Healy and Mooney take Australia to ten-wicket win after Vlaeminck's impressive return

Bangladesh got to 126 for 4 on the back of Nigar Sultana’s 63*, but their bowlers failed to prevent defeat with 42 deliveries to spare

AAP31-Mar-2024Tayla Vlaeminck celebrated her return to international cricket with a wicket with her third ball, as Australia thrashed Bangladesh by ten wickets in their series-opening T20I in Dhaka.Playing her first game for Australia since January 2022, Vlaeminck beat Sobhana Mostary with her speed to hit the batter’s stumps. She finished with 1 for 30 as Australia kept Bangladesh to 126 for 4, before chasing the target down without loss and with seven overs to spare.Vlaeminck, the fastest female bowler in Australia, suffered two anterior cruciate ligament ruptures and a shoulder dislocation before her 21st birthday. That came before her most recent extended break, when stress fractures in her foot and a shoulder dislocation required more than two years of recovery.She admitted before the Bangladesh tour that she at one stage privately questioned why officials had kept faith in her. But on Sunday afternoon, she answered it herself. Vlaeminck bowled with speed in her first match on the subcontinent, piercing through Mostary’s defences as the No. 3 attempted to play back. Vlaeminck’s return helped push her case for selection for the World Cup later this year, also in Bangladesh.Nigar Sultana scored exactly half her team’s 126•Getty ImagesFellow Victorian Sophie Molineux also did her case no harm. After a ruptured ACL destroyed her 2023, she had Dilara Akter caught with the first ball of the match. She also bowled Fahima Khatun in the final over of the innings, finishing with 2 for 25.Bangladesh owed their final total of 126 to captain Nigar Sultana, who scored exactly half the runs, remaining unbeaten on 63 from 64 balls after walking out at No. 4 in the second over.In reply, Alyssa Healy (65 not out in 42 balls) and Beth Mooney (55 not out in 36 balls) made light work of the chase.Healy smashed nine fours and a six in a dominant innings, raising fifty in 34 balls. Mooney also hit nine boundaries as she too brought up a 34-ball fifty, with the pair taking Australia to their fourth ten-wicket win in T20 history.

Blow for Liverpool! Arne Slot confirms Joe Gomez has departed pre-season tour of Asia after suffering Achilles injury

Liverpool defender Joe Gomez has prematurely ended his participation in the club’s ongoing pre-season tour of Asia with a discomfort in his Achilles. The 28-year-old was flown back to England for further evaluation following concerns that arose during a training session at Hong Kong’s Kai Tak Stadium on Thursday.

  • Gomez has picked up an achilles injury
  • Will no longer play a part in pre-season
  • Slot running short on natural centre-backs
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  • WHAT HAPPENED?

    The Achilles problem is the latest in a string of injuries that have hampered Gomez's career. The England international had only recently regained full match fitness after sitting out the final stretch of the previous campaign due to a hamstring issue. This summer was viewed as a crucial period for the centre-back to reclaim his place in the squad, which makes this injury all the more disappointing.

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    THE BIGGER PICTURE

    Liverpool’s defensive depth is already under scrutiny following the summer departure of Jarell Quansah, who completed a move to Bayer Leverkusen. With Gomez sidelined and no new centre-back signed yet, Slot’s options at the heart of defence have become increasingly limited. At present, the Reds have just two senior central defenders available for selection. This includes captain Virgil van Dijk, who partnered Ryan Gravenberch, a midfielder by trade, in an emergency pairing against AC Milan.

  • WHAT SLOT SAID

    Speaking to , Slot informed: "He was with us for the first part of the week, but he had some Achilles problems. We thought it was better to assess it back in England and for him to work on him to come back to the team, probably in more ideal circumstances for him than be part of the group that every time goes out. So, we decided to let him go back to England. But we hope and expect to have him back soon.”

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  • DID YOU KNOW?

    As Liverpool navigate this challenging period, the club is said to be actively monitoring Crystal Palace’s Marc Guehi as a potential solution to their defensive concerns. Meanwhile, Ibrahima Konate is also linked with a potential move to Real Madrid, which has amplified the urgency of bringing in another centre-back, with the start of the 2025–26 season fast approaching.

'I played in two of the greatest Tests of all time'

Peter Willey is now better known as an international umpire, but for 22 Tests in the early 1980s, he was a doughty presence in England’s middle order.

