Darren Stevens celebrates contract offer with match-winning Oval spell

Kent squeeze past Surrey despite Ben Foakes’ battling half-century

ECB Reporters Network25-Aug-2020Darren Stevens celebrated being offered another year’s contract by Kent at the age of 44 by taking 4 for 41 to spearhead a thrilling 17-run victory against Surrey at The Oval and keep his county’s Bob Willis Trophy South Group qualification hopes alive.Surrey, needing 192 to win from 62 overs after bowling Kent out for a second innings 127, were themselves bowled out for 174 deep into the final session of a memorable contest.Matt Milnes was Kent’s other bowling hero, taking 4 for 57 – including the dramatic final wicket – and also producing superb deliveries to bowl both Sam Curran and Rikki Clarke either side of tea.Stevens had taken three wickets in nine balls in his opening spell to leave Surrey reeling at 20 for 4 but Ben Foakes’ excellent 57 had left Kent wondering if they could close out the victory despite taking regular wickets at the other end.Indeed, the last hour had just started, with 15 more overs remaining, when Milnes clipped the top of Matt Dunn’s off stump to bowl him for a brave 12 and give himself final figures of 4 for 57.Dunn had been left to make 28 runs for victory with only No. 11 Amar Virdi for company after Harry Podmore had rather fortuitously ended a second superb innings in the match by Foakes, having him well held by diving keeper Ollie Robinson from a legside ball after he had added another composed and high-class effort to his first-innings 118.Milnes’ other scalp had been that of Adam Finch, leg-before for 6 with 56 still required. There may not have been any spectators watching, but there was no shortage of tension, particularly when Foakes and Dunn were adding a calm 28 in 10 overs for the ninth wicket, as Kent fretted.Kent’s 22 points, and second win in four matches, puts them just six points behind south group leaders Essex with just the September 6 round games to go.Podmore picked up Mark Stoneman’s wicket in his own new ball burst during Surrey’s calamitous start to their chase, but Foakes and Laurie Evans then boosted Surrey’s hopes with a fifth-wicket stand of 57, until the irrepressible Stevens returned to the attack to take a smart catch off his own bowling with his third ball back to send Evans packing for a fine 53-ball 42.And Milnes made Kent heavy favourites, going into the last session, by nipping one back between left-hander Curran’s bat and front pad to bowl the England all-rounder for 14 and, in the second over after the interval, also defeating Clarke’s attempted drive.The evergreen Stevens has now bagged 20 wickets at 19 runs apiece in Kent’s first four BWT fixtures. But it is his record in the past decade that is most remarkable, especially when remembering that the veteran allrounder has also hit more than 7,500 first-class runs since 2010, including 16 centuries and 39 other scores above 50.Since turning 40 in April 2016, Stevens has now picked up an astonishing 213 wickets in county red-ball competition at 20.39 with his wily medium pace. Since the age of 35, moreover, that wicket tally is 438 at 22.50. Before moving to Kent in 2005, at the age of 28, he had hardly bowled in eight previous seasons with Leicestershire; in his first six seasons for Kent, he only took 87 Championship wickets as he slowly developed his bowling until becoming a recognised frontline operator.Here, he began by removing Scott Borthwick and Jamie Smith with his fifth and sixth deliveries to leave Surrey 6 for 2 at the end of the second over. Borthwick chipped to short midwicket off a leading edge, where Daniel Bell-Drummond took a fine diving catch, and Smith edged a forward push to Jack Leaning at second slip.There was no hat-trick but, with the first ball of his third over, Stevens won a leg-before decision to send back Will Jacks for 6 and – by then – Podmore had also had Surrey’s acting captain Mark Stoneman caught at first slip for 10.Jordan Cox, the catcher, threw the ball high into the air and let out a roar of celebration because, from the fourth ball of Surrey’s second innings, Cox had dropped Stoneman on 2 off a similar ball from Podmore that lifted and left the former England opener.No play had been possible before lunch, due to heavy overnight and morning rain, but hard work by the Oval groundstaff meant that a start could be made at 1.10pm with Kent resuming on 118 for 9 in their second innings.Last pair Nathan Gilchrist and Hamidullah Qadri added a further nine runs in four overs before Curran had Gilchrist caught at first slip by Clarke for 13 to finish with 4 for 39. Clarke, whose brilliant five-wicket spell had sliced through Kent’s second innings on day three, finished with 5 for 20.

