Ben Stokes' homecoming gives England chance to 'show the world how good they are'

New Zealand series presents the latest challenge of Stokes’ tenure as captain

Vithushan Ehantharajah14-Feb-2023On Thursday at the Bay Oval, Ben Stokes will captain England in New Zealand. Which is quite a big deal – because it isn’t.The boy from Christchurch turned twenty-something renegade is now the 31-year-old figurehead of the prim and proper world of English cricket. Even if he’s no fan of suits, he’s wearing the blazer damn well.There will be family and childhood friends to watch him, both here in Mount Maunganui and next week in Wellington. It’s not so much of a homecoming as a scheduled return given how often he comes back to the country, and how often these two teams seem to come up against each other. It can’t be long before Stuart Broad, on his fifth tour of New Zealand, qualifies for dual citizenship.One of Brendon McCullum’s go-to phrases since taking the big job at the start of last summer is “be where your feet are”. Yet with Stokes it seems the case that he is wherever his feet have been. All the places he’s experienced, all the things he has done, inform the decisions he makes in the here and now. And unlike most others, he leans more on the good times than the mistakes.That, ultimately, forms the bedrock of his captaincy. A record of nine wins out of 10 Tests to date has been built upon learnings from success, and the associated graft put in to achieve it. Beyond the 89 caps in the longest format are leading-man roles in two limited-overs World Cups and a documentary. He is one of the most sought-after personalities in the world when it comes to lucrative franchise opportunities and simply time. Now he wants all that for others.Stokes’ full-time tenure started with a whitewash of New Zealand•Getty Images”I’m at a stage now where I would much prefer to leave a mark on other people’s careers than look to make mine more established,” he said, sat among the English press pack. “I’ve played a lot of cricket and done some great things with some great teams over the years. I think that, being captain now, I’ve got a real desire to make the best out of the team that I’ve got here and players who will come in in the future if that does happen.”So that’s one of my goals as England captain: to hopefully let some of these guys in the dressing room here just have an amazing career and if I can influence that in any way shape or form then I’ll be happy.”You can already see that in play, with old and new. Broad and James Anderson, having considered retirement in 2022, now seem to be having the most fun in decades. Ben Duckett, who returned to the fold for Pakistan after six years out, believes “there’s no better time to be playing Test cricket for England”. All that is down to Stokes stripping away the pressures of the format without diminishing any of the privilege. He has pulled off a rare trick, not for the first time in his career.His influences are few and not contained to cricket, or indeed real life. He cited Paul Collingwood, his skipper when he broke into the first team at Durham, as someone who was “very open to allowing the players that he had to go out and express themselves… He understood that he did have a group of players at the time who needed that and they wanted to go out and take the game on.”

Eoin Morgan, who announced his retirement from all cricket on Monday, and was captain for 103 of Stokes’ 137 caps across ODI and T20I cricket is another. “Obviously I don’t need to go too much into how he did it,” he mused, with a knowing grin. Pretty much all of Morgan’s principles established during England’s white-ball revolution have been instilled during this red-ball transformation.The third and most surprising is Don Collier, a character played by Brad Pitt in , a film set in 1945 about a tank commander who has to inspire his crew to fight their way across Germany during the final weeks of the European theatre of World War II. “[It’s about] just trying to set an example by the things that you do and say,” Stokes said, “and if you do say something then going out and actually doing it because that’s when you get a really good response.”Stokes went on to say that sometimes, failing can be better for the collective. That does not quite play out as well in war. But in a sport where mistakes weigh so heavily, the manner in which Stokes operates on the field – particularly with bat in hand – reflects demanding as much of himself as he does of them. Especially when it comes to parking individual fear for the good and ambition of the collective. Though even that credit given to him is handed over to McCullum.”I think he’s taken a lot of his experience of the amount of cricket he’s played and just tried to release all that and then tried to take it off the shoulders of other players,” Stokes said. “And that not only comes from what we speak about on the field and what we try and do but away from the game as well.”Just letting lads go out there and really express themselves in a way that doesn’t add any more pressures on their shoulders. The expectations come from the guys in the dressing room and trying to not let any of the external noises outside our dressing room get into their head because I feel like in the past that might have crept in every now and again.”ESPNcricinfo LtdWins, of course, are the true measure of a successful team. As much as those involved and around this England team say otherwise, the fact they are enjoying themselves is heavily linked to three series win – and a series squared against India carried over from the 2021 summer – in the space of nine months. Even with the focus on attitude, Stokes admits sometimes the numbers go some way to reinforcing the upsurge in form and process.”At the end of the first game in Pakistan, when Colly read out all the records we’d managed to set or rewrite names into the history books, it was very… well, something to look back on and realise how special that game was in particular.”I wouldn’t say we necessarily go out there and try and break these records. I think it’s just something that comes with the way we’ve gone about it, I guess? But no, we don’t sit down before any series and go, ‘these records need to be broken, let’s go out there and try and do it’ because I’ve never been one for setting myself benchmarks of runs and wickets and stuff like that because if you don’t get those then you might feel like you’ve not performed well.”I will look back on my career when I’m finished and look at how many times I’ve affected a game for England to win rather than setting out runs and wickets. It’s something I like to do. But I just think everyone tries to play in a free way which allows them to show the world how good they are.”Related

