Newcastle Ohio Cup cancelled

Newcastle United journalist Dominic Scurr has been left stunned by some news that he has now hears from St. James’ Park.

The Lowdown: Ohio Cup cancelled

As per The Daily Mail journalist Mike Keegan, the proposed Ohio Cup pre-season tournament in the US, which the Magpies were supposed to be taking part in, has now been cancelled ‘at short notice’.

[web_stories_embed url=”https://www.footballtransfertavern.com/web-stories/newcastle-news-6/” title=”Newcastle news!” poster=”” width=”360″ height=”600″ align=”none”]

They are thought to be ‘furious’ over the decision to cancel it so suddenly, as they now have to scramble to make last-minute plans for their trip.

The Latest: Scurr stunned

Taking to Twitter, Scurr of The Shields Gazette was left stunned by the cancellation, claiming that it is a ‘disappointing blow’ for the North East club:

“Given Howe’s meticulous approach, this is a disappointing blow for NUFC with pre-season plans now uncertain. Matches against Wolves, Villarreal and Valencia would have been ideal. Now it’s a case of arranging a new schedule while most other clubs already have theirs in place.”

The Verdict: Shame

It is a shame that the Tyneside outfit will not be able to test themselves against the likes of Wolves, who will finish above them in the Premier League table, and UEFA Champions League semi-finalists Villarreal.

Eddie Howe would have had all of his plans nicely in place for pre-season in America, including what kind of squad he would want to take there, but now he will be rushed into making a compromise.

Nonetheless, one would have to question whether it is still worth going to the US without the friendly games in place, unless they can arrange for other matches at short notice.

In other news, find out which ‘world-class’ ace NUFC have now made contact over signing here!

Celtic team news: Defender out vs Real Madrid

Celtic will be without injured centre-back Carl Starfelt for Tuesday night’s Champions League clash with Real Madrid. 

The lowdown

Celtic open their UCL Group F campaign with a home game against the reigning champions of Europe.

Starfelt has started the Hoops’ last two Scottish Premiership matches, but only lasted 57 minutes in Saturday’s 4-0 Old Firm victory over arch-rivals Rangers.

Ange Postecoglou’s other centre-back options include Cameron Carter-Vickers, new arrival Mortiz Jenz and Stephen Welsh.

The latest

Speaking in his pre-match press conference (via Celts Are Here), Postecoglou revealed that Starfelt had sustained a knee injury against the Gers that will sideline him for the visit of Los Blancos.

“On the weekend, Carl Starfelt hurt his knee,” the Australian said. “We don’t have an exact diagnosis, but it’s nothing too serious.

“But it will probably keep him out for a couple of weeks.”

The player was unsurprisingly absent from training on Monday.

The verdict

This is definitely a blow to Celtic’s chances of upsetting Carlo Ancelotti’s side.

Starfelt was producing a solid performance against Rangers, winning three of the five duels he contested, completing 23 out of 26 passes and making five clearances (via SofaScore).

He was even better in the 9-0 win over Dundee United the previous weekend, capping off his performance by scoring the team’s final goal. That day, he also won seven of ten aerial battles, picked out team-mates with three of his four long passes and made two interceptions.

Across the entirety of the 2021/22 season, the Swede completed over 91 per cent of his Premiership passes and complete more passes per game than any other Hoops player.

You can get a sense, then, of what Starfelt offers – a strong aerial presence, a goal threat from set-pieces and above all superb distribution.

Celtic podcaster Ryan McGinlay hailed him as a ‘massive’ figure in the Hoops’ SPFL triumph last season and called for him to be made vice captain.

Fast starters and spin specialists: domestic batsmen to watch in The Hundred draft

Delray Rawlins, Lewis Gregory and Cameron Delport are among the domestic players in line for deals