Bursting of England's bubble shows how long the road to 2023 will be

First home ODI series defeat since 2015 reveals areas for improvement in World Cup cycle

George Dobell16-Sep-2020If part of the art of success in limited-overs cricket is peaking at the right time, England haven’t timed their dip in results too badly.There’s never a good time to lose to Australia, of course. Particularly given that the result was 5-0 to England the last time they visited. But this is still the early stages of the new four-year cycle towards the next World Cup. If ever there was a time to experiment and learn, it is now. Come the start of that tournament, in October 2023, the details of this series – fascinating though they are – will not be most people’s first frame of reference.On that basis alone, it may well prove unwise to read too much into this defeat. This is the first bilateral ODI series England have lost since January 2017 in India, after all. The first they have lost in England since 2015, when Australia were, again, the victors. Their long-term record remains excellent. And, in the end, they lost this match by a whisker to what Eoin Morgan admitted, quite accurately, looked “a better side”.In many ways, England will take a lot of heart from this series. For if there’s one quality that shone out it was their resilience. In all three of these ODIs – and in the first T20I against the same opposition – there were moments when it appeared as if they were going to be on the wrong end of a drubbing. To have won two of those matches and gone close in the two others demonstrates a certain amount of self-confidence and fight.”The positive is we can win when we don’t play our best games,” Morgan said afterwards. “We’ve seen the guys show belief and fight. Australia have out-played us but sometimes when you do that [win easily] you take things for granted. But these contests have been so tight we’ve learned a huge amount.”It’s worth remembering, too, what Morgan said ahead of the series. He said he welcomed the prospect of playing on lower, slower surfaces which provided assistance to spin as they considered both an area of weakness and a likely scenario ahead of the tournament in India.In that case, he will have learned plenty. And in some respects, it is that England have a long way to go before they can be considered favourites to retain their title. For, if they’re really honest, they will accept they were flattered a bit by the margin of defeat in the first game, escaped from jail in the second and saw a couple of familiar failings come back to haunt them in the third.”We’ve learned quite a lot about the group playing on slower wickets,” Morgan continued. “Having an opportunity to play on them for three games in a row is a rare one for us. It hasn’t gone our way, but certainly we have addressed an area of our game that is our weakest. We now have time to take it and work on it.”The thing they must improve most, in all formats, is their fielding. Whether in T20Is, Tests or ODIs, too many chances are going down to sustain serious hopes of winning the biggest tournaments. Morgan suggested his side missed the intensity created by a live audience, which is, no doubt, a factor. But it was telling that Australia seemed to manage far better.Glenn Maxwell and Alex Carey hold the Royal London One Day Series trophy•Getty Images

Two chances went down in this game. The first, Jofra Archer seeing a drive from Marcus Stoinis burst through his hands at mid-off, did not prove costly. But the second, Jos Buttler failing to cling on to a sharp but, by these standards, pretty much regulation chance offered by Glenn Maxwell off Adil Rashid when he had 44, was arguably the turning point of the game.The England management maintain they are working hard on the team’s fielding and no doubt that’s the case. But whatever they’re doing isn’t working. It’s an area that requires a rethink.Might that include Buttler behind the stumps? Probably not. He’s clearly an outstanding batsman in this format – despite a series average of 4.00 – and has performed decently with the gloves in the white-ball game. You only have to think back World Cup final to know that.But he is not convincing standing up to the spinners. Not in any format. And with the World Cup set to be played in India, it is an area that will require attention.There may be a vacancy in the spin-bowling department, too. The decision to leave out Moeen Ali on these surfaces was revealing. In normal circumstances, you might have thought England would even have considered playing a third spinner on such pitches but, with confidence in Moeen waning, they elected to pick only Rashid.ALSO READ: Maxwell, Carey centuries seal thrilling series win for AustraliaIt was understandable, too. Since the start of July 2018, Moeen is averaging 16.20 with the bat in 27 ODIs and has taken just 13 wickets at a cost of 86 apiece. His economy rate in that period – 5.75 – isn’t too bad but, by comparison, Adil Rashid’s is 5.71 (and his average 32.85) in the same period, Nathan Lyon’s is 5.01, while Mitchell Santner and Ravi Jadeja both concede 4.88 an over. Yes, Joe Root deputised nicely at Emirates Old Trafford. But at a World Cup in India, England may want to consider him a third spinner at best.Liam Plunkett has been missed, too. He would, if fit, have been awkward to face on these surfaces, in particular, and at this stage England look no closer to replacing his middle over wickets. It wasn’t necessarily wrong to move on from him – he is 35 now and unlikely to remain a viable selection by the time this World Cup cycle comes to a conclusion – but it was a reminder of how much he offered and the need to replace him. In general, this series was probably a useful wake-up call. England do not have a great recent record of resetting after achieving their targets. Consider the fate of the Test side which, having reached No. 1 in the rankings in 2011, was defeated by Pakistan, South Africa (at home), Australia and Sri Lanka (at home) over the next few years.Equally, when they travelled to Australia in 2006-07, they remained wedded to the team who had claimed the historic Ashes victory in 2005. Instead of refreshing it with younger player, they relied upon a team that was, in several cases, well past its best. So, coming up against a strong, motivated Australia team here may have been just the reminder of the levels required to maintain success at this level. Defeat will sting.There’s a bigger issue here, of course. The fact that we were able to see a result at all – the fact we’ve been treated to some terrifically entertaining cricket over these last two-and-a-half months – must be considered a great success. Bearing in mind the position we were in a few months ago, the achieving of playing the entire men’s international schedule is remarkable. It will help keep the professional game’s head just above the water.There are many to credit for this achievement with Steve Elworthy, the man who also ran the World Cup, a primary candidate. But England also owe plenty to West Indies, Pakistan, Ireland and Australia who have, in some cases, sent teams from regions where Covid-19 appeared to be less of a threat in order to help the ECB survive. This spirit must be remembered when future decisions about the game’s global finances are made.The coming weeks will see debates about the need to cut the pay of England’s top players. And, in the circumstances, it’s probably only right they share the pain. But it must also be remembered that some of them have spent 90 days, with very brief breaks here and there, in a hugely limiting bio-bubble.They decided long ago not to make any public complaint about this but to have been separated from their families, to have been unable to leave the ground, to have been stuck in the increasingly claustrophobic environment is some way more demanding that they have let on. Whatever the result of this ODI series, they – and all the other teams who visited this summer – deserve a lot of credit for that.

