All-time England World Cup XI

Andrew Miller, ESPNcricinfo’s UK editor, picks his all-time England World Cup XI

Picked by Andrew Miller08-Mar-2019England’s greatest World Cup XI, you say? Easy peasy. I’ve got for you a seamless, glorious blend of talented youth and gnarled experience. A mixture of all-time greats, stars of the future, and one-off tournament-specific tyros, perfectly packaged in their iconic sky-blue outfits, and offering a range of talents and expertise so varied that you could hardly have computer-programmed them better.ESPNcricinfo LtdIt is captained by arguably England’s greatest one-day batsman. It harnesses the last drops of brilliance from the country’s greatest allrounder. It features an agenda-setting wicketkeeper-batsman at No. 3, a Great White Hope at No. 4, a master of strike rotation at five, and a pocket battleship at six. A quartet of allrounders from seven to ten, and an understated spinner at No. 11, who had four first-class centuries to his name.They could have won the World Cup. They should have won the World Cup. Derek Pringle will tell you they would have won the World Cup if “Allah hadn’t been smiling” on Javed Miandad’s front pad (Javed’s words, not Pringle’s). Instead, their near miss became the high-water mark of England’s World Cup history. It was their third final in five tournaments, and the most devastating defeat of the lot. And since that fateful night in Melbourne, each of England’s six subsequent World Cup campaigns has been abysmal. You can keep your Flintoffs, your KPs, your Goughies and your Swanns. The team of ’92 are the lost legends of English cricket.

Obstructing the field, unusual stoppages, and devastating Latham

All the major talking points from the week gone by in the Super Smash

Deivarayan Muthu23-Jan-2019Mitchell out obstructing the fieldIn the fifth over of Northern Knights’ innings against Canterbury Kings, Daryl Mitchell patted a ball from Kyle Jamieson back to him and took a couple of steps out of his crease. The bowler swooped down on the ball in his follow-through and aimed to throw the stumps down, but Mitchell stuck his right leg in the way. Though the ball wasn’t heading towards the stumps, Mitchell was guilty of deliberately coming in the way of the throw.Jamieson gestured that Mitchell knocked the ball away with his leg and launched an appeal for obstructing the field. The on-field umpires Wayne Knights and Ashley Mehrotra got together and referred it to TV umpire Tony Gillies, who ultimately gave Mitchell out.

Four days later, in the final over of Otago’s chase of 185, Auckland Aces’ Mitchell McClenaghan bowled an inch-perfect yorker from round the wicket and Leicestershire’s Ben Raine hastily jabbed his bat down and set off for a single. In the process, he collided with McClenaghan, who recovered and scooped the ball onto the stumps at the striker’s end, where Nathan Smith had reached his crease in time.McClenaghan, though, appealed for obstructing the field but replays indicated that Raine hadn’t changed his line while running. The soft signal was not out, and TV umpire Derek Walker sided with it.Sun stops play in NapierSun squinted into the eyes of the batsmen and forced a 25-minute interruption in the match between Central Districts and Canterbury at McLean Park in Napier. Moments before the players and the officials walked off the field, legspinner Todd Astle had drawn a thick outside edge from Dean Foxcroft, but Tom Latham, the keeper, had dropped it. The action resumed once the sun moved away.The setting sun was at an awkward angle again during the first ODI between India and New Zealand and interrupted the visitors’ chase on Wednesday.ALSO READ: Sun stops play in New Zealand v India ODI

Astle, Neesham watchHaving been asked to prove their fitness in the Super Smash and audition for the last two ODIs against India, Todd Astle (knee) and James Neesham (hamstring) had low-key returns. Astle began promisingly and created the aforementioned chance, but lost his lines and lengths once Will Young and Tom Bruce began teeing off. Astle wound up leaking 44 runs in his four overs, including 14 in his last.Turning out for Wellington Firebirds against Auckland, Neesham was dismissed for 1 by Colin Munro. He then bowled only two overs, conceding 15 runs.Mitchell McClenaghan sends down a delivery•Getty ImagesMatch of the weekThe clash between Northern Knights and Canterbury Kings at Seddon Park. After being sent in, the Knights posted 154 for 5 in a rain-hit 16-overs-a-side game on the back of opener Nick Kelly’s maiden T20 half-century.Then the Kings lost Tom Latham to Mitchell Santner off the first ball of the chase. The returning Henry Nicholls flickered briefly for 40 off 25 balls before Ish Sodhi reeled him in with a wrong’un. Cam Fletcher and Leo Carter, however, put on a 56-run stand off 40 balls and took the game deep.When the Kings needed 19 off the last two overs it was anybody’s game. But Knights’ overseas recruit Kyle Abbott and Daryl Mitchell sewed up a six-run win (via DLS method) with a variety of cutters and yorkers. The result put the Kings out of contention for the knockouts.Batsman of the weekLatham exploited the short boundaries and the fast McLean Park outfield, cracking his maiden T20 century – and the first in this season’s Super Smash – off 57 balls against Central Districts. He was particularly severe on left-arm spinner Ajaz Patel, smashing him for 30 runs from nine balls before holing out off him. However, the rapidly rising asking rate was too much to overcome and Canterbury came up short in a chase of 226.Bowler of the weekMcClenaghan is an excellent bowler in the Powerplay, but he hasn’t been as effective in the end overs. Against Otago, he nailed one yorker after another and defended 16 in the final over against the well-set Raine and Smith. He is currently the second-highest wicket-taker in the competition with 11 scalps in five matches at an economy rate of 7.95. Jamieson, who has played two more games, leads the list with 14 wickets.

Talking Points – Deepak Chahar ties Knight Riders up in dots

How bad was Knight Riders’ start, and how MS Dhoni smiled sweetly and cocked a snook at cricket data

