Tigers Rookie Troy Melton Sings Blink-182 While Exciting Biggest Start of His Career

The Tigers had lost eight consecutive games entering Thursday night's matchup with the Guardians in Cleveland. Once up by 15.5 games in the American League Central, Detroit needed a win in order to get back even with the Guardians as the regular season enters its final weekend. A.J. Hinch turned to rookie Troy Melton to deliver in the biggest spot of the year and the young righthander rewarded that confidence by throwing 3 2/3 innings and surrendering a single run.

Upon getting relieved from the game, Melton savored the moment by singing along to Blink-182's "All The Small Things" as it blared throughout the stadium.

Here's that cool moment.

Detroit and Cleveland now have a three-game race to the division crown. The Guardians hold the tiebreaker so it would have been all but over had Melton not stepped in to stop the historic skid. It's a good sign for the Tigers that Melton can be this cool in such a huge moment.

And kudos to the Fan Duel Sports Detroit broadcast for catching on to what was happening.

VÍDEO: Melhores momentos de Atlético-GO 1 x 2 Flamengo pelo Brasileirão

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O Flamengo venceu o Atlético-GO por 2 a 1 neste domingo (14), no Estádio Serra Dourada, na estreia dos times no Brasileirão 2024. Os gols dos cariocas foram marcados por De La Cruz, em cobrança de falta, e Pedro, batendo pênalti; Luiz Fernando balançou as redes para os donos da casa. Assista aos melhores momentos no vídeo acima.

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Umpire Strikes Out Aaron Judge on Three Straight Pitches Outside the Strike Zone

Aaron Judge did not receive a favorable strike zone in his first at-bat against Red Sox pitcher Brayan Bello on Friday night. Judge, hitting third in the order for the Yankees' second game of a weekend series against Boston, did not swing at any of the four pitches he saw in the at-bat and none of them were in the zone.

Rather than give Judge a walk, home plate umpire Lance Barrett sent him back to the dugout without having seen so much as a single strike.

Looking at the recap of the at-bat, none of the calls were that far outside the zone and any one of them on their own wasn't that egregious.

Aaron Judge was punched out on three questionable strike calls. / MLB.com

But when you call all three of them strikes back-to-back-to-back, it's a bad look. And more importantly, people notice.

This would not be the first time that the Yankees have disagreed with Barrett behind the dish.

Sliding Yankees Formally Activate Aaron Judge From 10-Day Injured List

The New York Yankees have had a poor week, dropping their last four games. Getting back one of baseball's best players will help.

The Yankees are formally activating right fielder and designated hitter Aaron Judge from the 10-day injured list, they announced Tuesday afternoon. Judge has not played since July 25, when he went 0-for-3 in a 12–5 loss to the Philadelphia Phillies.

"It’s Aaron Judge—we know what he means to our lineup, to the guys in the room,” New York manager Aaron Boone said via Dave Sessions of MLB.com. “So to get him back, we’re certainly excited about that. And then hopefully, shortly thereafter, he’s back out in the field, too.”

Judge's return comes amid a four-game losing streak that has left a bitter taste in Yankees' fans mouths. The team was swept by the Miami Marlins and dropped its series opener against the Texas Rangers on Monday.

In 103 games this season, Judge is slashing .342/.449/.711—all three of which lead Major League Baseball—with 37 home runs and 85 RBIs.

Nick Castellanos Provided Fresh Take on Viral Phillies Fan Home Run Ball Controversy

A Phillies fan went viral for all the wrong reasons earlier this month when a home run ball close their seat was snatched by another fan who returned to his seat to give the ball to a young fan he attended the game with.

The fan who initially sat closer to the ball took exception to the move and marched over to the group to get the ball back. The man who initially ended up with the ball relented and passed it back in what was an awkward exchange. You can watch the moment below:

The internet, and even ESPN's anchors, had their day going off on the woman for her lack of perceived ballpark etiquette. It all worked out in the end, as the young fan who had the ball taken was given a new ball and a prize pack from the Marlins staff. Phillies outfielder Harrison Bader, who hit the controversial home run, sent him home with a signed bat too.

Nick Castellanos, another Phillies outfielder, weighed in on the moment with a different approach in an appearance on the podcast.

"Whenever I'm playing catch or I go, I always aim for a kid," he said via . "You always have that ambitious adult sometimes that will come and grab it but when I see that I don't just see a ball. I see a very frustrated lady for years that probably felt like she was getting the s— end of the stick. And now this thing happened, and she's like, 'I'm not finishing second here. I need this for me.'"

Betts and Castellanos discussed that the public doesn't know what's going on with the angered woman and maybe she was trying to get the ball for someone else. It's nice to see them giving a stranger the benefit of the doubt because you never know when someone else is having a bad day, but you have to hope that bad day doesn't impact a memorable moment for a young fan.

