Blue Jays Trade for Orioles Reliever Between Doubleheader Games in Baltimore

The Baltimore Orioles and Toronto Blue Jays conducted a trade of pitchers in between their doubleheader on Tuesday.

The Blue Jays got right-handed reliever Seranthony Dominguez from the Orioles, while Baltimore got right-handed pitching prospect Juaron Watts-Brown from Toronto, Sportsnet's Shi Davidi reported first. It was a quick journey for Dominguez to switch from the home locker room to the visitor's locker room.

Baltimore Banner's Danielle Allentuck documented the short wlak Dominguez took Tuesday afternoon to switch teams.

This trade comes after the two teams' first matchup of the day, in which the Orioles dominated and won 16-4. Blue Jays relievers gave up 12 of the 16 runs the Orioles scored, so this is definitely an area on their roster Toronto wanted to improve on.

Dominguez last pitched on Sunday in the Orioles' 5-1 win over the Rockies. He pitched one inning and gave up one hit and threw one strikeout in the ninth inning to help seal the win. In 43 game appearances and 41.2 innings pitched so far this season, Dominguez has posted a 3.24 ERA and 1.34 WHIP. He's thrown 54 strikeouts and has given up 32 hits and 15 earned runs.

Shohei Ohtani Had to Rush to Get to Second Job After Striking Out Ninth Batter

Shohei Ohtani is a man that wears many hats.

In his start for the Dodgers Wednesday evening, that came to a head after he walked off the mound and had to hit leadoff shortly thereafter. Ohtani threw five innings and struck out nine batters when he got the ball against the Reds. When his outing was over, he tried to catch his breath after recording the longest start since his return to the mound this year.

He couldn't do that though, as he had to quickly grab his batting gear and take some practice swings before he stepped up to the plate. Ohtani seemed to momentarily forget he was up to bat to lead off the Dodgers' half of the fifth, quickly realizing and picking up his pace to go grab his bat and helmet. You can watch the hilarious moment below:

The true problems of being one of baseball's best hitters while simultaneously starring on the mound.

Ohtani's dominant start Wednesday is a welcome sight for Dodgers fans, especially after he took a line drive in the leg in his previous start against the Rockies. Luckily, it wasn't serious and he didn't have to miss any time on the hill. He seemed to come back better than ever, striking out a season-high nine batters, one better than the eight punchouts he recorded in four innings against the Cardinals earlier this month.

At the plate, he has hit 45 home runs this season, tied for the National League lead with Phillies slugger Kyle Schwarber. He's slashing .278/.389/.612 with 85 RBIs in addition to the 45 homers.

Nationals to Hire Blake Butera as MLB's Youngest Manager in Decades

In an offseason of outside-the-box managerial hires, the Nationals have reportedly hired the biggest wild card of all.

Washington is naming 33-year-old Blake Butera its next manager, according to a Thursday morning report from Jeff Passan of ESPN. Butera, 33, will be the youngest MLB manager since the Twins hired 33-year-old Frank Quilici in 1972.

Butera, a longtime minor league manager in the Rays' system, currently holds the title of senior director of player development for that team.

Born in Louisiana, Butera played collegiately for Boston College before Tampa Bay drafted him in the 35th round in 2015. After two professional years in the Appalachian and New York-Penn Leagues, Butera entered management.

In both 2021 and 2022, he won Manager of the Year awards at the minor league level with the Charleston RiverDogs of the Carolina League.

The Nationals fired manager Dave Martinez, the manager of their 2019 World Series team, on July 6 after eight years.

Alas, poor South Africa

How much worse will it get for du Plessis and company before it gets better?

Andrew Fidel Fernando01-Feb-2020The playground harassment
South Africa are not in a good way. They’ve recently lost Dale Steyn and Hashim Amla, two of their greatest players ever. They had such a poor World Cup campaign last year they didn’t even get the chance to pull off a high-comedy choke. Their board was in turmoil as well. It was sad to see them struggle on so many fronts, many felt. The sport can’t afford for South Africa to dip so drastically, the cricket world agreed. Then England showed up, and like bullies picking on the weakest kid in school, kicked South Africa in the groin in Cape Town, stole their lunch money in Port Elizabeth, and rubbed their faces in the dirt in Johannesburg. On top of which Jos Buttler called Vernon Philander a fatty in Philander’s last series ever, and Ben Stokes called a South Africa supporter a “f**king four-eyed c**t”.The triple-trip tour
Is Pakistan safe? This is a question the Bangladesh Cricket Board pondered for months. Or at least this is the question they said they were pondering. There was nothing they didn’t supposedly consider – whether limited-overs games are a safer option than Tests, whether the team should be flown back to Dhaka in between matches, whether rising tensions between the US and Iran would make it more risky, and probably whether this kind of sports engagement is even appropriate following the planet-shaking revelations that Meghan and Harry will be stepping away from royal duties. Then, after weeks of insisting they just wanted a simple in-and-out T20I tour for security reasons, the BCB’s president met with the PCB’s head honcho and confirmed that they would be coming not just once, for T20Is, but coming back for a first Test, and then a third time for a second Test, in the most convoluted touring schedule in recent memory.The karma black hole
How many hearts can one team win until that team gets sick of winning just hearts? On Wednesday, New Zealand were on the wrong side of a Super Over result for the third time in eight months, having of course cruelly lost the World Cup in similar fashion, before being beaten by England in a Super Over again last year. As the undisputed nicest fellows in the world they are generating industrial amounts of good karma, but clearly this karma is being misplaced. Somewhere in the world a monster who never indicates in traffic keeps winning lottery.The long-term prank
Angelo Mathews knew that former coach Chandika Hathurusingha wanted him to lose weight. In fact, back in October 2018, Hathurusingha even suggested publicly that Mathews needed to work on his fitness, after he was part of the decision to sack Mathews as captain and drop him from the ODI team. Mathews, though, was publicly defiant of Hathurusingha, and never quite lost all the weight.Then, last month, just as SLC finally got around to terminating Hathurusingha’s contract as head coach, Mathews turned up for the T20Is against India rocking a flat stomach and exactly the slim physique Hathurusingha had wanted.Show some respect
In the last week of January, Kevin Pietersen launched a two-part Twitter tirade at the “cry babies” criticising Boris Johnson and Donald Trump, suggesting that their detractors should “keep it zipped” because these men are in positions of authority. Wait till he hears about the guy who seriously undermined the captaincy of Andrew Strauss that one time.Next month on the Briefing- The England team spot Faf du Plessis (who averaged 18.86 in the Test series) on the side of the road. They all jump out of their bus and give him a wedgie.- The Bangladesh Cricket Board wonders if the fallout from Brexit could put their tour of Pakistan in fresh jeopardy.- New Zealand endure another close heartbreak. Cigarette stocks soar worldwide.

