Root reinvents himself while maintaining trademark style

The new regime and not being captain anymore has brought him liberation and, perhaps, self-discovery

Osman Samiuddin06-Jul-2022Joe Root got England underway on the fifth morning at Edgbaston with a little nudge off his thighs to square leg for a single. It was almost exactly the shot with which he began England’s final day in the chase at Lord’s against New Zealand earlier this summer. It is a trademark Joe Root shot.He has an entire family of back-cuts, from the angled-bat dab down fine to the more vertical open-faced glides square and everything in between: these are all trademark Joe Root shots.The Joe Root off-drives are a trademarked range, housing the bog-standard drive through extra cover, leaning lithely into the shot, the square-driving on one knee or going straighter, body and bat moving into the ball with the practised ease of a dancer.Related

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The clips he works through midwicket – also a Joe Root trademark. The pull shot: trademarked; the back-foot punch, on his toes, as elegant as a yoga pose; the little drop to the off for a quick single; these are all shots that are identifiably Joe Root’s but if so many shots are identifiably Joe Root’s, then can any one shot be truly his? And if not, where does that leave us?With the best batter in the world at this moment.One sense that is common with great batters in their very best periods, as with Root now, is that every great innings acquires this inevitability. Of course, they scored a hundred and of course, they did it the way they did it, the way they always do it. It’s them, that’s what they do. After a time, pitches, bowlers, situations, and even results can become irrelevant.Or rather than an inevitability, is this what it must be like to see (rather than hear) an echo? Every subsequent great innings is the echo of an original great innings the batter has played, except unlike with sound, there’s no loss of vividness.With Root, most innings drive home the universal observation about his batting, that the first time you look up at the scoreboard after he has come in, he is already on 20-something and nobody is quite sure how he got there (hint: those trademarked shots).But the reality for most batters has always been that the first part of any innings is the most difficult time. They are lining up actions, making sense of the surface, getting their body aligned, making sure the feet are light, the arms loose and a central equilibrium holding it together. They are trying to tune themselves out from the outside noise but also tuning themselves to the task at hand.There’s no standout metric that illustrates the point of Root’s starts – the best one is that his dismissal rate in the first 20 balls (among batters who’ve played at least 100 innings since Root’s debut) is the sixth lowest. Even the caveat that he has played a lot in England, where top-order batting is basically about negotiating the early dismissal, doesn’t save this from being underwhelming. But that only speaks to a broader point about Root, because by the time you’ve read the last two paragraphs, he’s already on 23.

With Root, most innings drive home the universal observation about his batting, that the first time you look up at the scoreboard after he has come in, he is already on 20-something

For all that England’s batting has been this summer – and aside from being astonishingly successful, it’s still not clear precisely what it is – it has been underpinned by the presence of Root. He is the one who was there when none of this was there, and he’ll be the one still there when all this isn’t. That he has bookended the wild last few weeks with fourth-innings hundreds in a big chase is perfect.And the Edgbaston hundred was every bit as significant as Lord’s hundred. England had lost three wickets in two runs in a matter of minutes, Virat Kohli was all over them and India were threatening to recreate The Oval. Lose Lord’s and who knows whether this happens. Lose this and face the questions, or at least the smirking reminders that against the best attacks, this isn’t going to work.Root’s response was to lead England as he was always meant to: with bat. In the first 15 overs of the stand with Jonny Bairstow, a period in which the game was at its tightest, Root took 60% of the strike. That might not appear a very lopsided proportion but imagine the strong temptation to let Bairstow take over and really barrel his way into that target?Instead, Root gamed it out. Enough singles to not let the score stagnate (but not so many that anyone noticed he was already on 20-something), keep out what you can, put away what you can. Jasprit Bumrah got too straight, away to the midwicket fence; Mohammad Shami gave him a fraction on length, dabbed through backward point. Root survived a tight lbw shout, next ball he shuffled out – another trademark – and clipped Shami through midwicket.From the other end, Ravindra Jadeja was gaining control. Post tea, he had figures of 6-2-9-0 into his spell, drying up England’s runs from over the wicket. Root had reverse-swept twice to try to break the stranglehold, without success. In the seventh over of Jadeja’s spell, he finally paddle-swept him twice, each for four; in his next, he swept him conventionally for another. Boom, Bumrah and Shami seen off, now Jadeja; by the next over, Mohammed Siraj and Shardul Thakur were bowling.He can be a rock star too•PA Photos/Getty ImagesThis wasn’t what England had done previously; this was Root doing what he does. He referred to conversations in the dressing room about recognising moments when the pressure had to be absorbed, before ruthlessly turning it around – a bit of nuance not often talked about over these Tests.Once that period broke open, the inevitability crept back in: of a Root ton and more improbably of another big England chase. On the final morning, Root got through the 90s with, in order, a glide off the face through third man, a clip off his pads and a late, late dab so fine it bounced in front of and then over second slip – all for four. If Root were to sleepwalk his way through the 90s, this is the route he would take as he knows it so well.Eventually, England chased down the total in a much more calculated and less bludgeoning way than at Trent Bridge and Headingley. They were more inevitable about it and at the centre was Root.All that said, it has been a fascinating summer in the career of Joe Root. He feels like a kid again and because he has never knowingly not looked like a kid, the youthfulness is assumed to be in his batting. The new regime yes, no captaincy also yes. Together it has brought liberation. His strike rate has always been healthy but this summer, he has been striking at 19 runs more per 100 balls.Also, perhaps, self-discovery. At Trent Bridge, he played shots that are unusual for him in Tests and urged a rewriting of the coaching manual. After Edgbaston, he half-joked he was caught between the grounding of the old Yorkshire way of orthodox batting and the entreaties of his captain to be a rock star. But he has clearly been re-thinking, or rather re-assessing, more seriously the contours of Test batting.”It’s scripted out how you need to play in Test cricket,” he said when asked about dealing with the stifling orthodoxy around the format. “Sometimes being unpredictable is very difficult to bowl at. Sometimes the gaps are bigger, and you know where the ball is going to be because of generally how sides bowl for long periods of time. There have been occasions this summer I might have played some unusual shots. But they’ve felt like pretty low-risk options in the moment.”It’s not as if no one has ever come upon this truth before. Virender Sehwag, as just one, understood this from the moment he started playing. In Root’s case, it could even be argued he has returned to it, given his once burgeoning white-ball game. Remember that, unlike his great contemporaries, he rarely gets to exhibit his (still considerable) white-ball skills anymore.He has played seven ODI innings since becoming a world champion three years ago; he hasn’t played a T20 outside the Blast in over three years. The absence has steadily dimmed the cachet and robbed him of a global, all-format sheen (while, by contrast, Steven Smith and Kane Williamson faced off in the last T20 World Cup final). If nothing else, this summer has been a righting of that.

