'A 22-year-old playing in the Under-15s'

Twitter reactions after Mitchell Starc became the first bowler to take two hat-tricks in one Sheffield Shield game

ESPNcricinfo staff07-Nov-2017If England didn’t already know about how strong Australia’s attack is, Mitchell Starc sent out a reminder with two hat-tricks in one Sheffield Shield game. The man whose role Starc hopes to emulate in the Ashes led the plaudits for the incredible feat.

Before his double-hat-trick this week, Starc took a career-best 8-73 in the second innings of his previous Shield game.

England commentators looked to play down Starc’s red-hot form.

Others set even higher targets for Starc.

Much higher targets.

Zimbabwe's last big job

The World Cup Qualifier at home presents an opportunity for several senior players to sign their careers off with one last hurrah

Liam Brickhill04-Mar-2018One last big job.That’s how many of Zimbabwe’s squad will see the upcoming World Cup Qualifier. “A few us will be playing our last World Cup and I think the least we can do for each other is try and give everything we have in the tank for every game we play,” Sikandar Raza said ahead of Zimbabwe’s opener against Nepal. “If it happens, at least we can leave Zimbabwe Cricket with our heads held high. My first goal is to leave this beautiful game in better shape that I found it in.”Raza, 31, is one of nine players in Zimbabwe’s squad aged 30 or above. For Hamilton Masakadza, 34, the qualifier is the first act in what will almost certainly be his final lap in international cricket. Certainly, the World Cup in England would likely be the last chapter for a player who has stood as a colossus in Zimbabwe’s top order for 17 years – half of his entire life. Captain Graeme Cremer, 31, is well aware of the significance of the coming weeks to Zimbabwean cricketing history.”There’s a lot riding on these qualifiers,” Cremer told the ICC website. “Such a huge tournament, and a historic one. The first one being held here in Zimbabwe will make it more special. It’s always going to be tough to qualify but the team is ready and I can see the excitement being back in Zimbabwe. It’ll be special for everyone and everyone will be looking to get to the final.”We really want to have a decent crack at these qualifiers. We know what’s at stake so we’re raring to go. There’s a special buzz in the change room playing at home, really looking forward to it,” Cremer said. “There is definitely pressure especially because we’re playing at home. A lot of strong Zimbabwean teams in the past have had to qualify and they have qualified. That’s extra pressure on us and we’ll embrace that.”This will be Zimbabwe’s fourth World Cup qualifier – they have won three previous campaigns in what was then called the ICC Trophy, securing their places at the 1983, 1987 and 1992 World Cups. Their match against Afghanistan on Tuesday will set an early marker for their progress: a win in that game could be vital to them pulling the whole heist off.

If we qualify, that will change a lot of things for the better, for us as individuals, for our families. The country is going through a positive change as well, that will give a lot of people, if not everyone, something to smile aboutSikandar Raza

Given that they will have to face the No.1 ranked ODI bowler in the world in that match, and given the inconsistencies that have plagued Zimbabwe, one real danger will be psyching themselves out on the big stage.A couple of years ago, Tinashe Panyangara received a fine and a suspension for sharing a video of Mitchell Johnson’s bouncers with his team-mates via Whatsapp before Australia toured Zimbabwe. Panyangara’s jocular presence is no longer a feature of Zimbabwe’s set-up, and these days it could be googlies, rather than bouncers, that might be circulating on Zimbabwean cricketers’ cellphones ahead of the qualifiers. Specifically, Rashid Khan’s googlies. Type his name into YouTube, and you will be presented with hundreds of examples why he is among the best limited-overs bowlers in the world, and why Zimbabwe have every reason to be afraid. Come Tuesday, he is likely to be the difference between the two teams.Hamilton Masakadza acknowledges his half-century•Associated PressZimbabwe’s own batsmen make cameo appearances in several of those online highlights. Rashid helped himself to 16 for 127 against them in the ODIs that took place in February, to go with the 5 for 42 he took across the two preceding T20Is, at under a-run-a-ball.Zimbabwe’s most pressing concern will be with their middle order, who have struggled in recent times and against whom Rashid will be weaving his magic. While Raza, Brendan Taylor and Craig Ervine all came away from the 4-1 defeat to Afghanistan in Sharjah with their personal reputations intact, only once in the series did more than one batsman come good in the same match. Invariably, it was spin that did the damage. Conditions at Queens Sports Club will be a far cry from those in the desert, but equally helpful to slow bowling in their own way and Zimbabwe’s trial by spin is not yet over.Enter Sean Williams. The dynamic left hander was absent from Zimbabwe’s tri-series adventure against Sri Lanka and Bangladesh for reasons as yet unclear. He then ended up breaking his spinning finger in practice, missing the Afghanistan series, but was recalled by Zimbabwe at the last moment before this tournament. The bolt was removed from his finger on Friday, and coach Heath Streak has said he is “touch and go” to take part in the match against Afghanistan on Tuesday. Zimbabwe need him desperately.Williams is probably the best player of spin in the country, and he also has a history of overcoming health concerns in order to compete. In 2016 he scored his maiden Test hundred against New Zealand while seriously ill with a high fever.”But it’s not just the Afghans, I think to me every match is a great match,” Raza told the ICC website. Also part of Group B, alongside the hosts, are Nepal, Hong Kong and Scotland, each bringing their own unique challenges, and each quite capable of overcoming Zimbabwe on their day. “If we qualify, that will change a lot of things for the better, for us as individuals, for our families. The country is going through a positive change as well, that will give a lot of people, if not everyone, something to smile about, something to believe, something to hope for.”This is Zimbabwe’s litmus test; their line in the sand. Adversity has forged them into a band of brothers, and fate has now offered them a shot at redemption, glory even, in the third act of their careers. The very future of Zimbabwean cricket hinges on the next month. Several players, long-tired of the financial crisis that continuously affects their game, have confirmed that if Zimbabwe fail to secure a spot at next year’s World Cup, they may look at pursuing their careers outside the country.This is their “last hurrah”, as Raza put it. One last big job. And if they don’t make it? “What will be, will be, brother.”

