Neil Wagner, short, relentless and ruthless

The numbers that sum up the New Zealand quick’s ability to unsettle batters with his bouncers

Shiva Jayaraman27-Feb-2022Experts in the commentary box at the Hagley Oval wondered if Neil Wagner’s bouncers at Rassie van der Dussen were leaking valuable runs to South Africa. The visitors’ lead had crossed 150 and van der Dussen was negotiating Wagner’s short balls pretty well. The one real chance that Wagner created by bowling short at van der Dussen had been spilled by Colin de Grandhomme. Surely, the South Africa batter wouldn’t give another one? May be it was time to change tactics?But that’s not how Wagner operates. He is a few days shy of 36, but continues to bowl every ball of every spell in every Test match he gets to play with relentless intensity. That relentless intensity was what got van der Dussen in the end. Like he did in South Africa’s second innings, Wagner has repeatedly delivered for New Zealand when they desperately need him to. And it’s often been through aggressive short-pitched bowling. No bowler has taken more wickets bowling short balls than Wagner since his debut in July 2012.

The partnership between van der Dussen and Temba Bavuma had lasted 17 overs when Wagner made the breakthrough. Since the beginning of Wagner’s Test career, no fast bowler has broken as many partnerships to have batted 100 or more balls as he has. He’s broken 55 such stands in his career. That’s 22.5% of his 244 wickets at the time of Bavuma’s dismissal. Stuart Broad has 51 such wickets since Wagner’s debut, but that’s just 13.6% of the 376 wickets the England man has taken in this period. No fast bowler has built a career out of breaking partnerships quite like Wagner. Ben Stokes comes close at 21%, having broken 35 partnerships of 100-plus balls in his 167 wickets.

Admittedly, bowlers at second and third change are likely to be at the top of this list. But Wagner’s back-breaking method of providing these breakthroughs give these numbers meaning. And the use of the phrase ‘back-breaking method’ isn’t too much of an exaggeration – in 23 of these 55 partnerships that Wagner has broken, batters have got out to balls pitching short or short of length according to ESPNcricinfo’s ball-by-ball data.Van der Dussen had already batted 84 balls in his innings before he was dismissed by Wagner. That’s enough balls for a batter to get their eye in, especially in conditions like the Hagley Oval’s. But Wagner still managed to prise a wicket out and that’s no surprise. 97 of his 244 wickets have been of batters who’ve faced 50 balls or more in their innings. Since Wagner’s debut, only Broad and James Anderson have got more such batters out. However, these two largely bowl in English conditions where pacers almost always get some help.Among pacers to take 100 or more wickets since Wagner’s debut, only Shannon Gabriel has a higher percentage of his career wickets dismissing ‘settled’ batters. Among the 14 bowlers to take 200 or more wickets since Wagner’s debut, no one has a higher percentage of such wickets. The top five in this list apart from Wagner are all spinners.

Wagner is the sixth-highest wicket-taking fast bowler in Tests since his debut, having played just 58 of the 84 Tests that New Zealand have played since. None of the bowlers who’ve taken more wickets than Wagner have missed as many matches for their teams. In a team with fast bowling riches, he’s not a shoo-in in all conditions. However, one wonders if he should be playing more often. Though if he does, with an increased workload at his age, it’s likely that he won’t be as relentless in every spell as he is now. Or he might just spring a surprise as he did with the wicket of van der Dussen.

Warning signs for Australia ahead of litmus test against spin in Galle

The batters have stumbled in the ODIs and things are unlikely to get any easier

Andrew McGlashan23-Jun-2022Knowing what’s coming is one thing, playing it is something else entirely. There were some smiles from David Warner as he watched deliveries rip past his edge during the 99 he made in Colombo on Tuesday, but Australia’s collapse that decided the ODI series has brought into sharp focus what they will need to combat for the rest of the tour.Warner talked a good game afterwards, despite the series defeat, extoling the positives of Australia being challenged by Sri Lanka’s phalanx of spinners, who bowled 43 overs in the fourth match, ahead of the two Tests in Galle which start next week.”We were always expecting turning wickets so it’s fantastic preparation for us,” he said. “We actually love the fact that they’re playing on the wickets back-to-back… that’s what we want, we can’t get that practice in the nets – the nets are green.Related

