Gus Atkinson added to squad as England ponder changes for Lord's

Gus Atkinson joins Jofra Archer, Sam Cook and Jamie Overton as alternative seam-bowling options in England’s 16-man squad

Matt Roller06-Jul-20254:11

Stokes: We weren’t able to deliver our skills when needed

England will consider making changes to their bowling attack after a gruelling workload in their 336-run defeat to India, and have added Gus Atkinson to the squad for Thursday’s third Test at Lord’s after time out following a hamstring injury.England’s three frontline seamers – Brydon Carse, Josh Tongue and Chris Woakes – have all bowled between 77 and 82 overs in the first two Tests of the series. Atkinson joins Jofra Archer, Sam Cook and Jamie Overton as the alternative seam-bowling options in the 16-man squad for Lord’s, and the tight turnaround between Tests could prompt changes.”It’s no secret that we have spent some time in the field and bowled some overs in the first two games, and we’ll have to see how everyone pulls up over the next two days,” Ben Stokes said. “With it being a quick turnaround, there probably will be a decision we have to make given how everyone does pull up after this game.”Related

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Archer has not played a Test match since February 2021, but bowled regularly during intervals at Edgbaston this week, and Brendon McCullum hinted he will make his comeback next week. “We’ll let this one settle, and when we get to [Lord’s] we’ll have a good think about it,” McCullum told the BBC’s .Asked about Archer’s availability, McCullum said, “He’s fit and ready to go. Obviously the other boys have had two Test matches on the spin now, so you’d anticipate you would make a change at some stage with the line-up, and Jofra is one we’ll look at.”Stokes added, “Everyone’s in consideration for the game at Lord’s.”England’s margin of defeat – 336 runs – was their third-heaviest since Stokes took over as captain on a full-time basis, but he insisted that it will not affect them moving forwards. “We’ve obviously had some unbelievable wins and some bad defeats,” he said. “I feel I’m quite good – and the team is – at staying level throughout those ups and downs.”That is so important in a series where we knew coming in that it wasn’t going to be easy… We have to wipe this one under the carpet as quickly as we can, because Lord’s day one will be coming around pretty quickly. We will have one or two days to get the bodies right and recover, and all of a sudden, we will be out there flipping the coin.”He also played down the significance of England’s inability to take 20 wickets at Edgbaston. “You do have to appreciate how well India played with the bat,” Stokes said. “[They were] obviously pretty favourable conditions if someone got in; two of our lads showed that this week… You are allowed to let your opposition play well, and they definitely did that.”

England squad for Lord’s Test against India

Ben Stokes (capt), Jofra Archer, Gus Atkinson, Shoaib Bashir, Jacob Bethell, Harry Brook, Brydon Carse, Sam Cook, Zak Crawley, Ben Duckett, Jamie Overton, Ollie Pope, Joe Root, Jamie Smith (wk), Josh Tongue, Chris Woakes.

Henry Brookes joins Middlesex from Warwickshire on three-year contract

Fast bowler makes move to reinforce bowling stocks following Tim Murtagh’s retirement

ESPNcricinfo staff12-Dec-2023Henry Brookes, the talented Warwickshire fast bowler, has signed for Middlesex on a three-year contract.Brookes, 24, made his professional debut for Warwickshire in 2017 when he was just 18, and helped secure the County Championship Division Two title the following season, when he claimed 21 wickets in five appearances.His ability to bowl at 90mph makes him a prospect across all three formats, and in 2022 he became only the third bowler to take a five-wicket haul in the Men’s Hundred, with figures of 5 for 25 for Birmingham Phoenix against Southern Brave.In all, he has claimed 80 wickets in 31 first-class appearances for Warwickshire, and a further 77 across 60 white-ball appearances. His recruitment fills a void in Middlesex’s fast-bowling ranks following the retirement of Tim Murtagh.”I’m thrilled to be joining Middlesex,” Brookes said. “This is a hugely exciting moment in my career and I can’t wait to get started. I’m looking forward to joining up with my new teammates and I’m going to give my all to help get the club back into Division One and achieve white-ball success.”Alan Coleman, Middlesex’s Director of Cricket, said: “We are thrilled to have secured the signature of Henry for Middlesex – someone that we have been keeping a close eye on for some time now.”He is a player that has huge amounts of genuine talent, can bowl with real pace and aggression, and is someone that we believe will add a completely different dimension to our attack.”He has shown across both red and white ball formats that he can take wickets and cause batsmen problems, and we can’t wait to start working with him.”He is still young and has huge potential to develop into one of the best bowlers in the country, and we’re delighted that he’ll be doing so in a Middlesex shirt.”Brookes’ recruitment comes in spite of the financial difficulties that Middlesex are undergoing, with the club having recently confirmed they will be playing two T20 Blast games at Essex’s home ground in Chelmsford, rather than undergo the set-up costs associated with hosting matches at their outgrounds of Radlett and Merchant Taylors’ School.Andrew Cornish, Middlesex’s chief executive, added: “The challenges we face financially dictate that we are having to make some really difficult decisions for the long-term good of the club. Making these calls however, which positively impact on our financial position, can give us the opportunity where appropriate to invest in our playing squad to ensure we can deliver against our ultimate objective of being a competitive cricket team in all formats.”The signing of Henry Brookes is a great example of this, and I’m sure our members will be as excited as we are to see him representing the Club from 2024 onwards.”

