England's vibes of revival land their greatest glory yet

From Grand Prixs to viruses, via funky bowling and Nighthawks, how England overcame history in Pakistan

Vithushan Ehantharajah20-Dec-2022During the Abu Dhabi Grand Prix last month, Ben Stokes was leading his Test squad on a walk through the paddock.They had convened only a few days before, arriving from different corners of the globe. Stokes, Liam Livingstone and Paul Collingwood arrived from the successful T20 World Cup, via a brief jolly in Dubai. James Anderson, Ollie Robinson, Jack Leach, Will Jacks and Jamie Overton had been training with the Lions out in the UAE since the start of November. The rest, barring Harry Brook and Mark Wood who were given time-off after the World Cup, came in from the UK.The premise of the camp was straightforward: top up the camaraderie established over the summer and enjoy freedom ahead of the constraints that come with a high-security visit of Pakistan, all around a few net sessions ahead of a three-day match against the Lions at the Zayed Cricket Complex. But with plenty of cricket to come in the form of three back-to-back Tests, the onus at the start of this trip was on vibes and relaxation.Brendon McCullum had pulled a few strings with his contacts at Kolkata Knight Riders to get the team in at the plush Ritz Carlton Hotel. In turn, Stokes called in a few favours with his sponsors Red Bull for all-access passes for the whole squad to take in the sights and sounds of Formula 1.As they walked along, recognising faces from bumping into global superstars from Hollywood and music, occasionally plucking up the courage to ask for a selfie, Stokes was collared by an elderly, enthusiastic fan dressed in matching tartan flat cap, trousers and facemask. Confused at the manner in which the gentleman was fawning over him in an environment where everyone was playing it cool, Stokes obliged the compliments on his captaincy, his talents as a cricketer and good wishes for the challenge that lay ahead, all while his hand was being squeezed tighter and tighter.Eventually, the man was moved on, tailed by a few others. “Do you know who that was?” asked a voice from behind Stokes. “Not a clue”. It was Jackie Stewart, one of the godfathers of motor racing.James Anderson, Ollie Robinson and Ben Stokes bask in England’s win at Rawalpindi•Matthew Lewis/Getty ImagesThat Stokes did not recognise Stewart is less important than the fact Stewart recognised him. While the rest of the England team were holding back their excitement at the celebrities they were rubbing shoulders with, Stokes was the sole cricketer as a celeb in his own right. It helped that he had just come off the back of securing England the T20 World Cup in Australia, another high-profile success. But even before that, and indeed before assuming the Test captaincy and bringing the house down over the summer with some of the most stunning results in England’s history, Stokes was a person of interest.It’s an important factor when assessing how we are where we are right now, off the back of three more remarkable wins that sees England victorious in Pakistan. They have won nine wins out of 10, off the back of just 1 in 17, and you don’t need to mine Statsguru to know that that has never been done before.Stokes’ legend has been self-made, for better and worse, and that is all the more reason why he has excelled as a leader. People are always going to notice him, talk about him, judge him. Those aspects have weighted heavily and eventually drowned Test captains in the past. Including his best mate, Joe Root, who became so overwhelmed after five years in the job that he would often be reluctant to go on the family school run, in case judgemental chatter about him at the gates filtered into the classroom.Related

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So thick is Stokes’ skin, and so bad the results before his tenure, last summer was – in essence – a free-hit. Things could not get worse but, importantly, they could get more fun. Having stripped away the pomp, circumstance and pressure, he placed himself in front of the team as a shield to the usual criticisms, and in turn allowed them to thrive. In the UAE, he broke off a piece of his fame and handed it around. Players and support staff enjoyed a few high-profile gigs, including Kendrick Lamar, and a couple of boat parties. By the time they arrived in Pakistan, not only were they ready to get down to business, they were more together than ever. Just as well given the circumstances leading up to the first match of the series.

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No one really knew where the virus had come from. There were suggestions that it might have been brought from the UK by those with young children, maybe even Covid-19, but both were ruled out. Food poisoning, which affected the white-ball squad during their T20I series in Pakistan a couple of months earlier, was regarded as unlikely given the ECB felt they had mitigated for those issues by bringing over their own chef. He, too, fell ill.What they did know was they needed to rally around those affected, particularly as it meant dipping back into pandemic cricket – confined to their rooms to restrict any spread. Staff and players checked in on one another regularly, initially dropping snacks from home at doors to lighten the mood, before even that contact came under suspicion.As the game approached and talk of a delay came to pass if England could not raise an XI on the scheduled first morning, players began geeing each other up in the hope that raised spirits could be a remedy. That indeed proved to be the case.Some of those struck down, such as Ben Duckett, reiterated to the management group that he would play regardless, given his opportunity to rekindle a Test career that had been chopped down prematurely off the back of four caps at the end of 2016. Others needed a bit more encouragement.Zak Crawley, Ollie Pope, Ben Duckett, Harry Brook (clockwise from top left) all made hundreds•Getty ImagesStokes made a note of visiting Jack Leach, his go-to spinner throughout his tenure, in a bid to urge him to play. Leach, who suffers from Crohn’s, was affected badly and initially floated the idea of not playing because he did not want to let the side down if selected in the XI. His captain reiterated that he would look after him. The left-arm spinner would end up taking the final wicket in Rawalpindi and thanked Stokes publicly for twisting his arm.Even for the third Test, Ollie Robinson dismissed his own struggles when pulling McCullum off to one side and pretty much telling him he was playing. “I was pretty crook the first day, but I said to Baz I really wanted to play to prove a point to everyone here, and back home, that I can play three Test matches [in a row].” McCullum appreciated the sentiment and, above all else, respected the desire to finish strong. No other seamer played all three Tests, and none of them bowled more than Robinson’s 77 overs, which eventually secured him nine wickets at 21.22.Ben Foakes, however, could not pull through for the opener in Rawalpindi. He was afforded a morning fitness test but to no avail. As a result, Ollie Pope stood in to take the gloves and another Surrey team-mate, Will Jacks, made his Test debut. Within the first half of the match, Pope had scored a first-day century and completed two catches and a stumping.There was no resentment between friends, with Foakes wishing him well then assuming a role in Pope’s keeping practice ahead of the second Test in Multan when it was decided to retain him behind the stumps. Foakes even had to lend Pope his gloves because the resident No. 3 didn’t think to bring his along. Foakes joked that Pope should keep them before he assumed them once more for the third Test.As the series wore on, more players assumed ad-hoc coaching positions when staff were struck down. Keaton Jennings, who didn’t start a game but saw plenty of action as a substitute fielder, was regularly throwing balls. And at one point in the lead-up to the Multan Test, James Anderson was hitting high catches.Returning to Pakistan after 17 years, having been a non-playing member of the last England Test squad to tour in 2005, he added another section to his CV. His eight wickets came at 18.50, most remarkably his 4 for 36 in the final innings of the first Test, in which he bowled 22 overs on day five. He has also operated as a bowling coach with England not travelling with one after Jon Lewis, now head coach of England Women, was let go at the end of the summer.James Anderson takes his turn in the squad’s six-hitting competition on the eve of the Karachi Test•Getty ImagesThe best players don’t always make the best coaches. But Anderson’s work with all the bowlers, most notably Robinson and Mark Wood around reverse swing, has been vital. Even with 177 Tests and 675 dismissals, his information has been accessible and continuous without being overbearing. Indeed, he was so relaxed that many did not even regard him as a bowling coach, as such. If Anderson has something to say about the subject, you take it on regardless of his official or unofficial role.Much of this trip was about trying new things. There was very little reliable intel on the pitches, with only Australia’s series earlier this year to go on. As it happened, the surfaces mimicked how they had been nine months earlier: flat, sapping and hardly conducive to engaging cricket.England, however, brought their own enthusiasm, trying many different things. At another time, opening the second innings of the final Test with the spin of Leach and Joe Root might have been regarded as innovation bordering on madness. But by then England had already opened the second innings of the first match with an exclusive diet of bumpers, had as many as two catching covers and two catching midwickets in unison and even had long passages of pressure without anyone in the cordon. In fact, of the 26 wickets to England seamers, not one was caught by a regulation off-side slip fielder.”It was strange at the start, bowling without slips,” Robinson reflected. “It’s the first time I’ve done it in my career, I think. I have learned a lot and adapted to conditions as best as I can, in that sense. I’ve learned a lot about myself and what I’m capable of.”Stokesy kept saying to me, ‘just carry on bowling the way you’re bowling, don’t worry about the field’. He keeps moving it, trying to adjust it for the batters. It was tough at times but you just crack on.”Crack on they did, fuelled by endless amounts of encouragement. At another time, an England team might have bitched and moaned, called foul and given up altogether. That’s not how this side operates. When it looked like the Pindi surface was going to get the better of them, the mantra bellowed by Stokes was “enjoy the flatness”. So they did – more so than any side visiting Pakistan, English or otherwise, has ever enjoyed before.

