Tanveer Sangha ruled out of New South Wales action with back stress injury

Legspinner is targeting a return to playing during the BBL which begins in December

ESPNcricinfo staff19-Sep-2022New South Wales legspinner Tanveer Sangha has been ruled out of the first part of the domestic season with a stress injury of his lower back.Sangha, who has been involved with Australia’s white-ball squads, is aiming to return to action during the BBL where he will play for Sydney Thunder.He was with the Australia A squad which toured Sri Lanka earlier this year, taking seven wickets in the two four-day matches, and had a brief stint as a replacement in the Hundred with Birmingham Phoenix. He also travelled to India as part of the group who attended the MRF Academy in Chennai.Sangha made his first-class debut last season and has taken 24 wickets in eight matches. He has a very impressive T20 record with 37 wickets at 18.43 and an economy rate of 7.46.His injury means there is unlikely to be a chance for him to partner Nathan Lyon this season with the latter part of the Sheffield Shield taking place when the Test side are in India during February and March.Lyon has been included in New South Wales’ squad for their Marsh Cup opener against Victoria on Friday and because he isn’t part of Australia’s T20I set-up, he will have the chance for plenty of Shield cricket before the first home Test against West Indies in late November.Youngsters Ollie Davies (hip) and Hayden Kerr (finger) are also on the injury list for New South Wales. Davies, like Sangha, is aiming to return during the BBL.

Dravid still awaiting official confirmation of the extent of Bumrah's injury

With less than a month till their first match at the T20 World Cup, India are sweating the fitness of their strike bowler

ESPNcricinfo staff01-Oct-20221:58

Rahul Dravid: ‘Official confirmation’ awaited about Jasprit Bumrah’s status for T20 World Cup

Forty-eight hours after the first reports of Jasprit Bumrah’s back injury, there is still no clarity on the extent and seriousness of it with India coach Rahul Dravid saying they are waiting on expert opinion.Bumrah and India are racing against the clock with the T20 World Cup just around the corner. The team leaves for Australia on October 6 and will play their first match of the tournament two weeks later.BCCI president Sourav Ganguly was unwilling to rule Bumrah out of the ICC event just yet, saying a decision is expected in “two or three days”. Dravid stuck to the same tune while addressing the press ahead of the second T20I against South Africa in Guwahati.”I haven’t gone deeply into the medical reports,” Dravid said. “I rely on the experts to tell me what it is. They ruled him out for this series, and he’s being assessed. We’ll know in due course what happens in the future. Obviously, till he’s completely ruled out, till I get official confirmation that he’s ruled out, we’ll always be hopeful, right? We’ll always hope for the best, for us as a team, and also for Jasprit as an individual. We will always hope for the best.”As of now, officially he has been ruled out of this T20 series against South Africa – these two games. He has gone to the NCA, and we are waiting for the official confirmation on the next steps. We will see what happens over the next few days, and once we get some official confirmation, we’ll be able to share that.”Bumrah is only just returning from a back injury, which sidelined him for two months between July and September 2022. He led India’s attack in two of the three T20Is against Australia a few days ago, with the captain Rohit Sharma saying it was pleasing to see the fast bowler in full throttle.But during practice before the first T20I against South Africa, Bumrah complained of back pain and was taken for scans in Thiruvananthapuram where it was revealed that he was suffering from a stress-related injury. He has since been rushed to Bengaluru, where the National Cricket Academy is located, and is in the care of the board’s medical team along with some independent experts who have been hired to take care of him and figure out a way forward.India’s T20 World Cup squad contains five fast bowlers. Bhuvneshwar Kumar, who is a powerplay specialist, Harshal Patel and Arshdeep Singh, who are back-end specialists, Hardik Pandya, who offers support during the middle overs and Bumrah who is yet to be ruled out. If he is though, the reserve players Mohammed Shami and Deepak Chahar come into the frame.Given those options, Dravid is not pressing the panic button just yet. “I think we’ve been very clear about the kind of skills that we want in the 15. I think for me that is really important, the kind of squad that we picked for the World Cup – barring injury, what were the kind of skills that we were looking for, different kind of bowlers, certain batting skills – so all of those things, without going into too much detail, we’ve always been very clear about it, and I think to a large extent we’ve managed to get everything.”Not everything will be perfect, at times due to injury, due to many other factors. I think, in terms of the skills in the squad, everyone being fit, as we go ahead from here on in, I think we’re quite comfortable that we’ve got all the skills that will allow us to play different combinations and different kinds of XIs based on the different wickets that we might get in Australia and the different oppositions.”I think that’s really important in a tournament like the World Cup where you play in five different venues, or four different venues in our case in the league stage, and then hopefully onwards, and you play against five different teams, so you really need to have that little bit of versatility and flexibility in your squad that allows you to change up things if you need to against a particular opposition. I think we’ve been very clear with that – yes, I mean obviously, over the last few series, we probably haven’t been able to play that squad due to a variety of reasons, and that can happen, but I think that most of the guys in the 15 now have had a pretty decent amount of cricket, at least in the last six months here.”Teams that have directly qualified for the Super 12 round of the T20 World Cup – as India have – can make changes to their squad without ICC permission till October 15.