Ollie Robinson agrees switch from Kent to Durham

Wicketkeeper-batter moves north looking to secure opportunities across all three formats

ESPNcricinfo staff23-Sep-2022Ollie Robinson, the Kent wicketkeeper-batter, has agreed a three-year deal to join Durham from the end of the season.Robinson, 23, made his Kent debut in 2017 and has played for England Lions, but went on loan to Durham earlier in the summer in order to gain opportunities in T20 cricket, where he has had to contend with Sam Billings and Jordan Cox being above him in the pecking order.”We currently have two wicketkeepers who are in and around senior England squads In Sam Billings and Jordan Cox, and Ollie Robinson has toured with England Lions,” Kent’s director of cricket, Paul Downton, said. “Kent has produced three fantastic wicketkeeper-batters through the club’s academy in recent years, and at some stage this situation was going to come to a head.”From my own personal experience as a player, I can understand Ollie’s decision to move clubs to guarantee playing time. Of course, we would prefer that Ollie stayed at Kent, but he has to do what is best for his career.”Ollie has been a brilliant servant to the club, and he leaves with our very best wishes.”Robinson has been Kent’s first-choice keeper in the Championship since his breakthrough season in 2019, when he scored the first of his four first-class hundreds for the club. This summer saw him become only the fifth Englishman to score a List A double-hundred, as Robinson averaged 59.33 in the Royal London Cup.He also scored 226 runs across 12 innings for Durham in the T20 Blast, including a career-best 56 against Yorkshire.’I’m thrilled to be joining Durham Cricket from next season and beyond,” Robinson said. “Having been a part of the group during my loan stint I know how much quality the squad possesses, and I feel there are some exciting times ahead, hopefully I can make some major contributions and help Durham win some trophies.”I want to thank all the staff on and off the field for making me feel so welcome earlier this season – I look forward to meeting up with everyone again and getting down to business. I feel Durham is the right place for me to help fulfil my goals and next season can’t come fast enough. I’m looking forward to seeing what the north has to offer.”Durham’s director of cricket, Marcus North, said: “We’re extremely delighted that Ollie has chosen to join Durham and we have been able to secure the signature of one of the most talented and skilful wicketkeeper-batters in England.”At only 23, Ollie has already established great foundations in all formats of his game, and we look forward to nurturing this very exciting talent in his next stage of his career at Durham.”This is the quality and skillset we have been looking for that will strengthen our playing squad in all formats. We look forward to him joining back up with us during pre-season and the impact he will have with us next season and beyond.”

Tim Southee, Rory Burns dominate hard-fought fourth day

Ollie Robinson grabs two NZ second-innings wickets as chances of setting up final day recede

Alan Gardner05-Jun-2021Having come into this Test as the No. 2-ranked side, and preparing to contest the inaugural World Test Championship final later this month, it perhaps should not come as a surprise to learn that New Zealand have controlled this game. Were it not for the fact that the entire third day was lost to rain, they would be well on their way to winning at Lord’s for only the second time 18 attempts.Tim Southee bowled with skill and guile to claim a six-wicket haul – the second time he had done so at this ground – and it took a doughty century from Rory Burns to keep England clinging on by their fingertips.The visitors still claimed a 103-run lead on first innings, but Burns’ defiance and a pair of fighting stands with the lower order had kept them in the field until tea. Had Burns been stumped off Mitchell Santner on 77, England would have been 193 for 7 and New Zealand might have had a genuine window of opportunity.As it was, New Zealand adopted a circumspect approach to their second innings. Devon Conway took his match tally to 223 runs – the most by an opener on Test debut – before being bowled off an inside edge by Ollie Robinson, who also removed Kane Williamson lbw for 1. With 62 runs being scored from 30 overs, the chances of either side being able to set up the game on day five receded.Robinson’s interventions followed a vital 42 with the bat, and kept him right in Conway’s slipstream for most-impressive debutant. He became the first bowler in the match to find a way through Conway, and then twice pinned Williamson in front of his stumps with consecutive balls – the first lbw appeal was given, only for technology to detect an inside edge; the second wasn’t, but England finally found success with a review, having already burned two of their three.England’s efforts to stay in the game were worthy of praise, although they have been outplayed on two days out of three. Burns produced a typically gritty knock for his third Test century, and first since November 2019, but a callow batting line-up struggled to deal with the threat of Southee and Kyle Jamieson, with three ducks and a 2 registered among the top seven.After Friday’s washout, and with England still only two down in their first innings, this game needed a powder keg placing under it. Jamieson gave New Zealand the perfect start, removing Joe Root with the first ball of the day – England’s captain walking back with the clock still showing 10.59am – and Southee did his best to reduce the England innings to rubble with three wickets in as many overs. But Burns and Robinson dug in for a 63-run stand to narrow the deficit and take time out of the day.Southee completed his second Lord’s five-for by removing Robinson with the second new ball and England’s position was still a parlous one, as Mark Wood and Stuart Broad fell cheaply. Burns, who was also dropped at slip off Neil Wagner on 88, was still nine runs short of his hundred when joined in the middle by James Anderson, but he pilfered seven runs in the next over – and Anderson survived two dot balls from Jamieson – before steering Wagner to third man to reach the landmark.Burns scored just 13 runs during the morning session, putting a price on his wicket as his team-mates came and went, and had added 32 from 127 balls up to the point that the ninth wicket fell. But Burns cut loose during a 52-run stand with Anderson, taking Jamieson for three fours in an over and launching Wagner into the Mound Stand for his first six in Test cricket. He was eventually last man out, feathering Southee through to BJ Watling.That passage further delayed New Zealand’s progress, after hopes of being able to push for victory had been raised by a rip-roaring morning during which they claimed four England wickets in little more than an hour. Any thoughts Root had of attempting to guide his team towards parity were banished by Jamieson’s opening delivery, which pranced and straightened from a length, clipping the outside edge to be scooped low by Ross Taylor at first slip.Ollie Pope, a relative veteran of 18 Tests, twice edged Jamieson for fours wide of the cordon but stroked three more genuine boundaries in his 22, only to be pinned in front of his stumps by Southee – although it needed the help of DRS after Michael Gough turned down the initial appeal. Dan Lawrence, playing his first Test at home, then edged his second ball to slip and the debutant James Bracey was castled for a duck as England lost 3 for 0 in 21 balls.Robinson needed a review to survive until lunch after being given out by Gough caught at short leg in Mitchell Santner’s exploratory over, as England went in six down and still short of the follow-on target. Santner then should have removed Burns after the interval, only for Watling to fail to collect the ball. In the end the partnership was broken by Southee, as Robinson picked out long leg trying to take on a bouncer – but not before he had held up New Zealand for almost two hours.

