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Resolute Cook leads England's reply

Alastair Cook anchored England’s response to Pakistan’s immense first innings of 523 for 8 declared with a serene unbeaten 168

The Report by Andrew Miller15-Oct-2015
Scorecard and ball-by-ball details1:43

‘Template’ Cook leads the way

Alastair Cook, the England captain, responded to the challenge laid down by Pakistan’s run-hungry batsmen with a totemic unbeaten 168 to show his team the way to survive, and then thrive, in the harsh desert conditions at the Sheikh Zayed Stadium in Abu Dhabi.On Cook’s watch, England ground along to 290 for 3 by the close, a position of relative serenity given their travails in the field on the first two days. The bulk of his work was split between two century partnerships, first with Moeen Ali, who was a qualified success in his first outing as a Test opening batsman, and then with a hard-grafting Ian Bell, who eventually found his feet, and his footwork, after a horrifically jittery start before slashing at a wide one from Wahab Riaz in the closing overs of the day.Pakistan’s total of 523 for 8 declared remains several sessions from being equalled, but this was a day for the grand gesture, and Cook duly delivered in spades. His iron-willed feat of endurance, spanning 329 balls and more than eight hours to date, is a direct descendant of his trio of centuries on the tour of India in 2012-13. At Ahmedabad, Mumbai and Kolkata, his efforts first turned the tide of a losing cause, then eventually paved the way for his greatest captaincy triumph to date. It’s not a bad memory to fall back on.Batting with the bloodless resolve that has been the hallmark of his greatest feats in an England shirt, Cook built serenely on his overnight score of 39, as Pakistan’s bowlers took their turn to toil in the heat. Without the services of the legspinner, Yasir Shah, and with Shoaib Malik’s offspin a subdued option following his sapping double-century on the first two days, their four frontline bowlers managed a solitary strike between them in 105 overs, before Wahab bagged Bell then bowled the nightwatchman, Mark Wood, to double his tally shortly before stumps.It was a lively finish to a tough day’s work from Wahab, whose ability to start a spell at full tilt made him Pakistan’s go-to man, albeit he served up nine no-balls and three wides in an occasionally erratic display. But his fellow seamers, Imran Khan and Rahat Ali, were a disappointment, their apparently economical figures a testament more to their lack of threat with either new ball than to any excellence on their part. There was, however, no mitigation for the murderously flat conditions.Either way, Cook’s equilibrium could not be disturbed. With a judicious use of the cut, pull and sweep, allied to his usual caution outside off stump and his eye for a nurdle off the pads, the England captain notched up the 28th hundred of his Test career, and the third of a renaissance 2015 in which he has now gone past 1000 runs for the calendar year. At the age of 30, he is closing in inexorably on 10,000 career runs – he is currently 502 runs adrift – while his first century in the UAE completed a full set in all nine of the regions in which he has played Test cricket.Only Pakistan itself eludes him as a venue – England’s last Test there, at Lahore in 2005-06, came one match before his memorable century on debut in Nagpur. But it is fair to say he would thrive in his opponents’ real home as well. He has now scored eight of his centuries in Asia, a tally that has been matched only by Jacques Kallis among overseas batsmen. And Kallis’ tally of 2058 runs is also under threat.Alastair Cook didn’t offer a genuine chance until he had made 147•Getty Images

