Why aren't the World Cup organisers prioritising fans?

The delay in announcing the final schedule and ticketing process has made it hard for the fans to plan their travel

Sidharth Monga11-Aug-2023On August 9 the ICC and BCCI finally announced the revised, and hopefully final, schedule for the “ICC Men’s Cricket World Cup 2023”, which will begin on October 5. Normally such an announcement so close to an event might offer the sport’s fans a reason for the delay and express regret for any inconvenience caused.The question of expressing regret, however, doesn’t arise in this case. What inconvenience can a change in schedule – no matter how late – cause to a fan if tickets haven’t gone on sale yet?Tickets for the 2023 ODI World Cup will be available to the public only from August 25, 41 days before the first match. To know how you can buy these tickets, please register with the ICC website from August 15. What we know so far is that if you are travelling to India to watch India play, or your team take on India, you will have to wait until August 31 to September 3 to try to get a ticket.Related

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This timeline makes it extremely difficult for fans from countries that can’t get an India visa without producing a confirmed itinerary. It won’t be a cakewalk for those who want to travel from within the country either. Flights and hotel rooms are already exorbitantly priced around key match dates. And if you book travel and stay without a confirmed match ticket, you could end up at the mercy of touts and other agencies offering even more expensive packages. There is distinct possibility now that matches not involving India might be played in front of relatively poor crowds.If the ten-team format didn’t already make the tournament exclusivist, the possibility of poor representation of travelling fans might make you question the “world” in the “ICC Men’s Cricket World Cup”.What about the “ICC” part then? The Men’s 50-over World Cup is the ICC’s flagship event, but the governing body has been virtually absent – at least in the public eye – while the BCCI delayed finalising the schedule and ticketing to an unprecedented degree. The ICC CEO, Geoff Allardice, practically expressed helplessness on BBC’s during the World Test Championship final this June. He said he hadn’t seen the schedule at the time but hoped to announce it “as soon as we possibly can”.Eventually, the schedule was announced with 100 days to go to the first match (and revised 43 days later). Forty-nine days later, we will reach a stage where the public can register on the ICC website to receive news and updates about tickets. Ten days after that tickets will go up for sale.In the absence of an official explanation for the late change in schedule, you can believe one of two reasons. First that two of Pakistan’s matches coincided with big festivals in Ahmedabad and Kolkata, and local police expressed their inability to provide adequate security for both the festival and the cricket. When these matches were moved, it had a ripple effect on other fixtures.The second reason was offered by BCCI honorary secretary Jay Shah during a press conference in Delhi on July 27: “If security was an issue then why would the match go there [to Ahmedabad]?” he said. “[October] 14-15 is not the problem. Two or three boards have written in, asking to change based on the logistical challenges. There are some matches where there is only a two-day gap, so it will be difficult to play and then travel the next day [and then play again].”Flights to and hotel rooms in Ahmedabad were already priced much higher than usual before the India-Pakistan game was confirmed for October 14, from the original date of October 15•AFP/Getty ImagesIf it is the latter reason, it is extremely accommodating of the BCCI to entertain such late requests from boards after they had signed off on the original schedule.We don’t know who is answerable for the delays because we don’t know for sure whether this World Cup has a tournament director or an organising committee. Sources within the ICC and BCCI say Hemang Amin, the acting BCCI CEO for three years now, is the tournament director but there is no public record of such an appointment. Some others in the two bodies aren’t even aware of such an appointment. The latest announcement identifies Amin as the “CEO of the BCCI”.There was no such ambiguity around the 2019 World Cup in England. In July 2016 – three years before the event – both ICC and ECB appointed Steve Elworthy, a veteran of three ICC tournaments already, the managing director of the World Cup. He went on to form a local organising committee, which is a combination of the host board and ICC officials. They are the people responsible and accountable for delivering a successful World Cup.If it is the first reason – date clash with festivals – the BCCI might deserve some benefit of doubt. No organisation wants to sabotage its own event. While festival dates are known well in advance, Indian bureaucracy can sometimes spring surprises on the BCCI. Then again, this is precisely why World Cups are planned well in advance. Brushing off these delays as an “Indian thing” will be a grave disservice to past BCCI administrations. For the 2011 World Cup, the BCCI appointed a public-facing tournament director, the experienced Ratnakar Shetty, and an organising committee well in advance. The first batch of tickets went on sale as early as June 2010.Perhaps the presence of Sri Lanka and Bangladesh as co-hosts helped push matters along in 2011. Almost like how coalition governments work better. To stretch the analogy, the mandate for the current BCCI administration is absolute, and power is heavily centralised with honorary office bearers, a complete departure from the Lodha Committee recommendations to make the functioning of the board more professional and transparent.Not to tempt fate, but the actual cricket during the World Cup should go smoothly. In all likelihood the pitches, outfields and dressing rooms will be perfect, the needs of the broadcasters will be fulfilled, and the teams will be well looked after. The people working on the ground are too experienced to mess that up.Neither the ICC nor the BCCI seemed anxious or apologetic about the schedule or ticketing delay because their bottom line will remain unaffected. The ICC will produce a fabulous broadcast and get its revenue. It doesn’t seem to see this as an impediment to its ambition of globalising the game and taking cricket to the Olympics. The BCCI will sell out all India matches, and will carry on as it does. Politicians, film stars, and privileged people willing to pay will get in to watch matches. Only the regular cricket fan will suffer. the regular cricket fan.

Santner needs to be more Santner than Jadeja

They have similar roles, but they are different bowlers, and their battle could determine the outcome of the first semi-final in Mumbai

Matt Roller13-Nov-2023They both bowl left-arm orthodox. They both bat left-handed. They both represent the same IPL franchise. They both took 16 wickets in the World Cup’s group stages. And this week, they will both play in the first semi-final at Mumbai’s Wankhede Stadium.If Mitchell Santner is New Zealand’s version of Ravindra Jadeja, then Jadeja is India’s version of Santner, too. They are vital role players, balancing their respective sides, and have been outstanding left-arm spinners of this World Cup. On Wednesday evening, they will face off with a place in the final on the line.It is a battle that could determine the outcome. Santner has spent half a decade as Jadeja’s understudy at Chennai Super Kings, and jokes that he makes their art seem easier than it is. “I’ve obviously seen how good he is,” Santner tells ESPNcricinfo with a wry smile. “He makes things look pretty simple at times – which is annoying.”Much as they have similar roles, they are different bowlers. “He keeps it pretty simple: he just bowls fast, into the wicket, and makes it pretty tough to hit,” Santner says of Jadeja. “I’m slightly different in the way I change pace a bit more than him, but if there’s a bit there in the wicket, it’s a pretty option just to go fast into it, and see what happens.ESPNcricinfo Ltd”Speaking to him, he obviously just wants to hit a spot for a long period of time and over here, that’s a very good option: some skid, some spin. Playing him in Test matches is impossible, really. Back in New Zealand, where there’s not a lot in the surfaces, the way I’ve coped is [by] changing the pace, trying to get a bit more bounce and some overspin.”CSK have struggled to get both left-arm spinners into the same team over the past five seasons: Santner has only played 15 IPL games, and has become accustomed to running the drinks: “I’ve been lucky to be in the same set-up for a long time. I know my position; they know my position. And if I get the chance, it’s just: ‘Do what Jaddu does.'”He is at peace with it, believing that his back-up status is simply a reflection of coach Stephen Fleming and captain MS Dhoni’s desire for continuity of selection. When they made a rare appearance together at the Wankhede seven months ago, they ran through Mumbai Indians: Santner took 2 for 28 and Jadeja 3 for 20 in a seven-wicket win.Related

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But over the past six weeks, Santner has observed a marked change in the tempo of the 50-over game compared to T20: “It’s been nice being able to settle into a spell a little bit more. In T20, you bowl a couple of good balls and think, ‘I need to get out of this over; I might just get cut for one’. But the beauty of one-day cricket is you can play the long game for periods, and then there are aspects that are [like] T20.”Against India, Santner has generally played the long game. Their top six comprises six right-handers, who have often looked to see him off and score their runs against other bowlers. In the teams’ group-stage match in Dharamsala, which India won by four wickets, Santner finished with 1 for 37 in 10 overs, conceding one four and one six.”We were able to chip wickets out, which is going to be key against these guys,” he reflects. “We know how strong that top six or seven is, before you get into the bowlers. They got off to a good start in Dharamsala, so they could knock me around a little bit. If they’re coming at me, it brings me into the game a bit more.”His approach on Wednesday will be dictated by conditions. “On a flat wicket, it might be more of a defensive role, potentially getting wickets through pressure,” he explains. “If there is a bit of spin, it might be about throwing it up there, trying to nick them off.” With a fresh pitch expected, Santner may have to defend.

