Williamson, Taylor tons see NZ to victory

Ben Stokes at his most intimidating muscled England beyond 300 for the third successive match but New Zealand sparked a late collapse to remain very much in contention at midway as the Ageas Bowl produced another excellent batting surface in the Royal Lon

The Report by David Hopps14-Jun-2015
Live scorecard and ball-by-ball details1:24

England pay the price for late collapse

There is more than one way to lodge a score of 300-plus in a one-day international. You can dash there with a state of delirium, as England did, staying true to a spirit of devil may care. Or you can chase it down with ease, as New Zealand did in response, displaying not excitement but merely the composure that grows from two centuries of draining authority.By the time that Kane Williamson and Ross Taylor’s third-wicket partnership was broken, they had added 206 in 32 overs and New Zealand’s last seven wickets needed only 61 from 67 balls, the platform for what ultimately became a slightly edgy victory by three wickets with six balls to spare – a win which gave them a 2-1 lead in this five-match series.Taylor – after his century at the Kia Oval – achieved back-to-back ODI hundreds for the third time in his career. The pair also set a new benchmark in ODI’s for New Zealand’s third wicket, surpassing Geoff Howarth and Martin Crowe in Auckland in 1984.Williamson could probably bungee jump without any measurable rise in his heartbeat or blood pressure. Few international batsmen proceed with such equanimity; he picked off Adil Rashid’s leg spin – a player he knows well from his time at Yorkshire – with aplomb. Taylor’s classy strokeplay provided a perfect accompaniment.England, who for long periods in the field looked resigned to their fate as the Ageas Bowl produced the latest in a succession of excellent batting surfaces, will be left to rue a calamitous end to their innings in which their last five wickets tumbled for 14 in 22 balls.Conservatism does not enter England’s thinking at the moment as they try to reinvent themselves in a more attacking guise, but it was only with nine wickets down that they belatedly nodded to the virtue of batting out their overs and 28 deliveries went unused when the last man, Steven Finn, was cleaned up by Tim Southee. Those wasted deliveries proved hugely influential. They might have accepted the reality of their position a wicket earlier.There were four dropped catches too, catches that might well have turned the game. Taylor escaped twice in successive overs from Mark Wood, firstly on 67 when Jos Buttler might have gone two handed to his right in an attempt to take a catch well within range, and again on 72 when Ben Stokes could not hold a fierce pull, relatively close in at square leg.Wood, fresh again after feeling the effect of back-to-back Tests, often surpassed 90mph and was the likeliest England bowler on view. His return of 1 for 48 is the most economical so far in a series where batsmen have prospered extravagantly.Williamson was also dropped on 109, this time Wood the culprit at mid-off as he drove at David Willey. In Willey’s next over, the 200 partnership was raised, Williamson planted a six down the ground and finally England broke through when Wood this time leapt well at mid-off to hold the catch. Taylor got New Zealand within 13 runs of victory before he fell for 110, dragging Willey onto his stumps. It proved close enough.Earlier, Stokes had been in his most intimidating batting form for England, muscling England past 300 for the third successive match – unparallelled in their one-day history. There will be no more muscular shot all summer than Stokes’ strong-arm heave of Mitchell McClenaghan towards the midwicket burger vans. At a commanding 288 for 5 with 50 balls remaining, England had visions of 370.When Sam Billings’ innovative 34 came to grief, and Adil Rashid fell first ball, Stokes was in no mood to recognise a few complications, still seeking to be the King of the Swingers, the jungle VIP. He was bowled for 68 as he stepped away to batter Ben Wheeler to oblivion and Willey, in his second ODI, and fresh from a productive release to his county, Northamptonshire, in the NatWest T20 Blast, also fell with what by then felt like naïve attacking intent. “Ooh-bi-do, I wanna be like you.” Not this time.Instead, New Zealand’s pace attack had fought back strongly, with Wheeler returning a creditable 3 for 63 on debut, adding Stokes and Billings to his first-up wicket of Alex Hales.It was a bowlers’ morning – at least it used to be. Overcast skies were not quite enough to persuade Eoin Morgan to field first, not with 1369 runs logged in the first two matches, batsmen on both sides feeling a million dollars and bowlers reduced as emphatically as they ever have been to the ranks of the poor bloody infantry.There was swing for New Zealand in the first hour, and some bounce too, and they made decent use of it by removing both England openers, Alex Hales and Jason Roy, cheaply. England’s new-ball attack responded in kind, in less encouraging conditions, later in the day.Wheeler was presented with his debut cap before play by his fellow left-armer Trent Boult, ruled out of the series with a stress-related back condition. Boult’s part in the ceremony was appropriate because Wheeler is very much Boult Lite, finding some serene inswing.Morgan cut a somewhat impotent figure in the World Cup, a captain unable to stamp his imprint on the side. His 71 as the sun burned the clouds away was an innings from a captain who now has a sense of purpose. Add Joe Root’s crisp half-century and England’s third-wicket alliance was a productive one – 105 in 19 overs – before Santner cramped Root as he made room to leg and bowled him off his pads.Santner, heavily punished in the first two matches, but more resourceful here, also might have dismissed Morgan, first when he outwitted him down the leg side but the stumping was missed and again when he failed to cling to a low return chance to his left. Instead, it was Williamson who revived memories of his golden-arm display on the final day of the Headingley Test, defeating Morgan’s slog sweep and setting up the opportunity for the drainingly calm batting performance to follow.

