Narine, Mendis and a dash of mystery

Plays of the day from the first ODI between Sri Lanka and West Indies in Colombo

Andrew Fidel Fernando in Colombo01-Nov-2015The no ball-drop
When Ajantha Mendis hoicked Johnson Charles’ length ball toward deep midwicket, with Sri Lanka nine down, West Indies thought they had the chance to win the game. Jerome Taylor ran forward from that position and dived to get both hands to the ball, but let it bounce out of his palms. In the end, two West Indies errors on this delivery led to their defeat next ball. Charles had overstepped, and conceded a front-foot no-ball. Had this been a legitimate delivery, Mendis might not have aimed a six off the next ball, which became a free hit. Had Taylor caught the ball cleanly at deep midwicket, Sri Lanka might not have run two, and Suranga Lakmal would have been on strike for that next delivery.The double-strike
Jason Holder was forced to go to his part-time bowlers after an injury to Andre Russell left West Indies short of front-liners. In the 24th over, Jonathan Carter’s medium-pace revived West Indies’ hopes of victory, after the Mendis-Sachithra Senanayake partnership seemed to be taking it away from them. Carter first snuck his third-ball between Senanayake’s bat and pad to break that stand, and then left his team on the brink of victory by nailing Lasith Malinga in front of the stumps next ball. Lakmal would survive the last two balls of that over, however, allowing the hosts to hang on.The carbon copy
Danushka Gunathilaka and Shehan Jayasuriya received their ODI caps on Sunday, and they departed within four balls of each other, in almost identical fashion. Not picking Sunil Narine’s offbreaks, both batsmen saw the ball pitch on leg stump and played for the straighter one. Narine spun it past both men’s outside edge and clipped off stump on his way to a triple-wicket over.The yorker
Angelo Mathews has been reluctant to bowl over the past few weeks, owing to an ankle complaint. But upon seeing Andre Russell begin to take the match away from Sri Lanka, he took it upon himself to stop Russell’s advance. Bringing himself on in the 22nd over, Mathews deployed a long-off and long-on, and looked for the yorker-length that had been eluding his team-mates. He didn’t quite hit the blockhole, but when Russell attempted to slam him over long-off second ball, he found the ball was too full to achieve enough elevation and was caught comfortably in the deep.

Ashwin's 8, Jadeja's 51

Stats highlights from the first day’s play between India and South Africa in Bangalore where AB de Villiers fell 15 short of a century in his 100th Test

Shiva Jayaraman14-Nov-20158 Number of times R Ashwin has picked up at least four wickets in an innings in Tests in 2015 including his 4 for 70 in this match. This is the most such hauls by any bowler in 2015. Yasir Shah is next on this list with seven such hauls this year. Ashwin has taken at least one such haul in each of the seven Tests he has played in 2015.592 Runs by AB de Villiers in international matches on South Africa’s current tour – the most any batsman from either side has made from the ten games played. His 85 in South Africa’s first innings was his sixth score of fifty or more runs. De Villiers has made three hundreds and three fifties and has averaged 65.77. The next highest is by Rohit Sharma, who has made 383 runs at 54.71.51 Wickets by Ravindra Jadeja in just 13 first-class innings this season including his four in South Africa’s innings in this Test. This equals the most he has taken in any season in first-class cricket. He had taken exactly 51 wickets in 2012-13. However, Jadeja’s bowling average of 11.54 of 2015-16 is his best in any season.1029 Runs made by de Villiers against India in Tests. He passed 1000 runs during his innings of 85 in this innings. De Villiers is the third South Africa batsman after Jacques Kallis and Amla to score 1000-plus runs against India. De Villiers has made three hundreds and four fifties against India in Tests and averages 42.87.1974 The last time a captain winning the toss in Bangalore chose to field before Virat Kohli in this Test. In each of the 19 Tests after that and before the current one, teams winning the toss had batted first. In fact, this was only the 20th time in 246 Tests in India that a team had opted to field. This is also only the second time in 39 Tests in India since 2007 that a captain has opted to field. MS Dhoni had chosen to field against West Indies in the last Test of the series in 2013-14.55.50 De Villiers’ average against spinners on this tour; he has scored at a strike rate of 93.27 against them and has been dismissed six times in 357 balls. In contrast, the other South Africa batsmen have averaged 19.90 against the India spinners and have conceded 43 wickets off 1290 balls. De Villiers had made 44 runs off 62 deliveries in this innings before being dismissed by Jadeja.2009 The last time South Africa played a Test without Dale Steyn in the team, which was against England in Centurion. Since then Steyn had played in each of the 48 Tests South Africa had played before this match.2000 The last time a team batting first in a Test in Bangalore posted a total lower than the 214 by South Africa in their innings. On that occasion, India had been on the receiving end against the same opposition, and had been bowled out for 158. Since then, this is the first time in eight Tests that a team has failed to post at least 300 runs in the first innings.2 Wickets by Ashwin in the eighth over of South Africa’s innings; he got Stian Van Zyl and Faf du Plessis out in what was his first over in the match. This was the earliest a spinner had dismissed two or more batsmen in an over in the first innings of any Test since 2002. The earliest before this was the 15th over in the first innings of the Guyana Test in 2003 when Brad Hogg got the wickets of Wavell Hinds and Marlon Samuels in the same over.490.00 Hashim Amla’s batting average in his previous Test series in India; in three innings in this series he has managed just 50 runs. In international matches in India before this tour, he had made 1192 runs at 79.46 including five hundreds and four fifties from 17 innings. However, ten innings on this tour have produced just 177 runs at 17.70 and a highest of 43.0 Number of fifty-plus opening stands for India in eight Test innings before the unbeaten 80-run stand between Shikhar Dhawan and Murali Vijay in this Test. The last time their openers had added 50-plus runs in an innings was against Bangladesh in Fatullah earlier this year where the same pair had added 283 runs. Since then India had managed only 44 runs in eight innings with a highest partnership of 14.