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“I think it’s put a lot of perspective on it for all of us, seeing an 18-year-old coming in and play like he’s in the backyard.”Pope is only 24, not long from those backyard days. Yet Rehan Ahmed provided him and the rest of the playing group with a reminder of what this was all suppose to be about – fun.Even though that is a key tenet of this new era, the injection of Rehan’s youthful exuberance helped end the tour on a perfect note. It wasn’t simply that, having become England’s youngest Test debutant, he went on to be the youngest man in the history of the format to take a five-wicket haul ok debut. The little details proved captivating too, as the team was exposed to his unfiltered love of the game, from the way he walked around hotels with a ball in his hand, right down to shadow-batting with the stump he got given as a memento of Karachi while the post-series presentations were dragging on.The assimilation of Rehan, from a hushed pick back in October to his embedding in the squad for the last month perhaps best encapsulates the environment at the moment. He is the youngest by five years and, in terms of cricket, far less travelled than the rest with only three first-class matches to his name and only an Under-19 World Cup under his belt in terms of touring experience. Like most teenagers, he’s fond of hanging out in his room, whittling hours away on YouTube, mostly watching cricket with a bit of boxing and UFC mixed in. He is also a practising Muslim.That last part may not seem an issue of note. But within a group whose downtime and celebration often includes alcohol, it was something to consider.Throughout this tour, team-mates have been sensitive to his religion, ensuring gatherings did not revolve too much around booze to make him feel comfortable. They also brushed up on prayer times, making sure he was able to embrace his usual routines. While we can file all of that simply under “common decency”, it is not something that should be taken for granted.Ben Stokes hands a stump to Rehan Ahmed after his role in the third Test win•Matthew Lewis/Getty ImagesAnother aspect is the communication with Rehan’s family, which began in earnest when he was called up to the Lions. They had been kept abreast of the plan to “soft launch” him into the Test side. His father Naeem, who has been out in Pakistan, was made to feel part of the touring party. When Nasser Hussain presented Rehan with his maiden cap – number 710 – Naeem was invited into the circle to be there for the moment.Many within the squad were struck by the occasion. The overriding sentiment was of being reminded of their first moments at this level and how integral parents are in getting you to that moment. In Stokes, he has a captain who knows full well the importance of family.Both he and McCullum have made sure to keep tabs on Rehan, especially when he was restricted to the odd cameo as sub-fielder during the first two Tests. They were able to impress upon him that he was here on merit and that, when an opportunity came, he would simply have to be himself. Nevertheless, Rehan wanted to make as good an impression as possible off the field, too. That largely went well, with players struck more and more by an infectious personality. Though he did take it too far when he made an effort to be more presentable and ended up burning his training shorts while attempting to iron out a few creases.The growth in Rehan’s confidence manifested itself in the second innings for the dismissal of Saud Shakeel – the third of his haul of 5 for 48. Feeling in the groove, he decided to take control of his own field and went to Stokes with a plan of his own.”The Saud wicket, for example,” Stokes said. “He [Rehan] was the one who brought up the deep square for the sweep, because he said if he top-edges it, it’s going to go straight to him. And then two balls later, it did. For an 18-year-old to come into his first Test match and have such a cricket-savvy brain, especially under Test-match pressure, was really good for us.” So enamored were the squad with his performance – on and off the field – they insisted he be front and centre for the photo with the series trophy.Ben Duckett and Zak Crawley both set the tone at the top of England’s order•AFP/Getty ImagesPlayers like Harry Brook and Duckett also benefitted from the welcoming environment to finish as No. 1 and 2 on the run-scoring charts. While 23 and 28 respectively, both are early in their Test careers but were still comfortable enough to riff on their own, innate joie de vivre.For Duckett in particular, the tour has been a second chance at a childhood dream: to become a Test cricketer and then register a Test century, as he did at the first time of asking on his second coming. Best of all, the left-hander played throughout like the 22-year-old who first earned a call-up in 2016. A chastening experience in India – the last two of four caps he had coming into this series – ended up rattling him for a few years after. Having rediscovered his funk, he has been able to take it to the next level thanks to an ethos that aligns perfectly with his.”I’ve got the same shots now I had six years ago,” he said on Tuesday. “The one game in Bangladesh six years ago when I got 60 [56] is exactly how I played in this. Looking back, I wish I had done it every game but, back then, it was not really the way to play Test cricket.”Right now, I don’t think Stokesy cares what you do to get runs, whether that means scooping [Tim] Southee in New Zealand [in February]. For me that mindset allows me to score runs and makes me my best. If I’m looking to survive then to be honest I’m pretty useless. My way of surviving is to put the bowlers under pressure and look to score.”

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The heavy security detail in Pakistan meant outside entertainment was minimal for England. Beyond a few golf days, most of the fun had to be had among themselves.On the morning before the final Test, they decided to have a six-hitting competition between the squad, with teams split into North and South. Then came a battle between coach and captain. Coach won. As a result, Stokes had to serve the best on show for the North their dinner that evening, which happened to be Brook. The initial deal was for the loser to serve the victor, but McCullum figured this would be funnier. It certainly proved to be when Brook went on to run Stokes out later in the match.It may seem like hijinks, but the logic to the competition came from Stokes’ experience of long tours. Did they need another practice session after back-to-back Tests? Probably not. Could they do with a bit of a laugh to lift their energy levels? Always.Then came the penultimate session of the tour on the third evening, which might rank as one of the strangest / most hilarious under Stokes and McCullum. When Zak Crawley was dismissed for 41 after putting on 87 with Duckett in pursuit of a target of 167, Rehan strolled out to bat as the first sighting of the legendary “Nighthawk” role originally earmarked for Stuart Broad.The youngster was under strict instructions to finish the game, and smacked his first ball down the ground for four. While that absurdity played out, something even more ridiculous was taking place inside the dressing-room. As Pope put it on Tuesday morning, “Stokesy was on a bit of a mad one.”Bad light intervened before Ben Stokes and Ben Duckett could take England across the line on the third evening•Matthew Lewis/Getty ImagesFor some reason, the captain decided he wanted a few more rogue options to throw into the mix if another wicket went down. According to Pope, “a load of us” were padded up, including him, having been bumped down from his usual No. 3 spot. Then, on a whim, Stokes, one of the few not padded up, decided he wanted a piece of the action.He lasted the course, though his last act was to cloth a strike down the ground for two. He was trying to clear the fence and move ahead of McCullum with the pair currently joint top for most sixes hit in a Test career on 107.Stokes later admitted that, perhaps, he was taking things too far. “I was all over the shop last night, trying to finish it,” he said, of his thinking and then his batting, which eventually saw him unbeaten on 35 from 43. As for his botched attempt to clear the ropes at the end, he conceded there was a little selfishness: “I’ve had a small man on my shoulder for a while called Brendon McCullum.”