Has anyone scored more runs in T20Is in a calendar year than Suryakumar Yadav?

And is Rilee Rossouw the only batter to score consecutive T20I hundreds?

Steven Lynch08-Nov-2022I heard on the commentary that Suryakumar Yadav has scored more than a thousand runs in T20Is this year. Is this the record? asked Vinod Ganesh from India

It’s true that Suryakumar Yadav, one of the standout performers of this year’s World Cup, went past 1000 runs in 2022 during his unbeaten 61 in the last group game, against Zimbabwe in Melbourne.After that, Suryakumar’s tally for the year stood at 1026. The only man to have scored more in a calendar year in T20Is is Pakistan’s Mohammad Rizwan, who amassed 1326 in 2021. Rizwan is close behind this year as well: by the end of the World Cup group stage, he had scored 924 runs in 2022.I know about the highest scores on Test debut. But who has made the highest score in his second Test match? asked Bill Atkins from Australia

Seven men have made double-centuries on Test debut, but – rather surprisingly perhaps – only two men have reached 200 in their second match. Pride of place goes to Zaheer Abbas, who made a sublime 274 in his second Test for Pakistan, against England at Edgbaston in 1971. Three years later, David “Bumble” Lloyd of England made 214 not out in his second Test, against India, also at Edgbaston. It was the first of Zaheer’s 12 Test centuries, but Lloyd’s only one.Wajahatullah Wasti of Pakistan (against Sri Lanka in Lahore in 1998-99) and Australia’s Phillip Hughes (against South Africa in Durban in 2008-09) both scored two centuries in their second Test match.Australia’s elimination meant the host nation has still never won the T20 World Cup. Has anyone even reached the final at home? asked Bryce Cunningham from Australia

The current tournament is the eighth edition of the men’s T20 World Cup, and you’re right in saying that no host nation has ever won it. The best performance by the hosts came in 2012, when Sri Lanka got to the final at the Premadasa Stadium in Colombo, but lost to West Indies. India reached the semi-finals in 2016, but also lost to eventual champions West Indies, in Mumbai.It’s a different story for the women: England won at home in 2009, beating New Zealand in the final at Lord’s, and Australia followed suit in 2020, overpowering India in the final in Melbourne.Rilee Roussouw’s two consecutive T20I hundreds has been matched by one batter, France’s Gus McKeon, earlier this year•BCCIIs Rilee Rossouw the only batter to score two consecutive hundreds in T20Is? asked Muhammad Riaz via Facebook

The South African Rilee Rossouw scored 100 not out against India in Indore in October, and in his next visit to the crease hit 109 against Bangladesh in Sydney during the T20 World Cup. He did play one match in between, against Zimbabwe in Hobart, but didn’t bat in that game.Only one other man has scored successive T20 hundreds. He did so earlier this year, but you might have missed it at the time: teenager Gus McKeon made his debut for France in a World Cup qualifier in Finland in July, and scored 109 against Switzerland in Vantaa in his second match, and 101 against Norway in Kerava in the third. Gus, who turned 19 last month, lives in Western Australia and has played club cricket in Perth.No one has yet done this in women’s T20Is. New Zealand’s Sophie Devine hit six successive scores of 50 or more in 2019 and 2020, including a century against South Africa in Wellington. McKeon shares the men’s record of four with five other playersWho holds the record for bowling the most overs in a single Test series? asked James Emerson from England

The leader here is the much-missed Australian legspinner Shane Warne, who sent down no fewer than 439.5 overs (2639 balls) during the 1993 Ashes series in England. That was a six-Test series: the records for a five- and four-Test series are both held by the same man, the West Indian slow left-armer Alf Valentine. He sent down 430 overs (2580 balls) during the five-match home rubber against India in 1952-53, and 422.3 (2535 balls) during the four Tests of his debut series in England in 1950.The record for a three-Test rubber is 236 overs (1416 balls), by Muthiah Muralidaran in Sri Lanka’s home series against England in 2000-01. The West Indian offspinner Lance Gibbs sent down 1538 balls in 192.2 eight-ball overs – the equivalent of 256.2 of six balls – in Australia in 1960-61, but he played in only three of the five Tests.Use our feedback form, or the Ask Steven Facebook page to ask your stats and trivia questions

Stats – Azhar Ali: Pakistan's most prolific top-three batter

All the key numbers from Azhar Ali’s 12-year Test career for Pakistan

Sampath Bandarupalli16-Dec-202234.4 Percentage of Test innings where Azhar Ali batted 100-plus balls, the highest by any batter since his debut (min: 100 innings). Azhar faced 100-plus balls in 63 innings, the joint-second most by any batter since his debut. Joe Root had done it 75 times in 232 innings, while Alastair Cook also faced 100-plus balls in 63 innings during this period.7079 Runs by Azhar in Test cricket. He is one of the five players with 7000-plus runs for Pakistan in the format. His 19 hundreds are the fifth highest for Pakistan in Test cricket.

