Eileen Ash, oldest-ever Test cricketer, dies aged 110

ECB pay tribute to “a remarkable woman who led an extraordinary life”

ESPNcricinfo staff04-Dec-2021Eileen Ash, who was the oldest living Test cricketer, has died at the age of 110 with the ECB paying tribute to “a remarkable woman who led an extraordinary life”.Ash, née Whelan, made her Test debut for England against Australia in 1937 and played seven Tests in total, taking 10 wickets at an average of 23.00 with her right-arm seam bowling before her retirement in 1949. In the middle of her international career, she was seconded to MI6 – the UK’s secret intelligence service – during the Second World War.Ash was a well-known figure throughout her final years. She rang the bell at Lord’s ahead of England’s win in the final of the 2017 Women’s World Cup against India, and two years later the MCC unveiled a portrait of her at the same ground.Related

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Clare Connor, the ECB’s managing director of women’s cricket and the MCC’s president, said: “Our sport owes so much to its pioneers and Eileen was one of them. I am deeply sad to be saying goodbye to her today.”Heather [Knight, England captain] and I went to visit Eileen about six months before the 2017 ICC Women’s World Cup – she was 105 at the time – and it was one of the most remarkable experiences. Eileen taught Heather yoga, we played snooker, we drank cups of tea and we leafed through newspapers and scrapbooks celebrating Eileen’s time as a player in the 1930s and 1940s.”She regaled us with some amazing stories, including how she came to have her bat signed by Sir Donald Bradman at a French restaurant in Sydney in 1949. I know neither of us will ever forget that day, it was so special.”Our thoughts and prayers are with Eileen’s family as they come to terms with losing such a wonderful woman and the end of an astonishing life.”

Rohit: 'There was clear grit and determination to win every game' under Kohli's captaincy

India’s new white-ball captain says the team “couldn’t get that extra inch” to win an ICC trophy after the 2013 Champions Trophy

PTI13-Dec-2021Rohit Sharma enjoyed “each and every moment” that he played under outgoing white-ball captain Virat Kohli, and still continues to do so.In an interaction with , Rohit spoke about how the team had a “great time” under Kohli, who led for nearly five years.”Five years that he led the team, he led from the front every time, we stepped on to the park, and there was clear grit and determination to win every game, that was the message to the entire squad,” Rohit said on the sidelines of the India Test squad’s training session ahead of the South Africa tour.”We have had a great time playing under him and I have played a lot of cricket under him, I have enjoyed each and every moment, still continue to do that.”Related

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The Indian team has copped criticism for not being able to win an ICC trophy since the 2013 Champions Trophy despite having proven and consistent match-winners in the ranks.”There are lot of things that we need to do right before we think of end result. The last ICC trophy (Champions Trophy), we won was in 2013,” Rohit said. “But I don’t see anything wrong that we did after that Champions Trophy. We played well and performed as a team but just that we couldn’t get that extra inch.”That can happen as international cricket is very demanding but that’s the challenge as we are all professionals. Lot of World Cups are coming and India will be eyeing to do well in lot of them. Our focus is on winning championship but there is a process that we need to follow as a group.”If you need to win the championship, there are lot of other things that you first need to take care of, then focus on the end goal.”The focus will be on getting better as a player first and then collectively as a team, Rohit added. “When challenges are there and how you come out of those tough challenges is very important and I think, in the past we have been put in those situations before, where we have been 10 for 3 or 15 for 2 or something like that, we failed to recover. That’s something that we need to keep in mind moving forward, it’s one of the areas.”One of his primary tasks is to ensure that each player is aware of why he has been picked in the team and what is expected of him. “I have got limited opportunities to lead team India but whenever I have got an opportunity, I have tried to keep it simple, tried to keep one thing in common: clear communication to players.”I have tried making sure that they understand their roles, and that is what it is all about, understanding that role and going out there and performing that role. Because for us – coach and captain – it is important that we have clear communication and that is what I want to do, making people understand why they have been picked in the team.”Rohit and Rahul Dravid worked together during the three-match T20I series against New Zealand and the new captain is very happy with the start the two have had. “Working with Rahul , it was three-odd games but it was fantastic,” Rohit said. “We know how he has played his cricket, hard and tough. There has been a sense of relaxation as well, because it is important to keep the atmosphere light and cheerful.”

