Labuschagne gets his act together after testing Ashes tour

Australia’s No. 3 finds form at crucial juncture to move side a step closer to retaining the urn

Matt Roller22-Jul-20232:13

Labuschagne: For Australia it’s all about retaining the Ashes

Two balls into the 58th over of Australia’s third innings, Marnus Labuschagne made an unusual request. He was standing at the non-striker’s end and Stuart Broad had finally convinced umpire Nitin Menon that the old ball had gone out of shape. It no longer fit through the metal gauge, so Menon and Joel Wilson called for a box of alternatives and picked out a replacement.Before Menon threw the ball to Anderson, he granted Labuschagne’s request to study the ball himself in order to pick up clues as to how it would behave. “You could feel it straightaway… it was a harder ball, and the seam was a little bit bigger,” he later said. England’s fielders were bemused by what they saw as a characteristically eccentric demand, and Ben Stokes let him know as much.”They weren’t happy! They weren’t happy that I wanted to have a look at the ball,” Labuschagne said. “In this country, it’s pretty clear: if you look at the ball once you can tell straightaway what it’s going to do. I looked at the ball and was like, ‘Well, this is going to swing’ and I threw it back. They were obviously not very happy with that.Related

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“I said it to Ben out there. ‘Why do you want to look at the ball?’ he asked me. I said, ‘To see if it’s going to swing.’ Jimmy Anderson, first ball he bowled to me, big inswinger. It just helps you prepare. The ball before was reversing slightly. It’s just being meticulous. For me, it was pretty common sense: why would I not want to have a look at the ball?”It was a moment that highlighted Labuschagne’s painstaking attention to detail. He is notorious for his work ethic, and is the hardest trainer in an Australia side that also features Steven Smith; he has spent hours upon hours in the nets on this tour, using Andy Flower – who is working with the squad as a consultant – as a personal batting coach.This has not been a straightforward tour for Labuschagne. He made starts in both innings of the World Test Championship final, with 26 and 41, but then managed only 144 in his first six hits of this series. He reflected that his batting was “a bit of a rabble” at Edgbaston, but he has finally found his rhythm and form to deliver a fifty and a hundred when Australia needed him to step up.”In the first innings, I felt really confident in my decision-making, leaving the ball outside off, being able to make really good decisions when it comes straight,” he said. “I felt confident when they did go short that I could make really good decisions there. I felt it was all coming together and it was nice to get a bigger score today.”ESPNcricinfo LtdLabuschagne has been the only Australia batter to successfully negate Mark Wood across the last two Tests, a stark contrast to 18 months ago when he was dismissed by him three times in 61 balls. He was wrapped on the gloves on this abbreviated fourth day but has largely stayed in control despite Wood’s extra pace.”A lot of my stuff I [put down] to technique,” he said. “I feel like my game is in a really good space to be facing him, the technical changes I’ve made. It allows me to make really good decisions and get into positions to be able to either pull, duck, leave, sway. I think the key to batting is having as many options as you can for a delivery.”Shortly after the ball change, the umpires decided that it was too dark for England’s seamers to bowl, instead forcing them to bowl spin. Labuschagne seized on the opportunity, running down the pitch to launch Joe Root for back-to-back sixes over long-on.It was a calculated gamble, recognising the opportunity that Australia had to make a dent in the deficit and thereby force England to bat again if the rain holds off on Sunday. “Having two spinners coming on, it was an opportunity for us to put a little bit of pressure back on them,” he said.Marnus Labuschagne goes on the attack during his century•Getty ImagesLabuschagne eventually fell to Root, mistiming a cut shot having earlier outside-edged an arm ball past slip, but not before bringing up his second overseas century and his first in England. He was convinced he had not hit the ball and had to drag himself off after UltraEdge said otherwise, but his two innings have kept Australia in this game.”If we end up saving the match then it’ll be a pretty good moment but until then it’s sort of sitting on the edge,” he said. “It’s always a privilege to score a Test hundred and you have to recognise that, it is special. But currently, sitting here, it’s still a bit bittersweet with the circumstances of the game.”Labuschagne has not had the tour he wanted in England: he has been getting himself out to balls he should have put away, and shown little of his usual ruthlessness. But this week, he has made Australia’s highest and joint-second-highest scores of the match; if they escape with a draw, they will have him to thank for it.

India's road to the T20 World Cup is paved with tough questions and options

This is the format they are least strong in and it is because they haven’t adapted to its run-scoring needs as much as the best teams