Australia's record streak, Kohli fastest to 7000 runs

Stats highlights from the third ODI at the MCG, where Australia took an unassailable lead in the five-match series

Bharath Seervi17-Jan-201617 Consecutive ODIs won by Australia at home, including this three-wicket win at the MCG – the longest streak for any team. They surpassed West Indies’ winning streak from 1986 to 1990 and Sri Lanka’s from 1996 to 1998 of 16 consecutive wins each. Australia’s last defeat at home was to South Africa at the WACA on November 16, 2014.8 Losses for India against Australia in their last nine ODIs at the MCG since February 1986. Their only win was in 2007-08. Since 1986, India have an even win-loss record at both MCG and SCG – 0.125 (won 1, lost 8).2010 The last time Australia lost a bilateral ODI series at home, 2-1 to Sri Lanka in 2010-11. Since then, they have played six series, including this, and have won five of those; they drew 2-2 against Sri Lanka in 2012-13.4 Consecutive ODI losses for India in Australia – three in this series and the semifinal of the 2015 World Cup. Last time they lost four or more consecutive ODIs there was more than 10 years ago, between January 2000 and January 2004.0 Totals higher than India’s 295 for 6 at the MCG against the hosts in the first innings. India overtook England’s 294 which they scored on January 16, 2011, though they lost that game by six wickets. This is the eighth total of 265 or more against Australia at the MCG and the hosts have chased them down successfully on six of those occasions. Australia have made the highest successful chase at MCG as well with this victory.161 Number of innings needed by Virat Kohli to complete 7000 runs in ODIs – the least by any batsman, beating AB de Villiers who achieved it in 166 innings in November 2014. Kohli is the 36th batsman to score 7000 ODI runs and eighth from India. Kohli’ 161 innings are also the fewest by any batsman to make 24 ODI centuries, and by a distance too; Sachin Tendulkar took 219 innings to score as many tons. Only four batsmen have scored more centuries than Kohli in ODIs.Fastest batsmen to milestones of 6000 to 10,000 ODI runs.•ESPNcricinfo Ltd3 Kohli’s ODI centuries that have come in defeatsfor India, including this one. His previous two centuries in defeats were: 107 against England in Cardiff in 2011 and 123 against New Zealand in Napier in 2013-14.0 Times Australia conceded 275 or more in three consecutive ODIs against a team before this. India scored 309 for 3 and 308 for 8 in the first two ODIs of this series. This is only the second time Australia have given away 275 or more runs in any three consecutive ODIs. First was in 2007 – 305 for 5 by New Zealand at the WACA, 292 for 7 by England at the SCG and 290 for 7 by New Zealand at the MCG in the CB series.4 Number of times Glenn Maxwell has got out in the nineties in his ODI career, including his 96 in this match. Since his debut, on August 25, 2012, only Kane Williamson has got more such scores- six 90s. The other Australia batsmen together have got only three nineties in this period.5 Man-of-the-Match awards for Maxwell in ODIs. Since his debut, only two Australia players have got more such awards – Steven Smith and Mitchell Starc, with six each.40.22 Kohli’s average against Australia in Australia in ODIs, after this innings of 117. It was just 15.83 before this in seven innings and has increased with his scores of 91, 59 and 117 in the first three innings of the series.300 International matches captained by MS Dhoni; this match was his 300th. Only Ricky Ponting (324) and Stephen Fleming (303) have captained in more times than Dhoni. He has led India in 60 Tests, 189 ODIs and 51 T20Is – only player to lead his side in 50 or more matches in all three formats of the game.1 India batsmen who made fifty-plus scores in three or more consecutive ODIs against Australia in Australia before Kohli in this series – Sunil Gavaskar scored 59, 92*, 77 and 72 in the Bensen & Hedges World Series Cup of 1985-86. This is the sixth time Kohli has scored 50 or more in three or more consecutive ODI innings; it’s his first outside Asia, though. His best sequence is five 50-plus scores in five innings twice: 133*, 108, 66, 183, 106 in 2012 and 68*, 61, 100*, 68, 115* in 2013.0 Instances of India having at least one centurion in three consecutive ODIs against Australia in Australia, before this series. Rohit Sharma scored 171 not out and 124 in the first two ODIs and Kohli did it in the third ODI with 117. There have been two previous occasions of at least a century in two consecutive ODIs in Australia against the hosts – in February 2008 and January 2004. This is only the second such instance against Australia in Australia. The first was at least a century in four consecutive innings between November 2014 and January 2015.1 Previous occasions of India having a century partnership for the second-wicket in three or more consecutive ODI innings. Kohli put up 207 and 125 in the first two ODIs with Rohit Sharma and 119 in this ODI with Shikhar Dhawan. India had stands of 205, 148, 133 and 173 in 2012; Kohli was also involved in all four of those stands.0 Fifty-plus opening partnerships between Dhawan and Rohit in the last 10 innings they have opened together, with a highest of 42 against South Africa in Nagpur. They had added more than 50 runs in four of the previous five ODIs. They averaged 49.43 till then and in the last 10 innings, they average only 23.50.

