Steven Smith and Australia turn batting masterclass into Groundhog Day

Their one-day batting seems to be evolving with each game, and could soon leave the rest of the pack behind

Andrew McGlashan29-Nov-20201:40

Gambhir: Smith not that far away from Kohli in ODIs

Steven Smith’s innings at the SCG on Sunday felt like a highlights package and at the same time, it a highlights package.We might as well have been watching his spectacular display two days ago when he scorched a 62-ball hundred (that premise could have applied to most of Australia’s innings). Instead, we were watching it produced all over again: another 62-ball century, which if not for a slip of Marnus Labuschagne’s feet, would have been 61 deliveries.On both these occasions he could not have wished for a better situation: the ideal foundation provided by David Warner and Aaron Finch, a flat pitch and a bowling attack struggling for any consistency and control. However, even though Smith’s batting feats have been mind-boggling in the past, it has been a particularly notable 72 hours for him.Were we watching another evolution of Smith the batsman? This isn’t to say he was doing things that he hasn’t done before – he has a T20 century off 54 balls and has dissected many a bowling attack in the one-day format – but the sustained nature of the onslaughts felt different.What the one-day game gives Smith is that one thing he loves: time at the crease. While Test cricket offers him his ultimate indulgence, the 50-over game allows him to evolve an innings.Another day, another ton for Steven Smith•Getty ImagesHe has not been slow at any point of these centuries, but in the first of them he was 30 off 30 balls and today was 21 at a run-a-ball. Then, the hands have really gotten to work. On Friday, he scored 75 off his remaining 36 balls and on Sunday he cracked 83 off 43 from the same position.As is often the case with Smith’s batting, the standout feature has been the placement. The run towards his second century showed how he can work the field at will. A slower ball from Jasprit Bumrah was driven through backward point. In the next delivery, the most delicate of late cuts beat short third man. The final ball of the over was taken from around fourth stump to fine leg.Facing Yuzvendra Chahal in the next over, there was a brace of scampered twos with perfectly paced shots either side of a straight six. The ball after reaching his hundred he played the most astonishing stroke of the innings, stepping right across outside off and scooping Hardik Pandya over fine leg, while ending up rolling in the crease. Next ball, Smith toe-ended a wide delivery to short third man. Despite everything he had done, he was still furious with himself.Scores of 350-plus won’t be needed all the time, but on flat pitches like this, a team needs the ability to do it. Smith’s displays have been part of two hugely convincing Australia batting performances – this was their third-highest total, and Friday’s is also in the top 10. A longer run of matches, in a variety of conditions, and against some better bowling needs to be viewed before any significant conclusions are drawn, but there are signs that Australia’s one-day batting is undertaking the evolution it needed to remain with the leading pack.The ODI series in England last year was won by a brilliant stand of 212 between Glenn Maxwell and Alex Carey and now the top order has filled their boots in these two games. Warner, who limped off with a serious-looking groin injury early in India’s chase, and captain Finch form a formidable opening pair: this year alone they have four century stands (three in three matches at the SCG) and during this partnership of 142, they went past David Boon and Geoff Marsh into third in Australia’s all-time list. Adam Gilchrist and Mark Waugh are just over 200 runs ahead of them, then there is work to do to catch Gilchrist and Matthew Hayden.Glenn Maxwell switch-hits during his half-century•Getty ImagesThen you have the engine room of Smith and Labuschagne at No. 3 and 4. The latter is still evolving as a one-day cricketer, but his 70 off 61 balls in this match, while not as dynamic as Smith, ensured things did not stall. And if Smith is bringing a new gear to his ODI batting, it will take the pressure off Labuschagne.They are followed by a combination of allrounders, the central figure of which is Maxwell. His last five ODI innings have brought 294 runs at 73.50 and a strike-rate of 143.41 (and in this series it’s 108 runs off 48 balls). If Maxwell has found his home in the one-day side, so many of Australia’s plans will come together.Given the uncertainty over the cricket calendar in a post-Covid world, it is not yet entirely certain when Australia’s next ODIs will be after this tour. Currently, it is scheduled to be a short tour to West Indies in the middle of 2021, but the match in Canberra on Wednesday will be the last on home soil until next season. Can Smith make it a hat-trick of hundreds? You wouldn’t put it past him.

Talking points: Travis Head among batters told to earn their spot, pace rotation on agenda

Alex Carey also remains in Australia’s Test plans, while Matthew Wade may yet play the T20 World Cup

Andrew McGlashan23-Apr-2021Earn promotion
This was the over-riding message, especially when it comes to the Test batting line-up. Standout candidates are not obvious for a couple of positions, so the race will be on ahead of the Ashes next season. That means there are vacancies yet for an opening partner for David Warner – although you could argue that despite another injury, Will Pucovski couldn’t have done much more to be first-choice opener – and the No. 5 spot while assuming Cameron Green has locked himself in at No. 6, which him being given a contract suggests.Travis Head can probably feel a little hard done by despite being dropped against India. He had been in the squad for the originally scheduled South Africa tour although he wasn’t a certainty to make the XI, and scored 893 Shield runs for South Australia. But the move to clearly say batting positions are open should give the start of next season an edge.Related

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Wade made an irresistible case for a Test recall – which came for the 2019 Ashes – but did not make an irresistible case to be retained. In the two Australia seasons prior to his return, he averaged 52.34 with part of that coming when the Test side was shorn of Warner and Steven Smith. There was a school of thought that the recall could have come earlier. And when it did, he made two centuries against England and has played every Test since, but an overall return of 31.60 – with just one other score over fifty – was not enough. The writing was on the wall when he was left out of the squad for the postponed South Africa tour, with a loss of contract confirming the slide.And although Burns is two years younger than Wade but will need a very big start to the next season to push himself back into the frame, especially if Pucovski’s recovery goes to plan. However, as he showed with his brilliant 171 against Tasmania, at his best he remains a very fine opening batter.Matthew Wade captained Australia in a T20I during the 2020-21 home season•Getty ImagesAustralia will need far more than 17 players
Despite not being on today’s list, Wade is among a number of players who we are still very likely to see in Australia squads over the coming months. Touring parties are going to need to remain large due to Covid-19 restrictions and along with Mitchell Marsh and Marcus Stoinis, Wade is an incumbent in the T20I side where he has been vice-captain – and briefly captain – in Pat Cummins’ absence.All three stand a very good chance of being in the squad for the West Indies tour in July. There could also be plenty of others: the likes of Josh Philippe, Daniel Sams and Riley Meredith, who were all in New Zealand, will be pushing for T20I spots even when the first-choice players who missed that trip are available.Rotation back on the agenda
Australia fielded the same bowling attack throughout the four Tests against India and although the loads were relatively light in the first two games, by the end of the Gabba Test, there were some tired bodies. With six Tests likely in less than two months next season – one against Afghanistan and five against England – chief selector Trevor Hohns suggested another look at workload.”That comes back to the management of our fast bowlers and we’ve seriously got to have a look at it,” he said. “Sure, they may feel okay in themselves but we’ve really got to monitor that a little bit harder I think.”Mitchell Swepson has made a strong case for a chance at Test cricket•Getty ImagesOn the fringe
Two players who featured in the recent Sheffield Shield final will wonder what next season holds. Michael Neser and Mitchell Swepson were always unlikely to gain central contracts, but they have certainly made strong cases for a chance at Test cricket. Neser has been an ever-present in Test squads over the last two years, while Swepson has just completed the season of his life. Hohns indicated that James Pattinson remains the next in line of the quicks – so Neser may need a couple of players to make way, especially if and when they are rested or rotated – but he had a strong endorsement of Swepson.”He can certainly challenge Nathan [Lyon], whether he’ll ever take his place while Nathan is fit who knows,” Hohns exclaimed. “Mitch is going very nicely and it’s quite exciting to see a legspinner emerge and someone with the talent Mitch has, I can certainly see a bright future for him. He’s still only 27, and as far as a spin bowler goes, is coming into his best years.”Alex Carey’s standing
Carey is only in possession of a place in one of the three formats for Australia – the ODI side – but retains a contract. He lost his spot in the T20I side to Wade against England last year and wasn’t able to reclaim it against India. Carey then missed out on the New Zealand tour after being included in the Test squad for South Africa.That latter position confirmed he is next-in-line behind Tim Paine, but it is an interesting year coming up for Carey if, in 12 months’ time, Paine will have brought the curtain down on his career. No doubt he will be eager to get back into the mix for the T20 World Cup, but it could work in his favour if he stays out of the set-up because it would allow him a run of Sheffield Shield cricket early next season. Watch out for Josh Inglis coming up on the inside as well.