Sidharth Monga07-Dec-2023If, as expected, Rohit Sharma joins Rahul Dravid as the leader of the Indian cricket team until the T20 World Cup in June, there will be an element of personal pursuit to it: a final attempt at a world title perhaps, both for captain and coach. They could have walked away with heads held high, even if not on the ultimate high, after winning 10 straight matches en route to the 2023 ODI World Cup final, but there must have been that temptation to try to complete the story once the offer was made.To be fair to Rohit and Dravid, this is not exactly an easy assignment, which is probably why they have been asked to continue in the first place. It points to a lack of planning from the decision-makers who had neither thought of a succession plan nor asked the current leaders if they wanted to continue until four days after the World Cup final.They had put everything in the ODI World Cup basket, then realised they had to start gearing up for a T20 World Cup. By the time they would have advertised for coaching candidates, interviewed them and then got someone on board, India wouldn’t have any matches left to try and build a combination. And this is not just any format, but the one India are least strong in.Surely Dravid and Rohit know what a risk this is to their legacy? India are not laggards but they are nowhere close to dominating the T20 format as they do Tests and ODIs. At full strength, they are the team to beat in ODIs as we saw in the World Cup. In Tests, it still looks like it will be a while before any side can threaten to take a home series off India while they themselves continue to be competitive wherever they tour. In T20Is, even at full strength, they are, well, on the top end of the mid card.There are a couple of structural issues with the composition of the XI. Despite being home to the biggest T20 league, despite being the biggest cricket country, India doesn’t produce enough allrounders to give them the kind of depth that allows them to play freely. One of their two allrounders is injury prone, the other one easy to contain when he bats against spin. They ideally need more batting power, which can leave the bowling thin, a risk they have not been prepared to take even though the quality of bowling has less incremental advantage in T20 cricket than in longer formats.The other issue is that in T20s, India is largely a country of top-order batters who set up to bat through an innings. There is not enough reward internally, not enough recognition externally, and thus not enough cushion to fail, for batters who hit out selflessly in the middle order.Accumulation is perhaps too ingrained in the DNA of batters, who have had to show volume and averages to get selected right from a young age through every level before they reach the IPL or international cricket. All of India’s previous three knockout defeats in T20 World Cups can be, and should be, put down to conservative batting, but what is remembered? The no-ball from R Ashwin and the dropped catch in the 2016 semi-final, and captain Rohit’s words that India should have bowled better in the 2022 semi-final.Can Rohit Sharma and Rahul Dravid take India to glory in the T20 World Cup?•AFP/Getty ImagesWith Rohit’s likely replacement as captain, Hardik Pandya, being injury-prone, the move to ask Rohit to continue seems to have as much to do with his captaincy as his newfound form in the ODI World Cup, which finally matched the exemplary intent he has been showing over the last two years. That, then, creates another issue: if India decide they need a more dynamic No. 3 than Virat Kohli, do they have it in them to make an unpopular decision, which becomes even more unpopular if they retain one and drop the other?Also what’s best for the Indian team is not always best for the IPL team, which is the only non-international T20 cricket for most of India’s players. Take Liam Livingstone’s example. He was too good to not be playing for England, but there was no room at the top of the order, where he used to bat. So Livingstone made sure he batted in the middle order in every league he played, bowled a lot of legspin and offspin in the nets, and he presented himself as a middle-order option capable of bowling an over or three when required.A similar scenario for India is KL Rahul, who is a good enough wicketkeeper-batter in the middle order as he showed for Royal Challengers Bangalore in 2016, but he can’t be asked to play an IPL season in that role for Lucknow Super Giants just because that will help India in the T20 World Cup. Forget co-ordinating priorities with an IPL team, there wasn’t enough continuity in India’s interim team management who took four matches to give Jitesh Sharma a go when it is clear that India need a wicketkeeper in the middle order and not in the top three, where Ishan Kishan kept batting.Hardly has an India player emerged and added as much to his game as Livingstone or New Zealand’s Glenn Phillips to make himself a better fit in a team combination. They are all near perfectionists at their core skill and obviously work hard on their fielding, but you rarely see a batter bowl in India’s nets, for example. Phillips spends close to an hour bowling alone before a New Zealand net session.It is still a testament to the strong basics of India’s cricketers that they are dominant in two formats and there or thereabouts in the third. Starting this Sunday in Durban, India have six internationals – three of them against Afghanistan – and possibly half the IPL to see what they want to see before they select their squad for the T20 World Cup.That the conditions for the tournament, to be played in the USA and West Indies, are largely an unknown will probably make it a slightly more level playing field for India. Also the beauty of T20 cricket is that form and momentum matter less in it than in other formats. You can outsmart or upset any team on a given day.Dravid and Rohit, or whoever the captain is, don’t really have time to bring about a culture change in India’s T20 cricket, but if they manage to make a bold move or two and manage to succeed, they could create a blueprint for the future.

Stats – India no more Under-19 World Cup chase-masters

All the numbers that mattered as Australia defeated India by 79 runs to claim a fourth crown

Sampath Bandarupalli11-Feb-20244 Under-19 World Cup titles for Australia. They lifted the trophy in 1988, 2002, 2010 and 2024. Only India have won more titles – five of them – including the previous edition in 2022.4 The 2024 edition is the fourth instance of India finishing as runners-up in an Under-19 World Cup tournament, which is also the most by a team.253 for 7 Australia’s total against India is the highest by any team in an Under-19 World Cup final. England’s 242 for 3 in a chase against New Zealand to win the 1998 edition was the previous highest.Related

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1998 Australia’s win on Sunday was their first against India in an Under-19 World Cup game since 1998. Since then India had won all six outings against Australia between 2000 and 2022, including twice in the finals – 2012 and 2018.2012 The last instance of Australia defeating India in a youth ODI. In ten meetings since then, India got the better of Australia each time before the 2024 Under-19 World Cup final.22 Consecutive youth ODI matches won by India while chasing before their 79-run defeat on Sunday. Their previous defeat in a youth ODI game while chasing came in August 2018 against Sri Lanka.1 Only once has a team defended their Under-19 World Cup crown: Pakistan in 2006, after winning the trophy in 2004. Australia (in 2012) and India (in 2020 and 2024) finished runners-up in pursuit of defending their title.Oliver Peake’s cameo helped Australia go past the 250-mark•ICC/Getty Images3 Previous instances of India conceding 250-plus totals at the Under-19 World Cup. Two of those came in wins when they were defending 300-plus totals. Their only loss was against South Africa in 2002 when they conceded 268 for 5 and went down by 112 runs.397 Runs scored by India’s Uday Saharan, the second-most for a captain in a single edition. Cameron White tops the list with 423 in eight matches which he recorded in Australia’s victorious 2002 campaign.46 India’s opening stand against USA in the group stage game turned out to be their highest of the tournament. The 2024 edition is now the first where India failed to stitch an opening partnership of at least 50.

Why Matheesha Pathirana in CSK yellow makes for a good omen

A bowler of Sinhalese origin playing for a Tamil Nadu franchise to raucous applause at the Chepauk: things are changing, for the better

Andrew Fidel Fernando22-Apr-2024At the cricketing heart of it, Matheesha Pathirana is Chennai Super Kings’ sweet revenge.No bowler had wrecked CSK batting orders on the scale Lasith Malinga managed. With 37 wickets against CSK in 23 games, he is by a distance their biggest destroyer.But, oh, what’s that? There’s a young slinger that CSK have had eyes on first? Someone who has an even lower arm action than Malinga and more explosive pace? Okay, less control, less swing, not nearly as much general mastery… but still, CSK’s own ? It sounds almost too good to be true, right?Snap him up. Get him in as a net bowler. Have your legendary captain slap eyes on him. Promote him to the main team. Follow him as he becomes one of the best death bowlers in the league. Then on 14 April 2024, watch him rip Mumbai Indians to shreds, taking 4 for 28, while Malinga, in Mumbai Indians colours, watches on.Related