“He keeps it pretty simple: he just bowls fast, into the wicket, and makes it pretty tough to hit. I’m slightly different in the way I change pace a bit more than him, but if there’s a bit there in the wicket, it’s a pretty option just to go fast into it, and see what happens.”How Mitchell Santner is different from Ravindra Jadeja

He will bowl in tandem with Lockie Ferguson through the middle overs: “We speak a lot about bowling in partnerships and passing the baton on. It starts up top: it makes me and Lockie’s job a bit easier if we’ve taken a couple of wickets up top,” Santner says. “The way Lockie goes about his thing, batters might try to take a few more risks against me – which is probably fair, rather than facing that heat.”Santner’s demeanour as an interviewee – his level-headedness once earned him the nickname ‘Flatline’ from his Northern Districts team-mates – stands in stark contrast to the bustle of Mumbai. We speak in the Taj Mahal Palace hotel, with chaos engulfing the streets outside the window over his right shoulder as he calmly previews the second World Cup semi-final of his ODI career.Ravindra Jadeja and Mitchell Santner played one game together in IPL 2023 – at the Wankhede•Associated PressThe first was a slow-burning epic, stretching over two days in Manchester four years ago. ” I remember looking out and it was just a sea of blue… It was random, coming back to bat for two or three overs. I think I had had 2 for 7 off six overs at one stage, before Jadeja popped me for a couple of sixes. Hopefully, we can do something similar again in a couple of days.”India are clear favourites, sweeping all-comers aside in the group stages with a nine-match winning streak. But New Zealand’s golden generation are determined not to be overawed by the occasion in Mumbai, and have their sights on a trophy that would secure the legacy of a side who have consistently reached the knockout stages of recent World Cups.”It’s been a good period for us: the guys are all similar ages, we’ve played a lot of cricket together now and that especially that bowling unit has been pretty secure for a while now. We know India are a great side at home and it’s going to be tough. But we’ll rock up on Wednesday, plan accordingly, do our thing, and see what happens.”

No regrets for Stokes but another case of what might have been for England

Ranchi result elicits rare display of defeatism after Bazball fails its India acid test

Vithushan Ehantharajah26-Feb-20241:00

Manjrekar: India won the little battles inside the big battle

In the end, it was a bit of an anti-climax.Shubman Gill and Dhruv Jurel, 24 and 23, respectively, knocked about the remaining 72 runs with ease, giving us a preview of what Indian cricket might look like for the next decade. Teams come here, graft, sweat and, sometimes, get ahead. Then at the end of it all, India win.Much like the last decade, to be honest. Which is why, on the face of it, a first defeat in eight series for England under Ben Stokes and Brendon McCullum is not all that bad.Ahead of the tour, Stokes regarded victory in a single Test as success. England achieved that at the first attempt in Hyderabad. What followed, as India roused themselves to take the next three, vindicates the point he was making. Nevertheless, at the end of an undulating fourth Test in Ranchi, he cut a forlorn figure.Related

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“3-1 doesn’t look great,” conceded the England captain, still wearing the toil of the day’s 53 overs on his whites and face. For a good chunk of the middle of that, his side felt on the cusp of something extraordinary.”We didn’t have a chance in hell of even competing with India,” Stokes said on the overall match-up. “But even today, that wasn’t an easy win for India, and I think they would admit that.”The assessment of his team’s chances was at odds with some of the key tenets for England under Stokes. Ironclad belief, competing no matter what, focus on bringing out the best of yourselves, and not thinking about the opposition.Perhaps he was just being realistic, considering a “young, inexperienced team” was up against one unbeaten at home for the last 11 years. He spoke of the pride he had for the way the players “reacted to everything, even being on the wrong end of three results”. But it was certainly his most negative, even defeatist, soundbite since taking on the role full-time at the start of the 2022 summer.Maybe that’s because this is the first time he has had to swallow defeat of this kind. Stokes, for all his altruistic qualities as a leader, has long been the worst loser in the England dressing room. That won’t have changed as a skipper, and it probably makes the losses sting a little bit more. There had only been four in 18 matches leading into this trip. Having remained upbeat for every day of his 21 months in charge, here was an understandable first slip.Ben Stokes leads his team off after India secured victory•Getty ImagesFaith in the principles remained, and certainly, as the fourth day in Ranchi progressed, Stokes had full faith a result would come with it. He was constantly tweaking fields, managing his bowlers and applauding between deliveries, bellowing instructions and encouragement throughout. When England took 5 for 36 to leave India shaken in their pursuit of 192, he was in his element.That collapse, triggered by Joe Root, facilitated by Tom Hartley and then intensified by three wickets from Shoaib Bashir, was exactly what Stokes had promised them the night before. The players returned to the dressing room late on Sunday afternoon, gutted by how a day that began with them 134 ahead ended with India needing what can now be described as a modest 152 more for victory.But Stokes, with support from McCullum, lifted their spirits and dared them to dream. As Bashir proclaimed on Sunday evening, having just pocketed his first five-wicket haul in professional cricket, “We’ve got a chance to be heroes.”2:05

Harmison: India won it more than England lost it

Bashir’s display put him front of the queue for that mantle, now with more than half his first-class wickets coming in two tastes of Test cricket. Together with fellow rookie Hartley, India were tied down, especially when 31 overs went by without a boundary coming off the bat. The spell was broken when Jurel laced Bashir through cover, which felt like a counterpunch to the gut given how few runs there were left to play with.”They’ll be able to leave at the end of this tour with their heads held very high,” Stokes said of his two spinners.As for the rest, Dharamsala offers some scope for solace. But as they split for the upcoming break ahead of that fifth Test – a handful, including Stokes, heading to Chandigarh, while the majority of the squad and the coaching staff travel to Bengaluru for a few rounds of golf – the opportunities spurned for what would have been a spectacular decider in the foothills of the Himalayas should rankle.

