WWC 2022 Team of the Tournament: A lot of Australians there – what did you expect?

Our team features four world champions, four South Africans, and one player from Bangladesh – find out who they are

Vishal Dikshit06-Apr-20221 Alyssa Healy (wk),
Most runs in a Women’s World Cup ever, best score in a World Cup final (men’s or women’s), back-to-back-centuries in the semi-final and final… records, and more records. Healy, one of the most devastating batters in the game, had crossed 50 earlier in the tournament too, against India and Pakistan, but she took her game to the next level in the knockouts to stamp Australia’s authority in a World Cup yet again, to make her an automatic choice in this XI.2 Laura Wolvaardt,
South Africa’s most consistent batter in this World Cup, Wolvaardt also carried their top order on her shoulders in the absence of runs from her opening partner Lizelle Lee. Wolvaardt kicked off the tournament with five 40-plus scores in a row, including four half-centuries, that helped South Africa chase 225-plus totals against England and New Zealand to qualify for the semi-finals, although her 90 wasn’t enough against the Australians. Her trademark cover drives were in full display all along, and she ended up being South Africa’s leading scorer for two ODI World Cups in a row.3 Rachael Haynes,
If Healy was Australia’s aggressor, Haynes was the consistent anchor who played her role to such perfection that she was dismissed before Healy just once in the league games, and then once more in the final. She started the tournament with a 130, where she accelerated after negotiating a stifling bowling effort from England, and she laid the platform with Healy for Australia’s middle order in nearly every match.ESPNcricinfo Ltd4 Meg Lanning (capt),
The obvious choice for captain and middle-order mainstay. It’s almost as if Lanning’s arrival at the crease is a signal for an Australian win, and her dominance was on display against some of the best teams in the World Cup: an unbeaten 135 to chase down 272 against South Africa, 97 to slice through India in another stiff chase, and an 86 against England early on.5 Beth Mooney,
An average of over 100, a strike rate of almost 101, flexible up and down the order, and also a gun fielder, which make Mooney a must-have in the XI. She opened for Australia when she was the Player of the Tournament in the 2020 T20 World Cup but moved down to the finisher’s role and did the job with aplomb in the 50-over format to add another dimension to their already explosive line-up. She took some of the best catches in the tournament, and also made sure she was there to seal the chases after the top order had done the hard work.6 Sune Luus,
A legspinning-allrounder, Luus shone mainly with the bat with her three half-centuries, giving South Africa the much-needed solidity at No. 4 given the lack of runs from Lee, some instability at No. 3, and the absence of Dane van Niekerk. Luus’ calming presence also meant her best knocks came against some of the top sides – England, New Zealand and Australia – in the tournament, which included two close chases.Marizanne Kapp picked up her first five-for in ODIs during the World Cup•Getty Images7 Marizanne Kapp,
Need early wickets? Throw the ball to Kapp. Want a partnership broken? Just look at her and she’ll come running and do the job. Death overs? She’s at her mark already. Tight chases? She’ll smash those runs. One of the sharpest bowlers around, Kapp’s consistent contributions with the bat down the order helped South Africa win five matches in a row. Her best performances, too, came against the top sides: a five-for and 32 against England followed by two wickets and an unbeaten 34 versus New Zealand, and 30 not out off 21 balls against Australia.8Pooja Vastrakar,
One of the brightest young stars for India this tournament, along with Yastika Bhatia, Vastrakar was in the thick of things straightaway in India’s opening game when they slumped to 114 for 6 against Pakistan. A career-best 67 off 59 in a formidable stand with Sneh Rana meant India got a deep batting line-up, which she proved again with quick cameos down the order opposite Australia and Bangladesh. She was India’s second-highest wicket-taker, too – bowling is her primary skill – coming on mostly as second change to successfully break partnerships. Her back-to-back yorkers against Lea Tahuhu and Jess Kerr count as among the highlights of the tournament.9 Shabnim Ismail,
The best and one of the fastest bowlers in this World Cup, Ismail, fearsome and experienced, was consistent with her wicket-taking skills right from the first game, going wicketless in just one game out of the seven she bowled in. Ismail showed her knack of removing the big batters up front with her pace, short deliveries, movement off the pitch, and then with her slower variations in the death overs.Salma Khatun’s bowling was a big reason for Bangladesh’s impressive show in their maiden World Cup appearance•Getty Images10 Salma Khatun,
The ball she bowled to dismiss Lanning alone would have helped Khatun make this list. Her three-for had Australia in trouble, before they escaped, thanks to Mooney. Against West Indies earlier, she scored 23 to keep Bangladesh in the hunt in a 141 chase, and that was after she had picked up a couple of wickets. The 31-year-old offspinner’s ten wickets, the most for Bangladesh, in the tournament played a major part in the team’s good showing in their maiden appearance.11 Sophie Ecclestone,
Ecclestone was the best bowler of the tournament with a tally one-and-a-half times that of the next best, Ismail’s 14. Only 22, Ecclestone has already played over 100 games for England and her artistry in flight, drift and turn are testament to her ability and numbers. The left-arm spinner was England’s main weapon in the middle overs, and sometimes in the death too. Barring her inability to pick more than one wicket in 20 overs against Australia, over two games, she had an unforgettable World Cup, highlighted by her six-for against South Africa in the semi-final.

The Richa Ghosh story: from part-time keeper to World Cup record-breaker

India have looked far better balanced since she took over the gloves, and her keeping is now matching up to her hitting

Annesha Ghosh09-Mar-2022India teen Richa Ghosh is no stranger to firsts. Especially at World Cups.On March 8, 2020, she became the first-ever concussion substitute in a T20 World Cup final. Two years later, during India’s 2022 ODI World Cup opener against Pakistan, she became the first wicketkeeper to effect five dismissals on debut at a women’s 50-over global event.The feat is commendable for any 18-year-old, let alone one making just her eighth ODI appearance. Ghosh the keeper had till then been known more for her batting pyrotechnics. Her first impact with the gloves has left many impressed. One of them is her India and Bengal team-mate Jhulan Goswami.”Richa has taken responsibility as a wicketkeeper,” says Goswami. “She’s improving day by day, and her batting ability – you know she is even able to hit big sixes, she can score fast… So I think in our team – she will give us a lot of volume [value] because you are getting one more allrounder, a batting allrounder.”That Ghosh, who counts MS Dhoni among her idols, is keeping wicket at this World Cup is itself extraordinary. To understand why, we must go back in time.Playing as a specialist batter in March 2021, Ghosh had a horrid time in the field in the second T20I against South Africa in Lucknow. By the end of the match, she was tongue-tied and in tears, fielding at short fine leg, when the last of her many fielding errors on the night handed South Africa a series-sealing last-ball win. And this wasn’t a one-off. She had let a ball slip through for four, at point, at a critical juncture of South Africa’s chase in the previous match.

In domestic cricket, Ghosh had dabbled in keeping and bowled medium-pace for her state side, Bengal. But, with more established keepers around, Bengal mostly played her as a batting allrounder.

