Captain Stokes loses his sheen as Rawalpindi return ends in flat defeat

Poor batting, uninspired leadership and lack of bowling make for forgettable return to scene of greatest win

Matt Roller26-Oct-2024Rawalpindi was the scene of Ben Stokes’ best performance as England’s captain and this week, two years on, his worst. It took his side less than 24 hours to turn a position of dominance into a nine-wicket defeat in this series decider, to which Stokes’ own contribution was 15 runs, an uncharacteristically flat performance in the field, and no overs bowled.When Stokes has made mistakes as England captain they have generally been the result of overconfidence in his convictions, as in their defeats to New Zealand in Wellington or Australia at Edgbaston. This was something different, a loss that owed primarily to England’s own limitations as Stokes seemed to run out of ideas.That was certainly true of his batting on the final day, a nine-ball cameo with another farcical ending. After seeing Noman Ali find sharp spin from the footholes in his previous over, Stokes withdrew his bat when facing a delivery that hardly turned and was struck on the inner thigh of his back leg. Not many cowboys have offered no shot at a gunfight and lived to tell the tale.Even in a desperate situation, Stokes realised that asking for a review would have been futile and simply trudged back towards the dressing room. He had found a method and stuck to it in his second innings last week, sweeping almost every ball before his bizarre bat-flinging dismissal, but this leave betrayed a total lack of conviction against Pakistan’s spinners.Stokes will be more relieved than anyone else by England’s forthcoming schedule, which does not involve a return to the subcontinent for a Test until early 2027. His career average in Asia is now 26.46, dropping to just 18.00 across 14 innings this year. Having missed England’s win in Multan, he has now lost six overseas Tests in a row: four in India, and two in Pakistan.He suggested afterwards that he could not have done anything differently: “You see how hard everyone works on all aspects of their game, and sometimes those things just don’t fall right for you.” It felt like a moment of acceptance, with Stokes effectively conceding that he is not equipped to make runs on a turning surface like this, no matter how hard he trains.Stokes was unusually flat in the field as Pakistan dominated the agenda•Getty ImagesStokes’ captaincy on England’s previous tour to Pakistan was ingenious, manufacturing 60 wickets across three Tests played on lifeless pitches – none more so than in Rawalpindi. But this week, he let the game drift away on the second afternoon: Pakistan added 167 for their final three wickets, reinforcing a familiar trend that England struggle to finish teams off.Before the lunch break, elongated for Friday prayers, Stokes had used his legspinner brilliantly, giving Rehan Ahmed an in-out field for an eight-over spell which brought the wickets of Mohammad Rizwan, Salman Agha and Aamer Jamal. But Rehan was not used until the ninth over of the middle session, and struggled to find his length after a change of ends.Gus Atkinson, meanwhile, did not bowl between the end of the 70th over and the start of the 96th, in which time Pakistan added 132 for 1. When he returned, he removed centurion Saud Shakeel with his sixth ball. Stokes himself did not bowl a ball in the match: “I just didn’t feel like my bowling was going to be anywhere near as threatening as the [other] options we had.”He was unusually irritable in Multan, and went as far as apologising to his team-mates after letting out his frustrations on them following a series of fielding errors on the third day. Stokes played up the role of the toss in that defeat but could not make the same excuse in Rawalpindi. “I’m very satisfied that we lost the toss and won the match,” Shan Masood, Pakistan’s captain, said.Related

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Stokes made clear that two months of rehabilitation from his hamstring tear had taken a lot out of him. “It’s felt like a very long tour,” he said. “Coming out here to try to get fit for the first Test, not fit for that, get fit for the second Test, played that, straight to the third…” It is not the Stokes way, but he might have been better served, physically and mentally, by missing the tour entirely.He finds himself at an interesting juncture. Stokes confirmed at the start of this tour that he has signed a new central contract, but has declined to say whether he will enter the upcoming IPL auction or whether he will return to Pakistan in February for the Champions Trophy. He has built his 2024 solely around Tests, but has so far averaged 24.66 with the bat and taken six wickets.Stokes seemed reluctant to introspect after the defeat, instead throwing forward to England’s upcoming tour to New Zealand. “The great thing about cricket’s schedule is the challenges that cricket throws at you,” he said. “You’ll be faced with one, you try to overcome that, but then very quickly, we’ve got another challenge in two or three weeks’ time, which is in New Zealand.”It is all very well trying to move on quickly, and England will not play in conditions like these at any stage in the next two years. But when Stokes reflects on these defeats, he will look not only at England’s familiar deficiencies when it comes to both playing and bowling spin, but his own shortcomings as captain.

Michael Bracewell: 'Kiwi ingenuity is a real thing. You find a way and everyone mucks in'

The NZ allrounder speaks about growing up in a cricketing family, the challenge of bowling offspin to right-handers, and the planning that helps the team take down bigger oppositions