Highest T20 score in Australia, and Kohli's run of form

Stats highlights from the final T20I between Australia and India in Sydney, which the visitors won to complete a series sweep

Bharath Seervi31-Jan-20163 Instances when India have successfully chased targets of 190 or more in T20Is, the most by any team. South Africa is the only other team to do it more than once. India had chased 207 against Sri Lanka in Mohali in 2009 and 202 against Australia in Rajkot in 2013. This is the first time India finished a successful chase off the final ball of a match and the 15th instance overall for any team.4 Clean sweeps in a T20I series of three or more matches; this is also only the second in a series involving two Full Member sides. The previous instance came in 2014 when Australia beat England 3-0 at home.124* Shane Watson’s score in this match, the second-highest score in T20 internationals after Aaron Finch’s 156. Finch’s innings came against England in Southampton in 2013. Watson’s score is also the highest in T20 matches in Australia beating Luke Wright’s 117 for Melbourne Stars against Hobart Hurricanes in Hobart in 2012.1 Virat Kohli is the first batsman to score more than two fifty-plus scores in a bilateral T20I series. Kohli’s tally of 199 runs in this series is also the second-highest by a batsman between dismissals in T20Is. Martin Guptill had scored 216 runs with scores of 91*, 78* and 47 in February 2012. Kohli’s aggregate is also the second-highest by a batsman in bilateral T20I series. Hamilton Masakadza’s 222 runs in the four-match series earlier this year against Bangladesh is the highest.119* The highest individual score by a captain in T20Is before Watson’s 124*, by Faf du Plessis against West Indies in Johannesburg in January 2015. Tillakaratne Dilshan is the only other batsman to score a century as captain in T20Is.98 The highest score by a batsman in his first T20I as captain before Watson’s 124*, by Ricky Ponting in February 2005 against New Zealand in Auckland. Another Australia captain is third on this list: Steven Smith had made 90 on his T20I captaincy debut, against England in Cardiff in 2015.0 Centuries scored against India in T20Is before Watson’s knock. The previous highest individual score against India was Chris Gayle’s 98 that came in Bridgetown during the 2010 World T20.71 Balls faced by Watson in this innings, the most by a batsman in T20Is. He surpassed Morne van Vyk’s 70-ball innings of 114 not out against West Indies in Durban in 2015.4 T20I centuries in a losing cause. Watson’s score is the fourth-highest in overall T20 cricket in a defeat.62.94 Percentage of runs scored by Watson in Australia’s 5 for 197 – the fourth-highest percentage contribution in a completed T20I innings. Kane Williamson’s 70% contribution against Sri Lanka in Chittagong in 2014 is the highest.93 Runs added by Watson and Travis Head, the highest fourth-wicket partnership for Australia in T20Is. The pair went past an unbeaten 84-run stand shared by Adam Voges and David Warner against Sri Lanka in Sydney in 2013.3 Number of Indians who have aggregated 1000 or more runs in T20Is. Rohit Sharma is the latest on the list behind Virat Kohli and Suresh Raina.24 Runs scored off a Shaun Tait over [third of the innings], the third-most expensive over against India. The most expensive one was bowled by Stuart Broad, who conceded 36 in Durban [19th over of the innings] in the 2007 World T20, followed by Rory Kleinveldt’s 25-run over in Gros Islet [18th over] in the 2010 World T20.

