Grewcock, Hancock dismantle Storm to set up comfortable Sunrisers win

Grace Scrivens anchors chase with unbeaten 63 as Sunrisers start campaign with victory

ECB Reporters Network20-Apr-2024Jodi Grewcock and Nicola Hancock claimed three wickets apiece as Sunrisers launched their Rachael Heyhoe Flint Trophy campaign with a comprehensive eight-wicket victory over Western Storm at Cardiff’s Sophia Gardens.Seamer Hancock took 3 for 15 in 5.4 overs and teenager Grewcock bowled unchanged for 10 overs to return impressive figures of 3 for 28 with her legbreaks as Storm were dismissed for a wholly inadequate 114 in 30.4 overs.Offspinner Mady Villiers weighed in with 2 for 36, while Esmae MacGregor took a wicket and contributed a run out as Sunrisers produced a disciplined performance in the field after winning the toss. Only Nat Wraith offered meaningful resistance with the bat, top-scoring with 42 as Storm opened this campaign as they finished the last, by suffering heavy defeat.Sunrisers skipper Grace Scrivens then led by example, compiling a composed innings of 63 and sharing in a reassuring partnership of 59 with Cordelia Griffith for the second wicket as the visitors comfortably overhauled their target with 16.2 overs to spare.Victorious in their final four matches of last season, Sunrisers have picked up where they left off and will go into their next match against Thunder at Sale in confident mood. For their part, Storm have now been beaten in their last five outings in the 50-over competition and will need to find improvement ahead of their trip to play Northern Diamonds at Headingley on Wednesday.Put into bat, Storm were unable to recover from the loss of early wickets and were shot out inside 31 overs, only three batters managing double-figures in an innings which the home side will no doubt want to forget in a hurry.Hancock produced a probing new-ball spell to remove Alex Griffiths for 2, but fellow opener Sophia Smale responded in positive fashion, helping herself to three leg-side boundaries to advance her score to 16. Calamity then struck, Smale clipping Villiers behind point and setting off for a quick single, only to collide with partner Sophie Luff halfway down the track and be run out by MacGregor while getting back to her feet.That unfortunate mishap sparked a dramatic collapse which saw five wickets fall in just 8.1 overs as Storm subsided to 64 for 6, their top and middle-order batting undermined by spin. Luff played and missed at a delivery from Grewcock that nipped back and was adjudged lbw for 7, while Dani Gibson was also undone by the England Under-19 legspinner, playing back to a ball that struck her on the pad and departing for 3.Plying her offbreaks at the other end, Villiers trapped Katie Jones in the crease and then struck a telling blow, inducing former England international Fran Wilson to drive straight to Jo Gardner at mid-on. Wilson had made 18 and with her went Storm’s best chance of posting a competitive total.Fearing she might run out of partners before she was able to do anything to remedy a parlous situation, Wraith adopted a forthright approach and dominated stands of 24 and 26 with Niamh Holland and Amanda-Jade Wellington for the seventh and eighth wickets respectively. But Holland eventually offered a return catch to MacGregor and Wellington miscued a drive to extra cover as Grewcock continued to deploy clever variation in flight to strike again in her final over.Attempting to take matters into her own hands, Wraith plundered half a dozen boundaries in carrying the fight to the Sunrisers bowlers, her luck finally running out when she hoisted a ball from the returning Hancock to deep midwicket. Her combative innings of 42 spanned 52 balls and at least enabled embattled Storm to realise three figures.Hancock required just four deliveries to wrap-up the innings, having Chloe Skelton caught at the wicket, the seventh Storm player to perish either in single figures or without scoring.Stuck between a rock and a hard place, Storm’s bowlers did their utmost to build pressure and new overseas recruit Wellington provided a silver lining when gaining an lbw decision to remove Ariana Dowse with the score on 21 in the eighth over. Making a good first impression on her debut, the Australian international spinner finished with 1 for 24 from nine overs and discomfited the top-order batters sufficiently to suggest she is going to make a positive impact in Storm colours this season.But the implacable Scrivens overcame all attempts to unseat her, playing a captain’s innings to ensure her team reached their target without enduring any undue dramas. She found the perfect partner in Griffith, who adopted the role of chief support in an innings of 28 that spanned 48 balls and included a quartet of fours before she holed out to Holland in the deep off the bowling of Skelton.Unperturbed by that setback, Scrivens went to 50 via 65 balls with her ninth four, a fluent cover drive plundered at the expense of Griffiths. Perhaps fittingly given her performance with the ball earlier, Grewcock hit the winning runs as she finished unbeaten on 15.

WG's private party

Such was the draw of WG Grace that after a public spat with Gloucestershire, who he had captained since its formation in 1870, he was able to move to London and help establish a side that within a year had been given first-class status

Martin Williamson27-Jan-200682 pp, hb

Much has been written about WG Grace – perhaps more than any other cricketer with the exception of Don Bradman. But while his 19th-century exploits are well documented, less is known about the twilight of his career, and in some ways that is one of the most interesting periods. Such was the draw of the man that after a public spat with Gloucestershire, who he had captained since its formation in 1870, he was able to move to London and help establish a side that within a year had been given first-class status.Brian Pearce’s Cricket At The Crystal Palace helps to fill in the gaps about the brief history of the London County Cricket Club (by 1905 it had lost its first-class status, a victim of financial troubles and poor attendances). But in those five seasons, it was jazz-hat cricket at its best. Led by Grace (he only missed one of their first-class matches), LCCC attracted some of the best players of the era and also took on a quasi-MCC role of nurturing and encouraging the best young cricketers. The club was dominated by the Old Man, and Pearce manages to convey the sense of what it must have been like to play with and under him.This book is not just about WG. It gives the story of the Crystal Palace, which dominated the whole enterprise and ultimately led to its demise, and of the LCCC. Pearce injects colour and life into the narrative, and the illustrations are copious and interesting.This is clearly a labour of love but Pearce has managed to produce a book well worth buying. It’s not long – 82 pages in all – and if there is a criticism it is the rather slapdash and poorly formatted statistics. But that is one minor gripe which does not really tarnish the overall product.

Warne revives memories of 2001

Edgbaston, as everyone in the cricket-playing world now knows, is England’s lucky ground

Andrew Miller04-Aug-2005

Andrew Strauss falls to Shane Warne as lunch approaches © Getty Images
Edgbaston, as everyone in the cricket-playing world knows, is England’s lucky ground, a reputation largely based on their one glimmer of glory in two decades of Ashes misery – in 1997, when Australia were squashed by nine wickets after slipping to 54 for 8 on the first morning of the series.Four years on from that match, however, in 2001, Australia gained their vengeance in no uncertain terms, rampaging to victory by an innings and 118 runs, to set up a 4-1 series win. And, until Andrew Flintoff and Kevin Pietersen turned England’s fortunes around with today’s century stand, the 2005 Test seemed to be following an ominously familiar pattern.Admittedly, Marcus Trescothick did rather better on this occasion than the first-ball duck that he managed against Jason Gillespie back then, but his failure in 2001 was amply glossed over by Michael Atherton and Mark Butcher, who responded with a partnership of 104 in 23 overs for the second wicket. In fact, they batted with the same ease and poise that England’s openers, 112 in 25.3 overs, managed today. But, on the stroke of lunch, both then and now, Shane Warne struck.Admittedly, Warne’s impact was more seismic then than now – he needed just two balls to remove Butcher, brilliantly caught by Ricky Ponting at silly point (although that was twice as many deliveries than he had needed on his first Ashes tour in 1993). But the impact was similar on both occasions, as England continued to lose wickets in the second session (136 for 4 then, 187 for 4 now).The big difference, however, was the absence of Warne’s partner-in-crime. Glenn McGrath would doubtless have scented blood today, as he did with his three middle-order breakthroughs back in 2001. But this time he was holed up in the dressing-room with an ice-pack on his ankle, and England managed to wriggle off the hook. For the moment, at least.

