Squash balls, simulators, straps and more: Unorthodox methods that helped players innovate

Shakib’s bite is the latest addition to off-beat solutions players have come up with for technical adjustments. Here are some more

Varun Shetty27-Sep-2024A pain in the neck
The neck strap was not Shakib’s first attempt at fixing his head position; in fact, it might be an extension of a method he has tried in training before. At the T20 World Cup earlier this year, he was seen warming up with a neck brace on. Shakib’s head-positioning issues have stemmed from an eye condition called Central Serous Chorioretinopathy (CSC), where a fluid accumulates beneath the retina and affects the person’s vision. As a result, he has had to adjust his head positioning to ensure he could track the ball clearly, while avoiding excessive head tilt that could interfere with his technique.Gilchrist squashes Sri Lanka
Adam Gilchrist had been working on improving his grip and decided – on the day of the 2007 ODI World Cup final – that he would employ a little hack deviced back home in the big game against Sri Lanka. That hack was lodging a squash ball inside the batting glove of his bottom hand. The result was perhaps the best batting performance in a World Cup final – 149 off 104.The objective was to avoid gripping the bat too tightly with the last two or three fingers of his bottom hand. To help with this, his batting coach, Bob Meuleman, had suggested placing a squash ball in his glove, which created resistance against those outer fingers. The adjustment forced Gilchrist to rely more on his thumb and forefinger, allowing his top hand to dominate his shots.Banish the racket, squash your opponents in a World Cup final•Getty ImagesMalinga’s feet simulator
Lasith Malinga’s approach to bowling in limited-overs cricket was simple. As a boy, he watched Wasim Akram and Waqar Younis bowl yorkers and thought it was a “great ball to bowl”. Then he met bowling coach Champaka Ramanayake early in his leather-ball-cricket days, who told him to simply focus on bowling straight and fast.With those clear-minded philosophies in place, Malinga’s mastery of the yorker began with another simple but extremely effective drill in the nets. The pair placed two boots at the batting crease, aligned as if a batter was taking guard. Even in the absence of actual batters at the nets, Malinga now had a way of slinging the ball into their feet.George Bailey turns his back on everyone
In December 2016, when George Bailey first adopted his unconventional stance with his back turned towards the bowler, he admitted to Cricket Australia, “I’ll be the first to say it’s crazy. That’s why I don’t like watching it.” What drove him to such an extreme adjustment?Related

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Bailey realised that his traditional stance was causing him to get squared up, especially in swinging conditions, where his hands would drift away from his body in compensation. As a “ruthless” fix, he adopted a closed-off stance, positioning his left leg ahead of his right, with both feet pointing towards deep third.Pietersen goes no-pads
Kevin Pietersen’s Test dismissals break-up shows that he was dismissed by left-arm spinners on 29 occasions out of 181 innings. In hindsight, those aren’t alarming numbers by any stretch – he did still average 52.86 against that type of bowling. But his perceived problems against left-arm spin became a sticky narrative wherever he went, exacerbated by occasional dismissals against part-timers and rookies.A remedy emerged in a letter written to him by Rahul Dravid – to face Graeme Swann and Monty Panesar in the nets without his pads on. The idea was that his big front-foot push down the wicket would be slightly delayed, allowing him to not push hard at a turning ball, which was inevitable once the foot was planted early.Ranjitsinhji flicks open a new scoring area
Ranjitsinhji was the first well-known Indian cricketer. He has been described as “the first Indian of any kind to become universally known and popular” by John Lord in the book , and is still a part of Indian cricket through the Ranji Trophy, which is named after him. He is also widely believed to have invented the leg glance.According to legend, one of the Surrey professionals who tutored cricketers at Cambridge – where Ranjitsinhji was an undergraduate – fixed and “nailed” his back boot to the crease to stop him from retreating from the ball. Whether true or not, his newfound ability to deflect deliveries to the leg side revolutionised batting, unlocking previously untapped scoring areas on the field. This 1897 footage of him gives us a glimpse of a rather static back foot.

Shan Masood's statement of intent sets out Pakistan's stall for the series

Aggression is captain’s watchword as he takes lessons of 2022 and drills them back at England

Matt Roller07-Oct-2024It was not a mirage in Multan, but an overdue end to a four-year drought. Shan Masood has talked a good game in his first year as Pakistan captain but after five defeats out of five – in which his career average remained below 30 – he came into this series knowing that, unless he delivered with the bat, his position would be seen as untenable.This was as compelling a response as Masood could have wished for. When he hit 156 in Manchester in August 2020, he looked to have finally cracked Test cricket: it was his third successive hundred, albeit spread across an eight-month period. But in his 27 innings since then, he had not managed a single score above 60.Perhaps the most impressive aspect of Masood’s 151 was that he paid as much attention to ‘how’ as ‘how many’. Once a dour, shotless player who would crawl along at a strike rate of 40, Masood showed his team exactly how he wants them to bat by putting England’s seamers under pressure and targeting the young offspinner Shoaib Bashir.It would have been very different but for a review. Masood looked rushed by the extra pace during Brydon Carse’s first spell on Test debut, and had just edged him for four to reach 16 when he was given out lbw. But he was right to question Kumar Dharmasena’s on-field decision, with Hawk-Eye confirming the ball had pitched outside leg stump.The Pakistan captaincy is a role about more than just leading a cricket team. Its incumbents are also expected to act as spokesmen, musing at length about the state of the game – and the country. Masood’s views have been cited so many times that he should be charging royalties, and last week he gave a press conference previewing this series that lasted the best part of an hour.By his own admission, Masood had his eyes opened when England toured Pakistan two years ago and has taken inspiration from their attacking approach. He played in the third Test of that series after running the drinks in the first two, and describing England on Sunday as “pioneers” whose style “has had an effect on the world”.It has certainly had an effect on Masood, as he demonstrated with his calculated takedown of Bashir. Masood picked the ball after a convincing lbw shout as his opportunity to attack in Bashir’s second over, charging down to hack him through midwicket before using his feet again to the subsequent delivery, and launching him back over his head.A couple of skips down the pitch were enough to throw Bashir off his length, and Masood pulled his drag-down for four in the following over, then launched him over extra cover. It posed a problem for Ollie Pope, who could not rely on spin at both ends and found himself chasing the game while Masood and Abdullah Shafique piled on 253 for the second wicket.Related