“This is by no means a weak India side, but it was a newer one getting to grips with itself. England preyed on those uncertainties at various points, but only made it count once”

A result such as this, with the odds against England from the start, is no time to reassess ideologies, and they certainly won’t. But the question to be asked is if they were the best versions of themselves, for long enough. The answer is probably not. Eventually, they will have to wrestle with “why?”England did not lose this series on Monday, just as India did not make it 17 home series victories in a row simply because of the class and poise of Gill and Jurel. But like the Ashes last summer, key moments have not been seized.They had India 177 for 7 on day two here, after fighting tooth and nail for an excellent first innings of 353. They allowed India back in with a passive opening session on Sunday. Stokes opted to start with Ollie Robinson, who bowled as incisively as you would expect a man who had not played a competitive match since July, despite looking sharp in the nets.It compounded matters when Robinson dropped a catch at midwicket that allowed Jurel to turn 59 into 90. And then during England’s second innings, even in conditions Stokes said made it “nigh on impossible” for the batters to impose themselves in their usual manner, they were 110 for 3 before losing 7 for 35.Rajkot, though, was the real killer. India were 33 for 3 on the first morning of the third Test after winning the toss, but were able to emerge with 445. England, in reply, were 224 for 2 before Joe Root played shot to set off a collapse of 8 for 95, giving up a 126-run deficit. All while the hosts were a bowler down after R Ashwin was ruled out of the match with an urgent family matter. He returned on the final day to pick at the carcass of the fourth innings as England crumbled.Consider India’s absentees, too. The world-class duo of Virat Kohli and Mohammed Shami have played no part, while KL Rahul has been missing from the first Test onwards. Ravindra Jadeja missed the second Test, and Jasprit Bumrah was rested for this one. This is by no means a weak India side, but it was a newer one getting to grips with itself. England preyed on those uncertainties at various points, but only made it count once.A project that has largely been successful will now faces its own mortality for the first time. And it does so as gleeful critics who predicted previous missteps that did not quite eventuate, now have a humbling defeat in India to feast on.Shoaib Bashir’s eight-wicket haul was a bright spot for England•BCCI”That is something that will be said [now] that we have lost our first series,” Stokes said of negative reactions to come.”A lot of talking points are after the fact of them happening. That is something I have come to terms with, something the team has come to terms with. But the way we play is pretty simple.”You can have it all taken away from you at the click of a finger, so why not enjoy every opportunity you have to play, and make sure you are doing it with a smile on your face regardless of what is happening? It is a very short career, so why not make it as enjoyable as you can?”Outwardly, there are no regrets, and they do have positives to nourish them. But winning, as they well know, would have made this more fun. And the common denominator between this right here and against Australia last year is a sense England simply were not ruthless enough to seize the initiative – something they talk about often – when games were in the balance. Not that Stokes agrees.”Ruthlessness? What is it? How does it show itself? Everyone goes into the game with their best intentions, when it doesn’t pay off people say we’re not ruthless but when they do, they say we are.”I don’t really understand the saying. That’s from my point of view; we try to do what we think is the best way to win the game. It can be a throwaway comment when people say we’re not ruthless enough. What does it mean?”It was a defensive answer from a leader who always covers for his players. A character trait that, all told, is why England were able to have regrets against such dominant opponents.At the same time, they now possess a glum-looking form sheet. Barring a victory over Ireland in a one-off Test at the start of last summer, England have not won their last three multi-match series, having drawn with New Zealand and Australia in 2023. They have lost five and won just four of their last 10 matches.Context is important. Australia are the reigning World Test Champions, and India, the beaten finalists, have been the standard-bearer for the format across both cycles of the competition. The two-match series with New Zealand – outside the WTC schedule – was not shown the same level of vigour.So, here we are. All done and dusted with a Test still to go. For the first time under Stokes and McCullum, the team must rouse themselves for one final push with little on it but pride in the shirt and pride in the process. The last match of the series must be the start of a new iteration of an approach that has breathed life into English Test cricket and jolted the format but needs refinement. For the time being, a group of talented cricketers will rue what might have been for the second time in nine months.The haters said Bazball could not work in India. And the haters were correct. Honestly, great call from the haters.

Mohsin Khan nearly lost an arm, but he's back to being Lucknow's enforcer

The year he made his IPL breakthrough, the LSG fast bowler suffered a traumatic injury that he’s still recovering from

Nagraj Gollapudi13-May-20241:45

Mohsin Khan: ‘I thought I would never play again’

Even in the thrill-a-minute world of T20 cricket, there are performances that stop you in your tracks – a shot, a catch, a ball, or an over. Such as the one delivered by Mohsin Khan, the Lucknow Super Giants left-arm strike bowler in May last year, when he successfully defended 11 runs off the final over against Mumbai Indians’ Tim David and Cameron Green.If you watched that over (9:13 onwards), you will understand why 25-year-old Mohsin excites selectors and cricket pundits, who believe he has the potential, skills and mindset to play international T20 cricket.I brought the over up when I met Mohsin late this March at the Super Giants’ team hotel in Lucknow.Related

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“I stepped out [off the field] to splash my face with some water,” he says about how he approached the task. “I completely removed the runs element [from my mind] about how many runs I had to defend, because otherwise I could easily get distracted and put myself under pressure if there was even one big shot. I just planned to go ball by ball and bowl each one well.”He needed all the calm he could get, bowling as he was to two batters who can demolish bowlers with extreme prejudice. Mohsin had his plans: against Green he pitched either back of a length, as on the first delivery, which was a dot, or on length, as on the second, which went for a single.”I usually bowled slower ones majorly back then, which everyone knew about,” Mohsin says. “So I decided I’ll do something different for the rest of the over: just yorkers. There was this voice which was coming from inside saying, ” [It’ll work.]A yorker is a confidence ball. You can be a Bumrah, a Jofra or a Mohsin; without confidence, a yorker can fail miserably in execution. Mohsin’s self-belief in that moment was high. He left third in the ring, a bluff. “” [I kept bowling, and it happened.]Last laugh: Mohsin celebrates the wicket of Yashasvi Jaiswal earlier this season, where after being smacked for 17 runs off the first five balls of the over, he got his man off the sixth•BCCIIt was a cathartic moment for Mohsin. His father had suffered a stroke about ten days before the game and was in hospital. Mohsin dedicated the win to him. “Papa usually gets happy to see me play,” he says. “When I called him later after the win, he was unable to speak, he just said ‘Beta’ [son]. I was happy with just that. My entire performance was for papa. He was the only thing on my mind during the match. I thought he would be watching, so if we won it, it would bring him happiness. He would feel a little better. I think a day or so later he was discharged.”

****

Mohsin’s family originally comes from Khalilabad in Uttar Pradesh. His father, who works in the UP Police, was transferred to Sambhal, about 700km away, east of New Delhi, where the family lives now. Mohsin lives in Moradabad, about 20km away from Sambhal, because the cricket infrastructure is better there.At 6’3″ Mohsin is tall and well-built. In bowling terms, his biggest strength is a high-arm action and a straight wrist. Despite being able to deliver speeds in excess of 140kph, he has a short run-up, just 11 strides. He says several experts have suggested a longer run-up, for extra speed, but he is not keen on fixing something that is not broken.His bowling was nearly much worse than broken a couple of years ago, when he almost came to the point of having to have his bowling arm amputated.After his debut IPL season with Super Giants in 2022, Mohsin went home, where, about a week later, when he went to the ground, he realised he couldn’t lift his left arm.”I didn’t have any injury. I had gone home immediately after IPL and was resting,” he says.He drifted in a wave of panic for the next few months, going first to the BCCI’s National Cricket Academy in Bangalore, whose medical staff sent him to Mumbai to consult the board’s specialist surgeons.Against Mumbai Indians earlier this year, Mohsin bowled nine balls to Suryakumar Yadav, Ishan Kishan and Tilak Varma for three runs, and cleaned Nehal Wadhera up with the tenth, a 140kph yorker•BCCIVaibhav Daga, consultant of sports physiotherapy and medicine at Super Giants, who also heads the sports science and rehab department at the Kokilaben Ambani Hospital in Mumbai, says Mohsin had an extremely rare injury, an aneurysm in the axillary artery in his left shoulder, which was hampering blood supply to his left arm, forearm and hand. “If there was a delay in the diagnosis and surgery, he would have probably lost his limb,” Daga says.Mohsin had his surgery in October 2022, performed by Dr Raghuram Sekhar, a senior vascular surgeon. “His limb was saved, but because the aneurysm was close one of the nerves supplying the muscles of the left arm and forearm below, there was compromise of the nerve supply,” says Daga, “which affected the strength in his triceps muscle which helps the shoulder and elbow mechanics while bowling.”A graft needed to be taken from a vein to patch up the arterial wall after the aneurysm was removed. An upper limb nerve surgeon was consulted about treating the compromised nerve supply, and Mohsin had treatment for that, though he was lucky to not have to have more surgery.The doctors had warned Mohsin he might need close to two years to recover and there was no guarantee he would play again. By December that year, he commenced rehab, working closely with Daga, Nitin Patel and Dhananjay Kaushik (the head of sports science, and the senior physio at the NCA). Though it took a while for the regeneration of the affected nerve, it began to function properly as rehab progressed, and Mohsin gradually got most of the strength in his left arm back, Daga says.