T20 World Cup newsfile: Losses 'a wake-up call' to improve our skills – Thailand's Boochatham

The latest news from around the Women’s T20 World Cup

ESPNcricinfo staff17-Feb-2020March 2Thailand allrounder Nattaya Boochatham believes that the group-stage exit in the ongoing T20 World Cup has been a “wake-up call” for the team to improve their playing standards as they look to “set the benchmark” for the future cricketers in the country.”We want to play our best cricket and show how well we’ve prepared,” Boochatham said. “In the past few games, we haven’t been firing and haven’t demonstrated how well we’ve been working.”Some of the games have been a wake-up call for us that motivates us to go home, improve our skills and various areas of cricket, so the world can see that we can play. It’s a good motivation for us to set the benchmark for the new generation of Thai cricketers coming into the team, that this is the level you have to be performing at. Hopefully we can set a good role model.”Thailand women made history by making it to their first-ever global event as they qualified for the tournament in Australia. They faced a tough challenge being placed alongside England, South Africa, Pakistan and West Indies in their group, but put up a fight against most of the teams, even causing an early scare against England. With one more match to go against Pakistan – who have already been knocked out – Boochatham hopes the side can make a “big statement” as they bow out of the tournament.”We have got off to good starts in games and we’ve learnt about the need to capitalise on that, because if you don’t, teams like England and South Africa run away from you,” she said. “It would be a big statement if we were to win the last game.”We’ve been exposed, but that’s not a bad thing. We have room to improve and come back stronger.”Laura Wolvaardt had yet to be bat in the World Cup and is still new to the middle-order role but produced one of the innings of the tournament to take South Africa into the semi-finals with an unbeaten half-century against Pakistan.It was Wolvaardt’s second T20I fifty, brought up off the last ball of the innings, and only her second innings at No. 5 having played all her other matches as either an opener or No. 3 although she had taken up the middle-order position for her domestic team.”It’s been quite a journey for me to kind of get my spot here on this T20 side, and it’s been something that I’ve been working on pretty hard,” she said. “I guess I always focus on my basics, and I guess if the base is really good, you can kind of go on from there. It is something I’ve been working on really hard on figuring out my approach and my plan. I’m happy it’s finally showing in the games now.”It really meant a lot to me. I think it’s probably the biggest contribution I’ve made to this team, if I think about the importance of today and the World Cup. So I’m really happy things that worked out the way they did.”Nahida replaces injured Bismah for remainder of World CupPakistan have suffered a blow with captain Bismah Maroof ruled out of the remainder of the women’s T20 World Cup because of a thumb injury sustained during the 42-run loss to England.Opener Nahida Khan has been approved as her replacement, while Javeria Khan has been named captain.Maroof was caught behind while attempting a ramp shot as she wore the ball on her thumb, in the sixth over of their 158-run chase. She had top-scored for Pakistan in their eight-wicket win against West Indies in their first game of the tournament. Nahida, who has 603 runs from 53 T20Is, last played for Pakistan in the limited-overs series against England in Kuala Lumpur.Pakistan are currently second from bottom on the Group B table and are scheduled to play South Africa and Thailand in their last two group-stage games.Australia will monitor a hip niggle that Ellyse Perry picked up towards the end of the match against Bangladesh but are confident she will be available for what is likely to be a crunch group decider against New Zealand on Monday.Perry, whose shoulder has also been managed during the tournament, dived in the outfield in the latter stages of Bangladesh’s innings in Canberra and left the field a short while after”She’s incredibly resilient, she’s had a lot of niggles over the last few years and still managed to get through,” coach Matthew Mott said. “We’re very confident, especially with a day off tomorrow, that she’ll have plenty of time to get ready for a huge game against New Zealand.”Any time you get a niggle there’s doubt, I suppose, but I’ve seen her push through what seems to be worse than that. We’ll just have to assess her over the next 24-48 hours and make sure she’s alright.”Even in the worst case scenario of Perry not being fit, Mott was confident that Australia would have the resources to cover for her.”The beauty of this squad is we have a number of options we can bring in. We don’t feel like we lose a lot when we lose different players. Obviously we’d have to change, we’d look at our squad and match up the best we can against New Zealand, but we’ve done that all tournament from the day we lost Tayla Vlaeminck we had to change our strategy slightly.”Thailand must improve ‘to be taken seriously at this level’ – BoochathamWhile bringing plenty of smiles to the tournament and savouring every moment of the World Cup, Thailand’s vice-captain Nattaya Boochatham said it has been a harsh reality check as to how much they need to improve.Thailand have suffered heavy defeats against West Indies and England, making just 78 on both occasions, while against England they were plundered by Heather Knight’s century.”We are obviously very excited to be involved in the World Cup but things aren’t going our way, we have to take a hard look at ourselves and really improve to be taken seriously at this level,” Boochatham said. “We’ve been exposed and if we don’t get things right we are punished for it. It’s a matter of figuring out the situation on the field as quickly as we can and changing our plans.”After a promising start against England, where they had them 7 for 2 in the second over, the bowling became ragged under pressure. Boochatham believes Thailand can advance their game over the next two of three years, but need regular cricket against the stronger nations.”We need to be better at reading the batsmen because at this level they are shifting [around], so you can’t really have one stock ball, you have to be creative. That’s the part that comes with experience playing a lot of high quality cricket. If we get to play consistent at this level in two or three years [we can be competitive], but it has to be day in and day out at this level to be able to compete.”Winfield admits she would like to bat higherLauren Winfield has admitted she would like to be higher up England’s batting order but is happy to buy into the team ethos of having deep resources to allow the top order to play with freedom.Winfield has been at No. 8 since the series against Pakistan in Kuala Lumpur late last year, a tactic that has continued into the World Cup, which has raised questions as to whether England are wasting the position which would be better served by an allrounder or a bowler.”It’s obviously a different role,” Winfield said ahead of the match against Pakistan. “I’ve batted a lot at six and seven over the last couple of years in T20 cricket. You can’t hide from the fact that I’d like to be able to contribute more and be higher up the order but the way we’ve set out our batting is to have an extensive line-up to give people that freedom to let themselves go and really play with that positive intent throughout the 20 overs.”If we get into the back overs and we’ve lost wickets we still have batters to come. We need to keep pushing those big totals, making sure we get 150+ as often as we can.”India ‘more balanced’ because of Verma – MandhanaShafali Verma, the big-hitting 16-year-old India opening batter, has grabbed the attention of most people following women’s cricket, and Smriti Mandhana, her partner at the top, can’t stop raving about Verma’s impact.”Shafali has been a huge positive coming into the T20 side,” Mandhana said of the youngster’s 17-ball 39 against Bangladesh. “I used to have a major role in Powerplays, but Shafali is getting quick runs in those first overs now too. She’s made a huge impact and the team has become more balanced thanks to her.”Next up for India are New Zealand, and Lea Tahuhu, the opening bowler, is aware of the Verma threat, and relishing it too.”Personally, I love the thought of facing Verma,” Tahuhu said. “It makes me fire up a little bit more and I’m really looking forward to playing her. I actually played her in the T20 Challenge in India last year and I know she’s not going to take a step back.”Molineux injury frustrating – LanningMeg Lanning has admitted frustration at Sophie Molineux’s extended period on the sidelines at the start of the World Cup as the allrounder takes longer than expected to recover from a corked thigh.Molineux hasn’t played since the final group game of tri-series with England and India and wasn’t available for selection in the first two matches of this tournament. She faces another fitness test ahead of the game against Bangladesh in Canberra on Thursday.”She’s coming along well, she’ll train today and assess how she pulls up from that and see if she’s available for selection,” Lanning said. “It’s a bit of a wait and see, it’s been very frustrating for her and us to not have her available but she’s doing everything she can to get back.”Lanning also said that Ellyse Perry was managing the shoulder that she damaged during the WBBL late last year but that it would not impact her participation in forthcoming matches. “I’m sure there are a few players in this competition who are managing injuries and she’s a professional, she’s dealing with it very well so we’re not expecting anything major out of that.”Winfield at No. 8 gives us security – KnightHeather Knight has defended the make-up of England’s batting line-up, which has seen Tammy Beaumont moved into the middle-order and Lauren Winfield picked as a specialist No. 8 batter.Only Nat Sciver impressed against South Africa with a half-century as England suffered defeat in their opening match, meaning they face must-win matches from here on, but it would appear they will hold fast with their batting game plan.”We have set [order] in our mind that we want to go with, but there will be certain match-ups that we feel will have more impetus – for example someone is better against spin – we have a clear guideline on the starting order and we’ll be flexible from there,” Knight said ahead of the match against Thailand in Canberra. “The one big positive is the depth of our batting line-up, playing eight batters, and they have different skillsets and talent. We obviously didn’t show it the other night but we are determined to turn it around.”On using Winfield, who doesn’t offer any bowling, so low down, Knight said