Hot Seat: Readers make their picks for a steep ODI chase

Whom would you pick to chase 110 runs from ten overs against England at Lord’s?

ESPNcricinfo staff10-May-2020 Hot Seat I’d pick Imad Wasim because he averages 41.39 in ODIs but mostly because he has a strike rate of 109.62, which improves to 116.2 when batting at Lord’s. With him, I’d have Carlos Brathwaite. He strikes at 106.20 in England, and we know he has some experience in conjuring late heroics against England. I’ve been screaming at the top of my lungs that KL Rahul should be India’s No. 5 since before the 2019 World Cup. Finally, India have listened. He is an attacking player with 360-degree strokeplay (the best late cut since Inzamam-ul-Haq?). In this scenario, he has come in after three early wickets and is on 70, set for the late charge. Joining him is MS Dhoni, refreshed after his long break from cricket. Dhoni has been finishing games since he was an 18-year-old in Ranchi. He does it for fun. Rahul plays upper-cuts, flicks and off drives for six. Dhoni keeps running the twos and threes before using raw power to bunt Jofra Archer’s slower balls over the boundary. The game ends in the 49th over with both men not out. Rahul gets recognised as the next big thing, Dhoni gets redemption for the World Cup semi-final. Getting 110 from ten overs is going to be extremely difficult against the death bowlers England possess. You’re not going to do it with slogging. You need batsmen with strong technique, who can hit it clean. Ravindra Jadeja will be the new man in. He seems unaffected by pressure and can both hit the big shots and run hard between the wickets. The set batsman is Kohli. You cannot afford dot balls in this scenario, and these two will run even when the ball goes to a fielder, putting them under pressure and perhaps even creating overthrows. Plus, they are a left-hand, right-hand combination. Getty ImagesWhile many of the ESPNcricinfo writers picked Rohit Sharma for the set batsman, I’d go for Kohli. While Rohit can hit sixes at will, we need to remember that fitness is important in the last ten overs. We’ve sometimes seen Sharma getting tired at the end of an innings. Kohli is a beast when it comes to fitness and he’s the best chaser around today, with his ability to break the chase down over by over and take calculated risks. For the new batsman, I’d pick Andre Russell, who can hit sixes even off yorker-length balls and has a presence that seems to unnerve bowlers. The task is nigh impossible, so you need someone who with a ‘let’s have a go, and if we perish so be it’ attitude. Therefore, I’d pick Chris Gayle, who has a gear no one else – not even Sharma – has. To accompany him, who else but Dhoni, who, I am going to assume, has not lost his powers. For my No. 7, I’d go with Jimmy Neesham, who can hit sixes against quality pace bowling – remember how he held his nerve in the World Cup final Super Over and tied the match. With him, I’d pick Kohli, whose name immediately comes to mind when you say the word chase. Though Sharma is a tempting pick, his double-centuries have all come in India. In England, he tends to get out soon after reaching a ton. When it comes to finishing a game, there is one name you cannot ignore: MS Dhoni. His vast experience in finishing games is the reason I would pick him. My other pick is Russell because of his six-hitting ability. AB de Villiers averages 82.77 in successful chases and has the ability to stun the opposition with stinging attacks. With him, I’d pick Dhoni, who averages 102.71 in successful chases. With ten overs left, you can expect a few twists and turns before the end, so you need a cool head out there. Someone who has done it many, many times before. de Villiers will get 50 off 25 and then get out. Meanwhile, Dhoni has strolled to 17 off 17 balls. With 40 needed off three, he turns it on, finishing the game off the last ball with a hit to cow corner.

Cummins or Narine or Russell: who can KKR bench?

Franchise dealt with making the tough choice after Ferguson becomes automatic pick

Nagraj Gollapudi20-Oct-20201:49

Pat Cummins: ‘Lockie Ferguson showed why he’s one of the best in the world’

Last Sunday, Lockie Ferguson proved to Kolkata Knight Riders’ team management their folly of leaving him on the bench. He was the difference in their victory over the Sunrisers Hyderabad: not just darting in pinpoint yorkers but also surprising them with change of pace.Ferguson’s success means the Knight Riders face the difficult question of which two players they pick for the overseas slots from the trio of Pat Cummins, Andre Russell and Sunil Narine with Eoin Morgan leading the team.ESPNcricinfo looks at the performance of the options in no particular order.Sunil Narine
Narine has not played in Knight Riders’ last three matches after his bowling action was reported by the on-field umpires on October 10. Ironically, it was Narine who had delivered the final over that denied the Kings XI Punjab, as they fell short of the target by three runs. On Sunday, the IPL cleared Narine, but the spinner did not play against the Sunrisers.Narine’s role this IPL has been limited to his bowling after his consistent failures with the bat (44 runs in six matches) with opposition bowlers exposing his weakness mainly against the short delivery.With the uncapped Indian spinner Varun Chakravarthy showing good progress, the Knight Riders have utilised Narine in a defensive role predominantly in the final 10 overs of the innings. It is in the middle overs where Narine has made the most impact: in 78 balls delivered between overs 7 and 16, he has conceded 80 runs at 6.15 while picking up three wickets. He has also bowled four overs at death (between overs 17 and 20) giving away 42 runs while picking up two wickets. Narine has been the most expensive in the powerplay, leaking runs at over 11 (56 runs in five overs) without picking up a single wicket.Pat Cummins
Pace has dominated this IPL. Fast bowlers, both overseas and Indian, have created an impact. One name missing from that pack is Cummins, who became the most expensive overseas buy at an IPL auction when the Knight Riders paid INR 15.5 crore (USD 2.2 million approx) to snap up the Australian fast man. After nine matches Cummins has a mere three wickets at an economy rate of 8.42.Two of those wickets have come the first six overs where Cummins has one of the best economy rates in the tournament – 6.52. But, he has been expensive in the other two segments: he has an economy rate of 10.28 in the middle overs which climbs to 15.75 in the death overs.ALSO READ: Ferguson revs into IPL’s pace eliteBy his own admission Cummins said it is “frustrating”. So why is he still playing? Because Cummins was bought as a bowling allrounder who can also mentor young fast bowlers in the Knight Riders camp. It is as a batsman where Cummins has made the biggest impact with his powerful cameos; his strike rate of 161.53 is the highest for the team. Cummins has often walked in after the Knight Riders specialist batsmen had failed or scored at a slow tempo, but has instantly injected an aggressive energy into the innings.Andre Russell
Before IPL 2020, it would have been unthinkable to drop Russell, but one of the most valuable players in T20 cricket has been hurting badly – both for batting form and fitness. Russell has managed just 92 runs from the 70 deliveries he has faced in nine matches the Knight Riders have played. He does not even have the excuse of lack of bating time, considering he has been bating high up in the middle order. Niggles have not helped him either.Russell hurt his knee in the field in one of the matches and then on Sunday, against the Sunrirsers, appeared to have hurt his hamstring once again while fielding. Yet Russell has managed to swallow the pain and has soldiered on with heavily strapped legs to bowl at critical moments, including the death.On Sunday, Russell returned to the field specifically to deliver the final over. The Sunrisers needed 18 off the final over and eventually two runs from the final delivery with their captain David Warner on strike. Russell, walking off a few steps, used his shoulder power to cramp Warner for room, forcing the match into the Super Over, which the Knight Riders eventually won. Russell’s economy rate of 11 in death overs is high, but he has managed to still take five wickets. Barring fitness issues, the Knight Riders would still want his presence which creates its own impact.

