Dan Lawrence lives up to expectations as England's hot-house bears fruit again

Nurtured like a tropical plant, Lawrence’s maiden innings may herald the start of a long career

Andrew Miller15-Jan-2021″The exciting thing for me is that this is the beginning of a very successful, long international career, where you’ll be winning many, many games for England.”Individual batsmen may still harbour their superstitions, but the England management clearly doesn’t believe in tempting fate these days. For these were the very words uttered by James Foster, the team’s wicketkeeping consultant, in the minutes before the start of the Galle Test, as he presented Dan Lawrence, his former Essex team-mate, with his maiden Test cap.No equivocation, no doubts, and only a fleeting nod to “luck” as Foster walked over to shake the youngster’s hand and confer on him cap No. 697*. And sure enough, it has taken just two days for Lawrence to live up to those eagerly-expressed expectations, with a thrillingly sure-footed maiden fifty that leaves few reasons to doubt there will be much more to follow.

A note of caution is obligatory at this stage. There have been 103 debut half-centuries in England’s 144-year history, and while David Gower and Peter May are notable examples of players who shone as brightly from the outset as they did in their pomp, Paul Allott and Liam Dawson also exist as proof of the old adage about all penguins being birds, but not vice versa.But if you reduce that sample size to the dawn of the millennium onwards – which also happens to be the dawn of England’s central contracts era – then a more focused picture appears. From the moment that England’s 20th century survival-of-the-fittest mentality was ditched in favour of a mutually supportive team ethic, a total of 21 England batsmen, or one a year, have landed on their feet at the first time of asking (as opposed to just three in the whole of the 1990s – the ebullient Darren Gough, whose self-belief could launch armadas, and a pair of more designated allrounders in Dermot Reeve and Mark Ealham, both of whom, you sense, probably benefited from the job security that their second string offered).That post-2000 list does include some curios, not least the current national selector Ed Smith, while likely lads of the future such as Ollie Pope and Zak Crawley are obvious absentees. But more relevantly for Lawrence’s prospects of living up to Foster’s lofty billing, it also features each of England’s six highest run-scorers of the century.There’s Alastair Cook at Nagpur in 2006, of course, parachuted into a chaotic debut after hot-footing it from an A-team tour in the Caribbean. There’s Kevin Pietersen at Lord’s in 2005, whose unfettered assaults on Shane Warne and Glenn McGrath sowed the seeds of a fightback yet to come. In 2004, Andrew Strauss’s Lord’s debut was so unwavering that Nasser Hussain, a fellow century-maker, instantly knew his days were done.ESPNcricinfo LtdBefore that, came Strauss’s long-term opening partner, Marcus Trescothick, whose demons may have curtailed his England career at the age of 30, but not before he’d chalked up 5825 Test runs at 43.79. And if Ian Bell faltered at times on his own path to the upper echelons of England’s run-makers, then his average after three Tests, an unwieldy 297, was a clear sign that his class was worthy of investment.And last but clearly not least, there’s Joe Root, the current England captain, and Lawrence’s partner throughout a fourth-wicket stand of 173 at Galle on Friday. He turned 30 a fortnight ago, he’s likely to reach 8000 Test runs before this match is over, and he’s set to play his 100th Test when the tour moves to India in three weeks’ time. But it feels like only yesterday that Root himself was also making 73 on debut, in the fourth Test at Nagpur at the culmination of England’s epic series win against India in 2012-13. Pietersen and Cook had bossed that campaign for England, but with a draw sufficient to seal the series, Root rocked up with an apprentice’s performance of such mastery that few onlookers had any lingering doubts that they were witnessing the real deal.So… expectations? Yep, there are a few bubbling below the surface for Lawrence. And yes, there will be tougher days in prospect that the one that he has just encountered. While batting in Asia is never an easy challenge, especially when the ball is spinning quite as sharply as it was when Jonny Bairstow was extracted without addition in the opening moments of today’s play, Sri Lanka’s performance with the ball was barely any more continent than their own batting had been on day one. Only the admirable Lasith Embuldeniya posed a consistent wicket-taking threat, until he too got collared as the hardness of the second new-ball backfired on a toiling attack.And yes, there were flaws in Lawrence’s maiden innings – a spilled nudge to gully, and a brace of missed stumpings, one of which drew a grin of amusement from Root as he all but hauled himself off his feet. But the most telling feature of his performance was the poise that he projected, right from the moment of his first two deliveries – a quick-wristed cuff into the covers to hustle off the mark first-ball, then a compact thump through the same region for his first boundary as Dilruwan Perera over-pitched.There’s something about Lawrence which evokes Kevin Pietersen•SLCWhatever nerves may have existed had vanished in a trice, and suddenly Lawrence was batting as an equal partner to his skipper. If Root’s ruthless sweep-shots were the bread-and-butter of their stand, then the cream was provided in no uncertain terms by the new boy, who blatted Embuldeniya for a hold-the-pose six over cow corner, a shot that screeched of the sort of belonging that entire generations of England cricketers never dared to feel in years gone by.It was a familiar brand of audacity, and one that many observers had probably been craning their necks to witness from the moment that Lawrence came to the crease. Comparisons with Pietersen don’t have to be odious (although you wonder if Tom Banton, for one, might wish they weren’t thrown his way quite so frequently) but there’s something about Lawrence’s imposing frame, meaty strokeplay, and preternatural confidence that evokes KP’s arrival in the side in the 2005. There might even be something about his catching too, to judge by his first visible act as an England player, although hopefully he’ll cling onto at least one of the first five chances that come his way.There’s something, too, about the selectors’ eureka moment in the final months before their senior call-ups, when both men produced an acceleration of intent to prove beyond doubt their worthiness. For Pietersen, it was a run of performances on the England A tour of India in 2003-04 that, even to this day, stand out from the scorecards; for Lawrence, it was a match-winning century at the MCG back in February 2020, as England Lions completed their first victory in an unofficial Test in Australia, after seven blank campaigns.Related

