Dassanayake praises unsung hero Ali Khan

USA coach Pubudu Dassanayake rates Ali Khan’s new-ball skills so highly that he deemed it worth a gamble to play him in a crucial game against Oman despite a hamstring strain, and the debutant answered the call with two key new-ball wickets

Peter Della Penna in Los Angeles02-Nov-20160:56

‘Ali Khan is at a different level’ – Dassanayake

Lost in the brilliance of Steven Taylor’s thumping century and another five-wicket haul for Timil Patel in USA’s eight-wicket win over Oman was a performance that might not have been as statistically impressive but no doubt had an inspirational impact on the hosts. It’s not often that a player is picked to make his debut when practically half-fit, especially when the injury in question is a hamstring strain for a fast bowler.But Ali Khan’s skills with the new ball are rated so highly by USA coach Pubudu Dassanayake that it was deemed worth a gamble to pick him for the first time. It paid off handsomely. Khan took the big scalp of Zeeshan Maqsood in the first over, then claimed one more to finish with 2 for 27 in six overs. Dassanayake told ESPNcricinfo after the win that USA knew going into the game that Khan would only be able to bowl one spell, but it was worth the risk in USA’s biggest match of WCL Division Four and the win put USA in the driver’s seat for a promotion spot.”It was a tough decision for us because Jessy [Singh] was really performing well and all our fast bowlers are doing well but when you compare Ali, Ali is in a different level,” Dassanayake said. “He has that pace, he has that swing; especially against left-handers he bowls very well. The last two games we didn’t pick up enough wickets early and so we were looking for that.”Once he said that even with a shortened run-up he can come and bowl, we were okay for that because the swing that he has normally with the new ball definitely is going to bring wickets. We are not even worrying about him to bowl a second spell. It’s just about the six or seven overs with the new ball and get a couple of early wickets so we’re gonna keep doing that.”Dassanayake says what cemented his call to play Khan was his performance in a training session in the lead-up to the game where he continuously troubled USA’s opening combo of Fahad Babar and Steven Taylor. Despite bowling off a shortened run-up and not at full pace, his swing was a valuable commodity that made him a must have in the line-up.”We had one practice session just before the tournament where Steven was batting early in that session and Ali came and bowled some brilliant balls for the left-hander,” Dassanayake said. “So that’s the time we thought he can do the job even with a short run-up. Doctors and the physios are working behind the scenes to get him in whatever best fit.”I think he is one of the most valuable players that we have. I have to be careful that we don’t hurt him for the future but we’ve just got to manage to get through this tournament with him if he’s willing to take that pain and play the next few games.”It wasn’t just Khan’s bowling that uplifted the team. After his six overs, he remained on the field for the entire innings rather than coming off. Though he dropped two catches, he is regarded as one of USA’s better fielders. Khan said after the game that he wanted to show his USA team-mates that he had their back in the field after they supported him coming into the XI and that he wasn’t going to slump off the field after bowling his spell.Dassanayake says Khan is continuously being monitored but at the moment his hamstring injury hasn’t become any worse. The plan is for Khan to play against Denmark because if USA wins it will clinch their promotion into Division Three, allowing him to sit out the last two games. Dassanayake, though, doesn’t want to push Khan too hard and risk injuring him more severely and hurt his chances in the future, particularly since he is contracted with Guyana Amazon Warriors in the CPL as well.”I think we still need one more win and I know that Denmark also has left-handers in the top of the order,” Dassanayake said. “Those are kind of gambles. I think we are playing with his fitness. We don’t want to hurt him too much but then still we need to manage and also he is a very strong character.”He wants to perform for the team. He knows how important his role is for the team so I think overall everybody is putting in that effort and I’m very happy how things are moving.”

R Ashwin emulates Kapil Dev's all-round feat

Stats highlights of the second day’s play between India and England in Mohali

Shiva Jayaraman27-Nov-20161 Number of India players who have made 500 or more runs and taken at least 50 wickets in Tests in a year before R Ashwin in 2016. Kapil Dev did it twice for India, in 1979 and 1983. There have been only ten such instances overall. Ashwin completed 500 runs in 2016 during his innings of 57 not out in Mohali. (All numbers from Tests which overlapped into the next year are included in the year in which the Test started.)5 Number of 50-plus scores by Ashwin in 12 innings in Tests in 2016 – equalling the second most for India. Only Cheteshwar Pujara with seven in 13 innings is ahead of Ashwin. Virat Kohli also has five such scores in 15 innings this year.16 Wickets taken by Adil Rashid at an average of 28.18 in this series so far – the most by any bowler and the fourth highest by an overseas legspinner in a Test series in India. Rashid has taken at least three wickets in an innings four times already in this series.

Most wickets by overseas legspinners in a Test series in India

Bowler Season Wkts AveRichie Benaud 1959/60 29 19.58Richie Benaud 1956/57 23 16.86Danish Kaneria 2004/05 19 31.52Adil Rashid 2016-17 16 28.18Imran Tahir 2015/16 14 21.35Shane Warne 2004/05 14 30.07Jim Higgs 1979/80 14 50.142001 The previous time a visiting team scored a total higher than England’s 283 after having been four down for fewer than 100. Australia had made 349 in the Mumbai Test on that occasion after losing their fourth wicket on 98. England’s 283 in the first innings is the highest total out of the 33 times since that Mumbai Test that a visiting team has lost its fourth wicket before 100.7 Number of 50-plus scores by Pujara in 13 innings in 2016 – the most he has hit in a year. He has made 748 Test runs this year at an average of 62.33. It also equals the most 50-plus scores by any batsman in a season in India. Sunil Gavaskar (twice), Dilip Vengsarkar and Virender Sehwag are the others with seven 50-plus scores in a Test season in India.12.60 Rahane’s batting average in this series; he has made just 63 runs from five innings. This is the first time since his debut series against Australia – when he played just one Test – that Rahane has not hit at least one 50-plus score in his first five innings of a series.1990 The previous time before Karun Nair in Mohali that an India debutant was run out in Tests. Anil Kumble was run out against England at Old Trafford on that occasion. Nair is the 12th India batsman to be run out on debut.3 Number of times before Virat Kohli that an India batsman made 40 or more runs in each of his first five innings in a series. Rahul Dravid made five such scores against England in 2005-06. Navjot Sidhu did it in the Border-Gavaskar Trophy series in 1997-98 and Sunil Gavaskar did it in England in 1979. Kohli has scores of 40, 49 not out, 167, 81 and 62 in this series so far.

