Liverpool vs Chelsea early team news

Liverpool will unleash Jordan Henderson in the holding midfield role in place of the injured Fabinho, according to journalist James Pearce.

The Lowdown: Reds hit with Fabinho blow

The Reds have been relatively fortunate in the injury department of late but that changed during their 2-1 win away to Aston Villa in the Premier League in midweek.

Fabinho limped off early in proceedings with a hamstring injury and the Brazilian will now miss both the FA Cup final and Liverpool’s two remaining league games this season.

His involvement in the Champions League final is also up in the air, as Jurgen Klopp’s men look to win a seventh European Cup in Paris, although reports late this week suggest he will be fit for the season finale.

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The Latest: Pearce drops early team news

Taking to Twitter, The Athletic‘s Pearce says that Henderson is now ‘set to play’ the No.6 role – the skipper has played just 13 of his 53 appearances this season in that position.

“Jordan Henderson set to play the holding role in Saturday’s FA Cup final.”

The Verdict: Silver lining

Fabinho is one of Liverpool’s most important players, mastering the defensive midfield role and being hailed as a ‘lighthouse’ by Pep Lijnders, so him being out is an enormous blow. The 28-year-old has averaged 1.6 tackles and 1.4 interceptions per game in the league this season, not to mention scoring an impressive eight goals in all competitions.

However, while Henderson’s usual role is further forward on the right of a midfield three, his record in the defensive spot this season is somewhat remarkable – of the 13 games he’s played there (12 starts), the Reds have won 12 and drawn just once, a win rate of 92 per cent.

The captain manages less tackles and interceptions per game than the Brazilian, but provides nearly twice as many key passes, so could make the side more creative against Chelsea’s stern back five set-up.

In other news, a ‘major’ Liverpool transfer update has emerged. Read more here.

Whelan backs Newcastle to sign Maddison

Former BBC pundit Noel Whelan has backed Newcastle United to sign James Maddison in the January transfer window.

The Lowdown: Bid rejected

As per Football Insider, the St. James’ Park outfit had a bid worth £40m for Maddison rejected by Leicester City in the summer, as they value the attacking midfielder closer to £60m.

It has been reported that the North East club will go back in for him in January, but the Foxes have opened talks with the Englishman over a new contract.

The Latest: Whelan backs move

Speaking to Football Insider, Whelan has still backed the Tynesiders to sign Maddison in January after hearing that talks have been opened over a new deal, insisting that they ‘won’t give up’.

The ex-Leeds striker said of the 25-year-old: “Newcastle have proven that when they set their sights on a player, they don’t back down.

“That number 10, creative midfielder – he’s the missing piece of the puzzle right now. Someone who can break into the box and find the final pass. He’s very good on set-pieces too.

“It’s another step forward to improving their squad, and he’d give them a lot more options.

“They won’t give up the chase. They’ve got the money, they’ve got the clout – and they’re showing that they can continue to progress up the table.

“Eddie Howe is doing a fantastic job of assembling a really competitive squad there.”

The Verdict: Possible

Even though Brendan Rodgers’ side may be reluctant to sell him in January, a move for the Magpies to sign Maddison still seems possible.

Hailed as an ‘outstanding’ player by Rodgers himself, the playmaker recorded the most goal contributions of any Foxes player in the Premier League last season, tallying an impressive 12 goals and eight assists from midfield (WhoScored).

This term, the 25-year-old already has two goals and one assist in the top flight (WhoScored), despite Leicester’s poor start, and he is sure to be a player in demand in January should the Foxes have to sell him.

England ride their World Cup luck for perfect day that may yet save tomorrow

With nothing less than the future of English cricket at stake, an extraordinary final helped reconnect the masses with the country’s summer sport

Andrew Miller15-Jul-2019Cricket, bloody hellAt cricket clubs up and down the country – most of which endured a peculiar bout of “cricket stopped play” interruptions at about 5pm on an extraordinary Sunday evening – there’s a motto that gets trotted out with wearying familiarity after every duck, every defeat, every jobbing spell of ropey seam-up that contributes to another fabulous waste of a weekend afternoon.”There’s always next week…”And there always is. For cricketers of pretty much any ability, from the local park to St John’s Wood, it’s a fact of this extraordinarily time-consuming sport that there’s always another contest looming in the fixture list – another chance to make up for your day-to-day blunders, to keep coming back for more, to keep dreaming of that one perfect day that will make it all worthwhile.But what happens when there really is no tomorrow? When all your yesterdays have been heaped up into a single turn of pitch-and-toss, and it’s not merely that you know it, you know that everyone who knows you knows it too?ALSO READ: Final tied, Super Over tied, England win on boundariesWelcome to the state of English cricket on the eve of a tournament that simply had to be a success. Welcome to the state of the World Cup final in a contest that simply refused to go quietly into the night.First, the shock and awe. What scenes! What tension! What bedlam! What sustained waves of hope and despair. What triumphs, what disasters … and what on earth were those two imposters doing, time and time again, in the very same passage of play? Ben Stokes’ swipe to the long-on boundary … a six! A catch! A six again as Trent Boult’s footing failed him in the most critical of moments … then Stokes’ extraordinary quirk of fate with three balls remaining, as a scuffed pull to midwicket was trebled in value by a pinball-style deflection off his own desperate, flailing bat.These are the details that will be dissected for years to come. Details that leave poor Jimmy Neesham – mere inches from heroism with first ball and then bat – joking (one assumes…) on Twitter that he wishes he’d taken up baking rather than cricket so that he could die fat and happy at the age of 60. Instead, he is condemned to look back in devastation for the rest of a tortured decade, on a match that simply delivered everything but justice to the vanquished.England players converge on Jos Buttler after he runs out Martin Guptill•Getty ImagesBut after all that disbelief has ebbed away, or hardened in Neesham’s case, like scar tissue, into a less painful reminder of the occasion … for the victors, the sweet relief! The shuddering sense of liberation for England, the hosts and, until this edition of the tournament, the most hopeless of World Cup combatants.Relief on the field, and in the stands. Relief in Trafalgar Square and other public parks around the land, where the masses gathered to be reunited with a summer sport that has forgotten at times in the past 15 years that it belongs to everyone, not just the paying few. And perhaps, most of all, relief in the boardroom at the ECB – roughly in the direction that Neesham’s Super Over six would have been heading had the Mound Stand not got in its way, and where the challenge will now be to make good on an extraordinary day when the sport got unquestionably its biggest break in a generation.For there were two competing narratives squabbling for attention as this summer’s main event bubbled to its crescendo. The desire, heartfelt for the most part, that the finest one-day team ever assembled in this country should end those 44 years of hurt and lift the World Cup at the 12th time of asking. But there was also the imperative – urgent and at times overbearing – that, no matter what happened in the final analysis, those very same players had to put on a show to remember.Well, bingo. Morgan’s men have fulfilled their brief with a heroism to which the mere lifting of a trophy cannot fully do justice. Have you been entertained? How could you not be, in the final for the ages, surely the greatest world title decider that has ever been contested, in any sport and any era?

