When Dean Jones refused the money in the cake tin

Before the scope of corruption in the game became clear, Jones had provided a warning that was not heeded

Daniel Brettig28-Sep-2020In the aftermath of Dean Jones’ awfully sudden loss, his pioneering tendencies have been well and truly covered.Jones, it has been said, revolutionised the game through his attention to the details of one-day matches and innings, and an entertaining streak that made him a hero to far many more children, now adults, than perhaps even he realised. Barely an article or interview has gone by without a reference to him wearing sunglasses in the field, starting a trend that has remained to this day.What has been lost is arguably the most vital manner in which Jones was pioneering, certainly among cricketers in Australia. It was something for which he should have received far more credit, and it is to the detriment of administrators and leaders in the game at the time that Jones did not.Had more attention been paid to the rich cash offer Jones received from “John”, aka the Indian bookmaker MK Gupta, in Sri Lanka in 1992, an episode he immediately reported to the touring team’s leaders, there may have been a chance to stamp on the corruption fire before it grew so wildly out of control.ALSO READ: Ian Chappell – Dean Jones will always be known for MadrasAlmost certainly, Mark Waugh and Shane Warne would not have been able to get into near identical information-sharing arrangements with “John” over the ensuing two years. At the very least, had there been greater publicity around the way that gambling influences had seeped beyond Asian teams into the Australian fold, there would have been absolutely no grounds for Waugh, Warne and others up to Hansie Cronje to claim naivety as well as stupidity.As recently as August, Jones gave a frank account of what had transpired 28 years ago at the Taj Samudra Hotel in Colombo, in a jovial YouTube interview. “The last Tests I played were in Sri Lanka and I actually got introduced by Manoj Prabhakar, an Indian Test cricketer, to ‘I’ve got a mate, we need to meet in the meeting room at the Taj hotel [in Colombo], because last year he got me a deal to wear some clothes or something and you get some money and you’ll do a couple of photo shoots, no big deal’, and I thought it’s the same.”So I walk downstairs and he says ‘I want you to meet my friend John’, and I say ‘so what do you want me to do’, and he says ‘I just want you to tell me, sometimes you have Craig McDermott bat at No. 4 as a pinch-hitter, what’s your team, who’s likely to do well and who’s likely not to do well’. He wasn’t telling me to fix anything, he just wanted knowledge. And I’ve gone ‘what’s in it for me’ and he brought up a cake tin and it had US$50,000 cash in it. I was earning that a year. Then he put the mobile phone on and said ‘you’ve got to ring me up when things are happening’.2:17

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“You know when your gut says ‘no, this is not right’, so I’ve gone ‘no thanks, I’m good’. I wasn’t nasty, said ‘nice to meet you, all the best to you’. So I walked out and I remember I was in the elevator and I looked in the mirror and I looked at myself and thought ‘I think that’s the greatest thing you’ve ever done’, telling him to piss off.”It’s all there: the approach through a familiar intermediary, after Jones and Prabhakar had crossed paths countless times during India’s tour the previous Australian summer; the inordinately attractive sum of money for not much sweat relative to the trials of international cricket. There’s more: the reporting of the meeting is as telling as the meeting itself.”I went and reported it to Allan Border and to Bob Simpson and Cam Battersby our team manager,” Jones said. “And AB looked at me and said ‘if that’s all he wanted, why didn’t you take the money, there’s nothing wrong, you do that on radio or put it in a newspaper column’, he made a good point.”He said ‘he didn’t ask you to get out, or bat slow’ and I said ‘no, he just wanted knowledge … I just don’t think it’s right Allan’. By the way, I actually asked ‘John’ who else was doing it, and I’m not going to bring up names here, but there were other names in other teams, in every country.”ALSO READ: Thank you, Deano, for the many moments and memories Laid out there and then are the more or less institutional combination of familiarity and naivety around the implications of such relationships, as personified by Border; and the implication of a far wider story that cricket officialdom had little understanding about and even less interest in.This was no surprise given a few of the tales told round this time. Jones had, in earlier years, even styled himself as an unofficial bookie in the Australian dressing room. On the 1989 Ashes tour he took on bets totalling £1200 in value against the possibility of Tim May hitting the first six of his life. When May cleared the boundary rope at Canterbury in a tour game, Jones paid up, somewhat regretfully. Before the 1992 Sri Lanka tour, while serving as Durham’s inaugural overseas player in a fixture against the touring Pakistanis, Jones was jokingly offered £1000 by Javed Miandad to get himself out before reaching a century. As was the case in Colombo a few months later, Jones found himself able to decline.Why did Jones say no? Above all, a frank and often tempestuous relationship with his father, Barney, ensured Jones knew the stakes. They had argued at length in the summer of 1984-85, when Jones, out of the Test side after making his debut in the West Indies, initially wanted to accept an offer to join the rebel tour of Apartheid South Africa. Barney was having none of it, in rows that Jones’ younger brothers have vividly recalled. He recounted his father’s angry words in : “If you go over there you’ll never play for Australia again … don’t go. At least you’ll be able to look in the mirror and tell your kids when you’re 40 that you didn’t sell your country out.”Mark Waugh and Shane Warne at the 1998 press conference where they admitted dealings with a bookmaker•Getty ImagesA few details of the Colombo story vary, depending on who tells it. The sum of cash offered to Jones ranges from US$40,000 to US$60,000. Testimony from Gupta and Prabhakar to the Indian police match-fixing investigation in 2000 indicated that Jones did not decline, merely that he did not immediately accept, and then did not follow up. Battersby, in Inside Story, related that Jones posed the offer as more of a question for management to answer.”Deano rang up and asked to come up and see me. He said: ‘I’ve had this approach from an Indian bookmaker. He wants to know what the weather’s like, how much rain there is, humidity, the state of the wicket, what’d I do if I won the toss. What do you think I should do?’ I said ‘Deano, I wouldn’t touch that with a bargepole. It may be completely innocent. But if you go out and get a blob first ball, and this came out, you’d never live it down.”What is absolutely consistent is that the approach was made, that Jones discussed it with the team’s leaders more or less immediately, and that he did not take up the offer. What’s more, he remained somewhat puzzled in subsequent days, months and years that the episode – particularly the fact he had been told that “John” had already formed relationships with at least one international representative from every other major cricketing nation – was not followed up.During the 1992-93 home summer, Jones pondered whether to write one of his columns for The Sunday Age on the subject, consulting with his ghostwriter, Mark Ray, who recalls a pair of exchanges over the phone. Jones: “I want to do a column about bookies in cricket – there are players giving bookies information. It’s pretty big, it’s secret, but there’s a helluva lot of money involved” Ray: “Sure, that’s a great column but we’ve already got one ready for this week, make some notes and get back to me.”By the following week, Jones was having second thoughts – perhaps not surprisingly in a season where his previously sure hold on a place in Australia’s team was slipping from his grasp. “It’s too tricky,” he concluded, “I’m not going to do it.”

