South Africa, West Indies and the fight to protect Test cricket

Players and staff from both sides make stirring calls to invest in the game outside of the Big Three

Firdose Moonda07-Mar-2023Just underneath the West Indies’ crest on his practice kit, Kraigg Brathwaite wears a badge of personal significance. It’s a photograph of his late grandparents, one of whom passed away just two years ago, and if he could, he would put it on his match day whites as well. While that’s not allowed, Brathwaite has the pin on him at all other times, to keep his relatives close to his heart and take them with him wherever he goes, even as close to the cricket field as possible.”Test cricket means a lot to us in West Indies,” Brathwaite said, ahead of the second Test against South Africa in Johannesburg. “Our fans really follow Test cricket a lot and they want the Test team to do well.”That may sound like an overly optimistic statement to make, given the decline of West Indies as a Test power and especially given their record on the road. They last won an away series against a top eight team in 1995, when Brathwaite was three years old, no-one else in the squad was older than seven and five others had yet to be born. The glory days are well beyond any of their current recollections, though doubtless they’ve been regaled with stories of that old dominance and have dreams of reaching those peaks again. But in a climate of T20 leagues, where Test matches outside of those between India, Australia and England feel low-profile, it will be very difficult.

We cannot be excluded on the basis of not being leading lights in Test cricket. We are, and so are the West IndiesSouth Africa coach Shukri Conrad

Against that backdrop, Braithwaite is a chip off the old block. He is now a one-format player – 13th on the West Indies all-time Test run-scorer’s list – his last ODI was nearly six years ago and he hasn’t played any T20 cricket. At all. If it were up to him, West Indies would play more Tests, more often and would progressively improve. “You learn from playing. These two back to back tours – Zimbabwe and South Africa – have been good. You get rhythm,” Braithwaite said. “Some guys may not have done well but I think the more you play, the more you get familiar and it’s just better for us, as cricketers. When it’s spaced out so far, sometimes it’s tough.”South Africa are about to experience how tough that could be. They have no Test cricket scheduled for the next nine months and only play two-Test series until 2026. For a team that reached No.1 in the world just over a decade ago, their slide into a sort of obscurity has come quicker than expected, and everyone from star seamer Kagiso Rabada to new red-ball coach Shukri Conrad wants to stop it. While Rabada asked for Tests to be “prioritised a lot more,” Conrad believes dwindling interest, despite what Braithwaite said, is one symptom of where things are going wrong.”Our and their proud traditions and heritage should be ample proof that we need to play more Test cricket. We cannot be excluded on the basis of not being leading lights in Test cricket. We are, and so are the West Indies” Conrad said. “But the sad reality is, in places like the West Indies and hopefully not here, the lack of Test cricket might mean that interest starts waning. That’s a place you never want to reach, because once a youngster doesn’t have the desire to play for his country that spells the beginning of the end.”The biggest crowd in Centurion last week came in when South Africa’s Women’s T20 World Cup finalists arrived•AFP/Getty ImagesYou only had to glance at the almost empty grass embankments at last week’s SuperSport Park Test to see what Conrad means. A mid-week game, that started on a Tuesday and ended on a Thursday, pulled only a few hundred fans and most of them turned up when South Africa’s women’s side arrived to sign autographs following their run to the T20 World Cup final. There were smatterings of school kids at other parts of the Test but in general, inconvenient scheduling has meant this series will be poorly attended and deepen the impression that the red-ball game is dying in places outside the Big Three.That is partially true for a variety of reasons, and one of them is that Test cricket is perceived as boring. So enter Bazball and other styles of play in that ilk.Related

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When they came together in the English summer, Ben Stokes and Brendon McCullum made it clear that one of the things they were going to advocate was an entertaining style of play, even if it meant losing, to get bums on seats. Incidentally, they’ve only lost two matches since then and their brand of aggressive cricket has been spoken about as revolutionising the game. South Africa have toyed with trying something similar, and called it brave cricket, except that it wasn’t that at all and they lost series in England and Australia as a result.Now, they’re trying to figure out their batting blueprint, with a line-up where almost no-one is sure of their place. “It’s a unique set of circumstances. We don’t play a lot of Test cricket, so I’ve got to find novel ways. If that plays itself out in giving everybody a go and seeing how they react, so be it,” Conrad said. “That brand will take longer on the batting front. There’s patience required in terms of the batting side.”The problem with that, is that in 2023, with options aplenty for thrill-seekers, the waiting game is the one thing people don’t want to play, even if it brings it’s own subtleties and storylines – things that will be remembered long after the result. For example, West Indies arrived at their Wanderers training session with a massive pink teddy-bear named Suzie which was has to be carried by a particular member of the squad.”We play a game for warm up – a little tennis game and we always have a Man of the Match, who is the worst player of that game who has to take care of it,” Brathwaite explained.So who is it? This time it was Kyle Mayers. “Most of the squad has had a turn but unfortunately Mr Kemar Roach hasn’t gotten it yet.”Roach is the oldest member of the West Indies touring party. He is their fifth-highest wicket-taker now, going past Joel Garner’s tally of 259 in the first Test. He still wants to play for “two, three, four, five, six, seven…” years because he’s still motivated by his team-mates and “wanting to get amongst the greats.”If there’s one thing this series is showing is, it’s that there’s life in this old format yet, even in places where it seems there may not be.