CPL 2021: St Kitts & Nevis Patriots could pose favourites Trinbago Knight Riders their stiffest challenge

Covid-19-related issues have hurt most teams, but the tournament could return to being the party it usually is after a quiet 2020

Deivarayan Muthu25-Aug-2021Trinbago Knight RidersCoach: Imran Jan (replacing Brendon McCullum, who is unavailable because of Covid-19-related travel restrictions)
Captain: Kieron Pollard
Overseas players: Colin Munro and Tim Seifert (both New Zealand), Yasir Shah (Pakistan), Isuru Udana (Sri Lanka)
Local hero Dwayne Bravo has moved to St Kitts & Nevis Patriots, but the rest of the Knight Riders’ core remains intact, with wicketkeeper-batters Denesh Ramdin and Tim Seifert back in the mix. Colin Munro, who was sidelined from the CPL 2020 knockouts with a finger injury, returns to bolster the side. Munro believes he is done with international cricket, for New Zealand, after being left out for the forthcoming T20 World Cup, but he still has a lot to offer in T20 franchise cricket. At the CPL, he is the most prolific overseas batter ever, with 1753 runs in 53 innings at an average of nearly 40 and strike rate of 137.38.On the bowling front, Jayden Seales now has international experience, while the trio of Sunil Narine, Akeal Hosein and Yasir Shah, who has replaced Sandeep Lamichhane, take care of the spin attack. The Knight Riders will look to Isuru Udana to bowl the tough overs in the death, something that Bravo did expertly. The Knight Riders are currently on a 12-match winning streak and they have a strong chance to move further up this list.Trinbago Knight Riders won CPL 2020 after winning 12 matches out of 12•Getty ImagesVerdict: Pollard’s men have most bases covered once again and are favourites to win their fourth title in five years, although they won’t have the home advantage they enjoyed last season.Possible XI: 1 Lendl Simmons, 2 Tim Seifert, 3 Darren Bravo, 4 Colin Munro, 5 Kieron Pollard (capt), 6 Denesh Ramdin (wk), 7 Isuru Udana, 8 Sunil Narine, 9 Akeal Hosein/Khary Pierre, 10 Jayden Seales, 11 Ali Khan/Yasir ShahSt Lucia KingsCoach: Andy Flower
Captain: Faf du Plessis
Overseas players: Faf du Plessis (South Africa), Wahab Riaz and Usman Qadir (both Pakistan), Tim David (Singapore), Samit Patel (England)
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CPL 2021 to be played entirely in St Kitts

Daren Sammy has relinquished the captaincy and joined coach Andy Flower in the Kings backroom after marshalling the franchise to their first-ever final last year, which they lost to the Knight Riders. Faf du Plessis has taken over the captaincy from Sammy, and is likely to start the tournament, according to Flower, after having suffered a concussion at the PSL two months ago. The Kings will, however, be without the Afghanistan trio of Mohammad Nabi, Najibullah Zadran and Zahir Khan, who were central to their success last season. However, they will be bolstered by the Pakistan pair of Usman Qadir and Wahab Riaz. Singapore-born batter Tim David, who has become a hot pick in T20 leagues around the world, could potentially be their finisher. Obed McCoy and Kesrick Williams, who both have a variety of slower balls in their repertoire, could make a formidable death-bowling pair.Verdict: If du Plessis doesn’t recover in time or doesn’t hit form, their batting will appear light at Warner Park, which is more batting-friendly than the Queen’s Park Oval or the Brian Lara Cricket Academy.Possible XI: 1 Rahkeem Cornwall, 2 Andre Fletcher (wk), 3 Faf du Plessis (capt), 4 Roston Chase, 5 Tim David, 6 Mark Deyal/Keemo Paul, 7 Samit Patel, 8 Wahab Riaz, 9 Usman Qadir, 10 Obed McCoy, 11 Kesrick WilliamsESPNcricinfo LtdGuyana Amazon WarriorsCoach: Rayon Griffith
Captain: Nicholas Pooran
Overseas players: Shoaib Malik and Mohammad Hafeez (both Pakistan), Imran Tahir (South Africa), Naveen-ul-Haq and Waqar Salamkheil (both Afghanistan)
The Amazon Warriors have made five finals, but are still searching for their first title. After being shot out for 55 in the second semi-final last season, they have revamped their side, jettisoning their captain Chris Green, who has now got a late gig with the Jamaica Tallawahs, coach Johan Botha, Ross Taylor and Keemo Paul. Spin will be their stronger suit once again, with Imran Tahir, Kevin Sinclair and Ashmead Nedd leading the attack. But, while Afghanistan quick Naveen-ul-Haq brings with him rich recent form, having been the top wicket-taker in the Vitality Blast, the rest of the seam attack appears a bit iffy. Brandon King, who struggled on the turners in Trinidad, will likely enjoy the ball coming on to the bat at Warner Park in the early exchanges, while usual suspects Nicholas Pooran, Shimron Hetmyer and Shoaib Malik lend muscle and experience to the middle order.Verdict: Sixth-time lucky? Well, if the batters click in unison, they do stand a good chance of breaking the hoodoo.Possible XI: 1 Brandon King, 2 Chandrapaul Hemraj, 3 Mohammad Hafeez, 4 Nicholas Pooran (capt & wk), 5 Shoaib Malik, 6 Shimron Hetmyer, 7 Romario Shepherd, 8 Kevin Sinclair, 9 Odean Smith/Nial Smith, 10 Naveen-ul-Haq, 11 Imran TahirJamaica Tallawahs’ batting either side of Andre Russell doesn’t have a lot of T20 pedigree or experience•Randy Brooks – CPL T20 / GettyJamaica TallawahsCoach: Floyd Reifer
Captain: Rovman Powell
Overseas players: Chris Green (Australia), Haider Ali (Pakistan), Qais Ahmad (Afghanistan), Migael Pretorius (South Africa)
The Tallawahs’ right-hander-heavy batting line-up last year left them vulnerable to bowlers who take the ball away from them. The inclusion of Kirk McKenzie, who played for West Indies in the most recent Under-19 World Cup in 2020, could break up the sequence of right-handers, but the batting either side of Andre Russell doesn’t have a lot of T20 pedigree or experience. The middle-order quartet of Russell, Powell, Asif Ali and Carlos Brathwaite (who might miss the start of the tournament because of a Covid-19-related incident) was more bust than boom in CPL 2020, and they bizarrely sent Mujeeb Ur Rahman in at No. 3 in the semi-final, where he bagged a three-ball duck against the Knight Riders. Qais Ahmad has followed in Rashid Khan’s footsteps in becoming a sought-after T20 player, while South Africa’s Migael Pretorius is a promising seamer, who can also pitch in with the bat.Verdict: Once again the pressure will be on Russell to carry the team – both with bat and ball.Possible XI: 1 Chadwick Walton (wk), 2 Haider Ali, 3 Jason Mohammed/Kirk Mckenzie, 4 Rovman Powell (capt), 5 Andre Russell, 6 Kennar Lewis/Carlos Brathwaite, 7 Migael Pretorius, 8 Chris Green, 9 Fidel Edwards, 10 Qais Ahmad, 11 Veerasamy PermaulBarbados RoyalsCoach: Daniel Vettori
Captain: Jason Holder
Overseas players: Glenn Phillips (New Zealand), Thisara Perera (Sri Lanka), Mohammad Amir and Azam Khan (both Pakistan), Jake Lintott (England)
Chris Morris, the first pick in the draft, has pulled out of the tournament for personal reasons, and Glenn Phillips has been signed on as his replacement. Phillips has been the Tallawahs’ top scorer for the past three seasons and, more recently, he was in fine form in the Hundred. He is also set to turn out for the Rajasthan Royals in the IPL. They have also roped in Azam Khan, the son of former Pakistan wicketkeeper-batter Moin Khan. Azam can decimate spin as his strike rate of 165.27 against them suggests; against pace it drops to 133.84. Oshane Thomas has moved from the Tallawahs, while left-arm wristspinner Jake Lintott, who was the highest wicket-taker for the Southern Brave in their run to the inaugural men’s Hundred title, is another player to watch out for.Verdict: The Royals have quite a few in-form and X-factor players who could take them to the knockouts.Possible XI: 1 Johnson Charles (wk), 2 Glenn Phillips, 3 Kyle Mayers, 4 Shai Hope, 5 Jason Holder (capt), 6 Azam Khan, 7 Thisara Perera, 8 Hayden Walsh Jr, 9 Jake Lintott/Mohammad Amir, 10 Raymon Reiffer/Ashley Nurse, 11 Oshane ThomasChris Gayle spent the 2019 CPL with Jamaica Tallawahs and missed the 2020 edition for personal reasons•Ashley Allen – CPL T20 / GettySt Kitts & Nevis PatriotsCoach: Simon Helmot
Captain: Dwayne Bravo
Overseas players: Ravi Bopara (England), Paul van Meekeren (Netherlands), Fawad Ahmed (Australia), Asif Ali (Pakistan)The Patriots were the worst-hit team by the Covid-19 pandemic and the last-minute reshuffle in CPL 2020. Coach Simon Helmot, who had missed that season after testing positive, will reunite with Dwayne Bravo, with whom he had won the title, representing Trinidad & Tobago Red Steel in 2015. Chris Gayle, too, returns to the Patriots after missing the last season for personal reasons. Allrounder Fabian Allen is back as well, having been ruled out of CPL 2020 after missing his flight from Jamaica to Barbados. He’s turning the ball a lot more these days and has shown glimpses of elite power-hitting, which could make him a future superstar in T20 cricket.The South African pair of Anrich Nortje and Rassie van der Dussen and Sri Lanka legspin-bowling allrounder Wanindu Hasaranga, however, will be unavailable due to national commitments. The absence of Nortje, in particular, has weakened the seam attack, although Netherlands’ Paul van Meekeren’s recent form is encouraging. He was Durham’s second highest wicket-taker in the Royal London One-day Cup with 14 strikes in seven games at an economy rate of 5.53.Verdict: With their sensational batting line-up and steady bowling attack, the Patriots could seriously challenge the Knight Riders for the title this year.Possible XI: 1 Evin Lewis, 2 Chris Gayle, 3 Joshua da Silva (wk), 4 Sherfane Rutherford, 5 Asif Ali/Ravi Bopara, 6 Fabian Allen, 7 Dwayne Bravo (capt), 8 Rayad Emrit, 9 Fawad Ahmed, 10 Sheldon Cottrell, 11 Paul van Meekeren

