David Warner: The most prolific Australia opener, among the best at his peak

David Warner will bow out of Tests as one of the best openers to have played for Australia, and perhaps the best opener of his era

Shiva Jayaraman31-Dec-2023David Warner will end his Test career as the fifth most prolific batter for Australia. With one Test left in his career, he’s scored 8695 runs at an average of 44.58. No opener has scored more runs for Australia in Tests than Warner. Warner went past Matthew Hayden’s 8625 runs for Australia in his penultimate Test at the MCG. Hayden is the only Australia opener to score more Test hundreds than Warner’s 26.For someone who was in danger of being straight-jacketed as a white-ball specialist in the early days of his career, Warner finishes with a handsome record in Tests: he is the fourth most prolific opener ever. Only Alastair Cook, Sunil Gavaskar and Graeme Smith have made more runs in Tests as an opener. Australia fast-tracked Warner to T20Is – he made his debut even before he had played first-class cricket – because of his attacking style at the domestic level. Warner brought that style to his Test match batting as well, striking at 70.31 in the format. Among 35 batters to score 8000 or more Test runs, and those for whom strike-rate data is complete, only Virender Sehwag had a higher strike-rate.The best at a tough gigRemarkably, despite scoring at that clip Warner has been more enduring than any other opener in an era that has been largely difficult for openers. Since Warner’s debut, only seven other openers have survived long enough to score at least 3000 Test runs. Cook, who was an established opener for England long before Warner started, is the next most prolific opener with 6555 runs since Warner’s debut. Warner’s average of 45.08 is also easily higher than any of the above seven batters. With a lower cut-off of 2000 runs only Usman Khawaja and Rohit Sharma average higher than Warner.Warner also hit more hundreds than any other opener during his career. Warner’s 26 hundreds are ten more than Dimuth Karunaratne’s, who is the next-most prolific opener in terms of hundreds. Openers from New Zealand (22) and West Indies (18) and Bangladesh (12) have collectively hit fewer Test hundreds than Warner.ESPNcricinfo LtdBetter home than awayWarner was undoubtedly a better batter at home than he was away on tour. He scored 5336 runs as an opener at an average of 58.63. Among 21 openers to have scored 3000 or more runs at home, none average higher than Warner. The next best is Len Hutton, whose 3885 runs as an opener in England came at an average of 57.98. Overall, Warner has scored 5347 runs in Australia at an average of 58.11. He made 3348 runs on away tours at an average of 32.50.Not that Warner didn’t have his highs playing outside Australia: in the 2013-14 series in South Africa, he made 543 runs at an average of 90.50 with three centuries and two fifties in six innings. Among visiting batters, only Neil Harvey has made more runs at a better average than Warner in a Test series in South Africa. Harvey made 660 runs at 132.0 in eight innings in 1949-50. Ken Barrington is the only other visiting batter to score 500 runs in a series in South Africa at a better average. Best phase That South Africa tour came at the beginning of Warner’s best phase in Test cricket, which started with the Ashes hundred at the Gabba in 2013-14. From that Ashes series to end of the home season in 2015-16, Warner wasn’t just the best opener at the Test level but was also among the top batters. He scored 3066 runs at an average of 62.57 and made those runs at a strike rate of 81.49 in 27 Tests in that period. No batter scored more runs in Tests than Warner during this time. Among 76 batters to have played at least 20 innings in that period, Warner’s average of 62.57 was the fourth-best, only behind Kane Williamson, Steven Smith and Angelo Mathews, who was ahead of Warner by the smallest of fractions.The Gabba hundred in the 2013-14 Ashes would be the first of the 13 hundreds he would make in a span of just 50 Test innings. That is as prolific a streak as any of the currently active batters have had. Steven Smith and Virat Kohli are the only other currently active batters to make 13 centuries in any span of successive 50 Test innings. Warner accumulated 3017 runs at an average 62.90. Apart from Warner, only four batters with active Test careers scored 3000 or more runs over 50 successive innings – Virat Kohli, Steven Smith, Kane Williamson and Marnus Labuschagne. At his peak Warner rubbed shoulders with the best batters of this era.

The Ashes mixed-bag, and the Trans-Tasman highWarner’s Ashes record largely mirrors his overall record – good at home, mediocre away. In Australia he made 1237 runs at an average of 51.54. He crossed fifty ten times in just 26 innings in the home Ashes, including three hundreds. Playing away, he was half the batter he was at home – he made 936 runs at an average of 26.74. The 2019 Ashes in England was a forgettable one for Warner as he could manage just 95 runs from ten innings. Stuart Broad had the wood on him in that series, and subsequently, dismissing him seven times for 5 runs apiece.Warner’s best in England came early in 2015 when he made five fifties in nine innings in the Ashes series. An achievement worthy of note given how difficult it is to open in England. Only five other openers have made five or more fifty-plus scores in an Ashes series in England. Overall, Warner ended up being the third most prolific opener for Australia in terms of runs in the Ashes. He made 2168 runs and 19 fifty-plus scores. Only Mark Taylor and Bill Lawry made more runs than him as openers.

Warner’s record against Australia’s other traditional rival was exemplary. He made 1081 runs at an average of 67.56 against New Zealand including five hundreds from 19 innings. Three of them – including a 253 at the WACA – came in the 2015-16 Trans-Tasman Trophy when he made 592 runs at an average of 98.66. No Australia batter has scored more runs in a series of three or fewer matches.Opening mainstay without a stable partnerIt isn’t often highlighted that Warner opened for Australia without a stable partner for long stretches of his career. He had 13 different opening partners over the course of his career. Talk to openers and they’ll tell you the importance of walking out with the same partner time and again. Chris Rogers was Warner’s most frequent partner having opened with him 41 times (Khawaja will equal that should he open with Warner twice at the SCG). The average number of innings Warner had with each of his partner was 15.5, and the runs he added was 661.38. Among Australia’s six most prolific openers in terms of runs, the average runs Warner added with his partners was the lowest. And Warner was clearly not the weaker half. He averaged almost seven runs higher than his partners and scored 11 more centuries than them.!function(){“use strict”;window.addEventListener(“message”,(function(a){if(void 0!==a.data[“datawrapper-height”]){var e=document.querySelectorAll(“iframe”);for(var t in a.data[“datawrapper-height”])for(var r=0;r<e.length;r++)if(e[r].contentWindow===a.source){var i=a.data["datawrapper-height"][t]+"px";e[r].style.height=i}}}))}();

Warner made it his habit to answer his critics throughout his career, which hit rock bottom post the ball-tampering ban and the 2019 Ashes that followed. He could manage just 95 runs from ten innings in that series. Yet in his next series he roared back by making 489 runs against Pakistan in just two innings. In one of them he made Australia’s second-highest Test score of 335*. There haven’t been too many comeback stories like that in cricket. Only 11 batters in the history of Test cricket have scored more runs in a series after averaging less than ten in their preivous one. None of them had as many failures as Warner did in the 2019 Ashes. None of them had to endure what had come before that.