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On Tuesday evening, the squad convened for a team meeting at the sports bar in the Movenpick Hotel which has been their team room in Karachi. There were congratulations, a bit of a debrief, a “Happy Birthday” to team analyst Rupert Lewis and then farewells to 13 of the 16 squad members who were able to book early flights home.Given how this team have worked hard for what they achieved in Pakistan, and how they have closed out an exceptional seven months of Test cricket, it all seemed a bit flat. Surely an achievement deserves savouring and a celebration to match.But as bags were packed and shuffled into the foyer, there was a clear sense that their work here was done and it was time to head home. Among all the outward revelry of this England Test side, there is a thick streak of professionalism running through them. A backbone that supports everything that they have done.The bonds between this group are clear, the ethos a little deeper in stone. They leave Pakistan not wishing the good times could last for a little longer, but knowing there are more good times to come.

Stats – Mehidy equals highest score by a No. 8 in ODIs

A look at the records broken during Mehidy Hasan Miraz’s maiden ODI century and his partnership with Mahmudullah

Sampath Bandarupalli07-Dec-20222 Number of players to score an ODI hundred while batting at No. 8 or lower, including Mehidy Hasan Miraz in Mirpur. Simi Singh was the first player with the feat, who also scored an unbeaten 100 against South Africa in 2021 while batting at No.8.202 Runs added by Bangladesh after the fall of the sixth wicket. Only four teams have added more runs for the final four wickets in an ODI. The highest is 213 by Australia against New Zealand in 2017. The previous highest for Bangladesh was 174 against Afghanistan earlier this year in Chattogram.148 Partnership between Mehidy and Mahmudullah for the seventh wicket. It is the joint third highest by any pair for the seventh or a lower wicket in ODIs. The highest is 177 between Jos Buttler and Adil Rashid against New Zealand in 2015, while Mehidy shared an unbeaten 174 with Afif Hossain against Afghanistan earlier this year.The 148-run stand between Mehidy and Mahmudullah is now the highest for Bangladesh for any wicket against India. The previous highest was 133 between Anamul Haque and Mushfiqur Rahim, for the third wicket in Fatullah in 2014. The unbroken eighth-wicket stand of 138 between Justin Kemp and Andrew Hall in 2006 in Cape Town was the previous highest against India in ODIs for the seventh or lower wicket.14.08 Run rate of the partnership between Mehidy and Nasum Ahmed, the second-fastest 50-plus stand for Bangladesh in ODIs. Their only stand to have come at a quicker rate is the 54-run one between Mushfiqur and Tamim Iqbal, it came off 3.2 overs at 16.2 against West Indies in 2018.298 Runs scored by Mehidy while batting at No. 8 this year. These are the most ODI runs by a batter in a calendar year while batting at No.8 or lower since Heath Streak’s 429 runs in 2001. Overall, he is sixth on that list.

Ahmedabad turns full yellove on a night to be swept away

Tears, joy, relief, and an ice-cool captain who for once got emotional by it all: the IPL final had everything

Shashank Kishore30-May-20231:57

Manjrekar: Dhoni had his eyes closed for the final ball

You just began to go, “Oh, no. Not again.”Ravindra Jadeja had bowled the ball left-arm spinners dream of. Drift, sharp turn, bounce, whirr. Everything. Shubman Gill, the man in the form of his life, was beaten fair and square. Yet, it’s what transpired behind the stumps that had everyone’s jaw drop, even though they knew what was coming.He may be turning 42 soon, but MS Dhoni once again proved he has the fastest hands in the business. The time taken from the moment the ball lodged in his gloves to him stumping Gill is a mind-boggling 0.12 seconds. That’s even faster than the fastest stumping Dhoni has ever effected.Jadeja enquires, as if he’s asking Dhoni, ‘what do you think?’. The wry smile is a giveaway. Gill isn’t going to have a second chance. It’s a massive moment because until then, Gill had been picking gaps that may have seemed like a brick wall to others. The crowd erupts as the big screen signals ‘OUT.’ So much for this being the home ground of the Gujarat Titans.Related

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The fluid strokeplay, the lazy elegance, the bristling front-of-square pulls – they’re all the kind of shots you pay big money to watch. Or in this case, brave thunderstorms. But then at some point, you wonder if Jadeja’s contribution to the set-up will be overshadowed again, like it has happened repeatedly this tournament.Or at least he’s felt he hasn’t been credited enough by the fans at different times. They’ve elicited cryptic social media outbursts that have set tongues wagging. Is there another storm brewing? Is everything okay between Jadeja and Dhoni?But the beauty of sport is it offers you a second chance when you least expect it. And that second chance for Jadeja came in the final over with CSK’s hopes of a miracle fast fading. They needed 10 off two balls against Mohit Sharma, one of the best death bowlers in the competition. That’s enough pressure. Forget for a second there are over a hundred thousand people in the crowd, and upwards of 30 million watching on television. All at 1:30am on a Tuesday morning.In the dugout, Dhoni has his eyes closed. He never sits there. But on Monday night, he was there well before it was his turn to bat. And he continued sitting there long after he’d been dismissed. He seems to be praying hard, fists clenched. He can’t look, no one can. It’s rare, it’s raw, it’s unadulterated. And then Jadeja shovels a yorker-length delivery over long-on for six. Now it’s down to four needed off one ball. More nerves.Rift? What rift? Dhoni and Jadeja savour a moment together moments after CSK’s win•BCCIStephen Fleming, the coach, exudes the calmness of a sage at the best of times. He is anything but that now. “I just couldn’t look, I was gearing up for a heartbreak, mate,” he says later. “I thought, ‘oh that’s one ball away from a big heartbreak.’ I wasn’t even looking at what Dhoni was doing. And suddenly, Jaddu swings leg side. Oh, unbelievable.” Fleming lets out a big puff of air, re-running that moment as he describes it.He’s emotionally drained. He’s got a cold beverage that he’s left unfinished to sit there and talk about the win. But he’s also pumped. “I’m happy answering more questions, that’s fine. I’m enjoying it,” he tells the media representative trying to wrap up the press conference. And then, he goes back to describing the moments in the aftermath.Jadeja’s winning runs trigger manic celebrations in the crowd. Ahmedabad appears as one big party waiting to take off. Strangers in the stands wearing CSK’s yellow are exchanging hugs and fist bumps. There are happy tears. They’re all now awaiting that speech. and they can’t wait for it to begin. The eagerness is as if they’re all awaiting exam results hosted on a single server that would crash anytime, resulting in more delays and more anxiety.It’s 2am or thereabouts, but no one has moved. Besides the boundary, Harbhajan Singh is moved. He has been in the dressing room and knows what it takes. Matthew Hayden, who Chennai made one of their own during his three-year stint with the team, is moved to tears. He squishes Ajinkya Rahane and Deepak Chahar in a bear hug.Across Bengaluru, crackers are going off. An airline pilot en route a Dubai-Chennai flight is thanked profusely by passengers as they de-board, for being their voice from the match. His heroic act: announcing scores every two overs.Jadeja runs towards Dhoni, who in a rare display of emotion yelps in delight as he lifts him in one motion, wonky knees be damned. It’s a sight quite unlike anything. It’s not something you expected to see when Jadeja stormed off midway through last year’s IPL, hurt and upset by Dhoni’s rare outburst against his captaincy. The official reason was injury, but there was hubbub that Dhoni’s comments had upset Jadeja to the extent that he left in a huff.Not for the first time in his career, Dhoni took a backseat during the trophy celebrations•Associated PressYou wondered then if it was the end of a memorable association. You wondered now, in victory, if that association had only been strengthened. Minutes later, a teary Jadeja, voice still shaking from the emotions of victory and pumping of adrenaline, would dedicate the win to a “special man.” Dhoni himself.It seems like the completion of a circle that took shape in 2009. When Jadeja, facing severe backlash after a botched T20 World Cup chase at Lord’s against England, found a confidante and mentor in Dhoni. Who would throw him into tough situations fully confident he was polishing coal into a diamond.As cameramen crowded around the two, the lights went off at that very moment for a laser show. That wasn’t incentive enough for fans at the far end to leave. Metro services had shut down for the night. A long commute to a major intersection in the city by foot awaited. No problems, they weren’t leaving without hearing speak.

