakadza and Vusi Sibanda, racing to 54 off six overs•AFPMohammad Sami removed both openers off consecutive deliveries to leave Zimbabwe on 58 for 2 after seven overs•AFPPakistan managed to pick up more wickets and pull Zimbabwe back•AFPElton Chigumbura, the Zimbabwe captain, however, had other ideas. He smashed eight fours and a six in his 35-ball 54, which pushed Zimbabwe to 172 for 6•AFPAhmed Shehzad and Mukhtar Ahmed put on 142 for the opening stand off only 81 balls. Shehzad struck six fours and a six for his 39-ball 55 before being dismissed in the 14th over•Associated PressMukhtar, who had shown more aggression in the stand, departed in the next over after making a 45-ball 83 smashing 12 fours and three sixes•AFPThe match headed for a tense finish as Pakistan lost three wickets for 12 runs, leaving them with six to get off the last over•AFPBut Shahid Afridi brought a smile on the faces of the spectators at the Gaddafi Stadium when he smashed a four of his first ball to hand Pakistan a five-wicket win with three balls to spare•AFP

Two contrasting tons, and a Bravo super-catch

The highlights of the week gone by in IPL 2015

ESPNcricinfo staff11-May-2015The best innings
There were two hundreds scored in the space of five days, both by Royal Challengers Bangalore batsmen. First Chris Gayle ransacked Kings XI Punjab for 12 sixes on his way to 117 off 57 deliveries at the Chinnaswamy Stadium. AB de Villiers went ahead against Mumbai Indians at Wankhede Stadium, making his highest T20 score of 133, off 59 balls. De Villiers’ style was slightly different to Gayle’s – he hit 19 fours.
The best ball
It pitched on a length around leg stump, then cut away to hit the off stump. David Warner’s reaction said it all. He had wanted to push towards midwicket but was opened up completely. That it was bowled at a searing pace by Umesh Yadav left the batsman with no time to adjust.



The goof-up
When it comes to handling post-match presentations, Ravi Shastri is a pro. So it was strange to see him forget handing out the Man-of-the-Match award in the Chennai Super Kings v Mumbai Indians match. The broadcast moved back to the studio after Shastri’s customary, “That’s all from the presentation area”. Shastri, however, returned to complete his duties.The commentary pearl
“That was a quicker slow ball.” -Sunil Gavaskar on air.The drop
Virat Kohli was on 6 at Wankhede Stadium when Harbhajan Singh put down a sitter at slip. Kohli went on to make an unbeaten 82. He also put on 215 – the highest partnership ever in the IPL – with de Villiers.The best catch
When Shane Watson lofted Ravindra Jadeja towards the sightscreen in Chennai, he would have not expected Dwayne Bravo to come in between. Even Bravo, moving to his left from long-on, would not have expected to prevent the ball from sailing for six. But he jumped up a couple of feet anyway, stuck his right hand out and came down with the ball. He then ran towards long-off, eyes on the crowd, and pulled off his favourite celebration moves.AB de Villiers cut Mumbai Indians to ribbons during his unbeaten 133•PTI The heartbreak
Mitchell McClenaghan, steaming in on a hot day in Mumbai, was left seething. A pull by Kohli off the second ball went through Lasith Malinga at long leg for four. Two balls later, McClenaghan drew Chris Gayle’s top edge but saw his captain, Rohit Sharma, fluff the steepler. When Harbhajan dropped a sitter at slip off the next ball, McClenaghan swore and let out a cry of anguish.The unexpected hero
With 34 needed off the last 17 balls against Chennai Super Kings, Rohit Sharma signalled for Hardik Pandya to come in to bat instead of the big-hitting Harbhajan Singh. Pandya, who had been omnipresent in the field that day, carted three sixes in four balls in the penultimate over, effectively killing the chase. Not many would have heard his name before. But not anymore.




The moment of fortune
M Vijay has given away several starts this IPL but this one will probably rankle the most. Vijay was dropped as many as three times by Kolkata Knight Riders, but still made only 28. Gautam Gambhir put down a difficult chance at short extra cover, after which Brad Hogg and Umesh Yadav put down simple ones at square leg and short fine leg.The number
138 – the margin of victory for Royal Challengers Bangalore over Kings XI Punjab at Chinnaswamy Stadium. It was Royal Challengers’ biggest win in terms of runs and the second biggest ever in the IPL.Tweet of the week

Top order and the new ball – what England must do to win

ESPNcricinfo looks at the six things England need to do at Edgbaston if they are to take a lead in the Investec Ashes series