Shastri to skip Zimbabwe series

India’s team director Ravi Shastri is set to skip the tour of Zimbabwe next month owing to professional commitments that he had had agreed upon before the BCCI offered him a two-year contract extension

Amol Karhadkar28-Jun-2015India’s team director Ravi Shastri is set to skip the tour of Zimbabwe next month owing to professional commitments that he had had agreed upon before the BCCI offered him a two-year contract extension. India will be managed in Zimbabwe by the three assistant coaches B Arun, Sanjay Bangar and R Sridhar, who have been with the team for almost a year now.Shastri is understood to have agreed for an analyst role during the high-profile Ashes series with Sky, the official broadcaster. According to a BCCI insider, since Shastri had signed the Sky deal before he was offered the role of team director for the tour of Bangladesh, he had made it clear he would not be available for the series in Zimbabwe. The BCCI, though, is confident that Shastri will be available for India’s three-Test series in Sri Lanka starting in August.This would be the second time since taking over as team director during India’s tour to England last year that Shastri will not be with the Indian team. He had also skipped the first half of the tri-series in Australia before the World Cup because of personal reasons.

Warriors pip Red Steel to advance to second semi-final

Marchant de Lange’s 4 for 23 and an unbeaten 65 from Lendl Simmons led Guyana Amazon Warriors to a seven-wicket win over Trinidad & Tobago Red Steel in the last league match of the Caribbean Premier League 2015

ESPNcricinfo staff22-Jul-2015
Scorecard and ball-by-ball detailsMarchant de Lange took three wickets in his first two spells to give Guyana Amazon Warriors an early advantage•Caribbean Premier League

Marchant de Lange’s 4 for 23 and an unbeaten 65 from Lendl Simmons led Guyana Amazon Warriors to a seven-wicket win over Trinidad & Tobago Red Steel in the last league match of the Caribbean Premier League 2015. Both teams finished on 11 points, but a better net run rate helped Amazon Warriors finish in second place, ensuring their spot in the second semi-final where they will play the winner of the knockout match between Red Steel and Jamaica Tallawahs. Barbados Tridents, who topped the league table, are in the final.A win over Amazon Warriors would have taken Red Steel into the final, but de Lange inflicted damage on those plans when he broke through the top order with three wickets in his first two spells, after Red Steel opted to bat. He had Jacques Kallis caught behind for 3 in the second over, Javon Searles was caught on the leg side for 6 and Darren Bravo was also out caught behind for 3.In the midst of the wickets, Cameron Delport kept the scoreboard moving along and by the time he was dismissed in the 10th over, he had contributed 44 to the side’s total of 65. Red Steel did not recover from the poor start and were stifled by the Amazon Warriors spinners – the second half of their innings saw them add only 50 runs to the scoreboard. De Lange returned for the final over, and dismissed Kevon Cooper to take his fourth wicket, limiting Red Steel to 117 for 8.Simmons powered Amazon Warriors to a strong start, hitting a four and a six off Samuel Badree in successive overs, before taking 15 runs off Derone Davis in the fourth over. The side scored 47 in the Powerplay, with Simmons making 41. The opener had a reprieve in the eighth over, when the third umpire ruled that a return chance to the bowler Johan Botha was not out. Their start ensured that Amazon Warriors kept pace with the required equation and did not slow down despite the wickets of opener Assad Fudadin and captain Denesh Ramdin in successive overs.A 52-run partnership for the third wicket between Brad Hodge and Simmons put the side on the brink of a win. Hodge hastened the result, with successive sixes off Cooper, before his dismissal for 33, and Amazon Warriors reached the target with three overs to spare.