Partnerships and byes galore

Stats highlights from the second day of The Oval Test

S Rajesh10-Aug-2007

Anil Kumble had to wait 151 innings to finally get his first Test century © Getty Images
The story of the day was Anil Kumble’s unbeaten 110. In 117 previous Tests, his highest had been 88, against South Africa at Kolkata in 1996-97. In his 118th match, and his 151st innings, he wasn’t to be denied, though. It’s the most number of Tests any batsman has played to get to his first century. Chaminda Vaas held the earlier record – his unbeaten 100 against Bangladesh in Colombo earlier this year came in his 97th Test, while Jason Gillespie was playing in his 71st Test when he struck that memorable 201 not out against Bangladesh, again, at Chittagong in 2005-06. Kumble had only scored 79 runs in his 11 previous innings, and his innings is also his first 50-plus score overseas. (Click here for Kumble’s innings-by-innings list.) India’s total of 664 is their highest against England, and their fourth-highest against all teams. It’s also only the 11th time – and the fourth for India – that all 11 batsmen made double-digit scores. As at Trent Bridge, India’s top-order batting was characterised by contributions from every batsman. In all there were six 50-plus scores in the innings. Only twice previously have so many Indian batsmen scored so many in a single innings: at Kanpur against New Zealand in 1976-77, India managed 524 for 9 declared with six half-centuries but no hundreds – a total which remains, thanks to Kumble’s hundred, the highest without a century; against Australia at Kolkata in 1997-98, India scored 633 for 5 declared, with the top six all going past 50, and Mohammad Azharuddin scoring an unbeaten 163. So many significant scores from the batsmen meant there were partnerships for almost every wicket. In all India put together an astonishing eight 50-plus stands, which is a record in Test cricket. There are 25 instances of six 50-plus stands, but no team had managed seven in a single innings. The last-wicket stand between Kumble and Sreesanth yielded 73 at a rate of 5.47 per over. It’s the fourth-highest tenth-wicket partnership for India, and their highest against England. The 133 that Sachin Tendulkar and Zaheer Khan added against Bangladesh at Dhaka in 2004-05 remains the highest. Not only did the lower contribute handily, they did so at a brisk pace: India’s last five wickets scored 310 runs in 68.4 overs, a scoring rate of 4.51. Much of that scoring rate was due to the 81-ball blitz by Mahendra Singh Dhoni. His 92 is now the highest by an Indian wicketkeeper in England, going past Farokh Engineer’s 87 at Headingley in 1967. In fact, Dhoni and Engineer share the top five scores by an Indian wicketkeeper in England: Engineer also scored 86 at Lord’s and 64 not out at Edgbaston in 1974, while Dhoni contributed a match-saving unbeaten 76 in the first Test of this series at Lord’s. England had a forgettable day in the field, and it’s hardly surprising that a few of them entered the record books for all the wrong reasons. Matt Prior had a terrible time behind the stumps, dropping a couple of catches and letting through 33 byes, which is the second-highest in a single Test innings. England leaked 37 against Australia at the same ground way back in 1934, but there was a good reason for that: Les Ames, the regular wicketkeeper, was forced to retire hurt while batting in England’s first innings, which forced frank Woolley to keep wicket in Australia second innings. Whereas Ames had conceded four byes in Australia’s first-innings score of 701, Woolley allowed 37 in the second-innings score of 327. Prior joins two other wicketkeepers who have conceded 33 byes: John Murray, against India at the Brabourne Stadium in Mumbai in 1960-61, and Jim Parks against West Indies at Kingston in 1968. In fact, the five highest number of byes conceded in an innings have all been by England. James Anderson and Monty Panesar became only the second and third England bowlers to concede more than 150 runs in an innings against India. Andrew Caddick was the first, going for exactly 150 in 40.1 overs at Headingley in 2002.

New Zealand begin to believe

Two late wickets were reward for New Zealand’s application – particularly that of Chris Martin whose wiry frame belied an extra yard of zip that none of England’s bowlers could replicate (least of all Steve Harmison). But perhaps more significantly, the b

Andrew Miller in Hamilton06-Mar-2008
Alastair Cook fell for 38 – a stark reminder of the frailties of England’s batting lineup © Getty Images
For 85 overs of the second day at Hamilton, the first Test between England and New Zealand was dying a slow death. The application shown by Ross Taylor and Daniel Vettori during their 148-run stand was admirable but foreboding. England’s bowlers found no swing, seam or spin to help them on their way, and when their own batsmen replied in kind with an 84-run opening stand, the worst sort of stalemate was already being envisaged.But then, Alastair Cook went and played a pull shot that had “mug” tattooed all over it, and suddenly there was life in the match once again. Two late wickets were reward for New Zealand’s application – particularly that of Chris Martin whose wiry frame belied an extra yard of zip that none of England’s bowlers could replicate (least of all Steve Harmison). But perhaps more significantly, the breakthroughs were a reminder of the frailties of England’s batting line-up.Daniel Vettori made a point of bigging up England’s top six on the eve of the series, remarking how they all averaged in excess of 40. What he omitted to mention is that they all too frequently reach that score then give their wickets away. In Sri Lanka before Christmas, England were overwhelmed by three totemic innings – 152 from Kumar Sangakkara at Kandy, and then 197 and 213 not out from Mahela Jayawardene at Colombo and Galle respectively. In reply they mustered a solitary hundred in six attempts, and that came from Cook at the last gasp, when the series was already irretrievable.Taylor’s hugely mature 120 wasn’t quite in the class of those three knocks, but it was a performance of great resolve and substance, the like of which England aren’t too keen to replicate these days. As a squad they have mislaid the art of the meaningful innings – and they can’t even manage it in one-day cricket, where their last centurion was Owais Shah at The Oval against India last summer, 11 matches ago.Andrew Strauss used to score centuries for fun, with 10 in his first 30 Tests, but he was dropped after failing to reach three figures in 25 subsequent innings. Now he’s back in the mix, thanks entirely to the shortcomings of others, and he’s out in the middle already – at least a session sooner than he had envisaged. There’s no time like the present for ending his run-drought either. Ian Bell is incapacitated, Tim Ambrose is on debut, and Ryan Sidebottom – for all his merits – is hardly fit to lace Vettori’s boots at No. 8.New Zealand are flushed with unexpected confidence after the success of their batsmen this morning, and they sense that England are beatable.”We think we can win the game,” said Taylor. “If they were none-down or one-down it would be a pretty even game, but to have them two-down when it is starting to slow up and take a bit of turn, I’m sure the first session tomorrow will be big. If we can put some pressure on England early on then you never know.”Pressure was what England’s bowlers singularly failed to apply after resuming on 282 for 6. “We’re disappointed that we didn’t bowl as well as we did yesterday,” said Ryan Sidebottom, who with 4 for 90 was England’s stand-out bowler and, for once, had the figures to prove it. “We were fired up to get the four wickets and we were stupidly searching for wickets this morning, rather than doing what we did yesterday. We were trying to bowl too quick instead of plugging away, and they scored 100 more than we expected.”Apart from watching him on TV, I haven’t had a lot to do with him [Steve Harmison] but he can bowl at 130kph as much as he wants, because it makes it easier for me. He’d be a hell of a bowler to face if he was bowling at 145-150kph, especially on a bouncy deckRoss Taylor gives a damning assessment of Steve Harmison”Bowling too quick.” That may have been true of the two specialist swing bowlers in the line-up, but oh for such an accolade to be uttered in Harmison’s direction. Taylor could hardly believe his luck when reputation finally met with reality, and he faced up for the first time to the bowler who was once the most fearsome in the world. “Apart from watching him on TV, I haven’t had a lot to do with him,” said Taylor, “but he can bowl at 130kph as much as he wants, because it makes it easier for me. He’d be a hell of a bowler to face if he was bowling at 145-150kph, especially on a bouncy deck.”It was a pretty damning yet utterly honest assessment from a man in only his third Test match. Taylor came to the crease with a reputation for big hitting and a career-best score of 17, and yet he bedded in to bat for more than five hours. “I got off to a bit of shaky start in my first four digs in Test cricket, so it was good to silence a few people who doubted me and whether I was good enough to play at this level,” he said. “It was definitely the most circumspect I’ve ever batted.”England are capable of emulating such feats. Strauss was back to his compact self during the warm-up in Dunedin, while Kevin Pietersen is bristling for a big one after failing to reach even fifty in Sri Lanka. But to judge by the verve and aggression showed by Martin and Mills with the new ball, and the steep bounce and not-insignificant turn extracted by the spinners, Vettori and Jeetan Patel, New Zealand’s bowlers are more up for the challenge than their English counterparts proved to be.England were, after all, bundled out for 131 in their warm-up at Dunedin. “That showed us that England can be beaten,” said Taylor. “It was only a three-day game and it did do a lot on the first morning of that game, but it gave the players in that match a bit more belief they could foot it with England. It showed we are still in the game.”

