Positive mindset brings rewards for Imrul

Advice from coach Chandika Hathurusingha at Bangladesh’s pre-season training camp has helped the opening batsman reinvent his one-day game

Mohammad Isam08-Oct-2016As recently as last week, Imrul Kayes was still learning how an approach that involved having a premeditated mindset could radically change his batting. He has since implemented the game plan twice in four days, and on both occasions struck centuries.His 112 in the first ODI against England was his best innings in the format, though his dismissal took a bit of the sheen off the innings that began with a rousing six over square-leg that burst a hole inside an advertising board deep into the Shere Bangla National Stadium’s grandstand. That century was a follow-up to his 121 for the BCB XI in England’s warm-up match on Tuesday.Following that innings, which he also started with a cracking boundary off Chris Woakes, Imrul said that it was Chandika Hathurusingha’s advice that made him change tack.It has taken him more than eight years of playing at the international level to appreciate that there is nothing wrong in getting out of his shell to use his full potential. The hundred in Mirpur was testament of his ability to accept that he needed to change his approach to batting. It is also another feather in the cap of the coach Hathurusingha who has now made a difference to the career of yet another international cricketer.While Imrul’s Test career finally took off in 2014, he never quite hit the same note in the limited-overs game. He has opened in all but seven of his 60 matches, but was always playing second fiddle to Tamim Iqbal. Even when he did well, Imrul always seemed to struggle to pace his innings suitably.Since his debut in 2008, under Mohammad Ashraful and Jamie Siddons, Imrul had developed into an opening batsman who needed to play catch-up at the top level. He had issues dealing with deliveries outside the off stump, especially those angling away. He was comfortable against straight and incoming deliveries, but when bowling attacks figured him out, he looked lost for options.The cut and square-drive were his strengths too, and along with scoring runs in front of square on the leg-side, a big innings depended on finding gaps in these areas. For the first three seasons of his international career, Imrul batted without having too much focus on him; much of the opponent’s attention when playing Bangladesh circled around Ashraful, Tamim and Shakib Al Hasan.When he lost his form towards the end of 2011, he was swiftly dropped and replaced by seven other openers who were tried with Tamim. Only Anamul Haque and Shamsur Rahman came close to filling his gap completely but via runs at No. 3 in the Test team, Imrul returned to the ODI squad after more than two years.Though in his return match against Pakistan in March 2014 saw him add 150 for the opening stand with Anamul, the next time he opened was in the 2015 World Cup in place of the injured Anamul. It was a disastrous time for him as he was a mid-tournament replacement with only some domestic innings under his belt. He feared that he was about to be dropped but in 2015, he emerged as an important Test batsman. The fear didn’t go away completely as he was in danger of becoming typecast as a “Test specialist”, a tag that can be career-threatening for any hopes of returning to white-ball cricket.His first attempt at reinventing his game came midway through last year’s Bangladesh Premier League after he had run into woeful form. He finished off with two rapid fifties, the second of which was in the final where he helped Comilla Victorians to the title.But this latest change in his general outlook is something that has been happening in the background for quite some time. At some point during Bangladesh’s long training camp this summer, Hathurusingha told Imrul to think outside his box.The aim was to give Imrul a greater presence at the crease through positive body language, so the coach told him to think of playing the cut and pull off every ball that offers width or is pitched short. At the same time he was encouraged to deal with good balls differently, go for singles or defend with intent, but bad balls, of which there can be plenty, should be hit for fours and sixes.It sounds like a simple message but Imrul’s career has perhaps changed for good. He has now found success with the new formula so instantaneously that he may not want to go any other way.He can now go after the bowlers in the first Powerplay and, given his experience, knows how to work the ball around when the slower bowlers come on. But with his mindset now reset to a more attacking mode, he will always be ready to put away the bad ball.

Kusal, Mathews, Siriwardana set up clinical SL win

ESPNcricinfo staff26-Jul-2015Tillakaratne Dilshan provided the ideal foil for Kusal, getting to his own half-century, and then reached a memorable landmark•AFPESPNcricinfo LtdThe pair added 164 before Dilshan was run out for 62. Kusal kicked on to his second ODI century, though, before he too was run out for 116•AFPRahat Ali was the only bowler to pick up any wickets, but his figures werent too flattering – 2 for 74•AFPMilinda Siriwardana smashed his first half-century in just 25 balls, including four fours and three sixes•AFPThen an Angelo Mathews fifty sparked a late blitz as 119 runs were smashed in the last 10 overs and Sri Lanka finished with 368 for 4•AFPAzhar Ali was part of a 51-run partnership for the first wicket to kick the chase off•AFPBut his partner Ahmed Shehzad was stumped for 18 in the 10th over•AFPMohammad Hafeez, who was later named Man of the Series, helped Pakistan keep pace with a steep required rate…•AFP… but once he fell, the middle order crumbled. Pakistan went from 121 for 3 to 178 for 7•AFPSachithra Senanayake, playing his first game of the series, took 3 for 39 to seal a 165-run victory for Sri Lanka. But Pakistan took the series 3-2 and will make the Champions Trophy cut, provided there is no more one-day cricket until September 30•AFP