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“For us it’s great practice out in the middle with these dustbowls. It’s going to be exciting for the Test matches in Galle because we know what we’re going to get there. This is extreme spin; you don’t usually see these type of wickets.”You only see them here. India is completely different…they’re actually good wickets [in India]. And they turn later on day three or four [of Tests].”Warner was part of the Australia side that lost the Tests 3-0 during the 2016 tour of Sri Lanka. He made 163 runs at 27.16 in a series where only Steven Smith (average 41.16) and Shaun Marsh (average 76.50 from one Test) passed the 30-mark as the line-up was feasted on by Rangana Herath, who claimed 28 wickets at 12.75.There is one ODI remaining, but thoughts are turning to the two Tests which begin next Wednesday. Before the tour, Marnus Labuschange said he had watched how Joe Root found success in Sri Lanka last year when he plundered 426 runs in the two-match series. Usman Khawaja, who has transformed his play against spin after struggling earlier in his career, shapes as a vital player after his prolific returns in Pakistan but it will likely be a steep learning curve for the likes of Cameron Green, Alex Carey and even Labuschagne.Mitchell Marsh, another player who was on the 2016 tour and equaled Warner’s tally of runs across the three matches, believes Australia’s recent T20 World Cup success and the Test series win in Pakistan is evidence of how the batters have improved against spin.Australia’s 1-0 Test series victory in Pakistan earlier this year was a perfect of example of overcoming conditions that required the game to be taken deep on flat wickets•AFP/Getty Images”It’s probably a little bit hard to say that now considering we’re 3-1 down in this series, but I think if you look across the board all our players, especially in the white-ball team, we’ve all gained a lot of experience over the last couple of years and have improved dramatically playing spin,” Marsh said. “It came out in the World Cup, the way we all played, and the Test team has some really good players of spin. Looking forward, the Test series is going to be a great one. We are obviously going to get bunsen burners, so it will be great to watch.”The 1-0 Test series victory in Pakistan earlier this year was a perfect of example of overcoming conditions that required the game to be taken deep on flat wickets. Australia kept using the term that it was a 15-day Test and they won it on the last one. Reverse swing became as much of a deciding factor as spin. However, Galle is likely to be different if recent history is anything to go by. The game could well move much faster.Sri Lanka’s current crop of spinners don’t match Herath and they were poor on the recent tour of Bangladesh: Lasith Embuldeniya, Ramesh Mendis, Praveen Jayawickrama and Dhananjaya de Silva had combined figures of 3 for 536 as the pace bowlers, Kasun Rajitha and Asitha Fernando, secured victory.However, if Australia want a glimpse of what could greet them, the last time Sri Lanka played in Galle is likely a better guide. In two matches against West Indies late last year, Embuldeniya, Mendis and Jayawickrama shared 38 wickets. The quick bowlers sent down just 27 overs across both matches. There is a thought, however, that under new head coach Chris Silverwood that pace may not be quite so forgotten.It will be interesting whether any of the spinners who have troubled Australia in the ODIs are called up. Of the frontliners, only Wanindu Hasaranga has played Tests and he averages 100.75 from four matches. Along with Jeffrey Vandersay and Maheesh Theekshana they are viewed as white-ball specialists. Embuldeniya, with 71 wickets in 16 Tests, has shown glimpses of performing the Herath role, but does not have the same consistency. It is not out of the question that 19-year-old Dunith Wellalage gets a swift promotion.Regardless of selection, whoever lines up for Sri Lanka, Australia know the challenge that will likely come their way. That does not mean it will be any easier. Galle may prove the litmus test of how far their playing of spin has come since 2016.

The evolution of Kyle Mayers: from bowler to powerful opening batter, via Oslo

In 2012, he was busy topping bowling charts for West Indies at a World Cup in Australia. Could he do the same with the bat later this year?

Deivarayan Muthu03-Aug-2022Kyle Mayers began his career as a bowler who could hit some sixes lower down the order. At the 2012 Under-19 World Cup in Australia, he emerged as the highest wicket-taker for West Indies – and the fourth highest overall – with 12 strikes in six matches at an average of 11.83 and economy rate of 3.78. Three years later, on his first-class debut for Windward Islands, he took the new ball and bagged a duck from No. 8 in his first innings.Mayers to open the batting for West Indies at a T20 World Cup? Who’d have thunk it? A series of unexpected events now means he could well be returning to Australia as an opening bowler batter.Related

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Chris Gayle hasn’t officially retired yet, but his West Indies future is uncertain. Gayle, 42, has not played for West Indies since the previous T20 World Cup in the UAE. He will not be in action in CPL 2022 either and has instead turned his focus to 6IXTY, a T10 tournament.Evin Lewis’ immediate future with West Indies seems uncertain as well after he failed to complete a fitness test that had been arranged for him by the CWI during his recent IPL stint with Lucknow Super Giants, according to chief selector Desmond Haynes. Much like Gayle, Lewis has not played for West Indies since they bowed out of the 2021 T20 World Cup.So, let’s talk about Mayers now. An ankle injury sustained in 2018 forced him to reduce his bowling workload and remodel himself into a batting allrounder. In 2018, Mayers didn’t have a CPL contract and, after he recovered, he worked his way back into action, with high returns in a low-profile setting in Oslo.When his side Eagles didn’t have an opening batter at the Norway T20 Premier League, Mayers stepped in and cracked 528 runs in six matches at an average of over 100. Once he returned home, Mayers told his father Shirley Clarke, the former Barbados allrounder and now Level-3 coach, that he preferred to continue at the top for his local club as well.

“He is one of the West Indies’ most important players at the moment and, [in] every game, he continues to grow and improve and that’s something wonderful.”Pooran on Mayers