Do you remember who opened for Australia's men in their last Test?

For some batters there hasn’t been much cricket, but one of the incumbents has filled his boots over the winter and wants to be back at the Gabba

Alex Malcolm26-Oct-2021One of Australia’s incumbent Test openers has scored more runs in first-class cricket since the team last played a Test match than any of his countrymen. He’s made 995 runs in 14 matches, averaging 49.75, with four centuries.It’s not David Warner, who has played just one first-class match since the Gabba Test against India. It’s not Will Pucovski, who has not played a single game of cricket since he dislocated his shoulder in the new year’s Test in Sydney and won’t play in Victoria’s first Sheffield Shield game this season due to another concussion.It’s not Joe Burns, who was dropped for the Sydney Test and has played just six matches since. It’s not Matthew Wade, who opened in the first two Tests of the series despite never opening before in his 14-year 156-game first-class career.And it’s not Usman Khawaja, who is being discussed as an option to open in the first Test of the upcoming Ashes, having opened just three times in his last 28 first-class innings since the 2019 Ashes tour, for scores of 30, 4 and 2.Related

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Marcus Harris hasn’t yet played a game this summer, but his deeds in England this winter for Leicestershire seem not to be at the forefront of minds, and he chuckled when he was reminded that he is in fact one of Australia’s incumbent openers.”It was a difficult summer last year just with the way that the opening position kept rotating so there’s always going to be speculation,” Harris told ESPNcricinfo. “It’s good to talk about from a media point of view. Personally, and privately in speaking to selectors, I know what they think and I know they probably have looked back on my work over the last period of time and I think that will hold me in good stead going forward. I know I’ve been a consistent performer for probably five or six years now in Shield cricket so I’m confident if I get the opportunity I’ll be fine.Marcus Harris enjoyed a very consistent season for Leicestershire•Getty Images”But that’s the tough thing about playing for Australia. The opportunities are limited. You’ve got to take them when you get them so that’s what’s been hard, as I’ve sort of been in and out a little bit. But I think the people and the powers that be understand and they sort of know how hard it can be.”Going to England was a big part of my vision for going forward, being able to play a lot of cricket and putting numbers on the board.”Harris has been in regular contact with coach Justin Langer over the winter but more importantly had a fruitful conversation with Australia’s chairman of selectors George Bailey last Friday. He was reassured by Bailey that despite the annual media rumblings of a “bat-off for places” in the lead-up to the Ashes, that his larger body of work will carry more weight, particularly as Victoria and New South Wales have not played a single match so far this summer due to the Covid lockdowns, while other states have already played two each.”It is really good [to hear that]. I think it’s like with any sport, it’s good for stories and stuff like that,” Harris said. “But you know that at the end of the day the people that are picking the team are looking at the bigger picture rather than a smaller bit of work.”

When you come in and out of a team you can put a lot of pressure on yourself knowing that this might be your only chance so that can be hard to play with that pressure

Harris made 655 runs in eight games for Leicestershire, scoring three centuries including a stunning 185 not out in a successful fourth-innings chase of 378 against Middlesex. Harris loved the experience so much he signed a two-year deal with Gloucestershire to play all three formats over the next two seasons after only playing two with Leicestershire.”The best thing for my development was to go and play over there in the winter and keep playing cricket rather than playing home seasons here then not doing much for a couple of months,” he said. “I think at this stage of my career I’ve got to keep playing all the time so it’s been beneficial no matter which way the season goes here, just for me as a cricketer to be able to play over there in different conditions.”Harris’ experience in the 2019 Ashes in England, where he made just 58 runs in six innings, could have easily scarred him. But he viewed it as a pivotal learning moment.”It wouldn’t have seemed like it at the time, but it was such a good learning experience playing in that series,” he said. “Sort of knowing that you might be able to play one way in Australia but that might not always suit the way you’re going to have to play in England.”I think the good thing as well being in Leicester and being by myself with different coaches, is you work everything out for yourself and you have to work it out on the run a little bit. And equally as the pressure of being the overseas player, you’re expected to do well so you have that pressure on you. But I enjoyed that.Marcus Harris was bounced out in the second innings against India after starting promisingly•Getty Images”County cricket is very different to Shield cricket. The bowlers are different, the batters are different. They’re very good in their conditions and so you’ve got to try and find a way to make your game suit that, which I enjoyed.”The key now is for Harris to convert those experiences at Test level if he can get a consistent run at it. He has shown glimpses, including his second-innings 38 at the Gabba, that he is capable of being Australia’s long-term solution at the top of the order.”When you come in and out of a team you can put a lot of pressure on yourself knowing that this might be your only chance so that can be hard to play with that pressure,” Harris said. “I enjoyed in that second innings that we had to score quite quickly, that sort of suited me a little bit, so I learned from that.”If I get another opportunity, I can try and take that pressure off myself, which is easier said than done, but just go out there and look to score and put runs on the board will probably suit me.”I sort of feel like in first-class cricket it took me a little while, it probably took me 20 or 30 games, probably more, 40, to understand and believe in myself. But as I’ve got older, I sort of know that if I can get a good run, a few games, I feel like I could do the same thing in Test cricket.”That’s all it is really, a bit of self-belief and proving to yourself and proving to people that you can do it.”