Ears straining into the distance, eyes firmly on the big screen, trying to catch the odd missed words via a lip sync, they were all either standing or seated. When Dhoni announces he’ll try and come back next season for them, there’s a triumphant roar. This is what they were waiting for. There’s ecstasy, joy, and relief. All in one. The spectrums of emotion people don’t possibly experience are all activated at once. It’s nothing like anything you’ve experienced in recent times.The scenes elicit thoughts of life after Dhoni for CSK. But you’re immediately brought back into the sense by a massive burst of spectacular fireworks that light up the stadium. Ambati Rayudu, in his last IPL game, has the honour of receiving the trophy with Dhoni and Jadeja standing beside him. It was typical of Dhoni.What wasn’t typical of Dhoni are the emotions he displayed as he spoke of the love and adulation. It told you the story of a man who knows he’s at the sunset of a glorious career, wanting to come back for one final crack.The heart says yes. Now for the rest of the body to follow suit.

Motera goes yellow in anticipation of Dhoni's last dance

It was the perfect result for the Ahmedabad crowd: their defending champions getting off to a winning start, even while they had their fill of the MS Dhoni show

Shashank Kishore31-Mar-2023On IPL opening night, a 100,000-strong Ahmedabad crowd enjoyed the best of both worlds. It couldn’t have been more perfect for them than an MS Dhoni special and Gujarat Titans win.Except, Motera’s definition of “special” was something as simple as Dhoni tying his shoelaces, Dhoni waving while being paraded around the ground on a golf cart decked up like a chariot, or, even better, Dhoni emerging from the dressing room in his match gear. Who could fault them for going into a tizzy, though, with it being just shy of eight years since he last played at the ground. In fact, it was closing in on a year since he was last spotted on a cricket field of note anywhere, and that last sighting was at the end of an atypically woeful run for Chennai Super Kings at IPL 2022. Yes, everyone was waiting to see Dhoni, at 41, hoping for one more glimpse of the man if not the legend.They had braved traffic snarls, the sapping humidity that typically follows a summer downpour, the long queues to pick up physical tickets, and impossible levels of frisking and poking and prodding to finally get to their seats. As if all of this wasn’t stressful enough, they had to sit through the opening ceremony with the anxiety of whether Dhoni would actually play.On match eve, Dhoni had trained with knee braces. The news spread like wildfire on social media, with reports emerging that he’d probably have to skip the game. So every move Dhoni made today was viewed through the prism of him being a doubtful starter.It was a full house at Motera to kick off IPL 2023•AFP/Getty ImagesWhen he stretched his right leg, they wondered if he’d cramped. When he crouched low and did his wicketkeeping drills, they wondered if he was testing his hamstrings. When he gently lobbed a few overarm deliveries during the warm-ups, they wondered if the casual vibe was a sign of him not playing. Then, during the match, in the dying moments, when he clutched his toes to stretch after diving but failing to stop four leg byes, there was a collective cry of anguish, the four leg byes that benefitted Titans be damned.It needed a breathtaking opening ceremony to briefly keep the Dhoni chorus away. It felt like a home game for Chennai Super Kings, but when has it not been so at a Super Kings game, particularly since Dhoni’s message on Instagram at 19:29 on India’s Independence Day in 2020 to “consider me retired” from international cricket. Covid-19 pushed the IPL that year to September and CSK went on to have a season to forget, finishing joint-last on the points table. He couldn’t sign off altogether from cricket on that note, surely?In 2021, Dhoni duly lifted the IPL trophy. Dad’s Army had done it. There couldn’t have been a sweeter way to bid goodbye, right? But the win hadn’t come in Chennai, with the IPL once again moved to the UAE due to Covid-19. How could he have left without saying goodbye to his beloved Chepauk faithful? And so he came back in 2022, only for the tournament to be played only in Mumbai and Pune as cricket, like everything else, slowly got back on its feet after the ravages of the pandemic.Hardik Pandya could not have been faulted if he was left wondering about the concept of home advantage•Associated PressIn a rare expression of emotion after the season, Dhoni said he’d like to say goodbye in front of his home fans. When? No one knew.And so, here we were, in 2023, beginning all over again. Wondering if this would be his last dance. It’s a thought that consumed many in the crowd as they watched the opening ceremony. There was a point when the cameras panned to the Super Kings dugout with Dhoni the only one seated there, his feet tapping to Arijit Singh’s chartbusters. From singing along to “Channa Mereya” the crowd switched to “Dhooo-ni! Dhooo-ni!”. It was a proper throwback for those who grew up in the ’90s and 2000s, to hearing chants of “Saaa-chin! Saaa-chin!”.At several points during Super Kings’ innings, the crowd yelled for Dhoni to come out. For close to 90 minutes, they keep trying. At one point when Shivam Dube kept swinging for the hills and missing, they lost patience. The home team was in the ascendancy despite an astounding Ruturaj Gaikwad innings. You’d think the home fans would have rejoiced. They didn’t. They kept waiting for Dhoni. And after 90 minutes, when he finally took strike, the noise was deafening.But the loudest cheer on the night was yet to come. It was reserved for when he clattered his fourth ball for a six off Josh Little. Hardik Pandya could have well been left wondering if this was what they meant by home advantage.The Dhoni mania briefly gave way to rich applause when Shubman Gill played a series of aesthetically pleasing shots to get Titans’ chase going. But every now and then, there was a reminder that the fans were mostly here for Dhoni.A touch of Titans, a dash of Dhoni – the recipe in Ahmedabad on Friday evening•AFP via Getty ImagesThe 179 Super Kings had set wasn’t quite in the Dhoni territory of choke by spin, definitely not on this deck where the ball skidded through and came on nicely. But in empowering two rookies in Tushar Deshpande and Rajvardhan Hangargekar with the new ball, Dhoni played his cards like he always has amid the clamour.He was calm even when Deshpande went for a succession of boundaries and when he and Hangargekar overstepped. He was waiting for that one opening, and when he finally had it, he brought Ravindra Jadeja on and promptly attacked, with a slip in place for Hardik. Perhaps the presence of that fielder prompted Hardik’s dismissal, bowled missing a sweep.The match nearly went into Dhoni’s grasp after Hangargekar struck in the 18th over, but in the end it became amply evident that Super Kings’ middle-order slip-up, after Gaikwad’s stunner, was going to cost them. Dhoni alluded to this, his parting line at the presentation being: “I’m not disappointed, our bowlers tried their best.” It was a typical, succinct Dhoni assessment of where they’d erred.As for the crowd, they left a happy lot, perhaps wishing they could see a repeat of this clash come May 28, and return in big numbers to cheer for the man in the yellow No. 7 jersey while having their own team defend their crown.

