Injured Kallis out-thinks India

Jacques Kallis faced more adversity on the fourth day than he did in the first innings and came up trumps again, winning the mental battle against the Indians

Sidharth Monga at Newlands05-Jan-2011Jacques Kallis makes everything look smooth: be it batting, bowling or catching at slip. He has this cool air about him. A man who knows he is good at what he does, a man who knows he looks graceful when he does what he knows he is good at. Sometimes he can even give the impression that he is not even stretching himself to the fullest. It comes across the most when, at times, he gets off to a quick start, and then settles down into accumulation mode as opposed to domination. It is still a pleasure to watch him because he does things beautifully. The real joy, though, comes when you put him on a bad pitch, or in a pressure situation, asking him to stretch himself, to show you all he has got.This Test did that. On the first day, he came in a crisis situation on a pitch where the ball seamed all over the place. He also got hit in the rib area, hard enough to put him out for two weeks, but was the last man out after having scored a century that we scarcely thought could be bettered. Today, with the batting crumbling, with four to five painkilling injections in his system, with the sun spewing out 35 degrees-celsius heat mercilessly, with puffs of dust when the ball landed in the rough, with the series on the line, Kallis showed us his first-innings effort could be bettered.And as he did that, he didn’t mind looking ungainly, as if stretching himself. He was in a fight, he wasn’t going to run away from battle-scars. You hardly see him play the reverse-sweep; that’s not a shot for a batsman who plays proper cricketing shots so well. Yet today that reverse-sweep stood out. Great batsmen do that. They play one calculated, precise shot to change entire games. One shot. Think Sachin Tendulkar’s upper-cut off Shoaib Akhtar in the 2003 World Cup.If Tendulkar put Shoaib off his game with pure audacity, here Kallis got into the bowler and the captain’s heads. It was all going well for them until then. The ball was turning appreciably, and bouncing alarmingly. The leg-side fields were there to make sure no easy singles could be taken when playing with the turn. They even removed the silly point to make him play against the break. And what did Kallis do? He reverse-swept – in a Test, no less. And it was not just any reverse-sweep; the wrists rolled on it to keep the ball along the ground all the way. Not for a second did you feel that he was in danger of getting out.That shot rattled Harbhajan Singh and MS Dhoni. The man who went to collect the ball from the boundary didn’t come back. We now had a fielder for a reverse-sweep. Kallis started toying with that fielder. He hit square of him, the fielder went squarer. He hit fine of him, the fielder went finer. It was a clever little mind-game from a hurting batsman, and India – perhaps surprised that he played that shot so well – lost that mind-game. Once he had played around with the fields and Harbhajan’s lines, Kallis was free to score as he wanted to.Battling through the pain, Jacques Kallis bettered his first-innings performance•AFPExcept he was batting in mad pain, thanks to the bruising and contusing in the ribs area from the hit he took in the first innings. Mark Boucher, who added 103 priceless runs with Kallis, later said it was impossible to imagine what kind of pain his mate was going through. “I don’t think anyone actually understands the kind of pain he is in at the moment,” Boucher said. “I just spoke to the doctor, and he reckons it’s like someone actually breaking their own rib. Just goes to show the character of the guy. Lot of people talk about this cricketer, that cricketer, but in my eyes, in my opinion, we have got probably one of the greatest cricketers that has ever lived in our own country. It’d be nice if people start realising that as well.”In that kind of physical pain, just his coming out to bat after Alviro Petersen fell in the second over of the day was a brave act. The collective relief around the Newlands could be felt as soon as they saw it was Kallis walking out to bat. King Kallis, as they call him.Despite the pain, despite the pressure, despite the misbehaving bounce, Kallis managed to make things look smooth, at least he made batting look the easiest anyone has done in this Test. He still played beautiful on-drives and straight drives. Except for the times when the ball bounced and he had to hold onto his side to fight pain, he still was cool Kallis.”I have not seen many people bat the way he batted today,” Harbhajan, who took seven wickets today but couldn’t find a way past Kallis, said. “I have not seen many who could take up the responsibility the way he did. It was difficult conditions on the first day. It was overcast, and the ball was doing a lot for the seamers, it was nipping around, and there was a lot of bounce and swing. He has got the technique to play in all conditions. I would rate him up there, very up. After Sachin Tendulkar, Jacques Kallis is the best player in the world.”Kallis’ effort has all but made sure that South Africa won’t lose the series. In the process, he must have surely aggravated the injury, which could keep him out for longer than the original two weeks expected. Other cricket can wait, though. There can be no bigger thrill than to almost single-handedly save your side a Test, and put them on the victory road. The same can be said of watching a man doing it.

Vijay turns the leave in to a scoring shot

ESPNcricinfo presents the Plays of the day of the first day of the Durban Test between South Africa and India

Sidharth Monga at Kingsmead26-Dec-2010The lead
When Virender Sehwag walked out to bat on Boxing Day, after yet another lost toss, and with a new, inexperienced opening partner, he saw M Vijay run past him and towards the pitch. Sehwag walked to the pitch, had a little chat, and decided to take strike to the first ball. When Gautam Gambhir is with him, or even when Vijay is opening on friendlier tracks, Sehwag always prefers for the other man to take first strike. His responsibility today was rewarded with a stinging first ball that hit his hand.The leave
It’s always said that to do well in South Africa, you need to leave the ball alone well. Vijay took that to the next level today. Twice he meant to leave the ball alone, twice he found that it hit the middle of his bat even as he was pulling it out of the way. One of them went along the ground towards the slips cordon, and the other one, became an immaculate steer through it. All along the ground. Four runs.The six
After straight-driving Dale Steyn for a four, VVS Laxman did something he has done only five times in his career: hit a six. What a shot it was. Steyn bowled short, Laxman seemed to have enough time to set up for the pull, and he sent it careening – flat – over the square-leg boundary. His other sixes have come off Brighton Watambwa of Zimbabwe in 2001, Shaun Pollock in 2001-02, Paul Wiseman in 2003-04, and Danish Kaneria in 2004-05.The catch and the consequent look
You have played three Tests, have never taken a catch, your team-mates think – jokingly – that you “can tend to fall asleep” in the field. And what do you do? You pull off a stunner at straight midwicket to remove the best-looking batsman on the day. Lonwabo Tsotsobe, take a bow. When Laxman pulled Steyn again after that six, it looked like it was going for four until Tsotsobe went full-stretch and low to his right – his unnatural side – and plucked it inches off the ground. Laxman’s disbelieving look – reminiscent of his look when Mark Waugh pulled off a stunner in Chennai in 2000-01, at the same position – said it all. If that look didn’t didn’t say it all, Steyn, who took four wickets today, added more: “I actually took only three wickets, that wicket was his [Tsotsobe’s].”The delay
When it had finished drizzling in the morning, with time still left before the start of play, Mike Haysman of went out to do the pitch report. Midway through his report, it started drizzling again, and you could see the groundstaff itching to rush in and put the covers back in their rightful place. However, they had to wait for the pitch report to finish. Thankfully, it was not hard rain.

