Stokes: 'Had full belief we could chase down 399'

Despite ending up on the losing side, Stokes was happy with England’s approach in the fourth innings

ESPNcricinfo staff05-Feb-2024It proved to be the case, but Ben Stokes says at no point did his side believe their lofty fourth-innings target in the second Test against India was too many.Still needing 332 of the 399 set by the hosts, captain Stokes and his team began the fourth day in Visakhapatnam with the trademark self-belief that is a lynchpin of their Bazball ethos.”Coming into this last innings we had full belief in ourselves that we could go and chase that down,” Stokes said at the post-match presentation. “The way in which we go about taking on challenges like that is what we’re about and the number of runs that we needed to get was just sort of another thing for us to try and try and chase down.Related

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“In moments like that, in games when you’ve got scoreboard pressure, a lot of runs to chase down, that’s where your process and the way in which we know that we get the best out of ourselves as individuals, that really comes out. And I thought the way in which we applied ourselves and really tried to put India’s bowling attack under a lot of pressure was great. Unfortunately, we didn’t end up on the right side of the result. Congrats to India, I thought they played a fantastic game and, again, another great game to be a part of.”There’s no suggestion whatsoever about how to go out and play, it’s go out and play how you best feel at a given time. We knew the task ahead… and everyone in that dressing room there is a quality player and they are good enough to be able to go out there, assess the conditions or the situation and also assess how they’re feeling and how they best feel to go about getting those runs.”Stokes was further heartened by the fact that England had sliced 67 runs off their task for the loss of just one wicket – Ben Duckett on the third evening – and with Zak Crawley looking in good touch.”The big thing for us was asserting our authority very early and letting the Indian bowling attack know that this is how we’re going to go about the day, trying to not let them settle and make it as hard as we possibly could for them,” Stokes told broadcaster . “I know we’ve got to give credit to [India captain] Rohit [Sharma], the way in which he led, and credit to the bowlers that every time that we would drag the momentum back towards us and sort of felt like we were getting on top of them, they were able to produce something to take the wicket and put us back.”But I’m real pleased with the way in which that we found ourselves in a pressure situation. Chasing runs down in India is never easy, but we were actually able to go out there and stick to everything that we speak about.”Zak Crawley was England’s best batter in both innings•BCCI

Crawley was twice England’s top-scorer, adding 73 runs to his first-innings 76, but ultimately England fell short in the face of Jasprit Bumrah’s timely wicket-taking prowess. Bumrah took 3 for 46, including the dangerous Jonny Bairstow on the stroke of lunch and last man to fall Tom Hartley, to add to his six-wicket haul from England’s first innings and seal victory. But Stokes said Crawley had exemplified his team’s approach to the fourth innings.”That period last night when your openers have to go out, it’s one of those, what do you do? But I think when you have that real clarity, you’re able to see what they did last night,” Stokes added. “We could have easily been 20 for none, and not lost a wicket, but the game’s not really gone anywhere. Yes, we lost Duckett at the end of the day, but we’ve knocked 60 runs off and that’s a huge deficit when you come to a new day.”But Zak, he started again this morning, he sensed the threat in Bumrah early on and then when the spin came on, he looked to assert his dominance a bit more. But a great game for him with the bat, especially considering he’s someone who’s not been exposed to conditions like these for the most part of his career. Very happy for him and I think it’s a great stepping stone for him. “Stokes was also full of praise for his trio of young spinners, Hartley, Shoaib Bashir and Rehan Ahmed, who took eight of India’s second-innings wickets between them as the hosts were bowled out for 255, with the more experienced Joe Root bowling just two overs of spin before succumbing to an injury to his right little finger, sustained while fielding. James Anderson, the vastly experienced seamer, took the other two as part of his haul of five wickets for the match.”Looking at Tom, Bash and Rehan – five or six Test matches between them – to put in the performance that they did yesterday, obviously without Joe, and Jimmy having bowled a very long spell on Saturday, I thought what they were able to produce in terms of effort and output was incredible,” Stokes said. “They showed a lot of maturity, a lot of skill beyond their years and experience and it’s something I’m very proud of as a captain.”With the third Test, in Rajkot, not starting for 10 days, England’s squad will head to Abu Dhabi to enjoy a break with their families.