Boult overlooked as Jamieson's replacement; Stead defends Kuggeleijn inclusion

How Auckland kick-started Anderson's Test career

England in New Zealand – Vish's tour diary

Robinson criticises pink-ball 'gimmick'

Broad living in the present on return to scene of past glories

Despite the subdued nature of this two-match tour, it could be one reflected on positively for a few reasons. England have not won a series or even a Test here since 2008, and success could enhance the positive vibes heading into a summer featuring a one-off match against Ireland before a bumper yet concentrated Ashes series.There is also the challenge of the pink ball under lights to consider, along with some unpredictable weather due to Cyclone Gabrielle. In many ways, the anomaly of this upcoming fixture compared to what lies ahead over the next year is a blessing. It provides another robust test of the now ingrained in-game values of this team, particularly when you consider England have lost five of their six day-night matches.And yet even with those previous missteps, it is hard to see past an England win over the next fortnight, partly because of weakened opposition, partly because of the belief and application of this group of players who have taken a vow to be spurred on rather than burdened by history. The latter is without question the driving force, one they are assuming from their selfless, everyman leader.

Rashid, out of form? Try telling Royals that

Rashid, the master of deception, might be off his best, but his 3 for 14 on Friday showed that he is still a cut above the rest

Matt Roller05-May-20232:09

Muzumdar: Noor and Rashid didn’t allow batters time to adjust

R Ashwin crouched forward and took two small, tentative steps with his front foot, first planting it with his toes pointing towards cover, then towards mid-off.After being beaten on the outside edge by consecutive legbreaks – one just outside off stump, one much wider – Ashwin played for the googly, rolling his wrists as he looked to work a single through midwicket.He heard the clunk of ball on wood, then looked around to see his off stump lying flat, thrown back towards fine leg. Rashid Khan ran away with his brow furrowed and his tongue out, pointing towards the uprooted stump. As Rahul Tewatia caught up with him for a high-five, he broke into a familiar grin.Related