Shamya Dasgupta09-Apr-2019Chahar – the Powerplay Super KingA baby at 26 in MS Dhoni’s ‘Dad’s Army’ – otherwise known as Chennai Super Kings – Deepak Chahar is among the most important members of the team.”Under the radar” and “relatively unsung”, Stephen Fleming said of him the other day, while gushing about the paceman’s consistency, skills, and ability to tone things down for the benefit of his team. Consistency, especially in the Powerplay. No one has done more in the Powerplay in IPL matches than Chahar since the start of the 2018 season – just look at the numbers.ESPNcricinfo LtdLittle surprise then that he returned 3 for 14 in three Powerplay overs against Kolkata Knight Riders on Tuesday. His wickets: Chris Lynn, Nitish Rana and Robin Uthappa, one in each over.For the record, he bowled 20 dot balls in his four overs on the night – including five in the 19th over of the Knight Riders innings when, admittedly, Andre Russell was farming the strike and trying to go big. That is the most number of dot balls in an IPL innings, ever.That said, Russell scored 50 not out in 44 balls to keep his fantastic sequence going – that’s 46% of Knight Riders’ runs on the night.Chepauk pitch not yet ‘a lot better’The first match of this year’s IPL pitted Chennai Super Kings against Royal Challengers Bangalore. In Chennai’s MA Chidambaram Stadium. Batting first, Royal Challengers rolled over for 70 – they haven’t quite gotten back on their feet yet.ESPNcricinfo Ltd”It was too slow,” Dhoni had told Sanjay Manjrekar in the post-match chat then. “Definitely it needs to be a lot better than where it is right now. Even with the dew, it was still turning a bit.” He explained that 140-150 was the minimum in a T20 game, and the pitch wasn’t good enough for that.His team-mate Harbhajan, however, had disagreed. “We’re so used to watching matches on good wickets where no one complains when people score 170-180,” Harbhajan Singh, man of the match then for his 3 for 30, had said.Over two weeks on, it definitely hasn’t become . Take out Russell’s unbeaten 50 – at a strike rate of 113.63, which is much, much slower than his usual belligerent efforts – and it could have been another 70 all out.Wonder if it’s the sort of home advantage anyone wants; Dhoni certainly didn’t back on March 23, what do the fans have to say?Don’t bowl spin to Sunil Narine, unless it’s ChennaiLogic, and common sense, suggests that teams shouldn’t bowl spin to Sunil Narine early on, in the Powerplay, which is typically where he does most of his batting. Try telling that to Dhoni, though.At the toss, Dhoni was asked if he paid heed to T20 analytics before making decisions. “No, not much,” he responded with a smile. Therefore, it was no surprise that he threw the ball to Harbhajan for the second over after Chahar had sent back Lynn in the first.Harbhajan Singh accounted for Sunil Narine in the second over•BCCIBefore this game, Narine had a strike rate of 254 against spin in IPL Powerplays, and 166 against pace in the same period.But, even though Dhoni doesn’t care much for numbers, he may have remembered the Narine v Harbhajan match-up the last time they met in Chennai: one ball, one dismissal, in IPL 2018. This time, Harbhajan bowled four balls to Narine, conceded one run, and then had his man again.That left Knight Riders at 8 for 2 in two overs, and by the end of the Powerplay, they were 29 for 4 as Chahar picked up two more wickets. Not their worst Powerplay performance ever – that stands at 22 for 4, also in Chennai against Super Kings, in 2010 – but in the top (or bottom!) five.

The importance of the Roy-Bairstow partnership in England's success

In a fairly short time, the opening pair has consistently notched up some remarkable numbers

Gaurav Sundararaman10-Jul-2019One of the key factors behind England’s batting revolution over the last few years has been their opening combination, especially since Jonny Bairstow and Jason Roy started opening together. Rarely have both openers tried to outdo each other in terms of strike-rates and averages, and have consistently proven themselves crucial to England’s success. Here is a look at what makes them a force at the top of the order.ESPNcricinfo LtdIn a fairly short time, Bairstow and Roy have notched up some remarkable numbers. Among opening pairs who have added a minimum of 1000 runs, Roy and Bairstow have the highest average of 67.70. Only five other pairs have an average in excess of 51.The duo have also scored all these runs at a very quick rate. Among pairs that have made 1000 runs, Roy and Bairstow have been scoring at 7.11 runs per over – the quickest by a distance. Martin Guptill and Brendon Mccullum scored at 6.59 while Gautam Gambhir and Virender Sehwag scored at 6.42. Roy and Bairstow have ten century partnerships and seven stands between 50 and 100. In this World Cup, the pair has opened five times. After failing in the first two innings, they followed it up with three consecutive century stands. Without Roy, England have struggled at the top: his replacement James Vince scored 26, 14 and 0 in three innings alongside Bairstow. With Roy at the top, England average 101 runs per wicket in the Powerplay and strike at over 6 runs per over. Without him, they average 30.8 runs per wicket and score at 4.6 runs per over.

ESPNcricinfo LtdRoy and Bairstow have scored over 400 runs together in just five innings in this World Cup and have an average of over 80. Only India openers, KL Rahul and Rohit Sharma, average better than them.

England have lost just one game where the pair put on a century opening partnership, and have won 83% of the matches when they have put on at least 50 runs.

Roy or Bairstow – who is the better batsman? Roy and Bairstow have some incredible numbers against their names. For any opener with a minimum of 1000 runs in ODIs, Bairstow and Roy occupy the top two in the best strike-rates list. They have both scored nine centuries each. England have won 85% of the ODIs when Roy has scored a fifty, and are yet to lose a game in 2019 with a fifty-plus score from the batsman. Since Champions Trophy 2017, in the first ten overs, Bairstow has been striking at 108.4, and Roy at 104.06. While Bairstow leads the charts among all batsmen in that list, Roy is third. New Zealand’s Colin Munro separates them.ESPNcricinfo LtdA lot of teams have tried bowling spin to the pair early on but their numbers show a completely different picture, compared to a perception of weakness against spin. While Roy averages 39.24 with a strike-rate of 114.6, Bairstow’s averages an outstanding 61.06 and strikes at 106.5 against spin. That perception of the pair being troubled by spin is mainly due to their numbers in Asian conditions, where Bairstow averages 23.16 and strikes at 84.7 while Roy averages 27.25 and strikes at 105.3.

Ten captaincy announcements no one saw coming

Did Kieron Pollard’s appointment as West Indies’ white ball captain surprise you? Here’s looking at a few more from the past

