Royals hold off Dhoni and Jadeja in grandstand finish

Sandeep Sharma’s last-ball yorker made Royals the first team to defend a sub-190 total this season

S Sudarshanan12-Apr-20238:20

Moody: We’ve all questioned CSK, and Dhoni is usually right

It was set up perfectly. The whistles at Chepauk were getting louder with each moment as MS Dhoni took strike with 21 needed off six balls. Two wides later, Sandeep Sharma nailed a yorker, before erring in length and seeing Dhoni wallop back-to-back leg-side sixes.Dhoni was leading Chennai Super Kings for the 200th time in the IPL and he had the chance to script another fairytale, and the perfect finish loomed even after Sandeep went around the wicket and pulled things back, bringing the equation down to five needed off the last ball. This was still Dhoni territory, but Sandeep nailed another perfect yorker from around the stumps and Rajasthan Royals eked out a three-run win to go top of the table after four games.

Samson fined for slow over rate

Rajasthan Royals captain Sanju Samson has been fined INR 12 lakh (USD 14,000 approx.) for his team’s slow over rate against Chennai Super Kings. It was his team’s first over-rate offence this season, a post-match IPL statement said.
No in-game fielding-restriction penalty was imposed on Royals during the match.

Super Kings needed an improbable 54 off 18 balls with Ravindra Jadeja and Dhoni still new to the crease. Dhoni began the assault with a four and a six in Adam Zampa’s last over before Jadeja took over in a 19-run penultimate over bowled by Jason Holder, hitting him for a four and two sixes.Sandeep, however, just about kept his calm and Royals became the first side to defend a sub-190 total this season.MS Dhoni rolled back the years but Super Kings fell just short in the end•BCCI

Ashwin, Chahal, Zampa storm CSK’s spin fortress

Chasing 176, Super Kings lost the prolific Ruturaj Gaikwad in the third over. But Devon Conway and Ajinkya Rahane added 68 in 43 balls to keep the chase on track. Rahane, who had scored a blazing half-century against Mumbai Indians in his last outing, was quick off the blocks again, pulling Jason Holder through midwicket and slinking down the track to deposit R Ashwin over the long-off boundary while rushing to a 19-ball 31.In Ashwin, Yuzvendra Chahal and Impact Player Adam Zampa, however, Royals had a spin attack made for Chepauk conditions, and they extracted plenty of purchase even with dew starting to kick in. Ashwin’s dismissal of Rahane turned the tide for Royals. From 78 for 1 in the 10th over, Super Kings slumped to 122 for 6 at the end of the 17th.Zampa conceded 14 in the 18th over, when Dhoni went after him, but even including that, Royals’ spinners conceded just 95 in 12 overs while taking five wickets, while their Super Kings counterparts went for 84 in 10 while taking three.

Buttler and Padikkal set the tone

Yashasvi Jaiswal has been in red-hot form for Royals this season, and he threatened to go on another boundary spree in the powerplay when he hit two fours off the left-arm quick Akash Singh in the first over, after Super Kings elected to bowl. But Tushar Deshpande, Super Kings’ go-to bowler in Deepak Chahar’s absence, prised Jaiswal out in the next over. Royals kept the left-right combination going by promoting Devdutt Padikkal, who sat out the match against Delhi Capitals, to No. 3.Padikkal and Jos Buttler went after Maheesh Theekshana – who was playing his first game of the season – hitting him for four fours and a six in his first two overs, both inside the powerplay. That got them into groove for a 77-run second-wicket partnership off just 41 balls, which took Royals to a formidable 88 for 1 in the ninth over.R Ashwin made an impact with bat and ball•Associated Press

Bowlers keep CSK in the game

Jadeja helped Super Kings claw back with the wickets of Padikkal and Sanju Samson in the space of three balls, and Royals responded with the now familiar tactic of promoting Ashwin up the order. The scoring rate dipped for a while, with Royals failing to find the boundary in five successive overs, before Ashwin broke the drought with a slashed four off Theekshana in the 14th. He then swatted Akash for successive sixes in the 15th, before falling later in the over for a 22-ball 30.Buttler, who had been 34 off 17 at the time he lost Padikkal, didn’t hit another boundary, and eventually fell for a 52 off 36 balls. In the process he also crossed 3000 runs in the IPL, becoming the third-quickest to the mark in terms of innings taken.The ostensible intent behind the Ashwin promotion was to delay Shimron Hetmyer’s entry, and he came in at roughly his preferred time, with five overs remaining. He did his bit at the finish, smacking an unbeaten 30 off 18, but there was little support from the other end during his time in the middle, as Royals only managed 40 in their last five overs.Having at one stage seemed on course for 200, they finished on 175 for 8, with Deshpande dismissing Holder and Zampa in the last over .