'I have my doubts about Shoaib Malik'

Five years since he quit the game, Wasim Akram is as sharp with a provocative opinion as his bowling used to be in his heyday

Interview by Sidharth Monga11-Jul-2008

‘You take a ball, rough it up on one side, and practise with it. It has got nothing to do with your wrist or your action. The ball will go with the shine. Simple as that, but you have to master it’ © AFP
Everybody wants to know how Wasim would have adjusted to Twenty20.
I would have enjoyed Twenty20. A couple of things: it would have suited my batting style, and of course, it would have suited my bowling too. Because you need a lot of varieties in Twenty20. Only yorkers and slower balls won’t do. Nowadays you can bowl the slower bouncer…How difficult is it to bowl the slower bouncer?
It is quite difficult. You have to be very confident of yourself. You haveto be accurate, otherwise you will probably get hit for six. You have to be brave.These pitches [Asia Cup] are not helping bowlers. How would you deal with them?
We played on these pitches every time we played one-day cricket in Pakistan;I don’t want to blame the wickets. We all played on these tracks only, andwe managed.Considering the way the game is heavily loaded against the bowlers. Don’tyou think there should be some rule changes to make it more even?
For 50-over cricket, the ICC has to sit down, the cricketing brains have tosit down, and do something about the over numbers 20 to 40 – find out what they can do for the bowlers.Any ideas you have in mind? For instance, should ball-tampering be madelegal?
I haven’t sat down. I am not playing, so I am hardly bothered. Had I beenplaying I would have come up with some solution, I suppose, eventually.Why haven’t you got into coaching, shared your knowledge?
Coaching is a very different skill. You need patience, you need a lot oforganisation. I don’t have any. I can make a good consultant, I canfine-tune bowlers, give them mental toughness, talk about how to bowl underpressure, how to bowl with the old ball. But I can’t make a good full-time coach.Who are the bowlers going around that excite you?
Brett Lee, of course. He is the best bowler in the world right now. IshantSharma – but he has to learn quickly. He has been very average inthe Asia Cup. His length has to change in one-day cricket. He is awicket-taking bowler, he has to get the new ball. You can’t have your third seamer bowling with the new ball.Indian bowlers bowl well in helpful conditions in England, Australia andSouth Africa, but they struggle in the subcontinent. Unlike Waqar Younis andYou, who were actually better in the subcontinent than outside. What are theymissing?
The simple answer is: reverse swing. Either they don’t practise with the oldball or they don’t have confidence in it.It’s not rocket science. You take a ball, rough it up on one side on concrete, put it in your bag, and practise with it every day. It has got nothing to do with your wrist or your action. The ball will go with the shine. Simple as that, but you have to master it. It’s things that you find difficult as a bowler in matches that you have to practise more. Some people don’t, they just think line and length and forget about other things. I think that is where they are lacking. When the coaches come to India, Pakistan, Sri Lanka, they have meetings for two hours. They should know that the attention span in our part of the world is 14 minutes. If you get into the 15th minute, they will forget what you told them in the first 14 You have said earlier that the most important thing about reverse swing is how you look after the ball. What are the secrets of looking after the ball?
I am not giving that away so easily. Not in a freebie interview!Everyone in our team knew what we had to do. And we even had to change Saqlain Mushtaq’s action. He used to rub the ball in a manner that used to soften the rough side. As a captain, I had to tell him, “Saqlain don’t do that.” In team meetings we used to go after him.That much detail?
That much detail. Even if while throwing the ball from the outfield,if the rough side comes in touch with the grass, it will become soft. Sometimes bowlers used to stop the ball played back at them with their foot. If the boot spikes hit the rough side, it was Christmas. If it didn’t, you shone the ball and moved on.We just took our time. It all depended on the wicket, the weather, the dryness of the outfield. If the wicket is dead and the square grassy, it’s not going to happen. If one drop of sweat falls on it, the reverse swing won’t happen.And now with this rule to change the ball after 34 overs, you have taken reverse swing out of the one-day equation.Once you have seen talent in a young fast bowler, how do you go aboutnurturing it?
If I see an exceptionally good fast bowler, I would pick him right away. Batsmen probably need more time and experience to mature, but if bowlers have pace, swing, and they are physically and mentally strong, just back them and play them. I picked Aamer Nazir, Saqlain Mushtaq, I picked Shoaib Malik out of the blue in Sharjah 1997. I saw him play one game for PIA and I fought for him and he was on the touring team.Mohammad Aamer is being rated highly by experts in Pakistan. He is only 16: would you pick him pick right away?
I would.Is he that good?
He is quite talented.