“Norway was where I opened the batting for the first time,” Mayers told last year. “Then, when I came [back] from Norway, I went home and my dad asked me where I wanted to bat at the club. So we had T20s and I was saying: ‘you know what? At the top (laughs).'”I broke a record in Norway, then I broke a record for Carlton [club] as well in the domestic T20. So, I thought it [opening in Norway] was a stepping stone and it gave me another option. It showed me what I’m capable of doing.”At the CPL for Barbados Royals, Mayers had shown what he is capable of at the top. On Tuesday, against India’s IPL superstars, on a used pitch in St Kitts, Mayers once again showed everyone that he could be explosive as an opening batter.When Avesh Khan dug in a hip-high delivery at 140kph, Mayers jumped into position quickly and short-arm jabbed it over midwicket for four. Most quicks in modern T20 cricket rely on heavy lengths to stop batters from driving and pulling, but Mayers has developed this short-arm jab to counter them and manufacture scoring opportunities. The next ball was even shorter from Avesh, but Mayers was one step ahead of him. He sat back for this exact length and pulled him with the strong wind over square leg for six.The ball didn’t swing for Bhuvneshwar Kumar but he still kept things tight by targeting the stumps, with protection on the leg side. Mayers, however, found a way to score once again by backing away and belting a leg-stump ball through extra cover. Mayers was responsible for 29 of the 45 runs West Indies had scored in the first six overs.Since the start of 2022, Mayers has struck at 147.44 in the powerplay – the highest among openers who have played at least 10 innings in T20I cricket during this period. Rohit Sharma (140.16), Regis Chakabva (137.60), Andy Balbirnie (136.36) and Paul Stirling (123.21) are the others in the top five on this list.Kyle Mayers took on the fast bowlers in the powerplay•AFP/Getty ImagesImmediately after the powerplay in the third T20I, Rohit matched up R Ashwin with Mayers, but the left-hander kept up the intent high by stretching out and pumping the offspinner to the left of long-off. Mayers then briefly appeared clueless when Hardik Pandya hid the ball away from his swinging arc with a mixture of slower cutters and on-pace back-of-a-length deliveries.But, after slogging and missing three times in a row against Hardik, Mayers adjusted and played late, deliberately opening the face of the bat and dinking a four between backward point and short third man. When Avesh, one of India’s most inexperienced seamers on tour, returned to the attack in the 14th over, Mayers went after him once again.He then launched Bhuvneshwar with the wind for another six, but when tried to repeat the shot, the bowler took pace off and took him out for 73 off 50 balls.Of course, Mayers is no Gayle or Lewis but he can give it a good whack and with Brandon King also showing some improvement against spin, West Indies could have a promising left-right opening combination at the World Cup.”It’s about communication,” Mayers said of his partnership with King. “Whoever gets off to the flier, you continue to give him the strike. Once the person is hot, you continue to feed him to get him going and give the other person that’s not going the time to get in and click at the end.”Batting aside, Mayers can also play on the egos of batters with his floaty legcutters and legrollers. In the second ODI against India in Port of Spain, he tricked both Shubman Gill and Suryakumar Yadav with lack of pace in successive overs. In the same game, he had pulled off a spectacular sliding catch at deep third to dismiss Shikhar Dhawan.Mayers is only into his second year in international cricket but has already established himself as an “important” all-format player for West Indies, as captain Nicholas Pooran suggested in his glowing appraisal of Mayers’ all-round abilities during the ODI series.”Kyle has been impressive so far in all formats,” Pooran had said. “He is one of the West Indies’ most important players at the moment and [in] every game, he continues to grow and improve and that’s something wonderful.”Going forward, we do hope he can continue going from strength to strength and, you know, he is working really hard as well. He is now getting rewarded and we are really happy for that.” Australia calling, then?

How well do you know Kohli the T20I cricketer?

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Sreshth Shah28-Aug-2022

Hales and Buttler break records, Kohli passes 4000

Stats highlights from England’s ten-wicket win in the second semi-final against India

Sampath Bandarupalli10-Nov-2022170* The partnership between Jos Buttler and Alex Hales in the semi-final against India, the highest for any wicket in the history of the men’s T20 World Cup. The previous highest was by Rilee Rossouw and Quinton de Kock against Bangladesh in Sydney during the Super 12s of this tournament.ESPNcricinfo Ltd169 The target chased down by England in Adelaide is the joint second-highest without losing a wicket in men’s T20Is. Pakistan defeated England in pursuit of 200 without losing a wicket earlier this year in Karachi, while New Zealand also won by ten wickets chasing 169 against Pakistan in 2016.1 England became the first team to win a knockout at the men’s T20 World Cup by ten wickets. It is only the fifth instance of a team winning by ten wickets in the T20 World Cup, and the first for England. The last such result also had India on the receiving end when Pakistan chased down 152 in the 2021 edition.ESPNcricinfo Ltd1 Number of partnerships for England in men’s T20Is higher than the 170-run stand between Hales and Buttler. Dawid Malan and Eoin Morgan shared 182 runs for the third wicket against New Zealand in 2019.
It is also the second-highest partnership against India in men’s T20Is, behind the 174* by De Kock and David Miller in Guwahati earlier this year.1 England became the first side to win a men’s T20I at Adelaide Oval after winning the toss. Each of the previous 11 men’s T20Is at this venue was won by the team that lost the toss.ESPNcricinfo Ltd10 Consecutive wins for the chasing team in the knockouts at the men’s T20 World Cup. The last side to win a T20 World Cup knockout game while batting first was Sri Lanka in a rain-hit semi-final against West Indies in 2014.3.65 Difference in the economy rate of the spin bowlers for India and England. India’s spinners conceded 57 runs in the six overs they bowled, while England’s gave away only 41 runs in seven overs.

4008 Virat Kohli’s runs in Twenty20 Internationals. He became the first batter to complete 4000 runs in this format. Kohli’s tally of 1141 runs in the men’s T20 World Cup is also the highest for any batter.

Pakistan have problems, and they begin at the top

There are concerns elsewhere too: in taking on quality spin, and in assembling a solid pace attack if Shaheen Afridi isn’t good to go

Shashank Kishore13-Sep-2022The Babar-Rizwan conundrum
We have talked about this before. Babar Azam and Mohammad Rizwan have scored over 60% of Pakistan’s runs in all T20Is since the start of last year’s T20 World Cup and have been, over the last two years, a wildly prolific pair. But, like in the semi-final loss at the T20 World Cup last year, the Asia Cup has made it clear there’s merit in trying to break them up.Related