Brendon McCullum: 'We'll be pushing for results. If we get outplayed, that's okay'

England coach says team will stick to positive approach for first Test series in Pakistan since 2005-06

Vithushan Ehantharajah28-Nov-2022Brendon McCullum says England will continue their mantra of attacking cricket in Pakistan ahead of a series in which he hopes his players will experience “the greatest accomplishment” of winning overseas.England’s first Test tour of Pakistan in 17 years is also a first assignment abroad for the McCullum-Ben Stokes revolution that took the home summer by storm. Six victories in seven Tests jump-started interest in the longest format in England, earning plenty of admirers along the way.Now, with the team in unfamiliar conditions – only James Anderson has toured Pakistan previously – McCullum has urged a similar approach, and is willing to take defeat in his stride provided the intent remains. He even posited that Stokes, as captain, will do his utmost to ensure none of the three Tests, the first starting on Thursday in Rawalpindi, will end in a draw.”To win away from home is the greatest accomplishment you can achieve as a Test player and as a Test side,” McCullum said in England’s first press conference since arriving into the country on Sunday morning.Related

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“We understand the size of the challenge in front of us. But that’s great – that’s why you want to play the game. You don’t want easy challenges, you want to take on the best in their own conditions and you want to try and test where you’re at as a side. I’m really excited. I don’t know if we’re going to win the series. I can almost guarantee when the skipper comes in here in 48 hours time he’ll say there’ll be no draws in the series.”We’ll certainly be pushing for results because we see it as our obligation to try and ensure that people walk away entertained. And if we get beat, Pakistan, we know, will have played well. I expect us to play well and if we get outplayed, that’s okay too. Looking forward to the opportunity, looking forward to the challenge and looking forward to the hospitality. And hopefully in a few weeks time everyone will say this has been an amazing series.”Helping that push towards replicating the summer’s work will be the crowds. Rawalpindi, Multan and Karachi are all set to be sellouts, adding to the theatre of the occasion. It won’t be wholly one-sided with a touring party of England supporters, including the Barmy Army, expected in the stands. McCullum anticipates that will fuel their work over the next month.”The boys have already said they’re pretty excited about playing in front of a full house here, it’s going to be a good atmosphere, so they’re really excited,” he said. “That’s what we want from red-ball cricket all around the world, stadiums packed out and fans getting behind their local team.”To have that on the road is the greatest compliment… we’re lucky that the crowd here is sold out and that’s kind of what we want. The skipper wants them to be rockstars and to be a rockstar you’ve got to play in front of the big houses. We’ve got that opportunity to do that.”Both teams trained side-by-side on the outfield of the Rawalpindi Cricket Ground on Monday morning. Only Mark Wood, who McCullum confirmed will not play in the first Test as he continues to recover from the hip injury sustained during the T20 World Cup, did not take part in the session.England and Pakistan lined up on opposite sides of the outfield•AFP/Getty Images