Devine century delivers NZ consolation win

Jess Kerr and Hannah Rowe took three wickets apiece as England folded for 194

Valkerie Baynes07-Apr-2024Twelve runs needed for victory, 12 runs needed to reach a century, all the time in the world, but why wait? In the space of three balls, Sophie Devine twice hauled Charlie Dean over the fence at deep midwicket to seal a breath-taking ton and an emphatic consolation win for New Zealand in Hamilton in their final match of the ODI series, which England won 2-1.Devine came to the crease with her side 14 for 2 and smashed a 93-ball century to reel in a target of 195 with 11 overs to spare. She was well supported by Maddy Green, with whom she shared an unbroken partnership worth 105, and Amelia Kerr, who scored 29 of her 31 runs in a 76-run stand with her captain.There was no sign of the quad strain that had kept Devine out of action since the fourth T20I in her impeccable footwork as she took to England’s attack – particularly offspinner Dean and quick Lauren Filer – in a typically powerful innings which underlined her importance to the White Ferns, just as they looked in danger of squandering a golden opportunity to beat England.The visitors were bowled out inside 50 overs for the second match in a row, seamers Jess Kerr and Hannah Rowe taking three wickets each to restrict them to 194 with 3.3 overs to spare. Yet again England had to lean on Player of the Series Amy Jones, whose scores of 92 not out, 48 and 50 lifted her side after middle-order collapses throughout. On this occasion, she reached a run-a-ball half-century and shared a 73-run partnership for the seventh wicket with Dean, the pair having put on a record 130-run stand in the previous match. But this time it wasn’t enough to combat what was to come from Devine.Kate Cross struck in the third over of the run-chase as Georgia Plimmer – opening for Bernadine Bezuidenhout, who injured her hamstring while fielding in the second ODI – chased one outside off stump and edged to wicketkeeper Jones. Then Suzie Bates sent a leading edge straight to Maia Bouchier at midwicket attempting to turn Nat Sciver-Brunt squarer to the leg side.At the end of the powerplay, the hosts were 31 for 2 as Devine and Amelia Kerr settled into the early stages of their partnership. Devine was on 13 when she sent a sharp, difficult chance off Filer through the hands of Heather Knight at slip. Devine clubbed Dean over deep midwicket for twin sixes in three balls and brought up her fifty over the course of four fours in five balls off Dean’s next over.In between, Sophie Ecclestone pulled up with what appeared to be a calf problem at the start of her seventh over, but she broke the stand when she trapped Amelia Kerr lbw before leaving the field to seek treatment. Ecclestone returned to action and saw Jones fumble a stumping chance off Green with New Zealand needing 43 runs off 88 balls.Filer, who replaced fellow seamer Lauren Bell in the XI to play the fourth ODI of her fledgling international career, conceded 17 runs off her sixth over, 12 of those in fours clubbed down the ground by Devine. With 12 needed, Devine cleared the deep midwicket fence by some distance off Dean to move within one identical strike of a century and she repeated the effort two balls later.Earlier, Rowe struck in her second over, the fourth of the match, when she struck Tammy Beaumont on the back thigh with a ball that was on track to ping the top of leg stump and Jess Kerr had Maia Bouchier caught by Georgia Plimmer at extra cover with a leg-cutter for 19.Sophia Dunkley is bowled by Jess Kerr•Getty ImagesAfter 10 overs, England were 50 for 2 but they lost 4 for 13 in 34 balls after Sciver-Brunt and Knight put on 58 runs together for the third wicket. Amelia Kerr got a hand to a difficult chance but couldn’t cling onto a ball driven straight back at her by Sciver-Brunt, on 15 at the time. She did, however, ultimately remove Sciver-Brunt for 27, caught by Fran Jonas.Sophia Dunkley, who lost her place in the line-up after the five T20Is where she only reached double figures once, with a score of 32, in four innings, returned to the side after Alice Capsey sprained her ankle during training on Saturday. But Dunkley managed just 1 off the five balls she faced before playing down the wrong line to a Jess Kerr delivery which angled back in and hit the top of middle stump.Kerr grabbed her second, hitting Danni Wyatt low on the front pad with a full toss and England were 88 for 5.Jones had another big job to do to rescue her side and she would again need Dean’s help after calling Knight through for a single and seeing her captain run out on 31 as Kerr fired the ball in from square leg to wicketkeeper Izzy Gaze to make it 95 for 6.New Zealand looked in danger of letting England off the hook, just as they did in the first two fixtures of this series, when Gaze missed a stumping opportunity as Jones, on 18, advanced out of her crease and swung herself around attempting to loft a Jonas delivery over the leg side. At that point, England were 111 for 6 and when Dean overturned an lbw decision off Bates, the ball shown to be missing the top of leg stump, she and Jones were free to press on with the union their side so desperately needed.Jones brought up her fifty with a crisp single off Kerr but she fell moments later chipping Bates straight to Eden Carson at backward point, ending her stand with Dean, who departed a short time later when she picked out Brooke Halliday at cover off Rowe. Rowe claimed her third with a short ball which Cross edged behind down the leg side.

Marcus Rashford's Barcelona shirt number revealed as Man Utd outcast follows in the footsteps of Premier League legends after completing loan move

Barcelona have confirmed the arrival of Marcus Rashford on a season-long loan, with the England international handed the iconic No.14 shirt. The jersey carries deep historical weight at Camp Nou, previously worn by legendary figures such as Thierry Henry and Javier Mascherano.

  • Rashford joins Barca on loan
  • Handed No.14 shirt
  • Previously worn by Henry & Mascherano
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    For Rashford, wearing the same number as Henry holds significance, as he has long cited the French striker as one of his inspirations growing up. However, recent flops Joao Felix, Philippe Coutinho, and Malcom also all donned the No.14. The forward will be eager to forge his own legacy, hoping to reignite his career after a turbulent spell at Manchester United that saw him temporarily cast out of the squad.

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    Rashford has been consistently linked with a switch to the Spanish giants ever since he fell foul of United head coach Ruben Amorim last December. That exile from the first-team setup marked the start of a downward spiral at Old Trafford. In search of playing time and a fresh start, Rashford made a mid-season switch to Aston Villa in January, where he impressed on loan.

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    Rashford’s move to Catalonia marks a historic moment as he becomes the first English player to represent Barcelona since Gary Lineker departed the club in 1989. It’s been a 36-year wait since an Englishman featured in the red and blue stripes of Barca. The loan includes an option to make the move permanent at the end of the season, a clause similar to the one Aston Villa had.

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  • WHAT NEXT FOR RASHFORD & BARCELONA?