He is not a batsman who generally relies on power to make his point, but when Cook clanged Shan Masood, at short leg, flush on the helmet in the closing moments of the afternoon session, he showcased the timing that he brings to his best performances. Masood was deemed fit to resume after leaving the field for treatment, but he wasn’t the only fielder to look a bit dizzy in the heat. Midway through the evening session, Cook offered the only genuine chance of his entire innings, a top-edged slog-sweep on 147 that flew to Fawad Alam, at deep midwicket.Fawad made good ground but let the chance slip through his fingers, and one over later Zulfiqar Babar, the luckless bowler, had taken temporary custody of an unwanted record. If this game continues as it has started, with 70 wicketless overs already in the bank from England’s spinners, it will go down in history as the most overs of spin ever bowled in a Test match without reward.Aside from a sprinkling of plays-and-misses outside off, Cook’s only other moment of alarm came on 101, when he stretched to sweep Zulfiqar and was struck on the pad perilously adjacent to off stump. Umpire Paul Reiffel turned down the initial appeal, and though replays showed he had been struck inside the line, Hawk-Eye suggested the ball was missing leg stump. The naked eye argued otherwise.At the opposite end, in every sense, during their second-wicket stand of 165 was Bell, whose place in the team had been under scrutiny even before his crucial pair of dropped catches on the first day. Though he showed immense determination to survive 199 deliveries for his gritty innings of 63, he was never remotely as comfortable as his captain, right from the moment he edged his first delivery, from Imran, inches short of Mohammad Hafeez in the slip cordon.Though Bell got off the mark with a single from his third ball, he was unable to add to that tally from a further 24 deliveries before lunch, and was particularly troubled by the spin of Zulfiqar, his conventional technique seemingly unsuited to the flat skiddy conditions.Whereas Cook and Moeen, who made 35 in an opening stand of 116, had emulated Pakistan’s batsmen in playing the spinners with their bats well in front of the front leg, Bell’s preferred method was to press forward with bat and pad together. It made him a prime candidate both for lbw – two early appeals might well have been sent to the third umpire for reviews – as well as an inside-edge which eluded the grasp of silly mid-off.After tea, Bell discovered a degree of fluency, initially by unfurling his rarely used sweep-shot to keep the strike rotating, and latterly by bringing his favoured glide to third man into play. The best of his strokes was arguably a calm cover-drive for three as Wahab over-pitched outside off stump, but the most gratefully played was his conventional pull through backward square to bring up his half-century from 134 balls. It was one of the few balls all day that allowed him to play to one of his strengths.As the shadows began to lengthen, Bell reached once too often for his cover-drive and edged into the hands of gully. Sixty-five arduous overs had elapsed since the fall of Moeen, whose promotion from No. 8 to opening batsman was a qualified success. After 30 overs of hard toil with the ball over the course of the preceding two days, he was never at his most fluent – not that it mattered in the conditions – and was comfortably outscored by his captain throughout their opening stand.However, he played his part nonetheless, and helped to post only England’s sixth 100-run opening partnership since the retirement of Andrew Strauss in 2012. Two of those came earlier this year – Cook’s stands with Jonathan Trott in Grenada in April, and with Adam Lyth at Headingley in June.Moeen was untroubled aside from an awkward moment in the first hour when he was struck on the shoulder by a Wahab bouncer, but just when it seemed he might be able to press on to the sort of substantial score that might seal his audition, he was undone by one of the better balls of the day, a good-length delivery from Imran that nipped away by half-a-bat’s width and took the edge through to the keeper. But the agenda had been set and Cook remained on hand to take the minutes with typical diligence.

South Africa to tour Australia, New Zealand next season

South Africa will play Australia and New Zealand, home and away, in 2016-17, Cricket South Africa has announced. They will also host Sri Lanka in all three formats, and Ireland for ODIs

ESPNcricinfo staff03-Nov-2015South Africa will play Australia and New Zealand, home and away, in 2016-17, Cricket South Africa has announced. They will also host Sri Lanka in all three formats, and Ireland for ODIs.South Africa kick off their 2016-17 season with a two-Test match series against New Zealand in August. Then they host Australia for five ODIs in September and October 2016, before making a reciprocal tour in November to play Tests. Sri Lanka will tour South Africa from December to February for three Tests, five ODIs and three T20Is, and a full tour to New Zealand will follow these series, in February and March 2017.South Africa’s home series against Australia will be preceded by a visit by Ireland, who will play one ODI each against the hosts and Australia.”Playing against New Zealand, Australia, Ireland and Sri Lanka in one season will test the winning ways of our [team],” CSA chief executive Haroon Lorgat said. “It will also provide our fans with the opportunity to watch them in action at home in five Sunfoil Test matches, 11 Momentum ODIs and three KFC T20 International matches.”Test cricket will remain the main focus for our world No. 1 ranked team, and I am pleased the ICC has increased the total Test rankings prize money to $US 1.8 million.”Cricket Ireland CEO Warren Deutrom was pleased at the opportunity to play ODIs against South Africa and Australia. “Cricket Ireland is most grateful to Cricket South Africa and Cricket Australia for giving us this opportunity,” he said. “These matches are precisely what [coach] John Bracewell was referring to when he said we need more matches, more regularly, against the best players, in overseas conditions.”