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Masood explained that he saw Bashir’s introduction as an opportunity after Pakistan had seen off Chris Woakes’ threat with the new ball, on a pitch which offered very little for bowlers after some early movement. “If you can get the spinners away, you change the way they bowl,” he said. “On a first-day wicket, when you’ve had a good start, that’s when you have to cash in.”He expressly targeted a “mammoth partnership” early in his stand with Shafique. “The way we played, the way we put some scoreboard pressure on them, the way we kept running hard and made sure that we scored at 4.5-5 [per over] – that’s an important thing. If we would have just set up shop and tried to defend our way through the day, I don’t think we would have had 328 on the board.”Masood survived occasional sketchy moments off Gus Atkinson, including a top-edged pull that went just over the long-leg fielder and a gloved short ball that dropped short of Jamie Smith. But he was otherwise assured on his way to three figures, cruising along at a rapid rate: his hundred, reached off 102 balls, was Pakistan’s fastest in a decade.”From 30, still to 100, I was trying not to give anything away,” Masood said. “I’ve been very guilty of getting to those 30s, 40s and 50s and not carrying on. Today, I had that responsibility. When I played that pull shot off Atkinson, I had my heart in my mouth: I said, ‘Nothing [else] before 100.'”He flagged in the sapping heat of the afternoon, offering a half-chance to Pope at point on 133 and seizing up with cramp on 146 after reverse-sweeping Jack Leach for four. His dismissal – chipping a low chance back to Leach – was a tame end to a fine innings which spanned four-and-a-half hours, and was the second-highest of Masood’s Test career.It is not difficult to imagine the world in which Masood played no part in this Test. Five consecutive defeats at the start of his tenure could easily have led to him losing his job, or an overhaul in selection. But with a short turnaround from Bangladesh’s recent tour, the PCB defied their reputation for instability with a policy of continuity.The first day of a Test tour is unlike any other, in that it presents the opportunity to set the tone for what follows. Masood reflected as much with his positivity, which took the pressure off himself and put it on England’s bowlers. It couldn’t quite match England’s 506 for 4 in Rawalpindi two years ago, but Pakistan’s 328 for 4 laid the foundation for the series.

Gill needs to show his substance outside Asia to prove his worth

India’s No. 3 has a highest score of 36 outside Asia over the last three years and has shown a habit of throwing his wicket away after great starts

Alagappan Muthu20-Dec-2024At every net session, it becomes clear why India believe in Shubman Gill. He plays shots that are supposed to be hard ever so easily. There was this pull to a ball that was climbing up towards his rib cage at the Gabba. He swayed inside the line, just a subtle realigning of his torso, nothing more followed by a swivel of the back foot to direct the ball where he wanted it to go.The eye test in cricket is a rudimentary measure of how good a batter is based on how comfortable they look in the middle. Are they moving into the ball, or are they stuck on the crease? Are they rushed by quality bowling, or do they actually make it look a bit meh? Gill has been very good at passing the eye test in this Border-Gavaskar Trophy. But his highest score is 31. This has been happening for a while.In Birmingham 2022, as India attempted to build on their 2-1 lead in the Pataudi Trophy, he began his innings with a couple of crisp drives, and then he pulled Stuart Broad disdainfully in front of square. Each of those shots was a rendition of his natural instincts. Letting them take over got him to 17 runs from 20 balls. Letting them run unchecked got him dismissed for 17 off 24. James Anderson dangled one wide of off stump, and Gill took the bait.Related

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Since Gill announced himself almost four years ago, setting up India’s win at the Gabba with 91 off 146 balls, his highest score outside Asia is 36. During this period, he has only 267 runs to show across 16 innings in Australia, England, South Africa and the West Indies, for an average of 17.80.He has developed a habit of looking really, really good, and then just randomly getting out. Earlier this week, at the Gabba, he essentially middled a wide ball from Mitchell Starc into a packed slip cordon for Mitchell Marsh to pull off a superb catch. India were 6 for 2, and the irony was that Gill had attended the pre-match press conference and highlighted how the batters’ focus was in doing whatever it took to get big first-innings runs.Gill once spoke, to the podcast, of how his technique has been able to survive the journey up to international cricket; that even his coaches didn’t really believe he needed to change much. He must have wowed them all with his attacking shots, the ones that are difficult to play but come so naturally to him, especially off the back foot. From that point, it can almost be taken for granted that the other stuff – the boring stuff like blocking the ball or leaving it – would also be in order.Only the hard hands that he uses to put power into those impossible shots – the pulls, the jabs, and the punches – were leading to his downfall when he had to just defend. The hard hands that took advantage of bowlers just trying to hold a line outside off stump in limited-overs cricket were leading him into trouble in Test cricket. He ended up playing deliveries he should be leaving. In the WTC 2023 final, he left one that he should have been playing. It became confusing. On a Port of Spain pitch where every other member of the top four made fifties, he got caught for 10 because he didn’t seem to trust his own judgment of what to play and what not to, so he just played at everything. It bled into another one of his strengths – dealing with left-arm pace. Until 12 months ago, he had only been dismissed to them once, averaging 145. In the last 12 months, he has been knocked by them over five times, averaging 13.80.1:47

