Rudolph to retire at the end of English season

The 36-year old former South Africa opener has relinquished captaincy of Glamorgan in four-day cricket, but will continue to lead them in T20s until his retirement

Firdose Moonda24-May-2017Former South African Test opener Jacques Rudolph will retire from all forms of cricket at the end of the 2017 English season. The 36-year old has stepped down as four-day captain for Glamorgan with immediate effect, but will continue leading the T20 side until his retirement.”The time feels right to call an end to my playing career,” Rudolph said. “I have been incredibly fortunate to have enjoyed playing the game I love for the last 20 years. But at the end of this summer it will be time to focus on a new venture away from cricket and spend more time with my young family.”Rudolph, a product of the famed Afrikaans Hoer Seunskool, made his first-class debut twenty seasons ago in the 1997-98 summer. He played 48 Tests in two stints – the first 35 came between 2003 and 2006 and the remaining 13 between 2011 and 2012 – because he had signed a Kolpak deal with Yorkshire in 2007.By scoring 1000 runs or more in his first four seasons with the county, Rudolph found his way back into the South African team. But his second coming yielded only one Test century and he was dropped in November 2012. Rudolph then turned his attention to playing franchise cricket for the Titans and eventually called time on his South Africa career after the 2015-16 season.Rudolph has been with Glamorgan since 2014 and has captained them for the last two seasons. In 2017, he scored 319 runs in five first-class matches at 35.44 and 305 runs in eight one-day matches at 38.12. The T20 competition he will lead Glamorgan in begins on July 7. While Rudolph has not detailed what life after cricket holds, he has interest in a game farm with fellow South African batsman Boeta Dippenaar.With Rudolph standing down, Glamorgan have given the Championship captaincy to their 35-year-old Australian seamer Michael Hogan until the end of the season.

'Whole world had come down on me' – Stokes

Ben Stokes has spoken about the “complete devastation” he felt after the last over of the World T20 final

ESPNcricinfo staff08-Apr-2016Allrounder Ben Stokes has spoken about the “complete devastation” he felt after the last over of the World T20 final when Carlos Brathwaite had taken him for four consecutive sixes to snatch the title away from England.In the immediate aftermath of the conclusion to the final, Stokes admitted trying to block out the emotions and he said it is only since returning home that he has really reflected on what took place.The final over began with West Indies needing 19 to win and England favourites despite having struggled to 155 for 9 with the bat. But then Brathwaite swung Stokes’ first delivery over deep square leg, then connected sweetly against two full deliveries to suddenly level the scores and leave a distraught Stokes with his head in his hands.”I thought, ‘I’ve just lost the World Cup’. I couldn’t believe it,” he told the . “I didn’t know what to do. It took me so long to get back on my feet. I didn’t want to get back up. It was like the whole world had come down on me. There weren’t any good things going through my mind. It was just complete devastation.””It is probably only now really that all the emotions have started to come out about it. I couldn’t reflect on it at the time. There was just shock.”Stokes had developed his reputation as a death bowler during the tournament with important spells against Sri Lanka and New Zealand. He said he did not panic after the first ball of the last over had cleared the boundary and was still backing himself to defend 7 off 4 before being crushed by the third six.”It was not until they needed one off three that I knew the game was gone. When they needed seven I was still backing myself to get us over the line but I just couldn’t. It was amazing hitting. I just did not execute what I wanted to do.”A host of current and former players – not just from England – have come out in support of Stokes, praising his desire to be the man under pressure at the end, and he said he would not have a second thought about putting himself back in that position.”A hundred per cent. Definitely. It is something I work at a lot. Some days they go well. Some days they don’t. That was a bad day but I won’t be shying away from it. You almost want it to happen because if you nail it everyone forgets.”Stokes was at the centre of another spat with Marlon Samuels during the final – Samuels was fined 30% of his match fee for foul language – and Samuels was far from glowing about Stokes during his post-match press conference. Stokes has no issue with how events transpired and acknowledged Samuels played “a brilliant” innings.He also revealed that Brathwaite, who was fulsome in his praise of Stokes, had asked for a signed shirt.”We did not have a beer with them afterwards but Brathwaite came up to me and asked for a shirt. He is a brilliant lad. I wanted to make sure I spoke to them and say well done because I did not want people to think I was bitter. I wished them all the best. It is about respect to the opposition.”Stokes will return to action for Durham on April 24 in their County Championship match against Middlesex.

Ireland poised for big win

A strong batting display from Ireland, followed by an incisive spell of 4 for 32 from Max Sorensen left the hosts on the cusp of victory against Scotland in their Intercontinental Cup match in Dublin

ESPNcricinfo staff13-Sep-2013

Scorecard and ball-by-ball detailsMax Sorensen bowled a 10-over first spell that yielded four wickets•ICC/John Boomer

A strong batting display from Ireland, followed by an incisive spell of 4 for 32 from right-arm seamer Max Sorensen left the hosts on the cusp of a comprehensive victory against Scotland in their Intercontinental Cup match in Dublin.Sorensen, who picked up three wickets against Scotland in a World Cricket League Championship game last Sunday, dismissed Hamish Gardiner and Freddie Coleman in the third over. Preston Mommsen and Calum MacLeod also fell victim to Sorensen’s first spell as Scotland slumped to 27 for 4 in the 11th over.It became 64 for 7 before No. 9 Safyaan Sharif manned a rearguard action for the second time in the match. He added 79 runs with Majid Haq during an eighth-wicket stand that lasted 26 overs. Sharif recorded his maiden first-class half-century but lost his wicket off what became the last ball of the day, leaving Scotland at 143 for 8, and needing another 69 runs to avoid an innings defeat.Despite rain wiping out most of day two, Ireland’s batsmen put up a solid performance as Paul Stirling composed a 101-ball 65 that included 11 fours, and together with John Anderson, added 92 for the second wicket to take Ireland beyond Scotland’s first-innings score of 139. Anderson played the ideal foil for Stirling, picking up a fifty himself, which included five fours.But Stirling threw his wicket away, pulling straight to deep mid wicket off seamer Alasdair Evans and Legspinner Moneeb Iqbal dismissed Anderson for 56 off just his second delivery.With two new batsmen at the crease, Scotland might have sensed the tide changing, but Andrew White and Kevin O’Brien put up a 52-run stand for the fourth wicket and then, when Iqbal and Haq removed the pair in quick succession, Andrew Balbirnie and Stuart Poynter contributed 62 runs for the sixth wicket to increase Ireland’s lead.Iqbal and Haq took four wickets each, but were unable to curtail the flow of runs from the Ireland batsmen, who together struck a total of 43 fours and four sixes in the innings to build a lead of 212.