George Dobell28-Jul-2015Leave the ball
Ahead of this series, there was much talk about England’s aggressive new approach. There was talk of taking Australia’s bowlers on and talk of playing the style of cricket seen in the ODI series against England. All that is fine. England’s middle-order remains attractive and fluent. Ben Stokes, Jos Buttler and Moeen Ali still have a licence to play the attacking cricket that seems to bring out the best in them.But what the top order needs is some old-fashioned graft. It needs to protect that middle-order from the ball at its hardest and the bowlers at their freshest and provide a sure, firm platform on which the middle-order can build.A crucial part of that is leaving the new ball more often. Adam Lyth, for example, was dismissed in both innings at Lord’s playing at deliveries he could have left – admittedly by a fine delivery in the second innings – while Alastair Cook has been out all four times in the series to date – including when he was bowled via an inside edge – playing at deliveries that did not require a stroke. As coach Trevor Bayliss put it after Lord’s: “the one shot we didn’t employ against Mitchell Johnson was the leave”.Batsmen earn the right to be aggressive. They earn it through establishing themselves at the crease and playing themselves in. Knowing which balls to leave and which to play is a huge part of that and a skill that England’s batsmen have not always demonstrated in recent times.Provide more from the top-order
A recurring theme of England’s Test batting this year has been the failure of the top order. Eight times in their most recent 13 innings, they have lost their third-wicket with the score on 52 or fewer. While they have recovered on several occasions, it is asking a great deal of the middle-order – and Joe Root in particular – to continually bail them out. If they are to beat the better sides, they require more people in the team to contribute.With Lyth averaging 25 in his four Tests so far, England appear to have taken a risk by promoting Ian Bell to bat at No. 3. While nobody doubts Bell’s talent, his struggles at No. 4 – is he averaging 14.50 in the four Tests this summer – do not suggest he is in the form or frame of mind to adapt to the tougher task of batting a place higher up the order. But England need him to deliver if they are to improve their results on a more consistent basis.”You don’t mean to be 30 for three,” Cook said at Edgbaston on Tuesday. “The idea of the top order is to lay a platform and put miles in the bowlers’ legs. Hopefully we can do it better than we have done.” The fact that Cook was in the nets at Edgbaston at 8.15am on Tuesday morning suggests he knows how much his side require of him.Much depends on Alastair Cook at the top of the England order•Getty ImagesTake their chances
It is no coincidence that, when England won at Cardiff, they took almost every chance that came their way in the field. Yet when they lost at Lord’s, they squandered a couple of rare opportunities. Most notably, Steve Smith was missed by Ian Bell at second slip off Ben Stokes when he had scored 50. England cannot afford to give batsmen as good as Smith a life. Their slip cordon, and Jos Buttler, simply have to take any opportunities that come their way if England are to win back the Ashes.Use the new ball
Ahead of this series, James Anderson told ESPNcricinfo that his aim, like most Test bowlers, was to hit the top of off stump with more regularity. “Test cricket is about the top of off stump,” he said. “Bowlers who hit that more often than others will be more successful.”But, all too often, Anderson is failing to make the batsmen play enough in his first spell. His first five overs at Lord’s, for example, contained just one delivery that would have hit the stumps. All of which means that, with the ball at its hardest and conditions still offering some assistance, batsmen are having the opportunity to settle in more than England can afford. As was shown as Lord’s, it is essential to get Steve Smith in – and out – as quickly as possible. The new ball probably represents the best opportunity to do that.It is not just the bowled or lbw dismissal that is taken out of play by the delivery that is not hitting the stumps. Unless a batsman is forced to play – and, to be fair to Anderson, several deliveries were just outside off stump in an area that remains dangerous to batsmen – the likelihood of edges to the slip cordon is also greatly reduced.While Stuart Broad has bowled a probing, fuller length which has regularly challenged the stumps, it is vital that, on some of the placid pitches on which this series has been played to date, the new ball is utilised to make inroads.Use home advantage
Arguably no ground in England – with the possible exception of the Kia Oval – offers England as much home advantage as Edgbaston. While there have been no Tests here since the rain-ruined draw against West Indies in 2012, the pitch is expected to provide more assistance to English-style seamers, while the crowd – a fraction under 25,000 a day – will be relatively hostile by England standards.Producing a pitch to England specifications – not too quick, but providing some seam movement – is not an exact science. But word from the England dressing room suggests some confidence that Gary Barwell, the Edgbaston groundsman, has managed it. And, by the look of the number of Australian players pouring over the surface – and their insistence that they had no concerns – they may have come to the same conclusion.And, while Lord’s and Trent Bridge do not welcome the Barmy Army or their trumpeter, Edgbaston makes a point of celebrating their presence. With the stands close to the pitch and spectators encouraged to express their support in vocal fashion, Edgbaston is probably as close an equivalent to the “Gabattoir” as Australia will experience on this tour.”When you do get on top at Edgbaston, it feels like an extra man playing for you just because of the noise,” Cook said. “It’s a different atmosphere to anywhere else we play. I have seen Spiderman climbing up the stand, I have seen Bananaman being chased. It is fantastic entertainment. But you can only cheer a side which is playing good cricket.”Realistically, England have to take advantage. With Australia needing only to square the series to retain the Ashes, victory here would leave England requiring wins from both the final two Tests to deny them.Bowl as a unit
It will hardly be remembered now, but Stuart Broad bowled beautifully in the first innings at Lord’s. England’s problem – one of England’s problems – was that they did not provide enough support to sustain the pressure that Broad built. While Broad went for a fraction over three an over – and claimed four wickets – in the first innings, Moeen Ali and James Anderson went for much closer to four an over, while Ben Stokes went for more than that. Those three bowlers claimed only one wicket between them, too.If England are to defeat Australia, they need to find lateral movement with the ball – Australia gained more swing at Lord’s – and ensure that at least three of their bowlers produce a disciplined performance that ensures the batsmen are not given any “release” stokes.With some fitness concerns over Mark Wood, it could well be that Steven Finn comes into the side. Finn’s issue in his previous Tests – and he played his last in the first Test of the Ashes at Trent Bridge in 2013 – was his inability to bowl with the consistency that England required to sustain pressure. They will surely need improvement if he is to play his part in a revival at Edgbaston.

