Ben Dunk and Melbourne Stars part ways by 'mutual' agreement

The left hander signed a five-year deal in 2017 but has largely been short of runs for the Stars

ESPNcricinfo staff13-Jan-2021Ben Dunk has left the Melbourne Stars a year before his contract expires after the batsman and the club “mutually agreed” to part ways.Dunk signed a five-year deal with the Stars in 2017, having enjoyed strong returns with Hobart Hurricanes and Adelaide Strikers, but in 42 matches has made 621 runs at 16.34 with 342 of those coming in the 2018-19 campaign. This season he has made 69 runs in five innings.”This was a difficult decision that will allow me to explore other playing opportunities and ultimately was in the best interests for me, my family and the club,” Dunk said “I have thoroughly enjoyed my time playing with the Melbourne Stars and wish them all the best for the remainder of this season and into the future.”In a social media post, he added: “Unfortunately I haven’t made the most of those opportunities but that is cricket. To the fans of the Stars, you guys are amazing and I’m sure in time, you will get the ultimate success you deserve.”To my team-mates from over the years, I thank you, and I look forward to seeing you all at some point in the near future.”

Having played his last first-class cricket in 2016 and his last one-day match in 2017, Dunk has forged his career travelling around various leagues. He was recently retained by Lahore Qalandars in the PSL where he made 300 runs at 37.50 with a strike-rate of 167.59 last season.Melbourne Stars General Manager Nick Cummins said: “Melbourne Stars would like to thank Ben for his service over the last three seasons. We wish him all the best in the future.”

Okuhle Cele, Ryan Rickelton, Jacques Snyman get maiden South Africa call-ups

Heinrich Klaasen will captain a second-string T20I side in Pakistan, with several regulars prepping for Tests against Australia

Firdose Moonda19-Jan-2021Heinrich Klaasen will captain a second-string South African T20I side in Pakistan, with most of the Test squad returning home to prepare for a three-match series against Australia, scheduled to start in March though yet to be officially confirmed. George Linde, Dwaine Pretorius, Tabraiz Shamsi and Lutho Sipamla are the only members of the Test squad that will remain in Pakistan for the T20Is.South Africa named an 18-man T20I group for the Pakistan series, with three maiden inclusions. Fast bowler Okuhle Cele, wicketkeeper-batsman Ryan Rickelton and top-order batsman Jacques Snyman received their first call-ups to the national side while David Miller, Andile Phehlukwayo, Reeza Hendricks and Jon-Jon Smuts will provide experience and familiarity.Details of which members of the coaching staff will remain with the T20I squad are still to be finalised. Last week coach Mark Boucher revealed that initial plans were for him to return home with the Test squad and assistant coach Enoch Nkwe would remain with the T20I team. It is not yet clear whether bowling coach Charl Langeveldt and fielding coach Justin Ontong will travel back to South Africa or stay on in Pakistan.”We’re in the final stages of concluding plans for how the coaching and support staff will also be managed for the two tours. We will share those details when they have been finalised,” Graeme Smith, director of cricket, said in a statement. “It’s an example of the measures that some cricket nations will have to put in place to ensure that they can squeeze more than one tour in a period of three or four months, while fulfilling Covid-19 protocol obligations.”CSA has also yet to confirm the travel arrangements for the T20I side, which will hinge on whether Emirates airlines resumes flights into and out of South Africa, allowing for the team to take a commercial flight. The Test squad was originally booked on Emirates flights last Friday but the airline suspended all travel to the country for “operational reasons” from January 16 to 28, forcing CSA to organise a last-minute charter for the Test side. Given the costs of charters, CSA is understood to be reluctant to book another and there was some concern that the T20I series would be at risk. As things stand, it is set to go ahead.”A lot will be said about the inexperience of this team, but the selection panel and I believe we have a special group of players in this team that will do us proud in Pakistan,” Victor Mpitsang, South Africa’s convenor of selectors, said. “It’s a big year for T20 international cricket, with the World Cup coming up and this is the ideal opportunity for youngsters to put their hands up and grab opportunities, however they may come. We are excited to see what these youngsters will do under what won’t be the easiest of conditions, but more than that, we as a panel, are looking forward to seeing the more experienced players step up as leaders and take ownership of the team.”Related