Impact Player Strategy

Royals brought in Zampa as their Impact Player: he walked out to bat at No. 10 to face the last ball of their innings, replacing Buttler. The finger injury Buttler picked up earlier in the competition could have played a part in his removal. Super Kings, meanwhile, yanked off Sisanda Magala, whose two overs went for 14, after he injured a finger in his right hand while taking the catch to dismiss Ashwin. Super Kings subbed in Ambati Rayudu, who batted at No. 6 and lasted just two balls.

IPL 2022 likely to start from March 27

Mumbai slotted in as first option to host 10-team tournament, with UAE and South Africa as back-ups

Nagraj Gollapudi22-Jan-2022The 2022 season of IPL is set to start in the last week of March, and is scheduled to run till May end. ESPNcricinfo has learned that in a meeting with the ten franchises on Saturday (January 22), the IPL authorities informed owners that they had pencilled in March 27 as a likely start date.The franchises were also told that the tournament would be held in India, with Mumbai slotted in as the main venue. And in case the Covid-19 numbers in India are low at the time, Ahmedabad could be considered as a second venue to host the playoffs. In case the pandemic situation in India is not feasible to host the tournament, then South Africa and the UAE will be the back-up options in no particular order. At Saturday’s meeting, the IPL told the franchises that a final decision is expected to be taken by February 20.”I am delighted to confirm that the 15th season of the IPL will start in the last week of March and will run until May end,” BCCI secretary Jay Shah said in a statement released on Saturday evening. “A majority of the team owners expressed their wish that the tournament be held in India. The BCCI was always keen on staging the 2022 edition that will see two new teams – Ahmedabad and Lucknow – in India. I can tell you that we will leave no stone unturned in ensuring that IPL stays in India. The BCCI has not compromised on the health and safety of its stakeholders in the past and will concurrently work on Plan B since the COVID-19 situation with new variants remains fluid. The mega IPL Auction will take place on February 12-13th and we will lock in venues before that.”The reason the IPL has zeroed in on just one venue in Mumbai, which has multiple grounds, was to avoid travel and the debacle of 2021 edition, when the tournament had to be called off at the halfway stage due to the spike in the number of cases among teams. One key reason responsible for teams reporting growing Covid-19 positive cases was travelling between different cities. The tournament was postponed, before the second leg was held in the UAE in September-October.Related

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India is currently experiencing the third wave of the pandemic, with the Omicron variant dominant across the country. Though the impact is less severe, the high degree of transmissibility has led to stringent curbs on movement and public activities in big cities.Incidentally, even in 2021, the IPL had thought about holding the entire tournament in Mumbai, before deciding to host it across two cities at a time. This time they have decided to wait until mid-February, by when necessary government permissions would have been received and the feasibiity of hosting the tournament, which will feature 74 matches, in Mumbai can be checked.Along with the Wankhede Stadium, Mumbai also has two other grounds that have hosted international matches: the Brabourne Stadium and the DY Patil stadium. There is also the Mumbai Cricket Association-run ground in Bandra-Kurla Complex, which has hosted domestic tournaments and where IPL teams have trained in the past.Teams split over UAE and South Africa
It is learned that not all teams are unanimous about either of the two back-up options. Some of the franchises pointed out that the UAE, which has three venues, was becoming more predictable in terms of results as witnessed during the men’s T20 World Cup that was held in 2021, as well as the second leg of IPL 2021 that immediately preceded it. Another concern with the UAE was that the pitches could become weary by April-May, after a long season with multiple tournaments. However, others felt that barring Sharjah, which dished out slower pitches with low bounce last IPL, Dubai and Abu Dhabi hosted close contests.Some franchises also backed UAE only because there was no internal travel involved and the venue itself overall had been one of the safest spots globally during the pandemic. It was also pointed out by the IPL authorities that South Africa had one clear advantage in terms of multiple venues, but the counter to that – as pointed out by some franchises – was that any travel during the pandemic came laden with risk, as was already experienced in the first half of IPL 2021 in India, when the country had struggled to cope with the Delta variant.It is learned that some franchises said that one crucial aspect that the IPL had to take into account was the absence of any window in 2022 in case the tournament were to disrupted once again, due to travel-related reasons.