New highs for England, new lows for Australia

Alastair Cook and James Anderson were the star performers in an outstanding Ashes campaign, while Australia had few memorable moments

S Rajesh08-Jan-2011In the end, the margin of victory was emphatic – a 3-1 series verdict, with all three wins by an innings, is more than what any England fan would have hoped for when the series began. After the Perth defeat, England were so much better than the hosts that the last two Tests were no-contests. The overall series numbers tell the story of a surprisingly one-sided contest. England averaged 51.14 runs per wicket, which their is highest ever in an Ashes contest. The only other instance when they averaged more than 50 was way back in 1926, in England, when they scored 50.63 runs per wicket. Their previous highest in Australia was 43.18 in 1928. Australia’s average of 29.23 is their lowest in an Ashes home series since 1978, when a second-string Australian team averaged 19.17 during a 5-1 series drubbing. The last time a full-strength Australian team did worse was in 1954. England scored nine hundreds, which is their highest in an Ashes series. Alastair Cook led the way with three, Jonathan Trott made two, while Kevin Pietersen, Ian Bell, Matt Prior and Andrew Strauss contributed one each. Australia, meanwhile, struggled to convert their starts – they managed 16 fifties, but only three centuries, two by Michael Hussey and one by Brad Haddin. The last time they had such poor returns at home in an Ashes encounter was in 1990-91, in a low-scoring series which had only six hundreds in all from both teams. Australia won that one 3-0. England’s run-rate of 3.50 is also their highest in a series in Australia. However, in their home wins in 2005 and 2009, they scored at a better rate. Australia’s strike rate of more than 87 balls per wicket was their worst in a home Ashes series since 1970-71.

The key overall numbers for both teams in the series

TeamRuns scoredWkts lostAverage100s/ 50sScoring rateBowling strike rateEngland28645651.149/ 113.5056.73Australia26319029.233/ 163.0987.57Throughout the series, Australia struggled with their top-order batting. Apart from Shane Watson and Michael Hussey, none of their specialist batsmen had series to remember. The contrast with England’s batsmen is clear from the table below: while five of England’s top seven averaged more than 50, Hussey was the only one to manage it for the hosts. Cook was clearly the standout player: his tally of 766 runs is fifth-highest in an Ashes series, and the second-best for England, while his series average of 127.67 is second only Don Bradman’s 139.14 (among those who scored 500 runs in an Ashes series).The only batting position where Australia completely outdid England was at the No.5 slot, where Paul Collingwood had five miserable Test matches. For Australia, on the other hand, there were no hundreds from the top four – compared to seven for England – while numbers three and four averaged less than 22. The repeated failures of Ricky Ponting and Michael Clarke were perhaps the biggest setbacks for Australia. Together, their No.3 and 4 batsmen had an aggregate of 364, which is Australia’s lowest in a five-Test Ashes series since 1902. (Click here for Australia’s batting and bowling averages, and here for England’s.)

Position-wise batting stats for England and Australia

PositionEng – runsAverage100s/ 50sAus – runsAverage100s/ 50sOpeners107382.534/ 562933.100/ 5No.344589.002/ 117119.000/ 1No.436060.001/ 119321.440/ 1No.57712.830/ 057063.332/ 3No.621442.800/ 317219.110/ 0No.725551.001/ 139656.571/ 4It’s more of the same story in the partnership stats too: England’s average partnership for the top three wickets were all more than 70, which means they were seldom under early pressure. Australia’s on the other hand, were all under 40 – with the third-wicket average less than 18 – which meant they were almost always under early pressure and forced to fight rearguard battles. Hussey and Haddin fought back on a few occasions, but when they couldn’t, England were all over the hosts. England had five century partnerships for the first three wickets, compared to only one for Australia.

Average partnerships for each wicket

WicketEng – average100/ 50 standsAus – average100/ 50 standsFirst78.422/ 236.900/ 4Second95.502/ 030.671/ 1Third71.161/ 317.670/ 1Fourth30.331/ 045.552/ 1Fifth40.331/ 130.880/ 2Sixth87.802/ 160.331/ 2Seventh33.201/ 010.550/ 1Eighth36.801/ 024.110/ 2Perhaps the biggest difference between the two sides, though, was the quality of their pace attacks. Four of England’s fast bowlers averaged less than 35, with their main man, James Anderson, conceding only 26.04 runs per wicket. In fact, Anderson’s haul of 24 wickets is the highest by an England bowler in Australia since John Snow took 31 in six Tests in 1970.Australia’s pace attack, on the other hand, was toothless in comparison. Mitchell Johnson was their leading wicket-taker, but he conceded almost 37 runs per wicket. Leave out the Perth Test, in which he was admittedly outstanding, and his bowling average shoots up to 78.67. Similarly, Peter Siddle had 14 wickets for the series, but 12 of them came in two innings via two six-wicket hauls. Ben Hilfenhaus, the other fast bowler who played at least four Tests in the series, was Australia’s most economical bowler, but also their most ineffective, requiring 135 deliveries per wicket.The kind of scores the two teams put up is a good indication of the kind of bowling attack they were up against. Australia’s batsmen were always under pressure, thanks to the ability of the England fast bowlers to find seam and swing even with an old Kookaburra ball. Australia’s bowlers, though, hardly got the old ball to do anything, which made it much easier for England’s batsmen to go on to big scores once they made starts. The only column where Australia lead is in five-fors, but that only means England shared the wickets around and all the bowlers contributed their bits.Also, England had Graeme Swann to block an end up and take a few wickets – he had 15 at an average of less than 40. Australia’s spinners, on the other hand, were an embarrassment.

How the bowlers fared in the Ashes

OversWicketsAverageStrike rate5WI/ 10WMEngland – pace626.57027.6453.72/ 0Australia – pace631.15140.9674.24/ 0Aus pace, excl. Perth531.43158.03102.92/ 0England – spin224.11638.3184.01/ 0Australia – spin186.15135.80223.40/ 0The head-to-head battlesBefore the 2010 Ashes, Anderson had averaged 56.17 against Australia, with 17 wickets from eight Tests; in Australia he averaged 82.60 from three Tests. One of his biggest worries in the past had been Ponting, who’d completely owned him in previous contests, averaging 204 in the duel, and getting out only once in 280 balls. This time, though, the tables turned completely, with Anderson dismissing Ponting three times in 67 balls. Ponting’s average – a miserable 9.67.

Ponting versus Anderson

RunsBallsDismissalsAverageRun rateBefore the 2010 Ashes2042801204.004.37In the 2010 Ashes296739.672.59The two Australian batsmen who handled Anderson well were Hussey and Watson, who averaged more than 40 against him. Clarke, though, had no answers to Anderson and Chris Tremlett, falling to them five times at an average of less than ten.

More head-to-head contests

BatsmanBowler(s)RunsBallsDismissalsAverageMichael HusseyJames Anderson1122151112.00Shane WatsonJames Anderson148298274.00Michael ClarkeAnderson & Tremlett4413058.80Johnson had a largely forgettable series, but the one batsman he continued to dominate was Ian Bell – he dismissed Bell twice at an average of less than 20. In previous encounters, Bell had fallen to Johnson four times at an average of 9.25. Bell had no problems against Siddle, though, not falling to him even once in 126 balls, and scoring at nearly five runs per over.