Fun, fast, fearsome Archer carries Royals bowling load

His numbers are stunning despite lacking the kind of support Bumrah and Rabada have had

Vishal Dikshit31-Oct-2020Jofra Archer runs in to bowl as casually as you would if a kitten was after you. But he delivers the ball as fiercely as you would if you were to bounce out a tiger shark charging at you.Archer has been doing this all tournament now – running in at a pace you think is not his quickest, picking wickets as regularly as you’ve been attending Zoom meetings recently, bouncing out top-order batsmen for fun, returning in the death overs to scare the lower order and the tail, and then going back to play his XboX. And just like that, he has 19 wickets from 13 games for the Rajasthan Royals with a stunning economy rate of 6.69, which is far better than even Kagiso Rabada’s 8.13, Jasprit Bumrah’s 7.18 and Mohammed Shami’s 8.67, who are all marginally ahead of him on the wicket-takers’ list.But there’s one thing each of those bowlers has that Archer doesn’t: strong bowling support from the other end. The Royals’ over-dependence on Archer shows in many ways. It’s evident in the statistics, in their use of Archer against the opposition’s top batsmen, in the way oppositions look to see his spell off and target the other bowlers, and how the Royals seem handicapped when they need one more over of tight bowling from the other end to sustain the pressure when Archer has just finished his over. But there’s nobody to turn to.If Rabada has Anrich Nortje to share the responsibility, Bumrah is flanked by Trent Boult and James Pattinson, and Shami has had Arshdeep Singh of late in the powerplay or Chris Jordan at the death. Archer is standing tall and alone at the top for the Royals. Their next best bowler (Shreyas Gopal) on the wicket-takers’ list is not even in the top 20 overall, and their next best quick bowler is not even in the top 30: it’s 19-year-old Kartik Tyagi, who has impressed but can’t be expected to share such a responsibility at this stage of his career. The more experienced Jaydev Unadkat has four wickets with an economy rate of nearly 10 an over, and Ankit Rajpoot has only two while leaking 11.70 runs per over.In short, Archer’s 19 scalps are exactly half of the 38 wickets the Royals pace bowlers have picked this IPL, and while his economy rate is well under seven, the others collectively concede 10.51 per over. According to ESPNcricinfo’s Smart Starts, Archer’s bowling impact is also twice as good as the next best Royals bowler in IPL 2020.This over-dependence was briefly evident on Friday night against the Kings XI Punjab when the Royals wanted Archer to bowl his raw pace to Chris Gayle upfront. And to make that happen too, they needed Archer to strike early because Gayle has been batting at No. 3 this IPL. With his same casual-looking run-up, Archer bounced out Mandeep Singh with a ferocious 144kmh delivery at the end of the first over, and out walked Gayle. Even more casually.Jofra Archer whistles a bouncer past Chris Gayle•BCCIArcher must have been itching to bowl his next over to Gayle, hoping that he would retain strike. Instead, he gets a boundary off an inside edge, and Archer has to bowl to KL Rahul again. He waits long, for another five balls, before Rahul finally takes a single and he can bowl to Gayle. Archer bangs the ball in, it whizzes past Gayle’s chin as he drops his hands and Archer’s two overs are done after having bowled only one delivery to Gayle.The Royals have needed Archer’s two overs so desperately at the death that they haven’t bowled more than two of his even once in the powerplay this IPL. The temptation is there to make him bowl a third in a row this time. Gayle is still fresh; get him early and the middle order could stutter. The season is on the line. Two legspinners have to be bowled later, and Gayle will pounce on them.But Archer is taken off. It’s probably to contain the damage at the end.”There’s always a consideration to bowl Jofra in many phases of the game but he’s got only four overs and we’ve got to position that in the best way we see,” the Royals coach Andrew McDonald told the commentators during the game on Star Sports. “It’s always a consideration to get two great overs upfront and then the third over is always going to be questionable but we need a couple of other bowlers in support there. We saw Varun [Aaron] almost got the breakthrough as well, so it’s always bowling around him (Archer) most importantly.”Lack of support from the other end has also meant the Royals can’t use him the way the Delhi Capitals bowl Rabada or how the Mumbai Indians employ Bumrah. Because of Nortje and the spinners for the Capitals, and Boult and Pattinson for Mumbai, Rabada and Bumrah bowl just one over in the powerplay, one just after the halfway mark, and two precious overs at the death. Archer, on the other hand, has mostly been bowling two in the powerplay and two at the death, leaving a lot of space in the middle overs for oppositions to cash in on.On Friday, the Royals managed two points because their batting has stepped up in the last couple of games. Now, they have just the one game left to reach 14 points which can possibly get them a playoff spot. With this being Archer’s best IPL – in terms of both wickets and economy rate – all the Royals need is for someone to bowl with the same intensity as Archer for one more match to not let their season end on Sunday.

