Pete Alonso Spurns Mets for Orioles on Massive Five-Year Contract

The Polar Bear is reportedly headed to a warmer climate.

Longtime Mets first baseman Pete Alonso is joining the Orioles on a five-year contract worth $155 million, according to a Wednesday afternoon report from Jeff Passan of ESPN. Alonso, 31, has spent his entire seven-year career with New York.

Debuting in 2019, the first baseman immediately established himself as a superstar with a MLB-best 53 home runs. In a career that has seen him make five All-Star teams (and memorably win two Home Run Derbies), he has also led the National League in RBIs (131 in 2022) and doubles (41 in 2025).

Per Passan, Alonso's deal is the most lucrative ever for a first baseman on an average annual value basis.

Baltimore—which won 101 games as recently as 2023—is looking to put a disappointing '25 behind it. Much of the Orioles' lineup underachieved a year ago, and the team dismissed manager Brandon Hyde after 43 games.

Barring unforeseen circumstances, Alonso will debut for Baltimore on March 26 against the Twins.

PSL 2020: Six local rookies to keep an eye on

If they get enough opportunities, these youngsters are capable of making a big mark

Danyal Rasool and Umar Farooq19-Feb-2020
Ahmed Safi Abdullah (Islamabad United)
Just 21, Abdullah comes into the PSL without any baggage, having not played an official T20 at any level. But there’s still plenty from his record to be excited by. Since making his first-class debut just over a year ago, the left arm spinner has built a flourishing reputation as a prolific wicket-taker, having snared 59 in 19 first-class games at 23.38. He comes into the tournament fresh off a six-wicket haul in Faisalabad and four wickets in an innings in Bahawalpur during a pair of Second XI games, and while his List A record isn’t as encouraging as that in first-class cricket, this is a great opportunity for him to change that. Shadab Khan and Zafar Gohar should be ahead of him in the pecking order, but it’s unlikely Abdullah won’t get his chance at some point, and if he does, there’s enough to suggest he will surprise a few people.Arshad Iqbal (Karachi Kings)
In a squad as full of quality fast bowlers as Karachi Kings, there’s a possibility Iqbal will not get the opportunity his precocious talent deserves. Part of Pakistan’s squad that made it to the semi-finals of the 2018 Under-19 World Cup, the quick was one of only some Pakistan players to give a good account of himself in a game Pakistan lost heavily to India, taking 3 for 51. He went on to make his first-class debut for WAPDA that year, taking five wickets in the match. His short career in T20 cricket has been impressive too – he has taken ten wickets at 17 with an economy rate of 6.80 in seven matches. Should he get to add to them, there’s little reason to feel he will not be able to continue the upward trajectory.Aamir Ali (Peshawar Zalmi)
There isn’t too much you can say with certainty about Aamir just yet, and indeed he may find opportunities limited this season. The 17-year-old left-arm spinner was part of Pakistan’s Under-19 World Cup campaign, and picked up four wickets in five games. He was also the youngest player to feature in this season’s Quaid-e-Azam Trophy, taking the wicket of his Peshawar Zalmi team-mate Kamran Akmal on debut. Peshawar have seen another spin bowler in Ibtisam Sheikh fall off after a very promising PSL 2 years ago. So they should have extra incentive to make sure Aamir doesn’t fall in the same trap, particularly since, for all their success in the PSL, Peshawar are one of the franchises yet to serve as the springboard for an emerging player’s career.Rohail Nazir drives through the off side•Getty ImagesRohail Nazir (Multan Sultans)
All right, so this is a bit of a cop-out. You should know who Nazir is, but familiarity should not take away from anything. The 18-year-old was captain of Pakistan’s Under-19 side at the latest World Cup, scoring a half-century in the semi-final in a losing cause against India. He is already captain of his first-class side in the Quaid-e-Azam Trophy, and steered them to the final of the competition, accumulating 150 runs across two innings. Multan Sultans have already appointed him vice-captain, and as the only enlisted keeper in the squad, he’s pretty much a first-teamer. That should both be exciting and challenging for Nazir; T20 cricket is the one format he hasn’t raced out of the blocks in. Averages north of 36 and 47 in first-class and List A competitions respectively sit out of kilter with a T20 average of 18 at under 114. Nothing about his technique suggests this is not rectifiable, and he’ll be one of the players to keep a close eye on.Arish Ali Khan (Quetta Gladiators)
Arish is just 19, a left-arm spinner who emerged from a PCB-conducted tournament in 2016, ending as the leading wicket-taker with 45 strikes at 12.24. Since then, he has been part of the Pakistan youth set-up. He soon became the captain of the Pakistan Under-16 team, and after good returns against Australia in the UAE in the one-dayers and T20s, he made into the Under-19 circuit, and continued to do well, finished as the second-highest wicket-taker in the national Under-19 three-day tournament last year with 30 strikes at 16.27. He did make it to the He is a success of the system, and has a happy knack of picking up wickets at critical junctures.Maaz Khan (Lahore Qalandars)
Maaz is a product of the Lahore Qalandars scouting programme – from Jamrud in the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province, he is a legspinner with the attitude of a fast bowler. He has a good googly, a flipper, and can turn the new ball well too. He wasn’t picked in the Draft, the PCB allowed Qalandars to pick up an additional emerging player from their own programme. Yet to have a go in the domestic set-up, Maaz was unleashed against Titans in the Abu Dhabi T20 Cup in 2018, and finished with 2 for 23 after opening the bowling.

Why Steven Smith's 2019 Ashes batting performance is the greatest of all time in a series

The best batting, bowling and all-round performances in series, ranked, taking into account opposition strength and the pitch conditions