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Rizwan top-scored at the Asia Cup, but he struck at just 117.57. There’s a growing chorus over how his approach might not be the most optimal for Pakistan. Where middling targets haven’t been that much of a problem – their World Cup game against India last year being a prime example – bigger targets have magnified their issue with strike rates.In the Asia Cup final, for example, Rizwan played 22 deliveries in the powerplay while striking at 72.72 – in a chase of 170. Iftikhar Ahmed’s 31-ball 32 sucked the air out of that chase as well and by the time Rizwan was dismissed for a 49-ball 55, the pair had left Pakistan with a few too many to get – 61 off 23.Babar, meanwhile, has just one half-century in seven T20I innings this year. That half-century was in a losing cause against Australia, where Pakistan collapsed around his 46-ball 66 and finished with a below-par total that was chased down comfortably. Questions about his striking in the powerplay have lingered for far longer than has been the case with Rizwan.For a pair, their run rate is the second-lowest among all Full Members, behind Danushka Gunathilaka and Pathum Nissanka. In 13 games, they have scored 401 runs at a strike rate of 122.27. On the face of it, it’s not too bad, but it has invariably put a lot of pressure on the middle order.2:59

Is middle-order batting Pakistan’s Achilles’ heel?

Given Pakistan play seven T20Is at home against England and a tri-series with New Zealand and Bangladesh, in New Zealand, in the lead-up to the T20 World Cup, they could yet change the opening pair: one of the moves could be to have Fakhar Zaman open the batting, and one of Rizwan or Babar drop down the order.”I think they should [separate Babar and Rizwan],” Mickey Arthur, their former coach, said on ESPNcricinfo’s T20 Time Out programme during the Asia Cup. “Fakhar hits the ball in different areas, it frustrates the bowlers a little bit. It is the different angles, you’ve got a left-hand and a right-hand. So, spread Babar and Rizwan and you put Fakhar Zaman back at the top.”More power for the middle
As things stand, because teams know the openers occupy the crease for a good length of time and score the bulk of the runs, there isn’t a lot below the top three, even though the middle order has typically scored their runs quickly enough.But there is a larger problem there – against spin.Versus Afghanistan, Pakistan’s move to promote Shadab Khan to No. 5 [with good effect] was largely to shield Asif Ali and Khushdil Shah from Rashid Khan and Mohammad Nabi. In the Super 4s game against India, Ravi Bishnoi kept them quiet in the death overs. And if it wasn’t for Asif’s reprieve – after top-edging a slog off Yuzvendra Chahal – who knows how that game could have turned out? Such luck may not come their way all the time.Khushdil’s record at No. 4 across T20s is impressive, striking at 146 at an average of 27. But the disparity between his domestic T20 record [strike rate 138, average nearly 29] and his international one [strike rate 110, average 20] is vast and over an increasing sample size. He also has struggled against spin.Shan Masood is more comfortable as an anchor, but has reinvented himself in T20 cricket of late•Getty ImagesIn fact, Shadab’s record at No. 4 is stellar enough to wonder why he has never played there for Pakistan. In 19 innings, he’s averaging over 28 at a strike rate of nearly 160 . He was especially impressive for Islamabad United in the last PSL, until an injury disrupted his season.Other options include Haider Ali, who could be elevated from the bench, where he spent the whole of the Asia Cup. However, he hasn’t featured in any T20I since December last year. Having travelled with the national team, he has also missed out on any form of game time in the shortest format since March.Another option gaining traction among observers of Pakistan cricket is Shan Masood, who has been in the form of his life. Though uncapped in T20Is, Masood, the tall left-handed opener, has amassed 1257 runs in the format in 2022, striking at 136.68. He set tongues wagging at the Vitality Blast, where he was the fifth-highest run-scorer with 547 runs in 14 innings at a strike rate of 139.89 for Derbyshire.However, in the ongoing National T20 Cup, he is batting in the middle order, seemingly in a bid to make the T20 World Cup squad. But, like Rizwan and Babar, Masood is primarily an anchor. This may not work in the middle order, but the plethora of games in the lead-up could give him an opportunity to present a case for making the first XI in Australia.The real outside shots are Sharjeel Khan and Azam Khan, the latter currently playing in the CPL for Barbados Royals in the middle order.Sharjeel hasn’t featured in T20Is for over a year now, while Azam’s selection eligibility – given he has obtained a no-objection certificate from the PCB to play in the CPL rather than in the National T20 Cup – is unclear. On Monday, opening for Sindh, Sharjeel struck an unbeaten 62-ball 107 to help raze down Balochistan’s 158, with three overs to go. But, again, much of his success for Pakistan has been at the top.Pakistan would dearly love to have Shaheen Afridi back, and firing, at the T20 World Cup•ICC via GettyWhat happens if Afridi misses out?
Pakistan don’t have problems with their allrounders, with Shadab and Mohammad Nawaz certainties. But in the pace department, they are anxiously waiting on Shaheen Shah Afridi’s recovery from a knee injury.The nature and extent of that injury has only become clearer over time and Shaheen has now missed the Asia Cup and will likely sit out the seven T20Is against England as he undergoes treatment. If he returns, Pakistan have a gun pace attack with Shaheen, Naseem Shah and Haris Rauf, with all his BBL experience, being the top three pacers.If Shaheen misses out, Pakistan will be banking on one of Mohammad Hasnain, like they did at the Asia Cup, or Shahnawaz Dahani, who featured in just one game, against Hong Kong. If Mohammad Wasim doesn’t recover in time, it could mean Hasan Ali remains in the mix, even though he may have not played much cricket recently, leaving the back-up options a tad undercooked.Which is why drawing a balance between results and providing players opportunities against England will become all the more crucial.