Jurgensen ready for Rangpur juggling act

Shane Jurgensen has said that his experience as Bangladesh’s head coach will give him a slender edge in working with the Rangpur Riders in the BPL

Mohammad Isam19-Nov-2015Shane Jurgensen has said that his experience as Bangladesh’s head coach will give him a slender edge in working with the Rangpur Riders in the BPL. He is also relishing the prospect of his first assignment in guiding a T20 franchise team which is tipped to be the strongest on paper in this season’s tournament.”I think it will be a slight advantage [with my previous experience in Bangladesh] but every team will be well-prepared,” Jurgensen said. “We will have to make sure that we don’t take our foot off the pedal. We have to make all the 240 balls count.”It is a good opportunity for me to get into T20 cricket. I am pretty excited. I have never really done something like this in a franchise set-up. It is a new thing for me. It is a good test for my coaching ability to get along with the players, to have a good time in a team environment. I like what I am seeing. Everything is well organised off the field, so everything has gone well so far.”Jurgensen said that his role in Fiji, where he worked after leaving Bangladesh in April 2014, was that of an allrounder in terms of coaching all the representative sides on the island. He said that the hands-on role has added to his repertoire as a coach.”I have taken up a role where I do a lot of stuff off the field, apart from coaching. It has been good for me personally, to tap into other areas like budget, planning and lot more of other stuff.”In Fiji, it is me and me only. So I am coaching in a lot of different areas of the game. I am coaching a lot more fielding, batting and bowling. It has helped my coaching. I have to be more hands-on,” he said.It is a totally different story now for Jurgensen, who is in charge of a team that boasts the topmost catch among the local players – Shakib Al Hasan – as well as having Darren Sammy, Misbah-Ul-Haq, Thisara Perera, Lendl Simmons, Sachitra Senanayake, Mohammad Nabi and Wahab Riaz as their seven foreign players.He said that it would be an interesting task to pick the four foreign players allowed in the playing XI but what is more challenging to him is to pick the seven locals from the rest of his squad who are training in Mirpur for the last few days ahead of the BPL.Soumya Sarkar was Rangpur’s first pick in the BPL draft held last month while they also have Arafat Sunny, Mohammad Mithun and Jahurul Islam among Bangladesh internationals. Muktar Ali, Saqlain Sajib and Abu Jayed Chowdhury have just finished their assignment for Bangladesh A in Zimbabwe, so the likes of left-arm spinner Murad Khan, allrounders Rasel Al Mamun and Alok Kapali, Al Amin jnr and seamer Nazmul Hossain have been in training and Jurgensen is confident they will be ready.”It is going to be the same for all the team. But all these [Rangpur] boys have been playing some form of cricket recently. Some of them have been in South Africa while some have been in Zimbabwe,” he said. “The Sri Lankan and West Indian players have been playing too. They are all cricket-fit and they are experienced players now.”It is an opportunity for the [local] guys who are training in Dhaka to put their best foot forward. We have four overseas players and seven local players so everyone will be pushing for spots. It is important at the moment that these guys have the best preparation possible while the other guys are playing.”He said that while Shakib’s experience as a T20 player would be important for his team, he likes the balance of his team too.”Shakib is obviously an integral part of the team. He is Bangladesh’s most experienced T20 player and MVP in the last BPL. It is great to have him in the team and we have a good overall team too. The balance is pretty good.”Our goal is to reach the final. I have come here to win. I think we have a well balanced team. We have to make sure to put all the potential we have on paper and execute accordingly.”Rangpur play the BPL opener against the Chittagong Vikings on November 22.

