Stats – Virat Kohli goes past Sourav Ganguly

With 22 wins as India Test captain, Kohli only has MS Dhoni ahead of him

Bharath Seervi22-Aug-201822 – Tests won by Virat Kohli as captain – the second-most among India captains. He has edged past Sourav Ganguly’s 21 Test wins. Now only MS Dhoni has more wins for India – 27 in 60 Tests. Kohli’s win-loss ratio of 3.14 is the third-best among all captains who have led in a minimum of 35 matches.ESPNcricinfo Ltd2- Bigger Test wins for India against England by a runs margin than the 203-run victory at Trent Bridge. The 279-run win at Headingley in 1986 and the 246-run victory in Visakhapatnam in November 2016 are the only two bigger wins.5- Instances of teams winning by a margin of 200 or more runs in the third Test of a series (four or more matches),after being 0-2 down in the series. India have achieved this twice and both times outside home; the other instance came in Australia in 1977-78. The other three instances were for teams at home.

Largest wins by runs in the third Test after being 2-0 down in the series (series of 4+ matches)

Team Win margin by runs Series Final result Home/AwayAustrala 382 Eng in Aus, 1894-95 England 3-2 HomeAustrala 365 Eng in Aus, 1936-37 Australia 3-2 HomeIndia 222 Ind in Aus, 1977-78 Australia 3-2 AwayAustralia 216 Eng in Aus, 1903-1904 England 3-2 HomeIndia 203 Ind in Eng, 2018 – Away4- Number of times India have won the third Test after losing the first two Tests in a series of four or more matches. The first three three instances were: against West Indies in 1974-75 at home, and in Australia in 1977-78 and 2007-08.80.21- Control percentage of India’s batsmen in this Test in comparison to England’s 73.34. England had better control percentages than India in the first two Tests. The team with better control percentages have won all three Tests in this series so far.

Control percentages in this series

Batting team Test #1 control % Test #2 control % Test #3 control%England 77.75 78.26 73.34India 75.03 69.83 80.2119- Wickets by India’s fast bowlers – their second-most in any Test. They have only taken all 20 wickets once, at the Wanderers earlier this year. The previous most wickets by India’s fast bowlers in a Test in England was 17 – at Lord’s in 2007 and at Trent Bridge in 2011.2- Successive defeats for England at Trent Bridge, both by large margins. In the Test against South Africa last year they lost by 340 runs. They were undefeated in seven Tests prior to these two matches – won six and drawn one. Five of those victories were by either by an innings or by margins of 300 or more runs or nine or more wickets. Thus, seven of the last eight results at Trent Bridge have been decided by big margins.5- India captains to win Player of the Match in Tests outside Asia, excluding Zimbabwe. Virat Kohli joined the list, which includes Kapil Dev, twice, in Adelaide in 1985-86 and at Lord’s in 1986, Sachin Tendulkar at the MCG in 1999-00, Sourav Ganguly at the Gabba in 2003-04 and Rahul Dravid in Kingston in 2006.

Usman Qadir: lost in Pakistan, found in Australia

Son of Abdul Qadir, the 25-year old legspinner talks about carrying the burden of his surname, his role model, and his aspirations to play for Australia

Alex Malcolm20-Dec-2018It started with a phone call.Then Perth Scorchers coach Justin Langer was informed early during last year’s Big Bash League of a young Pakistani legspinner who was taking wickets for fun in Sydney Premier Cricket for Hawkesbury.Usman Qadir, 25, son of the great Abdul Qadir, had already claimed two five-wicket hauls, as well as figures of 2 for 14, 3 for 15 and 4 for 18 in three T20s to help Hawkesbury through to the T20 Cup preliminary final prior to Christmas.The Scorchers rarely look outside their Western Australian nest, but a series of events piqued their interest. They were decimated by injuries to their fast bowling brigade. Overseas signing David Willey was about to leave for international duty, and the development of Victorian legspinner James Muirhead was not working as planned.Meanwhile, Rashid Khan was wreaking havoc for the Adelaide Strikers. A mystery legspinner, the son of a gun no less, was a tantalising prospect.The impulsive move would have been to sign him sight unseen. But the Scorchers are three-time champions for a reason. They instead opted to fly Qadir to Brisbane for a training session ahead of their clash with the Brisbane Heat on January 5.”I went there and I was quite nervous,” Qadir tells ESPNcricinfo. “I just started bowling and after two or three balls I got my confidence back. I bowled pretty well over there and Justin Langer really liked me.”Langer wasn’t the only one impressed. Adam Voges, then Scorchers captain and now their new coach, faced plenty of Qadir in the nets.”He impressed everyone that day,” Voges says. “None of us could pick him. He had some energy about him. He bowled with a smile on his face. And he bowled really well. Right from that moment you sort of thought there’s something here. We certainly wanted to keep a relationship with him. We knew there was a possibility that we might be able to replace David Willey at the back end of the tournament so we just kept Usman in mind for that period.”But the Scorchers baulked at signing him. Even after losing to the Heat where their four quicks were taken for 167 from 16 overs before Yasir Shah took 1 for 27 from his four, the wheels were in motion to recruit Englishman Tim Bresnan.They asked Qadir to join training in Sydney a week later and his recruitment for the following season was cemented on the low and slow practice wickets of Spotless Stadium. He made fools of the Scorchers’ batsmen, five of whom had played international cricket.The fact that Voges took over as coach also helped. As opposed to Langer observing from the back of the nets, Voges had been bamboozled by him, and knew the value of spinners in T20 cricket.”We felt that we were a spinner short when we lost Ashton Agar to international duties last year,” Voges says. “We felt we got exposed there. So, we sort of made it a priority when I came on board to try and find another option, because should Ash be away again we felt we needed something.”He’s got a quick-arm speed. A bit like a Rashid Khan; he’s quick through the air as well. Even if you think you’ve picked it, you haven’t got much time to adjust if you’ve got it wrong.”It gives us an option of playing two spinners, which is something different to how we’ve gone in the past.”Voges got more than he bargained for. The Scorchers opted to bring Qadir to Perth to train with the Western Warriors in the lead-up to the JLT Cup in September. He played in a practice match against South Australia and took 7 for 35.He made his state debut for the Warriors against Victoria at the Junction Oval and took 3 for 50, claimed the prized wicket of Cameron White, and promptly declared he wanted to play in the 2020 T20 World Cup for Australia.