Matt Roller17-Oct-2019Fast startersWith the number of balls squeezed even tighter than in T20, losing wickets should become even more accepted. Aside from the elite handful who can ‘catch up’ and do so more often than not – think Babar Azam, Moeen Ali, and David Warner – players who eat up balls early in an innings and take a while to get in should largely be avoided: an innings of 30 off 25 will end up being vastly inferior to an innings of 15 off 10. It is a much-worn cliché that certain batsmen ‘go hard from ball one’, but in practice very few do so. Those that do, therefore, should be snapped up.Ed Pollock carves one through the off side•Getty ImagesEd Pollock was used poorly by Birmingham Bears in this season’s Blast, dropped after five failures in as many innings despite being tasked with the high-variance job of striking at 200 from the get-go. Over the course of the past three seasons, he strikes at 164.61 in the first five balls he faces, and 169.16 in the first ten, making him one of the men who should be able to use the 25-ball Powerplay well.Counterintuitively, Arron Lilley’s reputation as a batsman would almost certainly be greater if he didn’t bowl offspin too. He is generally thought of as a bowling allrounder, but as a batsman alone is worth picking up for his destructive hitting early in an innings; his first-five-ball strike-rate of 157.77 over the last three seasons could see him picked up as a bargain option.Adam Lyth’s struggles in the 2015 Ashes still affect his reputation negatively, but he is a massively undervalued T20 batsman. He struck at 178.72 after five balls of an innings this Blast season, and 190.90 after ten. He is a superb hitter of pace in particular.No obvious weaknessUnder the competition’s regulations, bowlers will be able to stay on for a second set of five balls from the same end. That means that batsmen with an obvious weakness against a particular type of bowling will have nowhere to hide: it will be very easy for them to get tied down.Therefore, batsmen who score quickly against both pace and spin ought to be particularly valuable.Wayne Madsen is a superb player, and has a remarkable record over the last three Blast seasons. He averages over 40 against seamers and spinners, and scores similarly quickly against both (142.5 vs pace, 147.7 vs spin). He should be high on a few teams’ lists.Wayne Madsen plays a shot•Getty ImagesPhil Salt was unfortunate not to get picked up as a local icon, and his exceptional fielding and ability to fill in as an occasional wicketkeeper will count in his favour. He bashes both pace (SR 171.2) and spin (SR 146.3) in the Blast – although his struggles in the PSL hint at a potential weakness against top-quality spin – and will add to his T20 experience in the Big Bash this winter. He should be snapped up early.Almost nobody dared bowl spin to Cameron Delport in the Blast this summer, and with good reason, given he scored at a strike rate of 193.7 against it. But he is almost as destructive against pace, striking at 161.2. With a larger sample size – across all leagues over the last three years, he is almost level-pegging against both bowler types.Death hittersOne of the perennial issues with the Blast as far as England were concerned was that with so many teams, the vast majority of talent ends up batting at the top of the order. That has left a dearth of specialist finishers, though there are still a handful who have demonstrated their worth over the past two seasons.Lewis Gregory was not far off an IPL deal this year after lighting up the 2018 Blast with his death hitting, and has been thrown into England’s T20 squad as a reward. There remains some scepticism over his ability against spin, but the sample size is very small after only one season as a finisher – and will teams hold back their best spinners just to deal with him?Ravi Bopara was perhaps surprisingly overlooked in the local icon draft, and will be an asset to whichever team signs him. Despite his reluctance to fulfil the role, he is immense as a finisher, striking at over 200 in that phase, and will be in high demand come October 20.Ravi Bopara swings into the leg side•Getty ImagesRoss Whiteley is a supreme six-hitter, and would surely have got more of a chance worldwide if his six sixes in a Karl Carver over had been shown on television rather than on a shaky fixed camera. He strikes at 178.0 in the last five overs, and would be a useful pick in a slightly lower salary band.Middle-over acceleratorsThe overs immediately after the Powerplay are typically used for consolidation in T20: overs 7-10 see teams tick over, neither losing wickets nor scoring quickly. Generally, that comes about because an opener slows down having made use of the fielding restrictions, or because a middle-order player has come in and is still getting set.That means that those batsmen who can score quickly in that phase are crucial.Delray Rawlins should be a perfect signing. He scores quickly right from the start of an innings, is ideally suited to tackling the inefficiencies of the overs immediately after the Powerplay, bowls useful spin, and is a brilliant fielder to boot. He has a base price of £50,000, but it might be worth snapping him up in an earlier round, such is his talent.Delray Rawlins in full flow in the Blast quarter-final•Getty ImagesTom Abell has reinvented himself completely as a T20 player in the past two years, adding deft, innovative shots to a solid attacking game against both pace and spin. He goes at 138.3 in overs 7-10, and should be well-placed to keep a team motoring with the field back.Tom Moores has been around long enough that it is easy to forget he is still only 23, and is an ideal man to keep things moving in the middle in The Hundred. He has scored at a strike rate of 143 in overs 7-10, is unusually strong against spin for an English batsman, and is among the best available options for a domestic wicket-keeper.Spin specialistsIt is often missed that English grounds tend to be more conducive to spin than pace in T20. Host venues include the low-scoring pair of the Ageas Bowl and Old Trafford, and spinners have been cheaper than seamers at each team’s ground in the competition over the last three Blast seasons. Domestic batsmen who can play spin will be crucial.Peter Trego is out of contract at Somerset, but remains a useful player even at 38. He has scored at a strike rate of 174.7 against spin over the last two seasons, and should be available on the cheap.Ben Duckett in action for the Lions•Getty ImagesYou’d never guess it after watching his struggles on England’s 2016-17 Test tour of India, but Ben Duckett is a great player of spin in T20, with a vast range of shots around the ground including a trademark reverse-sweep. He has scored at 169.8 against slow bowlers over the past two seasons, and would be an asset to most sides.There is no shortage of English openers in the draft, but Miles Hammond is unusual in his ability against spin. He scores at a strike rate of 157.7 against it, and is a fast starter who will fly in the Powerplay.

Stirling's stunning all-round show

Stats highlights from a day of spectacular individual achievements in the second ODI between Afghanistan and Ireland in Greater Noida

S Rajesh17-Mar-20171 Number of players who has scored a century and taken six or more wickets in the same ODI: Paul Collingwood, against Bangladesh in 2005, when he made 112 not out and took 6 for 31. Paul Stirling came within five runs of becoming the second player to achieve this, and might have reached that rare landmark had he not been given lbw in a dubious manner. Overall, there have only been six instances of a player passing 50 and taking six in an ODI, of which three have happened in the last four years. The last two have both come against Afghanistan – before Stirling’s effort, Scotland’s Josh Davey made 53 not out and took 6 for 28 against them in Abu Dhabi in 2015. Stirling’s is the first such all-round effort in a defeat.1 Number of players who have made a 50-plus score after taking six wickets in an ODI: Paul Stirling became the first to achieve this feat, scoring 95 after taking 6 for 55. There have been instances of players taking six or more wickets after scoring a fifty, but never the other way around, before today.

