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Seventy balls of England struggle

The visitors were pinned down on Friday at the SCG, scoreless for more than 10 overs. Relive the drama

Andrew McGlashan07-Jan-2022When are England going to score their next run?That might sound a like a flippant response to their batting woes on this tour, but for a passage of play either side of lunch on the third day at the SCG, it was a genuine question.The last ball of the 13th over, Dawid Malan clips Pat Cummins to fine leg. It’s a pretty innocuous moment. England are 36 for 1.

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The first bowling change of the day comes in the 14th over and Scott Boland, the hero of the MCG, is warmly applauded into the attack. He immediately hits his groove and starts with a maiden.It becomes a double change as Cameron Green replaces Mitchell Starc who has bowled a superb opening spell, curving one back through Haseeb Hameed’s wild drive having seen him dropped by Alex Carey a few moments beforeGreen’s second delivery bounces from a good length and beats Malan’s cut shot. He, too, starts with a maiden. It’s three in a row.Boland beats the edge of Zak Crawley with one that nips away. The next delivery nips back, the one after nibbles away. It’s doing plenty off a pitch playing a few tricks.Then the last ball of Boland’s second over jags back again, this time it’s right on target and goes between Crawley’s bat and pad. Boland has added to his wicket tally without conceding a run. It’s also four maidens in a rowEngland are 36 for 2. When will they score their next run?

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Three balls into Green’s next over, Malan almost miscues a pull to mid-on. It would have been a horrid way to get out, but quite in keeping with England’s tour. Malan sees out the over. Maiden number five.Boland challenges Joe Root’s technique as he hammers away in that off-stump corridor. Root angles one into the gully area where Green uses his go-go gadget arms to intercept. No run there.Malan is relatively secure in seeing out an over from Green. Seven maidens in a row.Scott Boland gets a standing ovation from the SCG crowd•Getty ImagesThe first ball of the 21st over and Root, who towered above all other batters in 2021, slashes at one outside off and the top edge travels very quickly. Steven Smith leaps at second slip and grabs it above his head. Root has collected England’s first duck of 2022. He’s a captain with the weight of the world on his shoulders.Boland has another Test wicket. His average is now 6.11. His overall figures are 9 for 55.Ben Stokes, nursing a side strain, makes his way to the middle. Four balls into his innings he is beaten by a delivery from Boland that nips away sharply. A fast off-break. The last ball does the same, but moves even more. Eight maidens in a rowEngland are 36 for 3. When will they score their next run?

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The first ball of Green’s next over leaps at Malan and hammers him on the glove. Three balls later it happens again. Has the pitch gone?Having shaken off the pain, Malan faces up again. Green is around the wicket, angles the delivery into the body and Malan clips it low to Usman Khawaja who is stationed at leg slip. An hour at the crease, 39 balls and Malan is gone for 3.It brings lunch. England are 36 for 4. When will they score their next run?

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Forty minutes later Stokes walks back down the steps of the visitors’ dressing room with Jonny Bairstow for company.There is one ball left in Green’s over. It’s actually off target, pushed down the leg side. But it’s another maiden. Nine in a row.Ben Stokes laughs after successfully reviewing a decision against him•Getty ImagesBoland gets the ball again. The first five balls are relatively mundane. Then the final delivery moves devilishly off a length to beat the edge. Ten maidens in a row.Cummins brings himself back on to replace Green. The second ball is a beauty which skims past Bairstow’s outside edge. He would have done well to edge it. The last ball of the over is short and Bairstow goes for the pull. It is miscued and rebounds towards gully where Green can’t quite reach it with a sprawling dive. Replays show it came off the arm. Eleven maidens in a row.

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The question is asked about the record for a scoreless period in Test cricket. It’s 154 deliveries between Peter Nevill and Steve O’Keefe against Sri Lanka in 2016.Boland strings together four more dot balls against Stokes. And then it happens.Stokes plays forward to a good-length delivery and it squeezes off a thick outside into the point area, wide enough that the fielder can’t cut it off.After 70 balls, England have scored a run. The crowd cheers. Not quite as loudly as for Khawaja’s century or Boland’s wickets and there’s no doubt a healthy dose of sarcasm from many.

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Twenty-five overs later Stokes and Bairstow walk off together for tea. They have batted out the session, with the help of a sizeable dose of luck when a delivery from Green clips Stokes’ off stump but the bail doesn’t fall. It’s one of England’s best passages of the series, albeit the bar has been set pretty low. In the first over of the resumption they raise the century, only England’s third of the tour, and those 70 balls of struggle are not the only memory of the day.

Virat Kohli's ten best Test knocks

From blazing away in Perth to lording it at Edgbaston, this has been a career of defying the odds