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For that’s the thing about England’s expectations these days. It’s no longer simply that a good player rocks up with a reputation after a handful of county knocks, and gets the cocksuredness knocked out of him by team-mates and opposition alike. As alluded to by Foster in his capping ceremony, Lawrence is a pathway player, identified as a 15-year-old as Essex’s Next Big Thing, and nurtured like a tropical plant thereafter. So too is his likely rival for selection in the short term, and likely sidekick for years to come, Pope – injured at present, but gunning for full fitness in India next month, the team against whom he debuted at Lord’s in 2018.Since then, of course, the world has turned upside-down, and Lawrence is the first England debutant of the Covid era – a player who has been part of the Test bubble since last June, a period of dressing-room hot-housing like no other in Test history. For months at a time, the players have been cooped up like contestants on Big Brother, and behind those closed doors, their characters – good, bad and insidious – will doubtless have been scrutinised by players, management and psychologists alike, and with every bit as much intensity as a high-octane passage of Test cricket.Lawrence’s apprenticeship has encompassed tragedy too, with the death of his mother in August leading to a spell of compassionate leave during the Pakistan Tests. But as Root reiterated at the close – and as frequently mentioned by James Anderson, the last man with a true insight into England’s dog-eat-dog days of yore – the current dressing-room atmosphere is more accommodating and supportive than at any stage in its history.”You just want them to feel as at home as possible,” Root said at the close. “We have got a very good environment. We’ve got some really good senior players, a good group of lads who enable that process of coming into the team to be a smooth one and a nice one. If you feel comfortable in the environment, I do think it probably feeds into your game, but the most important thing is that they see that as a start of something very exciting to build on.”* Alan Jones was retrospectively awarded England cap No. 696 in June 2020 after playing against Rest of the World in one-off Test in 1970

Stats: England's winning streak in Asia, and the ageless James Anderson

Anderson has the most Test wickets for a fast bowler after turning 30

S Rajesh09-Feb-20211:43

Did England play spin better than India in the first Test?

6 – Consecutive wins for England in Asia, following their 3-0 and 2-0 series wins in Sri Lanka in 2018 and earlier this year. Their recent record in Asia contrasts sharply with that of South Africa, who lost their ninth Test in a row in the continent when they were beaten by Pakistan in Rawalpindi on Monday.ESPNcricinfo Ltd11 – Test wins for England in Asia since January 2010 – they have a 11-12 win-loss record in the continent during this period, which is easily the best among the non-Asian teams. No other team has won more than half the number of Tests that they have lost: New Zealand and West Indies have a win-loss ratio of 0.5. Australia have a 3-15 record during this period. In fact, England have won more Tests in India during this period (three) than all other teams put together (two).
Of the nine series England have played in Asia during this period (excluding the ongoing one in India), they have won four, lost three, and drawn two.343 – Test wickets for James Anderson after turning 30, which is the most for a fast bowler. He went past Courtney Walsh, who has 341. Among all bowlers, only three have more wickets after turning 30: Rangana Herath (398), Muttiah Muralitharan (388), and Shane Warne (386), while Anil Kumble has 343 as well.ESPNcricinfo Ltd26 – Test wins for Joe Root, which equals Michael Vaughan’s record for an England captain. Root has a 26-15 win-loss record in 47 Tests, compared to Vaughan’s 26-11 in 51 matches.ESPNcricinfo Ltd1 – India had lost just one home Test in their last 35 games before this one, going back to the beginning of 2013. They had won 28 games during this period, and were easily the most dominant home team in these eight years.3 – Consecutive Man-of-the-Match awards for Root – he had won the award in the two Tests in Sri Lanka as well. There are only six other instances of a player winning three or more successive awards: Muralitharan (four), Ian Botham, Wasim Akram, Kallis, Michael Hussey, and Steve Harmison.2010 – The last time India bowled more no-balls than the 27 they did in this match. That was against South Africa in Kolkata, when India bowled 29. Just two bowlers contributed to all the no-balls: Ishant Sharma (16) and Amit Mishra (13).4 – Wins in India for Anderson. Since 2000, only two other overseas players have won as many Tests in India: Mark Boucher and Jacques Kallis.1999 – The last time India lost a Test in Chennai. It was an epic encounter, which Pakistan won by 12 runs. Since then, India won five out of eight Tests here before this defeat to England.

Teenager Alice Capsey caps historic day as Lord's delivers social karma

Crowd in excess of 13,000 witness remarkable matchwinning display from 16-year-old

Cameron Ponsonby25-Jul-2021And so the rain arrived. Just after the first women’s Hundred’s London derby had ended and just before the men’s was due to begin.A sort of social justice piece of karma delivered by the sky to anyone who thought they’d only turn up to the latter game and skip out on the former. Oh you wanted to watch some cricket? Well you could’ve and you would have seen possibly the most exciting teenage English talent in the game right now. Tough luck.Women’s cricket, and sport in general, is always going to suffer from lazy comparisons to the men’s game. Which has never really made sense. No one should look at Shelley Ann Fraser-Pryce with all her Olympic sprinting medals and think, “cor she’s quick…wonder how she’d get on against Usain Bolt?”. Because it’s a false equivalence. Why bother in the first place?And yet it’ll continue to happen. And I think it’s mainly down to how we consume our sport, which is through TV. We’re accustomed to watching cricket in the context of 90mph thunderbolts and sixes being launched 100m as we sit on the sofa lazily grunting our approval. The Olympics’ (recently updated) motto includes the words ‘faster, higher, stronger’ and so when things are smaller and slower people can think of it as less. But when you’re watching at the ground, the context of TV is removed and the skill of the players comes to the fore.Today, in the space of five balls, 16-year-old Alice Capsey lofted the spinner over mid-off for four, reverse-swept the next one for four more and then gave herself space to slap Deandra Dottin through point. It was thrilling. And you’d be a fool to miss it.The women’s game is increasingly being dominated by players of the skill level of Capsey. Whilst today was her day to announce her arrival, the likes of Shafali Verma, Sophie Ecclestone and Sophia Dunkley have all had their days in the sun to announce their arrival on the world stage. Young players, each phenomenal in their own right who are no doubt the rule of the women’s game moving forward rather than the exception.Related