The 1992 World Cup final: ‘Botham’s a very good friend of mine now and he still says he didn’t nick it’ © Getty Images
Waqar has spoken how half of his wickets were thanks to you. Can youelaborate on that and the partnership?
We had a love-hate relationship when we were playing. We used to hate eachother’s guts at times. There was always competition on the field. If he wastaking wickets, I wanted to take more. Not that he shouldn’t take wickets,just that I should take more than him. In the end Pakistan benefited from thathealthy competition.Were there ever times with the two of you when you felt a particular batsman was taking runs off you, and you’d tell the other to somehow get him out?
It never happened with us. When we were at our peak, I don’t think we ever faced such a situation. We could take on anyone and everyone.How do you fight the chucking problem?
It’s a difficult question made even more difficult. The rules have been mended or bended or whatever, for the sake of I don’t know who. The thing is simple: if somebody chucks, he chucks; if somebody doesn’t chuck, he doesn’t chuck. There shouldn’t be any 15-degree rule. It’s just making things complicated.Do you think chucking actually gives a bowler an unfair advantage?
It does, it definitely does. I have tried, when I was playing, to chuck, but I couldn’t. It’s difficult to chuck – it’s an art. But it does give an unfair advantage.What do you think the essential qualities for a good Pakistan captain are?
With any cricket team in the world, you pick the XI first, and then the captain.As simple as that.Selection in Pakistan is highly politicised. Things work differently here, don’t they?
Of course they do. Fourteen boys went to the Kitply Cup; they won the tournament, but two have been dropped. They didn’t even play and are dropped. What they must be going through, I can only imagine.That’s where Shoaib Malik has to be strong. As a leader and as a player he has to be positive. In the beginning I thought he had the skills; now I have my doubts. Against Zimbabwe he bowled ten overs in almost every match, against Bangladesh he bowled a little less. But in big matches he is not bowling. Do you think nobody notices? People do. Most of all, players notice how the leader is doing.You had a lot of difficult players to handle when you were captain.
Man management is very important. You can’t just become a captain and havea group of your own. That’s the worst thing you can do as a captain. Incricket teams you have to be friendly with everyone. I had Aamer Sohail, Waqar Younis, Javed Miandad, Ramiz Raja, Saleem Malik, Ijaz Ahmed – they were all different characters, they were all difficult, but they were all match-winners. I learned to listen to them and back them up when they were not doing well. I knew as a captain that when they came back to form they would win me a match. The thing is simple: if somebody chucks, he chucks; if somebody doesn’t chuck, he doesn’t chuck. There shouldn’t be any 15-degree rule. It’s just making things complicated Shoaib Malik has to learn that. [Abdur] Rauf gets three wickets in one match, but doesn’t get to play in the next. This is the captain’s fault, not the selectors’. Now he says the XI is given by selectors, but I know that in Pakistan if you are a strong captain there isno way the selectors can do that to you. We have all been through this: me,Inzamam, Imran [Khan], Miandad, we all did that but we always had our XIs. Maybe in the 14-15 you can have a compromise…Who do you think has been Pakistan’s best captain?
Of course, Imran was the best ever. He led from the front, with the bat, with the ball. Under pressure he went in at No. 3 in the 1992 World Cup. No othercaptain from India or Pakistan could ever have done it. I couldn’t have donesuch a brave thing, because I’d think: what if I failed? He was never scared.In the mid-nineties Pakistan had so much talent that they could havedominated world cricket like Australia have been doing. Were politics andinfighting to blame?
Politics is very much there. Infighting is less between the boys, but yes itis there. But if the cricket board is consistent, then we can talk. Todaythere is somebody running Pakistan, tomorrow there will be somebody else.With cricket boards, teams change, captains change, coaches change, teammanagements change. Everybody has to become a politician then.What were the unique problems you faced as a bowler-captain?
A bowler-captain, in my book, is always a better captain. A keeper-captain,if he is exceptional, can be at par with a bowler-captain. Becauseyou have to know the bowler’s psyche. Some captains – I am not naming any – say that you have got a wicket with an inswinger; why don’t you bowl a similar ball every time? If I could bowl every ball like that, then am I mad to not bowl it every ball?One bowler can bowl only a six-over spell, if you bowl him for seven, he is finished for the day. He has to bowl six only. Maybe get him just before lunch for two-three overs. You have to know your bowlers completely, and that a bowler-captain can do better.But if you are bowling a spell, isn’t it difficult for you to think of field placings, strategy, etc, when actually you want to rest a bit between overs?
You get used to that. It’s just a habit. Initially you think, ‘I have to think of my bowling, there is a match tomorrow, the team has to be selected, the coach has to be spoken to, players have to be spoken to, there’s a team meeting, media has to be spoken to.’ But you get used to it.

‘I can fine-tune bowlers, but I don’t have the patience to be a full-time coach’ © Getty Images
Who was the toughest batsman to bowl to, for you?
Sunil Gavaskar. I only got him twice in one-day matches. I played four Testsagainst him – he never gave me his wicket. I remember bowling him reverse swing, round-the-wicket stuff, bouncers, in the Chennai Test of 1987, but he swayed away easily, seeing the ball into the keeper’s gloves. And that was towards the end of his career.Martin Crowe. Sachin [Tendulkar] – I didn’t play against him in Tests for ten years [from 1989 to 1999], so it is verydifficult to rate him in that period, when we were at our peak. No doubt hewas a great batsman. Brain Lara. Another batsman I hated to bowl to was MarkWaugh. In ODIs, Adam Gilchrist, Sanath Jayasuriya, Aravinda De Silva.Which were your favourite wickets?
Of course, Ian Botham in the 1992 World Cup final. He still doesn’t admit he edged it.He is a very good friend of mine now, and he still says he didn’t nick it. Allan Lamb in the same game was special too.Test matches, I don’t remember many. There were so many.How did your run-up develop, and the whippy action?
It was natural. Run-up I shortened in 1987 with the help of Imran. He helpedme a lot. I had an angle too, but I thought I wasn’t losing on pace, runningin straight, so why run in from the side?Didn’t coaches interfere with your approach?
Imran Khan was there, what can a coach do? Is a coach mad to be speaking infront of Imran?Do you think there is a problem of over-coaching in today’s cricket?
It has become a bit too complicated. Bowling coach, batting coach, fieldingcoach… At this level you don’t need a coach. How will you coach [Mohammad] Yousuf? You can’t correct his back-lift. You can just give him confidence.We have to go by culture. When the coaches come to India, Pakistan, Sri Lanka, they make sure they have meetings for two hours. They should know that the attention span in our part of the world is 14 minutes. If you get into the 15th minute, they will forget what you told them in the first 14. I went through this as a captain, and I realised that the shorter the meeting, and the more to the point it is, it stays in their minds for longer. Coaches now keep talking, players go to sleep. Doesn’t matter how experienced orhow alert, inside they are asleep. Shoaib Malik has to learn. Rauf gets three wickets in one match, but doesn’t get to play in the next. This is the captain’s fault, not the selectors’What was the lowest moment in your career?
Quite a few. The match-fixing allegations, losing the World Cup final in 1999. Losing wasn’t so bad, but when we came back to Pakistan, I got called by the National Accountability Bureau. They kept me in Islamabad and questioned me day in and day out. Before that the prime minister, the chief minister of Punjab, used to call me every day. Suddenly, after we lost they all disappeared. And people started saying the match was fixed. It’s hilarious that people can still think that the World Cup final was fixed. That much pride – the money comes afterwards – you can’t feel anywhere else. There is no comparison. I eventually learned that the only way to answer it was with performances.How long did it affect you mentally?
For a long time. Had I not gone through that stage I would have probably got 500 wickets in Test cricket [he ended with 414]. General Tauqir Zia asked me to retire in 2000 or they would drop me. I have been through a lot. Cricket has been through a lot.How did you deal with it on the field?
Well, when I was on the field I shut it out. Just go, perform, enjoy the game, back the boys, enjoy their company. If you look at the records, we were the most successful side Pakistan ever had.

