Stats – Ashwin-Iyer's rescue act, India's unbeaten record against Bangladesh

Iyer and Ashwin knocked off nearly half the runs of India’s target

Sampath Bandarupalli25-Dec-202271* – The partnership between Shreyas Iyer and R Ashwin, the highest for the eighth wicket in a successful fourth-innings chase. The previous highest was 52 between Inzamam-ul-Haq and Rashid Latif against Australia in 1994. The unbeaten 71-run stand is also the fourth-highest for the eighth or a lower wicket in a successful chase.Related

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0 – India’s losses in Test cricket against Bangladesh, having won 11 of the 13 matches. Only three teams are unbeaten against an opponent, having played more Tests – 20 by Sri Lanka against Zimbabwe, 17 by New Zealand against Zimbabwe and 14 by South Africa against Bangladesh.49 – Percentage of India’s target knocked off by the Iyer and Ashwin partnership. It is the highest percentage of target added by the last three wickets in a successful fourth-innings chase. The previous highest was 48.1% by New Zealand against West Indies in Dunedin in 1980, when 50 runs came for the last three wickets in a 104-run chase.

74 – India’s total when they lost their seventh wicket. Only two teams have been successful in the fourth innings after losing their seventh wicket at a lower score – 54 by New Zealand chasing 104 against West Indies in 1980 and 59 by Pakistan in pursuit of 65 against England in 1984.42* – Ashwin’s score in the fourth innings in Mirpur, the highest by a No. 9 or lower during a successful chase in Test cricket. The previous highest was 40* by Winston Benjamin while batting at No. 10 against Pakistan in 1988 in Bridgetown.71 – Runs scored by India after the fall of seventh wicket, their second-most in a successful fourth-innings chase. India had added 94 runs for their last three wickets against Australia in 2010 during a one-wicket win in Mohali. The 71 runs by India are also the tenth-highest by any team after losing their seventh wicket in a Test chase.145 – India’s target in Mirpur, the third-highest successful chase for India in Tests in the last ten years. They won chasing 328 against Australia in Brisbane in 2021 and a 155 while also chasing against Australia, in the 2013 Mohali Test.

Shami and Joseph crank it up on spicy Kotla pitch

The two quicks are wired differently but can be equally lethal and, alongside Rashid Khan, give Gujarat Titans the cushion of an all-weather attack

Shashank Kishore05-Apr-20232:29

Moody: Alzarri Joseph varies pace like Andy Roberts

Three weeks ago, Mohammed Shami saw deliveries repeatedly scoot low to the wicketkeeper from the good-length areas that he hit consistently at Feroz Shah Kotla. Such a prospect in the very first over of a Test can be deflating. But Shami still bounded in to pick up four wickets to skittle Australia in the first innings.Last night, Shami was in for a surprise upon his return to Delhi. The ball was zipping around, there was lateral movement, and the carry was largely consistent. All he needed to do was to land it on good length like he does, with a bolt upright seam, and let nature take its course. After all, it’s a method that’s brought him rich rewards in the powerplay since last year.In Ahmedabad, at the IPL’s opening game, he picked up the season’s first wicket with a Test-match dismissal of Devon Conway, bowling him through the gate with a sharp in-ducker. And the early evidence in Delhi seemed to suggest he wanted to have fun, even if it meant conceding a few extra runs in search of that perfect delivery.Related

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Especially after seeing how the ball behaved after a pearler of a first delivery to David Warner, the ball leaving him late to kiss the stumps only for the bails to remain intact. Shami just wanted to let it rip. And the short square boundaries weren’t going to dissuade him.Prithvi Shaw was in the firing line and was roughed up by a short delivery as he spooned a catch to mid-on. Shami, the joint-highest powerplay wicket-taker for the Titans during their march to the title last year, had struck again.This Test-match length would have its second victim in Mitch Marsh in his next over when Shami had him play on. The opening spell was a spectacle, even if it wasn’t quite as thrilling as Shami flattening the stumps, like he did to Conway. But it set the tone for the Titans.It gave their attack markers on a surface where captains can often opt for the insurance of a score to defend. Hardik Pandya, though, was having none of it. Titans have been chasing well, and this surface was right up their ally. It took all of two overs for Shami to justify his decision to bowl.If Shami set the scene, Alzarri Joseph truly owned it. Five nights ago, he was in Jo’burg, delivering a telling T20I spell for West Indies on surfaces where 435 runs were smashed for fun. And he’s carried on doing the same at the IPL, where he’s got some unfinished business.Alzarri Joseph struck twice in two balls•BCCIIn 2019, he arrived as a replacement and ended up with the tournament’s best bowling figures with his 6 for 12 for Mumbai Indians against Sunrisers Hyderabad. He had made 136 seem 180 and beyond that night. But an injury soon had him missing the remainder of the season. It wasn’t until he was signed by Titans last year that he started getting games regularly.There’s some fire in his bowling that can be deceptive, because he doesn’t make an outward effort to bowl fast. His bowling is just so naturally wired and in sync that he can let them rip without seemingly meaning to. In the first game, he was largely responsible for Super Kings’ slowdown after they threatened to make 220 at one stage. Here, again, he went short of a length on a deck that offered to be his ally. And he found success.When Titans assembled a squad that was ridiculed by some last year, they did so knowing they weren’t going to play at home immediately. On red-soil decks with decent bounce and carry, they knew they needed fast bowlers. It perhaps explains why they got Shami and Joseph, among others.Here, Joseph had a batter of Warner’s calibre hanging back more often than not. Warner is as much of a white-ball destroyer as anyone can be but brought with him the inherent risk of playing back to a full ball, and was snuffed out after being late on the shot to a ball angling away.Joseph then went on a sustained short-ball barrage that had Sarfaraz Khan ducking and weaving under them uncomfortably until one pinged him on the helmet. Debutant Abishek Porel also copped one on the helmet in trying to pull. But the ball he bowled to Rilee Rossouw summed up his spell. It reared up from short of a length and ballooned off the shoulder of the bat to point.Joseph had combined seam movement, up-and-down bounce and “inconsistent pace” to have the night of his life. Two for 29 to boot, alongside Shami’s top spell that felled Shaw and Marsh, gave Titans the advantage.

“This is a name that is well back in the archives, but the great West Indian fast bowler Andy Roberts was like that. Different in stature to Alzarri Joseph but … he’s got that great change of pace, and has now got control of his line. He’s a weapon.”Tom Moody on ESPNcricinfo’s T20 Time:Out

“He’s a gun,” former Australia allrounder Tom Moody gushed of Joseph on ESPNcricinfo’s T20 Time:Out. “He bowls genuinely quick, and what I like about him is he’s unpredictable with his pace. And that’s intentional. So he’s either bowling one in the high 140s or he’s bowling in high 130s. And that’s why he’s hitting people in the head, because of that inconsistency.”This is a name that is well back in the archives, but the great West Indian fast bowler Andy Roberts was like that. Different in stature to Alzarri Joseph but you talk to some of the greats like Ian Chappell, who have played a lot against Roberts, and they will say you put the pull shot or hook shot away because he’s got two bouncers and you never know which one it is. So, he’s got that great change of pace, and has now got control of his line. He’s a weapon.”This variety that Shami and Joseph bring, along with Josh Little’s left-arm angle and Hardik Pandya’s seam-ups give them the luxury of using Rashid Khan in the second half, when teams don’t have the option of playing him out. Rashid had never been introduced as late as he was here – in the 13th over – in the IPL, and it needed all of two balls for him to strike.That nipped in the bud a flourishing stand between Sarfaraz and Porel that could’ve yet given Capitals 180. Rashid would walk away with three wickets in the end, benefiting from the work done by the fast bowlers on a surface that was as fast-bowler friendly as Kotla could get.The treat of two fast bowlers, wired differently but operating on a same wavelength, and a gun legspinner bamboozling batters with a modus operandi that can’t be novelty anymore brought thrills. And it gives Titans more than just an edge. It gives them the comfort of being an all-weather IPL attack.