PCB withdraws Balochistan first XI coach Faisal Iqbal from National T20 Cup after PIA delays NOC

The former Pakistan batsman also breached quarantine protocols for domestic cricket

ESPNcricinfo staff24-Sep-2020The PCB has withdrawn Faisal Iqbal, the Balochistan first XI head coach, from the upcoming National T20 Cup after his NOC was delayed from his parent organisation, Pakistan International Airlines (PIA). ESPNcricinfo understands the reason for the delay is becasue he is presently facing an inquiry about discrepancies between his date of birth and his name in the matriculation certificate from the one he had submitted for his employment with PIA in 2003.Iqbal was staying with his team in Muridke in a biosecure environment, a protocol for all teams playing domestic cricket. On the last day of quarantine, he, along with his assistant coach Wasim Haider, violated the protocol only to have their stay extended by five days. They were to be tested twice over and required to return negative both times before being allowed to join the team in Multan. After withdrawing Iqbal from the rest of the squad, the PCB named Haider as interim head coach for the tournament scheduled to start from September 30 in Multan.Unlike last year, all players, support staff and match officials who were offered contracts were asked to fulfill the stipulated term to obtain the NOC from their respective organisations. Unlike Iqbal, PIA has issued an NOC to their regular employees Ghulam Ali (head coach of Sindh Second XI) and Aizaz Cheema (Southern Punjab First XI), while other coaches in the system have understandably submitted their NOCs.ALSO READ: Salman Butt refuses to play National T20 Cup after Central Punjab demotes him“It would be unfair on Faisal Iqbal as well as on his side – and on the tournament – if he competed in a major domestic tournament until he had resolved and settled the matter with his parent organisation,” the PCB said in a statement. “Faisal Iqbal would be reintegrated with his domestic side as soon as PIA gave him a clean chit along with a No Objective Certificate (NOC). Until such time, Wasim Haider will act as the Balochistan cricket team’s interim head coach.”This year, the PCB had made substantial changes to the domestic set-up, bringing in new coaches with Iqbal being handed over the charge of Balochistan’s first XI team. However, there were as many as 16 coaches who lost heir jobs, including Azam Khan, Arshad Khan, Ijaz Ahmed Jnr and Kabir Khan. Abdul Razzaq is supposed to replace Kabir at Khyber Pakhtunkhwa while Basit Ali, the former SNGPL coach, will take over the reins from Azam at Sindh. Shahid Anwar is in charge of Central Punjab while both Abdur Rehman (Southern Punjab) and Mohammad Wasim (Northern Punjab) were retained. All six domestic coaches will also act as national selection committee members to assist Pakistan national team coach-cum-chief selector Misbah-ul-Haq.Iqbal, 38, had a prolific career at the junior level since making the Under-15 side. But his time with the seniors has, for the most part, been marred by allegations of nepotism. His career coincided with Mohammad Yousuf and Inzamam-ul-Haq being at their prime, and thus Iqbal was never able to cement his place in the team.His domestic figures are impressive with 12,685 runs at 39.64 in 225 matches to go along with 5,979 at 42.10 in List A games. Iqbal turned his attention to coaching since he retired from all cricket in 2018, having served as the Karachi Kings’ batting coach for the last two seasons of the PSL.

'It's all rosy' for Australia as Warner, Smith rejoin

No evidence of any bad blood as duo arrives in Brisbane for Australia’s pre-World Cup training camp

ESPNcricinfo staff02-May-2019There is no apprehension about having the in-form David Warner back in the Australia squad ahead of the World Cup, according to Mitchell Starc.There was no evidence of bad blood between Warner and his team-mates as he arrived in Brisbane for Australia’s pre-World Cup training camp. Steven Smith arrived separately from the IPL.Warner and Smith did spend some time with Australia’s ODI squad on the tour of the UAE prior to the IPL but Starc was not on that tour.Cricket Australia’s interim high performance manager Belinda Clark and CA leadership consultant Tim Ford have already held a meeting with Starc, Warner, Smith and Josh Hazlewood to outline some things prior to the pre-tournament camp. Hazlewood is not part of the 15-man squad but is on standby and will be in the Australia A squad that will be in England during the World Cup. Starc said the ball-tampering saga and any issues surrounding the reintegration of Warner and Smith were hardly discussed.”The meeting I was involved in with Steve, Dave and Josh Hazlewood, along with Tim Ford and Belinda Clark, 95% was not about Dave and Steve and the group,” Starc said.”It was more about where the team was going. There wasn’t anything spoken about those two in particular, it was more the team and what we are focussed on moving forward. I’m sure it was similar to the group meeting they had over in the UAE. We have another meeting this afternoon and I am sure it will be brought up there. But it’s all rosy.”Starc said he was excited by the prospect of having Warner back at the top of the order after his barnstorming IPL where he left as the tournament’s leading run scorer. Warner made a staggering 692 runs in 12 innings for Sunrisers Hyderabad including a century and eight half-centuries, striking at 143.86.”I’ve seen some of the highlights and some of the scores and he’s been on fire over there along with Steve, so that’s great for him, great for the group,” Starc said. “He’s a world-class player, we’re excited to have him back in the group and hopefully he can continue that form into the World Cup.”Australia captain Aaron Finch said he would certainly utilise Smith and Warner during the World Cup due to their vast leadership experience despite the fact both men are still banned from official leadership positions within Australian cricket. Smith is unable to hold a leadership post for another 12 months while Warner was banned from leadership positions for the remainder of his career in the wake of the ball-tampering scandal.