'Stopping cricket not the answer' – Imran

With India-Pakistan cricketing ties currently in limbo, former Pakistan captain Imran Khan has asserted that stopping cricket is not the answer to combating terrorism

PTI11-Dec-2015With India-Pakistan cricketing ties currently in limbo, former Pakistan captain Imran Khan has asserted that stopping cricket is not the answer to combating terrorism. Imran, who is currently in India attending , a news conclave, said he had raised the issue with Indian prime minister Narendra Modi, and was hoping for a positive response.”Stopping cricket is not an answer to terrorism. You don’t boycott a society on the basis of few sick men,” Imran said. “I supported the ban on South Africa once, but that was due to their stance on apartheid and that was a human rights violation. But other than that I believe sport should carry on.”It is a matter of a lifelong relationship. People to people contact is necessary to build ties. Sachin [Tendulkar] is loved in Pakistan as a Wasim [Akram] is loved in India.”On his meeting with Modi, Imran said: “I told Modi that cricket should happen. Modiji smiled at that question and I couldn’t decipher whether it was a ‘yes’ or ‘no’. But I am a positive person and would take that positively.”We are the first generation of partition children, so we had heard a lot of hate stories. And people like us were on each side of the country. But when I toured India as a cricketer, I realised that we are the same people, who listen to the same songs and have the same tastes. There is consensus in Pakistan against terror. So we should look to bridge gaps not create distances.”Former India captain Kapil Dev, who was sharing the stage with Imran, was however more guarded in his stance on India-Pakistan ties.”Players have no problem in playing against each other, but you can’t go against government policy,” he said. “Boards certainly want to play, but Imran, Kapil and Sachin’s views do not matter. It is the government’s decision which finally counts.”

Injured Shami out of Australia tour, Bhuvneshwar named replacement

India fast bowler Mohammed Shami has been ruled out of the Australia tour with a hamstring injury, the BCCI medical team has confirmed

ESPNcricinfo staff09-Jan-2016India fast bowler Mohammed Shami, who just came back from a long injury layoff, has been ruled out of the Australia tour with a hamstring injury, the BCCI medical team has confirmed. Bhuvneshwar Kumar was named replacement and is expected to join the Indian team on Sunday.Shami sustained a Grade II injury to his left hamstring which will keep him out of action for four to six weeks, a BCCI release said. Shami sustained a knee injury to the same leg, and had not bowled at all on Friday, in the warm-up T20 game against Western Australia XI in Perth.Shami’s last international outing was during the World Cup, when he played through injury and pain, after which he underwent surgery and then rehabilitation at the National Cricket Academy in Bangalore. He was then named among the 30 probables for a preparatory camp ahead of the South Africa series in September, but could not regain full fitness for the international matches.Once he was fit, Shami played four matches for Bengal – two in the Vijay Hazare Trophy in December and two in the Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy in January. In the one-day matches he returned with figures of 1 for 40 and 2 for 52, while the T20s saw him end with 2 for 30 and 3 for 18.Before the departure for Australia, India captain MS Dhoni had said Shami was part of his plans for the World T20, which begins on March for India, against New Zealand in Nagpur. Before that, India are also scheduled to host Sri Lanka for three T20s and then travel to Bangladesh for the Asia Cup T20.On the current tour, India will play five ODIs and three T20Is in Australia, from January 12 to 31.

Sharjeel ton powers Islamabad United to final

Sharjeel Khan scored the first hundred of the Pakistan Super League to charge Islamabad United to the final of the tournament, with a 50-run win against Peshawar Zalmi

ESPNcricinfo staff21-Feb-2016
Scorecard and ball-by-ball details0:30

‘Very special innings from Sharjeel’ – Mohammad Akram

Sharjeel Khan scored the first hundred of the Pakistan Super League as Islamabad United galloped into the final with a comprehensive 50-run win against Peshawar Zalmi. Sharjeel’s 50-ball hundred powered Islamabad to 176 for 3 before left-arm spinner Imran Khalid’s four-for made sure Peshawar were bowled out for 126 with two overs to spare.Put in to bat, Islamabad put together a 108-run opening stand in 13.1 overs, a majority of the runs coming off Sharjeel’s blade. Dwayne Smith, the other opener, struggled to get bat on ball during his stay of 37 balls to score 19 runs without a single boundary.In the ninth over, Sharjeel unleashed two sixes and a four against left-arm spinner Mohammad Asghar. He followed that up with an attack on Shahid Afridi too in the next over to bring up his fifty. The most eventful over, though, was the 14th in which Shaun Tait dismissed Smith and Brad Haddin off consecutive deliveries, but Kamran Akmal dropped Khalid Latif to deprive Tait of a hat-trick. Sharjeel then struck the next two balls of the over for a four and six.He brought up his hundred, studded with 12 fours and eight sixes, in style with a straight six in the 16th over and helped Islamabad score 46 in the last five overs. He was run-out for 117 in the last over of the innings.Peshawar started slow in the Powerplay and were dented when Samuel Badree dismissed Dawid Malan in the fourth over. Kamran kept the score ticking till the 11th over before Khalid struck. Peshawar’s main source of resistance was opener Kamran Akmal, who made 45 from 32 balls. But with the next four batsmen scored only in single digits, the writing was on the wall.Khalid removed Mohammad Hafeez and Kamran in consecutive overs, and Brad Hodge and Darren Sammy in the same over – the 13th – to reduce Peshawar to 80 for 5. By then, the required run rate had shot up over 13 per over.Afridi provided his team with a few late strikes, but it was not enough. Khalid finished with 4 for 20 from his three overs and Andre Russell took three lower-order wickets, including Afridi’s, to end with 3 for 37.