The rapid rise of Shubman Gill, from the Under-19s to a Test debut at the MCG

All you need to know about the newest face at the top of the order for India in Test cricket

Nagraj Gollapudi25-Dec-2020India Test Cap No. 297. That will be Shubman Gill, who will make his Test debut at the MCG in India’s second Test on the four-Test tour of Australia. Here’s the lowdown on Gill, who was recently picked by experts in as one of the youngsters to watch out for in the next decade.The first headline
Gill, 21, hails from the northern Indian state of Punjab. In 2018, he announced himself to the cricket world, playing a major role in India’s win at the Under-19 World Cup in New Zealand, where he also finished as the Player of the Tournament, batting at No. 3.He is good at
“Straight bat. High Elbow. Head still. Getting on top of the bounce.” Recently, former India opener Wasim Jaffer ticked all those skillsets in praise of Gill on Twitter. With his classical technique and fluent strokeplay, Gill has attracted attention from many greats including Sunil Gavaskar, Rahul Dravid and Sachin Tendulkar.Coaches who have worked with Gill have pointed out he has that one quality great batsman possess: the extra time to play a shot. That allows him to improvise late and better. His solid forward and backward defence also mean his basics are strong. Scoring at a fast clip is among his strengths, but Gill likes to play mostly along the ground, something he quickly inculcated into his game under Dravid, who was the India A and Under-19 coach.The quick rise
In the 2018-19 Ranji Trophy, Gill scored 728 runs in just nine innings at an average of 104. Dravid had drafted Gill into the India A set-up to fast-track his progression. Former India allrounder and his senior Punjab team-mate Yuvraj Singh had then said: “He (Gill) is a special talent. After a long time there is a young guy whose batting I like to watch. He is very exciting.” Singh had also said Gill should be drafted into the Indian team after the 2019 World Cup.Shubman Gill was part of Kolkata Knight Riders’ leadership group during IPL 2020•BCCIThe maiden national call-up
Gill did not have to wait as long as Singh had imagined. In January 2019, less then a year after the Under-19 World Cup, Gill was about to head to bed when he got the national call-up as one of the two replacements for the New Zealand limited-overs series after Hardik Pandya and KL Rahul had been suspended by the BCCI. Gill played two ODIs but did not cross single digits in either game.Later that year, he would go on to take the Player of the Series award in the ODIs for India A on the tour of the Caribbean. However, he admitted to being disappointed when the selectors did not name him in the India squads for the tour of the Caribbean.He would erase the disappointment by blasting an unbeaten 204 off 248 balls – rescuing India A from 14 for 3 – in the four-day match against West Indies A. On his return to India, he would once again help India A, this time as captain, with a match-winning 90 against South Africa A. A week from then, Gill earned his maiden call-up to the Indian Test squad for the home series against South Africa.The strengths
The coaches who have worked with him have said they’ve been impressed by the youngster’s understanding of his game. That is what prompted Brendon McCullum, currently the coach at the Kolkata Knight Riders, to include Gill as part of the team’s leadership group. Gill’s responsibility was to help newcomers settle down while acting as a channel between them and the management.What they said…
“Gee, I was impressed with Gill. I really think he’s got something about him, his technique.”

WTC final scenarios: England in tight spot after India's win in second Test

India’s 317-run win in Chennai means there is plenty at stake for both these teams, and Australia

S Rajesh16-Feb-2021India’s 317-run win in the second Test in Chennai means there is plenty at stake for both the teams, as well as Australia, when it comes to lining up a face-off with New Zealand in the final of the World Test Championship.The target for both India and England is to surpass Australia’s points percentage of 69.17.What do India need to do to qualify?India need to win the series by any margin, which means they need at least a draw and a win in the two remaining Tests. They started the series requiring a minimum of 70 points to go past Australia’s points percentage. That meant they needed at least a 2-1 series win. With the series currently level at 1-1, India will be through to the final if they win 2-1 or 3-1.What about England’s chances?The loss in the second Test has hurt England’s chances in a big way. They now need to win both the remaining Tests to make the final. Anything less, and they will be out. History is against them as well – the last touring team to win three Tests in a series in India was West Indies in 1983-84.ESPNcricinfo LtdWho will Australia be cheering for?Australia would be hoping that India don’t win the series, and that England don’t win both the remaining Tests. That means, for Australia to finish ahead of both India and England, the series should either finish in a draw – 1-1 or 2-2 – or England should win 2-1.Whatever the result in the third Test, Australia will still have a chance to qualify if the fourth Test pans out favourably for them: If India win the third Test: Australia can qualify only if England win the final Test and level the series 2-2 If England win the third Test: Australia can qualify if India win the fourth Test, or if it is drawn If the third Test is drawn: Australia can qualify if England win the fourth Test, of if it is drawnAustralia are still in it, but they could have avoided all this uncertainty had they not dropped four points because of a slow over-rate against India in the Boxing Day Test. Had that not happened, Australia would have been level with New Zealand on 70, which would then have brought the runs-per-wicket ratio into play (that is the ratio of the runs scored per wicket lost, and the runs conceded per wicket taken). Australia’s ratio is currently 1.39 while New Zealand’s is 1.28.This means Australia would have stayed ahead of New Zealand, and would have been certain of qualification. Now, they will need India and England to help them out.Of course, the over-rate lesson is one that both India and England will do well to heed: any points docked due to slow over-rates in the next two Tests could affect the qualification hopes of these two teams as well.

Nobody knows anything about Test cricket. Thank god

What’s a good score to declare on? Haven’t the foggiest

Alan Gardner15-Feb-2021The fourth innings of a Test match can be a pretty complicated business. Besides the target (which is sometimes only a “target”), you’ve got to factor in the state of the pitch, whether the fielding side has the attack to exploit conditions, whether the chasing side has the maverick talent to upend the odds, the history of the ground, the forecast for the weather, who’s sitting where in the dressing room, and the manifold opinions of former players, armchair pundits and the social media hordes.We all know instinctively that chasing over 300 is going to be hard (or do we?) but now there are the data wonks and their gizmos to contend with, too, bespoke algorithms pumping out gobbets of win probability throughout the game. It can all get a little bit “60% of the time they win every time”, to draw on the wisdom of Brian Fantana.Anyway, the corollary of ordinary lay cricket folk having to engage with a bit of maths is that the back end of the third innings, with its mandatory declaration speculation, can trigger some baffling behaviour – cricket’s equivalent of “silly season”, if you will. The devil makes work for idle fingers, and that is never more apparent than in the case of certain ex-internationals with access to a smartphone and a Twitter account.Take Shane Warne, for instance. Warne has form for continuing to sledge from the commentary box, and he was quick to call out England’s “cautious and timid” approach on the fourth day of the first Chennai Test (a Test which, for reference, England went on to win by 227 runs with a session and a half to spare). Those who can remember as far back as, erm, last month, might recall Warne also demanding Australia get on with it and declare at the Gabba, roughly 24 hours before Rishabh Pant and India’s third XI forcibly retired the ground’s cherished nickname for the foreseeable.