AB de Villiers – 9000 runs off 9005 balls

AB de Villiers broke the record for being the fastest to reach 9000 runs in ODIs

Bharath Seervi25-Feb-20172:34

AB de Villiers and the trek to 9000

205 Innings taken by AB de Villiers to complete 9000 runs in ODIs – the fewest among the 18 batsmen to get there. Sourav Ganguly was the previous fastest – 228 innings.9005 Number of balls de Villiers took to score 9000 runs, again the fewest. The previous record holder was Adam Gilchrist – 9328 deliveries.54.04 De Villiers’ average – easily the best among those 18 batsmen. MS Dhoni (50.96) is the only other batsman to average over 50, the other 16 average under 45. De Villiers’ average is in fact the highest among all 202 players with 2000-plus runs.AB de Villiers bettered Sourav Ganguly’s record to become the fastest batsman to 9000 ODI runs•ESPNcricinfo Ltd2 South Africa batsmen to have scored 9000 or more runs. Jacques Kallis was the first and he took 242 innings to get there.189 Sixes for de Villiers in ODIs. Only Chris Gayle (229) and Dhoni (196) had more sixes than de Villiers at the end of the innings in which they completed 9000 runs.24 Centuries for de Villiers – the second most among batsmen when reaching the 9000 milestone. Only Sachin Tendulkar had more – 25.

Kings XI reboot hinged on Indian bowlers

The coaching and captaincy duties have changed hands for Punjab, but the core group that remains intact will have to find ways to overcome scars of the last two seasons

Shashank Kishore04-Apr-20174:09

Agarkar: Captaincy could make Maxwell consistent

Likely first-choice XIManan Vohra, Glenn Maxwell (capt), Wriddhiman Saha (wk), Eoin Morgan, David Miller, Marcus Stoinis, Axar Patel, KC Cariappa, Sandeep Sharma, Mohit Sharma, T NatarajanReservesBatsmen – Shaun Marsh, Hashim Amla, Martin Guptill, Armaan Jaffer, Rinku Singh
Bowlers – Swapnil Singh, Pardeep Sahu, Rahul Tewatia, Varun Aaron, Anureet Singh, Matt Henry, Ishant Sharma
Wicketkeeper – Nikhil Naik
Allrounders – Gurkeerat Singh, Darren SammyStrengthsTwo consecutive poor seasons might have forced most sides to make changes. Kings XI Punjab, though, have retained faith in the core group of players, who were part of both, the highs of 2014 – when they finished runners-up – and the disappointments that have followed.They have a strong batting – three of the world’s best limited-overs players aren’t guaranteed a spot in the starting XI – which is helpful considering M Vijay’s participation in the tournament appears to be doubtful.The team also arguably has the best Indian bowling line-up. Sandeep Sharma’s swing, Mohit Sharma’s back-of-the-hand slower deliveries, Ishant Sharma’s experience and Axar Patel’s control make them a potent force. Add to it their latest recruit T Natarajan, the left-arm pacer on whom they splurged INR 3 crore, and the attack looks well-rounded. Natarajan, the franchise believes, is the Indian version of Mustafizur Rahman, who brings to the fore an element of surprise with his cutters and subtle variations in pace.This isn’t a side that looks intimidating, but it has the smarts to upset the opponent’s designs.WeaknessesA lack of experienced spinners could leave them vulnerable on potentially tired surfaces as the season progresses. Glenn Maxwell and Gurkeerat are part-timers at best while the legspinning duo of Pardeep Sahu and Rahul Tewatia have hardly played in 2016-17. There is a chance that the team has to rely solely on their pacers to deliver wins.The franchise has defied conventional wisdom by naming Maxwell as captain despite him not having prior experience leading a side at any level. Only time will tell if it was a risk worth taking, given they had two seasoned T20 leaders in Eoin Morgan and Darren Sammy in their ranks.Where they finished in 2016, and what’s different this year?With just four wins in 14 matches, Kings XI were the bottom-placed team for a second successive season. In the aftermath, there were a few changes, to the coaching line-up. Sanjay Bangar resigned as head coach, while Virender Sehwag, chief mentor until last season, was promoted as director of cricket operations. He will be assisted by J Arun Kumar, the new head coach, who shepherded Karnataka to win titles in all formats for two successive seasons.What have their players been up to? Hashim Amla: After a poor Test series in Australia where he was repeatedly snuffed out in the slips, the opener returned home to become the eighth South African to score a century in his 100th Test. He’s been through an inconsistent patch since. While he was part of an ODI and Test series win in New Zealand, he has scored only one fifty-plus score in his last 11 international outings. Eoin Morgan and Darren Sammy were team-mates not too long ago in the Pakistan Super League. Morgan left midway to lead England to a ODI and T20 series win in West Indies, where he rode a top-order wobble to make an ODI century in the series opener in Antigua. Prior to that, he was one of England’s most productive batsmen during the limited-overs leg of their Indian tour. Sammy, in the meantime, led Zalmi to the title, often providing the flourish in the end-overs. His leadership and spectacular slip-catching made him a crowd-favourite both in the UAE and in Lahore, which staged the final. Axar Patel injured his thumb while fielding as a substitute during the fifth and final India-England Test in Chennai and was subsequently ruled out of the limited-overs leg of the series. He watched from the sidelines as his state side Gujarat clinched their maiden Ranji Trophy title. He returned to action in the Vijay Hazare Trophy, the domestic 50-over competition, and took seven wickets in four matches.Overseas-player availabilityShaun Marsh injured his back during the final India-Australia Test in Dharamsala and may not be in the starting XI immediately. Martin Guptill is also on a comeback trail since injuring his hamstring during the ODI series against South Africa last month, and could be in contention only from the third week of the competition. He will leave on May 10 for a tri-series involving New Zealand, Bangladesh and Ireland, though. Matt Henry will join him too. Eoin Morgan will be unavailable from May 1, when he’ll take off to lead England on their tour of Ireland.Home and away record in 2016They won two games at home and away, in a campaign where they were all but out of the reckoning halfway through the season.PollTest your Kings XI Punjab knowledge

'I needed to be more positive'

As a batsman, Matthew Elliott was unable to fulfil the expectations of many, but he hopes to help others do so as a coach