her fielding also comes into the equation.”We feel like another bowler would be wasted, that batter at eight gives us added security. I know she didn’t have a great night the other night, but Lauren is one of the standout fielders for us and at some point we are going to need a batter down at the back end to win us a game and we feel Lauren can do that.”England would never run out a batter backing up – SciverNat Sciver has said that England would never run out an opposing batter backing up after Katherine Brunt declined the chance to do so in their opening defeat against South Africa.With the match on a knife edge in the final over, South Africa needing 7 off 4 balls, Brunt gave Sune Luus a warning when she backed up well out of her crease before Brunt had barely entered her delivery leap. Whether it would have changed the game is up for debate as the ball itself wouldn’t have been counted if the run out had taken place, and next delivery Mignon du Preez launched the six that levelled the scores, but England have made their stance on the matter clear.”She was never going to run her out,” Sciver said. “A bit of drama, isn’t it? I mean one of their bowlers did it to me. I don’t know if she stopped because I moved around and she wanted a bit of a reprieve or she was keeping the other batter in there. I know that none of our team would ever do that. It’s just part of the game, isn’t it?”South Africa allrounder Marizanne Kapp tweeted “fair play from both teams” after the contest with both sides declining the hotly-debated form of dismissal. ‘We know how dangerous she can be’ – Haynes on AtapattuChamari Atapattu is not just Sri Lanka’s greatest woman cricketer, but she has a particular affinity for the Australia bowlers. That 178 not out in the 2017 50-over World Cup remains one of the great innings in the game, while, more recently, she hit her maiden T20I century against the same opponents.Australia are in front of Atapattu again, and this time a big innings from her could well rock the hosts’ T20 World Cup campaign, stuttering as it already is after the opening-day loss to India.”We know how dangerous she can be,” Rachael Haynes said a day off from their game in Perth. “We’ve got ideas on how we want to counter her attack. We’ll plan for her, because she clearly enjoys the ball coming on to the bat at the WACA.”Atapattu is also the only Sri Lankan player to have taken part in the WBBL, and that should help her.”I’ve tended to play my best cricket against Australia, but I try to do that against every team,” she said. “I love playing in these conditions and I love playing under pressure, which I think is why I always score against Australia.”I always say to myself ‘play freely, with courage and be positive’. That’s all it is.”‘We trust our fielding a lot to get us far’ – Thailand’s BoochathamThe seven-wicket margin did show up the gulf between West Indies and newbies Thailand, but for a while, with the favourites at 27 for 3 in their chase of 79, Thailand might have dreamt of a bit of the improbable.”We think our performance will make people take us more seriously,” opener Nattaya Boochatham told the ICC. “We have an aggressive mentality and we know it only takes ten balls to create wickets. That’s the plan we stick to.”We trust our fielding a lot to get us far in the competition. It has given us motivation to do better and show we can compete on the global stage.”That was on show early on in the West Indies innings when Naruemol Chaiwai knocked down the stumps to run Lee-Ann Kirby out, and though a debut win eluded them in Perth, the show against the 2016 T20 world champions would have ensured that none of their remaining opponents take Thailand lightly.‘We love a bit of pressure, that’s fine’ – HealyJust one day into a tournament where they are, or were at least, considered favourites and much is pinned on them reaching the final at the MCG, Australia know they are in a position where they probably can’t afford another mistake.The 17-run defeat against India at the Sydney Showground means they flew to Perth on Saturday chastened and needing to find a balance between reflecting and moving on. The next two matches against Sri Lanka (at the WACA) and Bangladesh (in Canberra) be more comfortable affairs, which leaves the Trans-Tasman clash against New Zealand in Melbourne as a potentially mouth-watering occasion.”We love a bit of pressure, that’s fine,” Alyssa Healy said. “We always talk that you can’t go through this tournament undefeated. Obviously you don’t want to lose the first game, but you often take more out of a loss than a win so we’ll take all the positives and leave the negatives aside, one of the blessings of our crazy schedule is that we don’t have a lot of time to dwell on it.”Australia have never been beaten by Sri Lanka but they have the threat of Chamari Atapattu at the top of the order who takes her game to a new level when playing them. On last year’s tour she scored a T20I and ODI hundred which followed her magnificent unbeaten 178 at the 2017 World Cup.”We aren’t taking any team lightly, it’s a really tough pool, and we love that,” Healy said. “Charmari loves facing our attack, has hit us to all parts of the ground the last couple of years. We’ll prepare as best we can, get our plans in place, and if we do that we’ll be okay.”Australia favourites but India no pushover – Mithali RajFormer India captain Mithali Raj has backed the current team to give Australia a run for their money in the opening match of the T20 World Cup in Sydney on Friday.”Australia go in as favourites, but India will be no pushover,” she said in her ICC column. “They have some very talented players and I think it will be a very close, high-scoring game. Both teams have exciting players, particular in the batting units, and it will be a case of whoever can score the runs that their country need on the day.”I do think Australia have the advantage because of their T20 record and have a slightly better chance of winning the first game against India but no matter what, it’s going to be a very exciting way to open the tournament.”Raj, who played 10 Tests, 209 ODIs and 80 T20Is, said that more and more teams were now becoming competitive in the women’s game.”The gap between the top and bottom teams is closing. You can’t go by the practice matches alone, but it does give you a rough indication of how the tournament could play out. Take Sri Lanka beating England for example — there is a possibility that could happen again. When you see these scores, and tight games, there is so much more quality now in the game, even just since the last edition of the ICC Women’s T20 World Cup. Teams like Sri Lanka, Pakistan and Bangladesh can compete too.”Strano replaces Vlaeminck as Australia suffer big blowAustralia have called offspinner Molly Strano into their World Cup squad after it was confirmed that fast bowler Tayla Vlaeminck would miss the tournament with a stress injury to her right foot.Vlaeminck reported pain in her foot, with scans revealing a stress response of the third metatarsal and signs of an early stress fracture of the navicular – a bone in the top inner side of the foot.”Tayla has been in brilliant form of late and established herself as one of the premier fast bowlers in international cricket,” Australia coach Matthew Mott said, “No one ever wants to see a player miss a major tournament in these kinds of circumstances, but I have no doubt she will bounce back from this setback and play a leading role in Australian squads for many years to come.””We are fortunate to have great depth across Australian cricket and Molly enters the squad in great form having recently been named the domestic player of the year.”Strano has played five T20Is for Australia having debuted in 2017 and comes into the side off the back of a good season that saw her finish as the leading wicket-taker in the WBBL.Vlaeminck set to miss World CupAustralia fast bowler Tayla Vlaeminck looks set to be ruled out of the T20 World Cup after picking up a foot injury just 48 hours before their opening match against India.Vlaeminck, one of the fastest bowlers in the game, was wearing a moon boot during a team function in Sydney on Wednesday afternoon. More information is expected when Australia train at Sydney Showgrounds on Thursday, but team-mates are preparing for the news to not be too good for Vlaeminck, who has previously suffered a torrid injury list and has had two knee reconstructions.”The medical staff are working through [it] but anything that requires a moon boot isn’t overly great,” Ellyse Perry said. “The whole squad has their fingers and toes crossed for Tay, but I don’t think it’s overly positive.”Vlaeminck, who made her T20I debut during the previous World Cup in the West Indies, took seven wickets in three matches during the recent triangular series with England and India, rattling batters from both sides with her pace which was set to prove a telling point of difference to Australia’s attack.England humbled during warm-up defeatChamari Atapattu inspired her Sri Lanka side to a surprise ten-wicket thrashing of England in both team’s final warm-up game before the tournament. England’s reshuffled batting line-up never got started, with Shashikala Siriwardene and Atapattu taking 4 for 22 and 3 for 21 respectively, before Atapattu crunched a 50-ball 78 to seal a ten-wicket win with 45 balls to spare.Left-arm spinner Sophie Ecclestone in particular came in for some rough treatment, being hit for three sixes by Atapattu, while Freya Davies and Anya Shrubsole both proved expensive. While the game was not an official T20 international, Sri Lanka have never beaten England in the format, and have won only once in 15 completed ODIs against them, marking this out as a major upset.”It was a disappointing performance, but I’d rather we got it out of the way ahead of the World Cup,” said England’s captain Heather Knight. “Chamari batted really well for Sri Lanka and she just took the game away from us. It might give us a little kick up the backside, which might not be a bad thing.”We’re still in a good place. We’ve played a lot of good cricket over here and we need to take that into our first game against South Africa.”Kulasuriya cleared of serious injuryThere was a scary moment during Sri Lanka’s warm-up match against South Africa in Adelaide on Sunday when Achini Kulasuriya was struck on the head as she misjudged a catch as the two teams practiced a Super Over following the completion of their full game.Kulasuriya lay on the ground for a period of time as she was treated by medical staff before being taken off a stretcher and sent to hospital. However, she was released back to the team hotel later in the day without a serious injury.Speaking at the captain’s day in Sydney on Monday, Chamari Atapattu said Kulasuriya would miss Sri Lanka’s next warm-up match against England tomorrow but is expected to be fit for the start of the tournament itself when Sri Lanka face New Zealand in Perth.