London to Colombo for Younis

A Younis Khan fan travels all the way from London for his 100th Test in Colombo

Kalim Khan26-Jun-2015Choice of game
This game was special to me because of my childhood hero Younis Khan. I’ve been watching him right from the start of his career and I have backed him even during the difficult phases. This being his 100th Test, I travelled all the way from London to Colombo.Pakistan won the first Test but I was expecting a strong comeback from Sri Lanka, who are difficult to beat at home.Team supported
I am a huge Pakistan cricket fan!Key performer
I was very impressed with the debutant Dushmantha Chameera’s pace. By far, the quickest on show with lethal bouncers and credit to Angelo Mathews for using him well.One thing you’d have changed about the day
Younis Khan getting a century rather than scoring only 6 is something I would’ve changed, after all that is the reason I am here. The weather was pretty hot and humid and I wished it would have been more pleasant.The interplay you enjoyed
Chameera bowled at good pace, troubling Mohammad Hafeez with short balls, including one that struck him on the helmet. However, Hafeez stood firm and scored 42 before Dhammika Prasad made further inroads.Shot of the day
For me, no shot is prettier than a Younis Khan trademark straight drive and I had the pleasure of watching it during his brief stay in the middle. Younis hit Prasad straight down the ground and that’s when I thought that I was going to see a special innings from Younis. However, he was out the next ball.Crowd meter
To be honest, the crowd wasn’t great. Sangakkara got the loudest cheers when we walked out to bat.Tests v limited-overs
T20 games are crowd pullers. Unfortunately, Test cricket in Asia doesn’t attract much crowd, but this is the format I love the most.Overall
The day was good though Younis got out cheaply. It would have been great had he got a big one.Marks out of 10
6 out of 10. It could have been better.

Dar's untroubled return, Mushfiqur's refined slog

The Plays of the Day from the first ODI between Bangladesh and Zimbabwe at Mirpur