Warne’s fellow outspoken hair-replacement advocate Michael Vaughan was of the same view, foghorning into the ether about Joe Root’s non-declaration and suggesting it could affect England for the rest of the series. Luckily, with Vaughan having predicted India would lose 4-0 in Australia only a few weeks ago, this one barely needs to go down as a gaffe.Amid the nonsense, we were able to enjoy some genuine fourth-innings magic courtesy of West Indies and debutant Kyle Mayers, who could barely find a swag bag big enough for all the records he made off with in Chattogram (after a Bangladesh declaration, lest we forget). A reminder that, as William Goldman once said of Hollywood, “nobody knows anything” – and Test cricket is all the better for it.

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Rumbling emerging from Australia, where it seems a few of the players have let slip that they don’t class Justin Langer’s coaching methods – how shall we put this? – in the elite bracket. Now, it’s easy to mock Langer for his many foibles – it’s practically a raison d’etre for some of us. But with the gnomic one describing such reports as “a wake-up call” on these pages and vowing to use the feedback positively, it was hard not to feel sympathetic, particularly given one of the items on the charge sheet. As Langer put it: “Now I’m the grumpiest p***k in the world because I told Marnus [Labuschagne] not to take a toasted ham and cheese sandwich after his 40-minute lunch break.” You’d think Australians might be glad that a toastie is the worst thing Langer’s players are trying to smuggle on to the field these days.

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It not’s unusual for the Light Roller to sit down and consider whether it would be wise to delete the contents of our hard drive. After all, what could be more X-rated than archive footage of Wasim Akram delivering unplayable reverse-swinging rockets (possibly achieved with a little assistance from the dark arts)? News that Facebook had recently blocked pictures of an England team huddle for being “overtly sexual” raised the stakes, however. What else should we now be concerned about? Could classic images of Andrew Flintoff and Sourav Ganguly baring their emotions (and their chests) fall foul of the filters? Are motivational bum pats in danger of being reclassified as erotica? On the flip side, we know there’s nothing more effective at catching the interest of kids than banning it. Maybe cricket as pornography can help inspire that much sought-after new generation of fans…

Tempo troubles and the Morgan question

Knight Riders have not been their usual selves in 2021, but it’s not too late to fix things

Sreshth Shah03-May-20215:04

What’s ailing KKR’s batting this season?

Failing to set the tempo
Since the middle of last season, the Knight Riders have gone with a top-three which has plenty of potential but is the most inexperienced among all the teams. Nitish Rana and Rahul Tripathi are both uncapped and Shubman Gill is far from being a regular in India’s white-ball squads.Very few IPL teams in the tournament’s history have had a combined top three with only three games of international cricket between them, and the optimistic punt from the management has failed more than it has worked. Inconsistent scores from Rana, who has five innings of 22 and under, and Gill’s average of 18.85 at a strike rate of 117.85 have been the two biggest concerns.The alternatives – Karun Nair, Gurkeerat Singh, Venkatesh Iyer and Sheldon Jackson – are not too compelling either. Apart from Iyer, none of the others are regular openers in T20s, however, they may have the fire in their belly to show their worth. Perhaps, the Knight Riders could harness that.The other option is to bring in Tim Seifert, the New Zealand batter, but that would mean axing an overseas player. Although the issue of inexperience doesn’t get solved, at least a new thought process could bring in different results. After seven games for each side in IPL 2021, the Knight Riders have lost 12 powerplay wickets, the joint-most in the tournament. That along with a powerplay run-rate of 7.35 has hampered the side from setting the tempo early with the bat.Brendon McCullum, the coach, said in a press conference recently that he wants his top order to be aggressive, which they have failed to do. He said: “if you can’t , you change ” Expect a new top order for the rest of the season – the only question is what the personnel will be.Kolkata Knight Riders’ problems have started with the top this season•ESPNcricinfo LtdThe Morgan question
The ideal scenario for the Knight Riders was for their top three to set the base for eight to ten overs, following which a strong middle order of Eoin Morgan, Andre Russell and Dinesh Karthik could change gears to set a big total or complete a win.But with the top order eating nearly half the overs with very little on the board in most games, Morgan’s been forced to look for the big shots from the get-go. However, he has struggled with timing and when he hasn’t, he has fallen just before he could transition into his power-hitting mode. The lack of good scores from the top four has added more pressure on Russell and Karthik, who have also not been able to replicate their peak batting performances from 2019.On numbers alone, no one would bat an eyelid if Morgan was dropped after scoring only 92 runs in seven games, but when he is also wearing the captain’s armband, things get complicated, more so after the Knight Riders changed captains midway through last season. And with Karthik saying last year that captaincy hampers his own batting, the management will have to look beyond the obvious choice for a new leader. In any case – barring Rohit Sharma’s 2013 run with Mumbai Indians – changes in captaincy do not rescue teams from dire situations.McCullum has often stressed on role definition among the Knight Riders, so it’s unlikely Morgan will bat anywhere else either. The side likes Russell to come in at the 12-over mark and Karthik preferred at the death, and with both struggling against spinners who operate in the middle overs, the captain Morgan is set to stay at No. 4.4:01

McCullum: ‘I’ve asked time and again for us to be more aggressive’

The Narine conundrumWith a new bowling action that no longer has the sting of the Narine that lit up the IPL in his early days, does he merit a place in the XI when he no longer opens? Runs off the bat, as a floater, have been few and far in between. And with only three wickets in four games, there are others who can potentially have a greater impact.Although Narine isn’t a shabby opener option given the current struggles in the top order, the Knight Riders may still move to replace him with Shakib Al Hasan. Although Shakib may not replicate Narine’s batting strike rate, he is more consistent and there’s little to separate in the bowling.The other option is dropping Narine for Lockie Ferguson, who has the ability to be the enforcer in the bowling line-up by simply using his pace to trouble batters at any stage of the innings. That would also give the Knight Riders two express overseas quicks to torment oppositions, alongside Pat Cummins, and bring in one of Harbhajan Singh or Kuldeep Yadav as the second spinner. The third option is Seifert at the top for Narine, and add someone like Pawan Negi (or one of the two spinners) lower down.Sunil Narine’s new bowling action no longer has the sting of the old one•BCCIRethinking powerplay bowling plans
The original Moneyball team in the IPL, the Knight Riders have focused on match-ups. But that hasn’t worked out well with the ball.Take the example of Varun Chakravarthy against Royal Challenger Bangalore. With two wickets in the game’s second over, he had given the Knight Riders an early upper hand. Yet, next over, against the new batter Glen Maxwell, it was not Chakravarthy, but left-arm spinner Shakib bowling, who could potentially get the ball to turn away from the batter. Maxwell ended up hitting 78.Against the Delhi Capitals while defending a smaller total, it was Shivam Mavi opening the bowling – against the in-form pair of Shikhar Dhawan and Prithvi Shaw – and not Cummins, who arrived later to pick three wickets, an effort that came too late to have any impact on the match result.Against Chennai Super Kings, on a pitch where Deepak Chahar ended up taking four wickets in the Powerplay, the Knight Riders bowled three overs of spin. The Super Kings openers quietly compiled 54 for 0 to set a strong platform. They finished on 220 for 3.There is merit in their most experienced bowler Cummins taking the new ball in the hunt for early wickets, with Prasidh Krishna and/or Ferguson from the other end. Then bring in Shakib or Narine, leave Chakravarthy to control the middle overs, and once again use the Ferguson-Cummins combo alongside Russell at the death to close out the innings. It’s conventional, and yet propitious. But the Knight Riders – more often than not – prefer taking the path less travelled.