ESPNcricinfo staff03-Mar-2022119 v South Africa, Johannesburg, 2013
The first Test of a 13-month stretch in which India would have to play four overseas series, and Virat Kohli set the tone with an innings South Africa’s then bowling coach Allan Donald said “reminded him of Tendulkar”. In seaming conditions against Dale Steyn, Morne Morkel and Vernon Philander, he left responsibly early before opening up and targeting the spinners. It was a calculated innings that allowed India to eventually get to a winning position before the match ended in a tense draw.
105* v NZ, Wellington, 2014
It looked like India might get Kolkata-ed. They were well ahead in the Test, but Brendon McCullum and BJ Watling had done a Laxman-Dravid, and on day five, it looked like India might lose. Rather than just bat time, Kohli played sparkling shots all around the wicket, taking the pressure off India and getting them a draw.
141 v Australia, Adelaide, 2014
In his first Test as captain, Kohli had already got a century in the first innings. When Australia made an aggressive declaration, leaving India 364 to chase in a day, Kohli decided that his side was going to play for a win and not a draw and that he was going to be the one to show them how. Nathan Lyon was turning it big, there was awkward bounce, but Kohli was sweeping from outside off, cover driving against the turn, pulling and cutting Mitchell Johnson. His strike-rate was 80.57, and he got India to within 60 runs of a win before holing out at midwicket.
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169 v Aus, Melbourne 2014
Spectacular, courageous and skillful, this was an innings of both soul and substance. Kohli had already announced himself with twin hundreds at Adelaide, but with Ajinkya Rahane matching him, he created theatre on cricket’s largest stage by roughing up Johnson (68 off 73 balls), who had terrified England on these pitches the previous season. I was there, and the sensation remains.
Virat Kohli has hit three double hundreds in a year•AFP235 v England, Mumbai, 2016
Don’t be fooled by the scorecard, this was a masterclass against spin on a pitch that had turned vicious by day three. Playing five batters, India were six down with 93 in arrears when Kohli started amping it up, sweeping out of the rough, driving against the turn and lofting down the ground. When he was done, England were done too.
104* vs Sri Lanka, Kolkata, 2017
India opted for a green track to help them prepare for their upcoming tour of South Africa, and the seamers dominated a rain-affected Kolkata Test that seesawed rivetingly. A Suranga Lakmal-led Sri Lanka attack shot India out for 172 in their first innings, and then had them effectively 159 for 7 halfway through day five. Kohli, who had until then batted with a serenity that transcended the conditions, seized the moment with a flurry of breathtaking on-the-up drives and leg-side whips, and transformed the mood at Eden Gardens. In his time at the crease, Kohli scored 104 off 119 balls, while six wickets fell at the other end for 56 runs. When bad light brought an early end to the Test, it was to the relief of Sri Lanka, who were 75 for 7 in a chase of 231.
153 v South Africa, Centurion, 2018
The next best score from his side was 46, the second innings altogether put on 151, South Africa completed the series win despite all the anticipation and build-up from India, but for the 379 minutes that Kohli batted anything seemed possible. Kohli brought India within striking distance of South Africa but an AB de Villiers masterclass in the second innings denied them.
Virat Kohli exults after getting to his 22nd Test hundred•Getty Images149 v England, Edgbaston, 2018
Kohli’s first Test century in England. An innings that showcased his vulnerability at the beginning, followed by his tenacity to stay put, then his free-flowing and glorious strokeplay, and above all, his immense hunger to be one above his opponent. Just before lunch on August 2, 2018, Kohli walked into Edgbaston to vociferous boos from the England crowd after the Indian captain had given an impolite send-off to his opposite number Joe Root on the first day of the series. That was immediately followed by one of the most forensic examinations of his batting by England great James Anderson who bowled 15 overs split across the lunch break to challenge Kohli’s defensive skills and his ego, inducing outside edges frequently, thus creating one of the most engrossing and intimate battles seen between ball and bat in Test cricket. Of the 43 balls he faced from Anderson that day, Kohli had 41 dots, scoring just six runs.On 21, Kohli had nearly started to walk back after poking at an Anderson away-going delivery, but Dawid Malan, at second slip, flopped it badly. Anderson sank on his 36-year-old creaking knees in pain and frustration. Kohli restarted and never stopped there on. It did not matter to him that all of India’s specialist batters had left him to get India closer to England’s first innings 287. Kohli buried his ego and let his bat talk as he was the last man out, with the lead being limited to 13 runs. Upon reaching the three-figures Kohli pointed his finger to his head – as if to say how much temperament matters. Kohli would score another half century in the second innings even as India lost the Test by 31 runs. His efforts were enough for him to uproot Steve Smith and replace the Australian as the No. 1 Test batting in the ICC rankings, the first for an Indian since Sachin Tendulkar in 2011.
123 v Australia, Perth, 2018
Uneven bounce. Seam movement. High pace. Turn from the rough. An unrelenting attack. This pitch required the highest quality of batting. The next highest score in the whole match was 70. Fingers were broken, helmets were crashed, collapses happened, but Kohli seemed like he was batting on a different surface in a different universe. His best innings to date.
74 vs Australia, Adelaide, 2020-21
Before 36 all out, India had had a slight upper hand in the Adelaide Test of December 2020, and quite a bit of that was down to Kohli, who marked his first day-night Test at his favourite venue with an innings of technical virtuosity. On a day-one pitch with spongy bounce, he largely shelved the full-blooded drive and displayed beautiful balance at the crease and judgment around off stump to construct what was then his second-slowest half-century, coming off 123 balls. The innings, together with gritty contributions from Cheteshwar Pujara and Rahane, put India in a seemingly commanding position at 188 for 3, until a mix-up with Rahane cost Kohli his wicket and gave Australia just the opening they needed to bowl India out for 244.

The Rashid Effect was always on show, the 'biggest achievement' just took its time coming

A big blip in the wristspin magician’s career was corrected on Sunday night, and the world seems a fairer place for it

Sidharth Monga30-May-20224:14

Rashid Khan: ‘My objective is to build pressure’

It is one of the anomalies of T20 cricket that until Sunday, Rashid Khan, one of the handful of all-time greats of the format, had not been part of a winning XI in a big T20 tournament final.He had won the Desert Challenge in the UAE and the Shpageeza Cricket League at home in 2017, but these are not tournaments where you encounter the best players of the world.There is no obvious correlation: it is not like teams exhaust their purse on him [although they should] and end up with lesser teams, nor does he suffer from stage fright on the big night. For some reason, it hadn’t happened.Related

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It’s one of those things, which he corrected with the IPL 2022 final.Rashid was glad he finally ticked it off. “It’s the biggest achievement of your career as a player to be part of a winning IPL team,” Rashid told Star Sports after the match. “For this competition, you have to be well prepared and be prepared for all areas. Then only you will be able to win a big competition like this.”A win here needs a lot of hard work, a lot of practice, a lot of good energy, and I think we as a team did really well. It is one of the biggest achievements in my cricket career.”Now to an anomaly that can be explained unlike this one. Rashid has been playing all around the world in all T20 tournaments but has never ended as the clear highest wicket-taker. Twice he has been the joint-highest wicket-taker, but usually you don’t see him among the top wicket-takers.It was the reason one of the Sunrisers Hyderabad coaches, Brian Lara, gave for not retaining him prior to the latest season. “I have a great respect for Rashid Khan but I believe we have the right combination,” Lara told Star Sports. “Rashid Khan was someone who opposition teams decided to defend against, he was not much of a wicket-taker.”

In eight overs in the two playoff matches [against Royals], Rashid conceded only one boundary, that too thanks to a misfield. More incredibly, there were zero boundary attempts against him. Twenty per cent of an innings is too long a cease fire, but Rashid left Royals no choice.

That’s because teams prefer to sit in when Rashid bowls. And Rashid, like someone who truly gets T20, doesn’t go chasing individual glory. He keeps creating wickets for his team-mates.Traditional stats will put Rashid at No. 8 this year, a good eight wickets behind the leader, but his economy rate of 6.6 gets even better on ESPNcricinfo’s Smart Stats. Only two bowlers – Sunil Narine and Mohsin Khan – have a better Smart Economy than Rashid this IPL. Narine, like Rashid, is another true T20 great who doesn’t go chasing wickets because he knows his bowling creates wickets for others. On total bowling impact in our Smart Stats, Rashid sits at No. 5.There is no bigger example of his impact than the two playoffs Gujarat Titans played against Rajasthan Royals where the opposition basically wrote off his four overs. In Qualifier 1, it was quite a sight to see the best batter of the tournament, with only three wickets down and time running out, choosing to just play out the 16th over, bowled by Rashid. Jos Buttler knew he just could not take any risks.In eight overs in the two playoff matches, Rashid conceded only one boundary, that too thanks to a misfield. More incredibly, there were zero boundary attempts against him. Twenty per cent of an innings is too long a cease fire, but Rashid left Royals no choice.ESPNcricinfo LtdFor, like Narine, Rashid has all the ingredients. There is hardly a batter who can claim to pick Rashid because he can bowl legbreaks with the wrong’un release. And if you are not picking a bowler out of the hand, you need one of the two: either a half-volley or the ability to step out. Just like Narine, Rashid’s mastery of length is immaculate, and his pace makes sure you can’t step out to him. You can still guess and try to go after him, but that will give him wickets. And Royals – with R Ashwin batting at No. 7 and at times higher – were in no position to give him wickets. It was in his four overs that Royals lost both the matches.Rashid did have to make a mid-season adjustment, though, after the left-handed opener from Sunrisers, Abhishek Sharma, got stuck into him. On that day, Rashid made up for it with a match-winning 31 of 11 with the bat, but for the rest of the season, he made sure nobody got the better of his bowling.”That was something I had in mind that I should bring my length back a little bit,” Rashid told Star Sports during the final. “That is because of the wickets in Mumbai and here as well. Because of the red soil, I had to adjust myself because the length I bowl elsewhere was not helping because the ball was coming on nicely and there wasn’t enough turn for me in the wickets. So, I pulled it back a little bit, and that’s why I got better economy, and that helped the team in the middle.”It’s not like that adjustment would have impressed Sunrisers much because he didn’t suddenly become a “wicket-taker”. But Sunrisers’ loss was always going to be another team’s gain. There was a big tussle for Rashid at the 2022 auction, to the extent that Titans’ coach Ashish Nehra arrived at a unique arrangement to pay both his first draft picks, Hardik Pandya and Rashid, equally. Now Rashid has an IPL title, and the world seems a fairer place.

