Dodgers Fans Greeted George Springer With Chorus of Boos in Game 3 of World Series

Rather unsurprisingly, George Springer received a less than warm welcome from fans at Dodger Stadium on Monday.

When Springer was introduced during warmups, boos from Dodgers fans cascaded across the stadium. The Blue Jays' slugger received a similar response when he stepped up to the plate as the game's first batter.

Of course, Springer was a member of the 2017 Astros World Series team that defeated the Dodgers in the Fall Classic. That team was later found to have been illegally stealing signs, which resulted in discipline for various members of the organization, but not players.

Since then, Springer, as well as anyone from that Astros team, has effectively been public enemy No. 1 in Los Angeles whenever they visit Dodger Stadium. Springer, eight years removed from that scandal, is still hearing the jeers despite being with a new team.

Toronto was expecting Springer to be booed in L.A. Blue Jays infielder Ernie Clement joked that he often joins in on the booing from opposing fans, suggesting that it actually serves to motivate Springer, who has made a habit of silencing his doubters with his play on the field.

'A true stalwart of Pakistan cricket, a catalyst for the women's game'

Tributes poured in from around the world as Sana Mir, the former Pakistan captain, called time on her 15-year international career

ESPNcricinfo staff25-Apr-2020

Captain, rebel, coach – the many hats of J&K's Samiullah Beigh

The former Jammu and Kashmir pacer has trail-blazed the way and is enjoying the current team’s success

Shashank Kishore in Jammu24-Feb-2020As Jammu & Kashmir fought to stay alive in their Ranji Trophy quarter-final against Karnataka, a dapper-looking government officer, who was in Jammu to attend meetings and finalise a tender for the installation of a water treatment plant, rushed to the Gandhi Memorial Science College ground to watch “my boys” attempt to do the unthinkable. He could’ve easily been in the tent meant for VIPs, but instead chose to sit and watch with the general public.Police officers on duty waved to him, a few players from the J&K bench walked up to shake hands during the tea interval while on a jog around the ground. Match officials, who’ve seen him from close quarters, smiled at him.Until three years ago, he was one of J&K’s key fast bowlers. Samiullah Beigh, the former captain, retired in 2017 after a run-in with the erstwhile administration. He says he hasn’t stepped into the JKCA office since, but keeps a close tab on the team.”You see, I’ve been a rebel of sorts,” Beigh tells ESPNcricinfo. “I’ve always called spade a spade. JKCA hasn’t honoured me in retirement or even during my playing days, but I have no regrets. Not many stand up for what is right, I did and I’m proud of that. Whatever issues I had was with JKCA, the players are dear to me, that is why I’m here.”Beigh leads a busy life these days. He has a bachelors degree in Civil Engineering and a masters degree in Structural Engineering. He currently works as an Assistant Executive Engineer in J&K’s Public Health Engineering department, with a team of 150 employees under him.He travels around the state for laying and installation of pipe networks and water filtration plants. It is one such assignment that has brought him to Jammu. He was to return to Srinagar, where he lives, the same day, but the temptation to watch “my boys”, many of whom he’s shared a dressing room with, was hard to resist. He even extended his stay to see if J&K could pull off a first-innings lead, and upset favourites Karnataka.We’re watching Shubham Khajuria and Suryansh Raina confidently bat against Karnataka’s pace attack. As he speaks, one eye is on the game. As and when ball hits the middle of the bat, he yells out words of encouragement.’Played, Chintu’ he repeats regularly. Khajuria is nicknamed Chintu. The two were one-time team-mates, Beigh a senior by a decade. Today, Khajuria is their leading batsman, a senior player. and Beigh is far away from the team, even if he’d like to contribute to the growth of cricket in the state.

“I’ve spent more on flights from my pocket, more than the match fees I earned initially, to fly back home to write exams during my B.Tech. Selectors would tell me on my face, ‘You won’t get a chance.’ But in club cricket next year, I used to do even better, so they couldn’t ignore me.”SAMIULLAH BEIGH

Last year, Beigh earned a coaching degree for junior cricket from Cricket Australia. He runs an academy in Srinagar which he founded with a few “like-minded people”. His day typically starts early with coaching, before he sets off for field work stretching to “10-12, maybe even 14 hours at times.” Such a routine can be draining, but Beigh says this is a life he has been used to since he was a teenager.”I came from a studious family. I’m the only rebel,” he laughs. “My younger brother is a doctor – ENT – my sister is a teacher, my mother a teacher and father was a revenue officer. There was no sports background to speak of. So once I told them I was serious about cricket, they said you can go, but you can’t miss exams, you can’t fail exams. So wherever I went, I used to carry my books. So I’m used to this intense schedule.”When I finished engineering in 2006, I got a scholarship at the MRF Pace Foundation after impressing in the trials. I spent five months learning the ropes of fast bowling under Dennis Lillee. It used to be two sessions of cricket, with a lunch break. Evening used to be our fitness work. And then at night, I used to go back to my room to study for GATE (an entrance exam for post-graduation degrees in Engineering).”I used to also teach Varun Aaron and Dhawal Kulkarni, they were in Class X or XII. So we used to all train in the morning until 4.30-5.00 pm, and in the night, we used to freshen up and sit to study in our rooms. This is how it was for six months. That is where I learnt the ABC of cricket. Whatever I did outside that was all natural ability. Because we didn’t have coaches here who were qualified enough to tell us what our weakness was, so in the name of coaching, our natural abilities were being compromised. The MRF stint was an eye-opener.”Beigh’s first-class career may have lasted 15 years, but he truly found his peak only after 2008. Prior to that, he was in and out of the team, mixing cricket with engineering. In his first five years, he featured in just six first-class matches as a result.”I’ve spent more on flights from my pocket, more than the match fees I earned initially, to fly back home to write exams during my B.Tech,” he says. “Selectors would tell me on my face, ‘You won’t get a chance.’ But in club cricket next year, I used to do even better, so they couldn’t ignore me.”But I also made mistakes, I never told them I had to miss matches for exams. I used to cook up excuses. ‘Important call from home’, ‘mother not feeling well’ – she wasn’t yes, but not so bad that I had to miss matches. I had thoughts of focusing completely on studies at times because cricket had no career security. My first match fees was INR 1500 per day. For five one-dayers, I received 7500 INR. It was a very small amount.”Giving up studies was a heavy risk. I played it safe, that’s the one thing I keep thinking about. If it would’ve happened now, I would have taken the risk. Now, even if you don’t make it to the top, if you’re a domestic stalwart and play a few IPL seasons, your career is secure.”Even after 17 years, my parents tell me, ‘You could’ve done better in studies’. Now, that perception is changing among people and parents. I was given no relaxation for sports during my graduation and masters. They realised only after I finished that I could do it, because I was made captain.”