Sri Lanka's revival 'all about smart options'

Where in the past Sri Lanka sides have sworn that positivity and fearlessness mark their route out of a bad stretch of results, it is smarts that has produced improvements, according to bowling coach Rumesh Ratnayake

Andrew Fidel Fernando in Colombo09-Mar-2018It is not aggression that Sri Lanka has recently prioritised, but cricketing wit. Following an extremely disappointing year in limited-overs cricket, Sri Lanka has begun 2018 brightly, winning the tri-nations series and their three T20 internationals in Bangladesh. Instrumental to those victories has been a resurgent top order. The likes of Kusal Mendis, Upul Tharanga and Kusal Perera have all struck important innings, while Thisara Perera has been unusually consistent from lower down in the batting order. Where in the past Sri Lanka sides have sworn that positivity and fearlessness mark their route out of a bad stretch of results, it is smarts that has produced improvements, said bowling coach Rumesh Ratnayake.”As I always say talent was aplenty in our team, it’s just that the mindset of the boys – and I think coach Hathuru [Chandika Hathurusingha] has come in taken maximum part in that – I would say he has changed their mindset by letting them do things on their own. It’s all about smart options.”

Taskin wants lower-order batsmen to do more

As Bangladesh experiment with a five-bowler strategy, it is up to lower-order batsmen to hone their batting skills, fast bowler Taskin Ahmed said. Mehidy Hasan batted at No. 7 for Bangladesh on Thursday, with Taskin himself coming in at No. 8, with 3.2 overs remaining in the innings. Partly because the lower order was in so early, Bangladesh mustered only 32 runs from their last five overs.
“We bat in the nets but it all depends on the extra training for lower-order batsmen,” Taskin said. “To be honest, it has to come from within, for each individual. Most bowlers nowadays bat well around the world. Even I want to bat better, and become a bowling allrounder.
“The bowlers are still batting a lot. We have to slog towards the end. We will try to keep improving.”

The victory against India on Tuesday was perhaps the strongest indication yet that a corner has been turned. Though it is a depleted India side that has arrived for the Nidahas Trophy, it is at India’s hands that Sri Lanka suffered most in 2017 – their rampant tour of the island having been particularly traumatic for the hosts.”For us it’s not about being ruthless – it’s about playing a smarter game and playing to the best of our abilities,” Ratnayake said. “In the last match against India, it wasn’t just about winning one part of the game, it was many parts. Your chances are enhanced by making those parts bigger and bigger.”Many players have reported a palpable change in the Sri Lankan dressing room since the arrival of Hathurusingha – particularly with regards to the freedom players have had on his watch. Where in 2017 there was substantial uncertainty about one’s place in the team, and a muddled, disjointed strategy devised by coaches whose own position in the set-up was often under threat; Hathurusingha has been credited with providing stability.”I think Hathu lets people take smart options,” Ratnayake said. “And even if the player fails he will say: ‘Well, that was good enough, let’s try again next time’. For an example, you tell someone to go and play some shots but if he gets out you can’t ask him: ‘Why did you play that shot?’ So he’s a man of his word. We have given the players that confidence. If it has shown in the boys, that’s good. But consistency is what we’re looking for in the future.”While Sri Lanka’s batsmen ran down India’s 174 of 5 with five wickets and nine deliveries to spare, Ratnayake believed the bowlers fell some way short of their best performances. Three bowlers conceded more than 30 runs.”We still need to look at our bowling. I personally thought we gave 15 runs too many against India. We have scrutinised that a little bit and we’ve also looked at instances when an Indian bowler went off for a big over, how well they came back as bowlers. So comparing those things, comparing ourselves as well, and we will what we can do better in the next game. There is lots to learn even though we won.”