Dolly mixture

Forty summers ago a Cape Coloured South African playing for England unwittingly threw MCC into crisis over a tour to the apartheid republic

Rob Steen12-Sep-2008″I come down on the side of honesty, a good honest piece of bungling by good honest men.”Thus did Ted Dexter, sometime England captain and one-time prospective Tory MP,characterise the most important selection meeting in sporting history. More recently,in the Sunday Telegraph, the political columnist Kevin Myers delivered much the sameverdict, except that he described the original omission of Basil D’Oliveira from the MCCparty to tour South Africa in the winter of 1968-69 as “cretinous”. In 2003 Observer SportMonthly named it among its “Ten Worst Sporting Decisions”. But were they all too generous?D’Oliveira, the Cape Coloured South African allrounder playing for Worcestershire, was summoned as a replacement for Tom Cartwright three weeks later, whereupon John Vorster, South Africa’s Prime Minister, denounced the party as “the team of the Anti-Apartheid Movement” and MCC cancelled the tour, fuelling the sports boycott that ultimately did much to bring down a despicable regime. Not for nothing would Nelson Mandela convey his heartfelt thanks to ‘Dolly’.It is amazing no film producer has brought this classic political espionage thriller to the screen. It had everything: a battle to beat seemingly insurmountable odds, race, class, Empire and Third World, spies and bribes. The problem is that the jigsaw lies incomplete. For all the decades of denial, the question still demands answering: was D’Oliveira’s initial non-selection politically motivated? Indeed, could the same be said of his demotion to 12th man for the Lord’s Test against Australia two months earlier?Fundamentally the issue was all about power and white supremacy. Cricket was still a game dominated by the white elite. England, Australia and South Africa, the founders of the original Imperial Cricket Conference in 1909, had enjoyed double voting rights until 1958 and the first two would retain their hegemony until India’s improbable 1983 World Cup triumph paved the way for the game’s biggest constituency to assert itself. When the newly formed republic left the Commonwealth in 1961, it continued, with the support of England and the Australasians, towave away any protests by India, Pakistan and West Indies, none ofwhom had ever played South Africa.The growth of the anti-apartheid movement was in keepingwith the climate of the times: free expression, the rejection ofdeference and privilege, dissent going on anarchy. In Octoberthe American sprinters Tommie Smith and John Carlos would hoisttheir Black Power salutes on the Olympic podium in Mexico City.That fateful meeting at Lord’s was on the evening andthrough the night of August 27. There were at least 10 men in thecommittee room: the four Test selectors – Doug Insole (chairmansince 1965), Alec Bedser, Don Kenyon and Peter May – the tourmanager Les Ames, the captain Colin Cowdrey, Billy Griffith andDonald Carr, respectively MCC secretary and assistant secretary,the club president Arthur Gilligan, and the treasurer and allroundomnipotent Gubby Allen, who objected to D’Oliveira on purely cricketing grounds. Only Kenyon,the former Worcestershire captain, could be considered not a member of the establishment. Only three -Bedser, Carr and Insole – are alive now, all over 80.Some, if not all, were privy to the fact that five months earlier Vorster had informed Lord Cobham,England’s senior Viscount, that there would be no tour should D’Oliveira be chosen (their meeting did notbecome public knowledge until the following year). Cobham, who had been Governor of New Zealand,captain of Worcestershire and, like his father and grandfather, MCC president, had been targetedby Arthur Coy, the South African Cricket Association official assigned to persuade MCC not to pickD’Oliveira and hence ensure the tour went ahead.Cobham had considerable business interests in South Africa. In Coy’s words he would “do almostanything to see that the tour is on”. After meeting Vorster he relayed the information by indirect means,keeping it on a need-to-know basis. Had he simply written to Griffith, the secretary would have beenobliged to pass the news on to the club, whose official position, encouraged by Harold Wilson’s Labourgovernment, was that no interference in selection would be tolerated. The tour would almost certainlyhave been called off then and there.”Far more is known about the cabinet meetings of Harold Wilson, or the activities of the secret servicein Moscow, or the details of the Poseidon nuclear missile programme, than what the England selectorssaid and did that night,” reckoned D’Oliveira’s biographer, the political columnist Peter Oborne, who alsocontends that there was “at least one spy” in the room, “feeding information straight back to the SouthAfrican Cricket Association, whence it was instantly passed on to Vorster”. A private letter sent by Coy toVorster a week after the party was chosen promised the “inside story” of the MCC meetings and statedthat D’Oliveira was still a candidate. But the minutes are reported, curiously, to have disappeared.Reviewing Oborne’s book for The Observer in 2004, the Labourminister Peter Hain noted that the “disappearance” of theminutes from that selection meeting would be “both afrustration and a catalyst to the conspiracy theorists. I’m rarelyinclined to join that number but Oborne is persuasive. He contendsthat Vorster used ‘secret pressure, bribery and blackmail’ to preventD’Oliveira being chosen. Which surprises no one. But he adds thatthe MCC, advised by the former Conservative prime minister, SirAlec Douglas-Home, ‘helped to make Vorster’s life as easy as it could’.”Hain, of course, arriving in the UK as a teenager in 1966 as hisliberal parents fled South Africa, formed the “Stop The 70 Tour”campaign that kept Ali Bacher’s tourists from these shores. “Mostanti-apartheid activists didn’t care about sport,” Hain told TWC. “ByAugust 1968 I was 18 and a rank-and-file activist. I’d already seenD’Oliveira bat for England at Lord’s and The Oval: his story touchedme very closely. So when he was excluded I was outraged. All I wasaware of was John Arlott writing an article in The Guardian for whichthe headline read something like ‘Nobody will believe D’Oliveirawas omitted for cricketing reasons’. Everyone knew there was more toit.” When Arlott told the BBC that he would not commentate on thescheduled 1970 tour the most unpleasant letter of condemnation hereceived came from Peter May.Peter Hain, the active anti-apartheid campaigner•Hulton ArchiveIt is via Arlott that D’Oliveira, denied opportunity in hishomeland because of the colour of his skin, entered in the first place.In 1959 a series of pleading letters to him began a chain of eventsthat resulted in a contract with the Central Lancashire League clubMiddleton for 1960, the year of the Sharpeville massacre. Friendsclubbed together to pay the airfares for Basil, his wife Naomi andtheir newborn son Damian. When he was signed by Worcestershirein 1964, he gave the club a false birth date, late by three years, tohelp persuade them he was worth a gamble. He found a fast friend inTom Graveney. Two years later he played for England. In another two,the storm was falling about his ears through no fault of his excepthis talent.The political dilemma/scandal was blowing in the wind at Lord’s inJune. Nine days before the second Test there he had made an unbeaten87 as England crumbled to Australia at Old Trafford. No other homebatsman reached 50. The previous year he had made his maiden Testton against India, represented the Rest of the World XI in Barbadosduring celebrations for the island’s independence and been namedone of Wisden’s Five Cricketers of the Year. In fact, he had missed onlyone Test since his debut two years previously. Five changes might havebeen a justified reaction to the Manchester debacle. That D’Oliveira was one of them, relegated to 12th man, made no sense except as apolitical expedient, cushioning later shock.Insole, challenged last year on this, denied it robustly, adding:”There was never at any stage any objective in the selectors’minds other than that of picking the best team to beat Australia.”D’Oliveira, though, had suspected the chop. At the eve-of-Test dinner,he subsequently revealed, “a top cricket official told me the only waythe tour could be saved would be if I announced I was unavailablefor England but would like to play for South Africa. I was staggeredand angrily said, ‘Either you respect me as an England player oryou don’t.’ The next day an eminent cricket writer put the sameproposition to me.” D’Oliveira was too discreet to name names, evenin an autobiography published in 1980, but the official was Griffith,the cricket writer EW Swanton, long-time ally of Cowdrey.On cricketing grounds only hindsight justifies D’Oliveira’sdropping on the morning of the match: his replacement, BarryKnight, took 3 for 16 as Australia were bundled out for 78, their worstAshes total for 30 years; and but for rain, the rubber would, in alllikelihood, have been squared. Wary that England had been fatallycautious in Manchester, Cowdrey had wanted a seamer like Knightfor Lord’s, not a swinger like D’Oliveira. In Manchester, Cowdreywould write, the latter – deployed, unusually, as first change – had”bowled tidily but without the thrust to keep the pressure on”.The backlash was strong. The “cynics”, noted Cowdrey, “refused tobelieve that D’Oliveira’s exit was not some sort of fascist plot”. Perhapsthey felt that to have him playing in front of Coy and Co, who wereat Lord’s, would have sent a provocative message when conciliationwas so plainly the aim of the game? Or was it simply punishment forD’Oliveira’s spurning the advances of Griffith and Swanton?Cowdrey, for all his antipathy towards apartheid, had had little hesitation in accepting the captaincy for South Africa, albeitonly after requesting assurances that there would be no politicalinterference in selection. Yet he would later write: “Whatever wemight think about apartheid, at least it seems to work in theircountry; it is none of our business.” His role and influence shouldnot be underestimated. When Vorster decreed that his tour party, bythen including D’Oliveira, was not welcome, he wanted to hop on aplane to the republic and talk the PM round. “I had been at the heartof things throughout,” he wrote, “and could