Pujara: Gill’s hard hands and lack of footwork causing trouble in Australia

In 2024, Gill began the home series against England with a pair of low scores, and it felt like his place in the side was under threat. He trained extremely hard – he had kids bowling to him in the Visakhapatnam nets, and he gave them the utmost respect – and emerged the second-highest scorer across the five Tests with two crucial centuries. He has credited that period as an important part of his career so far. Preparation and repetition, that’s how Gill likes to work through the challenges he comes up against. So perhaps the more time he has spent at No. 3, the better he will get. It has been 18 months since he has permanently taken over that position. He isn’t the perfect fit there. His best position might be one step lower, but that’s occupied.Melbourne, the venue of the fourth Test against Australia, is likely to offer fast-bowler friendly conditions again, and Australia will once again look to drag him forward – which he tends to do reluctantly – and tempt him to play away from his body – which he tends to do liberally – and that disconnect is what often leads him into danger, as he ends up reaching away from his body.Gill could still get out that way. Batting in the top three has been extremely hard in this series. But he would want to make it a little harder than it currently is for bowlers to pick up his wicket.

SCG axe leaves Mitchell Marsh's Test career at crossroads

It’s difficult to see a road for his return with Webster and Hardie moving up the list and Green set to return later in 2025

Andrew McGlashan02-Jan-2025It has been one of the feel-good stories in Australian cricket over the last 18 months, but not quite a year on from being named the Allan Border Medalist, and giving an acceptance speech for the ages, Mitchell Marsh’s Test career is at a crossroads.”Not necessarily blindsided,” Cummins said of Marsh’s reaction when the news was given to him that he was dropped for the final Test against India at the SCG with Beau Webster handed a debut in his place. With 73 runs in the series and limited impact with the ball, the numbers were not in his favour.Having been informed of the decision before Cummins spoke to reporters, Marsh left the nets having not batted but still signed autographs and posed for pictures with fans who had come in to watch Australia’s opening training session. A very popular team figure, Cummins made a point of mentioning Marsh’s first thoughts on Webster’s inclusion. “The first thing he said was, ‘I can’t wait to see Beau out there and give it a crack’,” Cummins said.Related

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Sydney Tests against India have not been kind to Marsh. In the 2018-19 series he was also dropped for the equivalent fixture having made a one-match return at the MCG where he was booed in what became an often-recalled story of his career. From there he played one Test in four and a half years before his return midway through the 2023 Ashes.In the last few weeks Marsh has looked a shadow of the player who produced a string of match-changing innings since his recall against England. That day at Headingley he was dropped on 12 at slip before racing to a thrilling hundred. Marsh said he played that game as though it was his last, having undergone ankle surgery earlier in the year to give himself a chance of playing Test cricket again. But such was the impact he had he remained for 14 consecutive matches, even forcing Cameron Green to the sidelines early last summer.However, this series he has only once threatened to dominate with the bat, making 47 in the second innings Perth with Australia’s defeat inevitable. At times he has appeared caught between attack and defence.Mitchell Marsh has made just 73 runs across seven innings in the series•Getty ImagesMarsh’s bowling workload has been a regular talking point – since the Perth Test he has sent down just 16 overs – but while Cummins referenced Webster’s capabilities with the ball, for a match where the workloads of the captain and Mitchell Starc will be of particular focus, it is the lack of runs that has cost Marsh his spot.”He was in the side this summer for being a top six batter so that’s generally a guiding principle when you are picking a top order,” Cummins said. “Think when he’s at his best he gets into the side on his batting alone and his bowling’s a bonus.”At 33 it doesn’t have to be the end of Marsh’s Test career, something which Cummins stressed when he confirmed the team, but like Green missing out in England to give him his unexpected return, he will now wait for the cards to fall in his favour. Green will return later in 2025 while Webster has moved ahead of him in the pecking order and, if he can regain bowling fitness, Aaron Hardie will likely soon move up the list.It’s difficult to see a road for Marsh’s return. Australia are likely to get creative with the balance of their side in Sri Lanka in late January, and playing spin is not one of Marsh’s strengths despite his natural power down the ground. It would be difficult to see him being recalled for a World Test Championship final should Australia qualify having just been left out. Being a key part of Australia’s ODI side means he will also miss Sheffield Shield cricket in February and early March.Beau Webster is set to make his Test debut at the SCG•Getty ImagesIt is the second significant selection call Australia have made in the last two Tests following the axing of Nathan McSweeney in favour of Sam Konstas, a move that paid off in dramatic style at the MCG.In contrast to 19-year-old Konstas, Webster is a player who has done the hard yards through domestic cricket to earn a debut aged 31. In 2023-24 he scored 938 runs and took 30 wickets in the Sheffield Shield, a return only bettered by Garry Sobers. He is also one of the best slip catchers in Australia.He has reinvented himself, too, having revived his medium pace during the 2020 Covid lockdowns to a point where it has now overtaken offspin as his primary weapon with the ball.”I don’t think I’d be standing here if I was still wheeling out the offspinners,” Webster said in Melbourne last week. “It’s a part of my game I’ve been really proud to develop in the last four years. It’s taken a lot of hard work early doors from being sore at the start and trying to get my body used to bowling a few overs here and there and then bowling lots and lots of Tasmania.”Now it feels like it’s as important as my batting game and they go hand-in-hand if you’re struggling with the bat you can still contribute with the ball and vice versa.”Webster will have good memories of his most recent outing at the SCG where he helped Tasmania to victory over New South Wales with a total of 110 runs and five wickets in the match.”He’s a special player at the moment,” Tasmania captain Jordan Silk said after that match in late November. “Any time I feel like we’re in trouble, I feel like I can throw him the ball and he just seems to be able to create something.”