Ranji Trophy knockouts: Uttar Pradesh bank on IPL stars, Punjab depend on young core

While Uttarakhand are in the quarters for the second time in three years, Jharkhand make their first appearance since 2016-17

Shashank Kishore04-Jun-2022JharkhandSemi-finalists in 2016-17, Jharkhand since have somewhat slipped under the radar. They staved off a serious fight from Delhi to clinch a narrow opening victory courtesy Shahbaz Nadeem’s ten-for, but slipped to a defeat in the following game against Chhattisgarh as they were shot out for 169 and 133 across two innings. In their final league game, they ran into an inspired Tamil Nadu, who nearly thwarted them, but for a pugnacious lower-order, led by Kumar Kushagra who fought hard to help secure a narrow two-wicket win. When they lost their seventh wicket, Jharkhand needed 36 more, and they held on to enter the pre-quarter-final.In that game, they ground Nagaland, the Plate group qualifiers, to dust, by batting for 2.5 days to make 880, and then bat on in the second innings despite pocketing a 591-run lead. Nagaland’s struggle finally ended just after halfway on the fifth day, as the two teams shook hands at Kolkata’s Eden Gardens, with Jharkhand having taken a lead of 1008, the highest in the history of first-class cricket.The key moment
Their win over Tamil Nadu, which could have gone either way, proved to be the clincher in many ways. As much as the batters deserve credit, fast bowler Rahul Shukla’s fiery spell in the second innings that netted him figures of 12.2-2-29-5 to skittle TN for 152 proved to be the difference. He was well assisted by Nadeem and Anukul Roy, the left-arm spinners.Mandeep Singh is the experienced hand in the Punjab batting line-up•PTI PunjabPunjab have developed a young batting core in Prabhsimran Singh, Abhishek Sharma and Anmolpreet Singh, along with two senior pros in Mandeep Singh and Gurkeerat Mann. The lower-order pluck of Anmol Malhotra, the wicketkeeper, has further given them more heft. Malhotra, 26, has over the past three seasons, bailed the team out of tough situationsOften, Punjab have often found one of these players rising to the occasion and taking the responsibility of shepherding the batting. In the bowling department, they will be without Arshdeep Singh, who has been picked in India’s T20I squad for the South Africa series. The attack will be spearheaded by Siddarth Kaul. As such, Punjab emerged runaway winners in a group also comprising Haryana, Himachal and Tripura, but it’s hard to pick a winner between them and Madhya Pradesh.The key moment
On the opening day of their tournament opener, they found themselves 165 for 4 shortly after lunch. Then Mandeep and Malhotra got together to add 163 at close to 4.5 an over to rattle along. Both went on to make hundreds – Mandeep 159 and Malhotra 100 – to set up a first innings score of 444 that helped consolidate their standing. Their bowlers then responded magnificently to deliver 149 overs across two innings back-to-back to secure victory as Haryana were made to follow-on. Punjab eventually polished off a small target by ten wickets to secure a bonus point to give themselves a headstart.Rinku Singh has scored over 300 runs for UP this Ranji Trophy•Ekana cricket mediaUttar PradeshUp until the final day of the league phase, Uttar Pradesh and Vidarbha were in a neck-and-neck battle for the knockouts. Ultimately, Uttar Pradesh scored a crucial win over Maharashtra in their final league game to squeeze into the knockouts, while Vidarbha lost out an opportunity to press for an outright win against Maharashtra because of rain and damp weather that led to nearly six washed out sessions. This eventually proved to be the deciding factor when it came down to the final qualifying spot.Rinku Singh currently leads their run charts with 300 runs in six innings. The presence of in-form duo of Yash Dayal and Mohsin Khan, both coming off breakthrough IPL season, will bolster their bowling, while Priyam Garg and Akshdeep Nath will carry the batting along with Rinku.The key moment
Uttar Pradesh conceded 462 against Maharashtra, and then conceded a 145-run lead before clawing their way back. The fightback was led by Rinku, whose twin half-centuries in the game proved pivotal. His second-innings effort, an unbeaten 60-ball 78 in dying light on the final day, helped Uttar Pradesh pull off a mammoth chase of 359 to clinch victory and a spot in the knockouts.For insider knowledge against Mumbai, Uttarakhand have Jay Bista to turn to•Prakash ParsekarUttarakhandThree seasons old, Uttarakhand will play their second quarter-final of the Ranji Trophy. This one should be more special than their maiden entry, given they qualified through the Elite pool, having overcome resistance from Andhra, Services and Rajasthan. The luck of the draw means they’re slotted against Mumbai, who are the overwhelming favourites in their quarter-final clash.Jay Bista, the Uttarakhand captain, will be playing against the team he made his first-class debut with. Still a Mumbai resident, Bista has played with every member of the opposition and only moved to Uttarakhand two seasons ago due to lack of opportunities with Mumbai. This will form a fascinating subplot to the contest. They will also bank on Robin Bist and Swapnil Singh’s experience to steer the team. Bist has been part of a title-winning Rajasthan squad while Swapnil comes with years of experience from Baroda.The key moment
In a tight group, their win over Rajasthan allowed them to progress despite losing their final fixture to Andhra. Mayank Mishra, the left-arm spinner, picked up seven wickets to open up a massive lead that Bista then build on. They won by 299 runs. Dikshanshu Negi also contributed two crucial half-centuries to the win. Mishra ended with a 11-wicket haul in a historic win.