Mohammad Isam07-Nov-2015The appearanceAleem Dar was umpiring in a Bangladesh match for the first time since he was embroiled in controversy in the team’s World Cup quarter-final against India on March 19. Effigies were burned of the umpire while the ICC president at the time, AHM Mustafa Kamal, made some humiliating comments about Dar. But this game, his 53rd involving Bangladesh, went off without a hitch and there was no visible animosity towards him from the crowd.The slog-sweep liteMushfiqur Rahim usually plays the slog-sweep by bending down on one knee and flat-batting it over the midwicket boundary. He is not known to play it squarer but today he added a new angle to his slog-sweep: he came down the wicket to Sikandar Raza and spun his wrist over the ball, to have it skim past the long-on fielder for his first four in 12 overs. The shot stood out from his usual approach due to its slickness and how it reduced the risk in what is still, basically, a slog.The pull-outMushfiqur was on 39 when he tried to blast Graeme Cremer over extra cover. But the legspinner did well to deceive him in the flight, catching the outside half of the bat as it fountained towards the cover sweeper. Taurai Muzarabani initially ran in hard to take the catch but inexplicably pulled out at the very last moment.He signalled that the sun was in his eyes but the bowler didn’t really think it was a good enough reason to stop. The crowd behind him, it seemed, was also slightly disappointed with his efforts.The reverse starterLuke Jongwe was sent in to open the batting for the first time in his international career, after Richmond Mutumbami injured his right ankle in the 31st over while keeping wicket. The replacement opener took until the fourth over to open up when he unleashed a reverse-hit on Arafat Sunny, who had actually tried to nail him on middle stump. The shot came out of nowhere, as it sped over the point fielder for his first boundary of the Zimbabwe innings.The brush with injuryLiton Das and Nasir Hossain nearly came to collision while trying to take the skier offered by Chamu Chibhabha in the tenth over. The batsman charged Shakib Al Hasan but the ball looped up towards long-off from where Liton charged in, and Nasir ran back from deep mid-on. The two came close as the ball fell to Liton but they still brushed against each other. The collision wasn’t hard enough to knock the ball out of Liton’s grasp but he did take a bit of time to get up from the ground. There was hardly much celebration from him or Nasir.

The MS Dhoni batting manual

An unorthodox technique, a sharp cricket brain, and supreme belief in his abilities have made Dhoni the batsman he is

Aakash Chopra01-Sep-2015In the dying overs of an ODI game, Iftikhar Anjum – the right-arm medium-pacer from Pakistan, moved the fine-leg fielder inside the circle. Next, and according to plan, he bowled a lethal yorker. Unabashedly, the batsman went down on one knee to sweep him past short fine leg. That was a tad too much for Anjum to abide by. Next ball, he sent the fine leg back to patrol the fence and brought in the third-man fielder inside the circle. This time, the batsman played a cheeky reverse-sweep past the short third-man fielder. While most batsmen would go on the defensive when the bowler is on the offensive, few, very few, retort in an equally or more aggressive and assertive fashion. This batsman did, then, and continues to even now.Mahendra Singh Dhoni may have, over the years been recognized for his gritty and unruffled sort of cricket, but it was this match – an India A encounter against Pakistan A in Kenya way back in 2004 – with his two fours in two balls, that scripted the story of his years to come. As his teammate and as a spectator, it told me almost everything there was to know about this man. For starters, it was quite evident that Dhoni wasn’t the one to fuss about copious technical jargons painstakingly etched in the many revered coaching manuals. That he would create his own rules – with an air of self-assurance, was for everyone to see.The fact that his game wasn’t built to please the purists parked in the plush President Box but for fans in the gallery, was unmistakable too. More importantly, it was Dhoni’s raw passion and gusto that seemed to be defining each of his innings. Looking at him, one felt that he played for the sheer joy of it all.

He has both the brutal force to create a big shot out of nothing and also the finesse to place the ball between the two fielders at the deep