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Today the attendance for the women’s game was measured at 13,537, a figure that grew throughout the match as fans filtered their way into the ground for a Sunday at the cricket.A record for a domestic women’s game in the modern era, which should be celebrated. However, perhaps it’s the greed of progress that it still left me wanting more.It’s the gift and the curse of the double header that the women’s game is put in front of more people’s eyes than ever (good) but only as a curtain-raiser (bad). But, because of the rain today, it took centre stage for the second time this tournament after Wednesday’s opening night. And far from it being a warm-up, it hopefully left 13,537 people asking for an encore.Certainly those who arrived on time for the match action will have left wanting to know and see more of Capsey following her imperious display.Much has been made of Capsey’s age, or lack of. The youngest player in the tournament at 16 and recently embarked on her A levels, it could have been expected, or at least forgiven, had the occasion of playing at Lord’s got the better of her.Or, on the other side of the coin, and as I’m sure many will comment, “she played with the fearlessness of youth.”As a phrase it’s one that’s always confused me and I can only assume it is only said by those who don’t remember being 16 (sorry). Because being 16 is terrifying.You’re constantly being confronted with so many firsts in your life happening at one time. Your first love interest maybe, your first drink perhaps, your first major set of exams for definite. It’s just that, unlike us, Capsey has added her first innings at Lord’s to that list as well.To say Capsey’s youth made her fearless is to diminish her achievement. She batted brilliantly for 59 off 40 balls on the biggest stage of all. There’s no doubt it was a daunting occasion and that’s what made it all the more impressive.Her innings shifted from one of promise to one of certainty in the space of five balls midway through the innings. Consecutive boundaries off the bowling of Dean was followed by a dismissive shot through the off-side against Dottin. Three boundaries in five balls. A drive, a reverse sweep and a cut. Three different shots with the same outcome each time. This was a batter in control of her game and of the occasion.Further testament to her innings was that she was supported, not led, by South Africa captain and star of the Invincibles opening night win on Wednesday in Van Niekerk.”It’s a special moment. There were a few nerves, but I just wanted to be able to express myself and stay true to how I play,” Capsey said afterwards.”I just wanted to take it in my stride and show I’m not going to be pushed to the side. I want to play how I want to play.”The Hundred Rising is providing eight aspiring, young journalists the opportunity to tell the story of The Hundred men’s and women’s competitions through their own eyes.

Stats – Can England bury the ghosts of their last two Australia tours?

England have lost nine of their last 10 Tests in Australia, but with Root in form and a promising pace attack, they will hope to change the narrative

S Rajesh06-Dec-2021Since their 3-1 series triumph in Australia in 2010-11, England have lost nine out of 10 Tests in the country, averaged 25 with the bat, and nearly 46 with the ball. That is the sort of recent history England will be up against over the next few weeks, as they try to regain the Ashes.

Australia have been battling problems of their own recently, and lost their last home series, against India. However, their overall win-loss record in the last 10 years is still an impressive 36-8, with 11 series wins out of 16; they have lost twice each to India and South Africa, and drew a series against New Zealand in 2011-12. In fact, South Africa and India have been the two teams which have competed strongly in Australia. South Africa have a 3-1 win-loss record and are the only overseas team to score more runs per wicket than they concede in Australia in this period, while India’s record is marred by their hopeless 4-0 drubbing in 2011-12.Smith, Warner vs Anderson, BroadJames Anderson will play his fifth Test series in Australia, and Stuart Broad his fourth. How they go against Australia’s line-up in their home conditions could be a key component of which way the series pans out. Of particular interest will be their battles against Steven Smith and David Warner, the two giants of Australia’s batting.Broad was dominant against Warner in the 2019 Ashes series in England, dismissing him seven times while conceding just 35 runs, an average of five runs per dismissal. However, the last time they played in Australia, Warner scored 73 off 175 deliveries from Broad without being dismissed.ESPNcricinfo Ltd

Overall, both Anderson and Broad have dominated Warner in England, but Warner averages more than 50 against each of them in home conditions. Smith’s numbers against them have a remarkable symmetry – his average against Anderson in England is his average against Broad in Australia, and vice-versa. In Australia, Anderson has had more success against him, though Smith still averages a healthy 45.2.Red-hot Root’s century missionJoe Root’s average in Australia is a modest 38 from nine Tests, but the last time he toured there – in 2017-18 – he did much better, averaging 47.25, and scoring five fifties from nine innings. A century eluded him, though, which means his highest score from 17 Test innings in Australia is 87. It is the only country where he has played at least 10 innings without a hundred. Australia will be happy if those stats still hold true at the end of this series.

However, Root and Test centuries have had a strong bonding in 2021 – he has scored six of them, which is twice his previous best in any calendar year. That suggests he should end his century drought in Australia this time around, and also lift his overall Test average in the country to beyond 40.Going by his numbers against Australia’s current bowlers, his biggest threat will be his opposite number, the newly appointed captain Pat Cummins. Cummins has had the better of Root both in England and Australia. Against Josh Hazlewood, Mitchell Starc and Nathan Lyon, Root averages more than 45 in Australia.

However, apart from Root, England will also need the rest of the top order to score big runs. Among the batters who have played in Australia, only Dawid Malan averages over 40. Malan was impressive on the tour in 2017-18, scoring a century and three fifties in nine innings.

Australia’s pace advantageOn the last two tours, England’s fast bowlers have struggled in Australia: they have averaged 38.56 runs per wicket, compared to the home fast bowlers’ average of 25.73 in the period since November 2011. The only country where they have a poorer average in these 10 years is in India (41.85).