Ghosh had only played four international matches – all T20Is – before that nightmarish evening in Lucknow. But she had done enough already to show why India needed her hitting skills in an otherwise relatively sedate line-up. What to do about her heavy legs in the field, though?That’s where Ghosh’s multi-faceted talents came into play. Smriti Mandhana, the stand-in T20I captain in the series, retained Ghosh for the third T20I, but handed her the gloves.The incumbent in that series, Nuzhat Parween, and longtime first-choice limited-overs keeper Taniya Bhatia, one of the best with the gloves in the women’s game, had both struggled to make a mark with the bat. India’s balance, as a result, had been shaky. Entrusting Ghosh with keeping duties, despite her having no prior experience of it in international cricket, was a risk the team was willing to take to address this.In domestic cricket, Ghosh had dabbled in keeping and also bowled medium-pace for her state side, Bengal. But with more established keepers around, Bengal mostly played her as a batting allrounder.”In the absence of wicketkeeping opportunities, she would do well as a bowler because she is tall and one of the rare hit-the-deck kind of bowlers in women’s cricket in our country,” Bengal head coach Rituparna Roy says. “She has a fairly strong grounding in all three skills, so Bengal’s teams has used her wicketkeeping and bowling based on match-by-match requirements.”In that final T20I against South Africa, Ghosh claimed a straightforward caught-behind of Sinalo Jafta for her first keeping dismissal in India colours.”Once she got that clarity from the Indian team management that she is being looked at as a wicketkeeping choice, Richa started working harder on her keeping in the Bengal set-up, too, and kept wicket more regularly for the Bengal senior team,” Roy says. She adds that Ghosh took up fitness routines to improve her agility and offset some of the disadvantages her height poses.During the bilateral series against New Zealand, right before the World Cup, Ghosh struck the fastest ODI fifty by an India Women – off just 26 balls•Getty ImagesOn the tour of England that followed the South Africa series, Bhatia kept wicket during the one-off Test and the three ODIs. But her lean run with the bat in white-ball cricket opened the door for Ghosh to take over the gloves in the T20Is. Ghosh made an impact almost instantly. In the eighth over of the first T20I, she took the lead in convincing captain Harmanpreet Kaur to use the DRS when an appeal for caught-behind against Danni Wyatt was turned down. The result: a big spike on UltraEdge, and off went Wyatt.Across the three T20Is, Ghosh was involved in seven dismissals and made 28 lower-middle-order runs off 21 balls. A big affirmation of her rapid evolution as keeper came less than two months later, in the 50-over warm-up game on the tour of Australia, when she effected four dismissals, including the wily stumping of Ellyse Perry off pacer Pooja Vastrakar. Bhatia was no longer a sure-shot inclusion in ODIs.India had every reason to try Ghosh out in the 50-over format. If successful, her T20I batting credentials could offer India respite from the dearth of runs down the order, that too with the ODI World Cup just around the corner. And Ghosh wasted no time in taking her chance. An unbeaten 29-ball 32 at No. 7 on ODI debut, followed by a 50-ball 44 at No. 5 that anchored a 76-run stand with Mandhana, effectively shut the door out on Bhatia. By the end of the Australia tour, her selection as first-choice keeper for the tour of New Zealand – where she would go on to hit the fastest ODI fifty by an India Women player – and the ODI World Cup had become a foregone conclusion.According to ODI captain Mithali Raj, Ghosh’s “good game sense” – much like Dhoni’s – is a standout feature of her glovework. “There are many times I’ve seen her involvement on the field. That is also a great quality at such a young age,” Raj told during the New Zealand series. Asked about Ghosh’s future, Goswami puts it simply: “We all are looking forward [to it].”That future, if her start to the World Cup is anything to go by, could be very bright.

Sikandar Raza is flying high, and Zimbabwe are soaring with him

The allrounder has had immense success in the last month, and Zimbabwe are winning because of it

Mohammad Isam08-Aug-2022Sikandar Raza’s shriek from the middle as soon as Tony Munyonga struck the winning runs in the second ODI on Sunday pierced through the din at the Harare Sports Club. His excitement was understandable. Raza had just led Zimbabwe to their first ODI series win against Bangladesh in nine years, nailing two tough chases in the space of three days. It was Raza’s weekend and his month, as he enjoyed the sort of batting form rarely seen in Zimbabwe.In just four weeks, Raza has scored 607 runs across formats at an average of 101.16, with two centuries and four fifties, coupled with 11 wickets at 22.18 apiece. Along the way, he was part of two record partnerships, bagged figures of 4 for 8 in the final of the T20 World Cup qualifiers, and took some key catches.Simply put, Raza has been the main reason for Zimbabwe’s transformation from a side that suffered shattering defeats against Afghanistan and Namibia earlier this year to one that has beaten Bangladesh in both T20Is and ODIs. He was the Player of the Tournament in the T20 World Cup qualifiers, the Player of the Series for the T20Is against Bangladesh, and must be the frontrunner for the award in the ODIs too.When Raza was playing a T20 tournament in Rajshahi, in Bangladesh, this June, little did he know how much his life would change in the coming months. At the time, qualifying for the T20 World Cup was his only concern. He fretted thinking about the heartbreak of 2019. At the age of 36, this was his make-or-break moment. And how he has pulled it off will likely become part of Zimbabwe cricket folklore.After his unbeaten 135 ensured Zimbabwe chased down 304 in the opening ODI against Bangladesh, Raza raised his game in the second match. Along with the new captain Regis Chakabva, he took Zimbabwe from 49 for 4 in the 15th over to a win with 15 balls to spare on Sunday. Raza had earlier taken 3 for 56 to restrict Bangladesh in the death overs.The big crowds in Harare and Bulawayo were witness to Raza’s heroics in the last four weeks. He started with a 40-ball 87 against Singapore in a T20I and his last knock was 117 not out on Sunday. A bowling attack strengthened by left-arm spin couldn’t stop him. He methodically took apart the Bangladesh attack – going after the best bowler of the day Hasan Mahmud – and rotated the strike consistently to ensure his partners never got stuck at one end.Sikandar Raza did another repair job on Sunday, for the second ODI in a row•Associated PressIn all these recent matches, Raza helped Zimbabwe stay ahead in the game, giving the impression that a big over was just around the corner. That threat made opposition captains and bowlers think, rethink, and overthink their plans against him. Luck, too, played its part. Raza survived chances in the 40s in both ODIs against Bangladesh but as the saying goes, fortune favours the brave. And Raza has been brave.What has made this success sweeter for Raza is how it has helped his team, and how he has overcome personal difficulty. Last year, Raza had a bone marrow infection in his right shoulder that was suspected to be cancerous. His return three months later was fraught with doubt because he wasn’t sure whether he could bowl or even throw properly. Raza changed his bowling action to accommodate the problem, and he has recovered to a great degree.Now, he is in line to win his third successive Player-of-the-Series/Tournament award. If he does, he will become only the third Zimbabwean to win four series awards, after Heath Streak and Andy Flower. In a recent interview, Raza said he never compares himself to those legends, including Brendan Taylor, but his performances do warrant some comparison.Flower’s 540 runs against India in the 2000-01 Test series certainly comes to mind. He rose to No. 1 in the ICC Test rankings later that year, and is considered Zimbabwe’s greatest batter of all time. Taylor’s two centuries in the 2015 ODI World Cup, averaging over 72 in the tournament, were celebrated, while Neil Johnson had a dreamy 1999 World Cup campaign. Current coach Dave Houghton played historic knocks, so did Duncan Fletcher way back in 1983.Zimbabwe’s struggles in the last 15 years adds more sheen to Raza’s runs and wickets. They don’t play a lot of high-profile cricket: they haven’t toured England since 2003, and Australia are hosting them for the first time this year since 2004. The ICC had even suspended Zimbabwe briefly. They failed to qualify for the 2019 World Cup and the 2021 T20 World Cup.Raza is now giving Zimbabwe cricket fans something to cheer about, and his form bodes well ahead of tougher assignments against India and Australia later this month, but breaking Bangladesh’s run of five straight ODI series wins is an achievement too. Raza did it without most of Zimbabwe’s senior players around him but his form helped the other batters: Innocent Kaia and Chakabva both scored their maiden ODI tons in this series.Raza’s personal success is a fine example of perseverance and self-belief shining through. But his success has led to success for Zimbabwe. And that’s perhaps the biggest deal.

How many batters have scored their first and second centuries in the same Test?

In memory of Cricinfo pioneer Travis Basevi, who died last week, and made many invaluable contributions to this column

Steven Lynch25-Oct-2022Travis Basevi 1975-2022

Like everyone else connected with ESPNcricinfo, I was deeply saddened to hear of the death of Travis Basevi last week, at the young age of 47. His lasting memorial will be the superb StatsGuru, but he was also responsible for creating much of the site’s database in the first place, and much more besides. He was a great help during my time as Cricinfo’s editor, and afterwards, when he continued to help out with arcane queries for this column. When he finally left, I wished him well and said I hoped he hadn’t been diverted too much from real work by Ask Steven. “Don’t worry,” he said. “Your requests were far from irritating, they were the stuff I’d thrive on.”And so, as a tribute this week, I’ve collected together some of his invaluable contributions to this column over the years.I was impressed with the way that every New Zealander made a tangible contribution to their Test victory at Leeds [in 2015]: the least significant performers were Kane Williamson (six runs, three wickets) and Matt Henry (39 runs, two wickets). Has there ever been a Test where the minimum performance in runs and wickets was so considerable? asked Stephen Taberner from Australia

It’s obviously difficult to quantify this sort of thing exactly, but I asked ESPNcricinfo’s ace number-cruncher Travis Basevi whether he could come up with a formula. He told me that, excluding extras and run-outs, the overall bowling average in all Tests is 31.43. That means that the smallest contribution to New Zealand’s fine win at Headingley was by Ross Taylor (68 runs, no wickets), as Kane Williamson’s contribution was 100.29 (six runs plus three wickets at 31.43) and Matt Henry’s 101.86.That is indeed the highest minimum contribution in Tests, beating Mushfiqur Rahim’s 61 in Bangladesh’s victory over Zimbabwe in Chittagong in 2014-15, and three instances of 59 – Mohammad Kaif for India vs West Indies in St John’s in 2006, Nayan Mongia for India vs South Africa in Kanpur in 1996-97, and Michael Hussey for Australia vs South Africa in Johannesburg in 2011-12. It’s not a perfect formula – the presence of two wicketkeepers in the names mentioned reminds us there’s no provision for catches – but, as Travis points out, “even if you change the value of a wicket to 20, or 40, New Zealand at Headingley are still significantly in front – so a most excellent spot.”
June 9, 2015Travis Basevi was the creator of StatsGuru, an invaluable data tool for cricket journalists and stats fans all over the world•Will LukeHas anyone else scored their first and second Test hundreds in the same game, as Peter Fulton did at Auckland [2012-13]? asked Tim Pate from New Zealand

