Shami smashes records, while Sri Lanka plunge to new lows

Stat highlights from the World Cup match between India and Sri Lanka in Mumbai

Sampath Bandarupalli02-Nov-202345 World Cup wickets for Mohammed Shami in 14 innings, the most for an Indian bowler, surpassing the 44 wickets by Javagal Srinath and Zaheer Khan.4 Five-wicket hauls by Shami in ODIs, the most for India in the format, going past Srinath and Harbhajan Singh, who have three five-fors each.3 Five-wicket hauls for Shami at the ODI World Cup, the joint-most with Mitchell Starc.7 Hauls of four or more wickets for Shami in ODI World Cups, the most by any bowler.55 Sri Lanka’s total against India in Mumbai is the fourth lowest in the men’s ODI World Cup. It is also the lowest for a Full-Member nation, with Bangladesh’s 58 against West Indies in 2011 being the previous lowest.302 The margin of India’s win is the second largest by runs in the men’s ODI World Cup, behind Australia’s 309-run win against the Netherlands last week. This is the fourth 300-plus runs win in men’s ODIs and all four matches have occurred this year.ESPNcricinfo Ltd4 Instances of Sri Lanka getting bowled out for less than 100 in 2023, the most for a team in a year in men’s ODIs. Three of those four came against India, also the most for a team in a year against an opponent.5.31 Mohammed Siraj’s bowling average in the first ten overs against Sri Lanka in ODIs. Siraj has taken 16 wickets for 85 runs in the first ten overs in six ODIs against Sri Lanka.3 Indian batters with higher scores in the match than Sri Lanka’s total of 55. It is only the third instance of three batters outscoring the opponent in a men’s ODI. Matthew Hayden (88), Andrew Symonds (59) and Darren Lehmann (50*) outscored Namibia (45 all out) in the 2003 World Cup, while Hashim Amla (112), Jacques Kallis (72) and AB de Villiers (52) scored more than Sri Lanka (43 all out) in Paarl in 2012.2 Runs by Sri Lanka’s top-five batters, the fewest in a men’s ODI innings.29 Sri Lanka’s total at the fall of the eighth wicket – the fourth-lowest total at which a team has lost the eighth wicket in men’s ODIs, and the lowest at the World Cup.

The spectacle at No. 4 featuring KL Rahul

India have had some famous names occupying that spot in Test cricket and their latest – albeit stopgap – option looked the part too.

Alagappan Muthu26-Jan-20241:26

Manjrekar: ‘Rahul’s knock a model for how to bat on these pitches’

KL Rahul keeps kicking at his batting crease. It’s littered with dust. Once he has appeased his inner neat freak, he begins his pre-ball routine. There’s a pull of the right pad. An adjustment of the helmet. Couple twirls of his bat. And then he gets into his stance like he’s slipping into some flip-flops. One foot after the other. Right in front of middle stump.Now that is a sign of a batter who wants to be on top of the ball at all times, and so he was. For 41.5 overs on the second day of the Test match in Hyderabad, there was no better spectacle than the man who walked out at No. 4 for India. Talk about keeping up traditions.Related

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Rahul made 86 runs on a turning pitch at a strike rate of 70. There were few signs of overt aggression. He was simply making the very best decisions and profiting off them more often than not. Certainly a fair bit more than his team-mates. Another storied No. 4 tradition.It all began with where he positioned himself. On Thursday, Jonny Bairstow had stood on leg stump to India’s left-arm spinners. Batters do that to manipulate the line of the bowler, and Bairstow managed to cut balls that were coming in with the angle from around the wicket. Standing on leg stump also helps the batter avoid lbw – a constant risk against the ball going with the arm.Rahul predominantly stood on middle stump, probably because he has a lot of trust in his defence. From there it was all about reacting to the ball coming at him; all about his training and muscle memory and an incredible gift for judging length.Rahul used the depth of the crease superbly against England’s spinners•Getty ImagesIn the 55th over, which was around the time the pitch was throwing up some uneven bounce, Rehan Ahmed got one to skid through low. Rahul was on the back foot and if his response had been anything less than absolutely perfect, he would have been bowled. Initially, he was going for the cut, because he does that, he loves to cut balls that are meant to hit the top of off stump. Then he realised he couldn’t afford a horizontal bat shot and played an almost straight-bat slice through point and it went for four.Rahul would have had less than a split second to make all of those calls and he almost always made the right one. First, his footwork. The moment a ball pitched even on the shorter side of the good-length area, he was ready to use the depth of the crease in whatever way he needed to to open up scoring options. Some of his team-mates – and more than a few England batters – were dismissed by balls like this because they’d simply pushed forward even though there was no hope of their getting to the pitch of the delivery.Then the hand-eye coordination. It isn’t easy to shift from one shot to another in the time between the ball pitching and arriving at the crease. In scientific terms, that’s less than diddly-squat. This was a stroke of genius. Another India No. 4 did something similar to another England legspinner seven years ago.In all, Rahul went back to 43 balls as per ESPNcricinfo’s data, and nailed 38 runs at a strike rate of 88 with four fours and a massive six.Unlike Shubman Gill, Rahul was able to rotate the strike with ease•Associated PressThese included his back-foot returns against Mark Wood, who did his best to try and break his air of invulnerability with a four-over spell during which the speed gun seemed stuck at 150kph. Once again Rahul’s decision-making blunted the threat. Short balls aimed at the back shoulder were left alone, because going after them might have brought in the fly slip, or the gully or the man about three-fourths of the way to the backward square leg boundary. Short balls ending up down leg, on the other hand, were karate-chopped – not pulled, karate chopped, with the bat going up in the backlift and then coming down on top of the ball. Hi-yah!England put pressure on Shubman Gill because his only release seemed to be the big shot. He was going block, block, boom. Rahul, meanwhile, was ever so adept at shifting his body either inside or outside the line of the ball to bring his wrists into play and find the gaps through all the funky fields that Ben Stokes set. He respected England’s bowling when the length was good – 15 off 50 balls – but went at nearly a run a ball – 71 off 73 – when they pitched either side of that band. None of their plans worked against him. Until that long hop.India were rarely in any trouble because they had a batter trusting his instincts and backing his strengths. There was a time in his Test career, not too long ago, when all he seemed capable of doing was second-guess himself. That KL Rahul looks a distant, fast-fading memory.In an interaction during the 2023 World Cup, he asked the singer Dua Lipa what number she’d wear on her jersey and explained his choice. “I wear No. 1 because it’s a mindset thing.” He’s one of the few – perhaps the only – international players with that number on their back. Because it’s such an easy target for critics and he’s had a lot of them over the years. Some of his century celebrations in limited-overs matches – the forefinger of each hand stuck in his ears – were aimed at them. However, he marked his most recent three-figure score – an intense innings in South Africa on comeback after a 10-month hiatus – with a mostly calm raise of the bat. It’s a sign that he’s at peace. With himself and his cricket.