Australian bowlers v England batsmen

BatsmanBowlerRunsBallsDismissalsAverageAlastair CookMitchell Johnson1391731139.00Ian BellMitchell Johnson39106219.50Ian BellPeter Siddle1041260-Kevin PietersenPeter Siddle51100225.50The final word in this series, though, must belong to Alastair Cook. The table below shows his head-to-head stats against each Australian bowler. His performance, more than any other, captures the English dominance in this Australian summer.

Alastair Cook v Australian bowlers

BowlerRunsBallsDismissalsAverageRun rateMitchell Johnson1391731139.004.82Ben Hilfenhaus1212860-2.53Xavier Doherty1092000-3.27Peter Siddle94242247.002.33Shane Watson86172186.003.00Ryan Harris68124234.003.29

Home advantage and big-match record favour Chennai

Despite Chris Gayle’s threat looming large, Chennai’s perfect home record this season makes them favourites to retain the title

Madhusudhan Ramakrishnan28-May-2011Contrasting strengths for both teams
Chris Gayle’s outstanding run of form continued when his superb 89 off 47 balls helped Bangalore upstage Mumbai in their knockout clash. Gayle has single-handedly restored Bangalore’s fortunes in this IPL season after they had started badly losing three of their first four matches. Gayle has scored over 600 runs at a stunning average of 76 and a scoring rate of 11.08 in just 11 innings. With an exceptional boundary-run percentage of nearly 81, Gayle has helped boost Bangalore’s scoring rate in the first six overs from less than six before he entered the team to nearly 9.50 since. In Virat Kohli, Gayle has found an equally capable partner in the early overs. Kohli has also scored over 500 runs at an average of 47.45 with four fifties. While Gayle failed in the previous game against Chennai, Kohli set up an extremely competitive total with a well-paced 70, but was let down by some poor bowling in the latter half of the Chennai innings.If Bangalore’s top-order batting is a huge threat, in Chennai’s case, it is the powerful middle order that has turned matches. In the previous game against Bangalore, MS Dhoni and S Badrinath retrieved the situation after Bangalore had put Chennai in a spot of bother. With the striking power of Albie Morkel and Suresh Raina available, Chennai have been content to start slowly and keep wickets in hand to allow for a strong acceleration in the end overs. Badrinath has been extremely consistent with five half-centuries while Dhoni, who scored 70 in Chennai’s heavy defeat against Bangalore in the last league game, has maintained an excellent scoring rate of 9.48 in the tournament.

Gayle/Kohli v Dhoni/Badrinath in IPL 2011

PlayerRunsSRAvgBoundary%100/50Chris Gayle60811.0876.0080.922/3Virat Kohli5227.3147.4558.620/4MS Dhoni3709.4846.2561.080/5S Badrinath3967.5966.0052.020/2The table below lists the partnership stats for the top-order (1-6) for both teams. While Bangalore clearly have been the more powerful side at the top of the order and have a better scoring-rate and more fifty stands, Chennai have dominated the middle-order partnerships. They have consistently scored faster and accelerated much better in the late overs. The contest could ultimately be one between the explosive top order of Bangalore and the highly reliable middle order of Chennai.

Partnership stats for teams in IPL 2011 (RR, avg, 50+)

Team1st wicket2nd wicket3rd wicket4th wicket5th wicket6th wicketChennai6.15,21.80,37.99,37.20,58.07,53.84,78.92,35.33,49.16,31.83,09.21,28.66,0Bangalore9.90,37.73,58.42,56.16,66.97,29.81,27.90,22.27,18.57,34.28,09.00,24.00,1Spinners the key
In an otherwise brilliant tournament, Gayle has had only a couple of failures. While he fell to a rash shot in a huge chase against Punjab, in the game against Chennai, he was dismissed by R Ashwin, who is among the most economical bowlers in the IPL across all seasons. Ashwin’s unique ability to bowl restrictively while picking up crucial wickets in the first six overs may prompt Dhoni to employ him against the aggressive Gayle who would prefer some pace on the ball. Bangalore, on the other hand, have been lucky to have Daniel Vettori back for the business end of the tournament. Apart from one bad game against Chennai in the first qualifier, Vettori has been superb and has conceded less than six runs pver over in 12 innings. He picked up three wickets in the game against Mumbai and will undoubtedly be the key for Bangalore in the final.

Vettori v Ashwin in IPL 2011

BowlerInningsERWicketsAverageBoundary%Dot-ball%Daniel Vettori125.811223.0847.8441.25R Ashwin156.301721.8841.6643.22Chennai marginally ahead
Chennai and Bangalore have faced off ten times in the IPL so far and have been very evenly matches winning five matches each. Chennai though, have the home advantage as they have won two of the three matches played in Chennai. Overall, in the ten matches played, Chennai have been the slightly better side with a batting average of 24.50 and run-rate of 7.71 compared to Bangalore’s figures of 23.50 and 7.60. With a strong track record in the previous years in knockout games and a 2-1 head-to-head advantage in this season’s tournament, Chennai will head into the final as slight favourites.Final-overs bowling crucial
Bangalore have by far been the best batting team in the first six-over period primarily because of Gayle’s heroics at the top. His hitting has helped set up a strong platform from which they have inevitably made huge totals or chased down competitive targets very efficiently. On the bowling front though, Bangalore have been found wanting in the middle and end overs. While they had an impressive performance against Mumbai in the second qualifier, they were not so good in the game against Chennai and conceded way too many runs in the final five overs. Faced with a highly destructive middle order, Bangalore’s bowling will have to be at its best in the late overs in the big game.Chennai have been sedate at the start and have focussed on buidling a strong base for the acceleration at the end. The lusty hitting of Raina, Dhoni and Morkel makes them a huge threat in any circumstance. Despite the fact that they prefer to bat first, they showed in the previous game against Bangalore that they can be adept at chasing down tough targets. Chennai’s bowling led by Doug Bollinger and Morkel has been incisive in the first few overs, and with Ashwin’s tight spells, they have been able to curtail the scoring of the opposition very effectively especially in home games.

Performance of the teams across the innings (Run-rate,average and Economy-rate, average)

TeamInningsOvers(1-6)Overs(7-14)Overs(15-20)Overs(1-6)- EROvers(7-14)- EROvers(15-20)- ERChennai16.33, 27.867.22, 48.9210.69, 28.087.00, 28.006.96, 31.859.83, 33.71Bangalore18.03, 60.258.60, 68.8010.03, 21.506.95,34.757.93, 36.889.74, 20.23Chennai25.83, 23.338.87, 71.009.29, 29.007.87, 32.507.05, 32.947.99, 14.24Bangalore28.65, 32.437.23, 29.529.79, 27.386.56, 19.707.02, 28.109.19, 37.00Home advantage a huge factor
Chennai have been the most consistent team in the short history of the IPL and have made the semi-final stage every year. They lost in a close final in the inaugural season to Rajasthan, but went on to lift the IPL title and the Champions League in 2010. Along with their experience in big games, it is their supreme home record that makes them very dangerous to face in a final. They have won 17 of their 25 games at home across all seasons and are unbeaten in Chennai this season. They also clearly prefer batting first and have won six and lost just one game when they have batted first. While their pace bowlers have been very consistent, it is in the spin department that gives Chennai the upper hand overs most teams. Chennai’s spinners have picked up 20 wickets at an economy rate of 6.44 in home games which is second only to Kolkata’s performance in IPL 2011.