The Kookaburra hasn’t been a friend for England’s pace bowlers: Anderson (35.43) and Broad (37.17) both average over 35 here, while Chris Woakes’ 10 wickets have cost him 49.50 each. Ben Stokes has done better, averaging 32.80, but England will want more from their frontline fast bowlers this time around. They’ll hope that Mark Wood’s pace, and Ollie Robinson’s accuracy and ability to extract bounce, will change the narrative this time around.Spin problems in AustraliaIf England’s fast bowlers have underwhelming records in Australia, then the spinners have been an embarrassment in the last two series, taking 22 wickets in 10 Tests at an average of 87. Except for Scott Borthwick, who picked up 4 for 82 in the last Test of the 2013-14 series, no England spinner averages less than 80 in Australia during this period. That underlines the challenge before Jack Leach and Dom Bess – should they play – as England try to emulate their achievement of 2010-11.

The Ishan Kishan metric to measure the chasm between young India and Sri Lanka players

The India batter smashed 89 off 56 while Sri Lanka’s youngsters had more sedate returns

Andrew Fidel Fernando25-Feb-20222:14

Ishan Kishan: Our approach is to attack the bowlers rather than wait for a bad ball

Seven balls into his innings, Ishan Kishan gets a full toss outside his off stump. In a blink, it has scorched its way to the cover boundary. The next ball from Chamika Karunaratne is a shorter, slower delivery. The shoulders swing into action. The elbows are a blur. This ball blazes and takes an even quicker route to the rope. Straight of cover this time.In the late 1990s, when Sanath Jayasuriya reigned over India versus Sri Lanka fixtures, word on the streets in India was that Jayasuriya had springs hidden in his bat. How else did he get the ball to boing off over the infield when the likes of Javagal Srinath and Venkatesh Prasad bowled at him?Related

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Kishan’s bat functions more like rocket launcher than trampoline. That he is no conventional “timer of the ball” is clear, because he throws every milligram of his body weight into some of his shots. But this is not the same thing as saying he does not have timing. On evenings like these, the force that goes up from his toes, through his hips, chest, shoulders, arms, wrists, seems to be matched by the energy that his bat, of its own accord, is producing. It’s big-effort batting mixed with glorious-timing results. The best of both worlds. It took seven years at the international level for Jayasuriya to mesh his explosive power with batting’s more refined virtues. Kishan is in his ninth T20I.But we know where the refinement came for Kishan, right? He’s hit 1452 runs in the IPL, and commanded a pay packet of more than US$2 million in the most-recent auction. He’s played 56 innings in that competition, and 108 T20 innings overall, and in that time, batted in a host of match situations and positions. On Thursday evening, he had to face two 140kph-plus bowlers up front, and a legspinner and a left-arm spinner, none of whom seriously troubled him. He batted, as on his debut against England last year, and in several internationals since, as if pounding bowlers of every description was a birthright.When Sri Lanka came out to make their response to Kishan’s 89 off 56 and India’s 199 for 2, they had some promising young batters too. Pathum Nissanka, a first-class star who had sort of made the switch to being a decent T20 batter, having top-scored in the recent series in Australia, was opening the innings. Charith Asalanka, who was excellent in last year’s T20 World Cup, was batting lower down.Through the course of this tour, you might notice their better shots. Like Asalanka’s ramp off Jasprit Bumrah at the end of the fourth over. Or his flat, hard, reverse sweep through point off Ravindra Jadeja in the 14th.But you might also notice this. Young India players are largely doing things they’ve done before, going into their memory banks, calling up moments from their past in which they’ve triumphed in similar situations, against oppositions of perhaps somewhat worse but not-dissimilar quality. Sri Lanka’s young players are always reaching. The next level. That big step. This vast chasm they have to somehow bridge.Occasionally, they manage it. But often, they don’t. You see their talent warring with their inexperience when Kamil Mishara, who has all of 15 T20s (of any description) on his ledger, punches the second ball he’s ever faced from Bumrah to the cover fence on the up, before failing to connect with the next three deliveries, as Bumrah mixes it up. You see it in Janith Liyanage’s pained 11 off 17, or even in Nissanka’s fatal first ball, where he failed to account for the low bounce in the Lucknow pitch. Even Asalanka, the Sri Lanka batter who has best transitioned to T20Is in the last few years, was dropped twice on his way to his half-century.We will not tread over SLC’s many sins here, because they have been lavishly documented in these pages. But even if their officials were competent, Sri Lanka will never have the likes of this Indian cricketing machine, of which Kishan is a proud product. There are some harsh judgements on the Sri Lankan system, but also some bald economics. For much of Kishan’s IPL career, he was coached by one of Sri Lanka’s greatest cricketing minds.Sri Lanka have two more T20s, and two Tests, in a country where they have done exceedingly poorly in both those formats. If they are to make something of this tour, they will have to reach for the kinds of performances they have never produced before.India, like Kishan, ferocious at home in any case, need only to do what they’ve been doing.

Five first-timers who impressed at the World Cup

From Charlie Dean to Fatima Sana, here’s a look at a group of potential stars for the future

S Sudarshanan05-Apr-2022Sophia Dunkley (England)

Having made her ODI debut last June, Sophia Dunkley had an important spot in England’s lower-middle order, taking over from Fran Wilson, who quit last year. Dunkley made regular contributions throughout the World Cup, not just with the bat but also on the field, often in the deep. She scored back-to-back half-centuries – in England’s last league match against Bangladesh and in the semi-final against South Africa – to help the side post what turned out to be match-winning totals. She finished with 291 runs, second behind Nat Sciver’s 436 for England.Yastika Bhatia unfurls a slog sweep against Bangladesh•Getty ImagesYastika Bhatia (India)

After a rough start to her international career, Yastika Bhatia came into the World Cup having batted in the middle order in each of her seven ODIs. But in India’s second game of the tournament, she was brought in to open in place of an out-of-form Shafali Verma. She played a couple of contrasting knocks before being pushed down to her regular No. 3 position, where she returned successive fifties against Australia and Bangladesh. Though she failed to convert her starts into something substantial at times, her impressive strokeplay showed she could be one for the long haul.Alana King was the second-highest wicket-taker for Australia in the tournament•Getty ImagesAlana King (Australia)