England seek to sweep away the mystery as Abrar Ahmed presents a new spin challenge

England’s attacking approach secures a foothold, where former sides might have crumbled

Vithushan Ehantharajah09-Dec-2022It was almost like Pakistan knew what was coming when their official account framed debutant Abrar Ahmed as a “mystery spinner”.If Australian fast bowlers stop English batters from leaving the house, then unconventional twirlers from the subcontinent have tended to get them checking under their beds before they go to sleep. And with seven wickets on his first meeting with England, all before lunch on day one, we can add the 24-year-old to the list of Boogeymen.On the face of it, he joins the likes of Abdul Qadir, Saqlain Mushtaq, Saeed Ajmal, and Abdur Rehman, all of whom have inflicted psychological damage on these opponents. There are many others, of course, but those four names happened to finish with career-bests against England. It will be some going if Abrar betters what he managed at the Multan Cricket Stadium on Friday, though he does potentially have three more goes at this team before the year is out.This England side, however, are not like the others. While respect was given to Abrar’s skill, the approach spoke of a lack of it. Instead of opting to go into their shell against their latest wrist-spinning and/or front-of-the-hand-ring-finger-flicker incarnation of Michael Myers, they decided to confront him head on, with hatchets of their own.Did it work? Well, it’s probably too early to say. But Abrar was taken for 114 in his 22 overs (an economy rate of 5.18) as England still managed 281 from 51.4 overs. And to judge by Duckett’s punchy assessment of their day at the close, there’ll be no psychological hangover to concern them. They certainly didn’t die cowering.Their weapon of retaliation? The sweep. For so long it has been seen as the last resort of the western batter against the turning ball (Pakistan haven’t played the shot once in their reply so far), and on previous calamitous tours of Asia, it has seemed one step removed from the white flag. But it came to England’s aid here. The positive option for the most enthusiastic stroke-makers in the game.”Going harder” has been the McCullum-Stokes decree in the face of any kind of adversity. Up against an unfamiliar foe seeking to inflict some very familiar scars on the kind of pitch where they’ve been buried before, England were cavalier and calculated. Ollie Pope came out and smoked a reverse-sweep off Abrar through backward point for four, the very ball after Zak Crawley had been bowled through the gate with a googly. It was a shot usually premeditated when the bowler begins his run-up. Pope had decided his shot as soon as he got up from his seat in the dressing room, and started to make his way out in the middle.Abrar Ahmed celebrates with Babar Azam as he works his way through England’s batting•Matthew Lewis/Getty ImagesAs for its success rate, again, we might only really know when the game moves on and the pitch deteriorates further. But all in all, a form of sweep – conventional, reverse, switch hit, lap or paddle – was played 50 times, with 74 runs scored and six wickets lost. No doubt the worst of that last figure was Jack Leach switching hands and getting bowled on the move by Zahid Mahmood for a golden duck. Even the No.10, out of his comfort zone, was buying in wholeheartedly.Since 2018-19, England’s percentage of runs through sweeps off spinners is 25.6. Day one’s mark of 33.2 was a notable uptick. It wasn’t, however, as sweep-dominant as the Sri Lanka series at the start of 2021, when Joe Root almost single-handedly boosted the team to about 40 percent. Even those were mostly conventional. And it was in a winning cause, too.However, the four matches in India that followed that tour perhaps offer the best comparison for the surface here, which spun almost immediately. All in all, 205 sweeps were played on that tour, 275 runs scored for 17 dismissals. Only Root (107 from 63) and Ben Stokes (65 from 42) played the stroke with any real conviction. For the rest, it was akin to clasping at air during free-fall.Here, Stokes swept just once and Root not at all. And perhaps the deliveries from Abrar that dismissed them – a googly from outside leg that left Stokes open-faced in appreciation, and a sharp-spinning legbreak that pinned Root on the back foot – could have been swept. But the pair of batters who used the shot the most were also the most successful, England’s top-scorers Ben Duckett (63) and Pope (60).Both are interesting case studies when it comes to the sweep. Duckett has been a proponent of the conventional and reverse since he was old enough to wield a bat, and now has the kind of confidence that means he can strike 29 off 17 with it, as he did today. Pope, on the other hand, has tinkered to such an extent that, while facing Rashid Khan in a T20 Blast match, he happened upon a wrong-footed sweep – with the right-hander’s back foot (right) coming forward rather than the front (left). He nailed that once here.Naturally, in keeping with the theme of the day, both men eventually fell on their brooms to be dismissed, and against the man of the moment, of course. But, as is the way under Stokes and McCullum, there were no regrets.Related

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“For me, generally a sweep is kind of a forward defence, especially when the ball is spinning into me,” Duckett said afterwards. “I’m gutted I missed two in the last two games, but I’m going to be playing plenty more out here.”Two years ago, maybe I’d have played differently to that. But with the backing from the captain and the coach, I’m pretty sure they’d be quite annoyed with me if I got out knocking it to short leg.”I just tried to sweep every ball [Abrar] bowled, really. Try and stick to my game and not really worry about what he was trying to do.”There were brains behind the belligerence. Duckett said he felt comfortable to go “every ball” because of how Abrar operated: primarily as a legspinner with a fine googly who would rarely pull his length short.”I actually think the control he had throughout his spell was very good,” Duckett said. “Generally, someone like that will give you bad balls. He tended to miss [his length] on the fuller side, which is what you want from someone who spins it both ways. That’s kind of why I swept: because it doesn’t matter which way it’s spinning when you’re sweeping.”It was insightful that Duckett likened the “high-risk” nature of sweeping spinners to driving against the new ball. Without the shot, England would have finished well short of the 281 that they eventually made, on a pitch that would have put the frighteners up previous iterations of this team.”I’d much rather get out playing a sweep shot than playing a forward defence,” he added. “It got me runs today and made me score quick. We were really focussed on being positive. If we didn’t score at that rate it could have easily been 150, 200 all out.”He’s got a point and it’s worth remembering Duckett has been burned by such negativity before. In his second Test appearance, back in 2016 on a raging bunsen in Mirpur, he had wristily flayed Bangladesh’s spinners to all parts.By tea on day three, England were 100 for no loss, Duckett 56 – the first of now three scores above fifty – to Alastair Cook’s 39, chasing a target of 273. They then lost 10 wickets in the next 22.3 overs after the break with one of the meekest displays against the turning ball. As it happens, only Stokes – 25 from 36 – tried to give anything back.Having taken two Pakistan wickets by stumps, and still leading by 174, you could just about argue the opening day in Multan was tilted slightly in England’s favour. Sure, they could have improved on their score of 281, but probably only through doing what they did with more gusto.

