Fleet-footed India leave England stumped

Stepping down to spinners is an important skill but, while India have picked the length early and avoided premeditation, England’s batsmen have been far less adept

Sidharth Monga in Mumbai06-Dec-2016In the 49th over of the Visakhapatnam Test, Cheteshwar Pujara pulled and drove successive Zafar Ansari deliveries for six and four. To the first ball, he rocked back to manufacture the length a little, and advanced down the crease to take the second on the full. Freeze frames from both these deliveries might illustrate a big difference between the two sides so far.As Ansari completes his action and the ball leaves his hand, Pujara has pushed on to the front foot to both deliveries. With the first, he sees the ball flat and goes back to use the depth of his crease. With the second, he sees the flight and charges out, not letting it pitch. And there is no way to tell from these freeze frames what Pujara is going to do.This is Pujara – or any other accomplished Asian batsman – at his best. Ready to move forward, picking the length early, and then attacking any error from the bowler – be it from the back foot or the front foot. Pujara’s use of this movement out of the crease is a return to how he played on debut in Bangalore six years ago, charging out at every opportunity after a shooter had done him in in the first innings. In this series, he has charged out once every 8.5 balls of spin he has faced, scoring close to 15% of his runs against spin by stepping down the wicket.More important, though, is the timing of Pujara’s charge. As those two deliveries suggest, he is always on the lookout to go forward, but he is never committed too early or so much that he leaves himself no way to bail out. By contrast, in Mohali, Ben Stokes, Moeen Ali and Jos Buttler gave themselves no second chance and paid with their wickets.Bowling to Stokes, when Ravindra Jadeja is in an identical position to that of Ansari earlier, you know Stokes is coming. You can tell. It’s not just the front foot shuffling across a little but also the movement in his upper body. He comes out all right, and is beaten on the outside edge. The difference between the two charges is a fraction of a second, but that premeditation can be lethal against good spinners. Buttler, looking to bat positively, left his crease often, but twice he charged out without reaching the pitch of the ball. The result: he was caught at short cover once, and dragged the other intended straight hit into the waiting hands of cow corner.For the second time in the series, Moeen left the crease, found himself nowhere close to the pitch of the ball, froze and paid the ultimate price – lbw once, and chipping one to mid-on on another occasion. Moeen is often guilty of leaving the crease with premeditation and then not knowing what to do. His dismissal giving Yasir Shah the charge at Lord’s is a better known case in point.Now, it is up for debate whether spinners see that movement a fraction of a second too soon even as they are in the process of delivering. The bluff masters that they are, the spinners will tell you they do, but it is fair to assume they don’t always spot it. Even if they don’t always do, as batsmen you don’t want to leave yourselves exposed to those occasions when they adjust and bowl wider or shorter.It doesn’t help England that their spinners – apart from Adil Rashid – haven’t done much with the ball in the air. The Ashwin ball that got Moeen in Mohali dipped on him and drifted appreciably into the pads. Jadeja got Stokes with one that drifted away from his bat. Add Joe Root’s dismissal in Visakhapatnam, and England have lost six wickets with batsmen out of the crease; India haven’t lost even one to a proper charge.It’s not as though India batsmen haven’t ventured out: Pujara and M Vijay in particular have frequently used their feet to reach balls before they turn, but they have been more effective. Their charges have been less premeditated and swift once they do come at the ball. While Pujara has not hit one ball in the air after advancing down the wicket, Vijay has left the crease with the sole intention of hitting over the straight field to get himself a release from the intense concentration his game needs. Even when the batsmen have charged out too soon, there hasn’t been much aerial deception from England’s spinners.To leave the crease and take a spinner on is an important tool for a batsman, but England have been doing so a fraction of a second too soon, and against better spinners.

Improving Bangladesh chase a piece of history in New Zealand

A fitter, faster Bangladesh will focus on showing up well-prepared to face New Zealand as they look for their first series win in the country