Chennai’s impressive home record

Overall(wins/losses)2011(wins/losses)2011 Wins (bat first/chasing)Pace(wickets, ER)Spin(wickets,ER)17/77/06/122, 8.1020, 6.44

Hafeez's all-round feat, and a familiar Zimbabwe collapse

Stats highlights from Pakistan’s seven-wicket win against Zimbabwe

Madhusudhan Ramakrishnan05-Sep-2011Not on too many occasions do teams manage to win a Test after conceding over 400 runs in the first innings. But Pakistan did exactly that against Zimbabwe. They batted well enough to gain a handy 54-run lead at the end of the first innings and then followed it up with a terrific bowling display to skittle the hosts out for 141. Despite starting off with a fairly inexperienced squad, Pakistan rode on superb performances from Mohammad Hafeez and Aizaz Cheema to complete a convincing seven-wicket victory. For Zimbabwe, the second-innings collapse proved to be impossible to recover from. In 17 Tests, they have been bowled out under 150 in their second innings and have gone on to lose on all 17 occasions.Here is a look at a few statistical highlights from Pakistan’s seven-wicket win

  • This was only the fourth time that Pakistan won a Test after conceding over 400 in the team first innings. All three previous occasions came in 2005. On the other hand, it is only the second time that Zimbabwe have lost after scoring over 400 in their first innings. The previous defeat came against India in Delhi in 2000.
  • This is Pakistan’s second consecutive win after their win in Kingston earlier in the year. It is only the second time since 2005 that Pakistan have won two consecutive matches.
  • Hafeez became the seventh Pakistan bowler to score a century and pick up four wickets in an innings in the same match. Musthaq Mohammad has achieved the feat on three different occasions. However, he missed out on becoming the first player since Jacques Kallis in 2002 to score a century and pick up a five-wicket haul in a Test.
  • Hafeez scored his first century in nearly five years. His previous century came against West Indies in November 2006. In ten matches in between, he scored just one fifty and averaged 18.52.
  • Cheema’s match analysis of 8 for 103 is the second-best by a Pakistan bowler on debut behind Mohammad Zahid’s 11 for 130 against New Zealand in 1996.
  • Zimbabwe’s defeat is their ninth against Pakistan. Only Sri Lanka with ten wins, have won more matches against Zimbabwe.
  • The run-difference of 271 between Zimbabwe’s first and second innings totals is their third-highest in Tests. In Bulawayo in 2003, they were bowled out for 104 against West Indies (difference of 273 runs) and in Harare in 2001, they scored 563 in the second innings after being bowled out for just 131 in the first innings. Click here for the list of highest differences between the first and second innings totals.
  • Zimbabwe’s poor form in Bulawayo continued with their tenth defeat in 18 Tests at the venue. While they have managed only one win in Bulawayo, they have won six Tests in Harare.
  • Tino Mawoyo’s 163 in the first innings is the fourth-highest score by a Zimbabwe batsman in a Test defeat. Andy Flower holds the record with 199 against South Africa in a nine-wicket loss in 2001.

Leadership lifts Haddin

Brad Haddin’s 80 was equal parts daring and discretion and showed that he can be a valuable lieutenant to Michael Clarke

Daniel Brettig at the Gabba03-Dec-2011If Australia’s hellish defeat to South Africa in Cape Town could be captured in a single moment, it was the stroke that dismissed Brad Haddin. Advancing towards Vernon Philander even though his side was already in a precarious position on the second afternoon, Haddin aimed to carve a delivery offering neither length nor width, and edged wretchedly to his opposite number Mark Boucher. In that instant it felt impossible to view Haddin as anything other than a waster, deserving to be dropped, and as the match galloped away from the visitors the notion could only gather speed.Yet three weeks later, here was Haddin in Brisbane, swelling his side’s first innings against New Zealand with a chanceless 80 that was equal parts daring and discretion. He stretched the hosts’ lead in the company of his captain Michael Clarke and then a motley collection of tail-enders. In between times, Haddin had proved his worth by contributing critically to the victory in Johannesburg, swatting a priceless 55. Of even greater significance was the fact that once the team returned home, the new selection panel named Haddin vice-captain for the Gabba.Power and responsibility can do a variety of things to cricketers: building them up, tearing them down, or simply exhausting them. What is clear from Haddin’s innings at the Gabba, as well as his lengthy playing career, is that this is a man lifted by a position of responsibility. When Haddin is thinking broadly of his team, his own batting shows a greater sense of awareness and balance, while still retaining the boldness and ball-striking that has had Australian crowds cooing regularly over the past few years. Granted the vice-captaincy, Haddin can still pierce the field with some of the crispest driving in the game, but he also appears more likely to choose the right ball with which to do it.To draw such a conclusion from one innings would be instinctive, if not presumptuous. To sustain it beyond argument, it is necessary to look more deeply into Haddin’s past, beyond his time in the Australian team. A fact often forgotten in the age of Simon Katich, Clarke and latterly Steve O’Keefe is that Haddin has been one of the most accomplished New South Wales captains of the past 20 years. Before the job was passed on to Katich, Haddin led the Blues with aggression, flair and plenty of courage, best epitomised by his performances at the ground on which he has now brought New Zealand to heel.In four Sheffield Shield matches as captain of NSW at the Gabba between 2004 and 2006, at a time when Queensland counted bowlers like Andy Bichel, Michael Kasprowicz, Joe Dawes, Ashley Noffke and a young Watson among their number, Haddin’s record is startling. Across those fixtures, often low-scoring on a seaming surface, he coshed 544 runs at 77.71, never reaching less than 41. Haddin’s achievements in those matches were far more than statistical. Team-mates speak of how his courageous batting often lifted the team’s morale as well as momentum, exuding the attitude that “these Bulls aren’t so impossible to crack” and taking the team with him.This was never more evident than in the 2005 Shield final, which NSW won breathlessly by a wicket. There were shades of Australia’s Johannesburg chase about it. Haddin’s 68 and 41 were his side’s highest scores in each innings, and getting the visitors close enough for a tail-ender, Stuart MacGill, to scramble the winning runs.Six years on, once Clarke had departed, Peter Siddle and James Pattinson swiftly followed. But Haddin’s NSW team-mate Mitchell Starc responded to his senior’s encouragement, building a partnership of strokes both chipper and chancy. While Starc had the time of his life, Haddin built soundly, picking off ones and twos, and twice sallying forth to thump sixes over straight midwicket. He ran the show with the assurance of a genuine leader.As Australia’s wicketkeeper of choice since 2008, Haddin has always been near the discussions of several captains, but only occasionally held formal office. He was not considered for the vice-captaincy when Michael Clarke replaced Ricky Ponting earlier this year, passed over for Shane Watson. The decision seemed largely to do with the selectors wanting a longer-term captaincy option in place should Clarke not pull himself out of the form trough that consumed his summer of 2010-11. There is also the habitual reluctance to make a wicketkeeper Australian captain.Now, however, Watson is recovering from injury, and Clarke is in something like the form of his life. Haddin’s response to leadership responsibility cannot have been lost on the national selector John Inverarity, as he continues his search for men of staunch character to build the Australian team around Clarke. Though Tim Paine and Matthew Wade are worthy successors to Haddin as a wicketkeeper, neither yet have the captaincy experience of the older man. The vice-captaincy was described by the Argus review as “an important role that should be more clearly defined”.Haddin should not be discounted as the man to serve under Clarke for the remainder of the summer, the shrewd lieutenant to a strong and natural captain. A similar dynamic worked soundly for Mark Taylor and Ian Healy during the first two and half years of the former’s reign, despite Healy never being considered likely to ascend to the captaincy himself. At 34, Haddin will never do so either, yet on the evidence of Brisbane he has much more to give Australia as vice-captain than simply as batsman/wicketkeeper. The Cape Town shot will never be forgotten, of course, but a few more days like this will allow its memory to soften.