Can Babar Azam steer Pakistan to the T20 World Cup title?

The captain has been Pakistan’s most dependable anchor through management changes and team reshuffles, but is that enough?

Danyal Rasool11-Oct-2021It’s the monsoon in Lahore, sweeping rain washing down the red brick of the Gaddafi Stadium complex. The drainage system, ill equipped to handle what the monsoon unleashes in this part of Pakistan, has long given up, water spilling back out onto the streets just outside the PCB’s offices in the complex. Still, the place is packed with journalists and TV reporters, because in an intimate little room nestled behind the open-plan office space, Pakistan’s T20 captain will spare a few minutes for a chat with the media.The room was obviously never built to house a dozen TV cameras, and so, instead of sitting at the head of the conference table, the biggest name in Pakistan cricket stands in a corner as questions are breathlessly volleyed at him. He repeats the usual platitudes about players needing to do their best, emphasises the importance of coping with pressure, and – bless him – expresses satisfaction that New Zealand and England are coming to Pakistan to play seven T20Is ahead of the World Cup. Babar Azam isn’t exactly the most engaging speaker, especially not in a crowd. Every word of his is scrutinised and sensationalised by the fans and the media, so being predictably dull is a rather useful skill to possess.Related

Deconstructing Babar Azam, the T20 batter

What's gone wrong for Pakistan in T20Is over the last two years?

Babar, Rizwan reveal secrets behind their prolific partnership

Once it’s all done and everyone begins to filter out, Babar sits down for an interview with ESPNcricinfo. Pakistan have only recently returned from the West Indies, where they have split a two-match Test series, and the focus is now fully on the T20 World Cup. Every bit of preparation is geared towards that tournament, one that, had it followed its regular cycle of being held every two years, Pakistan would have been overwhelming favourites for.In recent years, however, that dominance has evaporated, the dip in results faithfully aligning alongside a coaching change Pakistan made following the 2019 ODI World Cup. In three years under former head coach Mickey Arthur, Pakistan won 30 of 37 T20Is. Since his successor Misbah-ul-Haq came in, Pakistan won just 16 of 34, and slipped to No. 3 in the T20I rankings. Babar acknowledges the change had an effect – something that will undoubtedly concern Pakistan given they have had yet another change of coaches since he spoke. But he also insists the full picture is more nuanced.

“Whenever a new management comes in, it takes time to adjust,” he says. “You don’t just get used to it in a day. It takes time. Even for a team to gel, it takes time. If you select a team, you’re not just going to start getting results in the second or third game. You need time, but our goal is to acclimatise as quickly as possible.”Two years ago was a different time compared to today. Things change. At the time we had a different management, different coaches. The mindset is different. But then, we also had a different team; now we have a few different players.”The concatenation of factors that has combined to deprive or disadvantage Pakistan cricket in recent times is no laughing matter, but among the multitude of gripes Pakistan supporters have, the scheduling of T20 World Cups is probably the one they are most light-hearted about. The joke goes that T20 World Cups have been structured so as to keep Pakistan away from the trophy for as long as possible. When they won in 2009, the subsequent competition was held just ten months later, but when, through the best part of this T20 World Cup cycle, Pakistan were the highest-ranked side by some distance, there was a four-year gap between tournaments, which was extended to over five years due to the Covid-19 pandemic.A quirk of fate, however, has seen a scheduling decision break Pakistan’s way. When Covid-19 cases were soaring in India, the scheduled host of this year’s event, earlier this year, the tournament was relocated to the UAE. India might remain official hosts, but no country feels more at home in that part of the world than Pakistan. Since the 2016 World T20, when they transformed themselves from T20 stragglers to world beaters almost overnight, Pakistan have won all 11 matches they played in the UAE – West Indies, Sri Lanka, Australia and New Zealand the teams vanquished along the way.During Misbah-ul-Haq’s tenure as coach, Pakistan slipped from No. 1 to No. 3 on the T20I team rankings•Getty ImagesBabar was just a promising young player in that side, one among several. And while many faded under the spotlight as pressure and expectations intensified, his star has only grown brighter. He is among the biggest names in world cricket, one of the marquee attractions of the T20 World Cup. Part of the side that ascended to the peak of T20I cricket, he now has the job of leading a team looking to ensure they will have a World Cup title to show for all their desert dominance.Babar doesn’t balk at comparisons to past Pakistan performances in the UAE; instead, he seems eager for his side to draw motivation and heart from them. “Our record there is excellent, it’s the place where we became world No. 1,” he says. “The performances we produced, both as a team and individually, show the conditions really suited us. Our record and consistency there is proof of that. These days we understand teams are playing more positive cricket, and we need to continue to do that, too.”Captaincy changes and huge overhauls of the Pakistan team have historically been common enough that they don’t register in the public consciousness, but the PCB made sure Babar’s appointment as all-format captain late last year felt different. He had been captain of the limited-overs side since 2019, but when Azhar Ali was unceremoniously dumped as Test captain after a year in the job, Babar’s ascension carried the air of a royal inauguration.An ostentatious photo shoot with the new Pakistan captain at Gaddafi Stadium was heavily promoted by the board. A video depicted him in a crisp white shirt, striped green tie and designer sunglasses, majestically stepping out of a car as he casually threw on a suit jacket and gazed pensively into the distance in front of the PCB headquarters, gelled hair aggressively slicked back. A picture in front of the balcony at the Gaddafi media centre saw him survey the stadium from a great height, as a benevolent national leader might in front of adoring crowds. Azhar Ali’s time as captain had almost been scrubbed from history; the Babar Azam era had arrived.