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While regular white-ball captain Quinton de Kock will be back to lead the T20I squad as the World Cup draws nearer, the Pakistan matches are an opportunity for opening batsmen Janneman Malan and Reeza Hendricks and death bowler Junior Dala to make strong claims for more regular inclusion in limited-overs teams and for Klaasen to cement his spot as a senior player. Though it will be his first time captaining South Africa, he has previously led the Titans franchise 21 times in all formats and captained the Tshwane Spartans in the inaugural Mzansi Super League.While none of the senior seamers are included, Dala and Pretorius have international experience, left-armer Nandre Burger has a domestic reputation for swinging the ball and Glenton Stuurman, who was part of the Test squad for the Sri Lanka series but didn’t play a game with a quadricep injury, could finally make his international debut. Shamsi will head up the spin department, with Smuts, Snyman and Bjorn Fortuin in reserve.South Africa will play three T20s in Lahore on February 11, 13 and 14. The dates and venues for the Tests against Australia are yet to be confirmed but it is understood the series will start in late February or early March, necessitating those players that will be involved to return home from Pakistan at the conclusion of the second Test on February 8.Squad: Heinrich Klaasen, Nandre Burger, Okuhle Cele, Junior Dala, Bjorn Fortuin, Reeza Hendricks, George Linde, Janneman Malan, David Miller, Andile Phehlukwayo, Dwaine Pretorius, Ryan Rickelton, Tabraiz Shamsi, Lutho Sipamla, Jon-Jon Smuts, Pite van Biljon, Glenton Stuurman, Jacques Snyman

Sune Luus to lead South Africa Women in India as Dane van Niekerk remains injured

Chloe Tryon and Masabata Klaas to miss the India tour as well because of injuries

ESPNcricinfo staff28-Feb-2021South Africa Women will be without their regular captain Dane van Niekerk and allrounder Chloe Tryon for their limited-overs tour in India, comprising five ODIs and three T20Is.Both van Niekerk and Tryon had missed the recent home series against Pakistan also as they continue to recover from their back injuries.In van Niekerk’s absence, Sune Luus will continue to lead the side. Under Luus, South Africa had beaten Pakistan 3-0 in the ODI series and 2-1 in the T20Is.Meanwhile, a last-minute injury to medium-pacer Masabata Klaas means she is the only absentee from the Pakistan series.Related

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“It is really exciting to finally have this tour confirmed and announce our squad that will do duty here in India, and we are looking forward to getting out there to see our ladies prove themselves under different playing conditions,” South Africa’s coach Hilton Mooreng said in a media release. “India is always a wonderful place to tour and we are looking forward to the challenge that lies ahead.”As reported earlier by ESPNcricinfo, the South African contingent will be in quarantine for six days. The tour begins with the first ODI on March 7, with all eight matches scheduled to be held at Lucknow’s Ekana International Stadium.South Africa squad: Sune Luus (capt), Ayabonga Khaka, Shabnim Ismail, Laura Wolvaardt, Trisha Chetty, Sinalo Jafta, Tasmin Britz, Marizanne Kapp, Nondumiso Shangase, Lizelle Lee, Anneke Bosch, Faye Tunnicliffe, Nonkululeko Mlaba, Mignon du Preez, Nadine de Klerk, Lara Goodall, Tumi Sekhukhune

Sam Harper given out obstructing the field against South Australia

The dismissal occurred when he moved to block a throw at the stumps from bowler Dan Worrall

ESPNcricinfo staff08-Apr-2021Victoria opener Sam Harper was given out obstructing the field in the early stages of the team’s final Marsh Cup match against South Australia.The incident happened when he played the ball back to Dan Worrall in his follow through and came well out the crease when playing the stroke. Worrall then threw the ball towards the stumps at which point Harper made an obvious movement to block the throw which was on target with him still out of the crease.South Australia, led by Travis Head, appealed and it led to a lengthy conversation between on-field umpires Peter Gillespie and and Sam Nogajski before the third umpire, Shawn Craig, eventually confirmed the dismissal.