U-19 WC: Radhakrishnan's all-round show helps Australia clinch third place

Nangeyalia Kharote triggered a collapse late in the chase but Australia clung on to win by two wickets

Sreshth Shah05-Feb-2022Nivethan Radhakrishnan was the hero for Australia in the third-place playoff match as his all-round show downed Afghanistan in a close contest. His three-wicket haul limited Afghanistan to 201, and his 66 from No. 3 set up the chase. Australia were in for a scare when they went from 193 for 5 to 196 for 8 late in the contest, but they hung on, winning by two wickets.Radhakrishnan, known for being an ambidextrous spinner, used his right-arm offbreaks to run through the Afghanistan middle order. Suliman Safi was adjudged lbw while trying to sweep Radhakrishnan, given out even though the impact seemed to be outside the line of the stumps. Safi had to walk back for a promising 37. Bilal Ahmad holed out down the ground and Noor Ahmad was bowled trying to slog Radhakrishnan as he finished with 3 for 31.The early bowling impact from Australia, though, came from the seamer William Salzmann, who also grabbed a three-for. It was his opening spell that rattled Afghanistan, and by his second over, he had sent Nangeyalia Kharote and Allah Noor packing. Salzmann also contributed to the third Afghan wicket when his throw from cover caught Mohammad Ishaq napping outside his crease.After Radhakrishnan got into the act with the Safi wicket, Khaiber Wali was run-out trying to pinch a single that wasn’t there before Salzmann returned to dismiss Afghanistan’s highest scorer Ijaz Ahmad Ahmadzai (81). With five fours and five sixes, Ijaz’s hand ensured Afghanistan had some sort of total to bowl at, and his 79-ball innings took the side past 200. He held up one end when wickets were tumbling from the other, and he eventually fell to Salzmann in the 49th over while trying to find the boundary.Cooper Connolly then knocked the tailenders over, leaving Australia needing 202 to win.Radhakrishnan walked in at No. 3 when Teague Wyllie fell early for 13. He took his time against Afghanistan’s spin attack, and put on 60 with Campbell Kellaway in 15.2 overs. Their stand took Australia past 100, before Kellaway was bowled by the left-arm wristspinner Noor soon after reaching his fifty. Noor was soon in the act again when he bowled Connolly with a googly.Radhakrishnan, though, kept the innings moving, his occasional boundaries taking Australia closer. He had begun his innings with two cover drives for four before dispatching a short Noor delivery for another boundary. He even played a dab, a sweep and a cut and reached his fifty in 72 balls. He was the fifth Australian out when he was stumped after misreading the flight of a Shahidullah Hasani delivery.At 167 for 5, Australia were expected to cruise to victory, but Kharote was not going down without a fight. With Australia in the 190s, he removed wicketkeeper Lachlan Shaw and Salzmann in quick succession. Between the two wickets Kharote sandwiched an effort from backward point that ran Corey Miller out.With five to defend and only the No. 11 still to come, the game was in the balance going into the last two overs. Joshua Garner and Jack Sinfield knocked off four singles in a nervy 49th over, before Garner found the gap through a packed infield in the first ball of the final over to give Australia the bronze medal.