Presenting to you the all-format Pakistan captain, @babarazam258 pic.twitter.com/5q3698Oxn0

— Pakistan Cricket (@TheRealPCB) November 20, 2020

The initial concern with giving a young man like Babar such overarching responsibility was about the effect it might have on his batting, but those fears never really came to pass. As a Test batter, he bounced back strongly against the West Indies after a mild slump, while his strike rate in T20 cricket has improved slightly. He carries himself with the authority of a man who belongs in the role, and while there isn’t an obvious on-field spark that marks him out as a natural captain, he is reported to command significant influence in selection calls off the field.But all that happened under the previous administration. In Ramiz Raja’s short time at the helm, there have been sweeping changes at coaching and administrative level, with Misbah-ul-Haq, Waqar Younis and Wasim Khan all taking their leave. Ramiz’s public views on Babar have been noticeably cool. He pointedly refused to endorse Babar’s captaincy in his first press conference after being elected chairman, saying it was “too early to assess him”, and that his “expectations for Babar are the same as Imran Khan”. After a month of bedlam, even by Pakistan cricket’s standards, the very future of Babar, the most dependable man in Pakistan cricket, remains shrouded in doubt, especially beyond the T20 World Cup.His problems might not all lie off the field, either. Unthinkable as it might seem, the increased focus on positive cricket has seen Babar’s own performances, both with his PSL franchise Karachi Kings, as well as the national side, come under forensic scrutiny. Superficially, the numbers glitter; he was the top scorer at the PSL in each of the last two seasons, as well as the highest run scorer in the competition’s history. Internationally, he was the quickest to 2000 T20I runs, comfortably ahead of second-placed Virat Kohli, and has scored a half-century or better in 21 of his 56 innings.Babar on his partnership with Mohammad Rizwan: “We communicate well, and if he’s struggling to tee off, I go after the bowlers, and if I’m struggling, he does”•Getty ImagesBut with Babar insistent on opening the batting, both for franchise and country, questions swirl about whether his game possesses the natural belligerence required to set the tempo in those crucial powerplay overs. An overall strike rate of 130.64 with Pakistan and 121.55 at the PSL isn’t quite elite by modern opener standards. Since the 2016 T20 World Cup, 65 T20 openers have superior strike rates to the Pakistan captain, raising questions about the extent to which Pakistan are willing to walk the talk about positive cricket. To compound those concerns, his opening partner Mohammad Rizwan isn’t exactly known for his blistering power-hitting either, in spite of the record-breaking year he has enjoyed in the format.As if it were a day-one afternoon session on a placid track at Abu Dhabi, Babar digs his heels in on this point. “I became No. 1 in the world as an opener, so I’m comfortable there,” he says. “That’s where I performed so well, so I’m very comfortable opening.”Even with Rizwan? “Yes, absolutely. Look at how well that’s gone, at our performances in the past year, at the records he has broken. The year’s not done yet and he has already scored the most ever T20I runs in a calendar year. What more do you need, really?”A cursory glance at the numbers would tell you the question is very much rhetorical. Rizwan’s stats are bewildering; seven half-centuries and a hundred in 14 innings this year, while on average, the pair manage 52.1 runs per innings. On the ten occasions the two have opened, only once has neither gone on to score at least 35. When together, they have scored at 9.16 runs per over, nearly a full run better than the two other opening combinations Pakistan have tried this year: Rizwan and Sharjeel Khan (8.23), and Rizwan and Haider Ali (8.27).”There’s no better combination,” Babar says, almost offended he even needs to justify it. “We always want to start well to set the tone for the guys coming after us. That’s our mindset, and in the year we’ve been opening, we have come to understand each other’s games. We communicate well, and if he’s struggling to tee off, I go after the bowlers, and if I’m struggling, he does. We’ve built on that very well, and you’ll have noticed when we bat together we have built big partnerships.”ESPNcricinfo LtdBabar and Rizwan’s big partnerships are well documented, but so are the side’s struggles lower down the order. Pakistan have experimented with Asif Ali, Khushdil Shah, Iftikhar Ahmed, Azam Khan, Sohaib Maqsood and several other players lower down, but for one reason or other, haven’t been able to settle on a combination they can trust the same way as Babar and Rizwan up top. That heaps the pressure on the top two to stick around longer, which, Babar feels, might explain the less than explosive strike rate.”I believe if you have the momentum, you need to capitalise on it,” he says. “If we’ve started well, it’s not in my nature to think I should hold myself back or that I must bat deep at the expense of strike rate. However, if one of us is striking the ball well, we try to bat for as long as possible without changing our game. Keep our strike rate up, remain positive, but also try and hang around to take advantage of your form. You can’t worry about whether the guys below will deliver. The mindset remains the same. We plan to ensure one of us remains at the crease for much of the innings.”We’re struggling in two areas, middle order and death bowling, and have done for some time. We’ve tried different combinations and tried to assess who could suit the team if they played in certain positions. It didn’t work out, unfortunately, but that’s cricket. If you select players, you cannot guarantee that they will perform. There are ups and downs, and the players we selected were chosen because they had performed elsewhere. You need to take your chances if you want to stay in the Pakistan team. You will have to perform consistently, otherwise you get demoted to the bench.”Babar’s game might lack the monstrous power-hitting that has won the West Indies two T20 World Cups, or the all-out attack in vogue at present, which England have just about perfected, but it would be unfair in the extreme to overlook his T20 pedigree or nous. The 2020 PSL was a perfect example of the kind of situations he uses to his advantage so well: he made 473 runs at a shade under 60. While the strike rate of 124.14 fell well short of what Chris Lynn (179.74) or Ben Dunk (167.59) of fellow finalists Lahore Qalandars managed, it was Babar’s consistency for Karachi Kings that won out in the final.Babar demonstrated the importance of being the team’s anchor in the 2019-20 PSL final, against Lahore Qalandars•PCB/PSLDunk managed just 11 off 14 as Lahore were restricted to 134, and while wickets fell around him, Babar steered his side to the title with a masterful unbeaten 63 off 49, scooping both Player-of-the-Match and Player-of-the-Tournament-awards. With the UAE historically producing lower-scoring T20 games on average, both in internationals and at the PSL – the average batting strike rate there is 122.56 since 2017, with only strike rates in Bangladesh (121.89) and Sri Lanka (115.73) coming in lower – Babar’s anchoring role could end up being vitally important to Pakistan’s chances of success.Babar as a T20 batter has been dissected at length, but the narrative is probably less straightforward than “Babar in the UAE means advantage Pakistan”. He scores 116.68 runs in the UAE per hundred balls, nearly a full six runs lower than average. Of the 23 men with over 500 T20 runs in the UAE since 2017, only Ahmed Shehzad’s strike rate is lower than the Pakistan captain’s.Babar might not be the most renowned power-hitter, but he will still need to improve beyond these numbers. However, what he lacks in explosiveness he makes up for in reliability. His record points to him being perhaps the most consistent anchor in the world. T20 cricket is very much a team sport, and that means the bigger hitters around him are afforded significantly greater certainty about their role than they would normally expect. If Babar typically scores 50 in 37 balls every other innings, the players in the middle order tasked with providing the firepower have a much less variable equation in front of them to reach whatever goals Pakistan have for their batting innings.It might also explain why Babar has a lower strike rate when he has a more accomplished group of international T20 blasters around him at Karachi Kings, than with the national side.This theme of adaptability is one he frequently turns to. “You need to ensure the standards you have set for yourself are being met. When I’m batting with Karachi, I might have a lower strike rate than with Pakistan, but that will usually have an explanation behind it. It depends on the situation and conditions. Sometimes you have an idea about how the game’s going to go, and the complete opposite happens. Then you need to adjust your plans and your innings. Sometimes you lose a few wickets and then you have to hold back for a while with a view to catching up in the latter half of the innings.As captain, opener and anchor, Babar has to carry his team in more ways than one•AFP/Getty Images”If I’m still around by the tenth or 12th overs, I feel confident I’ll be more aggressive towards the death. I always try and raise the benchmark I’ve set for myself, and that includes my strike rate. You don’t set goals and just stagnate at a certain point. I’m always trying to improve day by day. When you play sports, you’re never 100% good at any specific thing. The more you improve it, the better you’ll become.”He was speaking at a time when he expected Pakistan to get another seven T20Is in before the World T20, with New Zealand’s and England’s planned arrivals, but despite that, he struck a note of decidedly cautious optimism about Pakistan’s T20 World Cup prospects.”You can’t say where we’ll finish. Right now we have small goals. The India game is first, then the New Zealand one and then Afghanistan. When you achieve the smaller goals, the bigger goal comes naturally. That’s what we’re focusing on. On the day, if you play well, things will happen the way you want them to. We need to continue in that vein. If you ask me, as a captain my goal is to win the World Cup. That’s every team’s goal, but we’ll keep our preparation up to the fullest, as well as our belief. But we can ultimately only aim to play well on the day, and hope the result then goes our way.”The platitudes are back as the conversation draws to a close, Babar playing the old hits that have helped him get everyone in Pakistan dancing to his tune. He and his band of team-mates haven’t yet convinced the critics, but if indeed his Pakistan side has new material to show off, the T20 World Cup is the perfect arena for it.