08-Jul-2005Peter Willey is now better known as an international umpire, but for 22 Tests in the early 1980s, he was a doughty presence in England’s middle order, taking on the might of Australia and West Indies with his chest-on batting stance. Cricinfo spoke to him about his role in two of the most amazing Ashes Tests of all time – Headingley and Edgbaston 1981


Peter Willey
© Getty Images

I will always remember the last morning of the Headingley Test, running out onto the ground in such an atmosphere that there were goose pimples on my arms. It was absolutely fantastic when Bob Willis had his amazing spell, ending up with eight wickets. It was the first Test I played in that we won, so it was an amazing occasion.Botham’s knock was one of those innings where he just went for it and I suppose he could have got out any time. We were all thinking that he couldn’t carry on the way he was batting. Even when they needed 130, we didn’t expect to win. If you’d read it in a book you have thought it was Roy of the Rovers stuff, which it was. I drove home that night, I had a sponsored car with my name on the side, and people were tooting as I went down the motorway. It was just great for the country.The stories about the Aussies having the champagne on ice are all true, they were ready to celebrate. It was all in their room and I think we ended up drinking it, which was even better. Then of course we went to Edgbaston and it wasn’t an easy pitch to play on. I think Mike Brearley was going to ask me to bowl in the last innings, as the pitch was turning quite a bit, but he decided to give Both a go and of course he took 5 for 1. It was marvellous but unfortunately after that game I got left out.I was disappointed to be left out especially at Old Trafford when Both got another hundred in no time at all. But I was just happy to play for England against anyone and I can always say I played in two of the most talked-about Tests of all time.Brearley just had a way of handling pressure – and especially Botham. When he took over it allowed Botham to express himself again and it paid off. When he was captain, the team struggled a bit, and he felt he couldn’t always go out and play his own way, but then he was allowed to do what he did best – just play cricket.Even after the Headingley and Edgbaston Tests there was a feeling that he couldn’t go on – not even the great Garry Sobers could change that many games – but Both just had a brilliant spell of three or four games when he could do nothing wrong. After being slated and being at rock-bottom following his pair at Lord’s it was just magnificent to see him come back. He had the strength of character to do it and it came off for him. I’ve never seen anything that has competed with 1981 for a single-handed turnaround of a series.I don’t think one person could beat this Australian side like Botham managed in ’81. They are a superb side, but if our bowlers can stay fit and bowl to their full ability, and if we can get enough runs, we can give them a contest. With good weather, good pitches and both teams playing to their potential I think we could have a great series and it is going to be marvellous to watch.I played 22 Tests and only won three – Headingley and Edgbaston in 1981, and Headingley in 85 – and to be involved in those games is something you will always remember. People always bring it up and come over with old scorecards saying “are you the Peter Willey that played there?” and it’s marvellous to be able to say I was.

The young and the old, and Boucher's shirt

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

Steven Lynch14-Nov-2005The regular Monday column in which Steven Lynch answers your questions about (almost) any aspect of cricket:

Shaun Udal: debutant at 36 © Getty Images
I recently read about Hasan Raza’s Test debut at the tender age of 14. Is he the youngest debutant? And who is the youngest to get a century? asked Aswin Chari from Singapore
Hasan Raza, who is playing in the current Test against England at Multan, is indeed the youngest person to appear in a Test match – he was only 14 years 227 days old when he made his debut for Pakistan against Zimbabwe at Faisalabad in 1996-97. There is some doubt about his exact age, but independent tests at the time suggested that he was about 15, so the published date is not far wrong (if indeed it’s wrong at all). For a full list of the youngest Test players, click here. The 12th man on that list, Mohammad Ashraful, is the youngest to score a Test century – he was 16 years 364 days old when he scored 114 against Sri Lanka in Colombo on the third day of his Test debut.Shaun Udal is currently playing his first Test for England, aged 36. Have many people have been older on their Test debut? asked Jeffrey Cobb from Fareham
Shaun Udal was 36 years and 239 days old when the match started, making him the oldest debutant for England since John Childs, who was 81 days older when he made the first of his two Test appearances in 1988. In all 22 players have been older than Udal when winning their first cap for England: for a full list of the oldest Test debutants, click here.Why did Mark Boucher have the number 200 printed on the back of his shirt in the fifth ODI between South Africa and New Zealand? asked Aamir Masood
Mark Boucher wore the special shirt because that match at Centurion was his 200th one-day international. He is the fourth South African to reach this landmark, after Jonty Rhodes (245 ODI appearances), Shaun Pollock (244) and Jacques Kallis (224). For a list of those with most ODI appearances, click here.