Mohammad Isam24-Dec-2016Little can be gleaned about a rivalry where the teams have played only two times in the last three years, but a look back at bilateral records between Bangladesh and New Zealand throws up interesting numbers. While Bangladesh have been on the losing side between 2001 and 2010 at home and away, in the recent past they have had the wood on New Zealand, especially in ODIs.Bangladesh’s 3-0 win in the 2013 ODI series was a follow-up to the surprising 4-0 result in 2010. Bangladesh had a quiet 2014. But since 2015, they have become a fitter, faster and smoother team. In the 2015 World Cup, New Zealand’s bowlers were made to work hard by Bangladesh in one of their closest matches during the group stage.Bangladesh followed that up with a hot streak at home, beating three top sides in ODIs. They have played six matches in 2016, with three wins and as many losses, but still enjoyed success with a maiden Test victory over England recently.The trip to New Zealand is Bangladesh’s first bilateral away tour after visiting the West Indies in August 2014. Since that West Indies tour, Bangladesh have won 21 out of 29 ODIs and have an average scoring rate of 5.48 per over, compared to an overall rate of 4.44. That improvement in the run rate is telling as it has meant bigger scores, and, thus, more cushion for the bowling unit.Along the way, they have discovered match-winners like Mustafizur Rahman, Sabbir Rahman, Soumya Sarkar and Mehedi Hasan Miraz, even as senior players like Shakib Al Hasan, Tamim Iqbal, Mashrafe Mortaza, Mushfiqur Rahim and Mahmudullah have gone deeper into their roles in various formats.To gain all-round balance, head coach Chandika Hathurusingha has put in place a stringent training regimen since the 2015 World Cup, stressing on a high degree of preparation before every competition. This approach has been followed for the New Zealand tour too. Bangladesh trained in Sydney for nine days, playing two practice matches, and arrived early in New Zealand where they played another practice match.Although they lost in Whangerei on Thursday, Bangladesh have shown they are a better-prepared side, with long pre-series camps and practice games in conditions similar to the ones likely for the matches. Allrounder Mahmudullah is perhaps the best example of how a cricketer can improve by leaps and bounds even after playing international cricket for eight years.During the training camp at home and in Australia prior to the 2015 World Cup, Mahmudullah’s constant use of a granite slab to master shots on the up helped him score two centuries in the tournament. Earlier this year, his work during training camps in Khulna and Chittagong made him Bangladesh’s designated hitter in T20s.Hathurusingha and limited-overs captain Mashrafe have also put in much effort to build a strong pace attack. During the World Cup, Rubel Hossain and Taskin Ahmed bowled well before Bangladesh discovered Mustafizur, whose bag of tricks has changed the way opponents think about the side’s bowling.For the ODIs against New Zealand, they have seamers Subashis Roy, Kamrul Islam Rabbi and the raw Ebadot Hossain in the mix. Subashis was picked for the Test against England but did not get a game. Rabbi is proficient at bowling yorkers, while little is known about Ebadot, who at this time last year, was playing volleyball for the Bangladesh Air Force.Bangladesh would also want their skilled batting unit to carry their form at home into the matches overseas. Tamim is currently the team’s best batsman and he will be expected to bring his experience into the fold against New Zealand’s vaunted pace attack.Imrul Kayes has developed into a more aggressive opener while Sabbir, Mahmudullah, Shakib, and newcomer Mosaddek Hossain will look to provide stability at different stages of the innings. Sabbir and Mosaddek also have their own challenges: while Sabbir will look to get over his off-field actions during the BPL, Mosaddek has yet to pass the short-ball test.Fans in New Zealand would remember a tame Bangladesh unit touring the shores in previous years, notching up losses like the one in the Queenstown ODI in 2007, which remains the largest margin of defeat in a match between Full Members in terms of balls remaining. This time, however, a different team will walk out to play – one that crushed New Zealand at home, one that runs faster, and bats and bowls with more heart and mind in the contest.

See ball, hit ball

Like a roster of the world’s fastest sprinters, today’s list featuring IPL’s fastest scorers is topped by a Jamaican and dominated by men from the Caribbean

ESPNcricinfo staff14-Mar-201710. Harbhajan Singh, 783 runs in 77 innings; Strike Rate – 143.66Apart from his primary role as an offspinner, Harbhajan has never been shy of moving up the order or being seen as a pinch-hitter when his side could do with some quick runs. Despite never scoring more than 120 runs in an IPL season, his occasional cameo puts him at 10th place on our list.9. Sanath Jayasuriya, 768 runs in 30 innings; Strike Rate – 144.36Almost 40 and at the fag end of his long career, Jayasuriya still managed to set stadiums alight in his own inimitable style for the best part of the first two IPL seasons. His tour de force in the IPL came against Chennai Super Kings at the Wankhede Stadium, where he hammered a hundred off 45 balls, still among the fastest in the tournament’s history.8. David Miller, 1480 runs in 60 innings; Strike Rate – 144.39Miller did not have the best of starts to his IPL career, until he smashed 101* off 38 balls against Royal Challengers Bangalore, in what remains one of the most memorable innings in the tournament to date. His simple approach to batting is summed up by his father’s mantra, which quoted on television after that innings – “If it’s in the V, it’s in the tree; and if it’s in the arc, it’s out of the park”7. Yusuf Pathan, 2761 runs in 122 innings; Strike Rate – 146.78Pathan’s reputation pre-IPL was largely built on his domestic performances and his debut at the World T20 final a year before. At Rajasthan Royals, he went about quickly acquiring a knack for powerful hitting that changed games in his side’s favour. While this reputation has largely carried him over the past few seasons, his presence on this list is a nod to the fact that his ball-striking abilities have never been under question.Kieron Pollard pings a mighty six down the ground•BCCI6. Kieron Pollard,1958 runs in 97 innings; Strike Rate – 147.99Pollard’s value to his side is reflected by his place among a handful of single-franchise players in the IPL, and it is thanks largely to his ability to clear boundaries at will. Pollard’s big-match temperament came to the fore en route to Mumbai’s IPL title in 2015, when he followed his 41 off 17 balls with a quickfire 36 off 18 in the final against Super Kings.5. AB de Villiers, 3257 runs in 109 innings; Strike Rate – 149.33Among all members on this list, de Villiers has played the most number of games, and his place so high up is testament to his sustained excellence across seasons. Known for his ability to shut opponents out of games with his all-round, “360-degree” game, he has only improved with time, averaging nearly 40 to go with his phenomenal strike rate.4. Chris Gayle, 3426 runs in 91 innings; Strike Rate – 153.28Every other “fastest” and “highest” score-related question when it comes to the IPL has Chris Gayle as the answer, and if not for a lean patch in 2014, he could well be on top of this list. After 2235 balls in the IPL, Gayle has scored at over 1.5 runs every ball, and has dispatched almost 1 out of every 4 balls to the boundary. The mind boggles.3. Virender Sehwag, 2728 runs in 104 innings; Strike Rate – 155.44Sehwag’s see-ball, hit-ball approach was a natural fit for T20s, but he somehow never managed to dictate terms in the same way as he did in the longer formats. His IPL career mirrored this, and apart from occasional spurts of dominance, his strike rate is largely due to the flurry of early-innings boundaries he was well known for.Andre the giant ball-striker is the top Jamaican on this list. Who’da thunk it?•BCCI2. Glenn Maxwell, 918 runs in 43 innings; Strike Rate – 161.61Kings XI Punjab’s captain for the 2017 season is another of those made-for-T20 cricketers who is yet to fully stamp his authority on the tournament. While his crucial contributions have won games for the side in the past few seasons, a consistent spell of match-winning performances is long overdue. Given how he has managed to do so in his international T20 career, it could well be a matter of time.1. Andre Russell, 574 runs in 25 innings; Strike Rate – 173.41The man with the highest IPL strike rate is a Jamaican, but not the one you’d have guessed first. Russell has established his place among the world’s top T20 allrounders with performances with both bat and ball for franchises across the globe, apart from his exploits for West Indies. Just as he was poised to continue his rich vein of form from the past two seasons, a doping violation-related ban has sidelined him for the next year.minimum qualification – 500 runs in the IPL