Katene Clarke and Mitchell Santner power Northern Districts to Super Smash title

Blistering knocks from the pair helped set a target of 218, which proved too far beyond Canterbury’s reach

ESPNcricinfo staff29-Jan-2022Blistering knocks from Katene Clarke and Mitchell Santner powered Northern Districts to their highest total of the season, 217, which proved too far beyond Canterbury’s reach in the final of the men’s Super Smash in Hamilton.Opening the batting, Clarke almost single-handedly drove Northern Districts’ early momentum, rushing to 40 off 15 balls to lift them to a powerplay score of 57 for 2. That became 77 for 3 when Colin de Grandhomme fell off the last ball of the eighth over.Santner entered the scene at this point, and the fourth-wicket pair proceeded to add 50 in just 26 balls before Clarke departed in the 14th over for 71 off 34. He had hit eight fours and four sixes.Santner continued to pummel the Canterbury bowling, as Northern Districts pillaged 90 runs from their last seven overs. The allrounder eventually finished unbeaten on 92 off 40 balls, having hit four fours and nine sixes.Fast bowler Henry Shipley provided Canterbury their only bright spark with the ball, picking up 2 for 30 to finish the tournament as its top wicket-taker with 18 at an average of 14.11 and an economy rate of 7.25.Canterbury’s chase never really got to grips with the required rate, as Tim Southee, Ish Sodhi and Joe Walker made regular incisions. Their top scorer was their No. 9 Matt Henry, who hit 44 off 22 balls, but by the time he got going the result was a foregone conclusion. Northern Districts eventually triumphed by 56 runs, bowling out their opponents with seven balls remaining.

Jharkhand make Nagaland toil after 591-run lead

Chetan Bist’s seventh first-class century the lone bright spark for Nagaland

Himanshu Agrawal15-Mar-2022Wicketkeeper-batter Chetan Bist’s unbeaten century turned out to be the only positive for Nagaland on another day of uninspiring cricket on a flat Eden Gardens pitch. Bist’s 122 took his side to 289, which was still a monumental 591 behind Jharkhand’s 880.Despite that big a lead, Jharkhand surprisingly opted to bat again during the second session of the fourth day’s play, eventually finishing 723 ahead at stumps with eight wickets remaining. Nazim Siddiqui dominated an opening stand of 63, hitting 42 of them. His partner Utkarsh Singh ended on 50*.Siddiqui’s intent of getting quick runs was clear from the second over itself, as he found the boundary thrice off Chopise Hopongkyu: a pull off a short ball was followed by a gentle push to beat the point fielder, while a crunching drive between mid-off and cover finished the over. He eventually fell leg before wicket to Raja Swarnkar, before the Nagaland captain Rongsen Jonathan had Kumar Suraj caught for 31.Earlier, Bist waged a lone battle for Nagaland. Having started the day on 46, he reached his half-century in the sixth over of the day. Bist had stands of 24, 25, 45 and 35 for the last four wickets, enough for him to reach his seventh first-class hundred. He used the sweep shot to good effect against left-arm spinner Shahbaz Nadeem, as he found boundaries as well kept the scoreboard ticking.Bist also rode his luck on his way to the century. When on 85, his sweep off Nadeem landed between fine leg running forward and square leg running back. Then on 88, a top-edged pull just eluded fine leg.Jharkhand are all but through to the quarter-finals of this season’s Ranji Trophy, having already taken a first-innings lead.

Leadership vacuum at USA Cricket as chairman Paraag Marathe resigns

Multiple sources have also said that another independent director, Rohan Sajdeh, submitted his resignation in March

Peter Della Penna17-May-2022Six months after the resignation of CEO Iain Higgins, USA Cricket is facing more uncertainty in leadership with board chairman Paraag Marathe also stepping down.USA Cricket board member Venu Pisike told ESPNcricinfo that this is all part of an agreement: Marathe’s resignation in return for Pisike and fellow board member Srini Salver dropping a longstanding lawsuit against the board.Multiple sources have also said that another independent director, Rohan Sajdeh, submitted his resignation in March which now leaves three significant roles vacant in the board.The lawsuit filed by Pisike and Salver was in relation to the USA Cricket elections, namely that they had waived the constitutional requirement that in order to vote, members had to be registered and in good standing for a minimum of 12 months prior to a vote.Related