    Rashford is set to join Barcelona’s squad for their upcoming pre-season tour across Asia. The team are supposed to begin their preparations in Japan, with a friendly against Vissel Kobe scheduled for this Sunday. Following the match in Japan, the Catalan outfit will head to South Korea, where they’ll face FC Seoul on July 31. That particular fixture will be of added interest, as FC Seoul now feature Jesse Lingard, Rashford’s former team-mate at United. Barcelona’s tour will conclude on August 4 with a final pre-season match against Daegu FC.

USMNT star Christian Pulisic reportedly in doubt for AC Milan's upcoming friendlies against Chelsea and Leeds

The winger is dealing with a minor injury and Milan are reportedly hesitant to risk him ahead of the Serie A season

Pulisic dealing with injuryCould miss final preseason gamesMilan set to face Leeds and ChelseaFollow GOAL on WhatsApp! 🟢📱Getty Images SportWHAT HAPPENED?

U.S. international Christian Pulisic could miss the rest of AC Milan's preseason, including an upcoming clash with former club Chelsea, due to a reported knock suffered earlier in the tour.

The U.S. men's national team star played Milan's preseason opener against Liverpool but reportedly suffered a minor injury in the 3-2 win in Hong Kong. He sat out the subsequent match against Perth Glory, with Milan's staff preferring to rest him rather than risk him in a friendly against the Australian side.

Now, per Gazetta dello Sport, Pulisic's condition is still seen as being day-to-day, and he will continue to be evaluated by the club's medical staff. It's uncertain at the moment if he'll feature in the club's final two preseason friendlies against Leeds on Aug. 9 and Chelsea on Aug. 10.

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Pulisic is no stranger to injury issues, and he suffered through a few during his standout 2024-25 season. Throughout the campaign, he missed several matches due to muscle issues, but ultimately did go on to make 50 appearances in all competitions for the second consecutive season.

Heading into the summer, though, Pulisic opted out of playing in the Gold Cup, telling USMNT boss Mauricio Pochettino that he needed a summer of rest one year out from the 2026 World Cup. That decision, ultimately, sent shockwaves throughout American soccer, putting Pulisic in the spotlight ahead of this 2025-26 AC Milan campaign.

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Pulisic had his best season for Milan in their most recent campaign, totalling 17 goals and 11 assists in all competitions, helping the club win the Supercoppa Italiana. It wasn't enough for Milan to earn European soccer, though, as they finished eighth in Serie A, prompting the arrival of new manager Massimiliano Allegri.

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GettyWHAT NEXT FOR PULISIC?

Following the two upcoming friendlies against Premier League sides, Pulisic and AC Milan will kickstart the campaign in the Coppa Italia against Bari on Aug. 17 and then open their Serie A season at home on Aug. 23 when they face Cremonese.

'I hit Mark Taylor on the head'

Dean Headley spoke to Cricinfo about his Ashes memories from 1997

14-Jul-2005Dean Headley played in 15 Tests – including six matches against Australia -before injury cut short his career in 2001. He is now a director of a newspaper in Kent. Cricinfo spoke to him about his role in the 1997 Ashes series.

Dean Headley © Getty Images
Fourth Test – at HeadingleyMichael Atherton and Nasser Hussain have always taken the mickey out of me for being a blocker, but in that match I hit 22 and I actually played some shots. I played a couple of drives off McGrath through extra cover, I hit a few fours, but then eventually got caught out at gully – then we had a collapse. But I enjoyed batting that day.I was out lbw for 3 in the second innings, which was probably a fair call! I leave it up to the umpires and, of course, at the end of the day I’ve also got to bowl. If you protest, they might not give you some wickets later.Fifth Test – at Trent BridgeIn the fifth Test at Trent Bridge, I’ve never played cricket like that. If I’m having a bad day, I’m having a bad day, but against Australia I played six Tests and seemed to bowl well in them. It didn’t all go our way – at Headingley, I went for over 100 runs for two wickets and I got hit all over the place, but my whole philosophy has been to try and to keep going. I’m not the best technical bowler but I bowl in my own style and it seemed to work.

A game that's found its niche

This season has been a great one for the Twenty20 Cup.

Paul Coupar07-Jul-2005


Young audiences quickly tire of gimmicks, but they have not tired of Twenty20
© Getty Images

This season has been a great one for the Twenty20 Cup. The competition is now in its third year: the hoopla has simmered down, most of the boundary-edge Jacuzzis have been drained and cricket-ground speed-dating has been abandoned. One of the men who spent last season in Warwickshire’s comedy bear suit is now playing for them. Now we can start to judge whether the game stands on its own feet.And it is not just standing but trotting at a healthy lick. If leafy Richmond, where Middlesex played Hampshire last night, is anything to go by, Twenty20 sounds like excited children, smells like a barbecue and looks like a big, happy bunch of people crowded round a boundary rope, drinking in wine and sunshine.The crowds seem to be growing still. Average attendances in 2004 were up by around 1,000 on the first year, at 5,800. The final figures are not yet in for this season’s group games. But on the drizzly Friday night of July 1, 20,500 Londoners knocked off work early to watch Surrey and Kent play a not-particularly-crucial match. Last night, the newly expanded Oval was almost full, despite Surrey having already reached the quarter-finals. The extra 27 group games this year do not seem to have watered down enthusiasm.What keeps people coming? It is no longer a fresh experience for most, but it still appears to be an enjoyable one. Young audiences quickly tire of gimmicks, but they have not tired of Twenty20.Is that because they are pinned to their seats by enthralling finishes? No. Some rough research reveals that only a third (33.3%) of this year’s Twenty20 group matches ended in a “close” finish (“close” being defined as a defending team holding on to win by fewer than 10 runs, or a chasing team scraping home to win in the last over, or with two or fewer wickets in hand.) Compare this year’s totesport first division, where about a quarter of games (22.2%) have been close. Fifty-over county cricket is only a little less exciting but a lot less well-attended.