While Alana King is 26, she made her international debut just over a month before the World Cup. Her 16 wickets in the WBBL 2021 saw her leapfrog Amanda-Jade Wellington in the pecking order after Georgia Wareham was out injured. She picked up three wickets in each of her outings against England – both in the league-stage game as well as in the final – to stamp her class. In the league game, she bluffed a set Tammy Beaumont to have her stumped before cleaning up Dunkley towards the end with the game in the balance. In the final, she dismissed Heather Knight and Dunkley at crucial junctures to dent England’s chances, and finished joint-fourth on the wickets’ chart with 12 strikes.Fatima Sana picked up 3 for 43 against South Africa•ICC via GettyFatima Sana (Pakistan)

Named ICC Women’s Emerging Cricketer of the Year in 2021, Fatima Sana finished with seven wickets in as many games. She exhibited her full range of skills in the match against South Africa, where she picked up three wickets. She had Lizelle Lee with the new ball and then, at the death, dismissed a set Sune Luus and deceived Trisha Chetty with a slower ball. Though she showed last year that she can be handy with the bat, Sana didn’t trouble the scorers much in the World Cup.Offspinner Charlie Dean picked up 11 wickets in just six games•Getty ImagesCharlie Dean (England)

In the inaugural edition of the Hundred, Charlie Dean made a name for herself by getting big wickets, finishing with six overall, the second-most for London Spirit. Left out of the XI for England’s first two games, Dean showed her worth by picking up four wickets against India and then a couple more against New Zealand. What stood out was her smart use of the arm-ball along with her offbreaks. She picked up nine of her 11 wickets in the competition in just three matches. Dean also showed her ability with the bat in the final, scoring 21 off 24 balls in a 65-run ninth-wicket partnership with Sciver.

Nurul Hasan: 'It's a team-first game; if you think otherwise, it won't work'

“When we don’t play well, we should be ready for criticism; but we have to start talking about success, we have to believe”

Mohammad Isam05-Oct-2022 • Updated on 07-Oct-2022There is something refreshing about Nurul Hasan. Whether it’s his flat-bat shots down the ground, or the way he handled himself, and the Bangladesh team, after being thrust into the T20I captaincy in July this year.It was a stop-gap arrangement; he was keeping the seat warm for Shakib Al Hasan at the time. *He was expected to do the same in New Zealand, now, for the triangular series, but Shakib has been cleared to make the trip and join the team the day before their first game. Not where he expected to be when, for a long time, he was a giant in the Bangladesh domestic circuit struggling to move up to the next level.That could have pulled Nurul down, but he reinvented himself, and his game, to cater to the needs of top-level cricket. It’s the sort of attitude that’s often lacking in Bangladesh cricket, and exactly what they need after having started the year well but declined quite dramatically since.Related

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Nurul agrees; he feels the right attitude is what the current team as well as future teams need.”Our culture is such that we don’t want to talk about our goals or ambitions, fearing failure,” Nurul told ESPNcricinfo. “If I say today that we want to win the World Cup, we don’t necessarily have to win it right away. But by saying such a thing repeatedly, maybe our next batch will feel more confident about winning the World Cup. Maybe I won’t be around then, but the belief will be there.”We have to create this culture, notwithstanding the negative reactions. When we don’t play well, we should be ready for criticism. But we have to start talking about success; we have to believe it. If three or four of us start getting into form, it could get Bangladesh good results.”When Nurul was made T20I captain after Mahmudullah was sacked, it was a toss-up between him and Litton Das. What worked in Nurul’s favour were firstly the perception, from domestic cricket where he has led Sheikh Jamal Dhanmondi, that he was a good captain, and secondly, that he was a team man through and through.”I don’t think there was a lot of joy [when I became the captain], but I had a duty towards fulfilling the responsibility,” he said. “I like taking on challenges. I didn’t think too much about it, which meant I was not emotional. I think I was mainly thinking about the challenge at hand. I try to enjoy whatever challenge I am facing.”

“Only six-hitting doesn’t bring runs on the board. If I hit a six but play three dot balls, it doesn’t help the team. We have to find our area of strength”Nurul Hasan