Imran Tahir or Rashid Khan: who has been more impactful in T20s over the last year?

What do the Smart Stats (and the conventional metrics) say?

ESPNcricinfo stats team22-Apr-2020Since the start of the IPL last year, the two bowlers to have played the most matches and bowled the most deliveries in all T20s are Rashid Khan and Imran Tahir. The two are at opposite ends of their careers: Khan is 21, remarkable considering all that he has already achieved in T20 cricket, while 41-year-old Tahir is at the fag end of his career, but still a globetrotting T20 specialist. Both have been outstanding in T20, and by virtue of being wristspinners, demand for them across leagues is very high. While the common perception may be that Khan is the better bowler between them, the numbers provide a slightly different picture.ESPNcricinfo Ltd What do the traditional numbers tell us?
Wristspinners have been dominating T20 for a while now, and their main strength is picking up wickets at regular intervals without worrying too much about runs conceded. Khan has been so dominant over the last few years that it’s possible some batsmen play the bowler rather than the ball against him. Over the last year, many teams have looked to play him out rather than trying to attack. As a result, he has picked up a wicket only once every 21 balls and has an economy rate of 6.9.Tahir, on the other hand, might have slipped under the radar, but his numbers show he has been very effective. He has struck once every 14 balls and has conceded 6.7 runs per over. In the same period, the average economy rate for all wristspinners has been 7.5 runs per over, and the average strike rate 19.How Tahir and Rashid fare in different phases•ESPNcricinfo Ltd How and where do they get their wickets?
Let us now dig a little deeper. Who bowls the tougher overs? Since IPL 2019, Khan and Tahir have bowled 14% and 18% of their overs respectively in the powerplay. Tahir has been impressive in this period of games, taking 12 wickets at an economy rate of 7.46, while Khan has only four wickets and has conceded 8.15 runs per over. Both have bowled the majority of their overs in the middle phase, conceding 6.24 and 6.34 respectively, though Tahir has the better strike rate – 13.6 to Khan’s 20.6.Although Tahir bowls only 13% of his overs at the death to Rashid’s 20%, his showing has been pretty good in that phase too. One reason Tahir is more successful than Khan could be that batsmen have now found a method to tackle Khan by not attacking too much and thereby not losing their wickets. He might also be over-dependent on his googly: 37% of his wickets have come off that delivery, while the corresponding figure for Tahir is just 20%. That suggests Khan may need to add more variations in the coming year to get more wickets.

How do they fare on Smart Stats?
Tahir also has taken the more important wickets, as seen through the lens of Smart Wickets: 1.57 per game to Khan’s 1.17. The Smart Wickets metric takes into account the quality of batsman dismissed, the score at which a batsman was dismissed, and the match situation at the time of the dismissal. Tahir has dismissed the likes of Tom Banton in the Blast, Babar Azam (twice), Andre Russell, Rishabh Pant, Colin Ingram and Alex Hales at crucial junctures in various games over the last year. He has broken key partnerships or dismissed the most important opposition batsmen early.If we look at the impact created by the two bowlers in the teams they have played, Tahir again has a higher impact score: 50.6 per match, to Khan’s 43.6. This impact score for bowlers considers the phase of the match in which they bowled, their economy rate (taking into account current and required run rates), the quality of batsmen dismissed, and the match context when the wickets were taken.Tahir has been instrumental in winning matches for the teams he has played in, and created more impact with the ball than Khan. Dismissing Andre Russell at a crucial stage , Pant over at Chepauk, and taking the wickets of the run machine duo, Tom Banton and Babar Azam for Somerset are some examples of the impact created by Tahir.On the Smart Economy Rate (SER) metric too, Tahir fares better. His SER is 5.97 while Khan’s is 6.04. SER takes into account not just the overs bowled and runs conceded but also the match situation, in terms of how much pressure there was on the bowler at the time; the overall match run rate; how other bowlers fared; and the quality of batsmen the bowler bowled to.Over the last year, Tahir has been the better and more impactful bowler of the two. Although he might be at the end of his career, his skills in the T20 format are still worth plenty. There might be a lot more focus and attention on Khan, but Tahir has consistently been putting up performances that have perhaps not been noticed as much.ALSO READ: Just how good has Andre Russell been in the IPL in recent years?Smart Stats is a part of Superstats, a new set of metrics used by ESPNcricinfo to tell more enriching and insightful numbers-based stories. More here.