In February 1995, with Jones on the international outer as the Australians toured New Zealand, he did speak out, around the time that the story of Salim Malik’s offers to bribe Mark Waugh, Shane Warne and Tim May on the 1994 tour of Pakistan had broken.First, Jones went on record in a page one story filed by Ray, saying: “I refused the offer straight away and he then increased it to $66,000 a year. He had the money with him in unmarked notes in a cake tin. It was not an offer to fix a game. He just wanted an Australian player on his books to offer information as to likely 12th men, the state of the pitch or the fitness of players.”Then via the decidedly un-cricketing avenue of the Channel Seven current affairs show Today Tonight (Kerry Packer’s rival Nine network was entrenched as the home of Australian cricket), Jones said: “Every team has got a Narc. Every team. And that, give it time, it’ll come out.”ALSO READ: Archive – Dean Jones on ESPNcricinfoThe reporter, Greg Hoy, then made the following clarification: “What he means is, he says, that someone on the Australian team is selling inside information to bookmakers, and he says the Australian Cricket Board knows it.” And Jones followed up: “It’s just the way I was brought up. This type of stuff is killing the game. We want kids to be coming into an honest game with an honest living, and that’s what I want to see happening.”Ray, meanwhile, had been making ever more pointed inquiries to the ACB about information that the Malik bribery story was far from the whole picture, aided by an anonymous letter to the effect that at least one Australian player had entered into exactly the kind of information sharing relationship that Jones had declined in 1992.While Ray was unable to fully unearth the story at the time, his questions forced an internal investigation during the New Zealand tour, whereupon Warne and Waugh admitted to ongoing conversations with “John”.Shamefully, Warne and Waugh were privately fined by the ACB’s chief executive Graham Halbish and chairman Alan Crompton, and then permitted to fly off to the 1995 West Indies tour without a substantial debate at board level. With the “distraction” avoided and Warne and Waugh safely on the plane, Australia won the series to take on the mantle of world champions. The story was kept quiet until December 1998, whereupon Waugh and Warne made near identical public statements in Adelaide.The frontpage story in The Sunday Age during February 1995•The AgeOver time and subsequent inquiries, other bits and pieces of the story filtered through: Waugh may have met “John” as early as the Hong Kong Sixes tournament in October 1993, and spoke to him in the West Indies even after the ACB fines had been levied. In his subsequent, independent investigation of the affair in 1999, the Queensland QC Rob O’Regan did not hide his disgust.”I do not think it is possible to explain their conduct away as the result merely of naivety or stupidity. They must have known that it is wrong to accept money from, and supply information to, a bookmaker whom they also knew as someone who betted on cricket. Otherwise they would have reported the incident to team management long before they were found out in February 1995. In behaving as they did, they failed lamentably to set the sort of example one might expect from senior players and role models for many young cricketers. A more appropriate penalty would, I think, have been suspension for a significant time.”An enduring irony of the affair is that while Waugh went on to play for Australia until 2002, and Warne carried on until 2007, when he had scooped more than 700 Test wickets, it was Jones who endured smears. In a 1998 judicial inquiry in Pakistan, Sarfraz Nawaz made the careless suggestion that Jones had been “forced to retire” due to his involvement, an allegation instantly rebuffed with the words: “That is absolute rubbish. Any inquiry to the Australian Cricket Board will give you the same answer. Made to retire yes, but not for that.”In 2010, Jones’ name was dredged up again in the wake of the sting that exposed Salman Butt, Mohammad Asif and Mohammad Amir. This time he responded with a column shot through with obvious hurt. “I was never interviewed by the ICC about this meeting,” he wrote for The Age of events in Sri Lanka. “I have always said that my books are open for authorities to canvass. This happened 20 years ago but the mud and insinuations are still being brought up, which offends me and my family deeply. I have done nothing wrong.” It would not be the last time.Undoubtedly, the time has come to recognise that in the murky ethical territory of early contacts with bookmakers, Jones’ passion for cricket and sense of right and wrong placed him in even more exclusive company than his cricket achievements do. If only the arbiters of the day had been willing to listen.

Australians at the IPL: David Warner times it right, Steven Smith departs and two big names dropped

Pat Cummins hit form in the final stretch but it wasn’t quite enough for KKR as David Warner’s team put together three wins on the bounce

Andrew McGlashan04-Nov-20202:10

Bishop: Cummins has kept doing the right things even if he wasn’t getting wickets

Warner times it rightAnother IPL and another consistent performance from David Warner, if not quite at the levels of his previous three editions in 2016, 2017 and 2019. He has come to the fore in the final week as Sunrisers Hyderabad strung together three consecutive wins to nab the final qualifying spot. He thrashed 66 off 34 balls against Delhi Capitals followed by an unbeaten 85 off 58 balls which powered them to a decisive 10-wicket victory against Mumbai Indians. The opening stand with Wriddhiman Saha certainly clicked, after the previously pairing with Jonny Bairstow was broken up, as they added 107 and 151 in the space of three matches.Cummins’ late surge as KKR fall shortPat Cummins took three times as many wickets in his last four matches as he managed in the first 10, but a Player-of-the-Match performance in the last group match – where he took 4 for 34 – against Rajasthan Royals, which included the wicket of Steven Smith, was not enough for Kolkata Knight Riders when SRH won their final match. His spell did not start in the best way, with the first five balls going for 19, before Robin Uthappa picked out deep square. In his next over he had Ben Stokes brilliantly caught behind then nabbed Smith. Given three consecutive overs in the Powerplay a short ball removed Riyan Parag to leave the Royals 37 for 5. Their season was over, KKR’s was a few days later.ALSO READ: Shane Watson retires from all cricket

Finch and Maxwell droppedTwo of Australia’s key limited-overs players did not finish the group stages in their respective XIs. Aaron Finch was dropped by Royal Challengers Bangalore at the beginning of the last week, to be replaced by fellow countryman Josh Philippe at the top of the order, after a tournament where he had failed to build on his starts except for one half-century. When asked if that created any concerns ahead of the India series, Australia head coach Justin Langer said: “Nah…I had a good talk to him last night, if anyone was going to replace him I’m glad Josh did because he’s getting some great experience. I’m not concerned about Aaron’s form, we know what a brilliant leader he is developing into and he’s one of the best players in the world.”Meanwhile, Glenn Maxwell’s forgettable tournament concluded by being dropped for Kings XI Punjab’s final match which they lost heavily against already eliminated Chennai Super Kings to miss the knockouts. Kings XI picked Chris Gayle, Nicholas Pooran, Jimmy Neesham and Chris Jordan as their four overseas players. Maxwell finished the competition with a top score 32 and without hitting a six.Stoinis’ fading returnsMarcus Stoinis started the tournament with a bang with a 21-ball 53 and then added 53 off 26 against RCB a couple of weeks later, but since then it has been a case of diminishing returns. His 10 not out against RCB in the final group game was his first double-figure score in five innings as Delhi Capitals clinched a knockout spot. With Mitchell Marsh not picked for the India limited-overs matches, as he continues his recovery from his ankle injury, Stoinis can expect to retain his spot in Australia’s team although could be pressured by the uncapped Cameron Green.ESPNcricinfo LtdSmith’s Royals finish bottomIt has been one of the most tightly contested group stages in IPL history but someone has to finish bottom and this year that’s Steven Smith’s franchise Rajasthan Royals. Their mid-season struggles became too much to overcome despite two late wins inspired by Stokes, the tournament ending with a heavy 60-run defeat against KKR. Smith’s tournament finished up being underwhelming – 311 runs at 25.91 – as he shuffled around the order having started as an opener then finished at No. 4. It was his lowest average for any IPL, although the strike-rate of 131.22 was higher than the 2017 and 2019 editions.Bench warmingWhile there were 19 Australians with IPL franchises, a significant proportion of them have not seen much action. Chris Lynn (Mumbai Indians) and Billy Stanlake (Sunrisers Hyderabad) have not played a match in the group stage while AJ Tye (Royals) made just one appearance as did Chris Green (KKR). Alex Carey briefly filled in for the injured Rishabh Pant at the Capitals, Daniel Sams has made two appearances for them and Adam Zampa (RCB) has not been used since two early-tournament outings. Josh Hazlewood played three times for CSK so there will be fewer concerns over any physical weariness heading into the India series.