302* Azhar’s highest score in Test cricket – against West Indies in 2016 in Dubai. It was the first-ever hundred scored in a day-night Test match and currently the second-highest individual score in a pink-ball Test. Azhar is only one among the four Pakistan batters to have scored a triple-hundred in Tests.101.6 Balls-per-dismissal in Test cricket for Azhar, the fourth-best ratio for any batter with 100-plus innings since his debut. Only Younis Khan (107.7) had a better balls-per-dismissal than Azhar in Tests during this period for Pakistan.

1198 Test runs by Azhar in 2016, the second most by anyone for Pakistan in a calendar year, behind Mohammad Yousuf’s 1788 runs in 2006. Azhar faced 2569 balls in 2016, which is also the second most in a year for Pakistan after Yousuf’s 2854 in 2006.57.25 Azhar’s batting average during a three-year period in Tests – between October 2014 and September 2017. He scored 2748 runs in 52 innings with nine centuries and 11 fifties. Only three players had scored 1500-plus runs at a better batting average during this period.

6 Test matches missed by Azhar since his debut in July 2010. Only one player with 50-plus Test caps had missed fewer Tests for Pakistan during their career – Hanif Mohammad, who missed only two of the 57 Tests by Pakistan during his 17-year career.37 Innings where Azhar opened for Pakistan – in 20.8% of his innings in Tests. Among players who’ve batted at No. 3 or lower at least 100 times in Test cricket, only two others – David Boon (33.2) and Alec Stewart (32.8) – have opened in a higher percentage of innings.With Pakistan perennially on the lookout for a stable opening combination, Azhar – a solid No. 3 until that time – took on the responsibility in the third Test of the series against England in November 2015, opening in Test cricket for only the fourth time in his career.

Azhar, however, had the experience, having opened in 59 of 80 first-class innings before his Test debut in 2010. He scored 1359 runs as a Test opener between 2015 and 2017 at 59.08 – the second-best average among openers with at least 500 runs in this period.6853 Test runs by Azhar while batting in the top three, the highest by any batter for Pakistan. His tally in the top-order for Pakistan is 2798 more than the next highest – Younis Khan (4055). Azhar scored 5297 runs while batting at No.3 alone, the seventh highest for any batter in Test cricket.

What has been the longest gap between a player's international debuts?

And is Ishan Kishan the youngest and fastest to score a double-hundred in an ODI?

Steven Lynch13-Dec-2022England won the first Test in Rawalpindi despite facing only 35% of the overs in the match. Was this any sort of record? asked Richard Anderson from England

England faced 136.5 overs and Pakistan 252 in the match in Rawalpindi, so England faced only 35.2% of the overs, yet still ended up winning. Rather surprisingly perhaps, they come in only seventh on this particular list, which is headed by India, who faced just 30.9% of the overs in beating New Zealand in Delhi in 1964-65. India made 465 for 8 declared in 113.4 overs and 73 for 3 in 9.1, and bowled New Zealand out for 262 (125.1 overs) and 272 (149.2).There are three other Tests in which the winning team faced less than half the overs of the losers: South Africa (50 overs) against Zimbabwe (106.2) in Cape Town in 2004-05, Australia (80.2) vs India (165.4) in Mumbai in 2000-01, and England (118) vs South Africa (239.4) at Lord’s in 1924.Abrar Ahmed took the first seven wickets to fall on his Test debut in Multan. Has anyone ever done better than this? asked Zeeshan Mohammad from Pakistan

That remarkable debut by the Pakistan legspinner Abrar Ahmed against England in Multan last week wasn’t quite a record: playing for West Indies against England at Old Trafford in 1950, the Jamaican slow left-armer Alf Valentine took the first eight wickets to fall. The only other man to take the first five wickets to fall in his first Test was George Bissett of South Africa, against England in Cape Town in 1927-28.If we include the second innings of the match, their sides having batted first, the England pair of Bill Lockwood (against Australia at Lord’s in 1893) and John Lever (against India in Delhi in 1976-77) took the first six wickets available to them on their debuts. Fen Cresswell (New Zealand vs England at The Oval in 1949) and Lester King (West Indies vs India in Kingston in 1961-62) collected the first five. King, who was playing in only his third first-class match, had not taken five wickets in an innings before.Is Ishan Kishan the youngest and fastest to score a double-century in a one-day international? asked Jigna Devalia from the United Arab Emirates

Ishan Kishan’s amazing 210 against Bangladesh in Chattogram at the weekend did contain the fastest double-century in a one-day international so far. Kishan zoomed to 200 in just 126 balls, 12 quicker than the previous fastest, by Chris Gayle for West Indies against Zimbabwe in Canberra during the 2015 World Cup. Virender Sehwag needed 140 balls for his double-century for India against West Indies in Indore in December 2011.And Ishan Kishan is also the youngest to score an ODI double-century. He’s 24, two years younger than his captain Rohit Sharma was when he made the first of his three doubles, against Australia in Bengaluru in November 2013.Of the other ODI double-centurions, Fakhar Zaman and Martin Guptill were 28 (with Fakhar a couple of months younger), Virender Sehwag 33, Chris Gayle 35, and Sachin Tendulkar 36. Here’s the full list of the highest individual scores in ODIs.There is, however, a younger double-centurion in women’s ODIs. New Zealander Amelia Kerr was only 17 when she hit 232 not out – and then took 5 for 17 – against Ireland in Dublin in June 2018. Australia’s Belinda Clark was 27 when she made 229 not out – the first ODI double-century by man or woman – against Denmark in Mumbai during the 1997 women’s World Cup.Devon Thomas received his Test cap nearly 12.5 years after his debut ODI•Mark Brake/Cricket Australia/Getty ImagesI noticed that Devon Thomas made his Test debut for West Indies more than 13 years after his first one-day international. Has anyone had a longer gap between debuts? asked Kris Jurgensen from Australia

