How much does the relative-age effect impact the careers of cricketers?

Do players born earlier in a selection year have a distinct advantage over those born later? And do these advantages carry over to later in their careers?

Matt Roller08-Jan-2021Rory Burns and Dom Sibley, England’s incumbent Test openers, have plenty in common. They were both born in Epsom, a small market town; they attended the same secondary school; they made their breakthroughs as professional cricketers at the same county; and while Burns is five years Sibley’s senior, they celebrate their birthdays ten days apart from one another.But in the last of those similarities lies an important difference. In England, the selection year usually runs from September 1 of one year to August 31 of the following year. Sibley’s birthday, September 5, made him one of the oldest pupils in his year group at school; Burns’, on August 26, put him among the youngest. That fact alone made Sibley twice as likely to have his name entered into an ECB database as a junior cricketer – as well as giving him a substantially better chance of attending Oxford or Cambridge University, or becoming a CEO of a major company.”It is not the month of birth that is important per se but rather where that month falls in the selection or academic year,” Tim Wigmore and Mark Williams write in their book (in Australia, the cut-off month in age-group sport tends to be January, compared to September in the UK, but the phenomenon remains the same). “Whatever month the selection year begins, the relative-age effect persists; those who are born earlier in the selection year have a far greater chance of being selected for youth teams or academies.”The logic behind the relative-age effect is intuitive. “Say my best mate and I have kids born in the same school year: one right at the start, one right at the end,” David Court, the player identification lead at the ECB, explains. “One of them could be walking around kicking a football on the same day that the other one is born. That’s where the gap is biggest.”

“This is the paradox of the relative-age effect: it is significantly harder for later-born children to reach professional level – but, if they can make it there, they have a higher chance of reaching the peak of their sport”From . “The professional hockey player starts out a little bit better than his peers,” he wrote. “And that little difference leads to an opportunity that makes that difference a bit bigger, and that edge in turn leads to another opportunity, which makes the initially small difference bigger still – and on and on until the hockey player is a genuine outlier.”The result is that at youth-team level, those who are born earlier in their respective selection years are over-represented. In England’s last two U-19 World Cup squads, 12 players were born between September and November, and only 11 between March and August. In 2015, an article co-authored by Court in the Journal of Sports Sciences showed that out of young cricketers at the first point of identification, i.e. entry into the ECB’s database, 36% are born between September and November, compared to just 16% between June and August.ESPNcricinfo LtdWhile they were born five years (and, crucially, ten days) apart, the similarities between Burns and Sibley’s journeys – same secondary school, same county development system – to become Test openers serve to accentuate the differences.Sibley was a typical early-maturing, early-born child, who dominated at schoolboy level, made hundreds for England U-19s, and became the youngest double-centurion in the history of the County Championship while still studying at school. Burns, on the other hand, was a late developer with a late birthday, whose slight frame and awkward technique saw him struggle for the same sporting opportunities as Sibley at Whitgift, to the extent he changed schools for sixth form.”Dom’s parents are both quite tall, and he was always pretty tall for his age,” recalls Neil Kendrick, Whitgift’s master of cricket, “whereas Rory would have been the opposite. Physical strength, especially for a batter, can cause you to score a lot of runs when you’re younger, but that’s not to say if you don’t have it that you’re not going to end up being a really good player like Rory has been.”There is a lot of proof that from an England point of view, at representative and age-group level, there is much more likelihood of you being selected at those levels if you’re born between September and November or December, like Dom, than if you’re like Rory with a June to August birthday.”The progression of Dom Sibley (left) and Rory Burns’ careers has typified the impact of the relative-age effect on young cricketers•Getty ImagesBut this advantage in the junior system does not necessarily bear out at senior international level. Court points out that two England players he classes as “super elites” – James Anderson and Ben Stokes – have birthdays in the final quarter of the selection year, in July and June respectively. This illustrates the idea of the underdog effect.Wigmore and Williams suggest that the traits picked up by relatively young players are exactly the sort required to help athletes reach the highest level. “The very difficulties of being physically immature for their selection year – and having to struggle to out-muscle or outrun opponents and rely on other qualities if they are to compete – are ideal preparation for professional sport,” they write.”This is the paradox of the relative-age effect: it is significantly harder for later-born children to reach professional level – but, if they can make it there, they have a higher chance of reaching the peak of their sport.” Their hypothesis is backed by the research: Court’s 2015 paper showed that 7% of English cricketers who had made it into the system despite their late birthdays went on to play internationally, compared to only 2% of those with early birthdays.Staggeringly, when he won his cap in 2018, Burns was England’s first August-born Test debutant since the Australian-educated Darren Pattinson a decade earlier. But throughout the 2010s, there is little evidence of a relative-age effect among England Test debutants, with the same number of caps handed out to players with birthdays in each of the four quarters of the year.ESPNcricinfo Ltd”You need to look at relative age, but also their physical maturation,” says Court. “You could have an early-born child who is a late maturer, or a late-born child who is early maturing, physically. What I found in my time at the FA [England’s Football Association, where he worked as the performance education lead] was that if there were any Q4 [June-August birthdays] boys within the academy system, they tended to be early maturing.”There are also implications for coaches. The ECB emphasises the idea in junior development that current performance is not necessarily a good indicator of future potential, but outside of its pathways, grassroots coaches can often pay undue attention to how a young player is performing at the moment. At every level below elite, there is a trade-off between investing in a player with a higher ceiling for long-term gain, or instead chasing short-term rewards, and the balance is hard to strike.And Burns and Sibley’s cases highlight the fact that for promising young players, progress and development are not linear. Kendrick suggests that Sibley stood out as a potential future professional from early on. “Lots of things can happen, but when he was 12 or 13, I think we realised he had a good chance,” he says. “I don’t think you would have said that Rory was as nailed on, and he certainly wouldn’t have been on the radar for England U-19s or anything like that.”Good players can be made in lots of different ways. Some of them are prodigies younger; some aren’t, and develop later. There’s definitely not one thing that happens; everyone progresses differently.”Sibley, then, exemplifies the benefits of being born early in the selection year: he was physically mature for his age, especially when compared to some of his younger peers; he was given development opportunities with additional coaching which exacerbated that advantage; and he had the confidence and strength that allowed him to flourish in his early days in county cricket. After his form fell away and he suffered his first setbacks as a Surrey player, he moved to Warwickshire, and made his Test debut aged 25.

“From an England point of view, at age-group level, there is much more likelihood of you being selected if you’re born between September and December, than with a June to August birthday”David Court, ECB player identification lead

Burns, on the other hand, typifies the late-developing underdog. He was small and young compared to his immediate peers, he missed out on England U-19 selection, and he did not make his County Championship debut until the age of 21. From there, he had to demonstrate his resilience and perseverance, plugging away in county cricket until belatedly getting a chance with England at 28.Perhaps the more pertinent question is whether the relative-age effect represents a problem to be solved, or simply a fact of life. Some direct attempts to address it have been made within a sporting context: in New Zealand, rugby teams are selected by weight rather than age group at youth level, while in English football, West Bromwich Albion have held trials open only to children born between May and August in order to “unearth talented footballers who have previously been overlooked”.”It’s a really tricky one,” says Court. “If you see it as a problem to solve, there might be unintended consequences.” In particular, he has concerns about the prospect of eliminating the underdog effect. “If some of our best players coming through are Q4s, do we then risk limiting them because they miss out on the same challenges along the journey? I’m wary of that.”The relative-age effect hints at “an inefficiency in the talent identification process”, according to Wigmore and Williams, and begs the question whether young players of high potential like Burns are being lost to the game by virtue of something as random as their date of birth. For the time being, ten days can make all the difference.