Daniel Brettig06-Jun-2017In 1997, Shane Warne released his first book, . Legend has it he fought tooth and nail with the publisher to ensure “Own” was included in the title. In it, Warne chose two names that would feature less prominently in any post-1999 publications. One was Steve Waugh, the other Matthew “Herb” Elliott.Of his fellow Victorian, Warne observed: “He has a simple, correct technique, time to see the ball and play his shots and an appetite for big hundreds. He’ll make at least 5000 Test runs for Australia. Fingers crossed.”Warne’s judgement was inked into the manuscript before the completion of that year’s Ashes tour, on which another bold prediction was made. Elliott’s 199 at Headingley was his second hundred of the series in challenging conditions, leading Ian Chappell to intone in commentary that the left-hander would make a Test 200 “very soon”. Elliott never did, playing only ten more Tests over seven years.Twenty years later Elliott sits in a Melbourne café and ponders Warne’s prediction, before laughing. “Goes to show he’s a poor judge, isn’t he, Warney! Nice words but I only fell about 4000 short…”It is in the gap between the prediction and the reality that Elliott’s value to Australian cricket now lies. Recently employed as a coach at the National Cricket Centre after nearly a decade at arm’s length from the game, he is intent upon using the lessons of his career to help others make as much of their talent as possible. He believes it should start with the ability to keep setting new goals at whatever level a player reaches.

“Once you go mentally, it’s a very difficult game because you spend so much time involved in it, playing, watching, training. Things start to go south pretty quickly”

“My goal was just to play for Australia. I think when you get there, it’s really important just to reassess a little bit on what you want to achieve and what you want to do,” Elliott says. “Getting there is an achievement, but it shouldn’t be the end goal. Playing for a period of time and testing your game out in lots of different conditions against lots of different players, I think that’s the ultimate challenge.”Maybe I was a bit naïve… getting there wasn’t enough for me, but I was just happy being in that dressing room, and I didn’t adopt that mentality I had playing for the Vics, that I really want to be a senior player here and set some standards. I was just happy to be there.”Happy and unhappy, as it happens. A fateful collision with Mark Waugh, at the SCG in his second Test, left Elliott with a wrenched knee and a legacy of pain and restricted movement. He rushed back to take part in the 1997 tour of South Africa, then barely made it onto the plane for the Ashes. While the joint settled down in England and he played the series of his life, by the time he got home, Elliott was not much fun to be around, and the runs dried up thereafter.”Physically I’d started to have some problems with my knees, and that really weighed me down a bit,” he says. “When you’re playing and you’re sore all the time, you become a bit of a pain in the arse to be around, and I probably was a pain to be around because it just wears you down, not only physically but mentally.”At one stage I wasn’t going to go [to England] because it was really playing up before we left. I got through the tour, came back, had both my knees arthroscoped at the same time after the tour, then probably came back way too quick into the Aussie summer, because you want to make sure you retain your place. That all happened quickly, and in the end I think I had about eight scopes on that right knee and it starts to compromise how you want to train.Elliott pulls one at Headingley during his 199 there in 1997•Getty Images”It wasn’t the only factor but it was one of the ones why I started to wobble a bit and unfortunately not achieve the things I wanted to when I was playing. Cricket’s one of those games where mentally you’ve got be as fresh as you can for as long as you can. Once you go mentally, it’s a very difficult game because you spend so much time involved in it, playing, watching, training, so when you start to struggle a bit mentally in terms of feeling that fatigue, things start to go south pretty quickly.”Memories of Elliott in 1997 tend to focus on his considerable panache – one flat pull shot off Allan Donald at the Wanderers that sailed over the boundary at head height, a flurry of shots at Lord’s for a first Test hundred, then many more at Leeds. But he was fortunate, too, dropped several times during the first hundred, then critically by Graham Thorpe early in the second. That luck was in shorter supply when he got home, and when he was recalled for the West Indies in 1999, where he was swiftly sorted out by Curtly Ambrose and Courtney Walsh.That trip carried another lesson for Elliott, about battling his natural tendencies towards the defensive. “The sort of person I am, and was as a player. I needed to be more positive,” he says. “When I started to come under pressure and felt I was only one game away from being dropped, I needed to come out and play a little more aggressively. I tended to play within myself a bit, and that’s something I reflected on as an older person.”It was really important for me to not focus on the outcome, and stay in the moment, and from there I’d tend to play more positively. But that was me, and it’s easy to reflect now that when you’re in the moment, I just withdrew a little bit.”

“When I started to come under pressure and felt I was only one game away from being dropped, I needed to come out and play a little more aggressively. I tended to play within myself a bit”

At length, Elliott performed with great distinction for Victoria, and also made a handsome century in a Lord’s limited-overs final for Yorkshire. His time with Bushrangers taught him about how teams need to evolve.”It really had a lot to do with shaping how I coach teams and how I go about it,” he says. “We had some big personalities involved in Victorian cricket when I first started, and even to be in the room was a big thing. We had Deano [Jones], Merv [Hughes], Paul Reiffel and Warne, and all these other guys who played. So some strong characters in that room, and one of the things that’s interesting about Victorian teams is a footy culture thing.”It’s this notion that you’ve got to be best mates and all got to get along together for the team to function well, and I think it’s a myth. We struggled with that at times, that we had to develop this closeness to be able to operate well as a team. I call it the footy culture, and to me you don’t have to do that. The challenge is bringing those individuals together for a common cause, but also embracing some of their individual traits as well.”I don’t think we ever quite got that balance right, particularly early on. Over time different people came in and were able to influence how we started to operate. John Scholes had a huge role to play in terms of being able to do that. He was terrific at bringing a team together, and under John we started to have a lot more team success and started to push towards playing finals and being at the pointy end of seasons.”But by the time Elliott accepted an offer from South Australia, his knee was starting to make long innings exceedingly difficult, and after a brief sojourn to the Indian Cricket League, his playing days petered out. At that point there was no inclination to pursue a coaching career in the game.Shane Warne predicted Elliott would go on to make 5000 Test runs, but was proved wrong•Getty ImagesInstead, he followed a pathway opened up by a construction and economics degree at the University of South Australia. With his wife, Megan, and their young family, he went from Adelaide to Bendigo to Melbourne, where he settled into a four-year stint as a civil estimator for the construction firm BMD.It was a world away from batting, but in some ways echoed coaching and selection – Elliott had to make estimates on the costs and expected windfall of a given project, before handing his work over to the builders. “Hopefully,” he says, “you’ve estimated enough money for it that you’re able to turn a dollar from it.”Family, rather than career, drew Elliott slowly back towards cricket. His two oldest sons Zach and Sam, play for Fitzroy-Doncaster in Victorian Premier Cricket, while his youngest, Will, is weighing it all up. “He had to come to me this year and we had a heart to heart, and he said, ‘You know what, Dad, cricket’s not my thing, I don’t love it’, and he plays footy, basketball and other things,” Elliott says. “We haven’t given up on Will coming back to the game just yet, the older boys and I flag that for discussion every now and again and see what we’re going to get.”When on annual leave from BMD, Elliott coached the Under-17 Victoria Country team at the national championships, ultimately leading to his applying for and taking the NCC job. The diversity of his own experience, as a cricketer, a civil estimator and a father, were all helpful factors in winning a role where he will be reunited with former team-mates like Ryan Harris and the national coach, Darren Lehmann.