Big game, white ball, first over: Starc's romance for the ages

The KKR fast bowler has been up and down in this IPL but when it really counted, he made the biggest impact

Alagappan Muthu22-May-20241:33

‘That’s why you pay big money for big game players’ – Moody on Starc bowling Head

The white ball wants to fly and, lately, it looks to the batters to satisfy this craving. Travis Head, in particular, has been very kind to it. They’ve seemed quite taken with each other recently; had a very successful date right here in Ahmedabad a few months ago. Then he showed up. The old flame.Oh they ran so hot when they were together. Early 2015 was filled with some totally NSFW scenes. Ninety-three thousand people saw them frolicking in broad daylight out on the MCG. Brendon McCullum had to avert his eyes.Related

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Mitchell Starc and the white ball. This romance is not for the faint of heart. And it was rekindled on Tuesday night. Right from practice, it looked like they were back together. The left-arm quick in his training gear was going full tilt and the guy with the baseball glove, standing behind a set of target stumps – those fluorescent ones made of pliant material – had trouble trying to keep up. So much pace. So much bounce. Something was brewing.Soon it was game time and destiny itself weighed in favour of uniting Starc with his one true love straightaway (sorry Alyssa Healy). Sunrisers Hyderabad won the toss and chose to bat. Head took strike. Starc ran in. The ball beat the bat and crashed into his stumps. He’d just been dumped in front of over 75,000 people.Mitchell Starc took three wickets inside the powerplay to derail the SRH top order•BCCIWe should’ve known this was coming. It was a big game. He’s Australian. And this is a World Cup year, which is partly why he’s even playing this IPL, after skipping the last nine. Starc couldn’t have known about the INR 24.75 crore (USD 2.99 million/ AU$ 4.4 million approx) that would come his way at the auction when he put his name back in the hat. Back then, all he cared about was the match practice, against the best of the best, leading into an ICC event.At first, it didn’t really go according to plan. He gave up 100 runs in eight overs. Then just 82 in 10 while picking up five wickets. Then it went bad again. 148 in 10 overs. Through it all Starc kept working. He trained as hard as he always does. He switched off when he needed to. He trusted in his skill.Sometimes in T20 cricket, no matter how good you are, you will get hit. And the place where Starc kept getting hit (economy rate 11.61) was the place where all fast bowlers were getting hit (10.51). Eden Gardens. That will have helped him keep perspective, which is why he didn’t see the need to change anything in the playoffs. He bowled a good length. He looked for swing. He found it. And he never let up. KKR spent 3/4th of their purse on him at the auction. It must feel so worth it right now.

Starc’s two great strengths are his air speed and his accuracy. One makes him a threat even if there’s no help available. The other makes him deadly if there’s even the slightest bit of help. Ahmedabad fell into the second category, with one very important caveat. As the ball got older, it lost its shine and became easier to hit. That was on show with Sunrisers scoring 53 runs in the back half of the first 10 overs even though by then they’d lost four wickets. So the trick was to make the most of the early exchange and there are few better than Starc at this.According to ESPNcricinfo’s ball-by-ball data, 67.5% of the deliveries in his first over across his T20 career either threaten the stumps or the outside edge. There’s a good chance of false shots under this kind of examination. Thirty-three percent as it turns out. In other words, two of the six balls he’ll be starting the game with have significant wicket-taking potential.Starc has 498 wickets in both formats of white-ball cricket. Three of those are Head’s. One from now. Two from the Australian domestic one-day tournament in 2015. All of them were bowled, in the first over, for scores of 0, 1 and 0, with the exact same delivery. Angled in. Swinging away. At speeds that cause nosebleeds.Seeing those stumps in disarray, Starc thrust his right hand up and peeled away to one side, creating another snapshot that was first seen nine years ago when he won a whole World Cup in the space of six balls. That was his best night, and this one, based on what happens in Chennai in a few days time, could still make the top 10. Imagine waking up an ODI World Cup, T20 World Cup, Test Championship, Ashes and IPL winner.

Harshit Rana: 'The competitive attitude I play with is similar to Australia's'

Inspired by India’s historic triumph down under in 2021, Rana is looking forward to making an impact in Australia after his maiden Test call-up

Daya Sagar27-Oct-2024Harshit Rana rarely watches cricket on TV ever since he turned professional. However, when India last visited Australia for a Test series in 2020-21, he followed the matches closely and was very motivated by the team’s win against the odds. He also told himself that if he ever got a chance to play in Australia, he would pull off something similar.Three years later, Rana is set to be on an Australia-bound plane.Related

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He is the third uncapped player in the 18-member Indian squad along with Abhimanyu Easwaran and Nitish Kumar Reddy. However, he has traveled with the India squad continuously since IPL 2024 and he hopes this experience will be handy for him on the tour.After taking a five-wicket haul in the ongoing Ranji Trophy match between Delhi and Assam in Delhi, Rana said, “I have been with the Indian team continuously since the IPL and I have learnt a lot of things there. This lesson is not only about cricket, but also about life, how a sportsperson advances in his career and life. Even as a cricketer, I have grown a lot by being with the Indian team.”After taking 19 wickets in 13 matches of IPL 2024 at an impressive average of 20.15, Rana was called up by the Indian team for the first time for the T20Is on the Zimbabwe tour. Although he didn’t get a game there, he has remained with the Indian team since then. After Zimbabwe, he was also part of the ODI team that toured Sri Lanka and then got a place in the T20I squad against Bangladesh as well.Rana was among the reserves for the first two Tests of India’s ongoing home series against New Zealand, but received his maiden Test call-up for the Border-Gavaskar Trophy.”Only when the team was announced did I know I was going to Australia,” Rana said. “But I had indications that I might be selected for the Australia tour because they had me with the team to prepare. Being selected for Australia tour is a big deal for me.”The kind of competitive attitude I like to play cricket with on the field is very similar to Australia’s. It was my father’s dream that I play a Test against England sometime at Lord’s, but I personally like Australia more. I am proud of myself, that my name came up for this tour.”Rana has already started preparing for the five-Test series. When he was released from the Indian team before the Pune Test, he returned to the domestic circuit registered his second first-class five-wicket haul in his 10th game in the format.Harshit Rana has picked the brains of Mohammed Siraj and Jasprit Bumrah on what lengths to bowl down under•PTI When he got the new ball on Saturday, he had the first three wickets with the batters caught behind or in the slips with his swing. Once the ball got old, he targeted the lower-order batters with short balls from around the wicket.However, Rana knows that the challenges of catching the right length in Australia will be different, and he has also received tips from his senior bowlers for this.”Recently when I was with the Indian team, I used to keep talking to Jassi [Jasprit Bumrah] and [Mohammed] Siraj that if someday I get a chance to play there [in Australia], what should I do and what should I not do, which length will be right there and which is not. I have got an idea of all these things from both the bowlers and talking to them has helped me a lot.”However, the biggest advantage of being in the Indian camp for Rana was bowling to experienced batters like Virat Kohli and Rohit Sharma in the nets.”I love bowling to both of them in the nets because they also bat with the same intent in the nets like they do in a match. So there is no scope for you to make a mistake or bowl ordinary to them. I also spoke to Virat and Rohit , so they just told me to focus on my length and I am trying the same thing here.”Advice from Indian bowling coach Morne Morkel has also come in handy for Rana, who has been told that every bowling session should have a single aspect the bowler can work on during the nets.”Morne takes a lot of care about our bowling. He is completely involved with the bowlers and keeps watching who is doing what in the nets,” Rana said. “He keeps telling us what we have to do next ball. It’s a very good thing and then you also have an idea of what you should do on the next ball.”The only thing he tells me is that every bowler should know what he wants to achieve with every practice session.”Rana, under head coach Gautam Gambhir, wants to taste the same success in international cricket that he achieved with Kolkata Knight Riders (KKR) in the 2024 IPL.”Gambhir has always backed me and if I have to ask anything, I always go to him and talk to him and he always gives me the right guidance. Under him, I have grown a lot in the IPL and he has taught me a lot of things.”