Gambhir has Dhoni surrounded, again

Plays of the day from the IPL match between Kolkata Knight Riders and Rising Pune Supergiants

Deivarayan Muthu14-May-2016The unlikely slog
Ajinkya Rahane is among the most classical of batsmen, relying on brain over brawn. Each of this six fifties this season were built on balance, placement and timing. On Saturday night against Kolkata Knight Riders, Rahane opted to test his muscle, after quietly playing out five balls for two runs. He lost his shape, looking to slog a back-of-a-length ball from Andre Russell, and only managed an inside edge that floored his off and middle stumps.The nick that wasn’t
Usman Khawaja had reprieves on 8, 9 and 22 on his IPL debut against Delhi Daredevils on May 5. He failed to cash in and was stumped off Amit Mishra for 30. Khawaja had a lifeline against Knight Riders as well. Morne Morkel banged in a short ball outside off and induced a lazy dab from the Australia opener. There was a noise as the ball passed the bat, and the bowler and wicketkeeper Robin Uthappa went up in unison. Umpire Bruce Oxenford, though, shot down the appeal. Replays and Ultra Edge later indicated a thin nick. Six balls later, Khawaja holed out to deep square leg for 21 off 17 balls. Another start squandered.Captain under siege, part II
When MS Dhoni walked out to bat against Knight Riders last month, Gautam Gambhir put his helmet on and swooped into silly point to greet the Rising Pune Supergiants captain. Gambhir brought in a slip and a short leg as well.In the reverse fixture, Dhoni arrived with his team at 74 for 4. Gambhir took his position at silly point again, besides adding two slips and a short leg. Knight Riders coach Jacques Kallis who was doing an interview by the sidelines at the time said that it was a plan to knock Dhoni over early and apply more pressure on Supergiants. The plan nearly worked as Dhoni feebly prodded at a loopy Piyush Chawla ball that drifted in first up, resulting in an inside edge that nearly kissed the leg stump via a deflection off the front pad.The crazy mix-up
Sunil Narine, who returned to the Knight Riders XI after missing the team’s last two games because of a finger injury, pushed one away from Dhoni with extra bounce. Dhoni reached out, stabbed to Chawla at backward point, and set off. Irfan Pathan responded to Dhoni, took a couple of steps forward, but suddenly stopped. By then, Dhoni was more than halfway down the pitch. Moreover, he was left jumping and yelling at Irfan’s indecision. The allrounder, who was promoted to No. 5, eventually sacrificed his wicket as Chawla fired a flat throw to Uthappa at the striker’s end. He made his way back for 7 off 8, without daring to look at his seething captain.