Andrew Fidel Fernando08-Mar-202521:24

The evolution of New Zealand cricket – Tim Southee has the story

There are so many New Zealand cricketers and Plunket Shield cricketers from the Bracewell family. What was it like to grow up around all that?
Yeah, I think it was inspiring to know that your family members have played for New Zealand. For me, it was an interesting one. I grew up down in Dunedin which is quite far from the rest of my family. All the rest of my family were up north.We saw them for Christmas holidays or school holidays every now and again, but we were kind of removed from the family in many respects. I have a brother and sister, and we played a lot of backyard cricket and rugby and things like that. Dad [Mark Bracewell] was a school teacher, so he coached our First XI and First XV (rugby) teams.I idolised my dad growing up and he taught me a lot of the values of how he thought the game should be played. That’s probably the most inspirational part for me – he instilled the right way to play cricket, and sport in general.There must have been some epic backyard cricket games when you all got together for Christmas – some crazy ones where so many people who had played for New Zealand were involved…
I think we came together very rarely as a family but when we did, sport was obviously what brought us close. We played a lot of forceback which is a rugby-kicking game. Cricket battles were particularly intense. One thing we all like to do is be competitive and I think that shines through when you watch any of us play.We like to play as part of a team and really compete as a team. That’s one thing that as a family we pride ourselves on as being good team-mates and trying our best for the team. I guess that comes from a love of rugby and cricket.Every good backyard cricket game has one or two people who never think they’re out, who think that everything that hits the legs are lbws. Who were those kinds of people in your big family games?
I think my brother and I used to have some really good battles. We would always end in a fight at some point around a dubious lbw decision or caught behind. I swear that I used to walk when I hit it, but he would argue on the contrary.They were great games. He’s three years older than me, so he was always challenging me and a lot more skilful than I was and bigger than I was. I never really won many of the arguments as I was growing up.I think part of having to deal with an umpire’s decision and just getting on with it comes from those battles with my brother in the backyard.Related

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You mentioned that your dad instilled some values about how he thought the game should be played. Could you just talk a little bit about that?
He always wanted me to play fair and hard, with a smile on my face, I think. He never pressured me to go play professional sports or anything like that. He just wanted me to enjoy it and have fun.I think I saw a lot of other parents growing up putting a lot of pressure on their children to perform, whereas our conversations were all around did you have fun and that sort of thing. I think that for me puts sport in perspective a little bit. At the end of the day, it’s just a game that we’re playing and it’s not life or death what we’re doing. But if you can enjoy it and accept that there’s going to be hard times and there’s going to be good times and not try and ride the highs and lows too much then hopefully your performance will stay nice and consistent. Making sure that you’re having fun and doing what you love is super important for any young kid out there.Watching this New Zealand team over the last 10 years a lot of those values that you’re talking about seem very much part of the team DNA. Did that upbringing set you up to fit into this team culture?
Absolutely. It’s definitely something that we focus on as a team is not getting too high or too low and just taking it as it comes. I think Mitch Santner, in particular in this tournament, has been amazing at keeping the team nice and calm and not getting overawed by a situation, but also understanding that there’s important moments and we need to try and win those moments. It’s been a really enjoyable team to be a part of and I think part of the reason for that is it so closely aligns with how I enjoy playing the game as well.We’ve got a special group together for this tournament and everyone’s really enjoying each other’s company and having a lot of fun out on the field. Part of the reason is you’re having a bit of success, but I think even if we weren’t having the success on the field, we’d still be having a lot of fun and enjoying each other’s company anyway.Bracewell: “We’ve got a special group together for this tournament and everyone’s really enjoying each other’s company and having a lot of fun out on the field”•ICC/Getty ImagesIf you look at the tournament history over the last 10 years, New Zealand has had an incredible run of getting to semis and finals against what you’d say are much better-resourced teams. How do you feel those values interact with the way you guys are able to take down those oppositions?
It’s almost a bit of the Kiwi way. Kiwi ingenuity is a real thing. You just try to find a way and everyone mucks in. When we shake some of the opposition’s hands and you see how many support staff, they have with them it’s quite overwhelming at times – the amount of people and staff that these opposition teams have.I think that’s a real strength of our group. Everyone has to muck in. You have to give someone throwdowns at the end of training when you’re done to make sure that they’re well prepared. I think you learn a lot about someone else’s game by doing those little things. Everyone in our team is willing to help out and make sure that we’re all ready to go. I think that creates a really great bond between the team.I guess that puts us in good stead when we’re in those tough situations as well. We really understand each other’s game. If you’ve thrown balls to someone for a number of years and then you’re in a tough situation and you understand their game, then you can offer them a little bit more advice than perhaps if you’re relying on support staff or other people to help in those situations. I think it’s actually a real strength of ours.We’re not under-resourced because we’ve got great coaches, but I guess everyone having to muck in and do their little bit gives us a really good understanding of each other’s games.It sounds like you’re saying that there’s a lot of knowledge in the way that New Zealand do things. When you’re playing a better-resourced opposition, is there a hunger to learn about their game as well and to use your strategy really effectively?
I think there’s no secret that we leave no stone unturned. The homework that we do and the preparation that we do leading into games is really important. The communication around how the conditions are on that game is a huge focus for us. I’m sure other teams do that as well. But for us it’s trying to understand how the wicket’s playing and then playing accordingly.We’ve got guys who have played all around the world in different conditions. We rely heavily on guys like Kane [Williamson] and Mitch and Matt Henry to pass on their knowledge of playing in these different conditions, to help us figure out a way to particularly bowl on these surfaces. We’ve got a sprinkle of youth and experience throughout the batting order.Those conversations don’t stop with the batters either. We’re constantly talking about how we can attack different things. I think the value of friendship-based cricket is what we’re seeing in our team as well where guys have played all around the world and with and against high quality international players. You sort of pick their brains around what they’re doing and then try to take that back to the New Zealand team as well.