Trent Boult: 'It felt bizarre to have a Test on down the road and not play in it'

The New Zealand and Rajasthan Royals seamer talks about the club vs country debate, getting Kohli out first ball, and looks ahead to the World Cup

Matt Roller10-May-2023Trent Boult jumps out of the pool, grabs a towel and his Phoenix Suns basketball jersey, and wanders over to perch on a deckchair next to me. Behind him, his wife, Gert, and their three young sons are relaxing in the early-afternoon sunshine in Jaipur.It is the sort of scene that Boult pictured last year, when he requested a release from his national contract with New Zealand Cricket (NZC). There would not have been anything stopping him bringing his family to India as a contracted player, but after a decade as an all-format international cricketer, Boult decided it was time to take ownership of his own schedule.Related

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Trent Boult hoping he's not done with Test cricket just yet

“Flicking through the camera roll on my phone, it’s a good feeling, to be honest,” Boult says, reflecting on nine months as a freelancer. “When I made that decision, it was [for] two reasons. One, to get to spend more time with my kids and be around the house; and then two, to get the chance to play in some leagues and play a bit of cricket around the world.”Since September 2022, Boult has played a dozen games for New Zealand across formats, five of them at the T20 World Cup in Australia. He has missed home series against India, England and Sri Lanka, and tours to India and Pakistan, instead playing in the Big Bash, for Melbourne Stars, and the ILT20, for MI Emirates, and, after a two-month break, in the IPL for Rajasthan Royals.”My boys had the chance to come to Dubai. They came to the Big Bash for Christmas – I’ve always wanted to bring them to India and I’ve had the chance to do that with Rajasthan [Royals] as well,” he says. “It’s been cool. It’s freed up a lot of time to spend with them.”But it has also put his international career on pause. NZC made clear to Boult that his decision would mean other players – contracted players – were prioritised in selection, and while he retains ambitions in all formats of the game, he has not played a Test match in nearly a year.In February the unavailability of Kyle Jamieson and Matt Henry left New Zealand scrambling for replacements ahead of the first Test against England in Mount Maunganui. Boult, who lives a short distance from Bay Oval, was the obvious replacement; instead Blair Tickner and Scott Kuggeleijn were drafted in for Test debuts.Boult turning down a central contract means that he has potentially shut the door on his Test career•Getty Images”It felt bizarre,” he reflects. “It really did. I was hoping that I would get a call-up… Test match cricket was on, a couple of kilometres down the road, and I wasn’t part of it. I’ve played nearly 80 Tests and had some pretty great times in the black cap, but they said that if I chose to move away from that contract, my time in it would be limited.”And I’m pretty sure they’ve never had anyone play Test cricket that isn’t contracted – so that probably makes it hard as well. But hey, I made that decision. I’m happy with where I’m at, and I’ve been lucky to experience some cool times over the last couple of months.”It invites an obvious question: has Boult played his last Test match? “Hopefully not, no,” he says. “There are some big Tests coming up next year: Australia and South Africa are due to travel to New Zealand. And Test cricket is still my favourite format.”It is what it is: I’ve made my decision. I’ve been lucky enough to have a 13-year career in the black cap, and hey, I’ve still got a big desire to play in the World Cup as well. We’ll see how that unfolds: there’s still a bit of movement in the landscape at the moment.”Boult has played in five World Cups across formats and has three runners-up medals to show for his efforts. “We’ve been agonisingly close to lifting some pretty prestigious silverware,” he says. “I remember after the 2019 final, I said to Kane [Williamson] that we’ve got to be there again, come 2023 in India.”It’s a shame with what’s going on with his knee but he’ll be working as hard as he can to try and get there. It’s snuck up on us, really: it’s only a few months away. It’s such a great tournament. One hundred percent I’ve got that desire to be out there.”We’re a great one-day side. We’ve got some players that have travelled to India and experienced the conditions a lot, and that’s what it comes down to in World Cups. You can’t buy experience, and you can’t replace players that have toured for however many years across these conditions.”Boult has 64 wickets across five World Cups in both white-ball formats•Getty ImagesIf it seems unjust that Boult wishes to pick and choose which series he does and doesn’t play, consider this: New Zealand’s men played 46 games of international cricket last year, their largest number in a calendar year. In 2023 they have already played 29 and will break that record comfortably.”I’m trying to cast myself back to eight or nine years ago, when tours seemed to be a month long,” he says. “You’d play a couple of Tests and three one-dayers, and that was about it. And I can’t remember the last tour I went on that was under almost eight weeks, really. They’re too long.”And if you play all formats, there were years there where I was at home for probably three or four weeks. I was away on the road both touring in New Zealand and internationally for ten months a year. Doing that while raising a family, getting married – all the things that normal people do – just makes it a bit more challenging.”The sport has changed over the last 12 months, with the launch of new leagues in the UAE, South Africa and the United States – all of them featuring several teams backed by IPL franchises – disrupting the status quo. Some players have started to discuss year-round contracts with franchises; international cricket’s supremacy is being threatened.”It’s an interesting time for both franchise and international cricket, I reckon,” Boult says. “The leagues – there’s a lot of movement happening in that space, but the golden question is what it’s going to look like in a couple of years. International cricket, I think, is going to suffer in some aspects.”The worry for the younger cricketer is simply the choice of chasing money and playing less cricket for more money, basically. First of all, you have to be a good enough player to be able to be selected to play in multiple franchise tournaments; and you have to be a pretty good cricketer to have a ten-year international career.”There’s a place for both of them to exist. You need to have an international presence and ability to be able to come and play in an IPL and be able to deliver. And you’re only a couple of bad performances away from being pushed out of a franchise as well, so you’ve got to be careful.””You’ve only got to get one ball to swing, then you’re in the batter’s head”•AFP/Getty ImagesNot that Boult is likely to be “pushed out” by Rajasthan Royals anytime soon. In the long term, it would be no great surprise if he agreed a deal to play for their teams in the Caribbean and South Africa too. “I can’t really make those decisions until they are put in front of me, I suppose,” he says.Since Royals signed him ahead of the 2022 season, Boult has led their seam contingent, opening the bowling and being given a clear role: to attack with the new ball, and strike early. He has taken 11 wickets in the first over of an innings in the last two IPLs; the next most by a single bowler is five.”As soon as I start thinking about it, I don’t get any wickets,” he says with a grin.”What I’ve really enjoyed coming to Rajasthan is being given that role: ‘You’re here to get us wickets in the powerplay. Go do it.’ It’s a real freedom to express what I feel I can do.”I like to swing the ball, I like to pitch it up and get a bit funky with a couple inswingers, a couple outswingers, whatever it is. I’ll tell you what I’m just thinking in general really, and that’s just: be as accurate as possible. I’ve always thought that, as a bowler, I’ve got full control of dictating the play. Nothing can happen until I deliver that ball. And if I deliver a beauty, then it’s going to be even harder for him.”Without giving away too many secrets, I basically try bowling an inswinger every ball. If it swings in, it swings in; if it doesn’t, it goes the other way, and everyone thinks I’m trying something else. That’s the beauty of being a left-armer. I’ve had many chats with Wasim Akram, Chaminda Vaas – all the guys I’ve idolised. You’ve only got to get one ball to swing, then you’re in the batter’s head.”One of his first-over wickets this season stands out from the rest. “My kids had just got here,” Boult says. “I was on 99 [IPL] wickets, it was about 700 degrees, and I was bowling to probably the best opening pair in the whole tournament.” The Chinnaswamy Stadium roared as Royal Challengers Bangalore’s openers walked out to bat – then fell silent.”To put one straight into Virat’s knee first ball was pretty cool. I don’t really normally give it too much celebration, but I quickly gave it a big turnaround to the family up in the hospitality area. I remember waking up at about 4am that morning, because my kids were jet-lagged.Boult has struck twice in the first over in the IPL three times since 2020 – Abhishek Sharma (in picture) and Rahul Tripathi were his latest victims•BCCI”I said, ‘Come on boys, you need to go to sleep. Daddy’s got a big game today. I’m playing against one of the best batters in the world.’ My oldest son said, ‘Are you going to get him out?’ I said, ‘Probably not’ – and I actually managed to! I couldn’t believe it.”I don’t really remember too many of my wickets in terms of who, when and where, but I remember my debut IPL wicket was Mahendra Singh Dhoni and he absolutely melted one to cover in the 17th [20th] over at Chepauk Stadium. The crowd went silent as well, but that wicket there [Kohli’s] was probably equal to a silence of a ground that I’ve ever heard as well.”The adulation that both men – Dhoni and Kohli – receive in India is staggering, but overseas players are also conspicuous compared to back home. Boult can walk down the road in Mount Maunganui without much attention, but in India, he is the centre of attention when he steps outside of the team hotel.”When the IPL was in a bubble, the best part about it was that you were locked into one area,” he says. “It was a lot easier – the logistics were a lot easier – but to have it back around the country playing at different grounds in front of big crowds, it’s what the IPL’s all about.”But the home-and-away format does have its challenges, particularly when travelling with a young family. Coincidentally, two days before our conversation, we were on a flight from Mumbai to Jaipur together; Boult was asked for selfies and autographs throughout the journey, even when unfolding a pushchair on the tarmac.”And [carrying] a nappy bag, and everything else!” he interjects. “It can get a bit much. The travel days are pretty tricky with three little boys running around with you, but it just shows the craziness of cricket over in this country; the culture, that everyone follows it, everyone loves it.”They just want a piece of all cricketers. But no, it’s good fun. I’ve been so lucky: it’s probably my ninth year, I reckon, at the IPL…”I’ve been bloody lucky to get the opportunities that I have.”