Debutant Mosaddek lays down a marker

Replacing a senior batsman like Mahmudullah comes with a lot of scrutiny and the 21-year-old handled it well, scoring a half-century and helping Bangladesh claim a rare first-innings lead

Mohammad Isam in Colombo17-Mar-2017Mosaddek Hossain is no stranger to pressure, and not the kind that comes out of a cricket match.Since his first-class debut in 2013, he has played for Abahani Limited, the most successful club in Bangladesh history. The BCB’s most influential directors come from their stables and they don’t like losing. That brings pressure wholly different to having to run down a big total, or weather a top spell, or keep pace with a rapidly climbing asking-rate.Yet it is in this environment that Mosaddek thrived, helping his team avoid relegation in his first season as a professional cricketer and making them Premier Division champions in 2016. He is nothing like the usual young Bangladeshi batsman. Not flashy. Not emotional. Just calm and calculated. Like a robot. It is for this reason Tamim Iqbal called Mossadek mature beyond his years.So how was he going to handle making his Test debut after replacing a senior player like Mahmudullah, who also hails from the town of Mymensingh and who was dropped for the first time in his career? A failure might not only hamper his career, it might make the higher-ups who backed him look bad.The first ball he faced was a peach. Suranga Lakmal pitched it on a length and darted it past his outside edge as if it were a puppet. Had Mosaddek gone at it with harder hands, he might have been out for a duck. Everyone talks about luck in this game and it seemed this 21-year-old certainly had some. He then spent his first half hour as a Test batsman learning to avoid the blatant threat of a fast bowler’s bouncers and the subtle traps laid by a master left-arm spinner.Eventually, it was off Rangana Herath that Mosaddek got his first boundary. A classic, inside-out cover drive for four. It wasn’t quite Mohammad Ashraful taking on Muttiah Muralitharan in 2001 and later boasting that the man who would go on to take 800 Test wickets was like anyone else he faced in the Dhaka nets. But it was something.The next challenge was batting with Shakib while the latter was in the nineties. The period when a senior player can essentially do whatever he wanted but the rookie’s job – his only job – was to rotate the strike while making sure he didn’t run his partner out. Mosaddek walked the tight rope perfectly.The milestone passed and it was time to let loose a bit. So in the 94th over, when he was getting into position to avoid the short ball, he realised there wasn’t too much bounce in the pitch and decided to pull it away. Bangladesh went into the lead with that four.Most of Mosaddek’s runs came on the off side. His shots were crisp, his ability to pick the gaps was excellent and the fact that his style was all his own made watching him all the more delectable.”I am no one to judge his standard or quality but I think that he has a big future in Bangladesh cricket,” Shakib said. “If you talk about his one-day or his international career – he has made a very good start. I would of course want that he continues as much as possible for the country.”Since I have batted with him in domestic cricket, it didn’t seem like we were batting together for the first time today. So whenever we bat together we are very comfortable with each other. We don’t even have to call when taking a run.”It is not because we have played together for long – I have only played five or six matches with him in the Premier Division and a few games in BPL – but there is a good understanding. His approach is appropriate for international cricket.”That is high praise from one of Bangladesh’s greatest cricketers. Mosaddek should feel happy about it, but he can’t get carried away. His 75 on debut showed promise but one innings does not make a good batsman. His technique and temperament will be tested again and again on the world stage – possibly even as soon as the second innings of the Colombo Test.What’s going in his favour is a giant appetite for long-form cricket. In a country that prioritises the limited-overs game, Mosaddek struck seven centuries between February 2015 and March 2016, including scores of 250, 282 and 200 not out. He has all the ingredients for success. Can he mix them in just the right way?

'Jhulan Is Number One'

Jhulan Goswami became the highest wicket-taker in women’s ODIs today. Here’s a look at some of the reactions from around the cricketing world.

