Breaking down how England learned to Baz-bowl

Never mind the skyscraping run rates, England under Stokes-McCullum are intent on taking 20 wickets

Alan Gardner15-Jun-2023The ankle injury that befell James McCollum at Lord’s a fortnight ago was unfortunate for a number of reasons – depriving the Ireland opener of valuable Test experience, as well as leaving No. 8 Andy McBrine stranded in sight of a maiden hundred and a place on the honours board. Less significantly, because England still went on to complete a comfortable win, it meant that for the first time under Ben Stokes the bowlers had failed to take all ten wickets in an innings.Ireland were all out, of course, which is the statistic that matters. But McCollum retiring hurt ended a run of 24 innings across 13 Tests in which England had rounded up ten wickets; the only time they hadn’t taken 20 in a match coincidentally also came at Lord’s in an innings defeat to South Africa last August. This century, only South Africa had managed a longer streak (25 consecutive innings between 2017 and 2018).If skyscraping run rates have been the most arresting feature of England’s approach under Stokes and Brendon McCullum, no less important has been a hitherto-lacking cutting edge with the ball – a commitment to wicket-taking that has seen them find a way everywhere from Mount Maunganui to Multan.Related

Can England maintain their tactics under an Australian assault? That will decide the result of the Ashes

Fairway to heaven? The golfers' guide to Test-match preparation

One year of Bazball: Have England changed the Test game?

McDonald: Moeen replacing Leach presents 'a challenge' for England

Smith backs his problem-solving skills if England go funky

In batting, the old adage says, “It’s not about how, but how many.” England have subverted that with their bowling plans. The “how many” is non-negotiable – 20 wickets to win a Test – but the “how” is the crux of the matter. Whether it is through stacking the slips, introducing spin inside the first hour or switching to a short-ball bombardment, Stokes has refused to let games drift in a manner that England captains past have been guilty of.Old guard, new approach
Under Stokes, England’s three most successful bowlers have been James Anderson, Stuart Broad and Jack Leach. Given they have close to 1300 Test wickets between them, those first two names are not hugely surprising – but it should be remembered neither was involved in the series prior to Stokes taking over as captain, a 1-0 defeat in the Caribbean.Stokes has himself taken 20 wickets – but only two since the end of last summer, amid questions about whether he is still a viable all-round option. And although Mark Wood has only played twice, his extra pace contributed to victories in Multan and Karachi as England maintained their threat in some of the most inhospitable bowling conditions imaginable.Problems still to solve
England’s new Test blueprint, of fast-forward batting and front-foot bowling on true surfaces, arguably moves them away from what has been a position of strength at home – where touring sides, including Australia over the last two decades, have struggled to cope in seaming conditions. Stokes has been public in his request for “fast, flat pitches” but, as Josh Hazlewood pointed out this week, Australia will be confident of tilting that to their advantage.There is also the small matter of Australia being able to deploy the top three Test batters in the world, according to the updated ICC rankings. Travis Head has limited experience in England at the highest level, but comes into the series on the back of a scintillating – and Bazball-esque – innings of 163 in the World Test Championship final, while Steven Smith and Marnus Labuschagne are old foes. Ollie Pope has hinted that England might have some “quirky” plans for Smith, in particular, but they have attempted to funk with his head before, with little success (in 2019, they had him caught in the leg trap at The Oval, in his final innings – having seemingly been trying for the dismissal all series).Over the course of the next six-and-a-half weeks, Stokes and his bowlers will be looking to maintain their immaculate record and bowl Australia out ten times. Such is the strength of Australia’s attack, even that might not be enough to guarantee reclaiming the Ashes – but it’s not a bad place to start.With stats inputs from Shiva Jayaraman

Upping her power game and getting the finishing skills right – Deepti eyes a higher gear

Deepti Sharma, India’s 26-year-old “senior”, opens up on the progress of the women’s team and the unfinished business at global events

Ashish Pant19-Sep-20232:55

Deepti: ‘I enjoy the finisher’s role because it puts responsibility on you’

It’s an early August afternoon in Bengaluru. The sun is trying to peek through the clouds, and a gentle breeze is around – the famous Bengaluru weather is showing off. Meanwhile, the infamous peak-hour traffic has just about eased. Away from all the hustle, WPL franchise UP Warriorz are holding a week-long off-season camp at a private sports complex in the eastern suburbs of the city.That a women’s cricket team is conducting a camp of this kind is a rarity in India. It merely underscores the importance of having a professional structure, which makes opportunities trickle down to the grass roots.More than a decade ago, Deepti Sharma was a starry-eyed kid trying to make her way up the ranks, a path strewn with hurdles, the lack of opportunities and exposure foremost among those. Today, Deepti is a veteran trying to help unearth young talent at a scouting trial, apart from fine-tuning her own skills, which have made her a key member of the India team.Related

  • Harmanpreet pleads guilty to ICC charges

  • More misses than hits for India on tour of Bangladesh

  • BCCI contracts: Deepti in the top bracket

  • Can WPL make women's cricket in India mainstream?