That’s a good spot: Devon Thomas made his ODI debut against Bangladesh in Dominica in July 2009, as part of a rejigged West Indian team during a contracts dispute. Fast-forward to last week, and Thomas made his Test debut against Australia in Adelaide.The gap of nearly 12.5 years between Thomas’s ODI and Test debuts is indeed a record, by over a year. The previous longest gap belonged to Aminul Islam, who played his first ODI for Bangladesh in Chittagong (now Chattogram) in October 1988, and his first Test nearly 12 years later, at Dhaka in November 2000; he made up for lost time by scoring 145. That was Bangladesh’s inaugural Test: Tamim Iqbal’s uncle Akram Khan, who also played in it, had made his ODI debut two days after Aminul.Next come Ed Joyce and Kevin O’Brien, who both played (Joyce for England) in Ireland’s first official one-day international, in Belfast in June 2006; both were still around for Ireland’s inaugural Test, against Pakistan at Malahide nearly 12 years later in May 2018.The previous-longest gap by someone whose country was playing Test cricket throughout his international career belongs to the Hampshire offspinner Shaun Udal, who played his first ODI for England vs New Zealand at Edgbaston in May 1994, and his first Test 11.5 years later, against Pakistan in Multan in November 2005.I just noticed that Usman Khawaja top-scored in all five of Australia’s innings in Pakistan earlier this year. Has this ever happened before? asked Leo McGuinn from Australia

Usman Khawaja’s success in Pakistan earlier this year, when he top-scored in all five of Australia’s innings in the Tests, turns out to be unique. Bobby Abel (for England vs South Africa in 1888-89), Roshan Mahanama (Sri Lanka vs New Zealand in 1992-93), Dave Houghton (Zimbabwe vs Sri Lanka in 1994-95) and Hashim Amla (with 253 not out, 114 and 123 not out for South Africa against India in 2009-10) top-scored for their teams in all three innings of a Test series (Houghton in three matches, the others in two). The West Indies pair of Desmond Haynes (against Pakistan in 1992-93) and Brian Lara (in Sri Lanka in 2001-02) both top-scored in five out of six innings in a series.Only a handful of men have top-scored more than five times in any Test series. The most recent was Joe Root, in six out of nine innings in the split series between England and India in 2021 and 2022. The others with six were Eric Rowan (South Africa vs England in 1951), Clyde Walcott (West Indies vs Australia in 1954-55, a series in which he scored a record five centuries), Sunil Gavaskar (in his first series for India, against West Indies in 1970-71), Mohinder Amarnath (India vs West Indies in 1982-83), Andrew Strauss (England vs South Africa in 2004-05), and Steve Smith (in the 2019 Ashes series).Shiva Jayaraman of ESPNcricinfo’s stats team helped with some of the above answers.Use our feedback form, or the Ask Steven Facebook page to ask your stats and trivia questions

Dhoni and CSK recreate old Chepauk magic

A crowd of about 35,000 got to watch a massive opening stand, wickets from the CSK spinners, and, of course, the good old Dhoni show

Deivarayan Muthu04-Apr-20234:36

‘Dhoni rises to the occasion for his fans’

Shivam Dube has just launched wristspinner Ravi Bishnoi for back-to-back sixes over wide long-on in the 14th over. A crowd of about 35,000 at Chepauk screams: (Hey, Dube get out). A similar chant rang around at Chepauk earlier this week during the intra-squad practice game that was thrown open to the public, who thronged the ground just to watch MS Dhoni smash sixes.Once Dube got out during that practice game, the Chennai crowd got what it wanted. But in Chennai Super Kings’ first home game in four years, they fear that they might not get to see their bat. When Moeen Ali belts Avesh Khan for a triptych of fours next over and when Ben Stokes smokes the fast bowler over mid-off for another four, the crowd becomes even more restless.Super Kings are 203 for 5 after the 19th over. Mark Wood has Ravindra Jadeja skying a pull and even before Bishnoi settles under it, the roof is blown off Chepauk. The DJ plays from Kamal Haasan’s recent blockbuster movie . Over the past four years, Chennai has had to live with only memories of Dhoni. Now, it finally gets to see Dhoni in the flesh.Related

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And Dhoni gives the Chepauk fans what they want. Wood, England’s speed demon, hits 149kph and hides the ball away from Dhoni’s reach. It finishes a set of stumps outside off, but Dhoni still reaches out and scythes his first ball flat and hard over point for six. He will turn 42 this July, but his hand-eye coordination and his power is incredible. Chepauk goes wild. Wood goes wide of the crease next ball and bangs a bouncer into Dhoni’s arm pit. He swiftly swivels on the back foot and hooks one of the fastest bowlers in the world into the top tier over square leg for a bigger six. Chepauk loses it once again.Shaik Rasheed, Rajvardhan Hangargekar, Devon Conway and Ruturaj Gaikwad, who have all never seen Dhoni do this at Chepauk before, are up on their feet, clapping in almost disbelief. But for the Chepauk faithful, this was old magic, even though Dhoni holed out next ball.

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The entire evening was about Super Kings recreating the old magic on their grand homecoming.It had all started with Gaikwad and Conway providing a throwback to M Vijay-Michael Hussey during their 110-run opening partnership. Much like Vijay back in the day, Gaikwad lined up the offspinner (K Gowtham in this case) and pumped him for three sixes in one over. After the powerplay, Conway took Hussey-esque trips down the pitch and took calculated risks against both spin and pace.Of course, there was a spin choke later in the evening, but it was a slightly unfamiliar one in a high-scoring fixture. The pitch on Monday wasn’t a turner, but Moeen and Mitchell Santner extracted enough turn and denied the Lucknow Super Giants batters easy access to the shorter boundary on one side. After being on 79 for 0 inside the powerplay, Super Giants fell to 130 for 5, thanks to Moeen and Santner.The crowd knows that Super Kings’ spinners have got this. But the presence of Nicholas Pooran at No. 6 for Super Giants prompts Dhoni to hold Jadeja back. However, with Deepak Chahar and Stokes leaking runs, Dhoni brings Jadeja into the attack for the 15th over. Pooran immediately smashes the left-arm fingerspinner out of the attack with two imposing sixes.Pooran’s hits hush the Chepauk crowd, but they soon find their voice once again when Tushar Deshpande has Pooran holing out in the 16th over and follows it up with a boundary-less 18th over.Super Giants need 37 of 12 balls. Super Kings are still waiting for the arrival of their death bowlers Sisanda Magala and Maheesh Theekshana after finishing their national duties. Hangargekar had conceded 6, 4, 4 to Pooran in his first over, but Dhoni backs an unheralded Indian seamer to do the job for him under pressure. The likes of Mohit Sharma and Sudeep Tyagi used to do the dirty job for him back in the day.3:13