Anantha Narayanan10-Oct-2020This article is about the top performers, both batsmen and bowlers, in Test series. I can already hear voices clamouring, “Come on, I can go to ESPNcricinfo’s stats section and see that Don Bradman’s 974 runs in the 1930 Ashes and Sydney Barnes’ 49 wickets in the 1913-14 South Africa series are the best batting and bowling performances in a series. What are you going to do differently?” A very valid plaint indeed. These tables can be obtained at a minute’s notice.However, I will bring context into the equation. Where was the series played, who were the opponents, how strong were the opponent bowlers and batsmen, what was the innings and match status when the players played, what was the result, what was the support available, and the like.In other words, I will bring into the equation Performance Ratings points. Just as Kusal Perera’s and Brian Lara’s unbeaten 153s were placed far ahead of Lara’s 400 in the batting ratings, it is possible that lower run and wicket aggregates could trump the colossal performances of Bradman and Barnes. In fact, I can say that the two performances referred to above are nowhere near the best ever.Let us start with the batsmen. First, a table on the best batting performances in a series – ordered by batting rating points.Anantha NarayananSteven Smith’s epochal feats in the 2019 Ashes series add up to the best ever series batting performance in the history of the game. He gathered 3427 rating points, which works out to over 800 points per Test (he missed one match with a concussion). He failed in one innings out of seven. The runs were scored when needed, and they helped Australia draw the series. In two Tests he delivered big performances in each innings, and he made excellent big fifties in the other two.Clyde Walcott’s magnificent series in 1955 against the strong Australians comes in in second position. He scored five hundreds in the series – the only batsman in history to do so, and his rating points tally was 3185. A young Mark Taylor, in only his second series, took England by storm in 1989 with an aggregate of 839 runs, with over 2850 rating points. A century, double-century and a bunch of fifties helped him achieve this remarkable feat, which gives him the fourth position. Rounding out the top five is Virat Kohli, who, after a disastrous 2014 in England, more than made up in 2018. His two priceless hundreds and consistent scores helped him gather 2805 rating points.Len Hutton’s landmark series performance in 1950-51 merits a separate paragraph. An aggregate of 533 runs in a low-scoring series, and nearly 2900 rating points, puts this performance in third place. That too in a lost series. Let us look deeper at the numbers from the series. One of the greatest bowling combinations ever (Ray Lindwall, Keith Miller, Bill Johnston), an average Pitch Quality Index of just over 40 (the lowest amongst all considered series). It is no wonder that Hutton ranks so high on the list. It also proves that the ratings basis is sound – the process does not reward wins and run aggregates undeservedly, especially when it comes to low-to-middling scores. Hutton’s 62 not out, coming in at 30 for 6, gathered over 500 rating points.The rest of the list reads like a Who’s Who of top Test batsmen. All these players have secured in excess of 2500 rating points in each case. Mohinder Amarnath deserves a special mention. After one of the greatest series by a visiting batsman, against West Indies away, he had the mortification of scoring 4, 7, 0, 0, 1, 0, 0 and 0 – and at home at that.Now on to the secondary metric of rating points per run. A high value of this indicates a tough series and a low one, a rather friendly one. Hutton had the highest value, 5.4 points per run. Allan Border in 1981 is the only other batsman to exceed 5.0. Smith’s value is rather high, 4.4. Bradman’s 1930 average is the lowest at 2.6.Why is Bradman, with his aggregate of 974 runs in 1930, only in 21st place? Well, it is time to look at some aspects of the ratings computations.1. Merely scoring runs will not guarantee ratings points. Just as the brace of 153s trumped 365 and 400, many series aggregates in the 500-600 range will get more ratings points over much higher 800-run aggregates. The main reason for this is context, which has already been covered. And the second reason is that I have made sure the ratings values are not overly linearly dependent on the scores.2. For the 49,366 innings of 10-plus runs in Test history, the correlation coefficient between runs and rating points is 0.90. That is very good correlation but not absolute dependency.3. Take three batsmen playing in a three-Test series. The first one scores two 300s, the second one, three 200s, and the third four 100s. Other things being equal, the first batsman is likely to secure 1500 rating points, the second one, 1800 points and the third batsman over 2200 points.4. Well-made small innings get a significant number of points. A tough 75 in a hard-fought team score of 200 is likely to carry more points than a 150 out of 700. However, this does not mean that all low scores will get good points. Aravinda de Silva’s 125, made coming in at 615 for 1 does not even get 200 rating points.5. The base numbers of the series mean a lot. For instance, Bradman’s 1930 series had an average Pitch Quality Index of 57, indicating a relatively batsman-dominated series. Smith’s 2019 Ashes was much more bowler-friendly, with an average PQI of 46.6. Bradman’s scores in that 1930 series against England were 131 (L), 254 (W), 334 (D) and 232 (W). Four substantial innings, but his three other innings, were 8, 1 and 14. Not necessarily good for ratings points accumulation, or for that matter, of great value to the team. Smith scored 144 and 142 (W), 92 (D), 211 and 82 (W) and 80 (L). The only other innings was one of 23. So there was almost no poor innings.Finally, scoring big innings only guarantees that the team will not lose. Not necessarily win. Of the 94 scores of 250 or more, only 45 have resulted in wins and 49, in draws. It is no wonder that Bradman accumulated 2517 rating points and Smith 3427.The ratings points are already a qualitative metric. A doubly qualitative one is the ratings points per Test. This is the ultimate measuring tool. Smith played in only four Tests in the 2019 series and averaged over 850 points per Test. That is an average of one innings fit to make the top 25 innings of all time in each Test he played in. The next batsman on this parameter is Sunil Gavaskar in the 1971 tour and he is exactly 200 points behind. The only other batsman who averages more than 600 points per Test is Walcott.Going down to two-Test series, Dimuth Karunaratne averaged 851 points per Test against South Africa in 2018. Jacques Kallis averaged 787 points against Pakistan in 2007. Ajinkya Rahane averaged 761 points against West Indies in 2019. Jimmy Adams and Brian Lara exceeded 750 points per Test in three-Test series against India in 1994 and Sri Lanka in 2001 respectively.Anantha NarayananThe list above is the table you can get in a minute from ESPNcricinfo. Bradman and Wally Hammond are the only two batsmen to score more than 900 runs in a Test series. Bradman has also topped 800 on two other occasions, while Taylor, Neil Harvey, Viv Richards, Walcott and Garry Sobers have also exceeded 800 runs in a Test series. Maybe this target is unattainable now with the number of Tests in a series coming down.However, I have provided another measure, a partly qualitative one, at the left. This is the Runs per Test value. Graham Gooch is the only batsman to exceed 250 runs per Test in this group – against India in 1990, but in a three-Test series. Richards is the other batsman to exceed 200 runs per Test. Smith crossed 190 twice. Because of six-Test series, the average drops to around 125 for some batsmen.When we come down to two-Test series, Sanath Jayasuriya averaged 285.5 against India in 1997, Hammond 281.5 against New Zealand in 1933, and Andy Flower 270 against India in a tough away series during 2000.Anantha NarayananI had prepared an additional chart ordered on Rating points per Test. I decided not to include the same. That graph would have done justice to the 2/3 Test series. Unknowingly, I have not been fair to the smaller countries which normally play 2/3 Test series. Hence I have included the same here. The graph is self-explanatory.Anantha NarayananFinally, a scatter chart to show the way the batsmen performed on the two measures – rating points and runs scored.Smith in 2019 is only in the middle on the runs-scored axis but is way up on the ratings-points axis. Bradman is way to the right on the runs axis and fairly low on the ratings-points one. Of special interest are Hutton and Border. They are way to the left on the X-axis but in the middle in the Y-axis. The diagram is, on