Andy Flower: 'Looking after the person is more important than developing the player'

The former England coach, currently with Kings XI Punjab, talks leadership, runtime tactics, and data in franchise cricket

Interview by Matt Roller23-Sep-2020After 12 years at the ECB, Andy Flower left the organisation in October 2019, and since then has become a familiar face in the world of franchise cricket. He has enjoyed early success, too: his Maratha Arabians side won the Abu Dhabi T10, he took St Lucia Zouks to the CPL final earlier in September, and his Multan Sultans team will head into the PSL knockouts in November as favourites, having topped the group stage before Covid-19 struck. Ahead of Kings XI Punjab’s first game in the 2020 IPL, Flower, who is the franchise’s assistant coach, spoke about his experience in the short-format circuit.The man who played arguably the best innings of this year’s CPL is part of your Kings XI squad in the IPL. After that outrageous hundred against the Patriots, do you see this as a breakout season for Nicholas Pooran in your middle order?
I’d be surprised if it isn’t. He looks like an outstanding player. When I first saw him, several years ago, I thought that he looked technically like the sort of player who could excel in any form of the game. He was excellent in the CPL and I would imagine he’s going to be outstanding for Kings XI this year. He looks in really good form, and he looks fit. Remember, he broke his legs a couple of years ago, so to get himself back into the sort of physical nick that he has done shows a depth of character that will serve him well. And he’s a young man with a lot of talent, and all the fundamentals that mean he should be a really consistent performer.You missed Chris Gayle, who withdrew from the Zouks. He is a T20 legend, but aged 40, he’s no longer a guaranteed starter. How can you make sure he still brings something to the group even if he’s not picked every game?
That’s primarily Chris’ responsibility, but I’ll be working closely with Anil [Kumble, KXIP head coach], plus our other coaches – Jonty Rhodes, Wasim Jaffer and Charl Langeveldt – in ensuring that we’re getting the most out of everyone. We have a big squad over here, and it’s not just those big names that will be influential in how the dressing room feels. The young Indian players on the sidelines who might not be expecting to play, how they approach the tournament will affect how the group feels.ALSO READ: How did IPL-bound players fare in the CPL? I was around early in Chris’ career [Flower made an unbeaten hundred in Gayle’s debut Test in 2000] and have seen him have success in every format. I’ve not worked closely with him before, but I think he’s a lot more thoughtful about the game than some might give him credit for. His effect on a dressing room is very positive, from what I’ve heard. He’s not finished yet: there’s still some international cricket in him, and these tournaments allow him the platform to perform.There’s really good competition for the batting places: more than likely, two of Chris, Pooran and Glenn Maxwell will be playing at any one time. We saw Maxwell’s success in the ODI series in England, and we know what the other two can do, so it’s great that we have three quality batsmen vying for a couple of spots.There have been several different suggestions as to how you might balance your overseas combination. Is it likely to be two overseas batsmen and two overseas bowlers in the playing XI?
Anil has a good idea for what our XI is going to be, and I won’t jump the gun. I would imagine that Mujeeb [Ur Rahman], given his form from the CPL and his T20 pedigree, will be a constant presence in the side. Dependent on surfaces, opposition, form, and balance, that will determine the other spots. We talked about continuity earlier: getting that balance right between giving people continuity of opportunity in a batting order, and resting players when they need some space and giving other guys a chance – those are the sort of decisions you need to get right.

“The franchises with a slightly longer-term view on how they develop as an organisation are the ones that have had more sustained success”