Heather Knight joins Rachel Heyhoe-Flint in exclusive club

Her 168* is the highest score by a visiting batter in a women’s Test in Australia

Sampath Bandarupalli29-Jan-2022168* – Heather Knight’s unbeaten score in the first innings is the highest individual score by a visiting batter in Australia in Women’s Tests. Smriti Mandhana’s 127 during the Pink-ball Test last year was the previous best. Knight’s 168 is also the second-highest score in Women’s Tests in Australia, behind Ellyse Perry’s 213* in Sydney during the 2017 Ashes Test.ESPNcricinfo Ltd1 – There is only one individual score higher than Knight’s 168 against Australia in Women’s Tests. Rachael Heyhoe-Flint scored 179 against Australia at The Oval in 1976. Knight’s 168* is also the fourth-highest individual score in Tests for England Women.2 – Number of times Knight has made 150 plus in Tests, both those performances came against Australia. Her previous effort came in Wormsley (157) in 2013. She is only the second woman with multiple Test scores of 150-plus runs. Karen Rolton also had two 150-plus scores in this format, both against England Women.ESPNcricinfo Ltd56.56 – Knight’s run percentage in her knock in England’s total of 297. Only four batters have contributed a higher percentage in a team’s all-out total in Women’s Tests. It is also the second-highest contribution made for England Women, behind Enid Blackwell’s 68.29 against West Indies in 1979, when she scored an unbeaten 112 out of England’s 164.2 – Knight’s 168* is the second-highest individual score by a captain in Women’s Test cricket. Heyhoe-Flint’s 179 against Australia in 1976 remains the highest score by a captain in Women’s Tests.ESPNcricinfo Ltd100 – Partnership between Knight and Ecclestone. It’s only the third century stand for the ninth wicket in Women’s Tests. Beverly Botha and Maureen Payne of South Africa added 107 against New Zealand in 1972, while the Indian debutants Sneh Rana and Taniya Bhatia stitched an unbeaten 104 against England in last year’s one-off Test in Bristol.

Tim David: 'For me to be effective, I have to be able to clear the boundary whenever I want'

The Singapore-born batter opens up on his stratospheric rise in stardom, playing in different leagues, setting the PSL alight, and more

Danyal Rasool26-Feb-2022There’s a long, circumspect pause down the other end of the Zoom call. It is so extended that a quick check is needed to ensure the connection hasn’t been cut. It hasn’t. Tim David is merely considering his next words.It’s a frequent occurrence during the conversation with Multan Sultans’ platinum pick this year. Time and again, the soft-spoken David stops mid-sentence, almost editing himself in real time as he snips out a word here, adds in a phrase there. There’s a crispness to his diction many would struggle to match in print. It’s precise, surgical, almost delicate. For a man who boasts a strike rate of 199.20 in the PSL this year, and over 150 since the start of last year, those aren’t words too keenly associated with him.Related

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He might be dressed in his Sultans shirt for the interview, but there’s more to David the man than the fearsome power-hitting that’s fast becoming his trademark. The hunger to improve is, as with nearly all elite sportspeople, insatiable, but so is a shrewd understanding of how to give himself the best chance of making it in the cutthroat world of T20 franchise competition.”Sure I’d love opening the batting in T20 cricket,” he tells ESPNcricinfo at one point. “That’s awesome; you get to face as many balls as you can. But in such a competitive market, there’s not spots for that. And so for me to get myself into a Big Bash team [last year], I needed to work on those skills and the biggest opening I saw where my skill set would fit in was to be able to play in the middle order and play with power.”When David was plucked by the Lahore Qalandars last year for the second leg of the PSL, he was almost an unknown quantity outside Australia. A Singapore international who only had one solid season in the Big Bash League didn’t quite glitter like some of the other big names the PSL has seen, but David knew the work that had gone behind his BBL success, and felt it was both sustainable and replicable.”I think it was a case of finding what I was best at. My skills were better equipped to being able to hit and play aggressively through the middle. For me to be effective, I have to be able to clear the boundary when I want. The experience you get through batting in the middle order, you learn how to chase, finish off an innings or maximise the scoring when the game’s pretty much dictated to you.”Opening batters go out and they can essentially play however they want to, whereas a lot of times the middle order players have to play to what the game demands. So, I’ve got to walk out, I might have to get going in my first three balls. Sometimes that’s not easy, but that’s what you have to practice for, because that’s what’s required of me.”That revaluation of his career and skillset has produced astonishing results. The 2020-21 BBL season saw him score at a strike rate of 153.29 – among players who scored more runs, only Chris Lynn and Ben Cutting boasted a superior strike rate. The second leg of the PSL, played in relatively low-scoring UAE, saw David become emerge as a breakout star even as the Qalandars crashed and burned, his 180 runs coming at 166.66. He would go on to enjoy success in the CPL, land an IPL gig and have a stellar follow-up season at the BBL. Just last week, Mumbai Indians paid over USD 1 million to snap up his services for this year’s IPL, a competition he said he was “definitely” excited for.David doesn’t want to be measured by just runs: ” It’s nice if those things look favourably upon me, but I think it’s about match impact”•Lahore Qalandars”Each league has a different identity,” he says. “Perhaps you go to the CPL where sometimes the wickets aren’t as good and you get a high dot ball percentage. Guys might play, say, three, four dots and over then hit a six when they get the opportunity. The Big Bash can be tough because you can play on bigger grounds, so obviously your margin for error is larger. If you have a mishit, you can get caught in the deep. I’d probably say the biggest factor [that determines the ease of power hitting] is potentially ground sizes in Australia. Some grounds aren’t so big or there’s certain areas of the ground you have to target.”For now, though, it is the Sultans who’re enjoying the fruits of his services. At the PSL draft, last year’s defending champions snapped him up in the Platinum category, a meteoric rise for a player who was little more than a wildcard just six months earlier. Slotting into an Andy Flower-led franchise that prides itself on using extensive analytical data to wring every last drop of performance out of their team, the Sultans-David relationship feels much more natural. Does he feel the same way?True to form, David is more measured in his assessment. “I guess I haven’t played enough for both teams to really [compare]”, he eventually says. “We’ve obviously been in some really good form here at Multan, whereas last year with Lahore we had a strong side but we didn’t play our best, we weren’t winning games. That was disappointing, [but] I don’t think I was at Lahore long enough to be able to pass comment on it.”I’ve got to be comfortable with accepting that fact that playing in the middle order in T20 cricket is so dynamic. My output can’t be measured by runs or necessarily strike rate. It’s nice if those things look favourably upon me, but I think it’s about match impact and that’s what I just try to be. The more I play each time I reflect back on how I have as much of a positive impact to the team as I can.”On that count, he ticks all boxes handsomely for the Sultans this season. A 29-ball 71 and an unbeaten 51 off 19 in consecutive games – two innings that saw him smash 12 sixes in 48 balls – stand out as obvious highlights; he’s also joint top six-hitter (20) this PSL with leading runscorer Fakhar Zaman, who has taken 379 balls to hit the same number as David has in 126. The Sultans have been in imperious form all season, winning 10 of their 11 games to cruise into the final.