“This notion that you’ve got to be best mates and all got to get along together for the team to function well – I think it’s a myth. We struggled with that at times”

Looking forward, Elliott is striving for balance, not only between cricket and life but also youth and experience – he notes how Harris evolved far later than he did. He also sees how a young cricketer has more time than he thinks to emerge as a quality player, but equally less than he might imagine to carve out his own niche after retirement.”In the end we can’t just want one thing from these guys,” Elliott says. “We want to produce talented players who come out and entertain us and be super skilful, but that’s only one part of the overall picture. I think it’s unfair to say, ‘Don’t worry about the rest of it’, because the reality is, only a couple of guys are going to come through and do that. I know for myself I got into that way too late, because you think you’ve got more time than you have. Time tends to slip away fairly quickly, and before you know it, you haven’t addressed some of these things.”These guys are certainly aware of that. The study and the effort they put in outside of playing and training is terrific. But it’s difficult – if it was easy, everyone would be doing it, so they understand the challenges. There’s an exciting group of young players about to emerge in Australian cricket, not only from this group but every year you see so much ability and talent around. The system is strong, we can always make it better, but we’ve got to be a little bit patient.”In this era there is impatience. We want them ready at 18 or at 20, but they’ve got a lot more time than they think. We’ve got to be patient in terms of not rushing them too quickly because there’s all sorts of things happening to them. You could have ten years, from 25 to 35, a wonderful international career. If that’s our model then these guys are only babies.”Elliott leaves the field for the last time in an Australia domestic match, in the Ford Ranger Cup in 2008•Getty ImagesElliott is an advocate for diverse and difficult conditions around the world. “Something I think that’s fantastic about cricket around the world at the moment is teams using their own conditions to advantage,” he says. “It should be hard to win away. What a great challenge to be able to take it to them in conditions more familiar to the home team.”For the game to survive, conditions need to be different and challenging. The first two Tests in India this year, every ball was a massive contest, people were hanging on, couldn’t look away for what might happen. I hope the message out of that is, if there’s a bit in the wicket – the worry is what that does commercially, if you don’t get the game going five days, but I’d much rather see a game go for four and be a real contest between bat and ball than drag on for five.”Commercial reality has affected that [in Australia]. They’ve got to pay for stuff, there are multipurpose venues with drop-ins, so having a centre wicket block is not ideal for them. Drop-in pitches are creating these very similar, beige conditions, in terms of what players are experiencing, so then when they are exposed to different things, naturally they’re going to struggle because they haven’t had that rounding. But that’s up to us to identify those things and provide other opportunities, because that’s not going to change.”After years of fighting his knee, meanwhile, Elliott is happy to relate that he has found balance in that respect also. “We’ve got a good relationship, my knee and I,” he says. “If I don’t do too much, it doesn’t give me much grief. As long as I don’t go running or doing anything stupid, we’ve got a good relationship.” Similarly constructive relationships with Australia’s young batsmen may mean that Elliott becomes responsible for players who actually do make it all the way to 5000 Test runs and beyond.

After 102 Tests, Broad prepares to start anew

With a decade’s worth of miles logged charging in for England, Stuart Broad’s body has its share of wear and tear but he has no intention of trading in his uniform for a pipe and slippers anytime soon