Series at stake as Sri Lanka begin life after Sangakkara

Sri Lanka have plenty of questions to answer as they start the post-Sangakkara era with a series decider against a hungry India side

The Preview by Karthik Krishnaswamy27-Aug-2015

Match facts

August 28-September 1, 2015
Start time 1000 local (0430 GMT)4:50

Agarkar: India’s best chance to win a series in Sri Lanka

Big Picture

Hearing this last section of Kumar Sangakkara’s retirement speech, Angelo Mathews may well have wondered to himself: “Really?” Because without Sangakkara, and without Mahela Jayawardene, who played his final Test last year, Sri Lanka are bracing themselves for a long and arduous rebuilding phase, with the “amazing future” a dot on the horizon. In their home season so far, Sri Lanka have lost two out of three Tests to Pakistan and are clearly not the momentum team as they go into a series decider against India.Looking around his dressing room, Mathews will not see too many battle-hardened faces. Apart from himself and Rangana Herath – the only two players in the side with more than 50 Test caps – the most experienced player in the likely Sri Lanka eleven at the Sinhalese Sports Club is Dhammika Prasad, who will be playing his 23rd Test.It is imperative, therefore, that the senior-ish players in their side, such as Prasad, Lahiru Thirimanne, Kaushal Silva and Dinesh Chandimal, add an extra level of consistency to their game and take on leadership roles to ease the pressure off Mathews and Herath.They will have to begin doing this right away. Sri Lanka are likely to be without one of their main wicket-taking weapons at the SSC, with Tharindu Kaushal a doubtful starter after an Umesh Yadav bouncer bruised the thumb of his bowling hand during the second Test. Dilruwan Perera will offer more control but less incision.Without Sangakkara, it is unclear how the batting order will resolve itself. Plenty of questions remain to be answered. Will Upul Tharanga slot in at No. 3, or will it be Thirimanne? Will Kusal Perera come in for Jehan Mubarak, and if so, will he keep wickets? Will the two new left-handers in the line-up be able to cope with R Ashwin’s round-the-wicket threat?India will have to make a couple of forced personnel changes too, but they know to a fair degree what they can expect from most of their players. They are a lot further along the road in terms of experience and know-how, and know what the core of their team for the next four-five years will look like. Their batting, save for a couple of hiccups, is clicking into gear nicely, and their bowling attack, in recent times, has never looked as consistently threatening as it did at the P Sara Oval.Even so, they have had to come back from behind to level this Test series, and will know, in all honesty, that they should have been 2-0 up already. Having let Sri Lanka off the hook in Galle, they will be itching to close out the series with a win, and show that they have become better players for the bruising experiences they have suffered on the road, with greater staying power and match awareness.

Form guide

(last five matches, most recent first)

Sri Lanka: LWLWL
India: WLDDD
M Vijay’s hamstring injury gives Cheteshwar Pujara the opportunity to play his first Test in 2015•Getty Images

In the spotlight

With no Sangakkara in the side, the time has come for Lahiru Thirimanne to step up and become the consistent Test batsman he has always threatened to be. He showed glimpses of his potential in both Tests so far, but Sri Lanka want more from him. As vice-captain, they need him to improve his record – an average of 26.13 and only one century in 21 Tests – substantially.Cheteshwar Pujara didn’t look particularly out of form during India’s tours of England and Australia, but while there were only three single-digit scores in 16 innings, he only made two half-centuries and no hundreds. That long run of unconverted starts brought his Test average down from close to 59 to just over 47, and cost him his place in the side. With M Vijay’s hamstring injury giving him a chance to play his first Test in 2015, Pujara will hope he has shrugged off the losses of concentration that have frustrated him of late, and is able to enter the trance-like zone that brought him bucketloads of runs in the early part of his career.