Rahane, Musheer get down and dirty to leave Vidarbha in the mud

Even as runs were not easy to come by, the pair kept grinding through, before switching gears and accelerating

Hemant Brar11-Mar-2024Their shirts covered in dust, Ajinkya Rahane and Musheer Khan appeared to be in the middle of an advertisement for a detergent.At different points on the second day of the Ranji Trophy final, both batters had to dive to make their ground. In the process, they ended up staining their shirts, which told the story of their struggle.For the first half of their 107-run partnership, the runs were not easy to come by and they had to rely on quick singles and doubles. In fact, the first 22 overs of their stand produced only 40 runs and one boundary. But they kept grinding it out and, by stumps, had all but batted Vidarbha out of the contest.Earlier in the day, Mumbai had bundled out Vidarbha for 105, thus taking a lead of 119. But Vidarbha would not have been in the final had they not staged comebacks from such situations.Related

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In the semi-final against Madhya Pradesh, Vidarbha had conceded a first-innings lead of 82. But they bounced back in the second innings to register a comfortable victory. A similar turnaround in the final was not impossible, especially when Mumbai lost their openers with 34 runs on the board.That brought in the middle two batters at opposite ends of their careers: Rahane, a veteran of 85 Tests but no longer in the national selectors’ plans, and Musheer, fresh from an Under-19 World Cup and playing only his sixth first-class game.Their forms were equally contrasting. Coming into the final, Rahane had scored only 134 runs at an average of 13.40 this season. A strong performance might have kept him on the periphery of India’s Test squad, but those hopes evaporated more and more with every passing game.Musheer, meanwhile, was the second-highest run-getter at the World Cup, with 360 runs at an average of 60.00 and a strike rate of 98.09. He carried that form into the Ranji Trophy as well. Landing straight into the quarter-final, he scored 203 not out and 33 against Baroda. He followed it up with a 55 on a treacherous pitch in the semi-final. After just three innings, his run tally (291) was more than double of Rahane’s.But neither Rahane nor Musheer had an easy start on Monday. Left-arm spinner Harsh Dubey was weaving a web with the new ball. He got one to pitch on leg stump and turn square to beat Musheer’s outside edge. When the batter tried to use his feet, Dubey shortened the length to make him look silly.Rahane was on 1 when he survived an lbw appeal against Umesh. The on-field call of not-out saved him when the Hawk-Eye showed the ball just clipping the top of middle stump.Both batters had their outside edge beaten multiple times by Umesh and Aditya Thakare, but they managed to survive. They also benefitted from left-arm spinner Aditya Sarwate, Vidarbha’s leading wicket-taker for the season, unable to bowl because of back spasms.Musheer Khan has brought his form from the Under-19 World Cup into the Ranji Trophy•PTI At tea, Musheer was on 13 off 55 and Rahane 9 off 39. Something changed after tea. Or perhaps just before it, and the effect was seen only after the break. In the penultimate over before the break, the ball had to be changed as its seam had come off.Or it could simply be that the two batters had spent sufficient time in the middle by then, and were primed to accelerate against an older ball.When play resumed, Thakare pitched one full around off and Rahane unleashed a gorgeous on-drive for the first boundary of the partnership.Sarwate finally came on to bowl in the 28th over but did not look 100% fit. Nor did he get the purchase Dubey was getting. When he overpitched one to Rahane, the batter used his wrists to hit against the turn and thread the gap between short midwicket and mid-on.In the following over, Rahane brought up the fifty of the partnership with a pulled four off Yash Thakur. It took the pair 140 balls but the next fifty would take only 76.Musheer stepped up by jumping out of his crease and smashing Sarwate down the ground. When the spinner shortened his length for the next delivery, Musheer was quick to go back and punch it through covers for four more.In his next over, Sarwate dropped one short and Rahane duly pulled it over midwicket for a six. And just like that, the biggest threat was taken for 35 runs in seven overs. That too on a day where no other frontline Vidarbha bowler conceded more than 2.7 per over.The acceleration meant that Rahane reached his fifty in just 88 balls. It was an emotional celebration. He kept his head down and held the bat high for a while, with Musheer giving him a hug and a pat on the back.When Musheer brought up his half-century, in the last over of the day, his dad gestured to him from the stands to stay there and carry on. Musheer gestured back in acknowledgement.At stumps, Rahane and Musheer walked off to a standing ovation from the sparse crowd, which included Sunil Gavaskar and Diana Edulji. They must be saying what a effort, or, perhaps, [Stains are good].

England still searching for their ruthless streak

The margins of victory against Pakistan are looking comfortable on paper, but the home side still need to find an extra gear

Valkerie Baynes24-May-2024Ruthlessness. If you could bottle and sell it, most teams would be buying. Making it last forever is harder, as Australia glimpsed during the Women’s Ashes last year. So is manufacturing it, as England are finding against Pakistan now.Having pushed Australia in an eight-all draw by winning both white-ball series at home less than a year ago, England’s 3-0 sweep of their T20Is against Pakistan and a 37-run victory in the first of their three ODIs in Derby look convincing on the scorecards. But anyone who has watched the matches against Pakistan will know they have largely lacked a killer punch.Related