“I think it’s important to be realistic. I’ve definitely performed well at times, but after every tournament I’ve left thinking I could have done better”

While David has been a key reason for that success, there’s perhaps an argument he’s still being wasted a little batting as low as he does. In Mohammad Rizwan and Shan Masood, the Sultans have a formidable opening partnership, but it is one that tends to bat through large chunks of the innings without quite achieving the same level of destructiveness that David or Khushdil Shah provide. In a game against Karachi Kings earlier this month, the pair batted for 14.2 overs for 100 runs, with the asking rate rising above 15 by the time the partnership was broken; David faced just 7 balls for 13 runs. In the qualifier against the Qalandars on Wednesday, Rizwan scored an unbeaten 53 in 51 balls, carrying his bat. Multan lost just two wickets, and David never got to bat at all.”I would be very hesitant to be critical of Shan and Rizwan,” he says, as ever, weighing every word before uttering it, “because they’ve been such big strengths for us this season. I still think they are in every game. They set such a strong platform. It really sets it up for our team the way we’re structured with a strong middle order. We like to think that all of the guys in the middle order could bat up top if we needed to. If we need to bat in the first 10 overs, we all can. We all want to face as many balls as we can, but we understand the role of the team and I think everyone in this side is going out to try and do their best for the side.”One of the highlights of the season came in an early game, with Quetta Gladiators seven runs from victory down to their number 11 against the Sultans. Skipper Rizwan moved the six-foot-four David to the deep midwicket boundary all the way from the other side of the ground. Next ball, Naseem Shah smashed it to exactly that place, with David needing every inch of his frame to grasp the ball, spoon it back up as he overbalanced past the rope, and take the catch on the return to seal a sensational win. It was emblematic of Rizwan, who cannot seem to put a foot wrong at the moment, as batter, wicketkeeper or indeed captain.”I’ve really enjoyed playing with Rizwan as my captain,” David grins. “He just encourages our team to have fun, play with a smile. That’s easy to say when you’ve won seven out of your eight games.David insists on leaving “everything I do on the field”•Getty Images”He’s probably a little bit more relaxed off the field, I think it’d be fair to say. But he’s been great for us to perform our best. We keep it simple. We’re trying to play bravely so we can just put in our best performance in the match. And you know, part of being a professional cricketer is accepting that you can’t have a perfect performance every day.”The heights David has hit have been so stratospheric at times it’s impossible not to wonder if it’s sustainable. Australia are likely to look at him very closely for this year’s home T20 World Cup; the days of playing for Singapore are done and dusted. David accepts that he’ll invariably run into a rough patch sooner or later, but rejects the idea he is simply a cricketer going through a purple patch.”I think it’s important to be realistic. I’ve definitely performed well at times, but after every tournament I’ve left thinking I could have done better. I’d be wary of calling it a purple patch. I know I’ve had good form and I’ve played well, but I’d like to think that it’s very sustainable. It’s encouraging to me that I’ve been able to do it in different leagues, across different competitions. I’m aware that form can change, and I’m sure that will come at some point. And that’s another skill of learning how to manage yourself through those periods. I’ve just been learning so much through each tournament. I feel already so much more confident in my own game I’m having a really good time.”But the idea of the T20 World Cup gets short shrift.”I don’t think it weighs heavily on me at all. If my performances are providing me the opportunity to be a part of those things, then that’s great. But honestly it sounds cliched, but I’m just literally focused on our game tomorrow.”That “game tomorrow”, the PSL final against the Qalandars, really is a rather big deal, and for once, there’s little hesitation in David’s answer. For a man who has seen his fortune turn – and indeed built – in a little over 12 months, talking about a competition eight months away makes little sense.”I hope I’ve given you enough,” he smiles, a little sheepishly. “I want to leave everything I do out on the field.”

Fluent Kyle Mayers provides yet another rescue act for West Indies

Once again, when the chips were down, he managed to wrest back the momentum and leave Bangladesh deflated

Mohammad Isam26-Jun-2022Kyle Mayers’ batting average was bound to come down from 250.00 since his debut Test. A dream start such as his, an unbeaten 210 leading West Indies to a 395-run chase against Bangladesh in Chattogram last year, was always going to be a hard act to follow. Mayers’ was an exceptional innings, never done before by a debutant.As he got to his second Test century with a very Caribbean swivel-pull shot on his toes, he once again released the pressure from the West Indies in a tight situation against Bangladesh. It was a quiet appreciation of Mayers’ application of his overall skills, aside from the obvious stroke play. As has been the theme of his short career so far, Mayers stood out when the chips are down.Related

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He picked up the home side who had lost four wickets for 32 runs at the time of his arrival at the crease. West Indies had slipped from 100 for no loss to 132 for four. The visitors were buoyant at the batting collapse. There was always going to be a counterattack from a Mayers-Jermaine Blackwood partnership, but no one could predict how long it would last. In the end, the pair added 116 runs for the fifth wicket, taking West Indies easily past Bangladesh’s 234.Mayers deflated Bangladesh not just by scoring the 126 runs, but the manner in which he wrestled back the momentum from them. Shakib Al Hasan appeared defeated as he slowly pulled back the attacking fielding positions one by one, only to resort to one-day type field settings whenever Mayers was on strike.It was disheartening for the Bangladesh bowlers who brought the team back into the contest with the four-wicket burst in the morning session.Mayers didn’t provide many chances, except the odd play-and-miss, or the flying edges going past the slip cordon from time to time. He threaded plenty of boundaries through the covers in his off-side-heavy innings. Mayers’ tendency to hang back slightly to blast the ball through the off side, even slightly squarer, is in a class of its own. One of his best shots was hammering Mehidy for a six down the ground, which started to open up the field.The usually attacking Blackwood took a backseat during their 116-run stand, as he made 40 off 121 balls. Mayers also dominated the unbroken sixth-wicket stand with Joshua Da Silva to give West Indies a sizable second-innings lead against a tottering batting line-up.Some of Mayers’ shots would have reminded the Bangladesh bowlers of his Chattogram epic. There too, the left-hander struck plenty of boundaries through the covers, but Mayers also hit ten boundaries, including six sixes, through the mid-on region. This time though, he had a very high percentage of his runs on the off side, having struck just the one four and six through the on side.The Chattogram innings was a big announcement of Mayers’ ability. The man who was almost lost to his family in a powerful typhoon some years ago, combined his brutal power with mental strength under pressure. It won him many fans and appreciation from several of the game’s greats.But just over a year later, Mayers found himself seeing the other side of the coin. On the back of 12 innings without a fifty, West Indies dropped him for the first two Tests against England in March. He returned for the St George’s Test with a mesmerizing spell of seam bowling that decimated the visitors, his match-haul of 7 for 31 effectively winning the West Indies the series.

“I just thought the key was to being myself, being counterattacking, getting on top of the opposition and changing the momentum. It is just a matter of fully committing to what I do”Kyle Mayers

Mayers continued his bowling exploits with six wickets in three innings against Bangladesh. He nailed Litton Das and Nurul Hasan, two in-form batters, in one over that hurtled the visitors towards further trouble. He removed Najmul Hossain Shanto and Mominul Haque in the same spell on the third day, again derailing Bangladesh.On the first day of the second Test, he chipped in with two more wickets. Shanto fell to a fine in-ducker although Mayers was lucky to get the wicket on the umpire’s call. Later, he had Mehidy Hasan Miraz caught at point, ensuring Litton lost his last recognised batting partner quite early in the third session.After the end of the second day’s play, Mayers said that he wanted to change the momentum of the West Indies innings shortly after they lost three wickets in quick succession.”The plan was just to be as positive as possible,” Mayers said. “We lost three quick wickets. I just thought the key was to being myself, being counterattacking, getting on top of the opposition and changing the momentum. It is just a matter of fully committing to what I do. I have to be very decisive in terms of stroke play. I have to be very positive when I decide to attack. I give it my all. It is the same when I am defending. Making the right choices is important.”We just want to shut out the opposition at least for the first hour. Keep them out of the game, and then pile on the runs as much as possible to get a big lead. I think 200 would be ideal for us, given the amount of time left in the game. It is a patience game, for both batters and bowlers. I try to maximise every chance I get to score. They bowled well in patches. The pitch isn’t one where you can blast out the opposition.”Mayers’ status as an impact cricketer has been underlined in this series. He will of course have to be consistent but West Indies have to quickly learn the value of a cricketer like him. He will use all of his talent in a fantastic spell or in a backs-to-the-wall innings whenever they are in trouble. But Mayers cannot be expected to do all this on a regular basis, however special a player he is. West Indies, instead, will just have to be patient with him.