The pitch was uncovered throughout, with players from both sides taking the opportunity to cast their eye over the surface, including McCullum.”It looks good but I’d expect it to change over the next couple of days, see how things scrub up. I think one of the things we’ve talked about is adapt to whatever we’re given and not be too stuck in our preconceived thoughts. Just play what’s in front of us and be prepared to adapt accordingly.”Adapting is the name of the game in these parts, especially so if England are to push the scoring along. Two of the last four Tests at this venue have ended in draws, the last of which – Australia’s visit here in March 2022 – saw the scoring rate hover at around 3-an-over, with both sets of top-order batters in the runs. No one, throughout both batting line-ups, was able to really impose themselves on the opposition bowlers.Asked whether England’s manner would carry over from the summer, McCullum said he is willing to see how it goes, though did concede some adjustments will be made.”We’ll find out I suppose,” he said. “One of the things we try and do is respect the conditions but at the same time if we are given the opportunity to try and play aggressive and attacking cricket, we’ll try and take that option. It’s authentic to the line-up that we have. The guys who are in our squad, that’s how they play their cricket and that’s what gives them the most amount of freedom and the best opportunity to perform at the highest level.”Look, we know it may not necessarily be as prominent, the aggressive cricket that we’ve seen in the past, but there will be opportunities to try and play positive. And when that does arise, I expect our guys to try and take that on.”

McCullum also warned not to put too much on the absence of Shaheen Shah Afridi for Pakistan, after the fast bowler was ruled out with a knee injury.”That’s obviously a big loss. I know him pretty well, I played many years in the PSL with Shaheen as well. He’s a wonderful bowler and he’s turned into a fine leader for Pakistani cricket. He’s a big loss, no doubt. But one thing when you play against Pakistan, you look at their team sheet and you see talent, and you see some that might not be developed talent but it’s talent. You need to respect that and you need to find a way to be able to be well-researched and well-planned about what’s going to come at you, but also try and find out a way to put that talent under pressure and see how it responds.”It’s a very good Pakistan squad, it’s well-rounded, it’s got some experience and some youth, with both batting and bowling, and they’ll be a tough challenge. We know we’ll have to play well if we’re going to be successful.”McCullum’s previous experience of Pakistan is limited to five ODIs from 2003 in which he scored just 16 runs, at a pretty un-McCullum strike rate of 35.55. He could see the funny side, 19 years on, when asked about how what he made of the country during his playing days: “Thanks for bringing that up – I think I scored 12 runs here in my entire career. I haven’t performed well here myself but luckily I don’t need to pick up a bat.”Nevertheless, he appreciates the importance of bringing an England Test team to this part of the world, particularly after the T20 side toured in September and October. And above all, hopes those in the stands and watching at home will get the kind of entertainment that will go some way to making up for the absence.”This is obviously a great place to tour and it’s been starved of international cricket for a long period of time. We understand how passionate people are here in Pakistan about this form of cricket and we understand the obligation that we have as an England side and we are looking forward to coming over here and playing an entertaining style of cricket which hopefully ends up in results, whether that’s in our favour or in Pakistan’s favour.”Hopefully, everyone that does dial into this series, not just in Pakistan but around the world, sees that international cricket is back in Pakistan and we’ve got a product that’s worth watching.”

New Zealand pick Jonas, Plimmer and Gaze in Under-19 Women's T20 World Cup squad

The three players have a combined 46 caps worth of senior international experience

ESPNcricinfo staff13-Dec-2022New Zealand have included three players with senior caps – Fran Jonas, Georgia Plimmer and Isabella Gaze – in their squad for the inaugural Under-19 Women’s T20 World Cup, which is set to be played in South Africa in January 2023. All three were part of New Zealand’s squad at the Commonwealth Games earlier this year, while Jonas and Plimmer also played in the 2022 ODI World Cup.Left-arm spinner Jonas (9 ODIS and 12 T20Is), batter Plimmer (2 ODIs and 10 T20Is) and keeper Izzy Gaze (3 ODIs and 10 T20Is) have a combined 46 caps worth of senior international experience.Related