A different, closer angle of the moment came out where you can hear the fan arguing, "that was ours, you took it from me, that was in my hands." She probably didn't think the moment would gain as much steam as it did, especially to the point where players on the team she roots for are discussing it. The internet definitely let her have it, but it seems like Castellanos is giving her the benefit of the doubt.

Report: Dodgers Open to Trading Tyler Glasnow As Two-Time Champs Look to Add More

The Dodgers aren’t done making moves this offseason, and another big one could be on the way.

ESPN’s Alden Gonzalez reports L.A. would “not be opposed” to trading Tyler Glasnow.

Glasnow has elite, ace-level stuff, but has only topped 100 innings once in his 10-year MLB career. Since joining the Dodgers in December 2023, he has only made 40 starts. In that time, he has gone 13-9, with a 3.37 ERA, a 1.01 WHIP, and 274 strikeouts against 78 walks in 224 1/3 innings. He has produced 5.5 fWAR and boasts an xFIP of 3.10.

As mentioned, the issue with Glasnow has been availability. He dealt with shoulder issues in 2025, after missing the entire postseason run in 2024 due to an elbow injury. This season, he only made 18 starts but pitched just 90 1/3 innings and went 4-3 with a 3.19 ERA.

The Dodgers acquired the 31-year-old Southern California native from the Rays along with Manuel Margo in exchange for Ryan Pepiot and Jonny DeLuca. They immediately signed him to a five-year, $136.5 million contract extension. As Gonzalez explained, the deal is fairly manageable now, with a minimum of $81.6 million left on it over the next three seasons if Glasnow opted in for 2028. Unless he gets a whole lot healthier, it’s unlikely anyone would pick up the $30 million option for 2028.

Glasnow could certainly be part of a deal for an upgrade, or the Dodgers could use him to solve the big hole they currently have in the outfield. Andy Pages is set in center field, while the team seems content to keep Teoscar Hernandez at one corner spot. Or they could decide to swing big and use the veteran righty as part of a package for Skubal, as Gonzalez suggests.

With Yoshinobu Yamamoto, Shohei Ohtani, and Blake Snell firmly entrenched in L.A.’s rotation, the remaining spots should go to Glasnow and Roki Sasaki. That’s as things stand today, but the Dodgers are not done maneuvering. Don’t be shocked if they do something big, and if Glasnow is part of it.

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

Ian Bishop – ‘Dean, an innovator in ODIs, a human being of great depth’

“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.

Country roads, take Steven Smith home

He’s got more than 16 tons and he’s going to sing about it

Alan Gardner14-Oct-2020While the shadow of Covid-19 lingers for many of us, the world’s leading cricketers continue to go above and beyond in attempting to provide for the gaiety of nations. Not only are many players becoming accustomed to spending their lives locked down in hotels, brewing their own coffee like 19th-century Italian street urchins, and providing each other with haircuts that are only occasionally laughable, all in order to get a game on – several seem keen to contribute to the light entertainment industry in their spare time, too.For some, the competitive urge remains overwhelming, as seen in the table-tennis turf wars being played out by Australia’s women in their Sydney bio-bubble; or the games room head to head between Jos Buttler and Joe Root – pitched by the ECB social media team as a -style contest, but really a lot closer to , with Mark Wood in the Fred Trueman affable-northern-presenter role. Much more in the way of governmental budget cuts and the BBC could seriously be looking at something like this as a viable format for Saturday night TV.Others have discovered a more artistic side, such as Ashleigh Gardner with her aboriginal dot paintings. The Light Roller is holding out hope that we will soon learn of Faf du Plessis and his new-found passion for pottery, or Niroshan Dickwella revealing an aptitude for life drawing.Then we get to the song-and-dance men. David Warner’s conversion to hip-swinging, lip-syncing TikTok teddy bear has already been documented in these pages. Meanwhile, at the ongoing IPL, Chris Gayle has so far been involved in more music videos than actual matches. Root, spurned in his previous attempts to get an invite to T20’s biggest gig, has perhaps realised the need to hone some new skills that will make him more attractive at auction, having popped up with his guitar on a recent episode of the Tailenders podcast.But unarguably the main event in cricketer side hustle this month has been Steven Smith’s debut as a budding country-and-western troubadour. The song Smith picked for his Instagram jam was called “All I Need to See” – and, without being too harsh, it’s probably fair to say we don’t need to see any more. The David Brent vibes were unavoidable, though it would be something of a surprise to hear of Smith referring to his captaincy style as “chilled-out entertainer” around the Rajasthan Royals dressing room. Then again, he is the original joker in the pack:”If you were to ask me to name three batting geniuses, I probably wouldn’t say Bradman, Tendulkar… I’d go Randall, Haynes, Inzamam. Walters.”Not that we are knocking Smudge, far from it. Sometimes the sight of a multi-talented sportsman turning their hand effortlessly to a new skill can leave the rest of us mortals feeling a little despondent. Imagine if Smith could carry a tune as effortlessly as he carries Australia’s batting? That would be too much. So strum on, Steve, and thanks for making us all feel that bit more adequate.