A hard-fought home-team win to savour

A fan watches his side go head to head with Australia and comes away with renewed admiration for them

Sudhindra Prasad09-Oct-2023Choice of game
From 3-2-1 to 9-1-1 to 11-2-1 – that’s how my CWC game attendance planning has progressed in recent World Cups. This year, besides the nine India group games, I plan to be at two matches in my hometown, Bangalore, plus both semi-finals and the final. I did investigate the possibility of matching my 2022 FIFA World Cup haul of 22 matches, but the extensive travel that would call for, in addition to a day off work for each game, added up to an impossible amount of time away from my corporate job.Team supported
The home team. My first memories (via TV) of World Cup cricket were of the India vs Australia game in Madras in 1987, and the everlasting image from that game for me is of the dust-streaked trousers of Allan Border’s Australia team, who scrapped hard to earn that one-run win. To watch those two teams match-up again at the Chepauk, and for me to be there in person this time around, 36 years later, rekindled some bittersweet memories.Key performer
This was clearly Ravindra Jadeja. His dismissals of the three dangermen in the Australia line-up changed the game altogether. Steve Smith and Marnus Labuschagne had the skills to play through on this tough wicket and set up a challenging chase for India. But Jadeja’s guile got the better of them. As I watched from behind the bowler’s arm, the Steve Smith dismissal had quite the magical spinner’s touch. The Chennai crowd screamed their throats out in appreciation of their favourite (adopted) son.Wow moment
Mitchell Marsh’s dismissal. This dismissal had it all. Subtle away movement from Jasprit Bumrah induced the edge and Virat Kohli took a screamer at first slip. It looked extremely impressive in real time, from the batter’s end. This dismissal set the tempo and will have done much to ease the big-tournament nerves for India, if they had any.The scorcher
Chennai was hot to start with, but an over by Bumrah, the 33rd in the first innings, raised the temperature. He came steaming in, with a packed off-side field and just missed Cameron Green’s outside edge first ball, eliciting loud ooohs from the crowd. The next four deliveries were played respectfully, maybe even tentatively, and one of them allowed a run off a misfield. The over ended like it began, and this time Glenn Maxwell was the one lucky to not edge it to KL Rahul. An Indian fast bowler almost toying with proper Aussie batters, with sheer pace and some movement – it made for a great sign of India’s fast-bowling prowess.One thing I would have changed
I would have sent in Rahul instead of Shreyas Iyer at No. 4. Pitches and situations like this need proper technique and an ability to put one’s head down and grind. While Shreyas is just as talented, his high-risk aggression might be better put to use when the team score is stable and ready for a lift in tempo.Crowd meter
The stands were full with India supporters almost exclusively (although David Warner got some love for his Indian dance moves) and there weren’t any Aussie flags around. The fans were mostly dressed in various India replica jerseys and this added quite a blue tinge to all the stands. The loudest cheer was for the crowd favourite, Kohli, when he departed after his dismissal (although the cheer for Marsh’s dropped catch off Kohli, came rather close).The stadium DJ on the day he kept the crowd going with songs, dances, chants and Mexican waves.Catch of the day
The six hit by Pat Cummins off a slow turner from Kuldeep. A member of the ground crew caught it just outside the rope and extended his arms out, as if to say, ‘How easy was that?’ Some fans in the stands behind him gave a standing ovation for the effort.The Mitchell Marsh drop was one of the loudest crowd moments of the night•ICC/Getty ImagesShot of the day
In the 36th over Rahul hit a straight drive for four and just at the point of contact, he slightly changed the angle of the bat to send it between the bowler and mid-on. It was an indicator of his sound shot judgement and his mental clarity. Ominous signs for the oppositions in the games to come, if you ask me.Songs and chants
The KL Rahul song, which we debuted during the 2019 World Cup, was in demand and came up for encores. Towards the end of R Ashwin’s spell in his last World Cup game at his home ground, it was satisfying to repeat a chant that was first used during the 2011 India-West Indies World Cup game. The crowd gleefully joined in.”, Ashwin ” [“Ashwin is anything but ordinary”, roughly].Brain drain
Historically the crowd at Chepauk has been known as knowledgeable. Today, though, the crowd and the DJ/presenter did not initially seem to pick up on any of the three partnership milestones between Rahul and Kohli. The cheers eventually came along a few deliveries and runs later, once the DJ announced it. This was very odd. I don’t know if the absence of traditional ticketing options leaves out the less than tech-savvy, but knowledgeable, fans out.Marks out of 10
9 A low-scoring thriller is always good for cricket. India’s chase was gripping, edge-of-the-seat stuff and each run was counted down.Before this game, I wasn’t sure if this Indian team had the wherewithal to overcome early losses. The start of the India innings was reminiscent of the 2017 Champions Trophy final (6 for 2) and the 2019 World Cup semi-final (5 for 3), but India’s fightback was outstanding and almost brought to mind an era when they had Yuvraj Singh, MS Dhoni and Suresh Raina bossing such chases by controlling the middle order.I think this Indian team will go a long way and I tip India to be in the final on November 19. See you there!

Abhimanyu Easwaran: 'Very few people are this close to being picked for India. That gives me confidence'

The Bengal and India A batter, who recently missed out on being picked for the national side again, is looking to accentuate the positive

Interview by Shashank Kishore06-Jul-2023Abhimanyu Easwaran has been on the fringes of the Indian team for three seasons now. His India A numbers are mighty impressive: an average of 47.27 across 34 innings as an opener, with six centuries and a best of 233.Barring one season, the 2019-20 Ranji Trophy, where he made just 258 runs in 17 innings, Easwaran has also been a prolific run-getter for Bengal. Yet, when the India squad was announced for the West Indies tour, which marks the beginning of the new WTC cycle for the team, Easwaran found Yashasvi Jaiswal and Ruturaj Gaikwad had leapfrogged him.Easwaran has taken the latest setback in his stride as he gets ready for the new domestic season. In Bengaluru, having finished playing for East Zone in the season-opening Duleep Trophy, he spoke at length about channelling his disappointments, how preparation matters, dealing with perceptions of being a one-format batter, and his fitness work, among other things.Related