Sentiments such as these are unusual in Bangladesh cricket, where players and administrators try not to raise expectations for being ridiculed when results don’t go their way.Nurul’s positive attitude comes from own experiences in the last few years. He impressed in the Dhaka Premier League T20 last year to earn a recall to the T20I squad after close to four years. But despite the early promise, he couldn’t find form at the T20 World Cup in the UAE. An ill-timed shot in the Chattogram Test against Pakistan meant another long pause. But he fought back through another tremendous showing in the Dhaka Premier League, which led to his side Sheikh Jamal winning their first title in the competition.”I have emotions, but I don’t get as excited as I used to,” he said. “Maybe I was different earlier, but now I take it match by match. I am used to a mindset of moving on from one performance to the next. I feel bad when I don’t do well, but it is important to recover well from it.”Part of his secret is his adaptability. Nurul isn’t too bothered by how he looks when playing a shot, as long as he gets the right result. Among Bangladesh batters who have batted at least thrice in the last five overs in T20Is in 2022, Nurul’s strike rate of 160.97 is the best. Since last year, he has also batted at five different positions, a factor that needs to be looked at.”I believe 200% that it is a team-first game. If you think otherwise, the results won’t come”•AFP/Getty Images”To be honest, I don’t think it does any good for the team if my mindset is fixed on a batting position,” he said. “In that case, you are carrying individuals. Situations keep changing, so you have to keep adapting. I believe 200% that it is a team-first game. If you think otherwise, the results won’t come. If [me] batting at No. 11 benefits the team, so be it. The team comes first.”Considering where I bat in white-ball cricket, I think it is important to have more impact rather than just scoring runs. I think it is better to contribute for the team’s win, rather than scoring runs when they lose. I want to work harder at it. I don’t listen to what’s being said or what’s happening outside. Contributing for the team is foremost in my mind.”When the thorny topic of six-hitting is broached – Bangladesh have hit fewer sixes this year than Suryakumar Yadav – Nurul is unfazed.”Only six-hitting doesn’t bring runs on the board,” he said. “I can hit a four, and then rotate the strike. If I hit a six but play three dot balls, it doesn’t help the team. We have to find our area of strength. Other teams are doing it, we should too.When Shakib Al Hasan, Nurul Hasan’s role will change, and he is ready for it•AFP/Getty Images”I also don’t believe in the fuss about big-hitters. Big-hitting doesn’t solely win you games. If you bat according to the match situation, if you can find the gaps and hit boundaries, it will get you close to the target. Six-hitting is easy when you have the right ball in front of you.”There has been a marked shift in Nurul’s stroke-making in the last two years, particularly down the ground and behind the wicket. He uses the pace of the ball more, even though there have been times when he has bludgeoned the ball – more long-on than midwicket.”There was a time when I used to work on my areas of strength in the past, but during a match, a bowler will not allow me to play those shots. I have to be aware of the match situation, what it demands from me,” he said. “Scoring runs and understanding the match situation is more important than playing a nice shot that has no runs or impact from it. My focus is to find runs in the middle.”The bottom line for Nurul is to make the most of his opportunities. Once Shakib returns, Nurul will go back to being the wicketkeeper-batter who has to get Bangladesh big runs in the last five overs.”At this moment, I don’t want to leave anything to chance,” Nurul said. “I don’t want to regret later that I could have worked harder or improved a little bit more through the training that I am doing now. I want to prepare very well. Allah decides all, I will get exactly what I deserve. I want to achieve the team’s goals, and I hope that as long as I play cricket, that’s how I want to play.”

Josh Bohannon keeps faith in red-ball route to England recognition

Lions hopeful confident his methods can meet requirements of rebooted Test team

Andrew Miller15-Jan-2023In a parallel universe, Josh Bohannon might already be a part of England’s Test reboot. Last year, it seemed he was the coming man – batting at No.3 for Lancashire, he would end up passing 800 runs for the second Championship season in a row, again compiled with the sort of no-nonsense temperament that belied his 24 years of age. He seemed an ideal candidate for a team that had won one match in 17 and was crying out for new blood.Bohannon was so close to a call-up, in fact, that on the eve of the tour of the Caribbean in March, a Sky reporter erroneously rang him up to congratulate him on his apparent selection. But then Bazball happened, and the narrative changed once again. Now, a settled England team is on the roll of rolls with nine thrilling wins out of ten, and as Bohannon prepares to head off for Sri Lanka for his third Lions tour, the question is whether the attributes that brought him so close to recognition last year are still relevant as the new season draws nigh.”Obviously I was pretty close to breaking in this time last year, but it wasn’t the right time,” Bohannon tells ESPNcricinfo. “And that was almost a blessing, because some of the work that I’ve done since then is really paying dividends. Hopefully when this opportunity does come, I’ll be in a great position to walk in and do some of the things that you see the guys in the team doing.”The Lions programme has long been intended to mirror the experience of playing for England, to enable those who make the grade to slot seamlessly into the senior team when their turn comes. And to judge by the contrasting moods of his previous two trips – to Australia last winter as part of the Ashes preparation, and more recently to Dubai and Abu Dhabi for a training camp ahead of the Pakistan tour – Bohannon has been a privileged witness to one of the most remarkable transformations that the Test squad has ever undergone.”It’s quite evident that people are walking around with a smile on their face all the time,” he says of his most recent encounter in November. “They are enjoying being in the field together for a period of time and doing the job that they love. Everything they do is based around winning a game of cricket. They never take a backward step, in some ways they are happy to lose, rather than draw, in order to win, and for the players that are extremely close to getting in as well, it’s a great environment to be around.”Going to Abu Dhabi and Dubai, I knew what I could do and the skills that I have,” he adds. “But I was almost too scared to, for example, to sweep a left-arm spinner first-ball, in case I miss one and I get an lbw, and all of a sudden we are two-down in the first session. But what that environment has taught me is that, if you practice something enough that it becomes a strength of yours, just go and do it, whether it’s first ball, fifth ball or 100th ball. It’s all about recognising opportunities in the game, and wherever that looks like, go and do it.”And if Bohannon was a beneficiary of that wisdom in Abu Dhabi, then Ben Stokes and Brendon McCullum are keen to ensure that the whole of the domestic game is set up to embrace those same possibilities. Last week, the pair hosted a Zoom conference with county head coaches and directors of cricket to pass down their Bazball blueprint (as neither man is calling it, of course). It’s a development that Bohannon welcomes with open arms because, while his progress at Lancashire has been as smooth and settled as any England hopeful could wish for, the relentless nature of the English domestic season, with fewer opportunities for middle practice, makes it harder for aspiring players to adapt their training to meet such fast-changing trends at international level.Bohannon believes a red-ball focus can still pay dividends amid the proliferation of white-ball tournaments•Getty Images”I know I can fit into that environment, but being brutally honest, the one thing I have struggled with is understanding what my [training] role looks like at Lancashire. If you want to play four-day cricket, you have to bat long periods of time, but the way that we train is very different to the way that the England team is training right now. That is definitely feeding down into county cricket. It’s really exciting to see everything as an opportunity, rather than worrying ‘what happens if I do this or do that’, which is the way that I used to think before.”A change of mindset, however, is not the same thing as a change of technique – a point that Bohannon believes he recognises as well as anyone, having worked extensively in recent seasons with Lancashire’s psychologist, Lee Richardson, as well as the club’s assistant coach, Carl Crowe, to give a focus to the fiery nature that had sometimes been his undoing in the early years of his career.”[Crowe’s] been awesome for me,” Bohannon says. “He gets what sort of person I am, and how I think, and turns everything that I say to him in a positive way, and makes me look at stuff a little different.”Take Rahul Dravid,” he adds. “He goes down as a legend of the game, but in almost two-thirds of his Test innings, even he failed to get a fifty or a hundred [187 out of 286]. At the end of the day, you’re batting with a piece of wood that’s four or five inches wide, and the ball only needs to nip or swing a couple extra millimetres from where your eyes see it, and it’s game over.”If bowlers bowl one bad ball, however, they get five other opportunities to get you out. Cricket’s an extremely hard game, so the one thing I’ve learned over the last two seasons is not to be too harsh on myself, because if I take the enjoyment away, that’s obviously not where I want to be.”Despite his delight at being involved in another Lions squad, there is just the sense this time out, however, that the focus for England hopefuls has shifted. More than 70 county cricketers are in action in various T20 leagues around the world this winter, and to judge by McCullum’s willingness to conflate white-ball prowess and Test potential, a winter spent at the SA20 or ILT20 could have been every bit as advantageous in the fight for future recognition.Bohannon, however, still believes that his red-ball focus is the right approach for him to take in the short term.”A lot of people are away with the franchise stuff, and it’s excellent, because they’re outside playing cricket, rather than just stuck in the indoor school, facing a flicker or some spin on a mat. But the way I’m looking at it, it’s an excellent opportunity for me to start the season really well and hopefully show people on the international stage what I can do.Bohannon made a half-century for England Lions on the tour of Australia•Getty Images”For me, the pinnacle is still Test cricket. I hope my white-ball game can kick on in the next couple of years, because people are getting paid a hell of a lot of money to play in these competitions, and everyone wants that in their life.”But I look at someone like Joe Root. His sole focus for a period of time has been on Test cricket, and now he’s looking to extend his white-ball cricket as he moves towards the end of his career, I guess. So that’s the way that I hopefully see my own career going. I want to play as much Test cricket as possible. And while I’m doing that, obviously develop my white-ball game so that hopefully I can be part of these competitions in the long run.”And therein lies the beauty of the new attitude that Stokes and McCullum have inculcated in the Test team. Bohannon is confident that, under the new management, those two ambitions do not need to be in opposition to one another.”I don’t feel like I have to change my game in any way,” he says. “Sometimes I think people are reading into the management a little bit different. It’s not just about going out there and smacking it every single ball. It’s about picking balls, picking bowlers, almost like you would do in T20, when certain people have better match-ups.”You have to recognise periods of the game where you’ve got to soak it up, or when you’ve still got five wickets left and the challenge is to get a certain amount in a session to make sure that we bowl for a period of time. So I don’t think it’s about changing the game, it’s just about working on that mindset and when, hopefully, I get into that set-up, it becomes a second nature.”Related