Dustin Silgardo11-Sep-2019Kieron PollardYears since last ODI before being named captain: 3A bright prospect in his early days, Kieron Pollard had become essentially a T20 mercenary by 2009, playing in various leagues across the world but rarely for West Indies. Disputes with Cricket West Indies resulted in him being dropped from the 2015 World Cup squad, last play an ODI in October 2016 and feature in just 14 of the 36 T20Is played by West Indies between 2016 and 2018. But with a change in the presidency of the board, a door opened for Pollard’s return to regular international cricket. While he did not make it from the probables list to the final squad for the 2019 World Cup, he was included in the side for the home T20Is against India. Still, it was hard to see a leap from just returning to the side to becoming West Indies’ white-ball captain, but that is exactly what was announced on September 9. Here’s a look at some other such surprising captaincy appointments.Dimuth KarunaratneYears since last ODI before being named captain: 4 Imagine naming a World Cup squad with a captain who hasn’t played an ODI in four years! Sri Lanka found themselves in that position after two years of turmoil in their cricket. Angelo Mathews had been axed after the 2018 Asia Cup, leading to a strained relationship between him and the coach. Lasith Malinga had come in but lost the ODI series in South Africa 0-5. With reports of infighting, the one man seen as a reliable leader was Test captain Dimuth Karunaratne. He had only taken over the leadership in Tests in February 2019, but the side’s massive upset of South Africa away under him had made him a favourite among supporters.The problem was that his cautious approach to batting was not suited to the shorter formats; one of the reasons he had not been a member of Sri Lanka’s white-ball plans since the 2015 World Cup. He was made captain, leading the side in a one-off game against Scotland before jumping straight into the World Cup.Tim PaineTests before captaincy debut: 12In 2017, Tim Paine had all but given up hopes of making an international comeback and was seriously contemplating a post-cricket career with sports equipment manufacturer Kookaburra. Then, the selectors picked him for the 2017 Ashes against England. He had not played a Test in seven years, after a serious finger injury in an ACA All-Stars game put his future in doubt.In the aftermath of the ball-tampering scandal in Cape Town, Steven Smith and David Warner were stood down, and Paine found himself taking temporary charge in the middle of the Test match. Following Smith and Warner’s one-year bans, Paine was announced as permanent captain, capping one of the most dramatic career turnarounds in recent times.Australia captain Tim Paine walks out to the toss•Getty ImagesGeorge BaileyInternationals before captaincy debut: 0When Test and ODI captain Michael Clarke gave up the T20I captaincy in 2011, Australia were looking for a young captain and went with Cameron White, who was six years into his international career. When White’s form dipped, they turned to someone with even less international experience, in fact, none. Bailey became the first man since Dave Gregory, in the first Test match in 1877, to make his Australia debut as captain. He was selected thanks to his reputation as a leader with Tasmania, though he wasn’t actually captaining in the Big Bash, where he played under White for Melbourne Stars. Nevertheless, Bailey went on to captain Australia through the 2012 and 2014 World T20 tournaments and frequently stepped in for Michael Clarke as ODI skipper too, including at the beginning of the successful 2015 World Cup campaign.James HopesGames for Delhi Daredevils before captaincy debut: 6The IPL has seen its fair share of surprise captains, but none stand out quite as much as the appointment of James Hopes. He played just two seasons of the IPL, one for Kings XI Punjab, one for Daredevils, and didn’t do much with bat and ball, but he did take over as captain for three games at the end of Daredevils’ dismal 2011 campaign. With Daredevils nearly out of contention for the play-offs with three games to go, Virender Sehwag, their captain, took the call to undergo shoulder surgery. Looking for someone to stand in till the end of the season, Daredevils turned to Hopes, the captain of Queensland. While Hopes’ run as Queensland captain lasted till 2015, his stint with Daredevils ended after just three games, and he never played another IPL match.Misbah-ul-HaqTests before captaincy debut: 19Misbah was 36 and had played just 19 Test matches over eight years since debut when he took the reins of Pakistan. In fact, a few months before his captaincy debut, he was contemplating retirement from all forms of cricket. In 2010, Pakistan cricket fell into crisis after three cricketers, including captain Salman Butt, were charged with spot-fixing. Butt had already been the third captain Pakistan had tried that year; Shahid Afridi had retired from Tests, and Mohammad Yousuf had lost seven straight games in Australia. Meanwhile, the senior-most member of the team, Younis Khan, was feuding with the board chairman, Ijaz Butt. So, Misbah not only returned to the Pakistan team, but was named captain.Floyd Reifer, Darren Sammy and Jason HolderTests before captaincy debut: 4 (Reifer) and 8 (Sammy and Holder)Since 2009, the West Indies board has been embroiled in a series of disputes with senior cricketers. Their first surprising move was appointing Floyd Reifer, who had made his Test debut in 1997 but had soon been dropped from the squad. He had, in fact, moved to Scotland and only in 2007 announced he was still willing to play for West Indies. In 2009, during a home series against Bangladesh, the West Indies players decided to boycott a Test a day before its start. The board scrambled to organise a replacement side and named Reifer, the oldest player, its captain.Also part of that team was Darren Sammy, the first international cricketer from St Lucia. He had debuted in 2007 but had not been able to hold down a place in the side. After Reifer’s brief stint as captain, Chris Gayle and Dwayne Bravo returned to the set-up as captain and vice-captain, but when they refused to sign central contracts in 2010, it was Sammy, who had played just eight Tests by then, who was named captain. A few years later, Sammy joined the long list of players feuding with the board, and it was now Jason Holder’s turn to take over. Holder made his international debut in 2013, was named ODI captain just a year later and then took over in Tests in 2015.West Indies captain Jason Holder during a net session•Getty ImagesSourav Ganguly, Chris Gayle, Brendon McCullum and Brad HodgeThere’s nothing strange about any of those names in a list of captains individually. But the four of them leading the same side, at the same time? That’s something no one saw coming. In the second season of the IPL, the Kolkata Knight Riders coach, John Buchanan, decided to try a split captaincy, with four different captains, each leading the team in different games. Many saw it as an attempt to undermine Ganguly, who was the sole captain the previous season, but Buchanan’s explanation was that you needed different views and ways of thinking in T20s. Buchanan was replaced after the season’s end, and the experiment was not revisited, with Ganguly announced as the only captain for the 2010 season.Adam HollioakeODIs before captaincy: 5He only captained England 14 times, but his stint was significant as it was one of the first attempts by a team to split their Test and ODI captaincy, handing the latter to a short-format specialist. Hollioake, a successful captain at Surrey, was just five ODIs into his career when he took over England’s ODI captaincy in 1997 from Michael Atherton, who continued to lead the Test side. He was picked ahead of more experienced players such as Alec Stewart and Graeme Hick as he was seen as a natural leader and also someone who understood the shorter format. Even when Stewart replaced Atherton as Test captain, Hollioake continued to lead the ODI team despite Stewart being a regular member of that squad.Lee GermonTests before captaincy debut: 0During New Zealand’s 1994-95 tour of South Africa, three young cricketers admitted to smoking marijuana at an informal function in Paarl. That and the team’s poor form in the following home season caused a shake-up in management. Glenn Turner was brought in as coach and he wanted to appoint a captain with proven leadership skills, who had the respect of the players and could maintain discipline both on and off the field by his own example. Lee Germon had not played Test cricket, but was renowned as a leader after moulding Canterbury into the best provincial team in the country. So, he was named Test captain on debut in 1995 and, in his first-ever Test, led a side featuring a number of senior players, including Martin Crowe, Mark Greatbatch and Danny Morrison.