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In picking these three, New Zealand have followed the example of India, who picked Shafali Verma and Richa Ghosh in their squad for the Under-19 tournament. England, however, left out Freya Kemp and Alice Capsey, in order to manage their workloads given that the two players are also likely to be on the senior team’s tour of the West Indies in December as well as take part in the senior Women’s T20 World Cup, which takes place in February in South Africa.The squad also includes a number of players who impressed on the just-concluded New Zealand Women’s Development tour of India and the recent National Under-19 tournament.Emma McLeod and Tash Wakelin topped the run-scoring charts at the National Under-19 tournament with 322 and 308 runs respectively across the T20 and one-day competitions, while Kate Chandler (255 runs and nine wickets) starred with both bat and ball for Wellington. Opener Izzy Sharp made the highest score in the T20 competition, 73 off 54 balls for Canterbury against Auckland.Former New Zealand keeper Sara McGlashan will coach the side, with former Auckland allrounder Donovan Grobbelaar and former New Zealand legspinner Tarun Nethula assisting her.An NZC release said a captain would be named in due course.””I think we’ve got a strong squad for this World Cup with a nice mix of youth and experience,” McGlashan said. “For many of the players, this will be their first time travelling overseas to play cricket, so they’ll certainly benefit from the experience of Fran, Georgia and Izzy, the natural leaders in this group.”New Zealand squad for Women’s Under-19 T20 World Cup: Olivia Anderson, Anna Browning, Kate Chandler, Natasha Codyre, Isabella Gaze, Antonia Hamilton, Abigail Hotton, Breearne Illing, Fran Jonas, Kayley Knight, Paige Loggenberg, Emma McLeod, Georgia Plimmer, Izzy Sharp, Tash Wakelin.

Jamie Overton set to miss Ashes after suffering stress fracture of the back

Setback for Surrey too ahead of County Championship defence

ESPNcricinfo staff18-Jan-2023Jamie Overton, the Surrey and England fast bowler, has effectively been ruled out of this summer’s Ashes after being diagnosed with a stress fracture of the back.Overton, who starred with the bat on his Test debut against New Zealand last summer with a match-turning 97, has returned home from the UAE, where he was part of the Gulf Giants squad at the inaugural ILT20 competition.Although Surrey held back from confirming initial reports about his injury, further investigations have confirmed that he has sustained a stress fracture of the lumbar spine, and will now begin a period of rehabilitation.With the Ashes taking part in the first half of the English summer – the first Test is due to begin at Edgbaston on June 16 – Overton is almost certain to miss the entire campaign, a significant blow to his ambitions and to England’s pace-bowling stocks.Last season, two other Test debutants, Matt Fisher and Saqib Mahmood, were ruled out of the international summer after suffering stress fractures of the back, as were Olly Stone and Jofra Archer. All four men are now back to action, with Stone and Archer impressing at the SA20, and Fisher and Mahmood due to take part in the forthcoming Lions tour of Sri Lanka.Related

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Overton’s injury comes after he was preferred to Matt Potts for the recent tour of Pakistan, in which he was an unused reserve. Potts had already won his place back for the tour of New Zealand in February, with Stuart Broad also back from paternity leave, but with his allround credentials, Overton was unquestionably a player in England’s thoughts for the coming summer.In addition to his 97 at Headingley, Overton played a key role in Surrey’s triumph in the County Championship, claiming 34 wickets at 25.64 in ten matches, including a best of 6 for 61 against Yorkshire at Scarborough. His absence will be a blow for Surrey’s title defence, with received another setback on Wednesday with the announcement of Hashim Amla’s retirement.Along with his twin brother, Craig, Overton is one of six players on an ECB Pace Bowling Development contract, which tops up the player’s county salary, by approximately £25,000, and gives the England management a say in managing their workload.

Jos Buttler 'frustrated' but understanding as England grapple with scheduling dilemmas

England captain backs Archer to build on promising comeback after SA ODIs

ESPNcricinfo staff02-Feb-2023Jos Buttler, England’s white-ball captain, has admitted to “frustrations” that his team’s preparation for the defence of their 50-over World Cup title has been hampered by scheduling clashes ahead of this month’s tour of Bangladesh.However, Buttler insists there will be no consequences for those players who have made themselves unavailable for the tour – among them Alex Hales, Sam Billings and David Willey – given that the opportunities currently presenting themselves on the franchise circuit are too good to turn down for those players who are not centrally contracted to the ECB.”It’s quite a unique situation,” Buttler said in the wake of England’s 2-1 series loss to South Africa in Kimberley. “It’s the time we are in. The way the games are scheduled, I can sort of understand it both ways. As an England captain, on one side you wish that everyone would see playing for England as the main thing and grab any opportunity available.”But there are bigger things in play as well. The discrepancy between what people can earn playing for England and not playing for England is quite large, so that’s a factor that must be considered. For each individual that will be a different decision made at different times of their careers.Related