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For the time being, it’s back to the shadow set-up for Bohannon, as part of a 16-man red-ball squad that is set to play a three-day warm-up in Colombo on January 25 before two four-day Tests against Sri Lanka A in Galle. And while the competitive element of his past two trips has been lacking, first due to the terrible weather that cramped the squad’s opportunities in Queensland, then by the Test team’s decision to cancel the final day of their warm-up match in Abu Dhabi in favour of middle practice, Bohannon is adamant that his experiences have been invaluable.”The trips I’ve been on have been awesome,” he says. “In Australia we’d have liked better weather, but in Dubai and Abu Dhabi, everything was based on scenario practice. If you weren’t on the centre wickets or fielding, you were in the nets, and if you weren’t in the nets you were running, gymming, or whatever. The days seemed to go really fast.”It’s always a pleasure to get picked and it’s obviously really exciting, but I wouldn’t say I feel comfortable within the set-up. Because I don’t want to be comfortable. I just want to give it my best, and push my ambitions to fulfil my dream.”

Finisher Shahrukh embraces T20 attitude as he repays Punjab Kings' faith

He does not have a remarkable individual record in the role and will want to take this performance as a launching pad for something special

Sidharth Monga16-Apr-20233:38

Bishop: Great to see Indian players like Shahrukh finish matches

During the innings break, M Shahrukh Khan was interviewed by the official broadcaster. He ended the interview by rubbing his hand on the grass and showing the camera “quite a bit” of dew, which had made batting easier as the game progressed. He expected a straightforward chase after the Punjab Kings bowlers – thanks in no small measure to his two-take catches at the boundary – had restricted hosts Lucknow Super Giants to 159.The ground staff must have run the rope and undertaken other dew treatments during that break, which resulted in the pitch retaining some of the difficulty at the start of the chase. Almost an hour and a half later, Shahrukh walked in with 38 runs still required in 4.1 overs and four wickets in hand.Related