Pandya vs Pandya as LSG look to break out of mid-table jam

Sangakkara bemoans 'embarrassing' Royals performance

At 18, Noor Ahmad is living his cricket dream

Rashid, Noor run through Rajasthan Royals in Gujarat Titans' perfect game

In his next over, Rashid had Riyan Parag in his sights. At 63 for 4, Rajasthan Royals felt as though they had no choice but to add to their batting line-up, but that meant bringing in a batter who had not played in two weeks after a lean start to the season to face T20’s leading spinner.Parag, like Ashwin, had no idea which way the ball was about to turn. And how could he? Even the world’s best players will tell you how difficult it can be to pick the white ball under floodlights, let alone when facing Rashid. Parag played down the wrong line, was smashed on the pad by a googly; a reluctant review projected the ball would have taken out middle stump.Soon after Parag’s dismissal, the TV broadcast showed a split-screen of Rashid’s legbreak and his googly, which illustrated just how hard they are to tell apart. Viewed from the batter’s stance, his wrist position looks fundamentally the same for both deliveries. Unless you can spot the seam – under lights, from 20 yards away – then it is like guesswork.”It’s just about making sure you don’t give that much of a signal to the batsmen to pick you and make it easy for them,” Rashid explained at the post-match presentation. “I am just trying my best, for the last one-and-a-half, two years, to minimise that difference between the legspinner and the wrong one… I’m trying my best to hold that in the same grip.”The one possible tell is his left hand. When Rashid bowls his googly, he tends to point his left forefinger towards the direction the ball will spin, perhaps as a signal to the wicketkeeper; when he bowls his legbreak, his forefinger and middle finger are both slightly bent.Rashid Khan takes off after cleaning R Ashwin up•BCCIIt sounds like something that batters should be watching – that is, until you remember that his left hand is at thigh height, about three feet under the ball itself, which batters are fixated on. You could study footage of Rashid for weeks and still be deceived.”The speed with which he bowls [means that] if you don’t pick it up that early, you’ve already missed it,” Aashish Kapoor, Titans’ assistant coach who has worked closely with their spinners, explained. “If you’ve not picked his googly, and you’re going to play off the wicket, it’s going to be really difficult.”It’s not like the days where we used to play, where you’d plant your leg in front, it would hit your leg, and the umpire would give you not out. These days, the moment you miss in line with the stumps, 99% [of the time] you’re gone. It’s hitting the stumps.”When Rashid was brought back for his final over, the 15th, Royals were just trying to bat the full 20. They were 96 for 7 with Shimron Hetmyer, their lone remaining recognised batter, on 7 off 12 balls. Hetmyer lunged forward, survival his only intention, but the hint of turn meant he was beaten on the inside edge.Rashid threw his right arm up in the air like a goalscorer wheeling away to celebrate, and was nearly in line with the popping crease as he turned around to implore umpire Virender Sharma to give him the verdict. He did, and with no reviews left, Hetmyer had to trudge off forlornly; either way, the decision would have been upheld on umpire’s call.At 24, Rashid has already played 400 T20 matches around the world.

On Friday night, Rashid returned to his Jaipur hotel room as the joint-highest wicket-taker this IPL and his franchise three points clear at the top of the table. If this is meant to be a decline, just wait until he’s back to his best

“Sometimes, if you’re playing day in and day out, in every league in the world, then you’re playing for your country, it becomes monotonous,” Kapoor said, “and you forget that you’re doing some mistakes. Some bad habits just creep in.”What he felt was, he was running in a bit too fast, because of which, his hand was dropping and the ball was falling short. All we wanted was, the ball should pitch on the good length, and you’ll see what happens after that.”Rashid said that he had studied his pitch maps from earlier this season, and responded by “spot-bowling” in training on Thursday evening. “He bowled at a single stump for one hour,” Kapoor said with a smile. “I just keep it simple,” Rashid said, straight after that simplicity had bamboozled the batting line-up of last season’s runners-up.Meanwhile, his compatriot and protege Noor Ahmad was doing his best to emulate Rashid at the other end. Both of Noor’s dismissals – knocking out Devdutt Padikkal’s off stump and pinning Dhruv Jurel lbw – were mirror images of Ashwin and Hetmyer’s dismissals. No wonder Kapoor described Noor as “a left-handed Rashid”.Hardik Pandya, Titans’ captain, leaves Rashid and Noor to speak to one another in Pashto when they are playing alongside one another. “He is so happy that I am there with him [Noor] and can translate those things into Pashto for him,” Rashid said. Noor asks Rashid so many questions that he says he is “like Google for me”.4:24