Hampshire's plague of injuries gives Andrew a fresh start

Hampshire’s plague of injuries this summer have given Gareth Andrew the chance of a fresh start in a county career that seemed to be over

Jon Culley14-Jul-2016There is no good age for a professional cricketer to be told he will not be offered a new contract. But if there is a particularly worrying time for it to happen it is when you are just the wrong side of 30: too young to be thinking your career has run its natural course, yet too old to be the most attractive proposition to a new employer, especially once it has been noted that you have played only a handful of matches in your last two seasons.This was the reality that confronted Gareth Andrew last August when Worcestershire, looking to create space in their staff roster to accommodate an influx of talented youngsters, identified their injury-bedevilled all-rounder as an obvious candidate to make way.What was all the more galling for the county’s 31-year-old one-time player of the year was that the back problem that had plagued him for three frustrating years had been finally resolved just days before he was given the news.Eight years of service, 327 wickets, 23 fifties and one hundred – suddenly it was all over.”I saw it coming,” he admits. “My contract was up and as a senior player who was not playing the writing was on the wall. But it was still tough to leave. Worcester has become my home at the end of the day.”It was a shame because after two years hoping my back would resolve I had an operation in the middle of last season and it cleared up the problem straight away.”It was only a few days later that I was released. Yet I felt I had a lot to give back to the club.”By the time Andrew found himself ready to play again, comfortable for the first time in three years, it was not long before he discovered there was hardly a queue forming to take him on.”Counties are looking for younger guys and I’m getting older,” he said. “Plus they are always going to be a bit wary of someone who has had back problems, if they don’t know the ins and outs.”I have a personal friend who works as my agent and I’ve been in cricket long enough to have built up a lot of contacts. But the answers we were getting tended to be the same – counties have had to tighten their budgets and are looking to play younger guys.”Happily for Andrew, one county’s misfortunes have created an opportunity for him. Although there are no assurances beyond the immediate future, he has found work with Hampshire, who remembered his approach during the winter and have turned to him to help them through an injury crisis.”I’d started to concentrate on things away from cricket, renovating a house in Worcester and doing the next part of my marketing module. I’ve been playing for Ombersley in the Birmingham League,” Andrew said.”I’d been in contact with Hampshire through the winter but when they signed Tino Best I thought that door was closed.”But then randomly, while I was organising the teas for Ombersley on a Friday afternoon for a Saturday game, I got a call from Giles White saying they needed me for a four-day game and would I be able to meet them at Old Trafford on the Saturday. I bit their hand off.”A little over two months later he has played 16 matches for Hampshire across all formats, contributing with bat or ball in all of them, and has the potential to continue his career, for which he thanks his partner for unceasing encouragement – “she gave me the drive and the kick up the backside when I needed it” – and friendly counties, such as Hampshire’s latest opponents, Warwickshire.”Warwickshire were fantastic,” he said. “Dougie Brown is a great guy and I know Alan Richardson, too, as a team-mate at Worcestershire. They offered me the opportunity to train with them all winter. I had a couple of weeks at Derby too with Pop Welch and I had the pre-season with Warwickshire. They gave me the opportunity to get myself fit, so I will forever be in their debt.”I’m not looking into the future at the moment. I’m on a monthly contract, playing game by game, just loving having the opportunity to be out there playing again.”Hampshire have been really accommodating and looked after me really well. It has worked well for them too because they have been losing players left right and centre through injury.”And even if I don’t fit into Hampshire’s plans in the long term, it gives me a better chance of finding another club. I’m only 32 and having not played a lot of cricket in the last couple of years I feel fresh. I reckon I have a few more years to give.”The injury, a stress fracture that first came to light during the 2013 season, restricted him to four first-class matches in 2014 and three in 2015, with five white-ball matches as a batsman only in 2014 but none at all in 2015.”I played all the way through 2013 but missed the last couple of games, which is when I realised I had the injury,” he said.”I did the rehab through the winter and started 2014 really well but after four games I was in a serious amount of pain. It was then we realised the nature of the fracture was different.”So I focussed on batting with the second team for the rest of that season and played a couple of T20s as a batter.”When 2015 came along we were hoping it had healed naturally. But after the second game it was found there had been what they call a non-union, where the last half a millimetre had not healed. Under stress and workload, it flared up again.”We tried injections to stimulate the bone to grow and heal but that didn’t work either. The last chance was to have it screwed.”I went to see a very good back specialist and the amazing thing is that I walked in one day, had the screw put in and walked out the next day healed, with no pain.”In hindsight, had I had it done 18 months ago I would have missed no cricket, but that’s just the nature of professional sport I suppose. You don’t always know these things.”