Commentating on Fox Cricket, former Australia allrounder Andrew Symonds quickly felt Harper was in trouble. “Obviously Harper went down the wicket and it’s whether he made his ground or not when the ball was thrown back,” he said. “I’d say if he’s behind the crease he wouldn’t be obstructing but if his feet are in front of the crease he may well be given out here because you can’t do that…oh, yeah, I’d give that out.”Obstructing the field is Law 37: “Either batsman is out Obstructing the field if, except in the circumstances of 37.2, and while the ball is in play, he/she willfully attempts to obstruct or distract the fielding side by word or action.”The MCC’s learning guide for the laws adds: “A batsman will be considered to have obstructed the field if, without justification (such as to avoid a fielder), he/she alters his/her running path which prevents a throw from causing a run out. The fact that the thrown ball might not have hit the stumps does not prevent a dismissal under this part of the Law.”

Jofra Archer tests his levers for Sussex second XI as return from elbow injury begins

England star gets back to action at Hove, but only with the bat so far

Andrew Miller04-May-2021These were circumstances that, ordinarily, make cricketers question their life choices. A biting, blustery day on the South Coast, with a ragged wind harassing the bowlers in their run-ups and the batters in their stances. The first-team squad went through their paces for a while in the nets behind the square, but not a soul in the flats overlooking the 1st Central County Ground bothered to poke their heads out to observe the twos going about their business – Sussex versus Surrey in the Second XI County Championship.The sun made infrequent appearances, but only of the “look what you could have won” variety. Slip fielders stood stiff-limbed in the cordon, hands jammed deep into pockets, When people talk of four-day cricket being pushed to the margins of the summer, these are the clichéd conditions that the mind’s eye conjures up.And yet, these were also the conditions in which one of the most sought-after cricketers on the planet was making his comeback from injury. For a man who spends most of his professional life on the road – or, in the current climate, in hotel-rooms of varying degrees of solitude – home, aka Hove, is most definitely where Jofra Archer’s heart is.

As if to prove the point, Archer’s sea-front flat – a short stroll from the ground – has featured in the headlines more often than most sportsmen’s homes in recent months, firstly due to his unsanctioned detour during last summer’s West Indies series, which caused him to miss the second Test at Emirates Old Trafford, and latterly due to the infamous fish-tank incident in January which left a shard of glass embedded in his right middle finger.And now Hove is where Archer has been undergoing his rehab in recent weeks, after a recurrence of his right elbow problems caused his withdrawal from this year’s IPL. But given the news that broke shortly before the start of play on Tuesday, you suspect that Archer might have been quietly grateful for an excuse to duck out of the unfolding drama in India, for all that he professes his loyalty to the tournament that has played such a significant role in his career.Had it not been for the decision, taken late last month, to withdraw Archer from the entirety of this year’s IPL, he would almost certainly have been caught in the maelstrom this week – effectively swapping an eight-day quarantine period on arrival in Delhi for a further ten days’ isolation back in the UK, with maybe not even a solitary outing for Rajasthan Royals in between whiles, now that the tournament’s bubble has burst and the players are scattering (with varying degrees of difficulty) for home.Jofra Archer made his comeback from injury for Sussex’s 2nd XI•Getty Images

