Was dropping Brendan Taylor warranted?

While Zimbabwe coach Stephen Mangongo’s uncompromising approach that will keep people on their toes is something to be lauded, the question remains, does Brendan Taylor’s recent run of form justify him being left out of the eleven?

Firdose Moonda22-Aug-2014To speak of Zimbabwe cricket and certainty in the same breath is to speak of white Christmases in Africa: they just do not happen. The former sways between changes to the structures, payment delays and a fixture list that can make the shifting sands of the Arabian desert seem stable when compared with cricket in the country, but one man changed that. Brendan Taylor.Since making his debut in April 2004, Taylor has been involved in almost every ODI – the format Zimbabwe play most often – his country has taken part in. Almost, because in 2008, he missed out on 17 ODIs after making himself unavailable because of a dispute with the board and a year before that he was dropped for the last match of a series in Bangladesh and the return home series after notching up scores of 1, 1 and 4 in the three games prior to his axing.Apart from those games where Taylor was left out, poor form had never accounted for his place in the XI until Thursday. With Zimbabwe 2-nil down in a three-match series and batting their broken element, their most experienced top-order player, Taylor, was left out. He was not injured, he was not being rested, he was dropped.The disbelief resonated from the commentary box to social media platforms were questions over whether a return of 20 runs from the two matches that preceded the final fixture was reason enough to bench the man who put on 93 in a Test a week earlier and scored a half-century and a 43 against Afghanistan in the last month’s contest. Zimbabwe’s coach Stephen Mangongo believed it was.”It’s a professional sport, there is always pressure. It is not Boozer’s XI,” Mangongo said. “It is a privilege to be selected, it is not a right. Whether you get one game or 20, there is always pressure and if you are professional and you get paid to do the job you must go and do the job.”The truth is that almost no one among Zimbabwe’s specialist batsmen were doing their job. Although their margins to South Africa defeat got smaller as the series went on, their methods of getting to those results grew worse because of their batting. Mangongo acknowledged that the efforts were lopsided with the tail wagging the dog quite literally.”The lower order batted with a lot of courage, a lot of determination, a lot of pride and dignity. They put runs on the board more than the top order,” he said. “Obviously we’ve got our work cut out for us in terms of the top order. It has been a perennial struggle and we’ve still got that problem on our hands. We’ve got to confront the demons and deal with them and get it right at some stage if we want to compete, let alone beat international sides.”In attempting to piece the puzzle together Zimbabwe trialled different combinations, all unsuccessfully. The Vusi Sibanda-Richmond Mutumbami pair yielded 16 runs before Hamilton Masakadza, who came in at No. 3 steadied things. When Masakadza was promoted into Sibanda’s spot for the second game, he put on 21 runs with Mutumbami but Sikandar Raza who was installed at No. 3 did not score at all. On their second go, Masakadza and Mutumbami were out in the first two overs and while Raza showed promise, it was up to Elton Chigumbura, promoted into Taylor’s spot, to give the innings a backbone.Exactly what Zimbabwe gleaned from all that is probably only that Masakadza should not be opening. Although he has scored most of his runs at the top, he has admitted to being more comfortable at first-drop. Sibanda’s talent has bought time often in the past but whether it will continue to do so with both Raza and Mutumbami around is doubtful, unless Mutumbami moves down. There may be a case for Chigumbura being given more time at the crease but there is doesn’t seem to be any for leaving Taylor out, something which seems to be happening increasingly.Taylor was stripped of the ODI captaincy after the Afghanistan series as part of a plan to unburden him. He was also taken off wicketkeeping duty, which Mangongo explained before the South Africa series. “I’m looking at a specialist role. I don’t believe in part-timers,” he said. “Wicketkeeping is a key role and I need the best man for the job, not a part-timer and that is the route we are going to do. BT is going to specialise in his batting, not keeping. That’s his role. We will look at a specialist keeper to do the job.”Mangongo promised to be equally harsh on other players who did not pull their weight. “Nobody is safe. We are coming from bruising encounters with Afghanistan where we have slid to our lowest levels – losing to an Associate member. It just tells you that there is something wrong here and we need to fix it,” he said. “This is part of the roadmap to fixing it and making sure we are competitive against the top teams and we thrash the Associates. Nobody is safe because we haven’t done well.”Sibanda experienced that recently and now, so has Taylor. Although his dropping is proving more difficult for Zimbabwean fans to stomach. Taylor’s decade with the national team has included acts that have made him a hero to people of varying backgrounds.Taylor refused to join the white-player walkout because he felt he was too young to involve himself politically and wanted to play for Zimbabwe. Although he had a dispute with the board in the years when chaos reigned, his was shortlived. On Test return, he led from the front. When more players walked away, he remained and that is not for lack of opportunity to follow them.As recently as the eve of the South Africa Test there were whispers that Taylor was contemplating a Kolpak offer. He denied that and confirmed he had resigned with ZC for the next year. Following his axing, he posted on Twitter: “I can’t wait to represent my country again. I will be back,” he posted on Thursday.”Mangongo’s uncompromising approach that will keep people on their toes is something to be lauded in an environment where mediocrity has been accepted too often. That said, Taylor has seldom been the protagonist of those middling times and so he has probably earned some time to remain flat-footed. The tri-series will tell.

