The audacious, and gloriously disrespectful Rishabh Pant

You don’t do what he did to James Anderson. But then, you’re not Rishabh Pant.

Karthik Krishnaswamy05-Mar-20213:20

#AskMatchDay: Is Pant’s reverse lap the most extraordinary shot in Test cricket?

There’s audacity, and there’s plain disrespect.Rishabh Pant was five years and 72 days old when James Anderson made his England debut.On Friday afternoon in Ahmedabad, Anderson, 38 years and 218 days old and bowling as well as ever, had figures of 17-11-19-2 when he ran in to bowl with an unsullied second new ball. Pant, 23 years and 152 days old, ran down the pitch and smoked him over mid-off, finishing with his back leg in the flamingo position.You don’t do that to Anderson. You don’t do that to Anderson bowling with a new ball. But you aren’t Rishabh Pant.Related

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To the next ball, Pant took a massive stride forward, perhaps even before Anderson had released. The length was perhaps short of good length, and the line was wide outside off. He was in no position to play that ball, but that’s a problem for other batsmen. For Pant, it was simply a ball he could wallop through cover point, even if it meant he had to reach out with arms at full stretch and address the ball with a flat-bat, topspin slap.At the start of Anderson’s next over, Pant was batting on 89. Perhaps this would bring a measure of restraint to his batting, you might have thought. Particularly since his last eight Test innings had included two dismissals in the 90s, and an unbeaten 89.Restraint? Pant reverse-swept Anderson from the line of the stumps, falling away to the leg side as he did so, and watched the ball fly over the leaping first slip fielder.It was audacious, it was gloriously disrespectful, and it was in every way what we’ve come to expect from Pant.In time, we’ll get used to all the other bits too, because it’s taken more than just edge-of-the-seat shot-making for Pant to average upwards of 60 in these last two series he’s played, against strong bowling attacks in mostly bowler-friendly conditions.Rishabh Pant cuts behind point•Getty ImagesThrough that tour of Australia and this series against England, we’ve begun to understand the logic that underpins nearly every Pant innings. It’s often a logic entirely his own, such as when he decides the best way to deal with the ball turning and jumping out of the rough is to try and hit it for six, repeatedly, even with long-on an deep midwicket back and with India miles away from saving the follow-on.But sometimes, as on Friday, the logic is far more straightforward. This innings was as close as he has ever come to batting like a typical No. 6. The slap-happy finish will live long in the memory, but the build-up was utterly sedate, by his standards, and brilliantly calculated.When Pant walked in, India were 80 for 4, and trailed by 125 on an unusual sort of pitch where there was help for the spinners but also enough to interest the quicker bowlers, with the odd ball seaming or stopping on the batsman or kicking up awkwardly. The old ball was swinging too, and Anderson had exploited this expertly to remove Ajinkya Rahane with what turned out to be the last ball before lunch.Twelve overs after Pant’s entry, Rohit Sharma was out for 49 off 144 balls. He faced 90 balls from England’s fast bowlers and scored 19 runs off them. This was a batsman who came into this game with a series strike rate of 80.98 against fast bowling. The conditions clearly weren’t made for flat-bat drives through the covers. Not just yet, anyway. Pant would have to bide his time. He’d have to take 28 balls to get into double figures.But there were clear incentives in front of him.England had picked only four bowlers, and one of them, Ben Stokes, was an allrounder who had only bowled 15 overs across the first three Tests. They weren’t trusting one of their two spinners, Dom Bess, to bowl a proper bowler’s share of overs.Pant came to the crease in the 26th over of the morning. Anderson was in his seventh over of the day. Stokes had bowled 10 already. Jack Leach, England’s main spinner, had bowled seven. Bess had only bowled two.Pant had arrived at a delicate moment for India. But he had also arrived at a moment when England’s meagre resources were beginning to get stretched, in the hottest stretch of a 38-degree day in Ahmedabad.6:53

Rohit Sharma – I don’t want anyone get upset when Pant gets out playing shots

Those resources had done exceptionally well to restrict India to 56 for 3 in the first 25.5 overs of the day. But there were two more sessions to go, and six more wickets to take, against an India line-up featuring three spin-bowling allrounders at Nos. 7, 8 and 9.By the time England got their next breakthrough, Rohit trapped in front by Stokes’ reverse-swing, they had used up five more overs from Anderson, and brought Stokes on for another spell. They hadn’t yet bowled Leach at Pant, possibly fearing the damage he could do against left-arm spin. So while Pant had to survive a nervy early period against Anderson, he only had to face Bess – who struggled all day to find his length – and the part-time offspin of Joe Root from the other end.By the time India were six down, Stokes had bowled 15 overs in the day, and Pant had moved to 30. The second new ball was 21.5 overs away, which meant at least another hour’s rest for the quicks.This was where India’s batting depth came to the fore. It was like India’s 2018 tour of England in reverse. The visitors had worked their socks off to get into a position of strength, but the home team’s batting simply wouldn’t end. For Sam Curran, substitute Washington Sundar. Another left-hand batsman, blessed with the same crisp timing and an even sounder technique.Sundar and Pant came together with India trailing by 59, but you wouldn’t have guessed it looking at the tone of the game during the early part of their partnership. Bess and Root sent down the first five overs after tea, with plenty of protection on the boundary when Pant was on strike. This was understandable, but it allowed him to get off strike whenever he wished to. He only faced seven balls in those five overs, allowing Sundar to get his eye in against England’s two least threatening bowlers.By the time Leach returned to the attack, the ball was 67 overs old, and was no longer zipping off the track like it had done during his first spell of the day. By the time a tired Stokes returned with five overs to go for the new ball, India’s deficit was down to nine runs. Sundar was batting on 24, and Pant on 55, off 90 balls.Pant would go on to score 46 off his next 28 balls. He was done waiting and watching. He was done respecting the bowling, the situation, and his elders.

Nervousness, goosebumps, a dream – Keegan Petersen ready for Test debut

Test captain Dean Elgar singled out the middle-order batter as a player to watch out for ahead of the West Indies Tests

Firdose Moonda07-Jun-2021Finally, South Africa have their KP.No, not the opinionated one with funky hairstyles but someone with the same two initials. Keegan Petersen is also a batter, a self-confessed bringer of “banter, on and off the field” and is set to make his debut on Thursday against West Indies as South Africa play their first series of another new era. He’ll bat in the top five, wants to score runs and rib both his team-mates and the opposition in the future.”I like to believe I am an energetic, positive-energy type of person,” Petersen said, just before the team departed for the Caribbean. “I don’t take things seriously, in a good way. I find a joke in everything and I lighten the mood so hopefully, it rubs off in the right way. And I hope I bring runs.”So will South Africa, after a lean period in which the batters have collectively produced only three centuries in their last eight Tests, crossing 300 just twice in 15 innings. Their problems range from lack of confidence – especially against spin – to an inability to convert starts or build partnerships, but Petersen could be crucial in ensuring that changes.While his presence won’t bring experience in international caps like line-ups of old, his nine years in the first-class game includes an accumulation of knowledge of a range of conditions that South Africa have historically struggled on. Petersen made his name on the slow pitches in Paarl before moving to the flat decks of Bloemfontein and ultimately the more challenging spinning surfaces in Durban, which he believes are the ultimate preparation for the Caribbean. “Kingsmead has prepared me for any slow or turning wicket because that’s all we get in Durban,” he said. “It almost gave me the worst conditions so whatever I get [on this tour], I’ll be prepared for.”