George Dobell at Lord's 04-Jul-2017It may be stretching a point but, as Stuart Broad describes “managing” his aches and pains and the hard work James Anderson has had to endure to recover from his latest injury, the final scene of floats to mind.In that scene, Anderson and Broad – OK, it was Paul Newman and Robert Redford – are holed up in a stable and desperately patch themselves up with improvised splints and bandages in order to fight their way out. At the risk of spoiling the ending for anyone who hasn’t seen it, it doesn’t go especially well for them.It’s an exaggeration, of course. Broad and Anderson haven’t been so badly injured – though the window between Anderson’s injuries seems to be closing – and South Africa aren’t the Bolivian army, though Hashim Amla averages 56.21 against England in Test cricket and remains plenty good enough to kill off another career or two before he is done.It’s more that Broad’s conversation – his talk of the special boots, of strapping the fat pads on his feet and managing the condition for the rest of his career – provides a reminder of how many miles there are in these legs, of how long England have relied upon them and that, one day in the not too distant future, they’re going to have to find another pair of bowlers to rely upon.Anderson and Broad have been leading England’s attack since March 2008; the best part of a decade. Anderson has bowled 5,000 more deliveries than any other England Test bowler. They’ve taken 835 Test wickets between them – Broad needs only 16 more to go past Ian Botham into second place on the list of England’s Test wicket-takers – and played their part in England reaching No. 1 in the Test rankings, and memorable victories in India, Australia and South Africa. Their reputations are assured.Which makes it all the more remarkable that they keep coming back for more. And all the more remarkable that Broad, now aged 31, retains the hunger and humility to continue to find ways in which he can improve.Despite not appearing in ODIs for England since 2016, Broad still maintains hope for a white-ball recall ahead of the 2019 World Cup•Getty ImagesIn particular, of late, Broad has been trying to improve his form against right-handed batsmen. Having worked hard on bowling round the wicket to left-handers – his Test average against left-handers since June 2015 is 18.40 – he feels he had let his technique against right-handers slip a little and, as a consequence, lost a little of the shape and pace that has rendered him such a successful bowler. His average against right-handers in the same period is 25.69.”I bowled a lot around the wicket to left-handers against Australia in 2015,” Broad recalls now. “Then we went over to South Africa, who had two left-handers opening the batting, and I grooved a lot to left-handers.”I saw some numbers came up that I maybe averaged 40 against left-handers and I had to get that down. Since I’ve gone round the wicket, I think it’s at 15 or 16. But with bowling a lot round the wicket and trying to open my body up to get that shape on it, I hadn’t drilled enough over the wicket for that not to happen a little bit.”So I’ve been doing a bit of work on having the ability to be around the wicket, and then over the wicket. I’m never a massive away-swinger, that’s not what I do, but I want to be able to stand the seam up straight and run it down the slope.”The issue was first spotted by fast bowling guru Steffan Jones while the pair were at Hobart Hurricanes. Jones, the former county seamer who has moved into coaching, noticed Broad was falling away in delivery when bowling over the wicket and recommended a quicker run-up which would result in Broad getting through his delivery stride faster and allowing him less opportunity to fall away. Broad responded by bowling with increased pace in the BBL and also started to regain just a little of the away movement that makes him so dangerous.”The thing I took from Stef was the run up speed,” Broad says. “I’ve worked with Andy Pick – the Nottinghamshire bowling coach – and Ottis Gibson – the England bowling coach – too. A lot of it is to do with this front arm keeping tight [close to the body] because if it drifts out too much then you’ve got to balance the left side. So if I keep that right arm in tight, then it comes over straighter and I can move it away. Look, you’re not going to see me trying to do that like Jimmy. But I’ll try to hit off stump and get a little bit of nibble either way.”It’s great. I’ve just turned 31 and I’m still finding things in my action to improve to make myself a better bowler, which is exciting. You don’t ever want to fall into that trap of not having anything to work on.”If ever Broad thought that, it was a stance dispelled by the decision to drop him from England’s white ball teams. While he retains aspirations of winning a return to England’s ODI side for the 2019 World Cup, he knows he might be reliant on a series of injuries. Equally he knows that, with the likes of Mark Wood and Chris Woakes pressing, he needs to work hard to delay the day when he – like Matthew Hoggard and Steve Harmison before him – is replaced in the Test side by younger men.Broad may be growing older but still maintains a youthful zest for action•Getty ImagesHaving not represented England for 198 days – his longest spell without international cricket since April 2007, when he was recalled after 223 days without a match – he says this return “feels like a debut.””I’m going to keep pushing and training and trying to get myself better in white-ball cricket up until 2019 because anything can happen leading into a World Cup,” Broad says. “The World Cup dream is still there. If someone goes down on the eve of the tournament you want to be in the best possible shape for someone to call on you. I’ll just keep working and trying. We saw this summer there were a few niggles flying around.”I’ve gone from being a prospect who gets an extra game because I might be good in the future, to a situation where I have to perform every game, which is good. I’m the sort of person who seems to thrive on that added pressure and I tend to raise my game a bit when there’s a bit more on the game.”I think some pressure from younger bowlers will do me the world of good. I’ve been in a period in the last three or four years to need to perform to stay in the team and warrant staying in the team but I’ve been bowling probably the best of my career over the last four years and with some tweaks I’ve made in county cricket hopefully I can really push on.”And the pace? Can he still crank it up above 85mph? It’s been a feature of many of his best spells – the match-winning efforts in Durham and The Oval and Joburg and Trent Bridge – that he had been able to find that extra pace that gets the ball moving later and bouncing higher.”I’m sort of past the stage of trying to look at the speedometer,” he says. “I know that I have an optimum speed that’s about 84-85mph where I get my extra bounce and if I really have to ramp it up I can go higher than that, for a spell of bouncers or something. But I know that about 83-85mph with movement is where I need to be.”I want to keep going for a while. I don’t think I’ve had a gap like this playing for England and it reminds you how special it is and how lucky you are to be a part of it. When you’re not part of the one-day team, like I’m not at the moment, you do miss it so when you get the opportunity to play it feels like a debut if that makes sense. I’m lucky enough to have played over a hundred Tests but this feels like a debut.”

Who will Comilla Victorians leave out?

The 2015 champions may have lost their inspirational former captain, but they have gained an enviable roster of homegrown and foreign talent, including T20’s hottest young legspinner

Mohammad Isam01-Nov-2017Previous season: 6th in league stageBig pictureComilla Victorians have put up a strong statement in front of the other BPL teams ahead of this year’s tournament. Their squad brims with T20 stars and local performers, and they start as one of the strongest contenders this year.The way Comilla built their squad has been seen as a reaction from the team owners to their poor performance in 2016, a season they played as defending champions. They want to become champions again. Simple.Comilla’s batting line-up has three of Bangladesh’s current top order – Tamim Iqbal, Imrul Kayes and Liton Das – as well as strong performers from abroad like Fakhar Zaman, Jos Buttler and Colin Munro. The middle order will depend on Marlon Samuels, Darren Bravo and Shoaib Malik, not to forget the allrounders Dwayne Bravo and Mohammad Nabi.They also have Hasan Ali, Faheem Ashraf and Solomon Mire as allrounders apart from bowlers like Rashid Khan, Al-Amin Hossain and Arafat Sunny. It is a really strong line-up if the team management can put the right combination out on the field. Some really good players have to sit out at times, a situation that will have to be dealt with properly off the field.Key playerIf Rashid Khan can continue his good form from T20 tournaments from earlier this year, BPL batting line-ups are in for a tough time against Comilla. Rashid has proved his worth in every phase of T20 games, and has already taken 68 wickets so far in the format in 2017.CoachMohammad Salahuddin has a great track record with mediocre teams but this time the challenge will be different. He has to handle a team full of stars. What he also has to tackle are young local players, among whom he can only play five in a single game. This campaign promises to be a true test of Salahuddin’s coaching skills.One that got awayDespite the team not doing well in the 2016 BPL, Mashrafe Mortaza finished as the joint highest wicket-taker in the Comilla team with 13 wickets. He will definitely be missed as captain, bowler and six-hitter.Below the radarAmong the few rookies is Mehedi Hasan Rana, a left-arm quick bowler who is said to have a lot of potential. He has never played a T20 and doesn’t have really impressive numbers in first-class and List-A cricket, but he might get thrown into the deep end at some stage of the BPL.SquadTamim Iqbal, Imrul Kyes, Liton Das, Mohammad Saifuddin, Al-Amin Hossain, Arafat Sunny, Alok Kapali, Mahedi Hasan, Mehedi Hasan Rana, Enamul Haque, Raqibul Hasan, Dwayne Bravo, Shoaib Malik, Hasan Ali, Faheem Ashraf, Imran Khan Jr., Fakhar Zaman, Jos Butler, Colin Munro, Marlon Samuels, Darren Bravo, Mohammad Nabi, Rashid Khan, Solomon Mire, Rumman Raees, Graeme Cremer.