Moody praises Moeen, Santner on their smart use of Chepauk dimensions

Having stacked the off-side field with his best fielders – Jadeja, Gaikwad, Santner and Stokes – Dhoni asks Hangargekar to bowl wide yorkers and pitch the ball away from the hitting arcs of both Badoni and Gowtham. Hangargekar, who is playing only his second game for Super Kings, marginally misses his line and gives up two wides in the over. But he doesn’t veer away from his plan and concedes just nine runs overall in the penultimate over to all but kill off Super Giants’ chase.The endgame at Chepauk has to feature Dhoni. He ticks that box as well by tracking down a skier from Badoni despite being wrong-footed initially.”[It] does mean a lot to be back here,” Dhoni said at the toss amid deafening cheers. “IPL started in 2008 but we’ve not played a lot of cricket here. Only about five-six seasons we’ve been here. This is the first time the full stadium will be operational, a few stands were empty earlier. Really glad that we get to play all our home games here at Chepauk, means a lot.”It certainly meant a lot to the Super Kings fans too.As the clock ticks past 12am, Dhoni has a reunion with former Super Kings Suresh Raina and Robin Uthappa, who are on commentary for this IPL, capping a memorable return to Chepauk.

Shanto and Young: Two rising stars add solidity at the top of their sides

They have been in form in the lead up to the World Cup but have different roles to play in the two XIs

Mohammad Isam27-Sep-2023You are likely to hear a lot more about Najmul Hossain Shanto and Will Young during the World Cup. They head into the tournament among their respective team’s top scorers this year, having also top-scored in the Bangladesh-New Zealand third ODI in Dhaka on Monday, their last game before the World Cup. But they have reached this stage through different routes in the last couple of years.Young is New Zealand’s fourth-highest run-getter in ODIs since his debut in 2021. He has opened in half of those matches, and has now nailed that position even as Kane Williamson returns for the World Cup. His 70 off 80 in the third game while chasing 172 against Bangladesh ensured New Zealand didn’t stumble despite losing two early wickets.Young said that although Bangladeshi conditions aren’t exactly like India’s, they helped New Zealand know their balance ahead of the World Cup.Related

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“The boys were saying in the change room that we haven’t won a one-day series here since 2008,” Young said. “Just the extra fuel for the fire to come here. Heading into this game with a 1-0 lead, get[ting] the job done. Winning a series for the first time in 15 years is pretty special. Playing three games in Bangladesh before a World Cup in India is pretty good preparation. It is not the same conditions but they might be similar, especially with the balance of sides.”Potentially, three seamers and couple of spinners. It was a good hit out. Five of us are heading to India for the World Cup. For those guys it was especially good. For the rest of the team, it is good to get the experience here as they [conditions] are very different to what they are like back home.”Young said that he was looking forward to linking up with the rest of the New Zealand squad so that they know more about Indian conditions. “We have a lot of experience in our batting in the World Cup squad,” Young said. “Rachin [Ravindra] and I are younger in our international careers. It is nice to have a bank of experience of playing in these conditions. We will take it to the World Cup.”For the rest of the squad, batters in particular, they have played in the IPL and bilateral series against India for years. We will hear what they have got to say, soak it all up. So, when we play the first game against England in Ahmedabad, we can hit the ground running.”Shanto was the only Bangladesh batter to go past 50 in the third ODI•AFP/Getty ImagesShanto has turned his career around in the last 12 months, from being a benched T20 batter to being the Bangladesh vice-captain in the World Cup. He returned to lead Bangladesh in the third game after missing a few matches in the Asia Cup with a hamstring injury and led from the front with his 76 off 84 balls.”It was disappointing to get out like that. If I hung around till the end, we could have made 200-220 runs, “Shanto said. “I should have batted with the tail. I couldn’t do it, so it was disappointing.”It is a matter of pride. My family is very happy. I will enjoy these moments. It wasn’t a happy occasion result-wise. I was excited since I was declared captain. When I was batting or when the bowlers were starting well, I was enjoying it.”Shanto’s innings stood out but the rest of the batting order crumbled around him. While the hosts maintained a good run rate, they couldn’t get partnerships going at any stage.”I think it was a good wicket for batting. We continued on a good run rate of around 5.5 to 5.7 even when we were losing wickets. We had a few batters getting out after being settled in the wicket. We needed a couple of big partnerships. I think we have to look inwards [to figure out] why it is not happening. It is up to the individual,” he said.Shanto’s turnaround in form started with the T20 World Cup last year where he was the team’s highest run-scorer. He expressed his desire to get better individually and collectively. “As a batter, it is my duty to score runs in every game. It shouldn’t be a dream. It is what I am supposed to do. I should do better. I am trying to improve myself.”It doesn’t matter if I am the highest run-getter if the team doesn’t do well. We didn’t make it to the semi-finals of the T20 World Cup last year so individual performance doesn’t count much for us. Important thing is, we need to win matches. I will try to convert those fifties into hundreds. I want to bat with the same intent and plan whenever there’s an opportunity,” he said.