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USA Cricket was going to allow new members to vote just weeks after enrolling in late 2020 and early 2021. Separately, Pisike and Salver issued a legal challenge to Marathe’s re-appointment as an independent director and board chairman in March 2021. They claimed that the post should only have been filled after the election, which has already been delayed by 17 months, with inputs from the newly-elected board members.”The two issues raised in the lawsuit are addressed to our satisfaction,” Pisike wrote via email when contacted by ESPNcricinfo. “Members who registered in early 2021 now meets the constitutional one-year eligibility requirement. Chairmam [sic] who is reappointed as independent dir[ector] against the adopted process submitted his resignation.”USA Cricket made no mention of either board member’s resignation in a press release on Monday night announcing that the Pisike & Salver lawsuit had been withdrawn. A USA Cricket spokesperson did not comment directly when asked about Marathe’s resignation.Paraag Marathe has resigned six months after USA cricket CEO Iain Higgins did the same•Getty Images

The credibility and stability of Marathe, who also serves as an executive vice-president for the NFL’s San Francisco 49ers, and Higgins were seen as key reasons for USA Cricket’s successful bid to become co-hosts for the 2024 ICC Men’s T20 World Cup along with Cricket West Indies. But their absence – Higgins resigned as CEO in November – now leaves a significant leadership vacuum just over three years after USA Cricket was readmitted as an Associate member by the ICC and recognised as the official governing body in America following the expulsion of USACA in 2017.Pisike is also looking to renegotiate a billion-dollar contract signed with American Cricket Enterprise (ACE) in 2019.A copy of the agreement, which has been obtained by ESPNcricinfo, states that ACE keeps 95% of all cricket-related commercial revenue – including TV broadcast rights, sponsorship agreements and gate sales – generated for USA Cricket while USA Cricket keeps 5%. The agreement provides a minimum annual payment to USA Cricket from ACE – which is listed at $399,000 for 2022, meaning USA Cricket would need to generate $8 million in revenue before they would receive anything beyond the base level disbursement guaranteed by ACE – in the event that the 5% revenue figure does not reach that threshold, which it has not in the first three years of the deal.”Also the majority of the board agreed to prioritise ACE contract negotiation which is pending for almost three years,” Pisike said. “I personally think the current contract doesn’t benefit USA Cricket or it’s constituents hence we need [and] desire a contract that is good for all parties including ACE.”Former USA Cricket CEO Iain Higgins played a part in the country getting to co-host the 2024 T20 World Cup•Peter Della Penna

The current arrangement has left USA Cricket severely cash-strapped, especially since the cancellation of the ODI series against Ireland in December. That tour was projected to break even thanks to incoming sponsorship and broadcast revenue, but only if all of the scheduled two T20Is and three ODIs had gone ahead. The cancellation of the three ODIs because of Covid-19 meant that USA Cricket lost out on significant revenue for those matches, though the costs of stadium venue rentals, Covid testing fees and hotel rooms for the squads remained. According to multiple sources, that led to USA Cricket suffering a loss of between $200,000 to $250,000.The domino effect of that financial hit has resulted in the board laying off numerous staff. USA Cricket announced late last week that they were not going to renew the contract of USA women’s head coach Julia Price, preferring someone who is based in the USA full-time. Price, who recently served as head coach of the Warriors squad in the Fairbreak Invitational T20 event in Dubai, is based in Australia and had been traveling back and forth since her appointment just over three years ago.Kirk Greaves, who was one of several independent contractors who also had their contracts terminated in recent months, has filed a lawsuit against the governing body claiming “racial discrimination” and is seeking $2 million in damages.USA Cricket has also delayed announcing the scheduling of any domestic championships for 2022 due to financial constraints. USA’s men’s side is due to travel to Zimbabwe for the 2022 Men’s T20 World Cup Qualifier B in July, but tentative plans for a slate of T20I fixtures to help prepare USA in the lead-up to that event may also be in doubt for financial reasons.