Somerset clinch runners-up spot

Abdur Rehman finished with match figures of 14 for 101 as Somerset clinched runners-up spot in Division One

13-Sep-2012
ScorecardAbdur Rehman finished with match figures of 14 for 101 as Somerset clinched runners-up spot in Division One with victory over relegated Worcestershire by an innings and 148 runs at Taunton.Rehman took 5 for 36 as the visitors stumbled to 152 all out in their second innings, Alexei Kervezee top-scoring with 76 and Peter Trego claiming his 50th first-class wicket of the season.The hosts took 23 points to Worcestershire’s two as their players guaranteed themselves a share in a £162,000 cheque for finishing second behind champions Warwickshire.Somerset had batted on at the start of the day before declaring their first innings on 512 for 9, with a lead of 300. Nick Compton finished unbeaten on 155, just six short of 1,500 first-class runs. Compton, who faced 322 balls and hit 15 fours and a six, was left with a first-class average of 99.60 when the declaration came. Six more runs would have left him averaging 100.Moeen Ali returned figures of 4 for 143, but by far the best Worcestershire bowler was Alan Richardson, who claimed his 500th first-class victim when pinning Alfonso Thomas lbw for 17, and finished with 4 for 100 from 41 overs.A three-day finish always looked likely and Worcestershire lost two wickets in scoring 39 before lunch. Phil Hughes edged Trego to wicketkeeper Steve Snell and Daryl Mitchell was caught at slip off Rehman.The Hughes wicket sparked wild celebrations among the fielders as they all mobbed Trego for whom it was a notable milestone in his career. The 31-year-old all-rounder had never threatened to take 50 wickets before, but has bowled more overs than ever for Somerset because of injuries this season.After lunch there was a predictable procession of batsmen. Thomas trapped Neil Pinner leg before for 14 and Craig Overton struck in his first over as Marcus Trescothick took a sharp catch at second slip to send back Moeen for 24.Rehman then produced perfectly pitched turning deliveries to bowl Aneesh Kapil and Brett D’Olivera, both pushing forward defensively, before Ben Cox fell to a brilliant catch at mid-wicket by Arul Suppiah as he pulled a short ball from Steve Kirby.It was 129 for 8 when Chris Russell was snapped up at leg-slip by Trego off a Rehman arm-ball, having made only a single. Kervezee stood defiant, reaching his half-century off 64 balls with six fours, although he was steadily running out of partners as Nick Harrison played on to Thomas and departed for a duck.Kervezee was the last wicket to fall, pouched at slip by Trescothick off Man-of-the-Match Rehman.

Ashes autopsy report close at hand

Australian cricket’s reckoning for a disastrous Ashes series, and the decline from greatness to mediocrity that preceded it, is belatedly at hand

Daniel Brettig17-Aug-2011Australian cricket’s reckoning for a disastrous Ashes series, and the decline from greatness to mediocrity that preceded it, is belatedly at hand. The findings of the Australian team performance review will, as ESPNcricinfo reported in July, be tabled and discussed by the directors at the Cricket Australia board meeting to take place in Melbourne on Thursday and Friday, nearly eight months after the Ashes were lost in an innings defeat at the MCG.Upon the conclusion of the meeting CA’s chairman Jack Clarke will face the cameras and microphones to run over whatever findings the board chooses to make public. Based on the submissions of a litany of players, coaches, administrators and other well-placed observers, they are expected to be blunt and wide-ranging.The review panel, chaired by Don Argus and including the former captains Allan Border, Mark Taylor and Steve Waugh plus the former CA chief executive Malcolm Speed, is likely to direct its harshest critiques towards the selection policies of the out of contract chairman, Andrew Hilditch, whose term lapsed at the end of the World Cup.Hilditch’s tenure began in 2006, and after enjoying a 5-0 Ashes sweep on England in the following summer he was fated to negotiate the retirements of a succession of great players, including Shane Warne, Glenn McGrath, Adam Gilchrist, Matthew Hayden, Justin Langer and Damien Martyn.He and his panel have been heavily criticised for numerous decisions across that time, most pointedly the revolving door for spin bowlers since the selectors’ planning was thrown out of balance by the sudden retirement of Stuart MacGill in 2008.More recently the removal of Simon Katich from the list of CA contracted players provided a window into the players’ discontent about the ways of the panel, something also highlighted by a formal submission to the review regarding selection by the Australian Cricketers Association.Rod Marsh, the former Australian wicketkeeper and highly-respected academy coach, has expressed his interest in becoming chairman of selectors, discussing the possibility with CA’s head of cricket operations, Michael Brown.Other matters at issue for the review panel include the shape of the Australian team’s support staff, with the place of the head coach Tim Nielsen in some question. Since the World Cup Nielsen’s support staff has been bolstered by the additions of Craig McDermott (bowling coach) and Steve Rixon (fielding coach), as the players desired greater guidance from mentors with international experience.Rixon’s arrival in particular has been met with great enthusiasm, and as the former coach of New Zealand and NSW his credentials far outweigh those of Nielsen, who was a distinguished assistant for South Australia and Australia but had never been a head coach until he replaced John Buchanan in 2007, like Hilditch at the outset of a difficult period of transition.Australia’s players and support staff currently on tour in Sri Lanka are expected to be briefed about the review findings on Friday morning in Colombo, before Clarke presents a summary of the findings to the public.The Australian team’s contract system, scheduling and preparation have also been matters for discussion, with the former chairman of selectors Trevor Hohns noting that a sleeker and more flexible contract system should be devised.It has also been pointed out that Test cricket in Australia would benefit from being the clear financial pinnacle of the game, with sufficient incentives for young players to devote themselves to its pursuit.The evolving role of the Centre of Excellence in Brisbane is considered a sore point in the development of players, as CA has sought to make it more of a finishing school for internationals rather than a bridge between junior cricket and the first-class arena.Further down the pathway, the standard of domestic cricket has been openly questioned by the likes of Ricky Ponting, who fervently believes that young cricketers need to be held to the same rigorous standards he had to reach before he was selected to play for Australia.Twenty20’s onset, and its attendant impact on the techniques and priorities of domestic players, is another factor, but CA are torn on this matter by competing desires to have the Test team successful while also growing the game’s revenue.There is little the review panel can do about the onset of the T20 Big Bash League and its heavy impact on the domestic schedule, meaning there will be plenty of hurdles ahead for the Australian team, whatever Argus and company recommend at the board meeting.