“I’ve been nervous for a while now. It gives me goosebumps thinking about it. I know I will have big boots to fill. Anyone would be nervous. This is what we dream of as kids and eventually when the dream becomes a reality, it gives your system a bit of a shock”Keegan Petersen

His domestic coach, Imraan Khan, agrees. “He is a very determined, smart player who knows his game well. And he’s got a good all-round game,” Khan told ESPNcricinfo. “He is quite a short guy, so he plays square a lot of the time and he has a good game against spin. That’s one of the reasons he came to Durban – to expand his game against spin. He has good footwork, forward and back, and has really developed his sweep shot.”Petersen announced himself at the Dolphins last season with a score of 173 in his first appearance for his new team after three summers with the Knights.It was with the Knight, in the 2018-19 season, that he had first caught the eye of the national selectors. That year, he was the leading run-scorer in the first-class competition with 923 runs at an average of 61.53. Those numbers earned him a call-up to the South African squad for the 2019-20 season – Mark Boucher’s first in charge – but Petersen could not force his way into the XI ahead of Rassie van der Dussen and Zubayr Hamza. Instead, he was mentored by Jacques Kallis, who was working as South Africa’s batting consultant in that period. “He enjoyed being able to absorb information from someone like Kallis,” Khan said.Petersen pulls Chris Woakes through the leg side•Getty ImagesSince then, his numbers have dipped slightly but he remains among the top performers on the domestic scene. In the 2020-21 season, Petersen finished in the top ten first-class run-scorers and averaged 44. He might have played in the festive Tests against Sri Lanka but missed the series for health reasons. He then travelled to Pakistan but again couldn’t get a game. “That bubble was extremely difficult because we were stuck in a hotel on one floor. We couldn’t go anywhere, we couldn’t do anything,” he said. “I hope the Caribbean will be different.”Related

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It already is. South Africa are staying at the Harbour Club and have access to a golf course and a beach, so any sense of claustrophobia has been mitigated. And Petersen is all but assured he will get the chance to play after new captain Dean Elgar singled him out as the likely replacement for the retired Faf du Plessis before the team’s departure. He also knows there are going to be a lot of expectation from him.”I’ve been nervous for a while now,” Petersen said. “It gives me goosebumps thinking about it. I know I will have big boots to fill. Anyone would be nervous. This is what we dream of as kids and eventually when the dream becomes a reality, it gives your system a bit of a shock. I’ve been around, so for me to get a go in the sides means a lot because I know where I’ve come from and I know the journey has been tough and long. This is what we work for.”

Harmanpreet Kaur: 'Nicole Bolton realised I couldn't cook, so she taught me to make eggs'

The India batter on her love for dal, giving up gluten, and surviving long tours without home-cooked food

As told to Annesha Ghosh29-Jun-2021What’s your favourite meal?
Dal, or anything gravy-based. But dal of any kind is a perennial favourite. I can have it pretty much every day of the week, and once I spot dal in my plate, my meal is complete.What Punjabi dish can you brag about being good at making?
I have trouble with the smell of cooking oil. I am not at all good at cooking. I can’t even stand around in the kitchen much. Nor do I have much interest in it, to be honest. During the lockdown I tried my hand at learning an Indian dish or two, but without much success. I tried cooking chicken, but then realised [I can’t do this]. It looks a lot easier than it really is.What is the specialty in your family kitchen?
My parents are vegetarian. My brother and I eat non-vegetarian food only when we eat out. In general, we all eat quite light. The dal that’s cooked at home is unmatchable, so that would be my pick for the best dish from the Bhullar household.Which cricket venue has the best catering?
I remember the food we were served at the Feroz Shah Kotla in Delhi during the 2016 T20 World Cup match against Pakistan was . That’s the only international game I have played in Delhi to date, but the sumptuousness of the meals remains unforgettable.In general, no matter which part of India you play in, I feel you get served very good food. And that applies to overseas players, too. I think our board is good at ensuring the touring party is well looked after, food-wise. So they allocate chefs based on the food preferences of the foreign players. But when we tour overseas, getting used to sandwiches for the majority of the tour can be a bit challenging.

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Which cricketer you know is the best cook?
My friend Noopur [Kashyap], who played a bit of cricket with me in Punjab, is a terrific cook. Even if you wake her up in the middle of the night, she’ll whip up something amazing for you to eat. Among international cricketers, Australia’s Nicole Bolton has pretty impressive skills. During my debut season with Lancashire Thunder at the Kia Super League, I shared an apartment with her. Initially, while she would prepare her own breakfast, I would wait until 10am for the eateries to open, so I could eat out. After a point, Bolton realised I couldn’t cook (), so she taught me a few egg dishes. That was really nice of her to do.What does your match-day meal plan typically look like?
I like to eat light before all games, or else you can feel bloated quite easily, and it will affect your natural rhythm and running. When playing in India, I usually go for boiled rice, dal, and whatever vegetarian starters there are. After the game, I opt for a heavy meal, a nice balance of proteins and carbs, to make up for lost calories.Is there a food item you always carry on tour?
I like to take energy bars with me because you never know what sort of food arrangements will be available overseas. I can live on sandwiches only for a day or two and then I will invariably be, like, “, I am done.” So it helps if you want to have a quick bite and have an energy bar or two on you. They are quite light and help you stay full.What does your cheat meal typically comprise?
Mostly sweets. I am a sucker for and milk cake.What’s your favourite post-workout snack?
I usually don’t experiment much, I try to stick to something egg-based or a plant-based protein.Is there something you have removed from or added to your diet as part of a fitness regimen?
I have had to entirely bid goodbye to gluten. As you know, Punjabi families thrive on gluten. Rotis, parathas – there’s no escaping it if you’re a Punjabi. But I haven’t had gluten in any form in the past two years. That decision has paid off massively as my recovery post-match or post-injury has become quicker.

New Zealand experience shows Litton Das is ready for more responsibility

To be even more useful for Bangladesh, stepping away from T20Is could be the way to go for the wicketkeeper-batter

Mohammad Isam11-Jan-2022Litton Das’ counter-attacking innings on the third – and final – day of the Christchurch Test against New Zealand was the highlight from Bangladesh’s point of view. His approach, in which he strings together boundaries to put pressure on the opposition, which often forces a change in their tactics, worked well on the day, as he scored his second Test century despite an innings-and-117-run defeat.”He is technically very sound,” Bangladesh captain Mominul Haque said after the Test. “He gets a lot of time like world-class players. He always ensures he scores off the bad balls. He waits for a long time for the bad balls, and then makes it count. He has scored two centuries in consecutive series. Everyone, including myself, was really enjoying his batting.”Related

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Whichever direction Bangladesh goes in in the coming months, Litton has shown now that he is capable of taking on greater responsibility. In Christchurch. Mushfiqur Rahim’s injury meant that Bangladesh needed a middle-order batter with a bit of experience. Nurul Hasan was picked, which also mean that Litton could play as a batter at No. 5, giving him a significant role in the middle-order.The first innings didn’t go as planned. Trent Boult’s full delivery found Litton’s inside edge, as Bangladesh slipped to 27 for 5 after tea on the second day. Litton was one of the top five who all got out for single-digit scores. But unlike the four batters before him, Litton managed to bounce back with a significant score in the second innings.After following-on, Bangladesh’s second innings, despite a promising start, was going nowhere when Yasir Ali was dismissed before tea on the third day. Litton, however, stole the show in the next couple of hours.