Two men have scored twin centuries in their very first Test: Lawrence Rowe made 214 and 100 not out for West Indies against New Zealand in Kingston in 1971-72, and Yasir Hameed echoed his feat with 170 and 105 for Pakistan vs Bangladesh in Karachi in 2003-04. Seven others before Fulton had followed their maiden Test century with another one in the same match – but where Fulton does lead the way is that it took him till his 13th Test to achieve the feat: another New Zealander, Geoff Howarth, is next with 11 (vs England in Auckland in 1977-78).The others to score their first two centuries in the same Test are Warren Bardsley (Australia vs England at The Oval in 1909 – his fifth Test), Vijay Hazare (India vs Australia in Adelaide in 1947-48 – seventh), Jack Moroney (Australia vs South Africa in Johannesburg in 1949-50 – fourth), Duleep Mendis (105 and 105, a unique double, for Sri Lanka vs India in Madras in 1982-83 – his fifth Test), Wajahatullah Wasti (Pakistan vs Sri Lanka in Lahore in 1998-99 – second), and Phillip Hughes (Australia vs South Africa in Durban in 2008-09 – second). Moroney and Wajahatullah never scored another Test century. For a full list of those scoring two hundreds in the same Test, click here.
April 9, 2013. “Nice one,” said Travis. “Fulton’s effort totally escaped me the other week.”I noticed that Brendon McCullum’s two highest Test scores have come in the second innings of the match. What’s the record in this regard? asked Murtaza from Canada

It’s true that Brendon McCullum’s two highest Test scores – 302 against India in Wellington in 2013-14, and 225 against India in Hyderabad in 2010-11 – both came in New Zealand’s second innings. His next-highest of 224 – also against India – was in the first innings in Auckland in 2013-14, a week before that triple-century. The batter who enjoyed the second innings the most turns out to be Bangladesh’s Al Sahariar, whose seven highest scores – ranging from 71 down to 34 – all came at the second attempt. Six batters – Ali Bacher (South Africa), Hanson Carter (Australia), Harry Cave (New Zealand), Junaid Siddique (Bangladesh), Pommie Mbangwa (Zimbabwe) and Shane Shillingford (West Indies) – all recorded their five highest scores in the second innings. Of that group, Junaid was the only one to make a century (106 against England in Chittagong in 2009-10), while Mbangwa’s scores ranged from 8 to 3. His highest first-innings score was 2 not out. In all Mbangwa collected nine ducks (and eight not-outs) in 25 Test innings.Moving to the reverse stat – highest scores in the first innings of a match – the leader is something of a surprise. For much of his career, Tom Graveney seemed to be labelled as having a suspect temperament… but his 23 highest Test scores all came in the first innings. Joel Garner comes next with 20, ahead of his fellow West Indian Brian Lara – whose epic 153 not out to seal a one-wicket victory over Australia in Bridgetown in 1998-99 was his highest second-innings score in Tests, but his 16th-highest overall. The other first-up specialists, with their 15 highest scores all coming in their teams’ first innings, are Marvan Atapattu, Michael Clarke (to date) and Steve Waugh.
June 30, 2015. Luckily, Travis was “intrigued by the first part”.Kumar Sangakkara (left) and Mahela Jayawardene added 624 together – still the highest partnership in Tests – in Colombo in 2006 against South Africa, but only one of them received the match award•AFPIn the recent Perth Test [2015-16] David Warner scored 253, but didn’t receive the Man-of-the-Match award. Was this a record? asked Steve Austin from Australia

There have actually been two higher individual scores than David Warner’s 253 in Perth that didn’t lead to the player concerned winning the Player-of-the-Match award. Highest of all was Kumar Sangakkara’s 287, for Sri Lanka against South Africa in Colombo in 2006, when the award went to Mahela Jayawardene for his 374 (it might have been fairer to make a joint award, which happens sometimes). In Wellington in 1990-91, Aravinda de Silva’s 267 for Sri Lanka was trumped by Martin Crowe’s 299 for New Zealand. When Sachin Tendulkar made his highest Test score – 248 not out against Bangladesh in Dhaka in 2004-05 – the award went to Irfan Pathan, who took 11 wickets for 96 in the match. I should point out here that such awards only became commonplace in Test matches in the 1980s.
December 1, 2015. Travis: “It’s Sangakkara getting dudded when Jayawardene made 374 – I guess the adjudicator never realised you could give it to both of them.”In the Sharjah Test [2015-16], England fielded five bowlers who bowl with the hand opposite the one they bat with. Is this unique for a Test? asked Gerry Cotter from England

The England side for the third Test against Pakistan in Sharjah did include four men – James Anderson, Stuart Broad, Ben Stokes and Moeen Ali – who bat left-handed but bowl with their right, plus Samit Patel, a right-hand batter but a slow left-arm bowler. I couldn’t think of any bigger numbers – but Travis Basevi, Cricinfo’s database ace, unearthed a couple. As England’s first Test against India at Trent Bridge in 2014 meandered to a draw, Alastair Cook and Gary Ballance both had a trundle – and they each bowl right-handed but bat left. They joined Moeen, Anderson, Broad and Stokes to make up the half dozen.There was an earlier instance too. In the first Test against New Zealand in Moratuwa in 1992-93, Sri Lanka had six players who bowled with one hand but batted with the other: Don Anurasiri, Asanka Gurusinha Dulip Liyanage, Arjuna Ranatunga, Hashan Tillakaratne and Jayananda Warnaweera. There are ten further cases of five (the first two by England in Pakistan in 1961-62), including two other recent instances by England: in Sydney in 2014-15 (Anderson, Broad, Stokes, Steve Borthwick and Boyd Rankin) and the Lord’s Ashes Test of 2015 (Moeen, Anderson, Broad, Stokes and a solitary over from Adam Lyth). The figures only take into account matches in which the players concerned actually bowled.
November 10, 2015And a final thought…
If you’ve never tried Travis’ brainchild StatsGuru, why not give it a try? It may look complicated at first, but it’s really not that difficult (I can manage it, after all!) What you’ll then have at your fingertips is what Wisden 2003 enthused about: “An arcane world – a world of averages, aggregates and algorithms – suddenly became accessible.”

England step on the gas, India stutter at the crunch, Bangladesh take a step up

Our first batch of team report cards for 2022 also includes Ireland, Afghanistan, West Indies and Zimbabwe

31-Dec-2022

England

by Andrew Miller
I’ll try to keep it brief… but good grief.This was a year like no other for the England men’s Test team, one where winning a World Cup to become the first team to hold both white-ball world titles at the same time was arguably not the greatest of their successes. It began amid existential despair at the Ashes, and ended with a triumph in Pakistan as absolute as it was unprecedented. It began with an abject record of one Test win in 17, and ended with nine incredible wins in ten. It began with Joe Root clinging on as Test captain because there were no realistic alternatives, and ended with Ben Stokes being hailed as England’s best since Brearley.And by the end of the year, England had desecrated Test cricket in the best and most literal sense – “Bazball”, as everyone bar the team themselves were describing Stokes and Brendon McCullum’s new liberated approach to the ancient format, had stripped back the pomp and unleashed that inner white-ball beast.Suddenly England were playing a version of the game in which nothing mattered bar the endgame – “Strip it back, it’s only you and the bowler there,” as Jonny Bairstow put it after his sensational century in the second Test against New Zealand at Trent Bridge, the moment at which it was clear that this England team had entered a collective zone quite unlike anything the game has ever before witnessed.For the women, it wasn’t quite such a cathartic year, for all that it began with a similarly shattering trouncing in the antipodes. Nat Sciver’s heroic century against Australia in the World Cup final ensured a dignified end to a gruelling winter, but it couldn’t disguise the sense that a champion team had reached the end of its road.At least in the likes of Issy Wong, Alice Capsey and Freya Kemp, the team had a knot of oven-ready starlets, honed in the Hundred and ready to step. But the Commonwealth Games in Birmingham came too soon for an exciting but raw side, and India proved too strong. With Heather Knight and Sciver missing key portions of the summer, it wasn’t until December’s tour of the Caribbean (under new head coach Jon Lewis) that they returned to regular winning ways. Unlike the men in Pakistan, however, their clean sweep raised barely a mutter of recognition.High point
Nine Test wins in ten, and every one of them a stunning display in its own right. But the Rawalpindi victory was in a different league entirely. That first-day total of 506 for 4, that last-day surge after Stokes’ impeccably judged declaration. And all achieved in spite of a debilitating sickness bug on the eve of the Test. All the recipes for instant greatness.Low point
Did the Ashes even happen this year? The midwinter misery of 2021-22 could not seem a more distant memory. But if we have to dredge into long-forgotten horrors, then the loss of ten wickets for 56 runs in 22.5 overs on the final day of the series in Hobart seems a suitably bum note to hit.ResultsMen
Tests: P15 W9 L3 D3
ODIs: P12 W5 L6 NR1
T20Is: P27 W15 L11 NR 1
Women
Tests: P2 D2
ODIs: P21 W11 L10
T20Is: P18 W13 L4 NR1