Hauritz returns to where it all began

Nathan Hauritz and India go back a long way. It was here almost six years ago that his Test career started … and nearly ended

Sidharth Monga28-Sep-2010Nathan Hauritz and India go back a long way. It was here almost six years ago that his Test career started … and nearly ended. It was the Mumbai Test played on the raging turner where he took the wickets of Sachin Tendulkar and VVS Laxman, but in his own words, “after they had taken me down pretty easily”. Those runs helped India erase the deficit and win the incredible Test. Hauritz was sent back to first-class cricket where he spent the next four years. He never really thought he would be Australia’s lead spinner again, leave alone coming back as one to the land where it all began.Hauritz remembers the debut and the circumstances around it well. “Warney got hit on the thumb in the training on the day before,” he says. “It looked innocuous, not too bad. I didn’t find out until the morning that his thumb was actually cracked and broken. The first day was washed out. I didn’t bowl until late in the next day. And the match was over very quick.”Hauritz remembers not being mentally ready. The instant memory of that match, in fact, is Michael Clarke’s 6 for 9 on a pitch that should have suited Hauritz immensely. “Training-wise I was ready,” he says. “Mentally I was still developing. I was only 23 years old. I was put into that tour because there weren’t too many offspinners around. I had been bowling well in one-day cricket too.”The wickets of Tendulkar and Laxman came at a price. “Sachin hit me for the biggest six of my life,” Hauritz says. “Pup remembers he hit me into the sightscreen, and the dirt in the sightscreen looked like an ant – it was that far away.”Look it was a great thrill to get those guys in my first Test. It was a long time ago, but those memories will stay with me. I still can’t forget the feeling of being in the huddle after getting Sachin out.”The next four years were spent outside the team. “During that period, Shane Warne was playing, there were some other good spinners around, and I never really looked at myself in that way [leading the spin attack in the future],” Hauritz says. He doesn’t blame that debut Test for a slow start to his career. “I was very fortunate to play that Test. There weren’t too many spinners around. And I got the opportunity. And it was great to play. At the end of the day, my bowling wasn’t up to standard in first-class cricket in Australia, and I had to go back and become a better bowler. It took me four years to get to that stage where I could play at the next level.”As it would happen with the great Australian team of that era, the comeback, too, started through injury, this time to Jason Krejza’s ankle. “I was fortunate to have played a Test again, through injury and all that, but since then the bowling is improving all the time,” Hauritz says. “And when your bowling is improving, the confidence grows. To be the spinner going into this Test series, I would never have thought. It is a great achievement, but at the end of the day it doesn’t mean too much if you don’t do well.”The Hauritz on this tour is six years older, smarter, a better bowler. Still, he hasn’t got off to a desirable start. Piyush Chawla, a legspinner and a useful batsman in the lower order, danced down to him and lofted him with ease in the tour game against the Board President’s XI. Ajinkya Rahane, the Mumbai batsman, repeated the dose in the second innings.It’s not that Hauritz wasn’t prepared for an assault. “I don’t think you can have a better place to bowl spin,” Hauritz says. “You are bowling against the best players of spin in the world, but also on wickets that will help spin. It will be a really tough challenge, but it is something that I have always wanted to be part of. It is going to be fun, but it’s going to be really tough too.”Spinners better than Hauritz have come to India and have failed to have fun. Numerous others have had their careers destroyed here. Warne and Muttiah Muralitharan, considered two of the best spinners of all time, averaged in the mid-40s here. Hauritz is not likely to even be compared to those bowlers. He has neither the mystery nor the amazing confidence. Neither the dark tricks nor a reputation that could create some doubt in the batsmen’s mind.Hauritz is a straight-talking, simple offspinner, who relies on working hard. There is even a hint of awe when he talks about the Indian batting line-up, a sense of hoping for the batsmen’s human errors. In this self-confessed greatest test of his, Hauritz will have done well if he has some fun over the next two weeks in Mohali and Bangalore. It’s going to be tough, as he says. Really tough.