The difference in Litton’s form in T20Is and Tests could mean that, even at this stage in his career, he might have to take a decision on how many formats he plays. He forms a strong opening pair with Tamim Iqbal, when he is available, in ODIs, but perhaps for Bangladesh to do well in Tests in the coming years, Litton’s focus should be on that middle-order

In a calculated attack, he took 17 and 16 off Kyle Jamieson and Trent Boult. He pulled and ramped the ball against the tall Jamieson, while driving Boult with confidence; the last of the four boundaries off the left-armer, a straight drive, really stood out.Suddenly, from a meandering 33 off 64 balls, Litton got to 64 within the next nine balls he faced.He lost Nurul and Mehidy Hasan Miraz not long after, leaving him in the 80s with the tail-enders. And soon, he was up against Neil Wagner, a bowler he had hit with three fours off before the tea break. Wagner didn’t hold back either, bouncing Litton repeatedly, and taunting him to go for his shots. Litton responded. He first pulled and then flat-batted Wagner over the covers for two fours. The second shot was very uncharacteristic, but it was yet another example that he was ready to play out of his comfort zone.Litton had already showed that he had the chops in Mount Maunganui. Walking into a situation when Bangladesh had lost Mushfiqur after a tough 19-over spell in the first innings, Litton left his stamp with an attacking 86. Bangladesh needed his positivity at that stage, because Mominul was more inclined to play a conservative role. Litton took on Tim Southee, Jamieson and Wagner, while maintaining caution against Boult and, somewhat surprisingly, Rachin Ravindra.Litton Das had a poor time of it at the T20 World Cup•Getty ImagesHis 158-run fifth-wicket stand with Mominul gave Bangladesh the lead, but more importantly, it was an extra point scored against the New Zealand bowling attack that had been grounded down by the Bangladesh top five.Litton had a good year as a Test batter in 2021 as well, but Bangladesh’s poor results overshadowed that. He ended the year with 114 (his maiden Test century) and 59 against Pakistan, in Chattogram. That came after Bangladesh’s top order had sunk in the first hour of the match. Litton attacked, but it was a comparatively measured approach, with Mushfiqur holding up the other end. Litton almost repeated the effort in the second innings, but ran out of partners.That came after he had been dropped for the T20I leg of the series following a poor T20 World Cup, and he was asked to play first-class cricket instead. He met his childhood mentor Nazmul Abedeen Fahim then, and discussed his game. Litton then headed to train in Chattogram before the rest of the squad had reached, and Bangladesh batting coach Ashwell Prince later said that Litton had worked on a slight issue he had with his stance.The difference in Litton’s form in T20Is and Tests could mean that, even at this stage in his career, he might have to take a decision on how many formats he plays. He forms a strong opening pair with Tamim Iqbal, when he is available, in ODIs, but perhaps for Bangladesh to do well in Tests in the coming years, Litton’s focus should be on that middle-order.Shakib Al Hasan has missed a lot of cricket of late, and neither he nor Mushfiqur are getting any younger. Perhaps Litton, with Test cricket as his focus, could be the man to step up.

Ireland coach Heinrich Malan: 'It's about inquisitively asking questions and getting people to think differently'

With 15 home games this summer, Ireland’s new coach is hoping the players get plenty of experience ahead of the T20 World Cup

Interview by Himanshu Agrawal31-Mar-2022You have been with New Zealand A and the senior New Zealand side before. How is coaching Ireland different?
More than anything, what really gets me up in the morning is when I look at their potential. They have made huge strides over the last five-six years, and have also become a Full Member. It’s understandable that there is going to be a little bit of transition. We haven’t played any red-ball cricket for a period of time, which will be a challenge. But in the same breath, we need to use the work we’ve done in the white-ball space as a springboard to be consistent across formats. We can keep building on the white-ball success and lay foundations in place for some red-ball cricket. Ireland couldn’t make it to the Super 12s of the T20 World Cup last year, after which they moved on from Kevin O’Brien. But immediately after, they qualified for this year’s T20 World Cup. How do you intend to rebuild the T20 side in the lead up to the tournament?
You’ve seen over the qualifying period – people like Paul Stirling, Andy Balbirnie, Josh Little and Andy McBrine all played their part. But it was also really exciting to see how different players stepped up at different times. Even in the [qualifying] semi-final [against Oman], Stirling and Balbirnie didn’t really get going, and we had Gareth Delany and Harry Tector coming to the fore [after Ireland were 19 for 2].Related