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It must be disappointing to miss selection for the West Indies series. How do you channel it?
It’s all about that dream I had as a kid. Whenever things don’t go my way, I just think about why I started playing the game. Because I enjoy it and want to play for the country. Small things like not getting runs in a game won’t change the work I’ve put in for the past 15 years. Or if I don’t get picked in a squad, it won’t affect my passion or the hard work I’m going to put in going forward. The dream will always be to play for the country and win games. That drives me. No matter what happens, I ensure I wake up every day and do what I should to improve as a cricketer.How big is preparation for you?
Preparation is the key. I feel if I’m well prepared, I go into a game confidently. I try and ensure that I prepare according to conditions. Before the Duleep Trophy, I arrived in Bangalore early and trained at Just Cricket Academy for ten days on similar wickets to the one I was to play on here. I feel if I’ve prepared according to the conditions, it gives me the best chance to perform in any tournament.How have you gone about putting your preparatory process in place?
I’ve been working with Apurva Desai [currently batting consultant at the National Cricket Academy] for ten years now. His input has been massive in trying to help me adapt to different venues and conditions.Easwaran made a hundred in the first innings of the first unofficial Test against South Africa A in Bloemfontein in November 2021, against an attack that included Marco Jansen, Beuran Hendricks and Lutho Sipamla•Cricket South AfricaIf we’re playing at Eden Gardens, what are the kind of plans I should go with? What are the options I can give myself as a batter? We work on game plans, tactics, different shots and technical tweaks. We discuss the kind of preparation needed for every tour. Prior to the India A tour to South Africa in 2021, I trained on Astroturf because the ball zips through there. I trained with synthetic balls, just to get the hands high, because I would be facing extra bounce. We discuss everything in cricket. If I go into the ground, I want to be the best-prepared player. I may not be the best player in terms of runs in the match, but can I be the best-prepared? I always ask myself this.When you were coming up the ranks, did you always want to be a “pure Test-match type batter”?
No, that’s just a perception. I wanted to play all formats.There’s also a perception that you need IPL runs to go with domestic performances.
I’ve always wanted to be an all-format batter. I played T20s pretty late for Bengal, but I’ve constantly worked on that side of the game. In the off season I worked on a few shots, which hopefully will come off well this season.It’s not that I just love one format. Yes, Test cricket will always be special but it’s also the most challenging. But in terms of my game, I am constantly working on my T20 game. I wish to play IPL soon – it’s another dream, to play in the biggest league.You had a chance to trial with Delhi Capitals mid-season. How was it like?
I wasn’t expecting it, honestly. If you don’t get picked at the auction, you don’t think there’s a chance. Their fast bowler, Kamlesh Nagarkoti, got injured. You’d think they’d replace him with another fast bowler. But since their batting wasn’t going too well, they probably felt like strengthening that department. It was good to be part of the set-up, even if it was just for a few days. Just to see how people go about things – like, how David Warner prepares. They weren’t winning a lot of games at that point, but you could see guys wanted to put their hands up and win games.Within touching distance: Easwaran with India coach Rahul Dravid at a net session during the Bangladesh tour•AFP via Getty ImagesDid you get a chance to interact with Ricky Ponting, the Capitals head coach?
I didn’t get a lot of time to talk to him because he was busy with the entire group. But he was behind the nets, watching us bat, and would appreciate a good shot. He watched me and Priyam Garg [who was also called up] closely. I didn’t get really get a chance to speak about my batting or my game, but in the huddle, he welcomed us. It was nice.Does it bother you that you don’t get picked in the IPL?
I won’t say it bothers me. I still have a fair chance to be picked. It’s not like this is the last year I’m going to play. I’m just 27, I have enough time. If I get runs in the Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy, Deodhar or Vijay Hazare Trophy, that gives me a good chance. Again, it comes back to preparation and going into the game giving myself the best chance. That’s what I am focusing on.You’ve spent nearly a decade as a first-class cricketer. Is there a phase you look back fondly?
Yes, there have been a few but the one that stands out is from the 2019-20 season. I was made Bengal captain that year for the first time. I’d scored 861 runs in six matches [11 innings] the previous year. I then got a double-hundred for India A, I got a hundred in the Duleep Trophy final. So I was on a high, but I couldn’t buy a run the next season. I made 258 runs in ten games, but we were in the final. On the one hand, here’s my team doing well and making the final, on the other, I wasn’t able to contribute. Not being able to win the title was more disappointing, but to come back from that and get runs, bat the way I do, was special. That phase was challenging.When you’ve been so near yet so far for three years, it must hurt from within. Does it?
It sure does. But given the population we have, there are very few people who are this close to being picked for the Indian team. So I’m taking it in a positive way, that I’ve got to a place not many can. That gives me confidence. If I can keep putting in the work I’ve done, I’m still pretty close, I could get picked soon.There have been a few times when you came close to getting the India cap. When do you think you came closest?
I got twin hundreds for India A in Bangladesh last December, just prior to the Tests. I did well on the India A tour of South Africa in 2021.Easwaran with Priyank Panchal, whom he opened with and who captained Easwaran’s side, India Red, in the 2019 Duleep Trophy final•Saurabh Somani/ESPNcricinfoBut I think I was closest probably in 2021 in England. I was the reserve opener, and we had a tour game prior to the first Test. Not playing in that tour game because I was a close contact of one of the support staff who had Covid meant I had to quarantine for ten days. I lost that chance in that practice game before the first Test. Mayank Agarwal was concussed before that first Test. Maybe had I played and got runs, I would have earned the cap. All that time spent instead quarantining and isolating even though I didn’t have Covid was really tough.You spoke of on-field preparation. What about off-field preparation?
It’s as important as what you do on the field. You can’t eat what you like and say, “I’ll make up for it.” There’s a balance to maintain. Around 2015-16, I discovered I wasn’t feeling too well after breaks. There was a pattern where I used to get out soon after lunch or tea breaks. I found I wasn’t so switched on, even though I’d be batting on 50 or 70. I had a chat with a friend who told me about a genetic medical test. That told me I was gluten-intolerant. From that day to now, I have only had gluten probably twice or thrice a year. That’s after a tournament finishes and I have a break for more than a week, because I can afford that – I won’t be training the next day. That involves , soya. I gave up soft drinks ten years ago. I felt the dream is bigger than this. If I don’t have Coke, it doesn’t matter.How has fitness transformed your outlook to cricket?
During Covid, I felt there was something I needed to work on, because the seasons were getting longer. I was playing all formats and also for India A, so I didn’t have breaks. Usually during the off season, you get a couple of months off, but I wasn’t getting that because of India A commitments. I realised the need to get stronger.I had a lot of things in mind: Do I have the fitness to last an entire Ranji season, if we reach the final? Do I have the fitness to push beyond a double-century? Can I be fresh on day five of a match? That was the time I started working on fitness with Soham Desai [current India trainer]. Since then, I’ve been able to feel that change. Last year also, after fielding for around 155 overs against New Zealand A, I was batting probably the best I had in the last three years. My feet were moving well, so well that I was enjoying it a lot, and I wasn’t feeling too tired. I could feel the difference and that made me enjoy what I was doing.You may have not played a Test, but you probably have some fond memories of travelling with the team?
Without a doubt. It’s an honour to wear that jersey. I still remember when I received the team kit before that England tour in 2021, I just didn’t want to take it off all day. I cherish the chats I’ve had with Virat Kohli on preparation and Cheteshwar Pujara on single-mindedness. Being a part of the Test squad that won at Lord’s was a special memory. There was so much passion, so much fire. Shami, Siraj, Bumrah with their tails up… bundling them out inside 60 overs, it was amazing. I think those are situations you train and play for. It was great to be part of a side that won in England. You want to win overseas, at home, everywhere. It’s something every cricketer dreams of. Hopefully I’ll have that chance soon.