From Bogra to Brisbane: the Bangladeshi women expanding their country's horizons

Rumana Ahmed and Khadija Tul Kubra want to use their WBBL experience to raise the profile of the women’s game back home

Annesha Ghosh02-May-2018Imagine you are on your first visit to Australia and Stuart MacGill has a one-on-one session on legspin with you at the SCG. Then you bump into Mitchell Starc, who, on being introduced to you, says, “Of course, I know who she is.””I didn’t expect such a famous cricketer to have heard of a female cricketer from Bangladesh,” says Rumana Ahmed, Bangladesh women’s ODI captain, who along with her team-mate Khadija Tul Kubra, got to experience the action at last season’s WBBL up close as part of the ICC’s Rookie Placement Programme.Among eight cricketers shortlisted from five member countries of the ICC, Ahmed and Tul Kubra joined Brisbane Heat and Melbourne Stars to see how elite clubs train, play high-intensity T20s, and socialise as teams.”More than just the skill, or the fitness routines, I wanted to tap into their reading of the game, and study their body language – how these top women’s cricketers adapt to the pressure of modern-day cricket,” says Ahmed, as she prepares to lead Bangladesh on the ODI leg of their tour of South Africa.Her side hasn’t played an international match since the World Cup Qualifiers in February last year. “We are No. 9 on the ICC rankings, so unlike our men’s side, our playing opportunities are limited and that has stunted our growth to a great extent. So to train alongside players like [Jess] Jonassen, [Beth] Mooney, DK [Delissa Kimmince] and [Deandra] Dottin is a big achievement.”I met Ahmed and Tul Kubra in Belgaum last December when a full-strength Bangladesh A toured India for one-dayers and T20s against the hosts’ A team, and later spoke to them after they returned from their WBBL stint in January. They talked about how they made it to the national team – two very different stories.Ahmed comes around to the topic of her childhood while describing the pain of “wasted talent”.”I lost my father young, and in a family of four siblings, I started my formal training [in cricket] after my SSC exam in 2008,” she says.”My mother has never liked the fact that I play cricket. Not that she’s ever opposed it; it’s just that she doesn’t like that I play cricket. She barely tells anyone I’m the captain of the national team, you know, unlike what most mothers do.”What about when she was chosen to go to Australia?”When I told her over phone that I would be going to the WBBL, the first thing she said was, ‘Play, but don’t forget to read namaaz,’ Ahmed, 26, recounts with a laugh.Ahmed had a coaching session with fellow legspinner Stuart MacGill in Sydney•Rumana Ahmed”I am her child, so she’s obviously proud of it, but you’ve got to understand much of my mother’s thinking is a result of all the reeti-neeti [traditions] that shape our society.”In a society like ours, and in the subcontinent, it takes a lot of struggle for a girl to get to the field. I like answering people through my actions. All the effort I’ve put in, my team-mates and coaches have put in, I don’t want to let all that go waste.”At this stage of my career, I don’t want marriage to be a point of no return for me. I believe there will be time for me to get married, raise a family, but I don’t know of any female player from my country who gave up cricket for marriage and was then able to return to the game.”For Tul Kubra, 23, breaking the news that she was going to the WBBL to her father went quite differently.”He thought I had got the captaincy for the India tour,” she remembers. “But when I told him what it really was, he didn’t say a word. Not one. All Abbu did was weep for minutes. He had never expected I’d come this far with cricket.”Stirred by the sight of his pre-teen daughter playing cricket with her brother, Jamil Akhter, despite facing severe opposition from his family, felt “cricket could be the gateway to a better life” for her.”He would pack my lunchbox and send me to the camp in Bogra, where Aapu [Ahmed] and the Bangladesh team had been training ahead of the tri-series [involving Sri Lanka and Pakistan in 2009],” says Tul Kubra, who was 14 at that time.”Abbu would say, ‘Academics is important, but what you’ll learn by seeing these girls, you won’t get to read in the books. So go, watch them play.'””None of us ever heard this girl speak,” Ahmed says of first meeting Tul Kubra. “But we could see the eagerness in her eyes – a kind of fascination for what she would see us do.”Rumana Ahmed: “The self-belief can develop only when we play against international sides, understand what they’re doing right, what we’re doing wrong, and rectify those mistakes”•Annesha Ghosh/ESPNcricinfo LtdAn offspinner, Tul Kubra was first taught by her father and then coach Muslim Uddin in Bogra. In January last year, she took career-best figures of 4 for 33 while successfully defending a total of 136 against South Africa. However, she says turning out as Melbourne Stars’ 12th man on her penultimate day at the WBBL was just as thrilling as her international four-for.”I had to board an early-morning flight the next day, so I had packed my kit bag and left it in my room before leaving for the match. Just when I was about to get on the bus, the team manager said, ‘You’ll need to get your kit bag, you’ll be the 12th man today.'”When I heard that, my mind raced back to how I had been telling Abbu I needed somebody to accompany me to Australia. I was a little scared about travelling alone. But he said, ‘An airport is a metaphor for society. If you make your way through an airport all by yourself, you will conquer great things in life.'”From there to watching that Super Over [at the Melbourne derby between Stars and Renegades] from the dugout… I’d say I’ve been quite fortunate. Allah gave me the opportunity to watch players like Amy [Satterthwaite], Mignon du Preez and [Lizelle] Lee handle the Super Over the way they did. It’s about fighting to the finish. And that six from Satterthwaite and then our reply – there was so much to learn from their intent, their body language.”Ahmed, a legspinning allrounder, is Bangladesh’s leading run-maker and wicket-taker in ODIs, and the only female bowler from the country to have claimed an international hat-trick. She has played all of Bangladesh’s limited-overs matches since they got ODI status in 2011.On the India tour she was the top run scorer in both the ODIs and the T20s, took five wickets in six matches, and even her fielding stood out, especially one low catch she took, diving full length after running in about 30 yards from long-off.Ahmed with Mitchell Starc•Rumana AhmedAhmed knows Bangladesh can’t progress further without regular games. Although they performed reasonably well in the 2014 World T20 at home – winning two of their five matches – they have only played 12 T20Is since.”If you look at the way Pakistan has improved – they beat New Zealand last year, who would have thought? That’s because regular playing opportunities have injected confidence in these players. Even though they may have lost most of their series, the team has been growing in confidence.”It’s not that we are light years behind, but the self-belief can develop only when we play against international sides, understand what they’re doing right, what we’re doing wrong. That’s where an experience like the ICC-WBBL rookie programme helps.”Seeing her more experienced team-mates at Heat work out problems on the field taught Ahmed a lot about the mental aspect of the game.”When you see a Jonassen care so much about the team – it feels as though she owns the team – you feel like giving that 5% more to your own side as a player and captain,” Ahmed says.”And the way she and Mooney would bail Brisbane out of difficult scenarios – that could be a lesson for not only us but all subcontinental teams on how to stay calm, have a positive body language even when it seems like you are headed for defeat.”Ahmed and Tul Kubra also enjoyed their time with their team-mates off the field, and were touched by the warmth with which they were treated.”DK [Kimmince] and Dottin would pick me up from the hotel and drive me to the ground every day. Everybody knows her [Dottin] for her big-hitting, but she’s also very helpful. I needed a local SIM card, so she drove me to a store far off to get me the SIM.”Tul Kubra remembers the nervousness she felt when she met Stars’ players and support staff for the first time.”[Erin] Osborne treated me like a friend from day one. She would herself come to me, explain the finer details of offspin bowling. She did her best to make me feel at home.Rumana Ahmed: “We are trying to make sure this WBBL experience was as much our team-mates’ as it was our own”•Annesha Ghosh/ESPNcricinfo Ltd”When you think of these big teams like Australia, England, West Indies, you’re always in awe. What you don’t realise is, most of these players are friendly, warm and always willing to help you. They are human beings like us!”I was missing our home curries one night, so my team-mates drove me to an Indian resident’s place for dinner and they decided to use their fingers to eat, just the way people in the subcontinent eat! That was a great moment to be part of.”Ahmed wishes others like her could experience the sort of coaching session she got from MacGill.”That one hour sir spent with me, talking about the variations I could develop, how the courage to give it a good rip alone can fetch you a wicket at times. It’s the kind of experience parents from our society would want their daughters to have, I’d like to hope.”Now, back home, both Ahmed and Tul Kubra are hoping to share what they learnt with their team-mates, starting with the 30-player camp in Sylhet. The national team, staffed with a recently refreshed coaching faculty, including former India allrounder and assistant coach Devika Palshikar, who was recently appointed deputy to head coach David Capel, trained there ahead of their international season: the tour of South Africa is to be followed by the Asia Cup in Malaysia, a ten-day tour of Ireland, and the World T20 Qualifiers in Netherlands.”We are trying to make sure this WBBL experience was as much our team-mates’ as it was our own,” Ahmed says.”If our journey can instill confidence in our team-mates and inspire any girl in Bangladesh to take up sport, make them believe it’s possible to create one’s own identity and go places if you persist with it, we will think we have made decent use of the opportunity the ICC gave us through the WBBL.”