Mark Boucher: only the fourth South African with 200 ODI caps © Getty Images
I read somewhere long ago about a Test played in the West Indies that was abandoned because the pitch was deemed unsafe to play on. Was that the only such occurrence? asked Prateek Goorha from Australia
It wasn’t actually that long ago – the match in question was the first Test of England’s 1997-98 tour, at Sabina Park in Kingston. There was less than an hour’s play – 10.1 overs in all – during which time England limped to 17 for 3, with the busiest man on the ground being their physiotherapist, who kept having to run out to players who had been injured by balls flying unpredictably off the rutted surface. I’ve always felt particularly sorry for Mark Butcher, who hadn’t expected to play, got a late call-up … and was then dismissed by an unplayable lifter. This is the only instance in Test history of a match being abandoned after it had started because of an unfit pitch, although there was one ODI that suffered this fate – India v Sri Lanka at Indore on Christmas Day, 1997.You wrote a couple of weeks ago about there having been only one Test in Multan – but surely there have been several played there? asked Siddiq Khan from Lahore
The question was in this column two weeks ago, and asked about grounds which had only staged one Test. What I meant was that there was a ground at Multan – the Ibn-e-Qasim Bagh Stadium – which had only staged one Test (against West Indies in 1980-81). Subsequent Test matches in Multan have been played at the new Multan Cricket Stadium. The current Test against England is the fourth to be played there.I know that Mohammad Azharuddin scored a hundred in both his first and last Tests – has anyone else done this? asked Neeraj Bhardwaj from Canada
Apart from Mohammad Azharuddin there have been three other batsmen have scored hundreds in their first and last Tests, and they are all Australians: the current Indian coach Greg Chappell, Reggie Duff and Bill Ponsford. This excludes any current players, and the two men – Andy Ganteaume and Rodney Redmond – who scored a century in their only Test match.

A contemporary giant

With an aggregate approaching 8000 and an average of more than 56, Jaques Kallis is easily one of the giants of contemporary cricket, and the most prolific batsman that South Africa have ever produced

S Rajesh15-Apr-2006

Jacques Kallis: the rock in the South African batting line-up © Getty Images
With an aggregate approaching 8000 and an average of more than 56, Jaques Kallis is easily one of the giants of contemporary cricket, and the most prolific batsman that South Africa have ever produced. In a batting line-up that has often had an iffy look to it, Kallis has been the steadying force and their go-to man, even more so since the retirement of Gary Kirsten, the only South African to have played more Tests (101).Kallis’s start in Test cricket was anything but encouraging: 1, 7, 6, 39, 0, 2, 2 – these were the scores for Kallis in his first seven Test innings. His next three fetched him 177 – including his first hundred, in trying circumstances against Australia in 1997-98 – but then followed a prolonged slump, when his next nine Tests fetched 375 runs at 26.78. In fact, it took him all of 22 matches to get to 1000 runs, at which stage his average was a modest 30.87.

The progression to 100 Tests

Tests Runs Average 100s/ 50s

20 952 31.73 2/ 5 40 2479 43.49 7/ 12 60 3971 47.27 9/ 22 80 5967 53.75 16/ 31 99 7840 56.40 24/ 38As the table below shows, Kallis’s stats at the 50-Test mark were fairly ordinary. In his 51st, he crafted an unbeaten 157 against Zimbabwe, and that kickstarted a phenomenal run in which he amassed 660 runs and was dismissed just three times. Since then it has mostly been one almost non-stop run-fest in which he has, on an average, scored a hundred every 2.88 Tests. During this entire period, which started in September 2001, the longest streak without a hundred has been just six matches.

Kallis’s rise to the top

Runs Average 100s/ 50s

In first 50 Tests 2952 41.00 7/ 16 In next 49 Tests 4888 72.95 17/ 22Over the last five-and-a-half years, Kallis has easily been the most prolific batsman in the world, with an average which is four runs higher than his nearest competitor, Ricky Ponting.

Best batsman since Sept 2001

Batsman Tests Runs Average 100s/ 50s

Jacques Kallis 49 4888 72.9517/ 22 Ricky Ponting 57 5792 68.9522/ 19 Brian Lara 44 4761 62.6416/ 14 Rahul Dravid 52 4520 61.9113/ 21 Inzamam-ul-Haq 34 2967 59.3410/ 12And while most batsmen find the going tougher in the second innings, Kallis seems to relish the challenge, averaging nearly 60 (though it helps that out of 68 innings, he has been unbeaten in 21).