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“In this day and age, you’ve got to try to work with it as best you can and if people make themselves unavailable, they know they’re giving someone else a chance. But I certainly don’t want to be in a position where you rule people out and say they’ll never play for England again, or anything like that.”The squad for the Bangladesh tour includes two uncapped players in Tom Abell and Rehan Ahmed, with England having already selected 37 players across 33 ODIs since the 2019 World Cup victory – five more than they used in nearly three times as many matches (98) in the previous World Cup cycle from 2015 to 2019.With the IPL looming in April, plus a five-Test Ashes series in June and July that will be the preoccupation for a number of England’s leading multi-format players – including Joe Root and Jonny Bairstow – England will not be able to field their first-choice World Cup XI until at least the series against Ireland and New Zealand in September.Buttler, however, remains phlegmatic about the current situation, and confident that the players who have put their names forward for Bangladesh will use the chance to advance their own World Cup claims.”Wherever people are playing, we want to pick our best available team, especially for World Cups and big ICC events, so we are open minded,” he said. “It’s quite complicated, and there are some frustrations at certain points but I completely understand people’s positions and it’s an individual decision at the end of the day.”One man who has made himself available for the Bangladesh tour is Jofra Archer, who capped his return to England colours after a near-two-year absence with career-best figures of 6 for 40 in the third ODI.Jofra Archer was back in the wickets for England in Kimberley•AFP

Archer’s return to action has been a gradual process, with an initial outing for England Lions in Abu Dhabi last year followed by a run of five appearances for MI Cape Town in the SA20, prior to his two ODI outings in Bloemfontein and Kimberley.”He wants to play,” Buttler said. “When he’s come back and he’s fit, and there’s cricket available, it doesn’t seem to make sense to hold him back. He obviously needs to build his overs, and his resilience, to being able to bowl 10 overs a game and of course for English cricket looking ahead you want to see him playing Test cricket as well where he will be able to bowl spell after spell.”Archer could return to action for Cape Town this week, and is scheduled to play for Mumbai Indians in the IPL from April. Having touched speeds of up to 92mph in his England return last week, he has expressed his desire to be part of England’s Ashes plans come the English season.”He certainly needs to be playing cricket,” Buttler added. “You are always going to try to look after him and we will be guided by the medical team. But he has been sat on the sidelines for a long time and so if he’s fit and available it makes sense for him to be playing.”We all know the levels he can perform at, so to see him get back to that kind of level so quickly is incredibly impressive. It’s such a treat as a captain to have him there to throw the ball to.”He really wants the big moments, it’s something that he always stands up. Jofra wants the ball there and it’s just a great thing as a captain to have someone there like that. The more and more cricket he plays, the better he’s going to get.”

Kane Williamson, Daryl Mitchell star in New Zealand's Christchurch heist

Asitha Fernando led a spirited Sri Lanka fight, but it all came down to a scrambled bye off the final ball under the floodlights

Madushka Balasuriya13-Mar-2023
New Zealand were on the end of yet another thrilling Test match finish as they secured a second straight final-ball victory, this time pipping Sri Lanka by two wickets to win the first Test at Hagley Oval. Kane Williamson, unbeaten on 121, was the hero of the day, though it was his 142-run stand with Daryl Mitchell that broke open the chase, on a day that had started with a literal dampener with rain washing out some one-and-a-half sessions of play.What that meant was that New Zealand were left needing to score the remaining 257 runs in 52 overs, while Sri Lanka had the same length of time to pick up the nine remaining New Zealand wickets and with it keep their hopes of qualifying for the World Test Championship final alive.What proceeded over the next three and a half hour mega-session was a steady ramping of tension, ending up in a crescendo of chaos at the death.But before we get into that, here’s what the history books might not reveal when this match is recounted, in no particular order:

  • Williamson making his ground by a foot to secure a win following a direct hit on the final ball of the day
  • Neil Wagner, with a bulging disc in his back, one that had kept him from bowling for most of the second innings, haring to the danger end for the winning single – on his 37th birthday no less
  • Niroshan Dickwella, who had dropped Williamson on 33, missing the stumps to dismiss Wagner, only for Asitha Fernando to gather and score a direct hit with Williamson marginally home
  • This was the same Asitha whose three-wicket haul in the final hour almost singlehandedly dragged Sri Lanka back into the Test
  • The entirety of India presumably celebrating more than the Kiwis at the ground, as the result means their team instead of Sri Lanka qualifies for the World Test Championship final