Jacuzzis have been thin on the ground this year, but the fans have kept on coming
© Getty Images

Nor does it seem to be the big hits that encourage the punters to turn out in droves. In the first season spectators thrilled to sixes; now there are conversations along the lines of “Another six? Oh was it? I can’t find the chicken drumsticks anywhere in here.” However, there is enough interest – in the rapid evolution of new and exotic ploys like the batsman’s “ramp” shot over the keeper’s head – to keep serious cricket followers interested.For everyone else there is the atmosphere. Some doubters ask why people – wives, casual sports fans, auntie Jean who’s staying over for the week – go to an event they have only a cursory interest in? That seems a bit like asking why Italians go to the piazza in the evening when they’re not interested in the architecture. They go, it seems, because it’s fun and because it’s easy.At last there is cricket on at a time that suits working people. It eats a smaller chunk out of the spectators’ time so it attracts the casual viewer. In the time invested (three hours) it’s about the equivalent of a few post-work pints in the pub (and probably cheaper: £10 for adults and free for under-17s at Richmond). It is also a half-plausible excuse to bunk off work a little early. And everyone enjoys that.

Arbitration the only way to avoid crisis

The news that only three of the West Indies squad selected to tour Sri Lanka have signed the board’s match/tour contract raises the likelihood of another damaging dispute in the Caribbean

Martin Williamson26-Jun-2005

Shivnarine Chanderpaul: one of just three players to sign the board’s match/tour contract © Getty Images
The news that only three of the West Indies squad selected to tour Sri Lanka have signed the board’s match/tour contract raises the likelihood of another damaging dispute in the Caribbean. The long shot could be the cancellation of the trip, or even that the A team will be drafted in to take the places of the rebels, although it is far from certain that many of them would be willing to sign the match/tour contracts either.The latest standoff has come about because the West Indies Cricket Board (WICB) has insisted that all the players agree to a controversial clause – the much-debated clause five – which critics claim signs away their personal commercial and image rights, even though the board counters that it does not. This was the same issue which led to several players missing the first Test against South Africa in Guyana in April.That the board has again attempted to force this clause through has caused considerable unease, even anger, within the squad, and while they backed down two months ago, there seems to be a more steely resolve in their ranks this time. The West Indies Players Association (WIPA) has again found itself at loggerheads with the WICB, but as Dinanath Ramnarine, the WIPA chairman, insists, it is only carrying out the wishes of its members.The problem the players have with clause five is that it is, in their eyes, so one-sided. The claim is that the board can instruct players to void existing contracts, or decline them the right to enter into new ones, and yet is only willing to pay them on a series-by-series basis. The consensus is that if they had a system of central contracts, then this kind of demand would be more acceptable. The WICB claims that WIPA has not been willing to meet with it to discuss central contracts, although WIPA’s response is that this matter cannot be tackled until more fundamental issues have been resolved.

Dinanath Ramnarine insists the players’ board is only carrying out the wishes of its members © Getty Images
There are further issues in that it is suggested that the deal the board signed with Digicel means that any player “eligible for selection for the national side” falls under this umbrella of being controlled as to what they can and cannot do regarding personal endorsements. That would mean that any West Indies-qualified cricketer could be restricted concerning their use of their personal image rights, and yet get no benefit from the board.Although the board categorically denies this, the crux of the standoff remains the exact details of the Digicel deal. WIPA is quite adamant that the board has signed over rights over which is has no authority, but the board refuses to release the contract, arguing that it is a commercially-sensitive document and that the WICB, as a private company, has no obligation to make it public. That gives critics ammunition to counter that the deal is so one-sided that Digicel are effectively calling all the shots, adding that it is the very content of the contract which is the reason the board has kept the details close to its chest.The board’s moral high ground has been weakened of late by its reluctance to put certain issues before an independent arbitrator. WIPA is insisting that the WICB’s sponsorship with Digicel be included in the adjudication because it believes that players’ individual rights were sold to the company. The board wants to limit the adjudication to whether the personal endorsement contracts signed by players with Cable & Wireless were entered into as individuals or as members of the West Indies team. The end result is stalemate. And by insisting that it will abide by the decision of the arbitration, WIPA and the players have stolen the higher moral ground until now occupied by the board.Behind the scenes, there is much activity, and relations between the players and the board continue to deteriorate. Earlier this week Roger Braithwaite, the WICB’s chief executive, looked to shift the blame onto WIPA when he told reporters that his board “had made every attempt to avoid this [situation] by submitting the match/tour contract to WIPA on June 2 but there was no response by WIPA.” But Cricinfo has seen a copy of a reply sent by Ramnarine dated June 13 responding to this very matter.On Wednesday night, Ramnarine made another attempt to resolve the issue by again urging the WICB to agree to arbitration, but on Friday this offer was declined. With every passing day, the suspicion grows that there might be more to the Digicel deal than is being admitted. But if the matter goes to arbitration, then the details of the contract will have to be revealed.The net result is that the WICB has a squad of three players and it now seems unlikely that it will be able to make that up to a full tour party from within the A team currently in Sri Lanka. That would leave the board either trawling round the islands to find enough players or calling off the tour – and a cancellation would leave it open to financial punishment from the ICC and the Sri Lankan authorities.The only hope is that the arbitrator is allowed to do what he has been appointed to do and that, one way or the other, a solution is found. But history suggests that this sorry affair has quite some way to run.