Bangladesh pull off quiet triumph at a time of major upheaval

Fans had turned on the team after a poor World Cup, and the big stars were missing, but the players didn’t lose their belief

Mohammad Isam02-Dec-2023Najmul Hossain Shanto and Taijul Islam walked down the stairs from the picturesque Bangladesh dressing room, towards the post-match presentation area. There was no real rush. The usually crowded hangers-on zone, somewhere near the dressing room and the presentation area in Bangladeshi stadiums, was nearly empty. It was only 11am in Sylhet and Bangladesh’s resounding win over New Zealand in Sylhet was slowly sinking in.The Bangladesh players had done the usual end-of-match protocols before walking into the dressing room. Only Shanto and Taijul walked out. Mushfiqur Rahim watched briefly from the window. There was very little obvious celebration from the team. The 18,000-capacity stadium was all but empty too.Related

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Selector Habibul Bashar and media manager Rabeed Imam were standing in front of the Bangladesh dugout. Bashar, the former Bangladesh captain, wondered who would get the Player-of-the-Match award. He was mostly convinced Taijul should get it for his 10-wicket match haul. “You can’t really forget Shanto’s innings too,” he said. “He scored that century on the third day, getting us on the victory path.”The jovial Bashar is however never far from a punchline, even if it is at his own expense. “Shanto is the first Bangladeshi to get a Test century on captaincy debut, right? I am the only captain to get a pair on captaincy debut.”The only sound of victory at this stage was the roll of laughter that followed Bashar’s tale, and the text messages congratulating him.It may seem like the quietest of wins for Bangladesh, but its magnitude is palpable to those within and outside the dressing room. If you put Sylhet against what went on in the World Cup, the picture becomes clearer. Bangladesh lost seven out of nine games in India, and the fans turned their backs on the team to the extent that they even called off the protests they had planned at the Dhaka airport. Nobody cared, and it showed.There are interesting parallels with Bangladesh’s famous victory in the Mount Maunganui Test last year. Then, Bangladesh had had a woeful T20 World Cup campaign followed by a disastrous home series against Pakistan. Key players were injured. Nobody paid much attention, until they conjured up a miracle in New Zealand.This one in Sylhet didn’t look like a miracle but turning around from such a World Cup campaign wasn’t going to be easy. The regular captain and vice-captain were out. Two of the main pacers were missing. The senior opener remained injured.Bangladesh had the three biggest partnerships of the match, including Mushfiqur Rahim and Najmul Hossain Shanto’s stand of 98 on day three•AFP/Getty ImagesIt didn’t matter. The stand-in captain scored a crucial century. One of the young openers made a fifty, and an unheralded and hugely underrated left-arm spinner took 10 wickets.Shanto hailed the team’s effort against one of the top Test sides in world cricket, reminding them not to forget what had worked for them in this game.”I am happy to win my first Test as captain,” Shanto said. “Everything went to plan. We played a good game. Winning a Test, against any team, anywhere, is a great feeling. They are a very good team definitely. They won the first WTC [World Test Championship] so to beat such a team, it brings a lot of confidence to the players. Our belief is slowly growing that we can do better in Tests. If we don’t forget these wins, what worked for us, we will raise our level in Tests.”Shanto insisted that Bangladesh’s dressing-room environment didn’t change after the World Cup, as the players understood that the reactions they would get depended highly on results.”Nothing has changed [since the World Cup],” he said. “There will be talk outside. Now that we won, they will say nice things. When we will lose, they will criticise us. It is beyond our control. We don’t even think about it.”We think about the process, and try to stick to it regularly. We won today but it wasn’t a perfect game. We have to talk about our mistakes, and then take it forward.”Bangladesh’s on-field chatter was audible throughout the game, reflecting both their own enjoyment of their performance and the lack of a crowd to drown them out.”I think we were a little more excited as we were playing well,” Shanto said. “Everyone enjoyed these four-and-a-half days. Maybe it was seen more today but the batters and bowlers took up the challenge. I think it is important how we handle and enjoy pressure and difficult moments.”I think it is disappointing that our fans don’t really like watching Test matches. Motivation comes from different places, but I don’t think we had this [criticism] in mind. We wanted to win this game. We wanted to do our work rather than focusing on who came and who didn’t.”Taijul dismissed Kane Williamson in both innings•AFP/Getty ImagesShanto also paid tribute to Taijul for his accuracy over long spells. Taijul took four wickets in the first innings and followed it up with a six-for in the second innings. He struck decisive blows including removing Kane Williamson twice in the game.”He is one of the best Test bowlers in recent years.” Shanto said. “His strength is to bowl in one spot for a long time. I tried to use him for long from one end with this belief. We didn’t plan anything different. He just wanted to bowl for a long time from one end.”Taijul said after the game that it was satisfying to beat New Zealand twice in two years, in different conditions. “We beat NZ in their conditions not too long ago,” he said. “When they came to our conditions, we beat them. We are successful. We believed in our process throughout this game, and thought that we would attack as soon as we get into a winning position.”While Bangladesh will celebrate this win in Sylhet, they know how important it is for them to repeat their processes in Dhaka to clinch the Test series.”There has to be some form of celebrations after such a big win,” Taijul said. “We celebrated on the field and in the dressing room. But yes, it is not the end of the series. We have to do well in Dhaka, and then we will see what happens.”Ultimately, it was a team effort that brought Bangladesh this memorable victory. Partnerships were key to their progress with both bat and ball. Bangladesh had the three highest batting partnerships in the match, including the 98-run stand between Mushfiqur Rahim and Shanto that played a pivotal role on the third day. On the fourth morning, the tail wagged with Mehidy Hasan Miraz. There were small but important contributions when it was much required.It was the same in the bowling department. Taijul, Mehidy and Nayeem Hasan tag-teamed New Zealand. Shanto said he had found it difficult to take the ball out of their hands. Taijul often played the attacker’s role, while Mehidy and Nayeem gave him perfect support from the other end. Mominul Haque’s three wickets in the first innings were crucial too.These partnerships were the major element missing in the World Cup. Bangladesh had the big stars at that tournament but they needed a team effort to get them across the line. It didn’t happen. They were vilified on social media. Fans turned their backs on them. Nobody really seemed to know or care that New Zealand had arrived in Bangladesh less than a week after the World Cup had ended. Everyone has had enough.Now, after Sylhet, they can’t get enough of Bangladesh 2.0.