answer every question.”Two years later, when the projected visit by South Africa met thesame fate, he told the Daily Mail: “I cannot reconcile an isolationpolicy and boycott with the Christian ethic.”Getty ImagesIn his autobiography Cowdrey related a chat with his friendDouglas-Home, lately MCC president, on the final day of the OldTrafford Test, when he took the opportunity to introduce the formerPM to D’Oliveira. Sir Alec had just returned from meeting Vorsterin South Africa. According to Cowdrey, Douglas-Home “believed themoral issue was not Britain’s to enter into. He was certain that to breakoff cricket relations with South Africa would have no effect on herattitude to apartheid, however long we refused to play against them.”In the Caribbean earlier in 1968, D’Oliveira had struggled with onlyone half-century in the five-Test rubber and lacked penetration orcontrol with the ball. He had also displeased many in authority,Cowdrey among them, with his fondness for alcoholic consolation. Butif the selectors fancied they had an excuse for not picking him in theparty for South Africa, it went in the final Ashes Test.In July letters had been sent to 30 tour candidates, asking whetherthey would be available: he did not get one. Back on the countycircuit he had struggled for runs. Aware that he had damaged his cause, he felt guilty as well as miserable. It was his bowling thatjerked attention back to his cricket when, during the fourth Test, hehad match figures of 11 for 68 against Hampshire. Put on stand-byfor The Oval, he duly reported for duty on the eve of the match afterCartwright and then Knight phoned in sick. When Roger Prideauxpulled out with pleurisy, fate’s fiendish plot was complete.D’Oliveira survived a number of early chances, including a glaringmuff by the keeper Barry Jarman on 31 – the most important missin cricket history, as Swanton dubbed it – then went on to make acentury. May said in his autobiography that good fortune should notmask the reality and D’Oliveira must not tour. But Cowdrey confidedhis fears: “They can’t leave Basil out of the team, not now” – even ifthat contradicts his subsequent assertion at the selection meetingthat he did not warrant a place.Enter Geoffrey Howard. As Stephen Chalke relates in his 2001biography of Howard, At the Heart of English Cricket, the Surreysecretary’s office phone rang shortly after D’Oliveira was out.”The caller was on the line from Prime Minister Vorster’s officein Pretoria. A fellow called Teeni Oosthuizen. He was a director ofRothmans, based in South Africa, and had been trying to contactGriffith, the MCC secretary. ‘I can’t get hold of him, so will you takea message to the selectors. Tell them that, if today’s centurion ispicked, the tour will be off.'”Innings of his life: D’Oliveira during his 158 at The Oval in 1968•Getty ImagesOosthuizen had delivered another message from Pretoria earlierthat summer, directly to D’Oliveira, a key chapter that would notbe revealed until September. Oosthuizen had offered D’Oliveira ahandsomely paid coaching job back in the republic if he declaredhimself unavailable and he went on courting him until late Augustbut D’Oliveira had declined. As he told the Sunday Mirror nearly 30years later, he wanted “to prove that I could bat and that people fromthe black and coloured community, whatever you like to call it, knowhow to conduct themselves”.Asked in 2001 to respond to Howard’s recollections, Insole replied:”No way I’m saying Geoffrey didn’t tell me of Pretoria’s telephonewarning. What I do remember is opening a very long meeting bysaying, ‘Gentlemen, forget South Africa. Let’s just choose the bestMCC cricket team to go overseas, Australia, anywhere … ‘”The tour selection meeting took place on the final evening of theTest. Three evenings earlier Cowdrey had found D’Oliveira alone inthe dressing room and taken the opportunity for a quiet word. “Canwe get away with it without getting too involved in politics?” he hadwondered. D’Oliveira, he decided, “had clearly thought it all out …even down to the kind of social functions he would attend”. Thereply was riddled with guilt: “Look, I know I have put you all on the spot … but the whole situation isbeyond me. I’m in the hands ofpeople I trust.” But was he?When the tour partyannouncement reached theWorcester dressing room thenext day, Graveney was disgusted.Seeing the shock and dismay onhis team-mate’s face, he usheredhim into the physio’s room,where D’Oliveira wept. “I was likea zombie,” D’Oliveira wrote inhis autobiography. “The stomachhad been kicked out of me. Iremember thinking, ‘You just can’t beat the white South Africans.'”Kindly as ever, he has never believed that Cowdrey did not backhis selection.”I would say the original decision was made on the basis ofcricketing ability but it all looked so awful,” conceded Carr recently toTWC. “I think I believed, or was talked into believing, that it was all oncricketing grounds. There had been so much chatter about it. I thinkthere were people high up in the cricketing hierarchy in England whowere talking a lot about it and knew what the possibilities could be.”There was another twist to the tale, though. On September 16Cartwright was advised by Bill Tucker, the orthopaedic surgeonin London who had worked on Denis Compton’s knee, that hecould risk his shoulder but any aggravation could mean never bowlingagain. Back at Lord’s, in conflab with Griffith, Carr and Insole, he wastorn every which way. He went with his heart. According to StephenChalke’s biography of him, The Flame Still Burns, he had seen “a littlenews item” in the Daily Express, which reported that, when the squadwas announced, members of South Africa’s ruling National Partystood and cheered in parliament. “When I read that, I went cold,” hesaid. “And I started to wonder whether I wanted to be part of it.”Cartwright “knew immediately I’d done the right thing, eventhough it created a lot of upset”. Not that it stopped Cowdrey havingone last go. The tour skipper’s 4.05pm phone call from Lord’s greetedCartwright as he came through his front door, though the captain’sautobiography forgets to mention it.”Colin said, ‘Will you agree at least to start the tour? When youget out there, if things go wrong, there are people out there who arecoaching, like Don Wilson, who we could bring in.’ Basil certainlywasn’t mentioned. Nobody had suggested to me that, if I droppedout, Basil would be the one who took my place.” The answer was stillno. Ten minutes later, avowed Cowdrey, a decision was made on hisreplacement: Cartwright out, D’Oliveira in.The intention, said Cowdrey, had been to let the SACA have a listof the official reserves, D’Oliveira among them, “but now it was toolate”. Curiouser and curiouser: 19 days had passed since the originalparty announcement. Did the absence of the list stem from fear ofthe response? Had it, indeed, allowed Vorster to hide his hand?By any standards the switch from Cartwright to D’Oliveira was aleap and a half. Substituting a batsman who bowled a bit for a bowlerwho batted a bit (Cartwright’s days as a potent allrounder had longpassed) made little sense – unless one interprets the decision as anattempt to curry public favour and/or correct the error of August28. Back then D’Oliveira’s exclusion had been explained away on theground that he offered little as a bowler.”I think some people [at theoriginal selection meeting] puta lot of onus on Dolly’s poorishtour of the Caribbean, maybeunfairly,” Carr recalled to TWC.”Cartwright was a perfectly goodchoice as a bowler-cum-batsman.Then he pulled out and we hadthe toing and froing with SouthAfrica in the meantime, and wedecided that Dolly was the bestbet, but it all looked so fearful.Dolly wasn’t anything like asgood a bowler as the chap he wasreplacing but a miles better batsman. Once it had been decided topick him I think people accepted the position, though some fearedwhat the result might be. I felt it had not been very well handled.”If Cartwright was an active participant in the affair, Barry Knightwas innocently passive. He told TWC recently he was not surprisedto be called up for the Lord’s Test. “They picked me quite oftenthere. I did well there. I knew the slope, bowled on it for years – for theRAF, Combined Services, Essex, Leicestershire.” He had been surprised,though, at D’Oliveira’s demotion at Lord’s, “especially after that knockat Old Trafford. He was a terrific batter who bowled a bit. He kept ittight with those gentle outswingers but you never worried about himas a bowler. I never thought he was all that dangerous, and certainlynot a first-change” – which is how Cowdrey used him at Old Trafford,almost as if trying to set him up to fail. Knight’s unavailability for thefifth Test was pure mischance. He had rolled an ankle at Leyton.Was the circuit abuzz with D’Oliveira talk all summer? “Not in theearly part but as soon as he got that 158 at The Oval it was,” Knightrecalls. “God, we thought, that might cause problems. How could theyleave him out after that?” Had he been fit, he was confident he wouldhave been picked for South Africa himself. “I think they assumed Iwasn’t. I certainly don’t remember any phone calls inquiring about myhealth.” Yet, like D’Oliveira, he was not among the 30 recipients of thatMCC availability letter in July. “They probably never bothered to sendthem to the likes of me and Dolly because we were pros. They knewwe’d go anywhere. Pros like us never said no.”While still officially a state secret, rumours about Vorster’scommuniqué had reached the dressing rooms. “We’d heard, certainlyby then, that he’d said the team wouldn’t be welcome there if Dollywas included,” Knight recalls. “We thought the MCC didn’t have theguts to pick him. When the party was first announced, I thought,’They’re as weak as gnat’s piss. They’re kow-towing to Vorster.’ Thepros were revulsed. It was always them and us. We thought GubbyAllen was a snob, a bit up himself. And Basil was one of us.”Hence the widespread delight around the circuit as he progressed tothat Oval hundred. “Pleased? Oh God, yes. For Basil and because he wasmaking it difficult for them at Lord’s. You thought, ‘That’s got ’em!'”Of the three alive now who were ‘got’ then, Carr was askedrecently about those supposedly missing minutes. “I probably wrotethem,” he said. “I certainly don’t know about them being missing.”Yet no one outside that Lord’s committee room that night has everseen them. Forty years on the mystery remains.