India had some high-profile losses to contend with in 2022, including in the deciding Test of the England series, in Edgbaston•Associated Press

India

by Sidharth Monga
Losing a Test series in South Africa, losing the decider of the Test series, brought forward from last year, in England, an early exit in the Asia Cup, losing in the semi-final of the T20 World Cup in Australia, losing an ODI series to Bangladesh in Bangladesh – this is hardly the honeymoon period either Rohit Sharma, the new captain of the men’s side, or Rahul Dravid, the new coach, would have hoped for. Especially after the heady highs of last year’s Test series win in Australia.The disappointment from both the fans and the board despite the best win-loss ratio among ICC Full Members in all international cricket should tell this team in transition that they aren’t expected to just get by but to win big Test series away and win ICC tournaments.The women finished fifth in a field of eight in the ODI World Cup. They played no Test matches. They lost a home T20I series to Australia. Musical chairs involving the coaching staff remained the stuff of intrigue. Two of their greatest players, Jhulan Goswami and Mithali Raj, retired during the year.Yet there were some silver linings: they made the final of the Commonwealth Games, beat England 3-0 in ODIs in England, and finally got a WIPL.High point
India Women went to the home of the ODI World Cup runners-up, England, as absolute no-hopers. However, after finishing the Commonwealth Games two shots from the title, they continued their good form in the bilateral ODIs against the hosts, providing Goswami with a perfect farewell . Harmanpreet Kaur, the captain, scored 221 runs while getting out only once, Renuka Singh emerged as a new fast-bowling hope, and they rattled a few cages by running out a batter who was backing up too far before the ball left the bowler’s hand.Low point

The men could smell a series win in South Africa. In fact, after the first Test, which they won comprehensively, and after three innings of the second, it looked like it was theirs. This team was known for winning if it won the toss, especially when it had well above 200 to defend in the last innings. However, they failed to defend 239 and 211 in that second Test and the one that followed, on spicy tracks. It was not just that they lost; they lost by seven wickets each time and conceded the runs in a hurry. India had a good attack but the pitches suited the taller South African bowlers more, costing the visitors their best chance at a series win in South Africa to date.ResultsMen
Tests: P7 W4 L3
ODIs: P24 W14 L8
T20Is: P40 W28 L10 T1 NR1
Women
ODIs: P18 W10 L8
T20Is: P25 W14 L11
West Indies’ first-round exit in the T20 World Cup was perhaps the nadir of an already dismal year in the format for the two-time tournament champions•David Gray/AFP/Getty Images

West Indies

by Shashank Kishore
Three wins and two draws in seven Tests, including a series victory over England at home, should count as a good year, but by the end of 2022, West Indies’ tendency to fail in Australia, where they haven’t won a series since 1992, once again elicited the age-old debates about their Test future.If the debacle in Australia to wind down the year was utterly predictable, their T20 fortunes – which plummeted to an all-time low with their failure to qualify for the Super 12s of the World Cup – is something many didn’t see coming.It all started with Kieron Pollard’s retirement in April following a testy relationship with the cricket board. No inkling of his stepping away was on the horizon even two months prior, when he led the team on their white-ball tour of India, but rumblings began after they were blanked 6-0.In ODIs as well, West Indies endured a horror home run, losing 2-1 to Ireland and New Zealand and 3-0 apiece to India and Bangladesh. They were equally poor away, losing to Pakistan, and being swept aside in India.West Indies only success this year overseas was in the Netherlands, where they won 3-0 with a young team under new captain Nicholas Pooran – though he eventually stepped down from the post after their ignominious World Cup exit. Their qualification for next year’s 50-overs World Cup a year out isn’t a done deal yet; they are tussling with three teams for one remaining spot.The women’s team perhaps exceeded expectations by reaching the semi-finals of the 50-over World Cup, but off-field issues were ever present. If Covid proved challenging, their immediate future without talismanic allrounder Deandra Dottin could be tougher yet.Dottin retired in the middle of Barbados’ Commonwealth Games campaign citing a less-than-ideal “current climate and team environment” and taking potshots at the administration.Like at the start of the year, West Indies cricket at large is once again at the crossroads and in need of a thorough rejuvenation.High point
Beating hosts New Zealand and England back to back to begin the Women’s World Cup with two massive wins many didn’t anticipate.Low point
The men’s home ODI series loss to Ireland, who would also knock them out in the first round of the T20 World Cup with a nine-wicket pounding.ResultsMen
Tests: P7 W3 L2 D2
ODIs: P21 W5 L16
T20Is: P24 W8 L15 NR1

Women
ODIs: P18 W5 L11 NR2
T20Is: P10 W1 L9
Bangladesh pulled off an unprecedented eight-wicket Test win against New Zealand in New Zealand for the first time in their history•Getty Images

Bangladesh

by Mohammad Isam
The numbers don’t suggest it but 2022 was one of Bangladesh’s most productive years in international cricket – they won more matches in 2021, but 2022 is comparable to 2015 in terms of the quality of the opposition they defeated.They beat New Zealand for the first time in a Test match, and in New Zealand at that. They also beat South Africa in the ODI series in March, in that team’s backyard. Bangladesh were previously winless in both countries, so these were two special performances. They rounded off the year with a second successive ODI series win at home against India, and nearly toppled them in their last Test this year, in Dhaka.Litton Das had a stellar year in all formats, while Mehidy Hasan Miraz established himself as a reliable allrounder for the team. The rise of Bangladesh’s fast bowling across formats has been noteworthy too.The sole highlight for the women’s team was the win over Pakistan in the World Cup. They struggled in the T20 Asia Cup later in the year, where, despite being defending champions, they couldn’t reach the semi-finals. Captain Nigar Sultana had a good year with the bat, topping the batting charts in ODIs and T20Is, while Salma Khatun and Nahida Akter were among the main wicket-takers.High point
The miracle at Mount Maunganui and the 2-1 wins over South Africa and India in ODIs were high-water marks in Bangladesh’s cricket history.Low point
Bangladesh lost to Zimbabwe in ODI and T20I series for the first time in nine years.ResultsMen
Tests: P10 W1 L8 D1
ODIs: P15 W10 L5
T20Is: P21 W6 L14 NR1
Women
ODIs: P10 W1 L7 NR2
T20Is: P17 W10 L7
Fazalhaq Farooqi took 3 for 11 in Afghanistan’s opening win over Sri Lanka in the T20 Asia Cup in August•AFP via Getty Images

Afghanistan

by Peter Della Penna
Afghanistan may not have the seismic upset results over the years that other teams have had on the pathway from Associate to Full Member status, but 2022 showed that they continue to make steady progress in gaining respect with a steady march up the global rankings.In the ODI World Cup Super League, they beat the teams they were supposed to (sweeping a pair of three-match series against Netherlands and Zimbabwe) as well as winning a few games that were not nailed-on results (winning one match each against Bangladesh and Sri Lanka). Their consistency in ODIs has helped secure an automatic berth into the 2023 World Cup with a guaranteed top-eight finish in the 13-team tournament, which is all the more remarkable considering they still have nine matches left to play.As for T20Is, they once again showed flashes of immense promise thanks to their factory line of T20 franchise stars. Afghanistan advanced to the Super Four of the Asia Cup, but stumbled once there. Their T20 World Cup experience was severely rain-affected, with two matches washed out, though they gave defending champions Australia a scare in what amounted to a consolation match to end the group stage. It showed that a victory over the Aussies, which may have seemed far-fetched a decade ago, is not so hard to envision anymore.High point
Beating eventual champions Sri Lanka and Bangladesh to top Group B in the first round of the Asia Cup.Low point
Continued inactivity for women’s cricket initiatives at domestic and national team level, which is part of the criteria to be a Full Member of the ICC.Results
Men
ODIs: P12 W8 L3 NR1
T20Is: P18 W8 L10
Sikandar Raza’s three wickets in five balls helped Zimbabwe clinch a famous win over Pakistan at the T20 World Cup•Getty Images