If England got lucky, the ECB got luckier still … of that there is no doubt – just as they got lucky on this same ground two years ago, when England’s women transformed the horizons of their sport with what, until Sunday, appeared to be the most stunning World Cup final win imaginable. But we may not know quite how lucky they got until Channel 4 releases its viewing figures from its first day of terrestrial TV coverage since the 2005 Ashes …***”Just stop what you’re doing and watch this.””No, really, sod the tennis, and sod your parents’ obsession with the tennis, please watch this.””Please tell me you’re watching this…””Please…?”***

The whole day had been a confluence of circumstance from dawn until dusk. Everything came up roses in the end, but it didn’t half get a bit thorny along the way

That’s not an exact transcript of the texts I exchanged with my wife from about the moment that Stokes and Jos Buttler began to up England’s ante – but it’s a pretty decent approximation, give or take the odd rolling eye emoji (which still don’t translate too well to ESPNcricinfo’s written pages).I’m not proud of coming across as so needy, but in the second decade of the 21st century, being an English cricket lover has long since evolved from casual fandom, to something more akin to Seventh Day Adventism. It’s no longer enough simply to be a believer in the sport’s supreme virtues – those who know its glories have a duty to proselytise at every opportunity, to assume that those who profess no love for the game are merely lost souls waiting to be converted.And lo! Somehow, those prayers were answered in the most extraordinary fluke of timing since Stokes’ bat-deflected four. At almost the exact moment that the World Cup final was sent to a Super Over, a barely less epic Wimbledon final between Novak Djokovic and Roger Federer came to an end after nearly five hours. Suddenly, a wave of adrenalin-fuelled sports-affiliated channel surfers were freed to roam the listings and alight on the most extraordinary climax of an extraordinary sporting day.The whole day had been a confluence of circumstance from dawn until dusk, from the early morning rain that sheeted down the Lord’s slope to be mopped up in a puddle on the Tavern Stand rope, before evaporating into the most glorious of summer days. Everything’s come up roses in the end, but it didn’t half get a bit thorny along the way.For there’s been an undercurrent of angst throughout this World Cup. Of course, cricket is well used to feeling sorry for itself and fearful of its place in the public’s affections, but the helicopter dread has been something else for the past six weeks, like an over-attentive relative by one’s sick-bed. Is there too much rain? (“No.”) Is the format too boring? (“No.”) Have England blown it? (“Nearly, but emphatically no!”) Does anyone care? (“Maybe not as many as you’d hoped, but suddenly, more than you think!”)One wonders to what extent the near-suffocating importance of the bigger picture contributed to England’s mid-campaign wobble, when their back-to-back defeats to Sri Lanka and Australia left them staring into the abyss? For even in his moment of ultimate triumph, as he joined Bobby Moore and Martin Johnson in England’s captaincy pantheon, Eoin Morgan found himself using the phrase “participation levels” in only the second answer of his post-match press conference.Think about that for a second. There was barely any time for small-talk, no invitation to expand on the day’s “amazing scenes”, no “cricket, bloody hell”, not even a specific reference to the hero of the hour, Ben Stokes. Just a dry-as-toast but achingly valid enquiry as to the health of a sport that has been desperate for attention for a generation, and has now – thanks to his team’s efforts – captured the front and back pages of every newspaper in the land.