Eleven featherbed fixtures

Eleven matches that featured a surfeit of runs

17-Jan-2006This XI is the choice of Andrew Miller and Martin Williamson. Undoubtedly readers will have their own preferences. Email us with your nominations


Sanath Jayasuriya reaches his 300© WCM

Sri Lanka v India, 1st Test, Colombo (RPS), 1997-98

India’s debutant, Nilesh Kulkarni, must have thought he had Test cricket licked. Buoyed by his side’s formidable total of 537 for 8 dec, he dismissed Marvan Atapattu with his very first ball, as Sri Lanka – for an instant – looked as though they might struggle. That, however, was before Sanath Jayasuriya and Roshan Mahanama had got into their stride. Their obscene second-wicket stand of 576 remains to this day the largest in the history of Test cricket, and as the fifth and final day dawned, the only question was whether Jayasuriya, 326 not out overnight, would go on to break Brian Lara’s then-world record of 375. He didn’t, but Aravinda de Silva weighed in with a century of his own, as Sri Lanka closed with an alternative world record – a vast total of 952 for 6.

Spare a thought for … Rajesh Chauhan. Back in the reckoning after two years out of Test cricket, Chauhan was tonked for 276 runs in his 78 overs – the second-worst analysis of all time. At least he managed to claim the wicket of Jayasuriya.West Indies v England, 4th Test, Kingston, 1929-30

Both sides agreed to a timeless Test if the series was in the balance, and they probably regretted it. After nine days – the last two of which were rained off – this game was abandoned as England had to go home. Batting first, England scored 849, with Andrew Sandham making a world-record 325 in his final Test, and then bowled West Indies out for 286. Rather than making them follow on with a lead of 653, England opted to bat again and set them a tougher ask of 836 to win. But a magnificent 223 from George Headley guided West Indies to 408 for 5 when the rain came. The 1815 runs produced remains a record for a Test.

Spare a thought for … Tommy Scott, the West Indies googly bowler, who went for 374 runs, although he did take nine wickets. No bowler has conceded more in a Test. And what about England old timers George Gunn, who was 50, and 52-year-old Wilfred Rhodes. Bengal v Karnataka, Ranji Trophy quarter-final, Calcutta, 1990-91

The Ranji Trophy has produced some daunting totals and dull stalemates over the years, but few matches have been more turgid than this affair where after five days the first innings had not even been completed. Karnataka batted the best part of three days in scoring 791 for 6 before finally declaring, only for Bengal to take two-and-a-bit days to make 652 for 9 themselves. It wasn’t even as if the two teams got on. Bengal’s batsmen were accused by Karnataka players of deliberately delaying play to try to get them penalised for a slow over-rate. Deliberate or not, it work as Bengal were awarded 60 penalty runs, enough to give them victory by virtue of averaging 3.26 run per over compared to Karnataka’s 3.17.

Spare a thought for … Bengal’s Utpal Chatterjee, who took 0 for 160 off 65 overs and scored 5 when his turn came to bat. Karnataka’s Anil Kumble was more expensive, conceding 215 runs, but at least he took two wickets and made an unbeaten 68.


Len Hutton is congratulated on passing Don Bradman’s record at The Oval. He went on to make 364© The Cricketer

England v Australia, 5th Test, The Oval, 1938

The regulations again allowed for a timeless Test if the series was undecided, although it is worth noting that all Ashes Tests in Australia until the second World War were played to a finish anyway. On a pitch prepared by the legendary Oval groundsman Bosser Martin (who declared on the eve of the game that it would “last until Christmas”) England ground out 903 for 7 with the 21-year-old Len Hutton making a tortuous but immensely popular 364, taking Don Bradman’s world record in the process. By the time Australia came to reply they were without Jack Fingleton and, crucially, Bradman who had fractured a shin bone bowling on the third morning. Their nine batsmen, presumably exhausted and mentally broken, slipped to defeat by an innings and 579 runs. The call to end timeless Tests grew defeating once the euphoria dissipated.

Spare a thought for … Chuck Fleetwood-Smith, whose 1 for 298 remain the most expensive Test figures. And he had Hutton missed off a stumping chance when he had made 40.Surrey v Lancashire, County Championship, 1990

The summer of 1990 is recalled with a shudder by bowlers all across England. An improbably hot season, coupled with new regulations reducing the width of the seam, culminated in a run-fest like few others. The lack of contest between bat and ball was never better exemplified that at The Oval in early May, when Surrey’s captain Ian Greig compiled a career-best 291 out of a total of 707 for 9 declared, only for Lancashire to respond with the small matter of 863. The backbone of their innings was provided by two young players destined for greater things – Michael Atherton (191) and Neil Fairbrother (366) – who added 364 for the third wicket. By the end of that round of Championship matches, no fewer than 41 first-class centuries had been scored in the first three weeks of the season.