Chasing the century

The idea that Sachin Tendulkar might be a fallible human like the rest of us doesn’t sit well with many Indian fans. And so the wait for the milestone continues

Wright Thompson14-Mar-2012EDISON, N.J. – Not long ago, a group of Indian expats gathered in a restaurant to discuss the continuing struggles of cricket star Sachin Tendulkar. The men could have been in India, so closely does Edison resemble a subcontinent city, or at least the upscale suburb of one. Strip malls line the main artery of Oak Tree Road, block after block of sweet shops and takeaway storefronts, family-owned businesses selling saris and butter chicken. (The word for butter in Hindi is ” Coke. He’s worn a fake beard as a disguise. He’s driven his Ferrari in the middle of the night for a brief taste of freedom. His national importance is so great that he is protected by the Indian equivalent of the Secret Service. Election planners take into account his schedule; politicians know people are unlikely to vote when Sachin is batting. Once, when he failed to reach a century during the past year, a distraught fan killed himself (there were rumours of a huge gambling loss). And all these years, he’s never been ensnared by scandal, or boasted about his wealth and power.These layers of meaning are of utmost importance to the billion fans who follow Indian cricket. No figure in the game shoulders more symbolic power than Tendulkar, whose ascent to global stardom has mirrored India’s own economic rise. Both Sachin and the concept of media-fuelled narrative are children of that rise; heroes and impossible expectations are the Cain and Abel of any society that bruises its way out of the pre-modern.Through more than 20 years, his only real failure was the inability to lead India to a World Cup title. Then, 11 months ago, he achieved that, another storybook ending. It seems important to note here that, while this is slowly changing, a hallmark of Bollywood movies is white-hat saviours and black-hat villains, and crowds have actually set theatres on fire upon the introduction of gray. So the famous T-shirts that say “If cricket is religion, then Sachin is God” are more significant than if they were worn here in New Jersey.After the World Cup was won, India stopped. Crowds of euphoric fans shut down the streets of Mumbai and other cities and towns. Pizza places stopped delivering. They couldn’t get through the throngs. The most common spontaneous chant in Mumbai, echoing down the beautiful Marine Drive, was “Sachin! Sachin!”There was nothing more to accomplish.But there was. He finished the World Cup with 99 international centuries. For cricket neophytes, a century is when a player scores 100 runs in one at-bat. It is like a basketball player dropping 50 points in a game, but more prestigious. The drumbeat began in the press. Indians love statistics and symbolic displays of success. This was a perfect storm, managing to touch the soft underbelly of both national arrogance and insecurity: Thus began a media-driven quest. The 100 comes from adding Test centuries and one-day centuries, which no one had ever thought to do before. It’s not a real statistic, emerging organically like 56 or 61, but born full-grown by the narrative machine. Reaching this record, which wasn’t really a record at all, could deliver the complete victory of the myth. An easy and fitting coronation, it seemed. The defining century shouldn’t take long. He averaged one for every seven or eight times he went to bat.He’s tried 32 times since then. His last century happened 366 days ago.Never-ending symbolism
The longer Tendulkar stays marooned on 99, the more anxiety spreads through the global Indian cricket community. This includes expat neighbourhoods and colleges in the US, where this story has been hiding in plain sight from the rest of us, dominating conversation at tables and in dorm rooms while never raising a peep in the papers. Atul Huckoo’s three dinner companions host a local call-in radio show, and they’ve heard the anxiety creeping into the voices of their listeners, which grows with each failed attempt.”They want to know why,” co-host Amit Godbole said.A year ago from this chilly Monday, Tendulkar scored a century, his 98th, in a dramatic World Cup tie versus England. He got his 99th on March 12, against South Africa. The closest he’s come to 100 since was in November, against West Indies, playing in Mumbai.The at-bat lasted two days. He inched closer, crossing 75 runs, then 80. The crowd chanted his name. At Rutgers University, around 1 am, new graduate student Bhavya Sharma’s phone rang. Campuses, especially those with strong connections to India, are where the Tendulkar watch has been kept most closely in the US, as students explain to class-mates why so many Indians look like zombies in the morning. For reasons such as, say, a phone call from Sharma’s dad in India.”Are you watching?” he called into the phone.She found the match on the internet. Tendulkar was on 90. He scored four more runs. Six to go. The bowler landed it short, the ball bouncing halfway up Tendulkar’s chest. At the last split-second, Sachin opened the face of his bat just a little, and the ball sliced into the hands of a defender. Out on 94. He sighed, and as he reached the edge of the pitch, he looked around at the silent fans.