Lauren Winfield-Hill: 'The journey has changed for women's cricketers'

Opener finds new lease of life on domestic circuit, as wife takes centre stage for England

Andrew Miller04-Nov-2022Winfield-Hill was player of the match on Tuesday night. Nothing new there, you might think, in a redemptive year for the England international, one in which she has redefined her love of the game to cement her status as one of the very best in her chosen sport.The Winfield-Hill in question on this occasion, however, was not Lauren Winfield-Hill – Cricket World Cup winner in 2017 and twin-trophy winner in a stellar summer just gone – but her Australia-born wife Courtney, whose power-packed hat-trick lit up Headingley in England’s 72-4 victory over Brazil, in the opening match of the women’s Rugby League World Cup.It’s early days in a tournament that culminates in a double-header with the men at Old Trafford on November 19. But, if the home-soil success of England’s cricketers in 2017, as well as this summer’s women’s Euros winners is anything to go by, the coming month could yet be one in which Courtney Winfield-Hill’s own world-class credentials are sent mainstream, after five years of under-acknowledged trailblazing with Leeds Rhinos in the Women’s Super League.And if that does come to pass, then it will complete for the Winfield-Hills one of the most serendipitous sporting stories imaginable – a joint venture that began in adverse circumstances with the Covid outbreak in March 2020, and has traversed some dark days of soul-searching in the interim. But either way, a remarkable sporting power couple appear now to be proving that all the sacrifice is worthwhile.”I can’t grumble,” Lauren Winfield-Hill tells ESPNcricinfo, and with good reason after her own litany of recent successes. A starring role in her first season for Oval Invincibles helped the Hundred’s inaugural champions to defend their title in 2022, before she topped the averages in the Rachael Heyhoe Flint Trophy, including a player-of-the-match performance in the final in September, to become the first women’s cricketer to lift three trophies in consecutive final appearances at Lord’s.Now, while her wife is blazing a trail back in her adopted home in Blighty, Lauren’s form has sent her in the other direction for another crack at the Big Bash – this time for Melbourne Stars, where she is currently their leading run-scorer with 150 from 132 balls all told. That tally includes 47 from 49 in her most recent outing against Adelaide Strikers, where her steadying presence allowed the young guns Alice Capsey and Tess Flintoff to cut loose in startling fashion at the other end.Lauren Winfield-Hill sweeps during her unbeaten 74 against Northern Superchargers•Getty Images”I feel like I’ve just built myself back up,” Lauren says. “I wasn’t in a good place mentally after Covid, even just as a human being… I could barely even live in the house with my wife, because I was just freaking out at random stuff. But every competition I’ve played this year has just been another layer, going up all the time, and now I’m out here in Australia with a new team, different pressures, different expectations. It’s been really nice to be able to have nothing to change any more, and just to keep going like I did at the start of the summer.”In a different era, this week could have been one of crushing disappointment. On Wednesday, the ECB announced their new tranche of women’s central contracts, and Lauren was a notable absentee, though not an unexpected one after a frustrating run of insubstantial scores in her final months in the ODI side.After 11 double-figure innings in 13 starts, but no half-centuries, she was axed in March, midway through England’s gruelling World Cup campaign in New Zealand, and has since seen the coming generation – Capsey and Sophia Dunkley to the fore – seize their opportunities.And yet, as her performances outside of the England set-up have demonstrated, there’s a whole different avenue opening up for the women’s game – serving up opportunities that could not be further removed from her own early years as a player.”The main thing I feel right now is comfort,” she says. “There was probably always a sense that if you didn’t play for England, you weren’t a cricketer. You’d go from hero to zero, almost overnight, if you lost a contract or were deselected.”It used to be the case that, if you weren’t playing international cricket, the standard that you dropped to was, well, I’m not really going to bother getting out of bed for that. But now you know that you can play some really good cricket in some really cool competitions, even if you’re not in favour with England, and that gives you a lot of fulfilment and a lot to still be excited about, beyond just international cricket.”The journey has changed, hasn’t it?” she adds. “I never intended to come out to the Big Bash, it only came about off the back of me doing well in the Hundred, and I was like, oh, this is a nice surprise. And now there’s me and Capsey, playing on the same team, though she’s at the start, and I’m closer to the end. But how cool is it that we’ve both had this opportunity at the same time, and doesn’t matter that she’s 18 and I’m 32? We’re both in the same place right now.”Courtney Winfield-Hill has switched both countries and sports to star for England in the Women’s Rugby League World Cup•Getty ImagesPerhaps the only note of disappointment for Lauren now is that she cannot be around for her wife’s big moment. England play Canada in the Rugby League World Cup on Saturday with Papua New Guinea to come the following week, before a probable semi-final against either Australia or New Zealand in Lauren’s home city of York on November 14. After that, who knows what’s in store?”[Being away during the tournament] did feel like a really big decision for me and for us,” Lauren says. “We’re both in the sporting field, and when this opportunity came about with the Big Bash, we both knew that such things won’t present themselves forever. A lot of her family are over to support her and that’ll be really cool, because they haven’t seen her play a lot. Obviously, my family and myself have been there a lot, so I think it’d be nice to share that with them.”In spite of this absence at the sharp end, however, Lauren’s role in Courtney’s journey could not be more integral. Seven years ago, when their paths first crossed, it was as team-mates at Brisbane Heat in Lauren’s first crack at the Big Bash. Back then, she was the 25-year-old overseas star, an England player awaiting her breakthrough moment, and as their relationship developed during the course of the 2015-16 season, it was clear that hers was the career that demanded the investment.So Courtney – a talented seam bowler in her own right – was the one to up sticks from her native Queensland and build a new life in Yorkshire. She called time on her own playing days and moved into the coaching set-up at Northern Diamonds, but it soon became clear that the other Headingley Stadium, backing onto the cricket ground, was her truest calling.In 2018, she pulled on her rugby boots for the first time in two decades, and by the time she’d been named the Super League’s Woman of Steel in 2019, it was clear she was quickly making up for lost time. Her England chance, however, is directly attributable to Covid – specifically the postponement of the World Cup in 2021, which allowed her to complete her five-year residency qualification in time for this year’s delayed event, and to make it worthwhile for the England selectors to fast-track her in their plans.”The stars have just aligned, haven’t they?” Lauren adds. “How is she in England, married to an English girl, playing for England in rugby league? You wouldn’t have written that narrative five or six years ago, but it’s amazing. I don’t think it was something that she ever thought was going to be possible, but opportunities present themselves in different spaces.”I’m quite biased, but I’ve always said Courtney’s far too good an athlete to not ever reach the top,” she adds. “I’d never say this to her face, obviously, her head will grow. But she’s fearless. She’s a great athlete, and the narrative of her story is just awesome. She’s 35, and she’s debuting in a World Cup, in a sport that she hadn’t played since she was 12. It’s pretty cool.”Not everything about the Covid experience was quite so cool though, and Lauren freely admits the constraints of the pandemic tested their relationship to the max – almost from the moment of their marriage in Queensland in March 2020. Within 24 hours of the start of their honeymoon on the idyllic Hamilton Island, the entire country went into lockdown, and the Winfield-Hills were faced with a marital acid test.