“This is my goal and I’m looking forward,” Qadir says. “If the opportunity comes I want to grab that. That’s the plan.”Why the son of a Pakistani legend wishes to play for Australia is a question that would require two or three hours to answer, according to Qadir himself.After he represented Pakistan at the 2012 Under-19s World Cup in Australia, Darren Berry, then South Australia coach, brought him to Adelaide to play club cricket. He took two seven-wicket hauls and two six-wicket hauls in seven games and played two Futures League games for South Australia.But at his father’s request, Qadir returned home to play first-class cricket for National Bank of Pakistan. Over three years, he played eight first-class matches, 14 List A games and 13 T20s. His last first-class match in Pakistan, in December 2014 against Port Qasim Authority, perhaps summed up his experience. He was picked as a bowler, but did not bowl a ball in the match.The perception of nepotism plagued his career in Pakistan. His father’s tenuous relationship with the Pakistan Cricket Board did not help. It is a burden Qadir carries with him.”Unfortunately, I have a big name with me,” Qadir says. “It’s quite difficult if I talk about my father. I don’t want to do that. In Pakistan I didn’t play lots of cricket. That’s why I did not get opportunities. So that’s why I moved to Australia.”His relationship with his father is good despite, like many fathers and sons, some rocky moments. He is still proud to be the son of Abdul Qadir but he wants to be his own man.”He carries the name and so everyone, I think, makes the assumption or makes the connection,” Voges says. “Usman is very aware of that. I think part of that is the reason he’s come out to try his luck in Australia. He speaks a lot about his dad. But he wants to forge his own path and hopefully he can out here.”He hasn’t played a lot of cricket but he’s got some really good variations and he can actually bat as well, so that’s good. I think he’ll keep learning. The more he gets exposed, the more he gets the opportunity to play out here, the more he’ll keep learning.”He is learning quickly in Australia. His splash in the JLT Cup should have been no surprise given his performances in club cricket, which he describes as some of the most competitive cricket he’s played.It led to selection in the Prime Minister’s XI game against South Africa in Canberra, where he took 3 for 28. It also gave him a chance to catch up with his hero and mentor, Imran Tahir.

“Mostly, I like to watch Imran Tahir,” Qadir says. “He’s like my brother. Whenever I get into difficulties I speak to my dad and Imran Tahir.”He said, ‘you bowled pretty well. Just go with your flow, whatever you are doing, you’re performing really well. Just keep working hard and you can achieve your goal.’ This was his advice to me.”Now Qadir gets his chance in the BBL as the league becomes a haven for overseas spinners to make their mark. Rashid has forged a path and every other club has taken the Strikers’ lead. The Brisbane Heat have added Afghanistan teenager Mujeeb Ur Rahman while the Melbourne Stars have signed Nepal youngster Sandeep Lamichhane. Mohammad Nabi returns for another overseas stint at the Melbourne Renegades and now the Scorchers, a side whose success is built on the back of a deep pace-bowling unit, have gambled on Qadir.Voges, with more recent batting experience in the league than any other coach, said it was easy to see why spinners were having such a significant impact on the tournament.”Not being able to pick guys, which way it’s spinning, and the pressures of being able to score are huge,” Voges says.”I guess it’s just their skill that has made scoring really quite difficult. I think Rashid Khan has been a breath of fresh air into the competition and certainly was a big part of Adelaide’s success last year. We’d be mad not to try and copy something like that.”All Usman Qadir ever wanted was an opportunity. Now he’s found it in the last place you would ever think to look.

With their core still in place, Kolkata Knight Riders can hope for another top-four finish

The team might not be too badly affected by the World Cup exodus, giving them more stability than some of their competitors

Sreshth Shah19-Mar-20197:16

Manjrekar: Unsure of KKR’s playoff chances

Where they finished in 2018

Third in the league stage, lost in the second eliminator.

Strengths

A batting outfit with power-hitters slotted through the line-up. Kolkata Knight Riders’ top three of Chris Lynn, Sunil Narine and Robin Uthappa had the highest strike rate among all the teams last season, while their middle order (Nos. 4 to 7), led by Andre Russell and Dinesh Karthik, scored the most number of runs. Knight Riders also struck the most number of boundaries – 253 fours and 130 sixes – last year.Dinesh Karthik, in particular, plays a key role as captain and finisher, a job that he’s done well in for India as well. In IPL 2018, Karthik was not out in six of KKR’s successful chases, averaging nearly 70 in the second innings.By the numbers, KKR also have the strongest spin unit by some distance. In Kuldeep Yadav, Piyush Chawla and Sunil Narine, they had the best bowling strike rate (19.3) and most wickets (52, ahead of next-best Sunrisers’ 37) last season. Their spinners also had the best bowling average (25.78) in IPL 2018.ESPNcricinfo Ltd

Weaknesses

Like last season, they enter the 2019 competition with an inexperienced pace attack. Last year’s auction picks, Kamlesh Nagarkoti and Shivam Mavi, are out with injuries, as is South African Anrich Nortje, while they have released Tom Curran and Mitchell Starc. Prasidh Krishna, the young Karnataka bowler who hasn’t been a regular in his state’s T20 side, will be their most experienced IPL fast bowler.Their main overseas short-format pace bowler Harry Gurney has never played the IPL, while Lockie Ferguson is their senior-most pacer; Russell has dipped as a force with the ball.A boost for the bowling unit, though, is the addition of Kerala pacer Sandeep Warrier, who was recently part of the Rest of India side and also took a hat-trick for Kerala in the Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy.In IPL 2018, KKR’s pacers took only 13 wickets – the lowest among all teams – and had the poorest economy for the season: 10.69.ESPNcricinfo Ltd

The overseas question

Lynn, Narine and Russell form the backbone of KKR’s line-up, and all three pick themselves if fit. If the pitch is sticky or two-paced, left-arm pacer Gurney is a prospective selection with his multitude of variations. Carlos Brathwaite, who has found moderate success in the IPL but has pleasant memories of playing T20s in Kolkata, is also available. So is England allrounder Joe Denly, who bats in the Powerplay and bowls legbreaks.

Availability

Lynn and Narine are not likely to be part of their countries’ World Cup plans, so they should be available for the full season. Russell and Brathwaite could miss games towards the end of the season, with West Indies travelling to Ireland for a tri-series ahead of the World Cup.Nortje’s absence will hurt Kolkata, with his out-and-out pace one of the things the team had banked on. Ferguson, too, may not be available when New Zealand’s World Cup players leave the tournament.Overall, the team is well suited to withstand the possible exodus of foreign players, and barring injuries, their core should remain unaffected this season.The best XI
1 Chris Lynn, 2 Sunil Narine, 3 Robin Uthappa, 4 Shubman Gill, 5 Nitish Rana, 6 Dinesh Karthik (wk, capt), 7 Andre Russell, 8 Piyush Chawla, 9 Kuldeep Yadav, 10 Sandeep Warrier, 11 Harry GurneyCoaches: Jacques Kallis, Simon Katich, Abhishek Nayar

Will they make the play-offs?