Best 2nd innings batsmen (Qual: 1500 runs)

Batsman Innings Runs Average 100s/ 50s

Don Bradman 30 2299 104.5010/ 8 Herbert Sutcliffe 31 1541 64.206/ 6Jacques Kallis 68 2808 59.745/ 18 B Mitchell 38 1654 57.033/ 10 Andy Flower 49 1972 56.345/ 10Whereas Kallis the batsman has grown in stature with every passing year, Kallis the bowler is clearly on the decline. Once capable of swinging it at around 140 kmph, Kallis is now clearly reluctant to exert himself with the ball. In his last 30 Tests, he only has 45 wickets at nearly 43 apiece. He still remains a force as a bowler, though, as he showed the Australians in the recently concluded series, dismissing all the top-order batsmen except Matthew Hayden at least once in the three Tests. And the 25-run difference between his batting and bowling averages puts him on top of the allrounders list, ahead of even Garry Sobers.

Best allrounders (Qual: 2000 runs and 150 wickets)

Player Runs/ Average Wickets/ Average Bat ave – Bowl ave

Jacques Kallis 7840/ 56.40 196/ 31.68 24.72 Garry Sobers 8032/ 57.78 235/ 34.03 23.75 Imran Khan 3807/ 37.69 362/ 22.81 14.88 Keith Miller 2958/ 36.97 170/ 22.97 14.00 Shaun Pollock 3372/ 31.51 389/ 23.21 8.30 Ian Botham 5200/ 33.54 383/ 28.40 5.14 Richard Hadlee 3124/ 27.16 431/ 22.29 4.87 Chris Cairns 3320/ 33.53 218/ 29.40 4.13 Andrew Flintoff 3080/ 33.47 174/ 31.45 2.02 Kapil Dev 5248/ 31.05 434/ 29.64 1.41Even though Kallis has been so prolific, a few opposition line-ups have had a fair amount of success against him: against Sri Lanka he averages just 33, and hasn’t managed a single hundred in 21 innings, while Australia and Pakistan have also kept him down to less than 40 runs per innings. (Click here for Kallis’s career summary.)

Not going quietly

Martin Williamson reviews Fred Titmus’s autobiography

Martin Williamson26-Jul-2005Buy it now



Fred Titmus was an archetypal old-fashioned professional. Brought up in the hard world that was the fate of the working classes in the 1930s, his escape was sport. A useful footballer, his break came in cricket, initially as a batsman, then as a batsman who could bowl seam, and finally as an offspinner who could more than hold his own in the lower middle-order. From the time of his debut for Middlesex in 1949 aged 16, he followed the well-worn path of the county pro, through to his final game aged 49 in 1982 (making him one of a handful to have played first-class cricket in five decades). There were also spells as a coach at Surrey (brief and far from happy) and as a national selector.Growing up following Middlesex, I was weaned on tales of Titmus, the chirpy Cockney who served the county loyally. But he was a much better player than I ever suspected. He was one of only eight cricketers to score more than 20,000 first-class runs and take over 2000 wickets. For five years, until he lost four toes in a gruesome accident involving a speedboat propeller on England’s 1967-68 Caribbean tour (for which he was paid £98 compensation) he was England’s first-choice spinner. He was still good enough to earn a recall on England’s ill-fated 1974-75 tour of Australia, and while the veteran Colin Cowdrey earned the plaudits for facing Lillee and Thomson on a Perth flier, it was Titmus, a month older, who top-scored in the match with 61.But what, on the surface, appears to be a fairly standard autobiography nevertheless packs some surprising punches. As befits a man who was never short of an aside on and off the field, Titmus has not held back with his views on some contemporaries. He describes a former ECB chief executive as a “peehole bowler”, Mike Atherton as “a fair player but not a good leader … not fit to lace Peter May’s boots” and once told Prince Phillip to “f*** off”.Perhaps his most stinging remarks are reserved for the unlikeliest target, Mike Brearley, who as a captain is generally considered almost beyond criticism. Not by Titmus, however. Initially irritated by Brearley’s insistence on setting his fields, he speaks of “daft and arrogant ideas which made him something of a joke.”What is clear is that the old guard had little time for Brearley, and Titmus stingingly concludes by pointing out that his own Test average with the bat is almost identical to that of his captain’s. And therein lies the underlying theme of the book. Titmus straddles the era in which the old class-based hierarchy gave way to the new meritocracy, and although he served his time at the bottom of the ladder, by the time he neared the top it had been pulled away from under him. Brearley, seemingly the archetypal old amateur, who should have epitomised the old days, was in fact at the helm of the revolution.One major gripe remains the unforgivable lack of an index, and the total absence of any statistics to highlight just how good a player Titmus was. For a man who remains, by his own admission, a great believer that stats do not lie, that is a surprising oversight.