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While social media has allowed us to get closer to players, it can also provide insights that are less valuable. Such as into the minds of the people behind the Hundred, the fourth format cricket never knew it needed (but is going to get anyway). Having lain dormant since April, @thehundred burst back into life on Twitter last week, firing off a stream of gibberish about “completing” Netflix and Amazon, overdosing on GIFs, and generally playing up to the idea that the account is run by a 14-year-old out of their bedroom – which, of course, it isn’t, because Gen Z wouldn’t touch this stuff with a barge pole. That said, perhaps repeatedly being ratioed on Twitter will be good practice for the team by the time they roll out their 100-ball piñata next summer.

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T20 might not be the future anymore, but it didn’t deserve such a soggy send-off. For understandable reasons, T20 Blast Finals Day was pushed back to October to try to ensure it took place in front of a crowd, but the move backfired. First, the UK government shelved plans to allow spectators back into sporting events due to rising infection rates; then the sort of autumnal deluge that tends to occur at this time of year duly gave Edgbaston a soaking and led to the first washout in the competition’s 17-year history. Even the mascot race, which always treads the fine line between comedy and tragedy, was called off. Three shortened games were eventually held on the reserve day but here was an important reminder: well done for taking on a pandemic, but don’t mess with the English weather.

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.

Stats: New Zealand's dominant home record and all-round strength carries them to No. 1 ranking

New Zealand played eight of 11 series at home since May 2017, and ensured they took full advantage of it

S Rajesh06-Jan-20211:53

How New Zealand became No. 1 in Tests

A dominant home record is a significant factor behind New Zealand reaching the top of the ICC Test rankings. Their overall win-loss ratio of 3.2 is easily the best from May 2017, which is the period taken for the rankings – the next-best is India’s 1.9 – but at home they have been impregnable, winning 13 out of 16 Tests, and losing none. India are the only other similarly dominant team at home, with a 9-0 record in 11 Tests.ESPNcricinfo LtdNew Zealand are only seventh in terms of number of Tests played since May 2017 – their 24 Tests during this period is slightly more than half of England’s 45, but they have made almost every series count. The one debacle was in Australia, when they lost 3-0. In their remaining 21 Tests, they won 16 and lost just two. In the period from May 2017 to April 2019, when the results get 50% value in the ICC rankings, New Zealand had an 8-1 win-loss record; since May 2019, their record is 8-4.While New Zealand have undoubtedly been a formidable team with bat and ball, it is also true that they have had a favourable calendar over these 44 months: eight of their 11 series have been at home, and they have won each of those. England and West Indies have lost two series each in New Zealand during this period, while Sri Lanka, Bangladesh, India and Pakistan have all been beaten once each.ESPNcricinfo LtdAll those wins have helped rack up the points, but there have also been three crucial wins overseas which have made a difference between New Zealand actually taking the top place, and them hovering just a point or two behind the leaders. In UAE in 2018-19, they stole a 2-1 series win against Pakistan – including an incredible four-run win in Abu Dhabi – while in Sri Lanka they managed to level the series after losing the first Test.Despite those three wins, though, New Zealand are only fourth in terms of win-loss ratios in away Tests (including neutral venues). India are on top on that parameter with a 10-10 record in away Tests, followed by Sri Lanka and England. New Zealand have played only eight out of 24 Tests overseas, and haven’t played a series in England or India during this period. (To compare, India’s ongoing series in Australia is their seventh overseas series in this period.)ESPNcricinfo LtdWith an average of 64.48, Kane Williamson is on top of the charts among batsmen who have scored 1000-plus runs during this period. He pips Steven Smith and Virat Kohli, who both also average over 60 during this period. It hasn’t been a one-man show, though, for New Zealand have two other batsmen in the top 10: Henry Nicholls, who averages 51.50, and Tom Latham, who has averaged 47.63 at a time when openers have generally struggled. Add the contributions of Ross Taylor, BJ Watling and Colin de Grandhomme, and New Zealand have six batsmen with 900-plus runs averaging more than 38.ESPNcricinfo LtdBowling has always been New Zealand’s strong suit, especially in home conditions, and the presence of Kyle Jamieson in their last six Tests has added even more teeth to an already powerful bowling attack. Jamieson’s 36 wickets have come at an astonishing average of 13.27, while Neil Wagner and Tim Southee have 85-plus wickets at sub-23 averages. Trent Boult has been slightly off-colour recently, but his average of 26.47 is pretty good too.ESPNcricinfo LtdThanks to these key contributors with bat and ball, the difference between New Zealand’s batting and bowling averages during this period is 12.1. It isn’t the highest, though, because India have been even more dominant in their home victories. That won’t matter to New Zealand, though; where they will want to be ahead of India (or Australia) is on the World Test Championship table, on which they are currently third. If they manage to make it to Lord’s later this year for the final, that will cap off a fantastic four years for Williamson and his team.

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