the whole, self-explanatory.Now for some points about the bowling ratings.1. For the 29,876 wicket-capturing spells in all Test cricket, the correlation coefficient is 0.96. This is very high degree of correlation, indicating a very strong relationship between wickets and rating points.2. Unlike runs, which could mean nothing, wickets matter a lot almost always. There is a clear distinction between a batsman scoring an utterly useless hundred in a score of 700 in a drawn match and a bowler taking, say, three wickets in a match with a very low PQI of 10. In the latter case, invariably the team wins.3. The bowling rating scores, on average, are higher than for batting, since the total points are shared by fewer bowlers.4. Finally, taking, say, eight wickets, not only increases the chances of a result but also the chances that it is a win. Of the 97 eight-wicket performances, 63 have resulted in wins, 12 in draws, and 22 in losses.In summary, this is a recognition of the century-old saying that bowlers win matches.Anantha NarayananJim Laker’s colossal collection of 46 wickets in that mesmerising series against Australia in 1956 walks away with the best-bowling-performance laurels. It came against an Australia team that was not poor by any means – Colin McDonald, Neal Harvey, Keith Miller, Richie Benaud, Alan Davidson and Ray Lindwall formed a tough group of players. It was a bowling-centric series, where the average Pitch Quality Index was around 42. Laker’s wicket hauls were 10, 9, 6, 5, 4, 4, 3, 3 and 2.Next comes one of the greatest bowling performances by any bowler in Asia. When Imran Khan took 40 wickets against India in 1983, he set standards unequalled before or after. He gathered 4354 rating points because he dismissed many top-order batsmen. The fewest wickets he took in any innings in the series was two. He had four five-wicket hauls.In third place is Terry Alderman, whose twin golden series in England represent, arguably, two of the greatest bowling performances in that country. This particular entry is for the latter one – in the 1989 series. The 41 wickets he took gave him 4278 rating points. Alderman too dismissed many top-order batsmen. His two Ashes performances, eight years apart, were magnificent landmarks. However, his 1989 performance, though it was lower by one wicket than the 1981 one, earns 10% more rating points because Australia won 4-0 in 1989, as against losing 1-3 in 1981; the bowling average was 17 in 1989, against 21 in the earlier series; and Alderman dismissed 33 top-order batsmen in 1989 as compared to 26 in 1981.In fourth place lies Clarrie Grimmett’s farewell series performance of 44 wickets in 1936 against South Africa. South Africa were not a great team in those days, but the huge number of wickets helped Grimmett gather in excess of 4200 rating points. Let us not forget that he was past 40 at that time.In fifth place is Maurice Tate’s 38 wickets on his first visit to Australia, in 1924-25. Bradman was still practising at home in Bowral then, but this Australian team was quite a strong one, and Tate’s aggregate was well over 4000 rating points.In sixth place is Barnes’ haul of 49 wickets in four Tests against South Africa in 1914. However, it is clear that the South Africa team was a sub-par one, and this accounts for Barnes’ rating-points tally being only 4063.On the ratings-points-per-Test measure, Barnes deservedly leads, having earned his 4000-plus points in that series from only four Tests. He is the only player to exceed 1000 points per Test in this group. Laker, Grimmett and Tate accumulated over 800 points per Test.Moving to two-and-three-Test series, Saqlain Mushtaq averaged 1077 points per Test against India in 1999. Muttiah Muralitharan earned 1061 points per Test against South Africa in 2006. Richard Hadlee and Rangana Herath averaged either side of 1050 points per Test, in three-Test series, against Australia in 1985 and Australia in 2016 respectively. These four, along with Barnes, are the only bowlers to go past 1000 points per Test.Harbhajan Singh (2001 versus Australia), Nathan Lyon (2017 versus Bangladesh) and Mohammad Asif (2006 versus Sri Lanka) narrowly miss out.Considering that it was played in Pakistan, the opposition was a strong Indian team, and that the series was a batsman-dominated one (average Pitch Quality Index of 60), I would venture to say that Khan’s performance was the best ever in a series. The other bowlers in contention bowled in bowler-friendly conditions and/or against weaker opposition.Anantha NarayananBarnes leads the list of top wicket-takers, with 49 wickets in the series against South Africa in 1914. The fact that it was against rather ordinary opposition does not lower the greatness of the performance. Laker, Grimmett, Alderman (twice), Rodney Hogg, Shane Warne and Khan took 40 or more wickets in a series.When we come to wickets per Test, Barnes leads again, with over 12. In a three-Test series against South Africa in 1896, George Lohmann averaged 11.67 WpT. Laker is the only other bowler to exceed 9 WpT.Going down to two-or-three-Test series, a host of bowlers have WpT figures of 10 or more. Possibly the most impressive is Hadlee, who averaged 11 WpT against Australia in 1985. Muralitharan averaged 11 WpT in a two-Test series and 10 WpT in a three-Test series. Singh averaged 10.67 WpT against Australia in 2001. Abdul Qadir averaged 10 WpT against England in 1987.Anantha NarayananAnd just as for the batsmen, the above graph lists the bowlers with the highest ratings points per Test.Anantha NarayananFinally, the composite chart, plotting the wickets versus the bowling rating points. Quite different to its counterpart for batting. If I draw a line across, from (30, 3000) to (50, 4500), only one of the top series performers, Barnes, is clearly to the right of the line. That indicates that he gathered fairly average points per wicket – below 100. Many of the bowlers in the left and top have a value of over 100 on this parameter. Two aspects stand out. Barring Khan, no bowler from the subcontinent is in this elite collection. And Barnes, Alderman and Warne have two performances each.Anantha NarayananThe selection criteria for the allrounders list is that the player should have secured a minimum of 1000 rating points in each of the two aspects, batting and bowling. This is to ensure that true allrounders are selected.Ian Botham picked up 34 wickets and scored 399 runs in that roller coaster of an Ashes series in 1981. These numbers, individually, would be enough for a player to be considered as having done well either as a batsman or bowler. Botham was off-colour in the first two Tests, when he was the captain. Then he contributed with both bat and ball in the next four Tests – 50, 149 not out and 118, accompanied by 6 for 95, 5 for 11, 3 for 28, 6 for 125 and 4 for 128. All these were match-winning or match-saving performances.Aubrey Faulkner was a magnificent allrounder, not often talked about but very effective all the same. He was at his best against England in 1910, scoring 545 runs and taking 29 wickets. His key contributions were 78, 123, 47, 76, 44, 49 not out and 99. The bowling contributions were 5 for 120, 3 for 40, 6 for 87, 4 for 89 and a brace of three-wicket hauls. South Africa defeated a strong England side 3-2 mainly because of Faulkner’s exploits.Andrew Flintoff’s performances during the Ashes series of 2005 were reminiscent of Botham’s two and a half decades before. He made 402 runs and took 24 wickets; that England carved out a narrow 2-1 win in one of the greatest ever Test series was because of Flintoff. Scores of 68, 73, 46, 102 and 72 were supported by bowling spells of 3 for 52, 4 for 79, 4 for 71 and 5 for 78.George Giffen, with 34 wickets and 475 runs is fourth on the table. This performance was in the lost Ashes series of 1895. Garry Sobers had a batting-dominated series in 1966 against England. He took 20 wickets but scored 722 runs. West Indies won the Test series comfortably.Sobers appears three more times and Botham twice more on this list. The last two entries are two modern greats – Shakib Al Hassan and Daniel Vettori – both in two-Test series.Finally, a summary. Which three players are on top?Steven Smith: Arguably the greatest of modern Test batsmen, and again arguably, the greatest batsman born after 1910. Where will he end his career? No one can bet against a 65 average and a clear second position to the Don.Jim Laker: One of the most effective spinners of all time. Normally excluded when talks veer around to Warne and Murali. However, no one can deny the impact of the numbers at a time when the frequency of Tests was quite low – 193 wickets at 21.25, well below a typical spinner’s bowler’s average.Ian Botham: Inarguably, the most charismatic of allrounders. He was the original. A true match-winner in both aspects of the game.