Breaking the mould

The selectors have made a good start in picking the 30, but they could easily regress when it comes to pruning down the squad to 15 and leave out many of the really young ones, settling for safety instead

Anand Vasu07-Jul-2007

Strange omission: Dinesh Mongia, with 32 games under his belt, is far and away the most experienced in the Twenty20 format, but he has been overlooked © Getty Images
Twenty20 cricket would give a lot of people, some of whom would otherwise have never made it, a chance to play international cricket, Kumar Sangakkara said in a recent interview. His words appeared to be borne out when India announced a squad of 30 probables for September’s Twenty20 World Championship. With Rahul Dravid, Sachin Tendulkar and Sourav Ganguly excusing themselves – and they should be commended for doing so – the job of the selectors became that much easier.This will be the first time in years that India are going into a tournament of any kind without the big three, and it remains to be seen if this is an indication of the selectors’ long-term thinking, or whether it’s just an exception for Twenty20 cricket. The selectors picked a squad heavy on youth, and understandably light on experience.But the inexperience won’t matter a jot, for none of India’s cricketers has played much Twenty20 cricket. Dinesh Mongia, with 32 games under his belt, is far and away the most experienced, but he has been overlooked. Murali Kartik, who has played a bit of Twenty20 himself, for Lancashire and Middlesex – only yesterday he picked up 5 for 13, the third-best returns in the short history of this form of the game – also missed out.It’s hard to judge this squad of 30 because so little is known about what they can do at Twenty20 cricket. But it is a major opportunity for some of these young cricketers to get a taste of the big league. It’s still some way yet – the selectors have made a good start in picking the 30, but they could easily regress when it comes to pruning down the squad to 15 and leave out many of the really young ones, settling for safety instead.There are many familiar faces – Yuvraj Singh, Mohammad Kaif, Mahendra Singh Dhoni, Virender Sehwag – but interestingly there are fresh ones too. Yusuf Pathan has made a bit of a name for himself as an offie who can tonk the ball a long distance, and more than mere potential has some performances to back his claims up, and joins his brother Irfan in the squad. Karan Goel the twenty-year-old left-hand bat and offie who scored 26 and took 4 for 13 as Punjab lost to Tamil Nadu in the final of the domestic Twenty20 championship, finds a spot. What’s critical is to see how the selectors go about their business when they halve this squad on August 7. If they go with those who have built reputations in one-day cricket, and send the out-and-out youngsters back to domestic cricket, they would have missed a trick. In order to help the selectors pick the final 15 the Board of Control for Cricket in India will probably have to schedule its inter-zonal Twenty20 competition between now and then, and that promises to be a hastily arranged affair Abhishek Jhunjhunwala, although quite a correct batsman, makes it, along with Manoj Tiwary, both from Bengal, and his electric fielding would be a big plus. Chetweshwar Pujara, another young batsman of promise, though hardly a man you’d pick for Twenty20, is in the squad too, as is Niraj Patel, the industrious left-hand batsman from Gujarat who has scored regularly and played a key role in finishing off limited overs games. Praveen Kumar, the allrounder gets in for his utility with bat and ball, as does Orissa’s Niranjan Behera, while Anirudh Srikkanth, a dasher to the core, is one of those who could play a big part if he gets going.One person the selectors should have found place for, at least in the long-list of 30, is V Devendra, the Twenty20 specialist from Tamil Nadu. His played a crucial part in Tamil Nadu’s success in the domestic competition with his fearless hitting at the top of the order and steady mediumpace.What’s critical is to see how the selectors go about their business when they halve this squad on August 7. If they go with those who have built reputations in one-day cricket, and send the out-and-out youngsters back to domestic cricket, they would have missed a trick. In order to help the selectors pick the final 15 the Board of Control for Cricket in India will probably have to schedule its inter-zonal Twenty20 competition between now and then, and that promises to be a hastily arranged affair.While most of the attention has centred on the Twenty20 probables, what with a World Championship around the corner, it should not escape notice that the selectors also picked an A team to tour Kenya. In that squad are some seriously contentious choices, with Arjun Yadav getting a look in despite achieving little in domestic cricket. An opening batsman like M Vijay, who had an excellent debut season, scoring 628 runs at 40-plus will wonder why he misses out, in a squad that has only one regular opener, in Robin Uthappa. This at a time when India have a fairly new opening combination in Tests and are on the look out for openers. Once again, it seems a confused selection, with a wicketkeeper opening, but given what they’ve done with the national team in the recent past, you’d at least have to say the selectors are consistent.