“We rely heavily on guys like Kane and Mitch and Matt Henry to pass on their knowledge of playing in these different conditions”Bracewell on the knowledge sharing that happens in the New Zealand dressing room

Have there been any plans or strategies that you’ve come up with as a group that you can’t believe worked as well as they did?
I wouldn’t say they’re ground-breakingly different strategies to what any other team is using. I think there’s one thing having the strategy and that’s having the ability to be able to execute on that strategy.I guess Matt Henry’s a really good example of that. We’ve obviously played on wickets in Pakistan and Dubai that aren’t super seamer-friendly, but he always seems to find a way to exploit a batsman’s technique or whatever it is. He just has a funny knack of picking up key wickets at key times.I think he’s one in particular that’s led our bowling attack in this campaign. His ability to get the ball to move sideways off unresponsive wickets is pretty amazing. You look at the way he got Shubman Gill out in Dubai in our last game when bowlers weren’t really getting a lot of movement off the wicket as one example.1:07

What makes New Zealand handle emotions better than other teams?

You came to spin bowling fairly late in life. Did you have any advice from your uncle John or any of the Bracewell clan around making that move?
I speak quite regularly with John around bowling and the philosophy of it. I think a lot of what we talk about is how you can train to improve. I don’t have the years of experience of bowling in a lot of games, so it’s about how can I keep learning even when I’m at training. It’s about how you can maximise your learning opportunities in any situation. That’s been hugely beneficial for me. Whether it’s a net session or things like that, seeing where the ball is going and understanding how different balls are played and how the ball reacts on different surfaces and just trying to learn from every moment that you can has been huge advice for me from John. He’s been hugely helpful.It’s extremely unusual for New Zealand to have as many spin options in an XI. It probably never has happened in a New Zealand team. What is it like to have all these guys, Santner, Rachin Ravindra, Glenn Phillips – everybody able to contribute and have a big spin-bowling core?
It’s been awesome. We bounce heaps of ideas off each other. We’re all keen to keep improving and we lean on Mitch Santner a lot for that. He’s obviously the most experienced and the best bowler out of us. We’re all trying to pick his brains and he’s done it for a number of years.The way that he does it – he’s a different style. He tends to take the pace off the ball. Glenn and I both bowl offspin but we’re quite different offspinners. I’m a bit taller and get a bit more bounce whereas he brings the stumps into play a lot more. Rachin and Mitch are left-arm orthodox spinners but also very different in the way they approach things.Even though we’ve got two left-arm orthodox and two offspinners, we’re all very different. I think that really helps. We definitely talk a lot about what the conditions are like and what ball is hardest to hit but we also approach the game quite differently in the way that we play. We all have that batting element as well which is hugely beneficial to the balance of our side too.Michael Bracewell began his career as a batter and back-up wicketkeeper before he reinvented himself as an offspinner•ICC via Getty ImagesIs there something specifically that you’ve learnt from any of the other three guys that you can point to and say I wouldn’t have learnt that if it wasn’t for picking this person’s brain?
I’ve spoken to Mitch a lot about varying pace and how he does it. The subtleties of that is one thing that sets him apart in world cricket. His ability to change his pace without changing his action at all – it’s just in the subtleties of his wrist and I think that’s something that I’ve learnt from, trying to be a bit more unpredictable.Growing up in New Zealand you have to be able to beat guys in the air because the wickets don’t offer a lot of assistance in terms of sideways movement, so we’re usually pretty good at being able to change our pace but I guess trying to make it as hard for the batters to read it as possible is the challenge.In this tournament specifically is there a spell or a wicket you’re especially fond of?
I’ve enjoyed bowling in Pakistan to be honest. I think the difference is that because I’m quite tall I get quite a lot of bounce and often I’m over top of the stumps or the ball sits in the wicket a little bit whereas the wickets over there seem to not bounce quite as much so I’m bringing the stumps into play a lot more. That’s something that I’m going to have to be able to adapt to [for the final in Dubai] is the different length that you have to bowl over here that the ball sits in the wicket a little bit more, so you have to be slightly fuller and bring the stumps into play a bit more.I think that’s the great challenge of international cricket – you play in different parts of the world, and it can even be in the same tournament that you’re playing in two quite different places to bowl, so you have to be quick to learn. I think the experience that we had playing here against India a week ago will certainly put us in good stead for that. We’re the lucky team that’s had to play them already, so you get an idea of what the conditions are like in Dubai.Michael Bracewell: “I think the value of friendship-based cricket is what we’re seeing in our team”•Getty ImagesA lot’s been said about your economy rates and your ability to bowl dots. What do you attribute that to?
I think I’ve just tried to keep it really simple – just try to keep the stumps in play and not let the batters free their arms.I guess a lot’s made of right-handers wanting to target offspin, so it’s been a cool challenge bowling to a lot of right handers and trying to keep them quiet. I feel like I’ve got a pretty decent method of trying to get a couple of dot balls in an over and maybe that means you go for a few more boundaries if you’re a bit loose.I don’t have a lot of variation. I can’t spin the ball the other way or things like that, so I think that keeps my gameplan pretty simple. I can’t imagine how these mystery spinners stand at the top of their mark and decide what ball to bowl because they’ve got so many good balls to bowl. The simplicity probably helps me in a way. I can either try to bowl it fast or slow but it’s all going the same way so there’s not too many options at the top of my mark to figure out what I’m trying to do. Maybe that’s super helpful.You mentioned all four of you have a slightly different style, do you have quite well-defined roles in terms of what you’re trying to do at which stage of an innings?
Yeah, I think one thing we’re all trying to do is find a way to take wickets. We’ve seen that if teams in one-day cricket have wickets coming at the back end it’s very hard to stop teams.A lot of that for me, and I guess for Rachin and Glenn, is if we can build pressure then hopefully the wickets will come, whereas I think Mitch is probably a bit more adept at being able to take those wicket-taking balls. He bowls spectacular balls that get really good batters out, so his style of taking wickets is a little bit different to ours but as a unit if we can build pressure then hopefully we can lure some batters into some false shots and make it easier for the fast bowlers coming into the back end.