Highest scores by a player in an ODI after taking 6+ wkts
Player Wkts Runs conc Bat score Versus Year
Paul Stirling (IRE) 6 55 95 Afghanistan 2017
Andy Bichel (AUS) 7 20 34* England 2003
Gary Gilmour (AUS) 6 14 28* England 1975
Abdul Razzaq (PAK) 6 35 25* Bangladesh 2002
Shahid Afridi (PAK) 6 38 24 Australia 2009
Murali Kartik (INDIA) 6 27 21* Australia 2007

338 Afghanistan’s highest total in ODIs. They went past their previous best by quite a margin: against UAE in 2014 they had scored 302 for 5, which is their only other 300-plus total in ODIs.5/14 The previous-best figures for Ireland in an ODI, by Trent Johnston against Canada in 2009. Stirling’s 6 for 55 replaced Johnston’s figures as the new best for Ireland.10 Instances of a bowler taking six or more wickets in an ODI when coming in fourth change or later. Stirling came in as the fourth-change bowler today and claimed six. The best figures among these ten is Shahid Afridi’s 7 for 12 against West Indies in 2013.6/43 Rashid Khan’s bowling figures, the first time he has taken five in an ODI; his previous best was 4 for 21, also against Ireland, in Belfast last year. A couple of days back, Rashid took 4 for 48 against the same opponents at the same venue, which means two of his three best bowling figures in ODIs have come in three days. These are also the best figures for Afghanistan in ODIs, going past the previous best of 5 for 32 by Rahmat Shah against UAE in 2014.1 Number of ODIs in which two bowlers have taken six or more wickets in the same game. This match was the first time two bowlers took atleast six wickets while it was the 11th instance of two bowlers taking five-fors in an ODI.101 Asghar Stanikzai’s score, his first ODI hundred, was also the first by an Afghanistan captain in ODIs.5-5 Afghanistan’s win-loss record in ODIs against Ireland; they have won five of the last seven completed matches.

Women's Big Bash success opens doors and minds

The crowds, the TV ratings, the recognition and the young talent coming through all point to a future that’s more inclusive

Will Macpherson11-Feb-2016When Lisa Sthalekar played cricket, her sister was used to rocking up a couple of minutes before the game began and easily finding a spot on the boundary’s edge to watch the action.But on Sthalekar’s return to competitive cricket – in the Women’s Big Bash League’s inaugural season – after two years of retirement, something felt different. On the competition’s second day, Sthalekar’s Sydney Sixers were playing Sydney Thunder, and when her sister did her time-honoured drill of arriving shortly before the start, she found the car park at Howell Oval in western Sydney full. When she went in, there were perhaps a thousand people – many wearing the teams’ colours – already watching, and certainly no space at the boundary.It was instantly clear that the WBBL was women’s domestic cricket, but not as we knew it.

****

It was appropriate that Sthalekar announced she would be coming out of retirement for the WBBL. Because she – by design or otherwise, as one of the leading figures in the mooted Women’s International Cricket League (WICL) – played a role in making the WBBL happen, and happen as soon as 2015-16.Sthalekar and Sydney-based businessman Shaun Martyn were intent on dragging women’s cricket into the 21st century, and so, by the end of 2012 were contacting the world’s best players about taking part in a 12-day, six-team, one-venue tournament in Singapore. Players would be remunerated better than ever before, earning as much as US$40,000 each. Geoff Lawson joined the board, Clive Lloyd was an ambassador, while Sthalekar and Martyn met ICC chief executive Dave Richardson in Dubai in early 2014, found three major financial backers, and pledged to pour profits back into women’s cricket. Players like New Zealand’s Suzie Bates and England captain Charlotte Edwards expressed their excitement.But by June 2014, the ECB and Cricket Australia said they would not back the competition. Still, plans remain in place to hold it, and many believe the threat of it spurred Cricket Australia – and the ECB, which will hold the first Women’s Super League this year – into action. If they had not acted, the money on offer made the possibility of players stepping out of “the system” real.