Shock home loss to Sixers rocks depleted Scorchers' title-defence hopes

Scorchers’ route has just become difficult – they face Strikers at home first, and if they win they have to play either Heat or Sixers away

Tristan Lavalette17-Jan-2024When Laurie Evans signed off from the BBL season, having smashed 72 off 34 balls, he received a standing ovation from a rowdy 33,412 Optus Stadium crowd in the mood for celebrating.Moments later, Cooper Connolly and Nick Hobson – the unexpected heroes from Perth Scorchers’ epic title victory last season, achieved with a win over Brisbane Heat – pummelled a ragged Sydney Sixers attack to lift the defending champions to a mighty score of 197 for 4. It was Scorchers’ second-highest total of the season and they appeared set to continue a recent domination of Sixers, who had won just once from five matches on the harder and bouncier Optus Stadium surface.The confidence on the parochial west coast seemed justified with the prevailing feeling that Scorchers would clinch the all-important second spot and then knock over top-placed Heat in the Qualifier before once again staging another final at their home fortress.Related

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But, by the end of an astonishing match, with endless twists and turns in the latest chapter of a remarkable rivalry, Scorchers were left stunned by a brilliant chase led by opener Daniel Hughes and finished calmly by skipper Moises Henriques.The normally heaving Optus Stadium was reduced to silence with Scorchers’ bid for a historic hat-trick of titles having to go through a much more difficult route. Scorchers face surging Adelaide Strikers in the knockout final at home on Saturday, and if they get through that will have to play either Heat or Sixers on the road.The result means Scorchers will not host the final. Before losing to Sixers, Scorchers had won 17 of their last 18 matches at home. It’s a result that has provided a tonic for their rivals.”It’s so hard to come here and win, especially for a semi-final or final, which is what we don’t have to do now,” Hughes said. “We don’t have to come back to Perth to win the competition, so that was a big motivation for us.”

“We’re looking forward to seeing what he can do. I would imagine that he’ll come in on Saturday. And hopefully he can have an impact”Adam Voges on the returning Marcus Harris

Scorchers’ title defence has undoubtedly been rocked, but this veteran group has overcome significant hurdles in their previous title runs. They spent almost all of BBL 11 on the road due to Covid-19 restrictions and last season were hit hard by injuries and withdrawals, including losing Evans, who had his contract terminated following a positive drugs test.”I thought we batted beautifully… it [the target] was above par and they had to bat exceptionally well to chase it down. And that’s what they did,” Scorchers coach Adam Voges said. “It’s taken a pretty special performance and the last ball of the game [to beat us].”We’re disappointed. But we know our fate now.”Like the other finals teams, Scorchers have been impacted by a clash with the upcoming ILT20 in the UAE. Evans, who hit 292 runs at 58.4 with a strike rate of 189.61 this season, took the flight for Dubai on Wednesday morning and left a major hole in a middle-order that will continue to be without injured skipper Ashton Turner.Laurie Evans’ departure – for the ILT20 – could hurt the Scorchers batting•Getty ImagesScorchers’ batting resources might be further stretched with opener Steve Eskinazi undergoing scans after retiring hurt early in his innings following a blow to his knuckles.It points to late signing Marcus Harris being an almost certain call-up against Strikers. Having recently missed out on a Test recall, Harris returns after playing 14 matches for Scorchers from 2014-16.”With Marcus… he’s played with us before. He knows the conditions, the players, and he’s fit in seamlessly already,” Voges said. “That was a big part of the decision-making to bring someone in who knows our group and we know him pretty well.”We’re looking forward to seeing what he can do. I would imagine that he’ll come in on Saturday. And hopefully he can have an impact.”Having loaded up on bowling for much of the season, Scorchers reverted to stocking up their batting by including Hobson for their last two games. Hobson has grabbed his opportunities with powerful late hitting against Heat and Sixers, but Scorchers were exposed with the ball during an unusually sloppy performance from their frontline quicks.Matt Kelly could be drafted back in to the Scorchers XI for the finals•Getty ImagesScorchers might be tempted to recall seamer Matt Kelly, who has been a reliable option over the years. He has missed the entire domestic season so far due to a quad injury, but has recovered and is available for selection.”We’ve got Matt Kelly sitting on the sidelines and ready to go, so we can bring him in if we choose to,” Voges said. “It’s nice having that power-hitting that Nick Hobson has been able to provide for us, but we’ll sit down and just have a look at what things look like and come up with an eleven from that.”After their normally miserly quicks missed their lengths, especially speedster Lance Morris who leaked 48 runs from four overs, Scorchers face the daunting task of curbing Strikers captain Matthew Short.Short, who hit the most runs ever in a ten-match BBL regular season, blasted 76 not out and 74 against Scorchers this season with the teams splitting their pair of games. He looms as key in a game expected to attract 45,000 fans to Optus Stadium.”We need to make sure that we execute a bit better because he’s clearly the form player and best player in the competition at the moment,” Voges said. “He’ll be a big deciding factor on Saturday.”

SRH break speed records in astonishing chase against LSG

Travis Head and Abhishek Sharma ran down the target of 167 with 62 balls to spare and ten wickets in hand

Sampath Bandarupalli08-May-20242:24

Deep Dasgupta: Quite a statement from SRH

62 Balls remaining when Sunrisers Hyderabad achieved their target of 166 in 9.4 overs against Lucknow Super Giants – the biggest such margin in chases of 150-plus in T20 cricket. The previous biggest win was when Brisbane Heat chased down 157 against Melbourne Stars with 60 balls to spare in the 2018-19 BBL.167 SRH’s total in 9.4 overs against LSG is the highest by any team by the end of the tenth over in men’s T20s (where ball-by-ball data is available). The previous highest was Worcestershire’s 162 against Northamptonshire in 2018.107 SRH’s score at the end of the powerplay against LSG is the second highest in men’s T20s (where ball-by-ball data is available). The highest also belongs to SRH, when they smashed 125 for 0 against Delhi Capitals last month.146 Sixes hit by SRH in 12 matches in IPL 2024, the most sixes hit by a team in any T20 tournament. The previous highest was 145 sixes by Chennai Super Kings in IPL 2018.Related

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80 Difference between the powerplay scores of SRH (107 for 0) and LSG (27 for 2) in Hyderabad – it’s the largest in the IPL, surpassing the 69-run difference in last Saturday’s game between RCB (92 for 1) and GT (23 for 3).3 Fifties for Travis Head in fewer than 20 balls in the IPL. Jake Fraser-McGurk is the only other batter with three sub-20-ball fifties. Head has two 16-ball fifties, the joint fastest for Sunrisers in the IPL.17.27 Run rate of the 167-run partnership between Abhishek Sharma and Head in 9.4 overs against LSG – the highest for a 150-plus partnership in the IPL, and the second highest in all T20s.2 Number of ten-wicket wins for SRH while chasing a target of 150-plus in the IPL. Their first effort was chasing 150 against Mumbai Indians in 2020. Only Pakistan have more than one ten-wicket win (2) in chases of 150-plus in T20 cricket.30 Boundaries scored in 58 balls faced by SRH’s openers against LSG – 16 fours and 14 sixes -the most in the first ten overs of a men’s T20 match (where ball-by-ball data is available). For the record, Head and Abhishek ran only 12 singles and 2 twos.