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In a more perfect world, Pathirana’s cricketing rise, and the CSK vs Mumbai Indians vengeance arc, would be the only stories. But this is a world in which a 27-year-long civil war was fought in Sri Lanka, where for most of Sri Lanka’s and India’s post-Independence decades, the governments of Tamil Nadu and the Sinhalese-led government of Sri Lanka have been vehemently opposed. A world in which, only 11 years ago, the IPL’s governing council ruled no Sri Lankan players could play in Chennai for any IPL team over security concerns, such was the ferocity of political opposition.Against that history, Pathirana’s rise at CSK, and to a lesser extent that of Maheesh Theekshana, has been almost startlingly smooth. Pathirana showed promise at the end of the 2022 season, when Theekshana was more useful to the franchise. But then, with the onset of the Impact Player rule in 2023, Pathirana has become a go-to death bowler on account of his ultra-specialised skill set, MS Dhoni prodding him forward like a bird its fledgling chick. Pathirana has not merely been accepted, he has been embraced by CSK’s yellow army, and wildly cheered for at Chepauk.It is not certain exactly what political shifts have enabled this, but deductions may be made. Sri Lanka’s colossal protests of 2022, which culminated in the ouster of President Gotabaya Rajapaksa, are significant in the timeline. The Rajapaksas were understood regionally to be champions of Sinhalese-Buddhist nationalism, and had also overseen the vicious conclusion to the war, which substantially deepened an already profound divide with Tamil Nadu. But that family having been so chastened by a movement produced largely by the southern (mostly Sinhalese) population likely cast Sri Lankan southerners in a mellower light in Tamil Nadu.Around this time, Sinhalese animosity towards Tamil Nadu began to abate too. Through the worst of those crisis months of 2022, when the island was cripplingly short of fuel, power, medicines and food, the government of Tamil Nadu came through with humanitarian aid worth around 3.4 billion Sri Lankan rupees.

It is no surprise that the Chepauk fans who first bellowed for Pathirana are people roughly his age – Gen Z and young millennials, who tend to pack out the C, D and E stands. If you can make it there, Chepauk veterans say, you’re the rubber-stamped next big thing

Where previous decades had been characterised by a vortex of escalating tensions, here was a mutual softening, and in Sri Lanka at least, long-overdue introspection. It was in that year that Theekshana, then Pathirana, made their debuts for CSK, though there were no home games for the side in 2022.Additionally, there is the passage of time. Theekshana was ten when the war ended. Pathirana was seven. While injustices persist in Sri Lanka, and the kind of accountability Tamil Nadu has called for remains barely even a promise, there is also the simmering sense that these many years on, people need to move on.It is no surprise that the Chepauk fans who first bellowed for Pathirana are people roughly his age – Gen Z and young millennials, who tend to pack out the C, D and E stands. If you can make it there, Chepauk veterans say, you’re the rubber-stamped next big thing. Enmity, it turns out, does not have to be passed down through the generations.It’s worth clocking too that part of Pathirana’s rise among the CSK faithful is down to Dhoni’s vocal support of the bowler. When Dhoni struck that 91 not out and sealed one of Sri Lanka’s most painful cricketing memories with a six at the Wankhede, who could have guessed what he’d be capable of in the future? Since then, he has graduated from to in the Tamil imagination. And now he is – however unwittingily – playing a role in a Tamil-Sinhalese connect.Hurtbringer: for years, as Mumbai Indians’ bowling spearhead, Lasith Malinga was a thorn in Chennai Super Kings’ side•BCCIThere is also beautiful history here. Pathirana is far from the first Sri Lankan to feel the love at Chepauk, and in fact, Muthiah Muralidaran, in CSK’s early years, wasn’t either. In the pre-civil war decades, the Tamil Nadu state side was Ceylon’s (as Sri Lanka was then known) biggest regular opponent. In 1947, M Sathasivam – a Ceylonese Tamil, if you’re keeping track – hit a 215 against them that glittered by all accounts with delectable late cuts, fine glances, and spectacular drives. Right into the 21st century, old-timers who watched that innings would swear it was the greatest ever witnessed at Chepauk.There is no more legendary Sri Lankan cricketer of the pre-Test era than Sathasivam, and Chepauk was likely the scene of his crowning triumph. Whether or not Pathirana and Theekshana are aware, this too is a story to which they belong. Where their boots now tread, Sathasivam’s went first.These are victories worth celebrating, because despite what nationalists of any stripe would have you believe, hatred is not intractable. Neither, then, is cohesion. If there are many in the world intent on fanning flames, it is vital that when green shoots emerge from the earth, they are seen as worth protecting too.Right now, one of the brightest fast-bowling prospects Sri Lanka has produced, quite possibly the island’s fastest ever bowler, a man of Sinhalese origin, is being invested in and developed by a franchise side in Tamil Nadu. Across Sri Lanka, families turn their televisions on in the evenings and hear entire stands in a Chennai stadium scream “PA-THI-RA-NA”.You’d be foolish to think a few stump-splaying yorkers and stadium chants can heal grievances collected over decades. But you’d be naïve to think they mean nothing.

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ESPNcricinfo staff03-Jul-2024Sophie Ecclestone, England’s indomitable left-arm spinner, has been at the top of her game for years, but tells Valkerie Baynes and Firdose Moonda that there’s plenty left to achieve.

The European Cricket Network is massive. What do you mean you haven't heard of it?

Meet the competition that is taking cricket to the continent in a big way

Cameron Ponsonby09-Aug-2024″Is it true,” I ask Dan Weston, founder of the European Cricket Network, “that for your showpiece event in Malaga this year, you had five million people watching?””Oh,” replies Weston, “much bigger than that. Maybe 75 million.”The European Cricket Network is everywhere. Across 2023 it held events on 330 days of the year with 1700 amateur matches in 16 countries. ECN games are broadcast in every continent in the world on platforms such as Fox Sports, FanCode and Willow TV. Staggeringly, they claim that more than half of the cricket shown on TV across the globe is from ECN.Related

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“Football never ends,” explains Weston. “And I want to live in a world where cricket never ends too.”The goal is simple, if astronomically ambitious. To make cricket in continental Europe professional.”I want to be one of the pioneers, along with a bunch of us, that say, well let’s invest and do this now,” Weston says. “In the hope that French, Italian, Spanish and German cricketers are professional in the next ten to 20 years. So it’s a long-term, very long-term project.”In May of this year, for the first time, the ECN landed in England. And I played.