Who next after AB de Villiers?

South Africa’s selectors have a big hole to fill in Tests and at the World Cup. Here are some candidates they may consider for that

Firdose Moonda24-May-20181:37

Will ABD be remembered as an all-time great in Tests?

AB de Villiers’ retirement will be felt most severely by South Africa’s selectors, who will have to choose a World Cup squad without one of its most obvious inclusions.Though they have a year to plan for the tournament, they have less than two months to think about their first post-de Villiers tour. This will mark the start of the preparatory phase for the World Cup and a rebuilding process in the longer format. South Africa visit Sri Lanka for two Tests, five ODIs and a T20 in July and August.The Test side is familiar with playing without de Villiers’ – he did not play a single red-ball international between January 2016 and December 2017 in which time South Africa played 17 Tests including nine away from home – but they will now have to look for a permanent answer to his absence. And the limited-overs’ teams, particularly the ODI side, will need a swift solution and a few match-winners as they build towards the World Cup.Here are the options that may come into the discussion when the selection panel meets in the coming weeks.Temba Bavuma show his impressive temperament•AFPIn TestsTemba Bavuma: The diminutive middle-order batsman was the person who had to make way for de Villiers in December 2017. Although Bavuma had made useful contributions on South Africa’s tours of England and New Zealand in 2017 and Australia in 2016, his conversation rate of fifties to centuries was a concern. Bavuma’s progress was further stalled when he suffered a broken hand at the beginning of this year but he made a comeback during South Africa’s March Tests against Australia, when they opted for seven batsmen in the line-up instead of six, and his unbeaten 95 at the Wanderers all but cemented his place. De Villiers’ retirement provides Bavuma with a long leash and he is likely to feature in the starting XI for a significant period, provided he can make his opportunities count. He will need to focus on faster run-scoring, but his place in the side should be secure for the forseeable future.Theunis de Bruyn: A prodigious talent, de Bruyn has only played five Tests since making his debut more than a year ago, and without much success. He was dropped from the XI after failing to cross 40 in the first two Tests against Australia and there was some speculation a Kolpak deal may have been on his radar but now that should change. Though de Bruyn will have to compete for a place in the team if South Africa opt for six batsmen, if they play seven, he will likely be the extra batsmen. De Bruyn needs to start translating his domestic success on the international stage but de Villiers’ retirement may have opened the door for him to do that.Heinrich Klaasen: With a first-class average of 45.28, it is not difficult to see how Klaasen was named in the Test squad to play Australia in March. And it was also not his first foray into the national set-up. Klaasen traveled as a reserve wicket-keeper to New Zealand a year before, in March 2017, but he is still waiting for his first Test cap. Klaasen is an aggressive batsman, who takes the game on, a quality South Africa will want in a successor to de Villiers. It won’t hurt his cause that he also keeps wicket and can be both a back-up and a challenger to Quinton de Kock.In ODIs, and for the World CupAiden Markram: After being elevated to the one-day captaincy with just two caps to his name for the high-profile series against India in February, the signs that Aiden Markram will feature in the World Cup squad were there. But, when South Africa lost four matches under Markram to crash to a 1-5 series defeat and his own form suffered, doubts began surfacing. Now, it would seem South Africa don’t have a choice but to take Markram to the World Cup. He may not be able to open the batting, but he could be just as destructive lower down the order. Remember, Markram holds the South African List A record for the highest individual score – an unbeaten 183 off 138 balls – and has a penchant for playing big shots.Farhaan Behardien: The nearly-man of the ODI set-up could be the biggest beneficiary of de Villiers’ retirement, if it means he is given a consistent run in the team. Behardien has had to battle for a place which has left him unable to pull off the heroics he has become known for at domestic level, so much so that there was an outcry when he was initially left out of the squad to play India in February. Behardien was the fourth-highest run-scorer in the domestic 50-over competition and is thought to be reaching the twilight of his career. The World Cup could be his big chance to go out on a high.Heinrich Klaasen: Klaasen again comes into the picture, especially after his impressive knocks in the limited-overs matches against India earlier in the summer. His 69 off 30 balls in the second T20, which helped South Africa win the match, went some way to earning him an IPL deal with Rajasthan Royals, as a replacement for Australian captain Steven Smith, but he also has strong domestic form on his side. Klaasen was third-highest on the one-day cup run-charts, where he averaged 52.20, with five fifties. Again, his glovework will be an added bonus and could push him ahead of the queue for the World Cup final XV.Heinrich Klaasen launches it out of the ground•BCCIOther outside contenders: Temba Bavuma has played two ODIs for South Africa, with decent results, albeit not against top-tier opposition. Bavuma scored a century on debut against Ireland and 48 against Bangladesh, but both times he was opening the batting. He is believed to be seeking out more opportunities at the top of the order in domestic white-ball cricket but for as long as Hashim Amla, Quinton de Kock and Aiden Markram are in the mix, he may have to find ways of scoring quickly lower down if he hopes to make the World Cup squad.Reeza Hendricks is only capped at the T20I level for South Africa and has a top-score of 70 in a match against India. He topped the domestic T20 run-charts with 361 runs from eight matches, including a century, and may come into the picture for World Cup preparation.