Awesome in Australia: Kumble's marathon in Sydney vs Kohli's fight in Perth

Vote for the best individual Border-Gavaskar Trophy performance by an Indian in Australia since 2000

ESPNcricinfo staff25-Oct-2024Update: This poll has ended. Virat Kohli’s performance goes into the quarter-finals. Check the other polls here.ESPNcricinfo LtdAnil Kumble bowled 88.5 overs and took 12 wickets at the SCG•William West/AFPAnil Kumble – 8-141 & 4-138 in Sydney, 2004Match drawn, series drawn 1-1Anil Kumble’s match-winning ability was unquestionable at home but he hadn’t earned a similar reputation overseas. This Australia tour was an opportunity to improve that aspect of his game. Having started the tour on the bench, he replaced an injured Harbhajan Singh in the second Test. By the time the final match began at the SCG, with the series level 1-1, Kumble had bowled the most overs by an Indian bowler and taken a five-for in the famous win in Adelaide.In Sydney, after India posted 705 in the first innings, Kumble bowled 46.5 overs to pick up 8 for 141, his second-best haul after his perfect ten, and give India a lead of 231, which they extended to 442 before declaring late on the fourth day.Bowling another 42 overs in Australia’s second innings, Kumble went on to take 4 for 138 – his match-haul of 12 was his best overseas – but India were only able to take six wickets in total, falling agonisingly short of what would have been their maiden series win down under.By Shashank KishoreWatch the highlights of these performances on the Star Sports network at 10am, 1pm, 4pm and 7pm IST, from October 25 onwards.Virat Kohli was batting on another level in Perth 2018•Cricket Australia/Getty ImagesVirat Kohli – 123 in Perth, 2018India lost by 146 runs, series level 1-1Virat Kohli was already one of India’s greatest batters before 2018. He stepped up to an even more rarefied level that year, scoring 1322 runs at an average of 55.08 over 24 innings, of which 22 were played in South Africa, England and Australia.Conditions in all three tours were hard on batters, but the more challenging they became, the more Kohli seemed to relish them. When he walked in to bat in Perth, everything must have looked familiar. India had lost the toss and conceded a bigger total than they should have, bowling well but not without spells of releasing pressure. Then they lost early wickets.In similar circumstances, Kohli had scored 153 at Centurion and 149 at Edgbaston. Now, from 8 for 2, he proceeded to play an even better innings. This was a proper trampoline of a pitch, and Mitchell Starc, Josh Hazlewood and Pat Cummins were routinely getting the ball to rear throat-high from just back of a length. Kohli negotiated the vertical threat expertly, though not without suffering blows to his arm and ribs, but the standout feature of his innings was how well he dealt with Australia’s attempts to sucker him with full balls after pushing him back.Almost every time there was an opportunity to drive, he did so pristinely, down the ground or through the covers with a decisive front-foot stride. A 20th century version of this list would have undoubtedly contained Sachin Tendulkar’s 114 in Perth in 1992. Kohli’s innings came at Perth Stadium and not the WACA, and just as the new ground seamlessly carried forward the old one’s legacy of pace and bounce, a new master had carried forward an old master’s legacy.Karthik Krishnaswamy

Fast times in Rawalpindi: how Nahid Rana became Bangladesh's latest pace sensation

The quick bowler is one of many who have been fast-tracked to the top. Hopefully his story will not turn out like those of his predecessors who fell by the wayside

Mohammad Isam18-Sep-2024″Bangladeshi fast bowler” is not exactly an oxymoron but the phenomenon is an unlikely one. Particularly if you look at the Test team in recent years, you’d be justified in thinking fast bowers were an endangered species in the country. Then came Taskin Ahmed’s comeback. And Ebadot Hossain’s stunning improvement.Most recently, there has been Nahid Rana, who made an improbable journey from a small town in the country’s north-west to the Test team.Rana rocked Pakistan with his pace and bounce during Bangladesh’s 2-0 Test series win in Rawalpindi earlier this month. In baking hot weather, in an almost empty stadium, the 21-year-old bowled like no Bangladeshi fast bowler has ever done, hitting 150kph on occasion and averaging 145kph for most of his spells, hurrying the Pakistani batters, showing the ability to extract disconcerting bounce from a difficult length. His four wickets on the fourth day of the second Test battered the home side. Bangladesh won the game by six wickets.Rana bowled well earlier in the series too, following his impressive debut against Sri Lanka in March this year.It has been a whirlwind ride for Rana, who was playing tape-tennis ball cricket with his friends less than five years ago and only got into a cricket academy after fulfilling his family’s wish that he pass his college exam.Related

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He is now one of the most talked about cricketers in Bangladesh as they embark on their third bilateral tour of India. The hosts have reportedly brought a tall fast bowler into the nets to prepare for the challenge of facing Rana – likely the first time a Test side has taken such steps to counter a Bangladeshi fast bowler.

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Rana is wearing a loose-fitting black and white shirt when we meet at the academy building inside the Shere Bangla National Stadium’s premises. It is a week after the Bangladesh players have returned from Pakistan. After a couple of days’ training, it is now almost time for the India tour, and Rana is tackling a queue of interview-seekers. He finishes a session with Bangladesh Betar, the state-owned radio station, while three other groups of journalists, waiting their turn, sit idly by.The day before, Litton Das warned against complacency ahead of the India series, and requested the media not to talk too much about the Pakistan tour. But with Rana present in the flesh, you can’t not ask him about that spell in Rawalpindi.On the fourth day of the second Test, Pakistan had seven wickets in hand, and a lead of 74 runs. After playing some good strokes in the morning session, opener Saim Ayub was out caught at mid-off. Taskin Ahmed and hasan mahmudHasan Mahmud looked lively in their opening spells. When Rana came on, it was hot. He hadn’t bowled all that well in the first innings of the Test.Earlier during the match, Rana rang Alamgir Kabir, the former Bangladesh fast bowler, his mentor.”After he bowled in the first innings, he asked me, ‘Sir, what have you observed?'” Alamgir says. “I said, you looked confident – so confident that it looked like you are bowling in the National Cricket League. He replied, ‘Sir, you are right. I was bowling confidently. I felt like I could blast them away like in the NCL.'”I told him that he was either bowling too short or bowling half-volleys. It didn’t look like he was playing in a Test match.”Taking wickets inspires me me more than bowling fast”•Farooq Naeem/AFP/Getty Images”There’s a difference between domestic and international batters. ‘If you stick to your lengths and stick to one spot, you will have a better chance in the second innings,’ I told him.”With his third ball, Rana removed the Pakistan captain, Shan Masood, caught behind. Babar Azam went first ball next over, caught by Shadman Islam at first slip, who then dropped Mohammad Rizwan the following ball.Rana beat Rizwan’s inside edge in the next over, just missing the top of off stump. After Rizwan pulled out from the next delivery at the last second, Rana pinged him on the helmet with a bouncer as he attempted a pull. Taskin had something to say from fine leg. A ball later, Rana removed Saud Shakeel for 2. Pakistan were 81 for 6.The loud music in between overs broke the trance that Rana’s spell seemed to have cast. The press box he was bowling towards was abuzz. Someone wanted to know if “Rajshahi Express” might catch on as a nickname. Rajshahi is where Rana learned his cricket, though he grew up in nearby Chapai Nawabganj.He bowled two more menacing overs in the spell, finishing on 5-0-22-3. His team-mates gave him a round of applause and pats on the back.A Bangladeshi fast bowler had ripped out the opposition’s captain, their best batter, and their most in-form batter in three overs. In the city that not so long ago was home to the world’s fastest bowler.Rana was a threat earlier in the series too, but this spell was the highlight, and perhaps the first time he qualified to be called a match-winner in Bangladesh colours.When he talks about the spell a week later, in Dhaka, Rana is predictably shy. It takes a few follow-up questions to coax his thoughts out of him.”Yes, that was a good spell,” he says. “I think it was my best time in the four innings in Pakistan.” He says he worked hard for three months for the Pakistan series, doing everything he needed to keep his fitness and pace high.”Taking wickets definitely inspires me. It inspires me more than bowling fast.Rana trains in Chennai. “If you have good fitness, you can take good decisions”•Mahesh Kumar A/Associated PressThe series win was Bangladesh’s second overseas since becoming a Full Member nation in 2000. Rana’s pace was the surprise ingredient, coming as it did from a team that traditionally relies on its spinners. Over about the last four years, Bangladesh’s pace attack have become match-winners in both red- and white-ball cricket. Taskin’s comeback was a catalyst, followed by Shoriful Islam’s inclusion after he was in the Under-19 World Cup-winning side. Ebadot’s vast improvement, Mustafizur Rahman’s steady progress, and intermittent bursts of excellence from Hasan Mahmud and Tanzim Hasan Sakib have been highlights of the continued evolution of Bangladeshi fast bowling. Rana’s rapid rise from rural obscurity to playing a role in a Test series win overseas has been the cherry on top.