And just like that, Williamson is back, bringing the warm glow of the familiar

He’s returned from a serious injury with remarkable speed, right at the moment when New Zealand need his skillset most

Karthik Krishnaswamy12-Oct-20232:11

Who does Kane Williamson replace in the XI?

The world of 2023 is profoundly different to the world of 2019, but some things have endured. Kane Williamson is one of them. He’s the only guy from this photograph to feature in this one.He’s done this against all odds, recovering with remarkable speed from a knee injury that had all but ruled him out of this World Cup, and on Thursday afternoon he brought to Chepauk the warm glow of the familiar.Here he was, in that knowing way of his, choosing the blandest possible response to every press-conference question. Here he was, in that diffident way of his, making his way to the nets, his head momentarily turned by the noise of a dozen cameras snapping at him in burst mode. Here he was, in that finicky way of his, choosing which ball to force square on tiptoe and which ball – near-identical to the watcher from afar – to dab fine.Related

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Here he was, New Zealand’s captain, preparing for his first game of his fourth World Cup.Much has been made of this tournament showcasing a format going through an existential crisis. At the same time, though, this World Cup also showcases a format that’s experiencing a rare period of stability, with no major rule changes taking place between 2019 and 2023. For all of T20’s growing influence, Williamson doesn’t think ODIs have changed to any great degree in this time.”Yeah, I think with the number of T20 sort of World Cups that we’ve had, it’s probably meant that there’s been a lot more T20 cricket building up to those events,” he said. “Yeah, I mean it probably keeps evolving a little bit and there’s probably a bunch of things that still remain quite similar that you do need to still keep considering […] We saw in 2019 where there were expectations that there’ll be scores of 400-plus where in fact they were probably more [in the] 250 to 260 range, and so there’s still a lot of adjustment and adapting to the way you play that gives you the best chance, and I think every team does it a little bit differently.”New Zealand have brought to this World Cup a squad that allows them to bat differently in different conditions, and they’ll be thrilled at the timing of Williamson’s return. They won their first two games while rattling away at well over a run a ball on flat surfaces in Ahmedabad and Hyderabad, but Chennai promises to be different. It’s here, perhaps, that they will most need Williamson’s skillset.Kane Williamson bats at the nets•ICC/Getty ImagesNo team has made 300 in the last 12 ODIs at Chepauk, and Sunday’s World Cup clash between India and Australia was decided by Test-match virtues. India won because they bowled with better control for longer, and because their batters showed greater staying power in tricky conditions.New Zealand already possess plenty of staying power in Devon Conway, Daryl Mitchell and Tom Latham – all proven Test batters – but in conditions that are likely to bring spin into play, and against a Bangladesh attack made for those conditions, they’ll gladly welcome more of it.You don’t need reminding of all the times Williamson’s staying power has won New Zealand World Cup games, but here’s a recap anyway. Auckland, where Mitchell Starc looked all but unstoppable. Birmingham, where Williamson masterminded a seesawing chase of 242. Manchester, where he turned 7 for 2 into a total of 291. Manchester, again, where he scrapped away in seaming conditions to give New Zealand a total they could bowl at.For every ODI that looks like an extended T20 slugfest, there’s one that ebbs and flows like a condensed Test match. These tend to occur quite often at World Cups, for a number of reasons. They feature a number of matches on used pitches, for one. Perhaps more crucially, teams bring their best attacks to these tournaments, having spent much of the build-up resting key bowlers and testing out new faces.It’s against the best attacks and in less-than-ideal conditions that the best batters stand out from the crowd.This is why teams won’t worry too much about their linchpins even if they’ve not scored too many runs in the lead-up to the tournament. Joe Root scored one fifty and made seven scores of 11 or less in his last nine ODI innings before this World Cup, but it was no surprise to anyone that he began the tournament with back-to-back scores of 77 and 82. Williamson, dogged by injury, has played only 12 ODIs since the 2019 World Cup, scored his runs at a strike rate of 70.33 – well below his career figure of 80.97 – and hasn’t featured in the format since January.It’s likely, though, that none of this will matter on Friday. There’s every chance, instead, that Williamson will mark his guard, waggle his bat behind him in that twitchy way of his, and flow into his drives like 2019 never went away.

Cummins feels heat as Australia struggle to keep pace with Bazball

For the first time in the series, Australia’s containment strategy unravelled

Andrew McGlashan20-Jul-20231:51

McGlashan: England’s Bazball finally hurts Australia

Pat Cummins has not had many bad days in his entire Test career, let alone while he’s been captain, but Thursday at Old Trafford can challenge for the top of the list as Australia felt the full force of Bazball.It started when he drove the first ball of the day from James Anderson to cover point and did not get any better. By stumps he had been taken for nearly six an over – and it was higher before his final three-over spell – as England’s scoring rate ran away from Australia. He also missed the opportunity to catch Moeen Ali when he seemingly lost sight of the ball at mid-on, dropped a chance at midwicket off the same batter (although Moeen fell the next ball he faced), and in the final session couldn’t back up a throw from the deep by Steven Smith which left him chasing the ball towards a mass of cheering England supporters.Across two sessions, England scored 323 in 56 overs and even that was pulled back by Harry Brook and Ben Stokes playing for the close. Between lunch and tea 178 runs were flayed from 25 overs and the 206-run partnership between Zak Crawley and Joe Root took 30. In what has been an excruciatingly tight series it was, for that period, the most one-sided cricket that had been played.Related