du Plessis eager to master the Asian challenge

Batsman says he’s feeling good and he wants to do well away from home for his team

Firdose Moonda23-Jan-2021If Faf du Plessis sounds confident ahead of South Africa’s series in Pakistan it’s not necessarily because he is. It’s because he wants to be.Like every member of the touring party, he is entering the unknown and in an especially important period of a rebuilding Test team, he wants to make the best impression he can. “Fake it til you make it,” du Plessis joked, even though he is the batsman in the line-up who has truly made it.After his gracious stepping down from leadership last summer, du Plessis enjoyed a successful IPL and a stunning international return with two half centuries in South Africa’s T20 series and a career-best 199 against Sri Lanka. Without the weight of leading the team, du Plessis has played and spoken with freedom. “It’s coming from a place of contentment,” he said. “I am intentional in making sure I really enjoy my cricket. If that comes through in performances or the way that I speak, then I am glad that it’s happening.”But he also accepts that comes with some additional responsibility, especially when it comes to batting in conditions that are foreign to everyone. “I am batting well at the moment, feeling good and I really want to play my best cricket. I also want to put in some good performances in the subcontinent. It’s really important for me to do well overseas,” du Plessis said.Asia and England are two places abroad that du Plessis has not scored a hundred and the subcontinent is where his statistics are the least impressive. In 15 Test matches across India, Sri Lanka, Bangladesh and the UAE, he averages 22.70, well below his overall average of 41.08. Given that South Africa have talked up Pakistan as being the best place for batting in the subcontinent, du Plessis could well be eyeing it as the tour to improve on those numbers but he hasn’t seen enough to be sure it will be as batsmen-friendly as its been hyped up to be.South Africa had their first training session at the National Stadium on Saturday but they have yet to see the surface they will play on and are still playing a guessing game on what to expect when the Test stats on Tuesday. Previous South African sides, like the last one that toured the country in 2007 and included coach Mark Boucher, noted that Pakistan was flatter than India or Sri Lanka and took less turn, while from the practice facilities Kagiso Rabada said he expects reverse swing to play a role. Du Plessis thinks spin will have a big say, especially as Pakistan look to make use of home advantage and South Africa’s historic weakness. “I think the wickets will be a bit more subcontinent like than it used to be back then and spinners will probably be a little more in the game,” du Plessis said.Faf du Plessis is coming off a career best 199 that he hit at home•Associated PressAfter tough tours of India (2015 and 2019) and Sri Lanka (2018), perhaps du Plessis is predisposed to saying that. Or maybe it’s the memories of playing Pakistan in their adopted home in the UAE, of a trial by turn, that inform his opinion of this tour. “Every time I went out to bat there, Saeed Ajmal was warming up. Sometimes I would wake up in the middle of the night and he would be bowling at me.”Ajmal actually only dismissed du Plessis once in three innings in the 2013 series that South Africa won, but in an earlier rubber, and even though it was at home, du Plessis struggled to pick the doosra. There’s no-one in Pakistan’s squad who presents that kind of threat for this series, but there’s still a danger man in Yasir Shah.”From a spin point of view when you come to the subcontinent, the theory is like when we are playing in South Africa when we play and miss against the seamer. If he bowls a good ball and it spun past your bat, it’s just making sure you see it as a good ball and it went past your bat and you played it well,” du Plessis said. “But it’s also about making sure you are looking at two or or three ways of getting off strike. The challenge is when a spinner bowls a lot of dot balls and you feel stuck and you can’t get off strike and he settles into bowling a good area which Yasir Shah is very good at. He has really got good control. If you just let him bowl at you, he will bowl really well at you. You need to make sure you’ve got some plans to either get ones off him or have scoring options to get some boundaries.”He also identified left-armer Shaheen Shah Afridi, who “has been hot the last two seasons,” as another threat and warned South Africa of Pakistan’s captain as well. “Having Babar back is massive for them. I would say he is up there with the top three batters in the world at the moment,” du Plessis said. “His last two seasons, in all formats, have been nothing short of remarkable.”Babar currently lies sixth on the ICC Test rankings, third on the ODI charts and second in T20Is and his value for Pakistan has been reflected in the enormity of his absence. He missed the Tests in New Zealand with a fractured thumb and his return makes Pakistan a more competitive team. “With any team if you take out their best batter, it leaves a hole and If you take his runs out of the team, Pakistan becomes a team you feel you can get on top of quite easily,” du Plessis said.Pakistan might feel similarly about du Plessis or even Quinton de Kock, who had a poor series against Sri Lanka and appears to be straining under the weight of captaincy. Though du Plessis is not looking to take back the reins, he can see that de Kock is receiving support. “From a management point of view, they are trying to make sure they don’t put too much on his plate. (Mark) Boucher tries to do most of the things when it comes to setting up practices, talking, planning and meetings,” du Plessis said. “They are trying to make sure they are taking some of the burden off him so he can focus on just playing cricket. That’s when he is dangerous.”Though de Kock will return home with the Test squad and won’t captain the T20I side against Pakistan in Lahore, he will also lead South Africa in the home Test series against Australia and the white-ball matches against Pakistan that are scheduled to follow. By then South Africa will have spent several months in a bio-secure bubble, which, like many cricketers du Plessis thinks “is not sustainable,” and will need to be reconsidered as the pandemic wears on.For now, du Plessis is enjoying the challenge and ready to take on Pakistan. “Right now I am still in a good place. I am still motivated and driven but I can only speak for myself,” he said, with his game face on. Or not.”Fake it til you make it,” remember? The next few weeks will tell.

Wiaan Mulder sheds weight and carries the load for South Africa

The allrounder has battled multiple injuries to get back to international cricket. Now South Africa hope he can take on a Kallis-like role in the side

Firdose Moonda22-Jan-2021Wiaan Mulder arrived at the Wanderers in October 2016 with a helmet, hope and homework. He was 17 and already earmarked for bigger things.Geoffrey Toyana, the Lions coach at the time, had heard about a schoolboy allrounder who was being courted by other franchises, so he had gone down to St Stithians, one of South Africa’s most prestigious schools, the alma mater of Kagiso Rabada among others, to see what the fuss was all about.Toyana was so impressed by Mulder at the school that he nearly guaranteed him a place in the Lions first XI. “I remember saying to him that we don’t have many allrounders at the Lions and that if Dwaine Pretorius got selected by the Proteas, [Mulder] would be the next guy in,” Toyana said. “Within a week Dwaine was selected and even though Wiaan was busy with his school exams at that point, I couldn’t go back on my word.”Pretorius’ call-up to South Africa’s ODI squad came at the beginning of the 2016-17 season, when the domestic franchises were about to kick off their four-day competition. Mulder slotted straight into a high-performing Lions side with a strong bowling attack – bypassing the second-tier provincial structure entirely – and made his debut against the historically strong Cape Cobras. He bowled second change and took three wickets in the first innings. In the next, he was promoted to first change and took four more. Mulder had hit the big time while still occupied with his studies and turning up for training in his school uniform.