Another first at the last

Peter English on Shane Warne’s 700th wicket

Peter English at Melbourne26-Dec-2006


Shane Warne: almost double the tally of Dennis Lillee
© Getty Images

Dennis Lillee was Shane Warne’s childhood hero and back then DK’s collection of 355 Test wickets was the most coveted bowling record in Australia. It didn’t worry young tearaways that the mark was crept past by Richard Hadlee, Kapil Dev and Ian Botham. It might have seemed untouchable in the late 1980s, but it was still the one to aim for.Applying the attacking approach of Lillee with the slow-bowling trickery of the early 20th century, Warne has almost doubled it. Lillee’s haul was overtaken six years ago and in becoming the first player to 700 wickets in Melbourne today – he also won the race with Muttiah Muralitharan to 500 and 600 – Warne has extended the dreamy milestone. Murali hopes to reach 900, but Warne has only one more match to extend his tally after planning his retirement after the fifth Test in Sydney.At Perth last week he moved to 699 wickets in an exercise that was almost stage-managed. The WACA was half-full as Australia wrapped up the Ashes and despite the cold, wet and windy conditions here the MCG was almost packed. Its suitability as a stage was perfect for Warne.Every time he rolled his arms in the slips the crowd chanted his name. He was eventually called by Ponting at 2.51pm for the 41st over and started to a standing ovation before Paul Collingwood was booed for lofting him for a boundary. The fourth over was the one for history and, at 3.18pm, Andrew Strauss became the crucial figure.Strauss has been troubled by Warne in the past two series and he over-balanced as he tried to drive. The ball was not stopped by bat or pad and it spun into middle stump. Warne took off with one arm raised and finished at the end of a fast-bowler’s run-up before he found his first team-mate to hug. Extra police stood in a ring inside the boundary ropes to stop anyone running on to the field – nobody challenged them – and in the stands gold “700” signs were waved.Warne raised the ball above his head to recognise the crowd and his team-mates clapped as they tried to stand in a circle of respect. Aleem Dar joined in the hand-shaking and the supporters continued to roar. The locals have cheered him since he played his opening Test at the ground against West Indies in 1992-93, his third in all, when he starred with 7 for 52 in the second innings.Rodney Hogg, the former Australia fast bowler, first saw Warne in a Melbourne grade game and wrote in his newspaper column the legspinner would take 500 Test wickets. He was sacked and the editors weren’t the only ones who doubted the numbers that could be created. Warne was told by Terry Jenner after Jacques Kallis became his 300th victim he could double the total. He felt his long-term mentor was mad.Old Trafford hosted Warne’s 600th victim in 2005, when he took 96 wickets in the year, and since then he has continued to stay a couple of moves ahead of Muralitharan. Together they are at home in the Pacific Ocean while their closest counterparts swim in the Atlantic. They jostled for the right to reach 500, Warne winning in Galle in 2004 on his return from the one-year drugs ban, and once Muralitharan recovered from a shoulder problem their figures rose like waters affected by global warming.Murali stands at 674 and barring another serious injury will hold the bowling record for decades. At 37, Warne is looking forward to a rest. He has started to look old in this series and the aches have lasted longer after each of his marathon spells. The retirement announcement on Thursday came as a surprise, but in his last game at the MCG he has waved goodbye to his home-ground with another first.

A tactic of its time

Why Jardine’s leg theory was almost uniquely a product of its age

Gideon Haigh22-Oct-2007


The Iron Duke: “Just an old so-and-so who got away with it”
© Getty Images

Times change, and so do attitudes. Thirty years ago Kerry Packer was the unacceptable face of sporting capitalism. These days administrators laud him to the skies while entrepreneurs queue to emulate him.Three-quarters of a century ago Douglas Jardine was about to become the most reviled man in sport, detested by every right-thinking Australian and disliked by not a few Englishmen. The accepted philosophy had been that shared sport could only build warmth of international relations; the Bodyline series showed that different approaches to shared sport could have an equal and opposite effect.By the mid-1950s some of the breaks had healed and some of the bruises faded: Jardine’s chief instrument in his campaign, Harold Larwood, had even settled in Sydney. When the man himself visited Australia he appeared on a radio programme called , and found the natives disarmingly hospitable. “Though they may not hail me as Uncle Doug, I am no longer the bogeyman,” he commented. “Just an old so-and-so who got away with it.”Confirmation of his complete rehabilitation, at least in English eyes, was then perhaps provided by the cover of in February 2002, which acclaimed Nasser Hussain as showing “Shades of Jardine” in his deployment of a leg-side attack to restrain India at Bangalore. The background to Hussain’s image was indeed a shade of Jardine, loitering palely, like an apparition in one of those trick photographs favoured by Victorian spiritualists.Within, Mike Brearley opined that Hussain had reinvented Bodyline, albeit on a less intensive and more limited basis: “Jardine won the Ashes but nearly lost an Empire. Hussain saved a reputation and might have won a series.” Editor Stephen Fay wondered aloud if Hussain would prove “as ruthless as Jardine or better than Brearley”. Six months later David Frith’s magisterial revisitation of the 1932-33 Ashes series, , concluded with an approving nod to a late-life reflection of Jack Fingleton: “I think, looking back, the Australians perhaps made too much fuss about it.” At this rate Michael Vaughan’s reintroduction of the harlequin cap cannot be far away.This mellowing reflects not merely the passage of time but the changing of fashion. Batsmen skewered by pace from four prongs in the 1970s and 1980s found it hard to imagine bowling any more hostile; and if they could take it, then could Bodyline have been so bad? After all, only Larwood, abetted by Bill Voce, had kept the leg cordons busy; only once in that series had England taken the field without a slow bowler, and Voce gave way to a second spinner in Brisbane.International cricketers teethed in the 1990s and 2000s exhibit an aggression more calculated and cruel than anything dreamed of around the time of the Great Depression. The only on-field remark that Jardine is recorded to have made with the hint of a sledge was after rival Bill Woodfull absorbed his famous body blow at Adelaide in January 1933. “Well bowled, Harold,” the legend goes, was uttered for non-striker Don Bradman’s edification. It’s hardly “How’s your wife and my kids?”