N Jagadeesan steps up at the top for Tamil Nadu

He has rattled off four successive fifties and is only four runs short of being the top scorer in the Syed Mushtaq Ali trophy

Deivarayan Muthu28-Jan-2021Before the start of this Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy, N Jagadeesan had opened only in five out of 22 T20 innings, and largely floated in the middle order. In the absence of a number of senior Tamil Nadu players, Jagadeesan has enjoyed an extended run at a top, rattling off four successive half-centuries. Only four runs separate Jagadeesan (322) from this season’s top-scorer Punjab’s Prabhsimran Singh (326).Jagadeesan’s reunion at the top with his childhood friend C Hari Nishanth – they had played junior cricket together in Coimbatore and have also opened together for Dindigul Dragons in the TNPL – has been central to Tamil Nadu’s unbeaten run in the tournament. The pair has struck up three fifty-plus opening partnerships, including an unbroken 128 against Assam.”Me and Hari have batted a lot together, right from Under-13 cricket,” Jagadeesan told ESPNcricinfo ahead of Tamil Nadu’s semi-final against Rajasthan on Friday. “The understanding between me and Hari is slightly higher than any other player because we’ve been playing together since childhood. It’s been a great run, we’re very hopeful and we wish to continue the same.”In the match against Bengal at the Eden Gardens, Jagadeesan had gotten off to a sketchy start, with Ishan Porel threatening both his edges under lights, but he managed to ride that spell out. He then pressed on to hasten Tamil Nadu’s victory by hitting Porel himself over the top in the company of his captain Dinesh Karthik.”He’s [Porel’s] a bowler with experience and also other bowlers were also pretty quick,” Jagadeesan recalled. “So, I think when they were bowling good lengths, it was important for us to give them some respect and we also knew there was something on the wicket – it was seaming a bit and swinging. So, as an opener, I just thought of going through that phase somehow without losing my wicket. Obviously, when the ball is not going to do much and once you get to know about the bowler more, it’s going to get much more easier for you towards the end, especially when you’re settled.”Jagadeesan isn’t quite a power-hitter, but he has thrived by lofting and chipping the ball over the infield against the pacers in the powerplay. He reckoned that the time he had spent with Chennai Super Kings batting coach Mike Hussey in the IPL has helped him grow as a batsman.”We’re not someone who’re totally dependent on power; we’re players who look more for timing and the gaps you get in the field,” Jagadeesan said, “Personally, it has been a great experience to have good conversations with Hussey and he’s helped me a lot. Moreover, you don’t get a lot of time to work on your technique during the [IPL] season. It’s more about the mental ability to handle the bowlers; the kind of ideas and clear thoughts you can get while playing. These are simple mental thoughts that he gives me and coming from a player from his stature, it has been good for me.”‘It has been a great experience to have good conversations with Hussey and he’s helped me a lot’ – N Jagadeesan•BCCIAfter warming the bench in IPL 2018 and then 2019, Jagadeesan was handed his IPL debut in the UAE last season. He was an uncertain starter, though.”I was looking forward to my debut because I’ve been warming the bench for a few years before that,” he said. “Just two weeks before we were going to Dubai, I was playing basketball and the post fell on my head and so I had to do a surgery on my forehead. I wasn’t completely fit [to start] to be honest, but thanks to the quality of physios, the recovery was much better. I was totally fit once the matches started and I was eager to make my debut.”He eventually made his IPL debut against Royal Challengers Bangalore in Dubai, with captain MS Dhoni handing him his maiden IPL cap and easing him into the CSK XI.”He [Dhoni] did tell me since it’s an IPL match, ‘I don’t think you should be nervous right now and I think you should recall your first-ever game – how you enjoyed and you just wanted to play and express yourself’. Yes, it did help a great deal for me.”Obviously, very special feeling because everybody idolises him [Dhoni], but not everybody gets to share the dressing room with him. So, extremely privileged and whenever I go and ask for any doubts, he’s always there to help and the door is always open. It’s not just about wicketkeeping, I also talk to him about batting as well. The way he’s off the field – jovial – it makes your life much easier.”In a chase of 170, Jagadeesan made 33 off 28 balls, with his reverse-swept four off Yuzvendra Chahal being the highlight of his IPL debut. Jagadeesan has unveiled a variety of sweeps to unsettle the spinners in the Syed Mushtaq Ali tournament as well.”Before your debut, you ask questions to yourself : ‘do you belong here or can I score runs here?’ After the first innings, my confidence grew and it’s about carrying through. Sweep is also something I’ve been playing for a long time. Even in TNPL and first-class cricket, I’ve score a lot of runs with the sweep. So, it is something which comes naturally to me, I guess, so I don’t give a lot of thought about it. I just pick the right ball to be swept.”

Jagadeesan also hailed Tamil Nadu’s camaraderie and Karthik’s leadership as they look to win the domestic T20 title, having narrowly fallen short at the final hurdle in 2019-20.”We’re missing out on a lot of names, but the same time we have a good bunch of [young] players, and the team atmosphere has been really, really great,” Jagadeesan said. “Everyone is very hungry and wants to do well. We’re all aspiring to become Indian cricketers one day and that’s something that drives us. And Dinesh Karthik is someone with tonnes of experience and he has managed the team really well.”

Goodbye Ted Dexter, free spirit, cricket thinker, renaissance man

The England and Sussex captain had aura, flair, majestic batting, and impossible glamour – and that was just on the field

Mark Nicholas27-Aug-2021I don’t know when the Ted Dexter affectation started but I can guess. The last thing my father did with me before he died so young was to take me to see the 1968 Gillette Cup final at Lord’s. This was during Ted’s short comeback and when the great man strode to the wicket, I leapt about in excitement, cheering his name for all I was worth. He didn’t get many but no matter, I had seen him live. That evening Dad bowled to me in the garden as I imitated every Dexter mannerism and stroke I had seen just a few hours before.

“There is about Dexter, when he chooses to face fast bowling with determination, a sort of air of command that lifts him above ordinary players. He seems to find time to play the fastest bowling and still retain dignity, something near majesty, as he does it.”

I fell for the aura, and for the flair in those back-foot assaults on fast bowlers. Not for a minute do I think I saw the 70 in 75 balls against Wes Hall and Charlie Griffith at Lord’s in 1963 but I feel as if I did – the power, the poise, the sheer gall of it. Nothing, not even the Beatles, could drag me from the television screen when he walked to the wicket, seemingly changing the picture from black-and-white to glorious technicolor as he took guard. Frankly, much of the Test cricket of the time was pretty dull but there was a frisson, an expectation, with Ted, just as there is when Ben Stokes is on his way today. It was all too brief, he had retired for good before I started proper school.Related

'Winning in Australia has always been the pinnacle' (2011)

Ted Dexter, the old-fashioned modernist

Former England captain Ted Dexter dies aged 86

The West Indians of the day – Conrad Hunte, Garry Sobers, Wes Hall – thought that innings the best played against them by anybody, though Dexter himself would modestly say it was just one of those days where everything came together and the bat swung freely in just about the right arc. He was well miffed to be given out lbw, however, insisting later that the DRS would have saved him. Who knows how many careers might have been changed by the sliding doors of the DRS.The word majesty sits well with Dexter’s batting, primarily because of the way in which he attacked through the off side off his back foot. This is a stroke so difficult to master that more prosaic batters choose to ignore it. It is no great surprise that Dexter thought Gordon Greenidge and Martin Crowe the two most technically correct right-hand players that he saw, citing their ability to stay sideways-on and to play the ball alongside their body as the prime reason for the accolade.He was a huge fan of Joe Root and became near apoplectic during the England captain’s relatively lean spell a while ago, when he became square-on to the bowler and was playing in front of his body. This niggled so much that he wrote to Root without mincing his words. Though at first put out, Root soon saw the kindness in a man of Dexter’s age and knowledge who bothered to write, and therefore returned an email of thanks with the observation that he took the point. Who knows to what degree? It is enough to say that this year Root has batted about as well as any man could have done, and no one has enjoyed each of these innings in Sri Lanka, India, and now at home as much as Dexter.One final appeal: Dexter (fourth from left) watches as umpire Charlie Elliot gives John Inverarity out off Derek Underwood, The Oval, 1968•Getty ImagesFor the best part of a year now, Ted has been banging on about Dawid Malan: simply couldn’t understand why England didn’t pick him to bat at three. He cited the hundred in Perth in 2017 and this year’s big scores for Yorkshire before predicting near-certain success with the method that brought those runs. It is sad, indeed, that he didn’t live to see the fulfillment of his prophecy in Malan’s fine innings yesterday. He liked the look of James Vince and Zak Crawley too, cricketers who stand tall and play with freedom. He got a lot right, this man of Radley, Cambridge, Sussex and England.Tall himself, strong, handsome and impossibly glamorous, Edward Ralph Dexter caught everyone’s eye. With the golden Susan Longfield on his arm, they cut quite a dash and cared little for the sniping that came from those less blessed. The enigma in him – and how! – was often confused with indifference, and though cricket has remained his other great love, it was never the be-all and end-all for him – a fact that made his appearances all the more cherished and his company all the more engaging. It is remarkable to think that he first retired as far back as 1965, before returning briefly in 1968 to make a double-hundred at Hastings against Kent and be immediately recalled to the England team for the Ashes. In the brilliant photograph (above) of the moment when Derek Underwood claims the final wicket at The Oval, Ted is caught spinning to appeal for lbw with a face that smacks of a lifelong instinct for competition and achievement.