Green's big year catches up with him, and there's more to come

The allrounder has now lost his place in the ODI and Test teams in the space of a few months, but he could yet make an impact at the World Cup

Alex Malcolm12-Oct-2023It’s not easy being Cameron Green. Australia’s star allrounder has lost his place in the ODI side in just the second game of the World Cup, less than three months after losing his spot in the Test side for the final match of the Ashes series.It is far from doom and gloom for a player as young and gifted as Green. He could well play in Australia’s next World Cup match against Sri Lanka given the schedule and the tenuous fitness of Marcus Stoinis. Stoinis has been unavailable for Australia’s last five matches, including the two warm-up games, due to a hamstring problem and has not bowled in back-to-back internationals this year. If Green were to regain his place, he could still have an impact for Australia in the tournament.But it is worth noting how Green has gone from almost irreplaceable in all three of Australia’s sides at the start of the year, and a three-million dollar man in the IPL, to being left out of the team on form in a deciding Ashes Test and the second game of a World Cup.Related

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It is clear Green is physically and mentally exhausted. No player in Australia’s World Cup squad has spent more time away from home this year than Green. Since Australia’s Test group departed for India on January 31, Green has spent just a month in his own bed. That is the price of being a three-format international allrounder, and it’s something Green is going through for the first time over such a sustained period.But for a cricketer who has had his whole professional career carefully mapped out in terms of when he plays, when he trains and when he rests, the addition of the IPL to his schedule in a year where Australia had away Tests tours in India and England, a World Test Championship final, and an away World Cup looks like a workload too big for even his broad shoulders to carry.It was long forecast within the Australian camp that this would be a possible outcome. But it is also partly their own doing. Green is unlikely to have been on the IPL’s radar had he not played in a bizarrely scheduled three-match T20I series in India this time last year when David Warner and Mitchell Marsh were both rested.No one could begrudge him entering the auction that followed given his two blistering half-centuries in that series, and no one in their right mind could ask him to forego the life-changing AUD$3.15 million to rest during April and May and make the WTC final, the Ashes and the World Cup his priority.However, what has unfolded since has been a valuable lesson in workload management. Between February and May he spent four months straight in India without returning home, then he had just two nights at home in Perth between the end of the IPL and the start of the tour of England.Only three other Australian players went from the IPL on the Test tour of England. During the same four-month period, Warner had spent three weeks at home in late February and early March after fracturing his elbow in the second Test in Delhi. Josh Hazlewood did not play a match in India having gone home after the second Test in Delhi and did not return until halfway through the IPL. Marsh was not a part of the Test tour to India and went home to Western Australia for a week in mid-April during the IPL to get married.Cameron Green’s IPL was life-changing, but it brought new challenges•BCCIGreen, who has been a notoriously slow starter when it comes to switching between formats, then struggled on his first tour of England having never played there before at any level. His first match in England was a WTC final against India, where most of India’s IPL players also struggled.And Green never got himself into the Ashes with either bat or ball. A hamstring niggle kept him out of the third Test at Headingley where Marsh stepped in and starred. He returned for Old Trafford but was dropped for the first time in his Test career at The Oval.He then had four weeks at home, resting from the T20I series against South Africa, before returning for the ODIs. But after making the most of his break by barely picking up a bat, he was hit in the head by the second ball he faced in South Africa and missed the next three matches with concussion.Having been slated to bat No. 4 in the ODI side with a view to potentially playing a part higher up the order in the World Cup, Green returned to find himself without a defined role and was forced to act as a finisher and has battled for form and rhythm.Now he finds himself out of the ODI side, replaced by Stoinis who has not made an ODI half-century since March 2019 and has averaged 16.80 across 32 innings in that time, not to mention his injury issues.The challenge for Green is how he regains some form either on the sidelines or in high-pressure World Cup matches, and where he can get a rest given Australia’s schedule after the event.Australia have a five-match T20I series in India straight after the World Cup that he will likely be rested from. But if he wishes to regain his place in the Test side, he might want to play in the last Sheffield Shield game for Western Australia before the BBL break in late November or the Prime Minister’s XI match against Pakistan, both of which are not in his home state.Australia then play five Tests between mid-December and late January. Even if Marsh remains the incumbent Test allrounder, Green will likely travel with the team given Marsh’s injury worries. His ankle flared up during the Ashes and he has hardly bowled in the limited-overs matches since. Australia then tour New Zealand in February and March before the IPL starts again. The T20 World Cup follows in June next year.It is a never-ending treadmill that Green is on with nowhere to step off.