'I handle pressure better now'

Vinay Kumar talks about Karnataka’s historic treble, how his bowling has improved, and his thoughts on making a comeback to the India side

Interview by Nagraj Gollapudi25-Mar-2014You are the only captain to have won three domestic titles in the same year. How proud are you?
It feels really great. We did not know how big an achievement this is. Our success mantra has been to take one game at a time. After winning the Vijay Hazare we thought, let us now aim for the next: Syed Mushtaq Ali [domestic T20].At what point during the Ranji season did you grow confident that this was going to be a different year?
We lost to Mumbai in Mysore in the 2009-10 Ranji Trophy final by six runs and I could never forget that pain. The next year we lost in the semi-finals (to Baroda), and the following year we lost in the quarter-finals [to Haryana]. Last year we again failed to get past the quarter-finals, losing to Saurashtra.We asked ourselves some tough questions: whether we lacked in our preparations or whether we were not taking the responsibility. At the beginning of this season we told ourselves we had the team but we were lacking in some small areas. So we decided all of us needed to take some extra responsibility. The belief and faith became stronger with every match, and we kept winning from whatever position we found ourselves in.In one of our final league matches, Mumbai needed 282 for an outright victory. We were playing on our home ground. It was a low-scoring match. Before entering the final day, we had a chat. We were playing on the centre pitch, which can be dicey. The cracks open by the fourth day. If we wanted to win the Ranji Trophy we had to get them out within 180 – that was our target. The way we went about things and performed and got Mumbai all out, I realised that this season we could actually win the title.Karnataka were the only team to win seven matches in this season’s Ranji Trophy. What were the areas that you stressed on?
We stressed to the batsmen that they [needed to] take the team to safe positions. In the 2011 final in Mysore against Mumbai, Manish Pandey was playing with such freedom, and in the dressing room we were making jokes and thinking we would win the match easily. But as soon as he got out, we folded. I have never been tired of reminding him that only if he had batted for another 15 overs we could definitely have won the match. Such small factors play a decisive role.This year Robin [Uthappa] took more responsibility for helping the batsmen and making them understand the importance of playing according to the situation and how to battle different conditions. He stressed on playing one ball at a time, as he felt that would help regain the focus. It is in the mind that you can win or lose a game.In the quarter-final against Uttar Pradesh, Karnataka were one bowler short in the second innings after HS Sharath suffered a shoulder injury in the field. Abhimanyu Mithun, your fast-bowling partner, recollects the moment when you walked to him and said that for Karnataka to make the semi-final, he and you had to deliver.
That match was as big as the Mumbai match. UP were also one bowler short after RP Singh got injured early in the first innings. I told Mithun we have better bowlers than the opposition, considering both of us have played for India. If we bowl even 90% to our strengths, to our potential, then very few batsmen can tackle us. This is the day we need to deliver.He was bowling short and it was annoying him. It was important for me to point out to him to bowl to his fields. For example, take the wicket of Mohammad Kaif in the first innings. As soon as he came in to bat I got a short fine leg and square leg. I know Mithun, when he gets a rhythm, can bowl lethal incutters with extra pace. Kaif usually tries to jab at such balls. So I set a particular field, but Kaif left a ball that came in and was bowled.

“This domestic season I have learned a lot about myself and how to bounce back from difficult situations. I really want to come back to the Indian team”