Deepti is at the front and centre of the camp, where the coaches have set out specific tasks for the players. Deepti, who was signed at the auction ahead of the inaugural season for INR 2.6 crore (US $312,000 approx.), may have been back in rainy Agra training on cement surfaces. Instead, she’s going through the paces, both fitness- and cricket-wise. Be it timed sprints or precision-specific range-hitting topped with a technical breakdown of what she did right and what she didn’t.Such critical feedback from coaches in women’s domestic cricket, heavily dominated by the star-studded Railways team, is rare. Which is why the camp is already a massive step-up for the players who have assembled.As lunch time nears, Deepti gears up for a fresh round of match simulation. Many starry-eyed youngsters, who have been called up for trials, are keenly watching the team’s vice-captain. There’s a sense that everyone involved is keen to see what she does.Of course, the Warriorz are looking to get out as much as they can from the week-long camp. For Deepti, personally, this is a welcome opportunity to push herself hard ahead of a busy few months, having not played much since the WPL. All India have had in the interim is a short tour of Bangladesh, a low-scoring series marred by talk about the surfaces and the fracas over the umpiring.It starts with the Asian Games in Hangzhou, where India have secured direct entry to the quarter-finals beginning September 21. Having fallen short of the final hurdle several times, India have an opportunity to push for gold and establish themselves as the Asian powerhouses they are. It will set them up nicely for incoming tours from England and Australia in the coming months.Though just 26, Deepti Sharma is already something of a veteran•BCBDeepti has been part of all the recent heartbreaks, including T20 World Cup final at the MCG in front of 86,174 spectators. “Earlier, we never used to even qualify [for big-tournament finals]. Now we qualify, play the semi-finals, finals… it’s not easy,” Deepti tells ESPNcricinfo. “The more matches we play, the more experience we gain. We are falling short by a small margin. I am hopeful that we will cross the line very soon.”The experience bit is pertinent, because that is exactly what the WPL aims to achieve: to give Indian players a platform to train and play with the world’s best, adopt best practices and introduce them to modern training methods. This could go a long way towards bridging the gap from being second best to best.”We were waiting for so long for this [WPL], and it finally started. It has been great, experience-wise,” Deepti says. “We have played against some of the [overseas] players for so long, and now we are playing in the same team. It feels nice – different, because everyone backs each other. That is one good thing. You just need that support from the team. I feel this will go to a completely different level and it’s going to be a lot of fun going forward.”Deepti is only 26, but already a senior in Indian cricket. She made her ODI debut as a 17-year-old in 2014 against South Africa before getting her T20I cap 14 months later against Australia. No other Indian bowler has picked more wickets than Deepti since her debut in T20Is (105) and ODIs (93). In February this year, she became the first Indian bowler across men’s and women’s cricket to get to 100 T20I wickets.Deepti was part of the team that lost the 2020 T20 World Cup final•Getty ImagesDeepti’s numbers with the bat are decent too – 1912 runs in 74 ODI innings at 34.76 and 955 runs in 68 T20I innings at 24.48. What makes Deepti a perfect fit in any line-up is her versatility. She can bowl with the new ball and at the death in T20s and is often used to choke the opposition in the middle overs of an ODI. With the bat, Deepti has batted in every position from No. 1 to No. 9 in ODIs and No. 3 to No. 9 in T20Is. It’s this prospect of taking up new challenges that drives her.”Whatever the situation, if have to bowl or bat I like taking up the challenges in front of me,” she says. “These challenges help me get my mind stronger. It’s not easy to play in any condition, but if your preparation is strong, you can overcome any challenge.”I do my practice sessions in a way that I remain mentally strong, so that whatever I have in front of me gets easier.”

****

Hrishikesh Kanitkar, who will be travelling to Hangzhou as the head coach of the women’s team, had recently spoken about how Deepti keeps her “training levels very high”. This is one aspect Deepti says she focuses on keenly.”The mindset I have during a match, the same mindset I try and carry when I practice,” she says. “I have been trying to increase the number of balls that I face during a practice session. If I used to face 500 balls, now I am trying to up that by 100 to 150 so that I get better at my shot-making.”My preparation is always keeping in mind a match scenario. I keep practicing with the new ball, old ball, semi-new ball. Those sessions help me during a match. In a match situation, I can be asked to bowl at any given time, so I try to keep myself ready and try to replicate whatever I have done in practice in a match scenario.”Deepti Sharma celebrates a wicket during the WPL; her batting during the tournament, however, was below-par•BCCIWhile Deepti has had success with the ball, she had a below-par WPL with the bat, scoring just 90 runs in eight innings at a strike rate of 83.33. Her overall T20 record too points to her having underachieved with the bat. In 107 innings, Deepti has hit just two fifties, and her career strike rate reads 105.71.With the likes of Shreyanka Patil, whose stocks have risen rapidly in recent months, breathing down her neck, Deepti knows her T20 numbers with the bat need improvement. She has recently been the designated finisher for both India and her franchise. And she needs to work on her power-hitting, which she reckons she has been doing at training.”Power-hitting is an ongoing part of my practice routine,” she says. “I have started practicing with heavy balls. I make sure when I am facing the bowling machine, I try to step out and practice my lofted shots.”The balls are a bit heavier than the normal Kookaburra balls. So when you practice, say, ten balls with the heavier ones and then switch back to the Kookaburra, the shot-making becomes a bit easier.”I like playing as a finisher as it requires more responsibility and finishing a game for your team is a feeling on a totally different level. There is so much positivity within you when you finish a game for the team.”The next T20 World Cup is still a year away and Deepti remains a key part of India’s plans for now. The Asian Games presents a good chance for her to maximise her potential and build on her off-season gains. It could set her and India up nicely for the next several months.

Has Virat Kohli done enough to be called the greatest ODI batter ever?

As ever with these things, the competition is with Sachin Tendulkar. AB de Villiers and Viv Richards come into the picture too

Kartikeya Date01-Nov-2023Should India continue to have a great World Cup, come November 19 there will be a strong case for considering Virat Kohli the greatest ODI batter in history. The consistency, longevity and speed of his run production make him a solid contender for this unofficial title.Kohli now has 13,437 career ODI runs at 58 runs per wicket and about 94 runs per 100 balls faced. He has been in red-hot form in ODIs in 2023, and at the time of writing, he has 48 ODI hundreds, one short of Sachin Tendulkar’s record. He is currently about 5000 runs short of Tendulkar’s career aggregate of 18,426 runs and only 797 short of the second-placed batter on that table – Kumar Sangakkara, who has 14,234.ODI cricket has seen significant run inflation due to changes in rules governing field settings and ball use, apart from improvement in bats and the emergence of the power game. One way to account for this inflation (the average ODI scoring rate in the 1980s was 4.4 runs per over; in the 2010s it rose to 5.2 runs per over) is to normalise the scoring rate and batting average for each player relative to that of their team-mates in matches involving that player.For example, Rahul Dravid batted 344 times in ODIs and made 10,889 runs at an average of 39.2 and strike rate of 71.2. In those matches, the other ten India players and extras made runs at an average of 31.5 and strike rate of 86.2. Dravid’s average was 24.4% better (or positive) than that of the other ten India players, and his scoring rate was 17.4% worse (or negative).Kartikeya DateGraph 1: All 60 ODI batters who have at least 6500 career runs are organised by the difference between their batting average and that of the rest of their team, and the difference between their scoring rate and that of the rest of their team in matches involving that batter. All figures are percentages of the rest of the team’s figures.In the graph above, we see the 60 most prolific ODI batters, from Tendulkar (18,426 career runs) to Allan Border (6524 career runs) organised according to their batting average difference and scoring-rate difference. The players in blue make up the bulk of this group – 44 out of the 60, who, like Dravid, were more consistent than their average team-mate but scored slower. The two who were less consistent than their team-mates but scored quicker are Adam Gilchrist and Shahid Afridi (in yellow). There are 14 players (in red) who are both more consistent and score quicker than their team-mates. The large blue dot represents Virat Kohli’s record at No. 3, and the large red dot represents Tendulkar’s record as opener.The 14 players who are both more consistent (better average) and score quicker than their team-mates are listed in the table below. This list includes some players who played in relatively weak sides, like Brendan Taylor of Zimbabwe, Shakib Al Hasan of Bangladesh, Arjuna Ranatunga of Sri Lanka, and Chris Gayle of West Indies. Their individual records are not exceptional for their era, but they stand out in their respective teams.