Afghanistan face difficult climb up Test ladder

They will only get better the more games they play, but finding games to play might prove a problem

Saurabh Somani in Lucknow30-Nov-2019Afghanistan are ranked No. 10 in Test cricket. The same in ODIs. Marginally better in T20Is at No. 8. West Indies are ranked 8, 9 and 10 in those formats respectively. When they play each other, you might think it’s more or less a contest of equals. It’s not.The ‘contest’ is most lively in the shortest format. As the overs grow, so does the gulf. That’s why, in the series gone by, West Indies won 3-0 in the ODIs and finished off the lone Test in short time: it took just two days and half a session.But given how young Afghanistan are in Test cricket, that’s to be expected. Unlike, say, in T20s, you can’t suddenly be parachuted into Test cricket and win, or even compete in matches because of natural ability. Test cricket demands discipline to a level that you cannot achieve unless you actually and imbibe it through repeated iterations.Since their debut in June 2018, Afghanistan have played just four Tests. Ireland and Zimbabwe have two each, but the established countries are all in double digits. Expecting any country to be a force in Test cricket with that sort of playing time is futile. Even after Jason Holder had surprisingly chosen to bowl first on a pitch that assisted spin from the first day, even after the Afghanistan top order carried the team to 84 for 1.

If you don’t score big runs against top teams, it does not matter however good a bowling line-up you haveRashid Khan

Afghanistan captain Rashid Khan was realistic about the path that remains to be travelled. “This is just the beginning in Test cricket for us and definitely, we will be struggling, especially in the longer format,” he said after the nine-wicket defeat against West Indies in Lucknow. “We have struggled in the ODIs as well.”In this Test, we had the best opportunity in the first innings to score some runs to put them under pressure. But again, it’s a matter of experience and we didn’t have enough. We got the start, we got the partnership initially, but then we just slowed down. In this format, once you get on the back foot against opposition like West Indies, they won’t let you get up again. That’s what happened with us as well.”Ibrahim Zadran defends one•AFPAfghanistan had a competent spin attack in Rashid himself, left-arm wristspinner Zahir Khan and debutant left-arm spinner Amir Hamza, but as Rashid pointed out, without runs on the board – Afghanistan got just 187 in the first innings – there was little the bowlers could do. Even in limited-overs cricket, Afghanistan’s strength has always been their bowling. In the cauldron of Test cricket, where you can’t always hit your way out of trouble, the batting hasn’t yet reached a level to consistently make first-innings totals that can give Afghanistan control”We need to work hard in the batting department when coming up against the big teams,” Rashid said. “If you don’t score big runs against top teams, it does not matter however good a bowling line-up you have, you will struggle. We did not have enough runs in the first innings, and that let them play freely and get the lead. Again, we did same mistakes in the second innings.”Holder, when asked what advice he would give Afghanistan, agreed that the batsmen needed to step up, but also felt they needed to develop a more rounded bowling attack. Even on a very spin-friendly Ekana Stadium pitch, West Indies benefited from the control Holder could exert at one end with an overall match economy rate of 1.81, while Rahkeem Cornwall spun the Afghan batsmen out.

I always remember a conversation I had with Clive Lloyd, and he would always say he only learned to play Test cricket after three yearsJason Holder

“I think they’ve got some really good players. They just need to understand the dynamics of Test cricket,” Holder said. “You learn it over a period of time. I always remember a conversation I had with Clive Lloyd, and he would always say he only learned to play Test cricket after three years. It takes time to get the hang of it.”I think they need to rely a bit more on their seamers. Over the month I’ve been here, they’ve got some quality seamers. They need to put more confidence in them and try to make a balanced attack. And then obviously their batters have to take responsibility to put runs on the board.”For Rashid, the long-term solution lay in a two-pronged approach – play more Test cricket and improve the first-class structure in Afghanistan.”As you know, practice makes perfect, and the more you practice in Test cricket, the better it is,” Rashid said. “If we were play them (West Indies) again in a Test match in a short time from now, we will know better what are the right things to do and what are the right options against them.”We need to play the longer format more — ODIs and Tests. The more we play, the better we will be. It can’t be something like you play one Test in a full year, and then you are waiting for the next one. That kind of momentum, the kind of experience and the rhythm you have in that game, that just goes away – if you play after a year. Let’s hope (we play more). It’s tough for us to get more Tests against big teams, but we are still trying our best to get as many as possible.”Jason Holder discusses his batting with coach Phil Simmons•CWI Media/Philip SpoonerGetting Test cricket against the bigger sides is the goal, though with Afghanistan and Ireland not part of the World Test Championship, it is difficult. Equally important, the finances of hosting a Test match don’t always work out in favour of several teams.Former Zimbabwe captain Alistair Campbell, who was one of the commentators for this Test and has been a long-time observer of Afghanistan cricket, reckoned that this game would have set back the Afghanistan Cricket Board by a considerable amount, with no revenues to show for it.The match wasn’t broadcast on television in India, even though it was played in Lucknow, with no takers for the rights. “It’s great that Afghanistan have got some more Test match playing experience, but with the costs involved, it’s difficult for teams like them to host Tests on a regular basis,” Campbell told ESPNcricinfo.It’s a challenge alright, but what Afghanistan can do is strengthen their first-class system. The Ahmad Shah Abdali four-day tournament is the main first-class competition, and Rashid felt it needed some investment and fine-tuning to come up to speed.”We need to work a lot on our first-class cricket. It is still struggling there,” Rashid said. “The quality is not as good as it should be, being a Test nation. Once we get the quality, the first-class structure, and stuff like that in place, then it will be easy for us to adjust to the longer format quickly. We should focus more on longer formats back home, like 50-over cricket and four-day cricket.”We are famous for T20s, people love T20s back home, but where we are struggling is the longer format. Improving in that comes from domestic cricket. Once we have a proper domestic structure for first-class cricket, we can be better in the longer formats in the future.”Given the difficulties of playing Test cricket regularly, that might well be Afghanistan’s best option for the near future.

Marnus Labuschagne blossoms into a selector's dream

When he was dismissed, the batsman stood motionless in shock and disappointment at giving up his innings

Daniel Brettig at the Gabba23-Nov-2019For decades, selectors not wishing to be made redundant by simply using numbers to determine who should play in the Australian Test team, have offered the consistent refrain that “you can’t just pick a team on stats”.After the events of 2019, culminating in a sparkling 185 at No. 3 against Pakistan at the Gabba, they can now add a new conclusion to the argument along the lines of “… look at Marnus Labuschagne”.This year dawned with Australia facing a vexing Test match assignment against India in Sydney, having just been beaten out of sight by Virat Kohli’s men at the MCG. In response to an underperforming top order, shorn of Steven Smith and David Warner but also featuring an out-of-place Aaron Finch, the call was made to bring in Labuschagne and to bat him at No. 3.It was a decision that, on a statistical basis, looked decidedly ropey. Labuschagne, given a start in Test cricket in the UAE as a wristspinning allrounder, had struggled for Queensland after his return home, and had never in five first-class seasons averaged better than 39 for his state. The selectors and Justin Langer may have loved his attitude, appetite for hard work, and willingness to learn, but there was only the flimsiest empirical evidence to back up these impressions.Marnus Labuschagne was into his stride early on the third day•Getty ImagesHanded such a steep assignment, Labuschagne did his best, carving out a fighting 38 that seemed, at the time, to be about the best anyone could have expected. He went away from the home summer with another couple of Tests against Sri Lanka under his belt, and took up a county contract with Glamorgan where, bolstered by the experience, he made the technical change that seemed to be the key to unlocking so much more of the potential that the selectors saw more keenly than others.There was an intriguing subplot here. Glamorgan coach Matthew Maynard had previously coached at Somerset, and been far less a technocrat than his assistant Chris Rogers. But their mix of approaches seemed to give Maynard a greater wellspring of advice to pass down, and in straightening up Labuschagne’s back lift and alignment, gave him the ability to play down the line of balls that he had previously chopped across, making him a ready lbw candidate.His defence suitably strengthened, Labuschagne found himself able to not only survive but dominate attacks in challenging English conditions, resulting in a breakthrough run of scores that surpassed anything he had managed for Queensland at home. That was enough to put Labuschagne in Australia’s 25-man Ashes trial group in Southampton, where a battling 48 on a borderline dangerous pitch gave him enough credits to make the final squad.