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For the first two Tests of the series at Edgbaston and Lord’s, Australia found ways to keep up with, and even temper, England’s approach. In the opening match the home side scored briskly, but Australia took wickets at regular-enough intervals that things didn’t get out of control and they were able to nick the victory at the end.At Lord’s they dominated for significant periods and, with the help of the short ball, overcame the loss of Nathan Lyon. Stokes made them nervous on the final day after Jonny Bairstow’s run out ignited tempers, but they had enough runs in the bank.However, cracks started to emerge at Headingley when England were able to get away with the bat over shorter periods, notably after lunch on the second day which enabled them to get almost level and then, as promised by Stuart Broad, knocking off the target one-day style although it was tighter than they would have wished.Australia have often spoken about doing things at their own tempo this series and not getting sucked into playing England at their own game. It worked – just – at the start of the series when it was aided by some of England’s own errors, particularly in the catching, and they were able to build strong first-innings totals but now Australia have made mistakes themselves.Old Trafford has been where, on day two at least, they became overwhelmed by England’s approach. Having put in a wasteful display with the bat to only reach 317 from 183 for 3, they looked as shell-shocked and rudderless in the field as any time in recent memory while Crawley and Root were together.While England’s post-lunch surge took shape, at times there was barely a ball where fields weren’t being changed and bowlers not being talked to. And it did not feel proactive. The game was being played a pace that Australia couldn’t keep up with. There was more than the occasional furrowed brow and even a startled look as boundary after boundary was peeled off, many in increasingly audacious fashion. Root’s reverse scoops over the slips were back after last appearing at Edgbaston.”They are scoring quickly, [so] you feel like you can take a wicket,” Daniel Vettori, Australia’s assistant coach, said. “Do you keep going? Do you keep pressure? I feel like today was probably the first time our press was met with them going at seven an over. In the back of our minds we always knew England had this in them because they play so aggressively.Pat Cummins looks bereft of ideas as England pile on the runs•Getty Images”You see the respect our players have for their tactics with the fields we have set to mitigate that at times. Today was the perfect storm of them coming hard at us, and us not being able to come back against them with wicket-taking options, which is what has allowed us to be ahead in the series so far.”The build-up to the Test had been dominated by talk of how Australia would structure their XI with Cameron Green fit again. It was Todd Murphy who lost his place in what was always going to be a hotly debated decision given Australia had last played without a specialist spinner in 2011-12. It’s quite possible he would have been carted by England’s batters as well, but with Travis Head introduced in the 23rd over the absence of a frontline spinner was noticeable. Head, who was reverse swept for four first ball by Crawley then sent for six from the next, ended up going at eight an over.Meanwhile, Mitchell Marsh’s figures may not suggest he should have bowled earlier than the 36th over, when he entered the attack, but it was an odd decision by Cummins to not at least try him earlier against Crawley who he had removed twice at Headingley. By the time he did bowl, Crawley had 112.”It is a constant factor trying to marry up your own bowling against the plans,” Vettori said. “Through the whole series Pat has been exceptional. He likes advice, he likes to talk to talk to people around the group. It was just one of those sessions where we pushed exceptionally hard and England responded. The amount of boundaries that they were able to score even with the field set the way they were, we just weren’t able to mitigate that run rate at all. I think he has done an exceptional job all through the series.”The weather may yet come to Australia’s aid, but even if that’s the case to just be talking about such an escape shows how the mood has turned since Lord’s. Whatever happens from here, this was a day where Australia, and their captain, had few answers against an England side that is doing all it can to set up a decider at The Oval.

Sidharth Monga's India vs Pakistan fever dream

For every good India vs Pakistan cricket memory, there are many unpleasant ones. On Saturday, despite the world we live in, let’s all be heroes, for one day

Sidharth Monga13-Oct-2023Last night was the first in three that I went to sleep without fever. At around 4am, I woke up with fever, and a fever dream.I have had quite a few of these through the last three nights: repetitive, vivid, all-consuming, still extremely difficult to remember when I wake up with a parched throat. And yet I have been going back to the same dream when going back to sleep.I vaguely do remember meeting the ghost of a cricket match in my dream. I call it IP. Short for India vs Pakistan. IP has been extremely anxious, passing the anxiety on to me. Not that I am not anxious already. I don’t remember the conversations we have been having well enough to reproduce them verbatim, so please bear with my paraphrasing.Related

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One thing I clearly do remember saying to IP is that no recovery can begin until we accept that whatever has happened so far, wherever we are right now in life, was inevitable. That there is nothing anyone could have done to avoid that. That it is no one’s fault. Only then can we move on.Okay, it’s already working. Writing down things can help you remember. Now I remember why IP was anxious. They didn’t like what they had become. They just wanted to be a cricket match with great performances and memories.Memories of the time a whole country opened its arms and welcomed those from the other side, refusing to let them pay for food or clothes, showing them how well they had looked after the Nankana Sahib gurudwara left behind, opening their homes for their neighbours, comparing notes on dal makhni, butter chicken and mangoes, realising how little different they all were. Memories of the time one stand in one ground felt the best way to deal with the heartbreak they witnessed minutes ago was to applaud the opposition as the better side only for that emotion to catch on like wildfire and reverberate far beyond just the stands.Memories of even last year, when fans of both teams grooved together to outside the MCG, elevating the already popular song to a status very few pieces of art attain: a unifying force for nations at odds, which is quite befitting as the song at its heart is a lament of the writer of the song who couldn’t travel to India to collaborate on a project because of the world we live in.5:40

‘Once the first ball is bowled, everything is back to normal’

That night in Melbourne, India and Pakistan collaborated to play the most magical of T20Is that culminated in a last-ball finish and a roar that could be heard by my colleague Alex Malcolm’s partner at their home two suburbs away. You could see the afterglow of the match on the faces exiting the MCG. Now MCG has hosted massive footy games, but never yielded anything quite like it.All these memories almost made me feel better, but the , as IP duly went on to remind me, is that these memories have become aberrations with them. All the ugliness came back to mind. The burning stands just two Tests after Pakistan were given that standing ovation in Chennai in 1999. The stone-pelting at Indian fielders in Karachi 15 years before the two teams kickstarted that magical tour in 2004. For everything good that happens to them once in a while, said IP, there were tens of instances of ugliness, hate, jingoism, opportunistic politics and capitalism.Again, I asked, was it possible for things to have turned out any different? Or was it possible for the cricket rivalry to only have good memories? I mean, how many things would we have to wipe off for IP to remain a cricket match? The Partition of 1947. The war of 1965. Of 1971. Kargil 1999. The last is not a historical conflict even. Many survivors of it are still alive, they still think of the victims, of the horrors of a terrible time.I remember telling IP that for their own piece of mind, they have to accept things as they are. “You were never meant to be just a cricket match like other neighbours, say, Australia and New Zealand, play. You don’t get a choice in the matter. You were going to be the vehicle to legitimise – sometimes, just be able to express – our feelings that otherwise can’t even be acknowledged: hatred, anxiety, fears, revenge, pettiness, shame, guilt, love, joy, dreams, forgiveness, pain, reconciliation.”Along with the blue of India and green of Pakistan, these colours will be out in force come match time•Associated PressTo the best of my knowledge, till two days before the Pakistan match, only four Pakistanis outside the Pakistan team bubble were here for the match: commentators Waqar Younis and Ramiz Raja, statistician Mazher Arshad, and businessman-cum-super fan Bashir . On Thursday could come in journalist Shahid Hashmi and – on my flight from Delhi to Ahmedabad – PCB chairman Zaka Ashraf, his family and other delegates to a welcome befitting their status.Still it will hardly be India vs Pakistan in the stands. The of the world we live in!In my delirious state, I remembered a press conference of a BCCI official late in July where the official didn’t even want to talk about the protocols for fans to come.Even in a normal state, I wouldn’t know what to make of it. All I am thinking right now is what I think I told IP: it will be all right, have faith in Virat Kohli and Jasprit Bumrah, and Haris Rauf and Babar Azam. They will speak Punjabi to each other. They and their team-mates will play great cricket. They will rise above this again.It won’t quite be MCG but, as it has been on loop in my mind for the last three days, “Let everything happen to you: beauty and terror. Just keep going. No feeling is final.” That bit of poetry is written by Rainer Maria Rilke. In my head plays David Bowie’s . Let’s all be heroes. Just for one day.