“I used to also teach Varun Aaron and Dhawal Kulkarni, they were in Class X or XII. So we used to all train in the morning until 4.30-5.00 pm, and in the night, we used to freshen up and sit to study in our rooms. This is how it was for six months. That is where I learnt the ABC of cricket. The MRF stint was an eye-opener.”SAMIULLAH BEIGH

In 2007, Beigh received an offer to move to Railways. It brought with it not just the promise of playing for a “slightly better team” but also job security. But the basis of that offer was to do with his cricketing abilities. On a flat, Karnail Singh Stadium deck, he bent his back to pick up five wickets against a strong Railways side. J&K lost but Beigh had made a mark.”There was an upsurge after my MRF stint,” he remembers. “I was on the brink of getting neglected forever by my state, but word got around that a J&K fast bowler is here. So I remember, once I returned, I was picked for a match against Railways in Delhi. Sanjay Bangar was captain. That is the match that changed my career.”After the match, Bangar spoke to a few Railways authorities, and they handed over an appointment letter as an engineer that evening. It was a posting with Western Railways, so I had to move to Mumbai. It was an awesome feeling; he didn’t even ask me if I had a job or anything. He felt if I had to play at a better level, I had to choose a better team, because J&K was going nowhere those days.”There was logic, I was convinced, but I didn’t want to go to Mumbai, because it’d mean settling down there forever. Somehow, I also felt the job didn’t resonate with my profile. I felt it was too small a job, a Junior Engineer, non-gazetted post. I thought for career’s sake I can sacrifice, but for how long? I talked to my family, they didn’t agree. Here, we’re all attached to our families. If any other state offered me, I could’ve played during the season and returned home after it, but for a full-time settlement outside, it didn’t feel right. But in that match, I realised I had the potential.”Beigh gave up on the offer, just like he had a year earlier when he was offered INR 75 lakh by the Indian Cricket League. “Dhruv Mahajan, Abid Nabi had left, so I didn’t feel the time was right. The team needed me,” he says. “I spoke to my parents too, and they weren’t in favour of the cash. Karsan Ghavri was one of the team coaches, and he’d sent me the contract papers. He’d seen me in a game in Tripura, so he wanted to sign me up with the team he was associated with. As difficult as it was to tell him no, I had to do it.”Hardeep Singh, Samiullah Beigh and Ram Dayal after the win•Devashish FuloriaFrom 2009 to 2015, Beigh enjoyed his best years for J&K. It coincided with the side’s first-ever appearance in the Ranji Trophy quarter-finals in 2013-14. Rewarded with a promotion to Group A the following season, they went on to upset Mumbai. He also led the state in the same period.”As J&K cricketers, we learn to cherish small things in life,” he says. “Some people may say, ‘so what, it’s just one win’, but they wouldn’t know the struggle for that one win. For me the progress we made despite all our challenges, both administrative and political, is a big win. There is real passion for cricket here. People are crazy about the game, but don’t know how to go further. If this game is in Srinagar, I can give it to you in writing: there would’ve been 5000-6000 people.”The day’s play draws to a close. Beigh is ready to leave, but delays booking his return tickets. J&K end on 88 for 2, and the first-innings dream is alive. He calls his superiors and informs them of a change in plan. “I’ve taken leave till Monday,” he says. “My team doesn’t get here often. I have to be here when they do, right? Hopefully they will qualify.”Beigh’s passion for cricket is a mere reflection of the love the region has for the game, and he wishes the system becomes more streamlined than it was when he started off as a confused teenager. “That’s the dream. When kids can fearlessly say they can manage both cricket and studies here. One day, one day, it will happen.”

Sheldon Cottrell: 'I wouldn't say that I'm a sure pick' in the West Indies side

West Indies quick talks about how he never takes his spot for granted, Patriots’ chances in the CPL and more

Matt Roller12-Aug-2020He has played in every one of their last 20 T20Is, but Sheldon Cottrell admits that he still doesn’t feel like an automatic pick in the West Indies side in the shortest format.Cottrell, the left-arm seamer, is one of the few automatic picks in West Indies’ first-choice T20I bowling attack as things stand, with back-to-back World Cups coming up in 2021 and 2022. But heading into the Caribbean Premier League (CPL), where he will represent St Kitts and Nevis Patriots, Cottrell feels that he cannot simply rest on his laurels.”What I’ve gotten my success in the West Indies team from is saying to myself that my spot is not sure,” he told ESPNcricinfo. “That mentality keeps me fighting. I’m always going to fight.”I wouldn’t say that I’m a sure pick, no. Performances speak for themselves, so once I put them in, I’m going to keep my place.”For Cottrell, the dream of playing in a T20 World Cup final and helping West Indies defend their title feels within touching distance. Back in 2016, when they beat England in the final, Cottrell had only a handful of international caps to his name, and was at home watching with his family.”I was in my living room with my family, TV on loud,” he recalled. “I’m the one who has to teach my family about the game, and when Carlos [Brathwaite] hit the first six, everyone erupted like the game had been won.”Me being a fan of the game, I was sitting there like: OK, I know this can change in the blink of an eye. But when he hit that last six? Oh my god. Everyone erupts. We were drinking, laughing – it was like we were there.”I can imagine being in a final, and I would think about the fans, looking back at how happy my family and I were at the time. All those emotions and all that happiness would be a joy for me to bring to all of them. Winning that would be beyond my dreams.”