Warwickshire among England counties considering Pakistan for pre-season tour

Club mulling visit to Lahore to prepare for 2021 season after revelations England may travel to the country

George Dobell21-Oct-2020Pakistan’s reputation as open for business looks set to take another step forward with news that at least a couple of England’s first-class counties are considering the country as an option for their pre-season tours.Days after ESPNcricinfo revealed that England are considering a short tour to the country in January, it has emerged that Warwickshire are considering visiting Lahore as part of their preparations for the 2021 domestic season.ALSO READ: ECB confirms plans to undertake first tour of Pakistan in more than 15 yearsESPNcricinfo understands the club have held talks with Pakistan CEO, Wasim Khan, with a view to sending the entire first team squad to the country in March. Wasim, a former Warwickshire player, is believed to have guaranteed good quality training facilities and opposition.If the tour goes ahead, it seems likely the side will be based at Aitchison College. Two senior Warwickshire players, Will Rhodes, the club captain, and Oliver Hannon-Dalby, went on the MCC’s tour to Pakistan in February, which was also based at Aitchison College. Both enjoyed the experience and have given positive reports about the facilities on offer.A final decision will not be made until the club are satisfied that the tour is safe in terms of both security and Covid-19. Finances could also be an issue, with the club also understood to be considering La Manga, in Spain, as a pre-season option.Either way, the fact that Pakistan is being considered for such visits is a sure sign of progress. England have not visited the country since late 2005 due to security concerns.

Ian Chappell on how Australia should discuss taking a knee: 'It's got to be ongoing'

The former Australia captain gives his view on how the game should acknowledge Black Lives Matter

Daniel Brettig16-Nov-2020You come to this issue from talking a lot to Michael Holding about it in particular?I was very impressed with both Michael and Ebony [Rainford-Brent]. I thought it was really very powerful and stuff that needed to be said. I found it also educational – you figured there has probably been a fair bit of discrimination going on, but when you hear it first-hand and exactly how bad it is, it really hits home. I regularly speak to Mikey about things. Previously it was more to do with what was going on in America, he’d send me little clips or notes about events. So he sends me a lot, but more to do with America than with cricket.So how would you address the question of taking the knee, both personally but also as a captain leading a discussion?My personal view is that if I was playing now, I would be doing something, whether it is taking a knee or not, I’d be letting it be known that things need to improve. As a captain I think it’s very much an individual thing and I’d call the team together and say ‘okay, what do you guys want to do’ and if it was all ‘we’ll take a knee’ then fine, we’re all taking a knee. But if it was some do want to and some don’t, I’d be saying, ‘well alright, you do what you feel you have to do and it’s an individual decision, but you won’t cop any flak for that decision’.If I was taking that route, before I made it public, I would be dealing with the Board and saying ‘look, this is the situation, some players are going to take a knee and others aren’t, and I don’t want anybody to be punished for taking a knee – if that’s going to happen then there’ll be a problem’. I think that’s really important, because you don’t want guys suddenly disappearing out of the team because they’re taking a stand.Sounds like what we have seen in the WBBL, with some players and clubs taking the knee but others choosing not to?Exactly. That’s the first thing you do, sit down and talk about it. But I think in any situation where you’re taking a stand, I think it’s got to be an individual thing, and I don’t think anybody should be forced to do something against their will.How much do you think it is incumbent upon cricketers to have a decent level of understanding of events going on around the world, whether it is to do with racism or other matters?Certainly in the past I would say it was easier to make a stand or express an opinion once you’d retired, rather than while you were still playing, and I think the prevailing attitude was that if I’m going to do something, I’ll do it after I’ve retired. That being said, apart from Apartheid, there weren’t too many issues of that nature. In early 1971 at Newlands in a first-class game, both sides walked off the field after one ball of the match to protest the South African government’s stance, and that included guys like Barry Richards, Clive Rice, Graeme and Peter Pollock, Mike Procter and Denis Lindsay. That was a brave thing to do, but the prevailing attitude was ‘let’s not get political while we’re playing’. I think in these circumstances it is probably easier to make your feelings known as a player, because it’s happening worldwide in so many different areas of life.Both teams take a knee before the first ball is bowled•Getty Images