The Pant playbook: There's no room for boring

His 88-ball 91 was a reminder that his future knocks, too, would mostly be rollicking rides

Varun Shetty07-Feb-20212:46

Gambhir: Would never want Pant to change

“Run up, put it on the spot, be metronomic, and be almost deadly boring.”This was Graeme Swann’s advice to Jack Leach, who is on his maiden tour to India. It’s what Swann did when England won 2-1 in 2012-13, and so did India’s spinners for the first two days of this Test.Related

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None of them had to contend with Rishabh Pant, who simply doesn’t do boring. And we better get used to it.This much is evident when Pant keeps wicket – he sings Hindi versions of the Spiderman theme song, coos and cackles when teams try to pinch runs from the infield, and gets himself babysitting gigs. In this Test, his attempts to elicit noise from close-in fielders were so constant, you almost wonder if he was just looking for a conversation.And then, there’s his batting, as Leach found out for the first time in Test cricket. The plan was a no-brainer for England’s left-arm spinner – there’s a rough outside the left-hander’s off stump, and he was looking to hit it. At 73 for 4, India were 505 behind, and Pant had kept for two straight days as India played a patient, conservative game. There was no room for a metronome in his life on Sunday.India hadn’t hit a boundary for nearly 15 overs when Pant came in; half an hour later, Pant had two fours against Archer and four sixes off Leach, straight out of the rough.There are two things to consider about Pant’s innings. One, that his strategy was probably out of Ben Stokes’ playbook on Saturday. The England left-hander counter-punched through the early part of day two against Shahbaz Nadeem, predominantly using sweeps to unsettle the India left-arm spinner who was also looking to find the rough through a difficult spell. As one of the leading attacking batsmen in the world, Stokes did an expert job of executing that plan, explaining that he decided he would rather be out caught in the deep – as he was – than pushing at one to be taken at short leg. In both, the number of runs scored, and the way their respective innings ended, Pant and Stokes played identical innings.Why that may not be immediately apparent, is point number two: Pant loves to hit sixes, and is very good at it. That takes attention away from the solidity he showed against the other bowlers. Understandably, there was concern about his approach from fans and experts alike, as he went about his six-hitting streak. Some of his sixes only just cleared the fielders on the rope, and his ramp past leg slip during Leach’s second spell wasn’t what would be called a percentage shot – one where the risk and reward aren’t disparate.But, to reiterate, he is really good at hammering sixes. There was as much calculation in going after Leach as there was at being watchful against Bess at the other end. Pant taking on a left-arm spinner is almost always the best option: in 54 balls against left-arm spin in Test cricket, he hits a four or a six every 5.4 balls and is yet to be dismissed. Against right-arm spinners, whom he has faced considerably more (517 balls), that boundary rate is one every 11 balls and he has been out 11 times in 22 innings. At the press conference at the end of the day, Cheteshwar Pujara said that it’s probably never in Pant’s best interests to be defensive against spin.The audacity of his attacking game has often belied a rather intelligent batsman in his short career. On a turning pitch, nearly everything he did until he eventually fell to Bess’ offspin was calculative. Based on the trouble Leach caused Washington Sundar later in the day, it’s safe to say that Pant’s attack against him almost single-handedly delayed one of England’s frontline threats. It also helped Pujara immediately at the other end, as depicted in these pitchmaps below from an early point in their partnership.

The word “intent” can almost take on parody status in Indian cricket for the range of conversation it covers. It fuels debates, starts existential battles, and can be contorted to fit pretty much any discussion – it showed up during 36 all out and also during the results in Sydney and Brisbane, for example. So what is it, really?This piece from India’s early 2020 tour to New Zealand captures the essence: “it’s about getting past the fear of survival, no matter what the conditions are, and figuring out how best to score runs and get the game moving along.”With Pant growing alongside this diktat, and looking more and more like he will be one of India’s regulars over the next few years, it is perhaps time for those of us watching from outside to embrace what’s coming: the rollicking rides, as well as how abruptly they could end. In the dressing room, it’s something they’re already working on.”The communication is to try and make him understand which are the shots he can play, and there are some shots he needs to avoid. I can’t be specific about the shots, but there’s a clear communication with him that there are some shots he needs to avoid,” said Pujara at the end of third day’s play. “Some shots he can continue playing if they’re in his range. And there are times when he also has to understand, and even the coaching staff always communicates, that he has to put the team first and be a little sensible. And he has done that most of the time.”There are times when he gets out and it looks ugly. But […] he has a bright future. He will learn that there are times when he can be more patient and build another partnership with whoever is there at the crease, because he’s capable of putting the team first and at the same time put up a decent total. Whenever he bats long, we always end up putting a big total. I’m sure he’ll realise that.”Or perhaps he’ll just get bored of the fact that he has been out in the nineties thrice at home, and four times overall.

Ben Duckett: 'I've certainly had setbacks but they've made me who I am'

Notts batter eyeing England after righting some wrongs during last summer’s T20 Blast triumph

George Dobell09-Jun-2021Life doesn’t always present second chances quite as neatly as it has for Ben Duckett.A year after Duckett had, in his words, “messed up” at the key moment of the 2019 Vitality Blast semi-final against Worcestershire, he was back at Edgbaston again, though this time in the final. And this time, he hit consecutive boundaries to finish 53 not out and win Nottinghamshire the title with 16 balls to spare.”I will remember that match against Worcestershire for the rest of my life,” Duckett says now. “It was a big learning curve for me.”The whole game rested on me, and 99 times out of 100, I’d get the team over the line there. But I messed up in that last moment. I could have been the hero, but I missed that last ball and yeah, it was a bit of a shock. I made one mistake and it costs us the competition.”But when I look back on it, we – as a team – messed up the game long before that. We should never have been in the situation where it went to the last ball. I think we needed 11 from the final two overs. But we lost three wickets in the penultimate over through some brainless cricket.Related

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“Everyone had my back. Until that moment I’d actually played a decent innings and I think we understood that it was a learning moment for us as a team. I knew afterwards that, if I had my time again, I would have taken a risk in that second last over and tried to kill the game.”I’ve certainly had setbacks in my career. That was one of them. They’ve made who I am.”A great example is Ben Stokes. Look what happened to him in the final of the World T20 in 2016? Like me, he wants to be there in the big moments. And if you are there in those pressure moments, sometimes you won’t get it right. But he bounced back from that and won England the World Cup final a few years later.”Thankfully, 12 months after that Worcestershire game, I had another chance and I got us over the line.”Duckett and co. will have another chance to “get over the line’ when their Vitality Blast campaign starts on Wednesday with a televised fixture away against Worcestershire. They have lost their captain, Dan Christian, Pakistan allrounder Imad Wasim and Chris Nash, the top-order batter, from the team that won last year. But with Alex Hales and Joe Clarke joining Duckett in an eye catching top-order, they are quietly optimistic they could become the first side to win the title for two years in succession.