So many things are happening at once, and they have nothing to do with each other, except in the way that all things are connected. The growth rate is down. Inflation is up. The Indian cricket team is struggling. Its stars are fading. And not only is Tendulkar coming to the last act of his career, he is doing it in failure

Sharma turned off the game. Across town, a group of her friends did the same, heading for late-night food. It was Thanksgiving break, and the campus was empty and dark. It fit the mood. For these students’ entire lives, everything stopped when Sachin came to bat. One student’s grandmother won’t let anyone in the house move positions. Another’s mom refuses to cook as long until Tendulkar leaves the pitch. Everything stops until Sachin finishes. The past year has awakened people to the reality of Tendulkar finishing for good.In the same way the 1950s symbolically died with Elvis, the first rush of hope created by the new Indian economy will end when Sachin retires. The next generation will be successful but lack some hard-to-define simplicity and earnestness. So many things are happening at once, and they have nothing to do with each other, except in the way that all things are connected. The growth rate is down. Inflation is up. The Indian cricket team is struggling. Its stars are fading. And not only is Tendulkar coming to the last act of his career, he is doing it in failure.Listen to former Indian captain Dilip Vengsarkar. He told the on Jan. 7: “We might have left the best behind. We’ve been spoilt by success in the past 10-12 years. The big batting guns have long covered up other shortcomings but they are nearing the end. The increased dependence on Tendulkar after more than two decades is a sign of poverty.”What an odd choice of words to describe sporting failure..Blaspheming his own legacy?
The critics have drawn their long swords.Tendulkar has committed the great sin of being fallible. That’s not good enough. Everyone has an opinion about not only his life but about the inner workings of his mind. Fans and former players are calling for him to retire from one-day cricket, saying his play and his cherry-picking events are damaging both the present and future of the Indian team. One paper called the past year a “terminal decline”. The minority view that Tendulkar chases personal records instead of team wins, and that he crumbles under pressure, no matter how disproved by statistics, has gained tenuous traction.”Maybe his time has come,” a former Indian captain said.”He has to go,” said another.”It’s a monkey on his back, which is now a gorilla,” said a former Indian star.”After 50 runs,” tweeted another, “Tendulkar battles the demons in his head.”Those demons, if they exist, are his alone. Team-mates say he hasn’t mentioned the century, even in the safety of the dressing room. Sachin has said little to nothing publically about the close calls, offering a brief and contradictory interview to an Australian television station.”It is easier said than done,” he said. “It is just a number.”People can only wonder. They watch him eat lamb cutlets at his favourite curry house on Beaufort Street in Perth. They see him at a steakhouse in Adelaide called the Stag Hotel, where a DJ spins records on both levels. They follow him in the Sydney airport, Sachin smiling at the firing line of microphones and cameras, barrels bunched together, each attached to the outstretched arm of a reporter desperate for comment. They get none.The rest of the Indian team walks through baggage claim with little fuss. They climb onto an idling bus. This year has been bad for all of them. The entire team was slumping, swept in a Test series by England, then by Australia. Back home, India was boiling, calling for heads, focusing frustration onto Sachin’s personal quest, perhaps hoping this milestone, if achieved, would disinfect the rot of the past year. Or even offer a symbolic fresh start.The beauty of failure
The ghost of an Australian named Don Bradman looms over all of this. Bradman was the greatest cricketer who ever lived. Millions watched his funeral on television. Even in life people deified him, just as they’re doing to Sachin. His son, John Bradman, has spoken out against that worship. , he likes to remind people. John struggled with his dad’s legacy; for a period in the 1970s, he changed his last name, before accepting his fate and changing it back.Bradman entered his last at-bat in 1948 needing just four runs to retire with a career average of 100. The crowd at a stadium in London stood to cheer its dangerous opponent, the rumble and roar raising goose flesh around the stadium. The legend – however much part of a creation myth – says that the reaction brought tears to the stern eyes of Bradman, and, his vision blurry, he was bowled out on the second ball. That last part isn’t myth. The failure is real. He got out on the second ball and disappeared into the pavilion, his average forever 99.94 runs per game. Over the years, this number has turned into a sort of poem about the inevitability of human frailty, and the nature of the game itself.Cricket is defined by failure. In one-day cricket, a batter gets a single at-bat (an innings). In Test cricket, he gets two. A great innings takes hours, even days, and one slip of concentration, one misread of spin or bad angle with the wrists or conspiring crack in the ground – anything – results in an out. With a game so dominated by failure, it’s seen as appropriate that the greatest career ended with it, as a warning against the hubris of future generations. Men come and go. The game always wins.The last days of an epoch
The streets lay cold and empty at half past two in the morning. Suhrith Parthasarathy walked up Broadway, crossed 115th Street, arriving at the stone gates of Columbia University. As a child in India, he and his grandfather woke up at 5:30 in the morning to see matches from Australia, catching a few hours before school. Now a graduate student, he swiped his card and headed to Room 504C of the journalism school, where the window looks out at a bare tree in a tight quad, backed by the soaring glass walls of the library. Tendulkar was about to bat on this Monday night two weeks ago. Suhrith found the feed on the internet and logged into Twitter, joining in a global community.”Everybody wants him to get it,” he sighed, “so they can bloody well go on about their lives.”At Suhrith’s home stadium in Chennai, he’s seen a few Tendulkar centuries, including a famous 136 in a losing effort against Pakistan. A friend who grew up in Dubai found Suhrith in 504C and pulled up a chair. Hiten Samtani has also seen Sachin centuries in person, including two of the most famous. In April 1998, against Australia, India needed a miracle to stay alive in the Coca-Cola Cup. Before Sachin took the pitch, he told his coach: “Don’t worry. I’ll be there till the end.” Sachin finished with 143 and led India into the finals. Two days later, on his 25th birthday, he took India to a win against Australia, scoring 134. The television announcer said, 14 years ago, “This little man is the nearest thing to Bradman there’s ever been.”In the room at Columbia, the monitor glowing green from the pitch, Hiten remembered those long-ago days. “There were no physical constraints on what he could do,” he said. “He could do anything.”That night, Sachin reached 39 runs and then got his feet tangled, blocking a ball bound for his wicket with his leg. Hiten sighed. Suhrith rubbed his hands over his face. They switched off the computer and headed back out into the cold. For two days, they thought this would be Sachin’s last chance until September. Then news broke about the line-up for the Asia Cup, stunning the experts. The Indian cricket board had chosen Tendulkar. An important detail soon emerged:Sachin spoke to the selectors himself.A fleeting triumph over myth
He might never make it to 100.However unlikely, there exists the possibility that the Asia Cup will come and go, and then the next series, then another, with no century. Tendulkar is expected to play Test cricket for a few more years, which means he’ll get chance after chance. But what if he fails? A cricket writer in England, Jon Hotten, argued that, as there is beauty in Bradman’s 99.94, there would be a similar beauty if Tendulkar retired on 99. “It will contain in it this kernel of romance,” Hotten said. “He didn’t quite get the hundred hundreds, because no human being should be able to do that.”Like Bradman’s 99.94 career average, the 99 would be a poem about humanity, and failure, and about the nature of Tendulkar’s career. Because the interesting thing about the past 366 days isn’t simply that he’s failed over and over again, but that he’s kept trying under such global scrutiny. This seems like a final siege of expectation in a career flanked by it, the final struggle between the reality and the myth. What could be a more fitting coda?When you look back, it is not his unapproachable statistics that draw the most admiration, but that he managed them with a billion people on his shoulders. He’s almost at the end, and the final test isn’t of his sporting ability, but of something deeper. “Tendulkar’s greatest achievement,” Hotten said, “is he’s resisted the mad circus that’s around him. Tiger Woods, for example, it’s obviously driven him crazy in some respect. This has happened so many times with people you attach the label of genius to. I don’t know how Tendulkar has remained sane. In a way that will end up being the biggest mystery of all: How did he survive it?”The last year has been tough for fans of Indian cricket•AFPTendulkar is a closed book. He smiles and walks to the centre of the pitch. His play suggests he is bending under the weight, but he’ll never admit it. Nobody knows how he feels about the century. Bradman, for instance, never mentioned his career average in a lifetime of correspondence with the dean of English cricket writers, David Frith. There are all sorts of grievances and private insecurities in Bradman’s crowded, upright hand. But not a word about the failure that came to define his success.What does Tendulkar think about the quest? He cares enough to keep chasing it, but maybe the media and the ex-players and the manic fans are missing the point. Scoring the century doesn’t define his career, but the chasing of it does, the willingness to risk failing for the chance of success. In the past year, Sachin hasn’t blasphemed his career. He has reaffirmed it. The failure to achieve this one thing opens a rare window into the cost of all that’s been achieved already, and elevates, for a moment, the attempt above the result.The sacred journey is a familiar idea in his family. His father, a poet named Ramesh Tendulkar, often explored the theme that life is about the hard work of travelling, not the easy peace of arrival. Once he wrote these words, which now speak for his silent ageing son: .