Preparation more important than results – du Plessis

Victories are not the only barometer South Africa will use to measure their readiness for next month’s World T20

Firdose Moonda18-Feb-20163:47

‘I know what our best team is’ – du Plessis

Victories are not the only barometer South Africa will use to measure their readiness for next month’s World T20. Instead, their five home internationals – two against England and three against Australia – will act as dress rehearsals for their matches in India, even though conditions and combinations will be completely different.”If you’ve got you team for India and try and roll that out in South Africa, it’s not always going to right. But it’s not always about the best thing for now. It’s about looking ahead,” Faf du Plessis, South Africa’s T20 captain, said.”For me, the biggest thing is the World Cup, so everything we do is geared around that. If we lose 2-0, it’s not ideal for preparation but it’s about ticking the stuff we’re still working on and making sure you’re improving on that. If we’ve nailed our skills and we win five out of five, that’s great. But if it goes the other way it’s just about gradually stepping up.”That may mean South Africa will do some unusual things to their game plans – which will be focused on scoring as many runs as possible in the Powerplay and doing a bit more nudging and nurdling later on – and to their XI. At some point, perhaps they will even field two specialist spinners in Imran Tahir, who is regarded as their first choice, and Aaron Phangiso, who performed well in the South Africa A game against an England XI on Wednesday.Phangiso was the only one of the three national squad members in the A side who had something to show for his effort in the warm-up match. He took 1 for 29 in four overs while David Miller and Farhaan Behardien scored only 10 and 4 respectively. Du Plessis did not mind too much, saying it was more important for Miller, especially, to get game time after sitting out the ODI series. “Whether you do well or not spending time in the middle is always better than being in the nets,” he said.Both Miller and Behardien are likely to be in South Africa’s XI along with allrounders David Wiese and Chris Morris. That may not sound like the strongest middle-order but, given South Africa’s history of meltdowns in that department, it does promise some muscle and all four of them were always part of du Plessis’ plans.”I do know what our best team is,” he said. “That’s the great thing about how our plan has unfolded in the last year-and-a-half. Then we sat down and planned our ideal XV that we would like to go to the World T20, and that was the XV that was on paper at the squad announcement. In that period we experimented, we tried new roles, we tried to see where guys are suited best. In my mind I’m pretty clear what that is.”Now it’s about everybody putting those well-thought-out plans into action and that is all du Plessis wants from the next few weeks ahead of the tournament. “I see the next five games, seven if you count the two warm-up games, about giving most of the guys game time,” he said. “You can’t always guarantee that everyone is going to play. It’s just about to get some guys ready and feeling good before that first match starts in the World Cup.”

Root takes England to record WT20 chase

England completed the second-highest successful chase in T20 internationals and the highest in World T20 history to keep their campaign alive