KL Rahul is leading Kings XI for the first time. How do you think he ranks as a batsman in T20, and what indications have you got so far about how he will fare as a captain?
He’s one of the top players in the world. He’s been one of the top-performing batsmen in IPL in the last two years, and he’s had a really strong start in international cricket, and played quite a lot for India already. I had a really nice Zoom call with him and Anil when I was in the Caribbean, as an introduction, but I don’t know him too well just yet. He seems like a mature, humble man. He has quite a workload being skipper, keeping wicket, and as one of the top batsmen in the tournament, and our job is to take some of the responsibilities away from him so that he can focus on those jobs.A standout name among your young Indian players this year is legspinner Ravi Bishnoi, who has impressed in age-group cricket. What are your expectations from him?
I know a little about him because I commentated at the Under-19 World Cup at the start of this year. Other than being a skilful legspin bowler, he looked like a really good competitor. With some of the leadership in India recently – [Sourav] Ganguly, [MS] Dhoni, [Virat] Kohli – I think young cricketers there are growing up with real confidence, and a certain type of aggression with which they go into competitions. That’s a really good thing for them as a cricketing nation, and he is a good example of it. He looks very talented, and that sort of youthful exuberance and confidence can go a long way.ALSO READ: Anil Kumble on IPL 2020: Managing players’ ‘mental space’ key for support staffYou’ve been head coach of three franchises, but are an assistant coach to Kumble in this tournament. How will that relationship work?
It will be very different, and I’m quite looking forward to a new role. Mushtaq Ahmed, who I worked with for a number of years with England and also at Multan, once described the roles to me by saying the head coach is like a father figure, who occasionally disciplines children, whereas the assistants are more like mother figures, who get closer to the players, can be confidantes, and have quite a different relationship with them. I’ve got that at the back of my mind. Some people might see me as quite a scary mother figure, possibly, but I’m looking forward to playing a different role and hopefully playing my part in a successful campaign.Your first assignment after lockdown was in the CPL, where you were head coach of St Lucia Zouks – a franchise who have notoriously struggled, and have never really done anything in that competition. You suffered with international travel restrictions, too, losing Colin Ingram, Rilee Rossouw and Anrich Nortje after the draft.
At the PSL, Daren Sammy approached me and wanted to know if I’d be interested in coaching the Zouks. I was dead keen, but yes, the pandemic scuppered our overseas player plans. It was a bit of a scrabble for us, more than most teams. Towards the start of the tournament we were really scratching our heads as to how to replace them. We ended up with three Afghan overseas players and Scott Kuggeleijn came across from New Zealand. He was outstanding with the new ball, and ended up as the leading wicket-taker.The Zouks have not had a successful history in the CPL, but my experience was that it was brilliant fun. I loved working with Sammy as captain – I could see why he’d had such success with the West Indies limited-overs teams over the years, with the two T20 World Cups. We were a good combination that dovetailed well. Getting through to the final was such a huge boost of confidence for that playing group. We won some amazing games from almost nowhere – for instance, defending 92 against Barbados Tridents – and watching both the older guys and the youngsters providing match-winning contributions.Flower coached St Lucia Zouks in the CPL this year, and the franchise made the final for the first time in its history•Randy Brooks – CPL T20 / GettySammy didn’t do much batting or bowling in this tournament but still seemed to add value through his captaincy. You talked about him as an instinctive rather than data-driven captain, but you still used match-ups a lot, with your army of offspinners turning the ball away from opposition left-handers.
You’re right that Daren didn’t have a great time of it with bat or ball, but his captaincy was genuinely outstanding. I know he enjoyed having a little more information to work with in the build-up to both the whole tournament and each individual match. He hadn’t gone about it that way before. In a 36-year-old who has been around the block, it was quite nice that he experienced something new.But he was inspirational out there in the middle: he made excellent decisions tactically, he took a couple of outstanding catches – including a diving one at slip off Zahir Khan that turned our game against the Tallawahs – and he’s an inspirational character. I’m certain that he will lead cricket in St Lucia in some way over the coming years – he might be coming towards the end of his playing time, but he’s the heartbeat of their cricket.It’s a year since you left the ECB, after 12 years of involvement there. Have you enjoyed the change of pace of the last 12 months?
I was surprised, when my involvement at the ECB ended, to look back at how quickly it went. I really enjoyed my time there and worked with some amazing people. This has been a change of pace, and a change of environment; it’s been really interesting seeing the contrast between working for a national governing body and then a set of different franchises. I’d had a little taste of it in the very first edition of the PSL – I was assistant coach with Peshawar Zalmi – when I was taking a month’s break from ECB work. It has been similar to what I expected, and I’ve had some really interesting and great experiences.ALSO READ: ‘Mohammad Nabi, Roston Chase have been the keys for us’ – FlowerYour first tournament was the Abu Dhabi T10. Was a short competition like that a useful starting point, in that you had a limited time to create a group atmosphere and mindset, rather than the longer-term, developmental work you might have become used to at the ECB?
I think you’ve nailed it there. When you’re working for a national governing body and with a national team, you’re looking at medium- to long-term development of people, systems, skill sets, characters, and the ability to deal with pressure. You can have a long-term strategy for that. With franchises, especially in the T10, you’re specifically being brought in to win, and win quite quickly.The challenge is completely different: getting a group together, getting some unity of purpose, making people feel comfortable and as if they have the freedom to make decisions for themselves in the middle. Those are common things in coaching and leadership, but you shift from that medium- to long-term outlook to something a little more short-term. In saying that, I would add that more successful franchises tend to have some stability and continuity about them. Those with a slightly longer-term view on how they develop as an organisation are the franchises that have had more sustained success.

“T10 is a very tactical game, and you need more than one plan, so a captain like Bravo was worth his weight in gold. Not only can an over make or break an innings, but a couple of balls can”