Ladies who Switch: 'Nice to get four up against the Poms' – Annabel Sutherland interview

Valkerie Baynes and Firdose Moonda catch up with Australia all-rounder ahead of Women’s Ashes T20Is

ESPNcricinfo staff30-Jun-2023As the Women’s Ashes enters its white-ball phase with the first T20I at Edgbaston, Valkerie Baynes and Firdose Moonda caught up with Australia all-rounder Annabel Sutherland, who scored a century in the Test at Trent Bridge and ask her what makes this formidable Australian side tick.

Reactions to WI missing out on the ODI World Cup – 'How the standards have fallen'

The cricket community reacts to the two-time champions failing to qualify for the ODI World Cup for the first time in their history

ESPNcricinfo staff01-Jul-2023

Very sad to see West Indies not qualifying for the Cricket World Cup.

— Shoaib Akhtar (@shoaib100mph) July 1, 2023

I love West Indies
I love West Indian cricket
I still believe they can be the No.1 team in world cricket!

— Gautam Gambhir (@GautamGambhir) July 1, 2023

What a shame. West Indies fail to qualify for the World cup. Just shows talent alone isn’t enough, need focus and good man management, free from politics. The only solace is there isn’t further low to sink from here. pic.twitter.com/dAcs3uufNM

— Virender Sehwag (@virendersehwag) July 1, 2023

West Indies are out of the World Cup. Even though it isn’t surprising…given how their standards have fallen in the last few years…it’s still a little disappointing to see the erstwhile champions of cricket to become a spectator for a world event.
Change is the only constant!!!

— Aakash Chopra (@cricketaakash) July 1, 2023

Probably my most disappointing day ever on a cricket field for a few reasons. But it was nice to still enjoy the evening and make some cool memories mixing with the WI’s group https://t.co/iXRavcZSSV

— Kyle Coetzer (@MeerGoose11) July 1, 2023

Perfect match from Scotland to beat WI & knock them out of qualifying for the @cricketworldcup toss was again crucial & the chase clinical. Good to see the vice captain step up today. 2 big finals left against Zimbabwe & Holland so still all in our hands @CricketScotland #CWC23

— Majid Haq (@MajidHaq) July 1, 2023

Massive Congratulations to @CricketScotland and wish them all the very best in the ongoing tournament, that’s why I always raised my voice for teams like Scotland to play more at the global level and it would be shame not to see them play in India late this year pic.twitter.com/PaGi3kFuS3

— Shafiq Stanikzai (@ShafiqStanikzai) July 1, 2023

Outstanding performance again, @BrandoMcMullen4 simply superb, bowling unit again high class and @crossy16 great knock under pressure #followscotland

— michael leask (@leasky29) July 1, 2023

Jason Roy embraces home comforts in final push to secure World Cup berth

Despite being most frequent ODI selection since 2019, opener is in a fight for his spot for title defence

Matt Roller12-Sep-2023England’s selectors were deep in conversation in the middle at the Kia Oval. Jos Buttler, pads still on after a net, wandered over to the central strip with Matthew Mott, Rob Key and Luke Wright for company and the four of them stood for half an hour, no more than 50 yards away from the players whose World Cup hopes rest in their hands.At the far end of the ground, Jason Roy was being put through his paces by Craig de Weymarn, England’s physio. Roy has missed the first two ODIs against New Zealand after suffering a back spasm on the morning of the game in Cardiff, and underwent a fitness test ahead of a possible return on his home ground on Wednesday. His name doubtless featured in the nearby conversation.No England player has featured in as many ODIs as Roy in this World Cup cycle – not even Buttler – yet two weeks and one day before they fly to India, his seat on the plane is not completely secure. Roy is part of their provisional 15-man squad but is under pressure from Harry Brook, and could use a score this week to alleviate it.Roy is hardly alone among sportspeople in having battled occasional injuries across his career but the timing of this most recent one was unfortunate. England play nine games in five-and-a-half weeks across eight different cities in the World Cup and, with squad numbers so tightly capped, they cannot afford too many niggles.It was at The Oval seven years ago that Roy truly announced himself as an international cricketer, hitting 162 off 118 – then the second-highest ODI innings by an Englishman – in a successful chase of 308 against Sri Lanka in a 42-over game. He was 25 years old, playing his 24th ODI and with the world at his feet.Roy’s role in England’s 2019 World Cup win should not be underestimated. He will always be associated with the winning moment, firing the ball in from deep midwicket to enable Buttler to run Martin Guptill out off the final ball of the Super Over, but he was phenomenal with the bat too, passing 50 in five of his seven innings, including a ferocious match-sealing display in the semi-final against Australia, while maintaining a strike rate of 115.36.The question that England’s selectors must answer is whether, four years on, Roy is still the same player. After that World Cup, his ODI career average was 42.79, with a strike rate of 107.40; in this cycle, he has averaged 31.78, his strike rate dipping to 98.99. It is not a catastrophic record, but nor is it an unequivocal case for inclusion.Twice this year, Roy has shown why England have been so quick to back him as a 50-over player, even having dropped him from their T20I set-up. He has two hundreds in six ODI innings this year: the fact that one came in Bloemfontein and the other in Mirpur highlights his adaptability.Soon after England named their provisional squad, Buttler defended Roy’s inclusion by highlighting his record alongside Jonny Bairstow. “I feel we become very obsessed with age in England and we are always looking for the next thing,” Buttler said. “If people are still performing, age is irrelevant.”Related