In fact Venkatesh Prasad, the UP coach, says he was waiting for you two to get tired as you were bowling longer spells. He was impressed by your determination, consistency and accuracy.
That was a quarter-final. It was not a league match. If we had not performed in that match then again we would have been out of the tournament. I did not want that to happen. That day we were never going to be tired despite bowling long spells. If you have the hunger to want to get them all out, you will not be bothered by exhaustion.What about your own bowling? What did you work on this season?
I am at my best as a bowler. I have lost about 3kg. When you look fit, it adds to your self-confidence. It has helped me run quicker in my bowling stride. My rhythm comes from my run-up, so losing weight definitely helped in many ways.You said earlier that you have improved as a captain because you have become better at following your instincts. But you seem to have also got better at assessing conditions.
Possibly. In the semi-final, against Punjab, we were playing in Mohali in really cold conditions. I had a catch in my back, which hampered movement in my left shoulder. I was advised to take an MRI scan. But I did not want to take any chances. That was because during the Mumbai match we had conceded the lead by barely ten runs. At that point I was not on the field because I had felt a niggle in my calf and had to visit the hospital for a scan. I had sat out for more than three hours in the process. If I had stayed at the ground I could have stopped Mumbai from taking the lead.In Mohali, I asked the physio to do whatever and get me back on the field. It did not matter whether I bowled or not. I just wanted to be there in the middle. We had elected to bowl but Punjab’s openers were taking advantage of some wayward bowling by the likes of Ronit More. On a fast pitch More was bowling lengths one bowls on a flat pitch and leaking boundaries. I told him the ball needed to hit the handle. He immediately had one of the openers caught behind.After a while I decided to bowl off a short run-up. The first ball was good, even though I did not finish my follow-through. I got a wicket in a couple of balls. I got the feel-good factor soon. I was bowling at 80% but that was fine because my sole aim was to hit specific spots on the pitch that would help cut the ball. The pitch was damp in the morning session, so if you pitched the ball in the right areas it would leave some tiny marks. Once the pitch was dry you just needed to pitch on those spots. I managed to get five wickets for one run. It was a dream spell.Usually every captain has one or two go-to players in the team. In your case do you feel you are your team’s go-to man?
In bowling, I agree. If there is a difficult situation I will take the ball immediately, because I know if I take a wicket or two that will help the team. Take the crucial match during the zonal stage of the Vijay Hazare, when we tied with Hyderabad. In the Powerplay I got three wickets in two overs and that was vital. In the Irani Cup, Dinesh Karthik and Harbhajan Singh were playing really well for Rest of India. Their partnership was building fast. I had not bowled much in that phase and decided to come back, and took Bhajji’s wicket. Next over Robin took a superb catch to dismiss Karthik. The match was in our grasp soon.”The belief and faith became stronger with every match”•ESPNcricinfo LtdFitness is an important element of your game. Prasad points out a good example during the Challenger Trophy final: You ran out Virat Kohli midway into your follow-through. Do you remember that?
Virat had played [the ball] towards midwicket. I was into my follow-through leaning to my left, but midway I stopped, changed my body position, jumped across the pitch, intercepted the ball, and threw it in one action to break the stumps. I had run out Unmukt Chand against Delhi during the league stage in a similar fashion.If I do not do a fitness training session every day, I miss something. I start feeling guilty. It has become a routine, and probably that is because of the culture I have observed in Karnataka cricket. When I made my debut for Karnataka I would see [Anil] Kumble, [Sunil] Joshi, Rahul [Dravid], Venky [Prasad], [Javagal] Srinath train regularly. If I had to reach their level, I had to train.Are you disappointed not being part of the Indian team?
I would say yes. You can see, I am always striving to perform and take a wicket. But one bad match in Bangalore (against Australia)…What happened that evening?
When a batsman can score 200 runs, at least one bowler will go for 100. Most of the bowlers went for 80-85 runs. In hindsight I could have bowled more yorkers. Instead I stuck to pitching more back of a length, even if I was getting hit for a six. Usually I would bowl a slower delivery or a yorker the next ball. Ironically I had been doing that the whole series [bowling short-of-a-length deliveries], making breakthroughs in Powerplay overs. I think I was the highest wicket-taker among the fast bowlers.Has MS Dhoni spoken to you about your bowling?
Like I feel I am my team’s go-to bowler, I feel – and I might be wrong – he sees me as one of his go-to bowlers. He has thrown me the ball during the Powerplay and death overs. Only if a captain has confidence will he give a bowler such responsibility. Once, after the 2011 ODI series in England, he told me I bowl well and have variations but I can get predictable. He had asked me to work on that area. I always make sure I bowl against him during the team training because he is a dangerous batsman. If you can restrict him, that gives you extra confidence. So yes, I remain confident about my chances of making a comeback.I have matured enough to handle the pressure better now. This domestic season I have learned a lot about myself and how to bounce back from difficult situations. I want to really come back to the Indian team, so I’m waiting.You have played one Test. How ready are you now to take the opportunity whenever it comes?
My performances with the red ball in both the Ranji and Irani tournaments were very good. In Perth I played as a fourth bowler on my Test debut. Eric Simons, India’s bowling coach then, told me that my duty was to give less than three runs an over. Straight away I was on the back foot: I just needed to try and bowl dot balls.Next time I get a chance, I will enter the ground with a different mindset. I will bowl more like a strike bowler. In the ODI series I was a totally different bowler. Even Dhoni told me he sensed I had not bowled 100% in the Perth Test match.You will agree that pace is not your biggest weapon. Do you have to rely on consistency, accuracy and control instead?
I cannot bowl 140kph. I can’t do that. I have to perform within my limits. I can bowl between 130-135kph, but the margin of error is very less. I have to be consistent and move the ball both ways. I have now also developed the inswinger, so I can definitely trouble the batsmen. Hopefully I will be part of the Indian squad for the World Cup, since it is happening in Australia and New Zealand, where the pitches and conditions suit my style of bowling. These three to four years are my peak ones and important for me. That makes me positive.