“Ted was a man of moods, often caught up in theories, keen when the action was hot, seemingly uninterested when the game was dull… a big-time player, one who responded to atmosphere, liked action and enjoyed the chase and gamble. Maybe this was the reason he was drawn to horse racing so that a dull day stalking the covers might be enlivened for him by thoughts of how his money was faring on the 3:15 at Ascot or Goodwood.”
– Richie Benaud and Dexter in Sydney during the 1963-64 Ashes•Frank Albert Charles Burke/Fairfax Media/Getty ImagesAnd Snow would know for he was not the type to rise above those grey days of county cricket when the stakes were so low. Snow and Dexter, my first heroes, along with Jimmy Greaves and George Best, Muhammad Ali, the Beatles and the Stones – all of them important figures at 29 Queensdale Road, where the young Nicholas grew up with vinyl records and cared-for willow, narrow-grained and well-oiled for the garden Test matches that England forever won.Much of the 1960s were about rebellion, revolution even, in response to the age of austerity. After the long and mainly drab post-war years, the young simply broke free and changed pretty much anything they could get their hands on. Music and fashion led the way, leaving sport’s establishment to stutter in their wake. Only a few precious players could transcend the inertia, using both their talent and expression to delight the crowds and influence the young. Cricket was my thing, Dexter and Snow were the wind beneath my wings.In Snow there truly was rebellion, against authority and the system it supported. This was not so in Dexter’s case, though his free spirit and somewhat cavalier approach to responsibility gave the impression of one determined to ruffle feathers. From the outset he adored sport, worked harder than some might think at his books, and embraced diversions with the enthusiasm of a man who had more to do than could ever be done.In many ways Ted was a contradiction: at once a conformist, as shaped by the early years of his life at home and school, and a modernist, whose lateral thinking did much to reform the structure of English cricket during his time as chairman of selectors. Richie Benaud observed that Ted’s imagination and drive “will be of great benefit to English cricket in years to come. Equally, I’m in no doubt that others will take the credit for it.” The rebellion in Ted was hardly radicalised but he loved to challenge conservative thinking, to take risks and to invest in his life as an adventure. Both on and off the field, this made for a terrific watch.The best of Ted: Dexter on his way to 70 against Wes Hall and Charlie Griffith at Lord’s, June 1963•PA PhotosHe thought the Hundred a good wheeze and admitted he would rather like to have played it himself. He was, of course, the original thinker about one-day cricket, supporting its conception as early as the late 1950s and then leading Sussex to the first two 60-over titles at Lord’s in the Gillette Cup. He paid close attention to the tactics and convinced his men that following them to the letter would do the trick. Which it did. He pushed for four-day county matches 27 years before they were incorporated and he founded the idea of central contracts for England players long before other teams caught the bug.He was proud of his part in the development of the spirit of cricket, applying golf’s moral high ground to the game that made his name. Through his own PR agency, he became a pioneer in cricket’s digital-technology revolution by inventing the system of Test match rankings that first announced itself under the banner of Deloitte and is now the ICC international rankings.On a Zoom call a couple of months back, with tongue firmly in cheek, he said, “Having a rather high opinion of myself, I can safely say that had the rankings been in place sometime around the mid part of the 1963 summer, I would have been the No. 1-rated batsman in the world.” We had special guests on these calls – Mike Atherton, Michael Vaughan, Ed Smith, Robin Marlar, Sir Tim Rice and more – all keen to share a drink, chew the cud and have a laugh with the game’s most original and forward-thinking mind.Champagne days: (from left) Fred Trueman, Dexter, David Sheppard and Colin Cowdrey celebrate after winning the Melbourne Test, January 1963•PA Photos/Getty ImagesWe cannot jump past golf without mentioning the game at the Australian Golf Club in Sydney when Ted partnered Norman Von Nida against Jack Nicklaus and Gary Player. So enamoured of Ted’s golf were they that Nicklaus suggested Ted follow him back to the USA for a crack at the tour. Player has long said that Ted was the best amateur ball-striker he ever saw and Von Nida just thanked him for securing the one-up triumph that day. Eighteen months ago Player told me that in their one head to head with each other, Ted beat him up the last at Sunningdale, receiving only four shots. “Little so-and-so,” said Ted, “we played level!” They were due for a game last summer but Covid stood firmly between them. The last time I played with Ted, two summers ago now, he beat his age, shooting 83 round the Old Course at Sunningdale without breaking a sweat.This was a man of Jaguar cars, Norton motorbikes, greyhounds, race horses and an Aztec light airplane that, in 1970, he piloted to Australia with his young family beside him, to cover the Ashes as a journalist. They flew 12,000 miles and made about two dozen stops at British military bases along the way.Ted married the very beautiful Susan soon after returning from Australia and New Zealand in the spring of 1959. How she is hurting today. So too Genevieve, Tom and the grandchildren.There was an eccentricity in him that was occasionally misunderstood but otherwise immensely appealing and it is with that in mind, that I turn to the man himself for the final word. It comes from his blog, which is a splendid read and will remain a platform for the family to share their thoughts about this husband, father and grandfather who brought us so much joy.Dexter and Frank Worrell at a BBC interview with Peter West, August 1963•Harry Todd/Fox Photos/Getty Images

It was in my last term at Radley College when I had a hard game of rackets in the morning, scored 3 tries with two conversions for the 1st XV in the afternoon, was heard listening to operatic voices in the early evening, before repairing to the Grand Piano in the Mansion and knocking off a couple of Chopin preludes. “Quite the Renaissance man it seems” said my Social Tutor and I admit I liked the sound of it, if not quite knowing what it meant.

The Encyclopaedia Brittanica description of Renaissance man (or polymath) is as follows: one who seeks to develop skills in all areas of knowledge, in physical development and social accomplishment and in the arts. A point is made that you do not need to excel at any one activity. It is enough to tackle it seriously and see how far you get. I like the physical development bit obviously and I feel the social accomplishment bit is covered by my willingness to take on responsibilities all my life. Perhaps the arts bit is a bit shaky but a love for music, and particularly opera, and love of language – being fairly fluent in French, Italian, rudimentary German and Spanish – may be some modest qualifications.”

Some different cat, huh. What a man. What a cricketer. Goodbye Ted, and thank you.

New Zealand's 62 all out: The lowest total in a Test match in India

A set of ignominious records that the Black Caps now own after their dismal display in Mumbai

Sampath Bandarupalli04-Dec-20212:50

Vettori: Great day for Ajaz but poor for New Zealand

62 New Zealand’s total in the first innings in Mumbai, the lowest in Tests played in India. The previous was 75 by the home team against West Indies in Delhi in 1975.Watch live cricket on ESPN+ in the US

India vs New Zealand is available in the US on ESPN+. You can subscribe to ESPN+ and tune in to highlights of day two of the 2nd Test in English or in Hindi.