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Sometime around the end of the monsoon in 2019, Alamgir was looking for ways to keep his new students engaged on a rainy day at the Clemon Cricket Academy in Rajshahi. He arranged a taped-tennis ball match in which the coaches played alongside the students.”I saw that the wicketkeeper was having a hard time keeping to one of the pace bowlers,” he says. “He couldn’t grab three balls in a row. I said, what’s going on, why can’t you hold it properly? I took the wicketkeeper’s position myself, but I couldn’t hold on to the boy’s deliveries either.That was the first time Alamgir met Rana, who had come to Rajshahi from his village in Chapai Nawabganj.”From the next day, I kept Rana in the senior students’ group,” Alamgir says. “He had a haphazard action, quite natural for a newcomer, but I quickly found out he was receptive. If I showed him something, he could do it. I told our head coach [Khaled Mashud] Pilot that I have a feeling that we have someone special on our hands. He is a god-gifted cricketer. We should give him special training,” Alamgir remembers saying.Rana played age-group matches and was even considered for the Under-19 World Cup squad for the 2020 tournament in South Africa, though he eventually was a standby. After the pandemic, he made his first-class debut for Rajshahi Division in the 2021-22 season.He says that he owes everything to Alamgir for bringing him up as a cricketer. “Sir literally held my hand while teaching me everything about cricket. I learned how to be disciplined from him.”Does he feel different than most other cricketers in Bangladesh who play a lot of age-group and Dhaka league matches before coming into the Bangladesh team?”I always believed in myself,” he says. “I believed in my skills. I progressed with my confidence. When I played first-class cricket, I got an idea about what Test cricket is all about. I understood the discipline of it, what sort of fitness I should have. I got an idea about how to prepare for the longer format.”It seems only yesterday he was playing taped-tennis cricket. Mention the form and his eyes light up.”It has a very different feel to it. A taped tennis ball is light. A cricket ball has a bit more weight, so you have to keep a few things in mind when bowling with it. You can’t get swing with a taped-tennis ball, but you can swing the new cricket ball. You can do other things with the old ball. I think I bowl faster with the cricket ball than the tape ball,” he says.Alamgir had to make corrections to Rana’s bowling action; it was an effective one for taped-tennis cricket, but it needed to be tuned for the weight of the cricket ball. The lighter tennis ball usually travels quicker, so he didn’t need to generate speed from a long run-up when playing with it. That changed and his run-up got longer. The way his foot landed on the popping crease needed work.Rana cut his teeth in taped-tennis ball cricket, and many of his fundamentals were shaped by the format•Munir Uz Zaman/AFP/Getty ImagesThe way he used his wrist in taped-tennis cricket gave him a bit of extra pace, given his considerable height. Many of Rana’s fundamentals when he made his Test debut were rooted in informal cricket. He is a work in progress, but needs to be handled delicately because Bangladesh cricket will not want to lose his pace.

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If Alamgir is the coach who found Rana, taught him proper cricket, and introduced him to the age-group and first-class scene, Talha Jubair, another former Bangladesh fast bowler, as head coach at Rana’s BPL (Khulna Tigers) and DPL (Shinepukur Cricket Club) teams, has also been instrumental in his evolution.Talha saw Rana at a time when he had difficulty keeping his short run-up and landing at the crease in tune. “He was a late arrival at the U-19 World Cup camp,” Talha says. “He had a problem with bowling no-balls. We decided that he would have to rectify it, so before he headed back to Rajshahi, we worked on his running technique.”We gave him videos of his running technique so that he could work on it with his coach Alamgir . Rana had the raw pace back then, which suggested to us that he could be the real deal. I thought he had the potential to touch 150kph.”Alamgir, while providing Rana with his cricketing knowledge and experience, has also been something of a father figure and mentor. When they spoke on the phone during the series in Pakistan, Alamgir assured Rana, speaking from his experience of playing in that country, that things would go right despite his misgivings about the pitches. Alamgir played one Test in Pakistan and also nine first-class matches there for Bangladesh A in the PCB Patron’s Cup in 2003-04.”They usually make batting tracks,” Alamgir says. “When we spoke, Rana said that the practice pitches were mostly flat. He thought that would also be the case in the Tests. I told him to focus on his lines and lengths first. Since he is new to the Test scene, I figured that Pakistan would take a bit of time to adjust to his pace.”Alamgir keeps tabs on Rana, on whether his focus is in the right place. “I tell him that you will read a lot of things about yourself on social media but you have to stay in control of your emotions. They will write nice things now, but when things don’t go well, they will write bad things about you.”He has to judge the good and bad himself. His job is to think about cricket and perform well.”Both Alamgir and Talha had short international careers. Kabir debuted in 2002 and played three Tests, though he did not take a wicket in any of them. Talha, who is the seventh-youngest Test debutant, had a career curtailed to 13 internationals by back injuries.Rana has 11 wickets from his three Tests so far•Anjum Naveed/Associated PressTalha speaks to players about how they should manage their cricket careers, particularly their fitness, lifestyle choices, and diet. “I always reflect with my players about how my career went. I tell them what I have faced in my playing days,” he says. “I talk to them about what my lifestyle should have been, and what they can learn from it. could have had a longer career if I managed my injuries better.”