IPL 2025 scenarios: GT and RCB one win away from playoffs, MI in control of their fate

A look at the qualification chances of the seven teams which are still in contention for a place in the playoffs

S Rajesh13-May-20253:27

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Gujarat Titans
Gujarat Titans (GT) are just one win away from making the playoffs – 18 points will assure a team of a top-four finish. However, if they lose their three remaining games they could get knocked out as four teams can still finish on 17 or more points. Titans have a favourable itinerary too, with their last two games scheduled at home in Ahmedabad, where they have a formidable 4-1 record so far. Their net run rate is currently second only to Mumbai Indians (MI), which could help them with qualification or a top-two finish.Related

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Royal Challengers Bengaluru
Like GT, Royal Challengers Bengaluru (RCB) are also one win away from securing their place in the playoffs. RCB can also make the top four with 16 points if other results go their way. However, two wins will not yet guarantee a top-two finish as two other teams – GT and Punjab Kings (PBKS) – can still finish with 20 or more points. GT currently have a better NRR, while PBKS can finish on 21 if they win all three remaining matches.RCB are second on the points table•BCCIPunjab Kings
PBKS need two wins to be certain of qualification. At the moment, 17 points won’t assure qualification as five teams can get to 17 or more: if, for instance, they beat Rajasthan Royals (RR) but lose to Delhi Capitals (DC) and MI, and if DC beat GT but lose to MI, then RCB, GT, MI, DC and PBKS can all finish on 17 or more points. However, PBKS can qualify with 17 points if they beat DC and lose their other two matches, as in that case only one of MI or DC can finish on 17 or more points, since they play each other.PBKS can sneak through even if they lose all three matches and stay on 15, but for that to happen DC will have to lose their two other matches, so that they stay on 15, and LSG will have to win no more than two of their three games. It’ll then come down to run rates between PBKS and DC (and Kolkata Knight Riders, if they win both matches) for one spot.Mumbai Indians
Despite the loss to GT, MI are still in control of their destiny, as wins in their last two matches will ensure a place in the playoffs. For them to go through on 16 points, though, they’ll need help from other results, while defeats in their two remaining games will eliminate them. MI also have an excellent net run rate of 1.156, which could yet be crucial if qualification comes down to that.Delhi Capitals
KKR are on the brink of elimination as the maximum they can finish with is 15; there are already two teams who have more than 15, while PBKS are on 15 with three games to go.Assuming that those three teams go through, KKR will have to hope that MI lose their two remaining matches and stay on 14. Since one of their matches is against DC, who are currently on 13, that will take DC to 15. The fourth spot will, in that scenario, come down to an NRR battle between KKR and DC.On the other hand, if PBKS lose their three remaining matches, then MI will go past 15, while DC, PBKS and KKR could all be on 15 points, fighting for the fourth spot.However, any washed-out game will see them eliminated.Lucknow Super Giants
LSG are struggling for momentum, having lost three in a row, and four of their last five. The best they can do now is win their three remaining matches, finish on 16 points, and hope that one or more of the in-form teams suffer a sudden reversal of fortunes. If they lose another match, though, they will be eliminated. Their terrible NRR of -0.469 doesn’t help their cause either.

Pujara's best in Test cricket

From a brisk fifty on debut to herculean efforts in Sydney and Brisbane, here’s a look at Pujara’s best knocks

Ashish Pant24-Aug-202572 vs Australia, Bengaluru, 2010Pujara’s debut innings lasted just three balls, but in the second innings, with India chasing 207, the 22-year-old showed his class. Promoted to No. 3, ahead of Rahul Dravid – whom he would eventually replace at that position – Pujara scored 72 off 89 balls in a tricky chase. He had been dismissed by Mitchell Johnson in the first innings, but having settled himself in, he handled the pace remarkably well in this time. He was also immaculate against the spin of Nathan Hauritz, often waltzing down the track. By the time Pujara was dismissed, India were just 61 shy of their target.153 vs South Africa, Johannesburg, 2013Pujara showed his wares on a spicy Johannesburg surface, recording a second-innings century against a top South African attack, which included Dale Steyn, Morne Morkel and Vernon Philander. He came into bat on 23 for 1, with India 59 ahead. He added 70 with Murali Vijay before a mammoth 222-run stand with Virat Kohli. Pujara’s 153 off 270 balls included 21 fours, his innings helping India set South Africa a target of 458. The match eventually ended in a draw.Cheteshwar Pujara is pumped after reaching his double hundred•Associated Press202 vs Australia, Ranchi, 2017An all-time great knock on a spiteful Ranchi surface. KL Rahul and Vijay gave India a good start after Australia’s 451, before Pujara came to the crease and stitched a century stand with Vijay. The middle order did not contribute much, but Pujara stood firm and amassed 202 off 525 balls against some tight Australia bowling. That helped India declare on 603 for 9, and the match ended in a draw. This is the only instance of an Indian batter facing more than 500 balls in an innings (where data is available).Cheteshwar Pujara celebrates his Adelaide hundred•Associated Press123 and 71 vs Australia, Adelaide, 2018Pujara showed the value of patience on the opening day of the 2018 Adelaide Test, even as the rest of India’s batting crashed. Batting first, India found themselves on 41 for 4, with most of the batters guilty of playing loose shots. Pujara, though, held his own and almost single-handedly took India to 250, facing 246 balls for his 123. The next best score was Rohit Sharma’s 37. If that wasn’t enough, Pujara scored a vital 71 in the second innings to set Australia a target of 323. They fell short by 31.Girish TS/ESPNcricinfo Ltd 50 and 77 vs Australia, Sydney, 2021 and 56 vs Australia, Brisbane, 2021Pujara was a different beast in the 2020-21 Border-Gavaskar Trophy, and not just with the amount of runs but also the way he put his body on the line. In a show of tremendous grit and resolve, he wore several blows to help India save the Sydney Test. He scored 50 off 176 balls in the first innings, but it was his 77 off 205 in the second innings that gave India the belief. Hanuma Vihari and R Ashwin then showed similar resistance to deny Australia. A few days later, Pujara was at it again in Brisbane. He scored 25 off 94 in the first innings and 56 off 211 in the second, often getting pinged on the body. India eventually pulled off a famous win to take the four-match series 2-1.