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The ECN was founded in 2019 but its roots go back another couple of years, when Weston, originally from Australia, who moved to Germany as a 23-year-old, walked off the pitch after playing for the German national team.A Denmark vs Sweden game in the European Cricket Championship in Cartama, Spain, last year•Diana Oros/European Cricket Network”We won against Sweden one night and there was a [player’s] brother there, and he did a Facebook Live, filming us walk off the field,” Weston told ABC News in 2022. “I thought, ‘Oh, that’s really interesting.’ He got a few thousand views of that, and I thought, ‘Who is watching the German cricket team walk off the field?”’The next time Germany played, Weston recorded it and German Cricket TV, a Facebook page posting clips from club cricket and from the national team, was born. Hundreds of thousands of views arrived in the first week as expats across the country realised that the game of their original homelands was also available in their new home. In the space of the next 18 months, according to Weston, Germany’s 60 cricket clubs went from having roughly 90 teams between them to 370.The next leap came when, thanks to the success of German Cricket TV, Weston was asked to help broadcast an ice cricket event held in St Moritz. There he met Roger Feiner, the former head of broadcasting for FIFA, who was looking for a new adventure.”I met a very inspiring and convincing person in Daniel,” Feiner, now CEO of the European Cricket Network, says. The potential for cricket in Europe was, in Feiner’s opinion, clear, and so he roped in two friends, Thomas Klooz and Frank Leenders, both of whom had helped found the UEFA Champions League, and the four haven’t looked back since.

The European Cricket Network’s four series

  • The European Cricket League, in effect designed to be a Champions League-style event, a showpiece in which club teams from across the continent qualify, or are invited, to participate once a year.

  • European Cricket Internationals, where national teams play each other on weekends throughout the year.

  • The European Cricket Championship, the “Euros of cricket”, sees national teams come together to play in a tournament.

  • The European Cricket Series, a set of one-off club tournaments held across the continent, involving sides local to whichever area the event is being held in. The events normally last one or two weeks and are the bedrock of ECN. Of the 1700 matches ECN hosts a year, over 1000 are in the ECS.

While a private enterprise, the ECN fully operates under the ICC and each of their events is sanctioned by the body. “It was just so glaringly obvious to me that to make this work and to make the whole thing actually function well, you have to do everything under the ICC, and you have everything under the host federation,” Weston says.To date, the ECN has paid over €2m in hosting fees to European cricket federations. The ECB will have received a fee for the tournament in England.When nations receive non-ICC funding, they go higher in the official ICC good books and then become eligible for even more ICC funding. “All boats should rise,” Weston says.It is both new age and old at once. New in the use of streaming and its broadcasting of amateur cricket. But old in that it predominantly relies on club cricket as the vehicle of growth, and it operates alongside the existing federations.”I’m a big believer in the club system,” says Weston. “Across Europe, it’s clubs that get access to venues. We want to grow the game in Europe as fast as we can. And that doesn’t happen overnight or by flying mercenaries to play franchise cricket in Spain.”