Wyatt-Hodge, Smith to the fore as England grind past Bangladesh

Sobhana Mostary hits 44 but England spinners shackle chase in low-scorer

Alan Gardner05-Oct-2024England’s four-spinner attack shackled Bangladesh in a low-scorer at Sharjah to get their T20 World Cup campaign off to a winning start. Danni Wyatt-Hodge made 41 off 40 before England fell away with the bat but, on a slow, gripping surface, Bangladesh were kept in check throughout despite Sobhana Mostary’s career-best 44.With dew having played a limited role in the tournament so far, Heather Knight had opted to get a score on the board. Linsey Smith, the slow left-armer who spent six years out of the side, was selected in preference to Lauren Bell, alongside the formidable trio of Sophie Ecclestone, Charlie Dean and Sarah Glenn. Smith bowled two in the powerplay, as England had hinted in the build-up, and finished with constricting figures of 2 for 11, as well as playing a part in the run-out of Nigar Sultana.Bangladesh had defended a similar score at this ground in their opening game against Scotland, but while Fahima Khatun and Ritu Moni were again impressive with the ball, they paid for allowing England to get away in the powerplay. Wyatt-Hodge and Maia Bouchier rode their luck at times – Bouchier was badly missed on 16 – but an opening stand of 48 in 6.4 overs opened up a chasm between the sides.The chase rarely got out of second gear, with only Mostary and Nigar reaching double-figures. Mostary should have been stumped on nought and would have been out lbw on 8 had England reviewed but she prevented the innings from flatlining even as Bangladesh struggled to build partnerships.

Mostary anchors, Bangladesh grounded

In contrast to the start made by England, Bangladesh managed just one boundary during the powerplay, losing both openers to be off the pace on 20 for 2. Dilara Akter, into the XI in place of Murshida Khatun, missed a sweep at Dean to be lbw in the fourth over, before Shathi Rani took on Smith only to be taken by the leaping Ecclestone at mid-off.The rebuilding job fell to Mostary, who had top-scored in victory over Scotland, and the captain, Nigar. The latter signalled that Bangladesh weren’t out of it, despite the climbing run rate, as she twice danced out to hit Glenn for fours in the ninth over.Bangladesh reached 42 for 2 at halfway, with Mostary picking up her first boundary shortly after as the third-wicket pair looked to push on. But Nigar was run out taking on Smith’s arm for a second that wasn’t there and Glenn bowled Shorna Akter to pile the pressure on Mostary. She responded by thrashing Dean over deep midwicket for six, leaving the requirement 40 from the last four overs. In the end, it was too much of an ask – although keeping Ecclestone wicketless for only the second time in 36 T20Is was a small victory.

Early running

The opening exchanges were watchful, as England attempted to size up a pitch they had never previously played on. It wasn’t until the fourth over that Wyatt-Hodge hit the first boundary – by which point she and opening partner Bouchier had been involved in three near-mishaps with their running.Bouchier survived a direct hit in the first over, via a well-judged tip-and-run to mid-off. Wyatt-Hodge was then left sprawling face first for the line as she attempted an even tighter single, only saved by the time it took Nahida Akter to return the ball to the non-striker’s stumps. And Wyatt-Hodge should have gone in the next over, picking out Moni in the covers and then sent back by Bouchier – only for the fielder to make a complete hash of throwing the ball in.The pair soon decided that boundaries were preferable to risky singles. Wyatt-Hodge swiped Fahima over square leg and then drilled four more through cover; Bouchier climbed into Marufa Akter as the swing began to wear off, striking back-to-back fours – although she should have gone next ball when prodding to point, where Rabeya Khan put down a straightforward chance. Another brace of fours off Nahida in the sixth over and England were up and running, 47 without loss from the powerplay.

England progress stalled

From that point on, Sharjah’s slow-and-low surface began to exert its influence on proceedings. England scored 29 runs and lost four wickets over the course of the next 6.1 overs as Bangladesh’s plethora of pace-off options came to the fore. Bouchier was first to go, plinking Rabeya to mid-on, and Nat Sciver-Brunt did not last long, playing around Fahima’s legbreak to be plumb lbw.Wyatt-Hodge and Knight steadied things but Moni’s peach did for the England captain, nipping the ball through the gate to hit middle and leg. When Wyatt-Hodge walked past one from Nahida to be stumped miles from safety, England were 76 for 4 and wondering how to resuscitate the innings in suffocating conditions.Alice Capsey became the first batter outside of the top two to find the boundary with a sweep off Nahida in the same over, but she became Fahima’s second victim when reversing straight to point. Danielle Gibson huffed and puffed, striking one four before edging behind for 7 off 11, while Amy Jones tried to make the most of being dropped on 3. From the penultimate ball, Ecclestone finally managed a clean hit, lofting the only six of the innings straight back down the ground.