ESPNcricinfo staff09-May-2017

Pujara in Sri Lanka: Three Tests, three tons

Sachin Tendulkar is the only overseas batsman to score more centuries than Cheteshwar Pujara in Sri Lanka

Bharath Seervi03-Aug-20172 – Number of Indians to have brought up 4000 Test runs in fewer innings than Cheteshwar Pujara’s 84. Virender Sehwag had got there in 79 innings and Sunil Gavaskar in 81 while Rahul Dravid got there in his 84th innings. Pujara is one of four Indians to score over 4000 runs in their first 50 Tests.3 – Centuries for Pujara in three Tests in Sri Lanka. He had scored 145* at SSC in 2015 and 153 in Galle in the first Test of this series before making another century on Thursday. Sachin Tendulkar is the only overseas batsman to score more centuries in Sri Lanka. Outside India and Sri Lanka, Pujara has just one century in 29 innings.52 – Balls taken by Pujara to move from 50 to 100. He had taken 112 balls to reach his half-century. At one point in the innings, he had faced 94 balls for 28 runs, amounting to a strike rate of 30.85. He finished the day with a strike rate of 56.88.743 -Combined runs made my India on the opening days in Galle (399 for 3) and SSC (344 for 3), in this series. scored by India on the first days of the Tests of this series: 399 for 3 in Galle and 344 for 3 in this Test at SSC. These include four centuries.5.66 – India’s run rate in the last 15 overs of the second session, in which they struck 85 runs. Overall, the second session produced 137 runs off 30 overs at 4.56. They scored 101 for 1 in first session at run rate of 3.60 and 106 for 0 at 3.31 in the final session.6 – Number of consecutive fifty-plus scores for KL Rahul. He became only the third Indian to record this. Gundappa Viswanath, between 1977 and 1978, and Rahul Dravid, between 1997 and 1998, are the other two to have recorded this streak. Rahul hasn’t converted any of these fifties into hundreds.ESPNcricinfo Ltd6 – Number of double-century partnerships for India in Sri Lanka. But this is the first time two such stands have been recorded by India on the same tour. Shikhar Dhawan and Pujara added 253 runs for the second wicket in Galle. Here, Rahane and Pujara’s stand is unbroken at 211 after the first day.138 – Rangana Herath’s bowling average in this series, easily his worst in a series where he’s played more than one Test. He’s bowled 72 overs for 276 runs and has just two wickets to show so far.34.25 – Virat Kohli’s average against left-arm spinners in Tests this year. He has got out four times to left-arm spin in 10 innings this year, the most against any type of bowling. Before this year, he was out only twice to left-arm spinners and averaged 170.50. He’s been out to Taijul Islam, Shakib Al Hasan, Steve O’Keefe and Herath this year.

Pandya's six-hitting ability is special

Former India opener Aakash Chopra looks at five talking points from the series opener

Aakash Chopra18-Sep-20172:43

Gambhir: A long way to go before comparing Pandya and Stokes

Good length not good on flat Indian pitches
Australia dismissed the first three Indian batsmen with reasonably full-length deliveries and the next two well-set batsmen with the short ball. While the good-length ball mostly serves the purpose of keeping batsmen quiet, it doesn’t create wicket-taking chances. But if you bowl really full, you encourage an attacking response from the batsman, which could lead to mistakes.Against Ajinkya Rahane and Virat Kohli, Coulter-Nile left a huge gap in the cover region. He had only a square point and a slightly wide mid-off. He pitched fuller, got the ball to shape away, and both batsmen fell to expansive drives. The ball to Manish Pandey was a half-volley, which he edged to the wicketkeeper. I often wonder why more new-ball bowlers don’t pitch really full and wide once in a while when the batsman isn’t fully set. While the mind may tell the batsman to be cautious, it also sees the ball that full and automatically reacts. This conflict can result in a mistake.Once both Rohit Sharma and Kedar Jadhav were set, and the new ball had stopped moving, bowling fuller wasn’t a wicket-taking option anymore and so Marcus Stoinis used the short ball to good effect. Chepauk has fairly large square boundaries and challenging the Indian batsmen to take them on was a ploy worth trying. The noteworthy point was the line of the short-pitched deliveries: none were at the body and the batsmen had to drag them from outside off, which resulted in the lack of control in executing the pull.No boundaries behind square until the 45th over
Bowling full or short wasn’t the only plan the Australian quicks had. The were also disciplined enough to consistently bowl outside off. Until the 45th over of the innings, India did not score a boundary behind square on the leg side. There were no fine tickles or guiding shots because you can play these shots only to balls veering in towards leg stump.Hardik Pandya blasted five sixes in his 66-ball 83•Getty ImagesPandya’s six-hitting ability special
There was nothing wrong with what Adam Zampa did when Hardik Pandya creamed him for three consecutive sixes. The legspinner bowled flatter and fuller in the hope of making it difficult for Pandya to get under the ball and get requisite elevation. But that’s where Pandya stands out, for unlike most batsmen, he doesn’t need to use his feet to gain momentum while going aerial down the ground. Anyone who can hit sixes against spin without using the feet will be an asset because the bowler doesn’t have any inkling of the batsman’s plan and can’t adjust.If Zampa knew Pandya wouldn’t stop at just one six, he may have gone slower and wider on the following deliveries, but the lack of feet movement from Pandya kept the bowler guessing. The other thing that stands out in Pandya’s hitting is his preference of targeting the straight boundary as much as possible.Faulker’s death-bowling inconsistency
Until a few years ago, James Faulkner used to be a good end-overs bowler. He was capable of bowling yorkers consistently and the back-of-the-hand slower ball was a well-disguised delivery. But that’s a thing of the past. His attempted yorkers are no longer finding the right spot and his pace is ideal for hitting the length ball or the full toss. And if the yorker isn’t landing perfectly, the slower one also loses its sting because it is overused. It was a tactical goof up on Steven Smith’s part to let Faulkner bowl two of the last three overs. While it’s understandable that Smith was tempted to use Cummins and Coulter-Nile in short bursts to break partnerships, it was a little ambitious to hope that Faulkner would finish strongly.Clueless against spin
The way some of the Australians batted against wristspin indicated they didn’t have a clue as to which way the ball would turn. It was all the more perplexing because some of them have played in the IPL for a while. While the two new balls did make it a little tougher for Australia early on, the presence of five fielders in the circle for 13 overs should have negated that disadvantage, if only their middle-order batsmen could read wristspin.