How would you respond to concerns about how the Australian men’s team might be received if some took the knee and some did not?You discover in life that the people who like you, it basically doesn’t matter what you do, they’ll still like you. And the people who don’t like you, same thing. So for people taking a knee they’ll get criticised and you’ve just got to forget about it. Whatever you do, you’ll get some critics, of the people who take a knee and of the people who don’t take a knee. But I’m with Mikey on the fact that it’s something that needs to be ongoing. It’s no good just doing it that Test series in England against the West Indies, and then it’s forgotten. It’s got to be an ongoing thing, because it’s an ongoing problem.What is your view on how far away Australian cricket is from reflecting the diversity of Australia?I think Cricket Australia has done more in recent times to try to address that problem. It’s only in very recent times that much has been done to try to attract Aboriginals to the game. I don’t think Australia took that opportunity until recently, but there have since been genuine attempts to improve that situation. It’s a very diverse country and there’s no doubt that cricket doesn’t reflect that diversity yet. Whether it will one day, it will have to, otherwise the game will be dying. If you’re going to totally rely on the Anglo heritage you’re going to be in trouble down the track.I think that’s really the first step. The kids going to the cricket have got to look out on the field and see diversity on the field. Thanks to the BBL and the WBBL they are seeing more, because overseas players are coming in. But I think that’s an important part of the process…if they go to the cricket and they don’t see anyone they can relate to out on the field, they’re going to think ‘well, this game’s not for us’.Lastly, what’s your perspective on how, as national men’s captains, Aaron Finch and Tim Paine, should discuss the issue with the team?The best way to go about it would be to have a players’ association level discussion. So you’re talking about all players, male and female, discuss it there. You’re probably going to come to the same conclusions about it needing to be an individual choice, but I think by doing that and letting it be known that the thing is being discussed by all players, that’s taking a bit of the onus off the captains. So I think that would ease the situation a bit if it’s made public that ‘this is a broad discussion we’ve had as players, male and female and this is the conclusion we’ve come to’. I think by doing it that way, one you make it clear to the public that it’s not the captains just saying ‘this is how it’s going to be done’, and also it’s sending a message to CA that ‘we’ve given this a lot of thought and this is the solution we’ve come up with ourselves’.

India on notice: Steven Smith 'finds his hands' again after disappointing IPL

He does not believe the India attack will be able to replicate the short-pitched approach of Neil Wagner last summer

Daniel Brettig24-Nov-20202:12

Smith: Stepped away from my natural game during the IPL

No matter how many “controllables” Cricket Australia have tried to control in the lead-up to a Covid-affected summer, how many biosecurity protocols, meetings with government or compromises with broadcasters, there will always be imponderables of sport that dictate how the season plays out.To the evident delight of Australia’s cricketers and coaches returned from the IPL and currently quarantining in Sydney ahead of the ODI, T20I and Test series against India, perhaps the most important of them all clicked into place over the weekend: hold the front page, because Steven Smith has figured out how to hold his bat again.That he has been able to return to the simplicity of long training sessions in between quiet hotel contemplations already looks to have been a blessing. Away from the relative cacophony of the IPL in the UAE, where he was captain of an unsuccessful Rajasthan Royals campaign, Smith has been able to find the clarity of mind and body he needs to hit a million-odd balls and, in his words, “find my hands”.”I was pretty disappointed actually with my batting throughout the IPL,” Smith said. “I never really got into a good rhythm, but I think the last few days actually I’ve found something. People close to me that know me well, I’ve found my hands the last few days, which I’m extremely excited about.ALSO READ: David Warner says Australia ‘trying not to engage’ in verbal volleys“It’s taken me probably about three and half or fourth months to do it, but found them now, which is pleasing and I actually look forward to going back to the nets again this afternoon to have another hit and just reinforce it and get started again in a few days’ time. Theoretically it is a simple thing, but it’s just getting that feel and the look of the bat behind my toe the right way and the way my hands come up on the bat.”It’s hard to explain but it just hasn’t quite been right until probably two days ago, I found a little something and everything just clicked in. I had a big smile on my face after training the other day, because I walked past [Australia’s senior assistant and also Rajasthan head coach] Andrew McDonald I think it was and said ‘I found ’em again’, I was really excited.”All the way through his career, including Newlands and after, Smith has always retained an almost childlike love of batting and at the same time a sense of mystery to it: Smith knows how good he is but there are times when even he doesn’t know exactly how to find his best, other than to face countless throwdowns and hope that the old rhythm comes back. He is known for a recurring nightmare where he is timed out because he can’t find his bat, and has often spoken about the need to find his hands and all else that flows from that.Steven Smith glances fine•Getty Images