Boult's century, and Sri Lanka's collapse

Stats highlights from the second day’s play of the first Test between New Zealand and Sri Lanka in Christchurch

S Rajesh27-Dec-2014303 The first-innings lead for New Zealand, which is their third-highest in a Test against Sri Lanka. Their best is 364, in Dunedin in 1997, while they led by 311 in Wellington in 2005. New Zealand won both those Tests.3-15 Sri Lanka’s draw-loss record in the 18 Tests when they’ve followed on. New Zealand have a 12-5 win-draw record when they’ve enforced the follow on.28 The number of times Sri Lanka have been bowled out in under 50 overs in a Test innings. Sixteen of those have been in overseas, including each of the last five instances. Their total of 138 is their third-lowest against New Zealand.8 Number of times, out of 25 innings, that Sri Lanka have been five down for less than 100 runs in a Test in New Zealand. Fourteen times they have lost half the side for less than 150.102 Trent Boult’s wickets tally in Tests. He has become the 13th New Zealand bowler to take 100 or more Test wickets.23.54 Boult’s average in 11 Tests in New Zealand, where he has taken 48 wickets at a strike rate of 50.4 balls per wicket. In overseas Tests he has 54 wickets in 18 matches at an average of 30.90.1094 Angelo Mathews’ aggregate in Tests in 2014. He has scored those runs in 19 innings, at an average of 78.14, with two hundreds and seven fifties.108 Lahiru Thirimanne’s aggregate in nine Test innings in 2014, at an average of 12. His highest this year is 38.84 The opening partnership so far between Dimuth Karunaratne and Kaushal Silva in Sri Lanka’s second innings. Only once have Sri Lanka added more runs for the first wicket when following on: against West Indies in Galle in 2010 when Tharanga Paranavitana and Tillakaratne Dilshan added 102 in a drawn game.2 The number of times in Test history that the opening partnership in the follow-on innings has exceeded a team’s first-innings total. Against West Indies in Barbados in 1958, Pakistan’s opening partnership added 152 in their second innings after they had been bowled out for 106 in the first; in 1924 at Edgbaston, South Africa’s opening wicket added 54 when following on after being bowled out for 30 in their first innings. Pakistan saved the Barbados Test, but South Africa lost by an innings and 18 runs. Sri Lanka’s opening pair is currently 55 runs from overtaking their first-innings total.

'Dhoni: someone Indian cricket owes a lot to'

The cricket world reacts to MS Dhoni’s retirement from Test cricket

ESPNcricinfo staff30-Dec-20143:48

Favourite Dhoni Test memory

“A great competitor, and someone who I think Indian cricket owes a lot to.”