How many bowlers have taken hat-tricks in the same innings?

And which Test captain was married on the same day as his twin sister, but on a different continent?

Steven Lynch20-Aug-2024Shamar Joseph took a five-for in the second Test at Providence. What are the best bowling figures by a Guyanese bowler in a Test in Guyana? asked Ravindra Persaud from Jamaica
Shamar Joseph collected 5 for 33 in the first innings of the second Test against South Africa in Providence last week. Joseph, who comes from the remote village of Baracara in the west, is only the second Guyanese bowler to take a Test five-for in the country, after the great offspinner Lance Gibbs, who did it three times, at the Bourda ground in Georgetown: 6 for 29 against Australia in 1964-65, 6 for 60 vs England in 1967-68, and 5 for 80 vs Pakistan in 1957-58.There have also been 13 five-fors by visiting bowlers: the best figures of all were the Australian captain Ian Johnson’s 7 for 44 at Bourda in 1955. For the full list of the best innings figures in Tests in Guyana, click here.Which Test captain was married on the same day as his twin sister, but on a different continent? asked Bryan Marriott from Trinidad
Your location was useful here, as the answer is Trinidad’s Jackie Grant, a member of the family who owned the Geddes Grant trading company. After studying at Cambridge University, Grant captained West Indies in all his 12 Tests in the 1930s before devoting himself to teaching and missionary work around the world. His brother, Rolph Grant, succeeded him as West Indies’ captain.Jackie Grant married Ida Russell in Southern Rhodesia in 1932, on the same day as his sister tied the knot halfway round the world in Canada. The 1980 book Jack Grant’s Story gives the details: “We fixed our wedding date for 9th May, 1932 – my birthday. It so happened that my twin, Jill, had also planned to be married in May. When she learned that I had chosen 9th May, she decided that her wedding would also be on the 9th. Thus Jack and Jill were married on the same day – Jack in Bulawayo and Jill in Toronto.”Is Tharaka Kottehewa the only man to take two hat-tricks in the same innings in a List A match? asked Nirmal Mendis from Sri Lanka
The Nondescripts medium-pacer Tharaka Kottehewa took his two hat-tricks in Ragama’s innings of 92 at the Moors club in Colombo in Sri Lanka’s Premier one-day tournament in December 2007. Kottehewa finished with 8 for 20, still the fourth-best figures in all List A (senior one-day) matches.You’re right in thinking that no one else has taken two hat-tricks in the same List A game. The Australian fast bowler Graham McKenzie took two for Leicestershire in 1972, about six weeks apart, and the Bangladesh seamer Rubel Hossain took two in the space of five matches in 2013-14, one in an ODI against New Zealand in Mirpur. The Sussex fast bowler Billy Taylor also took two in the space of six weeks in 2002.Only four bowlers have taken three List A hat-tricks during their career: Sri Lanka’s Lasith Malinga (all in ODIs), the Pakistan pair of Saqlain Mushtaq (two in ODIs) and Wasim Akram (two in ODIs in Sharjah in 1989-90), and India’s left-arm spinner Kuldeep Yadav (two in ODIs, and one for India A).Apart from those mentioned above, ten others have taken two List A hat-tricks: Trent Boult (both in ODIs for New Zealand, in 2018-19 and 2019), Andy Caddick (1996 and 2000-01), Darren Gough (for Yorkshire in 1997 and 1998), Nantie Hayward (for Eastern Province in 1996-97 and 1998-99), another South African fast bowler in Garth Le Roux (1982-83 and 1985), Sri Lanka’s Farveez Maharoof (in an ODI in 2010 and a domestic match in 2015-16), Bangladesh’s Mohammad Sharif (2016 and 2017-18), Graham Napier (for Essex in 2011 and 2013), Gurinder Sandhu (in Australia in 2018-19 and 2021-22), the West Indian fast bowler Jerome Taylor (in a Champions Trophy game in 2006 and a county game in 2017) and Sri Lanka’s Chaminda Vaas (both in ODIs, in 2001-02 and the other in the 2003 World Cup). For the list of List A hat-tricks, click here.Steve Waugh took 244 Test innings to get to 10,000 runs•Getty ImagesWho was the fastest to reach 10,000 runs in Tests? asked Rajendra Krishnan from India
The answer to this depends on how you calculate it. The fastest to 10,000 Test runs in terms of time is England’s Joe Root, who needed only nine years and 171 days to reach five figures. He’s the only one to do it in less than ten years. His long-time England team-mate Alastair Cook is next, at ten years 87 days.Probably a better way to look at this is to consider the number of innings each batter took. Of the 14 men to have made it to 10,000, Root and Cook stand 10th and 11th by that measure. There’s a three-way tie for top spot, as Brian Lara (West Indies), Sachin Tendulkar (India) and Kumar Sangakkara (Sri Lanka) all got there in 195 innings, while Australia’s Ricky Ponting took 196. The slowest to 10,000 by that yardstick was another Australian, Steve Waugh (244 innings), while the slowest by time was the West Indian Shivnarine Chanderpaul, at 18 years 37 days. For the list, click here (note that the times shown there are from the day of debut to the start date of the match in which they passed 10,000).Who has scored the most first-class runs without ever playing in a Test match? asked Kevin Richards from Scotland
The answer to this one is, oddly, slightly complicated! The Glamorgan left-hand opener Alan Jones piled up 36,049 runs in a 26-year first-class career – but he never played an official Test match. However, he did play for England against the Rest of the World at Lord’s in June 1970, which was marketed as a Test at the time but was later ruled unofficial. Many years later, Jones was presented with England cap number 696, so features in the official list of England Test players.If you include Jones, then the man with the most runs who remained uncapped is Sussex’s John Langridge, who finished his equally long career in 1955 with 34,378. He did later stand in seven Tests as an umpire. For the list of the batters with the most first-class runs, click here.And there’s an update to last week’s question about bowlers taking caught-and-bowleds with successive deliveries in Tests, from James Tiver in Australia
“The Australian legspinner Jimmy Matthews also had two consecutive caught-and-bowleds, in his second hat-trick against South Africa at Old Trafford in 1912. He got the two hat-tricks all by himself – two bowled, two lbw and two caught and bowled!”You’re right that Matthews’ second hat-trick in the match in the Triangular Tournament included successive caught-and-bowleds – South Africa’s Reggie Schwarz (low to the bowler’s right) then the unfortunate Tommy Ward, who marked his debut by becoming the third victim of both Matthews’ hat-tricks. According to the Manchester Guardian: “Ward played his first ball exactly as Schwarz had done, and cocked it up. The ball, however, was hit so gently that for an instant no-one thought of a catch. Then one saw a nimble little figure flying up the pitch and making a frantic dive with both hands for the ball. Matthews went tumbling over, and it was not until he had flung the ball wildly in the air that the onlookers could believe that he had made the catch.”I’m sorry we missed Matthews last week, but it still means there are only three known instances – and none since 1912 – of caught-and-bowleds off successive balls in Tests before slow left-armer Jomel Warrican did it for West Indies against South Africa in Port-of-Spain earlier this month.Use our feedback form, or the Ask Steven Facebook page to ask your stats and trivia questions