Revived Pakistan face unsettled Australia

Pakistan will be looking to maintain the winning form they showed at the MCG

Daniel Brettig18-Jan-2017

Match facts

January 19, 2017
Start time 1120 local (0320 GMT)

Big picture

Pakistan find themselves in the unfamiliar position of trying to capitalise on a win down under – their first in any format against Australia in Australia for more than a decade. In Melbourne they won in a fashion that emphasised the strength of their bowling attack, by allowing the batsmen a target within their reach. Perth and the WACA Ground offer the opportunity for a similar result, as the Perth Scorchers have demonstrated in mastering the defensive elements of the Twenty20 format in building an enviable record in the west. The left-armers Mohammad Amir and Junaid Khan should enjoy the pace and bounce on offer, provided they find the right length for the conditions. Equally intriguing will be whether the stand-in captain Mohammad Hafeez can utilise his spin bowlers on a surface not likely to be as sluggish as the MCG was.Australia’s mixed priorities – win this series but also keep an eye on the looming tour of India – mean a changing team for Steven Smith to lead. Peter Handscomb is following up his richly successful early Test matches with an ODI debut in place of Mitchell Marsh, while Mitchell Starc did not even fly west in order to rest up. This means another opportunity for Billy Stanlake, who could manage only three overs on debut in Brisbane.

Form guide

Australia: LWWWW (last five completed matches, most recent first)
Pakistan: WLWWW

In the spotlight

Following his barnstorming century before lunch on the first morning of the SCG Test David Warner  has made a quiet start to the limited-overs portion of the summer, seeming strangely subdued by his naturally aggressive standards. Perth affords the chance for fast-scoring conditions, and the hosts will want a better display from Warner to help underpin a more substantial top-order display after the false starts of Brisbane and Melbourne.Returning to the team at the MCG, Junaid Khan demonstrated his quality to help put Pakistan in a position to win. His intelligence and tightness as a bowler should serve him well in Perth, where consistency and subtle movement can be rewarded. An Australian top-order lacking in certainty after a pair of poor displays will also be a strong reason for Junaid to approach the bowling crease with plenty of intent.Mohammad Amir should enjoy the pace and bounce that may be on offer in Perth•Getty Images

Team news

Mitchell Starc has been rested from the ODI, with Billy Stanlake returning in his place. Peter Handscomb is in for his ODI debut in place of Mitchell Marsh, while Chris Lynn has been ruled out of the remainder of the series with a neck complaint.Australia 1 David Warner, 2 Usman Khawaja, 3 Steven Smith (capt), 4 Peter Handscomb, 5 Travis Head, 6 Glenn Maxwell, 7 Matthew Wade (wk), 8 James Faulkner, 9 Pat Cummins, 10 Josh Hazlewood, 11 Billy Stanlake.Pakistan will consider recalling Wahab Riaz for the WACA Ground, but should otherwise try to preserve the combination that won so well in Melbourne.Pakistan (possible) 1 Mohammad Hafeez (capt), 2 Sharjeel Khan, 3 Babar Azam, 4 Asad Shafiq, 5 Shoaib Malik, 6 Umar Akmal, 7 Mohammad Rizwan (wk), 8 Imad Wasim, 9 Mohammad Amir, 10 Junaid Khan, 11 Hasan Ali/Wahab Riaz.

Pitch and conditions

The WACA Ground surface is not as swift as it used to be, but should afford decent pace and carry to bowlers prepared to bend their backs. The forecast is for a fine and warm, somewhat overcast day.

Stats and trivia

  • Pakistan have won four of six ODIs between the two teams in Perth, though Australia’s two victories came in the most recent meetings in 2010
  • Peter Handscomb will become Australia’s third ODI debutant of 2017 after Chris Lynn and Billy Stanlake. There were seven – Scott Boland, Joel Paris, Adam Zampa, Travis Head, Daniel Worrall, Joe Mennie and Chris Tremain – in 2016

Marsh seeks out Rogers to stop nicking

Shaun Marsh, who will make his fifth comeback into the Australian team in five years at the Day/Night Test in Adelaide, has worked with Chris Rogers to sort out his technical issues