“I’m the type of person who creates his own energy. Most times, the fans don’t matter to me on the field, because I’m so focused and zoned in on my job and what I have to do.”Sheldon Cottrell

Cottrell returned to small-group training in Jamaica a month or so ago, and soon got over the initial aches and pains that came after a long break. He will be leading the attack for Patriots in the CPL, with significant expectations on his shoulders after they were hit by the withdrawals of Fabian Allen (missed flight), Rassie van der Dussen (travel difficulties), Dennis Bulli (Covid-19 positive) and Sunny Sohal (family reasons), plus a late change to their coaching staff.”I’ve had a lot of rest, so my mind is in a wonderful place right now,” Cottrell said. “Jamaica’s a beautiful place and I haven’t been at home for this long for the past two or three years. I’ve had the chance to explore and relax my mind – just set my mind into a good place.”I’ve been more disciplined in my training, mainly in areas that I haven’t had a chance to work on while playing. This is one of the positives of all this – I’ve gotten to strengthen some areas that the time wasn’t there for while playing.”During the lockdown, I’ve been thinking about things that I can do and since I’m back bowling now, I’m going to put them into play. I’ve got a couple of deliveries I’ve been working on – I don’t want to give too much away. But even if I start with the new ball, I’ve got a few things up my sleeve.”Following the CPL, Cottrell will travel to the UAE to fulfil his $1million contract with Kings XI Punjab in the IPL, a tournament that he describes as “every modern-day cricketer’s dream”. He admitted that it would be strange in both tournaments to play without fans, but thinks that he can “create his own energy” to avoid any dip in performance.”How am I going to feel? Playing without spectators is something new for most international cricketers, but I’m the type of person that’ll put in 110% no matter what, so I’m not too worried about that.”I’m the type of person who creates his own energy. Most times, the fans don’t matter to me on the field, because I’m so focused and zoned in on my job and what I have to do. Whenever I salute, it’s all about passion and respect for my military colleagues: I didn’t start out doing it for the fans.”And as for the Patriots’ chances? “It’s a well-rounded team. I’ll be realistic: we’re pushing for the top four and will take it from there, but we have a strong team with the inclusion of Chris Lynn and Ish Sodhi.”Alzarri Joseph too, he’s a cool customer. There’s nothing too hype about him, but he’s gone from strength to strength. With what he’s been through in his personal life, I feel for him, and I can see that he’s a strong person. He’ll be trying to put his hand up.”

Narine, Brathwaite and more – CPL 2020 watch list

ESPNcricinfo picks out seven players for whom this season could mean a big deal

Deivarayan Muthu16-Aug-20201:24

Will be strange to play without crowds – Ross Taylor

.Sunil Narine (Trinbago Knight Riders)“You can’t let a guy with a broken finger win games.” That was the St Kitts & Nevis Patriots coach Robin Singh talking about Narine after the offspinner claimed 2 for 10 in his four overs to help Trinbago Knight Riders secure a home qualifier in the last CPL.That was in October. Since then Narine hasn’t played top-flight cricket, thanks to that finger injury. The Knight Riders went down to eventual champions Barbados Tridents in the second qualifier and subsequently Narine missed West Indies’ tour of the subcontinent.Narine has warmed himself up by playing the Central Super League (CSL) – a T10 tournament – but is he fit and ready for the CPL, and then the IPL? Can he also rattle off quick runs at the top? If Narine is indeed back to top form, he could play a key role for Knight Riders on the usually spin-friendly tracks at home in Trinidad and carry that form into the other Knight Riders franchise in the IPL.Carlos Brathwaite (Jamaica Tallawahs)He just turned 32, but Brathwaite must know his career is at crossroads. In 2019, he not only lost the T20I captaincy but also his spot in the West Indies team across formats. Then the Patriots, where he had played from the team’s inception four seasons ago, did not retain him despite his leading them to play-offs in 2019 CPL.Luckily, the Tallawahs have picked him for this CPL, allowing him another opportunity to prove his worth and regain his position in West Indies squads. The T20 World Cup will now be played in October 2021, but Brathwaite knows he will face stiff competition from not just Kieron Pollard, West Indies’ white-ball captain, but the two other senior allrounders in Dwayne Bravo, who came out of T20I retirement earlier this year and Andre Russell.Sunil Narine celebrates a wicket•CPL T20/ Getty ImagesShimron Hetmyer (Guyana Amazon Warriors)The 23-year old is among the most exciting batsmen in the Caribbean, so much so that Andy Roberts recently picked him out as one for the future. However, Hetmyer probably hasn’t had enough game-time in the lead-up to the CPL, having pulled out of the England tour, citing concerns around the Covid-19 situation. Earlier, in IPL 2019, he got only five games at Royal Challengers Bangalore and managed only 90 runs at an underwhelming strike rate of 123.28. A productive stint on the spin-friendly tracks in Trinidad & Tobago may not be a bad way to tune up for the IPL, which will be played on fairly similar pitches out in the UAE.Chris Lynn (St Kitts & Nevis Patriots)The hard-hitting Australian opening batsman missed last CPL after he signed for the Euro T20 Slam which has failed to take off. Subsequently, Lynn lost his place in Australia’s T20I side, which led to his taking a swipe at the selectors.But Lynn did bounce back, blasting 113 not out off 55 balls in PSL 2020. He will now reunite with his Lahore Qalandars team-mate and fellow Australian Ben Dunk at Patriots. Can Lynn regain his big-hitting form and then make a seamless switch to Mumbai Indians in the IPL later this year?Chris Green (Guyana Amazon Warriors)The 26-year old offspinner has taken over the captaincy of Amazon Warriors from Shoaib Malik, who has pulled out of the league, but their rivals Knight Riders may keep an even closer eye on him. Green was suspended from bowling due to an illegal action in January earlier this year after Kolkata Knight Riders had snapped him up for his base price of INR 20 lakh in the IPL auction. Brendon McCullum, who is head coach both Knight Riders’ teams, had also backed Green to overcome the setback.After undergoing remedial work, Green’s action was cleared in June, but with the Covid-19 pandemic disrupting the cricket calendar, he’s yet to test it out in a high-profile game.Rovman Powell (Jamaica Tallawahs)Another allrounder, who is in West Indies’ mix, Powell will have to juggle batting, bowling, and captaincy this CPL. After shellacking a 38-ball century in the Super50 Cup in 2019, Powell was back in West Indies’ T20I side for the Sri Lanka tour. However, he did miss a major chunk of the CPL that year due to injury, and Tallawahs finished at the bottom, with just two wins from ten games. The Chris Gayle-Ramnaresh Sarwan controversy has soured Tallawahs’ build-up, and the onus is now on Powell to rouse the team.Asif Ali (Jamaica Tallawahs)After a hot streak in PSL in 2018, when he helped Islamabad United win, Ali became a T20 globetrotter, earning gigs in the Mzansi Super League, Bangladesh Premier League, and Global T20 Canada. This, however, will be his first taste of the Caribbean Premier League. Ali doesn’t quite have recent form on his side: he scored a mere 81 runs in seven innings in PSL 2020 at an average of 16.20 and strike rate of 150. Having also been jettisoned from Pakistan’s white-ball sides, can Ali serve a reminder of his power-hitting?