A bonanza for ninth-wicket pairs

Stats highlights from an enthralling game in Dunedin, where Afghanistan notched up their first World Cup win, and Scotland their 11th defeat

S Rajesh26-Feb-20155 one-wicket wins in World Cup games. There were none in 2011, two in 2007, and one each in 1987 and 1975.96 Samiullah Shenwari’s score, his highest in ODIs, and his ninth 50-plus score. It’s also Afghanistan’s highest in the World Cup, and their third 50-plus score in the tournament.147 Balls faced by Shenwari in his innings, the most by an Afghanistan batsman in ODIs. The previous best for them was 143, by Usman Ghani, who made 118 against Zimbabwe in Bulawayo in 2014.122 Runs put together for the ninth wicket in the match – for Scotland, Majid Haq and Alasdair Evans added 62, while Afghanistan responded with a 60-run stand between Shenwari and Hamid Hassan. It’s the second-highest in a World Cup match, next only the 1983 game between India and Zimbabwe, when Kapil Dev and Syed Kirmani added 126 undefeated runs for the ninth, and Zimbabwe’s Kevin Curran and Peter Rawson added 41 to that. The Afghanistan-Scotland game, though, is the only one where the ninth-wicket pairs of both teams have added more than 50.11 World Cup games for Scotland without a win. Afghanistan have got their maiden victory in their third World Cup game.1 Time, in 11 World Cup games, that Scotland have topped 200 with the bat. This was the first such instance. Their previous best was 186 against South Africa in the 2007 World Cup. (Click here for Scotland’s scores in their 11 World Cup games.)14.19 Scotland’s batting average in their 11 World Cup games. It’s the lowest among all teams which have played at least 10 matches in World Cups.62 The partnership between Evans and Haq, Scotland’s highest for the ninth wicket in all ODIs. Their previous best was 48.4 for 38 Shapoor Zadran’s figures in the match. It’s only the second time he has taken four or more wickets in 33 ODIs – his best figures are 4 for 24, against Netherlands in 2009. It’s the first haul of more than two wickets for Zadran in 18 innings.

Afghanistan spark but fail to ignite

Afghanistan’s bowlers showed potential with a few good overs but the absence of consistency helped Australia bully their attack in Perth

Abhishek Purohit in Perth04-Mar-20152:18

‘We ran into a freight train’ – Moles

From high in the uppermost tiers of the Prindiville Stand, it feels like you are suspended over the WACA outfield. You are not close to the action, but you feel like you are hovering above the players, a bit detached, able to watch the game in its entirety and all its dimensions. Afghanistan do not seem to be bowling particularly badly. Then you glance at the old manual scoreboard. David Warner is on 77. You strain your eyes and check again. Yes, 77. The game is barely 17 overs old.True, Warner has had the bulk of the strike but Afghanistan definitely have not bowled that badly. Dawlat Zadran’s second over has been too good, in fact. He has set Aaron Finch up beautifully with a few away swingers followed by one that moves in. The last ball of the over moves away once more, and this time, Finch is suckered into a drive. It is a sharp catch, too, at first slip.Dawlat bowls a good third over, too. He is trying to draw Steven Smith into pushing at outswingers, but the batsman lets a couple go, and gets off strike with a single. Dawlat beats Warner off the next two deliveries.

Clarke throws weight behind inclusive cricket

Michael Clarke has said that he wants to see as many countries as possible participate in events such as the World Cup so that the game can spread far and wide.
“How the next World Cup is run is completely up to the ICC and I’m sure they’ll make the right decisions for that. My personal view is I love seeing as many people, as many countries playing in major tournaments as possible,” Clarke said. “I think it’s great for the sport. I think this is a wonderful opportunity today for us to play against Afghanistan, for both teams.
Clarke’s comments came after MS Dhoni had advocated that cricket should look beyond commercial factors to grow the game globally.
“I’m all about trying to grow the game as much as we possibly can,” Clarke said. “I think that’s a big part of our role as professional athletes: to try and grow the sport so once you leave the game you can sit back and look at how much the game has improved while you’ve been involved in it. As many boys and girls as possible playing cricket in any country in the world is what I would love to see, so the more opportunity these countries get in major tournaments… it can only be a positive for the game of cricket.”