Zimbabwe

by Firdose Moonda
A year of two halves started with Zimbabwe’s men’s team losing 11 of their first 14 international fixtures – including series defeats to Afghanistan and Namibia – before winning 13 of their next 25 matches. The difference? A change in coach.Dave Houghton, the country’s first Test captain, had an immediate impact after he replaced Lalchand Rajput – who moved sideways into the position of technical director – in June. Zimbabwe won the T20 World Cup Qualifier, held at home, a month later and earned a spot at an ICC event for the first time since 2016. They also had an impressive run through the T20 World Cup, where they got into the Super 12. They also beat Bangladesh in an ODI series for the first time since 2013 and won an ODI in Australia for the first time ever, but remain out of automatic contention for the 2023 World Cup.Zimbabwe did not play a single Test in 2022 and only have five scheduled in 2023 (two against West Indies and one against Ireland at home, and two against Afghanistan away). Their focus seems to be shifting to the shorter formats, and they will even host a T10 tournament in January 2023. They do, however, remain committed to long-format players. Gary Ballance, who was schooled in Harare and has played 23 Tests for England, opted out of his Yorkshire contract early and has signed a two-year deal with Zimbabwe Cricket.The women’s team did not play any ODIs in 2022, but came agonisingly close to qualifying for the 2023 T20 World Cup, their hopes being ended by a four-run loss to Ireland.High point
Zimbabwe stunned eventual finalists Pakistan in the T20 World Cup by defending an under-par 130 in Perth. Pakistan were on track on 88 for 3 before Zimbabwe’s man of the year, Sikandar Raza, took three wickets in five balls. Richard Ngarava and Blessing Muzarabani squeezed the Pakistan batting and Brad Evans defended ten runs off the last over to secure a massive upset.Low point
It’s tough being always eclipsed by South Africa, but imagine when even Namibia overshadow you? In May, Zimbabwe lost a T20I series to their lower-profile neighbours, but they did make up for it by qualifying for the Super 12 at the T20 World Cup when Namibia didn’t.ResultsMen
ODIs: P15 W4 L11
T20Is: P24 W12 L11 NR1

Women
T20Is: P15 W12 L3
UAE qualified for the men’s T20 World Cup and prevented Namibia from making it to the Super 12s by beating them in Geelong•AFP/Getty Images

UAE

by Peter Della Penna
Having not played in a World Cup of any kind since 2015, UAE made a spectacular splash in 2022. Not only did they qualify for the men’s T20 World Cup by winning the qualifying event in Oman in February – a performance that included a pair of victories over Ireland in both the group stage and the final – they also managed to spring a surprise upset of Namibia to end the group stage of the T20 World Cup itself, a result that denied Namibia what would have been their second straight trip to the Super 12s.In ODIs, the year started off in positive fashion for UAE before tailing off significantly. The loss of form was not without consequences. After the team went winless on their ODI tour of Scotland, Ahmed Raza was sacked as captain and replaced with CP Rizwan. Initially the move was announced as a change for T20Is only, but Rizwan continued to lead UAE in ODIs in their next series, against Nepal, as well. That apart, long-time allrounder Rohan Mustafa was shockingly left out of the T20 World Cup squad despite having been one of UAE’s better-performing players in the Qualifier.The men were not the only team to make waves in the year. The Under-19 Women beat Thailand to clinch the Asia Regional Qualifying spot in the inaugural Women’s U-19 World Cup in South Africa. The senior women continued a streak that began in 2021, to ultimately win 18 T20Is in a row before the run was snapped by a loss to Thailand. Though they could not secure a spot at the T20 World Cup, the women scored a famous win over Zimbabwe at the qualifier in Abu Dhabi, winning off the last ball by four wickets.High point
Fighting off the cold in Hobart, and a talented opponent in Namibia, to win a match at the men’s T20 World Cup.Low point
Very nearly blowing a chance to reach the T20 World Cup in the first place with a two-run loss to Bahrain to end the group stage of the men’s qualifier in Oman.ResultsMen
ODIs: P21 W10 L10 T1
T20Is: P16 W8 L8
Women
T20Is: P28 W16 L10 NR2
Bilal Khan’s 76 wickets in the CWC League 2 were among the few highlights for Oman in an otherwise underwhelming year•Getty Images

Oman

by Peter Della Penna
After a spate of successes under the leadership of head coach Duleep Mendis, Omanwere underwhelming in 2022. Less than four months after being co-hosts of the 2021 Men’s T20 World Cup with the UAE, they could not secure a berth for the next edition of the tournament, despite hosting the qualifier. A loss to Nepal in round-robin play meant they finished as runners-up in Group B, pitting them against Group A leader Ireland in a crossover semi-final that wound up being fairly one-sided.In ODIs, they became the first team to wrap up the full slate of 36 matches in Cricket World Cup League Two, ending with two wins out of four against USA and Nepal in Texas to take 44 points from 36 matches. Though they will not finish as winners of the seven-team competition, their spot in the top three is nearly assured, which will put them into the ten-team ICC World Cup Qualifier in Zimbabwe in 2023. It will be their first appearance in the 50-over World Cup Qualifier since 2009, bringing them full circle from the depths of World Cricket League Division Five in 2016.On the women’s side, Oman won four of five T20Is on home soil to finish runners-up to the UAE in the six-team Gulf Cooperation Council Women’s T20 Championship. However, they were less successful away from home, losing all three completed matches at the Asian Cricket Council Women’s T20 Championship in Malaysia.High point
Bilal Khan finishing as the leading wicket-taker in CWC League 2 with 76 wickets.Low point
A clumsy chase against Ireland that saw Oman go from 68 for 2 at the halfway points chasing a target of 166 to 109 all out in the semi-final of the T20 World Cup Qualifier.ResultsMen
ODIs: P16 W7 L8 T1
T20Is: P15 W6 L9
Women
T20Is: P9 W4 L4 NR1
Scotland’s win over West Indies in the T20 World Cup was an epic moment for them, but that was their only victory in five T20Is in 2022•ICC via Getty Images

Scotland

by Peter Della Penna
Change would a recurring theme for Scotland in 2022, both on and off the field. Allegations by former spinner Majid Haq, among others, sparked an independent review that concluded that Cricket Scotland’s governance and leadership practices were “institutionally racist”. In anticipation of the report findings being made public in July, the entire Cricket Scotland board resigned en masse.Earlier in the summer, long-time men’s captain Kyle Coetzer stepped down from the national team captaincy and retired from T20Is. New captain Richie Berrington led his charges to a famous win over West Indies to start their T20 World Cup campaign in Hobart, but they were unable to sustain that momentum and were beaten by Ireland and Zimbabwe in successive matches to fall short of the Super 12s. Scotland’s ODI form, however, was mighty impressive and they ended the year in first place in the seven-team CWC ODI League Two competition.As for the women, they could not maintain the progress made in 2021, when they defeated Ireland to be champions of the Europe Regional T20 World Cup Qualifier. Two losses in Edinburgh in early September to Ireland were followed by another in a must-win match at the T20 World Cup Qualifier in the UAE, ending Scotland’s dreams of advancing to the Women’s T20 World Cup in South Africa. However, the junior women were able to defeat Netherlands to secure a berth in the inaugural Women’s U-19 World Cup.High point
Not just beating West Indies, but the manner in which they did it. A thumping 42-run win highlighted by Mark Watt’s trio of wickets off deliveries bowled from 25 yards away.Low point
Calum MacLeod abruptly announcing his retirement at age 32, following the end of the T20 World Cup after a summer in which he was in blistering form with the bat.ResultsMen
ODIs: P21 W15 L6
T20Is: P5 W1 L4
Women
T20Is: P11 W4 L7
More in our look back at 2022

Gujarat Titans look stronger for their title defence

Hardik Pandya is now a more experienced captain, and Shubman Gill comes into the IPL in excellent form

Hemant Brar24-Mar-20234:00

How crucial is Miller’s form for Gujarat Titans?

Where Gujarat Titans finished last season

Right at the top, winning the IPL title in their debut season.

Gujarat Titans squad for IPL 2023

Hardik Pandya (capt), Shubman Gill, Rahul Tewatia, Mohammed Shami, Shivam Mavi, Yash Dayal, R Sai Kishore, Abhinav Manohar, Wriddhiman Saha (wk), Jayant Yadav, Vijay Shankar, KS Bharat (wk), Mohit Sharma, Darshan Nalkande, Urvil Patel, Sai Sudharsan, Pradeep Sangwan, Rashid Khan, David Miller, Matthew Wade (wk), Alzarri Joseph, Kane Williamson, Josh Little, Odean Smith, Noor Ahmad

Player availability – David Miller arrives late

David Miller will arrive in India on April 3, after South Africa’s ODI series against Netherlands. So he will miss Titans’ first game, the tournament opener against Chennai Super Kings on March 31. He should be available for selection for their second match, against Delhi Capitals on April 4 in Delhi.Related

  • Mentor Dhoni vs protege Hardik, a contest within contest to kick off IPL 2023

  • Potential India captain Hardik hosts superstar Dhoni in IPL opener

  • Revitalised Williamson returns to scene of his debut heroics ready for fresh IPL challenge

  • IPL 2023 – why it's going to be a season unlike any other

  • Rohit on player workloads during IPL: 'Up to the franchises now'

Ireland fast bowler Josh Little missed the recent ODI series in Bangladesh as he was recovering from a hamstring strain, but he has joined the Titans squad. He will, however, leave for two home ODIs against Bangladesh in the second week of May. The rest of their overseas contingent should be available for the whole season.