'I've got too big a drive to stop' – Katherine Brunt

After 13 years as an England cricketer, fast bowler aims to evolve into a genuine allrounder to prolong her career

Andrew Miller28-Jun-2018Over the past fortnight of international action, in both men’s and women’s cricket, there’s been no place to hide if you are a toiling fast bowler. Records have been obliterated wherever you care to look – from New Zealand women’s 490 against Ireland, to England men’s 481 against Australia, to England women’s 250 in a T20 against South Africa at Taunton last week.”Yeah, it does make you question why you do what you do,” says Katherine Brunt, England’s veteran quick bowler, with the sort of lugubrious air that Angus Fraser might have cultivated in his pomp.”There’s not much fun in it any more. One of the main things our coach tells us now is accept you are going to get hit, the pitches are that good and the balls don’t move off the straight so you have to be very highly skilled at variations and consistent lines and lengths.”You mainly have to accept the fact that you are going to get smashed a few times, you have to keep working hard and you’ll get your rewards that way.”However, Brunt, who turns 33 next week, is not half as downcast as she might like to let on – not even when the conversation turns to the astonishing wicketkeeping skills of Sarah Taylor, whose half-volleyed leg-side stumping off Dane van Nierkerk at Taunton was a bittersweet moment for the fastest bowler in England’s ranks.”It’s actually demoralising,” she says. “It makes me think I can’t be that quick if you can just do that! But I’ve played with Sarah since she was 16, so I know what she’s capable of. It wasn’t a massive shock to me, but for people watching it’s jawdropping. You do have to take a moment to say that was pretty special, but I bet if you asked her, she’d say it’s not as hard as you think.”But realistically there is little reason for Brunt to grumble at present. England’s women are riding the crest of their post-World Cup wave, having out-muscled South Africa in a closely fought ODI series before providing some quality entertainment in the opening rounds of the T20 Triangular, for which they are virtually guaranteed a berth in Sunday’s final at Chelmsford after a pair of hard-hitting wins over both opponents.”The venues have been great, the crowd attendance has been great, the feedback’s been brilliant, the media support too,” says Brunt. “And the weather has been incredible, we’ve been melting down in Bristol for the past two days. All of our games seem go down to the wire at the moment because the teams are so evenly balanced, and that makes for really good entertainment. But it doesn’t work quite so well for the state of my nails, or getting heart attacks midway through games!”With three wickets at 19.66 in the campaign to date, Brunt has done her bit for the cause with ball in hand. But increasingly, she is being trusted as a frontline batting option – not least in the world-record 250, when she was pushed up the order to No.4 with licence to give it some humpty, and duly walked off the field 16 balls later with 42 not out to her name.Katherine Brunt rocks back to cut•PA Images via Getty Images”I’ve been working on my batting a lot recently,” she says. “I used to be a bit of a slogger but I’ve turned myself into a genuine allrounder. My skill has come on a bit, I can hit balls in different areas now rather than just being a one-track batter, so I’ve got Robbo [coach Mark Robinson] to thank for that, and hopefully I can keep getting better.”Brunt’s innings on that day at Taunton included three fours and three sixes, and followed another fine performance in the first ODI of the summer against South Africa, when she produced a career-best 72 not out to double England’s total after they had slumped to 97 for 8.”It’s mostly a mental thing,” she adds. “The hardest thing about batting is that you have to believe it yourself, and then I needed someone else to believe it too, not just me. It’s always been a bit of a ****-take, for want of a better word. People would laugh at me if I said I could bat, and they’d just say ‘no’.”So once people started to take me more seriously, I was allowed to take myself more seriously, and spend a bit more time on it, and I could see the improvement from where my game was.”The development of an extra string to Brunt’s bow is a vital aspect of her career evolution, as she begins to accept the inevitability of time creeping up on her 13-year England career.”I ask myself this question in two-month intervals,” Brunt says on the subject of her eventual retirement. “It’s just where my body’s at really. I did used to say I’d quit when I didn’t love it anymore, but I can’t see that happening because my passion will always be there.”I’m very stubborn and a perfectionist. There’s always more I can do to be better, It’ll be my body that caves in in the end, and I don’t see that happening yet, but I’ve got too big a drive to stop. The choice will have to be taken out of my hands in the end, but women’s sport is going places, with different formats and competitions taking place, which make it harder to walk away.”As and when she does depart, however, Brunt will be able to reflect on a career that has spanned two distinct eras of women’s cricket – and while the professional era is still in its infancy, the standards have been rocketing in recent months, not just out in the middle where no total seems safe anymore, but in the nets where the next generation are developing rapidly.”We’ve never really been challenged in the nets on tours until recently,” says Brunt. “Now a few girls have turned up with a yard or two of pace or a bit about them. These are 16-17 year olds with variations from nowhere, and they do open your eyes and make you think ‘blimey!'”Five or six years ago, kids coming into the nets as net bowlers weren’t very good, you’d have to get the coach to give you throwdowns because the standard wasn’t good, but now they are getting you out every other ball.”There’s some real good talent coming through from the counties, lots of girls with the skills to bowl yorkers and out of the back of the hand. The likes of our performance squad girls, who unfortunately miss out a lot of the time like Beth Langston and Kate Cross, and Katie George, who’s just on the scene with pacy left-arm inswing. There’s a lot to be excited about, for now and in the future.”Kia Motors is the official title sponsor of the Kia Super League, for more information please visit www.kia.com