From legal battles to last-minute flights: Puducherry's cricketing journey

The story of a motley crew of industrialists, semi-pros, amateurs and professionals, who came together to build something special

Saurabh Somani22-Dec-2018At about 10am on September 20, 2018, six uncapped cricketers in Puducherry, the city that is the capital of the Puducherry Union Territory on the southern coast of India, received a call from a Cricket Association of Puducherry official to bring all necessary documents to be submitted to the BCCI as proof of their status as local players. And immediately.On the previous day, Puducherry had just made a long-awaited debut in senior men’s domestic cricket, against Manipur in Vadodara, in the Vijay Hazare Trophy.What the six players didn’t know was that immediately after Puducherry’s debut – which should have been a happy one, given an eight-wicket win in 25.3 overs – rumblings of protest had reached a crescendo. The thrust was that the team was ‘Puducherry’ in name only, with convenient hires hurriedly drafted in as locals. In fact, the BCCI had relaxed the eligibility norms for the CAP, given that it could get operational – due to legal tangles and not administrative incompetence – mere months earlier.Whether the CAP was right in using the relaxed criteria in the manner it did is a philosophical debate for another day. But the upshot was that the BCCI immediately revoked the allowance it had granted. Suddenly, after a historic first match, the possibility of a second was in doubt – because there weren’t XI members remaining in the squad. With eight of them disallowed, the team rallied around those who were forced to leave, while also trying to keep the remaining flock together and upbeat.Back home, the six uncapped cricketers prepared their documents. The players thought they were being asked to submit them for the Ranji Trophy, which was still two months away. Then, it dawned on them that they were expected to make their debuts , at a place more than 1,000 miles away.There is one flight from Puducherry to Bengaluru on six days of the week, which leaves at 12.50pm. The players had about an hour to arrange their affairs and get to the airport in time. Thus began a mad dash that would end in the wee hours of the morning.One of them was wicketkeeper Ranjit Baskaran, who asked for a couple of hours off from his workplace, Eaton Power Quality Pvt Ltd, when he got the call. When he got to know that he wouldn’t simply be submitting documents but also flying out even before his scheduled lunch break, he went back to his office instead of home because there wasn’t enough time. “I just asked my friend to bring my kitbag to the airport,” he tells ESPNcricinfo. “Meanwhile, I went to my office and informed my manager that I need leave, and will let him know about the exact situation once I reach Gujarat. From office, I went directly to the airport.”Opener AM Narayanan runs a taxi service with two cabs, one of which he drives himself. Fortunately, he was home. When he later told his wife that he was off to play cricket, she had a touching request. “She told me to take photos in the flight,” he says. “It’s the first time I was going in a flight.”Saiju Titus has a sports shop that is close to one of the venues that teams have used for practice in the Ranji Trophy, the Palmyra Cricket Ground. He was grocery-shopping when he got the call. “My life is cricket,” Saiju says. “I’ve played Under-16, Under-19, Under-23 at district level. My shop is not as important for me as my cricket is. After this season, I [will] focus a lot more on practicing than on the shop. My younger brothers will look after the shop.”AM Narayanan, Saiju Titus and Ranjit Baskaran were all called up at the last minute after several players had been disallowed•Saurabh Somani/ESPNcricinfoSaiju is a portly 37-year-old. He’s been in the Ranji Trophy squad but hasn’t played the long format yet. He’s among a group that is made to run timed sprints after a day’s play, all part of the reserves. You can see the effort, the strain, and the purpling of the face as the intensive training continues. When it ends, Saiju can barely catch his breath. But he’s run miles to be where he is today, part of the Puducherry team, playing at the highest level of domestic cricket. What’s a few sprints?All six players made the flight. From Bengaluru, they flew to Mumbai, then travelled by road to Vadodara. A day that began with a 10am phone call ended with the replacement players trooping into the team hotel at about 3 am.Six hours later, they were making List A debuts against Uttarakhand.