Gregory and Green get going to take Somerset to Finals Day

Captain’s innings rescues home side from 62 for 5 as Nottinghamshire bow out

ECB Reporters Network07-Jul-2023Lewis Gregory and Ben Green batted Somerset into Finals Day of the Vitality Blast as the hosts completed a thrilling five-wicket victory over Notts Outlaws at Taunton.The Outlaws posted what looked a below par total of 157 for 6 after winning the toss, Matthew Montgomery top-scoring with 51 off 38 balls, Imad Wasim cracking 31 not out off 15 and Samit Patel contributing 30. Craig Overton claimed 2 for 23, while legspinner Ish Sodhi conceded only 22 from four overs.Somerset lost five wickets by the midway point of their reply before Gregory and Green put together an unbroken partnership of 96 to see their side to Edgbaston with three balls to spare.A big moment in the game came as early as the fourth delivery, Notts opener Alex Hales advancing to Overton and making room for a big shot, only to have his stumps scattered. Overton soon followed up by having the dangerous Colin Munro brilliantly caught by the back-peddling Matt Henry at mid-off.Henry then had Joe Clarke pouched at midwicket by Overton to make it 17 for 3 and although Montgomery and Patel took boundaries off the sixth over, bowled by Jack Brooks, the Outlaws ended the powerplay on 37 for 3.Patel pulled a six off Gregory as 14 came off the ninth over. He and Montgomery had taken their stand to 69 when the 13th over saw Patel bowled trying to swing Gregory into the leg side.Montgomery survived a tough chance to Tom Abell in the outfield to bring up his half-century, but the next ball saw him sky another catch and Overton made no mistake running in from long-off.Tom Moores was caught at short fine-leg off Gregory and after Sodhi’s economic contribution, it was left to Wasim and skipper Steven Mullaney to boost a meagre Notts total with some clean hitting in the final overs. Wasim struck a six and two fours in his entertaining cameo, but the Outlaws looked to face an uphill battle at the halfway stage.Their spirits were lifted when Tom Banton was caught behind reverse-sweeping off the first ball of the second over of Somerset’s innings, sent down by Wasim, the umpire’s decision of not out being reversed after a referral. It was 9 for 2 when the left-arm spinner completed a double-wicket maiden by clean bowling Tom Kohler-Cadmore for a duck.Smeed responded by hitting boundaries off the first three balls of Wasim’s second over. Abell produced three sweetly-struck fours of his own as the pair took Somerset to 44 for 2 by the end of the powerplay. The pair had added 46 when Abell played a ball from Calvin Harrison into the leg side and Smeed called for a second run, only to fall short as Hales produced a fast throw to the bowler’s end.Soon afterwards, Sean Dickson fell lbw to Harrison reverse-sweeping and Abell walked after under-edging a catch behind in the same over. At the halfway stage of their innings, Somerset were 62 for 5.The experienced Gregory then took charge, clearing the ropes off Patel twice and Wasim as he and Green, who smashed Harrison over long-on for six, repaired the damage in style, bringing up a half-century stand off 35 balls.Thirty were needed off the last three overs. Gregory brought a packed crowd to their feet with a six over midwicket off Wasim and went to a brilliant 32-ball fifty with another maximum over long-off in the penultimate over, delivered by Jake Ball, to finally break Notts’ resistance.With three needed, Green appeared to be dropped at cover off Fletcher. But it was a no-ball and the resulting free hit was dispatched for the winning runs.

Sunrisers' playoff chances will slip away if they don't win against Mumbai Indians

Mumbai challenge could prove tricky since Rohit’s side have very little to lose

S Sudarshanan16-May-20222:35

Should Rohit experiment with batting down the order?

Big picture

Okay, let’s get this straight. Bowling isn’t really Sunrisers Hyderabad’s major worry. Yes, they have conceded runs at an economy rate of 8.74, which is the second-most. But it is not too much if you see that the best team has an economy rate of 8.09.That Sunrisers are still in contention for the playoffs – after five straight losses following five straight wins – is purely down to their batting from Nos. 3 to 6. Rahul Tripathi, Aiden Markram and Nicholas Pooran have been the key players at those positions and Sunrisers average 35.5 per dismissal for those spots combined, the best among the teams in IPL 2022.Kane Williamson’s run at the top of the order has been quite a forgettable one; his batting average of 18.9 this season is only better than Rohit Sharma’s 18.2 among captains. Moreover, his strike rate of 92.9 is the fifth-worst by any player to have batted in ten innings in an IPL season.With Abhishek Sharma being the leading run-getter for Sunrisers this season, it is perhaps time for Williamson to move down the order with either Glenn Phillips, who can bat anywhere in the top five, or Tripathi to take his spot at the top in order to maximise the powerplay. After all, Sunrisers have to win both their remaining matches in order to keep their hopes of a top-four finish alive.

LIVE in the USA

Watch the match on ESPN+ in English and in Hindi.

For Mumbai Indians, though, it is all about continuing to check out how their players do at different spots with an eye on the next season, something they have already started. Very little of Tristan Stubbs could be seen against Chennai Super Kings and they could continue to back him in the middle order, while young Tilak Varma continues to impress. While Mumbai are playing for pride, stopping another team from qualifying could be enough motivation to bring out their A-game.

In the news

Medium-pacer Akash Madhwal has joined Mumbai Indians as a replacement for the injured Suryakumar Yadav.

Likely XIs

Mumbai Indians: 1 Ishan Kishan (wk), 2 Rohit Sharma (capt), 3 Tilak Varma, 4 Tristan Stubbs, 5 Tim David, 6 Daniel Sams, 7 Hrithik Shokeen, 8 Ramandeep Singh, 9 Jasprit Bumrah, 10 Riley Meredith, 11 Kumar Kartikeya SinghSunrisers Hyderabad: 1 Abhishek Sharma, 2 Kane Williamson (capt), 3 Rahul Tripathi, 4 Aiden Markram, 5 Nicholas Pooran (wk), 6 Washington Sundar, 7 Shashank Singh/Glenn Phillips, 8 Marco Jansen/Kartik Tyagi, 9 Bhuvneshwar Kumar, 10 Umran Malik, 11 T Natarajan

Strategy punt

  • Both Rohit and Ishan Kishan strike at 90 or lower against Washington Sundar. As a result, it could pay for Sunrisers to bring the offspinner in early.
  • Jasprit Bumrah has dismissed Kane Williamson once in ten T20 innings and Nicholas Pooran twice in three innings. That is perhaps a case for holding Bumrah back for the second half of the innings

Stats that matter

  • Sunrisers have won only one of their nine matches at the Wankhede Stadium, where Mumbai have a win percentage of 62.3
  • Mumbai have conceded 94 sixes, while Sunrisers have conceded 92, which are the second and the third most by a team this season. These two are in the bottom four in terms of hitting sixes
  • As it happened: Australia vs India, 3rd Test, Sydney, 1st day

    Join us for updates, analysis and colour from the first day of the SCG Test

    Vishal Dikshit07-Jan-2021*Most recent entry will appear at the top, please refresh your page for the latest updates.