“It’s such a tough competition to win,” he says. “We have 11 games in 20 days, I think. So it’s really important we focus and start again. If we think we’re going to breeze through because we won last year, we’ll be in trouble.”Joe is a quality player. Some players – me, for example – don’t change their game that much between T20 and Championship cricket. We tinker, but it’s pretty much the same. But with Joe, I’ve seen him bat for 150 balls in a Championship game one week and make 70 off 25 balls in the Blast the next. It’s scary how good at striking the ball he is. And Hales, at the other end, he’s not too bad, either. With those guys at the top of the order, we look dangerous, don’t we?”Could there be a second chance for Duckett in international cricket, too? It could easily be forgotten that he has played all three formats of international cricket but never in England (he played his only T20I in Wales). He’s only 26 and, in 2020, averaged 56.28 in the County Championship and 42.50 (at a strike rate of 137.65) in the Vitality Blast. There’s a lot to like.”I’d love to play an international game in England in front of the crowd,” he says. “I’m pretty sure it was about four o’clock in the morning when I played. Some people don’t even know I played international cricket.

“My issue was my front leg used to go straight down or outside leg stump as I used to hit through the off side. But if you show your stumps to someone as good as Ashwin… well, it’s easy for him.”Duckett struggled in his only Test winter to date

“It [India and Bangladesh] was an extremely tough place to go. If I went back to India now, I know that I would do a lot better.”I obviously had a technical issue against offspin. I kept getting out to balls that pitched on middle and hit the top of off stump. Funnily enough, I see county players doing the exact same thing now. I mean look at the lads who went to India last winter: they’re clearly gun players and they really struggled.”My issue was my front leg used to go straight down or outside leg stump as I used to hit through the off side. And I could get away with that in England because there is, basically, no spin. But if you show your stumps to someone as good as Ashwin… well, it’s easy for him.”I had to work really, really hard on that. It took me a couple of years. But I made a good hundred against Jeetan Patel a couple of years ago and just the other day, I scored one off about 30 balls against Simon Harmer. I was happy with that as I really trusted my defence and it worked.””My aspirations certainly aren’t over. But I don’t know which format I would return in. I still love playing four-day cricket – there’s no better feeling than scoring a Championship hundred – and it may be there are more options for me in Test cricket than the limited-overs teams. They look really tough to break into. But there’s another World Cup in a couple of years. Who knows?”Right now, my focus is on playing for one of the better sides in the country, enjoying my cricket and putting in some performances to help Notts win another trophy this year.”With the opening two matches of the 2021 Vitality Blast at Trent Bridge sold out at reduced capacity, tickets are currently on sale for the subsequent five fixtures and are available online at tickets.trentbridge.co.uk. All home games which aren’t live on Sky will be streamed at trentbridge.co.uk/live.

'Which world is NZ living in?' – Ramiz Raja

Ramiz Raja, the new PCB chairman, was among the many voices from Pakistan expressing their disappointment at New Zealand’s decision to abandon the tour

ESPNcricinfo staff17-Sep-2021

Extremely disappointed on the abrupt postponement of the series, which could have brought the smiles back for millions of Pakistan Cricket Fans. I've full trust in the capabilities and credibility of our security agencies. They are our pride and always will be! Pakistan Zindabad!

— Babar Azam (@babarazam258) September 17, 2021

1/2 New Zealand Cricket would not have made the decision to end their tour of Pakistan lightly- they have shown time and again that they are willing to do their part to promote and play our great game so I don’t think it’s right to be critical of them.

— Jason Gillespie (@dizzy259) September 17, 2021

2/2 we are all however disappointed for Pakistan cricket, it’s players and supporters. A wonderful cricketing country that has, for a long time, been denied consistent top level cricket. Hopefully the situation in the country improves quickly!

— Jason Gillespie (@dizzy259) September 17, 2021

My country is safe. And my country is safe for cricket. This is a heartbreaking moment for us as a team and for all the fans. We will keep making our efforts iAPakistan Zindabad!

— Imam Ul Haq (@ImamUlHaq12) September 17, 2021

Sad news for players and fans. #NZvPAK https://t.co/8C6UpOMPz1

— Grant Elliott (@grantelliottnz) September 17, 2021

It is making me more sad thinking about how upset our fans must be after receiving this news. To the world, I want to repeat our country is safe for cricket.

To our fans, We the Pakistan team promise we will turn these sad feelings into happy ones In Shaa Allah
Zindabad

— Hassan Ali (@RealHa55an) September 17, 2021

Dejected and disappointment are my emotions right now. For many years we’ve shown that Pakistan is safe for cricket. So sad to see the tour end without starting #PAKvNZ

— Wahab Riaz (@WahabViki) September 17, 2021

Pakistan is a safe and secure country. We have state level security when it comes to international fixtures and high level sporting events. However whatever the reason was – we hope there can be some transparency over this matter so that Pakistan cricket at home survives.

— Azhar Mahmood (@AzharMahmood11) September 17, 2021

Disappointed waking up to the news of the cancellation of the Pakistan Vs New Zealand series because of security issues.Over the last 6 years playing and visiting Pakistan has been one of the most enjoyable experiences. I’ve always felt safe. this is a massive blow to Pakistan

— Daren Sammy (@darensammy88) September 17, 2021

#PakvsNZ

— Sana Mir (@mir_sana05) September 17, 2021

This is heartbreaking. Pakistanis love cricket so much, we have worked really hard to bring cricket back here. PSL & other teams visiting Pakistan is evidence of our hospitality & security arrangements. We will continue our efforts. #PakistanZindabad

— Shadab Khan (@76Shadabkhan) September 17, 2021

Toured @TheRealPCB 2 years back and really enjoyed every minute of our stay!! Felt extremely welcomed and also safe tbh! Never had any doubt Genuinely wanna see cricket return to this great nation! @danushka_70 @dasunshanaka1 pic.twitter.com/ovjroZbXx9

— Angelo Perera (@angiperera) September 17, 2021

In Rishabh Pant's defiance lies his defence

Was the wicketkeeper-batter’s bold approach in the WTC final appropriate?

Nagraj Gollapudi24-Jun-20211:02

Virat Kohli – ‘We don’t want Rishabh Pant to lose his positivity or optimism’

Just before he entered the Indian dressing room on Wednesday afternoon, Rishabh Pant punched the thick wooden door hard with his bare-knuckled right fist.Pant had just got out attempting to slog Trent Boult, getting a top-edge that flew high to backward point. Henry Nicholls, running backwards, took the catch of the final to silence the Indian fans in the crowd at the Rose Bowl. The magnificent catch, one of the turning points of the final, didn’t get as much attention as the shot that Pant played. The question still being asked is: was Pant’s bold approach appropriate?Related