Bishoo's eight-for leaves WI chasing 346

ESPNcricinfo staff16-Oct-2016Yasir Shah removed Miguel Cummins to complete a five-wicket haul and 100 Test wickets•Getty ImagesDevendra Bishoo resisted for 41 balls and scored 17 before becoming the last man to be dismissed; West Indies were bowled out for 357•Getty ImagesShannon Gabriel removed Azhar Ali early, before Bishoo trapped Asad Shafiq lbw for his first wicket•AFPBabar Azam was troubled by a few short deliveries before he inside-edged Bishoo on to the stumps•Getty ImagesSami Aslam countered with a brisk 44, before edging a late cut off Bishoo to slip•Getty ImagesAslam’s dismissal triggered a collapse as Pakistan’s batsmen had a tough time against Bishoo•Getty ImagesBishoo cut through Pakistan with career-best figures of 8 for 49; Pakistan lost their last seven wickets for 30 runs to be bowled out for 123•AFPBishoo cut through Pakistan with career-best figures of 8 for 49; Pakistan lost their last seven wickets for 30 runs to be bowled out for 123•AFPMohammad Amir got rid of Kraigg Brathwaite early in West Indies’ chase of 346•Getty ImagesBut the other opener Leon Johnson kept his end going, scoring 47 before eventually falling to Amir as well•AFPDarren Bravo, with Marlon Samuels, saw West Indies to stumps without further damage, setting up an intriguing final day: West Indies needed 251 runs more, while Pakistan needed eight wickets•Getty Images

Centurion Mazid lets his runs do the talking

Abdul Mazid followed in the footsteps of Nafees Iqbal and Raqibul Hasan in making a hundred in a warm-up game against England’s tourists

Mohammad Isam in Chittagong16-Oct-2016It remains to be seen whether Abdul Mazid, the latest Bangladesh batsman to make a century against an England touring side, will follow the colourful example of the last two men to do so, in 2003 and 2010. But, unlike Nafees Iqbal and Raqibul Hasan, this time he seems content to have let his runs do the talking.On this very day in 2003, at the BKSP ground in Savar, Nafees Iqbal cracked 118 in the first innings of England’s opening tour match, then had the temerity to dismiss England’s spinners as “ordinary”.Nafees, still a year away from making his Test debut back then, was Bangladesh’s up-and-coming star of the day who bore a lot of hope in their early days as a Full Member nation. In the end, however, he played only 11 Tests and 16 ODIs before passing the mantle to his younger brother – Tamim Iqbal.Funnily enough, one of the spinners whom Nafees had taken to task back then was back on parade today. Gareth Batty picked up two wickets today to further his claim for a Test recall after an absence of more than 11 years, but not before Mazid had thumped for two fours and a six in his innings of 106.When England returned for their second full tour to Bangladesh, the centurion in one of the warm-up matches, Raqibul, did the unthinkable by announcing his retirement from international cricket at the age of 23. This came as an angry reaction to being overlooked for the 2010 World T20 preliminary squad. After scoring the hundred, he left Chittagong in a fury, bewildering team-mates, coach and the BCB high-ups.His retirement angered the then-captain Shakib Al Hasan although coach Jamie Siddons sympathised with Raqibul. But the BCB terminated his contract even though he had returned from retirement a week later. He went on to play only two more Tests, and has been out of favour with the senior side for the last five years.Mazid, meanwhile, is neither a teenage sensation like Nafees was in 2003 nor a regular Test player like Raqibul in 2010. He is a 25-year old opener who is a consistent performer in domestic cricket over the last five years.His only taste of representative cricket was for Bangladesh A in the Caribbean in 2014, but that tour was a mini-disaster as he struggled against genuine pace. But in the intervening two years, he has improved measurably although England’s quicks still caused him some discomfort today when they pitched it short.But for the rest of Sunday morning, Mazid dominated an England attack including Stuart Broad, Chris Woakes and Steven Finn with 106 off 95 balls that had 16 boundaries and a six. He had reached 92 in the first session before cramps kept him in the dressing room until late in the day when he returned and reached three figures off 90 balls. Mazid’s end came when he swung across the line in the 66th over.Mazid will consider himself unlucky to be in form at a time when the competition for Bangladesh opener’s slots are stiff in all three formats. Tamim Iqbal and Imrul Kayes will be opening against England in the Test series, with the likes of Soumya Sarkar, Liton Das, Shahriar Nafees and Imtiaz Hossain also in the frame.But Mazid was a delight to watch at the MA Aziz Stadium, much like Nafees and Raqibul but without their frills.