Spare a thought for … Grahame Clinton, who missed out on the festivities, not once, but twice, falling for 8 and 15 in his two innings. “Actually,” he pleaded in mitigation, “it was harder not to score runs on that pitch.”South Africa v England, 5th Test, Durban, 1938-39

The final nail in the coffin of timeless Tests on a pitch which offered little help at any stage, but a local rule allowing the wicket to be repaired overnight meant , accordoing to the Cricketer, that each day started on what amounted to a brand new pitch. With no end in sight, both sides plodded along, and the eighth day was lost to rain. England were set a seemingly impossible 696 to win, but they were 654 for 5 at tea on the tenth day when rain started falling – and two of those wickets fell as the clouds darkened that afternoon. The captains went into a meeting and emerged to say that, as England had to catch the train to Cape Town that night to enable them to catch their homeward trip on the Athlone Castle, the game had to be ended with no result. South Africa’s Ken Viljoen is said to have had his hair cut twice during the game! The aggregate of 1981 runs is a record, as is England’s fourth innings score.

Spare a thought for … Any number of people, but South Africa’s Norman Gordon takes the biscuit – his 92.2 eight-ball overs produced 1 for 256 in the match. England’s Doug Wright conceded more runs – 288 – but took five wickets and, unlike Gordon, it was not his final Test.


Bobby SImpson sweeps on his way to 311 at Old Trafford
© Playfair Cricket Monthly

England v Australia, 4th Test, Old Trafford, 1964

Australia retained the Ashes in a match so tedious that it moved Playfair Cricket Monthly to ask if the time had come to end such contests. Wisden, meanwhile, wrote that “a bad taste was left in the mouth of the cricket enthusiasts.” The Daily Mail called it the “murder of Test cricket” while at one stage six journalists in the press box were seen to be sleeping. Sour grapes? Possibly, but pity the 108,000 who witnessed a game where the two first innings were not completed until five minutes before the end. Bobby Simpson, Australia’s captain, made 311 – his first Test hundred in his 41st match – in a score of 656 for 8 while England replied with an equally mind-numbing 611.

Spare a thought for … Australia’s offspinner Tom Vievers, whose 95.1 overs was one ball shy of the most sent down in a Test. He was in good company. Six bowlers conceded 100 runs and another three finished in the 90s.West Indies v India, 4th Test, Antigua, 2001-02

A horror story from start to interminable finish. Five centuries of underwhelming single-mindedness, a run-rate that never threatened to push three an over, significant and stultifying innings from two bit-part internationals, Wasim Jaffer and Ajay Ratra. With the series intriguingly poised at 1-1, the Antigua Recreation Ground and its landing-strip of a wicket was the last place that such a crucial encounter deserved to be held. While India were compiling 513 for 9 after being asked to bat first, they were setting themselves up for their first overseas series victory since 1986 – and their first in the Caribbean for 31 years. But Carl Hooper, Shivnarine Chanderpaul and Ridley Jacobs preserved West Indian pride with a trio of hundreds, and instead India became the third Test team to give a bowl to all 11 of their players.

Spare a thought for … Sachin Tendulkar, whose first-ball duck not only denied him his share of the spoils, but also compounded a horrific run of form – 0, 0, 8, 0 – that was the talk of an entire nation.India v Pakistan, 4th Test, Madras, 1960-61

Between December 1960 and February 1961, one of the greatest series of all time took place, a contest that reinvigorated Test cricket and conferred legendary status on each of its participants. Sadly, for the faithful and under-rewarded few who turned out to watch India take on Pakistan, the series in question was Australia v West Indies, 5000 miles to the south-east. Instead, the subcontinent was subjected to a five-Test stalemate that plumbed such depths of ennui that the Pakistanis were unable to force a result in any one of their 15 first-class fixtures. It was, as Wisden noted, “an extremely dour affair”, enlivened only by a fire during the Madras bore-draw that gutted the eastern section of the stands.

Spare a thought for … Haseeb Ahsan, who wheeled away to the tune of 15 wickets for the series, including a grandly futile 6 for 202 from 84 overs at Madras.


Chris Gayle settles in for the long haul in Antigua© Getty Images

West Indies v South Africa, 4th Test, Antigua, 2004-05

Antigua has become such a no-contest of a venue it is only fair that it should be named and shamed twice. If India’s visit in 2002 was pure distilled tedium, then South Africa’s engagement three years later was a gluttonous surfeit of runs that produced a world-record eight individual centuries. The largest and most avaricious of these was compiled by Chris Gayle, who slapped merrily through the off-side for a career-best 317. Just over 12 months had passed since his team-mate Lara had posted 400 at the same venue, and until fatigue set in on the penultimate afternoon, Gayle was on course to better even that feat. A jumbo total of 747 was capped by a maiden Test hundred for Dwayne Bravo.

Spare a thought for … Bravo, who suffered the indignity of becoming a first and only Test victim for Mark Boucher, who was brought on to bowl the 233rd over, and struck with his eighth ball.Pakistan v India, 1st Test, Lahore, 2005-06

A pancake of a pitch, and an eyepopping assortment of batting onslaughts. Younis Khan and Mohammad Yousuf provided a sedate start to the festivities with 199 and 173 respectively, before Shahid Afridi and Kamran Akmal flew off the handle in spectacular fashion. Afridi clobbered four sixes in a row off Harbhajan Singh in the course of a 27-run over and a 78-ball hundred; Akmal was scarcely any more sluggish, taking just 81 balls to reach his fourth international hundred of the month. A mighty total of 679 for 7 was just the basis for negotiation, however, as Virender Sehwag launched himself into the Pakistani bowling with Rahul Dravid providing steadfast support in a quadruple-century opening partnership.