Today it is hard to imagine a captain, least of all in Ashes cricket, responding with such imperturbable passivity to the unfolding plans of his opponent. If anything, the modern custom is to get one’s retaliation in first

Jardine having been brought within the realm of the acceptable, it was then but a small step to turn him into an exemplar. Beating Australia with Bradman was obviously no trifling achievement. And from a modern standpoint, beating Australia at all seems the stuff of which dreams are made. Undefeated in a home series for 15 years, still never having dipped their green and gold colours to India, Pakistan or Sri Lanka in front of Australian audiences, they are cricket’s benchmark. Jardine’s deeds, then, improve a little as each year of Australian hegemony passes.There is, however, a missing dimension to these calculations: the enigma of Woodfull. The captain who had regained the Ashes in 1930 gave them up 1-4 without ever attempting to parallel England’s strategy: as unreactive as Jardine was active. In his classic text (1946), Jack Fingleton reflected: “Australia certainly could have retaliated. It is a moot point whether retaliation would not have been the best and quickest way out of the mess, and whether it would not have quelled the jibes of squealing which assailed the Australians from many points at that time and in later years.” But where some on his own side, such as his vice-captain Victor Richardson, favoured an eye-for-an-eye response, the Methodist minister’s son turned the other cheek.We now have a rather better understanding of Woodfull’s thinking. In the course of the research for a new history of Cricket Australia, , a letter from Woodfull came to light which was apparently read aloud at the Australian Board of Control’s meeting of 30 January 1933. Woodfull thought that while “not infringing the laws of cricket”, Jardine’s team were “lowering the prestige of the game”.

There is evidence and like to the effect that two prominent English bowlers constantly attack the batsmen without paying the slightest attention to the stumps … Bowling of this type had unsettled the Australian batsmen during this season and all batsmen have been compelled for the first time to wear not only hip pads but also a pad covering the heart. A more serious injury than has occurred to date is only a matter of time.

Woodfull’s suggestion – never entertained – was a meeting between the board, Jardine, and the aqueous English manager Pelham Warner. His general attitude, however, was that he was powerless to do anything – interestingly not so much because of Jardine as because of the Englishman’s senior professionals.

To my mind we can hardly legislate on such a question but I would suggest a meeting of the Board with Messrs Jardine and Warner to see whether amicable relations could not be restored to some extent for the present. I am of the opinion that Mr Warner is against the theory … but that the professional players are too strong in their influence and opinions.The cricket bodies of both countries could bring pressure to bear, if necessary, on the cricket captains of first-class teams. England, I am certain, will fall into line, especially if they have a real taste of this theory next season in County Cricket. However, it is really on the field that the remedy rests, and while a cricket captain who still has the backing of MCC persists in the practice, little can be done by way of improvement.Since entering Test cricket I have not been sure that it is for the good of the Empire and in times when England and Australia need to be pulling together, large sections of both countries are embittered. Consequently I think that utmost must be done to find a way out. It appears unlikely that this would be discovered before the end of the present series yet I think it imperative that the matches be continued for more harm than good would be done by cancellation than by carrying out of the programme.