What’s new with Gujarat Titans this year

Titans have three new overseas players: Kane Williamson, Odean Smith and Little. The trio replaces Rahmanullah Gurbaz, Dominic Drakes and Lockie Ferguson. Wicketkeeper KS Bharat and fast bowler Shivam Mavi have also been recruited and could be in action at some stage during the season.David Miller will miss the opening game of IPL 2023 because of South Africa duty•BCCI

The good – Shubman Gill and Co high on confidence

The current Titans squad looks better than last season’s title-winning team. Hardik Pandya has gained experience as captain, and has added the inswinger to his bowling arsenal. Shubman Gill will be much more assured after his recent success at international level. Rashid Khan is fresh from winning the PSL title with Lahore Qalandars. He was the third-highest wicket-taker in the tournament, with 20 scalps in 11 games at an economy rate of 6.53 (the overall tournament economy was 9.20).Their top seven has a good mix of right and left-hand batters, especially if Matthew Wade features in the first XI, and the presence of Hardik and a few bowling allrounders ensures they bat deep.Playing home games at the Narendra Modi Stadium in Ahmedabad, with a possible 100,000 fans cheering for them, will in itself be an advantage. Moreover, the venue allows Titans to pick from a variety of pitches. Given they have the squad – especially the bowling attack – for all kinds of surfaces, they can choose what sort of pitch to play on depending on the opposition’s strengths and weaknesses.Titans also arranged three pre-season camps under head coach Ashish Nehra to warm themselves up for the tournament. In short, all the ingredients are there to avoid second-season syndrome.

The not-so-good – Does Wriddhiman Saha work at the top?

Their back-up overseas players, apart from Williamson, are thin on international experience. Even Williamson is not a natural in T20 cricket. Other than that, they have most bases covered. Perhaps another proven Indian batter would have made their first XI even stronger. That player could have slotted in at No. 3, with Wade replacing Saha at the top.

Schedule insights

Titans are among three teams (Delhi Capitals and Sunrisers Hyderabad being the other two) who play alternate games at home and away all through. This means they will be travelling after every game, and will have to work harder at managing the play and travel workloads of players.

The big question

When Dhoni and CSK took over RCB's home advantage

A wave of yellow washed over the Chinnaswamy Stadium, and CSK and RCB treated their fans to another high-scoring thriller

Shashank Kishore18-Apr-2023The M Chinnaswamy Stadium was predominantly yellow. Hours before the marquee match between RCB and CSK, hundreds of fans had queued at the ticket counter. They fully expected to be rejected, but wanted to try anyway.Earlier, there was similar fervour at the team hotel two kilometres down the road. Security personnel were told to reserve entry only for hotel guests once fans packed the coffee shop on the ground floor. They were waiting for one man, and the moment he stepped out of the elevator and onto the long walkway leading to the team bus, the coffee shop emptied quickly. Everyone had made a beeline towards MS Dhoni.With CSK’s fan army descending on Bengaluru in huge numbers, you could have mistaken this to be the Chepauk or anywhere in Chennai.Related

  • How can RCB turn the Chinnaswamy Stadium into a fortress?

  • As it happened – the yellow takeover of Bengaluru

  • Chennai Super Kings win run-fest despite Maxwell, du Plessis fireworks

  • Stats – Dube lays into RCB again in record six-hitting spree

It was Dhoni versus Virat Kohli, after all. Perhaps for one last time in the IPL, given the two sides don’t have a second league fixture this season, unless of course they meet in the playoffs.The only real ‘home advantage’ that RCB enjoys is their crowd support. Not the flat pitch or the small boundaries. Going by the number of yellow jerseys at the Chinnaswamy, that crowd support had been eroded to 50-50 at best. It was the first time the two sides were playing in Bengaluru since the pandemic; and this fixture has usually been an explosive, high-scoring contest.Monday night was no different. For the second time, CSK and RCB smashed the most sixes – 33 – in an IPL game. The previous occasion was in 2018, when Dhoni walked into the chase with 132 needed off 66, and smacked seven maximums on his own.Mohammed Siraj had suffered that night, going for 48 in four wicketless overs. His failed attempts at nailing wide yorkers dispatched repeatedly by Dhoni’s powerful bat swing. The much-improved Siraj who steamed in last night, however, was perhaps the reason RCB were chasing 227 and not 247. Coming into this game, his economy in the powerplay was 4.70 and he was even more economical against CSK, taking 1 for 6 in his first two overs.Rough estimates suggest that CSK had more support than RCB at the Chinnaswamy Stadium•BCCIDevon Conway is the most recent of CSK’s deceptively destructive openers, much like M Vijay, Mike Hussey and Faf du Plessis – now the opposition captain – before him. His 45-ball 83 set the tone for this high-scoring contest, and eventually earned him the Player of the Match award.Shivam Dube loves playing RCB ever since they released him after spending INR 5 crore to buy him at the 2018 auction. Last night was more of the same. His method was simple: stand-and-deliver to balls in his swinging arc. Each of his five sixes during his 27-ball 52 was different, but all were smashed whistle-clean onto the roof, near the DJ console, into the second tier, and the hospitality boxes.Despite the powerful batting performance, Dhoni was slightly testy on the field. Did he expect the defence to be any different? In the second over of RCB’s chase, two balls after Maheesh Theekshana dropped a catch at mid-off, Dhoni himself put down a chance. It was the kind of catch he’d take 99 times out of 100, but he didn’t even lay a glove on the ball.Du Plessis made him pay. His and Glenn Maxwell’s sensational six hitting threatened to blindside CSK. Wincing in pain because of a bruised rib that needed regular medical attention, du Plessis raced to his fifty off 23 balls. Maxwell got there in 24. The ferocity of their chase had Hussey, CSK’s batting coach, sitting in the dugout with his hands on either cheek. You couldn’t have found a better expression than that to describe a jaw drop.After dropping one early on, MS Dhoni took two high-pressure catches off Glenn Maxwell and Faf du Plessis•Associated PressUsually not a man of many words on the field, Dhoni was seen talking to his fast bowlers often last night. He’s used to having the experience of Dwayne Bravo and Deepak Chahar to call on, but now CSK had the inexperienced Tushar Deshpande, Akash Singh and Matheesha Pathirana taking on the marauding RCB batters. Dhoni ran instructions to his rookies – wonky knees be dammed – and often patted them on the back. There was a match to win.And when the first chance at redeeming himself came along – a steepling catch off a Maxwell slog – Dhoni allayed any fears CSK fans may have had of Theekshana having to catch it, by calling for it himself and waving everyone else out of the way. He did not celebrate though, and instead walked over to the umpire to tell them how close the ball had come to making contact with the spider-cam cables.Dhoni then did something even more unusual. He reviewed a not-out lbw decision against Shahbaz Ahmed even though it was clear the ball from Theekshana had pitched far outside leg stump. At 143 for 3 in the 13th over, RCB were still ahead.Then came the turning point of the chase. Moeen Ali had just been walloped for two sixes, while bowling flat and short. You couldn’t tell what Dhoni told his bowler while the ball was being retrieved, but Moeen immediately began giving his delivery more air. Two balls later, he forced a top edge from du Plessis. Another steepling chance, extremely similar to the Maxwell dismissal, and once again Dhoni called and caught it.The Dhoni-est of Dhoni actions, however, was reserved for the finish, when he backed ‘baby Malinga’ to defend 19 in the final over in his first game of the season. And it was only as 20-year-old Pathirana closed out an eight-run victory and the crowd went berserk that a hint of a smile appeared on Dhoni’s face.