An atmosphere like never before, but it could have been so much more

The 100,000-strong Ahmedabad crowd made itself heard, but it was a shame there was almost no green in that vastness of blue

Sambit Bal14-Oct-2023There is noise. And, then there is noise as force: pure, purposeful, and meant to deliver a punch.Through the years of the IPL, and the multitude of T20 leagues, we have grown accustomed to the former kind. It’s constant, blaring, engineered and soulless. Noise for the sake of noise: you must make plenty of it because it’s being demanded, and it’s supposed to be part of the entertainment bundle you signed up for.You scream at fours and sixes, you flail about between balls and overs, you sway sideways, flash your phone lights, become part of Mexican waves: you are part of the performance, you allow yourself to be conducted. You know it, and the players know it. They block it out as white noise.And then you get to places and matches where the crowds know what they are doing.Related

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India's bowling unit: Gods of small things

The Narendra Modi Stadium is built to be imposing, a nod to muscular exhibitionism and a symbol of Indian cricket’s pole position in the sport. It beats the Melbourne Cricket Ground by at least 20,000 seats, and though not as tall and colosseum-like as the MCG, its vastness makes it feel as gladiatorial. And it’s safe to say that cricket has never seen as many blue jerseys at a venue as it did today.Every inch of this stadium was packed for the last IPL final despite it being pushed by a day on account of rain but never had this ground hosted an India match of this magnitude. The previous ODI games here were played during the Covid era, and the Test match during Border-Gavaskar Trophy, despite the pomp of two prime ministers making a grandstand appearance, was thinly attended. So here it was, the real deal, the day this stadium you hope was built for, to be bathed in cacophonous blue. And when the moments came, it produced the noise so quintessentially organic to the Indian cricket experience.It began in the middle of that phase when Jasprit Bumrah and Kuldeep Yadav, whose originality and wicket-taking threat form the heart of this versatile Indian bowling machine, were hastening a Pakistani meltdown from a cushy 155 for 2. Stadium regulars would know the drill. The routine begins at the start of the bowler’s run-up with a collective swoosh and gathers decibels in sync with the bowler – in this case Bumrah – running in, reaching peak volume at the point of delivery. It’s rhythmic, full of intent, and if you are the batter, full of menace.This is a case of fans recognising a moment and becoming one with it. Players recognise this too, and they feel the energy and feed off it.No Pakistani cricketer would have played before a crowd as large, and as vociferously partisan, as this and though international players are internally wired to steel themselves against it, for them not to sense this air of intimidation would have been impossible. They would have expected it and prepared for it, but having never played India in India, and having played all their World Cup games against other teams in friendly Hyderabad, an experience such as this needs to be lived to be learnt. As forgettable as their performance was at this ground, the experience might remain unforgettable.No ambiguity in whom the fans are supporting•ICC/Getty ImagesIt didn’t have to be this one-sided though. The last time these two teams met at an ICC event, the crowd was nearly as large. And Virat Kohli’s biomechanics-defying six off Haris Rauf, followed by another to tilt a near-impossible equation towards India, turned the match into a humdinger. But though, like everywhere else, the Indian fans easily outnumbered the Pakistanis, there was at least a contest in the stands. And from all accounts, the sloganeering, baiting and banter was good-natured, and it spilt over to the streets and pubs in the evening.I have watched India and Pakistan play in Lahore, Bengaluru, Adelaide, Centurion, Johannesburg, and now Ahmedabad, and never has a cricket ground felt so hopelessly lacking in something so essential: one group of fans. A small group of Pakistani journalists have finally made it to the tournament, after their long wait for a visa to India ended just in time for this game, but no fans have managed to cross the border yet. And there is no word yet on whether they will be able to.Mickey Arthur, the Pakistan team director, didn’t mince his words after the game. “It didn’t seem like an ICC event tonight, let’s be brutally honest,” he said at the press conference. “It seemed like a bilateral series, a BCCI event. I didn’t hear coming through the microphones tonight. Yes, that [the possibility of being intimidated by a partisan crowd] does play a role, but I’m not going to use that as an excuse. For us, it was about living the moment, it was about the next ball, and it was about how we’re going to combat the Indian players.”Pakistan, in keeping with their performance against India in the World Cup – 0-8 with this defeat – were abysmal once again. But despite that, this match was this tournament’s biggest draw. And Arthur was spot on. The World Cup is billed, rightfully, as the biggest festival of cricket, and it will continue to feel like a travesty, and an act of neglect, if the organisers fail to ensure the participation of the whole cricket world in it, particularly those who give it colour and life.

Swashbuckling. Radiant. High-octane. We have a brand-new SRH

Between them, Travis Head, Abhishek Sharma and Heinrich Klaasen broke records, Mumbai Indians’ hearts, and T20 batting rules

Vishal Dikshit28-Mar-20241:43

Moody: Head set the tone, and Sunrisers just didn’t look back

If, before Wednesday, you were asked which team would break Royal Challengers Bengaluru’s record total of 263 for 5 from IPL 2013, who would you have picked?Not a team that has traditionally been known as a bowling powerhouse, surely?And yet, it’s Sunrisers Hyderabad. And the great bowling team of the past has not only broken the record by a distance, they have topped 200 in back-to-back matches in IPL 2024.Related

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And even if you had guessed Sunrisers, it would have been because of the presence of Henrich Klaasen, given his T20 strike rate of 193 since the start of 2023. He did top-score in Sunrisers’ 277 with a scorching 80 off 34, but it was the belligerence of Travis Head and Abhishek Sharma that “set the tone” – in Klaasen’s words – for a magical night in Hyderabad.Sunrisers were seemingly under pressure coming into this season – they had finished IPL 2023 at the bottom of the table with just four wins from 14 games; they have a new leader with no T20 captaincy experience; they hosted Mumbai Indians knowing that home teams had won all the previous matches this season. When Sunrisers arrived in Hyderabad, they knew they had won just one out of seven home games last season.Sometimes, that sort of pressure can free you up, and when it’s so early in the tournament, you can also free your arms more easily, especially on the flattest of pitches. It helps if the team management gives you a “clear message” to “go out and express yourself”.Head may not need such messages, but it must have done wonders for 23-year-old Abhishek, who had seen Head cart the ball around in the first four overs to race to 32 off 12. When IPL debutant Kwena Maphaka offered pace, Head sent him for a 22-run over. When Abhishek joined him in the fifth over, and Hardik Pandya tried different lengths and pace, Head smashed the Mumbai Indians captain for three fours in a row. And when Jasprit Bumrah was not going to get a second over in the powerplay, Head and Abhishek went all guns blazing.By the end of the powerplay, Head had registered Sunrisers’ fastest IPL fifty off just 18 balls. Head is one of Abhishek’s favourite batters, and the infectious energy was passed on when Abhishek smashed his second ball for a six. Abhishek revealed after the game that Head had told him that if he felt like going after the ball, even if it’s the first ball, “just go for it”. And he did!2:42