Archer was visibly fed up of the bio-secure lifestyle during England’s tour of India earlier this year – no player spent longer in hotel rooms that his 90-plus days during last summer’s contests in Southampton and Manchester, while he’s also had stints in South Africa in December (albeit truncated due to another bubble breach) and in the UAE at the last IPL in November, where he was named the tournament’s MVP for his haul of 20 wickets at an economy rate of 6.55.Instead, his injury has given him a chance to take stock, and build back into his workload, with two spells a day in the nets under the regular scrutiny of Jon Lewis, England’s bowling coach, and Craig de Weymarn, the physio. Writing in the Daily Mail this week, Archer reckoned he was already back to bowling at full pace after starting his comeback at 60-70 percent. Surrey’s reserves will find out soon enough quite how accurate that claim actually is.For the first day of action, however, Archer was made to play the waiting game. It was 70 overs before he got his first taste of action with the bat – almost enough time to complete an IPL double-header – as Sussex’s innings was carried first by Marcus Campopiano, an alumnus of the nearby Hurstpierpoint College, who set the day’s platform with 66 from 99 balls, and latterly by Oliver Carter, a 19-year-old wicketkeeper-batsman, who belied a previous highest 2nd XI score of 15 with a fluent and compact 110, studded with 14 fours and a pulled six behind square off Conor McKerr.Related

Archer’s innings, when it finally got underway at the fall of the sixth wicket in the early afternoon, proved to be a perfect paint-by-numbers amalgam of white-ball flamboyance and exaggeratedly dour red-ball dead-batting. His 46-ball 35 including three fours and two sixes – both of them heaved over the short square boundary – and he was dropped twice in an over too, including a flying edge at second slip that brought him out in a sheepish grin as he jogged through for a bonus single off McKerr.His luck ran out at the third time of asking, however, as Laurie Evans at gully swallowed an open-faced steer off the seamer James Taylor, and Archer trooped back to the pavilion, followed not long afterwards by the second cloud-burst of the day.As prologues go, it was a promising exhibition from a player easing his way back to match fitness. Archer’s levers certainly seemed to be functioning without inhibition, as he extended his elbows into a brace of fierce drives over long-off against the spin of Will Jacks, and if he perhaps seems a touch more inhibited than he had been in his previous appearance for Sussex’s second XI – when he took six wickets and smashed 108 from 99 balls against Gloucestershire at Woodmancote in 2019 – then he’s also got a longer lead-in before his next big date with destiny.Back then, he had just a week to get himself ramped up for his Test debut against Australia at Lord’s. The same venue awaits this year as well, but with New Zealand’s visit getting underway on June 2, Archer’s still got licence to take it slowly as he returns to the fast lane.

VVS Laxman's advice to Rohit Sharma: 'Focus on leaving deliveries outside off'

Shane Bond expects a fascinating battle between Rohit Sharma and Trent Boult

Vishal Dikshit15-Jun-20210:52

Five batters and two spinners? Aakash Chopra’s India XI for WTC final

VVS Laxman has offered two tips to Rohit Sharma ahead of the World Test Championship final against New Zealand starting Friday: know where your off stump is to leave the ball outside off and don’t take the left leg across too much while facing Trent Boult, who is likely to swing the ball into the batter. Laxman was speaking at a virtual press conference organised by broadcaster , with Ian Bishop and Shane Bond as his co-panelists.”I think not only for Rohit but for every opener, it’s very important to know where your off stump is,” Laxman said. “And Rohit, since the time he has opened for the Indian team even in Indian conditions against South Africa, the way he knew where his off stump was, he was very disciplined at the start of the innings. And if Rohit can replicate that in England, I’m sure he will perform well.”We all know what an unbelievable and talented batsman he is. He is a match-winner for the Indian team. But knowing where your off stump is and letting go of the balls outside the off stump in the channel of uncertainty is something which Rohit requires to focus on.