This limpet-like desire to stay in the middle, searching every part of himself to do so, is something that was first glimpsed well away from the spotlight, and then seen when he was granted that oft-criticised chance to bat No. 3 against India in January

That innings was played out to a chorus that Labuschagne had become quite familiar with over his years in Australian domestic cricket, one that had only grown more fervent after his speculative elevation to the Test team the previous summer. Taunts of “you’re not good enough” and other fruitier variations rained down on him from fielders who would soon be Ashes team-mates, as Labuschagne was drafted in as Smith’s concussion substitute at Lord’s.What was immediately evident that tense final afternoon of the second Test and in virtually every innings after it was that Labuschagne had added the requisite technical tightness to the work ethic, eagerness and attitude of learning that had caused the selectors to smile upon him in the first place. At times in England, there was a tangible sense of disbelief among players and spectators on both sides that Labuschagne was now looking so at ease in Test match company, despite all earlier statistical evidence to the contrary.For the national selectors Langer, Trevor Hohns and Greg Chappell – who retired from his post at the end of the Ashes series – it was a vindication. As Hohns put it at the end of the series: “With regards to Marnus, all credit to him, he got thrown in the deep end when Steven Smith got ruled out and he’s made the most of that opportunity and that’s all we can ask of anybody. He’s another one of those players who just eats cricket balls. He works so hard, so it’s no coincidence that the hard workers reap the rewards and we’ve seen that with Marnus.”What all this meant in determinations for the first Test match batting lineup of the summer was that Labuschagne was one of the first names on the team sheet, not only to bat in the team but to be placed at No. 3. Granted the advantage of a staunch opening stand by David Warner and Joe Burns at the Gabba, Labuschagne unveiled further exponential growth since England in how he not only showed how much he belonged in international company but now how badly he wanted to bat all day when conditions gave him the chance to.Marnus Labuschagne walks off for 185•Getty ImagesThe biggest challenge of the Gabba innings was not so much technical as mental, being a test of Labuschagne’s desire to spend hours in the middle repeating all the disciplines he has learned ball after ball. And, across days two and three, he passed it comfortably, unleashing a more expansive array of shots in an innings that was assertive as well as attentive, finding the boundary 20 times amongst century stands with Warner and Matthew Wade.As an exemplar of how early exposure to Test cricket had helped Labuschagne, giving him a chance to think through the problems he had encountered and find solutions to them quickly, there could scarcely be a better symbol than the fact that he was able to turn his first Test hundred into the highest score of his first-class career. Following five years of Australian first-class cricket in which he had never managed to average 40, Labuschagne has totted up averages of 65.52 for Glamorgan, 50.42 in the Ashes, 43.33 for Queensland in the Shield this summer, and now 185 at the Gabba.The neatness underpinning Labuschagne’s every shot, the shrewdness of his shot choices and the discipline of his defence moved the YouTube cricket maestro Rob Moody to upload inverted footage of Michael Hussey as a right-hander, creating an eerily striking resemblance. Hussey, of course, had been another player to dominate at Test level when chosen after years of solid if not quite spectacular returns in first-class cricket, because his attitude of learning was given its very best outlet at the top.When, finally, Labuschagne succumbed to mental and physical fatigue to slice a catch to gully, he stood motionless at the crease for several seconds in a combination of shock and disappointment at giving up his innings. This limpet-like desire to stay in the middle, searching every part of himself to do so, is something that was first glimpsed well away from the spotlight, and then seen when he was granted that oft-criticised chance to bat No. 3 against India in January.So, while Labuschagne’s emergence as something close to the finished article will be widely lauded this year, it is worth remembering the circumstances in which those asked to make judgements on the merit of cricketers do so, and how every now and then they will find a diamond in the rough. Or, in Labuschagne’s case, some batting gold in the Klerksdorp dirt.

Earl Eddings: from the frying pan into the fire?

The chairman of Cricket Australia looks back at the eventful days following the Newlands scandal and cultural review, and to bigger challenges that lie ahead in his role at the ICC

Daniel Brettig23-Dec-2019Earl Eddings was sitting in the Qantas Lounge in Canberra airport on the morning of November 1 last year when he took a call from Cricket Australia chairman David Peever. Eddings was Peever’s deputy on the CA board, and they had spoken much over the preceding six years. This was not a pleasant call.A few days had passed since the release of the Ethics Centre’s damning independent review of CA and its culture, during which time Peever had proven himself a leaden-footed public performer in a time of crisis. Having already endured the traumas of the Newlands ball-tampering scandal, this was another storm, just days from the start of the international season.As a result, Peever had lost the vital support of Cricket New South Wales to continue leading the game in Australia.”David, to his credit, said, ‘Well, this is damaging the sport, and if I haven’t got the support, I will stand aside for the good of the game’,” Eddings says. “That was really tough to hear him say that. I was left thinking, ‘Oh dear, it’s me now, so what am I going to do to fix it?’ It was quite a seminal moment in my life.”ALSO READ: Calmer Cricket Australia sizes up future challengesFour days later, having watched Australia’s ODI team get thrashed by South Africa in Perth the previous evening, Eddings was packing to leave for Melbourne when he took another call of import. Mark Taylor, the most experienced and widely respected director on the CA board, was resigning too.”Tubby rang me and he thought I was back in Melbourne, so it was 5am in Perth and I was packing to go to the airport. He said, ‘I’m leaving, I can’t do this anymore,'” Eddings says. “It was a big week, losing the chair, then losing Tubby, and certainly a very lonely time there for a bit.”In cricket and in business, Eddings had dealt with his share of scrapes, but nothing quite so public as this. Unlike Peever, however, he had a deep understanding of all the links in the chain from Australian cricket’s grassroots to the top of the game, having taken the traditional path once trodden by all cricket administrators, starting as a player.***At the time of the Ethics Centre review, the widely respected former CA chairman Bob Merriman pushed publicly for Eddings. Merriman, still a figure of enormous influence in the Geelong region, had been a mentor to Eddings when he first joined the Cricket Victoria Board in 2005. Eddings had already cut his teeth in the game as captain and coach, and then in other roles at the North Melbourne Cricket club in the decade after moving from Northcote in 1992.Eddings had grown up in working class Bundoora to Melbourne’s north, an area that grew swiftly from the early waves of post-war migration before it saw the construction of Latrobe University in the 1960s and an RMIT campus in the 1990s. As a young man, Eddings balanced university study and business involvement with playing plenty of cricket and hockey. It was enough of a rough and tumble background to help equip him for the hard conversations to crop up in running the game.