In his next match, Mulder took what are still his career-best figures, 7 for 25 against a Dolphins team that included Imraan Khan, Morne van Wyk and Keshav Maharaj. A week later he scored his maiden first-class hundred, batting at No. 8 against a Knights attack featuring Duanne Olivier and Marchant de Lange.”He had to bring his books into the change room to study,” Toyana said. “And we could all see he was talented. He could bat, he could bowl, and I was planning to use him at No. 5. We knew we had a gem in him.”From his early days Mulder was labelled a batting allrounder in the mould of – don’t say it too loudly – Jacques Kallis, and the numbers explain why. In 35 first-class matches, he has five hundreds – four at franchise level and one against India A in Mysore – and a batting average closing in on 40. Three of those matches came for Kent, for whom he played briefly in 2019.But in his fledgling international career he appears to have been used largely as a bowing allrounder. Although he first played for South Africa in 2017, Mulder has really come to notice only now, after taking nine wickets at 20.55 in the 2-0 win over Sri Lanka at home this season.Mulder made his ODI debut at the start of Ottis Gibson’s coaching tenure, when South Africa were looking for 2019 World Cup candidates, but back and ankle injuries dominated his next two summers.”He was carrying a lot of weight,” said Enoch Nkwe, who succeeded Toyana at the Lions and now works as South Africa’s assistant coach. At one point Mulder weighed 106kg and he knew he needed to shed some of it to be able to stay on the park. He was putting too much stress on his lower back, partly because of the weight, but more because of the way his forearm fell away when he delivered the ball. He had to work on straightening his arm and landing with his torso approximately in the same plane as his hips to make his action more efficient and less damaging.Mulder took nine wickets at 20.55 in the two Tests against Sri Lanka at home•AFP via Getty ImagesHe changed his diet, and on former South Africa fast bowler Morne Morkel’s recommendation, worked with Andrew Gray, a biokineticist, and his wife Janine, a researcher who holds a PhD in lower back pain in adolescent fast bowlers. In the couple, Mulder found people who could help him understand his physique and how to make it work for him.”He has the right physios, the right medical team and the right coaching around him, and he has been able to pick himself up and find new ways of reaching new levels,” Nkwe said.But it wasn’t all smooth sailing. The following year Mulder battled with an ankle issue and missed the 2019-20 international summer with further injury problems. His time off was sobering and he realised he had to work his way back almost from the beginning.Although Mulder went to an elite school, he comes from humble beginnings on Johannesburg’s West Rand. His parents were not financially flush and put all their resources into ensuring Mulder and his younger brother got the best opportunities.When available, Mulder plays his club cricket at the Dobsonville Cricket Club in Soweto, which is notable because Mulder is white and the club is situated in an area the apartheid-era government had demarcated for black Africans, and which still has a majority population of colour. “Some of the young white players who are from schools where they are coached by young black coaches end up playing at clubs like Dobsonville and they are encouraged to mix with different cultures,” Toyana said.In a country polarised by racial inequality, Mulder’s experience in Soweto would have been eye-opening, and it will be interesting to see how it affects the way he and South Africa’s next generation of players relate to each other. For now, he has shown an impressive level of maturity in the national set-up. When fellow quick bowler Lutho Sipamla, with whom he played at the Under-19 level, was struggling early in his first Test – going for 66 runs in 12 wicketless overs – Mulder told him to trust his ability, keep running in and to believe it would work for him. Sipamla took ten wickets for 101 across the two Tests against Sri Lanka, finishing the series in second place on the bowlers’ list, right above Mulder and below Anrich Nortje.Mulder bowled 12.5 more overs than Sipamla, taking on the role of doing the donkey work with full commitment. He explained that he understood his role as being a container and that his nine wickets at 20.55 were a bonus. In fact, the bonus for South Africa was the load that Mulder willingly carried.Nkwe cautioned that they will have to expect him to not bowl so much in the future. “We shouldn’t get too excited and allow him to bowl long spells. We understand that with the scheduling, if we start to fall into that trap of allowing bowlers to bowl long spells, it could catch up with us in three or four months’ time. It is part of player management to ensure that players don’t get burnt out or break down. He needs to continue to see himself as a batting allrounder and go after that.”Scores of 36 and 7 in the Sri Lanka series don’t necessarily indicate what Mulder is capable of. Ultimately South Africa want him to develop into a top-order allrounder in the Kallis mould. Though Quinton de Kock is currently installed at No. 5, it is not the position he performs best in (that’s No. 7), and over time it is likely that Temba Bavuma and Mulder will leapfrog de Kock into the top six. But South Africa don’t want to rush Mulder.”Technically there is still some work to do. He’s got a good cricket brain, he has got the skills, and I have no doubt he is one for the future,” Nkwe said. “There is going to be a lot of information thrown at him, so he needs to be smart about what resonates with him in this journey of becoming an all-round cricketer. We will do our best to guide him in the right direction but he will also have to do his homework,” Nkwe said.And if there is one thing Mulder knows how to do, it’s homework at the cricket.

We should know the World Cup team by the time England T20Is end: Vikram Rathour

India’s batting coach talks game-plans for T20s, and how and where strike rates matter in the shortest format

Nagraj Gollapudi09-Mar-20213:26

Vikram Rathour – ‘As far as we are winning games I’m okay with whatever strike rates batsmen have’

Having never played the format, how easy or difficult is it for you to be a coach in T20s. You do have experience as a coach in franchise cricket and in domestic cricket, having done that in the IPL and with Himachal Pradesh and Punjab?
See, I am not really teaching them how to play a cover drive or a pull shot. For me, the discussions are on game-plans, on decision making, on handling pressure, having the right temperament, or reading the situations well. And for that, whether I have played that game or not, I don’t think it is that important. That is my thinking.My job with them is (to help them with) what bowlers to pick, what areas to look to hit. And if they are doing certain things, what are their thoughts and why they are doing it – that is the area I focus on more actually.Related

'Indian team in great hands with Vikram Rathour' – domestic players on India's new batting coach

The Rishabh Pant journey from 'fearless' to 'careless' and back

Vikram Rathour, India's batting coach: 'Failure teaches you that nothing stops. That liberates you, actually'

Five T20Is against England. Which are the main questions you have jotted down for this series from the batting unit’s perspective?
The [T20] World Cup is in India, so I just want the batting unit to get settled basically. By the time we finish this series, we should know, ‘this is the team which is going to play the World Cup’. So hopefully that will happen in this series. I am already sure that there wouldn’t be too many changes anyway, because we are a pretty settled unit at the moment. But in case somebody loses form or somebody gets injured, as a batting unit you just want to get settled now.Isn’t there still a spot, the wicketkeeper-batsman, as a back-up to KL Rahul, still up for grabs?
KL has done really well as a wicketkeeper-batsman. He has been a superb cricketer, he has batted really well, he has kept reasonably well. Now Rishabh [Pant] (is) back in form and doing well, let’s see how it goes. Once this situation comes, what the team management is looking to do, that’ll happen on the day of the game and how this series goes.”KL has been a superb cricketer,” says Vikram Rathour.•Associated PressYou said game-plan is one thing you need to figure out. You are playing England, one of the best and most aggressive batting units – they bat deep and they play (hard) from ball one. India’s (batting) approach has been different with a top order comprising Rohit Sharma, Shikhar Dhawan, Virat Kohli. They all bat virtually in a similar style – they like to bat deep, their strike rates, too, are similar. How much of the ongoing strike rate debate do India need to adapt to?
You are looking to win a game. If you are chasing, strike rate doesn’t mean anything actually. You are looking to finish a game and chase a target – whether you do it in 10 overs or 20 overs, you are looking to win the game. Batting first, at times, yeah. If the conditions are good you need to be looking to put a par score on board. As far as our T20 (batting) is concerned we have been doing that pretty consistently. So I’m not really, really concerned; I mean as far as we are winning games and we are putting par scores and chasing targets, I’m okay with whatever strike rates they are going at.Can’t India afford to go (hard) from ball one, considering that you bat pretty deep?
Hmm…Yes. Somebody like Rohit has a very set game-plan and he has been extremely successful following that game-plan. So I would not really want him to change that. He is somebody who takes his time initially, gets set first, and then goes scores big. That has worked well for us. That has worked well for him. So I absolutely find no reason to change that at this point.