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The ECN wasn’t meant to come to England. The calendar is planned a year in advance, so Wimbledon CC’s request to host an event after they had participated in the showpiece tournament in Malaga earlier this year (for which they qualified by winning England’s National T20 club competition) was politely turned down. But when Corfu pulled out as a venue and participant because teams couldn’t be raised during the high season of tourism, Wimbledon stepped in.Dan Weston, the guiding force behind the ECN, at the Weston Shield tournament, named after him; the first edition was played in Santarem, Portugal, in April this year•Diana Oros/European Cricket NetworkWeston is courteous if not enthusiastic about what the tournament landing in England means. “It’s great,” he says. But the ECN is about growing cricket across the continent, so the one nation where it is already widely played is a nice-to-have rather than a must-have. “It’s validation that we’re not cowboys,” he says, “but by the same token, we’re [already] working with 35 different countries around Europe.”Corfu’s loss was Raynes Park Sports Ground’s gain. And on a chilly and grey May morning, at 9.45 on the dot, Spencer, my team from south-west London, and Tunbridge Wells CCs walked out to play the first ever European Cricket League match in England.Played in T10 format, matches take roughly an hour and a half each to complete, with five games played in a day. Five clubs – Wimbledon, Hornchurch and Twickenham in addition to the two above – played on the first four days, with the top three qualifying for finals on the Friday, when the NCCA (National Counties Cricket Association, formerly the Minor Counties) side would arrive and compete in the finals.I was available only for the first day, before a flight to Dallas for the T20 World Cup took precedence. Spencer would go on to finish as runners-up. Given we lost both matches I played in on day one, and the third was rained off, Spencer’s upturn in fortunes following my departure is purely coincidental and will not be investigated in this article.First and foremost, playing in the ECN is fun. Weston talks of the power of broadcasting and social media. He says that part of the allure is a kid looking at the TV and seeing their dad having a game, and for that he’s a hero. It doesn’t matter if it’s Kylian Mbappe or a father in their 40s, you want to be what you can see, and ECN’s commitment to broadcasting is part of their dream to inspire a new generation of cricketers on the continent.Drops of golden sun: a European Cricket Series game in Seebarn, Austria, in the spring of 2023•Diana Oros/European Cricket NetworkThe novelty of the event makes for dopamine rushes around every corner. You arrive at the ground and there are beer tents and chairs out for spectators. Realistically, there were never more than a few dozen at any one time. Hornchurch CC brought a strong following but for the most part the weather didn’t play ball.Camera gantries are set up on either side of the ground, and a commentators’ tent. In all, there are five cameras. A manned one at each end to track play, two that are fixed square of the wicket for replays and alternative angles, and a fifth that captures miscellaneous footage. It is a professional operation.Upon arrival in the Player and Match Officials Areas, you hand in your phone and any electronic device that can be used for communication. This event is being broadcast around the world and will be bet on, a lot. For all the fun and growth of the game that European Cricket is responsible for, the scale of betting and the potential for corruption that accompanies every event is a heavy asterisk. We’ve been warned, officially and otherwise, that people may contact us. And they do.But for now, it’s about preparing for game No. 1. As it is being broadcast and bet on, everyone must have a unique squad number. And my 23 (chosen because of my childhood front door, as opposed to any affiliation with Michael Jordan) won’t do because a friend also has 23. And since he arrived at the ground before I did, it’s deemed he gets to keep his and I have to change. Fortunately, with the aid of some gaffer tape, determination and imagination, my 23 is turned into a 28 and we’re away.At an ECS game in Wimbledon earlier this year, tape is cunningly used to make the number on the back of the author’s shirt suitable•Diana Oros/European Cricket NetworkThe organisation and efficiency of the event is remarkable. Captains film the toss 75 minutes before the start of play; you’re counted down, so you know when to take the field; at the loss of a wicket, the next batter has 90 seconds to be ready to face, and the organisers will let them know in no uncertain terms if they’re being too slow. Headshots, both individual and team snaps, are taken for your online profile. Umpires, hired from the local leagues, have talkback with the production tent; they keep the match on schedule and inform the scorers of bowling changes and confirm catch-takers. There is no DRS but there are TV reviews for run-outs, stumpings and boundary checks. The umpires, just like us, are enjoying the novelty of it all. At one point we have a run-out appeal sent upstairs. The umpire says that he thinks it was not out, and when proven correct, allows himself a fist pump.Batting first, we make 126 in our ten overs and have no idea if it’s a good score. It is not. Tunbridge Wells chase it in 8.4 overs without losing a wicket. My sole over goes for 15; my round-the-wicket offspin is cut and reverse-swept for two fours and a six.There has been no healthier checking of the male club cricketing ego than the increase in matches being streamed. Watching myself bowl in HD for the first time confirmed something I had long suspected but had never had proof of until now. That I am terrible.The standard on show is, in fact, varied. The ECN is best known for viral clips of terrible cricket that traffic in moments of comedy, but often the standard of play is more than competent and sometimes very strong. Our XI on Monday is made up of a core of first XI players, along with a batch of guys from the seconds and thirds. Our overseas professional is playing, so too is Wimbledon’s, who ropes in his brother, meaning, when we play each other there are three current first-class cricketers on the pitch. One of Tunbridge Wells’ openers was playing second XI county cricket last year, and the NCCA team is made up exclusively of current minor county players. So there are plenty of moments when genuinely good cricket is being played, but there are also plenty of moments when it’s not.A women’s T20I in Krefeld, Germany in 2021, where the hosts faced off against France. Though nearly all ECB games are T10s, ECN also broadcasts a few lower-level T20Is•Andrew Schou/European Cricket Network”I reckon someone’s going to hit six sixes this week,” said one of our players before a ball of the competition had been bowled. And it turned out to be him.Admittedly the boundaries in the ECN are tiny, measuring 50 metres from the centre of the pitch all the way around. This results in some comically mistimed sixes, but it’s a great leveller that allows weaker players to keep up the scoring rate, which, as a result, keeps matches closer.Even over the course of the day, let alone of the week, the idea that it is merely a hit and giggle, where anyone could win, is wide of the mark. Sure, there’s increased variance and a one-off lottery aspect once a team is in the finals, but the best team is never going to finish bottom of the group stage and the worst team is never going to win it.As a format, it wouldn’t satisfy you if you played just one game. But across a day, or in a multi-day festival format such as this, it’s great. Every over you bowl is important and has a tangible impact on the match – a feeling that is rare across a season of Saturdays but a common occurrence in T10. In our final match of day one, with Twickenham needing 24 off 18 balls to win, but eight wickets down, my over starts with a single and a dot. Twenty-three needed off 16.”Ponsonby, hasn’t he bowled well at the right times?” says commentator No. 1.”Yep, Cameron’s bowled well,” agrees commentator No. 2. “He’s been making the most of that angle across.”Six.What we do in the shadows: an ECS game in Zagreb, Croatia, in 2022•Diana Oros/European Cricket NetworkSeventeen required off 15. And we’d go on to lose. Of the many unique aspects to participating in the European Cricket Series, the ability to relive trauma should be packaged as one of the key selling points of the fact that it is televised. I finish the day with figures of 3-0-36-1.

****

Also unique, for an amateur player, is the presence of gambling. Upon walking off after the first match of the day and being reunited with my phone, I opened it to a new Instagram follower and a DM request: “Hello sir, I want to discuss something with you. Can you message back.”Team-mates received other, less discreet, messages. “Hello buddy, are you interested in vip fixed. It’s 100% fixed match. No chance to lose,” said one.”Hello brother, I need some clue about Spencer cricket club, can you help me?” said another.”The three main challenges for European cricket,” explains the head of anti-corruption at ECN, who did not want to be named, “are not too dissimilar to cricket across the world. Regulated betting markets, unregulated betting markets, and fantasy cricket.”Regulated and unregulated markets present similar issues. For one, the presence of “spotters” at grounds. Bookmakers, of the legal or illegal variety, will send someone to an event to report back in real time what is happening so they can set their prices accordingly. On the first day at Raynes Park, three spotters were kicked out. Often easily identifiable, a spotter will usually be talking continuously into a phone or into their jacket, where a communication device is being kept out of sight. Spotters are present all over sport. Only last year, at the women’s ODI between England and Australia in Bristol, two spotters were kicked out.A game in the Weston Shield in Portugal in April 2024•Diana Oros/European Cricket NetworkFantasy cricket presents a different problem. For instance, you pick a fantasy team for the competition in the UK, choosing me as a star allrounder who is expected to open the batting and bowling. In theory you’re getting loads of points as I’m playing loads of cricket. But if I actually bat at six and don’t bowl, you’re not getting any value for your purchase, while the person I tipped off that I’m not playing is quids in, as they didn’t pick me.Dealing with corruption is not new for the ECN. In 2020 a team was suspended for suspicious behaviour, and last September three players were charged with corruption offences. The ECN applies the exact same anti-corruption code as the ICC.”This is a strange moment where the lower level of cricket is being done in a huge promotional way that does attract some bad actors,” Weston explains. “But if you look at what we’re doing internally and externally, I think we’re probably managing our product better than anyone else on earth, apart from the ICC, when it comes to protecting the game.”On the one hand, it is inevitable. There are 1700 matches being played a year and corruption is present in all forms of cricket. But on the other, the league’s nature creates a fertile environment for people to make approaches and for players to be tempted to accept them.Wandsworth’s finest: players from London’s Spencer Cricket Club at an ECS game in the Wimbledon tournament from earlier this summer•Diana Oros/European Cricket NetworkUnder normal circumstances, you have professional players playing in a professional environment, or amateur players playing in an amateur environment. But European cricket is amateur players operating in a professional environment. There are many eyeballs on the matches and therefore there is money. Add in that on the continent, many of the players are immigrants or refugees of South-Asian descent who moved due to difficult socio-economic circumstances, and you have an uncomfortable combination of lots of money being on the line and a vulnerable player base where an easy buck for bowling a wide, or giving a bit of information, seems a victimless crime and an attractive option.”The education of players is getting better,” says the head of anti-corruption. “But we still see incidents of corruption. I take no pleasure in suspending or banning a player who’s been exploited. Because they’ve got a problem, so let’s help fix it. But I have no sympathy for the ones who are greedy.””In the early days it was really gut-wrenching,” Weston says. “Because I never thought that going into this was going to create betting markets and bookmakers. So for a long time I tried to fight it and stop it – and we still do but with higher-qualified methods.”It was like, come on, we’re trying to grow the game in this country and there’s all this betting going on. So what we do is, like any other sports federation, we sell our data to an official partner. Because if you don’t make it official, then it’s unofficial and going to happen anyway. We also put in place participant education and cutting-edge integrity systems both at the venue and digitally away from the venue.” Anti-corruption videos that the ICC uses are sent to participants beforehand. Ahead of the more high-profile events, meetings with players are held and a presentation given.When I tell the ECN’s anti-corruption head about my Instagram message, something I did the next day when interviewing him, he gently reminds me that technically, by not reporting it at the time, I’m in breach of the ICC’s anti-corruption code.Roll up, roll up: ECN claims more than half the cricket telecast on TV worldwide is their games•European Cricket NetworkHe welcomes the scrutiny. He previously worked in law enforcement and also for the ICC in anti-corruption.”I think the work that we do as our integrity unit is really good,” he says. “We go on the offensive, you know, going after players and after the fixes as well. But also the defensive side, as the prevention is better than the cure. I’d rather educate the players.”