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Different players took ownership and responsibility, and that’s the mark of the best teams – they have people performing consistently, but different people. We want to get players to dovetail – especially around the T20 circuit, where you need one or two players to be that X factor. We’ve seen that different players have done that over a period of time. That’s something we are going to build on in our preparation in this upcoming summer, and hopefully get ourselves through to the Super 12s.You’ll be up against T20 heavyweights West Indies in the first round of the World Cup.
We’ve got West Indies and Scotland [in our group], and we’ll be waiting to see what it [finally] looks like and who comes out of the second qualifying tournament [World Cup Qualifiers B, to be played in Zimbabwe in July]. It’s a huge possibility that it could be Zimbabwe. The Ireland side has shown that it can beat Full-Member nations. A year ago they beat South Africa and England [in 2020]. The expectation is always going to be there for us to win as many games as possible, but it’s also about making sure we follow the structure we want to play and the brand of cricket we want to build. Ireland have shown that they can compete – they just beat West Indies [in an ODI series].Are you hoping for more active involvement of Ireland players in T20 leagues around the world?
That’s something we’ve really wanted to give some attention to. It’s about trying to find ways for our players to get exposed to those leagues, because the quicker we can get them there, the more experience they’ll bring back. We’ve seen that with Paul Stirling and Josh Little playing in the Sri Lanka league.On working with captain Any Balbirnie: “I’ve had some really good conversations with Balbo. He’s an experienced and a passionate leader”•Karim Sahib/AFP/Getty ImagesWhat do you think of the ODI Super League? Ireland have played 18 ODIs since it started in July 2020, the joint highest so far. They have played series against major teams like England, South Africa, West Indies, and have New Zealand coming up.
It’s playing more consistent cricket, which is key. You’ve seen from a selection point of view that it’s the same names in that ODI side who have played over a couple of years now. And when players play, they gain the experience to play what’s in front of them as opposed to trying to show that they can play. And that’s a huge difference – once players go and play for the team, they play the situation, which you can only have once you play regularly.This coming summer we have 15 international games at home. Once we do get to a World Cup, it just becomes another game since we have played these nations on a regular basis.There’s been a reduction in the number of teams at the ODI World Cup, from 16 in 2007 to ten in 2019 and 2023. Does it not then become difficult to qualify? And if you don’t, you lose out on appearing on the biggest stage of the game.
As much as it is a challenge, that’s the stuff we as coaches talk about most of the time – being adaptable, versatile and agile. We don’t know how much cricket we are going to play. We have to be ready to play what’s in front of us.Learning from my time in New Zealand, that’s what happened – they were okay in different tournaments, but then became consistent. Now everyone wants to play the Black Caps because they have been successful over periods of time.But at the same time, there is going to be one ICC tournament every year until 2031. Is that a positive?
Yeah, 100%. The way it has been structured is that if you finish in a certain spot, you automatically qualify. It’s becoming more and more important because then you know how to prepare for the upcoming tournament. You don’t have to go to the qualifier, which is cut-throat. There are a few players in our squad who, over the next four years or so, will play a lot for Ireland, and hopefully these experiences over the last 18-24 months will stand us in good stead once we get down to Australia, and when we hopefully qualify for the 2023 one-day World Cup.”Trying to get better every day is as big a part of what I’m trying to be like as a coach, as is what I’m trying to challenge my players to do”•Kai Schwoerer/Getty ImagesWhat are your plans to ensure Ireland become an active Test team?
It’s well documented that Covid and the [bad] financial times have put a bit of a constraint around the focus area. There’s obviously been a real focus from a white-ball point of view. But it’s also for us as an organisation to think outside the box on how we best use our funding, get more players to consistently play three- or four-day cricket.How do we create opportunities for some of our players to play in the UK? If you look back to when Ireland was building up to having the golden years, a lot of those players were playing county cricket and were hardened first-class cricketers by the time they played for Ireland.How do we best use our training facilities? How do we best [organise] our domestic competitions, knowing we’ve got some iffy weather sometimes? Training in an indoor centre knowing that we are going to go to the subcontinent, where the ball is going to turn square?Hopefully some of my experiences over the last ten years in New Zealand, which is similar in terms of conditions over winter, can help. It is only recently that facilities have changed in New Zealand, with marquees and things like that.Do you believe the absence of the Intercontinental Cup will affect Ireland’s and aspiring Test nations’ preparations for the longest form? Are you seeking a potential second division of the World Test Championship with a promotion-and-relegation rule?
There’s a lot of white-ball cricket going on, and that’s what the ICC is trying to use to grow the game. The overarching thing is the challenge around making sure that we keep pushing for more longer day games for players to grow and be competitive. Just like we’ve seen in the white-ball space, where your so-called Associates or lesser nations have shown they can beat some bigger teams. It’s because they’ve had more exposure. If we can replicate that in the red-ball space – whatever that looks like – it’ll be a win-win.Ireland recently beat West Indies 2-1 in an ODI series away from home•CWI MediaHow do you plan to build depth with the Ireland A and Under-19 sides?
The Wolves – the Ireland A side – is becoming a real focus. We’ve highlighted the need to create a bigger pool of players. We’ve got to use our home internationals, building up to the T20 World Cup as preparation. We’ve also got to make sure that we keep challenging the way we go about building that squad. There’s still a lot of work to be done.I don’t think our player pool at this stage is big enough to have two teams; you look at India, Australia, maybe New Zealand, who can literally put up two teams if they need. That’s something for us to aim to for the future.How will you get Ireland to be more consistent?
It’s about understanding the way we want to play. Whether we are in trouble early on or whether we’ve got a really good start, players understand the way we want to operate. They can take ownership of that and keep each other accountable. It’s also through playing and getting the opportunity consistently.But it has to flow through the whole structure. It’s about making sure that our A team and U-19 coaches have an understanding of the brand we want to play and consistently evolve and educate our players towards that.Who are the players you see taking Ireland forward five years down the line?
Curtis Campher and Josh Little have already shown they can play and compete at this level. They are relatively young. Neil Rock, Ben White and Josh Delany have all started to show that they’ve got the ability to perform. Craig Young and Simi Singh, over the last 12-18 months in ODI cricket, have shown the ability to be prolific.The more we create such opportunities from an Ireland perspective, the quicker they grow into the players they are ultimately going to become.”Some guys will love the sports science, some will hate it. It’s about trying to find balance and trying to make it relevant, so that they can use the information to perform”•Hagen Hopkins/Getty ImagesYou are known to be interested in sports science. Can you tell us how it helps in coaching?
It’s the individual piece that is more intriguing for me. What can I help a player with that’s going to make him understand or connect to something, or want to do something differently? Sometimes that’s biomechanical, sometimes that’s stats-driven, and sometimes it’s the understanding of the physical side of things. That’s the exciting thing for me now to get into the environment of the Ireland and Wolves space – to get to know players, what makes them tick, and then start working towards challenging different people to be their best.Has sports science helped you as a coach in the past?
There’s numerous examples we can look at on how stats analysis or data analysis could come in and create opportunities. The match-ups, understanding conditions, and how does that impact the game formats or our game systems.It’s also about understanding the body. Where does recovery come into it? How does preparation aid us in performing at our best? How does workload management affect us – whether it’s recovery, sleep patterns, nutrition?I’ve always spoken about a cricket side as being a kindergarten: you’ve got a fat one, a thin one, one with sunglasses and one with red hair, and they all play together. Our challenges as coaches is to make sure that we get the best out of the group, and also understanding that they are all doing it differently. Some guys will love the sports science, some will hate it. It’s about trying to find that balance and trying to make it relevant, so that they can use the information to perform. Sometimes, less is more. You just don’t know that until you’ve actually spent time with people and get to know them.Malan named Josh Little and Simi Singh as part of a bunch of players who have the potential to carry Ireland forward in the future•Michael Steele/ICC/Getty ImagesFor me, it’s about getting to know those players who are on the cusp or have been in and out of the main side, and also starting to feel what the next generation looks like. The generation we work with have become the real Dr Google generation. You want an answer, you go to Google and you get it straightaway.The coaching piece is really challenging in that space because there’s no right way; it’s about inquisitively asking those questions and getting people to think differently. Ultimately it’s not about telling them, it’s about getting them to figure it out. But you’ve got to know them first to know which questions to ask.Former England analyst Nathan Leamon called Eoin Morgan an analyst’s dream captain.
And that’s the thing I like. You talk about targets as an example. If we’ve got to get 200 in a T20 game, some players want to know exactly how many we need to have at the end of the six-over powerplay. And there are players who are the total opposite: they just want to go out there and experience it themselves. It’s about trying to find the balance, and we play a huge role in that. It’s not about “This is the way we are going to do it.” It’s rather about “This is what’s in front of us, and you tell us how you’re going to do it.” The “what” and “how” is a huge part of my philosophy.The key point from a sports science and medical perspective for me is: how are we going to manage players’ bowling loads when they have not bowled in multi-day cricket for more than two years? How do we make sure that bowlers are actually doing what’s needed? It’s going to be a real challenge. But we’ve got some experienced people in the sports science and medical field, and hopefully I’ll bring a different view in the way I’ve managed my squads in New Zealand in the last ten years.What’s the most important lesson you have learnt in the last ten years in terms of coaching and player management?
I read that the only constant in planning is that it’s ever evolving. That’s something I’ve learnt massively over the last ten years – that you plan to change. A real strength of mine is being planned and organised. At the start of my coaching career, I almost felt like the world comes to an end when something has to change, whereas now that I’ve got the blueprint in my head or on paper, if things need to change, I’m really happy to change because I know where I’m trying to go to because I’ve got the plan.Ireland’s junior side were runners-up in the Plate final of the recent Under-19 World Cup in the West Indies•Matthew Lewis/ICC/Getty ImagesWorking specifically in a first-class and a high-performance environment is understanding that you plan to evolve and change every day. And that’s a good thing, because you’re playing what’s in front of you.Sometimes as coaches, we go the other route – “Say as I say, and do as I do”. That’s the fun piece. I’m only turning 42 this year, so I’m still very young at my craft. Trying to get better every day is as big a part of what I’m trying to be like as a coach, as is what I’m trying to challenge my players to do.Have you spoken to captain Andy Balbirnie, or coach Graham Ford, who will be passing the baton on to you?
I’ve spoken to them, plus other players and support staff. Unfortunately, I’m a pretty diligent player organiser, which, to my detriment, doesn’t allow me a lot of sleep! Then subtly, over time, once I’ve got my feet under the table, I build those relationships, start having a bit of influence and some more challenging conversations.But I’ve had some really good conversations with Balbo. He’s an experienced and a passionate leader. Graham has done a fantastic job over the last four years, and is very valuable to sit down and catch up with. He was really frank and open-minded – which I was thankful for – because it gave me an understanding of where he sees things.We’ve got some real senior players who have played for Ireland over a period of time. How do we as a collective make sure we get this wheel to grow? And not just grow, but also turn quicker.