How many bowlers have taken multiple ten-wicket hauls away at the same ground?

And was Bangladesh’s 159 in Chattogram the lowest innings total to include a century partnership?

Steven Lynch12-Nov-2024Ajaz Patel has played two Tests at the Wankhede Stadium, and taken at least ten wickets in both. How many other bowlers have multiple ten-fors on a single ground away from home? asked Ahmedul Kabir from Bangladesh
The New Zealand slow left-armer Ajaz Patel has played two Tests against India in Mumbai – the city of his birth – and taken 25 wickets there: 14 for 225 (including all ten in the first innings) in a defeat in December 2021, and 11 for 160 as New Zealand completed their unprecedented 3-0 whitewash at the Wankhede Stadium last week.Only seven other bowlers have taken two ten-fors in Tests on the same ground away from home. The first was England’s George Lohmann in Sydney, and he was followed by the Australian Hugh Trumble at The Oval, a pair of Englishmen in Colin Blythe (Cape Town) and Sydney Barnes (Durban), Lance Gibbs of West Indies (Old Trafford), and the Australians Dennis Lillee and Shane Warne at The Oval. Barnes did it twice in the same 1913-14 series, with 10 for 105 in the first Test and 14 for 144 in the fourth at the old Lord’s ground in Durban.Was Bangladesh’s 159 at Chattogram the lowest Test total for an innings that included a century partnership? asked Tarif Sherhan Shuvo from Bangladesh via Facebook
Bangladesh were bowled out for 159 in the first innings of their second Test against South Africa in Chattogram last week despite a ninth-wicket stand of 103 between Mominul Haque and Taijul Islam, which rescued them somewhat from 48 for 8.It’s not quite the lowest all-out Test total to include a hundred partnership: New Zealand’s 158 against Australia in Auckland in March 1974 began with an opening stand of 107 between Glenn Turner and John Parker. West Indies were all out for 160 against Sri Lanka in Galle in November 2021 despite an seventh-wicket stand of exactly 100 between Nkrumah Bonner and Joshua Da Silva.When South Africa were all out for 140 at Lord’s in July 1907, Dave Nourse and Aubrey Faulkner put on 98 for the fourth wicket (no one else scored more than six).The lowest completed innings in a one-day international to include a century stand is Pakistan’s 161 against Sri Lanka in Karachi in January 2009, when Salman Butt and Shoaib Malik put on 108 for the fourth wicket.Mominul Haque was out twice in a session during the Chattogram Test. Was this unique? asked Neville Flood via Facebook
After top-scoring with 82 in Bangladesh’s first innings in the second Test against South Africa in Chattogram last week, Mominul Haque was out for a two-ball duck in the follow-on. There were only 14.3 overs between the two dismissals, which both came in the middle session of the third day.The Australian statistician Charles Davis, the king of the ball-by-ball scorecards, says of being out twice in a session: “It happens occasionally in Tests, but is not common. The previous one was Lorcan Tucker of Ireland, against Sri Lanka in Galle in April 2023 – he was out twice in the first session of the third day.”A related statistic is the fastest pair bagged in a Test. For years I thought this was by Pakistan’s MEZ “Ebbu” Ghazali, against England at Old Trafford in July 1954 – he was out twice in the space of about two hours – but actually it seems the record is held by the South African wicketkeeper Tommy Ward, who marked his Test debut in May 1912 by becoming the final victim in both Jimmy Matthews’ hat-tricks for Australia at Old Trafford. Ward collected a king pair within the space of 110 minutes’ playing time.Clem Hill got within touching distance of a hundred in three successive Tests, only to fall for 99, 98 and 97•Getty ImagesApparently someone once had successive Test scores of 99, 98 and 97. Who was this? asked Pete Spencer from England
This unlucky batter was the Australian left-hander Clem Hill, who would have improved on his career total of seven centuries in 49 Tests with a little more luck. In the second Test of the 1901-02 Ashes series, in Melbourne, he was caught by Arthur Jones off the bowling of Sydney Barnes for 99. Then in the next Test, on his home ground in Adelaide, Hill was caught by JohnnyTyldesley off Len Braund for 98, and bowled by Gilbert Jessop for 97.In Hill’s reminiscences, which appeared in an Adelaide newspaper in the 1930s and were later published in book form, he claimed it wasn’t really a case of the nervous nineties. “In the first of them I was in with [Reggie] Duff. He and I had not been partners before, and did not know each other’s ways in running between the wickets. When I was 99, I asked him to be on the move to run a short one. Barnes sent up a short-pitched ball, which I could have square-cut to the boundary – but uppermost in my mind was the thought that I had told Duff to be ready for a single. I attempted to pat it down to third man, but instead touched it into the slips.”The second dismissal was on the Adelaide Oval. I hit a ball from Braund to the north-eastern boundary, where Tyldesley stepped on to the asphalt cycling track, threw out his left hand, and caught the ball. He did not know that he had brought about my dismissal. The arrangement used to be that if a fieldsman took a catch with his foot on the asphalt the batsman was not out. As, however, the umpire could not always tell if a fieldsman’s foot was on the paved track, it was decided by the captains that a catch anywhere on it was out. I knew this, but nobody had told Tyldesley about it.”I was dismissed the third time when facing Jessop, a fairly fast bowler. He bowled one just outside my leg stump. I went to glance it fine but played it onto my pads. The ball rolled between my legs and I watched it go slowly towards my wicket. It was some seconds before the bails fell off.”During New Zealand’s recent historic 3-0 win in India, there were only two centuries scored. Is this a record low for a Test series of three or more matches? asked Matthew Walsham from New Zealand
The only three-figure scores in the recent series in India both came in the first Test in Bengaluru – Rachin Ravindra’s 134 for New Zealand, and Sarfaraz Khan’s 150 for India.But this isn’t very close to the record: there were no individual centuries at all in the three-Test series between Australia and England in 1882-83 and 1888, India vs New Zealand in 1969-70 and 1995-96, Pakistan vs West Indies in 1986-87, and Pakistan vs Zimbabwe in 1993-94. There are 13 series that featured only one century, and 27 others with two (that includes four series of four matches: West Indies vs England in 1934-35, England v Pakistan in 1954, Pakistan vs West Indies in 1980-81, and India vs South Africa in 2015-16).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