“The outpouring of grief [after Cape Town] really showed how important Australian cricket is to the tapestry of Australian society – it’s part of our DNA”

“No one grows up wanting to be a cricket administrator,” Eddings says. “I think like most you get thrown into it because there’s no one else to do it. When I was at North Melbourne we were a struggling club, had no money and a lot of debt, so I was president, coach and No. 1 sponsor, because there was no one else to do it.”At that stage in my business life, my first business [Ark Consulting] made the BRW top 100 fastest-growing companies, top 25 start-ups. And at that time the Cricket Victoria board was looking for some renewal. You’re young, you know business, you know cricket, why not get involved. So it sort of happened from there, and happened much quicker than I thought. It was never a plan to do that, just the way the cards fell.”Along with Merriman, Geoff Tamblyn, the chairman of the Cricket Victoria board when Eddings came on, were key influences on how Eddings grew to see the running of the game. “They were great exponents of understanding the game at its grassroots but also saw the bigger picture. They were really strong role models.Eddings joined the CA board in 2008. “The first five years when I was on the board was really very parochial around states, a typical member-based board in a federal model. It wasn’t what I’d call a governance structure per se, more about how you make things work for different stakeholders.”ALSO READ: Belinda Clark: ‘I don’t think Australia wants to become a place where we just watch others play sport’A critical lesson came from Tamblyn, who accepted that, in order to bring about the governance reform that many CA directors, including Merriman, had attempted in the past, he would have to be the proverbial turkey voting for Christmas. In expressing to the board his intention to resign and so make room for independent directors on a smaller, nine-member board, Tamblyn helped open a gate that had remained locked for more than a century.”Probably without Geoff and [CA chairman] Wally Edwards, the governance reform wouldn’t have happened,” Eddings says. “I don’t think Tambo gets enough credit for that – he’s the one who threw himself under the bus as the first state chair to say, ‘I’m going to stand down.'”It’s not uncommon in 2019 to hear Eddings describe himself as the most dispensable person at CA, an attitude informed by the examples of Tamblyn and, latterly, Peever.Governance reform helped CA operate more strategically, rather than as state-based seagulls fighting over the financial chip. But it also arrived at a time when CA was growing more ruthless, more performance-based, more about “winning at all costs without counting the cost”, as the Ethics Centre review so damningly stated. The warning signs can be seen in hindsight, but the way the Newlands scandal blew up was still a shock for Eddings, who by this time had been installed as Peever’s successor.”David [Peever], to his credit, said ‘Well, this is damaging the sport, and if I haven’t got the support I will stand aside for the good of the game.'”•Getty ImagesOn the evening the ball-tampering news broke, Eddings had been watching his beloved Collingwood play their first game of the AFL season at a friend’s house. He was not initially sure what he was seeing when the channel flipped. “I could see this yellow piece of paper and I thought, ‘Why are they focusing on that, someone must have run a note out to the captain or something.’ Then I turned the volume up and realised what was going on. I quickly realised it was going to be a big week.”It was late at night, about 11-11.30pm. David was on a plane home, he didn’t know about it. James [Sutherland] was on the phone in the middle of the night, and then we were made more aware of it first thing in the morning. That was around the time Gerard Whateley had just started his [radio] program on SEN, and they went to a special the next morning and every man and his dog rang in and fanned the flames, if you like.”For all the issues that Newlands and its aftermath raised, Eddings thinks the board functioned as well as might have been expected. In concert with the then CA head of integrity Iain Roy handing down a series of penalties for Steven Smith, David Warner and Cameron Bancroft that balanced the storm of the moment with wider concerns.”You were virtually on the phone all day and all night with various board members trying to work out what was going on,” he says. “It was a case of not panicking, given the amount of emotion that was flying around, people saying ban them for life and whatever else. I thought we kept our heads pretty well. We didn’t get caught up in the emotion.ALSO READ: Why is Australia so outraged at Steven Smith’s team?“We discussed, ‘Okay, what do we do, this is more than just accepting a ban from the ICC, this is something that goes against the whole fabric of what Australian cricket stands for’. I think we [knew] that we had to make a stand as a board.”That stand resulted, too, in the commissioning of the review by the Ethics Centre, after a tender was put out for the task. While the Ethics Centre had in the past been somewhat kinder to the Australian Olympic Committee, among other organisations, this was a review that left no one in doubt that Australian cricket’s leadership was in the dock.”If I look at the events in South Africa, that wasn’t a one-off,” Eddings says. “I look at the MoU dispute, some of the behaviours before that and some of the relationships we had. So it had been eating away at our culture, but you couldn’t ever really put a finger on it.”If I’m trying to find a positive out of Cape Town, it’s that it allowed us to really reflect as a sport on what’s important to us, and while it was really difficult at the time, the outpouring of grief really showed how important Australian cricket is to the tapestry of Australian society – it’s part of our DNA.”

” We all had everyone on the same page, so it allowed us to do the right things rather than be rushed into action through the scoreboard pressure of losing”Eddings on the team’s recovery after the ball-tampering scandal