It didn’t seem that way immediately after the surgery, though. “When I used to try to lift my arm, it would just fall flat down on its own,” Mohsin says. “There was no power in the hand. I thought at one point my cricket career was over because my hand was not working at all. The triceps had no muscle. Now the muscle, as you see, is growing back, but if you compare it with my right arm, the muscle mass was significantly lesser on the left side.”By the time Super Giants started preparation for the 2023 IPL, Mohsin joined the squad, though he was not ready to play. According to Daga, the focus was to build on his running, bowling and throwing workloads and intensity, which all happened gradually.Eventually, about five weeks into the tournament, Mohsin returned to play for the first time since the 2022 IPL, against champions Gujarat Titans on May 7. He bowled three overs for 42 runs, picking up the wicket of Titans captain Hardik Pandya.”I was immensely happy,” he says. “Despite not playing a single practice match, I had played directly from IPL to IPL. I did not have an open net session [bowling to batters], but my team trusted me based on just two net [bowling] sessions I had prior to that match.”Mohsin’s IPL journey began in 2018, when Mumbai Indians bought him at his base price of Rs 20 lakhs (about US$31,000 at the time), impressed by his performance in the 2017-18 Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy.He did not play for Mumbai, but Mohsin had the privilege of working with former India bowling great Zaheer Khan, who was the team’s performance director at the time. For Mohsin, who grew up wanting to be a fast bowler from watching Zaheer on clips and TV, it was a dream come true, and he soaked it all up like a sponge.In the 2022 match where Mohsin bowled a spell to Virat Kohli that Ian Bishop remembers fondly, he also got rid of Faf du Plessis with one that shaped away to take the edge•BCCIAnother key mentor was Mohammed Shami, the senior India fast bowler, who is absent from this IPL, recovering from foot surgery. During the Covid-19 period, Mohsin trained with Shami at the latter’s facility in Uttar Pradesh. While the majority of the time there was spent focused on fitness, Shami also spoke to Mohsin about the importance of bowling lengths. “He suggested I pitch slightly fuller than the normal short-of-length delivery I bowl, especially against overseas batters, who are good at pulling or clearing the leg-side boundary.”When Mohsin joined Super Giants, former India opener Gautam Gambhir, was the franchise’s mentor-cum-head coach. “Gauti motivated me a lot. He said, ‘You are the only one who can make the impact. You don’t need to look at anyone. ball ‘ [When the ball is in your hand, you are king.]”The same kind of belief also came from Super Giants captain KL Rahul. “He is very cool,” Mohsin says. “I feel good and safe with his captaincy because even if I go for runs, he never says anything. “” is what he usually says.”In his first two IPL seasons, Mohsin largely bowled two overs in the powerplay, an over in the middle phase, and one at the death. But this season Rahul has used Mohsin more as a go-to bowler. In the match against Rajasthan Royals, he let Mohsin have three overs on the trot, which resulted in the wicket of Yashasvi Jaiswal. “Based on the game’s necessity in the situation, Rahul uses me,” Mohsin says.Bowling regularly in high-pressure situations as he does, Mohsin’s go-to delivery remains the slower delivery, he says. Harshal Patel, the Punjab Kings seamer who has a number of variations in his armoury, says a bowler needs lots of courage to execute the slower ball, and Mohsin agrees. “There are chances of getting hit, but my confidence is always high with the slower ball. It has given me the majority of my wickets in IPL, because with my pace and bounce, the ball can grip or stop, and that gives me an advantage.”Harshal says he has seen Mohsin evolve over the last three IPL seasons. “That’s how I judge new fast bowlers – is he constantly trying to build his repertoire or is he just going with the flow? Until last year I didn’t see him bowling yorkers. It was more into-the-pitch and cutters and all that. This season I saw the brilliant yorker with which he got Nehal Wadhera [Mumbai Indians], who was hanging back and not expecting it. The ball snuck under his bat and bowled him.””Where I am at the moment, I am just thinking about that. I am doing what is in my hands”•BCCIESPNcricinfo’s data shows that Mohsin bowled two yorkers in the 2022 IPL, three last year, and five so far this season – not enough to draw too many conclusions from, but that last number will likely go up, given LSG have at least two matches to go, and Mohsin is still working his way back up to full fitness.Former West Indies fast bowler Ian Bishop was impressed by Mohsin’s talent when he saw him in the 2022 IPL. “What stood out was his ability at his very best to bowl the hard length,” Bishop says, “to get the ball to deviate as well, and to be able to hit that good length.”I remember a spell, I think it was to Virat Kohli [in the Eliminator], where Mohsin just banged the ball in on a good length with enough movement that it was problematic to get away.”In that year’s IPL, in nine matches, Mohsin took seven wickets with the ball banged in back of a length or short, at an economy of just 6.11. His economy rate for balls in those categories spiked to 10.83 in the four matches he played in 2023, when he was fresh off his surgery, and he took two wickets with those deliveries. This season it has been 10.76 with six wickets in eight matches.Once Mohsin is back to peak fitness, Bishop is looking forward to him getting back to the bowler he was two years ago. “There are times this season when he’s been good but in 2022 he was very impressive.”Mohsin was forced to sit out Super Giants’ last match, against Sunrirsers Hyderabad last week, as a precaution, having left the field after hitting his head while fielding in the previous game, against Kolkata Knight Riders.This season has been an expensive one for him. He has predominantly bowled in the powerplay, where in 16 overs in his six games, his economy has been 8.87; he has taken five of his nine wickets so far in the powerplay. But at the death, where he was lethal in his debut season, Mohsin now ranks fourth-worst, in terms of economy, among 21 bowlers who have bowled at least eight overs apiece at the death this season: 12.44 runs per over, with three wickets. If there’s any consolation, it is that the bowlers above him on that list are seasoned pros: Bhuvneshwar Kumar (14.30), Sam Curran (12.90) and Arshdeep Singh (12.72).Mohsin’s best performance in his debut IPL season came against KKR: 3 for 20, where he got rid of both opening batters•BCCI”I always think, ‘Kar loonga’ [I’ll get it done]. I try and stay positive in such moments,” he says. “Just because I am getting hit for runs I shouldn’t feel I am in a hopeless situation. run run . Wicket ” [If runs are scored, so be it. If a wicket is to come, it will].In Super Giants’ first match this IPL, against Rajasthan Royals in Jaipur, Sanju Samson hit him for a four and a six in his first three balls of the fifth over. On the penultimate delivery of that over, Yashasvi Jaiswal paddled a six over fine leg. Mohsin dug the final ball of the over in hard short of a length, rushing Jaiswal into top-edging a easy catch. “The wicket was good for batting and my bowling was a bit all over the place,” Mohsin says. “Then I returned to my strength, which is back of length, and bowled with bit more pace and bounce and he [Jaiswal] was beaten.”Before execution, it is important to understand bowling plans, Mohsin says. “If the mind is clear and you are communicating clearly with the captain and coaches, things become easy. Getting a wicket is different, but at least if you are not deviating from the plan, you will bowl better most times.”His shoulder injury likely cost Mohsin a spot in India’s 2022 World Cup squad. The selectors thought his high point of release, ability to hit hard lengths at will, and ability to quickly size a batter up and respond with the right variations would have made him valuable on pitches in Australia, where the tournament was held.Two years on from his breakthrough IPL, Mohsin doesn’t once during our chat mention playing for India. He is fully aware he is still getting back to where he was, in terms of the strength in his left arm. The fear of whether the injury will return each time he feels any pain in that arm or shoulder will take its time fading, Daga says.”I just want to play well,” Mohsin says about playing for India. “Wherever I play, I just ensure that I do my best for the team. Where I am at the moment, I am just thinking about that. I am doing what is in my hands,” he says. He looks up. “.” [The rest is in the hands of the almighty, what level I get to, what I do, and all that.]Stats inputs by S Rajesh

Can T20 World Cup inspire a Maxwell revival?