Team news

Sri Lanka are likely to make a couple of changes to their batting line-up, with Tharanga coming in for the retired Sangakkara and Kusal replacing the struggling Mubarak. If Kusal plays, he could take the wicketkeeping gloves off Dinesh Chandimal. Kaushal is a doubtful starter, with Dilruwan Perera his likely replacement. Nuwan Pradeep has recovered from the hamstring problem that kept him out of the second Test, and will probably take Dushmantha Chameera’s place in the pace attack.Sri Lanka (probable) 1 Dimuth Karunaratne, 2 Kaushal Silva, 3 Upul Tharanga, 4 Lahiru Thirimanne, 5 Angelo Mathews (capt), 6 Dinesh Chandimal, 7 Kusal Perera (wk), 8 Dhammika Prasad, 9 Rangana Herath, 10 Tharindu Kaushal/Dilruwan Perera, 11 Nuwan PradeepWith Vijay ruled out, India will field their third different opening combination of the series, with Pujara partnering KL Rahul. With Wriddhiman Saha also enduring hamstring issues, Naman Ojha should make his Test debut.India (probable) 1 Cheteshwar Pujara, 2 KL Rahul, 3 Ajinkya Rahane, 4 Virat Kohli (capt), 5 Rohit Sharma, 6 Naman Ojha (wk), 7 Stuart Binny, 8 R Ashwin, 9 Amit Mishra, 10 Ishant Sharma, 11 Umesh Yadav

Pitch and conditions

Four of the last five Tests at the SSC have ended in draws, but its pitch belied its reputation as one of the flattest tracks in the world last year, when Sri Lanka beat Pakistan on a sporting surface that produced totals of 320, 332, 282 and 165. The pitch for this match might assist the seamers for the first couple of sessions before flattening out; there was grass on the surface on the eve of the match, but it seemed dry underneath. The weather could intervene from time to time, with Colombo experiencing scattered afternoon thunderstorms over the last few days.

Stats and trivia

  • R Ashwin is nine wickets from reaching 150 in Tests. If he manages it in this match, his 28th, he will join Clarrie Grimmett as the third quickest to the mark, with only Sydney Barnes and Waqar Younis ahead of them
  • If Naman Ojha plays for India, and if Kusal Perera plays and keeps wicket for Sri Lanka, it will be the 14th instance of two wicketkeepers making their debut in the same Test match. The last time it happened was in 2000, when Khaled Mashud and Saba Karim made their debuts in Bangladesh’s inaugural Test in Dhaka

BCCI turmoil hits Ranji points system

The new points system proposed for the Ranji Trophy will not be implemented this season, as the BCCI’s working committee is yet to discuss it

Amol Karhadkar29-Sep-2015The new points system proposed for the Ranji Trophy by the Anil Kumble-led technical committee in May will not be implemented for the 2015-16 season, as the BCCI’s working committee is yet to discuss the system. The working committee was due to look into the proposal on August 28, but then that meeting was adjourned within minutes due to N Srinivasan’s presence.The technical committee had proposed major changes to the points system, the most prominent amendment being to do away with points for the first-innings lead. That decision had raised a few eyebrows, with some of the BCCI member units expressing apprehension over the possibility of both teams earning no points after a four-day game. As a result, the proposal was to be looked into by the working committee.But the working committee meeting on August 28 was adjourned due to confusion surrounding Srinivasan’s attendance – despite being requested to stay away from the meeting due to his complicated legal status, he attended in his capacity as Tamil Nadu Cricket Association head.As a result, the BCCI now has no option but to stick to last season’s points system.Quick comment – BCCI makes its priorities clearCricketers make a proposal. Four months and ten days later, just two days before the start of a new season, it emerges nobody has even debated that proposal.At times of crisis, when you can’t possibly look after everything, your priorities become clear. The BCCI administrators, who spare no money or effort in calling “emergent” meetings and hiring high-profile lawyers to stay in power to “safeguard the interests of the game,” have made their priorities clear.In the interest of the game a technical committee, comprising men of integrity and cricketing acumen and led by Anil Kumble, suggested this change to the points system to reward positive cricket in India’s premier domestic tournament. The BCCI power struggle, though, has successfully managed to push this into the background. A meeting where the ratification of the new system would have been debated was adjourned because N Srinivasan decided to land up, but no one found it fitting to find a way to discuss the new points system before the start of the Ranji season.You won’t find such a lackadaisical approach towards finding Jagmohan Dalmiya’s successor as BCCI president. A special general meeting has already been called within the deadline. Sticklers to the BCCI constitution will point to the clause that deals with deadlines for calling such meetings, but isn’t the start of a new season a deadline for a matter as crucial as a points system? By Sidharth Monga