The two-time champions have finished in the top four in four of the last five seasons, and with the solidity in their batting, should get there again.

How Hobart Hurricanes became Perth Scorchers 2.0

They have been the standout side in the group stage of the Big Bash having largely trusted their own talent

Sam Perry25-Jan-2019They’ve never finished last, nor ever finished first. But after ten games and eight wins, Hobart Hurricanes have proved themselves the standout franchise in BBL08, and are virtually assured a finals berth with four games remaining in the regular season. What underpins their rise?Their evolution to BBL heavyweights has come about through part geographic disadvantage, part design, with no real Moneyball to be seen. On the contrary, whereas T20 franchises can often seem to be a cold, data-driven aggregation of players with good numbers, the central tenet of the Hurricanes’ philosophy is a ‘one program’ approach.With the exception of just two out-of-towners in D’Arcy Short and Jofra Archer, from the executives to the coaches to the kit handler to the strength and conditioning coach, the same people that work for Tasmania work on the Hurricanes. According to those familiar with the program, the notion of a team where staff and players alike simply ‘swap shirts’ for six weeks creates continuity, that in-turn breeds a welcome familiarity and camaraderie among the group. Sound familiar? The Hurricanes know this path has been well-trodden by their counterparts in the West, and don’t mind the moniker of ‘Scorchers 2.0’.Not that Short – who for all intents and purposes treated as an overseas player at the franchise – or Archer, aren’t important. The latter is especially so. While sections of the Australian public remain intriguingly unaware of his stardom – and his potential to be part England’s World Cup bid – the Hurricanes are happy in the knowledge they boast one of the best quicks in the format. His arrival in Hobart was spurred by a county fixture involving Archer and George Bailey, who was playing for Hampshire. Bailey faced Archer for the first time, and following the game called Hurricanes management to inform them that he absolutely had to be signed. Four weeks later, he was.But while Archer has performed excellently, not all overseas or out-of-town players find the Tasmanian Isle an appealing prospect. There’s the story of one player spurning an offer to join the Hurricanes because Hobart was too far from other states to travel to, while others have openly declared their preference to Hurricanes management for the glitzy cosmopolitan wares of Sydney and Melbourne, as opposed to the altogether more peaceable surrounds of the Salamanca Market and MONA.

Rather than plump for the outright best individual players in the competition, they recruit on a role-basis, aiming to fill specific game needs, rather than retrofitting stars into a team set-up

Not that playing for a Sydney franchise always guarantees a holistic commitment to the team cause either. While at the Sydney’s Western Suburbs-based Thunder, Chris Gayle rejected the team’s accommodation at Rooty Hill RSL, opting instead to pay for his own accommodation nearer the CBD.The parable of Gayle is instructive in the Hurricanes’ thinking, too. They’re of the view that the very best individual players don’t necessarily correlate to team success, as Gayle’s winning record might suggest. Instead, rather than plump for the outright best individual players in the competition, they recruit on a role-basis, aiming to fill specific game needs, rather than retrofitting stars into a team set-up. To that end, they were thrilled to regain the services of James Faulkner from Melbourne Stars, which they saw as having the double-effect of burnishing their playing stocks with a highly skilled finisher, and shearing a rival of a key role player in the process.The Hurricanes have never had a problem registering 180, but they’ve previously had trouble defending it. Faulkner’s return, alongside Riley Meredith’s stellar entrance, has balanced an attack which prefers to err on the side of pace, given Blundstone Arena’s unforgiving relationship to spin. While their recent capitulation at the hands of Sydney Sixers and Josh Philippe suggests they’re not fully rid of that phenomenon, more often than not they’re finding ways to restrict the opposition in the wake of their own batting flurries, which adheres to a simple goal to lose no more than two wickets in the first ten overs, and – if achieved – will likely lead to another 100 from the last ten.Further underpinning their holistic approach to short format cricket, they’ve recently commenced their own academy program. The brainchild of CEO Nick Cummins and Mike Hussey when both were at the Thunder, the apparatus bridges the gap between Premier Cricket and the BBL, where for many the step from suburban outposts to catches in front of 40,000 under lights can be dizzying.Under the program, players play against others on the periphery, and head to tournaments against other Academy outfits, like a recent one in Abu Dhabi, where they were able to play against teams like the Auckland, Yorkshire and Lahore Qalandars able to provide exposure to mystery spin, and players who could work the ball into strange areas.Earlier this week, Cummins replied to feverish praise of the Hurricanes on Twitter, claiming the importance of ‘keeping the lid on’. But as the Scorchers 2.0 project rounds the bend into finals, their powerful batting, role players, balanced bowling and a cohesive operational structure means he’ll be fighting an uphill battle. There can be little doubt the Hurricanes have given themselves every opportunity to claim their first title in franchise history. The lid is almost off.

Velocity v Supernovas – more than just a match of cricketing acumen

The focus, invariably, will be as much on the captains – Mithali Raj and Harmanpreet Kaur – as it will be on the youngsters and international stars

ESPNcricinfo staff11-May-2019First, the cricket
Velocity are led by Mithali Raj, arguably India’s best ever cricketer and captain of the ODI side; Supernovas are led by Harmanpreet Kaur, the most exciting batsman of her generation, Raj’s deputy in the ODI side and captain of the T20 team.These sides met here, at Jaipur’s Sawai Mansingh Stadium, two days ago. In that match, Raj’s Velocity lost pace, intent and eventually the match. But they still qualified for the final by pipping Trailblazers, whom they’d already beaten, on NRR.Match info

Start time: 1930 IST
Venue: Sawai Mansingh Stadium, Jaipur.