“I’ve never played in front of that many people for an international, let alone a domestic game!”Natalie Sciver

Cricket Australia’s Mike McKenna denies that the threat of independent leagues hastened action. “We were aware of the WICL and the discussions involving some of our players,” he says. “But it wasn’t really a concern. We always knew we needed to move the women’s game forward this way. Twenty-six per cent of our playing base is now female and we expect that to grow. We have an obligation to them to create pathways.””I’m not sure if what we were doing sped them up,” says Sthalekar, “but if it played a part then I’m delighted, because the reason the WICL still hopes to have this tournament is to give girls more opportunities. That was all we were ever about and WBBL is: girls getting more opportunities.”Talk of a WBBL first emerged in early 2014. The Ashes had taken place in Australia, and under new captain Meg Lanning’s stewardship, the Southern Stars romped to their third consecutive World T20 title. In January, Australia legend Belinda Clark revealed that planning for the competition was nascent. In April, Lanning described it as “the next natural step”. A month later, Cricket Australia announced it was looking to launch the competition in 2015-16.In February 2015, the board confirmed it would take place, but details were hazy. “We had reached the point,” says McKenna, “where we needed to provide more opportunities for girls to play a high level and start to develop properties that are commercially valuable so they and we can justify increasing their player payments so that they no longer have to make choices: playing, working, studying. The question was how you do that. We’d seen the success of the BBL and it had brought lots of young girls to the game – how do we get those girls to understand that they can actually play?”In July, the competition’s format, teams, structure and pay were revealed. The intervening period was not simple. The Australian Cricketers’ Association (ACA) was haranguing Cricket Australia for a collective agreement with the board (as male players have), providing minimum contracts and security. That collective agreement is now close, and by May the ACA had given players the green light to speak to the board.So, on a grey July day in Sydney Harbour, the WBBL was launched. Cricket Australia deliberated about whether to run the competition along state lines, but decided that the established eight BBL clubs would each have a women’s team, rather than using the seven teams from the Women’s National Cricket League (WNCL), which ran its 19th season in 2015. State associations had made their players free agents; squads were allowed five Southern Stars and three overseas players.Amanda Wellington was one of several young players to stand out in the competition•Cricket Australia/Getty ImagesMcKenna says that going with eight teams was “the one contentious decision”, while Sthalekar admits she had “doubts that the depth may not be there”.In the course of pouring $7million into the women’s game in 2015, Cricket Australia increased the Women’s Payment Fund by 36% to $2.26m; players would be handed retainers worth between $3000 and $10,000 for the WBBL (for context, WNCL contracts are $7000, and the top Southern Stars players earn $85,000 a year). There would be 59 games in 51 days, mainly played on carnival-style weekends to allow players to return to their jobs during the week.Separate Twitter accounts were immediately live for each team, and most importantly, it was announced that Network Ten, broadcasters of the BBL, would be showing eight games – all double-headers with the men’s competition, including the final – on their digital channel, One. Cricket Australia was to foot the incremental broadcasting costs, which amounted to $600,000 for equipment, contractors and more.”They [the board] first put it to us in March,” says Ten’s head of cricket, David Barham. “We had success with the BBL, and so we were weighing it up, trying to make it work. They presented the schedule to us and pushed it. We were always keen to be involved and worked out eight games would be a good start.””It was a risk for them,” says McKenna, “because it could have been a dud, it really could. We’re extremely grateful, because they didn’t have to take a punt on it.”For months, preparations simmered, as the Southern Stars won the Ashes and South Australia ended a run of ten straight New South Wales WNCL victories. Franchises were busy presenting themselves as “one club, two teams”, with the women sat alongside the men on websites, promotional material and events. In October, the WBBL found a promotional fillip with the announcements that Sthalekar would return and that tennis star Ash Barty was to turn her fast hands to cricket.Eight English players signed up in August and September, followed by New Zealanders, South Africans and eventually West Indians the week before the competition began. There were rumours that Jhulan Goswami was joining Sixers, but no Indian player joined. “Indian administration was going through significant change and we couldn’t get focus from them on this issue to understand the opportunity,” says McKenna. After playing Australia in January, Goswami said she hoped Indian players could figure in the competition soon.

It felt as if the quality dropped off in televised fixtures, where the pressure rose. How can players learn of the pressure of playing on TV and in front of crowds without exposure to them?

On November 25, ten days before the start, the final piece of the jigsaw fell into place as sport retail giants Rebel – who had been looking to back a major event for a couple of years – were announced as sponsors of the first season.From announcement to the first ball, Cricket Australia had taken under ten months. The tournament had a stellar cast, sponsors and even broadcasters. Given the part an independent league had played in its conception, there was delicious irony in the league, now ready for lift-off, officially being called the Rebel Women’s Big Bash League.

****

Sthalekar’s sister was not alone in being surprised at what she found once the tournament got underway. “It was bigger than I thought it would be,” says England’s Natalie Sciver, who played for Melbourne Stars. Sthalekar was “surprised and delighted”. “It’s done better than I anticipated,” says Barham. Perhaps most tellingly, McKenna says, “It , but ESPNcricinfo’s was the only occupied press box chair during the women’s game that afternoon.Cricket Australia’s state-owned media arm provided comprehensive coverage, while the clubs helped. Hobart Hurricanes, for instance, subsidised the sending of a reporter from the Mercury to Melbourne for the semi-final against Sixers. This is not new. Cricket Australia has contributed to the cost of journalists covering the last two Women’s Ashes in England.