Abhishek Sharma takes T20 hitting out of this world

It’s a format where you need a slice of luck to be able to showcase your skill, which Abhishek did, and how!

Karthik Krishnaswamy13-Apr-20251:54

Jaffer: Abhishek has given SRH a new lease of life

“He was a bit lucky as well, even though he played an exceptional knock which was out of this world, to be honest.”This was Shreyas Iyer, interviewed immediately after his team, Punjab Kings (PBKS), had suffered an extraordinary defeat at the hands of Sunrisers Hyderabad (SRH), who had chased down 246 with nine balls to spare courtesy a 55-ball 141 from Abhishek Sharma.If you hadn’t watched the match, Iyer’s words may have come across as a little churlish, a losing captain’s immediate reaction to losing a match from a position of immense strength.As a description of this innings, though, it was spot-on. Abhishek played an exceptional, out-of-this-world knock. He was also lucky. More than a bit.Related

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Abhishek Sharma's whirlwind 141 leads SRH to second-highest IPL chase

We’ll come to the luck, but first, a recap of Abhishek’s form coming into this game. His last four innings had brought him scores of 6, 1, 2 and 18. Abhishek’s top-order colleagues had also experienced lean runs over these four games, and SRH had lost all of them. At the start of IPL 2025, much of the talk surrounding SRH revolved around whether they could break the 300 barrier. Five games into the season, they had just one win and had lost more powerplay wickets (12) than anyone else. The approach of their top order, which had driven them to so many stratospheric totals, was now coming into question.Even SRH’s head coach seemed to be feeling the heat. He wasn’t yet asking his batters to tone down their aggression, but he was asking them to “respect conditions”, and “respect how well other teams are bowling”.As things turned out, those options weren’t exactly open to SRH when they began their innings on Saturday. They had just been asked to pull off the second-biggest chase in IPL history.This was the kind of chase that called for frantic boundary-hitting. It also called for a bit of luck.And luck smiled on SRH from the start. Both their openers got off the mark with boundaries that went in unintended directions, Abhishek’s via a slice to the deep-third boundary. And Abhishek hit his next ball in the air, over the fielder at short cover, where the leaping Marcus Stoinis only managed to get his fingertips to the ball.How good do you have to be for an opposition quick to give you a warm hug?•Getty ImagesLuck. It has four letters, but cricket discourse tends to treat it like a four-letter word, something to be spoken of in whispers, if spoken of at all. It has a significant influence on the fortunes (a revealing word in itself) of players and teams, but to talk about luck is to risk being accused of downplaying skill and effort.Let’s talk about luck, then, but let’s talk about both kinds of luck. Go back to Abhishek’s four previous innings before this one: 6, 1, 2, 18. A lot of things went into those scores: the bowlers and conditions he faced, the oppositions’ plans and how they were executed, and so forth, and also luck. Over those four innings, he only played seven false shots, and they brought about three dismissals. That’s outrageously bad luck by itself, before you factor in how his other dismissal came about: a mix-up when he was at the non-striker’s end.Abhishek was due a bit of luck when he began his innings against PBKS. And so were his top-order colleagues. Travis Head had been dismissed four times off 15 false shots, and the desperately unlucky Ishan Kishan four times off eight false shots.It’s unusual for every member of a top three to endure this sort of wretched luck at the same time. Perhaps SRH’s issues coming into this game didn’t stem from their approach, or not respecting conditions and their opponents’ plans. Perhaps they had just been plain unlucky.SRH were due a bit of luck, then, and they found it on Saturday. Abhishek was the biggest recipient, surviving seven false shots within the powerplay alone, including that chance to Stoinis and a catch at the backward-point boundary in the fourth over when Yash Thakur overstepped. The luck extended beyond the powerplay too, with mishits falling into no-man’s land multiple times, and a high, swirling chance that Yuzvendra Chahal couldn’t quite hold on to after aborting his follow-through and running towards the mid-on region.2:44

When everything comes together as it did on this surreal Saturday, Abhishek Sharma can make things look absurdly easy

Luck. It isn’t the opposite of skill, but as a batter, you sometimes need one to be able to showcase the other.Showcase was just what Abhishek did. Take the two balls either side of the Thakur no-ball, both hit for effortless sixes over the on side. Both balls were angled across Abhishek, one pitching on a good length and finishing around the top of off stump, and the other full enough to deny most batters elevation. He made light of the difficulty of working against the angle and slightly inconvenient lengths, putting both balls away with mere flicks of his wrist.Both these shots came within the first ten balls Abhishek faced. He’s made a habit of playing these types of shots early in his innings, and it perhaps takes a run of bad luck to truly appreciate how difficult it is to get off to starts like he does.His opening partner Head is blessed with this rare ability too, but even he wasn’t his usual self on Saturday; he went as far as leaving alone two of the first three balls he faced. It’s possible that the low scores and defeats leading up to this game had some effect on how he started.”Giving ourselves a chance,” Head said, when asked what he had discussed with Abhishek before SRH began their chase. “I was probably a little bit more patient in the first couple of overs in this game. They’ve got a quality couple of new-ball bowlers, I knew the sort of plans they were going to come [with]. Yeah, probably a little bit more quiet, and Abhi got off to a flier. So just trying to support him as much as I can.”You’ve got to be some player to make Travis Head, of all people, take on a supporting role.