What’s the feud?
The long-suspected acrimony between the two players became public during the World T20 in the West Indies in November. Raj was dropped for the semi-final, which India lost, and after the match Harmanpreet said she had wanted to retain a winning side from the previous match. Raj’s manager, however, then launched an unprecedented Twitter attack on Harmanpreet’s captaincy. She called Harmanpreet a “manipulative, lying, immature, undeserving captain” and also said the women’s team believed in “politics not sport”.What was the fallout?
The first casualty was the interim head coach Ramesh Powar – his contract expired days after that semi-final defeat and was not extended. Powar, who received the backing of Harmanpreet and her T20 deputy Smriti Mandhana, was critical of Raj in his report on India’s performance at the World T20. He said she had threatened to pull out of the tournament if not allowed to open the batting.Annesha Ghosh/ESPNcricinfoDid it end there?
There were a lot of emails sent by Raj and Harmanpreet to the Committee of Administrators, all leaked to the media. Raj said the episode had left her, “for the first time in a 20-year long career… deflated, depressed and let down. I am forced to think if my services to my country are of any value to a few people in power who are out to destroy me and break my confidence.” She did not directly blame Harmanpreet, saying “I am of the opinion that Harman and I are senior players and our issues, if any, should be sorted out by the two of us by sitting across the table.”What happened next?
Well, they sat down across the table – along with senior BCCI officials – within a week of Raj’s email. Raj is understood to have told Harmanpreet that Annisha Gupta, whose tweets had set off the storm, was not her manager. On her part, Harmanpreet told Raj that the decision to exclude her from the World T20 semis was not a personal choice but a collective call.About a month later, on the eve of the team’s tour of New Zealand, both Raj and Harmanpreet claimed to have “moved on” from the acrimony that, by Raj’s admission, did “hamper” the profile of the Indian women’s team.BCCISo that was that?
Or so we thought. Earlier this week, though, Raj told , “I do keep to myself [in the dressing room] and people can’t judge me for that right now…I believe what has happened has definitely made me more wiser to people around me in the dressing room… I wouldn’t say I felt lonely but I definitely feel that I was betrayed.”So has Raj settled in the side?
Since the start of the 2017 World Cup, Raj, now 36, has been largely inconsistent on whether she herself envisions herself playing the 2020 T20 World Cup or the 2021 ODI World Cup. While still a formidable force in the 50-over format, on the subject of whether retirement from the shortest format figures in her plans, Raj’s go-to refrain when fielding questions at press conferences of late has been, “You’ll see when that happens.”In March, WV Raman, the new coach of the women’s side, in a post-match review alongside stand-in captain Mandhana and Raj said that “we [him, Raj and Mandhana, the stand-in captain for the series against England women] had a chat about what she [Raj] is comfortable doing and what suits the side as well.”With that, a semblance of clarity around her batting slot in the middle order, and not as an opener, appeared to have been offered. That topic had become a full-blown controversy after India’s 2018 World T20 exit.Yet in that same interview, when asked whether the new team management had informed her of her role in the team, Raj’s answer was succinct: “Honestly, not yet.”Back to Jaipur
What Raman, Mandhana and the management make of the denial may not be brought up for discussion until the national camp in Bengaluru gets underway next month. For now, the focus remains on the action in Jaipur and the battle for supremacy between Raman-Harmanpreet’s Supernovas and Raj’s Velocity.Can 15-year-old uncapped Indian batsman Shafali Verma get Velocity off to a brisk start, like she did in her first game of the tournament? Or will Supernovas batsman Jemimah Rodrigues trump Shafali in the battle of the teenagers? Also, the in-form Danielle Wyatt could alone demolish the Supernovas attack, unless the Yadavs – Radha and Poonam – orchestrate yet another middle-overs choke with their spin.With less than ten months out from the T20 World Cup in Australia, uncapped Indians would do well to treat the Women’s T20 Challenge final as an audition for a likely call-up, and for internationals on the fringe, such as Veda Krishnamurthy and Sushma Verma, a chance for a recall into the national side.

You talk, Steven Smith bats

There has been no shortage of words written and spoken about Steven Smith’s comeback, but the man himself cares only about batting

Jarrod Kimber in Bristol31-May-2019″I think he’s got a bit more spare time on his hands. He gets bored pretty easy. That is why he is training for hours on end. He doesn’t like it when he is told he can’t train for the day.”That was Aaron Finch, speaking with a smile on his face, on Steven Smith.Not that long ago that Justin Langer was talking about how Smith shadow batted in the shower. Which seems a perfectly fine and normal thing for any cricketer to do. Langer more recently has been talking about how he doesn’t want Smith and Warner to be booed when they play. Which is an extraordinary thing considering Justin Langer also likes to sledge his daughter when they play Uno.ALSO READ: Australia come to the World Cup singing and dancingThere was also Nathan Lyon talking about Smith’s treatment in the warm-up match at Southampton: “They’re ruthless over here. I’ve had two Ashes tours and a one-day series and haven’t experienced anything else. They’re ruthless and don’t show much love. They haven’t changed their lines in 12 months.” The ‘s chief sports writer, Paul Hayward, wrote a column on the English crowd and Smith and Warner: “Somewhere in deepest England, Steve Smith and David Warner are steeling themselves to hear the same gags every minute of every day on a long summer tour.”Everyone has been talking about Smith, but Smith just bats.A few years ago a team-mate of Smith’s suggested privately that it’s actually hard to talk to Smith about anything not cricket. Obsessed is probably an understatement. Many captains find the extra parts that come with the job – video analysis, strategy meetings, keeping on top of everyone’s form and injuries – boring. For Smith it seemed like the perfect use of his time. Now Smith is only an occasional pariah, constant talking point and professional batsman.”There is no question about his batting ability,” Finch said. “So when you are great, you get the game quicker, things just happen quicker, so there is never any issue about how he’ll bounce back.” And as Finch noted, Smith has spent a season in the IPL against many of the best white-ball bowlers in the world, so he’s been plenty prepared.”I suppose, when you are the captain, there is a bit more stuff that occupies your time at various times,” Finch added. “But he’s been brilliant around the boys, he’s been great for me, talking cricket, talking batting, things like that and lessons he’s learnt from being captain and leading the team. I think he’s been really important for me, and just general conversation.”Some players fill their time watching movies, others playing FIFA, Steven Smith does it training, talking and preparing.Australia underwent a light training session on Friday. Most of the bowlers didn’t turn up, neither did the recovering David Warner, nor Glenn Maxwell, nor Usman Khawaja. But Smith was one of the first in the nets. At first in the spin nets, having some trouble with the legspinner Australia have flown in, and later slogging to leg the left-arm wristspinner. Then he went into the throwdown nets and did some hitting there before moving across to the seam-bowling nets. He spent a long time in each.Then when the other batsmen finished their session, he came back to bat alone for close to 40 minutes. First he was taking throwdowns from Ricky Ponting, whose arm seemed to go numb in the long session, before Sridharan Sriram, the team’s spin consultant, had to pick up the slack.During the entire net session he seemed to work on using his feet to spin, then some power hitting. Against the seam bowlers he was moving around the crease – even more than usual for him – to find new places to score. And against the throwdowns at one stage he was batting against the side of the cut strip outside leg stump, to work on – I mean, who knows, but he didn’t get bowled even when the ball was flung to the stumps.After the entire workout, where he’d batted as long as the other players combined, he was standing outside the nets, shadow batting on his own as the tired net bowlers and assistant coaches went for a well-earned drink.This summer, there will always be someone talking about Steve Smith. And while that happens there will be Smith batting in the middle, the nets, his mind and the shower.