Daniel Brettig18-Nov-20151:41

Marsh happy to bat anywhere in line-up

When Shaun Marsh returns to the Australian team in Adelaide next week, it will be the fifth time in as many years he has resumed his Test career after being dropped or absent injured from the XI. As an increasingly patient selection panel and increasingly impatient public sit down to watch, each will have the same question. ?Empirical evidence that he does is slim. In three Sheffield Shield matches this summer, Marsh has tallied scores of 15, 1, 2, 92, 64 and 33, a total of 207 runs at 34.50. That leaves 17 Australian batsmen ahead of him on the seasons’ first-class aggregates, plus two New Zealanders.In his most recent Test appearance, Marsh failed twice on a seaming pitch at Trent Bridge. His two firm feet and rigid bat edges symbolised the utter failure of the touring batsmen to cope with English conditions. Never mind that he was nervously called up on match morning, or that conditions have been described as uniquely difficult after rain moistened the surface in the 10 minutes before play began – Marsh was the unacceptable face of Australian batting.”To be honest I’ve tried to get it out of my mind,” he said. “It wasn’t a very good Test match – personally and for the team. Getting no runs and losing the Ashes. It couldn’t get any worse than it did. I guess you learn from lessons like that, hopefully I’ve learned some valuable lessons I can take into this next Test match and try and do the best I can for the boys.”The lesson was that Marsh had to change, and fast. There was the anguish of losing the Ashes to England in the most humiliating manner possible. Then he was dropped from the next Test at the Oval. In need of guidance, Marsh sought out Chris Rogers.Now here was a contrast. Marsh is viewed by most who watch him bat as a talent, and for years, Rogers fought the perception he was an ugly player. Marsh has had a surfeit of opportunities without yet taking them, whereas Rogers got one Test in 2008 then waited six years for his next one. Marsh had just endured one of the worst matches of his life, Rogers was in the middle of his most successful series.In Northampton, ahead of a county match made near enough to irrelevant by events in Nottingham, Marsh asked Rogers for advice on how to deal with the moving ball in England. More generally, he wanted to know why he always seemed to edge into the slips and Rogers so seldom did. It was a conversation Rogers had been waiting to have.Taking the younger man to the nets at Wantage Road, Rogers grabbed a bunch of tennis balls and worked on changing the angle of Marsh’s defensive blade. For years, Marsh’s firm and straight bat had won the admiration of selectors, but its angle from side-on had been a source of great hope for bowlers.By offering an almost vertical bat to the bowler, Marsh would offer edges great and small, invariably carrying to catchers. Rogers countered that by angling his bat further down, and playing the ball later, under his eyes, Marsh would greatly reduce his chance of offering catchable nicks. He would also likely prosper from edges running along the ground to third man – a tendency often cited as lucky but turned into something like an art form by Rogers and Justin Langer.Marsh walked away from these Northants sessions feeling like he had unlocked a secret to the game that had eluded him for most of the past decade. It is one shared by numerous top-level batsmen, not least Kane Williamson, he of the near mythical lack of slips catches. Like any change, this one is taking time to bed down, and may explain Marsh’s indifferent statistics so far this summer. But he still has Rogers’ advice very much in mind.”Definitely Bucky [Rogers] was really good, over probably the last few months,” Marsh said. “During the Ashes, I went away with Buck and just worked on a few little things on my game. He was fantastic to talk to – his record speaks for itself. He’s scored so many runs, so if I could learn as much as I could in that last little period in the Ashes I thought it was going to help my game.”I’m just trying to hit the ball a little bit later. I’ve worked on a few little bits and pieces. I’ve felt really good over the past month in Shield cricket and feel like I’ve got a better game now to hopefully be successful at Test cricket. I’ve been a little bit inconsistent with my Test career so far, so hopefully I can really take this opportunity now and build some consistent scores. I’m looking forward to that challenge.”When Marsh bats against Trent Boult and Tim Southee under the Adelaide Oval lights, with the pink ball potentially swinging around, there are likely to be edges and lots of them. If they scurry along the ground or fall short of slips, many spectators will throw their heads back and mutter about Marsh’s good fortune.But in the ABC commentary box at the top of the Southern Stand, Rogers will see that as a vindication of their work together, and a sign that Marsh has, at last, begun to make his own luck. Square of the wicket, the selection chairman Rod Marsh and coach Darren Lehmann may notice Marsh’s angled bat, and share a look of recognition. !

