Siddons confident of Mushfiqur, Mominul returning to form against Sri Lanka

Mushfiqur and Mominul had made only 59 and 13 runs respectively in the two Tests in South Africa

Mohammad Isam10-May-2022Jamie Siddons, the Bangladesh batting coach, has backed Mushfiqur Rahim and Mominul Haque to return to form in the first Test against Sri Lanka in Chattogram next week. Mushfiqur and Mominul had made only 59 and 13 runs respectively in the two Tests in South Africa.In fact, Mominul had the personal-worst two-Test series of his career in South Africa, which extended his lean patch that began during the home Test series against Pakistan last year. Mominul has had only three-double figure scores in 12 innings since last November. As for Mushfiqur, he has made only 76 runs in his last three Tests, leaving Siddons with his hands full during Bangladesh’s short training camp in Chattogram in the lead-up to the Test that begins on May 15.”Every batsman goes through patches where they don’t make runs,” Siddons said. “I am really confident that he will make runs out here this week. I have seen some really good signs, the way he is hitting it in the last two days. We worked on a couple of little things with him. I think he is going to have a successful series.Related

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“Mominul has nine [seven] centuries in Chittagong. This week is another chance to make another couple. He loves this ground. We are just trying to get him ready to go. He is very confident.”Siddons produced a robust defence of Mushfiqur after questions were raised about the senior players’ future in a recent Nazmul Hassan press conference. The BCB chief didn’t mention Mushfiqur, but it resulted in some speculation around Mushfiqur’s career.”I think Mushy is only focused in the next two Tests,” Siddons said. “I don’t think he is worried about his career in any format. I think he is worried about making runs for us in these two Tests. He is quite successful in white-ball cricket.”Good players can have moments when they don’t make runs, and then bounce back. That’s why they are great players. Mushy is a very successful Test player. He keeps making runs. He might have a period like South Africa, and then he will bounce back again.”Overall too, Bangladesh’s batting is a cause for worry. Siddons said that appearances in the Dhaka Premier League and the short camp in Chattogram will be enough for the players to prepare for the Test series. He added that they have had a lot of discussion about Bangladesh’s batting, particularly around building on good starts in the first innings.”South Africa was a long tour. It was a successful tour in my opinion because of the one-day team. Probably [we] didn’t play great Test cricket. We will have good and bad days in cricket. We had a couple of bad days that made us look quite bad. I thought we played some really good cricket in those Tests. Taijul [Islam] gets a nine-for, [Mahmudul Hasan] Joy gets a great hundred, very early in his career. We had some really great starts in the first innings, we didn’t play great in the second innings. The real focus is to make bigger first-innings scores.”

Mackenzie Harvey and Beau Webster pull off Melbourne Renegades heist

Melbourne Stars looked to be cruising but now their hopes of qualifying to the playoffs have taken a hit

Matt Roller20-Jan-2021An extraordinary, unbroken sixth-wicket partnership of 63 in just 25 balls between Mackenzie Harvey and Beau Webster dragged Melbourne Renegades to only their third win of the season and put a dent in their cross-town rivals’ qualification hopes.Shuffling up and down the order, Harvey had struggled for any rhythm or form this season, and arrived at No. 6 with 71 needed off 37 balls in a chase of 159. But with licence to free his arms, he pumped three fours and a six in the Power Surge before punishing some shoddy death bowling with Webster for company to seal an improbable win.Melbourne Stars looked to be cruising to a four-point victory which would have taken them second after securing the Bash Boost thanks to a tight start with the ball, but instead their playoff chances are now in jeopardy. They sit third with 24 points, but have played a game more than the four teams hot on their heels, and play the in-form Perth Scorchers in their next fixture on Saturday.Mackenzie Harvey put on quite a show•Getty Images

For the Renegades, this was a happy homecoming after a 359-day stretch without playing at Marvel Stadium. They were already mathematically out of contention for the finals, but after their top five had contributed a combined 84 runs off 88 balls, they sent a 14,208-strong crowd home happy thanks to Harvey’s heroics.Harvey the heroThere was little in Harvey’s BBL career to suggest that he was capable of such a heist from the middle order. A slight, 20-year-old left-hander and the nephew of former Australia international Ian, he had managed only 268 runs in his 18 previous innings in the competition, at a strike rate of 118.58.He had generally been used as an opener rather than in the No. 6 role he played tonight, but his cameo of 29 off 17 in Sunday’s reverse fixture turned out to be a sign of things to come.Harvey arrived at the crease during a turgid innings of 14 off 18 balls from Jack Prestwidge, who had been promoted to No. 5. The Renegades had attempted to take the Power Surge ahead of the 14th over, but told the umpires too late and instead pushed it back until the 16th. When it was taken, Prestwidge was bounced out by Nathan Coulter-Nile’s third ball, but Harvey slapped the fourth through extra cover and hammered the fifth for six over backward square.He added two more boundaries off Adam Zampa’s final over, the second of the Surge, steering through third man and muscling over mid-on, before Liam Hatcher was taken for three fours as he sprayed the ball around in the 18th, with dew making it difficult to grip.With 25 needed from 12 balls, Harvey clubbed a juicy full toss from Coulter-Nile into the second tier, before Webster steered another through point then carved six over midwicket to leave six required off the last. After three singles, Webster smashed the winning boundary through mid-on to seal the win.Finch’s nightmare continuesAaron Finch’s BBL season has contained enough unfortunate dismissals for a 10-minute YouTube compilation, and his luck did not change tonight. He got down to sweep Zahir Khan in the final Powerplay over of the chase, but could only deflect the ball onto his stumps via the thigh pad. After his 10 tonight, he has managed only 169 runs in 11 innings.With Shaun Marsh falling to a perfect Coulter-Nile offcutter in the first over and Sam Harper and Jake Fraser-McGurk struggling to adapt to a slowish pitch, the Renegades were 3 for 53 at the halfway stage, 11 runs short of the Bash Boost target, and looked like they would come nowhere near chasing 159.Zak attackAfter winning the toss and choosing to bat, the Stars struggled for early rhythm, with Andre Fletcher soaking up a first-over maiden from Josh Lalor. Lalor bowled him with a slower ball in the third over, but Marcus Stoinis looked in fine touch, crashing six early boundaries as he looked to drive the Stars’ innings.When he fell in the ninth over to Zak Evans – playing after Kane Richardson was ruled out for the season with a quad strain – the Stars decided to shuffle things around. Hoping to maximise their 10-over total in order to secure the Bash Boost point, the Stars promoted Coulter-Nile – fit again after a calf injury – to No. 4, but the experiment was short lived.Shaping to work an Evans slower ball down to fine leg, Coulter-Nile managed to play on via the pad, and was out first ball. With Nick Larkin struggling for early rhythm, the Stars were 3 for 63 at the halfway stage.Larkin, the Stars’ fillipWith Larkin on 14 off 21 balls heading into the 12th over, Glenn Maxwell decided he needed to take Imad Wasim on, after managing just two dots and a single from the first three balls of his innings. But, shimmying outside leg, he skied a slog-sweep straight down deep midwicket’s throat, leaving the Stars in a spot of bother at 4 for 77.Nic Maddinson forced the pace with two heaves over midwicket and a slap through extra cover, but miscued to mid-off immediately after calling for the Power Surge at the start of the 17th over for 21 off 18 balls. Peter Hatzolgou, the idiosyncratic legspinner, picked up his second Surge wicket – and his fifth of the season – soon after, with Hilton Cartwright chopping on when cramped for room.After eking out 29 off his first 35 balls, perhaps trying too hard to hit boundaries, Larkin finally cut loose in the second Surge over with a slog-swept six and a slash through point for four off Wasim.Three streaky fours through third man and a carve through cover in the final two overs dragged the Stars up to 6 for 158, with Larkin finishing on 61 off 47. Thirty of those runs came between point and third man, including several thick edges, while ESPNcricinfo’s data suggested he was in control of only 62% of the balls he faced.