“Mitch Santner, in particular in this tournament, has been amazing at keeping the team nice and calm”Bracewell on his captain

Is it strange for you that in this tournament especially there has been a lot of focus on your offspin, when offspin is the last thing you picked up in your cricket? Is it something you’d ever have expected a few years back?
Absolutely not. If you told me that I was going to be an offspinning allrounder even three years ago, I would have said you were crazy. But I really enjoy bowling, and I enjoy the challenge of learning and trying to get better and I think it’s definitely helped. I’ve always thought of myself as a batsman, so I’ve never really put too much pressure on my bowling.Whether I have a good day or a bad day with the ball I’ll get annoyed if I don’t score runs. Maybe it helps to take the pressure off my batting a little bit, but I still very much see myself as a batter who bowls and I think that mindset has helped my bowling. If I’m getting hit around, I don’t find it to be the end of the world, though I take it very seriously and take pride in my performance.I don’t think it’s something that will change as well. It’s a funny situation – being a batter my whole life. It’s just hard to shake that feeling of you hang your hat on whether you score runs or not.I don’t really know how to describe it. I completely understand that I’m playing as a bowler and my batting is a bonus, but it’s still what I hold dear to my heart is my batting. I wouldn’t have it any other way to be honest.It’s your first big final with the New Zealand team. Is it the biggest game of your life so far?
Yeah, it definitely is. It’s a funny feeling. In the days leading up to the semi-final, I was a little bit nervous. But then when I got into the game it was just another game of cricket. I was just completely trying to immerse myself in the process of playing the game and doing what I do and what I love. I think that certainly helped. After the game I thought that experience was amazing and it’s very cool to look back on. I was very proud that I didn’t overthink the situation.2:40

What explains New Zealand’s consistency in ICC events?

I think if you can get into that frame of mind where you’re just really excited about trying to do the simple things well then that’s going to put us in good stead and hopefully the years of mental skills and things like that that we’ve practised over and over again kick in tomorrow. It does just become another game with a little bit more on the line. It does sound really boring, but it’s just doing that process over and over again. The final is just another distraction that tries to take you away from that process so if you cannot let the distractions get in the way and focus on the right things, then you should be able to put in a good performance.Have you had conversations with your dad through the course of the tournament?
We always exchange a few messages and he’s super proud of watching me play and I think the one thing that he enjoys is seeing the smile on my face when I’m out there playing. It’s very cool to get those messages from him, and how much he’s enjoying watching from home.I think the time difference isn’t great so they’re sleeping in quite a bit and staying up quite late, but I don’t think they’d have it any other way. It’s super cool having them follow my career and it’s great that they’re so proud of me and I guess the thing that I enjoy is trying to play the game in the right way and hopefully they can see that through the TV.Has there been any advice or does he leave you to your own devices now?
No no, he’s always been really good at that. He won’t offer too much but he’ll know the right time to say something. He’s been awesome.

Nobody can resist the allure of T20 gold, not even the Hundred

Also, a look at Dasun Shanaka’s totally normal day of playing first-class and 20-over cricket in two different countries

Alan Gardner17-Feb-2025Firstly, an apology. Regular readers of this semi-humorous monthly column (don’t be shy) might have noticed a particular stance with regard to the Hundred. Namely that it is a faintly ludicrous wheeze, T20 simplified to the point of being confusing, a garishly marketed cuckoo in the nest of English cricket. In short, not all that it is cracked up to be.But – kerching! – we’ve seen the light. Or at least the dollar signs. Clearly the noble goal of flogging crisps to schoolchildren is also an extremely valuable one, after the far-sighted impresarios funding cricket’s march into a glorious future of year-round T20 league action agreed to line the ECB’s coffers to the tune of half a billion quid, essentially for the right to rename Northern Popchips as Sunrisers Headingley (an ironic name if ever there was one).Truly we live in remarkable times, where even the calm and reasonable advice of Lalit Modi isn’t enough to steer the IPL’s finest away from another T20 investment honeypot. English cricket’s controversial start-up has successfully lured in the venture capitalists, and the game is now richer than Croesus – aka almost as valuable as a single IPL franchise. If that means Derbyshire can afford to renovate the toilet blocks at the County Ground, so much the better.Sure, there could be a downside. And not just because Trent Rockets’ player roster is now in the hands of Todd Boehly. When private equity drops fat stacks, it usually does so with a nose for return on investment. How do you drive up the value of a product that has already been priced beyond most observers’ wildest estimations? It probably won’t come through selling a truckload of MI Oval merch on its own.In the wake of a bunch of Silicon Valley fanboys splurging nearly £150 million for one of the least-winningest (men’s) teams in the Hundred, Lord’s-based London Spirit – which is certainly one way to jump the queue for an MCC membership – Mike Atherton described the ECB’s sudden windfall as “a bet on the sport of cricket”. Which, given the game’s long and colourful association with the gambling industry, is certainly appropriate – if not altogether encouraging.Still, the direction of travel was clear, and English cricket needed to get on board. But it reminds the Light Roller, if you’ll permit a slight retreat into our former pessimism, of an old New Yorker cartoon in which a businessman in a tatty-looking suit addresses some children huddled around a fire in an apocalyptic wasteland: “Yes, the planet got destroyed. But for a beautiful moment in time we created a lot of value for shareholders.”Dasun Shanaka: he don’t like cricket, he love it•AFP/Getty Images