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In some ways, the mad dash that the six players made has been a microcosm of the CAP’s existence. It’s a mostly uninterrupted tale of waiting, and then there’s a final frenzy. Almost as if it’s an MS Dhoni innings in a successful chase of yore.Initially, cricket in the Union Territory was supposed to be run by the Pondicherry Cricket Association. They were happy to be counted as one of the districts under Tamil Nadu Cricket Association. The actual running of the cricket was lower on the priority list. You could grow up in Puducherry as a dedicated, passionate fan of the game, and never know there was any cricket that was played in town.Tourists came to Puducherry drawn by the prospect of relaxing on beaches, visiting the Aurobindo Ashram, taking in the French cuisine or visiting the international township of Auroville. Nobody came for cricket.You could be proficient enough at the game to be considered for call-ups from state teams that actually played in the Ranji Trophy. But you wouldn’t have played on a proper cricket ground in Puducherry. Mihir Ravikanti, who runs a health-care manufacturing business in the city now, was called up for tryouts with the Andhra and Odisha sides in 1987-1990. He never got to play Ranji cricket, because although he was successful in his tryouts, nobody had told him he needed a ‘No-Objection Certificate’ from the home association. This was much before the internet era when information wasn’t readily available. And there was no one from the PCA to ask. A medium-pace bowling allrounder, Ravikanti was considered by many to be the finest cricketer from Puducherry. His experiences of playing on the ground run by the PCA are of an outfield more brown than green, with a thatched shed as the pavilion. The ‘refreshments’ were one clay pot of water that would have been barely enough for four players.It was in this background that the CAP emerged to challenge the PCA as the body that should control cricket in Puducherry. Driven by Damodharen, industrialist and keen cricket fan, whose Siechem Technologies had a full-fledged factory in town, the CAP wanted to cut the umbilical cord that bound Puducherry to the TNCA. A legal battle inevitably followed. It’s still not over, and still tangled enough for anyone without a law degree to fully understand. But what had seemed for almost a decade-and-a-half like a fruitless battle, received a shot in the arm due to the Lodha recommendations that sought to fundamentally change the workings of the BCCI.The fencing and surroundings of the CAP Siechem Ground•Saurabh Somani/ESPNcricinfoThe BCCI sent a team to the city, of which Anshuman Gaekwad was a part. They looked at what both rival associations were doing, and in their report, recommended that the CAP be given charge of running cricket. “From what we saw, these guys (CAP) seemed to have better plans and energy in place to get things done,” Gaekwad told ESPNcricinfo. That favourable report, kickstarted by Lodha’s recommendation that there should be a Puducherry team, meant the dream of cricket in Puducherry took concrete shape for the first time.Whatever claims and counterclaims the PCA and CAP may fling at each other, the fact remains that until the CAP got the authority to do things, senior-level cricket in Puducherry remained a ghost’s dream.Not that everything is honey and sugar in the CAP. In clubs, there are stray angry mutterings about not enough ‘local’ players being part of the team, and Damodharen having got in people from outside merely to have a good first season, without regard for actually developing cricket in the city. Damodharen himself was the secretary of CAP, but stepped down – again as per the Lodha norms – because his son Rohit D was the captain of the team.Inevitably, there were mutterings about that too. Comparisons were drawn with the Niranjan Shah-Jaydev Shah situation in Saurashtra. Recently retired, Jaydev played 120 first-class matches, captaining in 110 of those, while having a sub-30 first-class average and still being an unquestioned part of the top order for more than 15 years. Where the story differs is that Rohit scored a century on first-class debut, both his and his team’s, and was the best non-professional batsman for the team in the Vijay Hazare Trophy.His formative years were difficult.Rohit faced that question when he was 13 years old, and all because he had stopped playing all of a sudden.”I went for a camp conducted by BCCI in Puducherry, and then an all-India Under-17 tournament conducted by BCCI again,” Rohit says. “A week later, I go back to my school in Chennai, Don Bosco. On July 16, I get a letter from TNCA saying ‘Rohit Damodharen, son of so and so, is banned from playing cricket in Tamil Nadu.’ I didn’t even know what being ‘banned’ was at that age. The next day, there was a new rule in the TNCA league book saying that ‘any player who has played in an unrecognised tournament is banned from playing cricket in Tamil Nadu’. The least they could have done is given me a warning. And they cannot call a BCCI tournament ‘unrecognised’. A 13-year-old boy doesn’t deserve that.”From there, to captaining his team in the Ranji Trophy has been a considerable leap for Rohit.