The weeks prior to the 2017-18 Ashes series were another such time. “The first Shield game or two I remember I was struggling with it…I remember I found it in the game against Western Australia at Hurstville Oval, something sort of clicked halfway through that innings I reckon, and then I was good to go,” Smith said.”It’s taken me a lot longer than usual, I don’t know why, whether it was a big [break], I pretty much didn’t bat for about four months during the start of Covid-19, maybe a bit longer, but I’m glad I’ve been able to find something the last few days.”The training time in Sydney has been valuable too for Smith to reflect on how his IPL approach will need to be massaged into something more rounded for the ODI and T20I series that prelude the Tests. “I think for me in white-ball cricket, it’s about playing my game in the way that I do it,” he said. “I think in IPL I got a bit caught up with trying to be a bit too powerful and that’s not quite my game I don’t think.”You know there are those players around the world who can hit sixes at will. I’m probably not one of those. For me it’s about hitting proper cricket shots and hitting the gaps and manipulating the field as much as I can. I probably went away from that a bit throughout the IPL. I know that’s the best way that I play. So keeping my thoughts clear and hitting the ball in my areas where I want to hit them. I still think there’s a need for a player like that in the short form of the game that’s for sure.Smith’s excitement inevitably features at least some element of making up for the summer he lost in 2018-19, when he could do nothing more than watch as the Australian batting order was unable to compile the sorts of tallies required to pressure India often enough. Certainly the Adelaide, Melbourne and Sydney Tests look as though they could easily have come to different conclusions with the addition of Smith’s presence at No. 4 for the hosts.”I don’t know if it makes me hungrier. I’m always pretty hungry to go out there and perform well,” Smith said. “I guess it was tough having to watch from the sidelines, particularly with the team not doing as well as they would have liked. And losing that series was difficult to watch knowing that I felt like I could go out and have an impact if I was playing. That was hard but certainly looking forward to this series. Two of the top teams going at it, two quality pace line-ups, two quality batting line-ups, and I think it makes for an interesting and exciting summer.”

Jake Ball joins Sydney Sixers to replace Tom Curran

The Nottinghamshire pace bowler was the leading wicket-taker in last season’s T20 Blast

ESPNcricinfo staff09-Dec-2020England pace bowler Jake Ball has joined the Sydney Sixers as a replacement for Tom Curran, who withdrew from the competition due to bubble fatigue, after his credentials were pushed by Nottinghamshire team-mate Dan ChristianBall was a reserve in England’s squad for the South Africa tour which was cancelled earlier this week after the Covid-19 cases within the biosecure bubble and will fly to Australia with the other members of the team who still have BBL deals. They will all undergo 14 days quarantine on arrival which means being available shortly after Christmas.Ball has not played for England since 2018 but returned to the set-up for the South Africa trip following an impressive T20 Blast season for Nottinghamshire where he was the tournament’s leading wicket-taker with 19 at 13.63 and an economy rate of 7.58.Christian, who himself has joined the Sixers this season, played alongside Ball in Nottinghamshire’s title-winning campaign.Jake Ball appeals successfully for the wicket of Jason Roy•Getty Images

“Jake has been a mainstay of our Nottinghamshire attack in my time there over the last six seasons, leading us to the domestic T20 titles in 2017, and again this year in 2020,” he said.”I didn’t hesitate putting Jake’s name forward upon hearing that Tom Curran was unfortunately unavailable. As the leading wicket taker in the T20 Blast this year, I’ve got no doubt that he’ll help us win games here at the Sixers.”The Sixers will be without captain Moises Henriques for the start of the tournament. Initially that was due to his selection in the Australia A squad but he has been ruled out of the match against India at the SCG with a hamstring injury. He is aiming to be available for the Sixers’ match against the Strikers on December 20. Daniel Hughes will captain the side in his absence.They are in action on the opening day of the tournament when they face the Hobart Hurricanes on Thursday night.