Talking points: How do you stop Dre Russ? Ask KKR

They had a chance to send Russell out in the ninth over, but waited until the 16th to unleash him

Alagappan Muthu21-Apr-20194:41

Plan was to save my overs for Russell – Rashid

It appears that Kolkata Knight Riders don’t really have a set batting position for Andre Russell. It’s more to do with how many balls are remaining when a wicket falls. This season it’s (roughly) 42. And if you take out their matches against Chennai Super Kings and Delhi Capitals, where their batting collapsed, it comes down to 38.ESPNcricinfo LtdThat is precious little time for your biggest match winner to have a say. On Sunday, KKR had a chance to send Russell out in the ninth over, when Dinesh Karthik fell. But they held him back and forced him into a situation where he only had a maximum of 27 legal balls to do his thing.KKR had 124 on the board in the 16th over – after being 42 in 2.4 – and Russell only had the tail for company. He had to deny singles. He had to hit everything out of the park. And even he succumbed to that kind of pressure. Bhuvneshwar Kumar knocked him out for 15 off 9.Trump card v Monster hitterNine overs of the match were done by the time Rashid Khan had his first over and he was taken off immediately. The reason was simple. Sunrisers Hyderabad were saving him for Russell. This head-to-head in IPL reads seven balls, seven runs and one wicket. And while that isn’t enough of a sample size, the West Indian has a strike rate of 140 against all legspinners since IPL 2015. He hits every other kind of bowling at 180 and more.It was advantage Sunrisers, even before KKR helped them out by bungling their batting order.Sunrisers boss the PowerplayDavid Warner and Jonny Bairstow are beautiful hitters of the new white ball – in any level of cricket – and with them as openers Sunrisers have recorded all three of this season’s best Powerplay totals.ESPNcricinfo LtdWinning this game hinged on their partnership because the pitch in Hyderabad was a pretty slow one and once the ball lost its shine, and the fielding restrictions were relaxed, forcing the pace was difficult. Knowing all of that, Warner and Bairstow carved out 72 runs – nearly 50% of their target – in the Powerplay itself. It was pristine planning and even better execution.The big callKuldeep Yadav was left out of a KKR XI for the first time in over 30 IPL matches. The left-arm wristspinner has been an intrinsic part of the franchise, except this season both of his strengths have been, well, not so strong.Although he turns the ball both ways, he’s only beaten the bat three times; times this season. And, at least in the last game, we saw a crack in that unflappable temperament.Good captains back their wicket-taking bowlers even when they’re out of form but seeing them on their knees changes the story.Kuldeep – with four wickets in 33 overs and an economy rate of 8.66 – needed a break. He needed to refresh, not only for the sake of KKR but also for India when they play the World Cup next month.The pinch hitterSunil Narine does not pretend to be a proper batsman. His only job is to get his team ahead of the game and, to that effect, all he does is clear his front leg and whack. While a technique like that can and has been exploited, his hand-eye coordination makes sure KKR still get plenty of runs before that happens.Case in point: While Narine was at the crease – and it was only 16 balls – KKR ransacked 42 runs. Over the remaining 20, they went at less than a run a ball and still got to the end of the Powerplay with a score of 61.

Are these the most remarkable shots in modern cricket?