When asked how he and the chief executive Kevin Roberts could justify their roles given how deeply they had been involved in the previous administration, Eddings says, “Are we part of the problem or part of the solution? I like to think we’re part of the solution, because cricket is such a complicated business, it’s not as simple as people think. You’ve got a range of competing interests, from overseas with the Future Tours Programme, broadcasting, state associations, the grassroots, the players, and your corporate sponsors.”It’s a really complicated business model, and despite all the angst we went through, cricket was still in good shape. In the really dark times the women’s team were great ambassadors, great team players and great cricketers coming out of the same system. So it’s not all broken.”Slowly but surely, the broken bonds began to be mended, aided greatly by the way that Justin Langer, Tim Paine and Aaron Finch were able to bring the men’s team closer in line with the behavioural record of the women. Eventually, too, results began to improve, helped along by the returns of Smith and Warner from their bans. “We also knew it would take time. Putting Justin in, there was a really strong line between all the key people,” Eddings says. “We all knew we were in this together, we all knew we had each other’s backs.”You take two of the best players in the world out of your team and any side would struggle. We also knew we had good, young talent coming through, a big year coming up with the World Cup and the Ashes, so we had something to aim for.ALSO READ: Review gives CA board more than it bargained for“On-field performances didn’t bother me – you always hate losing – because we knew we were on a journey and it wasn’t going to be fixed overnight. We all had everyone on the same page, so it allowed us to do the right things rather than be rushed into action through the scoreboard pressure of losing.”The way the men’s team responded, I was and still am very proud of how they took ownership and said, ‘Yeah we’ve got such a strong role in Australian society that we have to lift our game.’ We’ve seen that change now in how they’ve played over in the UK and how they’ve started this summer. That was really critical, getting the players understanding their role as custodians of the game.”I went over to the UK and saw some of the ODIs when we were getting smashed – that was pretty tough, but we knew we had a plan.”When that plan came together for the retention of the Ashes for the first time since 2001, Eddings was a far happier spectator than he had been 12 months previously.***Speaking to Eddings, there is something almost folksy about how he speaks – in a way familiar to so many in cricket’s club and community heartland. That relatability is helping in rebuilding relationships, for Eddings possesses a far more natural, affable style of interaction than the often stilted and overly corporate ways of his predecessor. This is not to say that the road ahead is smooth, far from it.As the Australian Cricketers’ Association has shown over the Emily Smith case, every relationship is only as good as how it can stand up to the next issue to arise.Eddings now has to find the balance between looking after cricket in Australia and being a custodian of the global game•Getty ImagesWith Greg Dyer moving towards the exit at the ACA, and a new, more contemporary president arriving in Shane Watson, there is a new relationship to be formed. Watson has publicly expressed a long-held displeasure at the ability of cricket boards to control so much of the lives of players they centrally contract. At the same time the exorbitant figures fetched by the likes of Pat Cummins in the recent IPL auction speak of the other side of this complaint.As someone who married hefty club cricket involvement with his business career, Eddings is eager to see a better balance struck in the life of players in CA’s care. Not only to make them better people and athletes but also to ensure they have the diversity of experience the game’s leaders need.”We’re always keen to have contemporary cricketers on the board, which is why Mel Jones [who took over Mark Taylor’s seat on the CA board] has been fantastic,” he says. “That allows us to keep in contact with the game when it’s changed so much in the last ten years. You need to be connected with it, you can’t be too far removed because you’re looking through a different lens. Players now leave school straight into a career of cricket and they don’t have the luxury of having another job or having other life experiences.”So trying to get a pool of ex-cricketers with the skills to sit on a board from a governance perspective is going to be more challenging. Certainly the ACA and us do a lot in that area, but we could always do a lot more. Also the players have got to want to deal with it as well.”I’m really proud we can pay our players really well, but we’ve also got to give them other life skills for their wellbeing. That’s always a challenge when they’re travelling all the time and playing different formats, and something we’ll keep working at.”ALSO READ: James Sutherland: ‘No one should think of themselves as indispensable’Equally, the international scene is facing significant change. The return to traditional governance for a more muscular BCCI in India takes place alongside the early months of Manu Sawhney’s revenue-raising commission as the new chief executive of the ICC.ICC chairman Shashank Manohar has charged Eddings with reviewing the ICC’s governance, a vexing task, and with Roberts has recently met with Sawhney to try to find a middle ground between cricket’s financial behemoths Australia, India and England, and the mounting need for ICC revenue among the game’s other nations.The new BCCI president Sourav Ganguly’s recent pronouncements about a new, annual ODI “Super Series” to feature India, England Australia and one other nation have illustrated how far apart the two poles currently are. As Edwards discovered between 2011 and 2015, domestic reform was a simple task next to finding international balance – the man who granted CA an independent board for the first time found himself a party to the self-centred “Big Three” move alongside N Srinivasan and Giles Clarke in 2014.”I don’t think that did cricket any favours,” Eddings says of the Big Three. “You find that balance between looking after your own backyard and understanding your responsibilities as a custodian of the global game, and that’s always a challenge. But certainly we walk into those conversations saying we need to look at bilateral cricket, but as members of the ICC, also have a responsibility and accountability to maximise it and make it work for everyone.”In that sense, the global scene may turn out to be more difficult for Eddings than even the darkest days of 2018, for as he says, the cultural problems at CA were distinct from structural or financial issues. “There was never a sense of panic,” he says. “We had a good business model, a good strategy and money had come into the game with a really good broadcast deal. So we weren’t trying to fix the whole business model at the same time. It was purely a cultural fix.”In trying to find a balance between the players, the BCCI and the ICC, Eddings is about to contend with elements of all three at once.

Philander: Deadly at home, phenomenal with new ball

His sublime skills with the new ball ensure he will go down as one of the finest exponents of seam bowling

S Rajesh22-Jan-2020There are few bowlers, if any, who have exploited seam-bowling conditions more effectively than Vernon Philander. His ability to pitch it on a coin ball after ball, coupled with the skill to move it both ways, meant there was no respite for batsmen: both edges of the bat were under threat with the ball seaming in or out, and the lengths he bowled coupled with a relatively low-arm action meant that lbw and bowled were also regular dismissal options for him.Philander’s overall Test numbers are a testament to his skills: an average of 22.32, at an economy rate of 2.63. Among bowlers with at least 150 wickets since Philander made his Test debut in November 2011, no bowler has a better average, and only one fast bowler, James Anderson, has a better economy rate. Five bowlers had better strike rates – Kagiso Rabada, Dale Steyn, Mitchell Starc, Mohammed Shami and Kemar Roach – but then Philander’s forte was his relentlessness, not the ability to blast batsmen out.ESPNcricinfo LtdEven in the all-time list of bowlers with 200-plus Test wickets, Philander is right up there: among the 76 bowlers in this list, Philander is ranked eighth in terms of average. In fact, the average of 22.32 and the economy rate of 2.63 are very nearly identical to the numbers for Richard Hadlee, another bowler who operated in much the same way as Philander.

Among South African bowlers, Philander ranks seventh in terms of wickets, but only one among those six bowlers with more wickets has a better average: Allan Donald, whose 330 wickets cost him 22.25 each.Lethal in home conditionsWhile his overall numbers are amazing, what stands out even more are his stats at home: in 36 Tests in South Africa, Philander has taken 146 wickets at an average of 19.08. Among the 84 bowlers who have taken at least 100 Test wickets at home, only one has a better average, and he played in the era of uncovered pitches: England’s Jim Laker averaged 18.08 for his 135 wickets in 29 home Tests. Philander’s strike rate of 43.8 is in the top five too, after those of Rabada (34), Waqar Younis (38.7), Dale Steyn (40.2) and Malcolm Marshall (42.6).ESPNcricinfo LtdThe away average of 28.37 pales when compared to his stats at home, but there were a couple of other countries where he also had plenty of success. In six Tests in England, he averaged 23.54, while his average in as many Tests in New Zealand was 22.95. (In New Zealand, it was a story of two halves: in his first series there, in 2012, he took 21 wickets at 15.47; in his second series there five years later, he managed only two wickets at 101.50.)Where Philander’s effectiveness reduced, though, were in conditions which weren’t conducive to seam bowling. In the Tests that he didn’t play in the three countries mentioned above (South Africa, England or New Zealand), Philander took only 33 wickets from 16 Tests at an average of 35.36; in 10 Tests in Asia his average went up to 38.06, with only 16 wickets in those matches. Even in those conditions, though, what he did offer the team was immaculate control: his economy rate in those 16 Tests was 2.64, and in the 10 Tests in Asia he went at only 2.5 runs per over.