Fekete, Dunk set up Tasmania victory

Fast bowler Andrew Fekete had hoped for a Test debut on the tour of Bangladesh this week. But after the cancellation of that trip for security reasons, he instead found himself setting up a comfortable nine-wicket victory for Tasmania in their opening mat

ESPNcricinfo staff05-Oct-2015
ScorecardAndrew Fekete picked up 4 for 30•Getty Images

Fast bowler Andrew Fekete had hoped for a Test debut on the tour of Bangladesh this week. But after the cancellation of that trip for security reasons, he instead found himself setting up a comfortable nine-wicket victory for Tasmania in their opening match of the Matador Cup tournament against Queensland in Sydney.Fekete collected 4 for 30 as Queensland were bowled out for 196, and Ben Dunk then posted an unbeaten century as the Tigers cruised past their target in the 36th over. Dunk finished not out on 104 from 101 balls and Dom Michael was on 51 from 64 balls when the winning runs came; Tim Paine was the only man to fall, out for 39 to the legspin of Cameron Boyce.The day began with George Bailey sending the Bulls in, and the second over saw Test squad members facing off against each other. It was Fekete who came out clearly on top when he had Joe Burns caught for a golden duck from the first ball of his first over, and Queensland continued to struggle to be 4 for 21 in the tenth over.Simon Milenko (40) helped steady things somewhat and there were also lower-order runs from James Hopes, who made 34, and Luke Feldman, who struck four sixes in his 33 from 28 balls. Queensland were dismissed in their 49th over, and the Tigers cruised to victory.

Sehwag quits internationals and IPL

Virender Sehwag has formally announced his retirement from international cricket

ESPNcricinfo staff20-Oct-20154:13

Manjrekar: Hitting the ball gave Sehwag a high

India batsman Virender Sehwag has formally retired from international cricket. On Tuesday, his 37th birthday, Sehwag made the announcement via Twitter, with a crisp message that said he would no longer play the IPL either.On Monday, Sehwag had revealed he would be participating in the Masters Champions League, a UAE-based Twenty20 tournament that requires its participants to have retired from all international formats, and said a formal retirement announcement would follow soon. He indicated that he would continue playing for Haryana till the end of the Ranji Trophy season.”God has been kind and I have done what I wanted to do – on the field and in my life and I had decided sometime back that I will retire on my 37th birthday,” Sehwag said in a statement. “So, while I spend the day with my family, I hereby announce my retirement from all forms of international cricket and the Indian Premier League.”Cricket has been my life and continues to be so. Playing for India was a memorable journey and I tried to make it more memorable for my team-mates and for the Indian cricket fans. I believe I was reasonably successful in doing so. For that, I wish to thank all my teammates over the years – some of the greatest players of the game. I would like to thank all my captains, who believed in me and backed me to the hilt. I also thank our greatest partner, the Indian cricket fan for all the love, support and the memories.”I also want to thank everyone for all the cricketing advice given to me over the years and apologise for not accepting most of it! I had a reason for not following it: I did it my way!”Sehwag is widely considered one of India’s greatest opening batsmen, and he revolutionised the art of batting against the new ball in Test cricket with his aggressive approach, scoring at a strike rate of over 80 in the longest format. He has been out of India’s plans for over two years, having last played for the national side in the Hyderabad Test against Australia in March 2013.Sehwag played 104 Tests, 251 ODIs and 19 T20Is, scoring over 17,000 international runs and picking up 136 wickets with his offspin. His greatest moments came in Test cricket, where he made 23 hundreds including the only two triple-centuries by an Indian batsman, while his ODI achievements included the format’s second double-hundred. He was part of India’s victorious campaigns at the 2007 World T20 and the 2011 World Cup.