Mithali Raj retires from international cricket

“Perfect time to call curtains on my career as the team is in the capable hands of some very talented young players”

ESPNcricinfo staff08-Jun-2022Mithali Raj has brought the curtain down on her storied career, announcing her decision to “retire from all forms of International Cricket” in a message on Twitter.Raj, 39, wrote, “I feel now is the perfect time to call curtains on my playing career as the team is in the capable hands of some very talented young players and the future of Indian Cricket is bright.”Though she didn’t give any concrete indicators on what her future plans were, she did say that she would stay connected with the game. “Each time I stepped on the field, I gave my very best with the intent to help India win. I will always cherish the opportunity given to me to represent the tricolour,” she wrote. “It was an honour to have led the team for so many years. It definitely shaped me as a person & hopefully helped shape Indian Women’s Cricket as well.”This journey may have ended but another one beckons as I’d love to stay involved in the game I love and contribute to the growth of Women’s Cricket in India and world over.”

It has been one of the most celebrated careers in the game, during which Raj played 12 Tests, 232 ODIs and 89 T20Is, her last appearance for India coming during the 50-over World Cup earlier this year, in a game against South Africa, which India lost by three wickets to be knocked out of the tournament.Raj, India’s captain, scored 68 in 84 balls in that game, her 64th half-century in the format, in which she compiled 7805 runs, including seven centuries, at an average of 50.68. In Tests, she aggregated 699 runs at an average of 43.68 with a century and four half-centuries. And in T20Is, where her appearances had been curtailed since the emergence of the “talented young players” she referred to in her retirement message, Raj scored 2364 runs at an average of 37.52 with 17 half-centuries and a high score of 97*. She, however, remains India’s highest run-getter in the format, at No. 7 on the overall list, with current T20I captain and ODI vice-captain Harmanpreet Kaur just 45 runs behind.Her overall tally of 10,868 runs made her the leading run-scorer in women’s international cricket, and no batter has scored more than her 7805 in women’s ODIs. She was also the first to score seven fifties in a row in women’s ODIs, where her tally of 64 is the highest.Raj, in fact, led India for a large part of her career. In eight of her 12 Tests, she was the captain, from as far back as November 2005 to the other day, when India played Australia in Carrara in September 2021. India won four of those Tests. She also led India to 89 wins in 155 ODIs, and in T20Is, 17 wins in 32 games.2:17

Archive: Mithali Raj – ‘I’ve not set any benchmarks for myself’

Raj burst on to the national consciousness as a 16-year-old, where on international debut, she scored an unbeaten 114 in an ODI against Ireland at Milton Keynes on June 26, 1999. Her innings at the time gave her the record for the youngest centurion in women’s cricket across all formats. It remains an unbroken record in ODI cricket.That kickstarted a career that reached never-before highs, as she quickly became the lynchpin of the India’s batting. Not long after, she led India to the final of the 2005 ODI World Cup, and when she did the same in 2017, Raj became the first Indian captain, male or female, to lead in two ODI World Cup finals. The winner’s crown, however, eluded her, as India lost a one-sided final in 2005 to Australia by 98 runs and then, 12 years later, in a much narrower contest to England by nine runs.Raj’s sound batting technique – helped along by outstanding footwork, perhaps a result of her childhood enthusiasm for Bharatanatyam, the classical Indian dance form – and ability to bat for long periods and anchor innings across formats made her an inspiration for the many that have followed. Like Smriti Mandhana.”The sense of responsibility she [Raj] has shown over these years. There was a phase of ten years when Indian batting used to depend on her,” Mandhana told in an interview in March 2019. “The fact that she never cribbed about it, and took on that pressure – that’s one thing I’d like to have in my head, because it’s hard when you know your wicket is important and that if you lose your wicket, the course of the match might change.Mithali Raj leads India out on to the field•Getty Images