Sehwag gets another Adelaide edge

ESPNcricinfo presents Plays of the Day for the match between Australia and India in Adelaide

Sidharth Monga at the Adelaide Oval12-Feb-2012The sacrifice
Rohit Sharma continued his good work in the field when he dived at cover-point and ran David Warner out. The batsmen reacted strangely: Warner and Michael Clarke both thought there was a single available there, but Warner was more cautious and went back in his crease when he saw Rohit had stopped the ball. Clarke, though, kept strolling towards the striker’s end. At this point, Warner left the crease to sacrifice his wicket. Perhaps it had to do with how well Clarke had been striking the ball until then. Warner was 18 off 24, and Clarke 26 off 20.The tackle
In the 48th over of the Australia innings, Matthew Wade drove Vinay Kumar towards long-on. It wasn’t well hit, and Vinay thought he could dive and save the single. Except he would have to dive around Dan Christian, the non-striker. He delayed the dive for a split second, but it wasn’t enough and he dived into Christian’s legs, tripping him. Christian, though, recovered fast enough to make the single.The run-out
Christian was run out next ball, attempting a second. It was observed immediately that he ran the second a bit casually, and that he didn’t dive for the second. Christian, though, didn’t know that the throw was coming to his end. That was thanks to the street-smart MS Dhoni. Dhoni never lets on that the throw is coming in at his end. This was a good example. While running towards the stumps, even before Christian had finished his first run, Dhoni signalled to Ravindra Jadeja to throw at his end, and then came and stood casually by the stumps, looking blank. Only when the ball approached did Dhoni get into action, and by then it was too late for Christian to dive or make up ground.The edge
In the Test at the Adelaide Oval, Virender Sehwag fell to two full tosses, both leading edges. There must be something about this track then. Today he got a terrible loosener from Clint McKay, short of a length, down the leg side, a wide if he hadn’t touched it, not a slower ball, but he somehow managed to get a leading edge on it to be caught at point. We could call it the Adelaide edge.The Clarke touch
That Clarke is going through a captaincy honeymoon has been obvious this season with how his bowling changes have brought immediate wickets. He added to that tally today with an even more startling immediacy. McKay got Sehwag with the first ball he bowled, and when Clarke brought him back in the 35th over, he struck first ball again, getting Gautam Gambhir lbw for 92.

From keeper to clerk and back again

Thami Tsolekile’s first taste of Test cricket, eight years ago, set his career back and for a time he left the game behind. But a second chance came his way and he has grabbed it

Firdose Moonda11-Jul-2012There is a desk in the Western Province Cricket Association offices that once belonged to Thami Tsolekile. Not a kit bag or a piece of cricket equipment – a desk. And a chair, and a computer, and a few notebooks and some pens. Four seasons ago, Tsolekile was a clerk. He was dropped by his home franchise, unwanted by any of the others and his cricket career seemed to be over.It was an anti-climax for a man who had promised so much. As a double international – having also played hockey for South Africa – Tsolekile was a true athlete. He had exceptional hand-eye co-ordination, was fit, fast and skilled and cricket considered itself lucky that he had opted to use the bulk of his talent on it.He was identified as a potential challenger for Mark Boucher – at that stage the word successor was not being used – and was picked for South Africa in 2004. At 23 years old, Tsolekile knew relatively little of the world but enough to realise he was largely not wanted. A public outcry and even internal administrative strife followed his call-up, tainting his short stint.Boucher had played 75 consecutive Tests and was sent to the sidelines as punishment for his rapidly growing sense of self rather than as a response to his loss of form with the bat. He was never expected to be out of the side for very long. Tsolekile knew his inclusion was merely an experiment to see if anyone else had could play in the wicketkeeper’s role.After three Tests, the selection panel was convinced no-one could. Tsolekile made his debut in India and was dropped after one Test at home against England, although AB de Villiers briefly had the gloves before Boucher returned. His self-confessed “lack of experience,” showed, especially with the bat, where he managed just 47 runs five innings. He was not as bad with gloves on but South Africa had lost the Test at Port Elizabeth, the first of the series, and wanted a quick fix. Boucher had been considered reprimanded so two Tests later was recalled and Tsolekile faded, as far away as he could, into an office job.Being managed carelessly formed a large part of Tsolekile’s retreat into anonymity. He was young and enthusiastic and having a small chance snatched away from him hurt. Although he continued play for Cobras, his spirit had been noticeably squashed. It took a call from up country to revive it.In 2009 the Highveld Lions franchise, then a struggling team, needed a wicketkeeper after Matthew Harris retired. With a history of importing players from the Cape, they asked Tsolekile if he could be lured onto the cricket field again. A new chance with a new team in a new city beckoned and even someone as disillusioned as Tsolekile could see that it would be foolish to turn them down.The change immediately paid dividends. Tsolekile took more catches than any gloveman across the franchise system in his comeback season. Given the tame nature of the Lions bowling attack then, it is not impossible to suggest that Tsolekile’s success meant he took every chance that came his way in that period. His batting had also improved – he scored his second first-class century that summer – and starred in a record partnership with Stephen Cook to the end the season with an average of 58.10.Maturity was the standout improvement in Tsolekile’s game. Once so hot headed – he was suspended by Western Province hockey for ill-discipline – Tsolekile had grown into a respectful adult. Administrators at Lions hailed and rewarded him for his leadership skills. He was picked as captain of the South Africa A side, elevated to vice-captain of the franchise and installed as leader when Alviro Petersen was on national duty. Under him, Lions qualified for the Champions League T20 in 2010, ending months of sub-standard showings.