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Pant himself was angry. As he charged Boult and the ball flew towards Nicholls, he would have known he had made a mistake. However, ever since he had arrived at the crease early in the first session after Virat Kohli and Cheteshwar Pujara fell in quick succession, Pant had been walking the high wire. Yet, it was only those outside who had their hearts in their mouths. For the stockily built Pant, who India’s bowling coach Bharat Arun describes as a “pocket dynamo”, his various advances towards the bowler were calculated acts of blunting the opposition attack.Pant’s plan and instinct was to play every ball. At times it backfired. Off the ninth ball he faced, Kyle Jamieson pitched a delivery on length with a scrambled seam. Jamieson had induced edges and lbws with similar deliveries and lengths, which was on the fullish side. Pant attempted a push to the off side away from his body. The outside edge flew straight to second slip where Tim Southee made a mess of an easy catch. Pant was on 5. India were 82 for 4.The Indian fans celebrated the drop. Southee banged the turf. Jamieson walked away, doing well to hide any emotions towards his senior team-mate, who had now dropped not one but two catches in the match. Dale Steyn, one of ESPNcricinfo’s experts for this Test, tweeted wondering whether Southee had dropped the WTC mace.Pant seemed unmoved. As Jamieson tested Ajinkya Rahane with short stuff, at the other end Pant was doing mock drills: ducking, swaying, hooking, pulling, ramping.Then it was Southee’s turn with the ball again. A delivery before the first hour into the morning, Southee swung one into Pant, who lunged forward toward the off stump. If you freeze the replay at that point, you can see Pant’s front toe, the right one, pointing towards cover – as if he was going to drive it square on the off side; instead with a loose left leg and meaty wrists, he flicked the ball to the right of mid-on for a boundary. Even Rahane was caught by surprise as he had to quickly move out of the way.When Neil Wagner replaced Southee, Pant charged him the third ball of the over, to slap a firm four. Next ball, he quickly moved into position to perfectly defend it under his eyeline, and exchanged a cool stare with the left-arm quick. Both men would engage in fencing duel.Rishabh Pant played his shots, as only he does•Getty ImagesPant jumped out of his crease again for a streaky outside edge against an away swinging delivery that flew to the right of gully for four. Wagner had a curious smirk. Next delivery, slightly fuller, again an away swinger, Pant charged and this time missed. Rahane walked up to Pant. From afar, Pant seemed to indicate to his vice-captain that if he stayed in the crease, there was a greater danger of the ball taking the outside edge.Next over Rahane was gone. India just ahead by just 77 runs, with 25 minutes to lunch. What would Pant do now? He jumped once again and went for an almighty heave against Wagner and missed completely. Wagner scratched his chin with an expression that said: ‘What the hell?’ Was it rash? Crazy? Pant might tell you: it was not an act of defiance. It was his instrument of defence.Immediately into the second session, Wagner went round the stumps to unleash his main weapon – the short ball. Six men were in position on the leg side: short leg, backward short leg, midwicket, deep square leg and two fine legs. Every time Wagner banged in short Pant pulled him – both on the front foot and the back foot. And he was pulling these balls into the ground.One particular stroke showed how well Pant had understood the pitch and the bowler’s plan: he reverse swatted Wagner for a single to third man with such disdain as if he was shooing a fly.Rishabh Pant swats one away•PA Photos/Getty ImagesPitted against the meditative batting of Kane Williamson and Kohli in the first innings, it is easy to be critical of Pant’s bating on Wednesday. Anarchic it might have seemed from outside, but Pant actually used his natural game to play to the situation. He was doing exactly what Kohli professed after the defeat: taking risks but in a calculated fashion. And he had to take risks. Both he and Ravindra Jadeja had battled hard to survive the first hour after lunch. Then Jadeja succumbed to sustained pressure. India’s tail rarely wags. Pant did not have too many options, because otherwise there was every danger that India would end up with a far lesser lead. Recent evidence suggests the same. In the WTC, India have been bowled out 19 times. Only on four of those 19 occasions has the team batted more than 10 overs and added more than 50 runs after losing the seventh wicket.Kohli himself was cautious about making too much of Pant’s final shot on Wednesday. The Indian captain backed Pant, saying he was an “expressive” batter and India didn’t want him to “lose his positivity or his optimism in changing the situation for the team”, because that is his USP. “It’s up to him to understand whether it was an error of judgement and rectify it moving forward because he has a long career with the Indian team, and certainly someone who could be a match maker for India on consistently many occasions in the future,” Kohli said at the post-match media briefing.This is not the first time Pant has played one stroke too many. It will not be the last time. The frustration from outside is because he himself raised the bar with his heroics in Australia, followed by the home series against England where he dug his heels in initially and then seized the momentum. He nearly did the same in Southampton, albeit in a different manner. Without his innings India potentially might have lost the battle well before lunch.

Why did Quinton de Kock refuse to take a knee?

Outrage has dominated both sides of the debate

Firdose Moonda28-Oct-2021It may be tempting to think that Quinton de Kock’s refusal to take a knee ahead of the match against West Indies earlier this week is out and out racism, but ignorance of racial inequalities that have resulted from slavery, colonialism and apartheid might be what caused him to not comply with Cricket South Africa’s directive, and to consequently withdraw himself from the match.That’s not the soft view, nor one that seeks to justify de Kock’s continued inaction over antiracist gestures, but rather one that aims to add nuance to the ever-complex conversation around race and sport, and especially race and sport in South Africa.Outrage has dominated the narrative locally on both sides. On the one hand, there is the argument that the right to freedom of speech and expression, which is enshrined in the South African constitution, must be respected, and that CSA should not have made taking a knee mandatory. On the other is long-brewing dissatisfaction with the national team’s inconsistency over their approach to antiracism, which is now embodied in de Kock’s refusal. And all this is happening while CSA conducts Social Justice and Nation Building (SJN) hearings, where some of those who have appeared, including former team manager Mohammed Moosajee and South African Cricketers Association CEO Andrew Breetzke, have called for the national team to have a unified approach to taking a knee.Related

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'Believe de Kock is committed to an antiracist agenda' – CSA chair

SACA CEO: CSA has caused a 'crisis' by mandating taking a knee

As a collective, South Africa have swayed between a steadfast approach to doing nothing, as was the case in the lead up to the 3TC event last July, to doing everything, when all players and support staff took a knee. (de Kock missed this last event because of a Covid-19-related issue.)They then planned to do nothing in the series against Sri Lanka, before deciding to raise their fists in the Boxing Day Test. Then there was a three-pronged approach on their tour to West Indies this winter, where some team members, all of colour, as well as Rassie van der Dussen and Kyle Verreynne, took a knee; others – all white, like Test captain Dean Elgar and Aiden Markram, raised a fist; and others, also all white, like Anrich Nortje, stood to attention. de Kock did nothing and has continued to do nothing. One of the issues is that no one yet knows why.de Kock is not against gestures. Historically, he has joined the rest of the team in wearing a black armband to commemorate a death, and the pink shirt at the annual Pink ODI to raise awareness for breast cancer. He has also made individual gestures. On scoring a century in the first Test against West Indies in St Lucia, de Kock displayed a bat sticker in favour of rhino conservation. And he made a finger gesture in support of a friend who had lost a digit. You might argue that de Kock made his own decision in all of these, but it would be interesting to see the reaction if he opted to wear a blue shirt on that all-pink day. The point being that employers often expect certain commitments from their employees. Very seldom do they impose expectations on them.