Scenarios: All eyes on Capitals and RCB with one round of fixtures remaining

The hopes of Sunrisers, Kings and KKR hinge on these two teams slipping up

S Rajesh17-May-2022Sunrisers Hyderabad: Mat 13, Pts 12, NRR -0.230
Sunrisers Hyderabad finally broke their run of five successive defeats, but the margin of their victory against Mumbai Indians was only three runs. That means their qualification chances are still extremely slim due to their poor net run rate of -0.230.Even if they win their last game, and if Delhi Capitals and Royal Challengers Bangalore lose theirs, the margins of two of those results will have to be huge for Sunrisers to have any chance. If, for example, Capitals lose by 50 runs chasing 200 in their last game against Mumbai Indians, Sunrisers will have win by 73 (if they score 200) against Punjab Kings to surpass Capitals’ NRR.Also, they will have to hope that Kolkata Knight Riders lose their last game against Lucknow Super Giants and remain on 12 points; otherwise, Sunrisers will have to exceed the NRR of Knight Riders too.Delhi Capitals: Mat 13, Pts 14, NRR 0.255
Delhi Capitals’ comfortable 17-run win against Punjab Kings on Monday was good news for them, but not so encouraging for all the other teams trying to sneak into the playoffs. Their net run rate, which was already a healthy 0.210, went up to 0.255, but the runs that Punjab Kings scored towards the end ensured there is still a chance for other teams to catch up, should there be an NRR scramble for the last spot.From Capitals’ point of view, the equation is simple: win the last game against Mumbai Indians on Saturday, and they qualify for sure. Even if they lose and stay on 14, they will have a fair chance to qualify if Royal Challengers Bangalore lose to Gujarat Titans. However, if it comes down to NRR, they aren’t yet safe.If Capitals lose their last game by 30 runs (chasing 171), their NRR will fall to 0.123. Currently Kolkata Knight Riders are at 0.160, so a win by any margin in their last game will keep them above 0.123. If Capitals lose by 15, their NRR will be 0.179. Thus, Capitals could still be on a sticky wicket if they lose to Mumbai Indians. They play their last game after Knight Riders, though, so they will know the equation before they get into that game on Saturday.Punjab Kings: Mat 13, Pts 12, NRR -0.043
Kings’ qualification chances have taken a severe beating with their loss to Capitals. Their NRR has slid into negative space, and even a 40-run win against Sunrisers in their last game (after scoring 170) will only improve it to 0.112. However, big victory margins have been common in the last few games – in seven of the last 13, the winning margin has been greater than 50 runs, while another win came with 31 balls to spare – which should give Kings some hope.They also play the last game of the league stage, which means they’ll know if they have a chance at all, and exactly what they need to do. Obviously, if Capitals or Royal Challengers win their last match and move to 16 points, Kings will be knocked out.Royal Challengers Bangalore: Mat 13, Pts 14, NRR -0.323
Royal Challengers will need Capitals to lose their last game to stand a chance of qualifying. Even if Royal Challengers score 200 and win their last game by 100 runs, their NRR will only improve to 0.071. Capitals will be well ahead of that if they win by any margin.And if both these teams lose and stay on 14, Capitals will have to lose by an absurdly high margin for their NRR to slip below that of Royal Challengers. For instance, if Royals Challengers lose by one run, Capitals will have to lose by around 150 (depending on the exact scores).In other words, Royal Challengers will have to win their last game, against table-toppers Titans, and hope that Capitals lose theirs against bottom-of-the-table Mumbai Indians.Royals and Super Giants are locked in a tight tussle for a second-place league finish behind Gujarat Titans•BCCIKolkata Knight Riders: Mat 13, Pts 12, NRR 0.160
Knight Riders still have a chance of qualifying if they win their last game, and if Capitals and Royal Challengers lose theirs. As mentioned earlier, their relatively healthy NRR means they are best placed to capitalise if those two teams slip up.Lucknow Super Giants: Mat 13, Pts 16, NRR 0.262
Lucknow Super Giants are already on 16, a tally that only four other teams can reach. Among them is Royal Challengers, with an NRR of -0.323. For Super Giants to lose out on a playoffs spot, they will have to suffer a big defeat against Knight Riders while Royal Challengers pull off a huge win against Titans.If Super Giants lose by 60 runs (chasing 201), Royal Challengers will have win by 89 (after scoring 200) to sneak ahead on NRR. That means Super Giants should consider their qualification chances pretty safe. They will be aiming higher than that, and will want to finish among the top two. That will depend entirely on the results of the last games of Super Giants and Rajasthan Royals, who are also on 16 points, but with a slightly better NRR.Rajasthan Royals: Mat 13, Pts 16, NRR 0.304
Like Super Giants, Royals are quite safe in terms of securing a place in the last four. For them to lose out, they will have to lose by 80 runs, while Royal Challengers will have to win their last game by the same margin (or the sum of the margins of these results will have to be roughly 160, depending on the actual scores).If both Royals and Super Giants win their last game, NRR will decide who finishes second and plays the first qualifier. If Super Giants score 180 and beat Knight Riders by 20 runs, Royals will need a 10-run win with the same total to stay ahead on NRR.

Throwback to pre-Covid times as Cuttack's cricket party kicks off on match eve

Impassioned crowd turns up for India’s nets, with Sunday’s T20I set to be the first international match at the Barabati Stadium since 2019

Hemant Brar12-Jun-2022It’s a short ball on middle and leg stump. As Shreyas Iyer moves across and pulls it towards the square-leg boundary, the crowd at the Barabati Stadium in Cuttack goes berserk. People are cheering, whistling, shrieking, and making all sorts of appreciative sounds human vocal cords are capable of.For a moment, it feels as if we are in the middle of the second T20I between India and South Africa. But it is only the eve of the match, and Iyer is having a practice session at the side strip.Related

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To say people in Cuttack are passionate about cricket is an understatement. The last time India and South Africa played a T20I here, in 2015, play had to be stopped twice as a section of the crowd started hurling plastic bottles onto the ground. The reason behind their anger being India getting all out for a mere 92 after being put in. The fans first threw water bottles onto the field during the innings break and then twice during South Africa’s chase.On Saturday, though, an entirely different but equally impassioned side of the Cuttack crowd was on display.The Odisha Cricket Association had opened one stand so that fans could watch the players train. During the day, the temperature hovered around 33° Celsius but such was the humidity it felt closer to 40°. A weather forecast cautioned against strenuous activities, saying there was a danger of dehydration, heat cramps and heat stroke. Even when the sun logged out for the day, there wasn’t much relief; you could still feel your clothes sticking to your body with sweat.But fans still came out in large numbers to watch their favourite cricketers practise their trade. Almost filling the whole stand next to the sightscreen at the Mahanadi end, they applauded every time a shot was played and gasped whenever the ball beat the bat.Diagonally opposite to that stand, just below the media box, was stationed the biggest cricket fan in India: Sudhir Kumar Chaudhary. Or if not the biggest, definitely the most recognised, with his body painted in blue, and an Indian flag in hand. After a couple of interviews with local news channels and more than a dozen selfies with fans, Chaudhary started waving the flag with his never-ending energy.Iyer was one of the first Indian batters to come out for the practice. He started on the side strip, which was almost indistinguishable from the lush outfield.

Of late, Iyer has been troubled by short-of-good-length deliveries, so it was almost imperative he faced some of those. A barrage of short balls was met with full-blooded pull shots, and with each shot, the cheer from the spectators got louder.The decibel levels peaked when Rishabh Pant played an aerial shot in the direction of the crowd, and you almost believed that all those shots were propelling India towards a big total.Between all the festivities, one person even managed to escape the security and reach the advertising board next to the boundary line. A policeman spotted him just in time and took him away. Apparently, the man was seeking an autograph.You do not generally get such a big crowd in India on a non-match day, unless Chennai Super Kings are having one of their training sessions. But then Cuttack doesn’t get to host too many international matches. In the last six years, they have staged only two ODIs and one T20I.Crowd trouble held up play the last time a T20I against South Africa was held in Cuttack, in October 2015•AFPSunday’s T20I will be the first international match in Cuttack since 2019. With the Covid-19 situation in the country now relatively under control, the BCCI has allowed 100% attendance at all the venues for this series. It seemed fans were just waiting for an opportunity to watch the players in the flesh instead of following their digital images on two-dimensional screens.In 2021, at the peak of the pandemic in India, an ongoing IPL was seen by many as an obscene gesture. But now the sport is playing a part in helping people return to their pre-Covid lives. It has shifted their conversation from the latest variant of the virus and the number of active cases in their city, to Umran Malik’s blistering pace and Hardik Pandya’s dream comeback.The hotel I am staying at has a signboard at the entrance with “NO MASK, NO ENTRY” written in block letters. But their business is finally picking up after a lull in the last two years. And when room service came to know what I was there for, one of the staffers couldn’t help asking that same old question: “Do you have an extra ticket, sir?”Like all the previous times, I didn’t have one but I don’t think that request had ever brought a smile to my face before.