Ryder's rise dulls the pain for New Zealand

Sidharth Monga rates the performances of New Zealand’s players in the Tests against India

Sidharth Monga08-Apr-2009Ross Taylor and Jesse Ryder could form the core of New Zealand’s middle-order for years to come•Associated Press8.5
Jesse Ryder
Revelation of the series for New Zealand. The compact technique, the cool head, the wide array of strokes heralded a new Test star on the horizon. Former New Zealand players who saw him bat reckoned he should go on to score at least 15 centuries. He scored two in the first two Tests, coming in at 40 for 3 and 23 for 3. The second was a double. Was perfect at gully and, at times, third slip.8
Chris Martin
Was the spirit that kept New Zealand high. Ran in over after over against the most experienced batting line-up. Made a successful comeback from injury and overcame the selectors’ reported reluctance to field him. Repaid captain Daniel Vettori’s faith by ending as the second-highest wicket-taker in the series.6.5
Ross Taylor
Flashy, rode his luck, but had 322 runs at 64.4 and two centuries to show by the end of the series. If he tightens up his aggression at the start of his innings, he and Ryder can form the core of a solid middle-order for years to come. Was the most impressive slip fielder on view too.6
Brendon McCullum
Very impressive behind the stumps, and did his bit with the bat too. Made sure New Zealand didn’t lose the first Test by an innings. Kept India on the field for long enough with an aggressive century in Napier. His catch of Rahul Dravid in Wellington, moving down the leg even as he shaped to paddle, was spectacular.Iain O’Brien
Didn’t have the results to show for it – nine wickets at 50.22 – but has the makings of an ideal first-change bowler for New Zealand. Hits the seam hard, and could have done with more seam movement from the pitch. His batting improved a lot as he scored 61 runs and helped avert an innings defeat in Hamilton along with McCullum. Had totalled 61 in his previous 14 Tests.5
Daniel Vettori
Big disappointment as a spinner, to the extent that he was more useful as a batsman. Scored a century in Hamilton, from 60 for 6, without taking undue risks. Will irk him that he couldn’t do more in Napier when New Zealand were the only team who could win with two days to go. Led the side fairly well, though.Jeetan Patel
Was the surprise package from New Zealand. Unlucky to have missed out in Wellington, where the pitch was expected to assist the fast bowlers more. Bowled really well in Napier, drifting the ball, getting it to turn too, and dismissing well-set batsmen – Sachin Tendulkar, Virender Sehwag and Gautam Gambhir twice.4.5
James Franklin
Came into the side as a specialist No. 6 batsman, riding on a successful domestic season with the bat. Didn’t contribute much in the first Test, scored 52 in a total of 619 in the second, failed again in the first innings in Wellington, and scored 49 in the second after the series was lost. Was a much better bowler with swing in the air in Wellington, and generally deserved better series figures than 1 for 290.4
Daniel Flynn
Showed his grit in the second innings in Hamilton, and also in trying desperately to get fit in time for the second Test. But scored only 12 runs in three other innings, and got out edging outside off too frequently for a No. 3 batsman.3
Martin Guptill
Showed flashes of brilliant strokeplay, but also showed his inexperience in the longer format of the game. Had already shown his preference for the front-foot play rather unsubtly, and Zaheer Khan kept troubling him with the short ball. But Guptill is not a stickler, and is one of the better top-order batsmen around in New Zealand.2
Tim McIntosh and Jamie How
On evidence from this series, didn’t look good enough for a Test top order. McIntosh got into trouble too often, didn’t use his height as he didn’t bend his knee, and barring one ordinary decision, contributed to his own demise with limp shots outside off.How got just one match and 11 balls, and didn’t do much to help his average of 22.Collectively, the top three, though still inexperienced, gave New Zealand their biggest headache with starts of 40 for 3, 75 for 3, 23 for 3, 80 for 3, and 84 for 3.Kyle Mills and Tim Southee
Neither of them showed signs of having recovered from the beating they got in the one-day series. Mills’ problems with no-balls continued, Southee continued to struggle for swing. Between them they gave away 271 runs for three wickets in one match apiece as Martin struggled for support from the other end.