Issy Wong breathes 'sigh of relief' as England women train in New Zealand for first time

Birmingham Phoenix retention is on tour to help her development as a fast bowler

Matt Roller03-Feb-2021England Women have trained for the first time since reaching New Zealand, which fast bowler Issy Wong described as “a big sigh of relief” after seven days of isolation at their hotel in Christchurch.England’s touring party arrived in the country last week ahead of a limited-overs series starting on February 23, and have been tested regularly for Covid, including in the weeks before their departure. They have been split into four bubbles, and were allowed to train in those groups on Wednesday at the high performance centre at Lincoln University.On Friday, they will merge into two bubbles as they draw closer to the end of their quarantine period, and if their final round of Covid tests come back negative, they will travel to Queenstown on Tuesday ahead of warm-up fixtures on February 14 and 16 against a New Zealand XI.”It was a real sense of freedom to be training and playing on grass,” Wong said. “It’s a big sigh of relief to get out and do something. We’d prepared for the worst [with quarantine] and been pleasantly surprised. We have an outside area where we go can on socially distanced walks, which has been really good to get out of the room, and I’ve got my PlayStation with me so I’ve been playing a bit of NBA 2K on that.”Related

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Wong, the 18-year-old fast bowler, is not part of England’s squad for the tour but has travelled with the group to help continue her development. She will continue to work closely with Tim Macdonald, the team’s assistant coach, and admitted that the prospect of being able to live normally after quarantine has been a major incentive.”I think Heather [Knight] described it as the carrot dangling in front of us, and that carrot is getting closer. We’re all going to be very excited when we can get out and be free.”This tour was a really last-minute thing for me, which hadn’t even been on my radar. It’s such an amazing opportunity to get outside first of all, but also to be around the squad and learn off this dressing room because there’s so much experience in there. I’m just thrilled to be here and be a part of it.”Wong was speaking to ESPNcricinfo after being retained by Birmingham Phoenix in the Hundred, having opted to roll her contract over to this year. Having played only three games in the Rachael Heyhoe Flint Trophy – part of the new domestic structure – for Central Sparks last summer after heading in and out of England bubbles, she is relishing the opportunity to have a longer run of games in the new competition.”How often do you get the opportunity to represent your home city in the first year of a major competition? It’s not escaped me how big it is, and I’m really looking forward to playing for all the people that have helped me get there.”Fundamentally I love cricket, so for me to go out and play and be able to express myself while doing something I love is massive. There’s a real structure to women’s cricket now and it’s really nice to have a similar group of girls playing in the two teams [Central Sparks and Birmingham Phoenix]. It feels like there’s a pathway – a way to progress.In particular, Wong is excited to get the chance to bowl on good, fast pitches, with all fixtures in the women’s competition due to be staged at Test match venues. She forms part of a strong squad which includes Amy Jones and Sophie Devine, and which will be finalised in June ahead of the tournament’s start date in late July.”I’ve played against [Jones] in the KSL and she whacked me round the park, so the prospect of having her and Sophie Devine on my side this time is very exciting,” she said. “Even just taking in your surrounding at the top of your mark is definitely special, especially at a ground like Edgbaston. I’ve been going there to watch cricket since I was eight or nine so to be bowling there is amazing.”The quality of pitches was something we noticed last year in the Rachael Heyhoe Flint Trophy. There’s been some criticism of women’s cricket that teams don’t score enough runs and bowlers don’t get enough bounce but actually when we get onto those Test grounds, teams were scoring 270 or 300 in 50 overs, and the ball was getting through a lot more.”There’s always half an eye on the speed gun for me but I want to bowl well. It’s always nice to be feeling quick but at the same time there are other things to focus on. Hopefully I’ll build on my experience from last year and work on my skills to make the most of it.”

Ben Stokes endures all-round off-day as England fail to strike right balance

Lack of familiarity with England T20 role plays part in underwhelming display

Matt Roller14-Mar-2021There can be no worse sound for a bowler than the blare of the no-ball klaxon, not least when you are under the pump, defending an under-par total with a set Virat Kohli on strike. For Ben Stokes, it was a brutal moment which summed up a frustrating night.Having foxed him with a slower ball only to find out he had overstepped by a fine margin, Stokes rushed Kohli for pace as he looked to swing him into the leg side, hitting the sort of length that had worked so well for England in the series opener. But the ball flew away off Kohli’s outside edge, travelling 61 metres to clear the fielder on the third-man boundary and fly into the lower tier. Stokes offered a wry smile in response.But an over later, that expression had turned to one of clear frustration. After Ishan Kishan had creamed him over square leg for six off the sixth ball of his first (and only) over – which cost 17 – Stokes had a straightforward chance to dismiss the same batsman at long-on off Adil Rashid. A wicket might have given England half a sniff, but he shelled the catch and the rest of the chase proved to be a cruise.Those ten minutes were the nadir on a night which lent credence to the theory that England are yet to work out how to get the most out of him in this format. Stokes’ overall record in T20Is says more about the infrequency of his appearances as his ability – this was only his 10th appearance since England’s last series in India, in early 2017 – but England will be desperate to get him as much experience in his roles with both bat and ball as possible ahead of the World Cup later this year.In particular, it was intriguing to see him coming in below Eoin Morgan at No. 6, with the two switching roles from the positions they had filled during England’s series in South Africa at the end of 2020. “It was primarily based on trying to get me into the game while the seamers were on and not necessarily the spinners,” Morgan explained. “It didn’t actually work out that well – they continued to bowl spin and one over of seam. My record against seam coming into that stage of the innings is better than against spin, so that was the call that we made.”The result was that Stokes failed to time the ball during his scratchy innings of 24 off 21 balls, which included only a solitary boundary down the ground off Bhuvneshwar Kumar. According to ESPNcricinfo’s ball-by-ball data, Stokes was out of control for nine of the 21 balls he faced as he struggled against India’s seamers and their intelligent variations at the death. As a relatively slow starter who usually takes five balls to get set, it may be that Stokes would benefit from coming in ahead of Morgan in the future.Given the weight that England have rightly placed on IPL experience in their T20 strategy over the last five years, it is surprising that they use him in a significantly different role to the one Rajasthan Royals found for him last season, when he was promoted to open and made a success of the job. It seems unlikely that there will be a re-think for either team, which means England will be desperate for Stokes to get as much exposure as they can in the final three games of this series.Related