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England were 11 for 4 in the first T20I at Edgbaston before winning by a flattering 53 runs. They won the second by 65 runs but no one passed 31 and Pakistan crumbled to 79 as their lack of batting depth was fully exposed by an all-round England bowling performance. Danni Wyatt’s 48-ball 87 was by far the standout in the third match as Pakistan gave a much-improved showing with the bat before losing by 34 runs.At a chilly, blustery Derby before a crowd of 1,500 on Thursday, the tourists stuck it out for 50 overs and got within three runs of their highest ODI score against England at 206 for 9, albeit in a 37-run defeat. The margin should have been greater for a side ranked No. 2 in the world, eight places higher than Pakistan, who are struggling to qualify directly for next year’s ODI World Cup.Alice Capsey top-scored with her ODI career-best of 44 as England posted 243 for 9 but Pakistan matched them in the first powerplay and the hosts couldn’t bowl them out despite the best efforts of spinners Sophie Ecclestone and Charlie Dean, who took five wickets between them.Much has been made of England’s new, fearlessly aggressive approach under head coach Jon Lewis but, Wyatt’s innings aside, there hasn’t been much evidence of it in this series against a side they have had on the ropes but only really crushed once, in the second T20I in Northampton. In fairness, England rightly took encouragement from the fact that that victory was an all-round effort iced by 3 for 11 by Ecclestone, who has been at the top of her game for years.Charlie Dean is part of a potent England spin attack•PA Photos/Getty ImagesIt feels like they are stuck between establishing a new identity for themselves – their ‘inspire and entertain’ ethos – and imposing it on other teams.Offspinner Dean, part of England’s enviable three-pronged spin attack with left-armer Ecclestone and legspinner Sarah Glenn, made her international debut at home to New Zealand in 2021 and became the fastest woman to 50 ODI wickets by matches (26) on the return tour in April, finishing England’s trip to New Zealand as the leading wicket-taker in the T20I series with seven at 19.14 and an economy rate of 6.70.Overall she had a leaner ODI series in New Zealand, taking four wickets at 39.75, but memorably combined with Amy Jones for a record 130-run partnership that won them the opening match.Dean said she was working hard to develop her skills as an allrounder and was frustrated not to press on with a handy 20-run cameo from 21 balls which might have helped England to a more imposing total. She also took 2 for 39 from her 10 overs and had finished her allocation with seven overs remaining in the Pakistan innings as Najiha Alvi and Nashra Sandhu staged an stubborn unbroken stand of 28 for the 10th wicket.”That’s exactly what we want to be, we want to be ruthless when we’re on top,” Dean said. “We want to stay there against teams like Australia and New Zealand and South Africa who maybe have a bit more depth in batting line-ups. We need to make sure that partnerships don’t form near the back end of innings and how we go about that is something that we’re exploring.”Equally it doesn’t need to come too far away from our basics. Sometimes when you search for things, then you don’t string your best balls together as much. Sometimes it happens, sometimes it doesn’t, but not for lack of trying today.”Credit, too, must be given to Pakistan, who are growing through this tour and have direct World Cup qualification at stake over the remaining two matches, at Taunton on Sunday and Chelmsford on Wednesday.Aliya Riaz had Heather Knight caught behind•ECB/Getty Images”They took us all the way to 50 overs and we certainly were trying lots of different things to try and get that end wicket or the last two, but I guess that’s just part of the game,” Dean added. “You can’t hold back or take your foot off the gas. You’ve got to keep trying to go through all the way to the end, even if maybe the result looks like it’s going a certain way. I don’t think we’re complacent in that way. You never know, a couple of them could have got hold of it and we’ve got to keep executing.”Sri Lanka exposed cracks in England’s batting against spin during their historic T20I series victory in England last year and, despite working to address this during training camps and a winter tour of India, Pakistan looked to target this area on a pitch their top-scorer with 34, Muneeba Ali, said demanded it.Dean said England were still learning in this respect. “We’ve spoken a lot about how we want to format our batting innings,” she said. “The girls really looked to be positive in the powerplay and maybe hit a few fielders, but it really looked like they were trying to take the game forward. I guess we lost a few wickets, but managed to get a decent total on the board, something that we knew that we could defend.”Capsey played a brilliant innings, being able to soak up the pressure that we’d probably put on ourselves, but Pakistan bowled fairly well. We know that maybe slow bowling with the offside up is a bit of our nemesis, but I think if we could all play like Nat [Sciver-Brunt] does off the back foot and smash it through cover, that would be amazing. We’re just looking to find our ways to be as productive as possible against that bowling.”There is a valid argument that sides perform better against those that represent a tougher contest without being complacent against weaker sides. England and Australia would both proudly admit to their clashes inspiring them to play at their best level. And while this series has less hype around it than the Ashes, with a T20 World Cup in spin-friendly conditions just over four months away, unearthing a ruthless streak now can only stand England in good stead on the global stage.

Test hopefuls jostle for limited slots as domestic season kicks off

With India about to embark on a long Test season, a crowded list of fringe players will hope to catch the selectors’ eye during the Duleep Trophy

Shashank Kishore03-Sep-2024The Duleep Trophy, which opens India’s 2024-25 domestic season, is set to kick off on September 5 in Bengaluru and Anantapur, with a number of big names featuring. With the Test squad for the home series against Bangladesh set to be picked later this week, there’s an opportunity for those on the fringes to impress the Ajit Agarkar-led selection panel as they look to shortlist players for India A tour of Australia in November, which shadows the senior team’s five-Test tour of the country.Here are a few things to look forward to.

Who is the next reserve opener?

Barring injury and illness, Rohit Sharma and Yashasvi Jaiswal are likely to be India’s first-choice opening combination for the moment. Shubman Gill currently occupies the No. 3 spot, while KL Rahul has expressed his preference to bat in the middle order. Both have opened in the past, however, and can slot back in at the top if temporarily needed.But there’s plenty at stake for the domestic openers on the fringes. On top of the list are Bengal’s Abhimanyu Easwaran and Karnataka’s Devdutt Padikkal, who made his debut against England earlier this year in Dharamsala, albeit in the middle order.Related

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Easwaran is largely old-school and copybook and has scored 7006 first-class runs at an average of 47.65 in a decade-long career so far. He’s been on tours with the national team previously and has led India A, but the Test cap has been elusive.Padikkal, meanwhile, started off as an opener but has carved a niche at No. 3 over the past year. But with R Samarth having left Karnataka, it’s likely Padikkal will be back at the top of the order for his state side. Padikkal scored 556 runs in six Ranji Trophy innings at 92.66 in 2023-24, including three hundreds. A strong follow-up to start 2024-25 will keep him in the mix.Another contender who has impressed the selection committee with his temperament is Tamil Nadu’s B Sai Sudharsan. While the left-hand batter plays at No. 3 or 4 for his state side, he is open to batting at the top. He began his ODI career with back-to-back half-centuries as an opener late last year in South Africa.Sudharsan will come into the Duleep Trophy fresh off a century for Surrey in the County Championship.

A crowded list of middle-order candidates

The Test series against England earlier this year featured a number of impressive performances from new faces in the middle order, particularly Sarfaraz Khan, who made three half-centuries in his first five Test innings, and Dhruv Jurel, who won the Player of the Match award with a pair of brilliant knocks in only his second Test. But they could find themselves crowded out by the imminent returns of Virat Kohli and Rishabh Pant, who both missed the series. Rahul, who missed the last four Tests with injury, is likely to slot right back too.Is Sai Kishore ready for the step up to Test cricket?•PTI If all of them are fit, India could opt for a top seven of Rohit, Jaiswal, Gill, Kohli, Rahul, Pant and Ravindra Jadeja in the first Test against Bangladesh in Chennai. Jurel will likely be the reserve wicketkeeper, which leaves Sarfaraz and Shreyas Iyer – who was dropped after the first two Tests against England – in a fight to squeeze into the squad.All this adds extra spice to the opening-round Duleep fixtures. Apart from Sarfaraz, Jurel and Iyer, other middle-order candidates who could be in action include Rajat Patidar, who endured a difficult Test initiation against England, and B Indrajith, who has been knocking for a few seasons now. Earlier this year, after being left out of the Tamil Nadu squad initially, he was instrumental in the team’s stirring run to the semi-final. Across 111 first-class innings, he averages 53.85 with 16 hundreds.