It’s ironic that Dhoni, ever since he’s become the captain of the Indian cricket team, talks only about the process and not the results. That’s a journey only a few take and accomplish.From a technical vantage point, Dhoni’s batting followed the simple principles of finding a way to score runs on every ball that was bowled to him. He built his initial game on his ability to clear the fence, for he had the strength to do it with aplomb against the slower bowlers. He refrained from using his feet too much to generate power to clear the fence and hence was always a difficult batsman to bowl to. It’s a lot easier to bowl to a batsman who’s a slave of his feet movement to generate power and momentum because often the eagerness to get close to the ball ends up in moving out a little earlier than one should, and that gives the bowler a chance to adjust. But if the batsman stays glued to his crease even when the intention is to take the aerial route, invariably the bowler falls into the trap. While he wasn’t equally comfortable against the quicker bowlers in the beginning, he got better as his career progressed. There was something else, equally critical, which evolved at a rapid pace – his ability to read the game and change his game accordingly.If you know that you can clear the fence at will, you often end up focusing and banking on that strength a bit too much. So much so that you completely ignore the importance of rotating the strike and playing the street-smart brand of cricket. Well, why wouldn’t you, for taking six singles off six balls is a painstakingly slow and tiring process, especially when you can get as many off one ball. A batsman called Atul Bedade comes to my mind here – he had the gift of hitting sixes at will. Ironically, his international career got over before you could spell ‘cricket’ because he didn’t have a second gear. But Dhoni’s maturity belied his age, for he realized the importance of taking singles very early in his career. Even though he knew how to clear the fence, he would run between the wickets like his life depended on it. Even today, after all the wear and tear, he’s still extremely fast between the stumps. He’s also an astute judge of how many runs are on offer considering the strengths and weaknesses of the fielder pouncing on the ball – and that’s a quality worth its weight in gold. In fact, during most team meetings, players settle on throwing to the other end when Dhoni is batting, simply because it’s so difficult to keep up with his pace. No wonder we seldom see him falling short of the crease. He’s also blessed with legs like tree-trunks, and that has little to do with the amount of time he spends in the gym. He isn’t big on lifting a lot of weights or long distance running but focuses on sprints all the time. During the same India A tour of Zimbabwe and Kenya in 2004, he would invariably find ways to chicken out of running long-distance. He’d not only be the first to participate in the short sprints session, but would come first in every sprint that we ran. He admitted that he found running long-distance quite monotonous.Dhoni has always understood the value of running singles, and even today he’s one of the quickest between the wickets in the team•Getty ImagesFortunately, there’s never a monotonous moment when he’s in the middle with the willow in his hands, for the man is always on the move. While his legs are his best ally when it comes to running between the wickets, it’s his hands that do most of the talking while batting, especially against the quicker bowlers. Playing spin is his strength and that’s when his feet complement the hands to either get to the pitch of the ball or take him deep inside the crease to get more time to hit the short ball. He has both the brutal force to create a big shot out of nothing and also the finesse to place the ball between the two fielders at the deep for a quick couple of runs. Spare a moment of thought for the fielders stationed on the fence when Dhoni is batting, for half the time they’re looking upwards and backwards to see the ball sail over their heads into the crowd, which pushes them right to the edge of the fence. And when they’re sitting on the fence without taking a long start they’re made to look like fools, for Dhoni steals a double by taking the pace off the ball. His astute sense of acceleration is the most fascinating part of his limited overs game, for he invariably starts slowly focusing only on ones and twos, then an occasional boundary to keep the required run rate – if batting second – in check and then he owns the strike to bludgeon everything that’s sent his way. His batting is a perfect concoction of a butcher’s strength and a surgeon’s precision.It’s not just the slow bowling that he owns in the limited overs format, for even the world’s quickest bowlers don’t feel completely at ease while bowling to him in the death overs. Sample this – what would Dale Steyn or Lasith Malinga bowl to a set batsman in the death overs? It’s quite straightforward that they’ll use their extra pace to bowl bouncers and yorkers, and use the same pace as a decoy to slip in a few slower ones. Now, what are Dhoni’s strengths? He’s not the one who gets perturbed by bouncers; in fact, he’s capable of hitting them for fours every time a bowler attempts that. He’s found a unique way of clearing the front leg to get under the ball whenever a yorker is attempted, and his ability to stay very still at the crease in the death overs coupled with his arm-strength allows him to delay his shot without losing momentum or power the moment he spots a slower one. Since Dhoni has efficient responses to whatever a fast bowler can throw at him in the death overs, it’s fair to say that his staying till the end is usually fruitful for the team he’s batting for.

Dhoni can play almost every shot in the book. Yet, somehow he hasn’t mastered the cover drive, and in my opinion, that’s one shot a batsman can’t do without