The Report by Firdose Moonda18-Mar-2016
Scorecard and ball-by-ball details
3:34

Chappell: Root has a good cricketing brain

England completed the second-highest successful chase in T20 internationals and the highest in World T20 history to keep their campaign alive. They held their nerve chasing 230, thanks to a blistering start from Jason Roy and a clinical innings from Joe Root that ripped South Africa’s attack apart and undid their batsmen’s efforts.Quinton de Kock, Hashim Amla and JP Duminy all scored half-centuries in a line-up that included AB de Villiers at No. 3 and South Africa would have thought they had enough. Instead, they were left to rue the three overs between 10 and 13, bowled by Adil Rashid and Moeen Ali, when South Africa could not find the boundary and scored just 14 runs. Before that, they were 125 for 2; after it, 139 for 3 and it was the difference between a score under 250 and one greater than. In the end, South Africa needed the latter.On a night when no one wanted to be a bowler, the England seamers’ scattergun approach was nullified by South Africa’s overcompensation in bowling too straight, as well as some ill discipline. While England only gave away two wides, South Africa donated 20. An England line-up whose approach is built on aggression punished them for that.Given the magnitude of their task, England showed intent from the first ball. Jason Roy swung hard at Kagiso Rabada and took 21 runs of the opening over – the most Rabada has conceded in an over in this format.Alex Hales treated Dale Steyn with equal disdain. He sent the first three balls for four, all flicks on the leg side, although he should have been dismissed off the first. Kyle Abbott was at short fine leg and could not hold on. Roy had even less respect for Steyn. He finished the over with 10 runs off two balls to take England to 44 after two overs, the most runs off 12 balls in a T20. It was also Steyn’s most expensive T20I overEngland were running away with it but Abbott made up for his earlier blunder when he had Hales rapped on the pads in front of middle and leg to strike the first blow.Ben Stokes was promoted to No. 3, Roy kept going and South Africa had to turn to death bowling strategies in the Powerplay. Abbott searched for the yorker and found it but when he missed Roy ramped him for six over de Kock’s head. Roy tried to do it again but skied it and de Kock took the catch, ending his contribution at 43 from 16 balls.When Stokes hit a Rabada full toss to the deep square leg boundary, it was advantage South Africa. Although England had more runs than South Africa had after six overs – 89 to 83 – they had already lost three wickets.Imran Tahir was introduced in the seventh over and immediately quietened things down. His opening over cost seven runs without a boundary and, having seen England’s spinners have a similar impact, Faf du Plessis gambled with bringing on Duminy. It paid off as Duminy worked in tandem with Tahir and snaffled Eoin Morgan, who chopped on, to keep the advantage with South Africa at the halfway point. After 10 overs South Africa were 125 for 2; England 118 for 4.But the brakes were slammed on South Africa’s innings then when Rashid and Moeen kept du Plessis and Duminy quiet. In the same period, South Africa used Chris Morris, Duminy and Steyn and the effect was entirely the opposite. England scored 42 runs in those three overs, Morris bowled short balls to his detriment, Root and Jos Buttler finally decided to take on Duminy and Steyn could not scare England into a mistake. The advantage swung. After 13 overs, England were 160 for 4 and the required rate had been dragged down from over 11 to 10.South Africa still had Tahir and he went on to become the only bowler not to concede a boundary on the night, and to remove Buttler, but he lacked support. Morris was South Africa’s weak link and gave Root the full toss that saw him bring up fifty off 30 balls. His was the slowest half-century of the night, after de Kock’s came up off 21 balls, Amla’s off 25 and Duminy’s 26, but it was the one that mattered most.Root took England to within 11 runs of victory before he swatted Rabada to deep midwicket and left it for Moeen to finish off. England lost two more wickets before they got there, but they won’t dwell on those late nerves.They will, however, want to address their own bowling lapses and a messy fielding performance that saw them on the received end of a total in excess of 220 for the fourth time. Reece Topley offered too much width even as Morgan refused to put a fielder at point to allow de Kock to hit him through there three times. De Kock was even more severe on Willey and forced Morgan to introduce a spinner in the Powerplay.Amla had only faced three balls by the time Moeen came on but already had his eye in. Amla found two boundaries before he should have been caught at mid-off but Topley, perhaps still recovering from his own mauling, spilled the chance. Jordan and Stokes could not find control and England conceded 81 runs in the five overs after Willey’s first had gone for two.Rashid was introduced as soon as the fielding restrictions were lifted but did not immediately appear a threat. De Kock used his first ball to bisect the men in the deep and bring up his first T20I fifty but did not add many more to his total. He picked out the fielder at deep midwicket to allow South Africa to unleash de Villiers on the perfect platform.The innings seemed to be playing to script when de Villiers smacked successive sixes but his show was short lived. Instead it was Amla and then Duminy who kept South Africa going. They scored 90 runs off the last seven overs but on a small field, a good pitch and against a bloody-minded England, it was not enough.