Ingram's feats tell of a game rediscovered

Few batsmen are hitting a cricket ball better than Colin Ingram at the moment as his destructive performances for Glamorgan attract global attention

Vithushan Ehantharajah02-Aug-2017″It just felt like I was meant to be playing out here,” says Colin Ingram, as rain hammers away on the roof of the pavilion at the SSE Swalec Stadium in Cardiff. It’s not long before the deluge ends what might have been a Friday night blockbuster with Surrey, without a ball bowled. Not for the first time in this summer’s NatWest T20 Blast, a Glamorgan home fixture was sodden by the Welsh weather. Ingram has a peek outside, shrugs and smiles.There are not many people hitting a white ball better than Ingram at the moment. The numbers say it all: with three hundreds and two fifties, he made the most runs in this year’s Royal London Cup – 564 – followed by two T20 hundreds in six Blast innings so far. That builds on his 2016 tournament of 502 runs and 29 sixes (equal top with Chris Gayle).It is in the game’s shortest form that Ingram’s work is truly distinctive. Of the 10 players, at the time of writing, who have scored more than 1000 T20 runs in English domestic cricket since the start of 2015, Ingram (1162 – third most) has the highest strike rate – 165.05. As a No. 3 batsman, in that same period, he has developed a near-complete game for the various scenarios packed into 20-over cricket – striking at 151 in the Powerplay, 145 in the middle before shifting up a couple of gears to 210 in the final five overs.Glamorgan worked quickly to secure his services for two more years, solely for limited-overs cricket. The rest of the world are starting to pay attention too: he is currently in talks with the Adelaide Strikes ahead of their Big Bash League season. If there are not many bludgeoning better than Ingram, at 32, it could be because there aren’t many as comfortable in their own skin. For that, Ingram credits his move to county cricket.”It felt like starting a new chapter,” he says of the decision he took in 2015 to draw a line under part of his career and sign for Glamorgan on a Kolpak contract.

Unfortunately I ran into a few really good bowlers when I ended up opening, which wasn’t my preferred position

Although there was anger at the spate and quality of South African players going Kolpak this summer, there was understanding and sympathy for Ingram two years ago. Here was a player with 31 ODIs and nine T20Is spaced out between 2010 and 2013, who batted in every position across the top seven. There are regrets, but none that keep him awake at night.”I definitely feel I held my own at international level and put in performances,” he says. “Unfortunately I ran into a few really good bowlers when I ended up opening, which wasn’t my preferred position. But when you get a chance to play international cricket, you don’t turn it down. It was an unsettling period because I did move around, I was in and out of the side and I didn’t feel backed. But that’s top-end sport. If you’re in the top 15 players in the country, you take whatever you can get. I tried to make the most of it. I’m a positive sort of guy.”A switch of Bays, from Nelson Mandela to Cardiff – at least for six months of the year – has proved cathartic, allowing Ingram to renew his free-wheeling younger years in Port Elizabeth where he learned his trade on slower pitches similar to those in modern county cricket.Failure had changed Ingram, curbing an intent that he has finally rediscovered. “I started off quite fluent and then became a bit of a blocker. As most players do, you wiggle your way through and find a way. Then, in the last couple of years of my career in South Africa, I became quite tight and nervous under pressure all the time. Coming out here, I wanted to let myself loose and rediscover my game.” And how: this season he has hit 28.3% of balls faced for boundaries.”After playing international cricket, when you have a lot riding on each performance, you can get quite tight. So I’ve come out here and really enjoyed my game and rediscovered a lot. The freedom has come with that and it has been great.”Colin Ingram pummels another boundary•Getty ImagesSouth Africa’s limited-overs sides are in a constant state of flux, but no one from Cricket South Africa has asked Ingram to reconsider his position, apart from a moment last year when a national selector shouted across a packed room to tell him he had proved his point and that it was time to come home. A heckle taken with a heavy pinch of salt.Ingram’s affinity for the UK goes beyond his stint as Somerset’s overseas player in 2014. He’d long been wise to the rhythm of county cricket through a childhood of anecdotes from a schoolfriend’s father, Ken McEwan – a stylish batsmen who played for Essex between 1974 and 1985, and who himself was introduced to county cricket by Tony Greig. “I grew up listening to stories from Kenny and, from then, it was something I always wanted to do.”After making his first-class debut for Free State in 2004, before representing Eastern Province, Ingram had his first taste of cricket in England two years later with a stint for Spondon in Derbyshire. “I was only 20-years-old when I came to do that. I needed a job in the winter. I wasn’t really making much money playing cricket at that stage. I was taken in by families and made some great friends.”He returned in 2007 but in a far more precarious state, having lost his domestic contract. In search of the best-paid gig, Ingram spent 2008 north of the border, playing for Dunfermline.

“Those pay cheques are what paid my rent at home and kept me playing first-class cricket. It was an incredible experience at a young age to come out and pro at a club.”