The Australia allrounder averaged less than six in this year’s IPL but there is a belief he can come good in the Caribbean

Andrew McGlashan24-May-2024One of the more forgettable IPL tournaments with the bat came to end with a lofted drive to long-on. It was Glenn Maxwell’s fourth duck of the season for Royal Challengers Bengaluru.”What on earth was that from Glenn Maxwell?,” Kevin Pietersen said on the broadcast. “That there from Maxwell, I’m afraid to say, is not good enough.”It left Maxwell with 52 runs from nine innings (28 of those coming in one knock) and an average of 5.77 in IPL 2024. For those who have played at least nine innings in a season only Sunil Narine (2023) and Daniel Sams (2022) have finished with a lower average and the majority of their innings came in the lower order.Related

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“It was the shot of a guy who had almost had enough of the IPL this year, it’s been a difficult campaign for him, his bowling has been a highlight, his batting has just been poor,” former Australia captain Aaron Finch said on ESPN’s .The season never got going for Maxwell who stepped away from the side midway through the competition having spoken to captain Faf du Plessis and coach Andy Flower before he would likely have been dropped. Had Will Jacks not been recalled for England duty, Maxwell may well not have made the XI in the latter stages as RCB mounted their remarkable run to the knockouts.Players go through peaks and troughs of form, it’s not the end of the world even if Maxwell’s slump is on the more extreme end. If there had been no cricket to follow the IPL for Maxwell it could probably be parked, but that is not the case with the T20 World Cup just days away and him being a pivotal part of Australia’s hopes to adding to their one men’s title in the format from 2021.

He’s going to the World Cup now and I don’t see any reason why he can’t turn this around or turn his own personal form around in the World Cup for Australia and I look forward to watching thatAndy Flower, RCB head coach

There is an it’ll-be-alright-on-the-night view from a number of voices, including the coach Andrew McDonald, when it comes to Maxwell’s form leading into the World Cup. There is some sound logic behind that confidence, for Maxwell is a player capable of the extraordinary.You only have to go back a few months for a recent example. Having suffered concussion falling off the back of a golf cart during the ODI World Cup he returned to compile unbelievable 201 not out against Afghanistan to carry Australia to victory from a lost cause. More recently, albeit in a game of less significance, he thrashed 120 off 55 balls in a T20I against West Indies in Adelaide; last November he made 104 not out off 48 balls against India in Guwahati. In all T20s from the start of 2023 until the beginning of this IPL he made 1200 runs at 30.76 with a strike-rate of 177.25.”I don’t think they’ll be too concerned,” former Australia batter Callum Ferguson said on . “They know what he brings in big tournaments and he does get up for them. It’s a great chance for him now to reset…I’m expecting him to bounce back really hard. He just looked a little indecisive through this IPL which is so unlike Maxi.”It’s not long ago that Glenn Maxwell was producing spectacular T20 innings•Getty ImagesIt was a similar tone struck by Flower. “Maxi’s had a tough season, absolutely, and we know what he can contribute. It’s been a really tough season for him,” he said. “He’s had an amazing couple of years actually. It was a surprise to everyone but I really wish him well.”He’s going to the World Cup now and I don’t see any reason why he can’t turn this around or turn his own personal form around in the World Cup for Australia and I look forward to watching that.”Maxwell continues to have to manage his fitness following the badly broken leg he suffered in late 2022. He has insisted he felt confident coming into the tournament but recently suggested the other off-field commitments of the IPL may have had an impact.”The filming, the ads, and all that sort of stuff takes up so much time and so much energy that I was sort of almost drained, I reckon, before game one,” he said during an interaction with members of his Catch Max fan club. “I probably had about four full days of filming leading into the first couple of games, and just found like I wasn’t able to probably get the same sort of match practice I was able to get in last time.”1:21

Moody on Maxwell’s duck: Reckless cricket and absolute brain fade

There is a degree of uncertainty over how the T20 World Cup will play out tactically. If, as expected, spin plays a key role in the middle overs as it so often does, then Maxwell will have a vital role to play in marshalling the middle order and the phase after the powerplay, which Australia will hope can be dominated by David Warner, Travis Head and Mitchell Marsh. Maxwell has a superb T20I record at No. 4 where he averages 34.22 with a strike-rate of 160.44, and has hit four of his five centuries.One positive, alluded to by Finch, is that the bowling continues go well for Maxwell. His offspin has become an integral part of Australia’s white-ball plans. One of the possible combinations they could go with in the Caribbean, and perhaps the most likely, again has him as the second spinner alongside Adam Zampa.While the attention now turns to Maxwell in Australian colours, the other intriguing aspect after his lean season is what comes next in the IPL? There is a mega auction on the horizon and teams will only be able to retain a set number of players beforehand.”The IPL will probably be the last tournament I ever play, as I will play the IPL until I can’t walk anymore,” Maxwell said last year. But will that be for RCB?

Ollie Pope succumbs to the chaos as batting questions refuse to abate

Stand-in captain falls to brilliant catch, but all-or-nothing innings have been feature of his year

Matt Roller08-Oct-2024A missed stumping, a dropped catch, an injured opener and a second-ball duck: this was the chaotic half-hour under the Multan sun which underlined the scale of England’s challenge.England were ground down across a 149-over innings in which Pakistan posted 556 all out. Rather than pulling the plug early – as they did in a recent 10-wicket defeat to Bangladesh – Pakistan drove England into the dirt, with their physical and mental exhaustion evident as the innings wound to its conclusion.The longest Ollie Pope had spent in the field in his first series as England captain, against Sri Lanka, was 89.3 overs. This was new territory, with his seamers flagging after more than 20 overs each in punishing conditions, no assistance in the surface for his spinners, and the lingering knowledge that he would likely have to bat on the second evening despite his fatigue.Before he knew it, he was walking out to open the batting for the first time in first-class cricket, let alone Tests. Pope was off the field for a comfort break when Abrar Ahmed, Pakistan’s No. 11, slashed Joe Root’s attempted bouncer straight into Ben Duckett’s left thumb at slip, and the decision was quickly made that he should replace him at the top of the order.After waiting five-and-a-half sessions to bat, Pope’s innings was over after two balls. Naseem Shah dropped short, Pope latched onto a pull and Aamer Jamal flung himself to his right at midwicket, holding onto a blinding catch. As Jamal ran off in celebration, Pope dragged himself off as though in disbelief.This has been a bizarre year for Pope, albeit one that has encapsulated his curious Test career. It started with an epic, match-winning 196 in Hyderabad, one of his three hundreds in 2024, yet he has also failed to reach 20 in more than three-fifths of his innings. His average for the year, 35.47, is almost identical to his career figure.In fact, his duck on Tuesday – his third of the year – brought his career average back below 35, midway through his 50th Test match. He increasingly looks as though he will be remembered as a player of great innings rather than a great player, and his all-or-nothing record is more that of a middle-order strokemaker than a long-term No. 3.Jamal’s catch was the culmination of a bruising couple of days for Pope, which started on the first morning when he lost an important toss. In the field, Pope then missed a diving run-out opportunity when Abdullah Shafique – one of Pakistan’s three centurions – was on 34, and could not cling onto a half-chance at point when Shan Masood had 133.Related