“We’d seen the success of the BBL and it had brought lots of young girls to the game – how do we get those girls to understand that they can actually play?”Mike McKenna

Since Ten’s coverage missed 49 games, many significant moments – such as when 18-year-old Strikers legspinner Amanda-Jade Wellington bowled Lanning round the legs – were unseen by all but the few in the ground. The next step is clear: cameras at every game and live streaming.”That’s the first step, streaming through our website with a smaller production team,” says McKenna. “Eventually, the plan is to have everything broadcast and rights sold separately.” Barham says Ten has not discussed next season, but many hope for 20 games to be broadcast.Franchises followed through on their “one club, two teams” message. The women stayed in hotels of equal prestige to their male counterparts, and had access to the same array of support staff. “All this just contributed to the sense that they weren’t the men’s cricketers or the women’s cricketers, they were just cricketers,” says McKenna.”With the Stars it felt like the media guys worked really hard to drill interest in the women through the men,” says Sciver. Mike Hussey, captain of Thunder’s winning men’s team, reported from the other side: “The girls’ energy and spirit was actually inspiring for us. Every time our paths crossed, be it at training, fan days or whatever, there’s been a great feel among both teams.”Indeed the decision to go with franchises paid off handsomely on two counts. In state kit, no one knew who the players were, but pulling on BBL colours turned them into stars. Particularly striking was Sixers batsman Ashleigh Gardner ending media commitments at the SCG by saying, “Sorry, I’ve got to get back to signing autographs.”Then there was the cricket. Franchises stretched and exposed the talent pool. Teenagers – like Wellington, Maisy Gibson and Lauren Cheatle of Sydney Thunder – stood out repeatedly. Overall, the quality of the wicketkeeping and spin bowling stood out, but the gulf in class – particularly in the field – between professionals and amateurs was often vast. Stars’ Lanning, frequently fighting a solo battle, was named Player of the Tournament, with Edwards second.Anecdotally, it felt as if the quality dropped off in televised fixtures, where the pressure rose, with the final a particularly poor (albeit pulsating) reflection of the competition’s standard. How can players learn of the pressure of playing on TV and in front of crowds without exposure to them?Players received a new level of attention from fans and the media•Cricket Australia/Getty ImagesThe schedule, which saw some teams play four games in three days in blistering heat, will need optimising. By the time Perth Scorchers had played 12 games, Renegades were just five in. However, each team playing each other twice provided the opportunity for a campaign as contrasting and a comeback as exhilarating as that of Sixers, who lost their first six, then won nine, only to lose the final.

****

The WBBL’s movers and shakers will be wary of the tricky second album. BBL02 was comfortably that tournament’s worst season. There is room for improvement on every level from WBBL01, a competition that felt vital for its freshness and originality. “It’s been a great step forward,” says the ACA’s Alastair Nicholson. “We will be doing a review and working with the players to see what needs to be adjusted. The key for us is getting that collective agreement in place.”For McKenna, one eye is already on 2020, when Australia hosts WT20s for men and women. “By then, we hope to have more standalone fixtures and a women’s game that is hugely attractive to fans, broadcasters and commercial partners, held in venues of 10-15,000. We want it to look something like the Women’s football World Cup in Canada last year.”These are lofty ambitions, but the path has been set. The final provided WBBL01 with an iconic image. The sight of Hussey’s men and Alex Blackwell’s women, all Sydney Thunder, all victorious, celebrating together on the same stage, pointed to a better, more inclusive game. Which is exactly what this was all about.

White's two deliveries in four years

Plays of the day from the Carlton Mid Tri-Series ODI, between Australia and England in Hobart

Brydon Coverdale23-Jan-2015The recordIan Bell is 65th on the all-time list of ODI run-scorers but, remarkably, that is sufficient for him to be England’s leading run-getter in the format. When he drove a single down the ground to move to 98, he passed Paul Collingwood’s record of 5092. Bell finished on 5136, still well short of the record holders from every ICC Full Member except Bangladesh. Even Zimbabwe has three men – Andy Flower, Grant Flower and Alistair Campbell – with a higher run tally than any England player.The hat-trickThe runs really began to flow in the ninth over of England’s innings, when Moeen Ali pulled three consecutive sixes off Pat Cummins. Two cleared the rope comfortably but one had some help from Shaun Marsh, who nearly managed to catch it above his head but was carried back over the boundary by his momentum. The other three balls of the over were dots.The anticlimaxNearly four years Cameron White has had to wait for his comeback to ODI cricket. He last played on the tour of Bangladesh that followed the World Cup in April 2011, and already knew he was likely to be released from the squad after this one-off appearance in Hobart due to a number of absences. White walked to the crease for his first ODI innings in 1385 days, only to receive a fearsome inswinging yorker from Steven Finn second ball. All White could do was get his leg in the way, which was not enough to save him.The synchronised slidingIf cricket doesn’t work out for James Taylor and Chris Woakes perhaps they can form a dance combo. They were certainly well in sync when they chased an Aaron Finch strike towards the long-off boundary and both slid on their knees to make the save. Woakes was the one who got closest and reeled the ball in, flicking it back to Taylor behind him.