The breaking and making of Murali

An extract from a new book on Sri Lankan cricket looks at the chucking witch hunt the team endured on their 1995-96 tour of Australia

Nicholas Brookes09-Dec-2022For Sri Lanka, there was one last test before the 1996 World Cup: a near three-month tour of Australia. Nothing would come easy, but the opportunity to test their mettle down under meant a lot. They knew they would be thrown into a pressure cooker. “I remember on the plane, the senior guys said, ‘It’s going to be really tough. You have to be really tough to beat Australia in Australia,'” Ravindra Pushpakumara recalled. “We thought, what do you mean tough? I don’t know – honestly, what do you mean? We have to sledge? We have to fight? No, you need to be tough mentally.”Pushpakumara sees this toughness as a natural consequence of the Sri Lankan experience. “We tough, mentally tough,” he contests. “Our cricketers come from the villages. They were very tough. I used to go to practice without food – that’s mentally tough. I’d walk six, seven kilometres to go to practice – that’s mentally tough. I didn’t have shoes for the whole year – that’s mentally tough. It comes from our nature.” When you have to prove yourself a survivor day after day, how can something as trivial as cricket lump pressure on your shoulders? Pushpakumara’s “just a game” mentality, seemingly shared by a number of his teammates, no doubt helped Sri Lanka deal with the trials they faced down Under.From the moment they arrived, it felt like all of Australia was intent on destabilising their progress. Sniffer dogs met them at the airport, putting noses out of joint – and the team were shunted from the warmth of Cairns to the colder Tasmania, before being dumped into the cauldron-esque WACA for the opening Test.Related

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Nonetheless, Arjuna Ranatunga remained upbeat. “We are a very young, positive side,” he told the press before the match. “Our fielding has improved and we have three bowlers who can take wickets.” Strikingly, he made sure to remind the world of the significance of cricket in Sri Lanka. “Our players are deeply committed for their country,” he said. “Everyone at home is keen on cricket rather than the other problems we have. If we can do well here, there will be a lot of smiling faces back home – and that is important to us.”Optimism quickly dissipated. Sri Lanka might have been encouraged by the algal virus which slowed the pitch – yet it quickly proved curse rather than blessing. A number of batters got in, but none stuck around; it was a long, hard slog in the field as the hosts pounded their way to 617 for 5. The game was up: though Hashan Tillakaratne’s 119 helped restore a little dignity, it was hard to gloss an innings defeat.Ultimately, the match was defined by an incident that had little to do with cricket. In the 17th over of Australia’s innings, umpire Khizer Hayat examined the ball and said its seam had been tampered with. There were three conversations between Ranatunga and the umpires, but the ball was not confiscated – as Sri Lanka requested and the rules dictate.Umpire Peter Parker and Sri Lanka captain Arjuna Ranatunga discuss the state of the ball during the Perth Test•Getty ImagesThough umpire Peter Parker was initially unconvinced, a report was submitted to match referee Graham Dowling. With little evidence and no thought of consulting the Sri Lankan management, Dowling issued an extraordinary press release, stating: “The Sri Lankan captain, Arjuna Ranatunga, was notified that the condition of the ball had clearly been altered by a member or members of his team during the course of the 17th over.” The Lankans had been branded cheats prior to any proper investigation. Worse, they were effectively gagged by the ICC laws – barred from making any statement to the press.The next morning, the “tampering’ Lankans” name was dragged through the mud in newspapers the world over. Though they had no real reason to manipulate the ball – and certainly no bowlers looking to exploit reverse swing – Sri Lanka held an emergency meeting at the close of play. “I was thinking, ‘What do I gain by tampering if I’m Murali [Muthiah Muralidaran]?'” Chandika Hathurusingha reflected when we spoke on the issue. “And I remember [Michael] Slater hitting one shot down the ground into the concrete stand. I was actually thinking, what would , bowling 110, 120 [kph]?” All 11 steadfastly denied tampering with the ball. A bewildered Ranatunga was seen on the brink of tears.When Pakistan had been accused of tampering in a tour match at the WACA earlier in the summer, it quickly became clear that an algal virus had created an unusually abrasive pitch. Equally, there had been consistent complaints about the quality of Kookaburra balls throughout the summer. Considering the facts alone – an abrasive pitch, a potentially dodgy ball, which the umpires did not confiscate – how could anyone accurately assess the cause of the damage, especially with Slater smiting the ball into the stands?Secure in their innocence, Sri Lanka went on the offensive. The BCCSL threatened the ICC with legal action – and when the second new ball showed similar signs of degeneration, the media began to change tack. Two weeks later, the team were cleared of any wrongdoing. An editorial in the bemoaned the fact the ICC report “expressed ‘sincere regrets’ to the Sri Lankans but did not include an apology. The best that can be said is that the ICC came to the right conclusion, if belatedly, and that the Sri Lankan players conducted themselves with dignity throughout the unfortunate episode.” Some felt the incident had racial undertones; certainly, there was a sense that England or New Zealand might have been treated differently.The tampering scandal was swallowed whole by the circus that engulfed the second Test. In so many ways, this tour revolved around Murali. It changed his life: during the early carefree days of the trip, he would slip out of the team hotel and explore Cairns unrecognised; by the end of the tour, he couldn’t step into open air without flashbulbs bursting in his face. The storm had been brewing. Murali had no idea that his action had been reported twice by match referees prior to the tour; nor that umpires Darrell Hair, Nigel Plews and Steve Dunne had expressed concerns to match referee Raman Subba Row during Sri Lanka’s recent trip to Sharjah.