In the T10, it seemed like Maratha Arabians achieved most of their success through Chris Lynn’s incredible run of form. Was there more to it than that?
Chris Lynn was a factor, without a doubt – he played brilliantly, and it was amazing to watch him do his stuff. It was really interesting watching that sort of power, and then the skill of a guy like Lasith Malinga – watching him train, and observing his level of skill from close quarters, was really brilliant. We had a young left-arm swing bowler from UAE [Shiraz Ahmad] and you could see how he grew in confidence and knowledge through working with Malinga. The exposure to those sorts of players, plus our captain Dwayne Bravo, is not only good for the younger players, but also as a coach coming into franchise cricket for the first time.How tactical is T10 cricket? It feels like teams go to their death plans very early after the powerplay. Is the timing of that shift the most important thing?
I really enjoyed the format – the game is over in the period of time that we’re used to for hockey, rugby, football matches. With a three-over powerplay, the batsmen are hitting straightaway. It’s a very tactical game, and you need more than one plan, so a captain like Bravo was worth his weight in gold. Not only can an over make or break an innings, but a couple of balls can. You have to realise what is working and stick with it, but also know that you have to be proactive and make decisions ahead of the opposition, and that getting the timing of those decisions right is very important. In my experience so far, both franchise and international, your on-field leadership is crucial to your chances of success. I’ve been lucky to work with some outstanding leaders: Andrew Strauss is an obvious one with England, but also Bravo, Daren Sammy in the CPL and Shan Masood in the PSL.ALSO READ: Nathan Leamon: ‘Analysis is easy. The trick is turning it into info players can use’ Before the PSL, Masood seemed like an unexpected choice as your captain at Multan Sultans, because he wasn’t seen as a T20 player. But is it right that he was very receptive to that precise, tactical, data-driven approach that you and Nathan Leamon pushed at that franchise?
There was a really interesting contrast between how we approached things at Multan and my experiences with Bravo and Sammy. The Multan owners, Ali and Alamgir Tareen, really wanted us to have a data-driven, tactical look at how we could attack that tournament. It was really interesting to have that driven from the top. Nathan was the first guy they recruited, and they followed up with me – which was ironic, given I recruited Nathan for England [as the team’s performance analyst in 2009]. It was great working with him again. We used data to drive our draft strategy, and then our selection decisions and our tactics.Shan was specifically chosen as captain – by the owners, primarily – because he was a man that could sift that sort of information, and handle the level of it. He did brilliantly. He’s not a player that’s got that much T20 experience, but he studies the game well, and I thought he handled the information that he was given and used it wisely on the field. Our discussions off the field helped him too, and that was a very different approach to the one I experienced with Bravo and Sammy. Both of them have outstanding cricket knowledge and a lot of experience, but are very instinctive captains. Our use of data was significantly adjusted when dealing with those two.”Our job is to take some of his responsibilities away from KL Rahul so that he can focus on keeping wicket, being skipper, and one of the top batsmen in the tournament”•BCCIIt is no secret that you used data and analysis a lot during your time as England coach. How much have you done so in the last 12 months?
When I was with England, we wanted to approach the game differently, and help us as coaches to understand the game to a different depth and breadth, and also help players challenge their understanding of the game. In this last period, it’s an important part of it. But you can never forget that you’re dealing with human beings. One of the most important things I’ve learned in my years of coaching is that looking after the person is more important than developing the player. It’s a really important thing to learn as a coach, because it drives how you interact with people, and how you care for them.I read an interview with Leamon in the , where he mentioned that the coaching staff would speak to Masood while he was out on the field – more so than we’d expect from a coach on the sidelines in cricket. Can you tell me about that?
I don’t want to give away too many secrets. We weren’t doing a Bob Woolmer with a microphone in the ear, or breaking any rules like that. We were communicating with him, and maximising the information that he had available, but with the understanding that it was always his decision out there in the middle. He was seeing the game from a certain perspective, with some differences to ours off the field. Combining those bits of information and then allowing the captain to make his own decision was the way to go, we thought, and it worked really well through that tournament.What sort of information would you be passing on? Favourable match-ups for the new batsman?
Match-ups over a shortened game are very important, and so is getting your field and your bowling tactics right. That sort of information would be covered pre-game, but that’s a lot of information for a captain, and obviously he won’t retain it all. [Favourable match-ups] would be an example: a gentle reminder of the flow of the game, the resources you have left in the attack, and just putting the right chess pieces in place at the right time.Are you heading straight back to Pakistan after the IPL for the PSL knockouts?
Hopefully it’ll be after the IPL final. I’ll head straight across to Lahore, and we have the semi-finals and hopefully final in mid-November. It’s a pity that the momentum which we had at the start of the year isn’t quite there, but that’s another challenge: we’ll have to get up to speed really quickly, and see which of our overseas players we can get to Lahore, then see if we can win the thing.

Why did Sunil Narine bat ahead of Eoin Morgan, and why did it work?

Also: why is Pant’s strike rate so slow this season and why did Axar Patel bowl just one over?