WV Raman appointed India women head coach

Raman, who played 11 Tests and 27 ODIs, has had coaching stints at Bengal, Tamil Nadu, Kings XI Punjab and Kolkata Knight Riders apart from the NCA

Annesha Ghosh in Mumbai20-Dec-2018WV Raman has been appointed the India women head coach after a day-long series of interviews conducted by a three-member ad-hoc committee set up by the BCCI for the purpose. Raman was one of three names, along with Gary Kirsten and Venkatesh Prasad, recommended by the committee to the board after interviewing nine applicants on Thursday in Mumbai.Raman, the former Tamil Nadu opening batsman, played 11 Tests and 27 ODIs in an international career stretching from 1988 to 1997. He has since transitioned into an extensive coaching career, which, ESPNcricinfo understands, strengthened his case. He has served as the head coach of state teams Bengal and Tamil Nadu, been assistant coach of Kings XI Punjab (2013) and the batting coach of Kolkata Knight Riders when they won their second IPL title in 2014. Later, he was named the batting coach at the National Cricket Academy in Bengaluru in 2015.
What also worked in his favour vis a vis Prasad was the panel preferring a former international batsman to a bowler in the role of head coach. Raman, however, is understood to have suggested that the board consider appointing a bowling coach for the team’s benefit.ESPNcricinfo Ltd