“I’m not really, really concerned; I mean as far as we are winning games and we are putting par scores and chasing targets, I’m okay with whatever strike rates they are going at.”Vikram Rathour

That’s Rohit. But I’m talking about the middle order, where you have Hardik Pandya and Rishabh Pant?
Yeah, that will depend. If both of them are playing and if you get a good start, so they are the guys who will go from ball one. Those are the guys who are capable of doing that. That’s the discussion we have been having: what the team requires at that point. If your team requires you to score 12 an over you should be able to do that, and if your team requires you to get 6 runs an over and win the game, you should be able to do that as well. So you need to be able to adapt to both situations, and that is what a good game-plan is.And equally be able to adapt with bating positions as well?
Batting plans, again, in T20, yes, depending on what kind of start of you have had, how many overs are left, so that is one format where you need to be very flexible with your batting plans or batting order. Anybody could be on at any point of time in the batting unit. That is the kind of mindset you need to have.

Disciplined Mohammed Siraj providing depth, intensity to India's pace pack

His ability to pin down any specialist batter for long periods could well make the difference in this series

Sidharth Monga23-Aug-20216:44

What makes this Indian pace attack so lethal?

The game feels different watching from the outside. Several recently retired players walk out of teams and into the commentary box to start wondering why captains stop trying to get an established batter out when in company of a tailender. It is as though they never were parts of teams that did the same when cheap runs were on the line. When there is skin in the game, hardly any captain risks those chancy 20-30 runs these days even if it means the established batter keeps taking singles on the fifth or sixth ball to manipulate the strike for a while.In England’s first innings at Lord’s, though, something interesting happened. England were eight down, Root was batting on 160, the ball was around 40 overs old, and he wanted to shield Mark Wood and James Anderson. This was an extremely delicate juncture for India in the Test. It was towards the end of a long day, the best batting day of the series. England were around India’s score. Root is an adept limited-overs batter too. His successful manipulation of strike could possibly bat India out of the Test.Related

India: No longer a one-man army but a team of 11 heroes

Siraj finishes England off as India script famous win

Why this is the greatest age for fast bowling in 60 years

For three straight Mohammed Siraj overs, Root was pinned to one end. One boundary, no single, no bouncer, no yorker. Siraj managed to shackle Root with just line and length. The line and length was just so good it presented undue risk if Root wanted to manipulate strike. The bowler at the other end kept getting a clear shot at the tailenders. Mark Wood was run out, and Jasprit Bumrah got a full over at Anderson.It takes either a treacherous pitch, which this wasn’t, or special skills and control with the ball to pin down any specialist batter for this long in such a match situation. Root didn’t even get a shot at a boundary with the field up for the single apart from the one that he managed to hit.This was a seven-over spell of high intensity from Siraj. He has had higher high points in his short career – the two-in-two earlier and later in the match, for example – but this was a feat of endurance and maturity that sets fast bowlers apart in an era tailormade for them. This is the intensity that England didn’t have when they had the chance to run through the Indian lower order on the fifth morning.Part of it comes from the superior depth in India’s attack, but part of it is credit to the bowler himself. Siraj managed to keep bowling his nipbackers that ended up in front of off. They weren’t full enough to drive. They weren’t short enough to pull or punch. Just the perfect line and length. This is what Test bowling is mostly about: deny risk-free runs for long durations and let your skills with the ball do the rest.Mohammed Siraj grabs a souvenir stump after sealing India’s win•Getty ImagesThe rest, it would appear, comes easy to Siraj. His first wicket – Marnus Labuschagne caught at leg gully – might have been part of a larger team plan, but the second was a delightful set-up. He bowled an over full of away-going deliveries to Cameron Green and Tim Paine followed by three more away swingers to Green before trapping him lbw with the sharp incoming delivery. That is something he did with Root in India too.With Jos Buttler at Lord’s, Siraj did the reverse. He bowled a spell full of incoming deliveries to right-hand batters and outgoing ones to left-hand ones before coming back for a fresh spell and bowling the one that went way. Buttler had been in, he had been leaving balls well, but such was the fear of the nipbacker that he let his hands play at this one outside off.That nipbacker is way more dangerous for left-hand batters, which is why Siraj is averaging just 16.7 against them. It is early days yet as he has taken just 10 left-hand batters out, but the dangerous angle he creates from them has been spoken about even before he debuted. It is the blind spot that around middle and leg that he keeps hitting again and again. Any straighter and you get picked off on the leg side, any wider and you get left alone. Siraj bowls that perfect channel where left-hand batters have to keep playing at him as Moeen Ali discovered in that over-and-a-half of torture before finally nicking off without doing much wrong.

“Siraj managed to keep bowling his nipbackers that ended up in front of off. They weren’t full enough to drive. They weren’t short enough to pull or punch. Just the perfect line and length.”

Siraj is no Bumrah, but still the movement he gets is not classic. It doesn’t come from a classic swing-bowling action. It’s all angles and quick arm speed. He bowls a scrambled seam. So it is not easy to line up the movement because it is late and unpredictable. He is beginning to play around with an offcutter, too.Of course Siraj gets to feed off the pressure created by a world-class unit, a luxury many Indian fast bowlers before him didn’t have, but he does his share of the heavy lifting. Since he debuted, he has bowled more overs, taken more wickets at better average with the ball aged 30 to 80 overs than any India fast bowler. Only Hasan Ali has taken more “old-ball” wickets than him during this period.The big difference between the India that toured England in 2018 and now is that Siraj is the fourth quick in a fully fit squad. He adds the depth to India’s bowling resources to an extent that the team management feels compelled to give up some batting depth and leave out an all-time great in R Ashwin.Sometimes you do wonder which are the “haters” that Siraj is shushing because all you see around is love for him. From Bharat Arun at Hyderabad to Paras Mhambrey at India A to Arun and Virat Kohli at international level, his bowling coaches and captains have backed him and not without reason.

England's selection headache: To go batting-heavy or bowling-heavy?

In the absence of allrounders Stokes and Curran, England find themselves with two different tactical visions to win T20s

Matt Roller22-Oct-20213:39

Talking tactics – Should Dawid Malan start for England?

When England have been at full strength in T20 internationals over the last five years, they have found it easy to balance their side. They have picked four frontline bowlers from No. 8-11, most of whom are capable with the bat, and then relied on Ben Stokes and one of Moeen Ali or Sam Curran to split four overs between them, sharing the workload of the ‘fifth’ bowler.In this T20 World Cup, they do not have that option available to them. Stokes has only recently resumed low-level training after a prolonged break from the game, focusing on his mental health and recovering from a broken finger, while Curran’s absence through injury is a significant blow: while his T20I career is still nascent, he is perhaps the closest thing England have to a genuine allrounder in the format as a six-hitter at the death and a versatile bowling option.Related

'Contenders' England must go all-in as ageing West Indian stalwarts look for one last hurrah

Willey hopes for dew rewards after England damp-ball practice

Could England captain Morgan drop himself? 'It's always an option'

The Morgan era has been great for England, but is it coming to an end?