The search for India’s next set of spinners

For more than a decade now, R Ashwin and Jadeja have been constants in the Test set-up. Over the past couple of years, Kuldeep Yadav and Axar Patel have pushed themselves ahead of the chasing pack to establish themselves as the next spinners in line.Beneath the cream, there’s a healthy crop of upcoming left-arm spinners. R Sai Kishore, the highest wicket-taker of the 2023-24 Ranji season (53), and Saurabh Kumar are high up in the pecking order. But the selectors are also looking keenly at the old-school Manav Suthar from Rajasthan who finds himself in the NCA’s targeted pool of players.The 22-year-old Suthar has picked up 55 wickets over the past two Ranji seasons and has been part of the India Emerging (for the Asia Cup) and India A (against England Lions) squads.Yash Dayal is among the left-arm quicks jostling for the selectors’ attention•Manoj Bookanakere/KSCAAmong the offspinners, Washington Sundar is the frontrunner, having already shown his utility as an allrounder in his brief but impressive spell in the Test side in 2020-21. He’s made a splash in white-ball cricket more recently, having been named Player of the Series in the T20I series in Zimbabwe for his eight wickets in five games at an average of 11.62, and following that up with decent returns during the limited-overs tour of Sri Lanka. He’ll hope to translate that form into red-ball cricket.The other offspinner the selectors have been keen on looking at is Delhi’s Hrithik Shokeen. The 24-year-old is only two seasons old in first-class cricket and has so far picked up 30 wickets in 10 games at 33.93. He, like Washington, is more than useful with the bat as well, as he has shown with two fifties and an average of 32.16 so far in his first-class career. He has also been to the UK on an exchange program with Mumbai Indians.

The fast-bowling reserves

India’s search for a left-arm fast bowler post Zaheer Khan hasn’t yet yielded a long-term solution, at least in Test cricket. Arshdeep Singh is a T20I regular now, but his challenge is to show he can sustain the intensity of red-ball cricket: he has only played 16 first-class games so far, and averages 31.97. Khaleel Ahmed, who has endured a stop-start career thanks to injury, has also played very little first-class cricket: just 12 games in seven years, while averaging 35.00.These two are set to feature in the Duleep Trophy, as is Uttar Pradesh’s Yash Dayal, who can swing the new ball both ways and has impressed India’s team management with his skills. He has picked up 72 wickets in 23 first-class games at 29.26, and has come into the limelight on the back of a stellar IPL 2024 for Royal Challengers Bengaluru.Among right-arm quicks, the Bengal pair of Akash Deep and Mukesh Kumar will hope to build on their impressive Test initiations, while Avesh Khan, who has an excellent first-class record – 165 wickets in 43 games at 22.49 – will hope he can find a way to break into the Test side having been in and around the white-ball set-up for a while. Prasidh Krishna, meanwhile, is finally fit again after two years of run-ins with injuries either side of a lacklustre debut Test series in South Africa.With a long Test season about to begin, India will want to make sure they have the right back-ups in place for the lead Test trio of Jasprit Bumrah, Mohammed Shami and Mohammed Siraj.

High-flying TKR favourites against Royals, Kings look to breach Amazon Warriors' fortress

Which will be the key battles in the CPL 2024 playoffs? Who are the players to look out for?

Deivarayan Muthu01-Oct-20243:41

Imran Tahir: Defending title tougher than winning it the first time

Eliminator: Trinbago Knight Riders vs Barbados Royals

Though Nicholas Pooran’s barnstorming century was not enough for Trinbago Knight Riders to secure a top-two slot, they can draw some positives from their win in the final league match of CPL 2024. Despite the injury-enforced absence of Sunil Narine and despite being the last team to play in the Guyana leg, TKR managed to breach fortress Providence this season.It remains to be seen whether Narine has recovered enough to return in the playoffs. TKR also had to contend with injuries to Andre Russell and Dwayne Bravo – who has now retired from all cricket – at various points during the season. This has left Kieron Pollard scrambling for options – Tim David, for example, bowled with the new ball when TKR last met Barbados Royals in Tarouba last week. If Narine isn’t fit yet, will TKR run the risk of handing local offspinner Bryan Charles a T20 debut in a knockout game?All eyes will be on Pooran once again. He’s already had a record-breaking year – his 2160 runs in 2024 is already the most by a batter in a calendar year in T20 cricket – and he’s now two sixes away from surpassing Chris Gayle’s sixes tally in the CPL. His familiarity with the Providence pitch, having played for and captained Amazon Warriors in the past, could serve TKR well.As for Royals, their run has mirrored that of their parent franchise – Rajasthan Royals – in the IPL. After having been the early pace-setters with five wins in their first six games, they ran out of gas and lost four in a row. Captain Rovman Powell’s batting struggles – 137 runs in eight innings at an average of 22.83 and strike rate of 117.09 – haven’t helped. That strike rate drops to 91.66 against spin.The South Africa pair of Quinton de Kock, who is currently the highest run-getter this season, and David Miller will have to do the heavy-lifting with the bat. Royals’ bowling attack looks in much healthier shape with Maheesh Theekshana, Keshav Maharaj, Naveen-ul-Haq and Jason Holder all doing the job for them at different stages. Unless Royals’ batters back up their bowling, TKR are favourites to make it 3-0 against them this season.Imran Tahir’s celebrations have been as lively as ever•CPL T20/Getty Images

Qualifier 1: Guyana Amazon Warriors vs St Lucia Kings

Imran Tahir is 45 and continues to rock the CPL. His legbreaks and wrong’uns in particular continue to befuddle batters and his celebrations have been as lively as ever. Along with Gudakesh Motie, the left-arm fingerspinner, and Moeen Ali, the offspinner, Tahir has ensured that Providence remains Amazon Warriors’ fortress. Dwaine Pretorius’ slower cutters have also suited the slow, low surfaces in Guyana.Like Chennai Super Kings in the IPL, Amazon Warriors have constructed a squad with a variety of spin options and a number of spin-hitters. The last time Amazon Warriors faced St Lucia Kings at Providence, during the weekend, Shimron Hetmyer and Shai Hope bossed the middle overs to all but confirm their top-two spot.Hetmyer against Khary Pierre and Noor Ahmad could be a key match-up that could influence the rest of the game. Hetmyer has been particularly severe on left-arm spinners this CPL, taking them for 106 runs off 50 balls at a strike rate of 212. Hetmyer has also been dismissed by left-arm spin six times in ten innings, but that hasn’t stopped him from lining them up.Kings captain Faf du Plessis suffered from cramps while batting against Amazon Warriors but coach Daren Sammy suggested that du Plessis will be ready for the rematch against the defending champions in the playoffs. Like Tahir, du Plessis is still going strong in his 40s and has forged a potent partnership at the top with Johnson Charles, who has reinvented himself at 35 by adding the switch-hit to his repertoire.On Saturday, however, Kings perhaps missed a trick by not promoting the left-handed Shadrack Descarte to counter Tahir and Motie, who dominated the right-hand heavy Kings middle order. So, keep an eye on how Kings use Descarte or Ackeem Auguste in the middle order against Amazon Warriors’ spinners.In CPL 2023, Kings lacked a gun wristspinner, but they remedied it this season by recruiting Afghanistan’s Noor, who has been largely un-hittable, thanks to his bag of variations. He will have to continue his terrific form if Kings are to secure their maiden CPL title.