Kirsten was the most high-profile candidate but his role as coach of Royal Challengers Bangalore will mean a potential conflict of scheduling with the women’s team. The BCCI release confirming Raman’s appointment also mentioned that this could have been a possible conflict-of-interest situation as per the new BCCI constitution.It is also learnt that the panel suggested to the CoA the possibility of having Kalpana Venkatachar, the former India Test batsman and current coach of the Meghalaya women’s team, and the only female candidate to have been interviewed, hired as a deputy.Anshuman Gaekwad, one of the three members on the ad-hoc committee alongside Kapil Dev and Shantha Rangswamy, said the panel had done its “job in the best manner” it could and that the decision would be taken by the board.”[Three names were recommended] for any last-minute changes, who’s available or not,” he said. “The interviews were conducted only for the head coach and not any deputy or assistant role or any other support staff.”ALSO READ: How the Mithali-Powar mudslinging saga unfoldedThe position has been vacant since Ramesh Powar’s term expired on November 30.

ODI, T20I squad selection on Friday

The ODI and T20I squads for the upcoming limited-overs tour of New Zealand are likely to be selected on Friday afternoon in Delhi. ODI captain Mithali Raj is likely to be in attendance, while T20I captain Harmanpreet Kaur is expected to join in via Skype, although she is scheduled to play for Sydney Thunder against the Hobart Hurricanes in the WBBL starting 8.20am IST. India are scheduled to play three ODIs and as many T20Is against New Zealand starting January 24. The three T20Is will be double-headers along with the men’s T20Is in February.

Powar had reapplied for the role after not being handed an extension amid controversial circumstances; he was among the three candidates, including Raman and Manoj Prabhakar, to be interviewed in person at the BCCI headquarters in Mumbai but was not among the final three candidates recommended by the ad-hoc committee.Five other applicants from the shortlist, including Kirsten, were interviewed via Skype.While Kirsten has coached the India and South Africa men’s teams before working with Delhi Daredevils and now with RCB, Prasad was the India bowling coach with the victorious India men’s team during the inaugural World T20 in 2007. Prasad then became the coach of the domestic team Uttar Pradesh before taking over as the chairman of India’s junior selection committee, a position he relinquished earlier this year to become the bowling coach of Kings XI Punjab.Raman will now be the fourth coach in 20 months, a timespan that also involved the controversial ousters of two head coaches – former India women captain Purnima Rau in April 2017 and, her replacement, the former Baroda spinner Tushar Arothe in July this year, both of whom had to vacate the position on the demand of seniors players.Before it came to a fractious end, Powar’s tenure saw India clinch limited-overs series victories in Sri Lanka in September, and beat Australia A in an unofficial T20I series in Mumbai where India fielded their regular side. Before the semi-final loss to England – his last match in charge – the team enjoyed an unbeaten run at the World T20, notable for victories over New Zealand and Australia.Powar, the first of the three applicants to have arrived at the headquarters for the interview, had made it to the initial shortlist from a longlist of 28 candidates after the position opened up in the wake of the non-renewal of his contract.Both Powar and Prabhakar are understood to have impressed the panel. Despite his formidable credentials, including coaching India to their first World T20 semi-final in eight years, Powar failed to make the cut largely owing to the controversies that preceded his reapplication.Much of the focus behind selecting the head coach, it is understood, had been on gauging the potential of the candidates at managing the personnel in the team and the sussing out the needs of the support staff.

Bishoo five-for helps West Indies wrest control

Brathwaite and Kyle Hope’s unbroken 63-run second-wicket stand leave Zimbabwe chasing the game on a 11-wicket day

The Report by Liam Brickhill in Bulawayo22-Oct-2017Stumps
Scorecard and ball-by-ball detailsDevendra Bishoo’s fourth five-for gave West Indies a handy lead•WICB Media/Brooks LaTouche Photography Ltd

In a Test match being played in fast-forward mode, 11 wickets fell on the second day at Queens Sports Club in Bulawayo as West Indies surged into the ascendancy. Legspinner Devendra Bishoo was the catalyst for the turnaround, scything through Zimbabwe’s top order to finish with 5 for 79.His first ball of the morning was hit for six, but Bishoo soon found his rhythm. In an unbroken 23-over spell on either side of lunch, he undid all of the hard work done by Zimbabwe’s bowlers, with spin, bounce and accuracy. The hosts were bowled out for 159 during the extended post-lunch session, and by the close West Indies had stretched their lead to 148, with Kraigg Brathwaite and Kyle Hope adding an unbeaten 63 for the second wicket.For a while, it appeared that Zimbabwe might continue to chug along gamely despite the early loss of Solomon Mire. But once Bishoo settled, West Indies made regular inroads as Zimbabwe lost 9 for 68 from a comfortable 91 for 1.Hamilton Masakadza, who had muscled Bishoo’s opening delivery over long on for six, could not smother the turn of a fizzing legbreak and feathered an edge through to wicketkeeper Shane Dowrich for 42 – the highest score of Zimbabwe’s innings. Brendan Taylor’s second coming then lasted all of seven deliveries before he reverse swept Bishoo into Jermaine Blackwood’s hands at slip, the fielder having moved in anticipation of the stroke.With his dismissal Zimbabwe slipped to 93 for 3, and Sean Williams endured a working-over against the pace of Shannon Gabriel as the hosts went into the lunch interval without further loss. At that point, the innings – and the match – was still in the balance, but the afternoon belonged entirely to West Indies.Bishoo’s effort was well backed up by the pace attack, who utilized the dryness of the surface to extract significant reverse swing. Kemar Roach had a flat-footed Sean Williams caught behind wafting lazily at one that left him off the track, while Jason Holder, hiding the shiny side of the ball in his hands during his run-up, castled Malcolm Waller with one that hooped in from outside off to beat a loose defensive poke. Between times, Bishoo bowled unchanged and found regular success against an increasingly jittery middle order.Sikandar Raza looked a little ungainly against the quicks, and positively frenetic against spin. He might have been stumped very early on, had the ball not deviated off his elbow and away from Dowrich, but kept using his feet and eventually swiped underneath a flighted delivery to top-edge a catch to Gabriel at long off.That gave Bishoo his third, with Zimbabwe still 96 in arrears. Straight after the afternoon drinks break, he had his fourth, finally getting the better of Craig Ervine with one that went straight on with the arm to beat the left-hander’s sweep and strike him right in front of middle stump. With Bishoo ragging it square from one end and the pace attack reversing the ball from the other end, full capitulation from Zimbabwe seemed only a matter of time.Regis Chakabva flapped a half-hearted cut tamely to backward point to give Bishoo his fourth five-wicket haul in Test cricket – and his third away from home. When Graeme Cremer inside-edged a drive off Holder Zimbabwe were 147 for 9. The last pair of Chris Mpofu and Kyle Jarvis added just 12 more before Mpofu nicked off to a length delivery from Gabriel.Brathwaite and Powell strode out to open the batting a second time inside two days with the opportunity to bat Zimbabwe out of a match. They weathered steady new-ball spells from Kyle Jarvis and Christopher Mpofu, but when spin was introduced Powell fell almost immediately, playing inside a delivery from Cremer to see his off stump disturbed.West Indies were 25 for 1 then, and with both Cremer and Williams gaining alarming turn and bounce, Zimbabwe were not yet out of the match. Hope was offered an early reprieve when a tough chance went down at short leg, but soon got his feet moving and repeatedly shovelled the spinners into the leg side. Brathwaite, similarly legside in his technique, was also unafraid to loft the ball and cracked Cremer over long on for six early in his innings.Neither he nor Hope gave Zimbabwe much of a sniff thereafter, and though there was still turn on offer in the afternoon it seemed some of the bite had gone out of the track. But there is still an awful lot of time left in a match during which 21 wickets have already fallen – and all but seven of those to spin. With a little more hard work, West Indies are one or two sessions from closing out the first Test.