The enduring pity of this summer’s World Cup is that it never had the chance to be the shared occasion that the 2005 Ashes was

That was the World Cup final that soared – a game which started, dare we admit it, with England assuming they’d lucked out on a more pliant opponent than India or Australia would have proved to be, and with the World Cup organisers no doubt ruing the absence of a bigger name to share top billing. But those expectations were swiftly confounded. Suddenly, there were no more tomorrows. All the planning, and plotting, and praying came down to a question of human frailties in the clutch moments – as two nations held their breath.But what would it have meant for England to fall at the last, to have dribbled out of contention to a chastening 20-run defeat, which seemed entirely plausible in the latter stages of the chase. There’s only one frame of reference that can do the occasion justice, and coincidentally, it came on the very last occasion that cricket in the UK was visible beyond its usual confines of the tried, tested and converted.The final day of the 2005 Ashes at The Oval, of course – then as now a coronation waiting to happen, then as now, a collective freeze on the big stage, as England’s top-order was vaporised in a surge of aggression from a pumped-up Antipodean attack.Journalists can be a cynical bunch at the best of times, let alone the worst of them. But I recall vividly the chat inside the press room at lunch that day, as England – level-pegging on first innings, limped to 127 for 5, with two sessions of the series yawning before them like the mouths of Avernus.”If we lose this now,” said one seasoned hack, “it’s going to trigger the greatest public outpouring of grief since Princess Diana’s funeral.”Reader. England didn’t fail then, and nor did they now – thanks to a clutch of combatants who are surely about to become cricket’s first household names since Kevin Pietersen and his ilk all those years ago. But would the nation have genuinely mourned a loss on this occasion, or simply shrugged and walked away?Moeen Ali and Adil Rashid with the trophy•Getty ImagesThe enduring pity of this summer’s World Cup is that it never had the chance to be the shared occasion that the 2005 Ashes evolved into being. Those that knew of it enjoyed it, those that did not barely noticed. And those that have just been given the most succulent of tasters may find, just as was the case 15 years, that the very thing that has whet their appetite may be about to be whipped from under their noses.Fifty-over cricket, English cricket’s most obsessive priority for the past four years, is set to be relegated to the undercard from 2020 onwards, as the ECB clears the decks for the advent of The Hundred, and a more structured (if no less partial) return to terrestrial TV. But if two things are abundantly clear from Sunday’s gripping events at Lord’s, it is that cricket in a run-chase scenario is an extraordinarily compelling and accessible version of the sport. And if 12 balls of a Super Over can provide that much drama, there’s obviously scope for 200 to be amply satisfying.But it is also abundantly clear that English cricket just used up a lifetime’s supply of luck to lay claim to its one perfect day, and give itself the impetus with which to make a success of its new beginnings. Please, don’t mess up the legacy of this achievement, or next time, there really will be no more tomorrows.

'A day we won't forget'

Zimbabwe’s historic ODI series win in Sri Lanka was celebrated by many in 140 characters including Kumar Sangakkara, who also called for measures to improve Sri Lankan cricket

ESPNcricinfo staff10-Jul-2017

'The key is to break down data to what's actually useful'

New Zealand coach Mike Hesson talks about effective use of analytics in T20, what selectors look for when picking players, and analysing the opposition

Interview by Andrew Fidel Fernando05-Apr-2016How much has the T20 format changed while you’ve been a top coach?
When I first started, T20 was just about going out and expressing yourself, and if a couple of guys had a good day, you ended up on the winning side. Now I think T20 is the most analysed game, because things happen so quickly. If you can gain a small advantage from a tactical perspective, that makes a big difference to the outcome of the game. In the 2012 World T20, we played Super Overs against each of the finalists, so we knew that skill-wise, we were pretty close to two good sides. So we tried to find other ways of trying to gain that small advantage. Hence there is a lot of work done away from the ground by our analyst and support coaches. A lot of senior coaches add to it as well.Is data key to getting that advantage?
Only if it is real. We can all gather loads of data, but I guess the key is to break it down to what’s actually useful. What data is relevant is actually to the conditions you play in? What about the opposition? Is it a day game or a night game? What position are you likely to be in at that stage? You’re trying to look at trends rather than chuck a whole heap of numbers at players.Is T20 the format where data is most effective at yielding that advantage?
I think as long as you have enough of a sample. If you don’t have enough of a sample and you guess based on a small amount of data, you can be exposed. But there is a tipping point where you’ve decided this is a trend, and that you need to pay attention to it. For example, if you look at someone like Shikhar Dhawan, against offspin, he’s struggled. But you’ve only really got a nine or ten-ball sample – so you’ve got to make a decision on whether it’s too small to be a pattern, or do you take a punt on it.That’s what we looked to do in that first game in Nagpur, but it wasn’t something we were sure of. Similarly, Glenn Maxwell really struggles against left-arm spin and becomes a bit one-dimensional. On a turning wicket he became a bit of a one-trick pony, really, the way he looked to take Mitchell Santner on. The data sort of suggested that, and it played out during the day as well.

“When the selectors talk, we speak about adding context to players’ performances, rather than lining them up and picking who made the most runs”