“They had a pretty good plan for us, outside off [stump], but I just wanted to invent a few shots, which I think was very easy on this pitch because of the bounce and the size of one side”Abhishek Sharma

You’ve got to be some player to take a good-length ball from wide outside off stump and helicopter it 106m over midwicket. You’ve got to be some player to do this against a bowler as tall and bouncy as Marco Jansen. Abhishek played this shot because PBKS were trying to force him to hit to the longer square boundary on the off side, and he wasn’t going to let their plans constrain him.There were even two occasions – off Jansen and then Thakur – when he walked right across his stumps, exposed all three, and clipped yorker-length balls to the fine-leg boundary.”If you’ve seen me close enough, I never play anything behind the wicket, but still I was trying a few shots,” Abhishek said during his Player-of-the-Match interview. “They had a pretty good plan for us, outside off [stump], but I just wanted to invent a few shots, which I think was very easy on this pitch because of the bounce and the size of one side.”Yes, this was a beautiful pitch to bat on, and yes, Abhishek was hitting these shots to the smaller boundary. But no, they weren’t “very easy”. Not for most others.For Abhishek on this unreal day, though, anything seemed possible. SRH, chasing 246, became favourites nine overs into their innings, according to ESPNcricinfo’s Forecaster. Six balls later, their win probability had climbed to 79.38%.Abhishek Sharma finished on 141 off 55 balls, the highest individual score for an Indian at the IPL•Getty ImagesBy this stage, Abhishek had already reached 87. Three overs later, he went from 98 to 100 with an utterly uncharacteristic pair of clipped singles to long-on. Despite that hint of slowing down as he neared the landmark, he had brought it up in just 40 balls.To get to a century at that rate demands sustained risk-taking, and pulling it off demands an extraordinary amount of skill – and, sometimes, a little bit of luck. This was Abhishek’s third T20 hundred in 40 or fewer balls; no one else has done it as many times, and only three other batters have even done it twice.For a batter to score big and quick and do it on multiple occasions requires an ability to hit boundaries from the get-go and sustain that momentum through an innings, against pace and spin, within the powerplay and outside it. Abhishek can do all of that. And he has the self-belief to keep backing his methods even when he’s gone through streaks of low scores and rotten luck.When everything comes together as it did on this surreal Saturday, Abhishek can make things look absurdly easy. Don’t ever let that fool you.

In unknown Grenada, Cummins and Chase aim for adaptability

With little prior intel and an unpredictable pitch history, neither side really knows what to expect, although the WI captain feels it will be a better batting surface than Barbados

Andrew McGlashan03-Jul-20251:13

Konstas and Green face vital test for Australia

Pat Cummins has urged his top order to adapt quicker to conditions in the second Test but is enjoying the challenge of coming to venues without much, or any, prior information. This is Australia’s first Test series in the Caribbean for ten years and the first time any of this squad have played in Grenada.The pitch looked as though it would be rather more benign that at Kensington Oval, but even there the talk at the toss was a surface that both sides thought would play reasonably well only for it to become a fast-bowlers’ shootout, which finished in three days.Australia have kept things simple in selection with Steven Smith’s return at the expense of Josh Inglis the only change, but Cummins has prepared his batters to be ready to switch gameplans should things play out differently than expected.Related

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“Just being a little bit quicker to adapt. It got difficult at times [in Barbados],” he said. “That’s a test for you. Even with the ball changes, each time you kind of got a new ball, that made [it] a little tricky period for the batters. So I think just being sharper… a lot of the conversations about keep the scoreboard ticking over, make yourself hard to be bowled at.”You don’t 100% know what you’re going to get coming up against players that we haven’t played a lot against on a field that we’ve never played on before. It’s [about] staying fairly open-minded. Our message is always: remember what makes you a good player, play to your strengths. But if the information takes you in a different direction just make sure you’re sharp and adapt.”With the last Test at the National Stadium played three years ago – out of four overall – plus the ground’s previous first-class fixture being back in early 2023, there is precious little research available.”I think it’s fun coming when there’s a few unknowns, you’ve kind of got to think on your feet and you’re not quite sure how a game’s going to play out,” Cummins said. “When you go to Australia, you kind of know how the conditions are going to be.Sam Konstas had a tough time of it in Barbados•Randy Brooks/Associated Press”I think that was something we did reasonably well in the first Test. We thought it was going to be really flat, and it ended up being a pretty bowler-friendly wicket. You’ve got to try and find a way to score runs differently to how you think, and I like that part of it.”Smith’s return brings the middle order back to full strength after the trio of Travis Head, Beau Webster and Alex Carey hauled Australia out of trouble in Barbados. He is renowned as one of the great problem-solving batters and will add further insurance against a top order that remains uncertain as Sam Konstas and Cameron Green work through their challenges.”He’s scored runs all over the world and whilst he’s not played a game here, he seems to work out pretty quickly what needs to be done and where your scoring areas are,” Cummins said of Smith. “So, of course, having that knowledge is going to be helpful, particularly to the guys that haven’t really played too many Tests or first-class games.”But it’s not only the Australians who are short on knowledge about the ground. Even West Indies captain Roston Chase has only played two games here in his entire career: an ODI against Ireland and a first-class match for Barbados back in 2015. Overall, West Indies will likely have four players who were part of the 2022 Test against England.”I’m not really accustomed to the facilities but the pitch looks a good one,” Chase said. “It looks evenly grassed. It looks way better than the Barbados pitch, although I’m a Barbadian.”Australia’s selectors are likely to make a call after this Test over whether to release Marnus Labuschagne•Getty ImagesOne of the pre-tour expectations was that spinners could be key in this series, but they had a limited role in Barbados and West Indies were even considering not playing left-arm spinner Jomel Warrican in Grenada. Australia had come prepared to partner Nathan Lyon with Matt Kuhnemann after their success in Sri Lanka, but the latter has remained on the bench. However, Cummins did not rule him out as an option in Jamaica for the last game even though it will be day-night Test.”It seems like Jamaica can spin a lot,” Cummins said. “I think even if it’s a pink ball, kind of wait and see and stay pretty open-minded. Beau’s a third quick as well. Until you kind of get eyes on the wicket, it’s pretty hard to know. I think just every venue is a little bit different. I thought maybe two out of the three might spin a bit, but so far it looks like the first two won’t.”Meanwhile, Australia’s selectors are likely to make a call after this Test over whether to release Marnus Labuschagne from the squad now that Smith is back in action. There are options for him to potentially get a couple of games for Glamorgan or be added to the Australia A squad for the four-day games against Sri Lanka A in Darwin. Australia would need to ensure they have sufficient batting cover for the final Test at Sabina Park should he leave.”It’s probably a conversation between George [Bailey], [Andrew McDonald] and Marnus over how he wants to best map out the next couple of months,” Cummins said.