'There's no wicket that's flat for a bowler'

Fighting spirit, hard work, and the unshaking support of his mother helped a young man from Langa leopard-crawl his way into the cricketing limelight

Luke Alfred28-Dec-2016Until very recently, Malusi Siboto was a relative unknown outside of a hundred or so South Africa’s franchise cricketers and the handful of zealous fans who follow the domestic game. Then he appeared in the domestic T20 final for Titans against Warriors before Christmas, giving an emotional performance that endeared him to a television audience running into the hundreds of thousands. He was suddenly – ephemerally – South African cricket’s biggest star.With Warriors poised to make a fist of chasing Titans’ by no means impossible target, he dropped a dolly standing at short fine leg but, shortly afterwards, was offered a chance to make amends by stand-in captain David Wiese, who asked him to bowl the final over, with Warriors needing 12. This he did successfully, but not before bursting into tears mid-pitch after bowling the delivery that ensured Titans could not lose. He followed that delivery with the season’s most memorable wide, before breathing deeply and somehow composing himself sufficiently to close out the game.When at last he bowled the final ball in an interminably long 20th over, he sprinted into the stands to hug and kiss his mum and grandmother. He had flown them up from Cape Town for the final.No one has been a more loyal and loving supporter of her son than Siboto’s mother, Nandi. “It was very emotional at the end of the final because, in a way, it was what I’ve been working so long for. I got into a final with the Knights against the Cobras at Newlands two seasons ago, which we lost, so this game was very important to me.”

“One of the guys in the sports complex where he was living heard suspicious noises coming from his room one night – we thought he had a girl in there. We found out later that he was doing sit-ups and push-ups!”Coach Monty Jacobs on Siboto

It was not cricket but hockey that was Siboto’s passport out of Langa in the Western Cape, the township in which he grew up. While he was always a decent cricketer, it was his hockey that earned him a bursary to study sports science at the University of the North-West in Potchefstroom in his first year out of school. For a few years, his prowess as a centre-link dominated as he flittered on the edge of South Africa’s Under-21 World Cup hockey squad without making the final cut for the tournament in Egypt. After a year or three, cricket finally gained the upper hand. Some good performances for the university allowed him to be sucked into North-West’s structures, alongside players like Chris Morris and Nicky van den Bergh.”He was always very hard-working,” remembers Monty Jacobs, one of his early coaches at North-West. “One of the guys in the sports complex where he was living heard suspicious noises coming from his room one night – we thought he had a girl in there. We found out later that he was doing sit-ups and push-ups!”Malusi is one of those guys who is really ripped, with a six pack and the works. He also happens to be one of the fittest guys around. He needs to be if he’s going to bowl you 15 or 16 overs a day in the Potch heat.”Siboto was never quite explosive or eye-catching enough a bowler to elbow his way into the Lions structures (North-West are their franchise partners, so the Wanderers was the local destination of choice). Sarel Cilliers, down at Knights, saw enough, however, to offer him a contract in Bloemfontein, and so Siboto headed to the middle of the country, swapping one batsman-friendly pitch in Potch for the arguably even more benign strip at Springbok Park.After the T20 final, Siboto spent a few days training with new Titans coach Mark Boucher, before heading back to Langa for Christmas•Getty Images”The thing with my studies when I arrived was that lectures were in Afrikaans and my Afrikaans is really terrible,” he says. “I had to take notes in Afrikaans and talk in Afrikaans, so it was difficult. It taught me to be patient. I couldn’t tell my mum about it – I didn’t want her to find out anything and so worry – so I just hung in there for as long as I could. I could easily have given up. The first years at university weren’t easy.”Despite his trial by Afrikaans, Siboto slowly became rounded as a cricketer. He found an ally in Vusumuzi Mazibuko, a fellow fast bowler at North-West, and the two set about strategising. “The two of us talked and with his help I changed my mindset,” he says. “We decided that there’s no wicket that’s flat from a bowling point of view. I learned to be positive and think on my feet. I had always used the bouncer. I had always wanted to protect my length to keep the batsman honest. Now we were thinking about other things and being creative. It didn’t matter where we were bowling. We had to keep clever and keep our body language good.”Under Cilliers and the players around him at Knights, Siboto began to fashion a full bag of tricks. For those who haven’t seen it, he has a distinctive action, falling away from the stumps at the non-striker’s end just before the point of release. While this collapse tends to signal that the ball is swinging towards middle and leg with the arm, Siboto cannily counteracts this with the full menu of slower balls, cutters and slower bouncers. Indeed, it was such capacity for reinvention that inspired Rob Walter, before he left Titans for Otago, to bring him up to SuperSport Park in Pretoria. At 29, Siboto is probably as complete a customer as he will ever be.