Bavuma, Rickelton prove, in their own special ways, that they can and they will

Both of them got ‘stuck in’ to rise to the occasion at Newlands for the New Year’s Test

Firdose Moonda03-Jan-2025The first hundreds Temba Bavuma and Ryan Rickelton scored this summer – in Durban and Gqeberha respectively – were knocks of relief. Before Kingsmead, Bavuma had returned from an elbow injury, with no red-ball match practice ahead of the Test, and only two Test hundreds after a decade in the game. Before St George’s Park, Rickelton had played eight Tests with a top score of 42 and had shown little sign he could transfer his domestic dominance to international success. As both of them raised the bats they proved a point: we can and we will. By the time they got to Cape Town, everybody knew that.So these hundreds, Bavuma’s fourth and Rickelton’s second were laced with what Rickelton called “enjoyment,” because, “I played the game the way I want to play the game.”South Africa were in a touch of trouble at 72 for 3 at lunch but after the tension of their two-wicket win at SuperSport Park, which confirmed their participation in June’s World Test Championship (WTC) final, Newlands was always going to be something of a riot. They were helped by one of the flattest pitches seen at this ground in recent memory – likely an overcompensation for last year’s aberration where the Test ended in 107 overs – and an uninspired Pakistan attack that lacked genuine pace. But they still had to get the job done, each under their own microscope.Related

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Rickelton was opening for the first time in a Test after spending most of his short career at No. 5. Promoted to No.3 in Gqeberha, he said he preferred playing against the new ball because it tightened his game, and he has some experience of opening at domestic level. So, he was a natural replacement for Tony de Zorzi, who was out injured, but came with the knowledge that this was the only place for him to play. “I just want to bat,” Rickelton said. “It doesn’t matter where, I just want a bat I get stuck in. I just want to play in this team and bat and score Test runs.”That desire was evident in the way he played: aggressively. Pakistan offered boundary balls and he cashed in. His century came off 135 balls, and his strike rate of 75.86 is his highest in any innings where he has scored more than 8. It was an indication of his proactivity.

Bavuma came to the crease with the same kind of conviction. Though he was the leading run-scorer in the series against Sri Lanka, his dismissal at SuperSport Park was so distressing – he walked when he had not nicked Mohammad Abbas and sparked a South African collapse that nearly cost them the game – that he hid in the bathroom until they were 15 runs away from winning. After that, Bavuma spoke passionately about being “berated and ridiculed” for playing with a hamstring injury in the 2023 ODI World Cup semi-final and the sounds of silence he has battled though this summer with two heavily strapped elbows. Those didn’t bother him in this innings, but he had cramp in the calf as he entered the 90s and asked Rickelton to “pull the old man through.”When his hundred came, Bavuma broke into a celebration that was completely out of character. He pumped his elbows several times, ran almost all the way to the boundary and cut his bat through the air as though he was slicing through criticism. What was that about? “The celebration just happened spontaneously,” Bavuma said afterwards.Temba Bavuma celebrates his fourth Test ton•Gallo Images/Getty Images”Obviously there was a lot of emotion behind it, more around the fact of having crossed the three-figure mark. I was quite frustrated at my last innings at Centurion – the manner that I went out, albeit I was obviously trying to make a play for the team. I wanted to make a bigger contribution towards the team and get away from the 40s and 50s that I have been getting. The celebration was around that. And also to prove to myself that I can play when there’s not much on the game.”There’s a poetic synchrony to Bavuma scoring the hundreds at Newlands. It’s the ground where he made his first Test hundred nine years ago, against England. Then, he was the face of hope in an experienced batting line-up; now he is the experience in a hopeful one. “The situations were a bit different. The first time I came in there was a bigger partnership that had been laid by Hash(im Amla), Faf (du Plessis) and the boys. Obviously I was under pressure as well from my place on the team,” he said. “Today, I was hitting the ball out the middle from relatively early on within my innings. It probably seemed a lot more fluent. I don’t think I made a lot of mistakes so there was a lot more class here if I could say.”And a lot more seniority and a lot of people looking up to him, including Rickelton. The two are domestic team-mates and to share a record-partnership in the New Year’s Test – South Africa’s marquee match of the season – in front of a sellout crowd with festive vibes fizzing in the air is something they will both remember for a long time to come. “We don’t talk a lot (when we’re batting), but we just emphasise doing the basics for long periods of time,” Rickleton said. “To share the partnership out there with the captain of South Africa, also captain of the Lions, is special for me and I like to think for him also. It was just really, really cool.”

Rohit and Kohli, making each other greater

They have been giving us less and less time at the crease together in this format, the one whose limits they have most stretched

Andrew Fidel Fernando07-Mar-20253:05

Will Kohli’s chasing form influence NZ’s decision at the toss?

It felt like the final scene of a beloved show, whose characters you have watched grow and change for a decade and plenty. Virat Kohli strode to the crease, every sinew bristling with purpose. Rohit Sharma leaned on his bat and watched Kohli come, almost inert.They batted 2.5 overs together in the Champions Trophy semi-final against Australia, Rohit making seven off ten balls in Kohli’s company, Kohli gleaning five off seven. Too short a time to savour their co-gianthood. Barely a glimpse into the interplay between two men who have defined so much about Indian cricket, and by extension the game in the latest age.In fact, they have been giving us less and less time at the crease together in this format, the one whose limits they have most stretched. That Kohli will be regarded the greatest chaser in its history has been beyond obvious for years. Rohit is the architect of its most gargantuan innings, that 264 at Eden Gardens still feeling like a fever dream a decade later.Related

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But in the last five years, they have made no more than 436 runs in each other’s company. ODIs are infrequently played now, of course, but in that time, Rohit has made almost five times as many runs (2019) with Shubman Gill. Even Kohli has had more productive partnerships with Gill (913), as well as with Shreyas Iyer (1181) and KL Rahul (913).Partly this is down to Rohit spinning off in a new direction. Where Kohli continues to impose himself on the middle and late overs when form allows, Rohit has become almost exclusively a powerplay artisan, frequently gone before Kohli arrives, and interested only in continuing to hack at the bowling rather than build an old-school block-by-block innings even when he isn’t. It’s worth repeating that the guy who specialises in hitting 60-odd off 40-odd balls was once thought to be an unstoppable six-hitting monster only he had spent 60 to 70 balls at the crease.Kohli’s feet have touched the ground in other formats. In Tests, he has even skidded along for some time, like a regular mortal. He still loves those big numbers against his name, of course, propelled forever by that internal fire that burns like a neutron star. And in ODIs, he is, still, largely managing them – his average of 52.56 over the past five years not much worse than his overall numbers, his strike rate almost exactly where it always had been. Their spending less time at the crease together is not really doing.Virat Kohli and Rohit Sharma, the ODI giants•BCCIAnd yet, although the Kohli-Rohit Venn diagram overlap is shrinking, they are both still there, very clearly driven by the pursuit of India’s success. In this tournament, Kohli has led two chases – against Pakistan and Australia, hitting 100 not out and 84. It had been Rohit’s 41 off 36, against Bangladesh, however, that had bought India’s middle order the time to arrest a middle-overs mini-collapse (they lost 3 for 22 at one point) on a difficult surface. This is exactly what these Rohit innings are meant to do – ease the progress of the remainder of that top order. Rohit prides himself on his sparkling support acts. It fits that although he wears leadership more lightly than Kohli ever did, he is the World Cup-winning captain out of the two of them.In Tuesday’s semi-final, their most intense moment together came in the field sometime during the middle overs, when Kuldeep Yadav yanked his hand away at the non-striker’s end, instead of cleanly receiving Kohli’s bounce-throw from the outfield, and Kohli and Rohit, standing in the distance either side of the bowler, raised their voices simultaneously to give poor Kuldeep an acerbic surround-sound bollocking. They might not be putting up the numbers they used to in each other’s company, but this much at least they do together.2:19

Is it still advantage India in Dubai?