Aashish Kapoor: Noor Ahmad is a left-handed Rashid Khan

When Trent Boult heaved Noor over midwicket in the 16th over for one of only three sixes in Royals’ innings, the ball dropped on a cameraman, named Manoj, who doubled over in pain. Without a second thought, Rashid jumped over the advertising display to see if he could help. He is much more than just a bowler.If you’ve been following IPL 2023 closely, you might have heard some chatter about Rashid. That he’s struggling for control this season. That batters have realised they can camp on the back foot against him. That he’s leaking more runs than ever before.And there has been some truth to it. Rashid has had two expensive outings this year, conceding 46 against Royals and 54 against Kolkata Knight Riders; they rank fourth and second among his costliest IPL spells.Imbued with extra batting depth on flat pitches, teams have attacked him more than they used to, particularly off the back foot. His highest economy rate in a full season is the 6.73 he recorded in 2017, his debut year. This year, he has gone at 8.05.Yet, on Friday night, as Rashid returned to his Jaipur hotel room, he did so as the joint-highest wicket-taker this IPL – along with his Titans team-mate, Mohammed Shami – and his franchise three points clear at the top of the table. If this is meant to be a decline, just wait until he’s back to his best.

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.

Stats – Defending champions New Zealand's sharp slide in a forgettable WTC cycle

Drawing a blank overseas, slumping pacers and wasting home advantage have left them at eighth out of nine teams in the points table

S Rajesh07-Mar-2023With just one series to go for them in the current cycle, it would be fair to say that New Zealand’s defence of their World Test Championship crown has gone rather badly. They are currently languishing in eighth place out of nine teams; and in fact, their opponents in this last series, Sri Lanka, still have the chance of making the final if they win both Tests.ESPNcricinfo LtdUnder normal circumstances, you would scoff at the possibility of Sri Lanka winning two out of two Tests in New Zealand. After all, they have won only one out of nine Test series in New Zealand, and that victory came way back in 1995. In 19 Tests in the country spanning 40 years, Sri Lanka have won exactly two; now they need to double that tally in a couple of weeks to give themselves any chance of qualifying for the final. However, thanks to New Zealand’s poor form in this cycle, Sri Lanka might fancy their chances of pulling off the improbable.How did New Zealand fall so steeply from being champions in the last cycle to rank eighth in the current one? Here are the key numbers comparing their previous campaign to this entirely forgettable one.No longer unbeatable at homeWhat should give Sri Lanka the greatest encouragement is the fact that New Zealand were beaten by Bangladesh in a home Test last year. They recovered to win the second Test and draw the series, but their eight-wicket defeat encapsulates their dismal defence of the WTC crown.ESPNcricinfo LtdIn six home Tests in the current cycle, New Zealand only have a 3-3 win-loss record, with drawn series against Bangladesh, South Africa and England. This includes the two Tests against England which isn’t part of the WTC. Had England scored two more runs in that Wellington chase, New Zealand’s home record would have been 2-4. That is a huge slide from the 2019-21 cycle, when they had a 7-0 winning record in eight Tests at home.Drawing a blank overseasIn the 2019-21 cycle, New Zealand had a 3-4 win-loss record overseas. They were clean swept 3-0 in Australia, but won a Test in Sri Lanka and two in England, including the WTC final (Their 1-0 win in England in 2021 wasn’t a part of the WTC).

Since that final, New Zealand haven’t won any of their seven overseas Tests, though they came close twice in Pakistan. Their results in England illustrate their slump: in 2021 they triumphed 1-0, but a year later they had no answers to England’s new-found aggression in a 3-0 series defeat. Surprisingly, since 2019, New Zealand have a 3-1 record against England in Tests which are not a part of the WTC, but 0-3 in Tests which are part of it.The pace slumpTim Southee took 70 wickets in 14 Tests at 21.2, Neil Wagner’s 55 wickets came at 22.87, Kyle Jamieson took 46 wickets at an incredible 14.17 and Trent Boult’s 46 wickets came at a slightly higher but still respectable average of 28.34. Together, New Zealand’s famed pace attack led their march to the WTC title in 2021, taking 242 wickets in 16 matches – that’s 15 per Test – at 24.16 (including the four Tests that weren’t part of the WTC).