Tending to Australia's grassroots

Ricky Ponting, Ed Cowan and Mel Jones reflect on the importance of club cricket

Brydon Coverdale24-Oct-2012Michael Clarke played club cricket a couple of weeks ago. It was a news story. Imagine the novelty of seeing Australia’s captain turning out with the regulars at a suburban ground in Sydney. His appearances for New South Wales have been few and far between in the past few years, let alone for Wests. Among Australia’s elite cricketers, that is a common theme. In part, it is due to the international team’s rigorous schedule. Who can find time for a club game when Australia play nearly 100 days of international cricket per year, on top of state commitments?But a disconnect between club and country has been occupying the minds of Cricket Australia for some time now. Administrators have been canvassing clubs for ideas about what needs to be done to help cricket’s foundations. International players have been encouraged to return to their clubs when they can. It’s all about the grassroots. The importance of club cricket was the theme of Gideon Haigh’s Bradman Oration on Wednesday. After the speech, three international cricketers – Ricky Ponting, Ed Cowan and Mel Jones – sat in the ballroom of the Langham Hotel, one of Melbourne’s finest five-star establishments, and reflected on what club cricket had meant to them.For Ponting, arguably the best batsman Australia has produced since Bradman, club cricket was everything when he was young. The Mowbray Cricket Club in Launceston was the centre of his universe. His father, Graeme, had been a first-grade cricketer in his younger days, and came out of retirement to play in the third grade when Ricky was starting out as an 11-year-old. Ponting is an all-time great but his story could be that of any amateur player anywhere in Australia.”My club survived on volunteers,” Ponting said. “We’re a very working-class club that basically was run and operated on how much money we took over the bar on a Saturday afternoon. There were a few people who would put their $2 in to get a beer out of the fridge and they’d take $5 out. We’ve done things pretty tough at my club. I’m very proud of my upbringing and where I came from.”I remember as a nine- or ten-year-old boy, getting on my BMX and riding all over northern Tasmania to find wherever the Mowbray Cricket Club was playing. I was always the first there. I’d be sitting in the change rooms when the boys got there and when they went out on to the field I’d be going through their bags and picking their bats up and putting their gloves on, and making sure I put them back in exactly the same position again so they didn’t know.”They’d come off at lunch and I’d be sitting in the corner waiting for the boys to come in. Then after play I’d sit around and listen to the stories they were telling about the day’s cricket. That’s where I learnt the game. I learnt from my club-mates and older guys who had been through many on-field battles. Through listening and watching and learning, I think a lot of what I learnt from them is part of what I am now as a cricketer.”Ponting put something back into his club as soon as he was able. When he emerged as a first-class cricketer, while still a teenager, he was sponsored by a local Launceston bakery. He appeared in a TV commercial for the bakery and he donated his fee to the Mowbray Cricket Club. It was enough to build new club-rooms. Mowbray had made Ponting, and he wanted to return the favour.Cowan also has fond memories of life as a teenage club cricketer. As a 15-year-old, he started playing with Sydney University so he could play with his brother, a uni student. As a kid in a university environment, he learned quickly the ways of the world. He also learned that a cricket club doesn’t run by magic. As every volunteer at every sporting club around Australia knows, keeping the cogs turning is a hard, and sometimes thankless, task.”At the time when I went to Sydney Uni it was really a struggling cricket club in the competition,” Cowan said. “There was talk of mergers, there was talk of being kicked out of the competition. At that point of time it was a very amateur club being run essentially by undergraduates. Some very good people behind the club got the club moving forward, and it’s done a full circle. It’s probably now the premier cricket club in Sydney, has a very effective management and some great players are coming out. I think for 50 years they didn’t produce a first-class cricketer and all of a sudden they’ve had five or six in the last five years. It shows what a cricket club can do when it gets its act together.”On the day that Ricky Ponting scored the 78th first-class century of his career, he spoke of the importance of Australia’s club game•Getty ImagesCowan now lives in Hobart and plays for the Glenorchy Cricket Club, and for Tasmania. But he feels more a part of the Sydney University community than his new club. Every Saturday he texts his old mates to see how the club fared. A group of his Sydney club-mates flew to Melbourne for the Boxing Day Test last year and watched Cowan make his Test debut. They had seen him through his ups and downs, progressing from fringe state player to a recipient of the baggy green.The sense of community provided by club cricket isn’t exclusive to men’s teams. Jones represents the oldest women’s cricket club in the world, the Essendon Maribyrnong Park side. For 108 years it has been providing female cricketers with a base. Some go on to play for their state, a few for their country. They all call their club home.”As much as most Australian cricketers would like to play more and more international games, the beauty of it is we spend 90% of our time in club land,” Jones said. “When you speak to most of the girls, they have some of the strongest connections to club cricket. It is really like a family. We probably know our people and our club members more so than the guys do.”Last Friday night I put the hessian and the covers down while all the young kids were doing something else, it’s all the same things [as the men]. You go through the fact that the club-rooms are rat-infested, you try to clean the barbeque, all those sorts of things. All those things are exactly the same. We used to wear culottes so we’d get bad wedgies. That’s a bit different to the guys, but overall it’s the same sort of community.”*************So what is the future role of these clubs, these mini-societies that have allowed Australia’s finest players to blossom? For decades, they were the only avenue a player could take if he or she wanted to progress to state cricket, and ultimately to represent Australia. These days, that is not always the case. Skilled junior players can be identified early and are whisked off to under-age carnivals, where their talent is further spotted. Names are pencilled in as future first-class players and piles of club runs are not a pre-requisite. It’s an issue that worries Cowan.”[We need to] make sure that club cricket is still the most important pathway to first-class cricket,” Cowan said. “I think there has been a tendency to maybe veer away from that and look at youth carnivals and these kind of things. But a strong club competition where young players can play with men and learn about the game and learn about themselves, I think that’s the most important thing for Australian cricket.