Rinku Singh isn't just an IPL star, and he is more than those five sixes

But “life has changed quite a lot after those five sixes”, he admits after a Player-of-the-Match award for his first international innings

Shashank Kishore22-Aug-2023Alur, July 6, 2023. It’s a day after India’s squad for the T20Is in the Caribbean was named. Rinku Singh, who was seemingly in with a fair chance of making the cut, has missed out. But as he walks off the field after play in a Duleep Trophy game, there’s a distinct sense of calm around him. He indulges in some banter and mimicry that earns peals of laughter from his team-mates. It’s as if he’s wired to not think or worry about the things he can’t control.A handful of journalists present at the venue put in a request through a member of Central Zone’s support staff for a chat with Rinku. He declines politely. You couldn’t possibly have branded him arrogant or rude; he is just a shy person. Perhaps Rinku knew questions over his non-selection would come up.”He’s disappointed, but he says he’s seen far more challenges,” a support staff member told us. “Not getting picked for West Indies isn’t a cause for dejection. He wants to enjoy his game and do well here in Bangalore. He’s happy to speak later.”Related

  • Gaikwad, Rinku, Prasidh sparkle as India seal series win

  • Rohit wants India to be flexible, in mind and batting order

  • India revel in Prasidh's fire and Bumrah's ice

  • Rahul, Shreyas, Tilak make it to India's Asia Cup squad

Later didn’t come in the two weeks he spent in Bengaluru for the Duleep Trophy. What did, however, was an India call-up, first for the Asian Games in Hangzhou, China, and then the T20Is in Ireland.As mentioned, Rinku is a man of few words even when he does speak. Like you saw at the post-match presentation ceremony in the second T20I against Ireland, when he was awarded the Player-of-the-Match award for a superb 38 off 21 balls.It was an innings of two parts. Initially, he took his time and set himself up, in the face of a mini-collapse, knowing well that India didn’t have much batting after No. 8. Then when he got to a position where he knew he had to go, there was clarity in his striking plans and the areas he wanted to pick.For 15 deliveries, Rinku had gone at a run-a-ball. Barring the one boundary off a ferocious sweep to legspinner Ben White, he seemed content nudging and milking singles. But in the 19th over, he got stuck into Barry McCarthy, first scything a wide yorker with precision behind point for four and then reading a slower offcutter early and depositing it beyond long-on for six.Rinku has a strong base; there aren’t too many premeditated movements to try and throw bowlers off. It’s the belief in his power to clear the ground that drives him. The effect of those hits was McCarthy suddenly feeling the pressure – he delivered two successive wides in trying to second guess the batter.

“Life has changed quite a lot after those five sixes. People only remember me because of that. It feels good”Rinku Singh

After that, perhaps a little frazzled, McCarthy ended up erring in length as he attempted another wide yorker. Having carved one behind point, Rinku knew with the third fielder quite square, he had to pick his spot. He did, showing remarkable timing and placement in the process as he went inside-out over extra cover to clear the longest boundary. The over went for 22 and India had the momentum on their side.Rinku’s innings helped Shivam Dube, too. From 9 off 13, he began the final over with two sixes. When the third ball went for a single, the Indians in the crowd went quite ballistic. Their man, Rinku, was on strike, and he didn’t disappoint as he sent one sailing over deep-backward square. The wrist, the pick-up, the muscle – all excellent.The fun ended next ball when he top-edged a pull, but he’d transformed a middling 160 score into a potentially match-winning 185.Rinku’s manner of flicking a switch from accumulator to beast was a proper throwback to that knock in Ahmedabad, when his career, and perhaps more, turned around. The quiet, shy Rinku, an afterthought in an XI boasting T20 legends such as Andre Russell and Sunil Narine, was suddenly at the front and centre of Kolkata Knight Riders’ plans.But, contrary to perception, Rinku isn’t an IPL wonder. As tempting as it may be to bracket his India call-up to his IPL 2023 exploits, it does little justice to the work he has put in at the domestic level for Uttar Pradesh.Rinku Singh isn’t an IPL baby – he averages close to 58 in first-class cricket and has been a star in India’s domestic circuit•Ekana cricket mediaIn the 2018-19 Ranji Trophy season, for example, Rinku was the second-highest run-scorer in the Elite division. He scored 953 runs in 13 innings at an astounding average of 105.88. This included four centuries and three half-centuries. At the List A Vijay Hazare Trophy in 2021-22, Rinku single-handedly steered Uttar Pradesh into the knockouts, notching up 379 runs in six innings, including four half-centuries and a century, at a strike rate of 94.75.These underline his all-format stature and how it isn’t just that one innings that propelled him to the national team. What it did give him, though, was visibility, which his toil and all the runs at the domestic level didn’t. It makes a massive difference, and Rinku knows all about it.”Life has changed quite a lot after those five sixes,” Rinku told the BCCI website when asked by Ravi Bishnoi about fans rooting for him in Dublin. “People only remember me because of that. It feels good.”Rinku has seen his fair share of struggles, but his modest upbringing has given him enough perspective about life – he knows that fame can be fickle. And when he takes the field on Wednesday, it’s likely he will be over Sunday’s performance.There’s a T20 World Cup coming up next year, and Rinku may have personal aspirations of making the squad. But it’s unlikely to make him lose sleep; just like being a run-a-ball 15 amid a slowdown in Dublin on Sunday didn’t.

Ghalib, AP Dhillon, and the sweet sounds of cricket at the World Cup

Our correspondent takes in some culture while also dealing with airport sagas (including not getting recognised by Javagal Srinath)

Sidharth Monga17-Nov-2023October 3
Heard/overheard in Ahmedabad:”Gujaratis are rich, they don’t need credit.”

– A waiter (who hails from Udaipur) while dusting off a credit card machine not used for years”Education is great, but it is greater to be able to employ educated people and tell them what to do.”
– A taxi driver, referencing self-made tycoon Dhirubhai Ambani while talking socio-economic issues”How can one get a licence to buy alcohol?”

– A British couple at the luggage carousel at the airport.October 4
A day before the World Cup, it doesn’t feel like one is about to start at all. Billboards, events, discounts on televisions, advertisement campaigns, all very lukewarm. The ICC flies in eight other captains – England and New Zealand are already here – on chartered planes to drum up some excitement. Ravi Shastri asks Babar Azam about the biryani in Hyderabad, where Pakistan have been camping. Babar gives him an inscrutable look. “We have been asked this hundreds of times,” he says.October 5
Happy World Cup Day. Things seen in Ahmedabad today:

  • Sweet old couple riding a scooter, one in a sidecar
  • Schoolkids packed into a van, giggling at people from the rear window
  • Garba classes and billboards for garba events, which start on October 15
  • Gujarat Titans flags being sold outside the Motera ground
  • A Gujarat Cricket Association employee in the media lounge standing up instinctively when he sees Jay Shah on TV, and remaining like that as long as the camera keeps showing his boss

October 6
Passengers aboard the Ahmedabad-Delhi flight realise how tall Javagal Srinath really is when they see him struggle in his economy seat. Now a match referee, Srinath oversaw the World Cup opener, and is on his way to the Delhi matches along with umpire Sharfuddoula Saikat. Srinath then has to take the coach from the aircraft to the terminal, leaving people a lot of time to approach him for selfies. Polite, smiling and posing for photographs. Same polite smile when I say hello. Realise he is in auto-pilot polite mode when he says to me, “Nice to meet you.” Either that or my face is so unremarkable and common that he doesn’t remember me. Can’t blame him either way.The water is free but you have to pay for the discomfort of being a spectator•Sidharth Monga/ESPNcricinfo LtdOctober 7
Looks like dystopia, feels like the BCCI keeping its promise of free drinking water at the grounds. Feroz Shah Kotla seems to also have kept its promise of clean toilets for women.South Africa keep their promise of big hitting , crossing 400 against Sri Lanka. There’s big hitting from Kusal Mendis too, as he threatens to break the record for the fastest century in a World Cup match, set earlier in the day by Aiden Markram. Eventually, though, both the record and the total are safe.October 8
Oh Delhi, why do you have to be so lovely yet so unlivable? Eat at Kake di Hatti and Giani di Hatti past Fatehpuri Masjid in Old Delhi, then walk to Mirza Ghalib’s old house in Gali Qasim Jaan. The intoxicating smell of blackboard tree flowers all around. Sit there and wonder, Granted Delhi is great to live in, but what will we breathe?Yesterday was the first day in a while that the air quality slipped into the “poor” category. Good planning to get done with the Delhi games while it is still only poor. Except, there is one match in November, between Sri Lanka and Bangladesh – two teams who have suffered in the Delhi air previously as well.Dhobi ghat: your dirty laundry washed and aired in public here•Sidharth Monga/ESPNcricinfo LtdOctober 9
Credit cards with corporate deals can get you into fancy hotels, but after that you are on your own. And on your own, you can’t pay their laundry rates, which are often higher than the cost of the clothes to be laundered. The Dhobi Ghat in Delhi is located right between the bungalow of a member of parliament and an apartment complex called MP Awas, housing other, probably less important, MPs.I ask Arjun, the man who did my laundry for Rs 25 per item, about the barbed wire on top of the already high walls of MPs Awas. He says this is a recent development after a young woman from Dhobi Ghat died by suicide in the building last year. Yes, let’s not address the economic inequality that tends to lead to such incidents; let’s reinforce it with more barbed wire.October 10
An afternoon in Lajpat Nagar, home to a number of Afghan refugees in India who have built themselves restaurants, stores selling nuts (or as we in India call them, dry fruits), and pharmacies with names in Persian script. Watch with nervous amusement as a Pashtun Afghan fights a Tajik Afghan outside a restaurant. Nervous because they are big dudes this close to going bareknuckle at each other, amusement because they are cursing each other in Hindi. Side note: some of the Afghan players ate here last night.Like the Afghans have adopted Lajpat Nagar, the predominantly Punjabi population has adopted them. They have even renamed , an Afghan dumpling, as dal-momo. It is no surprise they have welcomed the Afghans because most of these Punjabi colonies in Delhi were built for and, in the process by, refugees after 1947. Who will understand their pain better?None of the other teams at the World Cup, for sure. Afghanistan has been rocked by two deadly earthquakes, but theirs is the only team wearing black armbands.Rohit Sharma: grateful for the support India receive•Alex Davidson/ICC/Getty ImagesOctober 11