They were particularly impressive at home, but didn’t do badly abroad either: Southee’s 70 wickets included match hauls of 6 for 78 in Colombo, 9 for 162 in Perth and 7 for 80 at Lord’s; Wagner took 17 wickets from three Tests in Australia at 22.76.ESPNcricinfo LtdIn the current cycle, though, Southee’s form has gone south – 45 wickets at 37.11 – while the others haven’t picked up the slack either. The absence of Boult and Jamieson hasn’t helped, and all these factors have contributed in the pace average dropping by almost 35%. Even when New Zealand have played their best attack, opposition batters have still found a way: Bangladesh scored 458 in that famous Mount Maunganui victory against a New Zealand attack consisting of Southee, Boult, Jamieson and Wagner.Batters waste home advantageNew Zealand’s 7-0 home record in the 2019-21 cycle was built on solid contributions from their batters all the way down the order, from Tom Latham to Jamieson (226 runs at 56.5), Mitchell Santner (174 at 58) and even Wagner (117 at 39). Overall, their batters averaged 47.84 runs per wicket in eight home Tests (including the runs added through extras, that average goes up to 51.26.)

But in the last couple of years, that average has dropped quite significantly to 31.58. Their former captain and batting talisman Kane Williamson has had a relatively quiet period. He has played only seven of New Zealand’s 13 Tests in this cycle, and just two out of six at home. Williamson has scored 557 runs at 46.41 in these 13 Tests, but 332 of those – 59.6% – came in two innings, including an unbeaten 200 in Karachi. Seven times he was dismissed before reaching 25.

However, in the previous WTC cycle, Williamson was the standout batter at home, scoring 895 runs at 99.44. Six other batters scored 200-plus runs at 40-plus averages. Add their pace-bowling strength at home, and it isn’t difficult to see how New Zealand built the results they did. This time around, only Devon Conway and Tom Blundell have shown outstanding form at home. Latham’s average of 41.7 is boosted by an innings of 252 against Bangladesh, as in seven out of ten innings, he has been dismissed under 20.With the fast bowlers fading as well, the defending champions have fallen rather quickly from their pedestal. Thankfully for them, they have a chance to start afresh after this two-Test series against Sri Lanka.

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.

Markram and South Africa smash World Cup records

All the landmarks and milestones reached by South Africa – some in tandem with Sri Lanka – in a run-fest in Delhi

Sampath Bandarupalli07-Oct-2023428 for 5 – South Africa’s total against Sri Lanka in Delhi is the highest in the men’s ODI World Cup, surpassing the 417 for 5 by Australia against Afghanistan in 2015. It is also the highest ODI total against Sri Lanka, surpassing India’s 414 for 7 in 2009 in Rajkot.8 – Totals of 400-plus for South Africa in ODIs, the most for any team. Three of those have come at the World Cup, while all the other teams have two 400-plus scores in total.3 – Hundreds in South Africa’s innings, the first such instance in the World Cup – Quinton de Kock (100), Rassie van der Dussen (108) and Aiden Markram (106).3 – Previous instances of three players scoring hundreds in the same ODI innings. Two of them were by South Africa in 2015 – against West Indies in Johannesburg and India in Mumbai. England had three centurions when they made 498 against the Netherlands last year.100 off 49 balls – Markram scored the fastest hundred in the ODI World Cup, breaking the 50-ball mark set by Ireland’s Kevin O’Brien against England in 2011.4 – Consecutive 300-plus totals for South Africa in ODIs; they had scored three in a row during the recent home series against Australia. It is the first time South Africa have made 300-plus totals in four consecutive ODIs.204 – Partnership runs between de Kock and Rassie van der Dussen, the highest for South Africa against Sri Lanka in ODIs.17 – ODI hundreds for de Kock before his maiden World Cup century on Saturday against Sri Lanka. No batter has scored more ODI tons before a maiden World Cup century.4 – Number of specialist Sri Lanka bowlers who conceded 80-plus runs against South Africa – Kasun Rajitha (90), Dilshan Madushanka (86), Matheesha Pathirana (95) and Dunith Wellalage (81). It is the second instance of four bowlers conceding 80-plus runs in a men’s ODI innings. Netherlands suffered the same when they faced England in Amstelveen last year.754 – Runs scored in total by South Africa and Sri Lanka in Delhi, making it the highest aggregate for a men’s ODI World Cup match. The previous highest was 714 runs between Australia and Bangladesh during the 2019 edition at Trent Bridge.31 – Sixes hit by South Africa and Sri Lanka in Delhi, thejoint-second most for a World Cup game. The 2019 game between England and Afghanistan in Manchester featured 33 sixes, while New Zealand and West Indies collectively hit 31 sixes in Wellington in the quarter-final of the 2015 edition.