Who gathers that data?
We have relationships with different countries – the ECB and Sri Lanka Cricket – where we share information. The matches are played in different time zones and through different TV networks, so we gather that. Some of it is more reliable than others.You have data on your own players. How much do you pass on to them? What do you hold on to?
Depends who the player is. Some players respond really well to information. Other players, you want to keep it as simple as possible, or you could just cloud them by throwing information at them. Grant Elliott loves stats and data. He’s a very thoughtful cricketer. The way he bowls, he has to stay one step ahead of the game, because he doesn’t run in and bowl 145. He has to be clever in how he operates. And also because he bats in the death, he has to have some cues about what they’re likely to bowl, so that he can hit. Kane [Williamson], meanwhile, has great intuition that data doesn’t see, so there’s a great strength there.How much more potential is there for data to be used in cricket?
I don’t think we do it as well as we know we can. For example, in baseball you can determine strike rates in little pockets or zones where the ball arrives. That’s really useful. Once you get to that point, then the game will keep evolving. Batsmen will identify where bowlers are going to target them. What we’ve found with all the different shots people are playing is that bowlers have caught up, and batsmen will have to keep evolving.What were you looking for when you picked the spinners for this tournament?
We felt that we needed two guys who could bowl in the front six. Nathan McCullum is definitely one. Mitchell Santner is someone who had done it a couple of times. And we wanted someone through the middle who could take wickets for us. Through that period in the middle where sides are trying to build, if you’re able to keep taking wickets, then you give yourselves opportunities to reduce the length of the death. That’s where Ish [Sodhi] has really stepped up. Just impressed with the way he’s bowled in the last 12 months. He started in Test cricket. He was in and out a little bit. He had some things that he’s gone away and worked on, and he’s certainly come back a far better bowler.”Grant Elliott loves stats and data. Because he bats in the death, he has to have some cues about what they’re likely to bowl”•Getty ImagesYou’ve said that you pick players to play specific roles. If someone is performing really well in domestic cricket, do you try to find a role for them in the team?
It’s all about context. Where are they scoring their runs? What role are they playing? How are they going against the best bowlers? How about on the tougher surfaces? Or when there’s spin? Has he put the team first? When the selectors talk, we speak about adding context to players’ performances, rather than lining them up and picking who made the most runs.Santner is a guy who – his domestic stats don’t suggest that you’d pick him. I think it’s more about what we saw in terms of the skill set. New Zealand wickets don’t spin. For a spinner, if you average 40 domestically, you’re going okay. Also, players take a little while to develop. You’re trying to select the player for what they are now, rather than what their stats suggest over a two or three-year period.Is pitch reading an art or a science?
I think it’s a combination. You know information about the ground and previous surfaces, but we also know that every pitch is different. You need to use your intuition and also gather information from other people around. I think there are some pretty simple characteristics, which if we understand, we know how the pitches are going to play. In terms of the clay, the feel of it. Firstly, you want to work out if there’s going to be any pace in it. You can work that out pretty quickly by looking at the grass cover. Very rarely do you see a pitch with no grass that will have pace in it.Sometimes you will also have a sheen on the wicket, and the new ball can kiss through. As the sheen disappears, it will grip on the surface. And then the feel of it. Are the cracks flaky? Does it move when you touch them? You can gather information on the dew factor as well. There’s a whole heap of information you can process, and you don’t always get it right.

“Gone are the days when you try and bowl six yorkers, because if you get two wrong, you go for 14 an over”

I guess one of your information sources is the curator, but that’s not always a reliable source, is it?
Of the four group games, three of the curators said it was going to be hard, fast and bouncy. In Mohali he was spot on. He didn’t actually make a judgement, he just gave us information. The other three said hard, fast and bouncy. That’s when you have to make your own assessment. It’s not as if people are being tricky. I think what’s hard, fast and bouncy for us is possibly a little different for others.Are regional variations gaining more emphasis in the years you’ve been involved?
I think so. I’ve been really surprised how slow the pitches have been for this time of the year. I know that towards the back end of the IPL the pitches slow up, because they’ve been used. But at this end of the season it has been slow, and I’m not sure of the reason for that.As pitches become more and more different, do you need to have a wider skill set in your team?
I think your best players adapt everywhere. As your other players mature, they do as well. Some players are better suited to certain conditions. That’s something that we’re becoming better at, as a support staff group. We know that our best XI is not always our best XI in those conditions. There are certain parts of the world, like South Africa or India, where you have to pick your best team for those conditions.Is T20 more a horses-for-courses format?
In New Zealand, for one-day cricket, the pitches are very similar. We produce very flat wickets with good pace – your best team is your best team. In India, sometimes we thought three spinners was the way to go – in Nagpur and Kolkata, for example. Mohali, we thought had more pace and carry. And with Dharamsala, we thought with Mitch McClenaghan bowling hard into the wicket, it would create some variation in bounce.Is it tough to leave out performing players when they are not needed in certain conditions?
I think every player reacts differently. Most players want to play all the time. But once players look at the bigger picture, or when we tell them we don’t want to keep playing them till they break, they come around. Without a doubt, the management in that is challenging, but we’ve got an outstanding group which thinks about the team. If it’s in the best interests of the team, sure there might be five or ten minutes when they’re frustrated, but really quickly they turn that around. They say, “That’s what the team needs”, put a smile on their face, and get on with it. We’ve got a really selfless group, and that’s evolved over a period of time. Selection has a little bit to do with that. Sometimes if you feel like you’re this close to being dropped, you can be a little selfish and try to get a score. But we try and make our judgements based on what you add to the team, rather than necessarily what your figures suggest.”We needed spinners who could bowl in the front six. Mitchell Santner has done it before”•AFPHow important is communication when you’re batting first and assessing a par score?
We get information from the guys that are out there – they are in the best position to assess. We think we know how it’s going to play, but we never truly know. There’s a lot of sharing going on in the group, a lot of talk between the guys going out to bat.We played a one-day game in Dunedin against Sri Lanka where it was nibbling around, and we were 80-odd for 5. The guys coming back said it was tough to bat on, so if we scrap our way to 200, it could be a good score. And then Luke Ronchi and Grant Elliott got going, and said: “It’s flattened out, we need to get close to 300 here.” It was a big change from 200 to 300, but I think we ended up getting 360. That day there was a continual passing back of information, so that we could change our sights.And there are times when you have to revise your score downwards. In our first World T20 match, in Nagpur, we knew it would slow up, but we didn’t know it would slow up as much as it did. Then it actually spun as well. I was thinking 140-150, but with Corey Anderson’s innings, he said, “If we can get ourselves to 120, we’re in the game here.” And in the end it was sort of an ugly 126. I thought we’d had about par there. We had to lower our sights there.You scout and analyse opposition players as well. Have you come across players who are tough or impervious to that kind of analysis?
Someone like Chris Gayle – his tempo is very different from one day to the next. The data you have is often irrelevant. You know if he flicks the switch, the game can change so quickly. Other days, you can actually create some dots, but you know the game is not over. You always know that as long as he’s out there, the game can change very quickly, so you need to get him out. You’re asking for trouble if you try to contain him.