Even in 1995, there was the stench of something rotten. Robert Craddock reported that “a series of secret conversations between leading umpires, high-ranking officials and disgruntled players preceded the stunning decision to call Murali”

“Chucking” was becoming an increasingly contentious issue – strangely, often couched in moralistic terms. For many, it was a scourge on cricket, a repugnant canker that must be removed. The chucker was a dirty cheat – even today, few acts on the cricket field are accompanied by such a grave sense of wrongdoing. Yet, as Ian Peebles pointed out in his 1968 book on the subject: “Surely the essence of sharp practice of cheating is the covert and deliberate disregard or breaking of a rule or agreement. The suspect bowler subjects himself to the judgement of the umpires and up to eighty thousand people. He makes no attempt to conceal anything, in the confidence that, in his own judgement, he is in no way infringing the letter or spirit of the law.”Perhaps chucking was transformed into a deplorable crime by the way it was framed. As Australian influence grew during the early ’90s, the country’s administrators seemed to declare themselves moral guardians of the game. Just as it was their duty to rid the game of the Asians who would pick at a seam, they felt obliged to crack down on the chuckers who threatened to bring cricket into disrepute. Suspicion surrounding Murali’s action had amped up after he took seven wickets in a warm-up match against Queensland. Now, not only was he a threat to the sanctity of the sport, but to the reputation of this Australian side. Moving forward, TV cameras zeroed in on his action in the nets. Sri Lanka coach Dav Whatmore was troubled, and told Arjuna as much. Together, they decided that Murali should sit out the three-day game in Tasmania before the first Test.Meanwhile, ICC match referee Subba Row had been in touch with the BCCSL, imploring Sri Lanka to take their own look at Murali. Whatmore knew he had to get ahead of the game, so he bought a video camera and began shooting his star spinner. Both he and Murali were convinced there was no problem, but realised that might not be immediately clear to outsiders.After all, Murali’s mechanics simply cannot be replicated – in a sense, it is as though his body was built to bowl offspin. Not only was he blessed with an extremely supple wrist, his right shoulder was flexible almost to the point of double-jointedness; on top of this, he had a slight deformity which meant he could not fully straighten his right arm. Were it not for these physical abnormalities there is no way he would be able to impart such lavish turn. Yet, these elements equally combined to create the illusion that Murali was chucking. Those defending him were clear in their stance: Yes, the arm was slightly bent at the point of release, but only because it straighten. It would take Murali many years to prove he wasn’t breaking the rules.The whole squad woke up with butterflies on Boxing Day morning. This was the big time: 55,000 crammed into the MCG; Australians from Darwin to Devonport gathered around their TVs. Pre-’96, Sri Lanka often struggled to attract broadcasters for their Tests; the marquee sporting event of the Australian summer was a chance for them to prove their worth.Murali undergoing biomechanics testing at the University of Western Australia in 2004•AFPArjuna opted to bowl, turning to his star spinner just before lunch. Murali thought nothing of the fact that Hair stood further back than usual; nor was he concerned when his second ball was flagged. Only when his third delivery was called a no-ball too did he sense something was wrong. He asked Hair if he was cutting the side crease. The umpire’s frank response chilled Murali to the core. “No. It’s your action. You’re chucking.”Arjuna arrived on the scene for a lengthy discussion. Though he encouraged Murali to keep bowling normally, it’s hard to imagine how the spinner found the strength to carry on. “It was so insulting,” Murali told me when we spoke on the matter. Hair called no-ball another five times in his three-over spell. Had a crack burst from the ground and offered to swallow Murali whole, there’s little doubt he would have willingly obliged.Instead, he soldiered on. Ranatunga switched him to Dunne’s end; though Dunne had previously expressed doubts over Murali’s action, he told Hathurusingha, fielding at square leg, that he wouldn’t call him during the Test. In his mind, doing so was tantamount to playing God. Mercifully, his arm remained by his side. But by tea on the second day, Hair decided he’d had enough. Unless Murali was removed, he would call “no-ball” regardless of where he was stood. His sudden strikes as strange, given the fact that he had stood in four Sri Lanka ODIs in the past four months. For many, it is hard to escape the sense that the incident was timed to cause maximum humiliation. Even Steve Waugh later admitted that “it was a bit unfair the way it unfolded”. Murali had been crucified for the whole world to see.His tour, and his whole career, lay in tatters. Privately, Murali planned for the worst-case scenario, hoping legspin could provide a lifeline. But the team stood firm behind him. “Arjuna and Aravinda [de Silva] supported me a lot,” he remembers. “They said, you’re not doing anything wrong; we will challenge this.” Sri Lanka could have easily yielded and sent Murali home, but Ranatunga insisted they rally around him. “If he had any other captain, I don’t think he would have survived,” Pushpakumara opined. The incident was hugely destabilising, but it helped the Lankans develop a sort of siege mentality. As Asanka Gurusinha put it, “We were together [before], but that brought us very, very close.”The ICC were quick to stand behind Hair: the umpire had become judge, jury and executioner. Murali made it through a ten-over spell in an ODI in Hobart, but was called three times by Ross Emerson during his first over in the following match. At least the team had a plan. Sensing Hair had been calling haphazardly, Murali switched to legbreaks – widely considered impossible to chuck. Emerson fell headfirst into the trap, calling one a thrown no-ball.