****

Ultimately, and perhaps somewhat naïvely, I think that the European Cricket Network is fundamentally a force for good.Undoubtedly elements of the competition’s relationship with betting make my skin itch. Namely, the shape of their commercial partnerships with gambling and fantasy sports companies. Fantasy cricket is a source of corruption issues and an avenue for vulnerable players to be exploited. Yet as recently as last year, Dream11, India’s largest fantasy sports platform, was the title partner of the European Cricket Championship.However, my sympathy is at its strongest for ECN in that there is every chance they are the first responders to a problem that could soon impact recreational cricket as a whole. Club cricket across the world is increasingly being streamed by single-camera set-ups. Matches with single-camera streams, the ECN’s anti-corruption head says, used by 99.9% of club games that are recorded, are the most susceptible to manipulation: “If it’s live-streamed, people will be betting on it,” he says simply. So rather than scoff at the ECN as a dodgy league, their having to deal with amateur cricketers, who for the first time in history are being targeted by rogue agents, could turn out to be as much a case for education as for condemnation.Catch as catch can: a rough outfield is no problem for an enthusiastic fielder in a game in Brescia, Italy•Diana Oros/European Cricket NetworkOverall the ECN is harnessing the growth of the game in a way that no one else has and that is a good thing. It is easy to roll your eyes at the idea of making cricket professional in France in 20 years, but where’s the harm in trying? The world changes when people move. And in the present day people are moving by the millions. Great Britain took cricket around the Commonwealth. And now people from former Commonwealth nations are taking it elsewhere. The success of cricket in Europe rests on the oldest method of information transfer and the newest: migration and social media.”I might be in Bulgaria,” Weston concludes, “And I’m in a taxi or go to an Indian restaurant, and you mention cricket and you see their faces light up because they’ve never spoken to anyone about cricket in the ten years they have lived in Bulgaria.”And then you say, well there’s cricket in Bulgaria, and you can show them, and then because of the magic of social media, they end up joining a club or finding a team.”This is really a passion project that has gotten out of hand. Once I realised I would be living in Germany long term, I didn’t want to live in a region where there’s no cricket. Thanks to meeting great, passionate and committed people, we have been able to start promoting the game at scale in the past five years. And in the long term, the current group of European cricketers has a chance to grow the game for this and the next generation, and if we live in a world where cricket exists and it’s professional, then that’s a great legacy for us.”Like, yeah, those guys [who are betting on matches] do add to the pressures of growing cricket for good, but we care hugely about integrity and anti-corruption. But the majority of players who play on the ECN have had the best day of their cricket life. The good outweighs the bad. The positive stuff is actually so much stronger than the negative aspects of what we’re doing.”And on that I agree. European Cricket was great fun. I loved playing in it and I hope it succeeds. And if Corfu can’t host an event again next year, I look forward to heading down to Raynes Park next May to do it all over again.

Stats – Gardner's double, Mandhana's milestones, Sutherland's rearguard heroics

Australia have now recorded 33 ODI series sweeps, 21 ahead of second-placed England

Namooh Shah11-Dec-202433 – Whitewashes in women’s ODI bilateral series (of three or more matches) by Australia , which is the highest by any team. The next best is 12 for England.50 and 5 – Ashleigh Gardner’s 50 and 5 for 30 in the third ODI, played at WACA in Perth on Wednesday is only the fourth such instance in women’s ODIs. The others to achieve it are Heather Knight, Sune Luus and Amelia Kerr.91 – Innings taken by Smriti Mandhana to score nine ODI centuries, making her the third-fastest to reach the mark. She also has the most hundreds for India in the format, and is only behind Meg Lanning (15), Suzie Bates (13) and Tammy Beaumont (10) in the overall list.During her innings of 105 on Wednesday, Mandhana also became the youngest (28y, 146d) to complete 8000 international runs.4 – Number of ODI centuries for Mandhana in 2024 – the most in women’s ODIs in a calendar year.ESPNcricinfo Ltd1 – Annabel Sutherland became the first Australia batter to score a century in women’s ODIs from No. 5 or lower. Only eighth players have done it in the format overall.220 – Runs added by Australia’s batters after the fall of the fourth wicket, which is the second-highest in women’s ODIs. The 223 Australia scored against India in Mackay in 2021 is the highest.3 – Sutherland (110), Gardner (50) and Tahlia McGrath (56) hit half-centuries in the third ODI, which is the first instance of three batters scoring at least 50 runs from No. 5 or lower in a women’s ODI.4 – Arundhati Reddy’s 4 for 26 is the third-best by a visiting bowler in Australia against Australia. The top two are by Katrina Keenan (4 for 11) in 1996 and Helen Davies (4 for 23) in 1999.