“That is a very difficult space to be in as a batter. But she has been consistent, despite being in that headspace – that’s a big task. She’s calm and relaxed even if there are, say, two or three dot balls. I used to get a bit panicky earlier, but she has always been calm.”Those same abilities played a big part in Raj hitting her highest Test score of 214, in 2022, and, three years later, an unbeaten 91 in the ODI World Cup semi-final, which she rated at par with that double-century.A career at the highest level as long as Raj’s can’t be without controversy, and the biggest of them was the face-off between her and India coach Ramesh Powar during the 2018 T20 World Cup in the Caribbean. Things came to a head during the league phase of the World Cup when Raj was asked to move down the batting order, and hit rock bottom when Raj was left out of India’s semi-final against England, a knock-out match they lost. The long, and somewhat sordid, saga of ended when Powar was not given an extension and, not long after, WV Raman took charge of the team.There had been murmurs that Raj’s career was nearing an end as recently as last month, when she was left out of the three-team Women’s T20 Challenge tournament, Deepti Sharma replacing her as captain of the Velocity team. Even prior to the Challenge, during the BCCI’s Senior Women’s T20 Trophy, Sneh Rana was the captain of the Railways team that won the trophy, while Raj was with the squad but didn’t play, and adopted a mentoring role instead.That might be one of her options going forward too, in her attempts to “contribute to the growth of Women’s Cricket in India and the world over”, as she said in her retirement statement.

Moeen Ali confirms reversal of Test retirement ahead of Pakistan tour

England allrounder says family connections and McCullum influence key factors in decision

ESPNcricinfo staff12-Jun-2022Moeen Ali has confirmed his willingness to return to Test cricket for this winter’s tour of Pakistan, and has announced that he is officially “unretired” following a conversation on Sunday morning with England’s new head coach, Brendon McCullum.Moeen called time on his Test career in September, after claiming 195 wickets in 64 Tests, as well as five centuries, telling ESPNcricinfo at the time that he no longer felt able to “get in the zone” in the longest format of the game.However, McCullum’s arrival has indicated a new more attacking mindset to England’s Test cricket, and Moeen – who leaves for the Netherlands this evening ahead of next week’s three-match ODI series – says his hunger for the longer format has been renewed.”When, or if, Baz McCullum wants me, I’ll definitely play in Pakistan,” Moeen told BBC Test Match Special on Saturday, adding that his family heritage in the country made the trip – England’s first since 2005, when his cousin Kabir Ali was part of the white-ball squad – all the more tempting.”I have played Pakistan Super League out there a few years ago but it’s not the same,” Moeen said. “To travel with an England side there having family background from that part of the world will be amazing. It would be a historic event because of England not touring there for so many years.Related

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“I know the support and love you can get out there, they love cricket. It’s really something that’s very appealing for sure.”Moeen had added during his comments on Saturday that McCullum was “very hard to say no to”, and “we’re going to have a chat and see how it pans out”.Following up on the subject during Sunday’s third day at Trent Bridge, Moeen confirmed that that conversation had now taken place.”I spoke to McCullum this morning, and we did discuss Pakistan this winter. The door is always open, and yeah, I suppose I am officially unretired,” he said.”He is a very difficult person to say no to. I find that very, very hard. He is very convincing and to be honest I would love to play under him and Ben Stokes. They are both very aggressive and I think I would suit their cricket a bit more.”At the time I said I was retired I felt like I was done. I felt really tired with cricket.”