New-ball geniusPhilander’s biggest skill was his outstanding control and mastery with the new ball. It’s as if he had the ball on a string, with which he probed the batsman’s technique relentlessly: the line was always around off stump, the length had them confused whether to play forward or back, and the seam movement either way kept them uncertain and guessing.For top-order batsmen, Philander was a nightmare. Of his 224 wickets, 68 are of openers; the percentage of 30.36 is third-highest among the 76 bowlers who have taken 200-plus wickets. Only Zaheer Khan (31.2) and Chaminda Vaas (31) have a higher percentage of openers’ wickets in their overall tally. Include No. 3s into the equation, and Philander’s wicket percentage goes up to 41% (92 out of 224), fifth in this list after Zaheer (45%), Vaas (42), Graham McKenzie (41.5), and Bob Willis (41.2).

Philander’s mastery with new ball also meant plenty of early wickets, and plenty of top-order batsmen falling to him early in their innings. Sixty-two of Philander’s 224 wickets came in the first 10 overs of the opposition innings – the percentage of 27.7 is the highest among all bowlers who have taken at least 200 wickets since the beginning of 2002. And in the first 10 overs, he averages 19.77, which is again the best among the 26 bowlers who have bowled at least 300 overs during this period.ESPNcricinfo Ltd

All these early wickets also means he gets plenty of top-order batsmen out before they reach double digits: on 55 occasions he has dismissed the top three batsmen (Nos. 1-3) for single-digit scores, which is very nearly a quarter of his total wickets. That percentage is easily the highest among all bowlers who have 200-plus wickets. Overall, Philander’s average against Nos. 1 to 3 in Tests is 24.78; among the 51 bowlers who have taken 50 such wickets since the start of 2002, only two – Pat Cummins and Glenn McGrath – have a better average against the top three. (Since these numbers are from 2002, it only includes the last 44 Tests of McGrath’s 124-Test career; in these 44 Tests, he took 190 wickets at 21.15.)ESPNcricinfo Ltd

All of this is not to say that Philander hasn’t been effective in the later part of the innings; after 10 overs, he still averaged an excellent 23.29 at a strike rate of 51. However, he bowls only about 17% of the team’s overs after the 10th, which is about 10 percent lower than the contributions of Dale Steyn and Shaun Pollock. Clearly, the aspect of Philander’s bowling that South Africa will miss the most is his excellence with the new ball. Kagiso Rabada, the next leader of the South African attack, averages only 31 in the first 10 overs of an innings, and 32 against the top three batsmen of the opposition line-up. South Africa need more from their lead bowler.Head-to-head battlesWith his new-ball numbers so good, it’s hardly surprising that the players Philander dismissed most often were also top-order batsmen. Alastair Cook was one of three batsmen who was dismissed by Philander five times; all three averaged less than 20 against him. The other batsmen who struggled against him include Azhar Ali, Dinesh Chandimal, Martin Guptill and Dimuth Karunaratne, while Kane Williamson also averaged less than 30 against him. David Warner fell to Philander four times, but scored plenty of runs against him too.The two batsmen who have complete bragging rights against Philander are also the two best batsmen going around today: Virat Kohli scored 141 runs against him and was dismissed only once, while Steven Smith is the only batsman to score 100-plus runs off him without being dismissed.For the other mortals, though, Philander was most often more than a handful.

Philander’s Test stats v select batsmen

Batsman Runs Balls Dismissals Ave Shaun Marsh 64 231 5 12.80Alastair Cook 74 206 5 14.80Asad Shafiq 98 218 5 19.60Dinesh Chandimal 33 67 4 8.25Martin Guptill 46 99 4 11.50Azhar Ali 52 192 4 13.00Dimuth Karunaratne 80 203 4 20.00Kane Williamson 119 311 4 29.75David Warner 229 387 4 57.25Keaton Jennings 19 41 3 6.33Shikhar Dhawan 47 80 3 15.66Virat Kohli 141 276 1 141.00Steven Smith 125 214 0 –

Injured Bavuma out of Zimbabwe Tests, Maharaj named captain

South Africa captain Temba Bavuma has been ruled out of the two-Test series against Zimbabwe, which starts next Saturday. Keshav Maharaj will captain the team in Bavuma’s absence.Bavuma has not recovered from the hamstring strain he suffered during the World Test Championship (WTC) final against Australia last week and will undergo further scans to determine the extent of the injury.The squad features five uncapped players as South Africa rest several all-format players including Aiden Markram and Kagiso Rabada. Fast bowler Lungi Ngidi is only available for the second Test.Related

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Bavuma, who led South Africa to the WTC title, sustained the injury on the third day of the match. He was on six runs at the time and pulled up while completing a single. He received treatment on field and batted through to tea, where he was advised not to continue batting.After the game, Bavuma revealed that he went against medical advice because he did not want to give himself the option of not being in the middle at a crucial time in the game. In consultation with Markram, who agreed to downscale the tempo of his running between the wickets.Bavuma resumed his innings and saw South Africa through to the close of play. He finished on 66 as South Africa won by five wickets.South Africa’s next assignments after Zimbabwe, which Bavuma could be part of, are ODIs against Australia in August and England in September. Their next WTC campaign begins against Pakistan in October before a series in India in November. South Africa will not play any home Tests until October 2026, when they will host Australia. Bavuma has indicated he would like to continue playing until the 2027 home ODI World Cup, fitness permitting.This is the third hamstring injury Bavuma has suffered in less than two years. He was injured during the 2023 ODI World Cup and played the semi-final and then again during the Boxing Day Test against India that year. He has also had a series of elbow injuries and plays with a heavily strapped left elbow.South Africa squad: David Bedingham, Matthew Breetzke, Dewald Brevis, Corbin Bosch, Tony de Zorzi, Zubayr Hamza, Keshav Maharaj (capt), Kwena Maphaka, Wiaan Mulder, Lungi Ngidi (second Test only), Lhuan-dre Pretorius, Lesego Senokwane, Prenelan Subrayen, Kyle Verreynne, Codi Yusuf

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