62 New Zealand’s 62 is also the lowest total by any team against India in Test cricket, South Africa’s 79 in 2015 in Nagpur being the previous lowest. Two of the three lowest Test totals against India came in 2021 with England all out for 81 in February this year.1 Instance of New Zealand registering a total lower than 62 since 1959, when they were bowled out for 45 against South Africa in 2013 in Cape Town. Until 1958, New Zealand had as many as four all-out totals in Tests which were lower than 62.1 All-out total lower than New Zealand’s 62 in the subcontinent. Pakistan held West Indies to just 53 runs in 1986 in Faisalabad. New Zealand’s total in Mumbai is also the joint fourth-lowest total in Tests in Asia with Pakistan recording totals of 59 and 53 respectively against Australia in the Sharjah Test in 2002.28.1 Overs faced by New Zealand during their first innings. Only South Africa (19.2) and England (22.3) have dismissed them in fewer overs. They faced 27 overs while registering the lowest total ever – 26 all out against England in 1955. The 28.1 overs at Wankhede are third-fewest India needed to bowl out an opponent at home in Test cricket.17 The lowest highest individual score in an all-out innings against India in Tests. It belongs to Kyle Jamieson now. Only once had India bowled an opposition out with no batter reaching 20 runs – in Melbourne 1981 when Doug Walters was Australia’s top-scorer in the second innings with 18*.325 India’s first-innings total is the second-lowest for any team to end up with a lead of 250-plus runs. Australia, in Sharjah in 2002, earned a lead of 251 runs after bundling Pakistan out for 59 while bowling first.332 India’s lead at the end of the second day, the highest they have taken at this stage in a Test match. The only other instance of India leading by 300-plus runs in the second innings by stumps on day two was against South Africa in 2006 (311).

Shane Warne's greatest hits

ESPNcricinfo staffers cast their minds back to Warne’s most memorable spells

ESPNcricinfo staff05-Mar-20227 for 52 vs West Indies, MCG, 1992
It was Warne’s first Test at the MCG. Also his first Boxing Day Test. His hair dyed platinum blonde, his lower lip white with zinc cream, Warne made the most of a worn-out fifth-day pitch to undo the great work of Phil Simmons and Richie Richardson, who had put on 134 runs on the final morning. A quarter of an hour before lunch, Warne sent Richardson back with one that, in Michael Holding’s words, “pitched off stump, kept low, and hit off stump”. Carl Hooper was done in by big spin as he tried to pull over midwicket. After lunch, a legbreak that curled late sucked Simmons into a false shot. Warne was relentless as West Indies lost their last nine wickets for just 76 runs, of which Warne picked up seven – his last four coming for just three runs. It was his maiden five-for in first-class cricket. Playing only his fifth Test, Warne also won his first Player-of-the-Match award at his favourite venue.
7 for 56 vs South Africa, SCG, 1994
One of the ultimate thrillers in Test cricket, for many South Africa players the match of their lives, especially Fanie de Villiers, who, along with Allan Donald, thwarted Australia as they failed to cross a 117-run target. The Test was memorable also for Warne’s 12 wickets, including a seven-wicket haul in the first innings. He left the South Africa batters in a mess with his fast flippers, topspinners and whipping legbreaks. Most memorably, the wicket of Daryll Cullinan, who played from the crease against a flipper that zipped past and left his off stump swinging like a peg. Even the usually unflappable Richie Benaud was excited enough to say, “You can guarantee that Shane Warne has out-thought him there – shown the obvious flipper, let him pull it for four, and then slipped the other one in.”
4:16

Allan Border: ‘Shane Warne is the Bradman of legspin bowling’

8 for 71 vs England, Gabba, 1994
Back in the day, the follow-on was . So, when, after England had folded for 167 in the first Test of the 1994-95 Ashes, Mark Taylor thumbed his nose at convention and chose to bat again for a lead of 508, the pundits were incredulous. By the close of the fourth day’s play, with England finding new resolve to reach 211 for 2, there was the sniff of a famous escape in the air. Unbeknownst to those new to the art of legspin, however, the longer England endured, the surer their final demise became. Sure enough, as the pitch began to crumble and Warne’s leggies began to bite, there was no place for England to hide. Eighteen months on from his sensational Ashes debut in 1993, his hold over the Poms was already absolute.
7 for 23 vs Pakistan, 1995, Gabba
Warne’s hold over England was legendary, of course; his record against Pakistan is not as celebrated, perhaps, but it was no less traumatising from the opponents’ point of view. He had taken 18 wickets in Pakistan in the famous 1994-95 series, the first Tests he had played against them, but Saleem Malik and some others had played him well enough. But back home, a year later, and no chance. He reduced a solid-against-spin middle-order to rubble, on a ground that was hitherto a seam-bowling haven. He took 11 in the Test, marking the true beginning of an era of Australian dominance over Pakistan in which he would remain at the very centre.
4 for 46 vs West Indies, 1996 World Cup semi-final, Mohali
West Indies were 165 for 2 chasing 208 to make it to the final. It was a cakewalk. Warne’s great fast-bowling mate Glenn McGrath showed him a slight opening with the wicket of Shivnarine Chanderpaul, and Warne burst through by creating panic when there should have been none, chaos when things should have been straightforward, and wickets in the 45th, 47th and 49th overs.
That 1999 World Cup semi-final was, in many ways, all about Warne•PA Images via Getty Images4 for 29 vs South Africa, 1999 World Cup semi-final, Edgbaston
It had been six years since he had bowled ball to Mike Gatting. The world knew by now what he had done and what he could do. He was himself contemplating retirement, struggling with injuries and being dropped in the West Indies. In this game, Australia had hardly a score to defend, South Africa were off to a great start, and one of the unbelievable runs in a World Cup was about to come to an end. And then Warne bowled a ball as good as the one to Gatting, except with a white ball on a one-day track and when in a personal rut. Then he dragged the team along with him into the final, which they won.
4 for 33 vs Pakistan, 1999 World Cup final, Lord’s
It is testament to Warne’s greatness that although he produced almost certainly the best back-to-back knockouts bowling performances in the history of the World Cup, this is some way down in the hierarchy of his achievements. Having bowled Australia to the final with 4 for 29 in an Edgbaston semi-final that was as fiercely contested as a game of cricket could be, Warne ripped through Pakistan in the final. He bowled Ijaz Ahmed with a big legbreak, had Moin Khan caught behind, got a big-sweeping Shahid Afridi lbw, then had Wasim Akram caught off a top edge. Pakistan were 132 all out, paving the way for the first of Australia’s three successive World Cup victories.
5 for 74 vs Pakistan, Sharjah, 2002
The absolute zenith of Warne vs Pakistan. He took 27 wickets in this three-Test series, consigning Pakistan to one of their worst series defeats. The two Tests in Sharjah were played in inhumane heat, but Warne bowled over 50 overs in this last Test. It was an absolute road, and Warne – ever intuitive – didn’t bend the pitch to his will. He just went along with it, a succession of those famed flippers, zooters, straighter ones, toppies, crashing quick and low into the pads. It was, in fact, a very Rashid Khan kind of spell, more than a decade before the Afghan would emerge as another legspinning hero.
5 for 90 vs Sri Lanka, Kandy, 2004
Sri Lanka was, in some ways, the making of Warne. Back in 1992, he had gone wicketless in three of his four bowling innings, until he claimed three wickets in 13 balls to wipe out Sri Lanka’s tail. In that match, they were all out for 164, chasing 181. In 2004, in his comeback series following a year-long suspension for taking a banned diuretic, he broke Sri Lankan hearts again. Sri Lanka were 319 for 7, with only 33 runs required for victory, when Warne dangled one up, tempting Chaminda Vaas to heave across the line. The batter was caught on the leg-side boundary. Soon after this, he trapped Kaushal Lokuarachchi lbw, before Jason Gillespie claimed the last wicket to seal the series 2-0. Where in 1992 Sri Lanka were only still figuring out the format, this five-wicket haul in Asgiriya had come against one of the best top orders Sri Lanka had assembled.
4 for 31 vs England, Trent Bridge, 2005
Warne was unequivocally the greatest match-winner in the history of Ashes cricket, and yet, nothing revealed his greatness quite like his response to impending defeat. By the fourth Test in 2005, Australia were cornered. The series was still level at 1-1, but after surviving at Old Trafford, they had now followed-on at Trent Bridge, whereupon his own innings of 45 from 42 balls had ensured at least a token target of 129. At 32 for 0 after five overs, England were cruising as he entered the attack… but not for long. Marcus Trescothick prodded Warne’s first ball to silly point: 32 for 1. Michael Vaughan nicked a drifting legbreak to fall for a duck: 36 for 2. Andrew Strauss tucked another ripper straight to leg slip: 57 for 3. And when Brett Lee joined the hunt in a pace and spin onslaught, England were suddenly in danger of a shattering, Ashes-ending defeat. Geraint Jones then tried to take Warne on… and holed out to give him his fourth wicket in 12 overs, but on this occasion, the challenge proved just out of his reach. England, however, had once again been Warne-ed.
4 for 49 vs England, Adelaide, 2006
If Test matches were crime scenes, then Interpol’s forensic teams could spend the rest of the century trying to solve the heist of Adelaide 2006, but they would find not a trace of evidence from the most perfect cat-burglary of Warne’s career. There was nothing about the match situation that gave any clue to the mayhem to come, as England resumed the final day on a serene 59 for 1, leading by 97, . A bore-draw was nailed on, but when Strauss and Ian Bell fell in quick succession – to a dodgy decision, and an even dodgier piece of running between the wickets – Warne needed no further invitation to shin his way up the drainpipe. In a monstrous moment of hubris, Kevin Pietersen was bowled around his legs for 2, and thereafter England’s game-plan was catatonic. Ashley Giles and Matthew Hoggard were rounded up meekly, and as the citizens of Adelaide trooped across the river to witness a Tuesday afternoon heist, Australia cantered to a victory target of 168, setting in motion the inevitability of a whitewash.