“Yeah, that was… interesting. I didn’t play much cricket. It rained a lot. It wasn’t a particularly great standard but I had lost my contract so I was unemployed. I was just looking for a good deal.”Luckily, he had a supportive girlfriend, who upped sticks in the middle of her university studies to back his attempts to stay in the game and tour Scotland on the side. Ingram can’t help but laugh about aspects of this period – “from being stuck on the tip of Africa to Dunfermline!” – but appreciates the debt he owes to both cricket clubs for the platform they provided him.”Those pay cheques at Dunfermline are what paid my rent at home and kept me playing first-class cricket. It was an incredible experience at a young age to come out and ‘pro’ at a club and have that responsibility. I encourage our guys at home to get out as well; you learn a lot from it.”In 2013, Ingram opened South Africa’s batting during the Champions Trophy and the following year signed for Somerset as cover for his compatriot Alviro Petersen. It was this period at Taunton, with a shrinking window to get his place back in the national side and an enduring desire to experience county cricket to its fullest, that convinced him to go Kolpak. Unfortunately for Ingram, a change of focus at Somerset eventually saw the county reject him.At that point that Glamorgan captain and former South Africa international Jacques Rudolph came to Ingram’s aid. The pair were not particularly close – they’d brushed shoulders on a national camp before, recalls Ingram, but not much more – but their paths did cross in 2014. They bonded over a love of the outdoors.A month or so after his Somerset deal fell through, with every week pushing Ingram out of his eligibility window for a Kolpak deal, he got a defining call from Rudolph. “He just walked out of a wedding in South Africa,” remembers Ingram. “He asked me, ‘Are you keen to come back to England?’ I asked him ‘who do I need chat to.'”A day later, Glamorgan chief executive Hugh Morris called, gave him the sell. That was that. The next conversation would be his hardest. That girlfriend who selflessly moved to Dunfermline was now Ingram’s wife, with a different Celtic adventure put to her. “If that’s what we’ve got to do, it’s what we’ve got to do,” came her reply. So, Ingram, his wife and their daughter made the move. “I’ve been fortunate to have her support.”Ingram’s duty of care extends beyond those within the walls of his Cardiff apartment. Even at his team in South Africa, the Warriors – a “passionate, hard-working” domestic franchise, one of the smallest in the system, “growing with a lot of young guys” – his focus is skewed towards pushing those around him.Hugh Morris has stressed Ingram’s developmental role•Glamorgan CCCPart of Morris’ initial chat with Ingram was to underline that as much as he’d be needed out in the middle, his work behind the scenes would be just as important as Glamorgan bring more Welsh players through.Criticism of a lack of local players in their system has been widespread. Worcestershire director of cricket Steve Rhodes is one figure who took aim at the likes of Ingram and a Glamorgan squad packed full of imports.Ingram bit back: “I know what’s going on under my roof. Maybe for people from the outside it’s easy to look in and make a comment without knowing the full facts. But I know my role here is to work with the young Welsh players and bring them through.”One of those is Aneurin Donald, one of the brightest prospects on the circuit. “We talk a lot about the game,” Ingram says of the prodigy. “I’ve encouraged him to have separate accounts: your white ball account and a separate red ball account. If you structure it up in that way it makes it a lot more clear-cut and you don’t wander between the three formats. When you’re working on your red ball, you’re working on your red ball.”Ingram’s next focus is broadening his horizons on the international T20 circuit. The finer details are due to be ironed out with Jason Gillespie and the Strikers – he has everything crossed after a gig with Sydney Sixers fell through last season – but with this and another two years at Glamorgan, he has a solid base of work lined up.”A lot of the opportunities that have come from playing out here,” he acknowledges. “I’m really grateful for that.” He hopes, too, that he will be able to earn a spot in South Africa’s new Global T20 League this November.Pakistan celebrate dismissing Ingram for a duck•AFPAs for the IPL, that is a little more complicated because of the need for “No Objection Certificates” from Cricket South Africa and, in essence, from Glamorgan: Kolpak players are required to prioritise their county.”It gets quite confusing,” says Ingram. “I play six months back home and I play six months here so both sides feel they have some sort of right to me. But I think I’m moving towards a stage where I’d like to get out to international tournaments in the next two years. That’s my plan. Being 32, I know I’ve got loads of cricket in me. Without international cricket on the table, that’s the next challenge.”Prior to sitting down with ESPNcricinfo, as the rain begins, he is in deep conversation with Surrey’s Kumar Sangakkara, picking his brain about what options might be open to him in the off-season. In fact, Ingram breaks off his chat for this interview.”I’ve not seen Sanga in a while. I’m fortunate that I’ve played against and chatted to these really high, marquee players. So it’s great to touch base with him and throw out a few ideas and see what he thinks. Often in life it’s who you know and not what you know.”Ingram is right. Luckily for him, he is now one they’ll want to know, too.