Two players – AB de Villiers and Viv Richards – stand out more generally. By any measure, without bringing longevity into it, these are the two greatest ODI batters in the history of the format. De Villiers and Richards were both nearly 50% more consistent than their team-mates and scored between 11% and 24% quicker than them.Tendulkar played ODI cricket for nearly a quarter of a century and opened the batting for India for nearly 20 years. His career runs aggregate figure will probably never be approached by another player. The closest active batter, Kohli, is nearly 5000 runs away. Even at today’s rate, Kohli will have to play about 120 more ODIs to score those 5000 runs.Two players – Sanath Jayasuriya and Virender Sehwag – are noteworthy on the table. They are the only ones who are further ahead of their team-mates on scoring rate than on batting average. They, along with Gilchrist and Afridi, made a different choice compared to the other players in the table (and most of the 60 ODI players in the graph).The numbers of these four players (all openers in the main, except for Afridi, who opened for 3543 of his 8064 runs) point to the essential trade-off between speed and consistency in ODI cricket. There is little threat of dismissal for a batter for large parts of an ODI innings. Field settings are designed to prevent boundaries, and even the updates in the powerplay rules have not changed the tendency of fielding sides to prefer containment. It is exceedingly rare for a fielding side to have more fielders than required within the 30-yard circle; catching fielders are just as rare. The threat of dismissal in ODIs comes from the batter’s need to score quickly. The best players are those who score quickly without sacrificing consistency.Setting aside both Richards and de Villiers for now, both Kohli and Tendulkar excel in particular positions. Tendulkar made 15,310 runs as opener (more than any other player overall), while Kohli has now made 11,316 runs at No. 3, at an average of 61. Even accounting for inflation, maintaining such consistency over 223 innings, as he has done, is a remarkable feat of consistency.The graph below shows the record for each player from World Cup to World Cup in their most favoured position. The data used in the graph follows in the table a few paragraphs later.Kartikeya DateGraph 2: Consistency and speed in run-scoring for Sachin Tendulkar (as opener) and Virat Kohli (at No. 3) from World Cup to World Cup. 1992-1996 includes matches played from after the end of the 1992 World Cup to the end of the 1996 World Cup. The spans are bracketed by the relevant World Cup years. Tendulkar played his last qualifying ODI in 2012 and Kohli played his first in 2009. Tendulkar opened from 1994 through 2012.The striking thing about Kohli’s record is that he has been consistent. He has either been very consistent (as he was in the 2011-15 phase, the 2009-11 phase, or the 2019-23 phase), or off-the-charts consistent, as he was in the 2015-19 phase. The scoring rate has never been an issue because the run production at the other end matched Kohli’s run production. In other words, he was not responsible for providing both speed and consistency to his team.With Tendulkar, it was a different story. From the time he began to open, till about the 2003 World Cup, he was responsible for providing both speed and consistency to the Indian batting. He did this with extraordinary success. From 1994 to the end of the 2003 World Cup, he made 9416 runs at an average of 50 and a strike rate of 90. No other player approached this combination of speed and consistency. To see how extraordinary this decade was for Tendulkar, consider that de Villiers’ run production was 49% more consistent, and 11% quicker than his team-mates’ over his 9577 run ODI career, while Tendulkar was 60% more consistent and 11% quicker over a similar number of runs during this period.

The table above considers Kohli and Tendulkar in their best batting positions (No. 3 for Kohli, and opener for Tendulkar). The year spans are from World Cup year to World Cup year, as that is how the record is organised. Readers should note that Kohli did not bat at No. 3 in 2008 (when he made his ODI debut), and Tendulkar began to open in 1994.After the 2003 World Cup, we saw a different Tendulkar. He was still highly consistent but, especially once he returned from injury in 2006, India had Suresh Raina, Yuvraj Singh and Mahendra Singh Dhoni, who all scored extremely quickly. Kohli’s career has been played out in an Indian batting line-up similar to the one Tendulkar played in, especially from about 2006 through 2013. India have had plenty of fast-scoring players, so much so that eventually, even the power-packed Dhoni could afford to sit back and allow others to take chances.Playing in a strong team narrows the range of challenges a batter faces. But there’s not much Kohli can do about the fact that the India side he has played in has always been one of the best two in the world. Nevertheless, it remains the case that for nearly a decade and over 9000 runs, Tendulkar met the dual challenge of being a consistent and quick run-scorer in a way no player apart from Richards did in the history of the ODI game.Tendulkar, unlike Kohli, needed to bear the burden of scoring quickly (because his team-mates mostly couldn’t) while also being consistent•AFPWhen I last considered the question of Kohli’s place in the pantheon in an article about six years ago, his extraordinary (but relatively brief) record of about eight years at the time placed him first among equals. In 2023, his longevity places him, without question, among the all-time greats.Is he the greatest ODI batter of all time? With 48 ODI hundreds (at one every six innings) and over 13,000 runs, Kohli’s is an epic career. Given his longevity, Kohli is probably Tendulkar’s equal as an ODI batter overall, even accounting for run inflation. But Tendulkar’s career lasted nearly a quarter of a century. Kohli would have to play a further 176 ODIs (Richards’ whole career almost) to play as many as Tendulkar did, and he would have to make about 5000 more runs to reach Tendulkar’s aggregate. But even if he did all that, and matched Tendulkar’s longevity, there is still the small matter of that extraordinary decade for us to contend with.Kohli is a better ODI player than Tendulkar was in the last decade of his colossal career. But from 1994 to 2003, over his first 204 innings as opener, ending in the 2003 World Cup final, Tendulkar achieved heights matched only by de Villiers, and surpassed only by Richards. Are there periods in Kohli’s career when he achieved these heights? As the record above shows, needing to score quickly has never really been a challenge for Kohli, because in every Indian team he played in, the runs came just as quickly, if not more quickly, at the other end.Players who play in ODI teams where their team-mates score at about the same speed can choose more carefully when to take chances than players in teams where their team-mates score slower. In the last ten years of his career, Tendulkar had that luxury because several other players were good enough to take those chances (and in Virender Sehwag’s case, made a habit of it). Kohli has always had that luxury. From 1994 to 2003, Tendulkar didn’t have it. The record he produced during that decade places him, in my view, one small rung above Virat Kohli in the ODI pantheon.