The gesture is a way to tell South Africans, the majority of whom have suffered under racial segregation, that there is recognition of what they have been through

CSA went as far as imposing expectations only after more than a year of the men’s national team umm-ing, ahh-ing and half-gesturing. In that time, the board has been imploding: it changed from an interim board to a permanent one, and has had to deal with a significant lack of senior staff after suspensions over the last two years. It is plausible that the collective response to antiracism has not been top of mind, and the seriousness of the division in South Africa’s appearance only occurred to them when they saw the opening match of the Super 12s, where Australia took a knee together and their own team presented a mish-mash of posturing.Two images caught fire on social media. One was of members of the team on the sidelines that showed Keshav Maharaj, Tabraiz Shamsi, Kagiso Rabada and van der Dussen taking a knee; Dwaine Pretorius, Aiden Markram and David Miller raising a fist; and Anrich Nortje and Heinrich Klaasen standing to attention. The other was of Temba Bavuma taking a knee and de Kock standing with his hands on his hips. CSA board chair Lawson Naidoo confirmed that was the spark that forced CSA to act, but to do so five hours before the next game was risky.Perhaps CSA thought it had called the team’s bluff and the speed of the command would ensure it was obeyed. Then de Kock called the board’s back. When the team arrived at the ground in Dubai, he made himself unavailable without even telling his team-mates why. In so doing, he put his captain and his team-mates in a difficult position.Bavuma said it was the toughest day of his captaincy, as he had to do without de Kock the batter and de Kock the senior player. Reeza Hendricks would have been told at the last moment that he was going to open the batting. Heinrich Klaasen would have been told he would have to take the gloves, after having done so just once in a T20I in the last six months. He went on to drop the first chance he got. Bavuma was run out for 2 after failing to beat Andre Russell’s arm. Had South Africa gone on to lose, doubtless focus would have been on those three players and it’s likely the blame would have been laid on them. Luckily for them, they didn’t.The act of taking a knee has been described as a gesture of antiracism, rather than a gesture in support of Black Lives Matter, and that is another significant point. Although BLM has become synonymous with the fight against racism, the two do not have to be the same thing, especially in a country like South Africa, where the right for racial equality predates the BLM movement. The BLM organisation is seen by some in South Africa (and elsewhere) as a radical political, and even Marxist, movement rather than a civil-rights activist collective that speaks to global issues of exclusion. This is the kind of movement that white South Africa has in the past been afraid of; they have had terms to describe being overrun by the disenfranchised majority as “black danger” () and “red danger” (). And therein may lie part of the explanation for why taking a knee has been difficult for some of South Africa’s white players.Although none of the members of the current side are old enough to have lived through the horrors of apartheid, all of them will have had parents or caregivers who grew up then. van der Dussen was influenced by a father who was part of the African National Congress to take a knee.The array of gestures before the game against Australia that probably drove CSA to mandate the whole team taking the knee•ICC via GettyWhich is where Michael Holding and Carlos Brathwaite and Daren Sammy and Kieron Pollard’s calls for education come in. All of the last three have been part of a West Indian set-up that has been unrelenting in their consistency in taking a knee, and who have spoken at length about the experiences of being black in a world, especially a cricketing world, governed by whiteness.As South Africa readied to collectively take a knee, sans de Kock, on Tuesday, Sammy was on air. “My mother always told me, ‘You’ve got to stand for something or you will fall for anything’,” he said. “It’s good to see players united over something that has affected so many people across the world.”Pommie Mbangwa went further: “Some will say it is being political but I cannot shed my skin. I hope that the discussion at the very least can be about how to be united about something that everybody agreed on. This is also in the hope that there is agreement in that regard.”The pair referenced de Kock’s absence before Sammy expressed his disbelief at those who struggled to support antiracism. “Sometimes I don’t understand why is it so difficult to support this movement if you understand what it stands for. That’s just my opinion because of what my kind have been through. There are a lot of issues affecting the world, but I don’t understand why it’s so difficult.”Brathwaite, speaking on BBC Five Live, understood the significance of South Africa taking a knee together and de Kock not being there. “I’m not an advocate of forcing anyone to do something that they don’t want to do. But I also understand where Cricket South Africa is coming from,” he said. “There are a lot of conversations and a lot of education that still has to happen around why you take the knee, what it signifies, but more importantly, for things to change in society, taking a knee has to be a start and not the be-all and end-all.”Talk to some around de Kock and they will say this is the exact reason he does not want to take a knee: because it achieves nothing. The footballer Wilfried Zaha has argued similar. What that does not acknowledge is the simple fact that human beings can walk and chew at the same time. They can gesture publicly and they can act behind the scenes. The gesture is a way to tell South Africans, the majority of whom have suffered under racial segregation, that there is recognition and understanding of what they have been through. The rest is what shows our education in action.

Alana King's move west pays dividends with gains on and off the field

It will be the second consecutive final for the legspinner and pits her against a likely rival for Australia honours

Alex Malcolm26-Nov-2021Over to you, Alana. That was the statement Amanda-Jade Wellington made on Wednesday night with her WBBL record 5 for 8 in the Eliminator for Adelaide Strikers.The two best legspinners in the WBBL have been making their mark all season, with an Ashes spot potentially in the offing following Georgia Wareham’s season-ending knee injury.But, as the pair come head-to-head again on in the final on Saturday, Alana King isn’t looking that far ahead.”I think the higher honours will take care of itself,” King told ESPNcricinfo. “I’ve got tunnel vision for the Scorchers. We’ve got one more game of the season to finish off and hopefully, we’re lifting that trophy.”King, 26, has been a revelation as part of the Scorchers’ revamped squad that is one win away from the title. She has claimed 16 wickets in just 12 innings, compared to Wellington’s 22 in 16.But King hasn’t just had one good season to put herself into the frame for national selection. Last season, playing at Melbourne Stars, she also took 16 wickets and helped Stars reach the final. King’s economy rates have set her apart, conceding 5.82 runs per over this season and 6.00 last year, while Wellington conceded 6.52 this year and 7.81 last season. King has even been more frugal with the ball than Jess Jonassen across the last two years.Related

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Numbers alone though aren’t going to get King into Australian colours, and that is part of the reasoning behind her move west this season. King was part of the National Performance Squad in 2019 where she first worked with current Scorchers coach and Australia assistant coach Shelley Nitschke. She has long been seen as a player of potential.Even after her outstanding season last year, where she had worked with Stars’ coach Trent Woodhill on attacking the stumps more and being an aggressive wicket-taker in T20 cricket, King felt she needed further growth and development in cricket and in life. She had already made the move to play her WNCL cricket in Western Australia after struggling for opportunity in Victoria and joining the Scorchers was a natural progression.”It was just getting more opportunity to bowl and then when I made the move to go to the Scorchers it was more so working under Shelley Nitschke,” King said. “To work under the likes of Soph [Devine] and Moons [Beth Mooney] and Marizanne [Kapp] it was a nice way to lure me in and base all my cricket in WA.”

I remember seeing her quite a few years ago and she was a big turning young leggie and now she’s increased her pace a little, probably attacks the stumps a little moreNational selector Shawn Flegler on Alana King

Two other by-products of moving to WA have probably had the biggest impact on King as a cricketer this season. Being in the WA set-up has given her access to WA men’s batting and spin coach, and former Test wristspinner, Beau Casson.”I absolutely love Cass,” King said. “He’s been really clinical with me in this pre-season and probably a real point of difference.”It’s nice to have someone who just breaks stuff down really simply to you. Spin is a hard craft in itself. He’s someone who gets it, who bowls it, who bowled it exceptionally well in his career. I love leaning on to Cass and he’s checked in over the Big Bash which has been great and fine-tuning a few things and making sure that I can control what I can control.”The pair have made some minor technical adjustments which have certainly been noticed by the batters who have faced King, with many noting the energy, pace and control she has added while still maintaining her unique ability to spin the ball hard. But King feels her mental improvements have been more important.”It’s just more my routine,” King said. “We focus really on routine, when walking up to your mark, at the top of your mark, then go again. And it’s repeatability. If you can control that you can control a lot of things whether you’re on top of the batter, whether you’re under the pump, I think they’re the things that I’ve learned.”The other steep learning curve has come off-field. She has moved in with former Australia and WA batter and current Sydney Sixers player Nicole Bolton and there were some honest conversations over the winter about what is needed to get to the next level.”I’ve learned a lot from Bolts and living with her,” King said. “She’s taught me a lot about more so the professionalism of the game. She’s helped me understand a bit of the standards that are at the Aussie level.Alana King insists she isn’t getting dragged into thoughts of Australia•Mark Brake/Getty Images”I think it’s just probably a lifestyle change, now that I’m not living actually at home with family, I think you’ve got to be really in tune with what your body needs and that comes from a nutrition point of view, comes from a fitness point of view, so I’ve really tried hard in this pre-season off-season to nail a few things and it’s nice to see some reward.”That hard work hasn’t gone unnoticed by Australia’s national selector Shawn Flegler, who praised King’s progression.”She’s been great this season and has developed even more,” Flegler told ESPNcricinfo. “She’s always been highly skillful. I remember seeing her quite a few years ago and she was a big turning young leggie and now she’s increased her pace a little, probably attacks the stumps a little more. She doesn’t give much away, always asking questions.”She’s certainly improved her fielding, particularly her out-fielding, is moving across the ground a lot better. Has some skills with the bat as well, probably hasn’t shown a heap of it [this season] but has in the past.”This is where we are fortunate, we have someone like Alana and then Amanda-Jade Wellington who keeps putting up really good numbers, so we are probably spoilt for choice.””They have both put up some good cases for selection. We’d love to have a legspinner in our team. Georgia Wareham has been an important part over the last few years and we’ve made no secret of that. They are valuable in any format and of the game.”Wellington laid down the first marker, but King will get the chance to make a final statement on Saturday.