Talking Points: KL Rahul or bust for Kings XI

The opener has scored a third of his team’s total runs in IPL 2018

Dustin Silgardo16-May-20182:08

Top five reasons why Mumbai beat Punjab

Poor KL RahulWith 20 runs required off 10 balls, KL Rahul tried to hit a full, wide ball for six over long-off. He miscued it and was out. While walking off, he held in his face in his hands and shouted at himself. Perhaps Rahul was angry that he tried to attack Bumrah, Mumbai Indians’ most economical bowler. Perhaps he felt he should have waited for a better ball to hit. If that was the case, Rahul was being very hard on himself.KL Rahul has scored a third of Kings XI Punjab’s runs off the bat this IPL season•ESPNcricinfo LtdThrough this IPL, no team has been more reliant on one batsman than Kings XI Punjab have been on Rahul. He has now scored a third of his team’s total runs off the bat. Given that, he should have been the one trying to stay till the end while the batsmen around him attacked. But, during a crucial 16th over from Mayank Markande, Aaron Finch couldn’t time the ball, so it was up to Rahul to attack the last two balls. He hit them both for sixes. Once Finch was out, Marcus Stoinis and Axar Patel should have gone big from ball one, but they consumed four balls for only two runs before Rahul took strike in the third ball of the 18th over. So Rahul had to go after Ben Cutting. He hit him for three consecutive fours. Now, surely, it was Axar’s turn to take some of the pressure off. But again, in Bumrah’s over, he managed just a single off the second ball. It was all up to Rahul. He had to go for the big shot.How Mitchell McClenaghan’s season turned aroundAfter Mumbai’s match against Royal Challengers Bangalore on May 1, Mitchell McClenaghan had a smart economy rate of 9.07 and cost his team 8.5 runs over six games. Since then, he’s bowled in five innings and gone at a smart ER of 7.42, saving his team 9 runs. He’s also picked up five wickets, many of them crucial. The key to McClenaghan’s turnaround has been when he has bowled. Till May 1, he was regularly used as a death bowler. He had delivered four overs in the last four and had a smart ER of 17.95 in that phase. Since then, he has become a specialist Powerplay and middle-overs bowler and has been used for only two overs in the final four.Why Rohit bowled out HardikIn Mumbai’s last four games, Hardik Pandya had been a regular death bowler. But against Kings XI, Rohit Sharma bowled him out before the 16th over, and in the end had to bowl Ben Cutting in the 18th and McClenaghan in the 20th. It was an attacking move from Rohit. He knew how dependent Kings XI were on their top three and wanted to dismiss them early. In the middle order, Kings XI had Marcus Stoinis, Yuvraj Singh and Manoj Tiwary, all of whom have struggled this season. So, Rohit was confident that his back-up bowlers could do the job against them in the death if Hardik, his top wicket-taker, could dismiss Rahul or Finch. He didn’t, and having to bowl Cutting at the death almost cost Mumbai.Why was Yuvraj not sent in earlier?Yuvraj had been padded up since the fifth over of Kings XI’s chase, but when the second wicket fell in the 17th over, it was Stoinis who came out. When he was dismissed off the fifth ball of the same over, Axar Patel walked in, and Yuvraj arrived at the crease with only nine balls left in the innings. There were several reasons for this decision.First, Yuvraj has never been someone who can get going from ball one. This season, his strike rate off the first five balls he faces has been 77.77. Even over his entire T20 career, he scores at just 86.80 off his first five and 109.32 off his first ten. With 42 required off 23 balls, Kings XI couldn’t have someone come in and get 11 off 10. Second, Yuvraj has been in woeful form this season, striking at less than 90. Third, he has particularly struggled against 140-kph bowlers, often bringing his bat down late when playing shots against them, and Kings XI knew Mumbai had two overs from Bumrah and one from McClenaghan to come.Why didn’t Ashwin bowl till the death?While Kieron Pollard and Krunal Pandya blazed to a 65-run fifth-wicket stand, R Ashwin stood at mid-off looking tense. But his own figures at the time read 1-0-5-0. It seemed bizarre that Ashwin was not bowling, given Mumbai were four down and had left-hander Krunal and Pollard, who prefers pace to spin, at the wicket.ESPNcricinfo LtdIt turned out Ashwin was saving his overs for the death. Mohit Sharma had gone at 12.82 an over in the death before this game and had got hit for 25 in his first two overs, so Ashwin did not trust him to bowl two overs in the death. That meant he had to bowl from the other end while Andrew Tye bowled the 17th and 19th. Also, Ashwin may have been waiting for Ben Cutting to come in, so he could expose his weakness against spin.Had Ashwin bowled earlier, Mumbai may have decided to milk him for singles and wait for Mohit, and possibly Marcus Stoinis, in the death. Still, with Mumbai gaining so much momentum in the middle overs, it is surprising Ashwin didn’t give himself at least one in that period.So then why didn’t Ashwin bowl the 20th?Having come on in the death, Ashwin bowled two overs for 13 runs and took two wickets. He was eligible to bowl another, but gave Mohit the 20th – another surprising decision. The only explanation is that he thought pace was a better option than spin to the No. 9 and 10 at the crease.At the end of Mumbai’s innings, Ashwin and Axar Patel had bowled just six overs between them for 42 runs, while the seamers, apart from Tye, had conceded 123 in 10. So Ashwin may be left ruing his bowling changes.

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