Vishal Dikshit24-Oct-2020Why did Narine bat ahead of Morgan, and why did it work?When the Kolkata Knight Riders lost their third wicket in the eighth over, Anrich Nortje had bowled two and Kagiso Rabada was into his second. It was likely that their remaining four overs would be kept for the end and the Capitals would turn to a combination of their spinners, Tushar Deshpande and Marcus Stoinis for the middle overs. With express pace at bay, the Knight Riders smartly sent out Sunil Narine, who has a much better record against spinners than quick bowlers, ahead of Eoin Morgan at No. 5.The Capitals then bowled R Ashwin, against whom both Nitish Rana and Narine had good records, followed by Deshpande and Stoinis. Both batsmen cashed in, tonking Ashwin for 30 in his first two overs. By the time Nortje was brought back in the 13th over, the stand was already worth 61 off 28 balls with seven fours and three sixes. They saw off Nortje’s third over for eight runs, and then took on Stoinis and Ashwin again to reach a century stand off just 46 balls.When Narine fell for a 32-ball 64 in the 17th over, the task of facing Rabada was in the more experienced hands of Morgan, who scored 17 off nine balls. Narine also confirmed in the innings break that the plan was always for him to bat just after the powerplay to upset the Capitals’ bowling plans in the middle overs, and acknowledged it was good to get going against spin.Why did Rana open the batting instead of Tripathi and Narine?The Knight Riders have used four opening combinations so far this IPL. With Narine back in the XI, they had to pick the openers out of Shubman Gill, Rahul Tripathi and Narine, and they went with the least expected combination of Gill and Rana possibly because of the opposition bowlers, Narine’s poor form while opening this IPL, and the need for a left-right combination at the top.The left-right combination was worth a shot because the Capitals have been using left-arm spinner Axar Patel and Ashwin regularly in the powerplay and Rana could be useful against both, given he struck 19 off seven balls against Ashwin the last time these two teams met. Rana ha scored 58 off 35 in that game but since then he could manage only 54 runs in six subsequent innings at a strike rate of 98.20, so the Knight Riders gave him a new batting position and it paid off.Did the Capitals try whatever they could against Rana and Narine?Not really. They bowled express pace against Rana up front but without using the short-ball strategy. Since 2018, Rana has been dismissed six times against the short ball – the length that has troubled him the most in that period – with a strike rate of 122. The Capitals neither kept a short-ball field for Rana when Rabada and Nortje bowled, nor did they try to target his rib cage despite opting to bowl on a greenish pitch. When Deshpande tried a short ball against Rana in the 10th over, the pace wasn’t that high, the bounce not nasty and Rana smote him over the shorter leg-side boundary for a six.ESPNcricinfo LtdThe Capitals also used two overs of Ashwin for the four overs that were bowled after Narine came out to bat, despite the dominating record both Rana and Narine have against the spinner. It meant Narine didn’t face any express pace early on and instead got time to settle against spin. As a result, Narine smacked Ashwin for 32 runs off 11 balls and Rana collected 13 from seven balls.Eventually, the Knight Riders scored 115 runs in the middle overs (seventh to 16th) – the second-highest in an innings this season, behind Kings XI Punjab’s 118 against the Rajasthan Royals in Sharjah. The Capitals also didn’t bowl Axar Patel at all in the middle overs.Why did Axar Patel bowl only one over?When Rana and Narine were going after all the bowlers in the middle overs, the Capitals didn’t use Patel even once even though he has been one of their best this season, especially with his economical bowling in the first 10 overs. The initial thought must have been to avoid bowling left-arm spin to left-hand batsmen, but when you have made bowling changes in such a way that you can’t use your express bowlers against two batsmen short of runs in the last few games, it was probably worth trying Patel for at least one over from the end where the leg side had the longer boundary.Patel bowled just one over – the fifth – in the game for seven runs and it makes you wonder if the Capitals had the right strategy in place knowing that the Knight Riders had three left-hand batsmen in their top seven (Rana, Narine and Morgan).Why didn’t Ashwin bowl in the powerplay?Ashwin had bowled in the powerplay in seven out of the eight games he had played before Saturday but Stoinis got the ball ahead of him possibly because of Ashwin’s record against Rana. Apart from their head-to-head record in their last fixture, Rana has scored a total of 53 off 22 balls against Ashwin without getting dismissed in the IPL. That’s Ashwin’s second-worst record against a batsman with the worst being against Narine for 28 off 10 balls for zero dismissals, before this game (minimum 10 balls).What’s going on with Rishabh Pant?One of the most destructive Indian T20 batsmen hasn’t shown his true batting colours this IPL. Rishabh Pant’s strike rate in IPL 2019 was 162.66, only behind Andre Russell’s 204.81 and Hardik Pandya’s 191.42 (minimum 250 runs) but this IPL it has plummeted to 117.29 after eight innings.ESPNcricinfo LtdIt’s not like he hasn’t had enough deliveries to score big; he has faced 20 or more balls in six innings out of nine, but there has been a clear fall in his boundary-hitting, striking only six sixes so far, less than one per innings. Pant has appeared more constrained this season, curbing his natural game, as if he has been told to play differently and not attack right from the beginning.Mostly batting at No. 4, he hasn’t been going after the bowling the way he is known to. He came out in the third over but was on 9 off 14 when the powerplay ended. He struck two fours against Lockie Ferguson’s pace after that and ended up handing a catch on the leg side off Varun Chakravarthy for a 33-ball 27. His scoring rate has been so slow that only Aaron Finch and Shubman Gill have a lower strike rate than Pant among 27 batsmen who have faced 150-plus deliveries this season.

When was a Test series last drawn 0-0 before West Indies vs Sri Lanka?

Also: what is the lowest run-aggregate for a completed first-class match?