Heard/overheard in Delhi:”Customs [What a big hand he has]

– A fan in the stands about Shaheen Shah Afridi.Eden Gardens lets people watch teams train, a lesson all these modern grounds in the outskirts of cities with their tall locked gates before the match should learn.” match shops, including the extra-famous Girish Chandra Dey & Nakur Chandra Nandy, which sells like it is bootleg stuff. Ghalib, who lived just around the corner, is supposed to have said, according to the biographical show written and directed by the poet Gulzar, “Bengal lives 100 years in the past as well as 100 years into the future.”November 4

Overheard/heard in Kolkata:”Look, that’s Rassie van der Dussen batting.”

– A spectator at the nets, video-calling home and showing them van der Dussen struggle against a left-arm spinner. Note to self: Ravindra Jadeja will bowl first change tomorrow.”Rohit “. [I have come here for Rohit. If I don’t get to meet him, I will stop watching cricket altogether.]

– Another spectator to a policeman, who is relaying a request to the fans from Virat Kohli to not scream during the netsNovember 5
Jadeja takes five after Kohli scores a century on his birthday to go level with Sachin Tendulkar on 49 ODI hundreds as India dispose of their final challengers, South Africa. They have beaten all comers, but there still remains the duality of this format: knockouts to follow a league in which every team has played everyone else. Knockouts are not my problem, though. Time to avoid DigiYatra counters one last time and go home.

Bangladesh's Test credentials in question amid another batting collapse

Captain Najmul Hossain Shanto admits that Bangladesh “didn’t play well as a team”, despite getting the pitch they wanted

Mohammad Isam25-Mar-2024Alarm bells are ringing for Bangladesh after their fourth successive batting debacle in Tests. On a pitch that the team management reportedly desired, the home side collapsed twice in Sylhet, with Litton Das’ shot to get out in the fourth innings particularly being emblematic of the side’s batting failure.Captain Najmul Hossain Shanto has owned up to the problems, including his own dismissal in the fourth innings. But there are suggestions that the players weren’t prepared for the Test, which is all the more concerning given how most of them have ignored first-class cricket for many seasons now.Bangladesh kept Sri Lanka in the field for three hours on the fourth day. Most of the damage was done the previous day when they crashed to 37 for 5, before Mominul Haque’s 87 took them to 182 – their fourth consecutive sub-200 innings at home. In the first innings, they were bowled out for 180 after crashing to 83 for 5.Bangladesh made 172 and 144 against New Zealand in Dhaka, but at the time, the raging turner and the afterglow of beating New Zealand in Sylhet in the previous game, meant they avoided some of the public criticism. Three months ago, Shere Bangla National Stadium’s pitch was stacked too much in favour of the spinners. In Sylhet this time, both team acknowledged that barring the first 20 overs in each innings, the pitch was good for batting.Related

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Shanto admitted that Bangladesh had to quickly regroup after this 328-run defeat so that they can give an improved showing in the upcoming Chattogram Test.”We got the pitch we wanted,” Shanto said. “It was in our favour. We have no complaints about the pitch. I don’t think a defeat will bring us motivation. How we prepare and what we are thinking, that’s more important. This was a bad result. We didn’t play well as a team. We couldn’t take our chances. We are focusing on improving in the next game, and ensuring we don’t make the small mistakes.”Our top order didn’t do well in both innings, but it was also the same for them. We have to work on improving our game. I am hoping we will do well in the next game. There are lessons from every game but only when you take a long hard look at where you went wrong and where it went right for you. We have to consider everything. This experience will help us in the future.”There are no mincing words. Bangladesh batted poorly in Sylhet. The top order offered no fight against the new ball. In particular, they chased deliveries moving away from and outside off-stump. Openers Zakir Hasan and Mahmudul Hasan Joy were caught behind once each, as were captain Shanto and Mominul Haque. Shahadat Hossain got caught in the slips in both innings.Shanto called his waft outside off-stump a misjudgment, promising to improve in the next game.”I can only say that I chose the wrong ball. The sort of wicket it was, I should left that delivery as a top-order batter. It was a misjudgment. We will try to make a comeback in the next game.”The spotlight however is on the Litton dismissal on the third evening, when he tried to slog the first ball he faced in the innings. Angelo Mathews caught the skier, as it turned Bangladesh’s dire situation worse.Shanto suggested that Litton’s dismissal was rare in Test cricket, so he has to work harder on his batting with the coaches ahead of the Chattogram Test. He, however, ruled out giving a break to Litton.Shoriful Islam and Khaled Ahmed added 40 off 35 balls for the ninth wicket in the first innings•AFP/Getty Images”I can’t talk about Litton’s dismissal. He can explain it better. You don’t see this sort of dismissal in Test cricket. The batting coach can talk about the particular shot. I don’t want to talk too much about his dismissal. We wouldn’t have spoken if it was a caught-behind dismissal. I think the batting coach and Litton will plan better so that these shots can be avoided next time.”When (Litton) didn’t play the last ODI, we were thinking of giving him a break. He is an important player for us. One of our best batters. He hasn’t had a great time lately but we should be with him during this time, starting from the coaching staff to the players. He is also wary of this. I am hopeful he will do well in the next game.”Selector Abdur Razzak told reporters after the third day’s play that Litton’s shot was “disappointing”, but said that the top order has to take equal responsibility for their low scores.”It is disappointing that a senior batter got out in this way in a Test match. It is not right. But it wasn’t just Litton Das. We lost five wickets in the session. Everyone is at fault. There’s no chance to say that these are raw players,” Razzak said.”We have picked the players because they can handle these situations. When the team does well, we credit the team. The team now has to take the responsibility in this situation.”Bangladesh now have four days to recuperate ahead of the Chattogram Test which starts on March 30. There were suggestions however that they didn’t get enough time to prepare for the Sylhet Test, that was played four days after the last ODI in Chattogram on March 18, leaving Bangladesh with just three training days.Razzak, however, felt that the team had enough training. He said that cricket tours these days don’t allow practice matches.”The way cricket is these days, there’s not enough time for practice matches. There’s a lot of competitive cricket these days. I don’t see it as lack of preparation for the players,” he said.Bangladesh collapsed to their fourth successive sub-200 score at home•AFP/Getty ImagesThis was a particularly busy season for the senior men’s side. After the ODI World Cup last November, Bangladesh played home Tests against New Zealand and also toured New Zealand for white-ball matches. The two domestic first-class competitions had finished by December. There were no other Bangladesh A tours. The BPL was held from January 19 to March 1, while the Dhaka Premier League, the lucrative List-A competition, began in mid-March.Bangladesh’s Test specialists, however, had opportunities to play both the NCL and BCL. But none of the players in the XI had played the full season of first-class cricket. Zakir and Khaled played seven matches each, while Mominul played six games. Joy and Shahadat played three each.Litton, Mehidy and Shoriful Islam didn’t play a single first-class game this season while captain Shanto played one. It is mostly because their schedule didn’t make room for the first-class fixtures, but for long, even the more senior players have avoided the first-class tournaments.Most of the Sri Lanka players have a healthy diet of first-class cricket this season. Nishan Madushka and Fernando played nine and eight games respectively, while Dinesh Chandimal, Kamindu Mendis and Prabhat Jayasuriya have played seven each. Dimuth Karunaratne and captain Dhananjaya de Silva took part in six games too. Even someone as busy as Kusal Mendis played five games.Only playing first-class cricket will not guarantee success in Tests. Bangladesh’s first-class scene has long been criticised for lacking in quality. Tournaments like the NCL and BCL haven’t quite reached the level required to promote first-class cricket.That being said, Bangladesh also pay less attention to Test cricket, especially when an ICC tournament is knocking on the door. In this case, the T20 World Cup in June is the BCB and team management’s main concern, even though the Tests they are currently playing are also part of an ICC tournament.

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