Sam Billings retained, James Anderson returns as Ben Foakes, Jamie Overton miss out for India Test

Foakes fails to recover after positive Covid test, Overton omitted despite debut 97

Vithushan Ehantharajah30-Jun-2022Sam Billings will make his third Test appearance against India on Friday after Ben Foakes was ruled out after having failed to recover from Covid-19. Billings is one of two changes as James Anderson returns after missing the final Test against New Zealand, regaining his spot from his replacement, Jamie Overton.Foakes had to be pulled out on the fourth morning of the previous Test at Headingley after returning a positive test, having complained of back trouble on day three. Kent captain Billings made the late journey up to Leeds on the third evening, arriving at the team hotel at 2am. He became England’s first Covid substitute a matter of hours later, taking a catch off Jack Leach between his knees as England won by seven wickets to seal a 3-0 series win.Billings was subsequently added to the squad for this fifth Test of this 2021 series at Edgbaston, primarily as cover to give Foakes every opportunity to play. Despite training on Tuesday and Wednesday, the Surrey wicketkeeper was unable to prove his fitness.”Unfortunately Foakesy has not recovered as well as we’d have liked to,” Stokes said. “Sam is going to stay in the team and be our keeper.”He [Foakes] just hasn’t really recovered from last week. He doesn’t feel like he could give the best account of himself this week, so we took the decision out of his hands and said, ‘get yourself better’.”It was Bairstow who initially covered for Foakes when he was unable to take the field on day three at Headingley. Stokes, however, said there was no thought given to doing so again.Much has been made of Bairstow’s affinity for the gloves, particularly given that all but one of his six Test centuries scored before the start of 2022 had come as the designated wicketkeeper. Since then, however, he has re-established himself as an engine-room destroyer, with four centuries and 774 runs already this year, at an average of 64.50.Under Brendon McCullum and Stokes, Bairstow has become a totem of their selfless, attacking cricket, and both are keen to keep it that way, with Stokes reiterating Foakes’ position as the first-choice keeper.”At the moment Jonny is in the form of his life. He’s our best middle-order batsman at the moment. Ben Foakes is our keeper going forward and we just want Jonny to concentrate on batting. Because however he is thinking about it at the moment is working, we just want Jonny to keep doing what he is doing with the bat.”The return of Anderson was expected, especially as he said on Wednesday that he could have played the last New Zealand Test had the series still been at stake. Perhaps Overton might count himself unlucky to be the man to make way, however. He bowled quickly and relatively well, but excelled with the bat, striking a remarkable 97 as part of 241-run stand with Bairstow, rescuing England from a precarious 55 for six.”That’s how sport at the top level can work sometimes,” Stokes said. “Obviously Jimmy didn’t feel he recovered as well as we would have liked to last week. So Jamie got his opportunity to show what you can do in a cricket field. He gave the best account possible of himself. And, he’s obviously someone that we see has a bright and long future for him going forward.”So yeah, it obviously must be very disappointing for him, but he can walk away knowing that he’s done everything that he possibly could have done last week to really put his name forward to have a look a good career for England.”ESPNcricinfo Ltd

With the Edgbaston Test against India set to complete the five-match series that had to be postponed in 2021 due to a Covid outbreak, England have effectively made seven changes to the team that trails 2-1 in the series after last year’s Oval Test. Rory Burns and Haseeb Hameed have since been replaced at the top of the order by Zak Crawley and Alex Lees, with Dawid Malan, Craig Overton, Moeen Ali, Chris Woakes and Ollie Robinson the other absentees.Stokes himself was one of the players who sat out last year’s matches, after taking a mental-health break from the game while recuperating from a badly broken finger. And while he said he had not watched much of the action last time around, he was under no doubt about the threat that India would pose, having also effectively switched captains mid-series, with Virat Kohli stepping down from the role.”We just beat the best team in the world 3-0,” Stokes said, referencing New Zealand’s status as World Test Champions. “India are obviously a completely different opposition, a different dynamic of team, but we are concentrating on ourselves. We understand what we do well, but we have also take into account who we’re playing against. Just because the opposition changes doesn’t mean that we’re going to change.”We still obviously know we need to win this Test to draw the series from a year ago. But as I said last week, at the moment this is bigger than results, bigger then what happens out on the field. There’s more to it than that. We obviously want to win every game that we play, but it’s bigger than that.”Asked if England had it in them to get even more attacking in their approach, after three dynamic displays against New Zealand, Stokes replied: “If there’s a team that can, it’s us.”Crawley is the one regular selection in England’s ranks who hasn’t produced a significant contribution to their run of three wins in a row. But Stokes was adamant that he would receive all the support he needs to rediscover his most imposing form, despite a top score of 43 in six innings.”Before we’d even played a Test match, the squad was picked on the basis that every player in every position is the best player in England to carry us forward in the way that we want to,” Stokes said. “This team, and this squad, is going to be given a lot of time to perform. Zak Crawley is still in my plans, and Brendon’s plans going forward, to make this Test team great again.”