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Yet this summer, Roy has hardly spent any time in the middle. After a solid IPL with Kolkata Knight Riders, he tore his calf before Surrey’s opening game in the T20 Blast and his longest innings of the summer lasted 42 balls; he won the Hundred with Oval Invincibles, but averaged 17.11 with three ducks and a solitary half-century.”There’s a slightly different tempo that you have to play in this format, so he’ll be desperate to get out there and spend some time in the middle,” David Willey, Roy’s England team-mate, said on Tuesday. “I don’t know how far off he is, but he’ll be itching to get out there and score some runs.”The clamour for Brook’s inclusion has quietened down in the past week, with a run of 8, 4, 25 and 2 across the two white-ball formats acting as a reminder that he is not yet the finished product. But Dawid Malan, the spare batter in the provisional squad, did his own chances no harm with 54 in Cardiff, and Brook could yet squeeze Roy out.Roy seems to have reconciled himself to the fact that his England career will soon draw to a close. “There’s this 50-over World Cup, then there’s going to be that changing of the guard,” he told the recently. “Do they want to look at the future, which is probably the right thing? I’m at ease with it.”But first, Roy needs to make sure that he is on the plane to India. Assuming he is passed fit on Wednesday morning, he will have no better stage on which to nail his spot down.

Australia's road to the final: Problematic preparation and early losses to winning eight in a row

Individual brilliance and a few incredible selection gambles have helped Australia reach the World Cup final after a disastrous start

Alex Malcolm18-Nov-2023Australia have won eight matches in a row to reach yet another World Cup final. It has been a remarkable turnaround after a disastrous lead-in to the tournament and a poor start to the campaign itself. They had lost five of their last six ODIs heading into the event and were comprehensively beaten in their opening two matches of the tournament itself. They have managed to turn it around in stunning fashion, thanks to some amazing individual performances and a couple of incredible selection gambles. Here is how it has all come together.Problematic preparation and early losses
Australia’s start to the tournament could not have been worse. Having lost three games to South Africa and two more to India to lose back-to-back series in the lead-in to the tournament, nothing was going right.Travis Head was at home nursing a broken hand. Australia’s second spinner Ashton Agar had been ruled out of the tournament and they opted to replace him with a specialist batter in Marnus Labuschagne, who had not been named in the initial 18-man squad. Glenn Maxwell, Mitchell Starc and Steven Smith were all underdone due to injury-riddled preparations. Marcus Stoinis had a hamstring issue. Adam Zampa was sore and ill. Cameron Green and Alex Carey were out of form and Pat Cummins had captained just two ODIs in his career heading into the World Cup.Related