“It was very emotional at the end of the final because, in a way, it was what I’ve been working so long for”

During his first couple of years out of Wynberg High School in the Cape, it was touch-and-go as to whether Siboto would manage to leopard-crawl his way through a punishing system. He did so, in part because of his fighting spirit but in part because he did not want to disappoint either his hardworking mother or grandmother, Nonkululenko. He has never known his father, and his mum, a personal assistant at the Cape Town Market, seldom managed to watch him play either cricket or hockey when he was growing up. Despite this, she has been a pillar of support, a fountain of pride. It is fair to say that Siboto’s road would have been a significantly more tortuous one without her.After the final, he spent a couple of days training with new coach, Mark Boucher, at Titans, before heading back to Langa for his Christmas holidays. When asked if he was likely to be asked for his autograph as he chilled with his township (mates) over the New Year, he was adamant: “No, no, I don’t think there will be any of that.”He might be right; then again, he might just find himself pleasantly surprised, a bright light from a pocket of the cricket universe from which stars don’t very often come.

Ravindra Jadeja roughs 'em up

Aakash Chopra analyses the various methods used by India’s bowlers to bowl Bangladesh out on a fifth-day pitch that was still quite good to bat on

Aakash Chopra13-Feb-2017Ashwin’s rangeThe first three R Ashwin dismissals showed he has ways to dismiss batsmen even when the pitch isn’t too responsive. All three dismissals came in different fashions.Tamim Iqbal: When the ball is new, Ashwin prefers to go around the stumps to the left-handers. From that angle, he keeps the ball really close to the stumps. Some go straight with the arm and the rest turn away. In addition to that he keeps the midwicket region empty, tempting the batsmen to play against the spin. His variation in pace accentuates the problem for the batsman, for stepping out becomes tougher.Mominul Haque: Once the ball got old, he went back to over the stumps and this time consumed Mominul with a classical offspinner’s dismissal. It was a nicely flighted delivery that pitched on a good-length spot within the stumps and spun sharply to find the outside edge. The trick to play such a ball is to stretch fully forward and smother the spin, if possible. Mominul had a very short stride. Ben Duckett played Ashwin in a similar manner during England’s tour of India, and paid the ultimate price.Mushfiqur Rahim: Mushfiqur stepped out and drove one nicely through the empty cover region. A couple of balls later, he tried the same thing but this time the ball was a little flatter in the air and fell a few inches shorter than expected. The ball also went straight with the arm and found the outside edge of the bat. I remember Ashwin doing the same to Joe Root a couple of times in the last series.Jadeja and the roughIf there’s a fair amount of rough created outside the left-handers’ off stump, it’s almost impossible to negotiate Ravindra Jadeja for a long period. The problem starts with Jadeja’s extra pace in the air and gets complemented with his unrelenting accuracy. In decades gone by, batsmen could kick these deliveries away, but in the era of the DRS, it’s not a viable option anymore. Deliberate padding is an option only if the ball has pitched outside leg. Jadeja’s speed doesn’t allow you to sweep, something Alastair Cook found out, and playing on the back foot is the only way to negotiate him. But that’s also full of danger, for some some balls land in the rough and the rest in the area between the scruffy patches. It’s almost impossible to gauge and negotiate successfully. Shakib’s dismissal was a fine example of this.Ishant’s legcutterThere seems to be a useful addition to Ishant’s bowling variations. Once the ball got old and started reversing, he did well to make the ball deviate off the pitch away from the right-handed batsman. While his natural length is a little short for exploiting reverse-swing against the tail-enders, his ability to bowl legcutters will make him more potent against the top-order batsmen.

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