Batting in Test matches is a different kettle of fish though, for that’s where his technique – or the lack of it – comes to the forefront and makes him fallible. Dhoni can play almost every shot that’s there in the book; in fact, along the way he has also invented a few, like the helicopter shot. Yet, somehow he hasn’t mastered the cover drive, and in my opinion, that’s one shot a batsman can’t do without. Most fast bowlers keep a few fielders in the slip cordon and bowl outside off (Test cricket allows them to drift further away from the batsman too) at a length that draws the batsman forward. There are only two shots that you can play on these deliveries – leave them alone for nothing, or drive through the covers for runs. Dhoni’s basic instinct to attack and accumulate runs forces him to play the drive but his lack of feet movement keeps him a little away from the ball on most occasions, resulting in outside edges. He’s predominantly a bottom-handed player and most of his strokes, even on the front foot through the off side bear an imprint of the bottom hand in action. Bottom hand domination coupled with lack of feet movement is the perfect recipe for disaster when playing an aggressive stroke off a fast bowler on a slightly helpful pitch. Also, the same can land you in trouble if the ball bends back in sharply after pitching because the front foot hasn’t gone anywhere.Harper SportBut you can always count on Dhoni to find a new way to deal with his limitations. He’s coined quite a bizarre way of handling his weakness – he would walk across and down the pitch to get close to the ball, even in a Test match. Moving so much takes him outside off and then even if he gets beaten by pace of a sharp in-dipper, he gets stuck outside off ruling out the leg-before dismissal. His method isn’t foolproof and that’s why he hasn’t scored a single Test hundred outside the subcontinent but it’s still good enough to make him stay relevant. In 2014, during India’s last tour of England, he displayed another facet of his mental strength – he walked down the pitch and defended, took a lot of body blows and most importantly left a lot of balls alone. He spent close to twenty hours on the pitch in the five Test matches and showed that mental resolve can even take care of a slightly inferior technique.Dhoni didn’t feature much in the Zimbabwe leg of that India A tour. I would often find him bowling in the nets. As roommates we would get talking and I would tell him to be slightly greedy and bat in the nets, for his chance looked around the corner. His response was an offer – ‘I’ll bowl to you also in the nets if you wish, and as far as my turn in the middle is concerned, I’ll be fine.’ The manner in which he uttered those words betrayed his mindset, for he wasn’t arrogant about his chances but simply confident that he would succeed, and boy, wasn’t he right! The foundation of his cricket is not just his unique technique, his astute cricket brain or his undeniably good luck. It is his belief in his own abilities that has brought him thus far.

England's rookies fail their test of mettle

This was a defining day. There was no Alastair Cook to marshal the batting. England’s youthful middle order had the chance to seize a Test match that was perfectly balanced. Within a session it had gone horribly wrong

Andrew McGlashan in Dubai24-Oct-2015This was a defining day. There was no Alastair Cook to marshal the batting. England’s youthful middle order had the chance to seize a Test match that was perfectly balanced. Within a session it had gone horribly wrong.Pakistan’s bowling was exemplary, especially the hostile, conditions-defying nine-over spell from Wahab Riaz which dispatched that young, spluttering engine room of England. It was nothing less than his performance in the first Test-and-a-half of the series deserved – reverse swing at 90mph is some sight – but England gave him a significant helping hand.Joe Root, Ben Stokes and Jos Buttler all fell to a variety of flat-footed pokes outside off stump. In less than a session England went from being neck-and-neck in the series, to facing a herculean task to leave Dubai with the contest still level.In one sense it was the innings that England feared they would produce at least once in the series having arrived as distant second-favourites, although it went against expectation that a pace bowler should spark the collapse. Once Root departed, an edged drive to the keeper reminiscent of a few dismissals this year (although he has plenty of credit in the bank) the door was ajar for Pakistan.Stokes was uncertain against Yasir Shah, edging wide of short leg, before his eagerness to get bat on ball left him wafting away from his body. And then Buttler’s slump