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.

'Afghanistan, you have pulled off the biggest upset in World Cup cricket'

Sachin Tendulkar, Ian Bishop, Mithali Raj, Shoaib Akhtar and others react to Afghanistan’s stunning win over England

ESPNcricinfo staff15-Oct-2023

Phenomenal stuff from Afghanistan to turn over the defending champions tonight so convincingly. They put the hopes of a nation on their shoulders and made everyone proud. Well played @ACBofficials.

— Ian Raphael Bishop (@irbishi) October 15, 2023

Afghanistan outplayed England in all disciplines on the day. Rahmanullah Gurbaz unleashed a fearless display of power-hitting that asserted their dominance from the beginning – he made 80 off 57. Ikram Alikhil, on his World Cup debut, drove them ahead with 58 off 66 as Afghanistan posted a competitive 285.

Exceptional play by Team Afghanistan today, securing a thrilling win against England The team's determination and skill shone brightly. Well played boys!#AFGvsENG @ACBofficials @rashidkhan_19 pic.twitter.com/jazGbPqQkT

— Suresh Raina (@ImRaina) October 15, 2023

A historic triumph for Afghanistan! Their spin attack was a delight to watch on this Delhi track, Shahidi marshalled his troops brilliantly. A perfect tribute to @MohammadNabi007, who was playing in his 150th ODI today. England choosing to field first worked against them. A… pic.twitter.com/KRJDiddISG

— Mithali Raj (@M_Raj03) October 15, 2023

In return, England’s batting never really took off, as they struggled against Afghanistan’s seamers and spinners, surrendering for 215 in the 41st over. Afghanistan’s spinners accounted for seven wickets, with Mujeeb picking up the crucial wickets of Harry Brook – who was England’s top-scorer of the day – and the in-form Joe Root.

Salute you AFGHANISTAN. You have pulled offff the biggest upset in WC cricket. If not in the history of the game. Respect. @rashidkhan_19 @Mujeeb_R88 #CWC2023 #ENGvsAFG pic.twitter.com/o59wpS6Sxc

— Ravi Shastri (@RaviShastriOfc) October 15, 2023

This Afghanistan team plays modern day cricket. You can see that in their batting in first 10 overs. Same with bowling. Lots of things there to learn from.

— Shoaib Akhtar (@shoaib100mph) October 15, 2023

Bahot mubarak Apko Afghanistan. You out played England every department. Gurbazzaaaa you were amazing Ikram Alikhil looked good in the middle overs. Bowling has been top notch from Afghans. #ENGvAFG

— Irfan Pathan (@IrfanPathan) October 15, 2023

Switch Hit: Time for a brief spin-terlude

England went back to Abu Dhabi between the second and third Tests – and nearly lost Rehan Ahmed at border control. The pod sat down to discuss

ESPNcricinfo staff13-Feb-2024After a break in Abu Dhabi, England have returned to India ahead of the third Test – although not with another visa hitch. Ben Stokes hopes to have Rehan Ahmed available for selection in Rajkot but could the situation have been avoided? Alan Gardner, Andrew Miller and Vithushan Ehantharajah discuss this and more on the latest episode of Switch Hit. Will Mark Wood come into the XI as part of a shift in tactics? Can England cope without senior spinner Jack Leach? And how should we view Stokes’ greatness on the eve of his 100th Test?

Game
Register
Service
Bonus