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For those worrying that the Hundred sell-off has taken us a step closer to T20-leagues-mageddon and the end of international cricket as we know it – relax, bro, the ICC has got you. Not only did the governing body create the World Test Championship after a mere decade of prevaricating, they are actually planning on it. Y’know, so that generations to come can enjoy the gift to humanity that is Test cricket. At least we assume that’s what ECB chair Richard Thompson was saying when he spoke on the subject earlier this month. “It is fully understood that the current structure does not work in the way it should,” he said. “The World Test Championship should be fairer and more competitive. It is going to change to ensure it always encourages the best teams to reach the final and encourages other nations that want to play Tests to play Tests.” Yes, it definitely sounds like they have only good intentions – and aren’t just planning to rig it so the Big Three get to play each other more and upstarts like South Africa don’t reach the final at the expense of wholly more deserving teams (example: India). Right? Right???

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Such is the clash between red- and white-ball cricket nowadays that some players are taking radical steps to fit both into the schedule – see Dasun Shanaka’s much-publicised feat of playing a first-class match and a T20 in the same day. The fact that one was in Colombo and the other in Dubai might have presented a problem for some but not Shanaka, who whizzed off early from SSC’s fixture against Moors. “SLC and the club knew I had to leave,” Shanaka said, explaining how he had coincidentally also sustained a concussion, but one that wasn’t so bad he couldn’t get on a flight and turn out in the ILT20 later in the day. And the doctor was practically on the way to the airport. And his Dubai Capitals kit was already in the car. Plus, he also had a lot of air miles that were about to expire. See, it all makes complete sense. You’d have to have been hit on the head to think otherwise.

Switch Hit: Don't mention the Ashes…

Alan Gardner is joined by Andrew Miller and Matt Roller to debrief on the Hundred and preview England’s upcoming white-ball series with South Africa

ESPNcricinfo staff01-Sep-2025After a month of the Hundred, it’s time to get back on the international treadmill as England take on South Africa in ODI and T20I series. On the latest Switch Hit, Alan Gardner is joined by Andrew Miller and Matt Roller to help get you back up to speed. Topics for discussion include Sonny Baker’s impending debut, Jamie Overton ruling himself out of Ashes contention, and “the end of the beginning” of the Hundred.

Stats – India finally end their rotten luck with the toss

India won their first toss in 21 ODIs, their first since the 2023 World Cup semi-final

Shubh Agarwal06-Dec-2025KL Rahul chuckled before tossing the coin up in the air in the third ODI against South Africa in Visakhapatnam. When the coin landed in his favor, he gave a little fist bump before stating that India will bowl first.The chuckle and the fist bump captured India’s wretched luck with the toss. They had lost 20 tosses in a row in ODIs before this game – a statistical oddity with a mathematical probability of 1 in 1,048,576 instances.The last time India won the toss in ODIs was in the 2023 World Cup semi-final against New Zealand. It was 753 days ago (more than two years). Hardik Pandya was still with Gujarat Titans in the IPL at the time, Gautam Gambhir wasn’t anywhere near India’s coaching staff and India still hadn’t lost a Test series at home for over a decade. Now, eight Indian players have made their ODI debut since India last won a toss in this format.Netherlands held this unfortunate record previously. They lost 11 consecutive tosses in ODIs between March 2011 and August 2013. India were close to doubling it.Netherlands won only three ODIs during this phase, including an abandoned game and a tie. India, on the other hand, won 12 of the 20 ODIs during their dreaded streak (win percentage of 60%) alongside a tie. It includes winning the 2025 Champions Trophy undefeated despite the toss going against them every single time.India’s success rate with the toss was abysmal across formats. Since the 2023 World Cup final which started this streak, India had won the toss only 33 times in 96 completed matches.They lost 11 tosses in a row between November 2023 and January 2024. It included seven matches (two T20Is, three ODIs and two Tests) across their full tour of South Africa. Between January 31, 2025 and July 31, 2025, India went a few steps ahead, losing 15 tosses in a row, which included the England tour where they lost the toss in all five Tests.The previous record belonged to West Indies, when they lost 12 consecutive tosses across formats in 1999.In the two years prior to that (from Nov 15, 2021 until Nov 15, 2023, the semi-final against New Zealand), India won more than 50% of the tosses.

India have had six captains in during period. Rahul, who broke India’s streak had the lowest win percentage with the toss (16.67%). Among the full-time captains, each of Rohit Sharma, Shubman Gill and Suryakumar Yadav won the toss less than 40% of times. Jasprit Bumrah is the anomaly here, winning the toss in both matches he played at captain (the two Tests in Australia). Meanwhile, Rishabh Pant lost the toss in the only match where he captained the side – the Guwahati Test against South Africa.

Among Full-Member nations, India’s percentage of winning the toss is the lowest since the 2023 World Cup final – 34.38%. However, defying the outcome of the toss, India are still at the top of the table in terms of win percentage during this period – 65.63%.

Not only that, India have won 64.91% of their matches when they have lost the toss, again the highest for a Full-Member nation, with only New Zealand and Australia coming close.