South Africa's mixed BLM messages epitomise the country's moral maze

Refusal to take a knee during England series comes across as tone-deaf given Apartheid history

Firdose Moonda24-Nov-2020You already know that South Africa’s players will not take a knee in their upcoming white-ball series against England but maybe not exactly why or how they came to that decision. And you may also wonder how a team that represents a country with a long-divisive history and a slew of racial issues have chosen not to display support for the defining global antiracist movement of the day. And you may also ask why that same team is not willing to engage in more discussion around the issue, having refused to take the question at a press engagement on Tuesday.If not South Africans, then who would be best-placed to talk about the evils of racism and its legacy, having experienced it in legal form until less than 30 years ago? Shouldn’t South Africans be at the forefront of inclusion, as promised by the rainbow nation vision?The current crop say that, at their core, they support BLM, as they showed at the exhibition 3TC match in July, which took place at the height of cricket’s engagement with the movement. All 24 players and every member of support staff including director of cricket Graeme Smith took a knee and wore an armband with the BLM logo. That, they say, was enough.Now that South Africa are taking the field as a national team for the first time since BLM resurged over the winter, they want to turn their attention to other causes. They are likely to wear black armbands to show solidarity with the fight against gender-based violence (GBV) and to mourn more than 20,000 South Africans who have lost their lives to coronavirus. Flags at Newlands will fly at half-mast, heeding South African president Cyril Ramaphosa’s call for five days of national mourning from November 25 to 29, a period that immediately precedes December’s 16 days of activism against GBV which takes place every year ahead of the festive season.South Africa is a complex country, with myriad, inter-related social issues and a history of violence. It came out of colonialism only to be enveloped in legalised racial segregation in the form of Apartheid. Its transition to democracy was bloodless, but it remains for many, an unsafe country: Gallup ranks it the fifth most dangerous in the world.ALSO READ: Rabada ‘100%’ in support of BLM – but SA won’t be kneelingThe legacy of inequality looms to the extent that almost three-quarters of the country’s land is owned by a minority white population and 57 people die as a result of violence every day, including a woman every three hours. In short, this is a country where there are many causes to be concerned about and racism, poverty, crime and femicide are chief among them. In 2020, you can add Covid-19 to that list.At one level, it feels as if the national team is demonstrating a degree of tone-deafness after a fractured winter in which race issues were front and centre, both globally and at home. From what we can tell, they believe they discussed race at their culture camp in the Kruger National Park, where they decided on a new team culture that involves embodying empathy, respect and belonging.That’s an internal thing, with which the general public cannot engage, so how then is the South African team going to show South Africa, whom it represents, what they are about? Not explicitly, according to Boucher: “It’s not something you have to continue to show. It’s something you have to live.”Boucher’s point is one that is being made worldwide. Despite the repeated takings of knees, such as those we have seen in the English Premier League and Formula 1, it’s debatable whether any tangible change is being achieved. There are no crowds for us to be able to gauge whether racist abuse continues towards players of colour, but just last week a tabloid newspaper ran a story about Manchester United’s Marcus Rashford which the player himself saw as a racially-profiled piece on excess, while Lewis Hamilton is still the only driver of colour on the F1 circuit. Wouldn’t it be better if instead of taking a knee, people took action? It’s even been argued that taking the knee constantly diminishes its significance. If that is what South Africa means by living, not making gestures, they could have explained it as such, although they would then leave themselves open to questions over why they are then making gestures against GBV.The actions of the Sale Sharks players, poster boys for diversity in the Springboks’ World Cup win, brought up questions about the depth of the stand against racism in sport•Getty ImagesAll we can actually deduce from that is South Africa are willing to make some gestures but not others, and they won’t say why or who has made that decision. When Kagiso Rabada was asked about it on Monday, he said it was a “team decision”, and that “Mark stated the team won’t be kneeling”, but that he remained “100%” behind the BLM movement. When Rassie van der Dussen was asked on Tuesday, CSA stepped in and said it was “drawing a line” under the BLM issue.That is significant for two reasons. First, that line may not be CSA’s to draw, but society’s. CSA needs only look at the ECB attempting to do the same thing after England stopped taking a knee in their summer – and Michael Holding’s subsequent criticism of their explanations as “flimsy” and “lame” – to understand that this is a narrative cricket cannot control.Second, van der Dussen was the first current white international to come out in support of BLM, immediately after four former white players had criticised Lungi Ngidi for asking his team-mates to join the rest of the world in “making a stand”. Van der Dussen was followed by Faf du Plessis, Anrich Nortje, Dwaine Pretorius and Marizanne Kapp and all but the absent Kapp took a knee alongside others at the 3TC. Neither Boucher nor South Africa’s white-ball captain Quinton de Kock were present at that match either (for personal reasons) and neither of them have made any public statements over BLM, including explaining how the team agreed not to take a knee.LISTEN NOW: Switch Hit podcast – Gesture politics, and why cricket needs to keep talking about raceWhatever the reasons, ESPNcricinfo understands that it was not a unilateral decision and that there was a difference of opinion in the squad, with some players uncomfortable with taking a knee for religious reasons. This is something du Plessis hinted at when he posted on Instagram in July and wrote, “As a person and a Christian, I believe it’s my responsibility to strive, to treat every person I come across with the same respect and not judge them. We are all equal and loved the same way by God. There are no exceptions… The knee for me means it’s time to take action.” English rugby player Billy Vunipola touched on similar themes in explaining why he opposed the stance.Vunipola stood for his club Saracens, as did eight South African players, when the Sale Sharks took a knee in August. No reason was given for the South African players standing but the country’s sports minister Nathi Mtethwa asked the South African Rugby Union to look into the matter. No action was taken against the players. But Mthethwa has also been keeping a close eye on cricket and, though he cannot compel the team to take a knee, he could ask the question of why they do not, and he may have more luck getting an answer.Our own beliefs aside, whether they are the same or not, we can probably all agree that the act of taking a knee is one form of expression against racism. Maybe South Africa’s cricketers will show us others in the coming weeks. Maybe some of them will take a knee and some won’t (which may be divisive in its own way, but it would be honest) or maybe the gesture will quietly go away. The issue of racism will not, especially not in South Africa, and especially not yet.