Non-disclosure agreements cloud T20 debate

Non-disclosure agreements lasting for 10 years are preventing progress on the debate over the future direction of domestic T20, according to county officials

George Dobell09-Sep-2016Non-disclosure agreements (NDAs) lasting for 10 years are preventing progress on the debate over the future direction of domestic T20, according to county officials.The ECB insisted that the agreements were signed before counties could be shown plans for a new competition. But now the counties – most of which are owned by their members – say they are constitutionally, morally and perhaps fiducially obliged to consult them before coming to any conclusions. Several clubs, who are unwilling to be named for fear of being seen to have broken their NDAs, state they would need to hold Special General Meetings before progressing.While the ECB claims the non-disclosure agreements are due to the “commercial sensitivity” of the discussion, some county executives fear they are an attempt to stifle opposition and present plans for a new tournament as a .It is true that the ECB is anxious to end an argument that has rumbled on for several years, with occasional outbreaks of cricket. The board has told the counties it wants to “reach consensus” on the shape of the proposed new tournament at a meeting on September 14.But some of the counties say that this timeframe does not allow discussion with members, or any other cricket lovers, or further examination of the consequences of their decisions. They point out that, while sponsors, broadcasters (some broadcasters, anyway), players and the counties have been given details of the potential options, spectators have been informed only by media reports. They also point out that many questions about the new competition remains unclear.The last time the ECB conducted a consultation process into domestic T20 – the Populous survey of 2012 – it suggested that spectators preferred a predictable schedule that didn’t demand too much of their time or their money in the space of a few days. It increasingly looks as if the new competition will see games played every day of the week in a July block.At this stage, though, there is no official preferred option. The ECB presented five options to the counties for discussion: these range from the ‘no-change’ option that almost nobody favours, to proposals for a new-team, city-based competition. Increasingly, option four – featuring a city-based competition co-existing with the current NatWest Blast T20 – has emerged as the frontrunner.Packaged as a compromise – or a wolf in sheep’s clothing, depending on your view – it has won over a number of counties (Derbyshire, Nottinghamshire, Leicestershire and, perhaps, Sussex) that might otherwise have resisted a city-based tournament and seems to have an even chance of gaining the two-thirds majority required to see it adopted as the shape of the season from 2018. The ECB is promising the counties a minimum of £1m each if they do so. It is clear that, officially or not, this is its preferred option.There are, though, huge questions to answer before anything can be confirmed. What other cricket will be played in the July window while the city-based competition is on and is it not a concern that the quality of the Championship (or Blast competition) will be diluted? What evidence is there that audiences in England and Wales will warm to new teams? Can the money promised really be considered new if it comes at the expense of a watered down Blast (with fewer ‘name’ players, less interest from broadcasters and sponsors and the sense that it is a lesser competition) and can the money even be guaranteed even if broadcasters subsequently fail to deliver on the estimates that the ECB has received or if they fail to reach their audience target?The ECB hopes to drum up bids from broadcasters to televise a new competition•Getty Images

Furthermore, won’t the gap between the Test-hosting counties and the rest grow if a city-based competition is held only at the bigger grounds and there is no distribution of non-cricket income (bar receipts, for example)? Especially if they are benefitting from the supply of players from smaller counties, without further compensation. Equally, it seems odd that all hosting grounds would be paid a flat fee (far below the amount some sides make for hosting Blast matches) whatever their capacity or hospitality facilities.It is understood that the ECB has also been asked to provide assurances that the ‘independent’ broadcast experts utilised to provide information on the likely value of tournaments do not stand to gain should the city-based tournament win favour. The ECB has a close working history with Sky and appears to have valued the existing competition far below comparable events.Premiership rugby, for example, a sport with similar supporter numbers as county cricket, receives something approaching £40m for its broadcast rights. The ECB currently ascribe a nil value to county cricket and seems to think the Blast is worth as little as £7.5m a year. That’s less than it can expect to earn from gate receipts. A city-based competition, despite lasting less than a month and not being offered exclusively, is said to be worth up to £40m.In the longer-term, the ECB has also been asked whether the international schedule will be cut to make space for the new city-based competition – and to allow England players to take part – and what the cost implications of that might be. Again, if it diminishes the money gained in the next broadcast deal, it would be wrong to view the city-based revenues as new rather than replacement. It seems unlikely that England players will be made available in 2018.But most of all the question remains: why is the ECB not interested in the input of those that, indirectly, pay the wages of the administrators, the media, the players and the broadcasters? One day, and it may not be a distant day, the spectators will tire of the £6 pints, the soggy chips, the slack over rates that short-change them of their £90 Test tickets and spend their money elsewhere. The ECB disrespects them at its peril.