India have risen above the toss factor to consistently outperform conditions and opponents alike. However, New Zealand and South Africa were among the few sides who managed to exploit India’s streak, turning toss advantage into historic series wins in India. New Zealand made India chase on turning pitches in Pune and Mumbai, while South Africa repeated the tactic in Kolkata and Guwahati. India lost all four matches. The Guwahati Test resulted in India’s heaviest Test defeat at home by runs (408).

Dhoni effect on show as CSK find a way

This CSK was unlike the usual CSK, but they did enough things right, and smart, to spark hope among their fans

Shashank Kishore15-Apr-20252:04

‘What Dhoni is doing is extraordinary’

By the time Shivam Dube got Chennai Super Kings (CSK) over the line at the Ekana Stadium in Lucknow on Monday, it was hard to tell which the home side was. Flags – because of the sticks – had not been allowed in, but the stands still glowed with the yellow of the CSK jerseys, celebrating despite the un-CSK-ness of the win.It began with a bold call to bench two veterans. R Ashwin, he of the INR 9.5 crore tag, was left out to bring in a seam-bowling allrounder in Jamie Overton. Ashwin hadn’t completed his quota of overs in three of the six games he had played and was expensive at 9.90.Then there was Devon Conway, CSK’s top scorer in their 2023 title run, dropped after just three games – likely for his slow starts. CSK had been the season’s slowest in the powerplay. It paved the way for 20-year-old Shaik Rasheed’s debut. Rahul Tripathi and Deepak Hooda had also been struggling along with Conway.Related

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Rasheed had spent two full seasons with the squad before being re-signed at the mega auction last year. CSK have shown the propensity to pick players based on gut calls over the years. But, while there have been a few, like Ruturaj Gaikwad, who have moved up the ranks at CSK, those are the outliers. Many prolific domestic performers like B Aparajith, R Sai Kishore and N Jagadeesan have waited in the wings for multiple seasons, only to be released.On Monday, Rasheed was opening in a T20 for the first time, and he showed he belonged, by trusting his technique and focusing on timing the ball rather than trying to smash the cover off it. He played some shots high on aesthetics – like a flick to a length ball from outside off that had more than a shade of M Vijay.The Rasheed experiment also seemed to free up Rachin Ravindra to play the aggressor – the pair helped CSK get their best powerplay in the last five games. Rasheed hit six fours in his 19-ball 27, putting together 52 in just 4.5 overs with Ravindra. They ended the powerplay on 59 for 1. MS Dhoni later revealed Rasheed’s move was out of necessity.”He batted really well,” Dhoni said at the post-match presentation. “He has been with us for quite a few years. Even last year, we’ve seen improvement, but this year, he has been batting really well in the nets, both against the fast bowlers and spinners. I felt we needed to make a few changes, because we were doing the same things and getting the same results.With Shaik Rasheed and Rachin Ravindra, CSK finally got a good start•BCCI”It’s just the start. He has the capability to dominate, but with authentic shots. What’s important is for him to keep playing the shots he has in his armoury and not try to hit like some of the other openers that are floating around.”Rasheed’s knock gave CSK a strong start, but a familiar middle-overs dip – made worse by Dube’s lack of rhythm – kept the pressure on. They only hit three boundaries between overs seven and 15, and the asking rate went from 7.69 to 11.20.In past seasons, the Dube threat had often forced teams to avoid bowling spin in that phase. This ability to dominate spin, which also earned him a T20 World Cup ticket, reshaped CSK’s batting. But in IPL 2025, Dube’s lack of form against spin – a strike rate of 118.30 compared to 176.47 and 155.35 in 2023 and 2024 – has been amplified by the top order’s inconsistency.Yet, it was perhaps Dube’s reputation that made Rishabh Pant hold back Ravi Bishnoi and turn to Shardul Thakur. But Dube’s determination to finish the game in a season where his overall numbers have been poor spoke of a player ready to fight his own battles.4:32

Why did Pant not give Bishnoi another over?

Even before Dube and Dhoni finished the game, CSK prowled – highlighted by Tripathi’s anticipation and athleticism in running back from extra cover to catch Aiden Markram in the very first over to set the tone. After coach Stephen Fleming had criticised the “poor” fielding against Punjab Kings (PBKS), Monday’s effort was a marked turnaround.Ravindra Jadeja and Noor Ahmad then gave Dhoni crucial control in the middle overs, especially with Pant looking to break free. Noor’s miserly 4-0-13-0 spell may have deserved the Player-of-the-Match award – something Dhoni agreed with while sheepishly accepting the award for his unbeaten 26 off 11.On a surface that was familiar to CSK, Dhoni was at his best, expertly marshalling his spinners – the lone CSK trait in a win that pieced together just enough to spark hope in their fans.