So much for flat pitches: Edgbaston turns nasty as 18 wickets fall

Just when it seemed reliable pitches were now the norm, Edgbaston turned nasty, 18 wickets fell in the day and batsmen took some painful blows

Jon Culley at Edgbaston09-May-2016
ScorecardIan Bell’s hamstring injury seems to make him a non-starter in the first Test•Getty Images

So much for flat pitches. Just when it seemed batsmen might be able to look forward to some good old-fashioned shirt fronts, thanks to the decision to allow visiting teams to bowl first if they fancy it, the one cut for this match has been a proper package of unpredictability, and painfully so at times.There were 18 wickets on the second day and at least six instances of players being hit on various parts of the body. Tom Abell, Peter Trego and, earlier, Keith Barker, were all left with throbbing fingers, Chris Rogers took blows to the ribs and midriff and Lewis Gregory had to have treatment as a ball from an apologetic Boyd Rankin reared up and struck him on the helmet.It was a wonder Ian Bell’s hamstring, which has almost certainly ruled out any possible Test recall against Sri Lanka next week, was not superseded as the injury story of the day.If Somerset were left a little battered and bruised, Warwickshire look like being on the wrong end of the result. Bowled out for 152 in reply to 295, their tall pace quartet in turn shot Somerset out for 178 but a target of 322 to achieve a first win of the season looks a tall order, unless the pitch flattens out appreciably.Trego’s 51, which supplemented his 94 on day one, was by some margin the best Somerset score and its merits were applauded with gusto on the visitors’ balcony. It was a characteristically aggressive innings from the combative all-rounder, and though he described the pitch as “scary” he confessed to enjoying the challenge hugely.”There are some quite decent sized cracks so there is a little bit of uneven bounce and sideways movement and when someone is bowling a very hard projectile at you at 85mph and you don’t really know how it is going to behave off the pitch, that’s a pretty scary proposition,” he said.”When a few of the guys get hit on the gloves and hit in the body, that sets the batsmen on the back foot and creates a little bit of doubt and mistakes creep in.”But to be honest I quite like playing on wickets like that. It gets the juices flowing and you know there is going to be a potential result. Wearing a couple is part of the gig. A couple of guys who ducked into some relatively full deliveries that were not played particularly well but some balls bounced alarmingly and that’s fantastic for me.”Abes (Tom Abell) played magnificently well on day one with support from myself but we played and missed at a lot of balls and it was one of those wickets where you could easily be rolled for 150 and that played out in Warwickshire’s innings.”In fairness, it could be argued that the behaviour of the pitch was a factor in no more than a handful of dismissals. Rogers, never comfortable, fended a short ball to short leg and the one that had Jim Allenby caught at second slip climbed on him but the full, straight ball was as effective a weapon as any. It was too good for James Hildreth, for example, who had his middle stump uprooted first ball by Chris Woakes.There were a few batsmen, too, who were architects of their own demise.Bell, who had missed the whole of the last session and a little more after feeling his left hamstring in the field on day one, came in unaccompanied at five down but never looked comfortable and the immediate thought was that it would not be long before he asked for a runner. In the event, he did not need one. After despatching a glorious cover drive for four off Trego, he attempted to dab the next delivery to third man but was never in control of the shot and instead gave Allenby a low catch at first slip.The diagnosis on the ground was that Bell had a grade one tear. He was due to have a scan after close of play but even if the damage is revealed as no worse, he can expect to miss next week’s match against Nottinghamshire at the very least. A recall to Test match duty seems therefore to be ruled out, at least in the short term.Bell was the fourth man out in the morning session as Warwickshire stumbled from 27-2 overnight to 107-6 at lunch. Jonathan Trott had pulled Gregory loosely to midwicket, Sam Hain was undone attempting to play across one from the same bowler and Tim Ambrose thin-edged a cut, Ryan Davies, the England Under-19 wicketkeeper recruited from Kent, taking a good diving catch.Varun Chopra played soundly for his 56 but only Chris Woakes was able to stick with him for more than a few overs.Somerset’s batsmen looked hardly more secure. Abell, after his first-day hundred, was gone for just two this time and after the departures of Marcus Trescothick and then Hildreth left them 23-3, there seemed to be a nervousness about the batting that suggested the pitch was playing on a few minds.Trego countered this with aggression and for him it paid off. After Allenby was dismissed at 53-4, Somerset’s progress to 151-8 would not have happened without it. Trego struck sxi fours before top-edging a pull as Jeetan Patel claimed the 28th wicket of the match, and the 16th of the day, and the first to fall to spin.Useful runs from the Overton twins swelled Somerset’s lead and Warwickshire were left to negotiate two overs before the close. But for the forecast of rain, a three-day finish would be guaranteed.