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When Bangladesh entered the Test arena, they didn’t have a stable pace bowling attack. Hasibul Hossain was an erratic tearaway, but the selectors found a new pace sensation shortly after: Mashrafe Mortaza was fast-tracked from the Under-17s into the senior team over nine months, but his complicated bowling action couldn’t withstand the workload of Test matches.It didn’t, however, stop the selectors from going on to pick other teen pace sensations. Talha and Nazmul Hossain were injury-prone, while Shahadat, who has the most five-fors among Bangladesh’s fast bowlers, had a hard time handling his sudden fame. Rubel Hossain showed promise with his slingy action, but he was better with the white-ball. His Test record was poor. Robiul Islam burned bright in one Test series, while Mustafizur and Taskin couldn’t translate their white-ball skills to Test cricket quickly. By 2016 it looked like the team management had moved on from fast bowling altogether, resulting in perhaps the bleakest era for Bangladesh’s fast bowling.Taskin and Ebadot turned the tide after the pandemic, making strides as match-winners. Ebadot’s six-wicket haul helped Bangladesh to a miraculous Test win in New Zealand; that performance brought his Test bowling average down from 81 in his first ten matches to 35 in his next ten. He started his white-ball career brilliantly before an ACL injury put him out of the side. Taskin’s comeback story is well documented. Shoriful came into the Test attack after being part of the U-19 World Cup-winning side in 2020. Hasan Mahmud impressed Russell Domingo and Allan Donald in the nets.Rana is another Bangladeshi fast bowler who has been rushed into Test cricket. Not many have survived this kind of fast-tracking in the past; there is now enough information and precedent for him to know the perils such a career trajectory might hold. His coaches, Talha and Alamgir, themselves went through difficult playing careers.Right now, though, Rana is only thinking about the Test series against India. “I don’t think too far ahead,” he says.”I feel that a cricketer must give importance to fitness,” he says. “[Otherwise] when the going gets tough in the middle, your brain doesn’t function properly. If you have good fitness, you can take good decisions. A cricketer knows how much fitness he needs. Only he will know what his body wants.Being a prodigy in Bangladesh cricket can be something of a curse. Mohammad Ashraful had a rough time. Mustafizur had to deal with injuries. Rana’s Test career has begun brightly, a rarity for a Bangladeshi fast bowler. His desire to focus on fitness is a positive, and it could ultimately help him stay on course and not end up a cautionary tale like a number of his predecessors.There will be temptations aplenty as he goes along, especially from the franchise T20 world. Right now, he is best with the red ball in hand. It is something that can take him places.

Robin Minz is back, and desperate to make up for the year he has lost

A motorcycle accident prevented his IPL dream from taking flight, but he is working harder than ever to make it happen now

Rajan Raj12-Nov-2024The first Adivasi [tribal] player to play in the IPL – you must have read the headlines just under a year ago.It was all about to happen for Robin Minz after Gujarat Titans (GT) shelled out INR 3.6 crore for the wicketkeeper-batter till a motorcycle accident just before the start of the IPL 2024 season took him away from cricket. He is back now, putting the pieces back together, 22 years old but already having to make up for lost time.”When I had the accident, the first thing that came to my mind was… how will I play cricket now, what will happen to the IPL,” Minz told ESPNcricinfo on the sidelines of Jharkhand’s Ranji Trophy game against Chandigarh in Jamshedpur a few days ago, his comeback game.Related

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“IPL was the first step, through which I had to move forward. But everything seemed to end. But after the accident, my family and coaches [Asif Haque and SP Gautam], my friends, and [GT coach Ashish] Nehra sir helped me a lot. Nehra sir called me several times and kept assuring me that I would be back.”During the IPL, I got a call from Titans that I have to stay with the team and do rehab with their physio [Rohit Salavkar]. I went there. Whenever there was a home match, I used to go. Rohit sir and the entire team helped me a lot. Even though I was not playing IPL, I enjoyed being with the team.”GT did what they could, but the opportunity of IPL was gone, and it wasn’t easy to deal with. It wasn’t easy for his family either. Once upon a time, they had to think many times, count their savings, before buying Minz a new cricket bat. That was about to change, but it didn’t.

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Sometime between the accident and Minz travelling to Ahmedabad to be with his GT team-mates, he turned up at Ranchi’s Sonnet Club, where he trained under Haque and Gautam.”One day I was in my academy, I saw that Robin had come. I was shocked – he was supposed to rest,” Haque said. “I asked him what he was doing. His reply was, ‘I know that I will not be able to play right now but let me sit here, I want to spend some time here’.”Perhaps the first steps towards the inevitable comeback.

“What will I do thinking about what has happened and what will happen; whatever has to happen will happen. But I will play good cricket. I have to score more runs, and I have to hit more sixes and fours”Robin Minz

“It is normal to be scared and nervous about an incident like this, but we knew that his condition was not very serious,” Minz’s father, Francis Xavier, said. “I knew this was a big shock for Robin. You may call it a lesson or something else. We do not think so much about money, but the bigger concern was that the cricket ground had been taken away from him. Playing the game was more important than the money.”Ever since he started playing, I have never seen him step away from cricket. We thought we would see him playing in the IPL, but that didn’t happen.”Minz is back playing cricket, but has been released by GT, and while he is in the IPL 2025 mega auction longlist – with a base price of INR 30 lakh – franchises are likely to be cautious even if he had come with a big reputation before the last auction.”Cricket is his life, but it is not as if his life will end if he doesn’t get a chance in the IPL,” Xavier said. “Our entire family has taught him to fight difficult situations. He will work hard again, play well again, and try again next time. Whatever happens after that will happen.”

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Minz’s cricketing journey started at Sonnet Club. It was there that he got the nickname ‘Chris Gayle of Jharkhand’. Minz spent a lot of time at the club while recovering from his injuries – the big ones were to his shoulders and legs. As he got better, his work on the field doubled, and then tripled.”Robin was very disappointed with himself, he blamed himself for what had happened,” Haque said. “But we spoke to him, and he channeled his disappointment into the desire to make a comeback, be even better.”Anyone who saw him training, he was at a new level. I have worked with him for the last eight-nine years, but I had not seen this. He was adamant that he had to make a strong comeback on the cricket field.”Robin Minz has lost a year of his career, and now has to find a way to make up for lost time•Francis Xavier MinzThen came the Col. CK Nayudu trophy, and Minz was in the Jharkhand XI for their first game, the only one he played. He scored 77 runs in 80 balls against Haryana from No. 4, his innings included ten fours and three sixes. And then, with Ishan Kishan away in Australia with the India A side, Minz’s first-class debut happened. That hasn’t been too dramatic. So far, he has scores of 12 and 16 against Chandigarh and 8 and 39 against Saurashtra. That 39, though, came in a match-saving 84-run stand with Anukul Roy for the sixth wicket.”A lot has changed in the last one year,” he said. “I never thought that so many people would know me and worry about me. After the accident, I don’t know how many messages came, everyone was trying to console me. I was a little sad, but now I know that I will come back.”Questions about the IPL auction were to be expected – even fans who stopped him to take selfies during the Chandigarh game asked him about it.”I am not thinking anything,” he said. “I just want to play cricket – this is my life. What will I do thinking about what has happened and what will happen; whatever has to happen will happen. But I will play good cricket. I have to score more runs, and I have to hit more sixes and fours.”I am back… Minz is back.”

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