R Ashwin's fortunes mirror India's on frustrating day at the SCG

The first day showed that the batsmen might need to do the heavy lifting if India are to win the SCG Test

Sidharth Monga07-Jan-20211:16

Chopra: Pant’s first miss was a ‘regulation’ catch

Two Tests in a row, R Ashwin has been introduced into the attack ahead of a third seamer in a country that helps fast bowlers more. Before this series, it had happened outside Asia and the West Indies only twice before in the first innings. Back in 2011-12, it was more a case of a youngster being sent to the gallows in Adelaide, and in 2018 at Edgbaston, India wanted to utilise the early moisture against a left-hand opening pair.Here in Australia, the story is different. India are fielding an inexperienced bowling attack – both at MCG and SCG, India have had a debutant fast bowler – because of injuries. Ashwin has stepped up as a leader of the attack, and has bowled exceptionally well, and for long hours. How Ashwin has gone has also been indicative of how well India have gone.In Melbourne, Ashwin came on to bowl in 11th over of the innings, with Australia at 25 for 1. In Sydney, he was held back with till the 14th over – because the rain break allowed the opening fast bowlers a longer first spell – with the score 36 for 1.It really was that sort of day for R Ashwin, and for India•AFP via Getty ImagesAt MCG, Ashwin’s first spell broke the back of Australia’s batting, getting a wicket early, exposing Steven Smith to a newish ball with the scoreboard pressure on and getting him out. At SCG, Ashwin started off just as well as he did in Melbourne, but things took a different route for him and for India pretty soon.For seven overs, Ashwin and Jasprit Bumrah, the two leaders of the attack, the likeliest men to take a wicket, put debutant Will Pucovski and Marnus Labuschagne under pressure. Mohammed Siraj, in only his second Test, then took over well from Bumrah. Only 13 runs came in the ten overs since Ashwin came on to bowl, Labuschagne faced 18 straight dots, and there was anticipation in the India camp.Related

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Pucovski: 'Probably my favourite day of cricket to date'