Here are 11, from Gayle, Kohli, Buttler, Williamson and others

Jarrod Kimber06-Jun-2019Everyone has a batsman who plays a shot that does things to them. Magical, visceral strokes that grab us, from nowhere, despite everything, because there is something about their architecture or meaning, or where the ball goes, or where it doesn’t. Of how you can’t help but notice it, or you miss it every time. The connection is yours. But these are some of the best right now.Cue moans of ecstasy•Getty ImagesShai Hope: the back-foot drive
The ball is short of a length, just outside off stump. He has barely moved from his original position. If anything, he stops his front foot from going forward and drags it towards the crease. But the back one never moves. His head is still; it is entirely his arms that do the work. They wait until the last moment, when the delivery gets to bellybutton height, beneath the eyes. A slightly off-centre straight bat hits the ball, his feet leave the ground, and the ball flies through mid-off.There are lots of great back-foot cover drives out there. If you can play the shot, chances are it looks good. Stuart Broad has a breathtaking and surprising version. Morne Morkel has shown elegance beyond himself with a few. The best in the game right now is probably Kane Williamson, but Joe Root might want to have words with that opinion. Then there’s Haris Sohail. And Hashim Amla’s back-foot cover drive hasn’t retired yet.But Hope, when he stays so still, makes one quick movement, and the ball flies through mid-off – it’s just wonderful, and it does something to me. I saw this shot live, and there was a communal guttural moan that followed it.We all have that shot by that player that moves us. It might have been David Gower off his pads, Virender Sehwag’s square drive, or Neil Harvey coming down the wicket to spin. It’s not the generic “I like cover drives”, it’s the specific, “I like Rohan Kanai’s cover drive.” From now until the end of time I’ll always be moved by Hope playing that shot. I still remember how the arm of the person next to me felt when I grabbed it after Hope played one of these.Is that a jab or a caress? Is he human? Questions•Mal Fairclough/AFP/Getty ImagesRohit Sharma: the short-arm jab
The front foot comes down the wicket; it’s not a huge stride but the weight is forward. The narrowly back-of-a-length ball challenges that movement. But instead of going back, he stands still and swings his arms across the ball. The ball is picked up from somewhere above bail height and ends miles over midwicket.It’s not a shot for mortals; the angled bat means you have a significant chance of top-edging the ball or dragging back on. You’re attacking a length ball across the line. And you’re on your front foot playing what has been for centuries a back-foot stroke. To play this, you need to have the extra moment of time that the rest of us don’t have – be the sort of person who stops their own sneeze. Virat Kohli has one, David Warner another, and in recent times Shubman Gill has also played it. But those players emphasise the jab in their shots. They are punching their jab; Rohit caresses his.The pull shot is the most red-blooded of cricket shots. It’s a combination of protecting your body, getting the ball a ways away, and doing it by any means. With Alastair Cook retiring, Shan Masood’s pull shot is perhaps the best around (a delightful swivel pull). The pull produces interesting progeny like the strapple (straight pull) and the Lara and Greenidge hip flicks. But the short-arm jab is different, as you can score from different kinds of balls.Warner uses his to find easy twos, Kohli and Gill unfurl theirs when the field is up on the leg side. Rohit doesn’t use it in those ways because he is ethereal. He’s not even a batsman; he’s just a collection of fireflies lighting up our world. So when he plays the short-arm jab, it’s 34 rows back, because he has entered god mode, and he has no time for length balls. He is reaching out with his feelings, finding balance and energy, surrounding and binding cricket fans together.This is the Rohit Sharma Jedi short-arm ease.Taylor: legs it all the time•Michael Bradley/AFP/Getty ImagesRoss Taylor: the standing hockey swat
The ball is full and wide of off stump, a perfect delivery to be cover-driven or lofted over off. The batsman moves across his stumps and bends his knee. It’s like he’s building to sweep. What follows is a cross-bat shot, although the bowler is fast. The ball disappears over deep midwicket.There was a time when Taylor was one of the best T20 batsmen on earth. It was only fleeting, but in 2008 he averaged 39 and struck at 182. That was across IPL, domestic T20s at home, and some internationals. At that stage he was playing this shot almost exclusively. If the ball was full, wide, or even straight, spin, seam, it didn’t matter, Taylor was in position to play his stroke. His wagon wheels looked more like a compass, and his north was midwicket. These days he brings the shot out when he gets to the death; given that in the last two years he has averaged 75 in ODIs, that happens more often than not.Taylor isn’t the first player with a frequent leg-side shot. Yuvraj Singh had his pretty flick, Dean Jones his run-down-the-wicket clip, Eoin Morgan the run-and-swat, and Mominul Haque the chip wide of mid-on. Oh, and I appreciate the Fakhar Zaman fast-action leg flick. More players now have go-to leg-side shots. It’s far easier to take a ball from outside off to leg than the other way around.Other crazy guys have swept quicks, but Taylor isn’t even doing that. And he’s not using the pace of the seamers, as Mal Loye did; Taylor’s shot is forward of square, usually towards midwicket. And this is not even a cricket shot, it’s more of a drag-flick from hockey.Unlike most players with their agricultural or necessity shots to leg, Taylor seems to have decided it comprised almost all of his run-scoring options. No player reached further to hit to leg. This is a man desperate to hit a shot, one shot, his shot. The single bloody-mindedness and the huge sixes are admirable.Williamson’s push-guide-nudge: a genius response to a critical delivery•Getty ImagesKane Williamson: the defensive shot to gully
His eyes are level, he’s in a symmetrical batting stance, his gloves are just near his right hip, there is a slight bow in his front leg. The ball is back of a length outside off stump, and he moves into the line of the delivery and waits for it to come. He is in this position early, and he plays the ball late, so the ball’s under his eyes when it hits his bat. His soft hands roll it out on a gully line, and then straight away he’s off down the other end.Let us be clear here. For almost any classical shot in cricket, Williamson is either first or on the podium. He probably has the best forward defence, the cleanest conventional cover drive ( sorry, Belly) a world-class pull, the nicest back-foot cover drive. And he may be the best cutter of spin. I assume there are people with all these various shots tattooed across their backs, but Williamson’s defensive stroke is more important than any of them.In top-level cricket there is no ball more critical than the one in the channel outside off – the corridor of uncertainty, the Queensland line, or whatever your phrase is. It’s the thing you see in Tests and ODIs the most. Top batsmen like Rahul Dravid, Joe Root and Williamson score off them. Root knocks the ball to point and takes a one or two, Dravid used soft hands to guide it through fifth and sixth slip. Williamson is somewhere in between.It’s not entirely a guide or a push; in most hands it’s probably a play and miss. He does it from the stumps and wide in the channel; he does front- and back-foot versions. It’s a versatile, gentle defensive scoring shot. If it’s a shot you haven’t noticed or fallen deliriously in love with, that’s because it just looks like nothing.This simple shot allows Williamson to be constantly at the non-striker’s end. Look at the highlights of Williamson batting: no self-respecting TV director is adding this shot to the package. And yet he plays it ball after ball, making bowling in the channel to him like shooting a ghost.The switcheroo: Mendis looks like he’s striding forward to defend, and then in a flash he’s pulling it to the fence•Getty ImagesKusal Mendis: the pull to spin
The batsman moves across and forward, trying to negate the turn. But the ball is just a touch too short. Then, like he is being yanked on a string, all his weight thrusts back. One leg has moved towards square leg, the other is around off stump. He’s low to the ground and putting all his force into a pull shot.Generations ago, cutting the spinner was seen as high art, but with the advent of DRS, spinners bowl straighter now, and the cut shot has gone. If this piece was written 20 years ago, Tendulkar’s lap, Steve Waugh’s slog sweep, Younis Khan going down the wicket, and VVS Laxman’s inside-out cover drives from leg stump would all be on the list. But spinners have become lbw machines, and many of the scoring options now reflect the need to protect your stumps.In the last three years of international cricket 13 players have scored 1000 or more runs and averaged 50 plus against spin. Che Pujara has his come-down-the-wicket-and-whip. Steven Smith possesses the fastest feet. Williamson can cut the slow ball. Root pushes through the covers romantically. And Kohli plays a mean cover drive to the offspinners. But as good as all these shots are, none have the drama of Mendis’ pull.He has the talent to join the big four of batting, but he hasn’t worked out the consistency yet. You can see that in the pull shot. Not one of Virat, Joe, Kane or Steve would play this exact shot. They would work these balls or check the stroke. Mendis is all in; he is splayed across the crease and whacking the ball as hard as he can. Visually it shows speed and desperation; there is a touch of the schoolboy to it. Like he thinks any ball he has a chance of scoring off, he needs to throw everything at it.Dentist’s advisory: don’t try this at home•Getty ImagesAB de Villiers: the sweep against seam