Kuldeep: 'You learn a lot when you don't play'

“When you don’t play, it is very easy to blame someone. To take it constructively and improve is tough”

Shashank Kishore18-Sep-20253:59

Kuldeep: Had a good time in England working on myself

For Kuldeep Yadav, rhythm is everything. It’s what aids his drift, helps develop a loop to deceive batters in the air, and gives him confidence to sequence his deliveries better.However, he says, rhythm only comes with time in the middle, something he didn’t have a lot of through the course of an entire Test series in England, because the team opted for batting depth.”In England, obviously, looking at the conditions and the combination of the team, I didn’t get a place in the XI,” he said ahead of India’s final group match against Oman in Abu Dhabi in the Asia Cup. “But it was a very good time for me to work on myself, to improve my fitness and to give more volume to bowling, because it is very important.”Instead of sitting and sulking, Kuldeep developed his own pattern to training, and analysed his game, and picked out certain markers for when his time would come.Related

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“As a player, you learn a lot when you don’t play,” he said. “When the team reacts to certain situations, you can judge from the outside. You have a lot of ideas when you are in this situation, as to how to react and how you can bowl. I got a lot of ideas from there.”The communication [when he didn’t play] from Gauti [head coach Gautam Gambhir] was very clear. He was very straightforward. When you don’t play, it is very easy to blame someone. To take it constructively and improve is tough. There are two ways and players choose according to themselves.”But it is very important that you keep working hard. The game is such that you have good and bad days. If you are not playing, you have time to improve on your own and become a better player when you get the chance.”Kuldeep Yadav did not get to play in England•Getty ImagesKuldeep’s opportunity came soon after, in the form of a Duleep Trophy game in August. The scorecard will show no wickets next to his name, but for Kuldeep, those 32 overs meant so much more.”It was very important for me to bowl there,” he said. “Bowling in nets and bowling in a match are very different. Obviously, you want to play after a long time. You want to perform well. But I didn’t have that much in my mind. I focused on my strength and tried to bowl in good areas.”Now, he feels that sense of rhythm has returned fully at the Asia Cup, where he has picked up seven wickets in two games, against UAE and Pakistan, across 37 deliveries.”Actually, my rhythm is set now,” he said. “I don’t have a problem with that. I think it is important to use small angles for bowlers. As a wristspinner, I always think about my release point, my finish, whether the body is transferring [weight forward] or not.

“Between me, Varun and Axar, we are very experienced in the T20 format and understand our roles very well”

“When you don’t play, these things run in your mind. But obviously, with the help of video analysis, you get an idea of how you are bowling. I think my rhythm is good now. In the beginning, when I changed [in 2022, he worked on a straighter run-up and went through the crease faster], it took time. But now I am used to it.”The rhythm and confidence tie in nicely to his spin chemistry with Varun Chakravarthy and Axar Patel in India’s T20I set-up, with all three having different roles.”Everyone knows their job and my job is to take wickets in the middle overs,” Kuldeep said. “Axar, obviously, we have seen him bowling in the powerplay and he did the controlling job for us. Between me, Varun and Axar, we are very experienced in the T20 format and understand our roles very well.”Giving a lot of inputs really helped me, or anyone who is bowling in the middle. Whether it is Axar or Varun or me, whoever bowls first assesses the conditions and then suggests something. So it’s a good combination and we are very happy with that.”Axar Patel and Kuldeep Yadav ran through Pakistan’s middle order•AFP/Getty ImagesWhile Kuldeep’s rhythm has given him a fresh verve on the field, he also consciously tries to find a balance off the field, something he believes helps him find a release, especially when he is not playing. That balance has come through football.”If you follow other sports, you get to know how it feels when a team is performing really well,” he said. “You see the bench strength of their team. They have some unbeatable bench strength and when you focus on them, they are not getting enough time -15 minutes, 20 minutes – but they are so good, they can start in any game.”You see other teams, especially the big ones, and how they play against smaller teams – the communication, the decision-making, how quickly it all happens. You hardly have enough time to react.”Obviously, I play cricket on the field, that’s my job. After that, I enjoy football. There are so many games, you just watch and enjoy. In any sport, you admire how they play, especially in team games. The communication, the connection between players, how they lift each other – that’s the most important thing.”

Aston Villa's move to sign James Garner amid new update on Everton future

Aston Villa have now registered their interest in signing Everton’s James Garner, amid a new update on the midfielder’s future on Merseyside.

Villa are very much back on track in the Premier League, signing off before the international break with a 4-0 battering of AFC Bournemouth, courtesy of goals from Emi Buendia, Amadou Onana, Ross Barkley and Donyell Malen.

However, one of Unai Emery’s more recent signings was once again absent from the match-day squad entirely, namely Harvey Elliott, who has been frozen out after seemingly failing to impress his manager since arriving on an initial loan from Liverpool in the summer.

There have been widespread reports suggesting Emery didn’t actually want to sign Elliott in the first place, and would’ve preferred to have brought in Lucas Paqueta or Marco Asensio, casting the Englishman’s future into further doubt.

Villa will only be required to sign the attacking midfielder on a permanent basis if he makes ten appearances this season, but having fallen out of favour, it is currently difficult to see a way back.

Aston Villa register interest in signing James Garner

Emery clearly has serious reservations about Elliott, but it has now been revealed that Aston Villa want to bring in another new English midfielder, having made contact by registering their interest in signing Everton’s Garner, according to a report from Football Insider.

The Villans have joined Newcastle United and Nottingham Forest in the race for the central midfielder’s signature, with the latter club making an approach of their own, meaning there could be stiff competition.

The 24-year-old’s contract is set to expire at the end of the season, so his future at Everton is now ‘up in the air’, although the Merseyside club do retain an option to trigger a one-year contract extension.

The Englishman, who scored his first Everton goal at Villa Park in the EFL Cup back in 2023, has been a key player for David Moyes’ side this season, starting all 11 Premier League matches and putting in a particularly impressive performance against Crystal Palace.

Hailed as “phenomenal” by Trevor Sinclair, the 18-time England U21 international has also displayed his versatility by slotting in at right-back and left-back this season, putting in a solid display against Villa in the 0-0 draw back in September, which earned a 7.9 SofaScore match rating, the highest of any player.