The captain and his coups – five MS Dhoni classics

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Pinning down Pollard
Super Kings vs Mumbai Indians, IPL 2010 finalMumbai Indians were 136 for 6, needing 33 from two overs, with the title on the line. Kieron Pollard had just clattered Doug Bollinger for 4, 6, 4, 6 in a 22-run over, which titled the title fight Mumbai’s way. Until Dhoni intervened, having Matthew Hayden at an unorthodox straight mid-off position, in addition to having a more conventional long-off.Dhoni’s plan was to have Albie Morkel bowl yorkers at Pollard and turn his strength of hitting down the ground into a weakness. Morkel’s first ball to Pollard was thwacked past him for four. He nailed the yorker second ball, which squeezed underneath Pollard’s bat. After a dot and the run-out of Ambati Rayudu, Morkel went full once again, and Pollard could only skew a low catch to Hayden at straight mid-off. The Super Kings pressed on to win their maiden IPL title.IPL 2010 – Chennai Super Kings’ first title in the tournament•Indian Premier LeagueAt the post-match presentation, Dhoni reasoned that it was worth whisking short fine-leg to straight mid-off, given Pollard’s propensity to hit in the ‘V’. He also revealed that he had deployed a similar field against Hayden himself at a practice match in the lead-up to IPL 2008.”If you see the big-hitters of the world or powerful hitters, they don’t sweep or reverse-sweep. So I said, ‘okay what’s the point of a short fine-leg’,” Dhoni told the host broadcaster after the game. “Pollard will anyway look to hit down the ground and Morkel will look to bowl yorkers outside off. If he miscues one, he may not get the elevation. I’ve tried it once with Matthew Hayden, though. It worked at the practice game we had right at the start of the tournament. No rocket science.”Many other IPL captains subsequently took a leaf out of Dhoni’s playbook, having a fielder straight to counter the likes of Pollard. M Vijay, for example, when he was captaining the Punjab franchise in 2016, stationed himself at ultra-straight mid-off against James Faulkner.Chaos theory
Chennai Super Kings vs Kings XI Punjab, IPL 2018Super Kings slipped to 27 for 3 within five overs in pursuit of 154 on a spicy pitch in Pune. Fast bowler Ankit Rajpoot was on a hat-trick, having taken out Faf du Plessis and Sam Billings. Dhoni unleashed his chaos theory – promoting Harbhajan and Deepak Chahar ahead of himself, DJ Bravo and Ravindra Jadeja.Chahar. Chaos!•BCCIWhile Harbhajan saw off the new ball and contributed 19 off 22 balls, Chahar made a more decisive 39 off 20 balls at a strike rate of 195. Dhoni and Super Kings head coach Stephen Fleming had originally identified Chahar as a batting allrounder at Rising Pune Supergiant/s, but injury delayed his initiation into the IPL. Dhoni and Fleming reunited with Chahar at Super Kings, where he became their go-to bowler in the powerplay. In that game against Kings XI Punjab, he repaid the team management’s faith with the bat too, helping them seal the chase.”Sending in Bhajji [Harbhajan] and Chahar creates a bit of chaos,” Dhoni told the host broadcaster. “The bowlers all of a sudden bowl yorkers, offcutters, and bouncers. When [top-order] batsmen are batting, they stick to a good line and length, but against Bhajji and Chahar, they lose their line and lengths instead of sticking to the plan. Plus Bhajji and Chahar could come in handy during the playoffs.”Straightjacketing Sachin
Chennai Super Kings vs Mumbai Indians, IPL 2010 finalStopping Sachin. Not everyone could do it. Dhoni knew how•Indian Premier LeagueLet us revisit that game. Bollinger had struck early to dismiss Shikhar Dhawan, but Sachin Tendulkar stabilised Mumbai’s chase of 169, with the crowd behind him. Dhoni brought Shadab Jakati into the attack in the tenth over to give him a crack at Tendulkar. Jakati had apparently troubled Tendulkar when he was once a net bowler with the India side, so Dhoni was hoping for some control from the left-arm fingerspinner.The left-handed Abhishek Nayar, though, briefly foiled Dhoni’s plan, carting Jakati for back-to-back sixes in a 14-run over. Jakati then switched ends and eventually made the incision by hiding one away from Tendulkar’s swinging arc and having him chipping a catch to long-off.Two years later, in the 2012 Eliminator against Mumbai in Bengaluru, Dhoni tossed the new ball to Jakati, who kept Tendulkar to a run-a-ball 11. Something had to give and that something was Tendulkar running himself out. Super Kings went on to win that knockout game as well.Holding back Harbhajan
Chennai Super Kings vs Sunrisers Hyderabad, IPL 2018 Qualifier 1Super Kings had picked Harbhajan in 2018 to exploit the spin-friendly Chepauk track, but after just one game there, they had to shift base to Pune because of protests surrounding the Cauvery river water issue. Harbhajan did a good job for Super Kings in Pune, too, but in the qualifier against Sunrisers Hyderabad at the Wankhede Stadium, where Harbhajan had bowled across phases for Mumbai Indians, Dhoni didn’t use his offspin at all. Jadeja was in fine rhythm, giving up just 13 runs in his four overs for the wicket of Manish Pandey, so Dhoni didn’t need him on the day.Harbhajan Singh, not a car Dhoni needed to drive all the time•BCCI”You know, I have a lot of cars and bikes in my garage. And, I don’t ride all at a time,” Dhoni quipped. “When you have six to seven bowlers in your side, you want to see the conditions. You want to see who is batting and what is needed at that point of time.”Then, in the final against Sunrisers, Dhoni dropped Harbhajan altogether, fielding legspinner Karn Sharma, who brought with him the reputation of being a serial title-winner in the IPL and in domestic cricket. Karn came away with the prized scalp of Kane Williamson, drawing him out of the crease and having the Sunrisers captain stumped for 47 off 36 balls.Besting Chris Gayle
Chennai Super Kings vs Royal Challengers Bangalore, IPL 2011 finalChris Gayle could have taken the 2011 final away from Super Kings; he was out for a three-ball duck•AFPAfter opting to bat, Super Kings racked up 205 for 5 on the back of an M Vijay special. A red-hot Chris Gayle, though, was standing between Super Kings and back-to-back IPL titles. Gayle was the leading run-getter during that IPL and single-handedly transformed Royal Challengers’ fortunes in the tournament. Dhoni matched up R Ashwin’s offspin with the left-handed Gayle at a time when match-ups were not even a thing. After setting up Gayle with two offbreaks, Ashwin darted one into the batter and had him nicking off for a three-ball duck. Game over!”I rely a lot on the bounce, therefore a good wicketkeeper is extremely crucial,” Ashwin told the . “With Dhoni, the caught-behinds and stumpings have gone up many notches in my bowling. He understands the trajectory, the variation, and the bounce that I get.”