Australia on strong footing after Will Pucovski, Marnus Labuschagne fifties

Ashwin’s success this series has relied on shutting down right-hand batsmen by making them play to a heavily populated leg-side field. Which is what he kept doing in his first five overs, mixing it with the drifting delivery that challenges the outside edge. In his fifth over, he tried it once but pitched it too full, allowing Pucovski a cover-drive. Later, in the over, he corrected himself, drifting the ball away while staying short of a driving length, drawing a forward defensive, taking the outside edge… only for Rishabh Pant to drop it.Now dropped catches are as much a part of Test cricket as chances created are, but when it happens at a specialist position – wicketkeeper and slips, for example – the technique comes under the scanner. Former wicketkeepers immediately talked about Pant’s hands pointing at the ball, his fingers almost parallel to the ground and grabbing at the ball as opposed to hands pointing down and letting the ball come to him. ESPNcricinfo’s logs revealed that Pant has dropped nine of the 20 catches that have come his way off spin bowling in Test cricket.The one that got away – Rishabh Pant drops Will Pucovski off R Ashwin•Getty ImagesWhether Pant should play over Wriddhiman Saha is a debate for another day, but the fact that Australia got away after this drop and another half-chance spilled not long after tells you how much needs to go your way when you have a thin attack. Saha probably would have been playing had India not played Ravindra Jadeja as the fifth bowler and the sixth batsman. They had to provide some batting cover. Jadeja probably would not have been playing had Mohammed Shami not been injured.In Melbourne, everything went India’s way. That is what has to happen if you pull off an away win despite being so outmatched. Here things started to going against India. Ashwin was already into his 91st over of the series, this was a day-one pitch, the flattest of the three, and the margin of error kept diminishing. In the next four overs, Ashwin bowled perhaps more bad balls than he had done all series.A big part of Ashwin’s success has been in not allowing the batsmen to hit him against the spin into the off side. For that to happen, he either has to go too wide or too short. He began erring on the short side. In just one spell, he conceded 24 off-side runs to right-hand batsmen. In the whole Adelaide Test, he gave 28, in Melbourne 51.This was not the ideal time for debutant Navdeep Saini to be introduced either, and Pucovski laid into him. Fifty runs came in eight overs leading into tea. Steven Smith now got to start out against a 35-over-old ball. He didn’t have to face the first spell of any of India’s strike bowlers. The pitch was easier too. He got into his work like great batsmen do. Marnus Labuschagne went past 50 after two 40s. Despite more than a session lost to rain, Australia were near their highest score of the series. They batted with a control rate of 92%, well higher than the series rate, which is a comment both on the pitch and the not-surprisingly reduced accuracy of bowling.While it looked ominous for India, the day only put in perspective the immenseness of the effort their bowlers put in in Melbourne. They might just need the same from their batsmen to get out of this one.

Stats: All the records Pat Cummins and KKR raked up in their stunning rearguard

Also in the record books tonight: Chahar for a high, and Curran for a low

Sampath Bandarupalli21-Apr-2021171 – Runs scored by the Kolkata Knight Riders after the fall of the fifth wicket with the score on 31, the most by a team in an IPL match after losing five wickets. The Royal Challengers Bangalore held the previous record with 130 runs in 2016 against the Gujarat Lions, when they chased down 159 after being 29 for 5.The 171 runs by the Knight Riders is also the second-highest by any team in a T20 game after the fall of the fifth wicket. The highest is 184 by the Jamaica Tallawahs to chase down a target of 224 from being 41 for 5 against the Trinbago Knight Riders in CPL 2018 (courtesy 121* off 49 balls from one Andre Russell).ESPNcricinfo Ltd66* – Pat Cummins’ score while batting at No. 8 for the Knight Riders, the highest in IPL while batting at No. 8 or lower. Harbhajan Singh’s 64 against the Kings XI Punjab in 2015, also from No. 8, was the previous highest from such a batting position.0 – All-out totals higher than the 202 by the Knight Riders. The previous highest all-out total in the IPL was 188 by the Mumbai Indians way back in 2008, while chasing a 190-run target against the Kings XI Punjab.The Knight Riders are also just the second team in T20 history to register a 200-plus total after losing half their side inside 50 runs. The Jamaica Tallawahs, against the Trinbago Knight Riders in CPL 2018, recorded the first such instance.202 – The Knight Riders’ total is the highest by any team in T20 cricket with eight batters getting out in single digits. The previous highest with as many or more single-digit scores was 175 by Australia against Pakistan in the 2014 World T20. The Knight Riders’ total is also the first 200-plus total in T20s to include four ducks.ESPNcricinfo Ltd4 – Wickets for Deepak Chahar inside the first six overs in this match. He is the first player to take a four-wicket haul for the Chennai Super Kings in the IPL during the mandatory powerplay. The Super Kings took five wickets inside the first six overs, the first such instance for them in the IPL.Related

Deepar Chahar makes it CSK's night despite stunning Andre Russell and Pat Cummins counterattacks

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Natarajan not leaving SRH bubble for scans due to quarantine rule

58 – Runs conceded by Sam Curran in his four overs, the joint-most conceded by a Super Kings player in an IPL game. Mohit Sharma also conceded 58 runs against the Sunrisers Hyderabad in 2015. Curran’s third over cost 30 runs, the joint-most expensive over by a Super Kings bowler in the IPL. Lungi Ngidi also conceded 30 runs in the last year’s game against the Rajasthan Royals, where he conceded four consecutive sixes to Jofra Archer.0 – Instances of two individual fifties from Nos. 7 or lower in an IPL innings before today. The duo of Russell and Cummins produced just the second such instance in all T20 cricket. The first such occasion came during Jammu & Kashmir’s innings against Haryana in Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy 2012-13.

India women just lost a year, but not all the blame goes to Covid

Last year at this time, they were looking ahead to their first T20 World Cup final. After that, everything went downhill