Being managed carelessly formed a large part of Tsolekile’s retreat into anonymity. He was young and enthusiastic and having a small chance snatched away from him hurt

Tsolekile’s glovework has remained his strongest asset but with a top heavy domestic batting line-up that aspect of his game has not developed much further. Still, the selectors were satisfied enough with his progression to hand him a national contract earlier this year, something that identified him again as a successor to Boucher, who announced his intention to retire after the England series.A roadmap was laid out – in which would Boucher mentor Tsolekile – but it seemed to change course swiftly. Instead, Tsolekile was included in various A sides, such as the one that played Australia A in Potchefstroom. On a pitch that was green and where the North West Cricket Union apologised to Michael Clarke for the lack of batting practice his side had had there, Tsolekile scored a half-century. He also played in the recent two match series against Sri Lanka A, where he equalled the South African record for the most catches in a first-class innings with eight.Vincent Barnes, coach of the A side, said Tsolekile was “exceptional,” in those matches and was “definitely ready for international cricket.” Tsolekile was also due to travel to Ireland with the A side that will shadow the senior side from August. His plans have been fast-forwarded because of the enforced retirement of Boucher and he now finds himself on the cusp of playing in the year’s most anticipated Test contest.However, before he even got here, it seemed Tsolekile may find himself an outsider again. Both Gary Kirsten and Allan Donald said AB de Villiers will be the team’s wicketkeeper in the first Test. The national selectors would not confirm that they agreed with those thoughts. Instead, they announced Tsolekile as Boucher’s replacement the next day and named De Villiers as an “option”. While the selection panel picks the squad, the starting XI is chosen by Kirsten, Graeme Smith and the touring selector which leaves uncertainty over whether Tsolekile will play at all.With South Africa likely to want to include an extra batsman, he may not feature initially and judging by the reaction his call up has received in South Africa some would prefer him not feature at all. Tsolekile is not a popular choice. There have been calls for Dane Vilas, who was unimpressive in the recent Twenty20 tri-series in Zimbabwe, and Quinton de Kock, who will captain the Under-19 side and has yet to play a full season of franchise cricket, to replace Boucher and Tsolekile’s support has been slim and grudgingly given.After years of playing cricket, it is something he is used to. When he was first called up, Tsokelile was labelled a quota player. It is a term he and others of his skin colour – such as Vernon Philander – will have to put up with for years to come. In 2004, it stuck a stigma to him that he could not overcome. Eight years later, Tsolekile no longer flinches when he hears that word. He is more secure than that.In an interview with ESPNcricinfo in December he said: “I am a much better player than I was when I first played international cricket.” It is something that has also been acknowledged by selection convenor Andrew Hudson. Tsolekile feels he knows his game well enough to make an impact and even though his age, he will soon be 32, may mean he cannot think of spending the amount of time Boucher did in the international game he believes he has something to offer. Now all he needs is a chance to do that.

'When I was younger I used to bowl like Shoaib'

Grilled-chicken fiend Ajmal Shahzad is quite the mimic when it comes to other bowlers

Interview by Myles Hodgson04-Jun-2012You have just moved from your native Yorkshire to Lancashire on loan. There were several other counties interested in you, so why did you choose Lancashire?
There were a few reasons. Glen Chapple has been on the top of his game for the last few years and I want to learn as much as I can off him before he decides to call it a day. I wanted to work with Peter Moores as well. I’ve heard rave reviews about him as a coach and hopefully he can help develop my game.Presumably moving to Lancashire meant you also didn’t have to travel far from where you live?
Locality was also important. I didn’t want to be travelling up and down the country or moving about too much. I just wanted to go somewhere and start playing some cricket. I’m on the road a bit now, travelling from Yorkshire, staying in hotels, and the odd night with Ashwell Prince. It’s different but I’m enjoying it and I’ve just got to embrace it.How are you finding all the roadworks on the M62 motorway from Yorkshire to Old Trafford that have reduced the speed to 50mph for many miles?
It’s an absolute nightmare. You’re cruising at around 70mph and then you get miles and miles of 50mph and it takes you ages to get through it. If we’re training, I have to set off from Yorkshire at 6.30am just so I can get there for 8.30am and start training at 9am, but you’ve just got to get on with it. How easy has it been to fit into a new dressing room?
I thought it would be a tricky period for me, trying to fit in with the boys, but it happened seamlessly. I’ve got a few friends here, Saj Mahmood being one of the main ones, and that allowed me to fit straight in. The three days we had rained off down in Sussex [before Shahzad’s debut] allowed me to get to know the rest of the squad.What has the crowd reaction from Lancashire fans been towards you, bearing in mind the great rivalry with Yorkshire?
I got a really good reception from the crowd on my home debut at Old Trafford. My first over went well, so they clapped me in and then I bowled a wide or a no-ball and then a few more wides and they were on my back and gave me abuse! That sort of thing also used to happen at Yorkshire, but I had credit in the bank there and hopefully I can do that here.Fans at your drawn Championship match against Middlesex at Aigburth saw you change your action for part of the final day. Why was that?
I have a natural inswinger, so when the ball reverses, I swing it away. If I want to get a Waqar Younis-type inswinging yorker when it’s reversing, I have to get a bit more slingy in my action, and that’s what I tried on the final day against Middlesex. It was such a placid wicket and they were 150-odd for one, so I thought “anything goes here”, and the boys were happy for me to do it.

“I think I can bowl like Muttiah Muralitharan and I’m getting decent at it now. I keep saying to Glen Chapple that he should let me try it in a game!”

Some people said you looked like Shoaib Akhtar…
The boys were telling me to bowl like Shoaib Akhtar, so that’s what I was trying. It got to the phase of the game where you were allowed to do what you wanted to do and it was good to just go out and enjoy your cricket.What other cricketers can you mimic?
When I was younger I really used to bowl like Shoaib, but I had to stop because it put too much pressure on my back. I watch a lot of cricket on TV, so I must admit I’ve tried bowling like people in the nets. I think I can bowl like Muttiah Muralitharan, and I’m getting decent at it now. I keep saying to Glen Chapple that he should let me try it in a game! Adil Rashid at Yorkshire is brilliant at bowling like Saeed Ajmal in the nets – I used to get him to bowl at me like that so I could practise against it.What are you like at other sports?
I played badminton for Yorkshire from Under-15s to Under-17s, but again, it wasn’t really doing my back much good, so I had to give it up once I took up cricket seriously. I was good at squash and racket sports in general. I’m not really one for going out on the golf course. I tried to get into it but I’d rather put my feet up on a day off. You rarely get days off, and now that I’m on the move it’s even worse.What music do you like?
I like my dance music but I haven’t managed to influence the boys in the Lancashire dressing room at the moment. Steven Croft is the DJ man, so I’m just letting him get on with it, see how he gets on and then I can try and introduce a few of my tunes. What are you like at cooking and what can you cook?
I’m not very domesticated at all. I know this sounds really lame but I’ve just started doing boiled eggs and things like that. I can do potatoes but I’m not really a cook.Anybody who follows you on Twitter will know that you eat at Nando’s a lot. What’s so good about it?
I’m at Nando’s most of the time, which I get a lot of abuse for on Twitter, with people telling me I should branch out to other places. I just love it in there. I can get my grilled chicken with rice or whatever, and it’s healthy too. A lot of cricketers go – I think we should get a loyalty card going because we spend enough money there! When I stay with Ashwell and we talk about what we’re going to eat, he says to me, “I know what you’re thinking”, because he knows I want to go to Nando’s.

Game
Register
Service
Bonus