Joe Root has shouldered his burden magnificently

If England pull this off, they will owe a huge amount to their captain

George Dobell07-Aug-2021There were a couple of moments, ahead of this Test, when you sensed the burden of carrying this England batting line-up was starting to get to Joe Root.For one thing, he requested that the pre-match captain’s press conference – which has, for many years, taken place the day before the game – be moved to two days ahead of the match to allow him time to focus before the game. And then, while talking about Ben Stokes, his voice caught for just a moment as he discussed the phone call in which his friend had told him he needed a break.Root was, no doubt, aware of how much Stokes would be missed as a player. But the sense was much more of someone who simply felt for a colleague who was going through a tough time. You wondered whether Root might not be experiencing some of the same emotions. We really do ask quite a lot of our cricketers.But whatever the pressure he was feeling ahead of the match, Root has shouldered his burden magnificently. Here he produced one of his finest Test centuries – there are now 21 from which to select; none of them have, to date, come in a losing cause – to keep his side in with a fighting chance in this match. Without him, England would have been blown away.Related

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There was a period, not so long ago, when there were a few whispers about Root’s batting. It wasn’t that the runs had dried up exactly; it was more that the bigger scores had tended to come in relatively low intensity situations. In 2019, for example, there was a century in St Lucia, by which time the series had already been lost, and there was a double-hundred in Hamilton on a pitch so horrendously flat that only 22 wickets fell across five days.There are no such caveats about this innings. It came against an outstanding attack, on a surface upon which other batters have struggled and when his side – still 49 behind and two wickets down when he strode out to bat – were in some trouble. Not only that, but it came at the start of a series with everything still to be defined. It was his first Test century in England since 2018 but his best at home since at least 2017 when he made 190 in the first Test of a series against South Africa.To put his predominance in perspective, while he has made 109 and 64 in this game, the next highest score of his teammates across both innings has been Sam Curran’s 32. It is, according to BBC statistician Andy Zaltzman, only the fourth time in Test history that a player has made a century and half-century in a match where nobody else in the team has made even 35. Increasingly, Root is looking a giant among them. Take him out of this side and you wonder where they would drop in the rankings. Outside the top six, you suspect.His skills were put into greatest context during his partnership (worth 89 in 28.5 overs) with Dom Sibley. While Sibley’s crease occupation was valuable, you couldn’t help but admire how much easier the business of batting looked for Root. So vast is his range of stroke, so adaptable his feet and the angle of his bat, that he is rarely kept scoreless. He faced only two maidens in his entire innings – one of them during a nervous passage of play when he had 97 – and has a late cut which allows him to score from deliveries other players would look to leave well alone. Sibley made just 12 of their partnership.But it was surely the drives, played off both front and back foot, that will linger longest in the memory. Certainly they had a packed Trent Bridge purring in delight. The on-drive that brought the century was just a little reminiscent of the shot with which Sir Geoffrey Boycott reached his 100th first-class hundred. The celebration – by Root’s standards sustained and expressive – showed how important this innings was. He knew his team needed this.Joe Root has stood tall for his team•AFP/Getty ImagesMore than that, though, he had made a conscious effort to try and enjoy these pressures. This is what he had dreamed of as a kid, after all. So instead of focusing on those negative thoughts – the sense that his side would collapse if he failed – instead of allowing himself to become careworn, he tried to remember he was playing the game he loves, for a team he loves and on the grandest of stages. Put simply, he tried to remember it was meant to be “fun”.”There’s been a lot to handle,” he admitted afterwards. “But it’s important you find ways to handle that. You can let it weigh you down but you have to find solutions. It’s about trying to deal with what’s in front of you and not letting anything overwhelm you.”This morning I said to myself and to the group: just remember what is fun about cricket. It might be tough sometimes, it might be hard, but it’s fun. And it’s really important we all embrace that. Whatever the situation, whatever the conditions and wherever you are in your own game, it’s important you go out there, enjoy the moment and make the most of it.”It felt pretty good to get a big score and get us into position to give us a chance of winning this Test.”He reckoned that batting in the ODI series against Sri Lanka had helped him regain his batting rhythm. He made 68 and 79 – both innings unbeaten – in that series and reasoned that the required tempo – positive, but without the urgency of T20 – was helpful to his game.”I’ve actually felt a real benefit from playing some white-ball cricket,” he said. “I know it would be nice to have some red-ball cricket coming into this game but, from my point of view, playing 50-over cricket gave me some rhythm back in my batting.”I felt I got forward and back better. I was standing a lot taller a lot earlier, picking my bat up a lot earlier, I feel like I’ve got rhythm back in my hands. I find 50-over cricket can be a massive help to my red-ball game.”Maybe we shouldn’t have been surprised. Root has risen in stature in recent months, producing a string of huge scores in Sri Lanka and India (228 and 186 in Galle and 218 in Chennai) that led his side to memorable victories. And while Root at times made those surfaces look pretty flat, it’s worth remembering that no-one else in his side made centuries. Indeed, the next-highest score when he made that 186 was just 55.He’s already made 1,064 Test runs this year. So, with up to seven further Tests available to him this year (there are only three Ashes Tests scheduled before the end of the year this time and it’s entirely possible none of them will take place), he has given himself a chance of breaking Mohammad Yousuf’s record of 1,788 runs in a calendar year. More revealingly, however, the next-highest contributor for England in 2021 is Dan Lawrence with 354. In all, Root has scored 29.19 percent of England’s Test runs in 2021.Whether all this is sustainable in the long-term is debatable. At some stage, there is a danger the burden will break even Root. It is really is imperative England find a way to coax more runs out of the rest of their batting line-up. Right now, though, Root has given his side a chance to win a game they could easily have lost already without his intervention. If they pull this off, they will owe a huge amount to their captain.