The Hundred draft: explainer

Our guide to Sunday’s main player draft for the new competition’s first season

ESPNcricinfo staff15-Oct-2019What is it?The Hundred is the ECB’s new 100-ball tournament, which will be played in July-August 2020. It will be played by eight new teams, based in seven different cities (there are two London teams).Who are the new teams?Birmingham Phoenix (Edgbaston)
London Spirit (Lord’s)
Manchester Originals (Old Trafford)
Northern Superchargers (Leeds)
Oval Invincibles (The Oval)
Southern Brave (Ageas Bowl)
Trent Rockets (Trent Bridge)
Welsh Fire (Cardiff)Who’s making the picks?All the teams are owned by the ECB, so unlike in plenty of other leagues there will be no owners on the draft tables. Picks will be made by head coaches, but with plenty of behind-the-scenes inputs from the rest of their staff and their analysts.The head coaches are as follows:Birmingham Phoenix – Andrew McDonald
London Spirit – Shane Warne
Manchester Originals – Simon Katich
Northern Superchargers – Darren Lehmann
Oval Invincibles – Tom Moody
Southern Brave – Mahela Jayawardene
Trent Rockets – Stephen Fleming
Welsh Fire – Gary KirstenDo they have any players already?Yes. Each of the men’s sides has picked one England player. Teams could choose one Test-contracted player from their ‘catchment area’, meaning Northern Superchargers faced the choice between Ben Stokes, Jonny Bairstow, and Joe Root (they went for Stokes), while those players left over were allocated to a team without a Test player.Joe Root of Trent Rockets, one of the eight new teams that competing in The Hundred•Getty Images

Each team then picked two ‘local icons’, each of whom spent the 2019 season at a county in the new team’s catchment area. They were able to negotiate a salary with their new team, and ESPNcricinfo understands that some players were convinced to take lower salaries due to the security of being picked up before the main draft.That means that the majority of England’s one-day players have been picked already, though a handful – Joe Denly, Sam Billings, and Mark Wood, for example – will be available in the draft.How does the draft work?After a random draw, the order of picks for the first round was decided, with Stephen Fleming’s Trent Rockets set to pick the first player. The order of picks will then be reversed for the second round, and so on. Where a local icon has been picked, the team will skip that turn in the draft.Each team has 100 seconds to make their pick in each round. Salaries are pre-decided, and depend on how early a player is picked. First and second-round picks will earn £125,000 each, while round 13 or 14 picks earn £30,000.What about overseas players?As revealed by ESPNcricinfo, some 240 overseas players have registered for the draft, and with the exception of India’s white-ball stars and AB de Villiers, most of the big names are available.Each team will be permitted three overseas players, in both their squad and their XI.Can they sign anyone after the draft?Yes – each team will also be able to make a ‘wildcard’ pick after the conclusion of next season’s Vitality Blast, who will receive a £30,000 contract.What happens next season?Teams will be able to retain up to ten players in their squad for the 2021 edition of the tournament, and will mutually agree the salary band with the relevant player.What about the women’s competition?There’s no draft for the women’s competition, with players instead negotiating deals directly with head coaches. Each team has already signed two England-contracted players, and has until the end of May 2020 to complete their squad.When is the draft?The draft starts at 7pm local time in Sky’s London studios, and ESPNcricinfo will bring you live coverage throughout the evening to see who ends up where.