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They limped to 199 in the opening game against India. There was a moment where they could have had India 20 for 4, but Mitchell Marsh dropped Virat Kohli and India cruised to victory. Against South Africa they were annihilated, conceding 311 for 7 and making just 177 in reply. Australia’s tournament looked all but over when Sri Lanka cantered to 125 without loss after 21 overs in their third game in Lucknow.Zampa, Cummins, Warner and Marsh spark them to life
It took four players to spark the turnaround, but the transformation was swift and startling. Cummins bowled a spell that breathed life into his side, removing Sri Lanka’s two openers. Zampa then got to work. Having been hampered by shoulder and neck issues, all while battling illness, he shook them off and showed why Australia’s selectors had faith that he could carry the spin load just as he did in the 2021 T20 World Cup. Zampa went on a tear taking four wickets in three consecutive games. He then became the first player in ODI World Cup history to take three wickets or more in five consecutive games.Adam Zampa has picked up 22 wickets heading into the World Cup final•AFP/Getty ImagesEven while Australia’s quicks had trouble making inroads in the first powerplay, Zampa consistently pulled games back for them. He has 22 wickets in this tournament which is a significant achievement. Only Muthiah Muralidaran has taken more as a spinner in an ODI World Cup. David Warner also played his part in the turnaround in both the field and with the bat. He first took two exceptional catches in the outfield off Cummins and Zampa against Sri Lanka to snap Australia out of their uncharacteristic fielding malaise. He and Marsh then sprung to life with the bat.Marsh made an important half-century against Sri Lanka to set up the chase. They then made a statement against Pakistan with twin centuries in a stunning 259-run opening stand. Warner continued his rampant run with another rollicking hundred against the Netherlands and 81 against New Zealand. The 37-year-old proved why he’s one of Australia’s greatest ODI players ever and one of the best World Cup performers in history.Travis Head had to miss the first half of the tournament due to a broken hand•Associated PressHead gamble pays dividends
Picking Head in the 15-man squad when he was unavailable for Australia’s first five games due to a broken hand could have been a disastrous gamble if Australia had not recovered from their first two losses. But even having done so, the form of the Warner-Marsh combination at the top of the order and the fact that Australia had scored 350-plus in consecutive games did spark some different questions when Head finally returned.Smith made his displeasure about shifting to No. 4 known while Marsh would have also preferred to remain at the top. But Head proved why the selectors had shown faith in him in his first game back, smacking a stunning 59-ball century against New Zealand in a vicious assault with Warner. Australia’s long-term plan to pulverize their opponents in the powerplay with the use of three power-hitters in Head, Warner and Marsh was back in place. However, it did take a little while to gel properly.Marsh had trouble readjusting to life at No. 3 against New Zealand and then missed the match against England due to the death of his grandfather. Head missed out several times as the top order misfired against Afghanistan. But it finally clicked against Bangladesh. Head fell cheaply again but Marsh picked up the slack with a thumping 177 not out. Then in the semi-final, in a low-scoring game on a tricky pitch, Head proved again why his role is so vital, picking up two crucial wickets with the ball and then putting Australia ahead of the game with a blistering half-century that allowed some room for a middle-order wobble.The Big Show’s biggest show
The fastest century in World Cup history was not enough for Maxwell. He somehow trumped his 40-ball century against the Netherlands with the greatest ODI innings of all-time against Afghanistan. Words can’t do justice to his 201 not out off 128 balls. Australia were on 49 for 4 in the ninth over when Maxwell arrived at the crease in chase of 292. His epic innings sealed Australia’s semi-final spot and proved that they can always find a way to win, given the quality of match-winners they possess.Maxwell is the most extraordinary of them and has been a vital cog for Australia with both bat and ball. He has bowled superbly throughout as the second spinner and their bankable fifth bowler. Australia looked unbalanced and vulnerable at times without him in their wins over England and Bangladesh. He will be critical to their success in the final and is a player India do fear.Starc stands up
Starc was under some pressure heading into the semi-final. He had been a World Cup wonder in the last two editions of the tournament but had hardly fired a shot in this campaign and Australia had been one of the worst-performing powerplay bowling teams as a result. But cometh the hour, cometh the knockout king. Starc sizzled and South Africa were stunned.Starc and Josh Hazlewood loom as India’s biggest threat. They reduced India to 2 for 3 in the opening game of the tournament and Starc blew away India’s impregnable top order in Visakhapatnam earlier this year. He’s taken out the opposition captain and tone-setter in the first over of the World Cup final before. He will be aiming to do it again.

Predictable Hazlewood the face of the banker bowler's resurgence

The Australia fast bowler has bowled about 70% of his balls in the hard lengths and from his height, those are a handful for batters

Sidharth Monga27-Oct-2023The new ball has taken worse battering at this men’s World Cup than at any in the past. At 5.42 runs an over (before Pakistan vs South Africa), this World Cup has cost teams a good six runs more in the first powerplay than the next-highest World Cup for batting against the new ball.It is amazing, because on an average, the ball has swung and seamed more than it did in the last World Cup. However, it has done less than it was doing earlier in the year. Perhaps the batters are just relieved after what they have been facing for the last little while or they are trying to make the most of the new ball before it gets scuffed up as it has been doing in this World Cup.Whatever the reason, it is an opportunity for the really good bowlers to stand out. Among those who have bowled at least ten overs inside the powerplay so far, the second-most economical bowler is someone who, not long ago, was not considered a limited-overs bowler. Josh Hazlewood missed the 2019 ODI World Cup, and wasn’t fought over in IPL auctions. Now he is going at 4.35 an over with the new ball and averaging 21.75 with it. Jasprit Bumrah is going at an unbelievable 2.9 an over, and averaging 29.Related

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Either Hazlewood’s workload was being managed or people thought he was too consistent, and thus predictable, in formats where variations were all the buzz. Whatever the reason back then, it is that predictability and consistency that have made Hazlewood the face of the resurgence of the banker bowler. An era that rewards a bowler who can put the ball where he wants is a welcome era. This kind of bowler is not picking up wickets by the truckload, but almost always maintaining an economy better than the going rate and hardly ever has a horrible day out.Pat Cummins, who takes on the role of mixing his lengths in the middle overs, is thankful for such a consistent bowler in the line-up. “He’s been consistent his whole career, he’s been a gun,” Cummins said on the eve of their match against New Zealand. “So, I don’t think him being predictable has ever been a problem. He, I think, even in some of those times when he wasn’t in the team, was ranked No. 1 or 2 in the world. So, he’s fantastic.”He can now bowl at any time [new ball, middle overs or at the death]. But you’re going to get quality up front and, as you said, consistent. Just rarely gets hit off his length and just again another real luxury having someone like him in the team.”In this World Cup, despite taking the new ball, Hazlewood has been bashing the hard lengths, which, when done from his height, can be a handful. Hazlewood has bowled about 70% of his deliveries in the hard length band. For every five of those stock balls, he has bowled one bouncer.Josh Hazlewood goes into Batista mode with his celebrations•Getty ImagesHazlewood has drawn a false response every four balls, which is right up there with Bumrah. It is when he has got into the fuller side of the hard length that Hazlewood has been most effective, drawing a false response every three balls, going at 3.49 an over and taking half of his six wickets. Yet, he has resisted going to the well too often. More than half of his deliveries have been in the shorter side of that hard-length band.That is always the temptation with these bowlers: should they actually bowl fuller more often? The answer probably is that they have great numbers in that fuller part because they do so only when there is assistance in the conditions. That short of a good length – seven-to-nine metres to be precise – comes with the handicap of being employed when there is not much in the pitch.In Dharamsala, one of the three venues with encouraging swing and seam movement, in a day game, you could expect Hazlewood to get more into the six-to-seven-metre band. What’s remarkable with bowlers such as him and Bumrah is that they will go more aggressive without overpitching. You won’t expect half-volleys from them even if they go searching.In the process, if Hazlewood does walk away with a bag of wickets – law of averages would suggest such a match is not a million miles away – he will have earned it.