James Garner’s statistics against Aston Villa

Number completed

Tackles

4

Duels won

6 (6)

Big chances created

2

As such, Garner could be a shrewd signing for Aston Villa, who should look to capitalise on the midfielder’s contract situation and get a deal done this winter.

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Sol Campbell blames politicians and 'people on TV' for Tottenham abuse 24 years after completing switch to rivals Arsenal

Sol Campbell believes politicians and 'people on TV' are the reason he still receives abuse 24 years after completing a controversial switch from Tottenham to Arsenal. The former England international is still referred to as 'Judas' by most Spurs fans after he opted against signing a new deal for them and instead penned a contract with their rivals on a free transfer.

AFPCampbell angered Spurs fans with move to Arsenal

The 51-year-old went on to enjoy ample success with the Gunners, winning the FA Cup three times and the Premier League twice during a five-year stint with Arsenal between 2001 and 2006, before a brief return to the club in 2010. However, the manner of his transfer still leaves a bitter taste in Spurs supporters' mouths, who felt Campbell stabbed the club in the back due to the way he departed White Hart Lane for their arch-rivals.

Campbell had given assurances to Spurs that he'd sign a new deal but after months of negotiations and with talks at an impasse, the defender elected to secure a free transfer to Arsenal. To this day, Spurs fans remain angry at Campbell for the decision to leave the club for Arsenal, and in January 2009, four supporters were banned from every football ground in England and Wales after being found guilty for chanting an offensive song containing indecent language about the former centre-back.

In Campbell's words: "[Arsenal vice-chairman] David Dein made me feel protected. He was going to help and promised to be there for me. Come to us, he said, and you will be part of our family. We will protect you."

Campbell's decision in 2001 adds extra needle to the north London derby, as Spurs gear up to take on Arsenal at the Emirates on Sunday. However, the former centre-back feels more should have been done to stop the abuse he received following his move across the north London divide.

Advertisement'No one has apologised' for abuse Campbell received

Talking about the abuse he suffered, Campbell told : "I think some people have got away and are kind of hiding. A lot of people, when they look back, they would probably say to themselves, ‘What was I doing back then? I can’t believe I was acting like that’.

"I get the fans were being whipped up. But it’s the people who had so much – the powerful people who did nothing and just allowed it to linger, allowed it to carry on. And now they don’t want to own up, don’t want to say sorry, don’t want to say that should not have happened.

"People on TV, politicians as well, putting their five pence worth in… Everybody got involved. Everybody was allowed to get away with it. No one wants to remember how they acted and how they treated me with disdain and the way they carried on – and there was no protection.

"People with power just turned their backs, just put their heads in the sand and thought it would just go away or just, you know… time will forget. And no one has apologised. It’s really sad because obviously my family got affected and things like that.

"For me – and Luis Figo when he went between Barcelona and Real Madrid – there’s no way on that level someone could be treated again on a football field or in and around football clubs. It’s impossible."

AFPCampbell recalls his favourite north London derby memory

While both clubs have made efforts to help diffuse the situation, Campbell was asked about his favourite memory of the north London derby, to which he explained Thierry Henry's iconic goal scored in a 3-0 win in 2002. The Frenchman took the ball inside his own half before dribbling through the Spurs side and finishing calmly in front of Highbury's famous North Bank.

Henry's knee slide celebration was immortalised in a statue outside of the Emirates, and Campbell remembers the goal fondly. "It was an amazing run, about three-quarters of the pitch. I think that is probably one of the best games I’ve seen," he said.

"In a derby, an individual player just takes the whole game by the scruff of the neck and produces an incredible moment after an incredible run. That one definitely sticks out in the mind. Just being there, just seeing this guy, just like poetry really."

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Modern-day Arsenal hope to compound Tottenham's misery

Arsenal will hope to capitalise upon both Liverpool and Manchester City dropping points when they host Tottenham on Sunday. The Reds crashed to a 3-0 home loss to Nottingham Forest with their title defence in tatters, while City crashed to a 2-1 defeat at Newcastle, and a Gunners victory will see them open up a six-point lead at the top of the Premier League table.

They do welcome a Spurs outfit that boasts the joint-best away record in England's top tier this term having picked up 13 points from their opening five games on the road. Thomas Frank's side are the only team yet to lose an away match this season having beaten City, West Ham, Leeds and Everton, and drawn with Brighton, on their travels.

Yankees Prospect Was Turning Heads As 'Best Player' at MLB Futures Game

The New York Yankees may have themselves a future star within their ranks.

During Saturday's MLB All-Star Futures Games, shortstop George Lombard Jr. stole the show and impressed scouts in attendance. In fact, Lombard was even called the game's "Best Player" by Baseball America, thanks to his impressive defensive performance.

Lombard smoked a double and showed solid plate discipline by drawing a walk in a 1-for-2 performance in the game. He handled everything that came his way at shortstop, too.

As of its latest update, MLB Pipeline ranks Lombard as the No. 35 prospect in baseball, and the No. 10 shortstop. He's the No. 1 ranked Yankees prospect, and is currently the only player in the organization rated inside the top 100.

At 20 years old, it could be another year or so until Lombard gets his shot at the big leagues. Across two minor league levels this season, he's slashing .239/.382/.356 with three home runs, 30 RBIs and 25 stolen bases. He's struggled a bit at the plate since arriving at Double-A Somerset, but he'll have plenty of time to turn things around as he continues to develop.

Lombard was a first-round pick in the 2023 MLB draft, selected at No. 26 pick by New York.

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