Rapid Fire: An absolute nightmare for bowlers

After an 81-run powerplay, Sunrisers’ new record in the phase, Hardik fed the two left-hand batters legspin in the form of Piyush Chawla, and that meant only one thing – the ball sailing beyond the leg-side boundary, which is where Abhishek’s three sixes in that over landed. Sunrisers had crossed 100 in just seven overs. They were not just rewriting record books, they were smashing them to pieces.This batting duo was making the most of not just a flat track but also on a bowling attack that had an IPL debutant, one playing his second IPL game, one spinner turning the ball into them, and the best T20 bowler not bowling to them.Logic suggests that Bumrah should have bowled after Head fell to Gerald Coetzee in the 15-run eighth over, but Hardik persisted with himself and the 17-year-old IPL debutant Maphaka. Abhishek was in his groove by now, and when he clobbered a slower ball into the sight screen, he had broken Head’s record of the fastest fifty for Sunrisers – off 18 balls, set barely 20 minutes earlier – by getting there in 16 balls.”The message was simple for all the batters in the meeting we had before this match, that everyone just go and express yourself. That’s a very positive message,” Abhishek said at the press conference after the game. “If you get it from your captain and coach, I think that’s really supportive for all the batters.”The run rate was almost kissing 15 at the halfway mark and there was still no Bumrah, who, it appeared, was being saved for Klaasen. But when Klaasen came out at the start of the 12th over, there was still no Bumrah. Instead, Hardik brought on a bowler playing just his second IPL game: left-arm spinner Shams Mulani. Possibly because there were two right-hand batters in then, Klaasen and Aiden Markram. But this was despite Klaasen’s phenomenal record against spin in the IPL. Klaasen doesn’t need an invitation from spinners to hit sixes, and he launched Mulani down the ground for the first of his seven sixes off the second ball he faced.By the time Bumrah got the ball again, Sunrisers had soared to 173 in just 12 overs. The match was gone by then because even if Bumrah bowled three maidens after that – which might be beyond even his magical powers – Sunrisers would target the other 30 balls to still get to a daunting total. Hypothesis aside, Head and Abhishek had set the stage so beautifully and brutally for the rest that Klaasen’s seven sixes for his 34-ball 80 seemed routine rather than jaw-dropping.3:16

Moody baffled by Mumbai’s use of Bumrah

It has to be said that for a long time, Mumbai Indians were seriously in the chase of 278. Seventy-six runs in the powerplay, 100 off 45 balls, and sixes flying off the bat like in a highlights package.At 165 for 3 after 12 overs, when their run rate was 13.75 and the asking rate 14.12, it looked not just possible but achievable for Mumbai Indians. But that’s when Pat Cummins proved that despite the lack of T20 captaincy pedigree, he had the smarts – the World Test Championship title and the ODI World Cup trophy are evidence of that.Unlike Hardik, Cummins brought on his key bowlers when it mattered. He summoned his most experienced quick – Bhuvneshwar Kumar – before the death overs for a third over that went for just five runs. And when Cummins himself dismissed the dangerous Tilak Varma with a slow bouncer in a three-run over, he turned to Jaydev Unadkat for his knowhow of bowling mainly slower balls on a pitch where lack of pace was tough to score off. Unadkat’s five-run over continued a streak of 16 boundary-less balls and the asking rate had shot to 22 as Mumbai needed 88 off 24 balls.”Credit to SRH, they bowled pretty well there at the end, taking the pace off on a slowing pitch,” Tim David said at the press conference. “It can be pretty hard to hit to the big side so that’s credit to them.”The bowling was expected to do it, but with this new, improved, swashbuckling batting, Sunrisers have sent a message no opposition wants to show two blue ticks for.

Pathum Nissanka, Sri Lanka's first double-centurion? Who'd have thought?

Nissanka doesn’t fit the mould of batters to achieve this feat. But he’s put in the work quietly and made it happen

Madushka Balasuriya09-Feb-2024Pathum Nissanka has just become the first Sri Lankan to score an ODI double-hundred. Yes, read it, say it out loud, and let it sink in. This is not a drill, and why would anyone even prepare for such a preposterous eventuality?To say Nissanka doesn’t fit the mould for batters to achieve this feat would be an understatement. For the record, here’s the list of other men’s double-centurions in no particular order: Rohit Sharma, Martin Guptill, Chris Gayle, Sachin Tendulkar, Fakhar Zaman, Ishan Kishan, Shubman Gill, Glenn Maxwell. See a pattern? And now Nissanka.And here are some from Sri Lanka who got close. Sanath Jayasuriya, of course, whose 189 is in the minds of many Sri Lankans better than any of Rohit’s doubles. Then there’s Tillakaratne Dilshan who struck 160, 160* and 161*, but never more. Many thought it would be Kumar Sangakkara during his 169, but he too fell short. Upul Tharanga flirted with the double en route to 174 but never really threatened.Related

Binura Fernando comes in for injured Dushmantha Chameera for Afghanistan T20Is

Nissanka 210* outplays Omarzai, Nabi tons as SL clinch opener

Pathum Nissanka hits Sri Lanka's first double-century in ODIs

But then comes Pathum Nissanka, heaving an Afghanistan spinner over deep midwicket.It was in March 2021, away in the Caribbean, when he made his international debut, and the overwhelming feeling was Sri Lanka had unearthed their next great Test batter.Here’s Nissanka again, paddle-sweeping a wide yorker past short fine leg.”Perhaps one of the most technically sound young batters from Sri Lanka, he has struggled to find his feet in ODIs so far.” That was ESPNcricinfo’s verdict as Nissanka was nominated for Debutant of the Year in 2021.Oh, here he is squeezing another wide yorker through backward point.”He’ll carry Sri Lankan cricket forward – certainly in Test cricket, and he’ll play a massive role in one-day cricket. How he develops his T20 cricket, time will tell.” That was then head coach Mickey Arthur shortly after his debut.Now he’s rocked back and is pulling it high over deep square leg.”In recent months, he’s made an impact in the shorter formats too, but it is Tests to which he is most suited,” wrote Andrew Fidel Fernando in March 2022.And now he’s careening one past the bowler and crashing it through cover as well.Safe to say, Nissanka doesn’t like being put in a mould. But one thing he does enjoy is work. Quiet, in the shadows, buckle down when everyone’s packing up but you’re still going, work.Sanath Jayasuriya applauds Pathum Nissanka’s double-century•AFP/Getty ImagesIt’s the kind of work that gets you battle-ready when you enter the national side for the first time, despite having to drag yourself through Sri Lanka’s dysfunctional domestic system.It’s the kind of work that makes selectors want to keep picking you despite a high score of 24 in your first 11 ODI innings, and enables you to find your best white-ball form despite contracting Covid-19 and dengue in a two-year period.It’s the kind of work that doesn’t allow you to sit back and admire your four successive fifties at the ODI World Cup, but instead makes to strive for more.More importantly, it’s the kind of work where the task at hand is more important than any sort of personal glory. It might seem an unusual thing to say when Sri Lanka have just celebrated their first double-centurion, but Nissanka was selfless during his innings.Batting alongside Nissanka was Avishka Fernando, a player who many might have put ahead of Nissanka while rating potential double-ton candidates. But it was Nissanka who took the lead over his senior partner, taking the attack early to Afghanistan.When Kusal Mendis was struggling to get going, Nissanka took on Mohammed Nabi and Noor Ahmad to ensure the scoring rate didn’t dip – a frequent gripe in Sri Lanka’s recent innings. And when Sadeera Samarawickrama signalled his intent to take on the bowlers in the final 10 overs, Nissanka – at this point within touching distance of 150 and an average boosting unbeaten knock – outdid him.In the end he was rewarded with records and accolades. His 210 had come at a strike rate of 151.07, only comparable to peak Jayasuriya – with the man himself applauding the achievement from the stands.Even as Charith Asalanka embraced Nissanka in a bearhug, all he could do was grin – almost in disbelief. Had he really done that? Well, he had, and now it’ll be back to work.

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