Travis Head defines another day of Ashes cricket

No batter in the world thrives more against flagging bowlers

Matt Roller28-Jun-2023You might have heard the whispers about Travis Head. He doesn’t like it up at him. India’s fast bowlers worked that out at The Oval, when Head was making a match-defining 163 against them in the World Test Championship final. A few weeks later, on the other side of the River Thames, England’s bowlers tried to prove the same.Just after six o’clock, Ben Stokes set a short-ball field, with catchers back on the leg side, and threw the ball to Josh Tongue. Tongue was the point-of-difference bowler in his otherwise samey attack of right-arm, medium-fast bowlers, and the man tasked with testing out Head’s apparent vulnerability against the quick and nasty stuff.Tongue banged his first ball into the pitch, halfway down and wide outside off stump. Head didn’t flinch. He stood tall, lifting his feet off the ground a touch as he flat-batted through straight mid-on, tantalisingly out of Stuart Broad’s reach as he wearily gave chase.Four balls later, Head anticipated another short ball. He shuffled outside his leg stump to give himself room to free his arms, and took on the men in the deep on the hook. This time, he cracked Tongue away for four over Stokes’ head at deep backward square leg. Head had walked out at No. 5 with Steven Smith unbeaten on 43. Now, both batters were on 71.Related

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Stokes applauded, as if to suggest that it was a matter of time before England’s ploy worked. It never did: instead, he fell to Joe Root’s offspin shortly after. In total, England’s seamers bowled Head a dozen short balls; he scored 21 runs off them, including four boundaries. It was hard graft, for no obvious reward.England only went short to Head in the second half of his innings, after their more orthodox plans hadn’t worked. He thrived on any width, playing his trademark half-punch, half-cut where he combines fast hands and whippy wrists to slap through the off side; when they went straight, he flicked nonchalantly off his pads.They have been dreading the prospect of bowling to him again ever since he finished the reverse series as the leading run-scorer on either side – despite missing the Sydney Test through Covid. At the start of this summer, Stokes described him as “so hard to bowl to” and “really hard to set fields to”.Head is Australia’s werewolf. He is a different beast once evening descends. Since his return to Australia’s Test team ahead of the 2021-22 Ashes, he has scored just under half (46.7%) of his runs in the final session. There is no batter in the world who thrives more against flagging bowlers.That might sound like damning him with faint praise but consider this: there is no batter in the world that has scored more runs in a certain session than Head in the third since his recall 19 months ago. He has averaged 89.37 in the third session, and struck at 93.70.!function(){“use strict”;window.addEventListener(“message”,(function(a){if(void 0!==a.data[“datawrapper-height”]){var e=document.querySelectorAll(“iframe”);for(var t in a.data[“datawrapper-height”])for(var r=0;r<e.length;r++)if(e[r].contentWindow===a.source){var i=a.data["datawrapper-height"][t]+"px";e[r].style.height=i}}}))}();

“Trav is Trav,” David Warner said at the close. “It’s the way he plays. It’s exciting. He’s going to come out there and to be honest, we’re lucky he’s in our team because he can take it away from you in that half an hour patch. Striking at over 100 on that wicket is exceptional – and that’s what you get from Trav.”Head has been a revelation since coming back into the Australia side, liberated to play like he did in Sheffield Shield cricket for South Australia. In his first 31 innings as a Test batter, Head averaged 39.75 and struck at 49.65; after a year’s gap, he has played another 31 since, averaging 54.71 and striking at 82.45.On the morning of his career-reviving hundred at the Gabba at the start of the last Ashes series, Head bumped into Adam Gilchrist, who was working as a broadcaster. “He said, ‘If you get the chance, fight fire with fire. Play your way,'” Head recounted in a recent interview. There is, undeniably, a shade of Gilchrist in his style.”He applies the pressure back onto the bowling unit,” Warner added. “I felt they bowled pretty good to him first up. The ball was moving a little bit and then he countered. He just manages to hit them through backward point or get on top of the ball that’s rising off the wicket. He just finds a way.”Head was out for 77 off 73 balls while falling on his backside. He charged down the pitch to swing Root back over his head into the Pavilion, and toppled over as Jonny Bairstow whipped the bails off. It was a comedy dismissal – but by that stage, England weren’t laughing.In all probability, Smith will convert his 85 not out into a 32nd Test and 12th Ashes hundred on Thursday morning; in years to come, it will be his innings that stands out on this scorecard. But make no mistake: this was a day of Ashes cricket defined by Travis Head. Another one.

Want to watch Shaheen Afridi bowl? Peer through the fence

It’s Saturday two days out for Christmas, and it’s easy to miss the cricket at the Junction Oval

Danyal Rasool23-Dec-2023″So how do we get in?”An avid reader of this website, out on a stroll with his parents on a sleepy Saturday afternoon, appears to recognise the ESPNcricinfo journalist peering through the chain-link fence at the game of cricket going on at the ground.He’s informed that he can’t get in; this two-day tour game put on for Pakistan at the Junction Oval against a Victorian XI cobbled together out of players not part of the Big Bash League was a fairly last-minute arrangement.The family seems thoroughly unimpressed by this answer, which feels thinner every time you say it out loud. It is an explanation I’ll have to repeat several times during the day, with pockets of spectators showing up throughout the afternoon and wondering why they’re being shut out.Related

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The official explanation is the venue hasn’t had enough notice to get sufficient staff in to open up to fans or even media. Cost is also understood to be a factor, and as such, the game – the only real match practice the visiting side will have between the first two Tests – is essentially unconsumable: no entry, no live stream, no highlights. If you want to watch Shaheen Shah Afridi bowl, you show up to St Kilda and peer through the fence.