Stats – India scale new highs to make Australia go WWWWWWWWWWWWWWWL

Stats highlights from Navi Mumbai, where India completed the highest-ever chase at the Women’s ODI World Cup

Sampath Bandarupalli30-Oct-2025339 The target chased by India against Australia in the semi-final. It is the highest-ever chase in women’s ODI cricket, bettering the 331-run chase by Australia against India earlier in the tournament in Visakhapatnam.India’s previous highest successful chase was 265 against Australia in 2021, and they had never chased a 200-plus target at a World Cup.15 Consecutive wins for Australia at the Women’s ODI World Cup, coming into Thursday’s semi-final. Their previous defeat was also against India, in the semi-final in 2017.Related

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It is the joint-longest winning streak for any team in the Women’s ODI World Cup, equaling Australia’s earlier streak of 15 wins between 1993 and 2000.341 for 5 India’s total in the chase is their highest at the Women’s ODI World Cup, a run more than the 340 for 3 they posted against New Zealand in Navi Mumbai last week.It is also the second-highest total by any team against Australia in women’s ODIs, behind their 369 in Delhi last month. In fact, that is the only total in a women’s ODI chase higher than India’s 341 on Thursday.679 Runs by India and Australia on Thursday in Navi Mumbai, making it the highest aggregate for a Women’s ODI World Cup game. The previous most were 678 runs between England and South Africa at Bristol in 2017.The 679 runs are also the second-most for any women’s ODI, behind the 781 runs in last month’s Delhi ODI, also featuring India and Australia.3 Number of successful chases of 300-plus targets in a knock-out match across men’s and women’s ODIs. The previous two were by India in men’s ODIs, who chased 315 against Pakistan in the third final of the Silver Jubilee Independence Cup in 1998 and 326 against England in the 2002 NatWest tri-series final.127* Jemimah Rodrigues’ score against Australia is the highest for India in an ODI chase, bettering the 125 by Smriti Mandhana, also against Australia last month in Delhi.167 Partnership between Rodrigues and Harmanpreet Kaur for the third wicket – the highest by any pair against Australia at the Women’s ODI World Cup.It is also the third-highest partnership against Australia in all women’s ODIs and the highest for the third wicket.3 Fifty-plus scores for Harmanpreet in the three knockout matches she has played in the Women’s ODI World Cup. Only Belinda Clark, with four, has more fifty-plus scores in World Cup knockouts than Harmanpreet.Harmanpreet aggregated 311 runs across those three games, the second-most in Women’s ODI World Cup knockouts, behind Clark’s 330 runs.Hug it out: Smriti Mandhana congratulated Jemimah Rodrigues after India’s epic chase•ICC/Getty Images77 Balls Phoebe Litchfield needed for her century against India, the fastest in any knockout game in women’s ODIs. The previous quickest was off 90 balls, by Harmanpreet against Australia in the 2017 World Cup semi-final and by Nat Sciver-Brunt against Australia in the 2022 Women’s ODI World Cup final.Litchfield is also the youngest batter to score a hundred in a knockout match in women’s ODIs.23.3 Overs bowled by Australia’s spinners in the semi-final. They also conceded 157 runs without taking a wicket. These are the most overs the spinners have ever bowled in a women’s ODI while being wicketless. The previous highest by Australian spinners was the 23 overs against New Zealand in 2012 at SCG.0 The 2025 edition will be the first Women’s ODI World Cup final to not feature either Australia or England. At least one of the two teams have featured in all the previous editions of the World Cup which have had a final.

From Beefy to Broad Ban – inside England's Brisbane angst

England haven’t won in Brisbane since 1986, and their trips to the Gabba are rarely easy. Here’s a look at the moments – iconic, chaotic and brutal – that etched the myth into Ashes folklore

Matt Roller03-Dec-20252:29

Miller: England must back their approach to win second Test

“Dare I say, there would have been a very British satisfaction to it,” David Gower says, recalling the moment 39 years ago when, from the non-striker’s end, he watched Chris Broad carve the winning runs through cover-point in England’s most recent Test victory in Brisbane. “I’m not really the whooping and jumping and shouting sort… I think we’d have had a broad grin.”It was a different world. The Gabba was a cricket ground rather than a stadium, with a greyhound track running around the boundary, and the total attendance on the final day was a mere 1362 as England completed their seven-wicket win. Graham Dilley and Phil DeFreitas celebrated with champagne and cigarettes in the dressing room, and Broad’s son, Stuart, was only four months old.”The legend of the Gabba has grown since,” Gower tells ESPNcricinfo. “The concept of the Gabba fortress has grown over the last probably 20 years… It is now much bigger, and you have more of that sense of pressure from a hostile crowd. I’ve been there for Sky, standing in the middle before the toss, and it is a cacophony of sound. You are surrounded by it.”Related

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The hostility of the Queensland crowd is notorious. Along with the heat and humidity of the Brisbane climate, and the pace and bounce of the pitch, it has contributed to overwhelming countless England teams. Even accounting for their wider struggles in Australia, their record in their past nine visits to the Gabba is truly abject: lost seven, drawn two, won none.Ben Stokes insists that his team sees England’s record in Brisbane as irrelevant. “Obviously records for teams go back a long, long time,” Stokes said on Tuesday. “Many teams have gone to the Gabba and lost to Australia, but this is a brand new outfit… It doesn’t hold too much fear.”Nearly four decades of history suggest that the odds are stacked firmly against them.”The trick,” Gower says, “is to play against Australia when all their best players are playing for [Kerry] Packer.” His first Test in Brisbane, in 1978-79, coincided with the second season of Packer’s World Series Cricket. “It still felt like a contest. But we were stronger, and they had some weak links.”England won by seven wickets at the Gabba, and took the series 5-1.They were beaten four years later, but the most memorable thing that happened in Brisbane on the 1982-83 tour was the surprise appearance of a pig – with the names of Ian Botham and Eddie Hemmings emblazoned on it – on the outfield. “That was the most brilliant, imaginative thing that I’ve ever seen,” Gower says, laughing. “I’ve never seen anything like it.The England squad celebrate after winning the first Ashes Test in 1986•Getty Images”Allegedly, it was brought in by some vets who had the expertise to sedate it. They put it in an esky. At the gate, some gnarled old Queenslander said, ‘What’s that mate?’. They said, ‘lunch’. They put the lid back on and carried on, and then, at the crucial moment, revived it, gave it a stimulant, and by god, did it move! I’ve never seen anything like it.”When England returned in 1986-87, they had been written off as a team with three major problems: “They can’t bat, they can’t bowl and they can’t field.” Botham addressed his team-mates the night before the Test. “His contribution was brief, succinct, and punchy,” Gower recalls. “It was along the lines of: ‘forget about the last month. We start tomorrow.'”Botham rose to the occasion, belting 138 off 174 balls on the second day. “It was extraordinary,” Gower says. “Beefy was Beefy… If you walk out into that atmosphere and it’s inspiring rather than deflating, that’s a good sign. Ian would feel that, and I would tend to feel the same. It’s the defining thing as to whether or not you have picked the right career.”By the time England arrived in Brisbane for the start of the 1998-99 series, Australia’s unbeaten run at the Gabba had stretched to a decade – including Ashes wins in 1990-91 and 1994-95. But Mark Butcher does not recall any particular sense of trepidation: “They were redoing the place, so maybe one-quarter of it was missing… We also had a s***load of travelling support.”