Johnson can't brush aside retirement thoughts

Australia’s pace spearhead Mitchell Johnson says he is at that stage of his career where every Test could be his last

Daniel Brettig at the WACA11-Nov-2015Like the WACA Ground he loves so much, Mitchell Johnson is contemplating the end. Having already spoken about pondering retirement at the back end of this year’s Ashes series, Johnson has made the frank admission that thoughts about finishing his playing career are more or less a constant companion these days.Ahead of the second Test against New Zealand, which is set to be one of the last major matches played at the storied WACA, Johnson said he was now at a phase of his career where every match might be his last. He also expressed hope about ending his time in the Australian Test team on home shores, a privilege denied to Michael Clarke, Brad Haddin, Shane Watson, Ryan Harris and Chris Rogers after all five senior men departed during the England tour.”I think about it most days I think,” Johnson said. “It’s probably getting to that time, but to be honest I’m just trying to go out there and play each game and enjoy it. Like I’ve said before, it could be after this game I might just go, I’m done but I’m still enjoying my cricket at the moment and I’m enjoying the challenges.”It’s a really good time for Australian cricket with these young guys in the team and I want to be a part of that. As long as I’m performing well and doing my job in the team then mentally I’m feeling pretty good. I’m not emotional or anything like that now, no, because I’m not retiring. It’s always special playing here so it does excite me.”I started my career in Australia, played my first Test at the Gabba, I think I’d like to finish my career in Australia if I have the choice. It’s whether I get that choice or not. Not many people get it, so who knows. I feel like I’m still performing pretty well. I’d like to get a few more wickets but I feel like I haven’t dropped off too much. Pace is still up there enough and I feel confident enough in myself.”The talk about retirement is not to say that Johnson has fallen out of love with the game. On the contrary he spoke warmly about his involvement with club cricket and his belief in the importance of maintaining a strong linkage between the grassroots of the game and the commercialised, glamourised top end. If there is anything that seems to have stuck in Johnson’s craw recently – evident in his thoughts on the looming day-night Test and other lost traditions – it is the increasing gap between the international arena and earlier, simpler times.”I enjoyed it, it was a great experience and the guys get a boost out of it, both teams,” he said of turning out for Wanneroo Districts at the outset of the summer. “I actually felt a fair bit of pressure on me to perform as I always do when I go back, but I try to go out there and enjoy it as much as I can and mingle with the young guys.”I stayed afterwards and had a chat with the guys. I love club cricket. At the last game I caught up with my club president from the Wanderers and it was really good to catch up with him and chat about how it all started. I am a firm believer in all that, I think grass roots cricket is so important. I’d love to play more [club] cricket. I actually wanted to play a few more games but it just wasn’t possible.”Among the reasons keeping Johnson from his club side is a highly regimented and grooved routine to get him as close to his best for Test matches. At the age of 34, Johnson knows his body very well, and thus realises that a uniquely powerful frame is starting to wind down.”It’s good but it’s not as good as ever,” Johnson said. “You have your niggles here and there, just like every other fast bowler that’s been before me. You have your little issues you have with your body and I’m no different, so it’s just about managing those things and I guess I’ve become pretty good at that over the years. That’s part of being a fast bowler is you’re going to be sore when you play.”I really like that feeling of having that soreness – it doesn’t probably sound great, but I like that feeling. It feels like I’m doing something out there and pushing my body to its limits. As long as I keep doing that maintenance and looking after myself after each game then I’ll be right to play on.”Johnson finished the Gabba Test level with Brett Lee on 310 Test wickets, a mark that was a source of considerable pride for the younger man. He has spoken often of his admiration for Lee and Dennis Lillee, the original WACA tearaway who matured into the most complete of all Australian fast bowlers. His mark of 355 Test wickets is tantalisingly near.”I was just trying to get past Brett Lee – I’m even with him now,” Johnson said. “You never know I could go a few Tests without wickets and that’d be the end of it. It wouldn’t be a bad thing, Brett was an idol for me. I remember saying when I first got into really serious cricket that I wanted to bowl as fast as Brett Lee and now I’m level with him. It’s pretty awesome.”Never thought I’d reach that target, especially a few years ago, I wouldn’t have even thought about getting close to 300 wickets. Dennis’ is a pretty remarkable career he had playing 79 Tests and getting 355 wickets at low 20s. That’s pretty awesome and I’m not sure. I’ll have a crack but if I get there or not, who knows.”