And their numbers once were genuinely awesome. Until March 7, 2020, Kohli and Rohit had made 4878 runs in partnership, a figure surpassed for India only by the legendary opening combination of Sachin Tendulkar and Sourav Ganguly. Their partnership brought India 65.04 runs on average, which is way better even than Tendulkar-Ganguly (47.55). In fact, the pity in that era was that Kohli and Rohit didn’t find enough occasions in which it was possible for them to dovetail as batters. They had played 176 ODIs together through that period but batted together only 80 times.There is, additionally, this consideration: the Rohit-Kohli relationship does not immediately feel like one of the greatest bromances ever told. Not that there has ever been obvious friction. But the relationship has not conformed to a model others have set down – one artist, and one technician, sharing an elemental bond. Just in this century, and just in South Asia, we have had Rahul Dravid and VVS Laxman, and the 2001 epic by which their careers will always be partly remembered. There was also Mahela Jayawardene and Kumar Sangakkara, who smiled at each other across a dressing room one day and knew straightaway they were destined to sell very expensive crab together (they did also score some runs). Kohli-Rohit has never threatened to be sappy, but then who cares, also? Theirs is primarily a professional relationship. They have made each other greater for India – of that, there is no question.Though each of these batters clearly have more left in them, it feels like we have left the best Rohit+Kohli years behind. Which makes the rare occasions on which they bat together all the sweeter – two eagles circling on the same thermal, each acutely aware of the other, but not directly interacting, nor ever getting in the other’s way. One day, not long from now, we will look up, and they will be gone.

Was England's 342-run over South Africa their biggest ever in ODIs?

And what’s the latest a batter has come and scored a hundred in an ODI?

Steven Lynch09-Sep-2025England beat South Africa by 342 runs at the Rose Bowl. Was this their biggest win in ODIs? asked Bill Green from England

England ran up 414 for 5 in Southampton last weekend, then bowled South Africa out for 72 to win by 342 runs. It was – by exactly 100 – their biggest win in a one-day international, beating 242 runs against Australia at Trent Bridge in June 2018.More than that, though, it was the largest victory margin in any men’s one-day international, beating 317 runs by India (390 for 5) against Sri Lanka (73) in Thiruvananthapuram in January 2023. There have been three others by more than 300 runs.There have also been exactly 50 ODIs that were won by ten wickets: the quickest of those came when New Zealand overhauled Bangladesh’s 93 in Queenstown in December 2007 in just six overs.There have been bigger victories in women’s ODIs: New Zealand (455 for 5) beat Pakistan (47) by 408 runs in Christchurch in January 1997, and there have been seven further wins by more than 300 runs.In the Duleep Trophy semi-final the other day Central Zone scored 600 without anyone reaching a century. Was this a record? asked Akram Fazal Mirza from India, and others

The highest individual score in Central Zone’s total of 600 against West Zone in the Duleep Trophy semi-final in Bengaluru last week was Shubham Sharma’s 96. This was only the fifth time any team had reached 600 in a first-class innings without anyone making a hundred: the highest of all remains Surrey’s 671 for 9 declared against Kent in Beckenham in May 2022, when the highest individual contribution was also 96, by Ollie Pope.Namibia made 609 against Uganda in Windhoek in September 2010, with a highest score of 87 by Ewald Steenkamp, while the Indian record remains 605, by Madhya Pradesh against Haryana in Rajnandgaon in March 1999 (highest score Jai Yadav’s 90). Surrey’s 603 against Gloucestershire in Bristol in July 2005 included a highest individual score of 89, by Azhar Mahmood.Cameron Green came in in the 35th over against South Africa and hit a century. Has anyone entered later in an ODI and reached 100? asked Michael Z from Australia

Australia’s Cameron Green entered after 34.1 overs against South Africa in Mackay last month: he reached his century off 47 balls, and ended up with 118 not out.There have been five known centuries scored in one-day internationals by batters entering even later in the innings (we don’t have ball-by-ball details for all ODIs, but it looks unlikely there are any additions). Top of the list is Green’s frequent team-mate, Glenn Maxwell, who came to the crease after 39 overs against Netherlands in Delhi during the 2023 World Cup, and hit eight sixes in a 40-ball hundred.AB de Villiers came in after 38.3 overs for South Africa against West Indies in Johannesburg in January 2015, but still had time to smash 149, with 16 sixes: he reached 100 from just 31 balls, still the ODI record. United Arab Emirates’ Asif Khan hit 101 not out against Nepal in Kirtipur in March 2023, having entered after 37.3 overs. And England’s Jos Buttler has two such innings, both against Pakistan: in Dubai in November 2015 he entered after 35.3 overs and scored 116 not out, while in Southampton in May 2019 he came in after 35.1 and hit an unbeaten 110.Glenn Maxwell came out to bat in the 40th over against Netherlands in 2023, and reached his hundred off the next 40 balls•AFP/Getty ImagesAndrew Hudson scored 163 on his Test debut against West Indies, but was out for a duck in the second innings. How many other players have done this? asked Greg Nilsen from South Africa

Opener Andrew Hudson did indeed start his Test career with 163, against West Indies in Bridgetown in South Africa’s “comeback” Test in April 1992. He followed that with a duck in the second innings: at the time the only other man to start his Test career with a century and a duck was India’s Gundappa Viswanath, with 0 and 137 against Australia in Kanpur in November 1969.Since Hudson, three others have achieved the feat on debut: Mohammad Wasim made 0 and 109 not out for Pakistan against New Zealand in Lahore in November 1996, Keaton Jennings collected 112 and 0 for England vs India in Mumbai in December 2016, and earlier this year Ismat Alam made 0 and 101 for Afghanistan against Zimbabwe in Bulawayo.There’s also been one instance in a women’s Test: in Bloemfontein last December, England’s Maia Bouchier made 126 and 0 against South Africa.Rahul Dravid, by never making 89 in Tests, missed out on scoring the first 14 numbers in the Fibonacci sequence in Tests. Has anyone else managed 13? asked Chris Goddard from England

The first 14 numbers in the Fibonacci sequence – in which the next number is obtained by adding the previous two together – are 0, 1, 1, 2, 3, 5, 8, 13, 21, 34, 55, 89, 144 and 233. You’re right that while Rahul Dravid did score 233 – against Australia in Adelaide in December 2003 – he was never out (or not out) for 89.It appears that no one can beat him, although there are six other batters who have 13 of the 14 numbers (unlike Dravid, they are all lacking 233): Mike Atherton, MS Dhoni, Ricky Ponting, Kumar Sangakkara, Shakib Al Hasan and Steven Smith (who might yet add the next number in the sequence!)Shiva Jayaraman of ESPNcricinfo’s stats team helped with some of the above answers.Use our feedback form, or the Ask Steven Facebook page to ask your stats and trivia questions