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If comparison is the thief of joy then Pope is doomed to a life of misery when held up against Ben Stokes, perhaps England’s best captain of the modern era. Even Stokes would have struggled to restrict Pakistan on this surface – they racked up 579 against his side on a similarly lifeless pitch at Rawalpindi two years ago – and Pope did his best to get creative.England’s seamers shifted between orthodox plans, sustained bouncer ploys and umbrella fields but struggled to find any lateral movement, while their spinners generally bowled to in-out fields after Shoaib Bashir’s expensive first spell on the first day. Pope tried almost everything, but could not bend the game in England’s favour.By the time Abrar joined Salman Agha, Pope had burned his 11th and 12th reviews of his tenure, and is still yet to enjoy his first success. He needed a quick kill and a chance to put his feet up in the dressing room, but instead watched Jamie Smith miss a simple stumping and an weary Gus Atkinson let a catch slip through his fingers at midwicket.In reality, Pope’s batting is significantly more important to England’s medium-term planning than his captaincy, which is only an interim solution. Just over a year before the start of the Ashes tour which they have been building towards, he remains the most vulnerable member of their first-choice top seven.Duckett’s injury was the last thing that Pope – or England – needed to cap off two gruelling days in the heat, compounded only by Jamal’s catch. The only relief for Pope was that Zak Crawley and Joe Root batted serenely to chip away at the daunting deficit before the close, and there is nothing in the surface to suggest that England should not bat through the third day.If they do, Pope will have the chance to reflect on two of the most challenging days of his England career. When ruling himself out through injury, Stokes said that England’s seamers would quickly learn in Multan “how hard Test cricket can be”. If the stand-in captain did not know it already, then this was a reminder to Pope of the same lesson.

Pakistani paranoia fuelled by Hundred snub, but reasons may be closer to home

No picks in Hundred draft continue global trend. But poor results and board intransigence are also to blame

Osman Samiuddin14-Mar-2025Forty-five Pakistani players registered for the Hundred draft for the 2025 season. On Wednesday, exactly none of them were picked for any of the eight teams. That means that this season, the fifth, will be the first to not have any Pakistani players. Given the last two seasons had seen six and four Pakistani players respectively in the league, it is a notable disappearance.This season, you may have heard, is also going to be the first after the equity sale of Hundred franchises, four of whom are now either part-owned or majority-owned by owners of IPL franchises. Ah, you might think. This is starting to make some sense now. The IPL has long excluded Pakistani players from appearing. Its satellite franchises in leagues in South Africa, the UAE and the USA have also (mostly) excluded Pakistani players.Relations between the PCB and BCCI (more representative of their governments than ever before) have rarely been worse, or more given to pettiness, as the shenanigans at the recent Champions Trophy prove. It naturally follows that another league with incoming IPL ownership will begin to freeze out Pakistani players. This was exactly the scenario, after all, that the PCB spelt out two-and-a-half years ago. To believe in this sequence of logic is not at all to be a conspiracy theorist.But – and especially in the context of this Hundred draft – it doesn’t help to pretend there aren’t other factors, equally compelling if not more so, at play here. For one, the schedule (it’s almost always the schedule). Pakistan have two bilateral white-ball commitments in August that clash directly with the Hundred’s dates – the first two weeks of August, when they are in the Caribbean for three ODIs and three T20Is, and then a home series with Afghanistan that starts in the third week of that month (and a T20 Asia Cup that starts in September). Given Pakistan are undergoing yet another transition, and there is a T20 World Cup next year, their top players will almost certainly be involved in those series and, so, unavailable for the Hundred.Another terrible ICC tournament has left Pakistan’s reputation in the dust•AFP/Getty ImagesAlso, about those top players: it’s not as if Pakistan’s white-ball players are exactly hot property at this moment. Three abysmal ICC tournaments in a row have taken all the sheen off a generation of players once expected to abound in, and enrich, these leagues (of course, it could be argued they wouldn’t have performed so poorly had they been playing more regularly in those best leagues in the first place). Instead, Pakistan are outdated and stagnant, jarringly out of sync with the game as it is played today.More than all of this, though, is the wider truth, that the PCB itself is to blame. Successive administrations have flailed between being restrictive and gormless in dealing with player NOCs. The modern landscape demands a flexibility and deftness from boards in player management and the PCB has been as flexible as an iron rod. In fact, in an alternate reading, Pakistan’s white-ball regression over the years can be traced directly to how poorly the board has handled NOCs.A relevant case was revoking Naseem Shah’s NOC for the Hundred last year at the last minute, despite there being no clash with any international commitment (and likewise denying three others permission to play in Canada’s GT20).It was done in the name of workload management ahead of a busy season of international cricket, including nine Tests. How did that management turn out? Naseem played in three of those Tests, despite not suffering injury, and none of them consecutively. He wasn’t even in Pakistan’s last Test squad of the season (Shaheen Afridi, one of those whose NOC was revoked for the GT20, only played two of the nine Tests and wasn’t in Pakistan’s last two Test squads).Related

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Naseem’s is far from the only case. There was Usama Mir. And Azam Khan. And Haris Rauf . And a whole bunch of others.The PCB will point to the 20 players that did receive NOCs last November, but the stickier conclusion from the last few years is that they have made Pakistani players unattractive options in the marketplace. Why would a franchise take on a Pakistan cricketer when the PCB might abruptly revoke an NOC, or when a training camp call-up cuts a contracted stint unexpectedly short, or when a deal falls through because an unscheduled bilateral series has been shoved into the calendar, or when a player will summarily be called back from a league for a fitness test?None of this is to deny a looming, creeping reality. With the existing political climate as it is between India and Pakistan, and the continuing spread of IPL franchises around the world, it isn’t difficult to see a future in which Pakistani cricketers are marginalised and restricted to a second tier of T20 and T10 leagues (and in that light, who knows what impact going up against the IPL will have on the PSL).Richard Gould, the ECB’s chief executive, insists it won’t be the case in the Hundred at least, and it bears repeating that a packed calendar is the likeliest reason for the kiboshing of a high-profile Pakistani presence this year. Nevertheless, it was also Gould who introduced a new NOC policy last November which ends up hitting the PSL hardest in terms of English player availability, while protecting the IPL. Those words might feel cheap to Pakistani ears.In any case, it’s not as if there has ever been a formal bar on Pakistani players from the IPL. Nobody says that bit out loud. It’s just been that way forever now. And evidence from the other leagues with IPL ownership is, at the least, suggestive that it is contagious. No Pakistanis in the SA20 in three seasons. Only two Pakistanis in a franchise owned by an IPL owner in the ILT20 in three seasons. Only two Pakistanis in a franchise owned by an IPL owner in MLC in two seasons. Four Pakistanis in franchises owned by an IPL owner in the CPL over many more seasons. Nobody says anything about a bar… and yet.There are still four Hundred teams not owned by IPL franchises, so there is every chance Pakistani players might be picked up in next season’s draft (by which stage the new ownership structures will have kicked in properly). But it would feel like a bucking of a wider trend. And before anything else can happen, it would require the PCB to start helping itself and its players.

Breetzke must play, Maharaj out in front, room for Jansen – SA's ODI lessons

The maulings in the dead rubbers notwithstanding, South Africa have done many things right across the Australia and England ODI series

Firdose Moonda08-Sep-2025South Africa have won back-to-back ODI series and, despite the aberration in the two dead rubbers, have begun the process of building to the 2027 World Cup. While their success marks significant progress – their win in Australia was their fifth successive bilateral ODI series triumph over them, while victory in England was their first since 1998 – there are still some issues to iron out.Most pressing is the long-time concern of chasing. South Africa have not successfully chased over 200 since December 2023, and have failed to chase a score of that magnitude eight times, including twice across the Australia and England tours. Both times, with the series already won, South Africa conceded over 400 before being blown away, which may not worry them too much except for what it says about their obvious strength in batting first. Since 2023, South Africa have won 16 out of 23 matches when defending a total, but need to address the approach fielding first, especially when it matters. Here are five things to note on the road to 2027.