Joey Evison braced for his accession as Kent prepare to bid Darren Stevens farewell

Young allrounder in a hurry to succeed, and ready to take the expectation in his stride

David Hopps13-Sep-2022The man who must replace Darren Stevens was relaxing on the boundary edge at Canterbury. Joey Evison has the ability to make his own headlines as the seasons go by. But for the moment he is consigned to a supporting role in a Royal London Cup final that will be billed as Stevo’s Kent farewell.”No questions about Stevo,” joked a passing Kent team-mate as Evison took time off from 12th-man duties during a Championship match against Essex to tell his own story. It is an impressive one, too, the joint fastest half-century ever scored at U-19 level, a record he shares with Rishabh Pant, and now a one-day cup final back at Trent Bridge after Nottinghamshire loaned him to Kent ahead of a full-time transfer at the end of the season.This weekend, though, Stevo’s shadow spreads large. How could it not be when, at 46, he has propelled Kent into the 50-over final with successive scores of 49 against Lancashire in a must-win group game; 41 against Leicestershire in the play-offs, on the ground where his career began, and then, most astonishingly of all, an unbeaten 84 from 65 balls against Hampshire in a semi-final that Kent edged by three wickets with an over to spare? After 26 years, he still refuses to accept that the final might be the end of his journey. A cricketer who is adamant he deserves a player/coach role, if not at Kent then elsewhere, and who appears to live by Arthur Schopenhauer’s age-defying dictum that once you are over the hill you begin to pick up speed.So maybe just one Stevo question? Evison is happy to oblige, as best he can – he has only been at Kent six weeks. If he is feeling the pressure of being identified as Stevens’ successor, he is managing it nonchalantly enough.”Obviously, he is an all-rounder like me, but I’m just starting out whereas he’s a Kent hero, isn’t he? I don’t know him too well, but he’s been so supportive and nice to me for the last couple of weeks I’ve been playing with him.”He’s a Kent legend, just a great guy to have around the dressing-room. To keep playing as he is at the same level for a number of years now. It’s just really inspiring. I don’t know what I’ll be doing when I’m that age. That’s 26 years away.”Stevens knows every undulation of the Canterbury ground and has advised Evison how to cope with its particular challenges.”There’s a big slope and people struggle bowling at that end.”Evison’s opportunities at Nottinghamshire were limited but he made them count when he could•PA Images/GettyStill finding his way around, he conceded he didn’t know what the end was called. The Nackington Road End is not the sort of uber-cool name that sticks in the mind. He has been spending time getting to know Canterbury (he was raised in Stamford, a similar sort of place, and loves it) and advancing his career step by step while bellows of “Stevooooo” sound across the grounds.Joeeeeey’s move to Kent (okay, it’s a bit early for the chant) will have surprised many. He is a genuine allrounder (Kent have used him as an opener in the Royal London Cup) and Nottinghamshire valued him highly, but not enough to play him often. Peter Moores, their coach, called him “a player of immense promise” and described his departure as “bitterly disappointing” and “hard to take”.Nottinghamshire were well stocked with allrounders, not least their highly-respected captain Steven Mullaney, 35 now but still a major influence on a winning side. When Evison did get a game at the start of the season it was because the overseas fast bowlers had not yet turned up and he found himself plugging holes (my words, not his) as a fourth seamer, batting at No.9. He responded with a maiden Championship century, but was briefly loaned out to Leicestershire in search of greater opportunities before Kent came calling.Related

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“It’s just about opportunity for me at this stage of my career,” Evison said. “There really wasn’t a fit. I’ve been waiting for a couple of years now. When I’ve got my opportunity, I’ve taken it. That’s all you can do really. And that’s why I’ve come to Kent. Notts said they’re disappointed, but I wasn’t getting played. And that’s the past now. I just want to move on with the new club. And I’m very excited.”He joined Notts via the Lincolnshire development pathway and, at 15, he became one of the youngest players ever to strike a hundred in the Nottinghamshire Premier League. He soon followed his father, Gareth, a wicketkeeper-batter for Lincolnshire, in winning an England U-19 call. His father has been a big influence as was Dean Headley, the former Kent and England quick, the director of cricket at Stamford School. Although not blessed with great pace, he has proved himself adept at moving the ball both ways and has a presence with the bat.He is still technically a Notts player, so found himself in the awkward position of wanting them to do well, but not so well that they faced Kent in the 50-over final. “If they had got to the final, I wouldn’t be able to play against them. Obviously, I like to see them do well, but…”It’s going to be weird playing for a different team at Trent Bridge, but as a player you play to win trophies. If I can do that in the first month or so of me being here, that would be amazing. We didn’t have a great start to the competition, but we’ve just got so much momentum now. We won the last five games in the competition and they were all must-win games. And they were all close ones.”Darren Stevens takes the plaudits after guiding Kent into the Royal London Cup final•Getty ImagesStevens’ story began in 1997, an optimistic age of Britpop and first-term Tony Blair. Evison’s professional career began amid the loneliness and anxiety of Covid lockdowns. “We were all in the same boat,” he said, philosophically.He had just come back from the 2020 U-19 World Cup in South Africa and was involved in grass-wicket practice under a giant marquee when instructions were given to isolate at home. His lockdown routine was a lot of running and long dog walks back at the family home, for a couple of King Charles Spaniels no less – the dog breed that is expected to become suddenly popular after the death of the Queen. When he returned for the Bob Willis Trophy, against Derbyshire, it all went wrong.”I went through the whole of lockdown gagging to get back out there and then the first game I got injured. That was lockdown running. When you are not playing cricket, you have to keep your fitness up and you don’t know how much to do to keep on track. I did an awful lot of running which was the only thing you could do.”He didn’t play again for the rest of that truncated summer, and by the time he was loaned out to Leicestershire midway through 2022, Evison had been limited to nine first-class matches in four seasons – albeit his figures of 395 runs at 30.38 and 21 wickets at 25.28 backed up the sense of a player in a polite hurry to succeed.One unexpected benefit of his loan deal, however, was a friendly against the India tourists at Grace Road in which several India players, Pant among them, took the field for Leicestershire in one of these meaningless practice matches that have regrettably become so prevalent.Pant kept wicket with Evison in the field. And they had a connection because, in the warm-up matches for the 2022 U-19 World Cup in the Caribbean, he had equalled Pant’s record 18-ball half-century at U-19 level. It came against Sri Lanka at the Coolidge ground in Antigua, the ground famously bought by the American businessman Allen Stanford, whose brief attempts to become a big player in short-form cricket ended in criminal charges for him and embarrassment for England.Modesty prevailed. It might be seen as a bit crass to tap a worldwide star on the shoulder and, as an ice-breaker, tell him you share his world record at junior level.”I was thinking about mentioning it, but in the end I didn’t. I didn’t really get the opportunity. He’s got a bit of an aura about him but he’s such a nice guy, funny man as well.”Evison might get another chance for that conversation one day. Sport has dominated his life. He was at Leicester Tigers academy, as a 16-year-old fly half, before he had to choose between cricket and rugby. Impatience to progress led him into cricket just as it has now brought him to Kent.”When you’re 16 you can play ahead of your years in cricket, but not in rugby. Rugby is such a physical game; you can’t play with 24-year-olds because you just get physically damaged. I was just further on cricket. That was the route and I’m happy that I took it.”