Injury-hit Gloucestershire show their spirit

Gloucestershire are not in Championship action next week. They need a week off too after ending this match with four substitute fielders and their coach, John Bracewell, out of the country

Alex Winter in Bristol11-May-2013
ScorecardWill Gidman tried to battle through injury but broke down again•Getty Images

Gloucestershire are not in Championship action next week. They need a week off too after ending this match with four substitute fielders and their coach, John Bracewell, out of the country. But they will regroup satisfied with their first four matches of 2013.Money is being ploughed into the facilities at Nevil Road and Gloucestershire need a team more suiting to an international venue. Hiring Michael Klinger as captain was step one and so far he has led performances that suggest Gloucestershire can compete more regularly this season.”Northants completely outplayed us but the other games we’ve been on top,” Klinger said following the draw with Hampshire. “I’ve asked the boys to maintain that intensity and discipline from this week and we’ll have opportunities later in the season to push for the full points.”Piecing back together the bowling attack is Gloucestershire’s main target ahead of the trip to New Road on May 22 – a match they will be targeting to win if they are to move up the table this season. Will Gidman’s ankle is the biggest concern. Having been told he was not going to bowl in the remainder of the match he tried to open the bowling in Hampshire’s second innings. He lasted two balls. It will not look good for the Gloucestershire backroom staff if Gidman now faces a prolonged spell on the sidelines.But despite the problems – Jack Taylor picked up a shoulder problem, Hamish Marshall was ill and wicketkeeper Cameron Herring caught conjunctivitis – Gloucestershire got the better of Hampshire, who finished third last year and are widely tipped for promotion this season. The four days were a fillip for Klinger’s developing side. They will be hoping their season follows a healthier pattern to last year – after winning at the Ageas Bowl in the second match of 2012, Gloucestershire went on to claim the wooden spoon.The three results outside the defeat to Northamptonshire suggest that progress has been made. The wickets at Bristol are now friendlier for batting and Gloucestershire’s batsman have more chance of setting up more matches for their bowlers. It’s also so far so good regarding Klinger’s form.”I thought we did a fantastic job in two and bit days of cricket,” Klinger said. “Full credit to our bowlers on day one I thought they were excellent. They started things for us and allowed us to control the game.”Hampshire have a bit of head scratching to do after a third failure in as many innings from the batsman. Jimmy Adams carried his bat in the first innings here – a knock that saved his side from being rolled for under 150. His coach was understandably delighted.”Jimmy continues to lead from front,” Giles White said. “He’s the form horse in the County Championship. He’s impressed again, played an innings that saved us and he does that time and again. He’s mentally strong and is held in such high regard by the lads. He’s grown into the captaincy from last year and done a really good job.”We’re disappointed here but we’ve got a make sure it’s a blip rather than a dip. It’s a long season and we’ll have phases when we’re not at optimum.”Hampshire would have raised an eyebrow to Michael Carberry being selected for England Lions – the player himself surprised at a call-up at 32-years-old – but it allowed Michael Roberts, a 24-year-old right-hander who signed a one-year deal last October, to make his Championship debut and prove his ability with an attractive 44 in 82 balls that led his side out of trouble, beginning the third innings 126 behind.His dismissal, though, was disappointing, pulling a short ball from Craig Miles down the throat of deep square leg. The wicket briefly reignited Gloucestershire’s faint victory hopes. They did all they could. No time was wasted in bringing up maximum batting points, the additional 116 was made in 24 overs, and a declaration 15 minutes after lunch gave them 61 overs to try and put Hampshire under pressure.

'We fielded like an Under-14s side' – Lehmann

Deccan Chargers coach Darren Lehmann has said his side “bowled poorly and fielded diabolically” against Rajasthan Royals

ESPNcricinfo staff18-Apr-2012A visibly annoyed Deccan Chargers coach Darren Lehmann has come down heavily on his side after their five-wicket loss against Rajasthan Royals on Tuesday. Lehmann said the Chargers “bowled poorly and fielded diabolically” while defending 196 in a final-over defeat.”We fielded like an Under-14s side,” Lehmann said. “They are professional cricketers they should be able to catch. They should be able to stop the ball going through their legs.”The Chargers dropped three catches in the field, with Anand Rajan grassing Royals opener and the tournament’s highest run-getter Ajinkya Rahane in the fifth over, then Dale Steyn dropping Owais Shah in the 15thover, and Bharat Chipli spilling Johan Botha in the 18th over.The Chargers are yet to register a win in the IPL this season, and their coach said, that the team has to work hard if they want to succeed in the tournament. “For us it’s a disappointing start, considering we played really well against Mumbai [Indians] and should have won that game, so we have a bit of work to do,” Lehmann said. “Our [team] meetings are a waste of time at the moment because the players aren’t listening.”Deccan’s fielding compounded their problems against the Royals, but their bowlers too were expensive. Dale Steyn, Daniel Christian and Anand Rajan all went for over ten runs an over. “It should have been 2-1, we should have beaten Mumbai [on April 9] and Rajasthan today, but we bowled really badly with the new ball. Steyn also did not bowl well,” Lehmann said. “When you get nearly 200 in a Twenty20 game, you shouldn’t lose a game.”Deccan Chargers will play Delhi Daredevils in their next match on April 19.