“If there’s been a regret in my life it’s the fact that I haven’t had a chance to be around club cricket more”Ricky Ponting

“I’ve seen people come into state squads who haven’t done particularly well in club cricket, because they’ve done well in youth cricket, and they haven’t quite understood the game or how to succeed at the game. I think club cricket gives people that base. You know if you’ve succeeded at club cricket you’re ready for first-class cricket. I think that’s the biggest challenge, to make sure it’s the most important pathway.”Reconnecting Australia’s international players with their clubs can only help in that regard. Last year, Cricket Australia asked its players to ring some randomly selected club cricket volunteers from all over Australia and thank them for their hard work. Coincidentally, Ponting called a woman from Mowbray, who was thrilled to hear from him.”The four or five other guys who I rang thought their mates had set them up on a prank,” Ponting said. “Thirty seconds into the conversation they were saying ‘mate, I’m busy, I’ve got some work to do, I’ve got to go’. I’m not sure how it went down or what the feedback was like back at Cricket Australia but I thought it was fantastic, one to be recognising the volunteers that have made our clubs survive.”Having the international and state players return to their clubs as often as possible is another goal. Last time Ponting played for Mowbray, nearly 5000 people turned up to watch the match. But that was seven years ago. International commitments, combined with the fact that he now lives in Sydney, have prevented Ponting from playing for his club since then. That’s something he wants to change, and he has a genuine passion to give back to the game that has provided him with so much.”If there’s been a regret in my life it’s the fact that I haven’t had a chance to be around that club more,” Ponting said. “The way that my life has been, being a professional cricketer at the age of 17, being on the road and away from home for most of that period of time, you just don’t get as much time back at our clubs as we would like. I know that’s a big thing that has been spoken about in the last 12 months since the Argus review, international players being back in their states and playing more, and what that hopefully means is you can get back to your clubs more, and be involved with a younger generation of people.”Cricket and young cricketers need to be able to see their heroes. It would be great if I could spend more time around my club, or around primary schools, promoting the game and giving these young kids something to aspire to in the flesh. I’ve always been passionate about that. Once my life starts to wind down a bit as far as cricket is concerned I’ll make sure I’m doing that, because I feel that’s a role of mine.”And you never know. The next Ricky Ponting could be in one of those schools, or he could be sneaking into a club-room somewhere around the country, absorbing everything he hears. All the more reason for Australian cricket to tend to its grassroots.

What has happened to Mitch?