continued with a drive that smacked of a batsman low on confidence. In his last seven Tests, Buttler has averaged 13.54 with a top score of 42.Yet, despite the way the Abu Dhabi Test ended with England moments from victory, a morning such as this should not come as a massive surprise.Aside from Cook and Root, who have managed six hundreds between them in 2015, England’s batting has been inconsistent at best this year. Only four hundreds have been scored by the remainder of the line-up: Ian Bell in Antigua, Gary Ballance in the same game, Ben Stokes at Lord’s and Adam Lyth at Headingley Two of those names are now not in the team.Ben Stokes was found out by Wahab Riaz’s extra pace in a defining session for England•Gareth Copley/Getty ImagesIt highlights the underperformance of others, and the ruthlessness the selectors showed in dropping him, that Ballance’s average of 35.76 remains the third best for England this year. Of the XI currently on the field, that standing belongs to Ben Stokes with 33.40, but he has one fifty in his last eight innings. To put it another way, Cook and Root have scored 2442 runs between them in 42 innings in 2015, while the other eight batsmen used in that period have made 3075 runs in 119 innings, and that includes Moeen Ali who spent the Ashes at No. 8.Take it back even further, to April 2014 as a cut-off, and the numbers are not much better. Cook, Root and Ballance have averages over fifty but the next best, of a reasonable sample size, is Buttler at 31.15. Too much is resting on too few.England value loyalty, but they also need to show some even-handedness. If Ballance was deemed to be under-performing despite averaging 47.76 after 15 Tests, then others will have to come under the same scrutiny. As is often the case, the fortunes of those players in reserve tend to rise when a collapse such as this unfolds, but James Taylor has been pushing hard for a place over the last couple of months. One option could be that he replaces Buttler and Jonny Bairstow is given the gloves.A dropped catch down the leg side in the second over of Pakistan’s second innings compounded Buttler’s day although his glovework errors are increasingly rare and he soon made amends by catching Shan Masood instead. However, in the modern game, catching alone is not enough for a keeper and before the match, Cook acknowledged the diverging fortunes of Buttler’s game.”He finds this format here his least natural, in one-day cricket and T20 cricket he knows his method and is still working very hard on that,” he said. “He’s nowhere near the finished article, we know the potential Jos has got…I don’t think we should forget about how well he kept in [the first] Test, 170 overs in those conditions, I thought he kept superbly in that first Test in the subcontinent. He’s contributing there, he knows he has to score runs – that’s what happens when you play for England and have people pushing for your place – but he is in a good spot and we are right behind him.”There are no simple solutions. Although Bairstow’s entry on the scorebook shows a considerably greater contribution than Buttler, he endured a torrid time on the third day as well. He had played solidly on the second evening, and his first ball of the morning against Yasir was a confident push through the covers, but Yasir soon had him in the palm of his leg-spinning hand.Bairstow should have fallen on 40 to a slip catch by Younis Khan only for the third umpire to rule it had been grounded; the only difference between that incident and James Anderson’s catch to remove Zulfiqar Babar in Abu Dhabi was the identity of TV umpire. Chris Gaffaney has replaced S Ravi for this match.Before then Bairstow had nicked one fine of Younis and top-edged another that Sarfraz Ahmed could not gather when beaten by extra bounce. Then, in the space of an over, he edged another between the keeper and slip, survived a loud appeal for lbw and almost got himself in a tangle as he came down the pitch. Eight more balls was all it took for Yasir to finally remove him, a delivery sliding on to trap Bairstow lbw.The less said about Adil Rashid’s hack off Yasir the better. Trevor Bayliss, the England coach, is known to keep his emotions under control but even he will have needed a deep breath or two.The phrase “developing side” is used regularly with this England team and it remains a valid point, particularly in these conditions. Heading into this tour, Root, Bairstow, Stokes, Buttler – the batting quartet that was culpable on the third day here – had two caps between them in Asia. However, poor shots are poor shots regardless of how many matches have been played. This tour was always expected to be an education for England. Today they were given a harsh lesson.