The one (final) upgrade that can take South Africa's bowling from good to exceptional

They have dominated almost all other passages of play, but bowling in the death has been the one aspect of this team that has gone largely untested

Firdose Moonda26-Oct-2023Before you continue, this is a disclaimer: what you’re about to read is not criticism, but observation; the kind of thing someone tells a gifted student who can get better and become exceptional. And that’s one of the qualities the team that ultimately wins the World Cup will have.With that in mind and the knowledge that South Africa have won four out of their five matches and their batting line-up is shaping up as among the best in the tournament, let’s touch on an area of concern for them: death-bowling.South Africa have conceded a significantly higher amount of runs against lower order batters than any other team: 588 runs for wickets seven to 10 in their five group matches so far. It’s worth reiterating that these runs came with games all but won.Related

Kagiso Rabada: 'We want to win and we'll fight tooth and nail for it'

Gerald Coetzee: A scary all-round package in the making

Red-hot South Africa look to break 24-year jinx against teetering Pakistan

Making sense of South Africa's sixy start to the World Cup

Stats – South Africa's year of big scores and big wins

Sri Lanka were 233 for 7 chasing 429 when their last three wickets put on 93, England were 84 for 7 chasing 400 and reached 170 and Bangladesh were 81 for 6 in the 22nd over, chasing 383, and ended up batting until the 47th over and made 233.As a result, it is entirely plausible and even understandable that by that stage South Africa’s bowlers had lost some interest and allowed things to drift until the inevitable conclusion was reached. Except that in the Bangladesh game, that’s not what South Africa were doing at all.According to stand-in captain Aiden Markram, his bowlers opted to “go death,” to Mahmudullah who “got in and batted exceptionally well” he said at the post-match presentation afterwards. He indicated they were using that game to experiment with their tactics, “not that you are practicing, because you are never practicing in a match but we thought we would go death to him and there were some good signs. But there were one or two that we missed that went but that is death bowling ultimately. If you get it wrong, it tends to disappear.”ESPNcricinfo LtdSo, what exactly do South Africa consider “going death” and who does it? From what we can see in the first five games, Kagiso Rabada and Gerald Coetzee are their primary death bowlers and their intention is to send down a mixture of yorkers and slower balls.Coetzee tried both against Bangladesh, without much success. One came out as a full toss which Mahmudullah pulled to mid-wicket and would have probably been out if it was not a waist-high no-ball. The second one was read out of the hand and driven over long-off for six and the third was simply too full. Rabada also struggled to execute the yorker and ended up delivering juicy full tosses.In total, according to ESPNcricinfo’s ball-by-ball data, South Africa have sent down 16 full tosses, which is only half as many as Sri Lanka, who have the most in the tournament, but still puts them in the top five. New Zealand, as a measure of contrast, have bowled only three. On the other side of that fine margin, South Africa have bowled 13 yorkers, which is between two and three a game, while India, widely regarded as the best attack at the tournament, have nailed the delivery 33 times.The other option for many attacks at the death has been to take pace off the ball but the data shows that South Africa have only bowled only 20 slower balls in 43 overs. Even accounting for errors in the capturing system, simply watching them reveals that it isn’t something they go to instinctively. And the coach who stressed the importance of variation, Charl Langeveldt, is no longer part of the support staff, though they do have Eric Simons in the bowling consultant role and he would know better than most what the strategy should be.Lungi Ngidi has bowled just one over in the back end, largely due to his success upfront•Associated PressIt also does not help that South Africa’s death-bowling specialist Sisanda Magala was ruled out of the tournament with a knee niggle before the squad traveled to India. Magala has since played two games for his provincial side, the Lions, albeit none in more than three weeks, which vindicates South Africa’s concerns about his conditioning. What they did not want to risk was bringing him to India and then losing him for some matches, as has clearly been the case for the Lions. But that does not mean they can’t find someone else who can do a similar job.Lungi Ngidi, who missed the Bangladesh game, also with a knee concern, is expected to be back soon and, with an array of slower balls to offer, could be an option. So far, he has only bowled once in the last 10 overs which may be a consequence of using him to open the bowling and the success that South Africa are having early on.No team has been fewer than eight wickets down against South Africa going into the 41st over, which means they haven’t batted a full 50 overs against them. All that said, putting the spotlight on death-bowling can seem hypercritical of a team that is in control for most of the other passages of play so far but, with more challenging opposition on the way and the knockouts in their peripheral version, it’s an area of the game South Africa will want to get right.

Switch Hit: High-rolling in Hyderabad

In the wake of a spectacular opening Test in India, Alan Gardner is joined by Andrew Miller, Matt Roller and Vithushan Ehantharajah to look back on the action

ESPNcricinfo staff30-Jan-2024Bazball hits a new high in Hyderabad, as England land the first blow in their five-Test tour of India, and in staggeringly unlikely circumstances, from Ollie Pope’s world-class 196 to Tom Hartley’s zero-to-hero seven-for in the fourth innings. In this week’s pod, Alan Gardner was joined by Andrew Miller, Matt Roller and Vithushan Ehantharajah, on location in India, to recap a contest that has blown all pre-series conceptions to smithereens. Plus, Carl Crowe gives us the lowdown on Hartley’s rise from obscurity at Lancashire to a place in English spin folklore. The team also ask where India go from here, and cast a glance at West Indies’ stunning victory over Australia at the Gabba. Can such a famous result help change the narrative about the oldest form of the game?

Stats – Who has the best numbers after 100 Test caps?