Bill Woodfull’s stoical acceptance of leg-theory for the sake of imperial harmony had its part to play
© The Cricketer International

This stoical acceptance of England’s strategy for the sake of imperial harmony has a certain nobility, but it is also strangely lacking in imagination. It left Woodfull’s comrades to solve by their own lights the perplexities Bodyline posed, although he also disapproved of anything that smacked of innovation: thus the captain looked severely on Bradman’s response of retreating to leg to exploit the depopulated off. Woodfull was a strong enough man and a respected enough leader to enforce his will on the team, but in doing so, and actually limiting Australian response, he made Bodyline an even more effective approach than it might have been.It may seem fanciful to suggest that Jardine would have been deflected from his course: he was no more for turning than Margaret Thatcher. But we do know he was surprised that Larwood and Voce proved so penetrative, observing during (1933) that he was not in advance “inclined to rate the possibilities of leg-theory very highly”, because he harboured “a very healthy respect for their [Australians’] play off the leg stump”. Never imagining that leg-theory “would stand such a test as would prove its effectiveness throughout the whole tour”, he thought merely that it “might occasionally prove a profitable variation when two batsmen were well set”. He could persist in part because there was never any threat of reciprocity, or even counter-measure.Would Jardine make a great captain today? He certainly had the pertinacity and inflexibility of purpose to which a leader facing Ricky Ponting’s Australians must aspire, although the cool insouciance in the face of the media might today be harder to achieve. “I’m here to win the Ashes, not provide scoops for your ruddy newspapers,” he is alleged to have said; not even Hussain at his rudest ever tried that.All the same, for Jardine to triumph, he needed a rival like Woodfull, prepared to be run roughshod over for the sake of imperial relations. Today it is hard to imagine a captain, least of all in Ashes cricket, responding with such imperturbable passivity to the unfolding plans of his opponent. If anything, the modern custom is to get one’s retaliation in first. So while Jardine’s captaincy might appear to have a modern edge, its effectiveness was very much of its time.

A first for a subcontinent team

Stats highlights from the fourth day of the Perth Test

S Rajesh and HR Gopalakrishna19-Jan-2008

Ricky Ponting made only 45, which is less than his average score in the fourth innings as captain © Getty Images
India’s 72-run win broke a sequence of 16 consecutive Test wins for Australia, dating back to the Boxing Day Test in 2005. It’s the second time India have played spoilsport to Australia’s 16-match winning spree – in Kolkata in 2001, they had beaten Steve Waugh’s team by 171 runs. This is the first Test win by a team from the subcontinent in Perth. The nine previous matches here – five for Pakistan, and two each for India and Sri Lanka – had all ended in Australian wins, almost all of them by convincing margins. It was also Australia’s first defeat in Perth since February 1997. The last time Australia lost at home was way back in December 2003, and India were the opponents then as well. Since that Adelaide Test, Australia had won 22 out of 25 home games before they ran into the inspired Indians in Perth. India’s win is their 30th overseas, 17 of which have come in this decade. It is also their 22nd outside the subcontinent, and their fifth in Australia. Australia’s total of 340 is their second-highest in the fourth innings in a match they have lost. Against England at Old Trafford in 1981, they scored 402 and yet lost by 103 runs. Australia’s fourth-innings score was also the highest total of the match, and yet they ended up on the losing side, making it only the 11th such instance, and the fourth since 2000. The last time a team made the highest score of the match in the fourth innings and lost was in June last year, when West Indies made 394 but lost by 60 runs against England at Old Trafford. Ricky Ponting managed only 45, which was a relative failure, considering how well he usually does in the fourth innings. He averages 58.85 in the last innings of a Test, but as a captain he has done even better, averaging 93.25, with three centuries and two fifties in 15 innings. Ponting was caught by Rahul Dravid off Ishant Sharma for the second time in the match. Only once previously has he been dismissed by the same bowler-fielder combination in both innings – he was caught by Romesh Kaluwitharana off Chaminda Vaas in Adelaide in 1996. Irfan Pathan was especially effective against the left-handers in this Test. He dismissed both Australian openers in the first and second innings. He averaged 14.75 against the left-handers; Stuart Clark was his only success versus right-hand batsmen, who averaged 56 against him. Andrew Symonds didn’t score too many this time, but when he reached 11 he became the 87th Australian batsman to get 1000 Test runs. Mitchell Johnson’s unbeaten 50 is easily his highest Test score, going past his previous best of 28 in the Sydney Test earlier this year. Thanks to the fact that he has remained unbeaten in three of his four innings, Johnson’s Test average is a Bradmanesque 99. The 73-run ninth-wicket stand between him and Stuart Clark is the highest for that wicket at home for Australia versus India. It was a game to forget for Michael Hussey: not only did he get his first Test duck, it was also the first time he lost a Test match.

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