Breetzke must play

It could, and maybe should, become a campaign slogan after Matthew Breetzke stamped his name in the stars-to-watch list with five successive ODI fifties. That it took Breetzke eight months to play those five matches speaks to how difficult it has been for him to get into the XI, but he has now made the case for staying there. You could even argue that he should be batting higher than No. 4 given that he has spent most of his career as an opener. Breetzke’s aggressive approach fits in with how South Africa want to play and his square-of-the-wicket strength makes him difficult to stop. With Quinton de Kock and Heinrich Klaasen both retired from this format, Breetzke has the potential to take over the match-winning mantle and, injuries aside, should play in as many games as possible.Matthew Breetzke continued his prolific start in ODIs•AFP/Getty Images

Uncertainty over the top order

The jury’s still out on whether the Aiden Markram-Ryan Rickelton opening pair is the one to continue with after they came together in Australia. In six matches, they have shared one century stand, two half-century partnerships and three without getting past 11. Neither has looked entirely fluent, though Markram has been in better touch in 50-over cricket than in T20Is. Rickelton has battled for rhythm throughout so the efficacy of their partnership may best be judged when both are in better touch. Given the top-order options in the squad, South Africa may also want to experiment with other combinations, including moving Breetzke up or introducing Lhuan-dre Pretorius.Another factor that will affect the top two will be the availability of Temba Bavuma at No. 3, especially if injuries continue to interrupt his playing time. After going on tour with a mandate to manage his workload, Bavuma started five out six matches and suffered a calf strain in the fifth. While the captain has made plain his desire to lead the side at the 2027 tournament, his body may not agree and South Africa will need to start thinking of solutions. A potential one is to move Markram down to No. 3, creating an opening at the top.ESPNcricinfo LtdA middle-order of Dewald Brevis, Tristan Stubbs (who is also searching for form), and potentially David Miller promises much, especially with a wealth of allrounders to follow.

Getting Jansen back in

Corbin Bosch and Wiaan Mulder have each made significant contributions as the fourth seamer – Bosch with two T20I three-fors in Australia, Mulder with one in the ODIs in England – and they help lengthen the batting line-up. But will there be room for one or both of them when Marco Jansen is back? Jansen has not played since the World Test Championship final where he broke his thumb, but is expected to return for the Pakistan series.Jansen offers the left-arm variation, bounce and the ability to hit boundaries at will, which means he will likely slot straight back into South Africa’s XI and that will require a rejig.Bosch also has genuine pace and is a dangerous batter and Mulder’s ability to swing the ball and move up the order as needed may result in South Africa employing a horses-for-courses approach among the three and rotating them as conditions allow.There is also the option of the left arm-spin bowling allrounder Senuran Muthusamy, which gives South Africa additional resources.Related

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Maharaj grabs lead spinner’s role

All the talk about age may escape Keshav Maharaj, who is 35 now and will be 37 when the 2027 World Cup is played but continues to improve with experience.Maharaj took his first ODI five-for in Australia and became the No. 1-ranked ODI bowler the next day. He went on to take eight wickets in the England series to finish as South Africa’s most successful bowler and was named Player of the Series on both occasions.While accuracy has always been his strength, Maharaj has introduced more frequent changes of pace and gives it more flight in the shorter formats, as he actively goes in search of wickets in a more attacking role than before. Maharaj’s 50-over form earned him a recall to the T20I side and his performances have all but ensured he will be part of South Africa’s next two World Cup squads across 2026 and 2027.

Ngidi’s resurgence

The numbers are not going to make this seem like a good argument especially as 2025 has been Lungi Ngidi’s most expensive in ODIs, but that’s not the full story. Ngidi’s bowling strike rate of 26 is his best in the format in five years and points to a resurgence across formats. It was only three months ago that Ngidi played his first Test in ten months at the WTC final and recovered from a poor first innings to bowl a match-changing spell of 3 for 38 in the second innings. He has since played four of South Africa’s five T20Is in Zimbabwe, all six white-ball games in Australia, and nine out of South Africa’s 11 ODIs this year.Considering that between 2021 and 2024, Ngidi only played 36 out of 56 ODIs and struggled (with a strike rate of over 30 each year), the consistency of this comeback has been impressive, especially in Kagiso Rabada’s injury-enforced absence. Ngidi’s slower ball continues to be his ace and the delivery that bowled Jos Buttler at Lord’s and effectively won the series was one to remember.

What’s next?

South Africa’s focus will shift to T20Is with the series against England, which starts on Wednesday, in what is the more immediate concern as next year’s World Cup draws closer. Then they return home for a few weeks before heading to Pakistan for an all-format tour, including the start of their WTC title defence.

Plot intact, result missing: South Africa's Test revival still a work in progress

They showed promise, but lacked execution in Lahore, leaving them with several lessons ahead of the second Test

Firdose Moonda15-Oct-2025″They lost the game but they did not lose the plot.”Hardly words of consolation for a team that is trying to earn wins, not compliments, but South Africa will take them from Ramiz Raja after losing in Lahore.In theory, only two big things went wrong for South Africa: the toss and South Africa conceding 114 runs in the final session of the first day. In practice, you only need those two things to go wrong to end up on the wrong side, especially in conditions that quickly become more difficult to bat on and against one of the craftiest attacks going.Aiden Markram was careful not to dwell too much on the former because, “you don’t come to win the toss, you come to win the game and you’ve got to find ways to do that,” which suggests South Africa didn’t have enough of the latter. “It felt like there were moments where if we got on top and ran with a bit of momentum, it could have been a different result.”Related