The 100-Test club is set to grow by four this week. Here are some key stats from those already in it

Sampath Bandarupalli04-Mar-20241 Muthiah Muralidaran has the most dominant bowling record in the first 100 Test matches of a career – 593 wickets, 49 five-wicket hauls and 14 ten-wicket match hauls, all being the highest for any player. R Ashwin, who will play his 100th in Dharamsala, is the only one other than Muralidaran with 500-plus wickets in his career’s first 100 Tests.1 Steven Smith leads the run-getters charts as he scored 9137 runs at an average of 58.95 by the end of his 100th Test, both being the highest. His 32 hundreds, however, are the joint-most alongside Kane Williamson, who will complete 100 Test matches this week.Related

  • Why getting to a hundred Tests isn't what it used to be

  • Just sit back and get ready to marvel at R Ashwin, for the 100th time

  • Stats – R Ashwin goes past Anil Kumble for most Test wickets in India

  • Imagine there was no Kane Williamson. It's not easy, don't try

  • Captain's dream Lyon ensures that plan A gets the job done for Australia

0 Matches missed by Brendon McCullum between his debut and 100th Test match, making him the only player with this feat. McCullum, in fact, never missed a Test match for his team between debut and retirement. Five other players tied for second in the list, having missed only one match before they reached 100 Tests.Allan Border and Alastair Cook missed one Test in their debut series but played 150-plus consecutive matches from there until they retired. Kapil Dev was mysteriously left out of the 1984 Kolkata Test against England, the only time he missed a Test until his retirement.ESPNcricinfo LtdLikewise, the only Test that Ian Healy missed in his career was in the 1994 Pakistan tour with a broken thumb. Rahul Dravid went 93 consecutive Tests from his debut, a record in 2005 before he got hospitalized with gastroenteritis on the eve of the Ahmedabad Test against Sri Lanka, which was Anil Kumble’s 100th Test.7y 287d Time span between Alastair Cook’s debut Test and his 100th match. It is the shortest period any player needed to complete 100 Tests. The top five shortest spans to reach 100 Tests belong to England players who have debuted in the last 20 years.The shortest span to complete 100 Tests for a non-Englishman is eight years and 342 days by Mark Waugh for Australia. The longest any player waited to play their 100th Test was Graham Gooch, whose 100th Test came 17 years and 203 days after his debut.ESPNcricinfo Ltd77 Matches missed by Gooch before playing his 100th Test are the most. 25 of the 77 Tests missed by Gooch came after his low-key first series. He also missed 32 Tests between 1982 and 1985 by facing a ban for being part of the Rebel South Africa tour.Matthew Hayden is next on the list by missing 66 matches, as he featured in only seven of the first 69 Tests of Australia from his debut. A total of six players missed 50-plus Tests between their debut and 100th match, with Bairstow (51) set to join them.ESPNcricinfo Ltd3 Number of players to reach the milestone of 100 Tests during the 2006 Centurion Test between South Africa and New Zealand – Jacques Kallis, Shaun Pollock and Stephen Fleming. It is the only instance of three players reaching their milestone in a match.Joe Root made a double-century in his 100th Test•BCCIThere are two other instances of multiple players reaching 100 Tests in a match – Mike Atherton and Alec Stewart against West Indies in Manchester in 2000, while Michael Clarke and Alastair Cook did it in the 2013 Ashes Test in Perth. Two such instances will take place this week in Dharamsala and Christchurch.17 England players, including Bairstow, to feature in 100 Test matches. These are the highest number of players to have played 100-plus Tests for a country. Australia and India are next on the list – 15 and 14 players featured in 100-plus Tests for them. Among the first eight Test nations, Pakistan has the fewest players with 100-plus appearances – only five have reached 100 Tests for them thus far.ESPNcricinfo Ltd3 Players with a five-wicket haul in their 100th Test match – Warne, Muralidaran and Kumble. Warne against South Africa in 2002 and Muralidaran against Bangladesh in 2006 bagged a six-wicket haul in their 100th Test, while Kumble took a five-fer in his milestone match against Sri Lanka in 2005. Kapil Dev, in his 100th match, took seven wickets across both innings, the joint-third most by any player in their 100th Test.10 Players to score a hundred in their hundredth Test match. Only two of them went on to convert it into a double – Joe Root against India in 2021 and David Warner against South Africa in 2022. Ricky Ponting had a unique double in his 100th Test – he scored hundreds in both innings of that match.ESPNcricinfo Ltd298 Days Sunil Gavaskar spent between the start of his 99th and 100th Test match is the longest any player waited to play his 100th after his 99th, as India did not play a Test match in 1984 until October. Mohammad Azharuddin is the only player to end his career with 99 Tests after being banned due to match-fixing allegations.36.42 Jonny Bairstow’s batting average going into Dharamsala. 22 players averaged lower in Tests than Bairstow heading into their 100th Test, including 19 with 300-plus wickets. Ben Stokes averaged only 36.34 before the Ranchi Test, where he joined the 100-Test club but had 197 wickets.The other two players were Ian Healy (28.69) and Mark Boucher (30) – both played every game as a designated wicketkeeper. The lowest average heading into the 100th Test for a specialist batter is Mike Atherton’s 38.14, while Carl Hooper had a lower average than him (36.85) but had 110 wickets in his first 99 Tests.

Bairstow’s Test career has been a mixed bag – he played 55 Tests as a designated wicketkeeper with an average of 37.63, which is higher than the 34.95 in 44 matches as a specialist batter. Bairstow’s 216 dismissals when playing as a keeper would put him behind only Boucher (380) and Healy (344) for most before the 100th Test.2 Number of pairs who debuted together and featured in 100-plus Tests. Gordon Greenidge and Viv Richards debuted against India in 1974 and represented West Indies in over 100 Tests apiece. Sourav Ganguly and Rahul Dravid debuted against England in 1996 at Lord’s and played 100-plus Tests for India.6 The most players with 100-plus caps to feature in a Test match. Sachin Tendulkar, Rahul Dravid, Sourav Ganguly and Anil Kumble played in the 2008 Chennai Test against South Africa, whose XI consisted of 100-Test club’s Jacques Kallis and Mark Boucher. The Indian quartet was responsible for the three other instances when they toured Sri Lanka in the same year, clashing with Muthiah Muralidaran and Chaminda Vaas in a three-match series.