Shashank Singh: 'I've realised cricket is my life. I don't know what I would do without it'

From going unsold at the IPL auction to becoming Punjab Kings’ designated finisher, he has seen heartbreak and redemption, and come out on the other side with renewed belief

Ashish Pant10-Oct-2025The night of June 3 still haunts Shashank Singh. Punjab Kings had done most things right in IPL 2025. They topped the group stages, qualified for their first IPL final in 11 years, and looked set for a maiden title. But they fell short in the final.Shashank was a central figure in the team’s run to the final. He was their fifth-highest run-getter, with 350 runs in 17 innings and a strike rate of 153.50. More importantly, he was their designated finisher.When he came in to bat in the final, PBKS were four down, with the required rate close to 12 an over. Quickly running out of partners, Shashank got a few boundaries away, and while he finished unbeaten on 61 off 30, it wasn’t enough. PBKS lost to Royal Challengers Bengaluru by six runs.”It still hurts,” Shashank says. “Sometimes, when I recall what could have happened… it is very easy to say that I have moved on. But these things take time.Related

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“You say things [like] the sun will rise tomorrow, there will be another day. These things are nice to say and hear. It is very important to move on in cricket, but sometimes it doesn’t happen. The next ten to 14 days were very tough for me.”Every ball. I remember every ball even now. Where could I have been better? Should I have attacked Krunal Pandya? Should I have gone after Romario Shepherd a little early? Should we have done better [in] the field? What could I have done differently? I have moved on, obviously, and there are lots of things to look forward to. But yeah, sometimes it still hurts.”Since the start of IPL 2024, only Prabhsimran Singh has more runs than Shashank’s 704 in 28 innings for PBKS. Shashank averages nearly 47 across these two seasons, while striking at 158.91. While things are on the up now, it was very different three years ago, when he was left devastated after going unsold at the auction for the 2023 IPL. Having been on the IPL circuit since 2017 with Delhi Daredevils (2017), Rajasthan Royals (2019-21) and Sunrisers Hyderabad (2022) and still only having played ten games, Shashank, 31 at the time, was left contemplating his future.Shashank was the top scorer for PBKS in the 2025 final, but his unbeaten 61 couldn’t stave off defeat while the rest of the batting collapsed around him•Getty ImagesHis PBKS signing for the 2024 season was mired in confusion after a mix-up during the auction where for a while it seemed that Punjab Kings wanted to rescind their winning bid for him. It led to plenty of trolling on social media for months. But now, with the worst behind him, Shashank firmly believes it was all for the best.”Whatever I am today is because of that IPL auction where I did not get picked on December 23, 2022. I am what I am today because of that date,” Shashank says. “If someone tells me that I am gradually improving, it is because of that year – it keeps me in check. I get reminded about it sometimes, once a year, sometimes once a month, but I do get reminded of it. And then suddenly I start getting scared. And then you realise, no one is bigger than the sport and can never be. So I start again. It was an eye-opener for me. Whenever I slack [off] or get laid back, I immediately snap out of it, recalling that time.”If that wouldn’t have happened, I probably wouldn’t have loved this sport as much, nor would I have been working so hard. Till two years back, I used to say that cricket is a part of your life, not your life. But I’ve realised lately that cricket is my life. I don’t know what I will do without this sport. If someone asks me my plans after five-six years, I get scared because this sport has become my life.”Over the last few years he has transformed himself from a middle-order batter to a death-overs specialist. It didn’t come naturally, but he took the plunge to give himself a chance to stand out from the competition. He first explored the finisher’s role at the DY Patil tournament in February 2023 in Mumbai and realised he had the “calmness and maturity” required to play in the position. For the rest of the year he practised batting with the tail and worked on his power-hitting. It gave him a fresh lease of life when he was picked up by PBKS.In this year’s IPL, no batter had more runs than Shashank’s 242 in the last five overs of an innings. Across the last two IPL seasons, only Tristan Stubbs (360) has more runs in the death overs than Shashank’s 318 at a strike rate of 213.42.”Surya [Suryakumar Yadav] once told me that the player who bats at No. 6 and 7 gets judged the most,” Shashank says. “There are more times that you will fail, because the level of risk you take is the highest.ESPNcricinfo Ltd”See, I want to be a superstar for my team. That role of a hero, I want to be that. And I feel that the best time to become a hero is by batting at No. 5 and 6. I enjoy taking responsibility, I like it when the odds are against me. When the team needs 12 runs off two balls, I want to be the batter to hit the two sixes.”Sometimes I feel I would have got more visibility if I had batted up the order. I have batted there all my life, I have scored runs also. But I feel I am the best as a finisher and that’s why the team has selected me in that position.”Shashank is also a handy medium-pacer, and while he hasn’t bowled much in the IPL, he has picked up 37 wickets in List A cricket and 20 in T20s. In the 2023-24 domestic season, he became the first Indian to make over 150 runs and pick up five wickets in the same List A match, against Manipur.Earlier this year he won the BCCI’s Lala Amarnath award for the best allrounder in domestic limited-overs competitions for the 2023-24 season.Despite all that and his decently consistent run with the bat, Shashank hasn’t received an India, or even an India A, call-up yet. “I won’t say that I don’t feel bad [at not getting a national call-up],” he says. “There is disappointment. But again, can I do anything about that? Yes, keep on performing and keep on asking what else I can do better.”I don’t want to just play for India; I want to win matches for the country. I visualise and think the same way. Even today, when I’m training, power-hitting, I think about what I need to do to win matches. If I’m playing in Australia, I’ll be facing conditions where there is extra bounce, so I need to improve my pulls and cuts. If I’m playing in India, I’ll need power-hitting so that I can clear the ropes easily.”See, my job is to tick the boxes, to work hard. I can only control the things which are in my hand. That national call, that India A call-up, how that will happen, when it will happen, I don’t know. But one thing is that I still have a dream. That dream of winning matches for India. It will happen. The belief is still there.”Some might think that at 34 Shashank is past his prime, but he feels his best years are ahead of him. He draws inspiration from an illustrious former Mumbai team-mate who made his T20I debut at 30. “Surya hit Jofra [Archer] for six in his first match [innings] and now he’s the captain of the Indian team,” he says.”Then there’s Pravin Tambe. He didn’t play for India, but at the age of 41, he debuted in IPL. Can you imagine that!ESPNcricinfo Ltd”Sometimes, when you are disappointed about not seeing your name [among those picked], then these examples come to mind. These players had that belief and that’s why they are there.”In our sport, there is no criteria for age. It all depends on the performance of an individual and the team’s needs. I think age is unnecessarily categorised as an important thing. I just feel it is an excuse. If I am a liability for the team, if I can’t run quickly between the wickets, if I can’t field in the outfield, then yes, surely the age factor comes into play. But when you are proactive, you are an asset to the team. Then age is just another number.”IPL 2025 was the first time PBKS made it to the final since 2014, and Shashank attributes the team’s success to the captain and coach, Shreyas Iyer and Ricky Ponting.”Shreyas is at a different level altogether,” Shashank says. “He has his own aura, a different mindset altogether. Won’t talk rubbish, won’t tolerate rubbish. When he bats in the nets, he knows what he is doing. If someone asks me: who is the best captain you have played under? Hands down, Shreyas Iyer.”And then Ricky sir, he has made the game very simple. Cricket can be a complicated sport at times. If you ask a batsman, the leg shouldn’t go across, the head shouldn’t fall, but Ricky sir has simplified the game brilliantly.”You know why he is a great coach? It’s because he knows what a player wants. I’ll give you an example. I did not bat in the nets a single day throughout the IPL. Once the matches began, for two-and-a-half months, from the first match against Gujarat Titans till the final, I did not bat in the nets even once. Even Shreyas sometimes used to say, ‘Bro, what are you doing?'”Everyone has their own rhythm. After so many years, I now know my game. IPL is a high-pressure tournament. Even on non-match days there is a little pressure on everyone involved. Sometimes when batting in the nets, if you miss a few balls, if you mistime a few shots, there is added pressure on yourself. If I play a bad shot in the nets, I start thinking about that one shot rather than the other good shots I played. And I don’t know how but Ricky sir understood this.”Ahead of the last IPL season, Shashank had just one goal in mind: to not be a one-season wonder. Having ticked that box, he now wishes to manifest two things in the next year.”If you ask me about the team, then Punjab is lifting next year’s IPL for sure,” he says “And one more prediction I have, and that is in the upcoming [T20] World Cup in India, I’ll be playing, and I’ll be winning games for the team. I don’t know how that will happen, but I surely believe that it will happen.”