'I don't think England should be scared of having the favourites tag'

The result is that England will have to shape their side differently, opting for either a batting-heavy or bowling-heavy approach. Their choice heading into their first match of the tournament against the West Indies on Saturday – a repeat of the 2016 final – is not so much between like-for-like players, but for two different tactical visions as to how best to win 20-over games.There is an idea in football that the majority of teams have to deal with a ‘short blanket’ when trying to find a balance between attacking and defending: “If you cover your head, you have your feet cold; but if you cover your feet, you have your head cold,” Rafa Benitez, the former Liverpool manager, once explained. The same is true in T20 cricket, with No. 7s in particular: picking a batting allrounder leaves your attack vulnerable; picking a bowling allrounder can leave you short on batting depth.For England, their balance rests on one question: can they trust the combination of Liam Livingstone and Moeen’s spin as their ‘fifth’ bowler, alongside Adil Rashid and three seamers? That option, the batting-heavy one, would place immense faith in two bowlers who have effectively been used as part-timers in the last year – Livingstone has bowled 10 overs in six games since his recall earlier this year, while Moeen has bowled 13.5 in his 10 T20Is since the start of last summer.ESPNcricinfo LtdJofra Archer’s absence through injury is relevant here too: a batting-heavy side would leave them relying on their seamers to bowl both in the powerplay and at the death, but most of their seamers in this squad have a focus on particular phases of the game rather than across an innings: Chris Woakes and David Willey are new-ball specialists, Mark Wood is best used as an enforcer through the middle, while Chris Jordan, Tymal Mills and Tom Curran are strongest at the death. Ideally, they would bowl in their strongest phase rather than cover gaps elsewhere.The alternative – which seems the likely option at this stage – is to drop one of their batters and include a fourth frontline seamer, which would give England significantly more flexibility with the ball but slightly compromise their batting depth. There would be challenges if England lost early wickets and Eoin Morgan’s form means that it is a bold move to include him as one of six batters, but with dew likely to play a major role in floodlit games, the prospect of having to bowl eight overs of spin with a wet ball in a run chase is too risky – not least with Rashid’s legspin matching up poorly against a West Indies side featuring several left-handers.The question, then, is which batter makes way, with Dawid Malan’s place under pressure once again. Malan has a remarkable overall record across his T20I career, averaging 43.19 with a strike rate of 139.33, but his proclivity to play himself in – he tends to reach 10 off 10 balls – before looking to accelerate appears ill-suited to conditions in the UAE, while there are doubts about his ability to play top-quality spin after a relatively lean year in this format.Malan may well have dominated a World Cup held in Australia – as the 2020 edition was due to be before its postponement – due to his strengths against fast bowling and his ability to hit spin through the line on true pitches, but innings of 18 off 18 and 11 off 15 in England’s two warm-up games highlight the concern about his role here on slower surfaces. In the UAE leg of IPL 2021, 74% of games were won by the team scoring more runs in the first six overs, emphasising the importance of fast starts; in his T20I career, Malan strikes at just 111.97 in the powerplay.A batting-heavy side would leave England relying on their seamers to bowl both in the powerplay and at the death•Aijaz Rahi/Associated PressInstead, England may end up with a relatively flexible batting line-up of Jonny Bairstow, Moeen, Livingstone and Morgan coming in behind Jason Roy and Jos Buttler, with entry points more important than order. Bairstow, for example, might come in at No. 3 if they were to lose a wicket inside the first over given his experience against the new ball, while Moeen would shuffle above him towards the end of the powerplay to utilise his ability against spin. Morgan has left open the unlikely possibility of dropping himself at some stage while Moeen and Livingstone are not totally guaranteed of their places – but if it would be bold to drop Malan, it would be bolder still to leave out one of two men in career-best six-hitting form.Leaving out the man at No. 1 in the ICC’s T20I batting rankings is a luxury that few teams could afford but England’s batting is strong enough that it is starting to look like the logical remedy to their selection headache. When José Mourinho, Chelsea’s manager at the time, brought the blanket analogy to English football, he concluded: “But the blanket I have is made of cashmere, so it’s good.” England will feel much the same, even if it means their heads are sticking out.

Death-bowling problems rear their head again to take shine off England win

“Our execution was nowhere near as good as we would like,” Eoin Morgan admits

Matt Roller24-Jan-2022Two months after England lost an unlosable game against New Zealand in their T20 World Cup semi-final, they almost lost another. As the wheels came off in the final stages of their eventual one-run win against West Indies in the second T20I in Barbados on Sunday evening, there was a simple conclusion to be drawn: England have a death-bowling problem.Back in November, New Zealand needed 57 to win off the final four overs in Abu Dhabi, an equation that no batting team had solved in T20 international history. They hauled it down with an over to spare, with Chris Jordan, Adil Rashid and Chris Woakes put to the sword by Jimmy Neesham and Daryl Mitchell.Related

Eoin Morgan's endgame approaches as England prepare to do without him

England climb off the canvas to level series with one-run victory

Morgan left frustrated as England fail to adapt to bouncy Bridgetown

Morgan: Building 'deeper, stronger squad' part of England's T20 WC planning

In Bridgetown, West Indies left themselves 61 off 18 balls with two wickets in hand after a mid-innings collapse, a tally which has been achieved only once in the final three overs of a T20 international and never in a run chase. They fell two runs short and could justifiably feel aggrieved by an umpiring decision: Akeal Hosein – who struck 44 not out off 16 balls, a record for a No. 10 batter – was aghast to see a full, wide ball from Saqib Mahmood deemed to have passed him inside the tramlines.The 59 runs that came from the final three overs were the joint-most that England have conceded in that phase, made by India – and primarily Yuvraj Singh – in Durban nearly 15 years ago. Mahmood seemed to suffer the same stage fright that afflicted Stuart Broad on that night as he missed yorker after yorker and was slugged over the short leg-side boundary.Jordan’s over, the 18th, was eerily reminiscent of the 17th in the semi-final – not least because it cost the same number of runs, 23. With one boundary significantly shorter than the other, he planned accordingly and banged the ball into the pitch on a good length; Hosein (over cover) and Romario Shepherd (twice, over midwicket) responded by carting him for sixes over the bigger boundary.For Mahmood, the discrepancy in boundary sizes again informed his plan to bowl full and wide outside Hosein’s off stump. But after his first ball was given as a wide and his second narrowly escaped the same fate, he lost his nerve: Hosein hit consecutive boundaries either side of long-on, failed to reach another wide, then slammed three sixes to leave West Indies two runs short of their target.”Every team in the world is trying to get better at it,” Eoin Morgan, England’s captain said. “It is the hardest job in T20 cricket, death-bowling. Conditions did get a little bit better towards the end – the ball did skid on as opposed to our innings in the first innings – but ultimately, we need to find better ways of going about it. Our execution was nowhere near as good as we would like.”The inevitable question was asked: why aren’t England trying to bowl yorkers? “We are, we’re just getting it wrong,” Morgan conceded. “The majority of our plan today was to bowl yorkers, use the long side, and we missed. That’s being brutally honest. The guys are always honest with executing in order to try and move on [and to] identify areas that we can get better – this is definitely one of them.”They’re games that you want to play in. Looking back at the build into the [2021] World Cup, we didn’t play in many tight games to work on our death hitting and our death bowling, so today is a good example of that. The more experience, hopefully, the better we’ll get at executing.”