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Ravi Bishnoi, for some reason underutilised by Super Giants behind the two fingerspinners Krishnappa Gowtham and Krunal Pandya, was using the bigger leg-side boundary beautifully with his natural turn in to the right-hand batters.Shahrukh does not make sense if you look at traditional metrics. He has never scored a fifty in T20 cricket. Yet this was his 24th IPL match in two seasons and a bit. He has played 45 other matches. He averages 19.02 and strikes at 130.87. His average innings is a 14-ball 19. Yet he gets picked by his state side and his IPL side regularly as a specialist batter.That is hard data. Visual data of Shahrukh suggests a batter who bats lower down the order, doesn’t get many balls to face and tends to go for it from ball one. Yet, if that doesn’t translate into cold numbers, it points towards execution inefficiency.Ball one on the night for him was from Mark Wood, who at that point had figures of 2.5-0-16-1. He had time to visualise it because the previous wicket had brought on a time-out. Shahrukh’s response was just a natural reaction to the ball. It was in the slot, it deserved to be hit, and he hit it over long-on for six. It is credit to him, and the team management, that Shahrukh had no encumbrance that might come with an unremarkable individual record.Shahrukh Khan’s 10-ball 23 sealed the win for Punjab Kings•BCCIShahrukh told the same commentators later that all he wanted was to be blank and react to the ball, which is what he trains for. “I just wanted to keep my mindset really simple,” Shahrukh said. “I just wanted to react to the ball. I think my practice is paying off. I am reacting properly at practice to each and every ball I play. That’s the reason it’s paying off here.”Shahrukh said his starting point is to hit straight, and if the ball is not there, still try to hit it but adjust accordingly. “[That’s because] I am powerful,” he said. “If I go too cheeky, I don’t think it will work for me. So, I just have one thing on my mind. I look to play straight. If anything is here and there, I try and adjust. It’s good that it’s paying off, though.”To his credit, Bishnoi – bowling the last over because he was not introduced until the 15th over – bowled such a length that Shahrukh could neither hit him down the ground nor go inside-out for five of the six balls he bowled to Shahrukh. It was to what would be the last ball of the match Shahrukh managed to go to wide long-off, the shorter side.Shahrukh’s 23 off 10 drew praise from Player of the Match, Sikandar Raza, who got frustrated with Bishnoi’s bowling and ended up holing out. “When I got out, there were a few demons in my head,” Raza said. “Credit to Shahrukh for the way he finished the game. It would have been nice to get a fifty but had we not won, I don’t think I would have felt this good. Much, much credit goes to Shahrukh for finishing the game the way he did.”It will be a moment of relief for Shahrukh that he has managed to carry his side through to a win. He has won only one Player-of-the-Match award. For an IPL team to be backing him so, Shahrukh surely has the skill and the attitude for this format? He will want to take this performance as a launching pad for something special because this format and IPL teams aren’t really known for patience.

Nat Sciver-Brunt lives up to her billing on night of eerie familiarity

Wearing blue and facing a side in yellow led by an Australia legend, the England allrounder was in her element

Vishal Dikshit25-Mar-2023Nat Sciver-Brunt has done it plenty of times before. Donning the blues, against a side in yellow, in a crunch game, with the bat especially. And against several other teams too.Just last year, she started the ODI World Cup with an unbeaten 109 off 85 against arch-rivals Australia that took England from 177 for 5 to the brink of their target of 311. A month later, England were chasing a massive 357 in the final – yep, against Australia again – and Sciver-Brunt stood tall amid the wreckage with an unbeaten 148. No other England batter got to 30.Related

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When she returned from a three-month mental-health break later in the year, she was Player of the Series in the ODIs against West Indies, the second-highest scorer in the T20 World Cup last month with 216 runs at a strike rate of 141.17, and struck two scintillating knocks – a rescue act after England were 29 for 3 against India that ultimately set up an 11-run win, and a 29-ball fifty in a record-breaking win over Pakistan.The WPL eliminator on Friday evening at the DY Patil Stadium was a knockout game for two teams but it seemed like just another evening for Sciver-Brunt. She was wearing blue against a UP Warriorz side in yellow led by Australia’s Alyssa Healy, and she hammered an unbeaten 72 off 38 balls – she reached her fifty off 26 balls – that gave Mumbai Indians a total of 182 that they wouldn’t have reached without her.Sciver-Brunt also owes one to her England team-mate Sophie Ecclestone, who put her down at mid-off when she was on 6, off the last ball of the powerplay. Sciver-Brunt thanked Ecclestone after the game, but she first made Warriorz pay for the missed chance.Sciver-Brunt’s batting style doesn’t get the kind of attention that those of Healy or Shafali Verma do because she doesn’t hit as many sixes or go aerial as often, but her near-effortless ability to pick gaps and find the boundary regularly deflates oppositions in a very similar manner.The field spread after Sciver-Brunt was dropped, but short third and short fine leg were in the circle, and she scooped Ecclestone fine on the leg side for four in the seventh over. Top-order wickets often bring the pace down – even in T20s – but not in Sciver-Brunt’s world. Her confidence and self-belief were such that she hit the pedal harder after Hayley Matthews holed out in the 10th over. Sciver-Brunt unleashed her A game when she saw Warriorz’s most inexperienced bowler, the teenager Parshavi Chopra, come on in the 12th over.Sciver-Brunt has also picked up 10 wickets this season•BCCIShe grabbed the initiative off the first ball of the over, pulling a marginally short ball between long-on and deep midwicket for her fourth four. Chopra was going to go fuller now, and probably toss it up too because that’s her strength, and predicting that, Sciver-Brunt danced down to the next ball and lofted the converted half-volley over long-off for six. That forced Chopra to go a little short again, and Sciver-Brunt quickly rocked deep in her crease and swatted the ball past short fine leg for four more. The 16-year-old Chopra’s 16-run over lifted Mumbai’s run rate from 7.45 to 8.16.Once she crossed 50 and Mumbai entered the death overs, Sciver-Brunt took on the experienced left-arm spinner Rajeshwari Gayakwad. With nifty footwork again, she skipped down for an elegant inside-out drive over the covers and followed up with a short-arm pull off the next ball, inevitably flatter and shorter.Sciver-Brunt later said she had “surprised myself with a couple of shots”. Healy, who has seen her collect runs in this fashion plenty of times from behind the stumps, was a spectator again.”She’s a class player and I think she’s the No. 1 allrounder in the world at the moment,” Healy said at her post-match press conference. “There’s no secret to why that is, she plays good cricket shots and she bowls and fields really well as well. Yeah, I’ve been at the other end of a couple of her knocks which has been great to watch.”She’s a classy-looking batter, she doesn’t ever try anything too outlandish, she just plays nice and straight, plays along the ground most of the time and gets the job done for her team, which is probably the most amazing aspect of her cricket, that she stands up for her team in those big moments.”Sciver-Brunt topped her innings off with a fairytale last-ball six off Deepti Sharma. Her innings put her on top of Mumbai’s run charts for the season, and she also has the best strike rate in the side (149.45) as well as 10 wickets – she’s more than lived up to her billing as the joint-second-most-expensive buy at the auction. And if this yellow-blue rivalry is going to become a thing in the future – like Australia vs England or Chennai Super Kings vs Mumbai Indians in the IPL – the WPL will always remember who wrote its first chapter.

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