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Abhishek Nayar is waiting just outside the dressing room, on the morning of Puducherry’s first-ever Ranji Trophy match. It’s a historic occasion, made more special because it’s Nayar’s 100th first-class match. There’s going to be a ceremony to honour him, and as Nayar walks through a guard of honour, each player holds up a sort of candle-stick, and Nayar walks through a bower of sparks to be presented with a memento for the occasion.”It felt like the whole association cares about a cricketer, and I’ve not even played my cricket here, I’ve just come,” Nayar says of the moment. “It made me feel loved. I’m not someone who expects a lot because I’ve never really got that, but I was really emotional with the amount of love and respect I got. I might not have got that reception in Mumbai, because Mumbai already has a lot of cricketers who have been there, done that. Puducherry hasn’t.”Abhishek Nayar walks through a guard of honour ahead of his 100th first-class match•Saurabh Somani/ESPNcricinfoIt’s a minor miracle that the ceremony has taken place at the CAP Siechem Ground. Built 20 kms away from the city centre – which if you live in Pondicherry is like inter-city travel – the ground has been got ready just in time for the season. You wouldn’t know it by looking only at the playing surface, a billiards table lush green. The sightscreens in place are state of the art, and because of how they are built, require only one person to move them. Till a day before the first Ranji match though, the pavilion wasn’t fully ready. But come match-day, the facilities for players, umpires, official scorers and match referees are in place, and working just fine.True, there wasn’t any permanent arrangement for the media or spectators, though the CAP did make admirable temporary arrangements. That’s because apart from the pavilion and the playing area, the rest is varying states of dust and rubble, and beyond that open fields. Even that is being spruced up. From the first round to the fourth, the VIP box – open to the elements in the first match – already had glass doors and an air-conditioner fitted.The players’ dressing rooms are at either ends of the pavilion, and it is from here that Nayar emerges for the waiting fanfare.Nayar, alongwith Pankaj Singh and Paras Dogra form arguably the most pedigreed ‘professional’ trio of any team in the Ranji Trophy, and certainly among those of the Plate Group teams, Puducherry’s fellow rookies. But while the professionals have been carrying teams in the Plate Group to a large extent, Puducherry have been helped by a support staff made up of former cricketers as well. Aavishkar Salvi is the head coach, Omkar Salvi the assistant coach, and Dishant Yagnik is the fielding coach.ALSO READ: Go pro – the template to success in Ranji Trophy’s Plate GroupThe three professionals and the coaching group are the ones guiding the larger group, formally or informally. “I believe that if you change teams, you should go to one where you can give more, you can help your teammates, bowlers and give the right guidance,” says Pankaj.Aavishkar Salvi outlines his coaching goals thus: “Performances matter for everyone. But it also matters that people should be happy and feel that their games have developed. They should also feel that someone came and lifted our games, gave us knowledge.”Nayar’s decision to move to Puducherry – and Pankaj’s – was driven in large parts because of the coaching staff. And nor is that confidence misplaced. M Vikneshwaran was promoted to open in the Ranji Trophy, having batted in the middle order in Vijay Hazare, and has hit a century and a fifty while scoring at 44.66 at the top of the order. Fabid Ahmed, who has played for Kerala earlier but could move to Puducherry since he was born in Mahe, which is part of the union territory, has been an all-round force and credits the coaching staff and professionals for helping him.Puducherry took the first innings lead against Meghalaya in a rain-affected opening match, and saw their game against Bihar washed out without a ball bowled. Since then, they’ve gone on a winning spree. Whether it’s a story of the underdog fighting against the odds, or the poker player turning the odds in his favour, posterity will decide. But since the disastrous day on which eight players were told they couldn’t play for year, Puducherry finished third in the Plate Group in the Vijay Hazare Trophy, and have an outside chance of qualifying for the quarterfinals in the Ranji Trophy.”A lot of those cricketers made a big call to come and play here, and then to lose out on a year is disheartening as a fellow cricketer,” says Nayar. “It’s never easy to tell a cricketer that you’re going to lose out on a year. That was the toughest part.”In that game against Uttarakhand I didn’t have any expectations, but even then we stood up and fought well. That made me believe that this team can withstand difficulties, and very early in their career as a cricketing state.”

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Things aren’t perfect yet. There is plenty that could be tweaked or improved, on and off the field. The manual scoreboard wasn’t completely up to date at all times. The third umpire’s camera stands aren’t yet built, so there is no third umpire. If you place your chair in the wrong spot while settling down to watch a day’s play, you can feel it sinking in the mud when you sit. When it rained once, a herd of goats from a field beside wandered in and walked around the perimeter of the fenced ground to look for shelter.But none of it matters. Because it’s the Ranji Trophy, and it’s happening in Puducherry, with a team representing the city playing. It’s magical.

Kohli second only to Bradman in getting 24 Test centuries

Virat Kohli now has 30 centuries as captain in international cricket, going past the number of centuries he has as non-captain

Bharath Seervi05-Oct-2018649/9- India’s total in the first innings at Rajkot – their highest-ever against West Indies. India’s biggest total before this was 647 for 7 in Kanpur in 1978-79. Overall, this is the seventh-highest total by any team against West Indies and the highest in last ten years.8- Number of 600-plus totals for India in Tests since 2016, which is two more than the number of such totals by all other teams combined during the same period. Australia have had three such totals, whereas England, South Africa and Sri Lanka have got one each.123- Number of innings taken by Virat Kohli to score 24 Test centuries. Only Sir Don Bradman got there in fewer innings – 66. Sachin Tendulkar and Sunil Gavaskar took 125 and 128 innings respectively.2:29