For many, chucking was a scourge on cricket, a repugnant canker that must be removed. The chucker was a dirty cheat – even today, few acts on the cricket field are accompanied by such a grave sense of wrongdoing

With this one fell swoop, humiliation shifted from bowler to umpire’s shoulders. Clearly, Emerson had no idea if Murali was bowling some balls and throwing others. His calls were coming at random. The incident lifted Murali from his pit of despair. His tour was over, but the injustice he had been subjected to was plain to see. A volley of boos rained down on Emerson, who needed a police escort to leave the field. Standing in his first ODI, he had made himself look a fool – and exposed the sham that simmered beneath the surface of the scandal.Even in 1995, there was the stench of something rotten. On 27th December, Robert Craddock reported in the that “a series of secret conversations between leading umpires, high-ranking officials and disgruntled players preceded the stunning decision to call Sri Lankan spinner Muttiah Muralitharan”. He went on to reveal that “at least one high-ranking Australian official felt strongly Muralitharan be exposed as a ‘thrower’ and had a lengthy bar-side conversation with a Test umpire three weeks ago forcibly expressing this point”. Clearly, such a discussion between a partisan national representative and a supposedly impartial employee of the ICC, saw both men wading into murky water. It suggested collusion: something Steve Waugh hinted at when he later said, “I think Darrell Hair, we all knew, was probably going to make that call.”Dunne subsequently claimed the umpires’ “dressing room was never free of at least one member of the ACB”. The Australian board’s CEO Graham Halbish damningly admitted to telling Hair “that if he called [Murali] for throwing he would have the full backing of the ACB”. Prior to the tour, Australia’s coach Bob Simpson asked the official board photographer to take photos of Murali’s action – even suggesting his preferred angles. This was the antithesis of a fair and balanced trial.Yet shockingly, as the Sri Lankan author Michael Roberts pointed out, all involved felt they were “serving the long-term interests of cricket”. They seemingly forgot that targeting one of the opposition’s stars so forcefully created a serious conflict of interest. Equally, they went about their business without a shred of care for the bowler. Murali was just 23 – a rising star from a fledgling cricket nation; the type of talent that should be nurtured and by those who want to see the game flourish. No one can criticise these men for suspecting Murali of throwing, but did his humiliation need to be played out in front of the biggest TV audience of the year? As Murali put it to me 25 years later, “The only question I have is why didn’t he do it before? Why did he wait for Boxing Day?”India VikingWhile Sri Lanka continued to toil across the country, Murali was sent to Daryl Foster in Perth to prove his legitimacy. This was an ideal solution: the UWA’s department of human movement and exercise science offered facilities, and an air of impartiality, that Sri Lanka could not. Murali bowled under the gaze of high-speed cameras; the footage was enough to convince doctors that he did not extend his elbow while delivering the ball. Murali had been vindicated.Though he was in the clear for now, his trials were far from over. For the next 15 years, Murali laboured under a cloud of suspicion; wherever he went, he had to endure grudging handshakes and brush off unfounded allegations. It must have been tough to carry on. “It made me a very strong-minded person,” he told me. “I will never give up.”An Island’s Eleven: the Story of Sri Lankan Cricket

BPL round-up: Riders take up final playoff spot, Charles shows off his big hits

Khulna Tigers, Chattogram Challengers and Dhaka Dominators are out of the tournament with eight matches left in the league phase

Mohammad Isam04-Feb-2023Rangpur take final spot
Following their two-wicket win against Dhaka Dominators, Rangpur Riders became the last team to make it to the BPL’s playoffs. Captain Nurul Hasan played a captain’s knock, promoting himself to No. 4 and scoring 61 off 33, but the side also survived a late batting collapse to get to the win.But Rangpur’s confirmation also means that the other three teams – Khulna Tigers, Chattogram Challengers and Dhaka – are all out of the tournament with eight matches left in the league phase. There’s been a clear gulf between the top four and the bottom three teams this season. The four teams that have qualified – Rangpur, Comilla, Barishal and Sylhet – have shown consistency. They picked the right combination when building their teams, and have followed up with mostly consistent selection calls during the tournament.Chattogram and Khulna, meanwhile, could never replicate the success they had last season. Khulna lost four games in a row to bow out of the competition. Dhaka have won just three out of 11 games.Dearth of newcomers
There have been five debutants in this BPL season. Among those, Ashiqur Zaman (Victorians) is the only player who is part of the top four teams. But he hasn’t made a splash, and neither have the other debutants – Abdullah Al Mamun, Nahid Rana, Khawaja Nafey and Habibur Rahman Sohan.None among the four has played more than three matches, although Rana and Mamun are likely to feature in the remaining matches for Khulna and Dhaka respectively. However, Rana and Ashiqur have impressed Allan Donald, Bangladesh’s fast bowling coach, during a recent camp, while Mamun was the NCL’s Player-of-the-Tournament this season. Nafey is from Pakistan, but he has built a big-hitting reputation in the Karachi circuit.Batter of the week: Johnson CharlesJohnson Charles vs Khulna Tigers lit up the BPL this week. First, he slammed five sixes in his 22-ball 39 on January 28, before laying into them with a 56-ball unbeaten 107. This innings had eleven sixes and five fours as he powered Victorians to a record-breaking highest chase in the BPL. But this wasn’t Charles’ first century in the BPL. Five years ago, he hit his first century, coincidentally against Comilla, when he made 105 off 63 balls.Bowler of the week: Azmatullah Omarzai
It has been a productive week for Azmatullah Omarzai who has become an important player for Riders. The Afghanistan allrounder has been lethal with the new ball. Among all the BPL bowlers this season, he has the most wickets in the powerplay. Omarzai has not broken through yet in the T20 franchise world like his compatriots, but his new-ball chops and big-hitting ability make him a marked man for franchises around the world.