Boom will always shake the room

Whoever you are as a batter, the Player of the T20 World Cup has a delivery to deal with you

Andrew Fidel Fernando01-Jul-2024An angled-in length ball that zips away to clip the stumps, a series of pinpoint yorkers tailing in, a wicked offcutter, a floater into the toes, a nasty throat-high bouncer, a whole over in the channel – whoever you are, if you have held a bat and you tried to hit a cricket ball with it, our guy has something that will shake you.The ambit of this article is to discuss Player of the Tournament Jasprit Bumrah’s exploits in the ICC Men’s T20 World Cup 2024. But how to hem player in to parameters? No bowler can be all things to all humans. Bumrah comes close.The obvious starting points are the aesthetic marvels. In the final, his third ball, angled in to Reeza Hendricks, pitching on a line that suggested it was heading for middle and leg, darted deviously away to catch off stump two thirds up. This is, on first sight, perhaps the ball of the tournament – the Koh-i-Noor that glitters in India’s crown. Hendricks, bless him, had no chance. It is likely no other batter in this tournament would have done either.Related

Gambhir: Having Bumrah in the team 'really an honour'

Rohit on Bumrah: 'He's a genius with the ball'

Arshdeep: A lot of credit for my wickets goes to Bumrah

South Africa were winning, then came Jasprit Bumrah

You take that delivery, bleach the players’ clothes, put red dye into the ball, take the vast majority of the TV viewership away (sorry Test cricket, we wish you were more loved), and that off bail still does its wild somersaults. The bat still finds itself prodding balefully down the wrong line. The bowler still wheels away beaming.You could cut together a highlights reel for any bowler at this T20 World Cup, and as wonderful as many have been (Rashid Khan, Anrich Nortje, Fazalhaq Farooqi, and Arshdeep Singh all had great tournaments), none have a collection of spectacular deliveries that quite have the dazzle of the Bumrah gems.If one magic ball in a major final is not enough, how’s a reverse-swinging full delivery to slip between bat and pad and graze leg stump in the 18th over (see you later, Marco Jansen)? In the semi-final, how’s a perfectly pitched offcutter to draw Phil Salt into a big shot down the ground, before spitting it past the inside edge and into the stumps? Or ball to Babar Azam on a spicy New York deck, angled in, pitched back of a length, making a mess of the batter’s decision-making, ending with a neat catch to first slip? How to match such a set for variety? For charisma?No matter what your skills are as a batter, Bumrah can find a way past your defences•Pankaj Nangia/ICC/Getty ImagesBut say you’re a sceptic/curmudgeon/pragmatist/bore. Sure, these were great deliveries, but were they not a mere handful of balls over the course of a month-long event?Not to worry. Bumrah’s got you covered.He may make more raids into the realms of the unplayable than most bowlers, but where Bumrah lives, where he has built a body of work, is by being unhittable. In this World Cup, largely played on bowler-friendly tracks, Bumrah took this bowling virtue to an extreme. No other bowler from a side that played in the Super Eight had a better economy rate than his 4.17. Of the 124 runs he conceded off 178 balls bowled, 32 runs were “not in control” by ESPNcricinfo’s measures – 26% of the runs he conceded.Bumrah had 15 wickets of his own in this tournament, but the data suggests that his magnificent control also created wicket opportunities for team-mates. Arshdeep, Bumrah’s most-frequent collaborator at the top and tail of an opposition innings, finished with 17 dismissals, equalling Farooqi’s tournament-high tally.

If you are of the inclination to wade way into nerd territory and look up economy rates by innings phase, you would be no less staggered by his domination. In the three World Cups played this decade (Bumrah missed the 2022 edition, but let’s give other bowlers a chance), Bumrah is the most economical powerplay bowler, the most economical death bowler, and the third-most economical middle-overs bowler.There is no portion of a T20 innings in which Bumrah is not the best option. So it turned out in Saturday’s final, when captain Rohit Sharma went to Bumrah right after Axar Patel was clobbered for 24 runs in the 15th over. Bumrah generally comes on later than the 16th, but with six immaculate balls, he conceded just four against two batters running riot, and hampered the opposition’s stride.We know roughly why Bumrah is so good. There are a variety of physical phenomena at play here: for a bowler who is as sharp as he is (140kph range), his release point is further forward than most, which means batters have a fraction less time to gauge length. He puts so much backspin on his fuller deliveries, they travel further in the air before pitching. Batters frequently play for balls in the slot, when they are getting yorkers or low full tosses instead.And then there is the control and the creativity. If Bumrah can’t beat you with pace or skill, he could still outthink you. At worst, he can dry up your runs.In the three-format age, no bowler has reaped skills from one, and sown their seeds so gloriously into the others. He has top-order Test wickets with slower balls, bowled Test-match lines and lengths to spectacular effect in T20s, and developed a host of transferable bowling skills such as reverse swing, plus the mental agility to know which drawer of delights to open at which time.Whoever you are, Bumrah’s got something that will shake you.

What RCB did right after it began so horribly wrong

After losing seven of their first eight games, RCB are on the brink of achieving something remarkable. Here’s how they did it

Shashank Kishore17-May-2024Are Royal Challengers Bengaluru (RCB) on to something?Parallels are being drawn to the summer of 2016, when they made the IPL final after languishing near the bottom of the points table for the first half of the season. From two wins in their first seven matches, they had an inspired run of six victories in their next seven matches to finish in the top two. They were eventually runners-up to Sunrisers Hyderabad (SRH).RCB’s start was worse this season. Seven losses in eight games left them rock bottom, and they had to win all their remaining matches to have a chance of finishing in the top four. They have won five in a row, and had several other results go their way, to keep them in the race, and now they just need to win one more. By a certain margin, though against Chennai Super Kings (CSK), weather permitting.Related

  • Form vs funk in RCB vs RR winner-takes-all rumble

  • Swapnil's journey from almost calling it quits to going on a dream run

  • Sunny morning gives way to cloudy evening as RCB wait to take on CSK

  • IPL 2024 scenarios – RCB vs CSK for final playoff spot

  • Rain threat looms over RCB-CSK clash in Bengaluru

RCB’s resurgence has been led by their batters, and the upswing has coincided with them finally hitting upon an effective bowling combination. Since scoring 262 for 7 in a chase of 288 against SRH, RCB’s run rate of 11.37 in their next seven games is the best in the league and a massive improvement over the 8.94 in their first six games.