What are the best figures by a captain in ODIs and T20Is?

Also: how many women have scored World Cup centuries in a losing cause?

Steven Lynch08-Mar-2022Sakibul Gani followed his 341 on debut with 98 and 101 in the next match. Has anyone scored more runs after three first-class innings? asked Azweer from India, among many others
That astonishing start from Bihar’s Sakibul Gani has seen him score 341 against Mizoram in Kolkata (the record score for anyone on first-class debut), followed by 98 and 101 not out against Sikkim at Eden Gardens (the first match was at the Jadavpur University Campus).Gani’s 540 runs is a record for a player’s first three first-class innings, surpassing 494 (12, 290 and 194) by the New Zealander Bill Carson for Auckland in 1936-37. Gani made 38 and 23 in his next match, so did not pass the Australian Bill Ponsford’s records of 616 runs after four-class innings, and 724 after five. The records for six and seven innings – 831 and 900 runs – were set by the Afghanistan batter Bahir Shah in 2017-18. Ponsford reached 1000 runs in his eighth innings, the record at the moment.Sophie Devine scored 108 in the World Cup opener, but still lost – how many other women have scored a World Cup century but finished on the losing side? asked Deborah Mitchell from New Zealand
That hundred by New Zealand’s captain Sophie Devine in the opening match against West Indies in Mount Manganui last week was the sixth time that an individual century had not been enough to bring victory in a Women’s World Cup match. The seventh was not long coming: Nat Sciver scored an unbeaten 109 for England as they ran Australia close next day in Hamilton.Devine was the third New Zealander on the list, after her current team-mates Suzie Bates, with 102 against Australia in Cuttack in February 2013, and Amy Satterthwaite, who hit 103 a week later against England in Mumbai.There have also been two cases for India: Harmanpreet Kaur made an undefeated 107 in vain against England in Mumbai in 2013, and Punam Raut 106 against Australia in Bristol in 2017. The other instance – and the highest such score – was made by Sri Lanka’s Chamari Athapaththu, with 178 not out against Australia, also in Bristol in 2017. Despite Athapaththu’s remarkable effort, Sri Lanka managed only 257 for 9 in their 50 overs, which Australia chased down with some ease; Meg Lanning hit 152 not out.In the men’s World Cups, it has happened on 40 occasions.I heard that Shakib Al Hasan is the only batter in ODI history whose average never fell below 30 in his entire career. Is this true? asked Fahim from Bangladesh
Well, it’s partly true: Shakib Al Hasan currently averages 37.62 in one-day internationals, and the lowest his average has ever been was 30.91. But, given a qualification of 30 innings, there are no fewer than 31 other men whose average has also never been below 30 (including Eoin Morgan, who once averaged exactly 30). Of these, three have never averaged below 40: Imam-ul-Haq of Pakistan, whose lowest to date is 49.18, and the retired Australian pair of Michael Hussey (47.89) and Michael Bevan (42.33). This record is perhaps overly dependent on someone making at least 30 in their first ODI innings.Shane Warne played 145 Tests without ever representing Australia in a T20I•Jack Atley/Fairfax Media/Getty ImagesWho has played the most Tests without ever playing a one-day international, and what’s the equivalent record for T20s? asked David Knight from England
Leaving aside players like Godfrey Evans, who won 91 Test caps but had retired before the first one-day international in 1971, the ODI record is held by England’s Mark Butcher, who won 71 Test caps without ever featuring in England’s one-day team (this always struck me as slightly odd, as he had a very respectable record in List A cricket). Next comes the New Zealand fast bowler Neil Wagner, who has so far played 58 Tests without a single white-ball appearance. The former England captain MJK Smith played 50 Tests, but no ODIs, although his international career only just stretched into the ODI era. Of players who made their Test debut after ODIs started, Butcher and Wagner lead the way, then come the Sri Lankans Kaushal Silva (39 Tests) and Tharanga Paranavitana (32), alongside England’s Rory Burns (32 Tests).Moving to T20Is, Shane Warne played 145 Tests without appearing in a 20-over international, which started towards the end of his great career. Considering only players who made their Test debut after the first official T20I early in 2005, the leader is Cheteshwar Pujara (95 Tests), ahead of Azhar Ali (91), Dimuth Karunaratne at 75 and Kraigg Brathwaite and Dean Elgar bracketed together on 74. All of these players did play some ODIs.What are the best bowling figures by a captain in ODIs and T20Is? asked Ramaswamy Gohel from India
The best by a captain in ODIs is 7 for 36, by Waqar Younis, for Pakistan against England at Headingley in 2001. Next, rather surprisingly perhaps, comes Viv Richards, with 6 for 41 for West Indies against India in Delhi in 1989-90. There have been three more six-fors, by Dwayne Bravo (2012-13), Gulbadin Naib (2019) and Waqar again, with 6 for 59 two days later in 2001 at Trent Bridge.There are a further 21 instances of a captain taking a five-for in a one-day international. Waqar did it three times in all, and Greg Chappell, Jason Holder, Shahid Afridi and Wasim Akram twice.In T20Is the best figures by a captain are 6 for 18, by Argentina’s Hernan Fennell against Panama in a World Cup Americas Region qualifier in Antigua in November 2021. Next comes Sri Lanka’s Lasith Malinga, with 5 for 6 against New Zealand in Pallekele in September 2019.There are four other cases of a captain talking a five-for in a T20I, by Moazzam Baig (Malawi), Charles Perchard (Jersey), Ahmed Raza (UAE) and Shakib Al Hasan (Bangladesh).Shiva Jayaraman of ESPNcricinfo’s stats team helped with some of the above answers.Use our feedback form, or the Ask Steven Facebook page to ask your stats and trivia questions

Should Mushfiqur Rahim give up the reverse sweep?

The shot isn’t working for him – or his team, so there could be a case for him to shelve it and find another way

Mohammad Isam13-May-2022Halfway through the first innings of the Gqeberha Test against South Africa in April, Mushfiqur Rahim was battling towards his first fifty in eight Test innings. He wasn’t looking completely out of form but the fact that he had only three half-centuries since the start of 2021 was a concern. Mushfiqur had moved to 47 with the visitors teetering in the presence of their last recognised batting pair.Simon Harmer was brought into the attack for the first time on the third day at this point with two possible overs remaining before lunch. It shouldn’t have been a make-or-break time for Bangladesh, but Mushfiqur suddenly decided to go after the offspinner.First ball, Mushfiqur didn’t time his sweep perfectly, but the ball floated away towards backward square-leg for a boundary. It got him to his fifty. Next ball, Mushfiqur went back to block a ripping offbreak and was hit on the pads. South Africa had lost all their reviews by that time, so he survived.With just ten balls remaining before the lunch break, Mushfiqur could have either rotated the strike or shut shop. Instead, he went for a reverse sweep against Harmer’s around-the-wicket angle. He missed it by a distance, and was bowled, as Harmer roared in approval.On TV commentary, Mark Nicholas, only minutes ago, had praised Mushfiqur for his professionalism. It was the fourth time Mushfiqur had got out playing the reverse sweep in just over a year. Bangladesh were in a difficult position on all those occasions .Bangladesh were eventually bowled out minutes after the lunch break. Mushfiqur then played another extravagant shot during Bangladesh’s blowout next morning when they were all out for 80 in the fourth innings. Rather than celebrating how the tour started, it ended with Mushfiqur’s shot – and by extension his mindset – being heavily questioned by fans and media alike.