“It is the hardest job in T20 cricket, death bowling.”Eoin Morgan

The one bowler to escape with both figures and dignity intact was Reece Topley – ironically, playing his first T20 international since he was hammered at the death by JP Duminy in the 2016 World Cup. He too used the dimensions in his plans, hanging the ball wide outside Shepherd’s hitting arc with a short leg-side boundary and angling the ball into the left-handed Hosein’s pads. Crucially, his execution was significantly better, in keeping with a fine return to the side: he took 1 for 18 in his four overs, had Nicholas Pooran dropped, and pulled off an athletic run-out off his own bowling.One of the men tasked with post-match analysis in BT Sport’s studio, Tom Curran, was better-placed than most to talk about England’s travails, having himself slipped down the pecking order after some rough nights at the death – though he would have played in this series but for a stress fracture suffered in the Big Bash League.”It was interesting to hear Morgs say that they were all going for the yorkers,” he said. “I think a lot of the time what we’ve spoken about over the last year is actually the value of hard, heavy-length balls at the death.”Yorkers are a funny one. You can be nailing them in practice but when you get out there in the middle, it’s hard to describe – it really is a ‘feel’ thing for a bowler. You can find one early on in your spell and get your radar; on other days, you’ll be struggling.”In the long term, the Hundred should help England’s death-bowling depth by exposing young seamers to tough situations at the end of an innings. But in its first season, three of the five best regular death bowlers were overseas recruits (Adam Milne, Lockie Ferguson and Marchant de Lange) and the two domestic players (Jordan and Tymal Mills) are already in the England set-up.It should serve as consolation for England that their first-choice death bowlers, Mills and Jofra Archer, were only onlookers in Barbados due to rotation and injury respectively, and as Mitchell Starc and Shaheen Shah Afridi showed in the other World Cup semi-final, even the best can have off-nights.But this was a chastening night for Jordan and Mahmood all the same. Morgan often says that he wants England to be ruthless in white-ball cricket; across the last 12 months, their death bowlers have been anything but.

WWC 2022 Team of the Tournament: A lot of Australians there – what did you expect?

Our team features four world champions, four South Africans, and one player from Bangladesh – find out who they are

Vishal Dikshit06-Apr-20221 Alyssa Healy (wk),
Most runs in a Women’s World Cup ever, best score in a World Cup final (men’s or women’s), back-to-back-centuries in the semi-final and final… records, and more records. Healy, one of the most devastating batters in the game, had crossed 50 earlier in the tournament too, against India and Pakistan, but she took her game to the next level in the knockouts to stamp Australia’s authority in a World Cup yet again, to make her an automatic choice in this XI.2 Laura Wolvaardt,
South Africa’s most consistent batter in this World Cup, Wolvaardt also carried their top order on her shoulders in the absence of runs from her opening partner Lizelle Lee. Wolvaardt kicked off the tournament with five 40-plus scores in a row, including four half-centuries, that helped South Africa chase 225-plus totals against England and New Zealand to qualify for the semi-finals, although her 90 wasn’t enough against the Australians. Her trademark cover drives were in full display all along, and she ended up being South Africa’s leading scorer for two ODI World Cups in a row.3 Rachael Haynes,
If Healy was Australia’s aggressor, Haynes was the consistent anchor who played her role to such perfection that she was dismissed before Healy just once in the league games, and then once more in the final. She started the tournament with a 130, where she accelerated after negotiating a stifling bowling effort from England, and she laid the platform with Healy for Australia’s middle order in nearly every match.ESPNcricinfo Ltd4 Meg Lanning (capt),
The obvious choice for captain and middle-order mainstay. It’s almost as if Lanning’s arrival at the crease is a signal for an Australian win, and her dominance was on display against some of the best teams in the World Cup: an unbeaten 135 to chase down 272 against South Africa, 97 to slice through India in another stiff chase, and an 86 against England early on.5 Beth Mooney,
An average of over 100, a strike rate of almost 101, flexible up and down the order, and also a gun fielder, which make Mooney a must-have in the XI. She opened for Australia when she was the Player of the Tournament in the 2020 T20 World Cup but moved down to the finisher’s role and did the job with aplomb in the 50-over format to add another dimension to their already explosive line-up. She took some of the best catches in the tournament, and also made sure she was there to seal the chases after the top order had done the hard work.6 Sune Luus,
A legspinning-allrounder, Luus shone mainly with the bat with her three half-centuries, giving South Africa the much-needed solidity at No. 4 given the lack of runs from Lee, some instability at No. 3, and the absence of Dane van Niekerk. Luus’ calming presence also meant her best knocks came against some of the top sides – England, New Zealand and Australia – in the tournament, which included two close chases.Marizanne Kapp picked up her first five-for in ODIs during the World Cup•Getty Images7 Marizanne Kapp,
Need early wickets? Throw the ball to Kapp. Want a partnership broken? Just look at her and she’ll come running and do the job. Death overs? She’s at her mark already. Tight chases? She’ll smash those runs. One of the sharpest bowlers around, Kapp’s consistent contributions with the bat down the order helped South Africa win five matches in a row. Her best performances, too, came against the top sides: a five-for and 32 against England followed by two wickets and an unbeaten 34 versus New Zealand, and 30 not out off 21 balls against Australia.8Pooja Vastrakar,
One of the brightest young stars for India this tournament, along with Yastika Bhatia, Vastrakar was in the thick of things straightaway in India’s opening game when they slumped to 114 for 6 against Pakistan. A career-best 67 off 59 in a formidable stand with Sneh Rana meant India got a deep batting line-up, which she proved again with quick cameos down the order opposite Australia and Bangladesh. She was India’s second-highest wicket-taker, too – bowling is her primary skill – coming on mostly as second change to successfully break partnerships. Her back-to-back yorkers against Lea Tahuhu and Jess Kerr count as among the highlights of the tournament.9 Shabnim Ismail,
The best and one of the fastest bowlers in this World Cup, Ismail, fearsome and experienced, was consistent with her wicket-taking skills right from the first game, going wicketless in just one game out of the seven she bowled in. Ismail showed her knack of removing the big batters up front with her pace, short deliveries, movement off the pitch, and then with her slower variations in the death overs.Salma Khatun’s bowling was a big reason for Bangladesh’s impressive show in their maiden World Cup appearance•Getty Images10 Salma Khatun,
The ball she bowled to dismiss Lanning alone would have helped Khatun make this list. Her three-for had Australia in trouble, before they escaped, thanks to Mooney. Against West Indies earlier, she scored 23 to keep Bangladesh in the hunt in a 141 chase, and that was after she had picked up a couple of wickets. The 31-year-old offspinner’s ten wickets, the most for Bangladesh, in the tournament played a major part in the team’s good showing in their maiden appearance.11 Sophie Ecclestone,
Ecclestone was the best bowler of the tournament with a tally one-and-a-half times that of the next best, Ismail’s 14. Only 22, Ecclestone has already played over 100 games for England and her artistry in flight, drift and turn are testament to her ability and numbers. The left-arm spinner was England’s main weapon in the middle overs, and sometimes in the death too. Barring her inability to pick more than one wicket in 20 overs against Australia, over two games, she had an unforgettable World Cup, highlighted by her six-for against South Africa in the semi-final.

Game
Register
Service
Bonus