Those two overs are sparks that will be forgotten, perhaps already have been. The big boys of Australia have all the big numbers – Warner 178, Smith 95, Glenn Maxwell 88. Fifty boundaries in fifty overs for a total of 417 – the highest in a World Cup.Sparks. That is what Afghanistan were all about in this game. You don’t compete against Australia with mere sparks of potential or brilliance, slipping into the average in between.Average. Shapoor Zadran’s first ball of the match was average. No doubt he and his fellow fast bowlers would have been looking forward to bowl on the WACA pitch. Shapoor ran in from his long run-up and dug it short. It was a neither-here-nor-there kind of short ball – the kind you bowl when you want to bowl a short ball, but are not too sure about it. Warner dismissed it for four with the ease of a batsman who has pulled such deliveries since he was a kid.Two balls into his next over, there was an appeal for a catch down the leg side, but replays showed it came off the pad. Shapoor came up with another weak short ball next. The absolute comfort with which Warner smashed it over midwicket was scary.You can be as tall as possible and have as long a run-up as possible. You can wear your headbands and war paint. You can be genuinely quick too – and the Afghan bowlers were, as Warner himself acknowledged later. But Warner’s strokes were saying that you cannot get away with being average against me. Or against Smith. Or Maxwell.Short was not the plan against Warner, as coach Andy Moles said later. The plan was to be too short. But Shapoor saw bounce and pace in the WACA pitch, and got carried away. He was not the first visiting fast bowler to have done so. He was not the first visiting fast bowler to have been taken apart by Warner.Sometime after enormous damage had already been done, Afghanistan remembered their plan: They had to keep it up to Warner. But it was too late. The only thing that would have stopped Warner was a yorker each ball, and even some of them would have gone over the rope. And although Afghanistan got a lot of them in, they also missed plenty. Warner and co helped themselves to a few more sixes.Shapoor followed Warner with a superb yorker in the batting Powerplay. Inside-edge for four. The attempted yorker became a full toss next ball. Walloped over square leg for six.After a 260 run partnership in 207 balls, came a man who is such a freak that he takes balls from outside leg stump and reverse sweeps them over point for boundaries. When he can easily hit the same ball for six over midwicket. He does that, too.Shapoor fired in a yorker to Maxwell. But the batsman was in such control that even before he had dug the ball out to vacant midwicket, he was already prepared to run. Legs wide apart and still primed to take off. Easy two by the time the fielder ran in from the deep.In between these two forces of nature was Smith, who was driving sixes off the quicks on the up.As Moles said, Afghanistan were outbullied by Australia. Their three fast bowlers may have terrorised lesser line-ups at a lower level, but this was the No. 1 ODI team in the world. You may have pace and the ability to bowl yorkers but it had to be combined with a lot more consistency, which Afghanistan were not able to summon. They had plenty of spark, though.

The World Cup's best rivalry?