Walsh: Kohli’s hunger for ‘every Test run’ amazing

3- Number of India players with more Test centuries than Kohli’s 24. Tendulkar (51), Rahul Dravid (36) and Gavaskar (34) are ahead of him. He went past Virender Sehwag, who had 23 hundreds. Among batsmen worldwide, he also went past Javed Miandad, Justin Langer, Kevin Pietersen and Steven Smith, who all have 23 centuries.4- Centuries for Kohli in Tests in 2018 – twice more than any other batsman. No India batsman has more than one century this year. Mominul Haque, Kraigg Brathwaite, Kusal Mendis and Aiden Markram have two centuries each.30- Centuries for Kohli as captain in international cricket. He’s now got more centuries as captain than as non-captain. He has 29 centuries in 250 innings when he’s not been captain, as against 30 in just 134 innings when he’s been the captain.The two players who have more than 30 hundreds as captain – Ricky Ponting (41) and Graeme Smith (33) – took 225 and 333 innings respectively to get there.ESPNcricinfo Ltd20- Hundreds for Kohli at No. 4 position in Tests. He is the fifth batsman to score 20 or more centuries at that position after Tendulkar, Brian Lara, Jacques Kallis and Mahela Jawardene. Kohli took 82 innings to score 20 centuries at that position, the fastest among the five. Kallis had done it in 91 innings.109.52- Rishabh Pant’s strike rate while making 92 runs off 84 balls. He hit eight fours and four sixes. He scored briskly against every West Indies bowler, having a strike-rate of more than 85 against each one. He, however, missed out on becoming the first India wicketkeeper to get centuries in successive innings. He had scored 114 in his last innings in England at The Oval.

Rishabh Pant against West Indies bowler
Bowler Runs Balls SR Fours Sixes
RL Chase 24 27 88.88 2 1
ST Gabriel 22 15 146.66 2 1
D Bishoo 14 7 200.00 1 1
KMA Paul 13 14 92.85 1 1
SH Lewis 13 14 92.85 2 0
KC Brathwaite 6 7 85.71 0 0

3- Number of consecutive years in which Kohli has scored 1000 or more runs in Tests. He had 1215 runs in 2016, 1059 runs in 2017, and after his 139-run knock today, he has 1018 runs this year. He is the first India batsman – and the sixth overall – to achieve this three years in a row. Matthew Hayden did it five years in a row, from 2001 to 2005. Steven Smith has done it four years in a row from 2014 to 2017, while Brian Lara, Marcus Trescothick and Kevin Pietersen achieved this for three successive years.1- Ravindra Jadeja scored his maiden Test century. He had nine fifties to his name, with a highest score of 90 before this. He achieved it at his home ground where he also got his highest first-class score of 331. It is also his maiden century across all international formats, coming in his 218th match.217- Runs conceded by Devendra Bishoo in his 54 overs – the second-most by a West Indies bowler in a Test innings. Tommy Scott had given away 266 runs against England in Kingston in 1930, which is the most. Overall, Bishoo’s figures are the third-most expensive by any bowler against India, after Rangana Herath’s 240 and Suraj Randiv’s 222.

Is Amir too big to drop for Pakistan?

Pakistan don’t have too many who can emulate Mohammad Amir at his best, but the quick’s numbers since 2016 have been unflattering