Why is Monty Panesar trending on the eve of the first Ashes Test?

Bizarre broadside from Australia’s stand-in captain puts England’s former spinner front and centre of the pre-series banter

Alan Gardner20-Nov-20250:39

Steve Smith’s strange ‘Mastermind’ jibe at Monty Panesar

Hands up who had ‘Steven Smith Hits Back at Monty Panesar’s Sandpaper Comments with BBC Mastermind Jibe’ on their Ashes 2025-26 phoney war bingo card?Because that, bizarrely enough, is the point we had reached when those in the UK woke up on Thursday morning, less than 24 hours out from the start of the first Test. Perhaps it was the logical endgame of an Ashes build-up that has seemed ever more febrile and fantastical as the weeks have ticked by. But it also prompted, on many levels, the question: why?Why had Smith, in responding to what was reportedly a planted question early in his press conference, chosen to specifically target Panesar amid all the pre-series chatter on both sides? Why did Smith decide to make a personal dig at a retired player about a TV appearance from almost seven years ago? And why, on the eve of one of the most anticipated Ashes in recent memory, was he rewatching Panesar’s infamous meltdown if, as he claimed, “it doesn’t really bother me”.Ironically, the Panesar comments that Smith claimed he hadn’t been bothered by received minimal coverage – certainly in contrast to his “off-topic” digression in the full glare of pre-game media duties, which caused “Monty Panesar” to become a trending topic on two sides of the globe.The issue had, in fact, seemed to spiral after being picked up by Brad Haddin and Alyssa Healy on the Willow Talk podcast earlier this week. Haddin, still keen as ever to get involved in a stoush, suggested Panesar should “Pull your f***ing head in” – which is about the level of wit for Ashes repartee. What’s remarkable is that the mud-flinging has not been confined to social media, but ended up with Australia’s stand-in captain using it for an open-mic spot on matchday-minus-one.For those still in the dark, Panesar – speaking to an online betting company – had urged England to “really get into” Smith about his role in the 2018 sandpaper incident at Cape Town and “make him feel guilty”. But it seems unlikely that Monty’s masterplan would have featured quite so high up in the strategising by Ben Stokes and Brendon McCullum ahead of this series (although perhaps it now should…)Monty Panesar and Steven Smith have reprised hostilities in unlikely circumstances•Getty ImagesPanesar also explicitly urged the UK media to take up the cudgels against Smith, following the example of some typically fruity coverage of England’s preparations by the local outlets. In another irony, Smith’s response has made it much easier for the English pack to now mount their high horses (something that rarely requires a second invitation).As for the Barmy Army, who are expected to make up a significant proportion of the crowd in Perth Stadium, they won’t need any prompting from Panesar to break into another chorus of “We saw you cry on the telly”.Smith added in his press conference that he was “pretty chilled” these days, and certainly delivered his pre-planned bit for the cameras with a broad grin in place. It was, nevertheless, a curious call that has added another layer of intrigue to the series – as well as an unexpected new chapter to Panesar’s colourful Ashes backstory.By coincidence, it is only a couple of weeks since Panesar popped up as a walk-on character in the story of Jake Weatherald’s maiden Test call-up. Weatherald – who described Panesar as “one of the funniest people I’ve ever met in my life” – played alongside the former England left-arm spinner during his time in the UK with Great Witchingham CC and took time to regale the Grade Cricketer podcast about what an “amazing experience” it was. Whether they were laughing with or at Monty is probably moot.Related

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This has often been the case, starting with Shane Warne’s infamous comment that Panesar hadn’t played 33 Tests, but the same Test 33 times. Panesar was an unlikely hero with the bat for England at Cardiff shortly after that, but was again reduced to a figure of fun on the 2013-14 tour, including when Cricket Australia apologised for causing offence with a tweet that pictured four men dressed as Teletubbies wearing turbans and the caption: “Will the real Monty Panesar please stand up?”Since the end of his playing career, Panesar has forged a number of different career paths – often with limited success. His blooper, which he put down to nerves, came during a period in which he tried to carve out a regular spot as a reality TV personality, while he has done more run-of-the-mill work as a cricket pundit for a number of organisations (including ESPNcricinfo). Last year, he made headlines after briefly promising to stand as candidate in the General Election for the Workers Party of Britain, before backtracking.He has also spoken about his struggles with mental health issues and, sadly, still seems to be casting around for a comfortable post-playing role. Whether Ashes bantermeister is the right fit remains to be seen – but Smith has fanned the flames, inadvertently or otherwise. Certainly Panesar’s zinger of a response, delivered on BBC radio a few hours later, then followed up in a Telegraph guest column, suggested he is rising to the occasion:”I’ve started, so I’ll finish,” Panesar wrote. “Those were the words I heard at the end of my Mastermind shocker six years ago. But if I’m guilty of anything, it is having bad general knowledge. And that is better than being a cheat.”We’ve both made mistakes. I made my mine on a quiz show. He made his on the cricket field.”And so the sideshow rumbles on, with Panesar also due to appear on Michael Clarke’s Beyond23 podcast later on Thursday. Wonder what they’ll talk about? Thankfully the cricket is about to begin, otherwise who knows what we’d wake up to tomorrow.

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