How Australia's women got here

A World Cup is a celebration of how far the women’s game has come, yet it should not be forgotten that many advancements were a long time coming

Daniel Brettig22-Jun-2017In all the ugliness of Australian cricket’s pay dispute, there has been shared acknowledgement of the growth of the women’s game down under, recognition of its vitality and its equality with men’s cricket. Specifically, members of the national team, state squads and WBBL teams, stand to earn far more money than they currently receive.That shared realisation comes at a time when women’s sport in Australia is experiencing a major upsurge. The inaugural season of the AFL Women’s competition earlier this year was a vibrant success. Netball has undergone a reinvention in the shape of the new Super League. Amid this mood, some have wondered why the AFL’s new collective bargaining agreement does not include women, while Cricket Australia’s next MoU with the Australian Cricketers Association – however long it takes to emerge – will do so.In the days and hours before the start of this year’s women’s World Cup in England, it should not be forgotten that the first global limited-overs tournament was a women’s affair – staged in 1973 with the financial assistance of the businessman, philanthropist and sports lover Sir Jack Hayward, whose name emblazoned the initial trophy.The fact the women’s game had a showpiece of that kind before the men is something to be proud of, but it also serves as a reminder of how long its players and administrators have had to fight for the sort of pay and conditions that had for long been awarded to the men’s game. Were the AFL to follow the same trajectory as Australia’s Women’s National Cricket League, for example, it would be another nine years before any of its players were paid anything at all.It was in 1988 that Australia’s women’s team first gained a coach – Ann Mitchell – before lifting that year’s World Cup at home. Whereas the men’s event had been held more or less every four years since 1975, the women’s equivalent was, until the last decade, held at all manner of intervals in a variety of formats, due to the challenges of finding money for both its organisation and the travel and expenses of competing teams.Similar constraints afflicted the Australian Women’s Cricket Championships, which began in 1930-31, and for more than 65 years were restricted to a two-week carnival affair. When it was finally replaced by the more expansive WNCL in 1996-97, the players continued to take part on annual leave from their day jobs, as they did whenever representing Australia. The season after the inaugural WNCL, that leave was taken up by a visit to India for the 1997 World Cup, an event that featured two moments of transformative significance.The first of these was the uniforms: female players had long worn numerous styles of culottes (split skirts or shorts), a uniform taken to a wider audience by the allrounder Zoe Goss when she made a neat 29 and then dismissed Brian Lara in a charity match at the SCG in 1994. For reasons of health and safety relating to abrasive outfields, competing teams took to wearing pants during the 1997 tournament, and soon found that in terms of fielding especially, the game would go to another level.As was the case for Allan Border’s Australian men’s side a decade before, the team led by Belinda Clark found themselves going all the way to the tournament final, at Eden Gardens. To their surprise and delight, the cricket-loving public of Kolkata turned up in enormous numbers; the estimated crowd of 70-80,000 is still by a distance the largest assembled for a women’s match. Clark’s Australia defeated New Zealand to lift the trophy, then emulated Border and company by making an enraptured lap of honour.A 1993 World Cup match. Till recently, women’s World Cups have been irregular, ad hoc events•PA PhotosThat same year Malcolm Speed was appointed as chief executive of the Australian Cricket Board, and after negotiating his own pay fight with the nascent ACA, he began looking towards the amalgamation of the governing body with the Australian Women’s Cricket Council, later Women’s Cricket Australia. This process, pushed in part by the desire of the Australian Sports Commission to ensure that men’s and women’s sports worked more closely together, was largely smooth, albeit with one hold-up – the ACB’s state-appointed board members were opposed to adding a director from the women’s organisation. Ironically their opposition meant that the chair, Quentin Bryce, went on merely to become Australia’s Governor-General.By way of compromise, a women’s cricket committee was set up, while the ACB’s legal counsel, Andrew Twaits, worked with Bryce and WCA’s executive team on a staged amalgamation. Among other things, this meant opening up access for female players to programmes and facilities like the National Cricket Centre (then known as the Cricket Academy). The national team also benefited from a greater level of support staff. These were steps forward from the dismissive words of the former ACB chief executive Graham Halbish in response to questions about why there were no women at the Academy: he said it was “unashamedly elitist”. At the same time, work began on ways to ensure that women had a pathway into the game beyond the introduction of mixed-gender Kanga Cricket.The ICC followed suit in the mid-2000s, and organisation of women’s global events and development came under the same umbrella as the men. Among the most tangible signs of this change was how events were covered by television; the semis and the final of the 2005 event were broadcast, then ten games were covered in 2009, and more have been at each event since. The World T20 has meanwhile been played as a dual event, with the women’s matches watched by male team-mates. In 2010, Australia’s teams made it to both finals, but it was the women – by now referred to as the Commonwealth Bank Southern Stars – who came up trumps.

Whereas the men’s event had been held more or less every four years since 1975, the women’s equivalent was, until the last decade, held at all manner of intervals in a variety of formats, due to the challenges of finding money