Gayle marries brain with brawn

Twenty20 is not about mindless slogging; calculative assaults are the way to go as Chris Gayle demonstrated yet again, against Kolkata Knight Riders

Nikita Bastian at the Chinnaswamy Stadium12-Apr-2013We could debate for hours on who’s top dog in modern Test cricket, or who could win your one-day fantasy team the most points. When it comes to Twenty20 cricket, though, there are few who would dispute that Chris Gayle is No. 1. If you want a lesson in T20 batting, you couldn’t do better than watching Gayle construct an innings. And on Thursday night, for Royal Challengers Bangalore, he put together another one of those incredible knocks that have earned him this reputation; the sort of innings he has proven time and again to be the template for T20 success, this time flattening Kolkata Knight Riders along the way.Leading up to the match, Knight Riders captain Gautam Gambhir spoke of the challenge facing his team in a newspaper column. “Half my day is gone answering questions on how will we stop Chris Gayle,” he wrote. “One suggestion from a more enlightened team-mate was to lock him in his room.” Jocular that may be, but it does reflect the general perception. Because, really, how do you stop someone who marries awesome power with meticulous planning and flawless execution so consistently?This was the case at the Chinnaswamy Stadium; Gayle’s 85 not out off 50 balls reiterated that the shortest format is not so much about mindless slogging, as about launching calculated assaults. Royal Challengers were set 155, not a daunting total given the batsmen-friendly track and relatively short boundaries. Gayle was coming off two failures against Sunrisers Hyderabad – in the away game, he had fallen first up to the part-time offspin of little-known Hanuma Vihari, prompting talk of how he is prone to struggling early on against spin to resurface. Subsequently, the key battle in the Knight Riders game was touted to be Gayle v Sunil Narine.How does Gayle respond? No egotistical attempts at blitzing Narine. No change in strategy at all. He just did what Gayle does: show caution where necessary, pick which bowlers to target, dispatch balls that deserve to be dealt with, play straight rather than resort to typical limited-overs fare – ramp shots, reverse-sweeps and the like.Narine was nudged for singles and defended, even left alone when required. Gayle might have been beaten a couple of times, but he made sure he cut out the risks. In nine balls against Narine, he managed just four runs but did not let it worry him.Neither did the Bangalore crowd let it worry them. If Virat Kohli swipes across the line and is dismissed, you might hear a few chuckles at IPL grounds. When MS Dhoni defends, questions of whether he is taking it too late arise. These days even Sachin Tendulkar cannot escape a few murmurs of disapproval when he scores too slowly. But in Bangalore, while Gayle remains at the crease, the crowd is never in doubt that Royal Challengers hold the upper hand. Even if he leaves balls outside the offstump; on Thursday, as Gayle saw off Narine, there were shouts of “well left” echoing around my stand, while a spectator in the row behind me was busy explaining to his family that “this is how he bats, watch, he will explode soon enough”.This crowd has good reason to put so much trust in their superstar and his methods. In 2012, Gayle scored 31% of Royal Challengers’ runs. At the Chinnaswamy, he averages 60 and has a strike rate of 170. Second-best Kohli averages 30 at the ground, scoring those runs at the rate of 125 per 100 balls.

Knight Riders looked like they were straining themselves for that final surge, and still it didn’t come. Gayle and Royal Challengers battered their opponents even while staying well within themselves

Gayle did not misplace that trust. Having survived Narine, he didn’t spare the easier targets. He slammed seamers Ryan McLaren, L Balaji and Pradeep Sangwan, scoring off them at strike rates of 244, 218 and 200. But there was a certain rhythm to even this brutality: Royal Challengers’ chase was built around three overs of madness, spread across the 17.3 it took them to chase down the target.First, was the final Powerplay over, were Gayle lofted consecutive length balls from McLaren majestically over cow corner and cover. Kohli knocked off two fours in the over as well, as they shaved 22 runs off the target. In the ninth over, Gayle greeted 22-year-old Sangwan with four through mid-off before handing over the strike to Kohli; 19 came off the over.The third focal over was all Gayle. The assault might or might not have been in response to a request from the adoring crowd. “We want six, we want six,” they chanted, prodding him. On cue, he lifted a fullish ball from Jacques Kallis over long-off. Kallis, who had conceded 12 runs off 20 balls until that boundary, responded by changing the angles a bit, coming round the stumps. He overstepped in the process. Gayle deposited the delivery, which came into his body, over long-on. The free hit disappeared over point for four. That left Royal Challengers with 20 to get off the final four; match done and dusted.Prior to that Kallis over, Gayle had 54 off 40 balls with a strike rate of 135. Those numbers were not too different from Gambhir’s: Knight Riders’ top-scorer, his 59 in 46 balls came at 128.26. If you had not watched the match, you could be excused for thinking the innings’ – till that point at least – were alike. They were not. The numbers might have mirrored each other, but the character of the knocks was poles apart.Gambhir and Knight Riders left you feeling rather ungratified. They looked like they were straining themselves for that final surge, and still it didn’t come. Gayle and Royal Challengers battered their opponents even while staying well within themselves. Gambhir’s 59 off 46 left you feeling that he hadn’t quite done enough. Watching Gayle get to 54 off 40, you knew the game was already firmly beyond the opposition.But then, Gambhir’s effort was not the first that was made to look pedestrian by Gayle. He finished things off in typical brutal fashion, pulling Balaji over deep square leg before scorching one over long-on with 15 deliveries to spare. It was time for the electronic displays strung up on pillars around the ground to flash images of Royals Challengers players’ caricatures doing the ‘horse dance’, Gangnam style. It is a Gayle celebration that is mimicked with regularity these days. It can’t be long before Gayle’s T20 batting template is even more imitated.