Danyal Rasool18-Sep-2018Ever since his comeback to international cricket, Mohammad Amir has been leader of the Pakistan bowling attack. He assumed the role almost instantly upon arrival, and has been a more or less permanent fixture in the team since – one of just three all-format players Pakistan has. It’s not a role that has necessarily been conferred on him due to consistent performances, however. Rather, it’s the perception that one day, this young prince will mature into a king, and until he does it’s worth sticking with him. By now, even Prince Charles must be looking at him and thinking, “Boy, that’s a long time to wait for a coronation.”But for the first time, it appears that conventional wisdom is being challenged within the Pakistan team management, to the extent that Amir is by no means guaranteed to be a part of the side that takes on India on Wednesday. For any other player with his level of recent performances, it would be an unremarkable decision. But if Amir does indeed sit out the game against India, Pakistan will have made a stunning call. He has been feted as a big-match player by coach Mickey Arthur, and his most memorable moments since his comeback to cricket have been against India.If it does happen, Amir, who appears to relish the big games more than perhaps any other player in the Pakistan side, can’t point fingers at anyone but himself. Imagine this: in barely over a year since that sensational opening spell in the Champions Trophy final that tore India’s top order to shreds, he finds himself in a situation where he might not play the next game against them.Since his return in 2016, Amir has averaged nearly 35 runs per wicket in ODIs, and has never taken more than three wickets in a game. His best figures, by far, came in that Champions Trophy final. He took three wickets – those of Rohit Sharma, Virat Kohli and Shikhar Dhawan, no less – for 16 runs, and set up Pakistan’s tournament triumph. His second most memorable performance was also against India, in a T20 match at the Asia Cup in 2016, where his energetic opening salvo reduced India to 8 for 3.Amir’s performances since the Champions Trophy final have dropped without warning. He’s only taken three ODI wickets since that game 15 months ago, at an average of almost 80 runs per wicket. It isn’t just because of the quality of the opposition, either; half of his eight ODIs since have been against either Zimbabwe or Hong Kong.For any other bowler, those numbers would mean a fight to keep his place in the side. Given the new ball against Hong Kong, Amir had a glorious opportunity against significantly weaker opposition to stop the rot. Instead, he was flat, unable to muster the intensity required of a man fighting to keep his place in the side. He bowled a wayward first over and didn’t nearly have the penetration that his fellow quicks appeared to have, in a game that represented the ideal opportunity for one last shot of confidence before the India contest. Before that, he was eager to sit out the two series Pakistan played in Zimbabwe in July, only to be refused rest. In March, he told ESPNcricinfo that he wanted to cut down on Tests to prolong his international career.ESPNcricinfo LtdFast bowlers need their workload managed, and Amir – a regular for years in all three formats now – might have felt he wasn’t getting the rest he needed. He would have the facts to back him up; he’s bowled more than any fast bowler from Pakistan since his return, and ranks 12th overall, with 6072 deliveries across formats. Among Pakistani quicks, only Wahab Riaz (5662 balls) has bowled even half of the deliveries Amir has sent down in international cricket.But it is the impression that he wishes to pick and choose when he plays that doesn’t do Amir any favours. Most world-class players have their best days on the biggest occasions, but that hardly affords them a free pass in every other game. Cricket isn’t like boxing; results must be produced week in, week out. It is consistency that turns a star into a legend, and it’s proved a particularly elusive trait for Amir.It’s also an unenviable position for the team management to find itself in. Dropping Amir would invite intense scrutiny if Pakistan do not come away with the desired result, particularly since there’s no player on the bench with the ability to replicate Amir at his best. Picking a second spinner would be a bit of a gamble, particularly since Imad Wasim failed a yo-yo test and was subsequently excluded from the squad. Besides, India play spin better than any side in the world, which would put colossal pressure on the 24-year-old Mohammad Nawaz, who has only played 11 ODIs.Could they go with another fast bowler in a like-for-like swap? That brings Shaheen Afridi and Junaid Khan into the picture. Arthur is a big fan of the teenager Afridi, but it would almost be irresponsible to throw him in on such a challenging occasion and expect him to provide Pakistan with what Amir cannot. Junaid is a likelier option; he has a particularly good record against India and a level head, which is an especially useful asset in what can be a charged match-up. But Junaid no longer has the explosive match-changing ability that Amir possesses, and if Amir has indeed been saving himself for that game, it would be, to put it mildly, inefficient to let that simmer away on the bench.Sarfraz didn’t give anything away while speaking to reporters today, but he did acknowledge that Amir’s form was a concern. “Yes, it is a concern. But it is not necessary that you take wickets to prove that you have bowled well,” he said. “It’s a concern that he is not taking wickets. Sometimes, you bowl well but don’t take wickets, like Mohammed Shami was bowling well in England but didn’t take much wickets. So we sat down and told him that you are a strike bowler and you need to take wickets, so he will try his best to strike in the coming matches.”Whether the decision to drop him – and that hasn’t by any means been established – will be hailed or criticised invariably depends on how the game pans out on Wednesday. Such a consequentialist approach is inevitable in sports management; selectors live and die by big calls, and the stakes could hardly be higher. It is perhaps most appropriate to turn the focus back to Amir, and wonder why such an outrageously gifted player finds his place in the side being questioned. Only Amir knows whether some of the hunger that burned in him has faded with the grind of international cricket, but he is sharp enough to know that his performances need to pick up if he is to remain an automatic pick for the big games. It’s a heck of a call the selectors have to make, but it’s Amir who’ll need to do the real thinking if he finds himself in the reserves on Wednesday in Dubai.

Australia end their century drought

The 308-run partnership between Joe Burns and Travis Head, meanwhile, was Australia’s biggest against Sri Lanka for any wicket

Bharath Seervi01-Feb-2019308- The partnership between Joe Burns and Travis Head for the fourth wicket is Australia’s biggest for any wicket against Sri Lanka. The pair eclipsed a nearly 30-year-old record set by Dean Jones and Steve Waugh, who put on an unbroken 260 in Hobart in December 1989. The Burns-Head partnership is also the highest fourth-wicket stand by any pair against Sri Lanka.ESPNcricinfo Ltd13- Tests without a double-century partnership for Australia before this one. The last such stand came in the Perth Ashes Test in December 2017, between Mitchell Marsh and Steven Smith. In 13 Tests in 2015, Australia’s batsmen put on as many as eight 200-plus stands.1- Centuries by Australia batsmen in their last 11 Tests coming into this match. The lone century was by Usman Khawaja in Dubai.384- Australia’s score at stumps is already their highest total since the last Ashes, in 12 Tests. The previous highest was 362 for 8 in the fourth innings of the Dubai Test in October.1- Travis Head scored his maiden Test century, playing his eighth Test and 13th innings. He had made four fifties. It was Joe Burns’ fourth century and his current score is already the highest by a right-handed Australia opener since Michael Slater’s 219 versus Sri Lanka at the WACA in December 1995. Burns has been involved in three of Australia’s last four 250-plus partnerships.5- Tests played by Sri Lanka’s three fast bowlers before this one. Kasun Rajitha had played three, Vishwa Fernando two, and Chamika Karunaratne was making his debut. Fernando and Karunaratne reduced Australia to 28 for 3 in the ninth over, before Burns and Head dug in for most of the rest of the day.