He arrived with a huge reputation but Mitchell Johnson’s performance at Lord’s has left him under pressure for his place

Alex Brown at Lord's18-Jul-2009From the loungerooms of Launceston to the Long Room at Lord’s, no single issue has dominated discussion quite like Mitchell Johnson’s plummeting fortunes in England. The conquistador of South Africa has been reduced to an erratic, unreliable bit-part player this week, placing tremendous pressure on his fellow bowlers and greatly reducing Ricky Ponting’s options.The world’s third-ranked bowler was the third best paceman in the Australian attack on Saturday, and a distant one at that. Too short, too wide and too easily dominated by England’s openers, Johnson left Ponting with few alternatives other than to withdraw him from the attack after just three overs in the hope Peter Siddle and Ben Hilfenhaus would prove less wasteful with the new ball.Johnson was eventually redeployed in the 27th over, and hardly inspired confidence by spearing the second ball of his second over towards the slips cordon and only just within reach of an outstretched Brad Haddin. A burst from around-the-wicket went some way to straightening his trajectory, however, and Johnson, for the first time in the series, managed at least to contain England’s batsmen over the course of a ten over spell.That Australia was satisfied with Johnson merely tying up an end indicates the extent to which the situation has deteriorated. Johnson was brought to England to provide vigour and menace, not contain, and his lack of direction and form continues to be the most pressing concern for Ponting entering the final three Tests of the series.So what precisely is the problem? How has a man who broke Graeme Smith’s hands twice in three Tests become a bowler whose performances are best viewed through barely-splayed fingers? Is the slide reversible?Three recurring themes have emerged from conversations with sources close to Johnson on both sides of the Australian camp. They are, in no particular order, a lowering of arm height, an attempt to bowl too quickly and a domestic situation in which Johnson’s mother has publicly harangued his fiancée in the Australian tabloids.The last of these issues is the most difficult to gauge in terms of its impact. A sensitive soul, Johnson has rarely, if ever, had personal issues aired in public, and his mother’s inflammatory letter to a Melbourne newspaper just days out from the Cardiff Test can hardly have helped his state of mind. Johnson was, until recent years, known as much for his shy demeanour as his express bowling in Australian cricket circles, and the combined effect of a public squabble and the pressure of “spearhead” status in his first Ashes series cannot have been easy to manage.The mechanical aspects of Johnson’s bowling are easier to identify, though not necessarily to fix. Troy Cooley, Australia’s bowling coach, has worked at length to restore Johnson’s arm height over the past 18 months, and despite success in recent series in Australia and South Africa, a more round-arm release has set in.A lower release point, even by a degree or two, can substantially reduce a left-armer’s margin for error. A taller, more orthodox delivery arm should offer a paceman greater control of length, and lessens the likelihood of the ball spraying laterally. And in attempting to live up to his reputation as Austalia’s bruiser-in-chief, Johnson has sacrificed swing for pace. Or so the theory goes.

The Australian captain is in desperate need of a bowler who can penetrate the defences of England’s best batsmen, and build pressure in partnership with the likes of Hilfenhaus and Nathan Hauritz. Johnson has failed in both regards to date

These are not necessarily new problems. On tours of the West Indies and India last year, Johnson struggled for consistency, but in neither case was he bridled with the responsibility of leading the Australian attack. His man-of-the series effort in South Africa and elevation to the role of spearhead for the Ashes series – in which every triumph and failure is magnified – has delivered him to a plinth he has never previously occupied, and one that has left him exposed as form and confidence have deserted him. Anonymity is no longer a luxury he can count on.But such discussions are of little help to Ponting in the immediate term. The Australian captain is in desperate need of a bowler who can penetrate the defences of England’s best batsmen, and build pressure in partnership with the likes of Hilfenhaus and Nathan Hauritz. Johnson has failed in both regards to date. Figures of 3 for 200 from 38.4 overs – including no second innings wickets – tell the tale of a man struggling for control over his game, and Johnson’s body language has too often resembled that of a downtrodden trundler rather than the modern day gladiator Ponting had counted on.Assuming England declare their second innings closed early on Sunday, there is little Ponting can do to rectify the unmitigated disaster that was Johnson’s outing at Lord’s. Edgbaston is another matter, however. Despite stubborn attempts to maintain the fast bowling unit from South Africa, Australia’s selectors will now be sorely tempted to reintroduce the reassuring presence of Stuart Clark and/or Brett Lee into the attack, but just who would make way remains a sizeable point of contention.Without doubt, Hilfenhaus has been the pick of Australia’s pacemen while Hauritz, playing through the pain of a dislocated finger on his spinning hand, has grown in stature with each innings this series. Peter Siddle has not been as evident in the wicket-column as his peers, but has interspersed several blistering spells between occasionally wild ones. On intimidatory grounds alone, he is worth persisting with.That, then, leaves Johnson, who has done less to justify his place in the starting XI than Australia’s other three frontline bowlers. Demotion from spearhead to outcast in the space of three Tests would be both stunning and difficult to envisage, given the faith placed in him by Andrew Hilditch’s panel over the years, but in these desperate times little can be assumed.