'We want to see emotion, passion and pride from players' – ICC CEO

Outgoing ICC chief executive David Richardson touched upon on-field behaviour, ball tampering, cricket’s ever-growing global presence, and much more in the 2018 MCC Spirit of Cricket Cowdrey Lecture

ESPNcricinfo staff08-Aug-2018***Good evening Mr President, Guy, ladies and gentlemen.I’d like to start by thanking Lord MacLaurin and the MCC for the invitation to stand here before you tonight. It’s a huge honour, if not a little daunting.Even more daunting than when I came to Lord’s as a member of the South African team in 1993, post-isolation, and we met the Queen prior to the start of the Test. Before the match, they briefed us on how to address the Queen, as Your Majesty or Ma’am, but not to talk to her unless she talked to you.But they didn’t tell us how to address Prince Philip. The Queen arrived, we all lined up. The Queen came down the line and shook hands. I recall her wearing white gloves. Prince Philip, following behind, stopped to talk to Fanie De Villiers, who was standing next to me. I heard the Prince say “a pleasure to meet you”, and pointing to Fanie’s blazer pocket, he asked, “what happened to the Springbok?”Fanie’s first language, and only language actually, is Afrikaans. I was a bit worried because the replacing of the Springbok emblem with the protea was quite controversial in some quarters, and I knew Fanie was one of those who would have preferred to keep the Springbok. He hesitated a bit and then said, “well, Your Worship, the springbok has jumped.”Actually, he was not trying to be funny. Spring is an Afrikaans word, meaning ‘to jump’ in English. He wanted to say , a clever play on words, explaining that the springbok has moved on. Not quite the same effect when directly translated into English. Fortunately, Prince Philip must have understood what he meant and he moved on.But that was not my first visit to Lord’s. A very long time ago, in 1979, in the midst of an apartheid South Africa, as a 19-year old, I was part of a multi-racial team selected to come to England. I am not even sure who arranged the tour, but it was sponsored by Barclays Bank.The tour started in London. We stayed at the Danubius, and on the day we arrived, we were taken to the Lord’s shop to be kitted out, whites, bats, pads and gloves. The coach of our team was a gentleman called Colin Milburn, a name that I’m sure will ring a few bells in this room.A colourful character, an attacking, entertaining batsman, whose career was cut short by a car accident where he lost an eye. He imparted his experience not only in the skills of the game, but also in the art of ‘off-field’ tactics, teaching us the importance of socialising with your opponents and the medicinal values of gin and coke! Wherever the team went, we were struck by how popular a figure Colin Milburn was.The manager of the team, more of a mentor really, was one Colin Cowdrey, who was what I had imagined the English gentleman to be – softly spoken, impeccable manners, always dressed in a jacket and tie.In one of the matches, he made a guest appearance for the team playing against us. I recall he put his blazer over his whites before sitting down to lunch. And at tea time, I noticed him going into the kitchen to thank the tea ladies. Indeed, wherever we went, I noticed the tea ladies fell over themselves in excitement whenever he appeared. He was a lesson to our team in how to respect the game, your own team-mates, the opponents and the umpires.The two Colins were entirely different personalities, but both epitomise the nature of our great game. A game that is inclusive and accommodating of all types. A game that by its very nature exposes the personalities of the players, allows the players to express not only their skills and their passion for the game but also their characters, warts and all. This is what makes cricket so appealing and fascinating to those who are watching. We cannot and should not be looking to sanitise it out.As fans, we want our players enjoying and expressing themselves, we want to see emotion, passion and pride from players. What we don’t want is robots, lacking in personality, but equally what we don’t want is ugly behaviour.Lately, we’ve seen too much ugly on and off the field of play. As a sport, we must be united, not just in our desire to protect the spirit of the game, but every single person in the game needs to commit to living that spirit and ensuring it is relevant in the 21st century, continuing to make cricket a unique sporting proposition.What exactly is this spirit of cricket? The spirit of cricket isn’t an historical hangover; it is part of the fabric of our sport. No other sport has codified the spirit so blatantly in its Laws, and we disregard it at our peril. The phrase ‘it’s just not cricket’ is not an accident, it’s because cricket’s DNA is based on integrity, and people know that cricket represents something more than a game.But we have seen too much behaviour of late that puts that in jeopardy, and it has to stop. Sledging that amounts to no more than personal abuse, fielders giving send-offs to batsmen who have been dismissed, unnecessary physical contact, players threatening not to play in protest against an umpire’s decision, and ball-tampering; this isn’t the version of our sport that we want to project to the world.Getty Images