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“Another challenge is in the form of Trent Boult who can get the ball in. So I think he also knows that against Trent Boult, he cannot take his left leg across, he has to play as much as possible with the full face of the bat back towards the bowler and the umpire. These are the two things Rohit definitely requires to address at the start of the innings.”Bond, meanwhile, believes Sharma has the ability impose himself on bowling attacks like Matthew Hayden did during his time. The former New Zealand quick is part of the Mumbai Indians, of which both Sharma and Boult are part of. The trio were part of the IPL-winning Mumbai Indians team in the UAE last September.Bond chuckled that banter for the WTC final between Sharma and Boult had started well in advance, during the 2021 IPL season.”What I do know is that even during the IPL season, Trent Boult was running in, swinging the ball and hitting him (Sharma) on the pads and telling him, ‘that’s what is going to happen in the World Test Championship final’,” Bond said with a hearty laugh. “So he was talking about it four months in advance, there was banter going on, which was just brilliant. Those two were very aware that they were going to come up against each other.”I love Rohit Sharma as a player, I see him almost in a Matt Hayden kind of role where he goes out, as he did against England in the series in India on very difficult wickets, and he imposes himself. He could come out and score very quickly, he’s that sort of player, very dynamic in difficult conditions, like a Rishabh Pant, can take the game away from a team in a very good hour even when New Zealand are bowling with the new ball. So with the field up and he’s such a stroke-maker, it sort of suits him being at the top of the order when the ball is hard.”There’s obviously some areas in his game which New Zealand will look to exploit but what he does do is he scores fast and if he can score fast and put runs on the board, that instantly puts pressure on the bowling attack and there’s nothing worse as a bowler than going for runs, especially if you’re trying to pitch the ball up. I can’t wait for the Boult-Sharma battle, with all the banter that’s been going on and I’m expecting a few smiles between the boys as well.”For the rest of the Indian batting line-up as well, Laxman emphasised on how playing the ball late would help them in covering the late swing of the Dukes ball.”What the batsmen require to remember if they want to succeed in England is to know where there off stump is, and also always look for the full ball and a good, long, big stride,” Laxman said. “What that enables them to do is to play the ball late, allow the ball to come close to them and they can then cover the late swing which the bowlers will extract with the Dukes ball and also the lateral movement which probably they can extract because of the conditions there.”Boult further said it was New Zealand ‘s “best chance” to take home an ICC trophy after finishing runners-up in the 2015 and 2019 ODI World Cups, and expected them to play five quick bowlers by picking Colin de Grandhomme ahead of spinner Ajaz Patel, who was named in the final 15 ahead of Mitchell Santner on Tuesday.Laxman and Bishop both predicted India to pick five batters, Pant as the wicketkeeper at No. 6, R Ashwin and Ravindra Jadeja as the spin-bowling allrounders, and three fast bowlers.

Lancashire edge 19-wicket day despite Marnus Labuschagne's resistance

Australia batter’s 44 is highest score as Group Three leaders shade madcap opening day

ECB Reporters Network03-Jun-2021The bowlers held sway in the LV=Insurance County Championship match between Glamorgan and Lancashire in Cardiff with 19 wickets falling on the opening day.Lancashire were put into bat and managed 173 all out with the highest partnership of the innings being the 36 put on between Luke Wood and Danny Lamb for the seventh wicket. Michael Neser returned the best figures for the hosts with 3 for 46, with the other Glamorgan seamers all chipping in.Glamorgan started solidly in reply with an opening stand of 39 between David Lloyd and Joe Cooke but from that point on, the wickets continued to tumble with Tom Bailey – who had top-scored with 31 – claiming 3 for 40 for Lancashire.Related