Why Indian players need to be more aware of caste privilege and oppression

A recent incident tells of the need for education in this area

Sidharth Monga23-Jan-2023Stump mics do cricketers a great disservice. A cricket field is no ordinary workplace. All kinds of ugly talk that would earn someone the sack in an ordinary workplace is glorified in cricket. To let viewers listen in and also judge the players for what they say is mixed messaging. As it stands, the stump mic serves no purpose other than providing voyeuristic entertainment. If it was meant to be informative, commentators wouldn’t speak over it. If it is meant purely for cricket, it would be turned down after the shot is played and you have judged how sweet the connection is.That said, without incriminating anyone or virtue-signalling, we can use a recent incident to educate and sensitise ourselves. During the second Test between India and Bangladesh last month, an India player – let’s not guess who, because the person was not visible on camera – called his team-mate a “”, presumably because the latter had misfielded. are a caste-oppressed community of people who made or mended , temporary roofs. This was the only job they were allowed to do because of their caste, which was assigned to them by the accident of birth. However, the word has in recent years become a pejorative for someone who tries hard to be flamboyant. Looking blingy and flashy has been a form of expression and assertion by historically oppressed castes when they manage to earn enough money, but upper castes have looked down on such transformations, assigning the caste name to anything that is “cringe”.Related

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Even today, in the local trains of Mumbai, on the streets, in the maidans, even in the supposedly subversive world of rap songs, people, mainly of privileged castes, use “” as a derogatory term for anything or anyone cringeworthy. For example, to someone who prefers the aesthetic of Instagram Reels, TikTok is full of . Or if people see in a local train a man with a streak of blond hair and a colourful shirt, they might call him a .Because the term is so pervasively, casually and commonly used, and now goes beyond just caste, one could probably give this young cricketer the benefit of the doubt. Sometimes people from some states can pick up on popular terms from another part of the country without knowing how the word was derived. Still, if Black rappers use the n-word, it doesn’t become okay for others to use it.It is possible this player doesn’t know the ugly history of the word, but him probably not intending harm doesn’t mean harm is not done. Serious harm of perpetuating prejudice is done.He is hardly alone. During the Covid-19 lockdown, when players started to interview each other on Instagram, Yuvraj Singh, in a chat with Rohit Sharma, referred to Yuzvendra Chahal as a for his “cringe” TikTok videos, to the sound of laughter from Rohit. Again, are a community who, by accident of birth, were and are restricted to cleaning drains and toilets.When the matter blew up, Yuvraj responded with a non-apology, saying he was “misunderstood, which was unwarranted”. He expressed regret “if” he had “unintentionally” hurt someone’s feelings.Again, this is not to suggest Yuvraj is a monster, but he clearly didn’t have any counsel at the time telling him how what was a harmless comment to him hurts a whole community. As is in Bombay, is used as a slur commonly in north India. If a child doesn’t bathe all day, it is pretty normal for their mother to tell them not to be a . Google the term and you will find Bollywood stars using it self-deprecatingly to describe times when they are “shabbily dressed”.Instead of learning something from their abuse of these words, acknowledging historical and current caste oppression, and truly apologising for their ignorance, or worse, bigotry, people often double down and take offence at “misinterpretation” of what they said. These are members of a cricket team that took the knee to support the “Black Lives Matter” movement.They protested in Australia at being racially abused themselves by people in the stands. Imagine the spectators in that instance turning around and saying they were misunderstood, and Cricket Australia doing nothing. In fact, the hurt the Indian players felt at that alleged racial abuse should enable them to empathise with those at the receiving end of caste discrimination back home. Many of them experienced unimaginable hardships in their childhood; in an ideal world, they would be the first ones to empathise.Whenever there is a debate about caste in Indian cricket, a majority of fans of the sport are angered at the mere suggestion there might be discrimination based on caste. They like to imagine the sport is untouched by what goes on in society at large. Of course at the top level there is very little discrimination, because who doesn’t value an elite performer?This is where the caste system is more insidious than racism based on skin colour. It is not easy to look at the faces of players in India’s national team and say it is not representative, though in its history India has fielded less than a handful of players from Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes, who form about a fourth of India’s population. Only OBC (Other Backward Castes) players make it to the national team on a regular basis.

The description of some white South African players’ childhoods is not too different to those of Indians growing up ignorant of a more deeply entrenched system of discrimination that has endured for hundreds more years than apartheid

Scheduled Castes are the most caste-oppressed people of India. Scheduled Tribes are among those who have inhabited India the longest, preceding the Indus Valley civilisation and the Aryan invasion. They retain their distinct culture and live in separation from other communities, are geographically isolated and socio-economically disadvantaged. Both groups are protected under the constitution of the country.Young Indians are kept away from being educated about caste. When they grow up to be privileged adults, they keep themselves and their offspring shielded from this inconvenient topic.I have spoken to quite a few white South African cricketers who were kids during apartheid. They say they were never informed of what was going on in the country. Whether it is just an attempt to be on the right side of history now that apartheid is unequivocally accepted as an evil system, the description of these white players’ childhoods is not too different to those of Indians growing up ignorant of a more deeply entrenched system of discrimination that has endured for hundreds more years than apartheid. This is not to compare the horrors – apartheid was shorter but actually written in the law – but the “ignorance” of the beneficiaries of the two systems.To say that there is no player of a caste-oppressed background who has been denied opportunities at the highest level is disingenuous because the villages and small towns that Indian cricketers increasingly come from don’t even allow people of these backgrounds to use playgrounds; being able to afford all the facilities and equipment required to become an elite cricketer is a whole different leap altogether.If even at the top, players – officially representing India – can use casteist slurs and not even feel apologetic about it, can you imagine what the attitude of the caste-privileged system is towards caste-oppressed communities? Slurs do not endure if there is no deeper prejudice.Make no mistake, it is a caste-privileged system. I have spoken to a few people in the BCCI to find out if a caste-oppressed person has ever made it to a position of power in the board. Nobody remembers clearly. If such a person had indeed made it and it was such a non-event that it is not remembered, it would be the equivalent of India appointing a Muslim man or a tribal woman or a Dalit man as the president of the country, as they have done in recent years, and not shouting about it from the rooftops.A state official told me there was a time when a couple of officials from the so-called lower castes rose to positions of power in their state association. A superstar cricketer, he said, was quoted in the papers the next day saying something to the effect of: “Now will we have to be controlled by [washermen] and [cobblers]?”The BCCI does a great – sometimes underappreciated – job of conducting the number of matches it does, the academies it sets up, and the systems it has set in place, but it is dipping its feet in a talent pool too shallow for a vast country. There is much more to be done. Educating its players about the ugly history of these seemingly harmless putdowns will be just a start.

Final countdown: How might England line up for their World Cup defence?

England don’t play another ODI until September. Have they worked out their best XI yet?

Matt Roller07-Mar-2023

1. Jonny Bairstow

ODI career: 95 caps, 3634 runs at 46.58, SR 104.12If fit, Bairstow is a shoo-in at the top of the order•Getty ImagesBairstow has only recently started running again after the freak injury he sustained six months ago, and its severity means that a seamless return to fitness and form should not be taken for granted. But if he is anywhere near his best when he returns, Bairstow is an automatic selection as England’s opener – not least in India, where his prowess against spin should come to the fore.

2. Dawid Malan

ODI career: 18 caps, 769 runs at 54.92, SR 93.09Malan has made four centuries in his brief opportunity in the ODI side•Getty ImagesMalan has been the biggest beneficiary of England’s sporadic ODI winter, making three hundreds in nine appearances including a calculated, match-winning 114 not out in Mirpur last week. He will turn 36 before the start of the World Cup and has harnessed his extensive experience since making his England white-ball debut in 2017. As he did in T20Is, he has taken almost every opportunity he has been given in 50-over cricket, to the extent that he could even be marginally ahead of Jason Roy in the pecking order to open the batting.

3. Joe Root

ODI career: 158 caps, 6207 runs at 50.05, SR 86.93Root has barely featured in ODI cricket since the 2019 World Cup final•Getty ImagesA victim of England’s relentless schedule, Root has only batted a dozen times in ODIs since the 2019 World Cup final, averaging 35.10 without scoring a hundred. But he remains an automatic selection when available, offering the perfect foil for England’s more destructive players while playing a high-tempo, low-risk game himself. Two months at the IPL with Rajasthan Royals should provide ideal preparation, whether or not he plays regularly.

4. Jos Buttler (capt/wk)

ODI career: 165 caps, 4647 runs at 41.49, SR 117.97Buttler could benefit from a move up the order for England’s World Cup defence•AFP/Getty ImagesAnother automatic selection, as captain and wicketkeeper. Buttler has generally batted at No. 5 in ODIs over the last four years, but England must ensure he has sufficient opportunity to influence every game they play at the World Cup, particularly in the knockout stages: unless they lose two early wickets, he should shuffle up to No. 4 in India.