Brook's distorted reality brings England's dream finish into focus

Extraordinary century bends The Oval narrative to his will before India’s fightback threatens nightmare ending

Vithushan Ehantharajah03-Aug-20251:58

Bangar: Brook largely responsible for what unraveled

On Saturday evening, with England one down and still 324 away from winning this fifth Test and the series, Brendon McCullum ran through the ways they could do it all.The runs would not be squarely on one man, he said. Partnerships, as they were for both previous 370-odd chases against India, would be crucial. With spirits and belief raised, McCullum sent his players away with one request: “Dream the dream”.Now, they must dream another dream. And the gorgeous nonsense of this sport is those final 35 runs will bring a more restless sleep than the night before. With Chris Woakes expected to bat if required, they at least have four wickets to come, and a heavy roller to make their beds a little comfier. Related

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They do not, however, have either Joe Root or Harry Brook. But England owe their favourable position to both. For 55.3 overs between their coming-together at 106 for 3, and Root’s dismissal at 337 for 6, Yorkshire’s favourite sons were making those dreams come true.It was during their stand of 195 that England and their fans were deep in the REM cycle: revelling in lucid streams concocted from previous happy memories, and not simply those from previous Test chases. Mohammed Siraj’s misstep on the boundary sponge at long leg, after clinging on to a Brook hook for 19, was surely just a lazy re-interpretation of Trent Boult’s similar costly error during the 2019 World Cup final.Brook, even by that point, was in his flow state, having charged Akash Deep to send him over cover for six. And so, rather than stir, he went deeper, clearing cover and then the cordon (deliberately) in the same over.At times, Brook’s tenth century felt like contorted reality, altering a few universal laws across the 91 balls it took to get there.Root, on his way to a 39th century, was playing his trusty anchor role, which offered the dressing-room and home fans grounding during such tense times. But, suddenly, the man who was No. 2 on the all-time Test run-scorers’ charts was, well, in the way. Thanks for the memories Joe, but piss off for a bit – Harry’s on one.3:37

Root: ‘Amazing spectacle to look forward to’ on fifth day

India’s pace trio, who had run roughshod over England’s line-up only two days earlier, were now being reduced to million-dollar cannon fodder.Throughout the series, India’s support staff have been stationed around the boundary – saving the fielders’ legs and buying back time for overs – but now they were contributing to the very things they were supposed to prevent.The balls were coming back from the boundary as quickly as they were heading there. At times, it was as if Shubman Gill had opted for Sisyphus at both ends. India at one point were six behind on overs, but also unable to slow the game down in a meaningful way.The clarity of Brook’s boundaries lifted the atmosphere and quietened the , despite how reliant the former had previously been on the latter. None of it really made sense.Brook’s celebration, too, was out of the ordinary. He is, by his own admission, a muted celebrator, believing hundreds are just his job. But this time he pumped his fist, screamed towards the floor, cut the air with a fling of his bat and raised both arms aloft.It was as much relief at England’s situation as a chance to draw a line under the last few weeks. Until this innings, an impressive series that ends with 481 runs at 53.44 had threatened to end with a bitter after-taste.Brook’s part in the verbals in the closing overs at Lord’s had been followed by a bigger role in the dissent that marred the end of the Emirates Old Trafford Test. It put a target on his back, and it was clear that some quarters sensed an opportunity to get at a player still relatively early in his career, despite the size of the role he plays in this batting line-up.A vital 53 on day two has now been followed by a stellar fourth-innings hundred, his second meaningful contribution in the last throes of a Test after his 75 against Australia at Headingley in 2023. This, too, may prove to be another match-winning contribution from a talent whose strike rate of 87 is the highest of anyone with more than 1000 runs to their name.”He mentioned that out there,” Root said, on Brook acknowledging the extra feeling fueling his celebrations. “I don’t even think he knew where it came from, but clearly it’s been a hard-fought series and, and he’s desperate to win games of cricket for England.”Brook’s eye-catching demise then put the onus back on Root, who did not so much assume the lead role, but took it upon himself, as he picked apart the moments that India felt might have been heading their way.Brook’s century celebrations were unusually demonstrative•Getty ImagesAfter Prasidh Krishna removed Jacob Bethell, he beat Jamie Smith twice, then Siraj attempted to pin Root down. A dabbed single to point punctured the crescendo-ing pressure, drawing relieved cheers from fans starting to wake up and face reality once more. And like all dreams, there was one last chance to clasp at a memory of love rather than fiction.A shuffle across his stumps, and a tip around the corner took Root to his hundred. After removing his helmet and initially saluting all corners, he pulled out a commemorative white headband made in honour of the late Graham Thorpe, put it on and saluted to the heavens.You always hope to do right by your mentors. And for all the work Thorpe put into Root throughout his career – the fruits of which labour have given him a shot of becoming Test cricket’s all-time run-scorer – there would have been uncertainty in the moment for Root. Doing right by someone when they pass is a duty for life.All of us are made up of pieces of those who have reared us. Root’s third century of this series, and his general standing in the game’s history, is a testament to the part that Thorpe played in that development. But the ability to pay tribute with a knock of such guts and class, in a Test dedicated to Thorpe’s legacy at his home ground, merely underlined the romance of what was unfolding in front of us.But then … a jolt of inspired bowling from Prasidh removed Root, before Siraj’s unrelenting attitude sent the day’s final half-hour into nightmare territory as far as England were concerned.Nerves rattled. Heads in space. A night’s sleep (if they can get it) will do everyone some good.What dreams await this time may finally be realised on Monday.