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Glamorgan reached the close on 150 for 9, still trailing by 23 and in danger of conceding what could be a telling first-innings lead.Having won the toss and elected to field, they had started well in the first session with James Weighell the pick of the bowlers, but it was the ever-reliable Michael Hogan who made the first breakthrough from a ball that moved in sharply to the left-handed Keaton Jennings, clattering into his stumps.Weighell took the two next wickets to fall, the first from an inswinger that Luke Wells left alone and he was given out lbw. Alex Davies had looked to be finding his feet when he attempted to cut a ball that was too close to him for the shot and he spooned a catch to Andrew Salter at point for 21.It was Dan Douthwaite who claimed the final two wickets of the Lancashire innings with both Saqib Mahmood and Bailey chopping the ball on to their stumps.The wickets also fell at regular intervals in the Glamorgan innings, the first being Lloyd for a punchy 21, bowled when he left a ball from Mahmood that clipped his off stump.Bailey claimed two wickets in two balls when he had Joe Cooke bowled and Billy Root trapped lbw to leave Glamorgan 74 for 3.Marnus Labuschagne was the one player who looked well set but he also fell on this madcap day, dismissed lbw to Lamb. His 44 in this innings doubled his run tally for Glamorgan this season with the Australian yet to rediscover the outstanding form of his 2019 county campaign. With him gone there was little further resistance, as Lancashire made their way through the lower order.”There was some good bowling there, shot selection was a bit of an issue at times… there is the odd ball that nips around a bit but it is a nice wicket,” Hogan said. “After that first hour, I thought that we were in for a long old day, and it seemed like a nice wicket. 19 in the day is interesting but I suppose the game goes like that sometimes.”

Yuzvendra Chahal: 'You will see a more confident Yuzi in this series'

Downplaying the idea that his form has dipped, the India legspinner says the team had communicated their confidence in him ahead of the SL tour

Varun Shetty08-Jul-2021India legspinner Yuzvendra Chahal has said we will “see a more confident Yuzi” during India’s limited-overs tour of Sri Lanka starting on July 13 in Colombo. Chahal, alongside Kuldeep Yadav, was a key member of India’s ODI squad in their lead up to the 2019 World Cup. Since that tournament, however, neither has had an assured spot. This was reflected in BCCI’s annual contracts list for the year as well, with Chahal and Yadav both demoted to Grade C, from Grade B and A respectively.Since the end of the 2019 World Cup, Chahal averages 37.12 in ODIs and has gone at an economy rate of 6.45. Those numbers must be qualified with the fact that he has played in only five games during that period – which coincided with the Covid-19 pandemic – but his being benched during the entirety of India’s three-match ODI series at home against England in March was a reminder of sorts of his diminished importance in the squad. But Chahal said the team management had communicated their confidence in him.Related

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“My performance – I don’t think it was a dip [in form] or anything,” Chahal said ahead of the Sri Lanka ODI series. “You can’t perform in every match. I will try my level best. This series is very important to me.”I keep having conversations with the bowling coach. They [management] have given us confidence, and that’s why I’m here. If it wasn’t there, no one in the team [would be here]. My main focus at the moment is just this series – there’s been lesser cricket over the last year, but that’s not in our hands. Whatever series happens, we want to perform. After this series, my focus will be on the IPL, and only then the [T20] World Cup. Right now, I’m focusing on this tour only.”Chahal’s last ODI appearance was against Australia, in November 2020. Since then, he has played in 19 T20s across domestic and international cricket, and only two List A games for Haryana. But the spinner said he had been reminded by stand-in coach Rahul Dravid that he would be the senior spinner on this tour and that the coach wanted him to have a guiding influence on the younger players.”I’m playing an ODI series after so long, but we’ve already played here – two practice matches. [We’ve been practicing] early in the morning so that we get used to the heat,” he said. “It’ll be totally different compared to 20 overs where we’re on the ground for three, three-and-a-half hours.”A major difference between T20Is and ODIs is the fielding restrictions – with only four fielders allowed outside the 30-yard circle from the 11th to the 40th over of ODIs. Chahal said that while those restrictions might be hard on a spin bowler, they aren’t new.”I’ve played for five years, 50-plus matches, so I’m used to all this,” he said. “This is not an excuse or something. Now, when I bowl, I just focus on how to get batters out. That’s it.”I’ve a couple of variations and I’m focusing on that only, not using other deliveries. You will see a more confident Yuzi in this series. I’m just working on my angles and in general trying to bowl more.”