5. Harry Brook

ODI career: 3 caps, 86 runs at 28.66, SR 98.85Until his recent ODI debut, Brook hadn’t played a 50-over match since 2019•Getty ImagesBrook’s 50-over record hardly demands inclusion but he will be impossible to ignore. The three ODIs he played in South Africa were his only List A games, at any level, since May 2019, but his technique and style hardly alter between four-day and T20 cricket; the middle format should be ideally suited to him. He has thrived on slow, low pitches in Pakistan, and he will inevitably learn from two months at the IPL as a marquee signing for Sunrisers Hyderabad.

6. Liam Livingstone

ODI career: 12 caps, 250 runs at 31.25, SR 122.54; 6 wickets at 24.16, ER 5.80Livingstone slammed 66 off 22 balls against Netherlands last summer•Getty ImagesThe highlight of Livingstone’s fledgling ODI career to date is a 22-ball cameo against the Netherlands, but his versatility with bat and ball makes him an invaluable squad member. He has sometimes struggled to pace his innings, but batting at No. 6 in a 50-over game – especially in the final 10 overs, with five men out of the ring – is not far removed from the No. 4 T20 role he perfected for Punjab Kings in last year’s IPL.

7. Moeen Ali

ODI career: 129 caps, 2212 runs at 25.13, SR 99.46; 99 wickets at 49.89, ER 5.28Moeen’s record looks less impressive than it can feel when he comes good in his specific roles•Getty ImagesMoeen’s value to England’s white-ball set-up is often underestimated due to his underwhelming overall record. His batting and bowling averages are, respectively, lower and higher than he would like, but reflect the challenges of those roles: attacking early in his innings from No. 7, and bowling defensive offbreaks with only four fielders outside the inner ring. Throw in his role as Buttler’s vice-captain, and Moeen is a certain starter in India.

8. Sam Curran

ODI career: 23 caps, 318 runs at 24.46, SR 96.36; 26 wickets at 36.38, ER 5.86Curran has seized his chances in a variety of roles, particularly with the ball•Gareth Copley/Getty ImagesCurran is difficult to leave out of an England white-ball team, whether 20 overs or 50. He has become increasingly adaptable, adept in the middle overs and at the death, and showed in the second ODI in Mirpur that he retains his potency when handed the new ball. Curran adds balance with his useful lower-order hitting, and should thrive in Indian conditions.

9. Adil Rashid

ODI career: 125 caps, 183 wickets at 32.20, ER 5.64Rashid remains England’s pre-eminent spinner despite the emergence of Rehan Ahmed•AP Photo/Aijaz RahiAfter a quiet 2022, Rashid was back at his best in Bangladesh, claiming eight cheap wickets to take home the Player of the Series award. Despite the emergence of Rehan Ahmed, there is no player whose absence England would feel more keenly in India; they must make sure to look after his troublesome shoulder throughout the summer.

10. Jofra Archer

ODI career: 21 caps, 42 wickets at 21.73, ER 4.80Archer was the decisive factor in England’s 2019 win, and he’ll be crucial to their title defence too•Getty ImagesArcher has taken 12 wickets in four ODIs since his comeback from injury, and has regularly breached the 90mph/145kph mark over the last two months. Careful management will be vital in 2023: he will lead Mumbai Indians’ attack at the IPL in Jasprit Bumrah’s likely absence, then could feature in the Ashes before the World Cup. England would love him to feature in both series, but need to ensure he has plenty in the tank when he arrives in India.

11. Mark Wood

ODI career: 59 caps, 71 wickets at 37.88, ER 5.42Wood’s express pace will be vital on India’s wickets•Getty ImagesWood returned to England’s ODI set-up after a two-year absence in Bangladesh, and the sight of him charging in and slamming the ball into the pitch in Mirpur underlined his value to the side. As with Archer, Wood’s fitness record suggests he is unlikely to play every game across formats this summer; England need him in India more than they do in the Ashes, so his workload should be tailored accordingly.

12. Jason Roy

ODI career: 116 caps, 4271 runs at 39.91, SR 105.53Roy is in a fallow run of form, but has produced centuries in each of England’s last two series•Gareth Copley/Getty ImagesRoy looked like a busted flush in the 2022 summer when he endured a run of form so wretched that he lost his place in England’s T20 World Cup squad. But he has re-stated his worthy credentials with hundreds against South Africa and Bangladesh this year and it will take another lean summer for him to miss out altogether. However, if Roy is likely to start on the bench behind Malan, England may consider bringing a more versatile player – like Will Jacks or Phil Salt – as their spare batter.

13. Chris Woakes

ODI career: 112 caps, 1386 runs at 24.75, SR 89.82; 160 wickets at 30.23, ER 5.45Woakes may not play every game but would be a reliable bench presence•Getty ImagesThere is a justifiable case that Woakes has been England’s most reliable white-ball cricketer over the last eight years, and he is a certainty for the World Cup squad if fully fit. England will have to rotate their seamers across six or seven weeks in India; even in the event Woakes does start on the bench, he will doubtless play a role at some stage.

14. Olly Stone

ODI career: 8 caps, 8 wickets at 39.62, ER 5.98Stone’s impact in the middle overs has been reminiscent of Liam Plunkett’s former role•Getty ImagesAnother player with scant 50-over experience, Stone impressed in the middle-overs enforcer role in South Africa and provides a point of difference with his high pace. He has been around England’s squads across formats – and continents – this winter, and could form part of a varied pace-bowling arsenal in India.

15. Reece Topley

ODI career: 22 caps, 33 wickets at 27.03, ER 5.29Despite his injury issues, Topley’s impact in limited-overs has been immense in recent months•Getty ImagesTopley struggled in South Africa and was not selected in Bangladesh – reportedly due to a minor niggle – but was England’s most prolific ODI wicket-taker in the 2022 home summer. His upcoming stint with Royal Challengers Bangalore will double as a two-month apprenticeship for white-ball bowling in India.ESPNcricinfo Ltd

Notable absentees

It has been widely assumed that Ben Stokes will reverse his ODI retirement as soon as Buttler and Matthew Mott come calling later this year, but his long-standing knee complaint complicates matters. If available, he will come straight back into the squad, but Stokes may view the start of the English winter as the ideal opportunity to sort his injury out for good, then use the 2024 IPL to get himself ready for the subsequent T20 World Cup in the Caribbean and the US.Several batters remain in contention. Alex Hales could be floated in at the eleventh hour but has not played a 50-over match in four years; Phil Salt, Will Jacks and James Vince did little to further their cases in Bangladesh; Ben Duckett struggled in South Africa, but may find India’s pitches more suited to his methods; while Sam Billings has an impressive record but has still slipped down the pecking order since Mott’s appointment.Related

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Jacks’ versatility makes him the most likely player to provide another spin option – he could replace one of the spare seamers in the squad – while Rehan Ahmed and Liam Dawson are further alternatives. Matt Parkinson appears to have fallen out of contention altogether.David Willey, Brydon Carse and Saqib Mahmood are among the seamers who appear unlikely to form part of the squad at this stage despite recent ODI appearances, but could all mount strong cases over the next six months of short-form cricket.

Verdict: Can England go back to back?

England’s recent ODI form has been patchy, but reports of their demise in the format are exaggerated. Since lifting the World Cup at Lord’s in 2019, they have very rarely – if ever – fielded their full-strength side yet remain top of the ODI Super League, and have deep-seated trust in the squad that delivered the trophy four years ago.India will be favourites in October-November, looking to become the fourth successive host nation to win the 50-over World Cup, but England will not be too far behind. They are well-placed to achieve the minimum expectations of making it through the initial round-robin stage – at which point, they will suddenly be two wins away from defending their title.

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