Kohli on the frontlines

Like in 2016, Virat Kohli has been central to RCB’s late surge towards the playoffs. Back then, he scored four centuries and amassed 973 runs in the season, both records that still stand. While he is still a distance from those astronomical numbers, he is scoring faster than he has in any IPL season while remaining typically consistent: Kohli has contributed three half-centuries in the five-match winning streak.His acceleration starts in the powerplay, a phase where he’s scored at a strike rate of 193 in his last seven games, up from 131 in the first six. His overall powerplay strike rate of 163 in IPL 2024 is his best for a season.That is crucial. Even though Kohli was near the top of the run chart, there were questions raised about his ability to score quickly after the fielding restrictions were lifted, especially against spin. He has improved that aspect of his game too, raising his strike rate against spin from 123.57 in his first nine games this season to 167.69 in his next four. Unlocking shots he seldom used earlier – like the slog sweep – has been at the heart of this reinvigoration.”It’s an evolving process,” Kohli said after his 92 off 47 balls against Punjab Kings in Dharamsala. “I brought out the slog-sweep against the spinners. I didn’t practice it, I know I have hit it in the past. I’m always looking to expose that side of the field against spin. I know I need to take risks, it needs a bit of conviction. I have been managing to stay ahead of that thought. I am trying to keep up with the strike rate for me and the team.”Virat Kohli is scoring faster than he ever has in an IPL season•BCCI

Patidar and Jacks find their gears

After RCB’s loss to SRH on April 15, Glenn Maxwell attended the press conference at the M Chinnaswamy Stadium, even though he hadn’t played the game. He went on to reveal he had asked to be dropped after scoring only 32 runs in his first six innings.In came Will Jacks, playing his first IPL season, and he made an impact in his third game by scoring 55 off 32 balls in a chase of 223 against Kolkata Knight Riders (KKR) at Eden Gardens. They eventually fell one run short but Jacks’ 102-run partnership off 48 balls with Rajat Patidar showed RCB how to construct their middle order for the rest of the season.Patidar has been especially aggressive against spin in the middle overs in RCB’s last seven games, scoring at a strike rate of 254.71 and an average of 135 (135 runs, 53 balls, one dismissal). Among 19 batters with 50-plus runs against spin in this phase and period, his strike rate is the best, and all five of his fifties this season have come in less than 30 balls.While Jacks wasn’t as prolific as Patidar, he had his moments, like when he smashed Rashid Khan for 6, 6, 4, 6, 6 to race to 100 off 41 balls in RCB’s victory against Gujarat Titans. He isn’t available for Saturday’s game against CSK, though, having returned to England for national duty.”You don’t need a rocket scientist to figure who the replacement will be,” RCB’s assistant coach Malolan Rangarajan said on the eve of the match.With Faf du Plessis providing powerful cameos up top, and Cameron Green and Dinesh Karthik finishing strong, RCB will turn once again to Maxwell for that muscle in the middle overs.Rajat Patidar has scored five fifties, all in less than 30 balls•AFP/Getty Images

Siraj turns his season around

Ever since Mohammed Siraj became RCB’s spearhead, his form has shaped his team’s bowling performance.RCB picked up the fewest wickets (34) among all teams in the first eight games this season. Their bowling average (47.50) was the worst and their economy rate of 10.8 was the highest too. Siraj took only five wickets in seven games in this phase, and regularly conceded more than 10 an over.There’s been a remarkable transformation in their last five games. RCB have taken the most wickets (41), their bowling average of 20.5 is also the best, while their strike rate of 14 is only behind KKR’s.Siraj has had a massive role to play in this revival, bowling effectively in the powerplay and at the death, where he has a superb economy of 7.3 across the seven overs he has bowled. Two of these performances – against Titans and Kings – have had a positive impact on RCB’s net run-rate. Siraj has taken seven wickets in his last five games, and conceded more than 9 an over in only one match.Mohammed Siraj has found his rhythm when his team really needed it•BCCI

RCB run into their ideal bowling combination

With Maxwell benched, Mayank Dagar not making the XI after the first few games, and Karn Sharma missing six of the first seven, RCB were woefully short of spin options.They eventually turned to a 33-year-old left-arm spinner, Swapnil Singh, in their ninth game of the season. Before that, Swapnil had played only two IPL matches, for Lucknow Super Giants last season, and taken no wickets.Coming in as an Impact Player, Swapnil was entrusted with an over in the powerplay against the fearsome SRH batting line-up, and he dismissed Aiden Markram and Heinrich Klaasen in the space of five balls to break their chase. RCB have given him the first over in his next four games, and he’s offered them control as well as frequent breakthroughs.Along with Swapnil, Yash Dayal and Green have also had improved returns and contributed to the team’s resurgence just before it became too late. Dayal’s spell of 3 for 20 and Green’s 1 for 19 were crucial to RCB’s NRR-boosting victory against Delhi Capitals in their most recent game.Halfway through the season, almost no one gave RCB a chance of making the playoffs. But they are still here, having strung together a run of wins in what was effectively five knockout games. Hopefully, the weather in Bengaluru will allow them their shot at completing the greatest comeback in the history of the IPL.

No winds of change (yet), but USA aren't here just to make up the numbers

In a fixture that might have been termed a mismatch by many, USA showed there wasn’t really a gulf between them and South Africa

Melinda Farrell20-Jun-2024A decent number of fans are filtering into the Sir Vivian Richards Stadium for USA vs South Africa, despite the early hour – early in Antigua terms at least.Two large groups of white-clad school children take their seats in the shade of the Sir Curtly Ambrose and Sir Andy Roberts stands. Flags and shirts from multiple nations provide colour pops in the sultry heat; South Africa and USA, of course, but in one corner is the green and red of Bangladesh, over there is black with the fern of New Zealand, even the Welsh dragon can be seen draped over a railing.And then there is the green of Pakistan. Just a few shirts, dotted around the grass banks, but they are there. On the field, as the players warm up, Wasim Akram and Ramiz Raja perform their pre-match broadcast duties, the commentary rota drawn up weeks earlier.Related

  • USA's Steven Taylor: 'I'm representing my parents, my Jamaican heritage'

  • De Kock, Rabada provide cutting edge as SA beat USA

The press box, which would be bustling with travelling journalists if the group stage had followed the script, is virtually empty, save for ICC staff and volunteers.This was supposed to be South Africa vs Pakistan, but USA’s fairytale progression to the Super Eight spoiled that storyline. This stage is meant to be reserved for the big guns, the real contenders. Never mind. Order will undoubtedly be restored and USA will get a reality check without the levelling aid of those American pitches. They are only here to make up the numbers.The departure of Reeza Hendricks in the third over, a top edge off Saurabh Netravalkar that hangs for an age before falling into Corey Anderson’s waiting hands, is merely a blip. Aiden Markram joins Quinton de Kock in the middle; two guns waiting for a trigger pull.It arrives in the following over. Jasdeep Singh comes into the attack from the Sir Andy Roberts end, bowling right-arm over the wicket to the right-hand batter Markram. The ball pitches outside off stump, at the perfect length for driving. Markram obliges, punching through the covers for four. Jasdeep adjusts his line for the next delivery, angling into the pads and Markram flicks it into the leg side for a single.2:07