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“[His best role] is in the middle order,” Morgan said. “We saw in South Africa how well he played. I don’t think it’s an easy role: I’ve done it my whole career and it treats you like crap the majority of the time. You need guys that really play the situation of the game and aren’t that bothered about taking risks when the team needs it. Ben is a guy that has that attitude and definitely has the skill to do it.”Stokes’ bowling is also a relevant consideration, not least given the balance that he has provided England with since the start of 2020. In that period, he has bowled 18 overs in eight matches, taking seven wickets at an economy rate of 8.72, and while those numbers are hardly eye-catching, they have offered Morgan a crucial sixth option in the middle overs when things have not gone to plan for one of his five main bowlers.With Moeen Ali likely to come into the side in Tuesday’s third T20I – which is due to be played on a red-soil pitch that England are expecting to be conducive to spin – Stokes will again be required to play a supporting role with the ball, and if India bring Axar Patel back into the side as a third spinner, he will be tasked with hitting with the spin to take him and Yuzrendra Chahal down in the middle overs.England see Stokes as an automatic pick in their T20 side, and their problems replacing him in the home series against Pakistan and Australia last summer – when they were unsure whether to bring in an extra batsman or a bowling allrounder in his place – demonstrate why. But with a World Cup looming, lingering doubts remain as to whether he can transform his pedigree in Test and ODI cricket into the shortest format on a more regular basis.

Fakhar Zaman, Faheem Ashraf hand Pakistan T20I series

Both teams suffered collapses, but South Africa’s 145 target proved insufficient in fourth T20I

Firdose Moonda16-Apr-2021Pakistan have pulled off back-to-back T20I series wins over South Africa, albeit not a team with their first-choice personnel at their disposal, and capped off their tour with a 3-1 win thanks to a strong bowling performance and despite a batting wobble. Pakistan made heavy work of chasing 145, and after coasting on 92 for 1 lost 6 for 37 to put South Africa on the brink of a series-levelling coup.That might have been more than what South Africa deserved after an under-par batting effort. Only three times in the 77 T20Is in which South Africa have batted first, have they been bowled out for fewer runs as the middle-order collapsed. Shaheen Shah Afridi had his best performance of the series, with a return of 1 for 19 in his four overs, after conceding at more than ten for the first three matches while Hasan Ali and Faheem Ashraf took three apiece to stall any acceleration attempts.After Babar Azam and Fakhar Zaman put Pakistan on track for a comfortable win, Lizaad Williams removed them both and Tabraiz Shamsi and Andile Phehlukwayo squeezed Pakistan but South Africa could not hold their nerve at the end. It’s an age-old problem which they will want to confront as they slumped to a fifth successive series T20I defeat.Safe hands, finally
Neither team had a fielding effort worthy of this series’ highlights reels with four dropped catches on each side but Pakistan pulled off a flawless display in this match and took all eight chances they got in this match.It started when Fakhar Zaman intercepted Janneman Malan’s aerial drive at head height to take the catch to his right and put the brakes on a South African innings that was ticking along at eight an over. That was the most difficult of the opportunities Pakistan got with the others fairly straightforward skied chances, though they still took some judgement. Zaman took another good catch at sweeper cover, and avoided a collision with Ashraf to end Sisanda Magala’s knock and Mohammad Rizwan dived full-length to his left to hold on to an Andile Phehlukwayo outside edge.South Africa didn’t do too badly either and held on to six chances. Their best effort was Shamsi’s running catch at deep third to get rid of Azam and put South Africa in a position to push for a win.Middle-over blues
South Africa went into this match a batter short after opting to bench Pite van Biljon in favour of a third allrounder and it backfired badly. After the openers were dismissed, they needed at least one of Klaasen or van der Dussen to bat through to avoid exposing a soft middle, but exactly the opposite happened. Klaasen and van der Dussen were dismissed in the space of five balls, failing to make proper contact on attempted big strokes, which sparked a collapse of 5 for 13 in 19 balls. Linde and Mulder both looked as though they were batting a position too high and Phehlukwayo’s death-hitting amounted to one attempted to drive on the up. After scoring 100 runs in the first 12 overs, South Africa managed just 44 runs in their last 8, to finish well under-par.Rizwan’s run ends
After Mohammad Rizwan stalked them all summer, South Africa would have been thrilled to see the back of him for a second duck in the series. Given his form, you can hardly blame Rizwan for stepping out of his crease to take on Bjorn Fortuin in the first over, but he overbalanced and missed his flick, allowing Heinrich Klaasen to pull off a stumping down the leg side. The last time South Africa dismissed Rizwan early, they cantered to victory but, with a low total to defend, they could not repeat that feat.Batting beyond Babar
Pakistan’s middle order have been largely untested on this tour and proved more fragile than they would like. After Zaman and Azam were dismissed in the same over by Williams, Pakistan had to rely on their most experienced batter Mohammad Hafeez and promising youngster Haidar Ali to take them through the second half of the innings. Haidar flicked a full Phehlukwayo delivery to deep square leg and Hafeez slog-swept Shamsi to long-on, to leave it up to the lower-order. Then Asif Ali was hurried by a Magala bouncer and popped him a simple return chance. Pakistan lost 4 for 17 in 37 balls which made what should have been a straightforward chase much more complicated. They needed 25 runs off the final 18 balls and six off the last over and got there with a ball to spare.