The public reaction, around the world, to the incidents in the recent Australia-South Africa series was an eye opener. The message was loud and clear: cheating is cheating and is not what we signed up to.As administrators, we have to do our part and we have agreed to take stronger action against behaviour that is unacceptable, to back our match officials more, and for boards to behave in a manner themselves that creates a culture of respect between teams. We have taken a step in the right direction.But the reality is, it will be the players who can safeguard the reputation of the game with their actions on and off the field. It is the nature of the players’ personalities, their strength of character that will ultimately define the spirit of the game and what it means in the 21st century.And here it is important for current players to understand that they represent not only themselves but all the players that have gone before them, and those that will follow. The vast majority of players do this day in and day out. Players like Kane Williamson, Hashim Amla, Mithali Raj, Jos Buttler, Katherine Brunt, Moeen Ali, MS Dhoni.Going back in time to players I played with or against – Jonty Rhodes, Shaun Pollock, Alan Donald, Courtney Walsh, Richie Richardson, David Boon, Rahul Dravid … so many examples. Players who played hard, never gave up, never took a backward step, played with passion and a sense of enjoyment, but never disrespected the opponents or the umpires. Players who the fans loved to watch.Over the last few months, I’ve read comments from players requesting guidance on what is allowed in relation to the ball. Asking if they can chew gum, wear sunscreen or drink a sugary drink, and to be brutally honest, I find this a little disingenuous.The laws are simple and straightforward – do not change the condition of the ball using an artificial substance. If you are wearing sunscreen, sucking a mint or chewing gum with the intent of using the cream or sugary saliva on the ball, you are ball-tampering.You may not always get caught, we are not going to stop players chewing gum or from wearing sunscreen. There are many players who have chewed gum on the field throughout their careers, and never once thought to use it on the ball, but if you are caught – and we have only caught players when it is pretty obvious what they are doing – then don’t complain. Saying others do it is not a defence – you are cheating.Sledging is another element of the game that constantly draws attention – where do you draw the line? Banter, even elements of gamesmanship have always been a part of the sport, and in my view, play a part in adding to its mystique and unique character.I think in most cases sledging/chirping is a waste of time, often resorted to by players who are trying to psyche themselves up or boost their own lack of confidence, and very often it’s counter-productive.We tried to unsettle Steve Waugh by asking him what it was like to be the unpopular twin, with Mark getting all the toys when they were growing up – it had no effect and only made him more determined, seemingly getting runs whenever he batted against us.Pat Symcox is someone I played with who always loved to have a few words. Matthew Hayden’s career was in two parts. In the first, he had a very unhappy tour of South Africa, suffering a string of low scores in the series. In the second innings of the final Test, he got a duck. As he passed Pat Symcox on the way back to the dressing room, Pat said, “Don’t worry Matt, Donald Bradman also made a duck in his last Test innings.”Matthew Hayden was dropped after that, but a season or so later, came back for an extraordinary, successful second stage of his career, including a record-breaking tally of runs against South Africa in a later series. There was a time when teams like Sri Lanka and Bangladesh could be bullied mentally – that is not the case anymore.But there is a difference between the examples I have given and what amounts to no more than ugly personal abuse in the guise of playing ‘aggressively’. That type of ugly behaviour is not what sport, never mind cricket, is all about, and is simply unacceptable. And it is the latter that we are attempting to eradicate. A specific new offence, personal abuse, has been introduced, punishable as a level 3 Code of Conduct offence, which will result in a ban of up to six Test matches or 12 ODIs/T20Is.So, apart from this, what has ICC done to address the situation? Three main points.Firstly, we have introduced new offences and increased the severity of the associated penalties to serve as an effective deterrent.Secondly, we will take steps to educate the players on what it means to play the game within the spirit – advising them on not only what you can’t do, but showing them examples of what type of conduct does exemplify the spirit of the game as we would like to see it.Finally, the boards have agreed to adopt principles of behaviour that will create an environment of respect for the game, the match officials and each others’ teams. This includes the philosophy that the touring team should be treated as honoured guests in the country, with the standard of practice facilities and other logistical arrangements exactly the same, if not better, as the home team.The boards, including their ground staff, the players, their support staff, coaches and team managers, must all act as the guardians of the spirit. Mike Procter as coach of South Africa was a brilliant example of this. If you got a bad umpiring decision, you could expect less sympathy from Mike than you get when you have a hangover. “Bad luck” was all you got from him. Unqualified acceptance of an umpire’s decision, good or bad, was a given as far as he was concerned.Too many coaches or team managers of recent times are too quick to side with their players, blame the umpires for being biased against their team, storming off to the match referee’s room to complain.We are relying on everyone to showcase cricket and inspire a new generation of players and fans. Winning must obviously be the aim of any game, but not at all costs, not when it means compromising the integrity of the game.We must all work proactively to protect the spirit of the game and make it a relevant part of cricket in the 21st century. In my view, it is imperative to the long-term sustainability of the game. After all, who will want their kids to play cricket if what you see and read about is foul language, bad sportsmanship or corruption.And, of course, we all want more kids playing cricket. Growing the sport, in terms of the number of both participants and fans, is a key pillar of our global strategy for cricket that we will be launching later this year.The spirit of cricket should not only define how we play the game but how we fulfill cricket’s broader purpose. The first question sponsors ask us is, ‘why cricket’…’what’s the purpose of cricket’? At its most basic, cricket provides enjoyment, an opportunity for people of any age or gender to be entertained, and to connect with each other. Cricket has a great capacity to unite people, to inspire and to empower.We need to ensure that cricket is not elitist but is accessible to and capable of being enjoyed by all.There is little that depresses me more than receiving a glossy report from a well-meaning cricket board in South America extolling their efforts in growing participation, normally accompanied by a photo of kids clad in whites at a fielding practice in a huge semi-circle with a coach hitting catches to them. If you are lucky, a catch might come your way every 10 minutes or so. How to turn kids to basketball or water polo in one easy lesson!In the coming months, we will be launching a new app that will give kids and adults the chance to enjoy cricket anytime, anywhere, and in a way that suits them. This is a big departure for the ICC, but we cannot expect to do things the same way time after time with different results. We need to put our arms around ALL of cricket and celebrate the fact that anyone can play and enjoy it.Whether it be a game on a basketball court in New York, in a floodlit car-park at night in Dubai, the backyard with your friends, the street in Papua New Guinea, or the beach, they must feel they are part of the cricket family.It is not only in playing the game that we need to be more inclusive, it is also necessary to provide opportunities for people to watch and follow the game. Many cricket fans will tell you their first memory of cricket was going with their father or grandfather to an international match at the MCG or Eden Gardens. It is at that age that heroes are created. I came back from watching South Africa play Australia at Newlands in 1970, and immediately changed to batting left-handed like Graeme Pollock and bowling off the wrong foot like Mike Procter in my backyard games.We are also considering how we use technology and the digital space to attract younger fans. Shorter form, less conventional content that kids want to share must be a central part of what we’re all doing.It is the diversity of cricket that is so precious – different formats, different nationalities, different shapes and sizes of people playing. As a sport, we can and should be making every effort to diversify even further both in terms of new markets, but perhaps even more importantly in my mind in relation to women and girls.Cricket has always been known as the gentleman’s game, but that is a label we should attach to the character of the game only, not the gender of those playing the game. It is a game for all. For too long, we have ignored the potential of women in cricket and effectively 50% of the population. But that is changing significantly and will continue to do so.Last summer’s ICC Women’s World Cup, and particularly the final here at Lord’s, showed us the huge opportunity the sport has to attract more women and girls, not only as players and fans, but also ensuring the sport is a place where women want to work – as administrators, as commentators, as journalists… we must remove any barriers to entry based on gender.Getty Images