A look back at the Australia-Sri Lanka encounters in World Cups

Daniel Brettig07-Mar-20158:14

Men of the Finals: Aravinda de Silva

When pondering the most storied opponents at the 2015 World Cup, a few spring instantly to mind – India v Pakistan, Australia v South Africa, England against practically anybody. But a compelling case can be made for Australia and Sri Lanka as the two most enduring combatants at the tournament, a classical battle between a cricketing behemoth and a more recently emergent force, a clash of cultures and of cricketing styles. The following five matches and their surrounding issues illustrate why, ahead of a meeting at the SCG that will define who finishes second in Group A and thus gains the more favourable draw – in Australia’s case a home semi-final may be at stake.1975
Their first meeting, on June 11 at The Oval, showed Sri Lanka to be unexpectedly doughty opposition and Australia not shy in using any means necessary to assert authority. On a typically flat pitch south of the Thames, Alan Turner’s lone ODI century set Ian Chappell’s team on the path to a handsome 328 for 5 from their allotted 60 overs. A similarly large score in the opening match had caused India’s infamous “go-slow” response at Lord’s, but on a track so friendly, the youthful Sri Lankan XI was soon taking unexpected liberties against anyone other than the fearfully fast Jeff Thomson. A platform of 150 for 2 had been set when a somewhat worried Chappell recalled Thomson to the crease, and with great hostility he prevented Duleep Mendis (struck in the forehead) and Sunil Wettimuny (struck in the ribs, the chest and the instep) from continuing their stand. Both batsmen retired hurt and Sri Lanka’s challenge petered out, but the memory of the day’s injuries lingered. “Next morning a policeman walked into my room,” Duleep told Ashley Mallett. “He held his bobby’s helmet under one arm and he asked, ‘Do you want to press charges against a Mr Jeff Thomson?'”1996
A match that wasn’t and then a match that was. Death threats conveyed by mail and by phone, then the explosion of a bomb in downtown Colombo in the weeks before the tournament were enough to cause Australia to pull out of their scheduled meeting with Sri Lanka at the start of the 1996 edition. The decision followed on from a fractious home summer in which Muttiah Muralitharan was called for throwing and a spiteful World Series finals series saw Glenn McGrath and Sanath Jayasuriya bump shoulders before the Sri Lankans refused to shake victorious Australian hands, citing poor sportsmanship. The abrasive Arjuna Ranatunga marshalled his men expertly on the subcontinent, and their surprisingly smooth progress to the World Cup final meant another meeting with Mark Taylor’s men in Lahore. Taylor would have batted, and was not perturbed when Rantunga sent his men in. But after a fast start they were bogged down by a slowing surface, then thick dew aided Sri Lanka as Aravinda de Silva mounted a masterful chase. Shane Warne was neutralised as Ranatunga had confidently predicted, and the Australians reeled at a most unexpected defeat. Warne remains irritated by the memory to this day.2003
If the record books show an Australian stroll to the 2003 World Cup final, undefeated, then those present can remember how deep they had dig to win a trio of matches on a sluggish surface at Port Elizabeth to defeat New Zealand, England and finally Sri Lanka in the semi-final. This was the match in which Adam Gilchrist walked after it appeared Rudi Koertzen would reprieve him, and Australia’s struggle to establish a bridgehead was illustrated by the fact only Andrew Symonds passed 50 in an innings that would tally a mere 212 for 7. Sri Lanka had reason to be confident, particularly given a surface more Galle than Gabba. But Ricky Ponting’s side knew their ability to pull matches from the fire at this venue, and they duly did so again. Brett Lee bowled like the wind, Jayasuriya levered McGrath to Symonds, and the Sri Lankan chase was confounded by bowling of a uniformly high standard. India would not get even that close in the final.2007
If Gilchrist’s team-mates felt they owed him one for Port Elizabeth, he would repay them in spades at Kensington Oval in Barbados, delivering his last of many great and enduring innings in the final. A rain-delayed start limited Australia to 38 overs, but Gilchrist’s pyrotechnics – helped by a squash ball in the glove of his bottom hand to ensure he did not drag across the ball too much – left them with a total that would have looked substantial after 50. Coached by Tom Moody, the Sri Lankans were unable to stem the flow, and while their pursuit began brightly enough thanks to Jayasuriya and Kumar Sangakkara, momentum was sapped by the timely interventions of Michael Clarke and Brad Hogg. The match ended in a comical conclusion based upon the match officials’ fundamental misunderstanding of their own rain regulations, and some members of the Cricket Australia entourage were said to have left Kensington Oval early to enjoy the comforts of James Packer’s boat moored offshore.2011
To say Sri Lanka have not beaten Australia at a World Cup since 1996 is to state a fact but also to miss some significant detail. Their 2011 group encounter in Colombo was to be a critical one, deciding principally who would avoid the co-hosts and favourites India in the quarter-finals. Sri Lanka had the benefit of a surface that appeared made to their orders – Ricky Ponting spoke disdainfully of a pitch that was “basically rolled mud” – and they were making smooth enough progress at 146 for 3 in the 33rd over when the rain set in. Quoth Ponting: “I think it might have been a pretty good game of cricket… they had batted pretty well and it would have been a difficult run chase considering the way the wicket was playing. I think it would have been a decent game of cricket. I’m disappointed for the crowd more than anything today.” Since then, Sri Lanka have been partly responsible for the appointment of Darren Lehmann as coach – sealing Australia’s elimination from the 2013 Champions Trophy and thus Mickey Arthur’s tenure. Sunday may provide another pivot point for both teams.