Fit-again Shami picked for Vijay Hazare Trophy

Fast bowler Mohammed Shami has been named in Bengal’s squad for the Vijay Hazare Trophy, after recovering from the knee injury he had picked up during the Australia tour last December

ESPNcricinfo staff06-Dec-2015Fast bowler Mohammed Shami has been named in Bengal’s squad for the Vijay Hazare Trophy, after recovering from the knee injury he had picked up during the Australia tour last December. He had felt some discomfort in his left knee as early as the first Test in Adelaide but bowled through pain in the 2015 World Cup, where he was India’s second-highest wicket-taker, taking 17 scalps at 17.29.Shami, who has been sidelined from all competitive cricket since March, underwent surgery after returning from the World Cup and spent his rehabilitation period at the National Cricket Academy in Bangalore. He was then picked among 30 players to be part of a preparatory camp ahead of the South Africa series in September. However, Shami had not regained full fitness then and was not included in either limited-overs or Test squads against South Africa.Shami, who had also missed the league phase of the Ranji Trophy, though, hoped that the Vijay Hazare trophy would help him shake off the rust and return to the Indian team, whose next assignment is a five-match ODI series in Australia, starting January 12.”I am back after eight months, so I am taking it slow and easy… I am gearing up to play in the Vijay Hazare Trophy. It will be a good preparation going into the limited overs series against Australia,” Shami told .Bengal, who start their campaign against Goa on December 10, will also be boosted by the return of Wriddhiman Saha from national duty. They have been placed in Group D with Goa, Himachal Pradesh, UP, Madhya Pradesh, and Saurashtra.Squad: Manoj Tiwary (captain), Laxmi Ratan Shukla, Wriddhiman Saha, Sudip Chatterjee, Abhimanyu Easwaran, Sayan Sekhar Mondal, Sreevats Goswami, Pankaj Shaw, Debabrata Das, Aamir Gani, Pragyan Ojha, Mohammed Shami, Ashok Dinda, Mukesh Kumar, Sayan Ghosh, Pradipta Pramanik, Alok Pratap Singh

Momentum with Zimbabwe in series decider

While the bowlers have been central to Zimbabwe’s plans, Afghanistan have relied heavily on Mohammad Shahzad so far. Having come back from a 2-0 deficit, Zimbabwe start off as marginal favourites

The preview by Shashank Kishore05-Jan-2016

Match facts

Wednesday, January 6, 2016
Start time 1500 local (1100GMT)Zimbabwe’s bowling attack has shown better adaptability on slow Sharjah decks, with Nevill Madziva and Graeme Cremer central to their plans•Chris Whiteoak

Big picture

The series was nearly dead and buried when Afghanistan, cruising high and happy on a 2-0 lead, reduced Zimbabwe to 45 for 7 a short distance into the third ODI. Then Afghanistan took their foot off the pedal and slipped into their comfort zone in anticipation of a second successive series win. Half an hour’s indiscretion followed, and before they realised it, Zimbabwe had put up 175. Then they came out playing to the gallery, only to be brutally exposed against the swinging ball to give Zimbabwe an opening, which they tore into on Monday courtesy Chamu Chibhabha’s allround show. As a result, Afghanistan, who slipped at the first sign of turbulence, find themselves vulnerable, with plenty of doubt lingering over the temperament of the batsmen heading into the series decider.Cricket is often a confidence game, and there is little doubt as to which is the happier camp at the moment. For every step taken, Zimbabwe have often found ways to go back two steps. One such instance was their series loss to Afghanistan at home in October. Having started 2016 with two successive wins, the onus is on them to ride the momentum and make amends for that loss, for a slip-up here could also mean they will be edged out of the top 10 in the ICC ODI rankings.Afghanistan have relied heavily on Mohammad Shahzad with the bat and their plethora of spin options with the ball. The lean patch of Asghar Stanikzai and Mohammad Nabi hasn’t helped, and has put more pressure on Shahzad to alter his natural style of play and transform from an attacking batsman to an accumulator. Zimbabwe have been a little more rounded. Chibhabha aside, Graeme Cremer’s loopy legspin and Nevill Madziva’s late swing have accounted for a bulk of the batsmen in the middle overs. Hamilton Masakadza’s form has somewhat covered up for the inability of Sikandar Raza and Malcolm Waller to notch up scores of substance. Wednesday will be another chance to correct that.