And those were just the highlights from the final day.It all began rather tamely enough though, with Williamson and Tom Latham playing cautiously, content to wait for the bad deliveries and knock around singles. In fact, it was Sri Lanka who would make the first bold play, bringing in the left-arm spin of Prabath Jayasuriya 10 overs into the day’s play – a move that would pay off almost immediately, with Latham chopping on.Related

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This brought the out-of-sorts Henry Nicholls to join a not exactly fluent Williamson. The pair though would somehow manage to keep things ticking over at a fair clip, Williamson in particularly growing in fluency as the partnership wore on. They would put on 40 off 50 deliveries, before Jayasuriya struck once more getting Nicholls to top edge a sweep to fine leg.It was at this point the complexion of the game began to change, with Mitchell signalling his intent early, coming down the tracking and lofting Jayasuriya back over his head first ball.Mitchell would continue in a similar manner, taking Jayasuriya for three more sixes over the course of his 86-ball 81. While he would also score a handful of fours, the hallmark of his partnership with Williamson was their running between the wickets. Having first forced Sri Lanka to spread the field by finding boundaries at consistent intervals, the pair would then work the fielders in the deep, running them ragged with constant ones and two – between them they would take 19 twos in total.Asitha Fernando took out Tom Blundell’s middle stump with a searing yorker•Getty Images

By the time Mitchell was dismissed, chopping on a wide yorker from Asitha, the chase had been whittled down to a very manageable 53 off 48. Much of this was also down to Williamson’s timely acceleration. After taking 120 balls to reach his fifty, he took just a further 57 to reach his century.Asitha would do his best to give Sri Lanka a lifeline, following up Mitchell’s scalp with a searing yorker to take out Tom Blundell before having Michael Bracewell hole out in the deep. He was in action in the final over too, helping effect the run out of Matt Henry and almost doing the same to Williamson.But with Williamson at the crease the chase was always in control, even with five needed off three you felt he had matters in hand, and when he pierced what looked an army of boundary riders in the covers, Sri Lanka too realised it was out of their hands. It was always Williamson’s chase to lose.

Rashid Khan new No. 1 T20I bowler in the world

Fazalhaq Farooqi moves up to No. 3, to have two Afghanistan bowlers on the podium

ESPNcricinfo staff29-Mar-2023Rashid Khan is the new No. 1 T20I bowler in the world. He has displaced Sri Lanka’s Wanindu Hasaranga at the top following his three wickets at less than a run a ball in Afghanistan’s historic 2-1 series win over Pakistan in Sharjah.Rashid has team-mate Fazalhaq Farooqi for company on the podium, with the young pacer slotting at No. 3 on the T20I bowlers’ rankings after finishing as top wicket-taker for Afghanistan in the Pakistan series. Farooqi claimed five wickets and conceded just 4.75 runs to the over across the three matches to climb 12 places in the rankings.Rashid was No. 1 as recently as November last year, having consistently been one of the format’s best since first rising to the summit in February 2018.

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The 2-1 result was Afghanistan’s first T20I series win over Pakistan, and another bowler to make strides as a result was Mujeeb Ur Rahman, who moved from No. 10 to No. 8 after taking two-fors in the first and third games.For Pakistan, stand-in captain Shadab Khan (who led in place of the rested Babar Azam) moved up eight spots to No. 4 on the T20I allrounder rankings, having finished as the series’ third-highest run-scorer and joint-fourth-highest wicket-taker.In the T20I batting rankings, South Africa’s Rilee Rossouw moved up two places to No. 6 courtesy his 42 off 21, albeit in a losing cause against West Indies in the series-deciding third T20I in Johannesburg.

Rohit Sharma, Adam Zampa move up in ODI rankings

Following Australia’s ODI series winning victory against India in Chennai, legspinner Adam Zampa has moved to a career-best sixth in the one-day bowling rankings, while India captain Rohit Sharma is up one spot to eighth in the batting rankings. Zampa had produced figures of 10-0-45-4 in that game which Australia won by 21 runs to clinch the series 2-1, while Rohit had slammed 30 off 17, sparking his gains.Zimbabwe’s Sikandar Raza inched his way up the allrounder rankings too this week, going up one spot to fifth after Zimbabwe’s hard-fought series win against Netherlands where he scored 40 and topped the bowling charts for his side with five scalps.