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It isn’t so much that the Junction Oval creeps up on you, but for a ground that has an international side partaking in an ongoing match, it is fairly easy to miss. It’s a Saturday two days out from Christmas, and the holiday season has fully kicked in now. It’s an idyllic day in Melbourne, warm and sunny with an invigorating sea breeze to freshen up the late morning air. Most people who board one of the trams heading that way are off to St Kilda beach, the pier and the surrounding market street a much bigger tourist draw than a nondescript cricket game. Get off at the right stop, and the signs all tell you how to get to the beach, none pointing you towards the Junction Oval.It feels like a well-to-do, trendy neighbourhood; the hustle of the city centre is all but non-existent. Leafy green spaces abound, with parks and football fields dotted around walking paths and cycling trails. A group of teenage boys kick an AFL ball around; this very much feels more like AFL-country than cricket county. A young girl, wearing a Matildas replica jersey, kicks a football around with her dad. A pair of retrievers struggle to break free from their leashes, and all hell briefly breaks loose when one of them does, galloping happily around the field.And then you stumble upon it, almost by accident. It could easily be just another quaint ground putting on a casual Saturday game. But then you see a tall left-arm fast bowler building up steam, the unmistakable action, the high release point. It’s Shaheen Shah Afridi.

The ground hosted eight games during the 2020 Women’s World Cup, but for the most part, Sheffield Shield cricket is the highest level of the sport it generally plays host to. Idyllic as the surroundings are, the audience it commands for those games would do well to get up into three figures. This is a higher level of cricket, and yet, if you know where to go, you’ve nearly got it all to yourself.Much of the ground is made even less accessible with white sheeting locking out anyone wishing to peer in, as if the inhabitants within the fence are taking part in something actively clandestine. Mercifully, a little segment around mid-off has been spared by the tarpaulin. A pair of tall trees provide refuge from the burning sun. It’s a good place to spend an afternoon.The Junction has a reputation for being flat, and a strong Victorian batting line-up spends much of the afternoon flaying their more decorated opponents all around the ground. Marcus Harris, one of the leading contenders to replace David Warner at the top of the order after he retires next month, is in sparkling form, smashing 126 in 131 balls. Twenty-two-year-old Dylan Brasher dispatches Shaheen for three successive boundaries in an unbeaten 79.They’re assisted by some fairly ordinary Pakistan bowling, particularly by two men pushing to start at the MCG. Mir Hamza never quite finds his line, going for 69 in 13 overs. Sajid Khan, meanwhile, doesn’t ever find his length, and is punished off both back and front foot. With Noman Ali ruled out of the tour with appendicitis and Abrar unlikely to feature either, Sajid is the last specialist spin option left, so this isn’t ideal.The Victorians notch up 272 for 4 in just 59 overs before declaring to give Pakistan a final crack. The groundsman spots the tiny crowd that’s built up this side of the fence. “20 overs to go I reckon,” he shouts.The Victorians don’t have quite as many stellar names in the bowling ranks, but each quick wants to leave their mark. Pakistan captain Shan Masood is the first to be dispatched in a manner you don’t need to come to the Junction Oval to witness, edging a wide delivery through to the keeper. There’s a spring in the Victorians’ step, eager to give their international opponents a bloody nose before the game’s called off.Off the last few moments of the day, they get their wish. Tyler Pearson gets Abdullah Shafique to drag one on after a pretty little cameo, but the play of the day happens off the match’s last delivery. By now, it’s no secret Sarfaraz Ahmed and short deliveries on bouncy wickets are a bad combination, so 23-year-old Sam Elliott, whose father once played 21 Test matches for Australia, bangs one in. It gets big on Sarfaraz, and he can’t get on top of the pull shot he’s just played. It flies up to midwicket, where Pearson dashes in and takes a superb diving catch at midwicket. If that turns out to be the final competitive shot he plays in Australia, it will feel strangely apt.Yelps of glee break out amidst the young fielding side; Pakistan took 59 overs to take four wickets, and have given away three in barely over 11. They’ve seen enough. The handshakes come out, and the ground empties once more.It’s evening now, and the town is a hive of activity. The temperature’s begun to dip slightly and with the sun easing off, traffic at the beach has only increased. The trams stop every few minutes, regurgitating people out onto the street, people carrying beach towels, kids running off to the closest ice-cream shops, surfers with their boards primed. It’s unlikely any of them had a clue an international sporting event took place until just minutes ago here.And, as the no-entry signs and the white tarpaulin pulled across a chain-link fence suggest, perhaps it was intended to be that way.

Keshav Maharaj: 'I believe character wins trophies, not skill'

The captain of Durban’s Super Giants talks about his leadership philosophy, and his future with South Africa

Firdose Moonda08-Feb-20242:39

‘Jonty Rhodes is like espresso in a human body’

Keshav Maharaj wore a face like thunder.His Durban’s Super Giants side failed to chase 158 against Sunrisers Eastern Cape and secure a spot in the SA20 final. Though they can still get there via a second qualifier, Maharaj demands excellence and would have preferred to succeed on the first attempt.”I am a very driven, motivated person. I might not be a very flamboyant person but I am quite a head boy,” he says the day before that first-chance Qualifier match. “l am quite disciplined.”Related