Tamim's joy and Ajmal's relief

Plays of the Day from the second ODI between Bangladesh and Pakistan in Mirpur

Mohammad Isam in Mirpur19-Apr-2015The calmer celebration
All eyes were on Tamim Iqbal when he reached the 90s, to see how he would celebrate this hundred. The moment he clipped Junaid Khan through fine leg, he went running towards the dressing room. This time there was no anger, just joy. He swung his arm around five times and punched the air. Sixth ODI hundred in the bag, he just soaked up the applause.The chant
Mashrafe Mortaza threw the ball towards Rubel Hossain at the end of the seventh over, which brought a loud cheer from a half-filled Shere Bangla National Stadium. The in-house DJ didn’t need to announce Rubel’s name, but he did, and the crowd cheered again. A few seconds later the uncovered eastern gallery started a chant. It was the name of the actress with whom Rubel was embroiled in a controversy before the World Cup.The cry rolled around the whole ground until Rubel got to the top of his mark after a couple of swings of the arm. He bowled slightly outside off stump, Sarfraz Ahmed edged it and Soumya Sarkar at slip obliged. Curiously but thankfully, the chant didn’t start again.The connection
Haris Sohail was at the crease for 30 overs but hardly connected a ball with full satisfaction. Both his boundary hits, however, were drilled past and over the bowler. The first was through mid-off off his 12th delivery, but he crawled back into his shell. Finally off his 56th ball, Sohail bludgeoned Shakib Al Hasan over his head for a six. The hit was clean, went high and higher, hitting the sightscreen.The relief
Saeed Ajmal hadn’t played international cricket for more than seven months. He made his comeback in the first ODI but went wicketless and was carted for 74 in ten overs.The attack kept going after Tamim hit him for three successive fours in his first over of this game. In his fourth over, Ajmal finally got his first wicket when Mahmudullah missed a slog sweep. There wasn’t much of a celebration but there was relief written on Ajmal’s face.The trademark
Mushfiqur Rahim going down on one knee to a spinner and slogging towards midwicket has become his trademark. He has hit through that region plenty of times in the last four years, most famously against West Indies on his captaincy debut in 2011 when it brought Bangladesh a victory off the penultimate ball.In the last game he struck two sixes and three fours with the shot and the moment he middled one off Saeed Ajmal in the 19th over, there was only going to be one result: a six.

Farewell ODI tons, and highest in a semi

Plus, players who signed off with World Cup finals, Sydney’s ODI record, and Bradman’s highest average

Steven Lynch31-Mar-2015How many people have finished their international career in the World Cup final, as seems to be the case for Daniel Vettori? asked Keith McAlpine from New Zealand

Before 2015, there had been eight players whose last international match of any kind came in a World Cup final. Four of them finished on a high with a winners’ medal: Rohan Kanhai (1975), Imran Khan (1992), Paul Reiffel (1999) and Glenn McGrath (2007). The other four finished on the losing side: Faoud Bacchus (1983), Javagal Srinath (2003), Russel Arnold (2007) and Muttiah Muralitharan (2011). For three others a World Cup final was their last one-day international, but they subsequently played more Test matches: Ross Edwards (1975), Thilan Samaraweera (2011) and Sreesanth (2011). Of those, only Sreesanth finished with a win.Michael Clarke didn’t quite manage it, but has anyone scored a century in their final one-day international? asked Dean Bainbridge from Australia

Eight players have signed off from one-day internationals with a century, starting with England’s Dennis Amiss, who made 108 against Australia at The Oval in 1977. The following year another Englishman, Clive Radley, scored 117 not out against New Zealand at Old Trafford. In 1993-94 the great West Indian opener Desmond Haynes marked what turned out to be his final ODI with 115 against England in Port-of-Spain; like Amiss, he’d made a hundred in his first one-day international as well. In Netherlands’ last match of the 2003 World Cup, against Namibia in Bloemfontein – their country’s last for a while – Feiko Kloppenburg made 121 and Klaas van Noortwijk an unbeaten 134. Sticking with the Dutch, Ryan ten Doeschate signed off from ODIs with 106 against Ireland in Kolkata in the 2011 World Cup; in between, New Zealand’s James Marshall had clattered 161 against Ireland in Aberdeen in 2008. There are three current players who made a century in their most recent innings, two of them during this World Cup: Zimbabwe’s Brendan Taylor signed off with 138 against India in Auckland, while Ireland’s captain William Porterfield hit 107 against Pakistan in Adelaide. Before that, Lea Siaka made 109 for Papua New Guinea against Hong Kong in Townsville last November. These last two will presumably play again.The best performances in a World Cup final are pretty well known. But who has the highest score in a semi-final? asked Jayantha de Silva from Sri Lanka