In a coaching space, being challenged by your wife is a whole different feeling. She’s supposed to think my cover drive is the best in the world!Lauren Winfield-Hill

“It was strange at first because Courtney and I are so different,” Lauren says. “We have very similar values that we care about, but we are so different. She’s that free spirit, high energy, no structure, just go with it and it’s all a bit carnage. She’s very left-field thinking and very creative, and I’m quite militant at times. So it’s great because she’s my blind spot, I can lean into that space a little bit and it usually serves me really well.”A further complication came when their work-life balances overlapped – Courtney as a coach in the nets at Northern Diamonds, and Lauren as an out-of-form batter struggling with the pandemic’s boxed-in circumstances.”At first it was all a bit, whoa, this is alternative to my thinking,” Lauren says. “In a coaching space, being challenged by your wife is a whole different feeling. She’s supposed to think my cover drive is the best in the world! ‘What do you mean, I’m gripping too tight with my bottom hand!'”It was probably a bit of ego on my part, because I didn’t want to take feedback from someone so close to me. But I guess it’s just about switching hats, isn’t it? Because we can both talk until the cows come home about cricket, high performance and the rest of it. But when you’re at home and you’re out of that space, she’s my wife, and we have a cut-off where we’ve spoken work, and now that’s it, done.”But if that was feasible in the domestic sphere, it proved nigh on impossible during England’s gruelling campaign in the 2021-22 winter, encompassing a dispiriting one-sided Ashes tour followed by the World Cup. Looking back, Lauren believes that some of her on-field struggles could well have been connected to her diagnosis, in October 2019, of Crohn’s disease – the same intestinal issue that Jack Leach has been required to manage during his England career.”I’m lucky with the support I’ve had from the ECB,” she says. “It’s only thanks to the England doctor that I was diagnosed in the first place. But the bubbles involved a lot of UberEATS and takeaways, which did make me quite sick. It’s a lot easier to manage now that I can cook and go out for good meals, and look after myself physically.”Also, when you’re not in bubbles, you sleep better. Fatigue is a big part of it and obviously, if you’re not resting and recovering from the training and playing loads, then you’re just constantly taking fuel out the tanks.Lauren Winfield-Hill started the 2022 season with 96 from 51 balls for Northern Diamonds•Getty Images”Everybody had different experiences, but I’m quite a deep thinker and I need distractions. The bubbles don’t give you that, they just give you mental combustion and lots of analysis, lots of overthinking. And lots of disconnect. I needed my people to ground me and reassure me that I’m not just a cricketer, we love you regardless. When the only thing that you’re getting any sort of feedback on is cricket, and that’s not going well, you don’t really know who you are and what you stand for.”It always sounds really corny, doesn’t it? But you’ve got to bounce your bum on the bottom to come back up. And right now, I’m playing the best cricket in my life.”Though she hit the ground running in the 2022 season with a remarkable 96 from 51 balls for Northern Diamonds in the Charlotte Edwards Cup, it was Lauren’s move from Northern Superchargers to Oval Invincibles for the Hundred that provided the stand-out evidence of her new resolve. Her first match for the Invincibles came against her old team-mates – Alyssa Healy included, whose pre-eminence as a wicketkeeper-opener had been a factor in Lauren moving south to give herself an extra role behind the stumps. By the time she’d cracked 74 not out from 42 balls in a nine-wicket win, she had amply justified the switch.”It was a massive decision at the time because I’m Northern through and through, and obviously I had been captain at the Superchargers,” she says. “But sometimes you make decisions for other people instead of decisions for yourself. I don’t think I’ve ever been more nervous for a game than I was for that first game, so it was nice to perform, and they were really happy for me, which meant a lot.Related

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“I’ve just changed the way I operate,” she adds. “I’ve become less OCD with my training routine and allowed myself to go with the flow. The bottom line is that I couldn’t adapt to anything that wasn’t how it was supposed to be. But that’s the game of cricket. God knows what’s going to happen, who knows how many you are going to be chasing, or what sort of surface you’re going to get on, or who they’re going to bowl.”So I’ve worked really hard on being more fluid in life, and fluid in the game. I’m not trying so hard to get that score that proves I’m worthy of being an England cricketer, and so I’m able to adapt and play the game in front of me. Sometimes that might just need me to be gritty, whereas previously I’d have tried to be expansive and sexy, and fail to get the job done.”Greater self-assurance comes with a greater desire to be seen as a role-model too, on the field and off. In terms of her relationship with Courtney, Lauren acknowledges that it wasn’t always easy to be upfront about her sexuality, and that the act of getting married – and taking on a double-barrelled surname – was a big factor in becoming truly comfortable about who she is.”I just think it’s important to use your platform, use your story for good, and just create awareness,” she says. “Our job is to play cricket but there’s a bit more to it than that. It’s important to show you are not afraid to be authentic, and to drive the change.”More generally, however, as a female sportsperson, Lauren can feel that change happening on her watch, and is eager to do her bit to keep the momentum going, at every level of the game.”I think people understand the challenges that female athletes have gone through, and have a respect for that, but you’ve also got to have one eye on the future of change,” she says. “For instance, it’s great to see Amy Jones up on a billboard for a big advertising campaign, but who’s looking out for the girl who’s gone to a cricket club and has nowhere to get changed, or no sanitary bin? She isn’t going to go back if you don’t keep an eye on the shop floor stuff too.”We’re not just the tag-ons anymore. In the past we might have been the curtain-raisers, but now it feels like we are up there on a pedestal as well.”One of the best things about the Hundred has been seeing all the kids after the game, and there’ll be a ten-year-old boy shouting your name and asking for your autograph. That has such an impact, because if a girl then goes into the playground and plays cricket, they don’t all go ‘urgh, it’s a girl!’ They’ll be thinking, ‘I went to watch the Hundred, and the girls are really good. Come on, let’s play!'”Lauren Winfield-Hill recently featured in the Royal London series ‘The Changing Room’, a three-part video series, in partnership with the ECB, where players and officials discuss a range of topics that impact the game of cricket including, racism, faith discrimination, and gender equality. The entire series is available to stream at www.royallondon.com/cricket

Auction trends: Titans' 100% strike rate, England players in demand, big hikes and pay cuts

Almost 42% of the total spend was on allrounders; Williamson and Jamieson among the players to have huge salary slashes

Sampath Bandarupalli25-Dec-2022INR 82 = USD 1</smallPerfect seven for Titans
Gujarat Titans, the title holders, entered the auction with a purse of INR 19.25 crore for seven available spots. Titans bid only on seven players through the auction and took home all of them – four of them at their base price – and spent big on only one player: Shivam Mavi, who they bought for INR 6 crore.Sunrisers Hyderabad also had a near-perfect auction. They bought 13 of the 14 players they bid for. The only player Sunrisers missed was Ben Stokes, for whom they were in the bidding war until he touched the INR 15-crore mark, before going to Chennai Super Kings

Super Kings, on the other hand, had the lowest success rate as they got only seven of the 16 players they bid for. Super Kings made unsuccessful attempts to buy the players who went for big prices in the initial rounds until they got Stokes for INR 16.25 crore.Kolkata Knight Riders were next from the bottom, getting their hands on only eight of the 16 they tried to get. Six times – of the eight they missed – they were the losing bidders, the most for any team. Entering the auction with a purse of only INR 7.05 crore didn’t let Knight Riders make expensive buys – six of the eight players they bought were at their base prices.The only team to make bids for more players than Super Kings and Knight Riders were Rajasthan Royals, who bid for 17 players and got nine.Clamour for England players
Overall, INR 58.1 crore was spent on eight players from England – that’s INR 16 crore more than the amount spent to acquire the 51 Indians sold at the event, with Sam Curran, Stokes and Harry Brook the big spends. The three of them were among the five most expensive buys on the day. Between the three, a total of INR 48 crore was spent, which is almost 29% of the total auction spend.

The top international allrounders were the most in-demand and expensive category at the auction – almost 42% of the total spend was for players listed as allrounders. INR 70.95 crore was spent on the allrounders – INR 8 crore on Indians and INR 62.95 crore on overseas players. Cameron Green was another of the big buys there, going to Mumbai Indians for INR 17.5 crore.For the 80 players sold at the auction, INR 139 crore was spent on 37 capped players, and INR 28 crore on 43 uncapped players.