Last year, the decision was taken to televise all 31 matches of the ICC Women’s World Cup. We worked with broadcasters to incentivise them to carry all the matches, and their support saw the event reach 180 million unique viewers worldwide.This was a 265% viewership increase in comparison to the same event in 2013. We now need to supply the demand, ensuring there is access to compelling and competitive cricket. By doing that, we can build up a market where the women’s game becomes self-sustainable because sponsors and broadcasters know the commercial benefits.We need to do everything possible to make cricket a choice for young girls around the world. We need to get the basics right – even something as simple as ensuring they have their own changing facilities will make a big difference.It is such an exciting time for the sport. Cricket is in great health, with more than a billion fans around the world, and room for much more growth. We don’t have all the answers to the challenges we face, but we are working collectively to solve them.Nelson Mandela was right when he said: “Sport has the power to change the world. It has the power to inspire. It has the power to unite people in a way that little else does. It speaks to youth in a language they understand. Sport can create hope where there was once only despair.”Acting in the spirit of cricket means remembering this in our decision making, ensuring that we use cricket to provide enjoyment to and to unite, inspire and empower communities around the world.Cricket and its spirit is defined by the personalities of its participants – administrators, umpires, referees and the players themselves. On the field, cricket needs its larger-than-life characters – its Colin Milburns, Freddie Flintoffs, Shane Warnes, Virat Kohlis and Ben Stokes, its lovable rogues. But equally, it needs its Frank Worrells, Rachael Heyhoe-Flints, MS Dhonis, Rahul Dravids and its Colin Cowdreys to make sure we all stay on the good-guys (or girls) side of that “line”. The future of our game depends on it.Thank you once again for inviting me, and thanks for listening.

Morgan and Moeen star in convincing victory

Eoin Morgan is an England captain who senses his time has come. He has reshaped England’s limited-overs cricket, now he wants some tangible reward for it

The Report by David Hopps at Headingley24-May-2017
Scorecard and ball-by-ball detailsMoeen Ali produced an impressive all-round performance on his return to the side•Getty Images

Eoin Morgan is an England captain who senses his time has come. He has reshaped England’s limited-overs cricket, now he wants some tangible reward for it. As the Champions Trophy looms, he is in mint form as his 11th ODI hundred in front of a near-capacity Headingley crowd testified.Morgan’s 107 from 93 balls was a central component of a victory that put England 1-0 up in the three-match series. He fell 14 balls from the end of the innings, advancing to Chris Morris, the most resilient member of South Africa’s attack, and skying to mid-off. Along the way, he became the highest ODI run-getter of any batsman who has played for England, although that statistic is swollen by the 700-plus runs he made in an Ireland shirt. Ian Bell holds the record – as silky-smooth as he can be, already he feels like a batsman from another age.South Africa, No. 1 in the ODI rankings, will provide an ideal pre-tournament workout for England, the hosts, ahead of the Champions Trophy. Morgan’s third ODI hundred in eight hits, following two gained in the winter in Cuttack and North Sound, underlined that his game is in far better order than it was a year ago when his invigoration of England’s one-day approach was not matched by his own form.

South Africa fined for slow over rate

AB de Villiers’ side have been fined for maintaining a slow over rate during their loss to England in the first ODl at Headingley.
South Africa were found to be one over short, after time allowances were taken into consideration by Andy Pycroft, the match referee, based on the charge laid by on-field umpires Tim Robinson and Rod Tucker, third umpire Chris Gaffaney and fourth official Michael Gough.
De Villiers accepted the charge and was fined 20% of his match fee, while the other South Africa players were fined 10%.

Even with Morgan’s intervention, backed up by an inspired late assault by Moeen Ali which was enough to win him the man-of-the-match award on his return to the side, England had not quite put the game beyond South Africa at the interval. It was a record ODI score at Headingley, but it was a bountiful batting surface and, as evening approached, the day remained warm and the skies remained milky blue.Nevertheless, England gradually imposed themselves in the field to secure a 72-run win. The luxury of that margin had seemed highly unlikely when South Africa were 145 for 1 approaching midway.With the Manchester terrorist atrocity still so fresh in the mind, it was a pleasure to find Headingley carrying on regardless. The additional security was unobtrusive and, after a sombre minute’s silence to start the day, and with both sides wearing black armbands, a crowd of more than 14,000 gradually slipped into contented mood. National security levels have been upgraded to Critical – the highest of the five categories, communicating the conclusion that another attack cannot be discounted – but there was no sense of a country under siege.There will be disquiet at the fact that Ben Stokes was off the field for a period with a sore left knee, and only bowled two overs, but Morgan played down the significance of that and suggested that he was just being risk-averse. Anyway, if you worried every time an England player was off the field, you would rarely have time to do anything else.Mark Wood has also had better nights. He touched 90mph at times, which is a good sign after his long-standing ankle problems, but too often he strained for rhythm, conceding 49 in his six overs. Hashim Amla pilfered five fours in two overs, easeful drives and pulls, and AB de Villiers looked equally commanding when Wood returned for a second spell.All that was in the context of South Africa reaching 145 for 1 shortly before midway. Quinton de Kock fell early – a good running catch by the wicketkeeper, Jos Buttler, when he top-edged Chris Woakes – but Amla and Faf du Plessis had countered in inconspicuous fashion in a stand of 112. Then Wood trapped Amla lbw with a straight one – England winning the decision on review – Liam Plunkett straightened one to have du Plessis caught at the wicket in the next over and England rallied with Woakes snapping up the last two wickets to claim 4 for 38.Self-destructive departures by JP Duminy and David Miller also played into England’s hands. Both received long hops, from Adil Rashid and Woakes respectively, which they hauled obligingly to deep forward square. Moeen Ali found some purchase with his offspin and collected de Villiers to add to his earlier thumping 77 off 51 balls.England’s innings had provided the entertainment and, before Morgan’s intervention, things were not quite so rosy. Stokes and Buttler were back from the IPL, their superstar status widely acknowledged, but there was no grand entrance as they returned to the England fold.Stokes, named as the IPL’s Most Valuable Player, as well as being the most expensive at $2.16m, looked in good order in making 25 from 30 balls before a meaty pull at a short ball from Kagiso Rabada picked out Morris at deep forward square. The boundary boards had been brought in at Headingley about five yards on that side of the ground, but that did not entirely prevent the conclusion – satisfying for local consumption – that they had clearly not been brought in as far as in IPL.Buttler did not quite make the same impact in the IPL as Stokes, and he fell for 7 two overs later. Morris was brought back for him and the manner in which he immediately dismissed him at short backward square spoke of a pre-conceived plan.After experiencing India’s febrile crowds, an ODI in England had a gentler feel for Stokes and Buttler. They must have felt as if they were returning to suburbia after the clamour of the city (English cricket always feels like suburbia, especially at Lord’s), the applause appreciative but not particularly noisy until Morgan and Moeen took hold in the closing overs. Politeness pervaded the scene.Jason Roy departed early, driving expansively at Wayne Parnell’s second ball to be caught at the wicket. By the time de Kock took his second catch, England had raised 100 at not far short of a run a ball. Alex Hales, who had worked the ball through the leg side confidently whenever given the opportunity, reached 61 before a lazy end against Andile Phehlukwayo’s first ball. He normally feasts on width outside off stump but made a hash of it.Joe Root lost impetus. The expectations of his home crowd were high in his first innings on this ground since his elevation to the Test captaincy. He got 17 off his first eight balls, but only 20 off his next 43 as Morris, not for the first time, restrained him best of all.But it was Phehlukwayo who claimed his wicket. A seam bowling allrounder whose first sport as a youngster was hockey, he has no great pace, so there was little venom in his wide bouncer, but it was high enough for Root to get in a tangle as he tried to pull it and lobbed it into the leg side.A partnership of 117 in 13 overs between Morgan and Moeen, who finished unbeaten on 77 with five sixes, replotted England’s course. Moeen’s contribution was also invaluable. He recovered from a careworn start by advancing to hit Parnell straight for six, and then clearing the ropes thrice more in an over from the legspinner Imran Tahir that cost 22. After the match, he said that England had dedicated the victory to all those who had suffered in the Manchester attack.