Rapid Fire Review: De Kock being back among runs will boost South Africa’s confidence

Now the left-hand batter de Kock is on strike and Jasdeep switches to come around the wicket. He angles the ball in but it’s short enough to pull and de Kock helps it on its way to deep midwicket for a boundary.De Kock has help of another kind; the stiff cross winds that have the tall, slender ICC flags flapping and leaning, as if trying to escape from their anchors. The palm trees around the stadium are permanently slanted in the same direction after years of buffeting. Everything that can move is pointing in the same direction: de Kock’s leg-side boundary.Jasdeep bowls another, but it’s too similar to the last. This time de Kock gets all of it and the ball soars in to the breeze, over the rope, over the fence. It’s a front-foot no-ball. The free hit delivery strays onto the pads and it’s another gift for de-structive de Kock, who lofts it high and fine and lets the wind do the rest.Now Jasdeep switches to over the wicket and bowls a middle-stump line at a similar length. The adjustment almost works as de Kock top-edges the attempted pull and the ball appears to go straight up. At most grounds it would land in catchable territory, but this is not most grounds. Here it hovers high and drifts further and further towards the fielder at deep backward square leg and ultimately over his head and the rope.The final ball is fuller, pitches outside off stump and de Kock drives straight to cover. No run. Twenty-eight off the over and South Africa are on their way; trigger pulled, shots fired.Looking down from above it all looks obvious, the danger areas for bowlers depending on whether the batter is left or right handed, hitting into or with the wind. Certainly the conditions are not foreign to USA head coach Stuart Law, who spent two years in the same position with West Indies. But having plans to deal with the match-ups, the ends and the wind is not the same as executing them under the pressure that builds when the slightest error is severely punished. It is no coincidence the only two deliveries of Jasdeep’s over that forced the batters to play into the wind were a dot ball and a single.But USA’s bowlers are quick learners and not easily cowed. They concede just two fours and three sixes in their final five overs, backed up by sharp fielding, and their body language remains positive.Their self-belief is epitomised by the fearless batting of Andries Gous, the former South African, who punishes anything loose by his former countrymen and also takes advantage of the fortuitous gusts. His late-innings partnership with Harmeet Singh poses a left-right combination that, this time, disrupts Tabraiz Shamsi, who is left watching the ball sail onto the same grass banks that were a green magnet for de Kock.”USA! USA!” The school kids, the whole stadium, take up the chant. It’s surreal and slightly incongruous to hear, intermingled with the soca music – ubiquitous throughout the Caribbean – blaring from the speakers.That the 195 target proves too high is largely due to the control of Keshav Maharaj in the middle phase and the discipline of Kasigo Rabada, whose miserly calm in the 17th and 19th overs snuffs out any hope of another USA upset.South Africa have been quicker to adapt and their experience has ensured they continue their campaign undefeated.But the expected reality check, the folding of an Associate team when they are behind in what some would term a mismatch, has not quite transpired. And if USA continue to learn and adapt to the Caribbean conditions, they may yet shake up the Super Eight.They are not just here to make up the numbers.

All the records that Shubman Gill and Sai Sudharsan broke

They became only the third pair to score centuries in the same IPL game

Sampath Bandarupalli10-May-20242:11

McClenaghan praises Sai Sudharsan’s maturity

3 Pairs with hundreds in the same innings in the IPL, including Shubman Gill and Sai Sudharsan on Friday. Virat Kohli and AB de Villiers became the first pair to achieve this feat against Gujarat Lions in 2016. David Warner and Jonny Bairstow replicated it in 2019 against Royal Challengers Bengaluru.210 Partnership runs between Gill and Sudharsan for the first wicket against Chennai Super Kings. It is only the second 200-plus run-stand for the opening wicket in the IPL. Quinton de Kock and KL Rahul also put on 210 while batting full 20 overs against Kolkata Knight Riders in 2022.2 Partnerships in the IPL, higher than the 210 by Gill and Sudharsan against the CSK. The top two are by Kohli and de Villiers – 229 against Gujarat Lions in 2016 and 215 unbeaten against Mumbai Indians in 2015.231 for 3 Gujarat Titans’ total in Ahmedabad is their second-highest in the IPL, behind the 233 against MI in last year’s qualifier. It is also the joint-highest total conceded by CSK in the IPL, equalling the 231 by Kings XI Punjab (now Punjab Kings) in 2014.Two centuries in one IPL innings•ESPNcricinfo Ltd0 150-plus stands conceded by CSK, for any wicket, before Friday. The previous highest against them was a 144-run opening stand by Shane Watson and Ajinkya Rahane for Rajasthan Royals in 2015.It is also the first 150-plus stand for the Titans in the IPL, bettering the 147 between Gill and Sudharsan for the second wicket against Sunrisers in 2023.25 Innings for Sudharsan to complete 1000 runs in the IPL. He is the fastest Indian to the milestone, bettering the record jointly held by Sachin Tendulkar and Ruturaj Gaikwad. Overall, Sudharsan is the joint-third fastest to this landmark, alongside Matthew Hayden, and behind Shaun Marsh (21 innings) and Lendl Simmons (23 innings).100 Runs scored by the GT’s openers between the 9th and 14th overs. These are the second-most runs scored by any team between the 9th and 14th overs in an IPL innings. RCB scored 106 runs in this period against Kings XI Punjab during a 15-over game.4 T20 hundreds for Gill in Ahmedabad, including three in the IPL. Only three other batters have scored four or more T20 tons at a venue – Chris Gayle (5 at Mirpur), Michael Klinger (4 at Bristol) and Virat Kohli (4 at Bengaluru).24y 245d Gill’s age on Friday. He is the youngest captain to score a hundred in the IPL. Sanju Samson was the previous youngest, who scored 119 against Punjab Kings in 2021 at the age of 26 years and 152 days on captaincy debut.19 Innings Gill took to complete 1000 T20 runs at Ahmedabad. He is by far the fastest to complete 1000 runs at a venue in terms of innings played in men’s T20s, bettering the record – 22 innings – held by five players.

Game
Register
Service
Bonus