Annesha Ghosh07-Mar-2021March 8 last year, International Women’s Day, was box office for women’s cricket. India’s maiden appearance in a T20 World Cup final, against defending champions Australia, drew 86,174 spectators at the MCG – the most ever at a women’s or men’s T20 World Cup final and for a women’s sporting event in Australia.The significance of it all had barely sunk in before the Covid-19 pandemic took hold. Global sport screeched to a halt by the close of March. While Australia, England, New Zealand, South Africa, West Indies and Pakistan all played at least one women’s series apiece in the 12 months since, India played none. By the time they face South Africa in Lucknow on March 7 they will be just a day short of a full year during which they have not played any international matches. The reasons why are a reflection of many ills, most of which have afflicted the women’s game in India for decades now.India’s women cricketers cut their teeth in international cricket in October 1976, three years after the formation of the Women’s Cricket Association of India (WCAI), which became the custodian of the women’s game in the country. Until January 1977, India played eight Tests, including two overseas. An inactive spell of nearly 12 months followed.The next time they took the field, in January 1978, it was for their World Cup debut, also their first ODI. India finished last in that four-team competition but the tournament itself was significant as the first international cricket championship of any kind to be held in India, a decade before the country hosted its first men’s World Cup.India women wouldn’t play any cricket for 54 months after that 1978 World Cup – largely due to an acute cash crunch at the WCAI, which was founded by volunteers and those from the political fraternity. India returned to action with the 1982 ODI World Cup and played 35 international matches until July 1986, the games fairly evenly spaced out in that period. Then all cricket stalled for them for 1644 days, or another four and a half years, their longest gap between two international matches.ESPNcricinfo LtdIn that period, Australia played 32 matches, New Zealand 24, England 23, Ireland 21, Netherlands 14, and Denmark six. India, on the other hand, stagnated, with the cash-strapped WCAI unable to afford to send them abroad or host other teams.”That [break] was horrible,” remembers Diana Edulji, India’s captain for the best part of the period between 1978 and 1993, and for nearly three years a member of the Committee of Administrators, appointed by India’s Supreme Court, that ran the BCCI between 2017 and 2019. “We missed the 1988 World Cup in Australia despite being in a training camp before that, because the sports ministry had withdrawn our entry from the tournament without us or the association [WCAI] knowing.” A disagreement between the WCAI secretary and the government ministry of youth, sports and women and child development over guidelines issued by the latter that the WCAI was expected to follow (because it was receiving funding from the government at the time), is understood to have prompted the withdrawal from the World Cup, but an official explanation was never given to the players.”We had to catch up a lot because the other teams had moved far ahead,” Edulji says. “It took us time when we got back. That is why in our era we couldn’t perform well in the World Cups.”Gargi Banerji, who debuted under Edulji as India’s youngest player ever – male or female – at 15, agrees. “We were way better prepared to put up a fight in the 1988 World Cup than in the 1978 one. That gap of four-plus years killed the possibility, and the careers of several talented players.”The WCAI merged with the BCCI in November 2006, a year after the ICC made mergers between all national boards and their women’s bodies mandatory. The BCCI was the last of the national boards of the top eight countries to start administering women’s cricket in its country, and the absorption of women’s cricket into the larger fold happened at a snail’s pace in India. Against the backdrop of the delay in integrating the workings of women’s cricket at the level of the state associations came another hiatus for the players, stretching 424 days, from March 2007 to May 2008. It remains the longest India have gone without playing an international game since the BCCI took over.The current 364-day gap is India’s longest between two international matches since then. Save for Mithali Raj and Jhulan Goswami, who debuted in 1999 and 2002 respectively, none of the players from India’s 2020 T20 World Cup contingent or their squads for the upcoming series against South Africa, had prior first-hand knowledge of what a gap year looks like.Jhulan Goswami and Mithali Raj have gone long spells without cricket before, but none of their team-mates have•ESPNcricinfoThis hiatus is unlike any Raj and Goswami have experienced before, though. For starters, the security accorded by annual retainers at a time when the players have not been able to turn out for their country was unthinkable in the era before professionalisation. The BCCI, the richest and most powerful cricket board in the world, has to its credit, since the merger, bettered infrastructure for its female cricketers. It has improved the quality of grounds, upgraded travel essentials, introduced match fees, daily allowances and central contracts and announced pensions for its retired female cricketers. It has allowed its women players to participate in overseas competitions, and launched a tournament that is understood to be a precursor to an IPL-style women’s league.The 2010s were a productive – and critical – phase for women’s cricket administration in India, not least because of the impressive on-field results of the national team. Among the highlights was a maiden series win in Australia in 2016 and a breakout runners-up finish at the ODI World Cup the following year. A first appearance in eight years in the knockouts of a T20 World Cup then came in the 2018 edition of the competition, though the format wasn’t deemed their strong suit.India made the final of a T20 triangular series featuring England and Australia in February last year. The same young squad (with the addition of a 16th member) carved out an unbeaten run to the final of the T20 World Cup in February and March, beating favourites Australia in the tournament opener. Their campaign culminated in an 85-run hiding but on the whole it bolstered India’s stature as world-beaters in the making. The pandemic then brought their momentum to a halt.Then, even as international cricket resumed, in July 2020, and preparations for the IPL and the India men’s tour of Australia gathered pace, the women’s team remained starved of communication from the BCCI for months about what, if anything, was in the offing for them, as a raft of cancellations and postponements of their bilateral assignments played out rather discreetly. The players found themselves without a dedicated point person or a selection committee, and with the contract of their manager awaiting renewal.”Sometimes we do feel there’s no sense of purpose if we don’t have competitive cricket or any international series, even domestic,” Raj said during the ICC’s ‘100% Cricket’ virtual discussion last September. Six months on from then, India have not had a national camp in all of 2020, despite the BCCI president himself having promised one in August. Their domestic season begins on March 11, two months after the men’s started, so the only top-flight playing opportunity they have had since the T20 World Cup was the four-match Women’s T20 Challenge last November. They go into the upcoming South Africa series with just three training sessions, having come off a five-day quarantine, and their last outing in ODIs dates back to November 2019. The preparations aren’t ideal by any measure, not least for veterans Raj and Goswami, who are both 38, or for the six uncapped rookies in the two squads.ESPNcricinfo LtdIndia aren’t the only women’s team to have not played for so long. Sri Lanka, Bangladesh and Thailand too haven’t had a game since the T20 World Cup in Australia. Ireland, USA, Netherlands and PNG haven’t played since the T20 World Cup Qualifier in September 2019. And Zimbabwe’s first series in nearly two years was called off after just one game due to Covid-19-enforced flight restrictions. Worse, nine of these ten teams are slated to compete in the 2022 ODI World Cup Qualifier in four months’ time, with only India among them having earned direct qualification to the tournament proper.
At the MCC cricket committee’s virtual meeting last month, the disproportionately low amount of international women’s cricket played compared to the men’s game since the start of the pandemic was discussed. The concerns raised echoed the 2020 UN Women brief, which said that the pandemic has exposed how, in the face of slashed revenues across the entire ecosystem, organisations instinctively lean towards prioritising investments in “traditional” sports – meaning men’s sports.In the situation the Indian team finds itself in now, the absence of an independent players’ mouthpiece has not helped. “The fact that the best women’s players in India haven’t played for more than a year is hugely disappointing,” Tom Moffat, the CEO of the Federation of International Cricketers Associations (FICA), says. “From our perspective, it’s critical for the growth of the game and safeguarding of player interests that players have a voice and that they’re represented collectively through a players’ association.”India does have a players’ body – the Indian Cricketers’ Association – but it is for retired players only. The BCCI recognises it, but not FICA, which, in its Women’s Professional Cricket Global Employment Report 2020, highlighted an increase in volume of cricket for women’s players among its chief recommendations. It also described the Indian public as becoming “increasingly accepting of female sport” in general and off the field.”If you look at the most sophisticated team sports around the world, including cricket, like Australia and England, many of the most developed sports are the ones where players are best protected,” Moffat says. “A strong players’ association is the best way that we know to reach fair outcomes, and now with what’s going on in the world at the moment, especially for the women’s game.”An additional challenge facing India, and the women’s game at large, needs tackling in the immediate future. “Over the coming months, if there isn’t renewed focus on the women’s game and ensuring greater volume of cricket and exposure across more countries globally, a very foreseeable outcome is that there’ll be less eyeballs watching,” Moffat says. “Therefore, the reality is, there’s going to be potentially less fan interest and commercial interest in the game. And we know the commercial side of things is really important to sustaining the game longer term and to enabling it to grow across more countries.”On March 8, last year, for the third time, India came within touching distance of their maiden world title. Win or lose the series opener against South Africa today, they will feel somewhat relieved that their year without cricket is finally behind them. More than the memory of the defeat to Australia a year ago, their anguish at the eroded momentum of their recent world-tournament finishes is likely to linger.A timeline of the series that India women missed out on