Form guide

(Last five completed matches, most recent first)
Afghanistan LLWWW
Zimbabwe WWLLLL

In the spotlight

In the fourth ODI, Chamu Chibhabha became only the sixth Zimbabwean after Prosper Utseya, Andy Blignaut, Neil Johnson, Gary Crocker and Duncan Fletcher to achieve the double of a half-century and four wickets. He showed all the virtues of a good opener – left well, played late, held his composure initially, put away the loose deliveries. The disappointment of not carrying on was writ large on his face when he mistimed a pull to midwicket. He later admitted his batting was still a work in progress, particularly when it came to pacing his innings. He will have another opportunity to make amends in a crunch clash.Mohammad Nabi, Afghanistan’s highest run-getter in ODIs, has scores of 17, 33, 0 and 11 in his four innings so far. He has been unusually subdued and hasn’t been able to express himself in the manner that has brought him a bulk of his 1443 runs. With Samiullah Shenwari also being left out, Nabi’s return to form is vital for a predominantly top-heavy batting line-up. While Mohammad Shahzad’s belligerence is capable of ensuring they don’t miss their most accomplished batter, Afghanistan could be found wanting if law of averages catch up with their wicketkeeper-batsman.

Team news

The move to send Malcolm Waller in at No. 3 in the fourth ODI didn’t pay off. More importantly, it disturbed Masakadza’s rhythm. Zimbabwe’s most accomplished batsman could slot back in at his preferred slot, especially if Zimbabwe bat first on what is expected to be another slow Sharjah deck. With the team winning two games on the bounce, the only change they could possibly ponder is the return of Craig Ervine, who has fully recovered from a flu that kept him out of the third ODI, in place of Waller. That would mean somewhat countering Afghanistan’s spin threat by having a left-hander in the middle order.Zimbabwe (probable): 1 Peter Moor, Chamu Chibhabha, 3 Hamilton Masakadza, 4 Craig Ervine, 5 Elton Chigumbura (capt), 6 Sikandar Raza, 7 Richmond Mutumbami(wk), 8 Luke Jongwe, 9 Graeme Creamer, 10 Neville Madziva, 11 Tendai ChisoroWith Stanikzai and Nabi not in the best of nick, there is a case to push Karim Sadiq, a regular opener till not too long ago, up the order. But two successive batting meltdowns would have invited a fair amount of soul-searching. If they want some experience in a crunch clash, they could go back to Nawroz Mangal, the former captain.Afghanistan (probable) : 1 Noor Ali Zadran, 2 Mohammad Shahzad (wk), 3 Mohammad Nabi, 4 Asghar Stanikzai (capt), 5 Rashid Khan, 6 Hashmatullah Shahidi, 7 Najibullah Zadran/Nawroz Mangal, 8 Mirwais Ashraf, 9 Dawlat Zadran, 10 Amir Hamza, 11 Shafiqullah

Pitch and conditions

Captains winning the toss have had no hesitation in batting first so far. The trend is unlikely to be disturbed, considering both sides will not want to fall back on the pressure of having to chase in a must-win game. The ball has nipped around under lights too, and cooler weather conditions at this time of the year should help the fielding side in the second session.

Stats and trivia

  • A win in the fifth ODI will give Afghanistan only their second series win against a Full Member and strengthen their position at No. 10 in the ICC ODI rankings
  • Peter Moor and Chamu Chibhabha’s 92-run opening stand is the highest of the series from both sides.