“Some players respond really well to information. Other players, you want to keep it as simple as possible, or you could just cloud them by throwing information at them”

AB de Villiers is also tough because he can score 360 degrees. He’s very difficult to bowl a dot ball to, because he’s able to manoeuvre the ball anywhere. He’s very hard to stop in full flow. You need to try and identify an area that you want him to hit.Any bowlers who are similarly difficult?
With Mustafizur Rahman, we know what he does, but he’s got a good wrist, so he’s able to get good dip on the ball. It’s all very well picking him, but it’s tough playing him, because of the dip he gets and the grip. We haven’t seen a lot of him. We’ve seen a little bit but not on surfaces that grip so much as the one at Kolkata. He’s impressive.Jasprit Bumrah is also very difficult to pick up if you haven’t faced him before. If you’ve had the opportunity to even line him up a couple of times, then it’s not so difficult, but the first time is a real challenge.How much has scouting changed in the time you’ve been coaching?
We are more accepting that some players don’t want it. For some, one little gem is all they need. With Ish – if you keep it really simple with him – he knows how to bowl. You might see a hole in the swing of a batsman, and you tell him the wrong’un could be a good option. His plan’s really, really simple. He will set the batsman up to bowl the wrong’un.Can you give an example of when scouting gave you a very significant advantage?
Against Bangladesh in Kolkata, a lot of really good information came out from the bowlers’ meeting, with help from analyst Paul Warren and bowling coach Shane Jurgensen. We worked out the lines and change of pace that we needed to bowl. You’re used to bowling offspinners to left-handers, but maybe sometimes you’d bowl an offspinner to a right-hander. Basically we married up the data with the players we were facing, and the scouting plans were excellent.Has the yorker become less of a weapon now?
There are certain players and grounds where the yorker is great, and if you’re able to execute it, it’s a really good ball. But if guys lap and reverse lap, and you put your field back straight, then that challenges your yorker. Gone are the days when you try and bowl six of them, because if you get two wrong, you go for 14 an over. But there’s certainly a place for good yorker bowlers in the game.

Golden ducks for openers, and Mahela on song

Stats highlights from Sri Lanka’s close win against Afghanistan

S Rajesh22-Feb-20151075 Runs for Mahela Jayawardene in World Cup cricket. He is the fourth Sri Lankan in the 1000-run club, after Sanath Jayasuriya, Aravinda de Silva, and Kumar Sangakkara. His four hundreds is joint third in the all-time list; only Sachin Tendulkar (6) and Ricky Ponting (5) have more in the World Cup.56 Jayawardene’s World Cup average since the start of the 2007 tournament – he has scored 952 runs in 20 innings, with all nine 50-plus scores coming during this period. In 11 World Cup innings in his first two tournaments – 1999 and 2003 – he scored 123 runs at an average of 11.18.58* The partnership between Jeevan Mendis and Thisara Perera, Sri Lanka’s highest for the seventh wicket in World Cup matches.2 The number of times, in all ODIs, that both openers have been dismissed for first-ball ducks. The only previous such instance was in Guyana in 2006, when Zimbabwe lost both Piet Rinke and Terry Duffin for zeroes off their first ball.3 The number of instances of both Sri Lankan openers being dismissed for zeroes in an ODI. The two previous instances were against South Africa in Paarl, and against India in Sharjah in 1998.88 The partnership between Asghar Stanikzai and Samiullah Shenwari, the second highest for Afghanistan in an ODI against a Test team. The only higher one was 164, by the same pair, in the Asia Cup game against Bangladesh in 2014, which Afghanistan won by 32 runs.54 Stanikzai’s score in this game, which is the second best for Afghanistan in an ODI against one of the top eight teams. The highest is also by him – 66 against Australia in Sharjah in 2012. He has scored two of three 50-plus scores by Afghanistan batsmen against one of the top eight teams.86 Afghanistan’s score after 20 overs, which is their second best after 20 overs against a top eight team. They scored 95 against Pakistan in Sharjah in 2012.10 for 2 Afghanistan’s score in the batting Powerplay. They didn’t get any boundaries in these overs, and lost the wickets of Mohammad Nabi and Najibullah Zadran. Of the ten runs they scored, there were four wides and a leg bye, and only five runs scored off the bat in five overs. Sri Lanka scored 28 without losing a wicket in their batting Powerplay.1 Number of times Afghanistan’s top eight batsmen have all made at least 10. This was the first such instance.50 Wickets for Hamid Hassan in ODIs. He is the first Afghanistan bowler to get to that mark.16 Runs in wides conceded by Sri Lanka’s bowlers in the Afghanistan innings, the joint highest in the tournament so far.