Mashrafe Mortaza takes break from BPL to focus on political work

He played five games with Sylhet Strikers, but was clearly struggling with fitness issues

Mohammad Isam31-Jan-2024Sylhet Strikers captain Mashrafe Mortaza has taken a break from this season’s BPL to concentrate on his political career. Mashrafe is a member of parliament – he was elected for a second time in the country’s general elections earlier this month. His party, the Awami League, has appointed him as the party’s whip in parliament.”Mashrafe will be available to play for the Strikers further in the season if there is an opportunity in between his political commitments and schedule,” a statement from Strikers said on Wednesday. “Sylhet Strikers franchise has extended gratitude to Mashrafe for his commitment to the team in the tournament so far and looks forward to have him back when he is able.”Although he was clearly struggling with an injury, Mashrafe played Sylhet’s first five matches in the competition, all of which they have lost. It was reported that he couldn’t prepare for the tournament as he would have liked, so he bowled off-spin off a few paces, and batted in different positions in the batting order. It led to a lot of hue and cry, including from former captain Mohammad Ashraful, who said that Mashrafe’s presence in this state was “belittling the BPL”.Sylhet has announced that Mohammad Mithun will be the captain in Mashrafe’s absence. It is an interesting choice as Najmul Hossain Shanto, who has led Bangladesh impressively recently, is also in the team. Sylhet play their next match against Durdanto Dhaka on February 2

Dan Lawrence replaces retired Eoin Morgan as London Spirit captain

England batter has never previously captained in a professional T20 fixture

Matt Roller20-Mar-2023

File photo: Dan Lawrence celebrates a wicket•Alex Davidson/Getty Images

Dan Lawrence has been appointed captain of London Spirit men in the Hundred, replacing the retired Eoin Morgan in the role.Lawrence, 25, has never captained a team in a professional T20 fixture and his leadership experience extends to one Championship match for Essex and a warm-up match for England Lions in Abu Dhabi earlier this winter.He has played nine times for the Spirit across the first two seasons of the Hundred, scoring 135 runs and taking five wickets – four of them in a single fixture against Welsh Fire at Lord’s last summer.Related

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He was retained for the 2023 season on a £75,000 contract, and will receive a £10,000 bonus as captain.”It’s a real honour to be asked to captain this side,” Lawrence said. “Following on from England’s greatest white-ball captain is a huge challenge, but one I’m really excited to be taking on.”Spirit’s men finished third in the Hundred last summer, losing the eliminator against Manchester Originals at the Ageas Bowl. They have retained most of their squad and will make three signings in Thursday evening’s draft, including one overseas player.”We’ve got a talented group of players coming back this season, and it’s a great chance to build on last year’s strong performance,” Lawrence added. “I can’t wait to lead the team out in front of a packed ground at Lord’s.”Dan Lawrence celebrates a wicket with Eoin Morgan•ECB/Getty Images

Fraser Stewart, Spirit’s general manager, said: “We are delighted that Dan has agreed to captain London Spirit’s men’s team this year. He is tactically astute and is a very popular and respected member of the dressing room.”It’s also pleasing that he’s a local player from one of our partner counties, Essex, whose fans we hope will come to Lord’s to support Dan and the London Spirit teams.”The Hundred runs from August 1-27 this summer, and has a standalone window which does not clash with any England international fixtures – men’s or women’s – for the first time.

VÍDEO: 'Nossa história está longe de terminar. Queremos mais', diz técnico do Palmeiras após novo título da Copinha

MatériaMais Notícias

Paulo Victor foi o nome mais celebrado no gramado do Canindé após o Palmeiras assegurar o segundo título consecutivo da Copa São Paulo de juniores, nesta quarta-feira (25). Emocionado, o treinador alviverde garantiu que o trabalho está longe de trabalhar e que a base do Verdão continuará sua saga de conquistas. Confira:

continua após a publicidadeRelacionadasPalmeirasVÍDEO: ‘Nem lembro como foi jogada do gol’, diz herói de mais um título do Palmeiras na CopinhaPalmeiras25/01/2023PalmeirasJogadores do Palmeiras comemoram mais uma Copinha: ‘Agora é só festa’Palmeiras25/01/2023VídeoVÍDEO: A emoção das Crias da Academia com o título do Palmeiras na CopinhaVídeo25/01/2023