The battle over Curran
Curran, who became the most expensive auction buy ever at the IPL, was also the player to attract bids from the most teams. He was the only player six teams bid for: Mumbai Indians, Royal Challengers Bangalore, Royals, Super Kings, Punjab Kings, and Lucknow Super Giants. Stokes was the other to attract bids from five teams.As many as 70 bids were made for Curran, which is also the most for any player at this auction.

Salary cuts for New Zealand stars
Sunrisers, who retained Kane Williamson for INR 14 crores in 2022, released him ahead of the 2023 auction. Williamson was the first player to go under the hammer and was picked by Titans for his base price of INR 2 crore. That’s a pay cut of INR 12 crore, but he didn’t have the roughest time.Kyle Jamieson had a pay cut of INR 14 crore, down to INR 1 crore (Super Kings) from the INR 15 crore he was paid by Royal Challengers in 2021.

Jhye Richardson took a cut of INR 12.5 crore – down from INR 14 crore (Kings) to INR 1.5 crore, which is what Mumbai Indians got him for this time.Jamieson’s pay came down by 93.33%, the second highest for any player at this auction. Romario Shepherd topped the list with 93.5%, bought for INR 50 lakh by Super Giants after being bought by Sunrisers for INR 7.75 crore in 2022.The biggest percentage hike came for Rilee Rossouw, whose got a 1433.33% increase on his previous pay cheque. Rossouw was last part of the IPL in 2015, when he earned INR 30 lakh from Royal Challengers. This time, Delhi Capitals paid him INR 4.6 crore during the accelerated round of the auction.In terms of money, Curran got the biggest jump: from INR 5.5 crore in 2021 to INR 18.5 crore, a hike of INR 13 crore.

How many cricketers have also competed in the Olympics in other sports?

And what is the largest difference between a team’s first-innings and second-innings scores in all first-class cricket?

Steven Lynch23-May-2023I read that Brian Booth, who died last week, also played hockey for Australia at the Olympics. Are there any other Test cricketers who have done this? asked Craig Franklin from Australia
Brian Booth, who sadly died last week aged 89, seems to have been one of those rare cricketers who was universally admired. “A truly great human,” said his former team-mate Kerry O’Keeffe. “Strong claims to captain Aust ‘best blokes’ Test eleven.” Booth played the first of his 29 Tests in England in 1961, and led Australia twice during his final series, the 1965-66 Ashes. He scored five Test hundreds (and a 98). Before his international cricket career started, he had been part of the Australian field hockey squad for the 1956 Olympic Games in Melbourne, and played in some of the later matches.Booth is one of six Test cricketers who also competed at the Olympics. The first was the Essex fast bowler Claude Buckenham, who was part of the Great Britain football team that won the gold medal in Paris in 1900; he played four Tests in South Africa in 1909-10, taking seven wickets in the first in Johannesburg.Another Essex player, Johnny Douglas, won the middleweight boxing gold medal at the 1908 Olympics in London. He went on to play 23 Tests for England between 1911-12 and 1924-25, captaining in most of them. At around the same time, the Somerset batter Jack MacBryan played one Test against South Africa in 1924 (famously not batting or bowling at Old Trafford) after being part of the gold-medal-winning British hockey team in Antwerp in 1920. The New Zealander Keith Thomson had a very busy time in 1968: after playing two Tests against India, he was part of the national hockey squad for the Mexico Olympics. Like Booth, he died in 2023.Coming more up to date, Sunette Viljoen played one Test and 17 ODIs for the South African women’s team, before concentrating on athletics: she competed in all four Olympic Games between 2004 and 2016, winning the silver medal in the javelin in the last, in Rio de Janeiro. Suzie Bates was part of the New Zealand basketball team at the 2008 Olympics in Beijing, and also appeared in 291 white-ball cricket internationals, many as captain – but she never played a Test match.At the weekend Glamorgan made 737 in their second innings, having been skittled for 123 in the first. Is the difference between the innings a record? asked Joe Jervis from England
In a remarkable turnaround, Glamorgan scored 614 more runs in the second innings of their recent County Championship match against Sussex in Hove than in the first. This is indeed a record difference between two completed innings by one side in a first-class match, beating 591 by Karachi Blues (111 and 702 for 7) against United Bank in Karachi in 2016-17.The Test record is 551, by Pakistan (106 and 657 for 8 declared) against West Indies in Bridgetown in 1957-58, in the match in which Hanif Mohammad scored 337 in 970 minutes. There are two other cases of 551 in first-class cricket, by Barbados (175 and 726 for 7 declared) against Trinidad in Bridgetown in 1926-27, and Middlesex (83 and 634 for 7 declared) against Essex in Chelmsford in 1983.Glamorgan’s 737 was their second-highest total, exceeded only by last year’s 795 for 5 declared in Leicester. There have been just four higher second-innings totals in all first-class cricket, the highest being New South Wales’s 770 against South Australia in Adelaide in 1920-21.I was intrigued by last week’s question regarding England players with an X in their surname. How many Pakistan cricketers have names containing a Q? asked Sanjeev Kulkarni from India
There are rather more than the five England Xs when we investigate Pakistan Qs. There are 37 Test players from Pakistan whose names are usually rendered on scorecards with a Q; there are at least four others whose full names also include a Q (for example, the full name of the recent Test batter Yasir Hameed is Yasir Hameed Qureshi).I won’t list all the Q players, but a reasonable Test team can be fielded: for starters, try Sadiq Mohammad, Imam-ul-Haq, Abdul Razzaq, Mushtaq Mohammad, Inzamam-ul-Haq, Asif Iqbal, Abdul Qadir, Zulqarnain, Saqlain Mushtaq, Waqar Younis and Aqib Javed. Their match would have to be reported by Pakistan’s most durable cricket journalist, Qamar Ahmed. Pride of place, however, should perhaps go to the 1980s seamer Tahir Naqqash, who has two Qs in his name.Chris Martin collected 36 ducks and had a high score of 12 in his Test batting career•William West/AFPChris Martin took 233 wickets and scored 123 runs in his Test career. Is this negative difference of 110 the largest for a Test career? asked Elamaran Perumal from the United States
The New Zealand seamer (and hapless batter) Chris Martin collected 36 ducks in a 71-Test career that brought him just 123 runs to go with those 233 wickets. You’re right in thinking that 110 is the biggest negative difference between runs and wickets in a Test career: next comes the Indian legspin genius Bhagwath Chandrasekhar, with 242 wickets and 167 runs (a difference of -75). Old-time bowlers Jack Saunders of Australia (79 wickets, 39 runs) and England’s Bill Bowes (68 and 28) both had a difference of minus 40.The recent Pakistan seamer Aizaz Cheema had a big negative ratio: 20 wickets, but just one run. The 1930s England legspinner Charles “Father” Marriott and the recent South African seamer Mfuneko “Chewing” Ngam both took 11 Test wickets, but scored no runs at all.Regarding last week’s question about someone spending ten balls on nought in an IPL game, didn’t Dwayne Smith once get off the mark from his 12th ball? asked Rajesh Verma from India
You’re right that the normally attacking West Indian Dwayne Smith spent 11 balls on nought (eight of them, including a first-over maiden, sent down by slow left-armer Shahbaz Nadeem) for Chennai Super Kings against Delhi Daredevils in Raipur in 2015. However, last week’s question specifically asked about IPL chases, so the answers given were correct for teams batting second.Smith’s 11 balls is the most taken to get off the mark in either innings of an IPL match, but someone else has spent even longer on nought: Nayan Doshi faced 13 balls for Rajasthan Royals against Kochi Tuskers in Indore in 2011, being dismissed for a duck by the 13th.Shiva Jayaraman of ESPNcricinfo’s stats team helped with some of the above answers.Use our feedback form, or the Ask Steven Facebook page to ask your stats and trivia questions

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