Suryakumar takes down the Titans with first IPL ton

Rashid Khan took four wickets and smashed 79 off 32 balls but it wasn’t enough to beat Mumbai Indians

Alagappan Muthu12-May-20232:54

Moody: ‘Genius’ the only word to describe Suryakumar

For a little while, it looked like Suryakumar Yadav would actually finish a T20 without playing that one shot that made people’s jaws drop. And then he hit the most incredible six. It propelled him to his first IPL century and Mumbai Indians to a comfortable victory over the defending champions Gujarat Titans.You know how Kane Williamson dabs to third man to get singles? Well, Suryakumar accessed the same area, except he cleared the boundary. He saw a ball on off stump. He knew he could get under it. At the point where he made contact, he opened the face, just as Williamson does, and then the strength in his forearms and his wrists did the rest.This is Suryakumar. He sees T20 cricket the way nobody else sees it.

Rashid ends up a footnote

Titans came into this game knowing a win would not only secure a spot in the playoffs but give them two shots at making the final.And they turned to their main man to make it happen. Rashid Khan produced four wickets for 30 runs in a format that continues to be hostile to his kind. Even today, Suryakumar spent 49 balls proving that bowlers and their plans exist just so batters could come in and rip them all to shreds.But Rashid wouldn’t buy that. He had Rohit Sharma caught at slip with a gorgeous legbreak. He upended Ishan Kishan by a simple change in length, the premeditated sweep shot failing against a ball that was too full for it. Titans saved the last six balls they had from Rashid for the match up against Tim David. Those are high stakes. It was the 17th over. This is the time David comes to life. Except he couldn’t because Rashid took him out for 5 off 3.Very few are capable of producing wickets on demand like this. Even fewer are able to do so when the opposition comes hard at them.Hardik Pandya gave Suryakumar Yadav a hug after he brought up his hundred off the final ball•AFP/Getty Images

Suryakumar turns it on

When Mumbai lost their third wicket in the ninth over, they spent a little while scoring just a run a ball. 15 off 15. And then all of a sudden, they crashed 32 in 10.It was during this time that Vishnu Vinod, the Kerala wicketkeeper making his Mumbai debut, carved Mohammed Shami for a scarcely believable six. A ball ending up on top of off stump scythed over point thanks to his fast hands and wicked wrists.That would have been shot of the game if not for SKY doing SKY things.He needed 32 balls to get to his fifty. That’s slow by his standards, and he was building his innings with orthodox shots. The only luxury he afforded himself were those straight sixes, where his weight is usually on the back foot, right up to the point where he meets the ball, and then he hops, lifting both himself and the ball up off the ground. That’s how he creates leverage. It’s his own unique thing.Then Rashid took David out and something snapped. Suryakumar was 53 off 34 at the start of the 18th over. He hit Mohit Sharma for three fours and a six to move to 73 off 40. Then he met Shami in the 19th over and played a front-foot drive for six over third man, just by opening the face of the bat. Finally, on 97, with only one ball left in the innings, he did what he has done to fast bowlers all over the world, sweeping Alzarri Joseph from way outside off into the crowd past the square leg boundary.Rashid Khan smashed 10 sixes in his innings of 79 off 32 balls•BCCI

Rashid or bust for Titans

As good as Titans are in a chase, they were up against it very quickly when all of their top three batters fell for single digits. Shubman Gill, Hardik Pandya and Wriddhiman Saha totalled 12 runs between them.Vijay Shankar kept hopes of the improbable alive with a sweet little cameo. But he fell to Piyush Chawla’s first ball of the match, this IPL legend having the best season of his career at 34 years of age.Way on the other end of the spectrum is Akash Madhwal. He came into the tournament because Mumbai were having so much trouble with their bowling attack. This was only his fourth game of the IPL and the 26th of his T20 career. And already he has shown an appetite for the tough job. Bowling at the death, bowling to big hitters, bowling with games on the line.Madhwal has a lovely yorker. And now, it appears his other balls are just as deadly, because when he hits a hard length, they keep skidding through. He bowled Gill with one that stayed lower than the batter expected. And he had David Miller lbw in just the same way.Rashid carried the Titans with the bat as well, making his highest score in T20s, 79 off 32 with 10 sixes. A total of 103 for 8 in 14 overs rose to 191 for 8 in 20. But it was not enough. Imagine going three-fourth of the way to a century after picking up one short of five wickets and still losing the game.