Kohli, Gayle star as Bangalore sink Pune

Pune Warriors went up against Murphy’s Law at the Chinnaswamy Stadium and came a distant second-best, as they hurtled to their fifth successive defeat

The Bulletin by Nitin Sundar29-Apr-2011
Scorecard and ball-by-ball detailsVirat Kohli scored 40 runs off the last 16 balls he faced•Associated Press

Pune Warriors went up against Murphy’s Law at the Chinnaswamy Stadium and came a distant second-best, as they hurtled to their fifth successive defeat. Everything they tried backfired spectacularly: they included Kamran Khan to add an extra dimension to their attack, and Tim Paine for solidity at the top. As it transpired, Kamran bled 47 in three overs, allowing Chris Gayle and Virat Kohli to unleash a rain of sixes that lifted Royal Challengers Bangalore to 181. In the reply, Paine ended up providing more solidity than was bargained for, sleep-walking to 8 off 17 balls as the chase lost steam early.Paine’s problems, and Manish Pandey’s after him, meant Jesse Ryder struggled to roll at his usual pace. Pune dawdled listlessly to 63 for 1 by the 10th over, with their two best batsmen still waiting for a hit. By the time Yuvraj Singh took guard, Pune needed 103 off 51 balls. Had he left it for too late?Pandey continued to struggle, and Yuvraj took it upon himself to pull off the unthinkable. He began to target left-arm spinners Daniel Vettori and Syed Mohammad, and carted them for three sixes and a four with the spin to reduce the equation to 55 needed off the last four overs. Zaheer Khan, who had struggled in his first spell, came on and produced exemplary lengths to force Yuvraj into a mis-hit. Vettori and Gayle followed that up with two unhittable overs to close the game out.Earlier, Bangalore played the typical IPL innings: keep out the good bowlers, and go after the weakest link. They did not have to wait long to capitalise on Pune’s hit-me bowler. Kamran ran in for the third over, slipped in his delivery stride and lay sprawled on the turf. He managed to recover from that fall, but was soon floored once again by a murderous assault from Gayle. Pune kept slipping from the moment Kamran slipped.Kamran’s lengths were straight out of Chris Gayle heaven. He began with a short-of-a-length delivery. Gayle pranced out of his crease and carved through the covers. Kamran went fuller with the third ball, and Gayle launched him over long-off. Kamran promptly dropped short, and Gayle swung him almost onto the roof of the stadium. The next one was too full, and Gayle scythed through the off side. Twenty off the over, and the home crowd was dancing in joy.Two more quiet overs followed before the carnage resumed against Kamran. The length did not seem to matter anymore, as Gayle just looked to get behind the line and lash at everything. Two length balls were mowed through the leg side, before a very full delivery outside off was knifed over the point boundary, as Bangalore soared to 57 off the Powerplay.Rahul Sharma pulled things back by zipping a quicker one past Tillakaratne Dilshan’s pull, before winning a dodgy lbw appeal against Gayle when he was on 49. Only one boundary came in the next five overs – a six off who else but Kamran – as Kohli and AB de Villiers coiled up for the closing assault. Rahul’s first three overs went for 13 as he bowled clever lengths and kept varying the pace. His last over, however, was the start of Bangalore’s final fling.Kohli, who had moved to 27 off 26 balls by the end of the 14th over, went berserk thereafter, looting 40 off the last 16 balls he faced. The shot that stood out in his closing blitz was the swat-flick off the front foot through wide mid-on, with the bottom hand imparting unreal power. He redirected Rahul through the leg side twice in the 15th over before driving Ryder on either side of the wicket for elegant fours.Jerome Taylor was too full in the 18th over, and Kohli pummelled him for another six over square leg before mis-hitting him for six more over third man. In the meantime, de Villiers thumped Ryder straight for the biggest six of the day. As if that violence wasn’t enough, Saurabh Tiwary slugged Taylor into the midwicket stands as Bangalore’s total soared out of control. That, despite Rahul and Alfonso Thomas bowling out of their skins to pick up 4 for 50 off their eight overs. It’s fair to say it just wasn’t Pune’s night.

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