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'Self-belief is my biggest strength' – Bumrah

Jasprit Bumrah is confident that his good domestic form has him in a good mental space for the T20I series in Australia

Nagraj Gollapudi18-Jan-20163:18

Didn’t expect India call-up today – Bumrah

Jasprit Bumrah feels he is ready for Australia as he is confident on the back of his domestic performances for Gujarat this season. The 22-year-old came into the public domain based on his unorthodox bowling action when he made his IPL debut for Mumbai Indians in 2013.He made his IPL debut with figures of 3 for 32 against Royal Challengers Bangalore, he took a five-for in the Vijay Hazare Trophy final recently against Delhi to help Gujarat clinch their maiden one-day title. And he is the second-highest wicket-taker for Gujarat in this season’s Ranji Trophy.Not surprising then that the national selectors told him he had their vote of confidence, on Monday. Hours after Gujarat failed to make the final of the Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy, India’s domestic T20 competition, Bumrah spoke to ESPNcricinfo about his journey, his learnings and his aims.You don’t seem to be overawed by the occasion even considering this is the first time you have been picked for the Indian team?It is not totally unexpected. I was named the standby. Sandeep Patil (chairman of selectors) was also at the ground and he told me, “You’ve been doing well, you will get in a look anytime.” Even Vikram Rathour (national selector), who was there during the one-day matches (Vijay Hazare Trophy), told me to keep doing what I was doing and I would get a look-in anytime soon. And today I got a call from the Gujarat Cricket Association. It was a nice feeling…I was not expecting it would be today.Where do you think things changed for you?I was doing well on the India A circuit as well. But I got injured last year, towards 2014 end, my front (left) knee. But because of the injury I learned a lot about my bowling: what are my strengths, what are my weaknesses. And in this year’s Vijay Hazare Trophy I did very good. Things changed from there.Your unorthodox bowling action must come as an advantage for you?It is an advantage but it has its own weaknesses too. I have spoken about this to [Lasith] Malinga as well. He also has a different action, so he told me we have our own advantages as well: with this action you can bowl wherever you want to bowl. There is no point in changing it. You don’t have to be orthodox, you don’t have to do stuff like loading. If you are comfortable with this action and if you are getting the results, it is more than enough. He told me not every bowler has this action and batsmen do not face such actions every day. This is an action that comes to me naturally and [at least] the first [time] they play me they face some difficulties in picking up the ball.Where do you derive your bowling strengths from?Whenever I used to bowl earlier as well, I was fast naturally. But after the proper training I got at Mumbai Indians, it helped me to bowl faster for a longer period of time. Proper training, proper diet, your strengths sessions, your running sessions are important. Before IPL, I never used to do anything because I did not know what you should do as a fast bowler because on the domestic circuit we do not come to know about such things.You have said that you have learned something new each of the three seasons in the IPL – can you expand?IPL means learning process for me. The first year, 2013, when the first time Mumbai Indians became the champions, such big players were there, Sachin [Tendulkar] was there, Ricky Ponting was even there. So I learned how to prepare for such big games because I had never played even a first-class game before that. So I learned how to prepare for games, how to handle situations. In 2014 I was [one of] the main bowlers, I learned how to carry your form, at what situation what you have to do when you have to play for a longer period of time. Then in the last IPL I was just coming back from an injury, the senior bowlers helped me about how to come back – how to prepare yourself and what mental state of mind should be there when you are coming out of an injury.This was a major injury. I was regularly playing India A and at that time I was on the verge of getting [selected for India]. It was a difficult phase because for four-and-a-half months I was out of the game. It was my front (left) knee so it was very difficult for me. I was upset about the injury, but the chance which I missed that was more hurtful for me. At that time I was thinking if I would recover properly, if I will get the pace back. But my trainers were motivating me always and some even told me you would even be better than before. And now when I rate myself I am bowling better than before.Can you talk about learning the art of bowling yorkers from Malinga?Yorker has been my strength always because I started my cricket with tennis ball cricket where you only bowl yorkers. When I went to the IPL Malinga told me you have good yorkers, but you still need to control the yorkers. You have to continuously practice because it is a skill which is very difficult to master. For me it is different how I bowl the yorker. He practices it with a shoe on the pitch. For me basically it is a feel. If I am feeling good I would be able to bowl yorkers properly. But he gave me the general idea: where to aim, how to use your yorkers because you cannot be predictable. You have to mix it up. So this is what I have learned from him: what to do, how to do and what time to do it.About his action: “I have spoken about this to Malinga as well, he told me we have our own advantages: with this action you can bowl wherever you want to bowl. There is no point in changing it”•Getty ImagesYou have come some way since being hit for three fours off your first four balls in your IPL debut by a man who is now the India Test captain. Haven’t you?That was my first match. I had just joined [the squad] two days before that match. Not many people had seen me. I didn’t know anybody. I did well in the practice sessions so they told me you would get a match. So when I was playing the outfield and the wicket was wet so my landing was not nice. I was too scared to ask anybody what to do. But after three fours there is no other option, so I told Sachin sir. He said he would call somebody and fix the thing. He also told me one good ball would change your match and play as you play for Gujarat. Don’t bowl to the name. Bowl to the batsman. And that is what happened.What other than your action and pace are your strengths?Self-belief, I think, is my biggest strength. The mental toughness comes into play whenever the chips are down. After the injury it has increased more because when you are not able to do anything, when your body is not going after that you learn quite a lot about how to handle a situation. When I went to Australia on the India A tour in 2014, I played on flat pitches against batsmen some of whom were Test players. That experience taught me a lot as I also was playing with a lot of Test players in our side as well and I learned about being mentally tough.So you have already had a taste of Australian conditions. You are going to play Twenty20 cricket this time. What do you reckon would be in your favour?In T20 cricket the wickets hardly matter, but I heard the wickets are good. But where we played the match [in 2014] the wicket was really flat so I really don’t have a real idea of the wickets. But I have played quite a lot of first-class cricket in the past two years. A lot of matches help you know your game so that gives you confidence. So it won’t be that I would totally blank and I wouldn’t know what to do.Just not with the white ball, you have done really well with the red ball for Gujarat in domestic cricket.People have seen me [mainly] in the IPL, so they think I only bowl well in white ball cricket. But I really like and I have done well in four-day cricket. I love it because it is a proper test of a cricketer. You need a lot of strength. You need a lot of patience. You need a lot of training as well because we play eight Ranji Trophy matches. If you do well there you can do well in any format.Would it be correct then to say your aim is obviously to play the longer form of the game and not be branded as a shorter format player?Yes, in general I like to play all the three formats as you can express yourself, all the traits you have. In four-day cricket you have to be consistent, you have to bowl in one area. In T20 you can show your variations, you can show your yorkers. So I enjoy all the formats.

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