Rashid Khan crucial in sending Trent Rockets into knockout phase, Dawid Malan seals the deal

Winner takes all when Brave and Invincibles contest final spot on Monday, Superchargers eliminated

Matt Roller15-Aug-2021Rashid Khan took three wickets and two catches to spark a collapse of 6 for 28 and send Trent Rockets into the knockout stages of the Hundred, with Dawid Malan shuffling up the order to hit his third half-century of the tournament to seal a straightforward chase.Manchester Originals, who had already been eliminated after consecutive defeats, were 70 for 1 after 40 balls when Rashid came into the attack, but he struck three times in his first six balls to set a middle-order slide in motion which proved decisive. He was unusually subdued in his celebrations, with the crisis unfolding at home in Afghanistan seemingly on his mind, but still delivered a clutch performance in a must-win game to set up an easy win.In the chase, Originals were unable to take the early wickets they needed as Malan put on 50 for the first wicket with Alex Hales, moving up to open in a bid to find some form before the knockout stages. Matt Parkinson struck twice through the middle, having Hales caught behind and Steven Mullaney top-edging to mid-on, but Samit Patel’s 35 not out saw them across the line.The result sets up a winner-takes-all fixture between Southern Brave and Oval Invincibles at the Ageas Bowl on Monday night and means that Northern Superchargers have been eliminated. In the event of a no-result or a tie on Monday, Invincibles would pip Brave to the final spot in the top three. Rockets are likely to play in Friday’s eliminator, though could go straight into Saturday’s final if Superchargers thrash Phoenix on Tuesday.King Khan
Rashid gave an interview to the in the build-up to the Hundred in which he revealed he had spent 25 nights at home in the last five years, during which time both of his parents have passed away. He has been tweeting with increasing despair over the last month about the humanitarian crisis and deteriorating situation in Afghanistan and in the context of Kabul being seized by force on Sunday, it was a credit to his professionalism that he managed to keep his focus on the matter at hand at Trent Bridge.He came on with Colin Munro set on 25 off 12 balls and playing with the uninhibited calmness of a man whose team had nothing riding on the result, and his Sussex and Adelaide Strikers team-mate Phil Salt looking to accelerate after making it through the Powerplay. His first ball was his worst, a full toss sliding down the leg side, but Salt top-edged a sweep to short fine leg to give Rashid an early breakthrough.Two balls later, he pushed through a googly which struck Colin Ackermann on the shoulder as he got low in an optimistic attempt to sweep. After a long delay due to technical difficulties, ball-tracking confirmed it was hitting the top of leg stump and Rashid had two in three balls. He changed ends for his second set of five, immediately yorking Carlos Brathwaite, and conceded four runs across a set of 10 from the same end.His final set went for two boundaries through third man – once via the outside edge, the other through a late dab – but as if to make up for those runs, he held onto a superb running catch at deep square leg, to go with an earlier effort at long-on. It was not far off a one-man show.Malan’s the man
Malan started the season with a fluent innings of 62 not out off 43 balls to help Rockets cruise to victory against Southern Brave, but managed only 86 off 79 across his next six knocks – after his sluggish 51 against Birmingham Phoenix, Moeen Ali even joked: “we kept Malan in, which was great for us”.This chase was an ideal situation for him, with limited pressure on the required rate, and he got up and running in the Powerplay with a series of trademark drives and punches through the off-side ring. He slowed down slightly through the middle and fell for a low-key 52 off 46, when miscuing to extra cover via the top edge, but had provided a foil for the right-handers and left an equation of 12 off 10 balls.Patel, who had earlier celebrated exuberantly after bowling his Nottinghamshire team-mate Joe Clarke, put the finishing touches to the chase with a pair of late sixes, before D’Arcy Short – shuffling down to No. 5 as Rockets ensured left-right partnerships throughout – thumped a full toss for four to seal the win.