'I will do it – that's what is left' – stronger, fitter Khaleel waits to get back what he lost

Khaleel Ahmed has had two good years across formats and now has his eyes set on the next goal: play Test cricket for India

Himanshu Agrawal27-Aug-2025Khaleel Ahmed first played for India in September 2018, just months before turning 21. Seven years on, with just 11 ODIs and 18 T20Is to his name, there doesn’t seem to be a way back to the national side for him.He had made a brief comeback to international cricket when he played four T20Is across India’s tours of Zimbabwe and Sri Lanka in July 2024. But that came after nearly five years out, and he hasn’t been picked for India since then.Those five years included missing almost the entire domestic season in 2022-23 because of hernia surgery. Khaleel was back to playing competitive cricket in IPL 2023, and since 2023-24, his numbers across formats in domestic cricket and the IPL, while not outstanding, have been noteworthy. And he has former India left-arm quicks Irfan Pathan and Zaheer Khan to thank for it.Related

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  • Khaleel cuts Essex stint short for personal reasons

“I had to start from zero [after surgery], including learning how to walk,” Khaleel told ESPNcricinfo ahead of the Duleep Trophy quarter-final, where he is part of the Central Zone squad to face North East Zone starting Thursday. “Irfan spent a lot of time with me. He showed me how I can keep my seam upright, and also helped me sharpen my skills.”He and Zaheer also advised me on how I could do well in red-ball cricket. I am fortunate and grateful to have had them available whenever I wanted to speak to them.”Sixteen of Khaleel’s 22 first-class matches have come since the 2023-24 domestic season. That includes touring Australia and England with India A, and representing Essex in county cricket. During this time, Khaleel has bagged 49 wickets at an average of 26.40. In the six games before these, he had only 11 wickets at 46.72.

What’s changed? Khaleel says he gave it his all while working on his body and trying to stay fit enough to bowl the long spells, which the format demanded.”I paid a lot of attention to my fitness,” he said. “I also tried to learn some skills – like how to swing the ball late. I was working on ways to be successful. When you play days cricket, there are a lot of little things you need to work on. You need to prepare your body for the test of bowling 20-25 overs in an innings.”Then there are things like managing travel. As a fast bowler, I have to take care of my body every day – like sleeping on time, and recovery. Distractions can happen, but you have to do all these basic things.”Khaleel played two first-class games for Essex before cutting his stint short owing to personal reasons. But he says even the short stay was important for him to have new experiences and learn new lessons. Khaleel learnt about bowling at grounds with uneven dimensions, bowling on flat pitches, and bowling at grounds where the slope played a role. But, more importantly, he learnt a new trick, something that came out of necessity.Khaleel Ahmed played two first-class games for Essex in the county season•Getty Images”We were using the Kookaburra ball in England this season, although, generally, it is the Dukes which is used. The ball stopped swinging after 10-15 overs, and the wicket was flat,” Khaleel said. “So I had to learn bowling the wobble-seam ball, and how to extract a wicket with it. It was important to gain that experience of playing with a different variety of balls.”It is these things which make me feel that I’m ready to go. Every fast bowler knows what it feels like bowling at 140kph. I’m getting that feeling as well, and I’m enjoying it. I have also tried not to miss a game for the last two or three years. So now I have that confidence in my body. It feels so good for a fast bowler if he is continuously playing. For me, how I have been managing my body is a big achievement.”Khaleel’s success and learnings in the last two years, though, aren’t restricted to just first-class cricket. In six IPL seasons from 2018 to 2023, he played 43 games. The most Khaleel played in a single year were his ten games for Delhi Capitals (DC) in 2022.Khaleel Ahmed was CSK’s second-highest wicket-taker in IPL 2025•Associated PressBut since 2024, Khaleel has played 28 matches – 14 each for DC and Chennai Super Kings (CSK), who acquired him for INR 4.8 crore – without missing a single one for either team. That is another sign of a body that is learning to put in the hard yards and manage workloads. Khaleel has bowled more than 96 overs in the IPL since 2024, and is among the tournament’s top ten wicket-takers with 32 wickets at an average of 28.93 in this period.Apart from focusing on his fitness, Khaleel, during his two most fruitful IPL seasons, has realised how he needs to think and bowl differently in T20s.”T20 is so much more about tactics,” he said. “The more I’ve bowled, the more I’ve learnt about how much the ball is swinging, and what my angles would be. I’m also learning how the batters are trying to play me.