How Arshdeep gatecrashed Suryakumar and Mumbai's party

Suryakumar seemed to have the chase in control for the longest time until Arshdeep entered and changed the game at the death

Sruthi Ravindranath23-Apr-20231:15

Moody: Arshdeep a threat in the powerplay and at the death

Nature is healing. Piyush Chawla is rolling back the years. Suryakumar Yadav is back doing Suryakumar Yadav things. And Arshdeep Singh is back to taking wickets in a bunch – hasn’t been too long since he did that – in addition to defending totals in crunch situations, one game after another.For Suryakumar, though, it has been a long wait. He has endured a rough few months, often not striking the ball as he used to. The guy who pulled a Jofra Archer bouncer for a six on his first ball in international cricket was instead collecting unwanted records – like bagging three consecutive golden ducks in ODIs – during this time. The guy who has been owning the T20 format ever since he made his international debut in 2021 was struggling to even get going. Since 2022, he has had the most runs (1893) and the best strike rate (171.77) in T20s (minimum 20 innings). But it has been a quiet few months for Suryakumar.Related

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Against Chennai Super Kings this season, he nicked one behind while attempting to sweep. Against Delhi Capitals, he helped a short ball to fine leg and fell for a first-ball duck. On any other day, these shots would have produced results in his favour. In the first match of this season against Royal Challengers Bangalore, he played a uncharacteristic innings, scoring a 15-ball 16. It had been a gloomy start in the IPL for him, barring a 25-ball 43 against Kolkata Knight Riders.On Saturday, Mumbai were coming up against Kings’ big total of 214. At the halfway mark, the hosts seemed to be nowhere close to the required run rate. But only two teams have successfully chased down 200-plus targets this season, and on both occasions, the winning team needed about 120 in the last ten overs. A blinder is what Mumbai desperately needed. And it was still doable on the Wankhede surface where dew usually favours the chasing team.Suryakumar walked into the field with Mumbai needing 131 off 63 balls. He swept Rahul Chahar behind square for a four on the third ball he faced. The fun started in the next over when three of Liam Livingstone’s deliveries were swept fine for consecutive boundaries. Until then, the Mumbai crowd had reserved their cheers for Sachin Tendulkar, who turns 50 on Sunday and was interviewed by Ravi Shastri on the sidelines for the broadcaster. Now the whole stadium broke into a “Surya, Surya” chant.Suryakumar Yadav put on a show with his usual mix of innovative shots•BCCIIt was all Suryaesque from then on. Flick-pulling a slower short ball to the shorter boundary at fine leg. Getting on one knee to cut away a Nathan Ellis’ back-of-a-length ball over short third. Falling over while playing the paddle to bring up his fastest IPL fifty – off 23 balls. Showing off his superb wrist work by whipping Sam Curran over fine leg to bring the equation down to 40 off 18. Doing all of it with an air of nonchalance – all in all, it was a classic SKY innings.”Form is a funny thing,” Mumbai head coach Mark Boucher said after the match. “It’s always nice for Surya to get some runs, especially the way that he does, it looks pretty spectacular. Sometimes you judge it by the numbers. He’s been hitting the ball really well in the nets. It was just a matter of time before he translated that into runs. So grateful for having him in some good form, hitting the ball so sweet and playing so devastating just like he did tonight. It bodes well for the future for us going forward.”It was all hunky dory till then in the chase, with Cameron Green also doing his bit with a 43-ball 67. The game was almost in Mumbai’s hands.Enter Arshdeep, the man who’s been tasked with bowling the tough overs for Punjab Kings and India in the shortest format. Around this time last year, Arsheep, who is being touted as the “next big thing” in Indian cricket, bowled a tight 19th over to MS Dhoni and helped Kings defend 188. Since the IPL 2022, he’s risen through the ranks and has done some phenomenal stuff (like this) at the highest level.Arshdeep Singh finished with four wickets to his name•Associated PressEarlier in the chase, he had dismissed Ishan Kishan for 1 for his 50th IPL wicket. In the 18th over, Tim David had just dispatched his low full toss for a six off the first ball of the over. Arshdeep nailed the yorker next ball and landed another low full toss off which David took a single to give Suryakumar the strike. The boisterous home crowd got behind Suryakumar once more. He bowled a low full toss again, but this time, Suryakumar’s flick resulted in a superb catch in the midwicket region by Atharva Taide. Mumbai’s hopes were still not dashed, with David and Tilak Varma in the middle.A 15-run 19th over brought the equation down to 16 needed off six balls. The crowd had quietened a bit at this point, and there was a lot of chatter among Kings players. Just one run came off the first two balls. On the third ball, Varma took a swing at a full ball and missed it, and the ball went on to break the middle stump. The next delivery was again a full ball on middle, this time to Nehal Wadhera, the Impact Player. The new middle stump met the same fate. And that’s how Arshdeep gatecrashed Suryakumar and Mumbai’s party.It was also a game that came alive in the second half of each innings. Kings had slowed down after a decent start, with the run rate hovering around eight until the 15th over. The carnage began in the next over in which Arjun Tendulkar conceded 31 runs, with Curran and Harpreet Singh Bhatia hitting four fours and two sixes. Kings plundered 96 runs off the last five overs; the second-most runs scored in that period in IPL history.

Switch Hit: Season's greetings

Alan Gardner is joined by Andrew Miller and Vithushan Ehantharajah to catch up on the latest news and the start of the County Championship

ESPNcricinfo staff25-Apr-2023It’s the start of the English summer (sort of), and there have been some occasional outbreaks of cricket between the showers. After a few weeks off, the pod is back, with Alan Gardner, Andrew Miller and Vithushan Ehantharajah sitting down to catch up on the news – from the CDC verdicts at the end of March, to the early rounds of the County Championship and what’s been going on at the IPL. There’s also a snippet from our new women’s cricket segment, as Valkerie Baynes and Firdose Moonda take a look at the state of the game.

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