Butcher’s tour had started with scores of 0 not out, 2, 5, 2 and 0 in England’s three state fixtures, and a blow on the head from Western Australia’s Matthew Nicholson. “I’d had more stitches than runs,” he says, laughing. “I had the attitude in the nets in the build-up to it that I was going to be a lot more positive.”Australia batted for five-and-a-half sessions after winning the toss, with centuries from Steve Waugh and Ian Healy digging them out of a hole. But Butcher held firm, scoring 116 in his first Test innings in Australia, and England held on for a draw despite a quickfire third-innings hundred from Michael Slater. “I honestly thought it was the best pitch in Australia,” Butcher says.It was on the first day of the 2002-03 series that the Gabba truly secured its reputation as the place where England’s Ashes dreams go to die. Nasser Hussain won the toss and infamously chose to bowl first. Ninety overs later, Australia had piled on 364 for 2 through Matthew Hayden and Ricky Ponting’s dominant hundreds, and England had lost Simon Jones to a ruptured ACL.When Butcher heard cheers from the Barmy Army from the Gabba’s underground dressing rooms on the first morning, he had started to pad up. “We’d all had a conclusion that we would probably bat: it was roasting hot and the pitch looked lovely. When Nass came back in and said, ‘we’re having a bowl,’ I already had my thigh pads and box on.”Matthew Hayden’s twin centuries at the Gabba crushed England in the Ashes 2002•Getty ImagesIt echoed a similar call made in Brisbane in 1954-55 by Len Hutton who, long before the Gabba had developed its notoriety, gave Australia first use of a surface on which they piled up 601 for 8 declared before an innings defeat. “If the England fielding had approached any decent standard Hutton might well have achieved his objective,” the reported.It was a similar story 48 years later: “Vaughany [Michael Vaughan] fumbled one in the first over, poor old Jonesy left his leg behind on the boundary, and that was all she wrote,” Butcher says. The redevelopment work to turn the Gabba into a multi-purpose modern stadium was largely complete, and the crowd revelled in England’s shortcomings: Jones was called a “weak Pommie b******” as he was stretchered off.Four years later, the opening day went just as badly. Steve Harmison, nervous and underprepared by his own admission, bowled the first ball of the series into the hands of his captain, Andrew Flintoff, at second slip, and another Ponting hundred took Australia to 346 for 3 by stumps. England were duly thrashed by 277 runs, and lost the series 5-0.Andrew Strauss leaves the field after the high-scoring draw in 2010•Quinn Rooney/Getty ImagesFor most of the 2010-11 Test, it looked like a familiar story was unfolding. Andrew Strauss slashed the third ball of the match to gully, Peter Siddle took his famous birthday hat-trick, and a mammoth 307-run partnership between Mike Hussey and Brad Haddin gave Australia a 221-run first innings lead.But England launched a memorable fightback, declaring on 517 for 1 after hundreds from Strauss and Jonathan Trott, and 235 not out from Alastair Cook. Australia were deflated, and the final day played out in front of only 7088 fans – the vast majority of them English. “It gave us a lot of belief that this Australian side was there for the taking,” Cook told the BBC recently.No Englishman has scored a Test century at the Gabba since. In 2013-14, they were blown away by the pace and hostility of a reborn Mitchell Johnson, who took nine wickets including, twice, Trott, who left the tour citing burnout straight after. Michael Clarke infamously told James Anderson to “get ready for a broken f***in’ arm”.The local media also ramped up their scrutiny. Stuart Broad’s refusal to walk after edging to slip (via Brad Haddin’s gloves) prompted Brisbane’s newspaper to announce a ‘Broad Ban’, referring to him only as “the 27-year-old medium pacer”. After five wickets on the opening day, Broad walked into a press conference with a copy tucked under his arm.

“If you are Brendon McCullum or Ben Stokes then you’ll do your best to ignore any talk about the Gabba as a ‘fortress’ and you’ll highlight the other teams who have come here and have won and how they did it – which is just playing good cricket – and stress that whatever happened in Perth was probably an aberration”David Gower

Stokes’ nightclub brawl ahead of the 2017-18 series meant more fertile ground for the Australian press, and Strauss – as director of cricket – found himself insisting that the players were “not thugs” as a result of a bizarre story involving Jonny Bairstow and Cameron Bancroft. “They were taking every opportunity to try and derail us,” recalls opener Mark Stoneman.It was Stoneman’s first overseas Test, and his memories reveal the challenge that the Gabba provides for English batters raised on slower surfaces: “I remember standing at the non-striker’s end with Cooky taking the first ball, and thinking, ‘Why are the slips and the keeper so far back?'” He soon found out, when Cook’s edge flew to a tumbling first slip in the third over.Stoneman and James Vince took the sting out of the game with a 125-run partnership on the opening day, but the Test ultimately followed the same pattern as many England defeats in Brisbane. The 2021-22 defeat was even worse, and the Australian celebrations that followed Rory Burns’ first-ball dismissal reflected the absence of travelling fans, locked out by Covid restrictions.There are morsels of hope for England this week. Australia have lost two of their last five Tests at the Gabba – to India in 2020-21, and West Indies in 2023-24 – and the dynamics are different. For the first time since 1982-83, Brisbane is hosting the second Test rather than the first, and the day-night aspect introduces several unknowns.”If you are Brendon McCullum or Ben Stokes,” Gower suggests, “then you’ll do your best to ignore any talk about the Gabba as a ‘fortress’ and you’ll highlight the other teams who have come here and have won and how they did it – which is just playing good cricket – and stress that whatever happened in Perth was probably an aberration.”If you have another crazy half-hour where three of your best batsmen get out playing egregiously bad shots, then you’re going to struggle. But if you eradicate that, and someone in the top six takes the game by the scruff of the neck, then you’re in the game.”Even that would mark a significant improvement on England’s usual efforts in this city.

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