“I have to serve the country. It’s very easy for people to forget performances in the IPL, but what you do for the country remains with them for a lifetime”

“The bigger the stage, the more fun I have in bowling. I love to do it when no one’s believing [in me]. For instance, my job was to swing the ball upfront in Chennai [this year]. But there was hardly any swing available there. So that’s the challenge: what do I do in that case, even if I have to bowl only two or three overs?”Khaleel looks back at these last two years with a lot of satisfaction: he has delivered on big stages and he has kept himself fit. And he is looking ahead to what beckons instead of looking back on the time and opportunities lost.”I am working with a lot of patience. I am just waiting for my chance,” he said. “I have to serve the country. It’s very easy for people to forget performances in the IPL, but what you do for the country remains with them for a lifetime.”I want to be at the international level. I am giving everything I have for that. I don’t have any time for anything else. This is my focus right now. I have faced tough times mentally. But now I am in a phase where I am feeling experienced. I feel I will do well in life. As a fast bowler, I am feeling a lot more mature. I’m just waiting for opportunities, and I will do it – that’s what is left.”

How many bowlers have taken five-wicket hauls in all three formats?

And was India’s successful chase of 341 against Australia the highest in a Women’s World Cup?

Steven Lynch04-Nov-2025Simon Harmer recently played his 11th Test – in Pakistan, the sixth country in which he has appeared. Has anyone played in more countries over the course of their first 11 Tests? asked George Garrett from England
That’s an interesting area to explore. There are five men whose first five Tests all came in different countries: Eric Russell (England), Hasibul Hossain (Bangladesh), Avishka Gunawardene (Sri Lanka), Robin Peterson (South Africa) and Andy Balbirnie (Ireland). Of these, Eric Russell is perhaps the most notable as there were only seven teams playing Test cricket during his career in the 1960s. Hasibul only played five Tests.Nobody has played all their first six Tests in different countries, but six men have appeared in six by their seventh Test, undercutting Simon Harmer by four: Peterson and Farveez Maharoof (Sri Lanka), plus four Ireland players in Mark Adair, Curtis Campher, Lorcan Tucker and Harry Tector. Another Irishman, Andy McBrine, played his first nine Tests in seven different countries. Kasun Rajitha of Sri Lanka and Pakistan’s Faheem Ashraf had played in eight countries by their 12th Tests. (Note that we have treated West Indies as a single country for these answers.)Was India’s total in the semi-final the highest ever made to win a World Cup match batting second? asked MS Chandrakant from India
India’s 341 for 5 to overhaul Australia’s 338 in the semi-final in Navi Mumbai last week was not only the highest score to win a women’s World Cup match batting second, but the highest in all women’s one-day internationals. The previous records were both set by Australia earlier in the tournament, when they made 331 for 7 to surpass India’s 330 in Visakhapatnam.The only higher score by a team batting second in a women’s one-day international is India’s 369 in a floodlit game in Delhi shortly before this World Cup started. It wasn’t enough, as Australia had earlier run up 412. The match aggregate of 781 runs was easily the most in a women’s ODI: the record at the time was 678 runs, by England (373 for 5) and South Africa (305) in Bristol during the 2017 World Cup; the recent semi-final beat that by one to go second.We quite often hear about batsmen having centuries in all three international formats, but what about bowlers with five-wicket hauls in all three? asked Haseeb Ahmad from Pakistan
You’re right that there seems to be less publicity for bowlers who have taken five-fors in all three international formats than for those who have scored centuries in each (31 men and five women as I write). Just 13 men have achieved this feat: the first to complete the set was Pakistan’s Umar Gul in 2009.He’s since been joined by Lasith Malinga and Ajantha Mendis of Sri Lanka, the South Africans Imran Tahir and Lungi Ngidi, Bhuvneshwar Kumar and Kuldeep Yadav of India, the West Indians Jason Holder and Alzarri Joseph, New Zealand’s Tim Southee, Rashid Khan of Afghanistan, Bangladesh’s Shakib Al Hasan and, most recently, Hasan Ali of Pakistan in May 2025. Three women have also done it: Jhulan Goswami of India, England’s Jenny Gunn and Australia’s Ash Gardner.Umar Gul is the first bowler to take a five-for in all three formats, in 2009•Tom Shaw/Getty ImagesWhat’s the highest partnership in which one of the batters failed to reach 100? asked Dennis Armstrong from England
The highest first-class stand in which one of the partners failed to reach 100 was one of 373, between Bert Sutcliffe (275) and Les Watt (96) for Otago’s first wicket in Auckland in Auckland in December 1950. Next comes the 358 of Darren Lehmann (339) and Michael Lumb (98) for Yorkshire’s fourth wicket against Durham at Headingley in September 2006. At Brisbane in November 1968 Western Australia’s Derek Chadwick, who died recently, ended up with 91 after an opening stand of 328 with Colin Milburn, whose 243 included an astonishing 181 runs between lunch and tea.The Test record is a fifth-wicket stand of 322 between Brian Lara (213) and Jimmy Adams (94) for West Indies against Australia at Kingston in March 1999.The highest team total in a Test is 952 runs, the lowest is zero. What is the lowest score not yet scored? asked Barrie Henton from England
Surprisingly perhaps, no Test innings so far has ended at a total of 18. Apart from that, the lowest score at which an innings has never ended in a Test is 597 (there’s a 596 and two 598s). No side has ever been bowled out for 525, but South Africa made 525 for 8 declared against New Zealand at Port Elizabeth (now Gqeberha) in January 2013. The highest team total not yet made in men’s ODIs is 379, while in T20 internationals it’s 249 (250 and 251 are also blank). No T20I innings, whether complete or not, has yet ended at 22 (or 1, 3, 5, 8, 9 or 20).Shiva Jayaraman of ESPNcricinfo’s stats team helped with some of the above answers.Use our feedback form, or the Ask Steven Facebook page to ask your stats and trivia questions