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The most obvious of those was when South Africa had Pakistan 199 for 5 shortly after tea on the first day. Mohammad Rizwan and Salman Agha counterattacked with an intensity South Africa could not control. “We thought we had good plans, but they played the sweep shot really well and made it quite tough to set fields that can limit scoring,” Markam said. “Through that, I suppose you leak a couple of runs or a couple too many runs per over instead of maybe going at twos and threes, you might be going at fours, and that does eventually add up at the end of the game.”Pakistan scored at 3.45 runs an over in the third session on the opening day, which is not an alarming run-rate by any means but if South Africa wanted to squeeze them, what could they have done? A solution may lie in their bowling selections and combinations. With the resources they had at their disposal, they used offspinner Simon Harmer, who looked dangerous earlier in the day, and left-arm spinner Senuran Muthusamy immediately post-tea, then Prenelan Subrayen and eventually Kagiso Rabada with the second new ball. Could a second specialist seamer, a left-armer perhaps, bowling with an older ball do something similar to what Shaheen Shah Afridi did on day four, when he took 3 for 16 in a three-over spell to end the match?South Africa didn’t have Marco Jansen in the XI, which meant that they did not have that option available to them, which is something for them to consider going forward. “We did still have (Wiaan) Mulder but we felt the ball only tails or reverses for a few overs and then naturally gets softer and that reverse goes away,” Markram said. “But we’ll look at it, we’ll reflect and see if there’s an opportunity to get another seamer in if we feel it can make a positive difference. But if we’re going to back our spin with Kesh(av Maharaj) being back now as well, we’ll have to weigh that up when we see conditions.”Keshav Maharaj should be back in the team for the second Test after sitting out the first as he recovered from a groin injury and he hasn’t just been putting his feet up in preparation for the series. Last week, Maharaj captained his domestic team, the Dolphins in a first-class match against the Lions, scored an unbeaten 43 and bowled 49 overs with a return of 3 for 105 so if anyone is ready for Test action, it’s him.Tristan Stubbs hasn’t had the best of times in red-ball cricket recently•ICC/Getty ImagesWhich brings us to another area South Africa need to address in their batting line-up:A misfiring Tristan Stubbs If enthusiasm and potential were the defining criteria for picking a player, Stubbs would be the one of the first names on the team-sheet but since form is more important, he has to be sent back to the domestic system. Stubbs has only got into double figures once in his last nine Test innings and South Africa cannot afford to have someone who is struggling that much in a position as important as No.5. For the immediate term, they have two other options on this tour – David Bedingham (who sat out this match), and Zubayr Hamza – and for the longer term, the return of regular captain Temba Bavuma means they are all covered for extra batters. But what of Stubbs?Even though he is not part of the South African white-ball squads for Pakistan, by the time he returns home after the second Test, there will be no domestic red-ball cricket until early December. At that point, South Africa will be in India, where they play two Tests. An option would be to leave Stubbs at home to play a round of first-class cricket but it would be just one round and whether that can make a material difference is questionable. The rest of the red-ball competition takes place in February, when Stubbs is likely to be at the T20 World Cup. Given the scheduling crunch, it’s difficult to find a proper window for Stubbs to get consistent red-ball game time unless he is given the harshest treatment: dropped and told to spend next summer with his domestic team.That hasn’t happened to a player for some time which makes it seem unlikely it will now. An example is Tony de Zorzi, who lost his place earlier this year but has stayed with the Test squad and scored his second Test century in this match. Markram said that behind the scenes de Zorzi, and left-arm spin bowling allrounder Senuran Muthusamy, had both been “working really hard at their games trying to come up with plans to succeed wherever they are in the world,” and that their performances in Lahore were “a big feather in their cap.” So maybe all Stubbs needs is some extended time in the nets with South Africa’s batting coach Ashwell Prince, which seems to have benefitted de Zorzi immensely.Simon Harmer celebrates a wicket•Getty ImagesAnd so back to the positives South Africa will take from a match they did not disgrace themselves in despite what a 93-run margin suggests. The early parts of de Zorzi’s first innings century involved a lot of luck and the man himself said he was “just trying to hang in there,” but then gave way too good application. Ryan Rickelton showed patience and determination across both innings and faced a total of 282 balls in the match, more than anyone else, and Dewald Brevis appeared to be batting on a different surface as he breezed his way to a run-a-ball 54. With that kind of combination, Markram believes South Africa had what it took to chase a record score at the Gaddafi Stadium.”A guy like Brevis always takes the game on. That’s what he’s known for and that’s when he’s at his best so it was actually great to see him bring out that side today,” Markram said. “But Rickleton and other batters in the group might pack their defence a lot more and feed off the scraps that come around that. So, there’s two different ways of approaching it and two ways I still think you can be successful in these conditions. It’s about committing to one way and living by that.”That kind of thinking shows that South Africa very much have the plot but not the result. They hope to be able to turn that around in the second Test. “I would expect the conditions to be similar,” Markram said. “We expected conditions to be like this and we expect it again for the second Test match. It’s on us now as a group to go back and find ways to be better and to give ourselves a chance to win.”

Eden Carson – NZ's reel sensation who clicked at the biggest stage

The offspinner has put her career in veterinary science on hold to live her cricket dream

Shashank Kishore16-Oct-2024Eden Carson, 23, imagined being a reel sensation for things more serious than just a sheepish grin. But when she woke up on Monday, her Instagram blew up with “tons of stories” that she had been tagged in for being tongue-tied and grinning away when asked of New Zealand’s semi-final entry at the T20 World Cup.”When that interview [to TV presenter Laura McGoldrick] first happened, I don’t think it really set in that we’d made the semis,” Carson tells ESPNcricinfo. “I was just so proud and overwhelmed with joy that we’ve got this far, because I know a lot of people probably didn’t think we would get here.”Quickly realising the light-heartedness of the question, Carson breaks the seriousness and continues. “I’ve seen that reel a few times. The morning after, one of the girls was like, ‘oh you’ve been in my feed a lot’ and I was like ‘one reel of me giggling in that interview is all over the internet and stories’, so yeah, it’s just been there haunting me [laughs] at the moment.”Related

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Carson probably doesn’t realise she isn’t the only one haunted. India were, too, when she damaged them big time in the opening game by picking up the wickets of Shafali Verma and Smriti Mandhana with her offspin. It helped break New Zealand’s 10-match losing streak, while also throwing India’s tournament hopes into jeopardy.That performance set the tone for Carson, who has been Sophie Devine’s go-to powerplay bowler. Four of her five wickets in the tournament have come in this phase, her economy a miserly 5.44. And of the wickets she has picked up far, Mandhana’s has been her favourite.”I went into that game really wanting her wicket, especially because I was a match-up to her,” Carson says. “I was nervous in that first game because I hadn’t played India before. We knew a lot was riding on that game and if we could beat them, it’d help us big time. One of the girls actually told me ‘hey, you need to remember they haven’t faced you either’, and then I was like, that’s fair. So it’s kind of a two-way street really.”Carson feels like “I belong a lot more” now than she did when she first earned a New Zealand call-up ahead of the Commonwealth Games in Birmingham in 2022. She celebrated her initiation with a bronze medal finish. Carson now has a chance of better that in UAE, at the T20 World Cup.”I have a lot more of a bowling routine now,” she says. “Like taking deep breaths when I’m at the top of my mark. I know what ball I’m going to be bowling. The outcome I want and the ball that I can’t bowl to my field and things like that.”Through the weight of her performances over time, Carson has been able to justify to herself the decision to put “everything else on hold.” She is a qualified veterinary nurse who also until recently worked at a dairy farm at home in Ranfurly, a town in New Zealand’s south island.Carson’s family runs a sheep and beef farm, but a desire to “prove” to her dad she can be “more than handy” at a farm got her to milk cows and work at a dairy farm owned by a family friend. That gig helped Carson earn extra income while studying and coming through the ranks playing domestic cricket in Otago.”My days would begin really early – I’d milk the cows early, and some days when I had morning training, I’d be like ‘so sorry, can’t get the cows in’ and head off to Dunedin, which is like an hour-and-a-half away from home. Our family friends were really adjusting; even now whenever I’m off cricket I often drop by to meet them.”Eden Carson played a key role in detailing India’s campaign early on•ICC/Getty ImagesIt’s at the farm that Carson’s love for animals grew. It had a massive influence on her choosing to pursue a degree in veterinary science, which she completed recently.”I think being on a farm has really driven that as well,” she says. “Just having lots of pets at the farm is fun. I always say I’m going home to see my parents, but it’s mainly to see my cats [laughs]. I was happy to be able to finish my studying just to have a back-up after cricket as well because you know cricket’s not going to be forever as well.”Carson, who has an annual retainer from New Zealand Cricket, now lives in Dunedin with her aunt to focus on the game. While cricket remains her primary focus, she has also branched out to learn the Māori language to keep up with her roots and culture – her mother is Māori.”I’ve loved it so much and I’ve had a lot of motivation to be able to learn it, even though it is quite hard,” she says. “Also being on tour makes things busy, but I’ve been staying on top of things which is good. But I’m really enjoying it at the moment.”Carson dreams of being the “world’s best offspinner”. Having gone through some technique changes “like getting more body into the ball, because my back was failing me a little bit earlier”, she is confident of ticking off her boxes.”I like Ash Gardner, she’s one of the best allrounders, but recently I follow Charlie Dean as well,” Carson says. “She’s one of the better off spinners as well; some people might not agree but I do. Just like watching her action and the variations she has. She’s also a great fielder and batter, so yeah.”For now, there’s just one thing on her mind. A World Cup trophy.

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