Bryce is right for Blaze as Sparks fall short

Allrounder Kathryn Bryce played the starring role as The Blaze maintained their 100% cent record with a fourth win from four in the Charlotte Edwards Cup, defeating Central Sparks by 10 runs at Trent Bridge.Bryce top-scored with 57 for out of 134 for 6 for The Blaze, sharing partnerships of 55 with sister Sarah and 40 with South African allrounder Nadine de Klerk, with Sparks seamer Emily Arlott taking 2 for 23.She then took 2 for 28 with her medium pace, with Blaze skipper Kirstie Gordon taking 2 for 22 as Sparks fell short despite the efforts of Katie George, captain Eve Jones and Courtney Webb in reply.Invited to bat on a cloudy afternoon, The Blaze lost both openers in the powerplay. England’s Tammy Beaumont, having helped Arlott’s loosener round the corner for a first-ball boundary, promptly miscued to midwicket. Teresa Graves hit Grace Potts to extra cover, where Eve Jones took a fine one-handed grab.Kathryn Bryce had an escape on 17 when she was put down at midwicket as she and Sarah plundered 55 in 44 deliveries before Sarah holed out to deep midwicket, leaving The Blaze 71 for 3 in the 11th.The Scotland skipper reached the half-century milestone for the second time in as many matches when she paddle-scooped George for her eighth boundary from 44 balls, following up by sweeping Baker for her ninth but was leg before trying to give the same treatment to the next delivery.De Klerk’s run-a-ball 19 ended with a second catch for Jones at extra cover. Arlott limited Marie Kelly’s contribution to a single but Ella Claridge and Josie Groves added potentially valuable late runs.Needing 6.75 per over, Sparks were behind the clock and three wickets down after their batting powerplay. They had lost Chloe Brewer to a fine catch by substitute fielder Michaela Kirk at deep midwicket, Davina Perrin to a tame return catch and Abbey Freeborn leg before to be 20 for 3.Jones, reprieved on 9 after walking on a caught-and-bowled by offspinner Lucy Higham that umpires Amy Clark and Anthony Harris ruled did not carry, was joined by Webb and by reaching the halfway point with no further losses the pair kept their side at least in contention.But that changed in the course of two tight overs as Sparks captain holed out to long-on off legspinner Josie Groves and Webb was caught by keeper Sarah Bryce off a steepling top edge off Higham, pushing the required rate up to nine, Pavely falling to a superb catch at midwicket by Ella Claridge as the last 30 deliveries began with 46 needed.Arlott hit two boundaries but was bowled by Bryce, leaving 20 needed off the last over, which despite the efforts of George proved too much.

USMNT forward Josh Sargent reportedly in talks with Wolfsburg over transfer from Norwich City

The Bundesliga side are reportedly looking to bring Sargent back to Germany, where he broke out as a professional in 2018

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  • USMNT's Sargent linked with Wolfsburg transfer
  • Burnley have reportedly showed interest as well
  • Striker looking to move on from Norwich City this summer
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  • WHAT HAPPENED?

    U.S. men's national team striker Josh Sargent is reportedly in discussions with German Bundesliga side Wolfsburg over a transfer from Norwich City this summer, according to The Athletic.

    Sargent, 25, has been linked with a move away from the club after a brilliant 2024-25 campaign at the club level, where he was the fourth-highest goalscorer in the Championship, with 15 goals in 32 games.

    He originally broke out in Germany as a teenager with Werder Bremen. On his 18th birthday in 2018, he signed a professional contract with the club, and then was a regular with the senior team until he joined Norwich in the summer of 2021.

    For the , Sargent scored 48 goals across 133 games in four seasons with the club. Internationally, Sargent has made 26 appearances for the USMNT, scoring five times and recording one assist.

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    THE BIGGER PICTURE

    manager Liam Manning told BBC Radio Norfolk on Monday that it's no surprise to him that Sargent is being linked with top clubs, but that as things stand, no deal is over the line and he's a Norwich player until that changes.

    “He’s top, you see that, you see what he’s done in the division, but the consequence of that is naturally he’s going to be linked with clubs at a higher level," he said. "We’ll have to see how that pans out, but I can’t speak highly enough of how he’s applied himself in training and how he’s gone about it.”

    If the deal gets over the line, Sargent will become Wolfsburg's second addition from the English Championship this window, following Sheffield United's Vinicius Souza.

    Internationally, Sargent will be looking to improve his stock with the national team by securing a top-flight transfer this summer ahead of the FIFA World Cup next year.

  • DID YOU KNOW?

    Newly promoted Premier League side Burnley have also reportedly shown interest in Sargent this window, but the price tag of $26.8M (£20M) has them monitoring the situation for now.

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    WHAT NEXT FOR SARGENT?

    Sargent, who missed out on representing the USMNT at the 2025 CONCACAF Gold Cup due to what manager Mauricio Pochettino labeled as a "football decision," reported for preseason with the earlier this month. On Monday, he was pictured participating in a training scrimmage for the club on social media.

    Norwich begins their 2025-26 Championship campaign on Aug. 9 against Millwall.

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