'Everything comes from purposeful practice' – Aniket Verma on his six-hitting

In his first IPL season, he has hit more sixes than Head, Abhishek and Klaasen, quickly making the step up from the Madhya Pradesh League

Himanshu Agrawal and Nikhil Sharma22-Apr-20251:04

Aniket: My uncle had to borrow money to buy me a phone worth 7k

In a Sunrisers Hyderabad (SRH) team full of superstars like Travis Head, Abhishek Sharma and Heinrich Klaasen, Aniket Verma has emerged as the new star. The 23-year-old batter from Madhya Pradesh (14) has hit more sixes than Head (9), Abhishek (10) and Klaasen so far (10) in IPL 2025.Aniket seamlessly slotted into SRH’s power-packed batting line-up, hooking the second ball he faced this season, from Rajasthan Royals (RR) seamer Tushar Deshpande, for six.The match against RR was only his second T20, having bagged a duck on debut for Madhya Pradesh in the 2024-25 Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy. While Aniket didn’t have the benefit of domestic experience heading into the IPL, he had already lit up the Madhya Pradesh League with his six-hitting. He has now showcased those skills in the biggest T20 league in the world.Related

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“Everything comes from purposeful practice,” Aniket told ESPNcricinfo ahead of SRH’s game against Mumbai Indians on Wednesday. “That’s how I have developed everything. It all depends on your environment, and how you are doing things.”In an innings during the Madhya Pradesh League in 2024, he bashed 123 off just 41 balls at a strike rate of 300, including 13 sixes and eight fours. Overall, Aniket hit the most runs (273) and most sixes (25) in the tournament. It caught the attention of SRH, who called him for trials, where the big-hitter impressed his eventual employers.”These [state] leagues are benefitting us a lot,” Aniket said. “As a result, we realise what we need to do, and don’t feel a lot of pressure as well. Also, the seniors in any team have a massive role to play. They support you, back you and direct you about what is to be done, and you need to trust them and know that what they are asking you to do is indeed the right thing.”My team had started [the Madhya Pradesh League] with two losses. So no matter what, we wanted to win the third match. We got some momentum in that innings, and my senior Harsh Gawli backed me, saying ‘you just focus on picking the bowlers [to hit], and go after them’.”

“We were never strong financially. We shifted to Bhopal, where my uncle was based for his education. We moved over to stay with him, as we didn’t have a house of our own. It’s only last year that we bought a small house”Aniket Verma

After scoring seven off three balls against RR, Aniket smashed five sixes during a cameo of 36 from 13 deliveries against Lucknow Super Giants (LSG). All five of those sixes came against the spinners Ravi Bishnoi and Digvesh Rathi.The breakout performance, though, came in his next innings against Delhi Capitals (DC). He came out to bat when SRH were 25 for 3, which soon became 37 for 4. He counterattacked with 74 off 41 balls, including six sixes, to lift SRH to 163. All of his sixes came off spinners Vipraj Nigam, Axar Patel and Kuldeep Yadav.Aniket even tried to slog Kuldeep over midwicket immediately after lofting him for six over his head. But this time, he was caught on the boundary.”He has got great wrists,” Aniket said of Kuldeep. “I had to focus hard and watch it well while facing him in order to understand what he was trying to bowl. But I remember the six I hit off him: he went shopping for my wicket with the googly, but I hit him straight back!”No wonder, though, that Aniket’s aggressive approach against spin has stood out. So far in the tournament, 38 batters have faced at least 40 balls of spin. Among them, Aniket has cracked the second-most sixes (11), and has the second-highest strike rate (208.69).ESPNcricinfo LtdAniket was born in Jhansi in Uttar Pradesh. But it was in Bhopal in Madhya Pradesh that his cricketing journey began. The journey might not have been possible without the sacrifices his – paternal uncle – made so that a teenaged Aniket could pursue cricket, something he “loved playing right from the beginning”.”We were never strong financially,” Aniket said. “We shifted to Bhopal, where my uncle was already based for his education. We moved over to stay with him, as we didn’t have a house of our own. It’s only last year that we bought a small house of our own.”I remember he bought a [mobile] phone for me when I had to play an Under-15 match. At the time, his salary was Rs 2000 or 3000, and the phone cost Rs 7000. So, he borrowed money from two people, and bought that phone for me.”Aniket repaid his uncle’s faith by standing out in the Madhya Pradesh League last year, before taking the big leap with the IPL, where SRH acquired him for INR 30 lakh. He is looking to make the most of his time at SRH, picking the brains of batters like Kishan and Klaasen.”Whenever we have a chat, I always ask him what should I be doing in certain situations, and how I should pick a bowler. We discuss these things all the time,” Aniket said of his conversations with Kishan.Aniket Verma has emerged as a spin-hitter for Sunrisers Hyderabad•BCCIThus, Aniket readies himself by practicing on the field, and by interacting with his seniors off it. But remind Aniket of facing a world-class bowler like Jasprit Bumrah, and his boyish smile tells you he would have loved to score big runs off the quick. SRH played Mumbai at the Wankhede Stadium last week, and Aniket, who managed only two runs off two balls from Bumrah, quickly realised how big a challenge it was to put him away.”No doubt, at the time I was looking for an opportunity to score off him because my team needed to maximise our total at that stage,” he said about his experience of facing Bumrah. “He’s a very tough bowler [to face]. He bowled two deliveries at me, and both were yorkers. I couldn’t do anything off them!”Aniket idolises Klaasen and takes inspiration from his ability to swing his bat freely and launch the ball for six. But consider this: Aniket’s strike rate of 187.05 this season is higher than his team-mates Klaasen (159.09), Head (168.05) and Kishan (170.37).Aniket, though, isn’t getting carried away. His uncle has kept him humble and grounded by reminding him that he has just started and that he still has a long way to go. But with his power-hitting, who knows how quickly Aniket might further move up the ladder – like he already has from the Madhya Pradesh League to the IPL.

Lost in translation: How does the IPL overcome its many language barriers?