Would the modern player switch places with a counterpart from the past?

Packed schedules, bio-bubbles, pandemic uncertainty, but a lot more cricket and substantially better rewards – do current players have it better or worse?

Ian Chappell23-May-2021The modern cricketer is substantially better rewarded than players of the previous century. However, like with all such things in life, there is a downside involved. This comes in the form of the numerous adjustments to be made because of the extra formats that are now played and the resultant crowding of the schedule.As if that wasn’t a big enough challenge, there are now the vagaries of the pandemic. There’s no better example than the chaos created by the postponement of the opulent IPL, resulting in a last-minute appeal to the ECB to rejig India’s tour dates in England to accommodate the completion of the tournament.Whoever said life wasn’t meant to be easy perfectly summed up the career of the modern international cricketer.The Covid-ravaged world has meant cricketers spend extended periods in bubbles, which challenges their skills and their mental health. It has also resulted in scheduling that has Test matches crammed together, which is physically and mentally demanding, especially for the fast bowlers.While the 20th-century cricketer had the occasional back-to-back Test over the Boxing Day-New Year period, now it’s more likely the schedule will include back-to-back-to-back Test matches than not, which is a real grind for all concerned.This was highlighted in the last Australia-India series, where the home side used the same fast-bowling trio in all four Tests. As the Australian pace bowlers wore down in the final stages of the series, their Indian counterparts may have caught a break as injuries meant they had to constantly change personnel.Related

Do you remember these cricket cancellations and disruptions?

This year will sorely test cricket administrators' planning and resilience

Could India become mighty like West Indies and Australia of old?

India is one of the few teams who have enough skilled quick bowlers in reserve to meet the challenges of the schedule and still remain competitive.Modern fast bowlers do a lot of varied training in order to prepare for the demands of constant cricket, but still the injuries continue to pile up. Fast bowlers in the past concentrated more on running and bowling a lot in the nets to gain their match fitness.Australian fast bowler Frank Misson, who toured England in 1961, was one who believed in running to build up stamina. The 1961 Australian team travelled to England by boat, but Misson was not to be denied his training regime. As he ran laps of the deck, some of the less physically minded players sitting in the bar saw Misson flash past the window. Perhaps embarrassed by Misson’s zealous workouts, they decided to complicate his exercise regime by placing deck chairs in his path. When Misson hurdled the first set of obstacles and did the same to yet another layer of chairs, the bar rats relented and left him to train in peace.The preparation a player goes through today in the build-up to a Test is extensive when compared to the past. Teams now arrive at a venue anywhere up to four days prior to the game, which is a far cry from what happened in 1921, when England were in disarray following their country’s involvement in a brutal war. The selections ranged from the haphazard to the bizarre, with ten England players who appeared in that series only being involved in a solitary Ashes Test.Lord Tennyson’s build-up to the Lord’s Test was extraordinary by any measure. Relaxing at his club in London at 1 o’clock on the morning of the game, smoking a cigar and imbibing, Tennyson received a phone call requesting him to report to Lord’s later that day to take part in the match. Not surprisingly he failed in the first innings – like the bulk of his team-mates, though he atoned in the second innings by remaining 74 not out.It would be interesting to discover if retired cricketers envied the rewards paid their modern counterparts or whether current players would swap today’s whirling merry-go-round for the casual approach of the past. I suspect most international cricketers are just happy to have played.

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