Kusal Perera bats with body, heart and soul in innings of a lifetime

Against one of Test cricket’s most fearsome attacks on home soil, Sri Lanka’s No. 5 stood up for his embattled team

Andrew Fidel Fernando at Kingsmead16-Feb-20192:11

Perera follows in Laxman’s footsteps – greatest one-wicket wins in Tests

That vein.The vein on Dale Steyn’s forehead has come alive. He is mid-pitch, biceps taut, knees bent, fists clenched, face red, practically on fire, screaming.Mitchell Johnson had three furious seasons. James Anderson nicks entire top orders off. But let’s not kid around. If there is a sight that has struck fear into the heart of the planet’s batsmen in the last 15 years; if there is a vision that shakes them to their soul, it is this.Steyn. His vein. Mid-pitch. Screaming.He has just blasted Oshada Fernando out to claim South Africa’s fourth wicket, and two balls later he takes a return catch to send Niroshan Dickwella packing as well, so his team-mates are laughing, broad grins galore, but not Steyn. Steyn is an inferno. He is burning up mere metres from Kusal Perera. It is Kingsmead, but this – be in no doubt – is still Steyn’s patch. One of the most fearsome quicks in the history of the game. At home. In a state of almighty fury.While Steyn scorches up one end, Kagiso Rabada is lightning at the other. His partner is up over 140kph, but Rabada is touching 150, his outswingers whistling past another prod, the slip cordon’s hands all up in unison, before the ball has thwacked into the wicketkeeper’s gloves. But it is the Rabada bouncer that rears up into your ribs, and the Rabada bouncer that follows Perera like a mugger down an alley. It smacks him on the bottom hand, 65th over. The batsman collapses, a howl on his lips. His finger is already ballooning before the glove comes off.It has been only 13 days since Perera suffered a mild concussion in Canberra. (The ear guard of his helmet had disintegrated from the blow.) Only 14 overs since Duanne Olivier thudded a 142kph ball into his ribcage. Twenty minutes later, Olivier would crack him on the helmet, too.ALSO READ: Perera’s epic 153* leads SL to record-breaking victoryWhile Perera is getting punched, cutting, and counter-punching, at the other end, his team-mates are missing, nicking, and leaving the field. Dhananjaya de Silva, with whom Perera mounted a 96-run defiance, misses a sweep off Keshav Maharaj and is trapped in front. Suranga Lakmal, the only man in the tail who can reliably hang around, edges his first ball to slip.Kusal Perera and Vishwa Fernando celebrate a sensational Sri Lanka win•Getty ImagesFour wickets for 20 runs later, Perera still believes, but is he the only one? Would it be a surprise if he was? This is a team that has not won a match since October. No, not just in Tests. One-dayers, T20s, hopscotch, connect four, tic-tac-toe, Sri Lanka players have probably found ways to lose them all.But then finally, one wicket to go, 78 runs still to get, Perera encounters another believer. Vishwa Fernando tells him. Don’t you worry. I’ll hit the ball with my body, if nothing else.So two Sri Lanka batsmen – one playing his fourth Test, the other playing his second since being recalled – put their chests, arms, skulls, throats, hands, ribs and balls in danger, against the quickest attack going, for the sake of whatever it is they are fighting for. For their nation, sure, but also for a team that has just dumped its long-term captain, for a head coach convinced his bosses are trying to fire him, and for a system that has let both of them down in unfathomable ways over the whole of their professional careers.

In years to come, we might struggle to believe that this embattled and unfancied batsman, in this embattled and unfancied team, played an innings of such quality

So beautifully is Perera playing, that for South Africa, his wicket is almost irrelevant. This is the best bowling unit in home conditions on the planet – an attack that devoured Pakistan over the last two months, sent Australia squealing into epoch-defining disarray last season, defeated India, monstered Bangladesh, and clobbered New Zealand the season before – flat out refusing to even attempt taking Perera’s wicket on a fourth-innings pitch, their fielders all posted on the boundary when he is on strike.For Vishwa they bring the field in. But Vishwa, through fortune and great personal bravery, somehow misses the outswingers, ducks the bouncers, and clings to his wicket. Perera has already once dived to make his ground, dirtying the front of his whites. Vishwa gets himself in a running tangle as well, and has to make his own full-body, whites-muddying dive. He throws himself at the crease from so far out, he is horizontal, sliding, for what feels like half the length of the pitch.The runs required decreases. Forty-two now. Hearts thumping. Thirty-four now. Pulses racing.Then, this is where they come. The shots this match will forever be defined by. The jewels that stud this crown of an innings. A desperate Steyn, looking for swing with the second new ball, still running hot, pitching on off stump, every sinew in his body straining for movement. Perera, clear-headed, forearms rippling, thumping this all-time bowler over midwicket, high over the boundary, way up into the eastern bank.In years to come, we might still struggle to believe that this embattled and unfancied batsman, in this profoundly embattled and unfancied team, played an innings of such dazzling quality. Could it be the greatest ever?Overlooked might be the coincidences: that he finished on 153 not out, same as Lara, in 1999. Or that he sealed victory with that left-hander’s glide to the third man boundary, same as Ranatunga in 1996.But unforgettable are the odds he fought, the blows he took, the joy on his face and from his team when it was won.

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