Bangladesh's fast-bowling evolution bears fruit in green Sylhet

While some might say Sri Lanka were let off the hook, the fact that the team management was not averse to a track with a green tinge in itself was a win for the quicks

Mohammad Isam22-Mar-2024Glass half-full or glass half-empty? It was a day when Bangladesh pinned Sri Lanka on the ropes, but then allowed them to wriggle free and, with the ball in hand, throw some heavy punches of their own. Whichever way you saw it however, Bangladesh’s fast bowlers were in the thick of the action.On a rare green-tinged pitch in Sylhet, Khaled Ahmed gave them a blazing start before Sri Lanka counter-attacked and took control of the middle session. Then the fast bowlers struck again.Sri Lanka had never before lost half their side so cheaply against Bangladesh. In fact, barring one or two spells in Tests between the two over the last two decades, it is hard to recall Sri Lanka facing Bangladesh’s fast bowling with such discomfort.As the ball got older though, the Bangladesh fast bowlers dragged their lengths back. Dhananjaya de Silva and Kamindu Mendis found that counterattacking the short ball was their best option. They added 202 runs for the sixth wicket on way to individual centuries. Nahid Rana brought Bangladesh back at that point, striking three times like Khaled before him. The visitors finished on 280, their third-lowest total against Bangladesh.Related

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Still, Sri Lanka had reached a decent score, given how poorly they were placed in the first session. There might be a feeling that the Bangladesh fast bowlers couldn’t quite finish the job. However, you cannot disregard Mahmudul Hasan Joy grassing Kamindu Mendis first ball; Sri Lanka would have been 57 for 6, with only their captain de Silva left with the tail.Bowling coach Andre Adams said that Khaled and Rana bowled very well together, but he would have been happier had the fast bowlers kept that going in the middle session.”They were good in parts,” Adams said. “There was partnership bowling throughout the day. Rana bowled very well in partnership with Khaled at the start. But then they relaxed in the pressure aspect. It wasn’t until the two spinners came on that we gained control of the scorecard again.”I thought Rana was outstanding, especially on debut. [Khaled] is an accurate bowler. This is a pretty young bowling attack. Shoriful was good in parts. I thought Rana and Khaled bowled well together. We created several chances in the first session, which was exceptional. Especially when you think that there was only ten overs of real pressure with the ball. Some great fielding and good catching. Disappointing that we didn’t grab two chances, which really could have spun the Test match. You have control if you take seven wickets at lunch.”Khaled’s first spell of 8-1-23-3 included the wickets of Nishan Madushka, Kusal Mendis and Dimuth Karunaratne. He got the ball to nibble away from Madushka and Kusal while bringing it back sharply through the left-handed Karunaratne’s bat and pad. Angelo Mathews’ run out, coming in a Khaled over, also underlined how well he was putting Sri Lanka’s experienced top-order under pressure.Adams, who joined the Bangladesh team only recently, was especially impressed by newcomer Rana, billed as Bangladesh’s fastest bowler. “He is talented. He is fast. He bowled almost every ball at 145kph. He has a beautiful action. He is just so raw. He has a lot to learn but he is very talented.”The young attack responded to Test match special in the best way they know. They tried their hardest. I was happy with the effort. We just have to learn how to do it better. I didn’t expect Sri Lanka to play any other way. They are going to attack. We have to manage ourselves better through that.”Najmul Hossain Shanto brought spin on in the 26th over, the latest that a Bangladesh spinner has been introduced in a Test-match innings, testament to how well the pacers were going. A culmination of Bangladesh’s fast-bowling evolution over the past three years; it has been the facet of their game that has seen the most development. From a time when fast bowling was virtually non-existent in home Tests, they have now got to a stage where the team management was comfortable with a green surface in Sylhet. Some may say that Shakib Al Hasan’s absence prompted the Bangladesh think-tank to explore a different bowling strategy, but they still have match-winning spinners like Mehidy Hasan Miraz and Taijul Islam in the team.This change in mindset is itself a win for the fast bowlers. They came into this Test with a combined experience of just 21 matches. Taskin Ahmed is taking a break from the longest format. Ebadot Hossain is still in the middle of a long injury layoff. But Khaled and Shoriful stood up like senior bowlers, before Rana showed glimpses of his ability. They have shown consistency with the white ball. Can they take the next step and show the sustained longevity needed with the red ball?