de Lange delivers in the biggest match of his career

With his pace and bounce, Marchant de Lange made a massive impression in the most important match of his career so far

Firdose Moonda02-Nov-2011After dismissing both Brad Haddin and Mitchell Johnson for ducks off consecutive deliveries, 21-year-old Marchant de Lange faced the biggest moment of his 14-match first-class career. A hat-trick against Australia in a tour match would not have elevated him to immediate Test-player status, but it would have made a strong statement about his credentials. Peter Siddle took guard, de Lange walked to his mark, thought about what he wanted to do and ran in.Unexpectedly, he banged in a wayward bouncer that was called wide.There was a giggle, on the field and later, off it, when de Lange was asked what he was thinking. “I was in two minds,” he said grinning. “Some of the guys got into my head. It wasn’t the ideal ball to bowl.”It didn’t matter, because even without a magical three wickets in three balls, de Lange made a massive impression in the most important match of his career so far. His five-wicket haul, included three wickets in five balls and four in the space of three overs, and the pace and bounce he achieved suggested a bowler of genuine promise.On a pitch that has offered assistance to the bowlers throughout the match, de Lange was presented with a perfect surface to show off his skills. At 1.9 metres tall, his height gives him an immediate advantage and on a pitch where bounce was on offer for bowlers who can exploit it, he was in his element. “The game-plan was to bowl back of a length and I hit the deck hard.”Like many top-class South African quicks, such as Allan Donald and Dale Steyn, de Lange does not come from one of the traditional cricketing schools. The agricultural town of Tzaneen in the Limpopo province, not far from Steyn’s hometown of Phalaborwa, is where de Lange was brought up and schooled.He played a range of sports at school, including javelin-throwing, which has been responsible for his unusually short run up. “I used to really enjoy my athletics and I also played a bit of hockey,” he said. Cricket was also part of his education at Hoerskool Ben Vorster but he missed out on playing at under-19 level for the province because of a stress fracture to his ankle.He was spotted by Northerns Provincial Union scouts and moved the 420 kilometres down the road to Centurion after the guidance of former Titans coach Chris van Noordwyk, who played a key role in assimilating de Lange with the franchise. After a handful of matches for the amateur Easterns side, he was picked for the national academy this winter and Lange made his SuperSport Series debut in September against the Knights and, again, immediately caught the eye.He took five wickets in the fixture and earned the praise of two, important figures in South African cricket, former opening batsmen Boeta Dippenaar and former national coach, Corrie van Zyl. Dippenaar was playing for the Knights in that game and said his team-mate, Reeza Hendricks, who faced both de Lange and Morne Morkel in that match, “was convinced that Marchant bowled quite a bit faster than Morne.” De Lange called Dippenaar’s words of encouragement, “an excellent compliment.”van Zyl, who is now a selector, also had praise for de Lange after the first game. “He his good lengths and gets the ball to rise up from a length” he said. “I liked it that he was at batsmen all the time because of the bounce.”de Lange was included in the South Africa A side to face Australia as part of a plan to find and develop fast bowlers. “We have identified a few bowlers and we wanted to give Marchant this opportunity to see what he could do,” van Zyl said. ‘I’m glad to see he has taken it.”His display today has also eased concerns that South Africa’s fast-bowling supply cupboard is running dry, something that was being talked about recently. “A couple of months ago people were asking what we would do if one of Steyn or Morkel got injured,” van Zyl said. “Now we can see that we have solutions.”

The giant desperate to roar

He may not have played for England since his encouraging display against India last summer, but he’s ready to stake his claim again

Interview by Will Luke08-May-2008

‘I’ve not heard from the selectors so I guess it’s just down to me. That’s the way it is. If you’re not a centrally contracted player that’s the way you get treated’
© Getty Images

You were ignored for the Sri Lanka tour and left New Zealand early with a side strain. How frustrated are you that Stuart Broad, for example, can make such an immediate impact in your absence?
Well, it doesn’t piss me off. Broady bowled really well in the ODIs. Obviously it’s frustrating not to get picked, especially after I’d bowled really well against India. I felt unlucky not to go on the Sri Lanka tour or the original [squad for the] New Zealand tour, but that just makes you more hungry to prove them wrong. I’ve worked hard since getting back from New Zealand: it’s just a matter of trying to get some good overs in domestic cricket, lots of wickets and force my way in.How do you remain motivated when you keep getting injured?
I got a taste of Test cricket last year and that’s where I want to be. I really enjoyed my time in the side in both forms of the game, but probably more in Tests, and I didn’t do myself too much harm. Hopefully I can find the form I showed last summer, get some good performances under my belt. But in terms of motivation, even playing for Hampshire gets me going: I love playing for them and still get nervous going out to play. I still get butterflies – that’s motivation enough. All I want to do is play cricket. That is my motivation.How do you respond to the detractors who question your passion for the game?
Yes, well, those people don’t know me. Or at least they don’t know me very well. Cricket has been my life and has always been my motivation – there’s never been anything else I wanted to do. Sometimes it might look like I’m not trying or that I might not care, but I do, deep inside. I guess it’s the way I carry myself, maybe the way I’m perceived from the outside. But the way I feel on the inside is that I’m trying my hardest. It might not show, but that’s just the way I look. I’m laidback, I guess, but I always try my hardest.Your former captain, Shane Warne, spoke of his wish to find a more aggressive Chris Tremlett. Have you found him yet?
I think I have definitely got more aggressive over the years, certainly. The quicker I’ve got over the years – I’ve gained a bit of
extra pace – which makes you more aggressive when you know you’ve got that in the bank when you need it. But it’s a balance. I find that if I’m over-aggressive, then I can’t concentrate, so it’s about trying to find a balance between being aggressive and being myself, and not trying to be someone you’re not. People have said I should be aggressive, but if I went out there and acted like a lunatic, I don’t think people would believe it was me and they’d probably laugh at me, or not take me seriously. I think I’ve got a good enough presence these days. It’s about making people aware of your presence, making
them realise that you’re there and not going to back down to the batsman at the other end.