ECB moots points-based system for SL series

Sri Lanka Cricket has confirmed that the ECB has made a request for the tour between the two teams, which starts next month, to use a points-based system to decide a winner across all formats

Andrew McGlashan and Andrew Fidel Fernando17-Apr-2016Sri Lanka Cricket has confirmed that the ECB has made a request for the upcoming series between the two teams to use a points-based system – following the lead of the women’s game – to decide a winner across all formats. England are scheduled to host Sri Lanka for three Tests, five ODIs, and a T20I.

How England’s last three series would have panned out

If a scoring system of four points for a Test win (and two for draw), and two points for an ODI or T20 win was used:
v South Africa: South Africa 16 (Tests 6, ODIs 6, T20s 4) – England 14 (Tests 10, ODIs 4) – Final T20 the decider
v Pakistan: England 14 (Tests 2, ODIs 6, T20s 6) – Pakistan 10 (Tests 8, ODIs 2) – Final T20 the decider
v Australia: England 18 (Tests 12, ODIs 4, T20 2) – Australia 14 (Tests 8, ODIs 6)

The proposal will be discussed by the SLC committee at its next board meeting either later this month or early in May although even if it is agreed each format will continue to be contested for separately as well.”The ECB has made a request, but we have not discussed or agreed up to this point of time,” SLC’s secretary Mohan de Silva said. “We will probably take it up at the next executive committee meeting. The CEO and the Cricket Operations Manager will have to make a recommendation to the committee.”The ECB led the way in introducing points-based scoring across all three formats for the women’s Ashes in 2013. Initially, there were six points available for winning a Test (two for a draw) and two points for the ODIs and T20s, although the Test allocation has since been cut to four points as there was concern the one-off Tests had too much of a weighting.Until now, the men’s game has kept each of its formats distinct during bilateral tours, but there is a desire to try and increase the context of tours and give meaning to matches that may otherwise have little significance. It could, potentially, make end-of-tour T20s the deciding fixture in determining the overall winner.It was a topic covered in this year’s Editor’s Notes in with Lawrence Booth writing: “Walkovers happen, but cricket would benefit if they didn’t happen in a vacuum… last summer’s women’s Ashes provided a glimpse of a solution, already suggested elsewhere for the good reason that it makes sense: hand out points for every win on a bilateral tour (say, six for a Test, three for a one-day international and two for a Twenty20), tot them up, then award three to the overall winner, or one each in case of a draw.”The exact details of how a points system would work if the idea was adopted for the English season are yet to be confirmed – and it remains to be seen whether there would be conflict with existing sponsorship deals, with each format in England being under a different name – but individual series winners would remain.Cricket Australia’s team performance manager Pat Howard said that events in the UK would be monitored with interest ahead of Australia’s next assignments, including a multi-format tour of Sri Lanka in July and August.”We’ve noted the trial and we will see how it plays out,” Howard said, “before considering any changes to our current system, whether it be at home or in away series.”The only two Test series ‘trophies’ that England do not currently hold are against Sri Lanka and Pakistan, who are the second visiting team for the season and whose tour could also adopt the points system. Sri Lanka won 1-0 on the 2014 visit to England, and Pakistan won 2-0 in the UAE late last year.

Northants plan open-top bus parade

Only 17.1 overs were possible as Northamptonshire began their penultimate match of an impressive season

Vithushan Ehantharajah at Wantage Road17-Sep-2013
ScorecardNorthamptonshire fans will get a chance to see the team parade the FLt20 trophy next week•PA Photos

Only 17.1 overs were possible as Northamptonshire began their penultimate match of an impressive season. As incumbents in the promotion spots for most of the season, the hosts are on the verge of promotion from Division Two, needing to better Essex’s result against Glamorgan by four points to return to the top flight for the first time since 2004.During the tea interval throughout this match, spectators will be invited to have their photo taken with the FLt20 trophy, which will also be taken around the streets of Northampton next Friday on an open-top bus.The plan is for the team to set off from the County Ground at 6.15pm, parade through St Giles Street before attending a civic reception in their honour at the Guildhall at 6.30pm. By then, promotion could – and should – have been wrapped up. But it could all be very tight, regardless of whether Essex manage to push them close.Northants are at New Road next week for their season closer against Worcestershire starting on Tuesday. They might be playing until 5.30pm on Friday, meaning they would have 45 minutes to complete an hour-and-a-half journey.There was one wicket to fall in the small window of play – that of Sam Northeast, who fended at an outswinger from Andrew Hall that got big on the opener at the last moment. Standing up to the stumps, David Murphy took an exceptional catch.All things considered, Kent will be happy to have nine wickets in reserve, with the ball seaming and swinging on a damp, overcast morning. After some diligent work on the ball from the Northants fielders, it began to move so dramatically that even a skilled operator like Hall was unable to tame it.A handful of his deliveries curved so much from middle stump that they ended up at second slip, jarring the tops of Murphy’s fingers on the way through. Predictably, when Hall readjusted to wide of leg-stump, the ball continued on down the leg-side, leaving Murphy sprawling to his left in vain.At 12.09pm, the rain came and settled in for the rest of the day. Play was eventually called at 4:25pm.