Mason Crane: 'I just want to play and feel like an integral part of a team'

England legspinner on hopes for Glamorgan loan and proving he is still a force in all formats

Alan Gardner01-Apr-2024It is just over two years since Mason Crane put Hampshire within touching distance of their first County Championship since 1973. “I had two balls to win the title,” Crane says, reflecting on his dramatic five-wicket intervention against Lancashire at Aigburth in the final round of the 2021 season. “I bowled really well in that innings. But you know, obviously then things change and a new summer comes around and it’s all part of playing in England really. There’s always going to be things in the way of the spinner.”Had Crane managed to dismiss fellow leggie Matt Parkinson with one of those two deliveries, Hampshire would have pipped eventual champions Warwickshire by half a point. Instead, their wait goes on, while Crane has had to go back to biding his time, too – in the manner experienced by many a young English tweaker. Now in the final year of his contract, and after playing just five Championship games over the last two seasons (two of them for Sussex), he has agreed to spend the summer on loan at Glamorgan.The move covers all formats, which seems significant given Crane has played a big part in Hampshire’s white-ball success – helping them to the One-Day Cup in 2018 and another Blast title in 2022, as well as featuring in two more 50-over finals. But he kicked his heels through much of 2023, playing just six Blast games and once in the Hundred for London Spirit before returning to Hampshire for the Metro Bank Cup.Related

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With Liam Dawson covering off Championship spin duties with aplomb – even while being disregarded by England – and contributing top-order runs into the bargain, Crane began to look at his options. “It just reached a point where it felt to me like I’m going to have to go elsewhere, at least temporarily, to try and get some cricket,” he tells ESPNcricinfo.”I’ve sat and watched a bit over the last couple of summers, as a team wins a tight game with a certain make-up of the XI, and then you stick with it. It’s tough, to be right on the cusp of winning it all one minute and then yeah, in game time, only five games later to be not involved at all. But I’m used to it now as part of being a spinner in England. You’ve got to accept it.”Obviously, it’s always frustrating. I just really want to play cricket and I feel like I’ve made some strides in the last couple of years but haven’t been able to show it whatsoever. So it’s important I play, everyone is in agreement really. I’m obviously grateful Glamorgan have given me an opportunity to do that. I’m very excited actually that I don’t have to turn up and constantly think about how I’m going to maybe get a game here and there, I can just settle in and play as much as I can.”In Cardiff, Crane will be reunited with his former Hampshire team-mate, Sam Northeast. The two had remained in contact and Northeast knew of Crane’s desire for game time. After Glamorgan confirmed Grant Bradburn as the successor to Matt Maynard in the head coach role, wheels were set in motion to bring Crane along the M4. Northeast has subsequently been named red-ball captain and is confident that Glamorgan have signed a player who can make a significant impact in their bid for promotion from Division Two.Crane is hoping for a more consistent run in four-day cricket•Getty Images”We needed something a little bit different, a wicket-taker, and we think he’s the man to do it,” Northeast says. “A couple of times [last season] we had teams eight- or nine-down at the end and missed that magic touch really, that little X-factor. He’s definitely someone who can provide that for us. We want him to settle in, not to put huge pressure on him. We want him to be part of the squad and I’m sure he’ll play his part through the season.For all that county cricket remains a tough nut for spinners to crack, Northeast believes that Cardiff is one of several venues on the circuit that increasingly requires “something different” for teams to force victory. He puts this down to the ECB’s decision in 2019 to sanction the use of the heavy roller across all four innings, which has begun to negate the traditional impact of an all-seam attack.”Day four in Cardiff can be one of the best days to bat,” Northeast says. “There’s a bit of grass and then four heavies and it flattens out, and you don’t get the up-and-down nature that you did in the past. We felt that we definitely needed a real classy spinner and that’s what Mason will bring.”