    6.55pm local time/1.25pm IST: Australia on top after first day

    Smith tells the broadcasters he was looking to be “positive, wouldn’t say aggressive” against Ashwin after the spinner got the better of him earlier in the series. With that session, that saw only one wicket, we’ve come to the end of the first day that saw only 55 overs, which means early start for the rest of the days, starting 10am local time (4.30am IST). The hosts are looking set for a big score here on this flat pitch and India’s inexperienced attack will have to do a lot more to tilt the game in their favour. Not to forget, they’ll have to hold on to the catches too after the two drops today. That’s a wrap from me, catch you all tomorrow for the live action and this Live Report again. The end of day report will be up soon.

    6.30pm local time/1pm IST: Labuschagne chugs long

    Australia are finally looking set to cross 200 for the first time this series, and today it’s largely thanks to Marnus Labuschagne. While most of the focus has been on the two debutants and Smith, Labuschagne is now ticking along with a strike rate of nearly 50 to keep Australia on top. His patience laid the foundation early with Pucovski for a century stand, he negated R Ashwin’s threat early on, and he even set the platform for Smith to get back among the runs on this batting-friendly track. He has blunted Ashwin carefully on the leg side by closing the face of the bat at the right time and playing with soft hands; he was the first one to punish the spinner when he pitched too wide or short in the second session. And Labuschagne has also been on the prowl for the loose deliveries from the quick; they pitch too short, he cuts, and if they are too full, like Siraj was few overs ago, he’ll drive and drive you for more boundaries. He’s batting nicely on 65, his ninth Test half-century.Meanwhile, Jadeja into the attack for the last eight overs of the day.

    6pm local time/12.30pm IST: It’s Smith vs Ashwin

    In the first two Tests Ashwin was responsible for two of Smith’s three dismissals in only 23 balls, threatening both edges of the bat. Now he’s back in the attack after Smith has faced 15 balls. Was it a bit too late? The tension of the contest is palpable; Ashwin desperately wants Smith on strike, and Smith is eager to dominate Ashwin this time. At the start of the second over of Ashwin’s spell, Smith dances down and lofts him over mid-on to signal his aggression and mindset. Remember, Smith said this to SEN Radio after the second Test:

    “I probably haven’t played Ashwin as well as I would’ve liked. I probably would’ve liked to have put him under a bit more pressure. I’ve sort of let him dictate terms and that’s something I’ve probably never let any spinner do in my career.”

    5.25pm local time/11.55am IST: Debutant gets debutant

    Navdeep Saini is pumped after getting his first Test wicket•Getty Images

    Saini’s first two balls in Test cricket had been struck for fours with disdain by Pucovski just before tea. And now, Saini comes back, adjusts his length and shows that still targeting the stumps is not a bad idea at all. He bowls a full delivery to Pucovski, the batsman shuffles across the stumps as he’s done the whole day against the quick bowlers, misses the flick and is struck in front to be given lbw. Saini is clearly fired up: he runs in hard next ball and oversteps for a no-ball against Smith. Another ball later, Saini delivers a yorker that Smith clips to the leg side and gets off the mark. Australia 108 for 2 with Smith and Labuschagne batting now, and India will be hoping they can get one more before these two settle into a partnership.

    4.55pm local time/11.25am IST: Pucovski gets to fifty before tea

    Rishabh Pant drops the second catch on the first day•Getty Images

    With those two reprieves and a close run-out miss from the deep, Pucovski has welcomed fellow debutant Navdeep Saini with two powerful strokes to stamp his authority. A fierce cut off the back foot off the first ball and then a handsome pull to smash Saini past mid-on for four on the next ball to reach 53 in the last over before tea. Australia now looking on top with their scoring rate at three per over, having put together 46 runs in the last 10 overs. Here’s Sid Monga:

    If you were going to look at one figure to sum up India’s bowling effort today, it is R Ashwin’s figures of 9-1-33-0. You go deeper, and you see it is a spell of two parts: 5-1-7-0 of amazing offspin bowling on an unhelpful day-one track, a drop catch, and then 26 runs in the next four overs.

    Ashwin’s success this series has relied on shutting down right-hand batsmen by making them play to a heavily populated leg-side field. Which is what he kept doing in the first five overs, mixing it with the drifting delivery that challenges the outside edge. With the last ball of that fifth over, he drew the edge. Now when you are outmatched and have a thin attack, you need everything to go your way to pull off wins like Melbourne. Dropped catches are a part of life in Test cricket, but with India’s attack you can’t afford those.

    Ninety overs into the series, Ashwin now began to tire and perhaps bowled more bad balls in the next four overs than he has bowled all series. A big part of his success has been in not allowing the batsmen to hit him against the spin into the off side. For that to happen, he either has to go too wide or too short. He has been erring on the short side. In just one spell, he has conceded 24 off-side runs to right-hand batsmen in Sydney. In Adelaide he gave 28, in Melbourne 51. And those tiring legs and more frequent loose balls might become the story if Australia can keep India on the field long enough.

    4.30pm local time/11am IST: Pant drops Pucovski twice!

    In the space of 10 minutes and 12 balls Pucovski faced, Rishabh Pant has dropped the debutant twice! Not easy chances by any measure, both of them, but you’d like the keeper to take them because they won’t come often on a flat pitch.The first came at the end of the 22nd over when Ashwin lured Pucovski into a forward lean outside off and beat him on the outside edge but Pant had his hands moving with a bit of gap between them and couldn’t hold on. Pucovski was on 26. And the second was off Siraj who pounded in a bouncer that rose on Pucovski and took his glove, went behind Pant who ran back and put in a dive and even got both hands to the ball but it escaped again, and he tried again to get his hands under the ball before it could touch the ground but didn’t do it cleanly enough. Pucovski saved on 32 this time.