Steven Lynch06-Apr-2021 There were 651 runs in the final ODI at Pune. Was this a record for a match without an individual hundred? asked Ray Penson from South Africa
The highest score in that exciting one-day international in Pune last week was Sam Curran’s unbeaten 95. There has been only one ODI that produced more runs but no individual centuries: in Port Elizabeth in 2001-02, Australia (330 for 7) beat South Africa (326 for 3) in a match that produced 656 runs but a highest individual score of 92, by Ricky Ponting. There have been 23 other ODIs with a total of 600 or more runs, but no centuries.Curran’s score equalled the highest by a No. 8 in one-day internationals, set by Chris Woakes for England against Sri Lanka at Trent Bridge in 2015.Both Tests in the recent West Indies vs Sri Lanka series were drawn – when was the last 0-0 draw in a Test series? asked Rishi Ramaswamy from the United States
It has been nearly six years since all the Tests in a series have been drawn – in the rather soggy two-match encounter between Bangladesh and South Africa in Bangladesh in 2015. The last three-Test series to comprise three draws involved New Zealand and England, in 2012-13.In all there have now been 40 Test series which ended up 0-0. That includes 17 of two Tests, 17 of three, and two of four matches. There have even been four five-Test series in which all five games ended in draws: India vs Pakistan in 1954-55, Pakistan vs India in 1960-61, India vs England in 1963-64, and West Indies vs New Zealand in 1971-72.Seven different England bowlers took wickets in India’s innings in the last of the recent one-day internationals – was this a record? asked Alan White from England
You’re right that seven England bowlers claimed wickets in the third ODI in Pune last week: Mark Wood took three and Adil Rashid two, while Moeen Ali, Sam Curran, Liam Livingstone, Ben Stokes and Reece Topley had one each.This actually equals the record for an ODI innings: there have been four previous instances of seven wicket-takers, by New Zealand against India in Auckland in 1975-76, New Zealand vs Sri Lanka in Dunedin in 1990-91, Netherlands vs Bermuda in Rotterdam in 2007, and Australia vs Scotland in Edinburgh in 2009.The 1878 Australian team that skittled MCC for 33 and 19. Fred Spofforth (seated, extreme left) took 6 for four in the first innings, Harry Boyle (seated, extreme right) 6 for 3 in the second.•The Cricketer InternationalWhat is the lowest run-aggregate for a completed first-class match? asked SM Nazmus Shakib from Bangladesh
The fewest runs in a first-class game is 85, in the Quaid-e-Azam Trophy match between Quetta (41 all out) and Rawalpindi (44 for 1) in Islamabad in 2008-09: it was all over in 20.1 overs. There were unusual circumstances: bad weather had prevented any play on the first two days, and both sides forfeited their first innings.The lowest for a game in which all four innings were played is 105 runs, in the match between MCC (33 and 19) and the touring Australians (41 in 66.2 four-ball overs, and 12 for 1) at Lord’s in 1878. It was all over in one day – Fred “The Demon” Spofforth took 6 for 4 in MCC’s first innings, and Harry Boyle 6 for 3 in the second. WG Grace was out second ball in the first innings, for four, and made a duck in the second.”One of the most remarkable matches ever played at Lord’s was commenced at three minutes past 12, and concluded at 20 minutes past six the same day,” said Wisden, which went on to report that at the end, “a stream of at least one thousand men rushed frantically up to the pavilion, where they clustered, and lustily shouted ‘Well done Australia’, ‘Bravo Spofforth’, ‘Boyle, Boyle’ &c, &c; the members of the MCC keenly joining in the applause of that ‘maddened crowd’, who shouted themselves hoarse before they left to scatter far and wide that evening the news, how in one day the Australians had so easily defeated one of the strongest MCC elevens that had ever played for the famous old club.”How often has a first-class hat-trick involved three catches, all by the same fieldsman – not a wicketkeeper – which just happened in a match in Dunedin? asked Russell Smith from New Zealand
The instance you’re talking about was achieved by Otago’s Dale Phillips, off the bowling of seamer Michael Rae, in the Plunket Shield match against Central Districts at Dunedin’s University Oval last week. Phillips, the brother of the New Zealand Test player Glenn, was fielding at short leg.There had been four previous hat-tricks in first-class cricket involving the same fielder. The first was by George Thompson off the bowling of Sydney Smith for Northamptonshire against Warwickshire at Edgbaston in 1914, and they were followed by Cyril White (off Raymond Beesly) for Border vs Griqualand West in Queenstown in South Africa in 1946-47. More recently, Ali Waqas caught three in a row off Samiullah Khan for Sui Northern Gas in Peshawar in 2014-15, and Marcus Trescothick took three in a row off Craig Overton for Somerset against Nottinghamshire at Trent Bridge in 2018.There have also been five wicketkeeping hat-tricks, all of them caught, apart from Sam Brain’s three successive stumpings off Charles Townsend for Gloucestershire against Somerset at Cheltenham in 1893.Use our feedback form, or the Ask Steven Facebook page to ask your stats and trivia questions

Rory Burns earned this recall, and needed this innings

England grateful for opener’s resistance, for without it they were in real trouble

George Dobell05-Jun-2021There are some batters, like Zak Crawley or Michael Vaughan, who owe their England call-ups to their potential. And there are some, like Rory Burns and Dom Sibley, who earn it through weight of runs.Neither way is necessarily wrong. Vaughan, like Marcus Trescothick and David Gower, went on to enjoy a productive Test career despite a modest county record at the time of his debut. And, while runs at county level are clearly not a guarantee of success at the top level, they remain about as good an indicator as we have.You can see why a selector would be reluctant to pick Burns, though. Whereas most of the best make batting look a simple, natural process, he makes it look, at times, fiendishly complicated. It seems unthinkable that any coach would suggest a young player copies his method. But, in the end, you can’t ignore the returns. It’s all about substance over style.Burns needed this innings. His eight previous Test innings had realised just 78 runs (including three ducks) and, by the time England’s tour of India had finished, he had lost his place in the side.But just as he won his first call-up through weight of runs – he had recorded 1,000 runs in a season for five successive years – he went back to the county game and scored heavily. He has reached 50 seven times in 10 innings in the Championship season. Nobody in the competition has reached 50 as often this year. He earned this recall.Rory Burns scored just 13 runs in the morning session•AFP via Getty ImagesIndeed, Burns earns everything he achieves. Unlike some modern batters, he is prepared to work for his runs. So, while his first 50 took a relatively fluent 90 deliveries, his second took 177.But that’s fine. England have plenty of strokemakers. What they require is someone to provide a platform on which they can build. Burns, who scored 13 runs from the first two-hour session, appears to have the patience for that role.He is an unusual player in many ways. When his game is in good order, he is unusually tight in that channel around off stump that is traditionally the area to bowl to top-order batters. He rarely pushes at the ball and scored only one of his 17 boundaries – 16 fours and his first six at Test level; a Stokes-esque slog-sweep after he had reached his century – in the ‘V’ from mid-on to mid-off. That was from a full toss.New Zealand responded with something approaching modern leg-theory on the second evening, with lots of short-balls and a packed leg-side field. But that only provided scoring opportunities. So, New Zealand settled into a holding pattern: bowling outside off stump in the hope of tempting him into a rash stroke. For a while, Burns ground to something close to a halt.But he didn’t give it away. Unlike some of his top-order colleagues, he was prepared to endure the testing periods in the knowledge that better times would come eventually.”It was a bit of a grind,” Burns admitted later. “They tried to dry me up and bowl at other guys in the order. It was like they were waiting for me to make a mistake. I found it quite difficult to get into a rhythm.”But we needed those runs today. So, it’s nice to contribute. And it’s nice to take the opportunity I’ve been given [on recall].”You try and stay level. Some days you get good balls. Some days you nick one and get dropped and end up getting a hundred. You have to stay level.”Related