Steven Smith’s 105 against India in 2015 was the fifth individual century in a World Cup semi-final. The highest score in one is Mahela Jayawardene’s 115 not out for Sri Lanka against New Zealand in Kingston in 2007, which just shaded Graham Gooch’s 115 (out) for England v India in Mumbai in 1987. Saeed Anwar hit 113 not out for Pakistan against New Zealand at Old Trafford in 1999, while Sourav Ganguly made 111 not out for India v Kenya in Durban in 2003. The best bowling in a World Cup semi-final remains Gary Gilmour’s irresistible 6 for 14 for Australia against England at Headingley in 1975. Craig McDermott (1987), Shaun Pollock (1999) and Wahab Riaz (2011) have also taken five-fors in World Cup semi-finals.The World Cup quarter-final between South Africa and Sri Lanka was the 150th one-day international at the SCG. Has any ground staged more? asked Pascal Bounin from Australia

With Australia’s semi-final against India to add, the Sydney Cricket Ground has now staged 151 one-day internationals, more than any other venue apart from Sharjah, which has now hosted no fewer than 219. Melbourne lies third: the 2015 World Cup final was the 143rd ODI played there. There are two other grounds which have staged more than 100 ODIs: the Premadasa Stadium in Colombo has held 116 so far, and the Harare Sports Club 114. England lags well behind on this list: The Oval has staged 57 ODIs, and Lord’s 56.David Warner’s 178 against Afghanistan in Perth in 2015 was Australia’s highest score in World Cups•Getty ImagesI don’t think it got much coverage at the time, but was David Warner’s 178 against Afghanistan Australia’s highest score in the World Cup? asked Kerry Johnson from Australia

David Warner’s 178 against Afghanistan in Perth was indeed Australia’s highest individual score in the World Cup, beating Matthew Hayden’s 158 against West Indies in Antigua in 2007. Aaron Finch’s 135 against England in Melbourne comes in sixth on this list, behind Adam Gilchrist’s 149 against Sri Lanka in the 2007 final in Bridgetown, Andrew Symonds’ unbeaten 143 against Pakistan in Johannesburg in 2003, and Ricky Ponting’s 140 against India in the 2003 final in Jo’burg. The only higher scores for Australia in all ODIs are Shane Watson’s 185 not out against Bangladesh in Mirpur in 2010-11, and Hayden’s 181 not out against New Zealand in Hamilton in 2006-07.What was the highest average Don Bradman ever had in his Test career? asked Dhanushka Edussuriya from Sri Lanka

The highest average Don Bradman ever achieved was 112.29, after his undefeated 299 against South Africa in Adelaide in 1931-32. He was out first ball in his next innings, against England during the Bodyline series in Melbourne, so the average went down a little. Before his final innings – that famous duck at The Oval in 1948 – The Don’s average was 101.39.

Super Kings defend 134 in nail-biter

ESPNcricinfo staff28-Apr-2015Piyush Chawla broke the 42-run opening stand by dismissing McCullum for 19•BCCIAndre Russell then removed Suresh Raina for 17 to leave Super Kings at 67 for 3 in the 10 over•BCCIKnight Riders bowlers maintained the pressure by removing MS Dhoni and Dwayne Bravo to leave Super Kings at 88 for 5 after 13 overs•BCCIFaf du Plessis was Super Kings’ top-scorer with a run-a-ball 29, as they ended up with 134 for 6•BCCIRobin Uthappa got Knight Riders’ chase off to a blistering start, slamming Ishwar Pandey and Mohit Sharma for 11 and 13 runs in the third and fourth overs•BCCIR Ashwin gave away just five runs in his two overs and picked the key wickets of Uthappa and Manish Pandey, leaving Knight Riders at 64 for 3 in eight overs•BCCIWith 14 runs required from the final over, Bravo conceded only 12 against Ryan ten Doeschate to seal a two-run victory•BCCI

Rohit, Simmons cap turnaround with title win

Mumbai Indians crushed Chennai Super Kings in Kolkata to win their second IPL title

ESPNcricinfo staff24-May-2015It was one-way traffic from there on as Rohit Sharma tore into Super Kings’ bowling•BCCILendl Simmons continued on his excellent run in the tournament to become the third player to cross 500 runs this season•BCCIDwayne Smith struck off his first ball of the tournament, but Mumbai Indians, on 120 for 2 in the 13th over, were waiting to explode•BCCISuper Kings never really challenged the total and lost way once Suresh Raina was stumped off Harbhajan Singh•BCCIMS Dhoni’s wicket confirmed what had seemed inevitable•BCCI

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