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So why did Mushfiqur try the reverse sweep few minutes before lunch? On the face of it, here’s a senior player who trusts his own game plan, and was just trying to put off Harmer who had just come into the attack for the first time in the day. But this is also a senior player who was the last recognised batter in a game that was delicately poised.Veteran coach Nazmul Abedeen Fahim, whom Mushfiqur had last week invited to work on his batting, said that the reverse sweep usually comes out when Mushfiqur is bereft of options, particularly when he is not in good form.

“Mushfiq is a fantastic reverse sweeper which has got him a lot of runs in the past. If you are a left-handed batter, you will be under pressure if you are cover driving in the first 20-30 balls. It is okay when you play that shot after you made 50 or 60.”Russell Domingo

“It is a matter of personal choice,” Fahim said. “He also knows that he can benefit from it if he can make it work. When the easy options to score runs are fluent and open, then usually batters don’t go for those shots. But when the options are few and form isn’t great, then maybe a batter goes into those shots to get out of a situation. I am expecting him to score in his natural way. I don’t think he would need to get into those options.”Bangladesh head coach Russell Domingo said that Mushfiqur plays the reverse sweep well but he should consider a few key questions before bringing it out.”If you say that the opening batsman getting out cover driving, you stop cover driving or playing through midwicket getting out lbw,” Domingo said. “If it is a shot you are confident in, and believe in, you know it’s a good option. There’s nothing wrong in playing it. I think the timing of playing the shot is important. When do you play the shot? Why you are playing the shot, is it to manipulate the field?”Mushfiq is a fantastic reverse sweeper which has got him a lot of runs in the past. If you are a left-handed batter, you will be under pressure if you are cover driving in the first 20-30 balls. It is okay when you play that shot after you made 50 or 60.”Fahim said that he has been working with Mushfiqur about a more technique-related issue and believes it would be only a matter of time for the form to be restored.”Sometimes when a batter goes away from his natural game, from his basics, it affects his form,” Fahim said. “Confidence can be lost, and that has an influence on his basics. Then you tend to try different things to come back, which ultimately doesn’t always work. So we were focused mostly on the basics.”His advantage is his experience of over 15 years. Once he can overcome his technical issue, he will start scoring runs. He knows how to score runs. When his flow returns, he will be as fluent as always.”

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The dismissal at Gqeberha was the second time Mushfiqur got out playing the reverse sweep in Tests since 2014. The first was against West Indies last year in Dhaka, while batting on 54.But it seems like this shot has caused him problems across formats in recent years. Generally, he has timed the ball well when trying to play the reverse sweep, having struck 38 fours in 107 attempts, getting out a total of nine times.Four of those dismissals have come since February 2021. He has also struck just two fours out of the 18 times he attempted the shot. Before this period, he was finding boundaries 40% of the time he was hitting a reverse sweep. In the last 18 months, it has dropped to 11%.To make matters slightly more complicated, after he got out to a reverse sweep in an ODI in May last year, he said it was one of his favourite shots and if the chance comes, he would play it four or five times in a match. Since he has also often played that shot in high-pressure moments, the statement hasn’t aged well.More than what he has said, however, it is also surprising that a batter of his experience and calibre continues to play a shot that isn’t really working for him. It is not working for his team either, and Mushfiqur might want to rethink his shot selection.The Waugh brothers shelved the hook and pull in the 1990s when it wasn’t working for them. Sachin Tendulkar famously didn’t play a cover drive during his Sydney double-hundred. It didn’t reduce them as batters, but probably helped them during a lean patch. Perhaps Mushfiqur, who is known for his training intensity and single-mindedness as a cricketer, will also figure out how to get over this mental barrier.

'Great to be back, almost a bit surreal' – Campbell on his Perth homecoming after near-death experience

Netherlands’ coaching consultant had spent seven days in an induced coma after going into cardiac arrest in the UK in April

Tristan Lavalette29-Oct-2022On the long journey from Sydney to Perth, Ryan Campbell found himself struggling to focus on watching films during his flight.So, instead, he decided to stare at the flight path and his emotions stirred when he realised the plane was flying over Kalgoorlie, Western Australia’s famous gold-mining town where he spent some of his formative years.”There was this calmness that I felt. I’m home,” Campbell, the former Australia wicketkeeper-batter and Netherlands coaching consultant, told ESPNcricinfo.Two days ahead of the T20 World Cup game between Netherlands and Pakistan at Optus Stadium, Campbell returned home to Perth for the first time since April. Back then, Campbell had enjoyed a long-awaited homecoming after two years due to WA’s strict Covid-19 hard border.”It was the first time I saw mum and dad since Covid-19. I saw mates and watched the (AFL team) Dockers play,” Campbell said. “I was fit and healthy.”But just days after he left Perth, Campbell went into cardic arrest in the UK while playing with his two children in a playground. He was given CPR at the scene before spending seven days in an induced coma.Related

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He was given only a seven percent chance of survival, but rallied and has since made a full recovery.”That’s why everyone who had seen me in Perth couldn’t quite believe what happened to me literally just a few days after I left,” Campbell said. “They were all shocked.”Having endured so much, Campbell, who has children aged seven and four, savoured spending time with close mates at a bar shortly after arriving in Perth on Friday. Some of them hadn’t seen him since his near-death experience.”It’s great to be back, almost a bit surreal,” he said. “When we were in Geelong [for the first round], I had a reunion with friends. Guys from Las Vegas, Hong Kong, Perth, Sydney and Melbourne flew in.”It was emotional to see them, emotional for them too. Grown men were in tears and giving me hugs. I’m lucky to have those people around me.”

“Grown men were in tears and giving me hugs. I’m lucky to have those people around me.”Ryan Campbell, the former Australia player and current Netherlands coaching consultant

His mates like to rib him by dubbing him the ‘Prince of Perth’ due to Campbell’s popularity as a flamboyant wicketkeeper-batter. He had also carved an effective opening partnership with Mike Hussey during WA’s heyday in the late 1990s. He was a prominent figure in the local media after he retired from cricket in 2006 before heading abroad.But that moniker might not be a stretch of the truth with Campbell, who played two ODIs in 2002, warmly embraced by several patrons at the popular watering hole.”There were times I didn’t think I would ever be back in Perth,” he said. “I’ve spent five years in the Netherlands and the five before that in Hong Kong, but I’ll always call Perth home. I’m the most proud person of this wonderful state.”Ryan Campbell forged a strong opening partnership with Mike Hussey during Western Australia’s heyday in the late 1990s•Getty ImagesWhile in Perth he’ll also catch up with his parents, having not seen his dad since April. “We’ll talk a lot of rubbish and what’s going on,” he said. “Of course, he’ll have an opinion on the cricket, as he always watches it.”On the Netherlands’ team bus from the airport to hotel, Campbell excitedly pointed out the city’s landmarks to his wide-eyed players who were mostly making their first visit to Perth.”I’m like a proud dad wanting to show off their babies,” he said. “On the bus I was pointing out the stadium and the Swan River. The guys were in love with it already.”Having passed the head coach reins to Ryan Cook, the T20 World Cup is a swansong for Campbell with the Netherlands after almost six years. With his young family entrenched in the Netherlands, with his children speaking fluent Dutch and proudly supporting the Netherlands at the upcoming FIFA World Cup, Campbell was uncertain about his next move.”My family is very settled in Europe. The kids are in school. We’ll only move if there is something set in stone,” Campbell said. “The romantic in me would be keen to coach in Australia but it’s tough to get a job there. If it means in the UK or somewhere else, so be it.”Before then, Campbell is helping steer the Netherlands’ T20 World Cup campaign, which started by them memorably navigating through the first round.After losses to Bangladesh and India in the Super 12s, Campbell’s local knowledge is hoped to help muster a highly competitive effort against a wounded Pakistan, whose semi-final dreams are hanging by a thread.No matter the result, watching his adopted country play at the 60,000-seat Optus Stadium will cap a memorable return to Perth for Campbell.”In my dream of dreams, I would love to see Scorchers fans dressed in orange and throw their support for the Dutch,” he said. “I can’t wait for the guys to play at the stadium in front of the passionate Perth fans. It will be an amazing experience.”