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England were grateful for his resistance. Make no mistake, without Burns’ century, they were in real trouble here. Nobody else in the top seven made more than 42 and three of them were out for ducks. At 140 for 6, they still required 39 to avoid a follow-on.As it was, Ollie Robinson sustained his impressive debut with an innings which demonstrated his long-term suitability for the No. 8 position (only Jofra Archer, of recent England seamers, has made a debut as assured as Robinson’s with the ball, too). Still, by the time England’s ninth-wicket fell, Burns was nine short of his century. He admitted he was “indebted” to James Anderson for helping him reach the milestone. Anderson not only played sensibly, but bravely, taking one on the body in his determination to see Burns home.There was one passage of play, though, where Burns lost his way. In a session reminiscent of his maiden Test century at Edgbaston in 2019 – an innings in which he was beaten 34 times – he enjoyed a fair slice of fortune in progressing from 77 to 88.He could – probably should – have been stumped on 77 (when Mitchell Santner saw him coming down the pitch and pushed the ball wider), caught on 88 (when he fenced at one which reared on him from the excellent Tim Southee) and was twice struck on the helmet (once by Southee; once by Kyle Jamieson) as he attempted to hook. He was also fortunate, on 80, to see a top-edged pull fall safely.You wonder what Australia’s fast bowlers, no doubt sent footage by their analysts, will make of such moments. Given the way they bombarded Burns’ Surrey teammate, Mark Stoneman, with short deliveries during the last Ashes in Australia, it seems safe to assume Burns will face plenty of the same treatment.Indeed, you wonder what Australia’s seamers will make of this England batting line-up in general. To see Crawley and Dan Lawrence edging to the cordon as they wafted at wide ones, to see James Bracey beaten (albeit by a fine delivery) through the gate and to see Sibley dismissed for his sixth single-figure score in succession (again, by a fine delivery) was hardly the footage to have them quaking in fear. They will also have noted that Ollie Pope, batting on off stump and falling to the off side, has some weakness to exploit and looks especially vulnerable to leg-before dismissals. Really, those Australia seamers will have been quite encouraged by what they have seen.From an England perspective, it’s important to remember that this is the youngest top seven they have ever fielded in a home Test. And they are, give or take, the best players available to England given the IPL absences. They are going to require time and patience to fulfil their talent.It’s a concern, though, and England were grateful for Burns’ fight for keeping their heads above water.

Janneman Malan, Quinton de Kock and all the records they broke

Malan’s 177 is the fourth-highest individual score for South Africa while de Kock crossed 10,000 international runs as wicketkeeper

Sampath Bandarupalli16-Jul-2021297 – Total runs scored by South Africa openers in the third ODI against Ireland – Janneman Malan (177*) and Quinton de Kock (120). It is the highest aggregate by opening batters in an ODI innings for South Africa, surpassing the 281 runs by Hashim Amla and Rilee Rossouw against West Indies in 2015. Their partnership of 225 is also the fifth-highest opening stand for South Africa in this format.483 – Runs scored by Malan across six ODI innings so far. Only one player before Malan scored over 400 runs in his first six innings – Inzamam-ul-Haq with 406 runs.ESPNcricinfo Ltd169 – Balls faced by Malan during his unbeaten 177, the longest ODI innings for South Africa, in terms of balls faced. The previous longest ODI innings for South Africa was 160 balls by Jacques Kallis against India in 2006.2 – Players who have faced more balls than Malan (169 balls) in a 50-over men’s ODI. Rohit Sharma faced 173 balls for his record-breaking 264 against Sri Lanka in 2014, while Canada’s Ashish Bagai batted out 172 balls against Scotland during his unbeaten 137 in 2007.4 – Malan’s 177 not out is the fourth highest ODI score by a batter for South Africa. It is also their second-highest score away from home behind Gary Kirsten’s 188* against UAE in the 1996 World Cup.ESPNcricinfo Ltd104.73 – Batting strike rate of Malan during his 169-ball 177, the second-lowest among the 52 individual scores of 170-plus runs in men’s ODIs. The lowest is 85.07 by Glenn Turner, who scored 171* off 201 against East Africa in 1975. Turner’s knock was the first-ever 170-plus score of the format.10,092 – Runs scored by de Kock in International cricket while playing as a wicketkeeper. He is only the seventh wicketkeeper to aggregate 10,000 runs across formats. None of the previous six players achieved this milestone before turning 30.ESPNcricinfo Ltd1 – Simi Singh became the first player with an ODI hundred while batting at No.8 or lower. The previous highest score while batting at No.8 or lower in the format was 95*, shared by Chris Woakes vs Sri Lanka in 2016 and Sam Curran vs India in 2021.ESPNcricinfo Ltd177* – Malan’s is now the second-highest individual ODI score against Ireland. West Indies’ John Campbell made 179 against Ireland during the tri-nation series in 2019. Malan’s 177* is also the second-highest individual score in Ireland in men’s ODIs, behind Campbell’s 179.

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