Perth Scorchers' double: leadership, lists and looking ahead

One of the key figures behind the scenes in WA cricket reflects on the season

Alex Malcolm13-Feb-2022Perth Scorchers became only the second club to win both the BBL and WBBL titles in the same season. The BBL team achieved it while playing just one match at home having been shut out of Western Australia due to border closures. Perth Scorchers and WA cricket general manager of high performance Kade Harvey spoke to ESPNcricinfo about how they pulled off the feat and some of the broader issues.The tournament just gone was an incredible challenge for everybody in the competition but Perth Scorchers in particular. What was the hardest moment across the four months of WBBL and BBL? I felt like the WBBL was what it normally is. We managed to dodge Covid. The schedule allowed us to play in green zones. We were able to play some really good cricket there in the normal framework of how a team might move around the country. But I suppose the challenge for most teams was that you didn’t have much downtime, especially when you made the final. At short notice, we hosted the final at Perth Stadium, which a lot of work goes into, and before we blinked, we were straight in the BBL.You probably felt that the BBL was going to be a little bit more challenging just on the back of the border changes that were happening through that period. Just rolling from one to the other, for all the support staff who work across both programs, particularly for WA cricket, that had its challenges.Every day I’d wake up to a whole heap of WhatsApp messages with PCR and RAT results, saying who was available and if we had dodged a bullet. Certainly, that first and second week in January was probably the toughest period I’ve seen in cricket, where we’re on the road and Covid was really threatening to take a hold of us. To get through that and put 17 players fully fit players on the park, maybe besides one Mitch Marsh dodgy hamstring, is a real credit to our team and the decisions that we’ve made throughout the tournament.Related

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Can you give some insights into the WBBL and BBL programs in terms of building those lists and whether there are different philosophies or the same philosophies for both? I suppose they are the same and different in the same breath. The biggest thing was who was providing leadership? Hopefully everyone sees that [CEO] Christina Matthews is a great leader of Western Australian cricket, and her impact flows through the business. I think if you get your captain and your coach right, particularly in franchise cricket, that was my number one focus. We lost Lisa Keightley [as WBBL and WCNL coach] when I first took over the job. We had a call to make on how we wanted to move going forward based on where we thought the group was at the time and it came to me pretty much straight away that we needed to split [the WBBL and WNCL coaches] and create a bit of a separate identity for the WBBL girls and that’s where my search landed Shelley Nitschke.She’s a great leader. It was her first crack at head coaching but I had great faith that she was ready for that opportunity and from the back of that you then start a recruiting drive based on what she thought and I thought and you end up with Sophie Devine and Beth Mooney and from there, you can’t really go wrong. It was about defining the leadership. Making sure we had great people running the programs and leading the programs and I suppose that’s a commonality between the two.Sophie Devine brought quality and power to Scorchers’ top order•Getty ImagesThat was part of backing Adam Voges in with a three-year deal when his first contract expired. I had great confidence that he was the right person to lead WA men’s cricket. I think what we saw in Ashton Turner this year was just the emergence of a fantastic leader who was in Mitch’s shadow there for a while and he clearly stepped out of that and provided great direction, strength and tactical awareness, and relationships with our coaches that really means that we were connected on and off the field. The things that we talked about off the field with our planning and different things we wanted to be able to see that connection on-field and we saw that in both programs across the year.You’ve had to regenerate both lists over the last few years and you’ve had to make some tough decisions. Shaun Marsh’s exit a couple of years ago was one and Fawad Ahmed more recently. Can you give some insight into some of the thinking behind some of the moves that you and the list management team have made? We struggled post-Justin Langer leaving. I think Justin as coach and Adam as captain was utopia and we struggled to recapture that leadership connection in the first couple of years. It was a big hole to fill. It took us a couple of years to work it out. That’s where Liam Livingstone and Jason Roy came in [last year]. We thought we needed to be more aggressive upfront, particularly when we played on the east coast. We made a few calls there that we needed to regenerate the playing list a little bit. But I don’t think there were major changes, they were more subtle.With the Fawad one, we just felt like with Peter Hatzoglou that we had someone that could bowl really well at Perth Stadium. We felt like he had a lot of upside and Fawad, whilst he had been brilliant for us, he probably was at the back end of his career. We could get Hatzoglou and younger guys into our group and that hopefully will pay off in years to come. It’s what we did with Turner, Richardson, Behrendorff, Agar, they all came through as younger players and are now BBL champion winning players. So that’s always been the philosophy.Peter Hatzoglou’s signing was with an eye to the future•Getty ImagesThere were some tough conversations. Particularly Shaun was a tough one. But we just felt like with Josh Inglis coming along and the way our top order was going, we needed to be a bit more aggressive upfront. But players like Colin Munro last year and bringing Laurie Evans this year, that experience on those slow wickets that those guys have played a lot on was certainly part of the thinking.How did the Tymal Mills deal come about because he played an important role in the absence of Jhye Richardson in the middle phase of the tournament?He was huge. That was sort of a fortunate one. We felt like we needed cover with a bit of ball speed and we just got lucky with Tymal being available and being keen. We knew that he was going to be leaving in mid-January. We were hopeful of getting Richo at the back end of the tournament. We kept some money aside and that third overseas option alive in the background, not really knowing when we would need it. To be honest, I thought Tymal was injured from the World Cup and we just ended up having some conversations with his agent that he was keen. He was outstanding. He’s a high-quality character. He was messaging our boys during the final. So a bit of luck as always is the case with these things and good timing more than anything else. But he certainly took on being a Perth Scorcher, which was awesome.The overseas draft is a concept that is bubbling away in the BBL. What are your broader thoughts on an draft versus an open market where teams can handpick overseas players from anywhere for their own needs? I’ve probably ebbed and flowed over the journey. With Covid, at one point you could see the merit of a draft. But I think having seen how it played out that I’d still like the [current] option for us because I still think part of the skill of a T20 tournament is how you list manage, how you put your squad together, how you have your depth, and I think teams should get rewarded for having those relationships with players. You can’t imagine Rashid Khan wants to play for anyone apart from Adelaide [Strikers]. I’d like to see that be a really strong part of what we do going forward and the ability to take a punt on a Laurie Evans or bring in Tymal, I think that was a good combo for us.Kade Harvey would like to see loyalty rewarded with overseas players•Cricket Australia via Getty ImagesSo my preference going forward is for there to be an open market and you bring in the players as best you can. Personally, I think the way it’s working at the moment doesn’t need to be tinkered with especially in the women’s game. The WBBL, with the national team players and your overseas players, I’m just not sure a draft would work there given the connection to teams.Players, ultimately, I don’t think want to be moving around every different year to play like they do in the IPL. I think in the IPL they do it because they’re getting paid a lot of money. I think in tournaments like ours, we want to be able to let players play where they’ve got strong relationships and can play their best cricket. So that’ll be our strong recommendation going forward. Whether that carries any weight or not I’m not sure.Following on from that, Steve Smith’s unavailability for the finals was a problem for the competition. Where do you sit on having to hold Australia representatives on your list, paying them as part of the salary cap and hoping that they’re available for you, versus an ability to have them outside the salary cap?I don’t have the answer to that but there’s got to be one that’s better than what it is at the moment. I think we all understand that we want Steve Smith to play but it’s got to be within a framework that everyone understands before the competition starts. For mine, with the Steve Smith scenario, we were changing one rule for one player for one club. And to me, that’s not healthy in a tournament. But again, I don’t disagree that we want the best players playing but it has to be within a framework of the rules.And if that means that Australian players are signed to a team and whenever they’re available it’s part of their Australian contract or retainer I’m not sure. But that’s the sort of discussion that we need to have in the off season to make sure that if those guys are coming back, it’s not just one player, it’s actually a case that we all really understand the rules and know how those players come into the competition in a fair and equitable way. Clearly, the ACA [Australian Cricketers’ Association] needs to be part of that conversation as well. But we certainly need a fix for that so that scenario doesn’t present itself again.How do Perth Scorchers get better? How do you improve again on what you’ve achieved?Look, it’s always tough. It’s always probably tougher to back up, as the hunters become the hunted. Hopefully by winning both titles we’ve given the players and the staff a sense of what it takes to achieve and there’s also the opportunity to go and do it again. It’s probably a little bit harder because you’ve got to get back there. The girls had never won it, and the boys, we’d been out of the game for a couple of years. Hopefully, that in itself is enough motivation to keep people striving to get better.We’ll need to continue to evolve the list and develop talent to play the roles that we want them to play. I was lucky enough to be at the stadium when the girls won, it was a hugely satisfying moment. Our job is to make sure that we’re developing the talent that can come in and play those roles. Hopefully within WA cricket, the people who have experienced it want to do it again, and those that missed out maybe want to work a bit harder to be able to be there and I think that’s what we’ve done well over a period of time. I don’t think there’ll be any lack of motivation going forward to try and stay up on top.