While amalgamation meant bigger events and broader coverage, matters of pay and conditions were still a long way from satisfactory resolution. New South Wales led the way in Australia, first paying the Breakers team small wages for the 2005-06 season, coincidentally (or perhaps not) beginning a run of ten consecutive WNCL titles for NSW. Lisa Sthalekar, the spin bowler so pivotal to the success of both NSW and Australia during this period, remembers the change that wrought.”We weren’t paying for flights and accommodation to play, but it was expected this was the amount of time we had to take off from work and we had to use our annual leave,” she says. “Up to that point, it cost players thousands of dollars a year [in lost work] to represent their state.”It was to be another three years before the national team was remunerated above basic expenses, initially offered retainers of A$5000 to A$15,000. One player who missed out on the modest windfall was Cathryn Fitzpatrick, the fast bowler who retired in 2007 and would later coach Australia to the 2013 World Cup victory in India. This lag period was the cause of some consternation, and there were numerous other flashpoints as the women began to assert their rights as fellow cricketers. Talks with the ACA, eventually leading to full membership in 2011, began in 2006.That was also the year in which the national women’s team felt slighted on Allan Border Medal night, when Clark’s peerless batting record and many years of service to Australia were not recognised in any meaningful way. Alex Blackwell was moved to write a letter to CA’s chief executive, James Sutherland, questioning the oversight. Clark, who has gone on to a vaunted role as head of the NCC in Brisbane, was more suitably recognised with induction to the Australian Cricket Hall of Fame at the 2014 awards presentation.Class of ’97: Belinda Clark and her triumphant side take a victory lap around Eden Gardens•Craig Prentis/Getty ImagesThe forming of a relationship with the ACA allowed players the benefit of access to financial support for university study, an option taken up far more readily by the women, who were used to juggling cricket and other pursuits. “The male players were purely focused on cricket rather than study,” Sthalekar points out. “There was a big push to get them to do other things, but the female players obviously always had a career and cricket was just the ‘hobby’ so to speak. Financially that helped out so many players because it meant they didn’t have to work as much as they had to previously.”On the field, other nations had closed the gap with Australia and the other two traditional powers, England and New Zealand. The 2009 home World Cup was something of an disaster in terms of results for Australia, while away from the middle the team was riven by differences between players and coaching staff.”The 2009 World Cup was our worst ever,” Sthalekar remembers. “We came fourth, lost to India twice, lost to New Zealand via Duckworth-Lewis, and even when we won, we weren’t dominating games. South Africa and the West Indies pushed us a lot more than we would have expected.”That was a bit of a wake-up call. That was when we felt like everyone’s caught us. Also from 2005 to 2009, we still won series but we weren’t dominating.”A bit like the men’s team around that similar period, you had a lot of stars of the game. They left, and so it took some time to regenerate. In 2009 we brought in a lot of younger players for their first tournament, rather than having a mix of youth and experience, which I think hurt us as well.”

“There were some players who had the superstition that if they didn’t have a good night’s sleep, they’d play well. So if you’re rooming with someone like that, it makes things kind of difficult!”Lisa Sthalekar on problems with sharing rooms on tour

Yet out of the chaos, a new breed emerged. Meg Lanning, Ellyse Perry and Alyssa Healy, to name three, had looked likely to be major contributors from their junior years, and in the more integrated environment developed over the preceding decade, were carefully guided through to places at the top level. In Lanning, Australia found a batting talent to rank with Clark, while Perry’s all-round skills and considerably pacy bowling made her the sort of all-trades performer the men’s team envied in the years after coming off second best to Andrew Flintoff in 2005.While the performance of the team improved, there remained areas of consternation. Australia’s men had stopped needing to share twin rooms on tour as far back as 1998. Likewise well-planned itineraries and business-class seats had been central to the sort of environment encouraged by Pat Howard when he became CA’s team performance manager following the Argus review in 2011.”One thing I remember a group of us advocating for in 2012 was single rooms on tour,” Sthalekar says. “We felt that everyone has their different time clocks when you’ve got jet lag, and also when one person got sick, everyone got sick throughout the team. There were some players who had the superstition that if they didn’t have a good night’s sleep, they’d play well. So if you’re rooming with someone like that, it makes things kind of difficult!

In the days and hours before the start of this year’s women’s World Cup in England, it should not be forgotten that the first global limited-overs tournament was a women’s affair – staged in 1973

“So we spoke about that in 2012 and there was a period of time where CA weren’t going to do it. We mentioned as well the class we were flying, because, for instance, in 2012 we won the T20 World Cup and that evening we got on a flight back home from Sri Lanka. We didn’t really get a chance to celebrate, we were all in cattle class, having played a game, a couple of girls were sick, we were exhausted tired and sore, then a week later we started the WNCL. So that wasn’t great.”Now the girls are flying business class and things like that. It’s good to see those changes happen, because all of that helps. As much as people think it is a bit of a luxury, recovery is a huge part of any athlete’s armoury.”Lisa Sthalekar dives to take a catch. Professional contracts have allowed the current generation to “put their whole focus” on cricket, she says•Getty ImagesThese advancements took place in 2013, the year of the most recent World Cup, and following on from similar moves in England. They arrived at the time that CA announced vastly improved payments for the national team and also state players. These ranged from A$25,000 to A$52,000, plus tour payments and marketing bonuses for the national side, fully funded by CA to the tune of just over $1.5 million a year, rising incrementally each year. With the wages came a new mindset.”A lot of girls around that time chose cricket to be their profession for the first time,” Sthalekar says. “That meant a lot of the girls in pre-season were up at the National Cricket Centre, training for longer periods of time. It’s only in the past two or three years that’s happened. This World Cup campaign, they had three weeks and then two weeks. The level of training and preparation they can do is so different to, say, 2005 when we went to India. That was a seven-week tour and maybe a one-week camp before. Because players are getting paid a decent wage, it means they don’t have other work commitments so they’re allowed to put their whole focus on that.”The next step is in many respects the final one. From amateurs meeting at the behest of Hayward in England in 1973, Australia’s players will return home from this campaign in the confident expectation that they will be paid fully professional wages from 2017-18 onwards. Not only that, they will be incorporated into the same pay deal as the men, an outcome driven as much by the years of sweat and toil put in by the forebears of Lanning, Perry and company as by the reforming spirit of Australian women’s sport in 2017.”Both parties believe they should be in this MOU, one agreement for all players regardless of gender,” Sthalekar says. “Then you have CA just recently changing the name to the Australian women’s team rather than being known as the ‘Southern Stars’. It’s not just that but also saying it’s not the Australian team anymore, it’s the Australian men’s team and the Australian women’s team. As little as it cost to do that, I think it sends a very strong message.”

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