    4.10pm local time/10.40am IST: Eyes on the debutant

    Taking it on – Will Pucovski has a go at a short delivery•AFP via Getty Images

    Gnasher is finally getting to watch some cricket at the SCG after the rain break:

    There has been an impressive calmness to Will Pucovski’s debut Test innings so far. Any Test opener will be beaten on occasions, but he has not appeared rushed or flustered although has been given a life on 26 when Rishabh Pant could not hold onto a thin edge against R Ashwin (I’ll leave the wicketkeeper debate to others). The battle against top-quality spin will be fascinating one. His first boundary, the hook off Mohammed Siraj, had some top edge about but he was committed to the stroke and it was well away from the field. There is a simplicity and crispness to his strokeplay – both qualities that have been on display in abundance during a first-class career that already includes three double centuries – with a game based on timing not brute force. It is perhaps a little surprising that India have tried a more sustained period of short-pitched bowling at him, but they are probably conscious of not wasting the new ball on a well-grassed surface.

    3.25pm local time/9.55am IST: The leg-side fields in focus

    More than five overs bowled since play resumed and two different kind of fields so far while keeping two slips and a gully. For Siraj India have kept a silly mid-on, midwicket and square leg, and for Bumrah there’s an orthodox mid-on and two square legs – one behind square and one in front. Both bowlers are sticking to their usual plan of bowling on or around the stumps with the odd short ball. Pucovski and Labuschagne are being very watchful, though, and are leaving plenty of deliveries outside off, unleashing the pull or flick on the occasional delivery that’s either too short or full. There was a loud lbw appeal on the second ball after play resumed but we haven’t seen its ball-tracking yet, strangely. And hello! Only 13 overs into a Test in Australia and we have Ashwin into the attack, with a slip and short leg. Australia 36 for 1.

    2.50pm local time/9.20am IST: SCG will BRB

    So it’s a 3pm local time start (9.30am IST), finally! And since we’ve had enough cricket, tea will be taken at 4.40pm local time. We can see some blue skies over the SCG, and it’s much brighter now. Umpire Paul Reiffel confirms the 3pm start and says the area just behind where the bowler jumps up before delivery is still a bit damp so the leaf blowers are drying that out.

    2.25pm local time/8.55am IST: Sun is shining (kind of)

    Fingers crossed, the next inspection is at 2.30pm local time or 9am IST. Let’s hope and pray the rain stays away until then at least. It was raining or drizzling on this very day at the same ground two years ago as well, and on that occasion it wiped out the final day of the fourth match to give India a historic (2-1) series win in Australia for the first time. Australia were made to follow on for the first time at home since 1988. The architects of the victory were Cheteshwar Pujara, who made 521 runs in the series, including 193 in Sydney, and Jasprit Bumrah, who took 21 wickets at 17. Rishabh Pant, followed up his maiden Test hundred, at The Oval in 2018, with a second in Sydney.India won the Adelaide and Melbourne Tests in 2018-19 to take the series 2-1•David Gray/AFP/Getty Images

    All that and more in our On This Day page for January 7.

    1.55pm local time/8.25am IST: Ponting’s take on Warner not 100% fit

    David Warner’s stay at the crease on returning from injury was a short one•Getty Images

    Gnasher can also talk cricket in between his weather updates:

    During his brief innings David Warner certainly did not appear that comfortable between the wickets. It was always accepted he wouldn’t be 100% fit for this game, but in the build-up it wasn’t the batting or running that was the main cause for concern but how he would go in the field. On Channel Seven, Ricky Ponting suggested the booming shots Warner played, with the last resulting in an edge to slip, may have indicated he was having problems.

    “I think everyone knew that he probably wasn’t going to be 100% coming into the Test match,” Ponting said. “The only thing I hope is that he hasn’t tweaked it again, doing something more there. It was pretty much from that moment on that those loose shots started. So hopefully it wasn’t playing on his mind, hopefully he’s okay and hopefully we can just say that that’s the way David Warner plays a shot like that early on in a Test match.”

    1.40pm local time/8.10am IST: It’s a cat and mouse game

    As soon as the India players emerged for a warm-up, it started to rain again. It’s pretty dark and gloomy at the SCG, a bit windy and the covers back on intact. Here it from the Pauls yourself…

    1.20pm local time/7.50am IST: Still no play

    “The rain has stopped now and it’s much brighter,” our weatherman Gnasher reports from the ground. “The groundstaff and fourth umpire are coming out. And covers are coming off.” Umpires Paul Reiffel and Paul Wilson also having a look at the conditions, the next inspection is at 1.30pm local time (8am IST).

    12.25pm local time/6.55am IST: Lunch taken

    No respite from rain yet so let’s make sense of debutant Will Pucovski’s situation during the lunch break (I’m having black coffee to stay up though). Making a debut after a long concussion history, he’s already faced two bouncers in the first 35 minutes of play, and will now feel some sort of responsibility to score after Warner’s early dismissal. Remember, it’s not been a great series for openers so far. We’ve already seen him walk across a fair bit to the fast bowlers, and a leg gully was kept for him too after the first few overs. He must be expecting more short balls once play resumes, and his state coach Chris Rogers looks back at Pucovski’s recent form and how he prepares for short balls.

    “When I first turned up as coach of Victoria, him and Sammy Harper, they do a lot of work with tennis balls, getting in really close with a tennis racquet and firing them in at each other. Will’s done a heap of work where he wants to stand up and roll the ball down to fine leg. You’ll see that shot from him quite a bit,” Rogers told RSN Radio. “Then it came to the matches and we played SA early on and Wes Agar came on first change and went straight to bouncers at Will, and he pretty much ducked them for the whole first session.