Com Abel Ferreira e Allianz Parque, Palmeiras tem trunfo para avançar à final do Paulistão

MatériaMais Notícias

O Palmeiras encara o Novorizontino nesta próxima quinta-feira (28), no Allianz Parque, em jogo que vale a vaga do atual bicampeão na grande decisão do Paulistão 2024.

continua após a publicidadeRelacionadasPalmeirasAbel Ferreira retorna de Portugal e comanda treino no PalmeirasPalmeiras24/03/2024PalmeirasEmpresa tem interesse em ser patrocinadora máster do Palmeiras e abre nova possibilidadePalmeiras24/03/2024PalmeirasColombianos rasgam elogios a volante do Palmeiras pós vitória sobre a Espanha: ‘Presente e futuro!’Palmeiras23/03/2024

➡️ Tudo sobre o Verdão agora no WhatsApp. Siga o nosso novo canal Lance! Palmeiras

E para eliminar a grande surpresa da competição, o Verdão conta com um ótimo retrospecto de Abel Ferreira em jogos eliminatórios no Allianz Parque.

Desde que o português chegou ao Brasil, o Palmeiras decidiu 23 vezes jogos eliminatórios no Allianz Parque, e acabou terminando 18 vezes como o classificado ou campeão e apenas cinco vezes eliminado.

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Com Abel Ferreira, o Palmeiras também jamais foi eliminado no Allianz Parque em jogos de Campeonato Paulista. As cinco eliminações foram em jogos de Copa do Brasil e Libertadores.

O duelo diante do Novorizontino será o primeiro mata-mata do Verdão na sua arena em 2024, uma vez que o duelo diante da Ponte Pretam pelas quartas do Paulista, aconteceu na Arena Barueri.

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+ Endrick se torna o 4º jogador mais jovem a marcar pela Seleção Brasileira!

Confira todos os jogos do Palmeiras em mata-matas na era Abel no Allianz Parque:

Temporada 2020

5/11/2020 – Palmeiras 1 x 0 Bragantino – Oitavas de Final Copa do Brasil (volta) – classificado


2/12/2020 – Palmeiras 5 x 0 Delfín-EQU – Oitavas de Final Libertadores (volta) – classificado


15/12/2020 – Palmeiras 3 x 0 Libertad-PAR – Quartas de Final Libertadores (volta) – classificado


12/1/2021 – Palmeiras 0 x 2 River Plate-ARG – Semifinal Libertadores (volta) – classificado


7/3/2021 – Palmeiras 2 x 0 Grêmio – Final Copa do Brasil (volta) – campeão

Temporada 2021

9/6/2021 – Palmeiras 0 (3) x (4) 1 CRB – Terceira Fase Copa do Brasil (volta) – eliminado


21/7/2021 – Palmeiras 1 x 0 U. Católica-CHI- Oitavas de Final Libertadores (volta) – classificado


17/8/2021 – Palmeiras 3 x 0 São Paulo – Quartas de Final Libertadores (volta) – classificado

Temporada 2022

2/3/2022 – Palmeiras 2 x 0 Athletico-PR – Recopa Sul-Americana (volta) – campeão


23/3/2022 – Palmeiras 2 x 0 Ituano – Quartas de Final Paulistão (único) – classificado


26/3/2022 – Palmeiras 2 x 1 Bragantino – Semifinal Paulistão (único) – classificado


3/4/2022 – Palmeiras 4 x 0 São Paulo – Final Paulistão (volta) – campeão


6/7/2022 – Palmeiras 5 x 0 Cerro Porteño-PAR – Oitavas de Final Libertadores (volta) – classificado


14/7/2022 – Palmeiras 2 (3) x (4) 1 São Paulo – Oitavas de Final Copa do Brasil (volta) – eliminado


10/8/2022 – Palmeiras 0 (6) x (5) 0 Atlético-MG – Quartas de Final Libertadores (volta) – classificado


6/9/2022 – Palmeiras 2 x 2 Athletico-PR – Semifinal Libertadores (volta) – eliminado

Temporada 2023

11/3/2023 – Palmeiras 1 x 0 São Bernardo – Quartas de Final Paulistão (único) – classificado


19/3/2023 – Palmeiras 1 x 0 Ituano – Semifinal Paulistão (único) – classificado


9/4/2023 – Palmeiras 4 x 0 Água Santa – Final Paulistão (volta) – campeão


13/7/2023 – Palmeiras 1 x 2 São Paulo – Quartas de Final Copa do Brasil (volta) – eliminado


9/8/2023 – Palmeiras 0 x 0 Atlético-MG – Oitavas de Final Libertadores (volta) – classificado

30/8/2023 – Palmeiras 0 x 0 Deportivo Pereira-COL – Quartas de Final Libertadores (volta) – classificado

05/10/2023 – Palmeiras 1 x 1 Boca Juniors-ARG – semifinal Libertadores (volta) – eliminado

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