Sciver-Brunt shows how England can tackle India's spinners

“The way to combat [spin] would be to get really far forward or really far back and then using the sweep”

S Sudarshanan15-Dec-2023When you walk out of the DY Patil University campus, which houses the cricket stadium, in the evening onto the main road, there are two serpentine queues of auto rickshaws. The drivers throw two words for you to make a choice: “Nerul [or] Juinagar! Nerul [or] Juinagar!” Those are the nearest railway stations from the university.Not quite in the same tone but “footwork” and “intent” were the oft-repeated words in Nat Sciver-Brunt’s press conference on Friday.England were dismissed for 136 in reply to India’s 428 in the women’s Test match as offspinner Deepti Sharma picked up a five-for. They now trail by 478 after India finished the day at 186 for 6, not enforcing the follow-on.England knew what to expect in Indian conditions. But the practice pitches on the two days leading up to the Test were not turners. In fact, both captains felt the pitches were skiddy with Heather Knight in particular finding “spin easier to face [but] things will change”. On the first day, India amassed 410 for 7 at a run rate of 4.36.Related

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But England were tied down by India, who opted for a pace-spin combination to start with. And in the ten overs since Deepti’s introduction in the 26th, England lost 7 for 28.Sciver-Brunt, who made 59 off 70 balls, put England’s collapse down to the in-between lengths Deepti bowled. “Making the batters not sure whether to come forward or back,” she said when asked about why Deepti was so hard to deal with. “When you play spin well, [it is about] making good decisions going forward or back and not getting caught in the crease. She bowled lengths that were difficult to read, and she also attacked the stumps.”England’s batting line-up collapsed against Deepti Sharma and Sneh Rana•BCCIDanni Wyatt did not press fully forward and got an inside edge onto her pad that lobbed to short leg. Sophie Ecclestone went back to a delivery she should have been forward to – a fullish-length ball spinning in a bit. Lauren Bell played for turn and ended up being bowled on the outside edge.”There was inconsistent spin, and you were not sure what to set up for as a batter,” Sciver-Brunt said. “Covering both sides of the bat was the main challenge. It is obviously a Test-match wicket that was going to deteriorate at some point. Some good bowling and obviously not brilliant footwork. The bowlers are creating indecision in the way we go about things. The inconsistency of the pitch as well [played its part].”England’s frailties against spin came to the fore in their 2-1 T20I series defeat at home against Sri Lanka in September. They lost 18 out of 24 wickets to spin in those three matches, which prompted head coach Jon Lewis to bring a select group of batters to Mumbai for a spin-training camp. It was keeping in mind not just the India tour but the bigger picture – the T20 World Cup next year in Bangladesh and the ODI World Cup in 2025 in India.It would be unfair to expect positive results immediately but Sciver-Brunt offered a template for the rest of hear team-mates to follow. She was constantly on the attack, which is not to suggest she didn’t trust her defence. Against spinners, she scored 27 off 26 balls and hit six off her ten fours but faced 17 dots, too. Of those 27 runs, she scored 18 on the leg side and laid a blueprint that she hoped the other batters could follow in the second innings.”I would speak in the change room a little bit about the surface,” she said, “and about the intent to score and the areas. The bounce from the seamers is not very high and so looking to score down the ground as much as we can will be important. The pitch deteriorated a little bit and some not-so-good footwork in the end.”When you come to India to play, you are expecting a slightly slower surface that takes turn, and face experienced spinners. The way to combat that would be to get really far forward or really far back and then using my sweep the best I can. That’s the plan.”We know when India get on a roll with the wickets, they can create a noise around that. Just try to ride that pressure and wave as a batter is the method that I will be using. Ideally, you don’t want to lose wickets in clusters.”For England’s batting train to get back on track, there is no choice but to follow the Sciver-Brunt advice of showing more intent and being assured in their footwork.

Shubha Satheesh just wants to be responsible

The top-order batter made her India debut in a Test last December, and got picked for the WPL. For her, it’s all about accountability

S Sudarshanan12-Feb-2024Shubha Satheesh was unassuming and sported a mild, nervous smile as she walked in. The “hello” she whispered softly into the mic for a sound check was barely audible in the front row.It was her first press conference and the few weeks that led to it were eventful. India were playing a women’s Test match at home for the first time in nine years. She was called up for the two one-off Tests last December – against England and Australia – on the back of her 99 and 49 in an intra-squad practice match in Bengaluru in November. Before those games, Shubha was picked up by Royal Challengers Bangalore in the auction for WPL 2024.Her first day as an India cricketer tested her; she responded with a 69 after walking in in the sixth over, and stitched together a 115-run partnership with fellow debutant Jemimah Rodrigues. In the evening, she sat at the press conference room of the DY Patil Stadium with journalists curious to know more about her.She answered questions in a low tone and short sentences. She often paused; she ran out of words because “everything is happening all together”. She thought she was “a fortunate cricketer”. She just wanted to play when she started at 12; thoughts of pursuing the sport professionally didn’t exist.

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Her rawness came through, as did her thoughtfulness. “Today morning I got to know about everything,” she giggled when asked about her debut and her batting position in the Test match. She also admitted to forgetting part of a long question put to her, eliciting laughter in the room. Before the start of day two against England she picked up a finger injury while warming up; her left ring finger needed a splint, ruling her out of the rest of that Test as well as the one against Australia to follow.But on her first big day, Shubha had left an impression, both on and off the field.