Bell stands tall when England need him

There were very few of the strokes he is gifted with but Bell’s fortitude has given England the platform to strike the first blow in this series

George Dobell at Trent Bridge12-Jul-2013Sometimes it is not the shots a batsman plays that are so impressive, but those he does not.So it was for Ian Bell on the third day at Trent Bridge. Coming to the crease with the match in the balance – England were just 66 ahead when they lost their fourth second innings wicket a few minutes after Bell’s arrival – Bell summed up the conditions and the match situation perfectly in playing an innings of denial, patience and maturity to retain England’s hopes of escaping – and yes, it would constitute an escape – with a victory from this Test.It might just be remembered as his best innings for England. Not his prettiest, not his highest, but his most valuable, his most determined and his most professional.This is a slow, low wicket. It is a wicket on which attempts to force progress are strewn with danger. Where timing the ball is difficult. Where any attempt to push the bat in front of the body risks the possibility of playing-on, as Kevin Pietersen proved.So Bell waited. He played straight. He left well and he refused to be drawn into pushing at anything away from his body. He wore down a consistent attack who gained impressive reverse swing and bowled admirably straight, he waited for them to err and he picked them off. He had, by stumps on day three, faced 188 dot balls – from 228 deliveries faced – and not scored a single run between mid-on and mid-off. Ten of his 12 fours came from deflections, either late cuts or leg glances, behind the wicket.That constitutes a remarkable act of restraint from a batsman as gifted as Bell. He forged his reputation as a strokemaker who could time the ball with a sweetness granted to very few; a man who could make a packed house purr with pleasure and gasp with joy.But here, like Monet opting to use only shades of grey, he reined in all those attacking instincts to provide the innings his team required. While it would be stretching a point to suggest that he showed the determination to make ugly runs – even Bell’s nudges and nurdles are prettier than most – he did reiterate that he is far more than the luxury player that his detractors sometimes suggest.There are those that still think of Bell as an unfulfilled talent. It is an appraisal that perhaps says more about the great expectations that have burdened Bell than any reasonable analysis of his record: after 6,000 Test runs, an average in excess of 45 and 17 Test centuries, he has already enjoyed a fine career and, aged 31, there are trunk loads still to come.A persistent criticism of Bell is that he rarely scores runs in the toughest conditions; that his contributions may adorn but rarely define a game. It is a harsh judgement – he has valuable performances under pressure several times, not least at The Oval in 2009, Cape Town in 2010, Trent Bridge in 2011 and Auckland in 2013 – but it has been a tag that has been hard to shed entirely due to lapses of form that have been as maddening as they have hard to understand.Ian Bell in full flow was a rare sight on a day where scoring was difficult•PA PhotosBy the end of 2011 it appeared Bell had resolved any lingering doubts over his worth at this level. Recalled to the side midway through the Ashes of 2009, he scored 2,023 runs in the next 30 months and 23 Tests, averaging 72.25 and recording eight centuries. But set back by his struggles against Saeed Ajmal in the UAE Bell had scored only 898 runs in the subsequent 19 Tests ahead of this series at an average of 32.07. The doubts and whispers were starting to return.He will have quelled them here. Perhaps not for long – the vultures never sleep for long – but for a while. On the biggest stage, against a decent attack bowling at their best, on a tricky pitch and with his team under substantial pressure, he delivered. It was an innings without a caveat.One of the more revealing moments of Bell’s innings came when he was at the non-striker’s end. Exasperated – not for the first time – by Stuart Broad attempting a heave into the leg side, Bell came down the wicket to remind his partner of his responsibilities to the team. When Broad avoided eye contact, Bell gestured angrily to the fielder and shouted until Broad understood. It was the act of a man confident of his own senior position within the team and a man whose eyes were fixed not on a not out or a personal milestone, but on the team’s success. It was as impressive a moment as any in this innings.”We know how good Ian Bell is,” Kevin Pietersen said afterwards. “He does not need to keep proving it to us. But that was an absolutely brilliant innings. He has proven why we think he is a fantastic player. He has come out there and played a very mature innings on quite a tough wicket. Michael Clarke set some very good fields and their bowlers bowled really well.”It would be a shame, then, if Bell’s innings was overshadowed by the furore over Broad’s decision not to walk for an edge so clear that Stevie Wonder might have given it out. It was a poor decision from Aleem Dar – a great umpire enduring a moment of human weakness – and most batsmen would not have had the gall to remain.But the moral outrage should be suspended: very few batsmen walk in international cricket and while Broad was guilty of shamelessness, he was also consistent. There is no moral difference between a thick edge and a thin edge and, many of those who do walk tend to do so because they know they are going to be given out anyway.It would not have been honour that prevented them from doing so in a situation similar to Broad’s but an absence of his cheek. Unless the Australian batsmen in this series walk, they have little grounds for their indignation: Broad is no better and no worse than the vast majority of professional cricketers.Broad batted well. While his batting in recent months has tended to be characterised by the slogs and heaves of a tailender, here he was prepared to graft and wait a little more. It was not perfect – he was still lured into a couple of reckless moments that required fortune to survive – but he lent Bell the support the team needed and had already scored more runs in this Test than any since the 2011 Trent Bridge match against India. A series of long net sessions with Graham Gooch and, perhaps, a change of mentality, have done Broad the world of good.It might be remembered that two days remain in this Test. To listen to some commentators and analysts – not least Andrew Strauss – you would have thought that England would have benefitted from a more pro-active approach on the third day. It is not so.There is plenty of time left in this Test and Bell’s cautious approach was entirely appropriate. Bell gave the impression of a man who had the strength of his convictions to play the innings his team required; not to please the media or spectators. More hard work lies ahead – the lead respectable but not impregnable – but Bell’s fortitude has given England the platform to strike the first blow in this series.