With multiple languages, accents and dialects in the mix, players, coaches and captains often have to find innovative ways to communicate

Matt Roller04-Apr-2025The start of any IPL season sees old friendships rekindled and new relationships formed – particularly in the first year after a mega auction. All ten franchises have undergone major transformations and each dressing room will have already seen interactions between players and staff who have never previously crossed paths, let alone spoken to one another.Those meetings are easier for some than others. For those who have been around the IPL for years and are fluent in several languages, fitting into a new environment is no issue. But for some, joining a team – or the league itself – for the first time may bring a sinking realisation that communicating over the following two months will be a major challenge.”I wouldn’t call it a language barrier; barrier isn’t the right word. It’s the beauty of this country,” says Piyush Chawla, the second-highest wicket-taker in IPL history. “There are so many different languages – and even in Hindi, there are so many different accents or dialects.” Chawla himself speaks Hindi and English, and can understand Punjabi and some Tamil.India does not have a single national language: Hindi, the most widely spoken, is considered one of two official languages of the country’s government alongside English, but there are 22 different “recognised languages” across the country. The IPL itself is beamed around the world in English, but the Indian broadcaster JioStar has feeds in 12 different languages, including the Bhojpuri and Haryanvi dialects.Related

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English is taught widely in Indian schools in metropolitan cities, but – inevitably, in a country of 1.4 billion people – cricketers’ ability to speak it fluently can vary wildly when they reach the IPL for the first time. Chawla, who grew up in Uttar Pradesh, was 19 when the league launched in 2008: he could understand English, but recalls: “I couldn’t speak naturally in it. What if I say the wrong thing?”The first dressing room he joined, Kings XI Punjab, featured a strong Australian contingent, including Brett Lee, Shaun Marsh, and head coach Tom Moody. “English wasn’t the problem. The accent was the problem,” Chawla says, laughing. He relied on team-mates – like captain Yuvraj Singh – to act as translators: “I used to ask Yuvi all the time: ‘What did he just say?'”David Warner once joked that he needed to use Google Translate to communicate with Mustafizur Rahman, the only Bangladeshi at Sunrisers Hyderabad•BCCIMoody arrived in India knowing that language could be an issue, after two years as Sri Lanka coach. “I would talk to players one-on-one about their development and tactical messages,” he recalls. “Three months in, Mahela Jayawardene came up to me and said, ‘Coach, the guys are really enjoying it. But Mali [Lasith Malinga] can’t understand a word you’re saying!'”In many cases, multilingual players and support staff find themselves acting as translators. “Whenever new domestic players come into the IPL, you have to be aware of it,” says Mike Hesson, who spent five years working at Kings XI Punjab and Royal Challengers Bengaluru after coaching his native New Zealand. “You might need to deliver a message across a number of different mediums.”You’re conscious of speaking slowly around players where English isn’t their first language. You might bring another coach along to a one-on-two meeting, just to reaffirm that the player understands the message you’re delivering – especially for the newcomers to a squad. It’s up to us as coaches to make sure that players can express themselves to us.”Later in his IPL career, when he had become a fluent English speaker, Chawla helped mentor a young Rinku Singh when he joined Kolkata Knight Riders: “We had Jacques Kallis and Simon Katich as coaches. Rinku would ask me to translate. [When that happens] you feel good on the inside. My job at that time was not only on the field, but to guide him off it: he is like a younger brother.”It is not only domestic players who struggle to communicate with English-speaking coaches. In 2016, Bangladeshi fast bowler Mustafizur Rahman joined Moody’s Sunrisers Hyderabad and found that only one other player in the squad – the young batter Ricky Bhui – spoke his mother tongue of Bengali. “We had a real challenge there in the early stages,” Moody recalled.ESPNcricinfo LtdDavid Warner, Sunrisers’ captain, would converse with Mustafizur primarily using body language, and once described pointing to his head at mid-off in an attempt to tell his young fast bowler to use his head. Mustafizur appeared to take it on board, but then ran in and bowled a bouncer: he had interpreted the message to mean he should aim at the head.”That’s where you have to be careful,” Moody says. “You might think you are getting a message across, but the player you’re talking to might be taking something completely different away with them. But it is part of the charm of the IPL: it tests your ability to communicate. It’s not always as easy as speaking to a fellow countryman that totally gets your sense of humour or sarcasm.”Mustafizur overcame the challenge, taking 17 wickets as Sunrisers won the 2016 title. It made Moody and Warner one of three overseas captain-coach combinations to win the IPL, and the first since 2009. Surprisingly, it took until 2022 for an Indian head coach to lift the trophy: an Indian captain and a foreign coach is by far the most common combination for a winning team.Gradually, most franchises have employed more local backroom and support staff. “It was quite organic,” Moody says. “We found that our staff covered a number of different areas organically, and between us could speak English, Hindi, Tamil… It became a bit of a melting pot of players and staff that could all contribute to the central cause.”When Moody signed a teenaged Rashid Khan in the 2017 auction, he made sure to recruit a fellow Afghan alongside him. “We needed [Mohammad] Nabi’s skill set, but on another level, it made sure Rashid wouldn’t be isolated in that squad.” In 2022, Rashid was the senior partner in a similar relationship with Noor Ahmad at Gujarat Titans: “I can translate things into Pashto for him,” he said.Rashid Khan paid forward Mohammad Nabi’s mentorship by taking Noor Ahmad under his wing in an otherwise unfamiliar environment for the youngster•BCCIBut language divides extend beyond lines of nationality – and can be turned into a strength. A curiosity of the IPL is that squads often bear minimal resemblance to the regions they represent: Chennai Super Kings, for example, rarely pick players from the state of Tamil Nadu. In 2020, a stump microphone even picked up Kolkata Knight Riders’ Dinesh Karthik communicating with Varun Chakravarthy in their native Tamil while playing CSK.This season, nine out of ten franchises have Indian captains: Pat Cummins, at Sunrisers, is the only exception. But communication and language remain a pressing issue: before Delhi Capitals’ first match of the season, against Lucknow Super Giants, captain Axar Patel handed over to Faf du Plessis in the team huddle, who delivered a pre-match speech in English.Hesson is a rare example of a native English speaker who went out of his way to pick up some Hindi during his time at the IPL. “I wouldn’t say I’m brilliant, but I can understand a fair bit,” he explains. “My speaking is more pidgin than full sentences… It’s a bit of a respect thing, isn’t it? I don’t think it’s right if someone doesn’t feel comfortable expressing themselves in their own country.”Yet even as the IPL is in its 18th season, the expectation that Indian players should learn English prevails, rather than the other way around. Perhaps, in a decade or two, it might become common for foreign players to learn to communicate with Indian players in their own native tongue: as Hesson puts it, “It is the Indian Premier League, after all.”

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