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Soumya Gowda, who played age-group cricket for Karnataka with Shubha and is now a strength-and-conditioning coach, describes the young batter as a “very jovial person but one who keeps to herself”. The two know each other since their Under-16 days. “When it comes to cricket, she keeps it basic,” Gowda says. “Her preparation is such that she doesn’t have a special routine but knows what her job is.”She is not a very outgoing person, and one who doesn’t want the attention. But she keeps doing her job well and the attention automatically comes to her.”When I asked her how she felt about getting into the India team, the only thing she said is, ‘I just want to be responsible’. No matter what happens, she just wants to be responsible. Even with the state games, Shubha always wanted to be responsible and accountable for the opportunities she got.”In 2022-23, Shubha scored 192 runs in the Senior Women’s One Day Trophy at an average of 48 and a strike rate of close to 100. The corresponding numbers in the previous two editions of the competition were 263 runs, 43.83 average, 80.42 strike rate; and 346, 86.50 and 72.38. For someone who spent close to a decade in the domestic circuit – first for Karnataka before making the switch to Railways this season – and put in compelling performances before getting an India call-up, there surely must have been more thoughts and emotions than just about wanting to be responsible?India coach Amol Muzumdar hands Shubha her Test cap•Vipin Pawar/BCCI”I was sort of expecting the call, because the practice game went well for me,” Shubha says. “It was a dream-come-true moment. I went blank when I got to know I was in the team. I was not able to type anything… I was that excited, anxious also because it was all new for me.”I was just waiting for this opportunity to represent the country for the past three-four years. When I got that, the first thought which came to my mind was, ‘This is my responsibility to do well for my country, to feel proud about it.’ I was visualising playing for the country every day. That’s how the thought might have come.”She played all the team sports her school had to offer, and evenings meant playing gully cricket with the boys in the Mysore neighbourhood where she grew up. She was noticed in a local tennis-ball cricket tournament. Someone suggested to her father that she start formal training, and he then enrolled her in a cricket academy in Bengaluru.Talk to those who knew her back then and they invariably mention her athleticism and fielding. “My sports teacher saw my athleticism and suggested I play hockey for the school, and I captained them.Shubha and Jemimah Rodrigues put on a partnership of 115 that helped India to a total of 428 against England•BCCI”I thought I was naturally built that way,” Shubha says of her agility. “I never feared the ball ever in my career. I don’t remember getting afraid of putting my hands to the ball. I don’t know how it happened – it is quite natural. I have memories of taking good catches at point, and everywhere on the field. In one of my selection matches, I took a catch diving forward at backward point, and that made me really feel good,” she laughs, the pride unmistakable.It was not until 2014 when she was selected for a zonal camp that Shubha harboured ambitions of playing cricket full time. She topped the batting charts in the Under-19 Women’s Zonal League in 2016-17 and continued to be in the fray for the senior Karnataka side. Incidentally, it was her fielding that helped her make the cut.”The senior team was a bit tough [to get into] initially because there was a lot of competition and Karnataka has always been a good team. To get into the XI was tougher at that age but I kept performing. I was picked as a fielder in the XI initially, and they made me stand in the hot spots of the field everywhere. I used to get the ball all the time and that made me really happy. I enjoyed that a lot and even now, I like to stand in hot spots.”As a batter, Shubha is known to be an excellent timer of the cricket ball and a strokemaker. Which is not to suggest she can’t bat aggressively. She has all the shots in her repertoire, some of which she displayed in the Test against England. But one particular stroke takes pride of place. A pristinely timed cover drive, where she got her front foot to the pitch of the ball and creamed it between cover and backward point, got her going on her second ball in international cricket. She brought up her fifty with the straightest of straight drives between the non-striker and the stumps at that end.”I never feared the ball ever in my career. I don’t remember getting afraid of putting my hands to the ball”•Shubha Satheesh”[In the middle] I was just focused on playing the ball. But when I came back and I saw the highlights, I realised that it was a special cover drive for me. I remember when I played my first cricket ever, at the age of 12, my first runs were also via the straight drive. That I connected a lot, that felt very special.”Shubha also bowls medium pace. India had Pooja Vastrakar, Renuka Singh and Meghna Singh as the seamers for the two Tests. Shubha, who didn’t bowl against England, has the longest run-up of them all. “But [I’m] not the fastest… ,” she says quickly with a chuckle. “I am working on it. [As primarily a batter who can bowl] it is tough to make time for both. But I try to keep sessions particularly for my bowling in a week, and just work on my bowling on those days.”Talk about the WPL auction and she shakes her head in disbelief. She had registered herself for the auction but did not expect much. “I don’t know why, I just turned off the television and slept,” she says. “I then got a welcome message from the RCB management and got to know it happened!”Honestly, I did not expect it. But I was really very happy and excited when I came to know RCB picked me. I am a big RCB fan, being in Bangalore and things like that. So to represent RCB in my first season of the WPL feels surreal. I watched the last season, and it was very crazy, and beautiful to see.”With Smriti Mandhana, Sophie Devine, Ellyse Perry and S Meghana around, whether Shubha starts for RCB in the top order is anybody’s guess. But expect her to be diligent and sincere in her preparation. Like she has done all her career so far. And for her to be responsible when her time comes.

How Ravindra Jadeja can say no to no-balls

The ace spinner needs to respond to the rule change where third umpires are catching the marginal no-balls he used to get away with

Sidharth Monga04-Mar-2024Ravindra Jadeja has bowled 52 front-foot no-balls in Test cricket since December 2020. Of the 18 overall no-balls he had bowled before that, four had bounced more than once, and seven were detected by the third umpire because they had either resulted in dismissals or were reviewed under DRS. We don’t have records that confirm all of the remaining seven were indeed front-foot no-balls. Be that as it may, you get the gist: Jadeja has been bowling an extraordinarily high number of no-balls since late 2020.In a way, this increase in no-balls has nothing to do with Jadeja. In mid-2020, the ICC handed over calling of all foot-fault no-balls to the third umpire. Before that turning point in cricket, the third umpires used to check for no-balls only if the ball had resulted in a dismissal or if a non-dismissal had been reviewed by the fielding side.Now Jadeja is the perfect illustration for why you need a third umpire, for why it is so difficult to call no-balls on the field. He pushes the line anyway, but to add to that, he doesn’t land flat. His front foot goes well over the line in the air, then he drags it back while still in the air, and the toe makes the landing first. The umpire has to quickly draw an imaginary straight line from his heel to the ground and calculate in their head if it falls on the popping crease or just behind.Related