    “Then after lunch he played one of these rolling pull shots and from there he never looked back. They targeted him with the short ball for prettymuch the whole game and then WA did it from about the ninth over onwards as well. He would have faced a heap of short balls and he looked comfortable doing it and the way he stood up and played it, he made it look easy. So when that happened on day three at Drummoyne, it was an awkward situation where there was nothing to gain and he probably just got caught in two minds, so hopefully he’ll learn from that.”

    12pm local time/6.30am IST: Still drizzling

    Reserve umpire Claire Polosak watches on as groundstaff cover the pitch during a rain delay•Getty Images

    I’m not going to say, “I told you so” about the rain but it’s back and it’s a “reasonably steady drizzle again,” says Gnasher from the ground. I forgot to mention, the fourth/reserve umpire today is Claire Polosak, the first female match official in a men’s Test match. She was out on the field some time back with her umbrella and the other match officials.

    11.40am local time/6.10am IST: Play resuming soon

    Play is set to resume at 11.45 local time (6.15am IST), unless rain arrives again by the time you read this. Fans appear to be having a good time at the SCG though.A glimpse of different kinds of attire fans took to at the SCG•Getty Images

    11.15am local time/6.10am IST: Rain arrives at SCG

    Rain was forecast and here it is! It’s largely the pitch that is covered with the umpires out under the umbrellas after the players jogged off the field. Andrew McGlashan from the ground: “There is a line of showers coming up from the south. Today was the day with the highest chance of interruptions. The forecast for the next four days is good.” Twelve minutes after the players went off, the rain has stopped and the covers are coming off.Will be interesting to see if this will add any swing once play resumes. Meanwhile, there’s been a lot of debate on social media on Mayank Agarwal’s exclusion. Was it fair to leave him out? Vote in the poll below:

    11am local time/5.30am IST: Siraj removes Warner for 5

    Mohammed Siraj has silenced Australia’s opening stand with the wicket of David Warner•Getty Images

    A very intriguing 18-minute stay for Warner. He was running those quick singles with visible discomfort in his groin, eager to rotate the strike, and falls after flashing well outside off twice in a row off Siraj. On the second ball of the fourth over he went after one that seamed away from outside off, and when Siraj pitched it away further and a tad fuller next ball, Warner didn’t move his feet enough to get close to the ball while chasing it, and edged to first slip. Pucovski, meanwhile, is leaving well outside off while walking across the stumps a bit, and got a bouncer in the very first over from Bumrah. No swing at all in this pitch even though there was some rain in the lead up to the Test, and some more is expected today and tomorrow. Australia 18 for 1 after the first half hour. “Looks like a very good batting track,” Glenn McGrath says on TV commentary.

    10.35am local time/5.05am IST: Warner and Pucovski walk out

    Boy, will Australia be excited by Warner’s return. He’s still not 100% fit after his groin injury but given the nature of this series and what all is at stake, Australia have decided to play him, partnered by a debut. Tim Paine said at the toss Warner’s “high energy” will bolster their “confidence”. Not to forget, Australia have endured their slowest scoring home series of the century so far, just ahead of the 2018-19 series which also didn’t feature Warner. Pucovski, on the other hand, has been around the Test set-up for close to a year now, has a history of concussion injuries, and has bossed his way into the Test XI with plenty of runs in domestic cricket. Here’s more on Pucovski’s journey so far.

    10.10am local time/4.40am IST: Two more debuts in the series

    After Cameron Green in Adelaide, Shubman Gill and Mohammed Siraj at the MCG, we have two more debutants as expected: Will Pucovski and Navdeep Saini. Pucovski given the cap by Andrew McDonald and Saini by Jasprit Bumrah. Australia have opted to bat, with David Warner coming in place of Travis Head, and Matthew Wade moving down to the middle order. For India, we already knew yesterday that Rohit Sharma will open with Mayank Agarwal given the axe, and Saini making his debut because Umesh Yadav has flown back home.Speaking of fast bowlers, India’s pace battery has Jasprit Bumrah, Siraj and Saini with a combined Test experience of 17 compared to Australia’s tally of 144, thanks to Mitchell Starc, Josh Hazlewood and Pat Cummins. That’s one thing Australia will be excited about that they haven’t had to change their attack since the first Test.

    10am local time/4.30am IST: More reports about doubts over fourth Test in Brisbane

    And we have news coming in already, even before the coin has been flipped. Here’s Andrew McGlashan with what’s brewing in Australia for the Brisbane Test:Cricket Australia will seek clarification from the BCCI after more suggestions emerged that India would not travel to Brisbane for the final Test but continue to insist they have not been made aware of concerns. And a report on Thursday morning said that the BCCI had officially written to CA to say they did not want to head to Brisbane. However, ESPNcricinfo understands that the updated plans for the Gabba Test, in the wake of the Covid-19 outbreak in Sydney which led to border restrictions to Queensland, were approved by the BCCI office bearers on December 29 and no objections have been received since.CA have largely been dealing with BCCI secretary Jay Shah and it’s understood will seek further conversations on Thursday.The players are not confined to their rooms when at the team hotels in Sydney and Brisbane – which have been entirely booked out by Cricket Australia – and are able to mingle in communal areas. The one difference is that the restrictions in Sydney are CA protocols while those in Brisbane are imposed by the Queensland government as the terms to allow exemptions to be granted.

    9.55am local time/4.25am IST: Warming up for toss

    Australia will be banking on David Warner’s return for the third Test•Getty Images

    Hello everyone and a very warm welcome to the third Test of this exciting series that’s level 1-1. Another Test, possible another set of debuts (there’s at least one confirmed from India), another tight race for the WTC points and the ICC rankings (New Zealand are on top now), another debate on selection, another discussion on who is going to open, and much much more. I’ll steal Tim Paine’s words and just say there is “tension starting to boil under the surface”.

    Game
    Register
    Service
    Bonus