He’s well outside off stump by the time the ball is delivered, crouching low and getting into a near lap-sweep position. Inside the line, and with the shoulders slightly turned towards fine. Then the sweep comes, it’s like a flick-sweep, lofting the ball, which travels for six over short fine-leg’s head.This shot is remarkable because he has done it to Lasith Malinga and Dale Steyn (OMG! Ponies!), because he hits so often, and because he shows all of his stumps while doing it. But maybe the most exciting part is that this is the only shot in world cricket that can hit sixes off full deliveries behind square off slower balls. The scoop – either Dil or lap – relies on pace from the bowler. The helicopter shot still has to clear boundary riders. Short fine-leg is almost always in the ring. De Villiers’ shot is almost always in play.ABDV is not a normal human. He played the demon Mitchell Johnson 2.0 like he was bowling yawns. He has perfected the execution of every shot invented, and he once reverse-hooked a ball.This shot would be foolish from a human player – even he laughs off the fact that he doesn’t do it in the nets because eventually a top edge will remove sections of his jaw. But his ability to play the shot means you cannot york him or bowl wide of off stump. Slower balls are less effective as well. So this stroke ensures there’s no place to bowl to him, and no field to set either.From a spectator’s point of view, this shot is bonkers, B.O.N.K.E.R.S. It doesn’t matter if it’s bowled by some clubby domestic T20 bowler or Mitchell Starc – sweeping a quick is silly, sweeping a quick while on the move is silly, and sweeping a quick while trying to get inside it is silly. It’s like a triple-pike shot while simultaneously smoking a cigarette and drinking a beer and winking at you that this will all work out.Roy: pavilion-hater•Getty ImagesJason Roy: straight drive
He has taken a few steps down the wicket. He is not running, though, just getting some momentum, staying leg side of the ball, and that’s so he can swing his arms through the line. The backswing and follow-through are not extravagant, but they are more than enough to clear any rope. This goes long and straight until it slams into the Oval pavillion.In this generation there are two noises you hear at The Oval, the topless bloke yelling “Come on, the Rees”, and the sound of a Jason Roy drive clanging into the pavilion. Surrey have been tinkering with their members’ stand for a while and Roy has spent most of that time trying to bash it down. It is his statement on how historical architecture fights modern life. It doesn’t seem to matter if he is playing for England or not, Roy always appears to be at The Oval, scaring members.One of the great selling points of this shot is how similarly he plays it against pace or spin. He is walking down the wicket because the bowler is too slow for his fast-twitch muscles – whether it’s flighted or seam-up, he wants at it, and then swings true.There are a lot of nice straight drives in the world. Kohli (again). Shane Watson’s has lovely brute force. Ajinkya Rahane is a picture when he plays it, Cameron White a statue. Roy’s is dramatic because of the number of sixes that come from it but also for his method. It’s a combination of old-school batting and newfangled hitting. The raw, muscular athleticism of the modern batsman, but still grammatically as correct as any straight drives of yore. It’s elegantly brutal.Sciver: like a giant trying to make a daisy chain•Getty ImagesNatalie Sciver: the Natmeg
The ball is full on the stumps, and although she has moved back to give herself room and get into her power position, she is now cramped. Instead of swinging through the line and smashing it straight, she has to come up with a new option. The one she takes is to keep her feet wide and flick a glance through her legs.The Natmeg even being a thing shows how far women’s cricket has come. The women had cricket’s first World Cup, but it’s not common knowledge. Belinda Clark scored the first ODI double, but that is rarely mentioned. But when Sciver played this awkward genius shot, it all went a bit viral. And what is better is that Sciver didn’t even invent the shot. The draw shot – the name used before hashtags – was a part of cricket back in the men-only days. And Steven Smith had been playing it for a while too.But there is a specific reason Sciver’s shot is better than Smith’s. It’s because we expect Smith to do weird things. One time he leg-glanced a ball from Wahab Riaz that was missing the pitch on the off side. For a while there he had this sword-dancing leave, and even his regular strokes are not standard human shots.Sciver is a hitter. She clears the front leg, lofts the ball and clears ropes. There is little art in her batting; it’s just aggressive slapping and muscle strokes. So for her to not only use the draw shot but for it to be back-up for when she fails to slog the ball as well, that’s remarkable.There’s a delightful awkwardness to her playing this shot. It is not like a leg glance; it is what a leg glance would be if you had only heard about it in a poem one time. She looks like a giant trying to make a daisy chain. Smith doesn’t have that; he was playing the ball through his legs while he was still in utero. Sciver’s version isn’t natural, it’s like a robot squatting, until the moment where she styles it out by artfully giving us a follow-through the legs. But you don’t care, because she hit a ball through her legs.Buttler: swing time•Getty ImagesJos Buttler: the straight hit
The ball is supposed to be a yorker wide of the stumps and it has not missed its length by much. But since the bowler hit the crease, the batsman has moved back in the crease. His feet are quick, and they stay close together; he doesn’t have a big power stance. His backlift is late, unlike other huge hitters he doesn’t always have his bat lifted like a baseball player. Instead, his bat is at his hip until the ball is halfway down. Then he quickly picks it up to about shoulder height, and it comes down as fast as anything moves in cricket. The shot is played with a slightly angled bat, late, and looks more like a golf swing. The wrists and hands are not like they would be a standard cricket shot, and the ball has a power fade on it as it disappears into the crowd.It is difficult to stop Buttler; the easiest dismissal seems to be waiting for him to leave the crease before the ball is bowled. In the last three years in ODIs in the final ten overs he has scored 742 runs off 425 balls and been out nine times, averaging 78 while hitting at 10.86 an over. The highest average and second best strike rate of those with over 200 death runs.He has a million shots – he played a ball over his head while standing upright; he can pull and cut hard; he steps across the wicket to paddle; owns all the sweeps that have been invented; and he has this muscular anti-cover drive that is awesome. Buttler is a favourite shot master. But it’s his straight hit that is the most captivating because it is not like traditional cricket shots, or even like new T20 shots. His method – this small base, golf-like swing and breaking wrists that don’t look like the hitting we’re used to – doesn’t feel quite right, or look like we expect a power shot to be. And yet there it is, disappearing quicker than the cameraman can turn around, again and again. And something is exciting about a player of his size who can launch balls over 100 metres and then paddle a quicker bowler over this head before dashing back for two on the rare mishit.The defence for four•Getty ImagesVirat Kohli: the on-drive
The ball is full and around off stump; the batsman moves across his stumps. The average human instinct is to flick it away, but the galaxy-brained player stays still and punches it back past the non-striker with a straight bat. It’s almost a defensive shot, such is the still head and angle of the bat; it’s just that the ball is now hitting the rope at long-on.I know already that Kohli fans are angry with me for him missing out on the straight drive and short arm jab. Considering how much arse he has been kicking (vast arse), they always seem angry. But Kohli plays so many shots well that unless you give him a medal for playing them all well (and I assume someone has) you have to pick the that he is best at. Essentially he was not competing with other players for best shots so much as his best shots were competing with each other. And the others are cool, sexy, breathtaking, but his on-drive is something else.The on-drive is cricket’s one iron, and not even God can hit a one iron. It’s a shot that is not handed out to all batsmen – you have to dislodge a bat out of a rock, Excalibur-style, just to show you’re worthy. MS Dhoni and Kieron Pollard play incredible lofted versions. But as good as Dhoni looks winning a World Cup, or Pollard does in a cap, lifting a spinner over a stand, the artisan’s on-drive is the forward defence that races through the non-striker’s legs.When the balance, eye and technique meld together, the batsman says, I am the best player on the ground. Or in Kohli’s case, the planet.Mind the windows, Chris•PA Photos/Getty ImagesChris Gayle: the heave to leg
His right foot points to midwicket, and the bat starts around his head. The entire pitch is clear for him to swing to leg. This ball is on a length on off stump; his bat comes through on an angle. Once the bat makes contact, the ball disappears, from the pitch, the ring, the ground, the stadium, the solar system.We’ve seen so many Gayle big hits now, it’s hard to think of his other shots. His footwork to the spinners, the pull shots off the hip, or even his occasional guide down to third man. Once you see him club Brett Lee into the Archbishop Tennyson School, other shots are just white noise.Slogs to leg have been around for a long time. When players from the top of Test cricket to the bottom of club grades swing hard, it’s to midwicket or cow corner. It’s a natural swing, it’s how kids first swing the bat, and they invented an entire sport around it. So the swing is not new, and sixes have happened before. Sure, he hits it longer, and that catches the eye, but they don’t count for more runs.But the real reason Gayle is so memorable is that he succeeds in playing a shot most don’t, and he does it over and over again. He is remarkably consistent at nailing what is a low percentage shot. According to ESPNcricinfo records, in the last three years of the shots that have been classified, 24.9% of Gayle’s T20 runs come through midwicket. And of those 565 runs, 294 are from sixes. To mid-on, there have been 365 runs, and 198 in sixes. That is incredible consistency from what is a cross-bat shot, with his foot nowhere near the line of the ball. That shows how well he picks the ball he is going to hit, and how much time he has spent honing this skill, turning a dirty slog into a production line.And think about this: everyone in the entire universe he claims to be boss of knows where he is going to hit, and he still does it, all this time later.