Welsh Fire doused as Sean Abbott gets Manchester Originals off the mark

Fire all but out of contention after fourth consecutive defeat, Originals end own winless run

ECB Reporters Network16-Aug-2022Manchester Originals 149 for 9 (Salt 38, Ball 4-29) beat Welsh Fire 102 (Abbott 4-8) by 47 runsManchester Originals recorded their first victory of the Men’s Hundred against the winless Welsh Fire by 47 runs at Emirates Old Trafford.Sean Abbott gave the Mancunian crowd the perfect parting gift in his last home match before he leaves for Australia’s series against Zimbabwe, taking three catches and four wickets for just eight runs.In a bowler-dominated affair, a fast start from Originals openers Jos Buttler and Phil Salt was hauled back by the disciplined Fire attack, led by Jake Ball who finished with figures of four for 29 off 20 balls, as the Originals set what seemed to be an under-par 149 for nine.That proved to be more than enough however, as regular wickets meant the Fire never got close, bowled out for just 102, as Dwaine Pretorius top-scored with 29.Originals captain Buttler, who by his own count lost his 16th toss in a row, showed no ill-effects of being asked to bat first, as he and opening partner Salt, who at one point hit three consecutive sixes off Ball, raced to 66 off just 35 balls before the latter was bowled by Adam Zampa for 38 off 22 balls.Wayne Madsen then tried to take up the run-scoring mantle, showing a particular liking to Zampa, but it was the Australia international who had the last laugh, catching Madsen at point for 10.From that moment disciplined bowling from the Welsh Fire ensured that the Originals were unable to replicate the ease with which they had batted at the start of their innings.First, Buttler was bowled by Zampa on 29, who began the Fire’s recovery with two wickets for 17, before Laurie Evans was dismissed first ball, brilliantly bowled by Matt Critchley.Andre Russell looked to use the full extent of his world-renowned power, striking some lusty blows before he holed out to deep cover for 17 off 13, before Paul Walter, Tristan Stubbs, and Abbott also fell in quick succession in search of late-innings runs.Phil Salt and Jos Buttler made a bright start•Getty Images

Matt Parkinson was caught off the final delivery to give Ball his fourth wicket and conclude the Originals’ innings on 149.Looking to emulate the Original’s quick start to their innings, Joe Clarke was well caught in the deep by Abbott off the bowling of Mitchell Stanley for 10, Abbott then had Tom Banton caught and bowled for three.The Originals’ spinners then began to make inroads into the Fire middle-order as Sam Hain was caught by Russell, who made amends for a simple drop, off the bowling of Tom Hartley for five.Hain was swiftly followed back by Ben Duckett for a breezy 25 off 15 before being caught in the deep off Stubbs. The South African then dismissed Fire captain Josh Cobb first ball, well-held by opposite number Buttler.The procession of wickets continued as, amongst resistance from Pretorius, the dangerous David Miller was caught at cover for seven off Russell, before Abbott took the wickets of Critchley and Zampa.With victory a near-certainty, wicketkeeper Salt smartly ran David Payne out for eight, then local favourite Parkinson took the final wicket of Pretorius to ensure that the two points stayed in the north-west to leave the Fire at the foot of the table.Joe Boaden is writing for the ECB’s Hundred Rising Reporter programme, which gives young and aspiring journalists the opportunity to take the next step in their career.

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