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It is now almost a decade since Crane emerged on the county scene as a precocious legspinning talent. Capped by England in T20Is at the age of 20, he made his sole Test appearance six months later in the 2017-18 Ashes before two back stress fractures derailed his progress. But having recently turned 27, and well knowing the received view on how long it takes spinners to mature – “If I had a pound every time someone came up to me and told me ‘you’ll only peak when you get to 30’… I’ve heard it a million times” – his focus for now is on playing consistently and feeling good about his game.”I’m obviously really proud that I’ve played for England but overall not satisfied,” he says. “I was such a young guy, and it all happened so quickly. An injury struck right when I didn’t really need it to, just slightly got my foot in the door. It took me a lot longer than people give credit for really to get back anywhere near where I want to be.”In terms of ambitions going forward, I don’t really know to be honest. All I know is that I’d just like to play some games and feel like a real, integral part of a team. I’ll always believe that on my day, I’m as good as anyone. The problem is, I’ve got to make it my day much more often. And I know that. But hopefully just play some games [with Glamorgan] and see where it takes me.”Crane roars the appeal on Test debut in 2018•Getty ImagesCrane’s Test debut was notoriously grueling, sending down 48 overs at the SCG for figures of 1 for 193. His most-recent England involvement was as a Covid reserve on the 2020-21 tour of India – where he and Dom Bess founded an informal spin-bowling support network, alongside Matt and Callum Parkinson, that still exists as a WhatsApp group today. Did Crane watch the success enjoyed by Tom Hartley and Shoaib Bashir in India recently and wish he had played in an environment more supportive of his craft?”To be honest, as such a young guy back then, I don’t think I knew what I needed. That’s all part of getting older and gaining experience, you learn more what’s best for you. Back then I was probably in a phase where I was still giving things a try and working out different ways of going about it. I wouldn’t ever turn around and say I was completely thrown under the bus, because I wasn’t. But I think now I’d be able to go into a dressing room and meet a new captain and say, oh, this is this is what generally works for me best and this is a bit of a preference of mine and things like that.”Another crack at Test cricket may seem a long way off, particularly when set against the attraction of winning contracts on the T20 franchise circuit – as well as his success for Hampshire, Crane has performed creditably in the Hundred and in 2023 featured in the first edition of the SA20 – but he has given no thought to specialising in limited-overs cricket.”Even going back to when I was really young, I’ve always seen myself as a red-ball bowler first,” he says. “I’ve always had the ability to get people out. That’s never really been a question and that’s always what I’ve enjoyed doing most, trying to actually get someone out and men around the bat on the last day. That’s always been one of the best things I’ve enjoyed in the game. But ultimately, you’re going to practice more what you’re going to be deployed for in games and for a long time, and for most legspinners around the world, that’s going to be training for white-ball cricket.

“A few years ago, I’d have been really against moving but I’ve reached a point where if I need to move, I need to move. I just can’t wait around and keep doing what I’ve done last two years. It just can’t go on”Mason Crane on leaving Hampshire

“I’ve certainly looked at the last couple of years where we’ve been going through the first few weeks of the season and then the T20s are only two weeks away. You’re clearly not getting a game in the four-dayers so you might as well start working on the stuff that you’re actually going to use in a proper game. Before you know it, you spend most of the year just bowling with a white ball. So I have sympathy with everyone that ends up being a white-ball cricketer, but it’s certainly not my ambition to drop the format, because I love bowling in red-ball cricket and I’ve always seen myself that way.”There are a lot of spinners out there that are white-ball based. You can see the way they bowl is all about T20 bowling, and that’s fine. But looking at my style of bowling, it’s centred around red-ball cricket and then I transfer it into white-ball. It just happens I get picked more in white-ball.”

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The experiences of Hartley and, in particular, Bashir – who had only played six first-class games for Somerset before being called up by England – offer a novel form of encouragement to Crane, Bess and their brethren. “You could be in the second team for half a year, play half the games [in the Championship] and then still find yourself playing for England,” Crane says. “That’s not a ridiculous thing to say nowadays.”Crane has not had any contact with the selectors since going on an England Lions tour of Sri Lanka in early 2023, and is under no illusions about his place in the pecking order. An England return would be “amazing” but that is only likely to come from hard yards on the county grind. “I’m very confident in my ability and I think on my day I’m as good as anyone. It’s up to me to make it my day much more often. What will happen after that will happen.”Increasingly, it seems, a move away from Hampshire might offer the best chance of a route back – as difficult as that is to contemplate for a player who became the youngest man to take a Championship five-for for the club, in only his second appearance back in 2015.”As a homegrown player, it’s sometimes … maybe slightly easier to leave [you] out than someone who has been brought in for a purpose. I’ve certainly felt that before, and I’ve seen it all over the place where if someone moves somewhere, the guys higher up want to see what they can do. I think a few years ago, I’d have been really against moving but I’ve reached a point where if I need to move, I need to move. I just can’t wait around and keep doing what I’ve done last two years. It just can’t go on.”

Switch Hit: Bye-bye T20WC, hello Tests!

Alan Gardner is joined by Andrew Miller and Matt Roller to review England’s World Cup exit and look at who’s in the Test squad to face West Indies

ESPNcricinfo staff01-Jul-2024England’s T20 World Cup defence came to an emphatic end at the semi-final stage with a 68-run defeat to India in Guyana. Following the completion of the tournament, Alan Gardner and Andrew Miller were joined by Matt Roller to look at where things went wrong and what the future holds for Jos Buttler and Matthew Mott. There was also time to discuss some new faces in the Test squad as attention turns to the series against West Indies starting next week.

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