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That trait has been in evidence – from the time he dealt with the rejection of not making South Africa’s Under-19 squad by taking himself out of his comfort zone for a stint in the Sussex Premier League, where he got into better shape and focused on his fitness to his seemingly miraculous recovery from a ruptured Achilles last year. But now he is showing it as a captain.Though Maharaj has led in 53 matches across formats, including in seven ODIs and five T20Is, the DSG role has presented an opportunity to make a high-profile team his own, and he has embraced the challenge wholeheartedly. “I love captaining. I find it brings a different perspective, gives me a sense of calm on the field and makes me think clearly, even about my own game,” he says.Maharaj is known for his cricket mind, but he says he leads through a combination of knowledge and instinct. “I am a ‘feel’ captain,” he says. “I do a lot of homework in terms of understanding certain types of players and ebbs and flows, but I also rely a lot off the feel I get off the wicket in terms of trying to read stuff”I am a very driven, motivated person. I might not be a very flamboyant person but I am quite a head boy”•Oli Scarff/AFP/Getty Images”It’s also about making sure my players are in the right frame of mind to execute and know how to work on various situations. I take the time to observe people and how they are and learn those people skills, because I believe characters will win me trophies and not skill.”That’s an interesting observation from someone involved in a sport that is skills-based, on multiple levels. For batters, cricket is about shot selection, changing gears, and these days, power-hitting. For bowlers, variations in deliveries and pace are essential. Maharaj says none of that is as important as what players can do when it’s crunch time.”Character wins you championships, skill wins you games. So in pressure moments, you want the character to come out, not the skill. Can the character deliver under pressure? Probably yes. Can the skill deliver under pressure? Probably not. That’s my philosophy.”Rewind to the 50-over World Cup last year. South Africa were playing Pakistan, ten days after their humbling defeat to Netherlands. Chasing 271, South Africa needed 11 off 27 balls when the final pair of Maharaj and Tabraiz Shamsi, neither of whom is known for his batting, came together. Shamsi outside-edged and ran as though his life depended on it to get off the mark, kept a Haris Rauf yorker out, and saw off Mohammad Wasim’s searing seam. Maharaj resisted his natural urge to attack and faced 20 balls for just three runs before turning Mohammad Nawaz behind square to score the boundary that sealed the win. Character, not skill, got South Africa home. And that’s the kind of approach Maharaj has tried to get out of DSG this season.”We’ve got a strong bunch of characters this year,” he says. Heinrich Klaasen, hardened from a bout of Covid-19 that severely affected his health and being dropped from the Test team (he has since retired from the format), scored 85 off 35 balls to give DSG their opening win in a rain-affected game against MI Cape Town. Medium-pacer Junior Dala, benched for the bulk of the campaign, seized the opportunity when given and took 5 for 26 to as DSG beat Pretoria Capitals by eight runs. Others, like Matthew Breetzke, DSG’s leading run-scorer, who is now knocking on the door of the South African side, and Marcus Stoinis and Nicholas Pooran have all contributed to DSG’s success.It’s a complete turnaround from their inaugural campaign, in which they finished fifth out of six teams, winning only four matches. Although they had strong batters in Quinton de Kock and Klaasen, their bowling misfired and none of their bowlers were among the top 15 wicket-takers.This season DSG have picked a more streamlined squad, retaining their batting core but refining their bowling stocks, and have four wicket-takers in the top ten.”There is more clarity in what we are trying to achieve as a unit,” Maharaj says. “The combinations we’ve got this year are a lot more balanced. And the one thing we’ve done this year is played well at home.”DSG have won four of their five home games – and the hearts and minds of Durban’s fans, who have been recently apathetic to cricket but have flocked to a revamped Kingsmead to watch them.”A lot of guys from other teams have come and said Durban is up there with the top two best atmospheres in the SA20, from a vibe [point of view] and the crowd,” Maharaj says. “The perception of Durban has changed, uniquely. A lot of guys used to come there and be like, ‘Urgh, Durban.’ And now a lot of guys want to come back here.”We’ve got good people and Durban is probably the most relaxed place out of the provinces in South Africa. It’s basically mini-India. Everyone who has come across has fitted in really well and we’ve got a good culture in our dressing room.”Under Maharaj, Durban’s Super Giants have won seven out of ten matches in this season’s SA20•SA20Unlike some of the other franchises (Eastern Cape aside, who are coached by a local, Adrian Birrell), DSG’s support staff is built on Durbanites – Lance Klusener and Jonty Rhodes are the head coach and fielding coach respectively and their yin and yang have helped mould the team’s approach.”Lance is very relaxed and doesn’t give too much away. He is a poker face-type guy and knows how to keep a sense of calm. I don’t think much flusters him. I had the privilege of working for a long period of time in the domestic set-up and he is probably the reason why I am sitting here today, playing for South Africa and being a captain. He showed me what it is like to kick on and be a professional,” Maharaj says.”And then you get Jonty, who is just a bundle of energy. I don’t think that guy shuts down. He is like espresso in a human body. If you’re having a down day, he is walking on that field during a time-out, giving his contagious energy to guys. They always say local boys know the conditions the best, and they also draw crowds.”And so does Maharaj, who embodies the spirit of Durban by championing it as home. “For me, Durban is the best place to be. I don’t see myself anywhere else in the world or in the country. It’s been nice to be the local boy leading the team.”He was offered the captain’s job at a time when he feared he might not be retained in the set-up. “I was injured at the time – about four months post-op and I was trying to find out if I am going to be kept in the side, and they [the RPSG group, who own the Super Giants franchise] were like, ‘We want to have a Zoom call.’ I thought, ‘Oh god, what is this about,’ and then Dr Goenka [team owner Sanjiv Goenka] said, ‘We want you to lead the side.’ It was something that also gave me motivation to get back on the field again.”

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Maharaj looked like he had been struck by a lightning bolt.He was celebrating the wicket of Kyle Mayers in a Test against West Indies last March when he abruptly fell to the ground with what was later discovered to be a ruptured Achilles. Did he think he would never play again?”I’d love to be a spin coach who not only works on the technical aspect but also the mental approach towards the pressures of being a spinner, because we are the easiest target in cricket teams”•Phill Makagoe/AFP/Getty Images”It did cross my mind. But I think I got over it very quickly when I said to myself, ‘I need to play the World Cup.'”The tournament was six months away. Typically it takes nine months to a year to completely recover from an injury that serious, but Maharaj was not going to let convention dictate his career. “I would have been shattered if I didn’t get there [to the World Cup], but I wanted to give myself the best chance of being there. It would have hurt but that was extra motivation.”Maharaj made sure he was ready not only for the tournament but also for South Africa’s preparatory series against Australia the month before. At the World Cup itself, he was South Africa’s third-highest wicket-taker, behind Gerald Coetzee and Marco Jansen, and had their best economy rate. He was instrumental to their win over Pakistan and their run to the last four, and was crestfallen that they could not take two steps further to the trophy.”I wanted to have that fairy-tale story, but getting to the semi-final was a huge thing,” he says. “It was not meant to be but the cricket we played was phenomenal. We went down with a fight. And we were well received when we came back and hopefully we can build on that.”For him, the outcome is only a dream deferred. “If South Africa want me, I am going to try and go for as long as possible, especially up until the 2027 World Cup. That’s my first goal. Hopefully they won’t look past me and I can still put in performances that warrant a place there, and then we will assess from there. Hopefully we can play the next three ICC events because I will feel very unfulfilled if I don’t win a World Cup.”Maharaj turned 34 on Wednesday and believes he has six years of international cricket left in him and more in the domestic game. “I want to play international cricket until I’m 40. And then I still want to play the domestic game as long as I can – maybe a year or two after my international career. I believe as a South African contracted player I have a duty and fulfilment to make our system stronger and better.”He also has plans beyond that. “I’d love to be a spin coach who not only works on the technical aspect but also the mental approach towards the pressures of being a spinner because we are the easiest target in cricket teams,” he says. “I want to make sure I am fighting for spinners to be the first selection in the team – at least one. I believe every condition around the world demands a spinner. A spinner is an asset in any team and I still believe you need a relative amount of control in T20 cricket because if you find a pot of gold in the wicket, you need someone who can be there consistently.”He said those words with a face like sunshine.

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