Spare a thought for … Salman Butt, run out by Yuvraj Singh for just six measly runs.

Four Tests, one result

Siddhartha Vaidyanathan04-Jul-2006India


Peerless Dravid: Man of the series
© Getty Images

9

Rahul Dravid
No one would grudge him the Man of the Series award, especially after his never-to-be-forgotten twin fifties in the final Test at Kingston. With four half-centuries and one hundred, he was the talismanic presence in the Indian side and took some bold decisions throughout. His catching at slip was a bit suspect at times, and his field placements, on occasions caused a few heads to spin, but those were just small blips in a memorable summer. Purely on batting alone, he had no peer.Anil Kumble
Tireless as ever, Kumble showed his unquenchable thirst for a fight. In a series where no bowler managed more than 150 overs and on pitches that didn’t offer him much support, Kumble sent down 223.1 overs and always provided some solidity at one end. He was streets ahead in the wicket-takers’ lists (with 23 wickets he had eight more than Corey Collymore at second place) and it was only fitting that he finished it off at Kingston. His batting was crucial too – his partnership with VVS Laxman at St Kitts went a long way in thwarting West Indies while his 45 at Kingston proved vital in the final analysis.8

Munaf Patel
On his first foreign tour, bowling largely on shirt-fronts, Munaf took several strides forward. He cranked up the pace consistently and hit the splice of the bat even when the pitch didn’t offer any assistance. Barring a brief session at St Kitts, when Sarwan pelted him for six fours in an over, he managed a steady length and troubled all with reverse swing too.Virender Sehwag
For sheer impact, it would be tough to find an innings as glorious as Sehwag’s hundred at St Lucia. On the first morning of the Test, with speculation rife about a green pitch, he manhandled the bowling as only he can. His rapidfire fifty at St Kitts gave India a whiff of winning a contest where they had played catch up throughout. Sehwag’s bowling also developed wonderfully on this tour – the fact that India chose four bowlers reposing faith in his bowling ability must tell you something. He teased with his offbreaks and his nine wickets in the series at 23.22 were thoroughly deserved.Wasim Jaffer
India’s fightback in the first Test at Antigua revolved around Jaffer’s magnificent maiden Test double hundred, an innings where he produced some gorgeous strokes on a slow pitch. The value of his twin fifties at St Kitts, when India had their backs to the wall, should also not be underestimated. He fumbled a few chances at slip, surprising given how safe he is while fielding in that position for Mumbai.7
Sreesanth
Sreesanth showed why he was rated so highly by the team management with some inspired spells when they were needed. He gave India a wonderful start on the final day of the Antigua Test, only to be thwarted by the last-wicket partnership, and was outstanding in the decider at Kingston. His batting too showed some promise though his out-fielding, at times, left a lot to be desired.


Harbhajan’s five wickets in less than five overs at Jamaica helped India build a decent lead and post a competitive target
© Getty Images

Harbhajan Singh
Shrouded by intrigue for the first half of the series, Harbhajan delivered fine spells in the final two games. His two five-wicket hauls were a study in contrast – the first, at St Kitts, came when West Indies were looking for quick runs, the second came in just 4.3 overs on the second day of the final Test. His unbeaten 38 at St Kitts also proved crucial in frustrating West Indies.VVS Laxman
Laxman’s workman-like hundred at St Kitts helped India claw their way back into the game, one in which they were heavily up against the odds. He showed glimpses of his vintage best but mostly preferred to grind it out on a pitch that was slow from the outset. He followed it up with a fifty in the second innings ensuring that they left unscathed.Mohammad Kaif
Kaif’s maiden hundred at St Lucia put India on course for a big first-innings total. After nearly seven years in international cricket, he finally seemed to have cemented his place in the middle order. However, he looked out of place in the next two games and needs to show more consistency if he harbours hopes of a permanent slot. He was an energetic presence while fielding in the covers but his close-in catching wasn’t upto the mark.6
VRV Singh
VRV Singh showed tremendous promise in the two Tests he played, turning in some fiery spells. He even impressed Brian Lara, who didn’t hesitate to complement him at the end of the series. One thought he was under-bowled in the second innings at St Lucia, despite having a good outing in the first innings. His batting though, an aspect where he has shown some ability at domestic level, produced more humour than results.Mahendra Singh Dhoni
It was unfortunate that the Caribbean public didn’t get to see Dhoni in his full splendour. He carted the bowling around in the second innings at Antigua, when India were pushing for a declaration, but managed only 99 runs in the other six innings. His wicketkeeping, though, improved as the tour went along and he gave a good account of himself against both spin and pace.5
Yuvraj Singh
An average of 17.33 in four Tests, with a highest score of 39, tells you what a poor series it was for Yuvraj. He gave glimpses of overcoming the lean run, especially in Kingston when he began with some confident drives, but invariably got out owing to poor shot selection. His fielding, though, remained sharp.4
Irfan Pathan
It was a harsh learning curve for Pathan, going from India’s golden boy to fifth-choice bowler in a span of a few months. After a poor showing in the one-dayers, he only played in one Test and, though he showed signs of improvement, was nowhere close to his best.