England under the hammer

A new film about the No. 1 Test side of the early 2010s looks at what pressure does to a team

Matt Roller22-Jul-2019Judged solely as a documentary about England’s Test team between 2009 and 2013, is surprisingly light on detail. The journey undertaken by Andy Flower and his side is depicted like a fairground high striker, with a firm whack preceding an immediate rise to the top and a dramatic fall.Of course things were never that easy. The off-field tension of the spot-fix series against Pakistan is conspicuous by its absence, as is the whitewash in the UAE; there is no hard-fought draw in South Africa, no clinging on in Auckland; and Flower’s final frontier, the 2-1 win in India, gets less screen time than Kevin Pietersen’s drunken dancing in the SCG changing rooms.But to care about any of that is to miss what this documentary hopes to reveal. It is a film about pressure, and the immense mental toll that constant touring has on a group that lack the means to process the expectations placed upon them. It is a film about preparation, and the difference between rigour and overload. Flower’s masterplan is held up as a triumph, but recollections of Jonathan Trott’s net sessions ducking 95mph bouncers over and over again strike a cold note.First and foremost it is a film about people: the confident but complicated, victorious but vulnerable players who populated England’s dressing room over a five-year period. And it is a film that eschews the binary judgements we tend to rush into forming about cricketers.You know what Matt Prior was all about, don’t you? A good batsman, decent wicketkeeper, but not the sort who needs reminding to affix his own oxygen mask before helping others, goes popular opinion. But sorting people into categories rarely enhances our understanding of their character. “Life as a professional sportsman doesn’t necessarily lend itself to you being a good person,” admits Prior, “because it’s about winning.”I had a three-inch tear in my Achilles tendon that no one knew about. I played with that for about five months. A place I wouldn’t want to go back [to being in] is sat at Lord’s in the dressing room, by myself, in tears, knowing that I was going to have to make a decision to not play cricket for England. It… just… was awful. And lonely.”How about Steven Finn? A classic story of unfulfilled talent, who messed about too much with his action and lacked the necessary mental resilience to play international cricket – right?”I just got in a really bad place,” he recalls. “I’d always been resistant, really, to sports psychologists, or people to talk to about that stuff, because I felt as though I would learn more from dealing with those problems by myself.”The doctor would ask me: ‘How’s the bowling going?’ [I’d] just burst into tears. I was trying so hard to get it right, and not to let myself down, I suppose.”Definitive verdicts about personalities miss the blurring of lines between black and white.Most haunting of all is the starring role of Trott, who is choked up and tearful when trying to pinpoint what it was he would miss about top-level cricket.”Going out to bat I felt my movements were restricted,” he remembers, describing his torment at the Gabba in 2013. “I was very rigid. I was tense. It was really frightening.”Concentration is the absence of irrelevant thought. When I was really struggling internally, then things started getting in. You’re just in tears on the field. I almost think I blacked out as I was walking off, just from the banging that was going on in my head.”There is something surreal, and perhaps overblown, about the shots of Trott marking his guard in a wheat field in Suffolk, and of him dropping through a water tank fully padded up, but the emotion in his voice is not lost in the image, and it is complemented by a stirring soundtrack, courtesy the Maccabees’ Felix White.Musically, the film’s greatest triumph is the drumming that accompanies Kevin Pietersen’s 149 at Headingley in 2012. Each shot is displayed as a release of his frustrations with his schedule, with his team-mates, and with Flower; an opportunity to breathe against the stifling demands placed on him.Pietersen comes out well here, though we are left none the wiser about the truth behind the whole saga of his fall from grace; given the confines of a 90-minute film, perhaps we were never likely to. One senses that Sky’s documentary series this summer will be the time for revelations on that front.The film starts off light-hearted, with the dry humour of James Anderson, Andrew Strauss and Tim Bresnan shining through. Despite the physical and psychological challenge of the boot camp in Bavaria before the 2010-11 Ashes, the cracks only truly become apparent after England beat India at home to go No. 1.Strauss recalls: “Holding that mace, to say we’re No. 1 in the world – it was a bit of an anti-climax.””It was like – f***, now what?” says a typically deadpan Bresnan.Things fall to pieces as Flower demands more and more, desperate to sustain the side’s success, and therein lies the impossibility of Test cricket: with no single tournament to win, just a never-ending string of bilateral series, there is no euphoric moment, as with a World Cup victory.The only way is down. And by the time Shane Watson is grinning, Peter Siddle is screaming, and Michael Clarke is preparing them for a “broken f****** arm”, don’t England know it.The Edge
Noah Media Group, and Heavy Soul Films
Released July 22

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