Spinners prove a knotty problem

Most captains in the second edition of the IPL have quickly agreed on one thing: if you are well set as a batsman, whatever you do, do not get out to a spinner

Victor Brown02-May-2009Rules of thumb usually take time to evolve, but most captains in the second edition of the IPL have quickly agreed on one thing: if you are well set as a batsman, whatever you do, do not get out to a spinner. The thinking is that the next man in, invariably needing to maintain a run-rate of eight or nine an over, will struggle more with his timing against the slower bowlers than the quicker ones. It has become a rule of thumb for a good reason. Just ask Delhi Daredevils.Tonight at the Wanderers they were going very nicely, thank you, on 127 for 3 after 15.4 overs and needed a further 37 off 26 balls with David Warner and Dinesh Karthik both entrenched. Teams win Twenty20 matches more often than not from such positions, but MS Dhoni, the Chennai Super Kings captain, knew what he was doing. And what he was doing was bowling his spinners.Warner, who was beginning to flag after earlier hitting Albie Morkel for 15 in four balls, had a huge swing at the slow left-armer Shadab Jakati, missed, and was smartly stumped by Dhoni for a 40-ball 51. Still, a target of 37 off four overs was gettable. Except now Dhoni brought back Muttiah Muralitharan in place of L Balaji. Mithun Manhas, presumably knowing who he would rather have faced, failed to score off his first three balls then heaved at his fourth and was bowled. The over cost a single: 36 needed off three.Jakati continued. Karthik reached fifty by lifting him over long-off, where S Badrinath should have been flush up against the boundary, but then slogged Jakati’s next ball to a jubilant Murali at deep midwicket. Three balls later Pradeep Sangwan was bowled by Jakati aiming a mow. In 14 deliveries against the spinners, Delhi had lost 4 for 6. The rest was a formality.When county cricketers worked out about two years into the Twenty20 Cup that spin bowlers were the not-especially-secret weapons of the 20-over game, the feeling was that their potency was based on their ability to take the pace off the ball. Now they are being used to make incoming batsmen feel claustrophobic by challenging them to work the ones and twos and biff the boundaries from the word go. Bowlers who wouldn’t get a look-in in first-class cricket are suddenly being asked to do a job.Batsmen, by contrast, have to strike an increasingly fine line between keeping up with the asking rate and not losing the wicket that could bring the house down – as happened tonight. “Any new batsman is going to find it difficult with Murali in the attack,” said Gautam Gambhir, Delhi’s stand-in captain. “The over he bowled which cost one run was the turning-point in the game.”But that downplayed the role of Jakati. Dhoni felt Chennai were chasing the game until his left-arm spinner came on to bowl, and praised him because he “mixes his pace well and isn’t afraid to flight the ball. The wickets here are quite worn because it’s the end of the season, so the spinners are getting more purchase as games progress. Also, batsmen feel they should be going after the slow bowlers from the start. Spinners have a big role to play in this year’s IPL.”Delhi, still joint-top of the table with Deccan Chargers, who also lost today, learned that lesson the hard way today. Expect Daniel Vettori to return to the side any time soon.

Scotch and tonic and plenty of advice

Lots of rain, lots of entertainment, lots of noise

Sanjeev Datadin04-May-2010The game
I’m a big cricket fan and love live cricket. I’m also a box-holder at the Providence Stadium in Guyana. This match promised a good old-fashioned rivalry between England and West Indies. Chris Gayle and Kieron Pollard were in good nick after the IPL, as were Kevin Pietersen and Eoin Morgan.Team supported
West Indies. I’ve been a fan since my father took me to see India v West Indies at Bourda, Georgetown in 1983.Key performer
Morgan played an excellent innings. So did Gayle and Luke Wright. But because of the rain delays, the DJ turned out to be the key performer of the day.One thing I’d have changed
To have no rain. England were a bit hard done by, and the crowd was robbed of some entertainment. It would have been interesting to watch a West Indies batting line-up of Gayle, Pollard, Shivnarine Chanderpaul and Dwayne Bravo chase 192.Face-off I relished
Gayle v Sidebottom. Given all the talk about left-arm quicks against Gayle, I was interested to see how the contest with Sidebottom would pan out. Gayle took him for 15 in the first over. To be fair, the first boundary was off the edge, but as a spectator shouted out immediately after that boundary, “He paid for the whole bat… edge included.”Shot of the day
Craig Kieswetter smacked Ravi Rampaul over long-off to scatter the cheerleaders right below where I was sitting. But the shot of the day was Chanderpaul’s switch hit for six off Graeme Swann. The noise that followed was deafening.Player watch
Darren Sammy was cheered every time he touched the ball, no doubt because of his heroics against Ireland. It helped that he took two wickets when England were on the charge. Since it was Guyana, hometown boy Chanderpaul was inundated with advice and comments every time he came to field below where I was sitting.Crowd meter
The stadium was packed. It was so loud, you could not hear your own phone ring, much less anyone you were trying to speak to. Horns, beach shells, whistles, thunder sticks, tassa drums and the steel pans contributed to the noise. Then, of course, there was the typical Guyana crowd, shouting all sorts of advice and remarks to the players. It was loudest when the umpires came out to inspect the conditions after a prolonged rain delay and approaching darkness; there was definitely no shortage of encouragement to bring the players back out to continue the game.The spectators stayed through the heavy and prolonged downpour. The Providence is a semi-open stadium and many patrons were simply standing, or dancing, in the rain.It was amazing to hear what sounded like every spectator screaming “wiiddde” every time and English bowler bowled a wide.A new discovery
In our box the very unusual (at least in these parts) drink of scotch and tonic became the order of the day. I think I might stay with this one for a while.Entertainment
Plenty. There was chutney, soca, reggae, dancehall, and even some 80s hits. The live artists were average and sounded as if they were screaming into the microphone at times. There were cheerleaders perched on stages around the ground, tassa drummers, and colourfully costumed assortments of characters carrying a kind of horn, who provided their own brand of loud entertainment during any slight break in an over.Banner of the day
There were no banners up around the ground; a consequence of the stadium being sanitised in the name of ambush marketing. There was a t-shirt with a picture of Kieron Pollard smacking the ball, with the caption, “Polly what a cracker!”Marks out of 10
8. Plenty of rain, but also plenty of music, dancing, unusual drinks and great atmosphere.

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