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That most of Jadeja’s no-balls are only caught on replay means he hasn’t started overstepping in 2020. Just that, he has started getting called for overstepping in 2020. Just imagine how many no-balls were missed before the third umpires started to check every ball for a foot fault. Not just from Jadeja, but especially Jadeja, because his landing is so difficult to work out.In another way, the increase in no-balls has everything to do with Jadeja. Since the third umpires took over calling all foot-fault no-balls, starting with the Test series between England and West Indies in July 2020, Kagiso Rabada and Ben Stokes have sent down the most foot-fault no-balls: 77. They are fast bowlers, and their increase from before third-umpires is not huge – 50s to 77. No spinner, however, comes even close to Jadeja’s 52 no-balls, and he has gone from seven foot-fault no-balls to 52. At No. 5, he is the only spinner among the top 14 bowlers of no-balls since the third umpire started checking every ball.Jadeja is one of the all-time great spinners and allrounders. He is such a gifted athlete that everything on the cricket field seems to come naturally to him. He is like a well-oiled machine on the road: smooth and seemingly effortless. This is not to say he doesn’t work hard, but he does give the impression that he does things the way he knows, and most of the times it just turns out to be too good for most other cricketers.With these no-balls, though, Jadeja needs to put in the extra effort. And it is not a big effort. Most of these are extremely marginal no-balls, and avoiding them requires only a small adjustment. A Test cricketer shouldn’t take so long to respond to a rule change.Known for his glib, funny one-liners on the field, India’s Test captain Rohit Sharma shouted during the ongoing Test series: “This Jadeja doesn’t bowl no-balls in the IPL, man. Jaddu, just imagine it’s T20.”In T20s, with the threat of the free hit around, Jadeja has overstepped just twice since 2020. In ODIs, he has done so only six times. The same should be easy to apply in Tests. In this series alone, Jadeja has bowled 11 no-balls, nearly twice what anybody else has. Luckily none of those has impacted his 17 wicket-taking balls, but it shouldn’t take a no-ball to cost him a wicket to make that adjustment.

Sunil Narine, number one in a field of one

Stats: No player has put in a greater all-round performance in a single season of the IPL

S Rajesh10-May-2024With 461 runs and 14 wickets in just 11 matches so far in IPL 2024, Sunil Narine stands on the cusp of something extraordinary: 39 more runs and one more wicket will make him the first player in IPL history to achieve the double of 500 runs and 15 wickets in a season.In fact, even with a 20% reduction – 400 runs and 12 wickets – only six instances turn up in the 16 IPL seasons before this one. These have been achieved by four different players, and the last of those came five seasons ago, in 2019 by Hardik Pandya.

It’s not about just the runs Narine has scored, but also the speed with which he has scored them, and the economy rates he has achieved with the ball to go with the wickets. It is rare enough for a specialist batter to score 450-plus runs in a season at a 175-plus strike rate – it has only happened seven times in an IPL season, two of which are in 2024. Narine has combined that with stunning performances with the ball.

And while 14 or more wickets at under 6.7 runs an over have come more often in the IPL – 44 times – his bowling numbers stand out because this has been such a batter-dominated season. The only other bowler to take 14-plus wickets at under 6.7 runs per over this season is Jasprit Bumrah.Of the six other instances when players achieved the double of 400-plus runs and 12 or more wickets, only Pandya had a 180-plus strike rate (in 2019), but that was coupled with an economy rate of 9.17. Andrew Symonds’ economy rate of 7.01 is the closest to Narine’s in the current season, but his strike rate in 2010 was below 130.Even when the cutoffs come down to 150 runs and five wickets, there are only two other instances of a player achieving an economy rate of under seven, and a strike rate of over 175. Chris Gayle scored 608 runs in 2011 but took only eight wickets, while Chris Morris took 13 wickets in 2016 but scored only 195 runs.

On the other hand, with a higher cutoff for runs and wickets – 400 runs and 12 wickets – you will have to make the two other qualifiers less stringent – the strike rate to 150-plus, and the economy rate to 7.5 – to have another member enter the Narine club.

Narine’s achievements this season is without precedent even in other major leagues across the world. In the major leagues in world cricket – IPL, BBL, CPL, PSL, SA20 and Vitality Blast – there has never been an instance of an allrounder even achieving the double of 250 runs and ten wickets at a strike rate of over 175 and a sub-seven economy rate.Let’s, therefore, ease up a little on the benchmarks: with a cutoff of 250 runs, ten wickets, 160 strike rate and 7.5 economy rate, eight players qualify, of whom five are from the Blast. The others are Kieron Pollard in IPL 2010, and Shadab Khan in PSL 2022.

The other metric which brings out Narine’s sensational all-round season is ESPNcricinfo’s player impact scores. These are points given for each batting and bowling performance for a player in a season, and is based not only on runs and wickets, but also on match context and pressure on the player when he batted or bowled. Based on these impact numbers, Narine has a batting impact score of 42.69 and a bowling impact score of 49.55 (these are on a per-match basis). In IPL history, no player has ever managed a 40-plus score in both batting and bowling in a season. Even 30-plus in each has only been achieved five times, including once by Narine himself in 2018.

With a six-match cutoff this season, Narine is among the top ten in both the batters’ and the bowlers’ lists this season – his score of 49.55 is fifth among bowlers, and tenth among batters. His overall cumulative impact score of 1014.13 is 1.424 times the next best – Bumrah’s 712.52.There is only one instance of the top impact player being further ahead of the second-placed player in IPL history – in 2011, when Gayle’s impact was 1.56 times higher than the second-placed Yusuf Pathan’s. Gayle’s total tally was largely due to his batting numbers, though – the batting-bowling split was 882.47 to 199.64. With Narine, though, the numbers are truly reflective of an allrounder in peak form in both departments.In fact, Narine features twice in the top-five list below: his 2018 season was similar, when his total impact was 1.25 times Rashid Khan’s. That was when he scored 357 runs in 16 innings at 189.89, and took 17 wickets at an economy rate of 7.65. This year, he has clearly outdone 2018 as well.

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