MacGill v Warne, and two centuries in two days

The regular Monday column in which Steven Lynch answers your questions about (almost) any aspect of cricket

Steven Lynch12-Jun-2006The regular Monday column in which Steven Lynch answers your questions about (almost) any aspect of cricket:

Even with Warne around, MacGill has often been the main man © AFP
Is it true that Stuart MacGill has outbowled Shane Warne in the matches they have played together? asked Aaron Thomas from Melbourne
It is true, although there isn’t an awful lot in it. The two legspinners have played together in 16 Tests – five of them at Sydney – and Stuart MacGill has taken 82 wickets at 22.11 in those matches. Shane Warne has taken 74 wickets at 29.57 in the same games. MacGill shades Warne on strike rate, too – a wicket every 41.7 balls in those matches, while Warne struck once every 56.6 balls. MacGill’s best bowling is 8 for 108 against Bangladesh at Fatullah in 2005-06, while Warne’s best return when MacGill has been on the same side is 6 for 80 against West Indies at Adelaide, also in 2005-06.Who scored two different centuries on successive days in a Test match? asked Gokul Sudhakar from Delhi
Vijay Hazare, the prolific Indian batsman, did this in the fourth Test against Australia at Adelaide in 1947-48. On the third day Hazare made 108 of his eventual 116, then, on the fourth day, moved to 108 as India followed on. He was out on the fifth day for 145. It was quite a match for Hazare – he also dismissed Don Bradman, although he had made 201 before Hazare managed to bowl him.I know that Murali holds the record for five-fors in Tests – but who holds the ODI record? asked Asela from Sri Lanka
The man with the most five-wicket hauls in one-day internationals is Pakistan’s Waqar Younis, with 13. Muttiah Muralitharan comes next with eight, ahead of Glenn McGrath (seven), Lance Klusener, Saqlain Mushtaq and Wasim Akram (all six). For a list of the leading wicket-takers in ODIs, click here. You’re right that Murali leads the way in Tests, with 53 five-wicket bags in 106 Tests – exactly one every two matches – well ahead of Richard Hadlee and Shane Warne, who have both taken five or more in an innings on 36 occasions.Who has made the highest Test score for and against Bangladesh? asked Mohammad Imran from Dhaka
The highest individual innings for Bangladesh in their 44 Tests to date is 158 not out, by Mohammad Ashraful against India at Chittagong in 2004-05. Ashraful has made three of Bangladesh’s 12 Test centuries so far, a record he shares with his captain Habibul Bashar. The highest score against them is 261 not out, by Ramnaresh Sarwan for West Indies at Kingston in June 2004.Apparently the five players who have appeared in most Sheffield Shield/Pura Cup matches have only seven Test caps between them. Who are they? asked Graham Frost from Australia
Jamie Cox of Tasmania has played in more matches in Australia’s premier domestic competition than anyone else, with 161 appearances. He went past John Inverarity’s old record of 159 Shield appearances during 2005-06. Next up at the moment come Jamie Siddons (146 matches), Stuart Law (142) and Darren Berry (139). The top five did indeed win seven Test caps between them – and Inverarity accounts for six of those. Law won the other one. Darren Lehmann has currently played 137 such matches, so is likely to move up the table during the forthcoming Australian season. For a full list, click here.Who called his autobiography Perchance to Bowl? I’m guessing it was a wicketkeeper! asked Jamie McDonald from Cardiff
You’re right, it was indeed a wicketkeeper: John Waite, the first South African to win 50 Test caps. Waite made his debut on the 1951 tour of England, and played on till 1964-65, scoring 2405 runs in addition to making 141 dismissals behind the stumps. His book was published in 1961.And there are some possible additions to last week’s item on reverse-swept sixes:
Anthony Bull writes: “I am pretty certain that Craig McMillan did it against Pakistan in New Zealand in the Test where he set the record for runs in one over. Not sure of the other details.” Gareth Kiernan, also from NZ, adds: “Craig McMillan reverse-pulled Daniel Vettori for six in the Shell Cup semi-final in 1999, having reverse-swept him for four the previous ball. He was into position so quickly for the pull shot that it went over point.” Somesh Verma from Nepal ventures: “Andy Flower, on an India tour, hit four sixes, all through reverse-sweeps, in one of the Test innings.” [These might have been fours: Flower never hit more than two sixes in a Test innings in India – SL.]Fahim Khondekhar has another Flower story: “Andy Flower was playing an ING Cup game in Australia and while in the nineties he reverse-swept the bowler for six. What was amazing was his first attempt just barely cleared the fielder at square leg, and instead of losing courage he attempted it again the very next ball. Nice way to bring up your hundred.” John van der Westhuizen writes on behalf of a fellow South African: “When West Indies toured South Africa in 1998, they lost the Test series 5-0. On his way to a second-innings century, I saw Jonty Rhodes reverse-sweep a six in the Centurion Test, the last of the series.” Shanthal Perera writes from America: “Brian McMillan reverse-swept Murali, I think for a six, in one of the group matches in the one-day tournament in Kenya in 1996-97.” Rajesh Mehta has a slightly different memory: “During the first four-nations tournament in Kenya in 1996-97, I remember Brian McMillan of South Africa reverse-sweeping Sanath Jayasuriya for a six at the Nairobi Club.” And Andrew Schwilk from Australia concludes: “I can recall Darren Gough reverse-pulling Gavin Robertson for six in a one-dayer at the MCG, which is no mean feat.”

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