Daniel Bell-Drummond has much left to achieve after decade at Kent

‘It’s a brilliant landmark for me but I’ve definitely got a lot of unfinished business,’ new vice-captain says

Valkerie Baynes01-Apr-2021When he travels to Northamptonshire for next week’s County Championship season opener, Daniel Bell-Drummond will be just over a month shy of marking a decade as a Kent player.Bell-Drummond, the opening batsman who was recently appointed vice-captain of the club where he made his debut as a 17-year-old, believes he has plenty left to achieve.”It’s absolutely flown,” Bell-Drummond said from Canterbury. “I can remember it very clearly, my debut game here against Loughborough Uni in 2011, taking a bit of time off school to come and play.”Some of the guys get stuck into me about how long I’ve been playing, even [Kent batting coach] Michael Yardy says, ‘it makes me feel young,’ because he’s played against me a fair bit.”I still feel quite young. I’m 28 this year so there’s still a lot of time left hopefully and I’m looking forward to the season. It marks 10 years but I’ve still got so much to learn. It’s a brilliant landmark for me but I’ve definitely got a lot of unfinished business and I know I can be a lot better.”Related

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A productive winter in which he played for Colombo Kings in the Lanka Premier League – he scored 70 in a losing cause in the final – came after he ended last year’s T20 Blast as the leading run-scorer with 423 runs at an average of 42.30 and strike rate of 154.94. In the Bob Willis Trophy he managed 185 runs at an average of 23.12 with a highest score of 45.Following the Covid-19 pandemic’s impact on the domestic schedule last year, the prospect of a full season, which will include juggling his Kent duties with those at Birmingham Phoenix after he was picked up in the Hundred draft, is enticing.”I’ve had the least cricket in the last 12 months that I’ve ever had since being a professional cricketer so I should be ready,” Bell-Drummond said. “I’ve had enough time sitting on the sofa. I’m really looking forward to the summer ahead, being involved in the Hundred as well. My main priority at the moment is for our set of Championship games and doing well for Kent.”On that front, Bell-Drumond has started promisingly, scoring a century against Essex and a fifty against Middlesex in their pre-season friendlies.A second-place finish in the South Group behind eventual champions Essex in last season’s Bob Willis Trophy has Kent feeling they are headed in the right direction.They have recruited players at both ends of the experience spectrum, securing the services of West Indies fast bowler Miguel Cummins for the first eight games and on Wednesday announced the signing of 20-year-old Tawanda Muyeye on a three-year contract. Zimbabwe-born Muyeye, an attacking batsman who can also bowl handy off-spin, was the Wisden Schools Cricketer of the Year in 2020, an honour previously won by the Likes of Jonny Bairstow, Jos Buttler and Bell-Drummond himself.With captain Sam Billings having linked up with IPL side Delhi Capitals as he continues his recovery from a collarbone injury sustained while playing for England in their ODI series in India, Bell-Drummond is preparing to lead Kent for the early part of the Championship, as planned.”Having done the role a little bit before while Sam’s been away, I know what to expect and I’ve got some good coaches and senior players around me and keeping in contact with Sam from abroad so we’ve got a plan in place and I’m looking forward to playing my role in that for sure,” Bell-Drummond said.”It’s really exciting times, there’s a great balance within the squad, quite a few young players coming through who are very hungry to stake their claims, so I’m really looking forward to the year, not just from a personal perspective but from a team point of view.”

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