Mumbai fight for survival against resurgent Lions

While the Mumbai-Lions encounter is not a knockout match for either side, a defeat would leave Mumbai on the brink

The Preview by Sirish Raghavan20-May-2016

Match facts

Saturday, May 21, 2016
Start time 2000 local (1430 GMT)

Big Picture

After a stop-start season that has been difficult to gauge, Mumbai Indians’ playoff hopes are mostly in their own hands. A win against Gujarat Lions in Kanpur will take them through; a defeat could consign them to the ranks of also-rans.They have been here before – sort of. In each of the last two IPL seasons, Mumbai required a late charge to make it to the playoffs. Last season, that late charge extended into the playoffs and earned them the title. This time around, the early slump was not quite as pronounced, and there hasn’t been much of a late charge to speak of. Nevertheless, as the defending champions treat their last league match like a knockout, they will seek to draw as much inspiration as they can from their late-season heroics in 2015.Lions will be buoyed by their big win over Kolkata Knight Riders on Thursday, but they cannot afford to relax yet. A loss to Mumbai could possibly leave them as one of five teams with 16 points, in which case their poor net run-rate of -0.479 would probably see them squeezed out. They will be keen to seal their qualification with a win, all the more so because it would assure them a top-two finish on the points table.

Form guide

Gujarat Lions WLWLL (last five matches, most recent first)
Mumbai Indians WLWLW

In the spotlight

Dwayne Smith’s 4 for 8 ripped through Knight Riders and, while his returns with the ball will be a welcome bonus, it is a return to his early-season form with the bat that Lions will crave more. After Lions’ middle order got a useful workout against Knight Riders, Suresh Raina would love his opening batsmen to rediscover their rampaging best.With the season approaching its climax, Rohit Sharma has yet to find a reliable opening partner. However, Martin Guptill showed in the previous match that he might just be the man. He weathered some early struggles to play a composed knock of 48. Given Mumbai’s poor opening partnerships this season, a firing Guptill would be pretty high on their wish-list.

Team news

Lions’ top seven, including their four overseas players, virtually select themselves at this stage. Local boy Eklavya Dwivedi did not have much to do in the previous game and may get another chance on Saturday. All in all, an unchanged XI looks likely.Gujarat Lions (probable): 1 Brendon McCullum , 2 Dwayne Smith, 3 Suresh Raina (capt), 4 Dinesh Karthik (wk), 5 Aaron Finch, 6 Dwayne Bravo, 7 Ravindra Jadeja, 8 Eklavya Dwivedi, 9 Praveen Kumar, 10 Dhawal Kulkarni, 11 Shadab JakatiMumbai Indians may be tempted to bring Hardik Pandya back into the playing XI, in which case he might just take R Vinay Kumar’s place. The rest of the XI is unlikely to change.Mumbai Indians (probable): 1 Rohit Sharma (capt), 2 Martin Guptill, 3 Ambati Rayudu, 4 Jos Buttler (wk), 5 Kieron Pollard, 6 Krunal Pandya, 7 Nitish Rana, 8 Harbhajan Singh, 9 R Vinay Kumar/Hardik Pandya, 10 Mitchell McClenaghan, 11 Jasprit Bumrah

Pitch and conditions

Thursday’s match at Green Park, the venue’s IPL debut, saw seam, swing, a bit of grip off the surface, but fundamentally no real demons for the batsmen. A different strip will be used on Saturday, but it is likely to play in much the same manner. The ground’s small boundaries may make for a boundary-leaden encounter. The weather is expected to remain clear but sultry.

Stats and trivia

  • Lions have won seven out of nine matches when chasing, but just one out of four when batting first.
  • Rohit Sharma scored five fifties in his first nine innings this IPL, but has a tally of only 76 runs – with a best of 31 – in his last four.
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