A pitch that defied stereotypes

In an era that is hell-bent on spoiling its batsmen, pitches that offer bowlers some help are not necessarily a bad thing

Nitin Sundar at the MA Chidambaram Stadium02-Oct-2011The Champions League Twenty20 is doing its darnedest best to debunk the most enduring of all Twenty20 myths: that the format is about flat tracks, ugly slogs, fours and sixes, and hapless bowlers. After another low-scoring game ebbed and flowed before New South Wales took control, it is perhaps time to revisit conventional wisdom on just what variety of pitch contributes to a good game of Twenty20 cricket.By all accounts, this was a very good contest, though it ended with three overs to spare. With a measly 100 runs to defend, Mumbai Indians had blasted out the NSW top order, and were closing in on the lower middle order with intent. Harbhajan Singh had pressed slip, leg slip and silly point into service, but he had to hold the boundary-riders back. He needed wickets, but couldn’t afford to concede boundaries. This wasn’t slam-bang cricket – this was a round of chess in the rapid format, and it was intriguing while it lasted.Steven Smith and Ben Rohrer responded to Harbhajan’s gambit with a series of soft nudges for singles – ten on the trot at one point – on a pitch so sluggish it made grafting an ordeal. The challenge was accentuated by the fact that top-class fielders like Kieron Pollard and R Sathish were prowling inside the circle. Smith and Rohrer persevered, and took it to 44 needed off 48 balls.Smith, who at one point had been on 1 off 14 balls, chose that moment to produce the only six of the game – and the stroke he played wouldn’t have been out of place in an attritional passage of Test cricket. He skipped down the pitch to Yuzvendra Chahal, got to the flight, thereby negating the lack of pace and bounce, and whipped with a flourish over midwicket. It was a loaded stroke, and it came off. So telling was the blow, coming on the back of a bunch of clever singles, that, as if by magic, Mumbai Indians’ intent dissolved.The Champions League has produced some low-scoring thrillers•Associated Press”There was a pretty big gap at midwicket, and Chahal was bowling a few little back-spinners,” Smith explained after the game. “So I thought if I got it in the right spot there was a chance to get a boundary away and change the momentum of the game.”It was pretty tough at the start; they bowled well at the top there. I thought if I gave myself a chance to build my innings and work it around, and if I was there at the end, it would give us the chance of getting home.”James Franklin had played a similar role to the one Smith did earlier in the day: picking up the pieces after the Mumbai Indians top order had chucked their wickets away, on what he termed “a real grafting wicket”.”It was always a case of us trying to get a decent score [after those wickets],” Franklin said. “If we had got to 130, it would have made things interesting. Our bowlers gave us a chance of winning, but Smith and Rohrer batted outstandingly; they had lots of time, took minimal risks and got themselves through.”Simon Katich later panned the wicket, singling out the low bounce for particularly harsh criticism. But the fact remains there was nothing in it to justify a combined effort of 201 for 12 in 37 overs. It wasn’t a wicket for bull-headed slogging, as Pollard found when he attempted the ugliest of heaves against Patrick Cummins. It wasn’t a wicket for indifferent footwork, as Symonds found when he wandered out of the crease and missed a lash against Steve O’Keefe. It had a little bit in it for every kind of bowler – grip and cut for Stuart Clark, slow turn for O’Keefe, and zip for Abu Nechim. All it asked from batsmen was a little bit of patience. In an era that is hell-bent on spoiling its batsmen, pitches like this are not necessarily a bad thing.

One last drama, and a dream ended prematurely

Highlights of the seventh round of the Ranji Trophy’s Super League and Plate matches

Cricinfo staff22-Dec-2008

Sourav Ganguly turned up for Bengal one last time, and helped them through to the Super League
© Cricinfo Ltd