If you’re hit for four, you’ve got to find something else – you can’t back down and you need to give off the impression that you’re in a fight. It’s the way you think about your bowling that matters: trying to be more in a contest with the batsman and trying to hate the batsman more

Didn’t it hurt that your captain should have made such a public declaration?
It didn’t nark me, no. It’s just Warne’s way of getting the best out of people I think. When I first started playing with him in 2003 I was very shy and still a young bowler in the county scene. I hadn’t played for England and he saw potential in me. I was naturally quite shy and laidback and he wanted to get the best out of me. Having a more aggressive approach is probably what you need, especially in Tests. There’s nowhere to hide. If you’re hit for four, you’ve got to find something else – you can’t back down and you need to give off the impression that you’re in a fight. You’ve got to fight as a bowler in the good times and the bad.I think it’s the way you go about your cricket, the way you think about your bowling, which matters; trying to be more in a contest with the batsman and trying to hate the batsman more. When I first started playing, I didn’t really think like that. I just wanted to bowl well. But now my thinking is more “Right. I want to get this guy out. What’s he doing?” It’s me versus him – almost a personal battle, instead of running up and bowling willy nilly. It’s about ensuring I don’t back down and that he knows he’s in a battle.Are Geoff Miller and the selectors in regular communication with you?
No. I’ve not spoken to anyone (in the England management) since I’ve got back. I’ve just been back with Hampshire, and I guess the England physio keeps an eye on me, fitness-wise. But I’ve not heard from the selectors so I guess it’s just down to me. That’s the way it is. If you’re not a centrally contracted player, that’s the way you get treated. That’s always been the case as long as I’ve been involved – not had too much communication with people when I’ve been out of the set-up. Maybe that’s a bit wrong, I don’t know. Hopefully when the selectors come down – it’s still early season – I can find out what I need to do to get back in the England team.How is Hampshire life post Warne?
It’s pretty good. It wasn’t a huge shock that he didn’t come back – we weren’t really expecting him to, so we were prepared for the post-Warnie era. It’s a good thing for us as we need to move on. We’ve had that stage of learning from Warnie who has been absolutely brilliant, but there’s always going to be a time when he has to retire and move on. We just need to keep doing what we were doing, but so far the atmosphere’s been great and everyone’s really keen to get going. It was pretty relaxed with Warnie around, as it is now, apart from the odd occasion … obviously Warnie’s fairly passionate and wants to win, and he made us fight all the time. But we’re quite relaxed, while trying to be aggressive at the same time.

Wakhare, Thakare three-fors take Vidarbha to Ranji Trophy final

Madhya Pradesh lost their remaining four wickets in 11.3 overs on day five

ESPNcricinfo staff06-Mar-2024Vidarhba’s bowlers made short work of Madhya Pradesh’s tail to confirm their spot in the final of the Ranji Trophy. Aditya Thakare and Yash Thakur started with a bang as Vidarbha took the four remaining wickets in 11.3 overs on the fifth morning in Nagpur to complete a 62-run win and join Mumbai as the finalists.MP started the day in strife, having already lost Yash Dubey, who top-scored with 94, before stumps last evening. They needed another 94 runs when Dubey departed, with Saransh Jain the last recognised batter.But Thakare’s double-strike dented MP’s hopes. He knocked over Kumar Kartikeya and Anubhav Agarwal in his first two overs of the day. Yash Thakur then landed the decisive blow by castling Jain.Avesh Khan and Kulwant Khejroliya, MP’s Nos. 10 and 11, showed some resistance with an 18-run stand, but Thakur completed the game by uprooting Khejroliya’s stumps.While Thakare helped take out the tail, Aditya Sarwate had dismissed both openers on the fourth day, and Akshay Wakhare ran through the middle order in the final innings to set up the victory.This will be Vidarbha’s third appearance in the Ranji final. They had reached their first final in the 2017-18 edition, which they went on to win, before also successfully defending their title in 2018-19.In this season’s final, Vidarbha will take on Mumbai, who trounced Tamil Nadu in a home semi-final in under three days. The match begins on March 10, and will be hosted by Mumbai.

Game
Register
Service
Bonus