Versatile Inglis looking forward to T20 focus after golf scare

The wicketkeeper-batter talks about his injury mishap, leadership growth and adapting between formats

Tristan Lavalette16-Dec-2022Josh Inglis admits he’s not obsessed with every minute detail of batting like certain high-profile national team-mates, preferring to stick with a crash and bash style that has powered him to the fringes of Australia’s teams across formats.”There are those guys who absolutely love batting…like Marnus [Labuschagne] and Steve Smith. I enjoy playing the game aggressively and scoring runs in that way… that’s what I love to do,” Inglis told ESPNcricinfo.”Sometimes it comes off, sometimes it doesn’t and you look a bit stupid but that’s okay.”Inglis’ big hitting penchant will be on show during the BBL season, where he looms as the batting talisman for injury-hit Perth Scorchers and is likely to be available throughout their title defence.Power hitters Mitchell Marsh and Phil Salt have been ruled out for the season with injuries, while Kurtis Patterson, Colin Munro and Laurie Evans have not returned from last season’s title-winning team for various reasons.Related

What might Australia look like at the 2024 T20 World Cup?

Scorchers chase back-to-back titles despite personnel challenges

There will be more pressure on the diminutive Inglis but – like his fearless batting – he remains unruffled having been given firm backing to trust his attacking instincts.”I quite like that [more responsibility]. I’m one of the more experienced batters in the line-up now,” said England-born Inglis, whose favourite batters to watch as a youngster were Kevin Pietersen and Michael Clarke.”They [Scorchers’ hierarchy] don’t tell me how to play…I have the backing to play how I want to play. I do chat to [Adam] Voges [Scorchers’ head coach] on how to tinker with batting to suit situations. I’ll probably be needed to be flexible where I bat, which I don’t mind.”Having generally batted for Scorchers at the top of the order, taking the aerial route during the powerplay with great success, Inglis is set to strengthen a weakened middle-order with overseas replacements Faf du Plessis and Adam Lyth likely to open.Although with both those batters only available for half the season before departing to cashed up new leagues in South Africa and the UAE, Inglis will probably be required to revert back to the top at a later stage.His flexibility at shuffling around the batting order, where in the middle overs he’s often sweeping spinners and running hard between the wickets, has made wicketkeeper-batter Inglis an alluring prospect for national selectors, who rate him highly.The 27-year-old made his T20I and ODI debuts this year and has been part of Test squads previously. But his versatility with the bat has proven a mixed blessing for Inglis, who is seen as a successor for an ageing Matthew Wade in Australia’s T20 team.”It’s why I’ve been picked in international squads because I can cover both bases,” Inglis said about being able to bat in different positions. “But you never can nail down the one role, so it’s a good and bad thing. I do like batting in either role though and feel like I have the skillset to perform both well.”In a clear indication from Australia’s hierarchy of his standing, Inglis last month captained a strong Prime Minister’s XI team against West Indies in Canberra. It was his first time in charge of a team since leading his grade club Joondalup around six years ago.

My set up didn’t feel right, the confidence and belief wasn’t there. When you don’t score runs, you go searching. The chopping and changing was not ideal to get into rhythm

With Australia amid a dearth of leadership candidates in white-ball cricket, Inglis appears to be getting groomed in the hope of becoming a potential option down the track if he can carve out a permanent spot.Perhaps unsurprisingly, Inglis sought an aggressive approach during the drawn pink-ball match on a flat Manuka Oval pitch with inventive fields and rotating his bowlers.”I spoke to coach [Andre Borovec] that I didn’t want the game to drift at any point and wanted to keep the game moving. I wanted to make the West Indies batters think differently,” Inglis said. “I feel like being a ‘keeper is a leader without the title, so it wasn’t too much different from usual, but it was nice to get the brain thinking. They [the selectors] must see something in me and want me to develop.”Under highly-regarded Scorchers skipper Ashton Turner, Inglis will be able to further his development and learn from one of the most astute tacticians in the BBL.”He has full confidence in the players and let’s that be known. I’ll definitely be watching how Ash goes about it, he’s so smart and a great operator,” Inglis said. “Faf too. It would be silly not to tap into his expertise and experience in leadership and batting.”Josh Inglis captained the Prime Minister’s XI against West Indies•Getty ImagesBut those best-laid plans would have been scuppered had a freak golf accident on the eve of the T20 World Cup ended his season, as Inglis initially feared.When a regulation tee shot on a par three caught a bit of turf, his five iron snapped in his right hand and sliced his palm and ring finger.”There was so much blood. I could see the flesh inside the wound. I was thinking there isn’t any way this isn’t a bad injury,” Inglis recalled. “I was absolutely shattered because I knew my World Cup was done and thought my season was over.”Fortunately, Inglis escaped tendon damage and the injury only sidelined him for a couple of weeks although he was replaced in Australia’s T20 World Cup squad by state team-mate Cameron Green.”I was really lucky not to have suffered a major injury,” said Inglis, who only started seriously playing golf during last year’s T20 World Cup in the UAE due to many of his team-mates’ fondness for the sport. “I haven’t played golf since. I’m a bit sheepish although I live near a beautiful course and drive past it every day, so I want to get back on the horse. I need some new clubs though.”Since his return from the injury, Inglis has mostly struggled with the bat apart from a match-winning 85 off 70 balls to lead Western Australia to a tight victory over South Australia in the 50-over Marsh Cup.Switching between formats, while also being a reserve during Australia’s ODI series win over England last month, proved “difficult to get into rhythm” as Inglis tinkered with his batting set up in a bid to end a frustrating rut.”I had a different set up for white and red ball cricket,” he said. “I moved my hands out in white ball cricket for swing room mainly for my power hitting. “In red-ball cricket, I brought my hands in but it felt off. My set up didn’t feel right, the confidence and belief wasn’t there. When you don’t score runs, you go searching. The chopping and changing was not ideal to get into rhythm.”I’ve found a middle ground between the two set ups and want to stick with that for now. I’m really looking forward to concentrating on playing T20 cricket for the next month and a half.”Inglis knows a big BBL season could provide the perfect platform for what might be a breakout international year for him with Australia faced with blockbuster tours of India and England, while the 50-over World Cup will be held in late 2023.The next T20 World Cup is also only 18 months away with Inglis in the frame for a permanent position amid a possible transition for Australia post their disappointing early exit at the recent event on home soil.Josh Inglis’ T20 World Cup hopes were shattered by injury•Getty Images”I don’t know if Wadey is retiring. Just waiting to see if that position comes up,” Inglis said of incumbent Wade. “He’s been batting at seven, I might go up to four or five. I’ll just be happy to be picked regardless. I’ll do whatever job is required.”The hectic schedule means there probably won’t be room for Inglis to explore opportunities at the upcoming IPL.”Fingers crossed I’ll be in India as the back up ‘keeper for the Test and ODI tour,” Inglis said. “If I was to play in the IPL, that means I would be away for four months straight. That’s tough on my partner and I’m not keen on that idea.”While all that is ahead, Inglis’ immediate focus is on Scorchers’ season-opener against arch-rival Sydney Sixers at Optus Stadium on Saturday.The grand final rematch will double as a celebration for Scorchers’ memorable triumph last season, where they had to spend 50 straight days on the road due to Western Australia’s Covid-19 border closures at the time.”It feels like we haven’t played at Optus for an eternity,” Inglis said. “It will be special and hopefully we can do well and play some exciting cricket for the fans.”

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