England, Australia fashion crushing wins

England and Australia complete easy wins over Pakistan and India in the Group A matches in Women’s World T20

ESPNcricinfo staff27-Sep-2012Left-arm spinner Holly Colvin picked four wickets as England beat Pakistan by 43 runs in the Women’s World Twenty20 Group A match in Galle. Colvin struck in her first over, followed it up with two wickets off consecutive balls in her second and a fourth one in the last over to return with figures of 3.4-0-9-4. Pakistan – chasing 134 – had crumbled to 50 for 4 by the eleventh over even before the introduction of Colvin. Offspinner Danielle Hazell prised out Pakistan captain Sana Mir and then broke a 26-run fourth-wicket stand with the scalp of Nain Abidi before the rest of the batting collapsed.Pakistan’s decision to bowl first backfired as England openers brought up a quick century partnership. Although Laura Marsh was run out after scoring 54 off 41 balls in the 14th over, England looked set for a strong total. But the fall of Charlotte Edwards (45) to another run out helped the Pakistan bowlers get a grip on the innings and they restricted England to 133 for 6.”We planned to attack the bowling in the Power Play overs,” Edwards said. “I think as the game progresses, we’ve seen spin play a major part, so before the pitch wore out, we wanted to get as much as possible.”Mir, who was the most successful bowler for Pakistan with 2 for 20, said: “We did really well to restrict them to 133. I thought we could have applied ourselves better with the bat. Once we lose too many wickets at the start, it just puts immense pressure on the middle-order. Hopefully we will rectify our mistakes and look to win the remaining two games, we can only go up from here.”Australia chased down the target set by India in the Group A match in Galle with eight wickets in hand to continue the trend of easy wins in the Women’s World T20.India chose to bat first and despite losing their openers in the fifth and the seventh overs, they were comfortably placed midway in their innings. But India’s captain Mithali Raj was run out on the first ball of the 11th over triggering a collapse. The score turned from 63 for 2 to 73 for 5 in a matter of four overs. Nagarajan Niranjana (15 off 14 balls) saved India some blushes with a quick 25-run partnership with Mona Meshram taking the team close to the century mark. In the end, India finished with 104, with Erin Osborne picking up three wickets for 13 runs. Jess Jonassen three-over spell in which she gave away only six runs and picked up a wicket was also key in slowing India down.In response, Australia made an aggressive start, putting up 43 runs in six overs by the time their first wicket – Alyssa Healy for 21 – fell. But Jess Cameron (36 off 32) joined Meg Lanning in a 49-run second-wicket stand in 8.3 overs to bring Australia to the brink of victory. When Lanning was out for 39 to Jhulan Goswami only 13 runs were required which Australia got without much trouble.A disappointed Raj later said: “Harman and I were batting really well, but we collapsed once again. One defeat doesn’t mean the end of the road, we have to keep believing in ourselves. We can’t sulk about this, surprises do happen.”Erin Osborne, who was declared Player of the Match, said: “I think I was just a beneficiary of some fantastic work done by the other bowlers.”

Short-term goals will keep England at top – Flower

Andy Flower says that England will seek to defend their new status as the world’s No. 1 Test side by attacking a series of short-term goals, starting with the winter tours of Pakistan and Sri Lanka