Turn again, tiger
So you thought he was gone? There was one final farewell left. And it was all Sourav Ganguly. The following, the elaborate build-up, the preparation, and the final act more or less lived up to the hype. Ever since he agreed to represent Bengal in the Plate League semi-final, a match that could take them to the Super League, the Plate League was sure to get a facelift.It started with the security arrangements. “We have our own security personnel at the stadium but since Ganguly will be playing, we have written to the local authorities to make adequate police arrangements,” said Ashok Dewan, the former India hockey goalkeeper, who is in charge of the stadium.Then came a foolproof plan. “I am sure the opposition will feel daunted by Sourav’s presence. And, if he fails, Goa is likely to be lulled into complacency,” Utpal Chatarjee, the Bengal coach, said. Neat.Ganguly played his part in what he had announced was his last first-class match. From 127 for 5, he took Bengal to 257 for 6, and scored a determined 69. Bengal ended with 337, which should have been enough for a first-innings lead, but an obligatory final drama remained. Fog and bad light threatened to eat so much into the game that at one point even a first-innings result looked improbable. In that case, Bengal would have lost out because of a poor run-quotient. But they managed the wickets in time, are back in Super League, Ganguly will never play again, Ranji trophy is Ranji Trophy again.And then there was more
Ganguly was not the only star attraction present at the Karnail Singh Stadium. With Bengal team, came Cricket Association of Bengal president Jagmohan Dalmiya. He had his share of spotlight too, but he said he was not getting into power battles with the BCCI now. “I have held all positions in my life, in ICC, ACC, BCCI and CAB,” he said. “One must know where to stop. I just want to prove my innocence. I’ve faith in the judiciary, and I don’t want to leave with a black spot.” Different folks, different battles.Dreamender
With Delhi working towards what could have been an incredible comeback, there was a fingerlickin’ good prospect at hand. If they made it to quarters, they would have had the services of Virender Sehwag, Gautam Gambhir and Ishant Sharma in the knockouts. And a certain Mumbai team would have got Sachin Tendulkar and Zaheer Khan back. And surely nobody could have prevented their clash at some point of time. But hey, hang on. Delhi first had to hope that Saurashtra did two points worse than what Delhi managed in their last league match.And Saurashtra, full credit to them, played the perfect spoilsports. They went for a big gamble, laid out a track that assisted spin, won the toss, batted first, conceded a marginal lead against Hyderabad, and then came back to win the match outright on the third day. Which meant Delhi could, at best, get only one more point than Saurashtra. When they came to know of Saurashtra’s victory on the third day, they were well placed to push for an innings win against Rajasthan. From thereon, though, they gave up, and went for some batting practice. So long Delhi, another champion team who have failed to make it to knockouts in their title defence.Will they, will they not?
With Wasim Jaffer saying before their last league game, against Punjab, that Tendulkar and Zaheer would be available from quarter-finals onwards, there was anticipation all right, but confusion too. Confusion because the quarter-finals start on December 26, which would only a two days’ gap for the duo after the Mohali Test. And why would Mumbai, group leaders, need them for a match against Himachal Pradesh? Perhaps because when Mumbai were desperate for full points last year, Himachal had thwarted their march, and that draw had proved crucial in Mumbai not making it to the semi-finals then.Anyway the confusion has been sorted out, and according to a release from the Mumbai Cricket Association, Tendulkar and Zaheer won’t play in the quarter-finals.Shane Warne’s boys’ corner
What a season Ravindra Jadeja is having. Cheteshwar Pujara started off as the star player for Saurashtra, but Jadeja has turned in big performances at crucial junctures to see Saurashtra through to the quarters. And when they played their big gamble in their last league match, against Hyderabad, it looked like going horribly wrong in the first innings. Jadeja scored 0 in Saurashtra’s 132. But he took 3 for 57 to keep the deficit down to seven runs, and then scored a crucial 31 to set Hyderabad 177. And then the star turn came: Jadeja opened the bowling, and took 7 for 31 to help Saurashtra win. With 30 wickets and 636 runs, he now No. 6 on the wicket-takers’ list and No.7 on run-getters’. Some all-round effort this.Quotehanger
“It’s good to play cricket again.”
Sourav Ganguly, before going on to say he doesn’t really miss the game

Phil Salt sprinkles touch of class as Lancashire secure home quarter-final

Northants struggle with bat before knockout hopes ended by six-wicket defeat

ECB Reporters Network02-Jul-2023Lancashire made it through to the Vitality Blast quarter-finals with a comfortable six-wicket victory that also ended Northants Steelbacks’ qualification hopes.Phil Salt smashed a 51-ball 74 as Lancashire chased down the Steelbacks 138 for seven with twenty balls to spare. The result means the Lightning will return to Emirates Old Trafford next Friday, where they are now unbeaten in 21 home games, to host their quarter-final tie against Surrey.Northants struck two early blows as the hosts set off in pursuit of their target, Jos Buttler cracking a short ball from David Willey to Saif Zaib on the cover boundary for 11, immediately after he had hit the bowler for six and four from consecutive deliveries. Steven Croft swiftly followed after top edging Tom Taylor to AJ Tye for 5.That left the Lightning ending the powerplay on 43 for 2 but Salt picked up the scoring with a six off Freddie Heidreich during a 35-run partnership in five overs with Liam Livingstone.Livingstone, the stand-in Lightning skipper, went for 11 slicing Taylor to Ricardo Vasconcelos at gully as Lancashire reached halfway on 74 for 3 but Daryl Mitchell was quickly into his stride driving Taylor for six into the pavilion seats.Salt continued to score freely as the hosts reduced their target to a-run-a-ball 44 before a mix-up saw Mitchell run out for 17. Undeterred, Salt reached a 40-ball half century by smashing Tye for six over long-on, and then took four, six, four off Justin Broad in the fifteenth over as the Lightning raced towards their target.The opening bat ended the contest in style with six off Taylor in the seventeenth over to finish unbeaten on a Lancashire-best 74 alongside Dane Vilas.A fine opening spell of 2 for 14 from three overs by Wood, after Livingstone had put the visitors in to bat, had Northants quickly on the back foot at the start of their innings. Vasconcelos was brilliantly caught for 12 by wicketkeeper Buttler diving to his left, followed by Emilio Gay who chipped the left arm quick to Luke Wells at mid-on two balls later.Northants then suffered a big blow when Willey departed for 10 attempting to hit Livingstone over midwicket to leave the Steelbacks struggling on 47 for 3, midway through the seventh over.Chris Lynn led an initial fightback launching Livingstone for consecutive sixes in the ninth over but he was then bowled for 35 aiming a big heave at Wells with the visitors on 74 for 4, one ball into the 11th over.Zaib pulled Mitchell to Wells at fine leg for 12 and the Steelbacks only managed to get any impetus into their innings during a 40-run partnership for the sixth wicket between McManus and Broad. McManus hoisted a slower ball from Tom Bailey into the hands of Wood at long-on having made 22 while Broad smashed a six over midwicket in his unbeaten 34 off 26 balls.Wood returned to bowl Tye for 1 as Northants closed on 138 for 7.