Dhananjaya, Vandersay in SL A squad for NZ tour

Kasun Rajitha, a 22-year-old seamer from Badureliya Sports Club, has been picked in both the four-day and one-day squads for Sri Lanka A’s tour of New Zealand in October

Andrew Fidel Fernando16-Aug-2015Kasun Rajitha, a 22-year-old seamer from Badureliya Sports Club, has been picked in both the four-day and one-day squads for Sri Lanka A’s tour of New Zealand in October. Rajitha has played only seven first-class matches, and has taken just six wickets at an average of 81.83 in the Premier League Tournament. However, match figures of 7 for 106 in the recent tour match against the Indians have helped earn him a place in both squads.Legspinner Jeffrey Vandersay and opening batsman Dhananjaya de Silva, who debuted in the recent T20 series against Pakistan, also find places in both squads. Seamer Lahiru Gamage, wicketkeeper-batsman Niroshan Dickwella, and middle-order batsman Kithuruwan Vithanage, who have all played for Sri Lanka in the past, also feature in both squads. Batsman Ashan Priyanjan has been named captain of both teams.Vishwa Fernando, the 23-year-old left-arm seamer who is in the Sri Lanka squad for the ongoing Test series against India, has been named in the four-day squad only. Chamara Kapugedara, meanwhile, is in the squad for the one-dayers.Left-arm chinaman bowler Lakshan Sandakan, who has been among the top five wicket-takers in to successive domestic seasons, and had also been in a Sri Lanka ODI squad last year, does not find a place in either squad.Sri Lanka A play four unofficial ODIs and two unofficial Tests against New Zealand A. Their tour begins in Lincoln on October 1, with two warm-up encounters against New Zealand Cricket’s winter training squad.Sri Lanka A unofficial Test squad: Ashan Priyanjan (capt.), Dananjaya De Silva, Udara Jayasundara, Minod Bhanuka, Niroshan Dickwella, Roshen Silva, Asela Gunaratne, Angelo Jayasinghe, Vishwa Fernando, Kasun Rajitha, Nisala Tharaka, Lahiru Gamage, Jeffrey Vandersay, Amila Aponso, Kithuruwan VithanageSri Lanka A unofficial ODI squad: Ashan Priyanjan (capt.), Dananjaya De Silva, Dhanushka Gunathilaka, Shehan Jayasuriya, Kithuruwan Vithanage, Niroshan Dickwella, Dasun Shanaka, Chamara Kapugedara, Lahiru Madushanka, Chaturanga De Silva, Jeffrey Vandersay, Lahiru Gamage, Kasun Rajitha, Binura Fernando, Nisala Tharaka

Cricket not linked to drug report – Sutherland

Cricket Australia’s chief executive James Sutherland has said there was no evidence specifically linking cricket to an Australian Crime Commission report that has found widespread drug use in Australian professional sport

Brydon Coverdale07-Feb-2013Cricket Australia’s chief executive James Sutherland has said there was no evidence linking cricket to an Australian Crime Commission report that has found widespread drug use in Australian professional sport as well as links to organised crime and possible match-fixing.However, the disturbing findings of the report have prompted Cricket Australia to consider its integrity processes, and in a statement the organisation said it would “immediately implement a review of our own integrity systems, controls and processes to ensure that Australian cricket is fully equipped to deal with the heightened integrity risks that have come to light this week”.Sutherland and other chief executives of major sports were part of an hour-long press conference on Thursday in Canberra, where some of the findings of the Australian Crime Commission’s year-long investigation were revealed. The ACC report suggested there was widespread use of banned substances including peptides, hormones and illicit drugs in Australian sport.”The findings are shocking and they’ll disgust Australian sports fans,” Australia’s justice minister Jason Clare said. “The findings indicate that drugs are being facilitated by sports scientists, coaches, support staff as well as doctors and pharmacists, and in some cases sports scientists and others orchestrating the doping of entire teams. In some cases players [are] being administered with drugs that have not yet been approved for human use.”The investigation has also found that organised crime is used in the distribution of these drugs. This is particularly serious. Links between organised crime and players exposes players to the risk of being co-opted for match-fixing and this investigation has identified one possible example of that, and that is currently under investigation … It’s cheating but it’s worse than that. It’s cheating with the help of criminals.”The Australian Crime Commission said the sporting bodies affected had been briefed on the investigation’s findings. While the specific sports in which widespread drug use was found were not revealed to the public, Sutherland said there had been no suggestion cricket was directly affected.”There’s no specific evidence that has been passed through to us but all this report does for us is heighten our concerns about risk and gives us a mandate to take our own action independently, but also collectively with other sports, the government and other agencies,” Sutherland said.When asked about match-fixing and the integrity of cricket, especially the Big Bash League, Sutherland said: “We’re as confident as we can be in that regard. We have our own integrity unit that has surveillance activities over all of the Big Bash League matches. That’s networked through to the ICC, who has its own anti-corruption unit and we work very closely with them, with information not just about the Australian betting market but the global betting market.”Of course this report heightens our awareness of risk and we will only be taking a step up, in terms of the support around our integrity unit, to protect the Big Bash and all other cricket matches played in Australia.”The release of the report came in the same week that the AFL found itself embroiled in a drug scandal centred on the Essendon club and its use of supplements given to players. Fast bowler Peter Siddle, when asked about what supplements Australian cricketers were given, said only basic items like multi-vitamins were used and none were injected.”It’s just all the general multi-vitamins and general stuff for health and well-being,” Siddle said. “Ours is pretty simple. Some blokes take them, some blokes don’t. It’s pretty standard stuff.”Australia’s captain Michael Clarke said the integrity of the game was paramount for he and his team.”[Integrity] is our priority and I think cricket does that generally,” Clarke said. “I think through the ICC and Cricket Australia they try and hold it in such a high regard that if you do anything that jeopardises that there will be consequences. We’re very lucky in our sport.”I’ve never been approached by anybody anywhere in the world playing in any country. Maybe they know me too well. The most important thing for the current Australian team is we continue to respect this great game and the integrity of it.”

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