Under-19 World Cup 2022: Wyllie, Dhull, Brevis and Wellalage headline ESPNcricinfo's Team of the Tournament

Our XI features four Indians but find out who else made the cut

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1. Teague Wyllie (Australia)
With unbeaten scores of 86 and 101 in Australia’s wins in the group stage, Wyllie was his team’s anchor in chases against West Indies and Scotland. His 97-ball 71 against Pakistan in the quarter-final secured safe passage into the semis. The runs, however, dried up by the time the semi-final and third-place playoff came around, and the early contender for the tournament’s highest run-getter finished joint-fourth.2. Haseebullah Khan (Pakistan, wicketkeeeper)
It was a slow rise to the top for the Pakistan opener who, after scoring 135 against Zimbabwe, could not put on a score for the next three games. However, after Pakistan lost the quarter-final, Haseebullah blossomed again with the bat, making 79 against Bangladesh and 136 against Sri Lanka to eventually finish as the tournament’s second-highest run-getter. A total of eight catches and two stumpings in six games also earns him the gloves.3. Dewald Brevis (South Africa)
The Player of the Tournament slides in at No. 3, having scored 506 runs in six games – the most in the history of a single U-19 World Cup edition. He could’ve finished with four centuries in six innings but missed out on two of them when he was out on 96 and 97 against Ireland and England respectively. Brevis was so dominant that he scored over 120 runs more than the second-placed Haseebullah. His legspin also earned him seven wickets.Dewald Brevis has had a stunning Under-19 World Cup•ICC via Getty4. Shaik Rasheed (India)
The India vice-captain makes the cut even though he missed two games. That’s because of his crucial contributions in key situations. Against South Africa, India were 11 for 2 in their opening fixture, but Rasheed began India’s recovery with 31. Then in the semi-final against Australia, he struck 94 in a similar situation with India losing both openers early. Against England in the final, it was his 50 in the chase that set the foundation for India’s four-wicket win.5. Yash Dhull (India, captain)
Like Rasheed, he also missed two games but was not short of impact. Against South Africa, his 82 dragged India to 232 which proved to be a winning total in the end. He also made an unbeaten 20 in the quarter-final when India suddenly went five down with the target still a few runs away. However, Dhull saved his best for the semi-final against Australia where his 110 was an innings that had composure and aggression in equal measure. He absorbed the pressure of a knock-out when India had lost their openers with not too many on the board. He will also wear the captain’s armband in this team.Yash Dhull and Shaik Rasheed had a big impact despite missing two games because of Covid•ICC via Getty Images6. Dunith Wellalage (Sri Lanka)
A massive reason behind Sri Lanka’s sixth-place finish in the event was courtesy their captain’s all-round effort. His left-arm spin earned him five-fors in wins against Scotland and Australia, while his three-fors against West Indies and Afghanistan meant he finished as the highest wicket-taker of the competition with 17 wickets. With the bat, he struck 52 to take down Australia, made 113 against South Africa and notched up 40 against Pakistan.7. Raj Bawa (India)
Before his heroics in the final – where he finished with the best bowling figures in the history of the U-19 World Cup finals – Bawa had two more standout games. He took 4 for 47 against South Africa in a game where he returned to take those wickets after being hit all over the ground in the first spell. Against Ireland, he made an important 42 from No. 3 when India were missing their regular captain and vice-captain because of Covid-19. He then posted the tournament’s highest individual score with an unbeaten 162 at a strike rate of 150. But he saved his best for last: 5 for 31 with the ball and 35 important runs with the bat.8. Vicky Ostwal (India)
The left-arm orthodox spinner showed metronomic accuracy and the skills to deceive batters not only off the pitch but also in the air. His economy of 3.63 squeezed his opponents and got important breakthroughs. It was his 5 for 28 against South Africa that ensured India could defend 232, while his 2 for 25 against Bangladesh and 3 for 42 against Australia in the knockouts ensured neither team could go past 200.Dunith Wellalage turned in key performances with both bat and ball•Getty Images9. Awais Ali (Pakistan)
The right-arm seamer was Pakistan’s key wicket-taker through the event, taking 15 wickets – the third-highest in the competition. He also had the second-best figures – 6 for 56 against Zimbabwe. His three-for against Afghanistan was important in Pakistan’s quest to be group toppers. He went on to take 2 for 46 in the quarter-final defeat against Australia and 3 for 52 in the playoff game against Bangladesh.10. Joshua Boyden (England)
With 15 wickets at an average of 9.86, the left-arm swing bowler might have missed out on topping the wickets tally by two, but he was, by far, the most impressive bowler of the tournament. He bowled nine maidens in all, offering control with the new ball. At the death, he had the skills to deliver accurate yorkers. His 4 for 16 against Bangladesh bowled them out for a sub-100 score, and Canada were no match for his skills when he finished with 4 for 44. He rattled South Africa’s openers in the quarter-final from where they could never recover.11. Ripon Mondol (Bangladesh)
In a disappointing event for the 2020 champions, one bright spot was Mondol’s bowling. He started the competition with a fighting unbeaten 33 not out against England, but his primary skill came to the fore in the next two games, where he took 4 for 24 and 3 for 31. He impressed with a four-for against India in the quarter-final that for a brief moment left the eventual champions worried. He ended his tournament with Brevis’ wicket in his final playoff game.12th man: Tom Prest (England)

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