Andrew Miller14-Aug-2011Andy Flower says that England will seek to defend their new status as the world’s No. 1 Test side by attacking a series of short-term goals, starting with the winter tours of Pakistan and Sri Lanka, as they set about reassessing their priorities in the wake of a crushing innings-and-242-run triumph against India at Edgbaston on Saturday.That performance, which was built on the back of Alastair Cook’s career-best 294, took England to an unassailable 3-0 series lead with just the Oval Test to come later this week, and ensured that, in little more than two years since the squad was torn apart by the falling-out between the then-captain and coach, Kevin Pietersen and Peter Moores, England have surged to the top of the world Test rankings.Flower, however, is already looking to the future as he plots a means to turn England’s spell at the top into something longer lasting. Writing in his Daily Telegraph column, Shane Warne conceded that the current England team has the look and feel of long-term champions, with big-match temperaments in every position from 1 to 11.Such heightened new expectations will be tough for Flower’s men to live up to, but he believes that two challenges in particular – the forthcoming challenge in the subcontinent, and the inaugural World Test Championship in 2013 – will provide all the focus his players need to ensure their ranking looks after itself.”I always think it is very dangerous to try to hold on to what you have got,” Flower told reporters after the Edgbaston Test. “We used that goal – to be No1 – as a motivational tool that drove us in training and in matches. Now that we have achieved that, what [Andrew] Strauss and I don’t want to do is hang on to No. 1 status. That’s not a very exciting way to go about our business. We are going to have to reset our goals.”This winter we go to play against two countries that the last time England toured those countries, we lost. We want to go away and play Pakistan and Sri Lanka away from home and win those series. Ignoring the ranking, those series will have their own importance.”We’ve also got the World Test Championship for the first time in 2013 and that’s in our own country. That is certainly something we are striving for – we have to be in the top four to get into the semi- finals of it and we are going to be working hard between now and then to ensure we are a strong unit ready for that semi-final.”It was a tour of Pakistan that ended England’s last comparable run of sustained form six years ago, when the 2005 Ashes winners were stunned by an unlikely defeat in Multan then crushed by an innings in Lahore. The squad never recovered its momentum after their run of six consecutive series wins had been ended, and Flower is wary that a similar fate can still await this team if they allow their guard to drop.”Now we are ranked No.1, people will be very hungry to knock us off that perch. There is no doubt about that,” said Flower. “It is one thing being good for a short period of time – but having a side that delivers some special results and has some special times together that they will remember for the rest of their lives, that will be a much better thing to look back on than a few victories here and there.”To that end, Flower heaped praise on his Test captain, Strauss, whom he lauded as a “an outstanding leader and a special man”. The pair bonded in the Caribbean during England’s tour in the spring of 2009, where a disastrous collapse to 51 all out in the first Test in Sabina Park gave both men the licence they needed to mould the team in their own driven images. “The players, after being asked to embrace responsibility, have delivered,” he said. “Strauss asked that of them when he took over the captaincy a couple of years ago, and they are repaying him.”At the age of 34, Strauss may not have many more series left at the helm, and so the prospect of taking part in the Ashes double-header in 2013-14 could prove to be a very personal motivation for the final stage of his career. However, his deputy, Cook, has enhanced his credentials as a leader, both through the sheer weight of his batting performances, and latterly through his impressive series win over Sri Lanka in the ODIs. The succession, it would appear, is in safe hands, which lends weight to the perception that England could yet establish a dynasty to rival those of West Indies and Australia in the past 30 years.Flower, however, does not want to address such grandiose ambitions, and prefers to keep his goals closer to home. “That isn’t a very clear target as yet,” he said. “I like goals to be fairly specific. I don’t think we can compare ourselves to those sides, to be quite honest. They dominated world cricket for lengthy periods. We have been playing well for a little while now but only for a short time in cricketing history terms.”Who knows what the future holds though? That is going to be up to us.”

Pakistan players were 'set up', claims envoy

The three Pakistan players who are at the centre of the spot-fixing controversy have been dropped for the limited-overs leg of the England tour

Andrew Miller and Nagraj Gollapudi02-Sep-2010Pakistan’s high commissioner to the UK, Wajid Shamsul Hasan, has provided a new twist to the spot-fixing saga after suggesting in an interview with the BBC that Salman Butt, Mohammad Asif and Mohammad Amir, the three players at the centre of the controversy, may have been the victims of a “set-up”.Hasan was speaking after the confirmation that the three players would be playing no part in the limited-overs leg of the England tour, after extensive talks between officials from the ICC and PCB led to the announcement that they had pulled out of the squad due to “mental torture”.”The three players have said they are extremely disturbed with what has happened in the past one week, especially with regard to their alleged involvement in the crime,” Hasan said. “They have mentioned that they are entirely innocent of the whole episode and shall defend their innocence as such. They further maintain that on account of the mental torture that has deeply affected them, they are not in the right frame of mind to play the remaining matches, therefore they have requested the PCB not to consider them until their names are cleared.”They are innocent until proven guilty. They are under interrogation so they have to defend themselves. They are bright young men, one of them has just broken a world record, and we will go to a court of law to defend them.”However, speaking in a separate interview later in the day, the commissioner appeared to support the notion that the players had been set up. Asked specifically if he believed this was the case, he responded: “Yes, I would say that. Yes.” A spokesman for the News of the World later said the paper would “refuse to respond to such ludicrous allegations”.Cricinfo understands that the decision to omit the players only came about after extensive meetings between Ijaz Butt, the PCB chairman, and Haroon Lorgat, the chief executive of the ICC, which went on past midnight on Wednesday evening. The PCB’s position had been one of reluctance to act before the investigations had run their course, but with the integrity of the sport at stake, Ijaz was finally persuaded to back down.On a day of hectic developments, officials from the ACSU met officials from Scotland Yard in relation to the ongoing investigation, and the three players will be be questioned by Scotland Yard early Friday morning. In the meantime, a local legal firm has been appointed, with the PCB’s legal advisor, Taffazul Rizvi, also in London assisting the case.A source close to the investigation denied that any pressure had been applied from the Pakistan government, but added that the deputy attorney general of Pakistan was in London and had attended the meeting with the high commissioner. Later in the day, Lorgat and Ijaz Butt attended a separate meeting at the Pakistan High Commission.The players, who arrived at the high commission in a car with blacked-out windows, were escorted by 10 police officers past a media scrum, involving up to 20 photographers and reporters, as they entered the building.Earlier in the day team manager Yawar Saeed announced the players’ exclusion from the squad in Taunton, where the Pakistan team is playing a warm-up game. “The T20 squad will remain what it is here this morning, i.e. 13 people,” Saeed said. “When we play the one-day internationals we will be asking for replacements to make the squad up to 16.”The ECB, whose stance on the omission of the players has been clear from the start, estimates that an income of approximately £10 million hinges on the successful staging of this series and the chairman Giles Clarke said “he welcomed the decision”. He said he looked forward to the series being playing “in the spirit” that matches between England and Pakistan are always played in.”I look forward to working with Haroon Lorgat, the ICC chief executive, and Ijaz Butt, the chairman of the Pakistan Cricket Board, and everyone involved in Pakistani cricket in taking forward cricket in Pakistan so that a proper plan exists for the whole of Pakistani cricket,” Clarke added.Alan Hamer, the chief executive of Glamorgan, also welcomed the news of the trio’s omission ahead of the county’s hosting of the two Twenty20 matches on Sunday and Tuesday.”This is definitely the right decision going forward into the series,” Hamer told Cricinfo. “The week leading up to the matches has felt like a department store in the lead-up to Christmas, with no-one coming through the doors. It has been clear from our initial market research that many people have been waiting for clarity on the allegations before committing to buying tickets, so hopefully with this decision, the emphasis will now shift back to the cricket, and a contest between the past and present World Twenty20 champions.”Additional reporting by Osman Samiuddin.

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