Fifth Ashes Test moved out of Perth, likely to be either Hobart or Melbourne

The order of the Tests will not change after a late bid by the WA government for a swap

ESPNcricinfo and AAP06-Dec-2021The fifth Ashes Test will be relocated away from Perth after Cricket Australia confirmed it could not be held in Western Australia due to border restrictions in place.There will also be no change in order of the Test matches – on Sunday the WA sports minister Tony Buti made a last-ditch bid for Perth to switch with Adelaide for the second Test – with the replacement venue to be confirmed in the coming days. Hobart is the narrow favourite behind having a second match at the MCG.It could be that there will now be two day-night matches in the series given that broadcasters will have lost the primetime-friendly west coast slot which allows Test cricket to broadcast in the evening in other major cities.A few weeks ago WA Cricket had been bullish about its chances of staging the Test with chief executive Christina Matthews putting it as a “97%” chance, but that receded quickly in recent days with the WA government insisting on 14 days quarantine for anyone associated with putting on the Test from outside the state including key broadcast personnel along with players’ families.”We acknowledge and appreciate the efforts of the WA Government, relevant agencies and Perth Stadium over recent months,” Nick Hockley, the Cricket Australia chief executive, said.”We are very disappointed that we are unable to stage the fifth men’s Ashes Test at Perth Stadium. We did everything we could in partnership with the WA Government and WA Cricket to make it work under the current border and health arrangements, but unfortunately this was not possible.”We are particularly disappointed for Western Australian cricket fans who were so looking forward to seeing the first ever Ashes Test at the new stadium.”Matthews put a figure of between three and five million dollars on the cost of losing the Test of which WA would hope to recover half through CA. She added the the difficulties of all the broadcast and production crew needed had only become apparent in the last two weeks but denied that had been an oversight.”And not just the broadcasters in Fox and Seven – there’s also Hawkeye, there’s Spidercam and there’s DRS that only have a certain specialist group of people who follow it all around the country,” Matthews said. “They can’t get here any earlier than the players. When they come to do their job, they’ve got to go in and out of the public areas.”So there’s things that can’t be kept away from the public and that wasn’t fully known until about 10 days ago. I don’t think we dropped the ball, but maybe we needed to dig a bit deeper into things Cricket Australia need to tell the government.”I’m really cranky about the fact it’s the second year in a row we’re missing a Test, but there’s really no one to blame which makes it really hard. It’s just circumstances.”There was never any chance of the late suggestion of a Test swap being possible and it was quickly shut down by the South Australian Cricket Association on Monday shortly before the CA announcement.Hobart remains a slight favourite to be the replacement venue ahead of Melbourne, with Cricket Tasmania chief executive Dominic Baker adamant the Tim Paine saga shouldn’t have an impact on any decision.Tasmania, which has not staged a Test since 2016, had been due to host the one-off Test between Australia and Afghanistan last monthBoth the NSW government and Cricket ACT have also stated their desire to host the match, at the SCG and Manuka Oval respectively, if requiredQueensland sports minister Stirling Hinchliffe on Monday threw the Gabba forward as an option to hold a second Test this summer.”We’d love to be able to see more content here at the Gabba,” Hinchcliffe said. “We’d obviously want to continue talking to Cricket Australia about making sure that we provide the best facilities for the great content.”Nick Hockley and I speak regularly and it’d be wonderful to play a part in making sure that the Ashes is the best series possible. We’ve got to see what the terms and what the arrangements will be and the circumstances. [We’re] happy to have that conversation.”WA is slated to host one other international this summer, with an ODI involving New Zealand on January 30. That series-opener would also likely be subject to biosecurity arrangements.It comes after the WACA was due to host the women’s Test between India and Australia in October before it was moved to Queensland. A one-off Test between Afghanistan and Australia was postponed last year due to Covid-19.

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