Ish Sodhi 2.0: How a horror series against England turned the legspinner's career around

The New Zealand leggie on advice from Mitchell Santner, his match-winning spell against India, and his friendship with Rashid Khan

Matt Roller06-Nov-2021Two years ago, Ish Sodhi endured one of the most chastening series in T20I history. Over the course of a five-match series against England, he took three wickets in 15 overs and leaked 11.73 runs an over; never before or since has a player bowled more balls in a bilateral T20I series with a worse economy rate.The challenge was brutal, bowling legspin to a destructive batting line-up on some of the smallest international grounds in world cricket, but even so, the figures were damning. At 27 and as a purveyor of a skill where players peak late, Sodhi had time on his side to reflect on what had gone wrong, and sought out his long-time team-mate Mitchell Santner for advice.”I knew his ability to be aggressive and defensive at the same time was something I definitely had to learn from,” Sodhi recalls, speaking to ESPNcricinfo. “We speak about spin bowling quite regularly – I’m probably the one that’s instigating it most of the time, but having the bowler at the other end to bounce ideas off is great.”Since then, Sodhi has improved markedly in T20I cricket, averaging 17.09 with an economy rate of 7.72, despite playing the majority of games at home. The key, he says, has been stopping worrying about emulating others. “I’ve thought about that [England] series quite a lot over the last two years,” he says. “I remember speaking to a few people about it before I came away [to the T20 World Cup] and where the development had come from.

“He’s definitely revolutionised legspin bowling. The way he does it is unique: it’s not so much the old 90s way that we grew up watching – legspin with two fingers up, two fingers down and trying to get drift and dip. He’s very much into the wickets and relentless with his lines and lengths.”Sodhi on Rashid Khan

“If you look at Imran Tahir, Rashid Khan, Wanindu Hasaranga, all those great legspinners playing a lot of their cricket in Asian conditions, they’re spinning the ball both ways, bringing the stumps into play, I think that’s always been a blueprint for what legspin should look like in T20 cricket. Up until that point, that’s how I based my game in New Zealand – even though most of the time the wickets don’t really allow for much turn.”That series was definitely a reminder that bowling in New Zealand, compared to anywhere else in the world, is unique for any bowler – even more so for a legspin bowler. Playing on small grounds is something we really need to get used to, and it means that having those defensive options is really important. These days in T20 cricket, anyone from No. 1 to 8 or 9 can hit sixes; being a spinner and not having the ability to peg someone back with a bouncer or something like that, it means you have to be really clinical in your lengths.”Sodhi was due to travel to the IPL as Rajasthan Royals’ team liaison officer earlier this year, effectively becoming a standby replacement player and net bowler, but logistical complications meant his winter instead involved a stint at Worcestershire in the T20 Blast. “There were a few things I was working on in the nets over the winter in cold conditions, so it was nice to be able to test those under pressure, and great for my development.”Ish Sodhi and Mitchell Santner have a bowl in the nets•Getty ImagesIn New Zealand’s opening game of this World Cup, against Pakistan in Sharjah, Sodhi was due to miss out on selection but came into the side at short notice when the ICC confirmed Adam Milne would not be cleared as Lockie Ferguson’s replacement in time; he responded by dismissing Fakhar Zaman and Mohammad Rizwan.As a result, he kept his place for their must-win game against India in Dubai. He made use of the bigger boundaries, having Rohit Sharma and Virat Kohli caught at long-on to return 2 for 17 and take Player-of-the-Match honours on his 29th birthday. “It was quite a cool day,” he says, smiling. “Any time you play against India the atmosphere is pretty grand and there’s a big population of Indians out in Dubai. The way that we played was just fantastic.”After comfortable wins against Scotland and Namibia, New Zealand have set up an effective quarter-final – from their perspective, at least – against Afghanistan in Abu Dhabi on Sunday. Aside from the pressure of a must-win game and the prospect of semi-final qualification, Sodhi is relishing the opportunity to lock horns with his legspin agony uncle.”I’ve spoken to Rash [Rashid Khan] quite a few times,” he says. “It’s good with social media, and I’ve connected with him a few times when I’ve had some questions during some cold winter in New Zealand, when I’ve been working on certain deliveries or my pace. He’s always been great to talk to and it’s great to have that sort of legspin community, when you come across guys like that and can pick their brains and try to improve your own game.”He’s definitely revolutionised legspin bowling. The way he does it is unique: it’s not so much the old 90s way that we grew up watching – legspin with two fingers up, two fingers down and trying to get drift and dip. He’s very much into the wickets and relentless with his lines and lengths. He’s been such a great player for Afghanistan and has done so well around the world in all formats: we know he’s a huge threat for them.”

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