Annabel Sutherland primed if Test duty calls

Allrounder made an impact with the ball during 2022 Ashes thriller

Valkerie Baynes14-Jun-2023She has only played two Tests but Annabel Sutherland isn’t one to baulk at the unique challenges of a multi-day, red-ball game – quite the opposite, in fact.Her six-over spell at the very end of the last Women’s Ashes Test very nearly swung the match in Australia’s favour, yielding all three of her wickets for the fourth innings before England’s tailenders, Kate Cross and Sophie Ecclestone, clung on for a draw in the face of Alana King’s efforts to prise out the one wicket Australia needed from the final over.Sutherland took five wickets in total during that Ashes Test, her second appearance in the format, some four months after Australia drew with India, also in Canberra. She has played 31 white-ball matches for her country, and now, after arriving for the return Ashes series, Sutherland has been relishing the chance to get used to the Dukes ball in English conditions ahead of next week’s Test at Trent Bridge.”I’ve got a bit of a wobble-seam ball going, which has been nice, and so far I’ve loved it,” Sutherland said. “I’m looking forward to getting out there for the three-dayer and putting it into practice against the England A girls.”Related

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England have experience playing with the red Dukes ball, having used it in last year’s Test against South Africa at Taunton, but both squads will be using this week’s three-day warm-up matches to gather more information. Australia will play England A in Leicester from Thursday while Australia A will face the England Test squad in Derby at the same time.Sutherland said a two-day practice match between Australia and Australia A had helped players become used to using the Dukes ball, as had some intelligence from assistant coach Scott Prestwidge and a number of Australia Men’s players, including Mitchell Starc, during a series of training camps in Brisbane last month.The upcoming three-day warm-up fixture also represents a chance for Sutherland to press for selection in the final XI for the Test starting on June 22 amid an Australian pace-bowling attack well stocked with contenders.”I’m super keen,” Sutherland said. “There’s so much history that goes along with Australia and England and the Ashes. This one’s been flagged on my radar for a long time, my first trip over to England playing in an Ashes so I’m very excited and looking forward to what’s to come in the next month or so.”Sutherland was looking forward to watching Ellyse Perry in action with her natural ability to swing the ball and vast experience, having played nine of her 10 Tests against England, four of those in England. And while they will be without regular captain Meg Lanning, who pulled out of the tour for medical reasons, Sutherland said the Australians had overcome the initial shock of her withdrawal and had every faith in stand-in skipper Alyssa Healy and her deputy, Tahlia McGrath.”Obviously, we would love to have Meg here and our thoughts are certainly with her back home,” Sutherland said. “We’ve talked about it as a group that it’s obviously a big, big miss to not have Meg. She’s an outstanding player and leader of the team, so we’re certainly going to miss having her.”But in saying that, I think Alyssa and T-Mac are exceptional leaders in their own right. We know it’s going to be a big miss, but we think we’ve got really good depth in our side to fill that and have shown that in previous series where Meg hasn’t been there.”Shelley Nitschke, Australia’s head coach, agreed that Lanning was a big loss to the side but was comfortable with the plans in place to deal with her absence.”It’s really disappointing for Meg that she’s not able to join us and she’s in our thoughts but we’ve had some time together at a camp in Brisbane, we’ve spoken a bit about it as a group and I know Alyssa is very well placed,” Nitschke said. “She’s got some really good support in Tahlia McGrath and some other really senior players within the team that are going to step up into some leadership responsibilities.”I think we’re really well placed to cover her but we certainly understand that she’s a great player, a great captain, so definitely going to be missed for us this campaign.”Phoebe Litchfield, the 20-year-old batter, is poised to come into the Australian line-up in Lanning’s absence, either in the middle-order or as opener should Healy move down the order as she spreads her responsibilities across wicketkeeping, batting and now the captaincy. Litchfield was Player of the Match with 78 not out in Australia’s first ODI against Pakistan in January and scored an unbeaten 67 in the second, both as an opener.Despite being part of the squad, powerful hitter Grace Harris was not required for the Test and will therefore arrive in England next week. Experienced left-arm spinner Jess Jonassen will captain Australia A during the warm-up match with Tess Flintoff joining the Australia squad to face England A.

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