Malik, bowlers lead Chittagong to 78-run win

Shoaib Malik struck 63 off 30 balls before taking a wicket to stud Chittagong Vikings’ 78-run win in their BPL 2016-17 clash against Barisal Bulls

ESPNcricinfo staff22-Nov-2016
ScorecardShoaib Malik struck a 30-ball 63 and took a wicket to help Chittagong Vikings dominate against Barisal Bulls•BCB

Mohammad Nabi led a solid bowling display by Chittagong Vikings, who bowled out Barisal Bulls for 107 to seal a 78-run win in their 2016-17 Bangladesh Premier League clash in Chittagong. This came after half-centuries from Dwayne Smith and Shoaib Malik powered Chittagong to 185 for 5 after they opted to make first use of the surface.Nabi took out the Barisal openers in the second over of the chase, and when he dismissed Jeevan Mendis in his next over, Barisal were reeling at 12 for 4. It wouldn’t be long before Nabi would be in the thick of things again as he plucked a catch at deep midwicket to send back Mushfiqur Rahim, who had added 25 for the fifth wicket with Rayad Emrit. That Barisal got to 107 was down to Enamul Haque’s unbeaten 42 at No. 8. Enamul walked out with the score 37 for 6 – it would soon become 39 for 7 – and began a brief recovery through a 42-run eighth-wicket stand with Taijul Islam. That would make for scant compensation, however, as Barisal added 26 more for the last two wickets before folding in the 19th over. Enamul was left unbeaten on 42 off 37 balls. He had struck one four and four sixes.Nabi finished with 3 for 16 in three overs and had support all around. Subashis Roy, who opened the bowling, and Taskin Ahmed were both economical and took two wickets each. Malik and Imran Khan, the left-arm medium pacer, took a wicket apiece.When Chittagong batted, they enjoyed a solid start from Tamim Iqbal, the captain, and Smith who put on 43 in 5.4 overs for the first wicket. Tamim struck a run-a-ball 19 before falling to the right-arm medium pace of Kamrul Islam Rabbi. It was then the turn of Anamul Haque to play second fiddle to Smith in a 39-run second-wicket partnership. Malik joined Smith in the 11th over and Chittagong biffed 103 runs in 58 balls during his stay. Smith’s burst was ended by Thisara Perera in the 16th over when he was caught at deep midwicket for a 49-ball 69 that contained six fours and three sixes. But Malik ensured a strong finish for Chittagong as they slammed 55 runs in the last four overs. Malik fell off the final ball of the innings for a 30-ball 63. He pinged nine fours and two sixes.Kamrul took two wickets, as did Perera, although he leaked 37 runs in four overs. Emrit finished with 1 for 41 from his quota of overs.

Warner adamant Broad record is not on his mind

David Warner has maintained that he feels in good touch in the Ashes, and Stuart Broad’s record over him is not a concern

AAP19-Jul-2023David Warner insists Stuart Broad has not got inside his head, despite admitting he has Barmy Army taunts over the English seamer’s record against him stuck on the mind.Warner has retained his spot at the top of Australia’s order for the fourth Test at Old Trafford, as the tourists push for their first Ashes series win in England since 2001 .The decision came after speculation over whether Warner could be squeezed out, after a double failure at Headingley last week took his series average to 23.5.Related

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Also of rising concern to a number of ex-players is Warner’s record against Broad. The left-hander has now been dismissed by Broad 17 times in his career, including twice in seven balls against him at Headingley last week.Devoid of any real sledging aimed in his direction in this series, Warner quipped on a podcast this week he had been playing Barmy Army chants over and over while facing up to bat.Included in those is the chant of “Broady is gonna get you” after the opener heard it on repeat throughout the opening Test at Edgbaston and in the matches that followed.But regardless, the 36-year-old insisted Broad’s record against him was not genuinely on his mind when facing up the quick.”I don’t really think about the match-up,” Warner said on the podcast.”You think about the ball that’s coming at you, how you are going to score. He bowls in a great area all the time.”I always love facing Broady. We have two left-handed opening batters and he is one of, if not the best bowler to left-handers in today’s game. He is so good at it.”Jimmy (Anderson) is there as well. These are guys we have watched and played against for a long time.”Stuart Broad celebrates dismissing David Warner again•Getty Images

Warner was also adamant he still feels in fine form ahead of the fourth Ashes Test, arguing Broad simply beat him with two good balls at Headingley.The left-hander began the tour with a fighting 43 against India in the World Test Championship final and made 66 in the second Ashes Test at Lords. Australia have also regularly pointed to the fact he and Usman Khawaja have made three half-century opening stands to help set up their 2-1 series lead.”I feel like I am in great touch,” Warner said. “I have felt good in the nets, leading in I had good sessions against our quicks at Beckenham (before the series).”Lord’s was probably the best I’ve batted in the last two years. Just holding my line.”We have batted in probably the toughest conditions so far. In Leeds, I got two good balls.”You can’t do too much about that … You just have to take it on the chin, can’t do anything about it.”

Luus steps down as South Africa captain ahead of Pakistan tour

Laura Wolvaardt is the favourite to take over; vice-captain Chloe Tryon has opted out of the tour, requesting a “leave of absence”

Firdose Moonda18-Aug-2023 • Updated on 20-Aug-2023Sune Luus has stepped down as South Africa’s captain, less than six months after leading the team to their first senior World Cup final – for women or men – with CSA set to unveil a new leader ahead of their white-ball tour of Pakistan in two weeks’ time. Luus is part of the squad, with Laura Wolvaardt the favourite to replace her.Confusion surrounds Luus’ decision, for which no reason was initially given in a press release issued by CSA. It read that Luus “will no longer continue her interim captaincy”, even though Luus had herself said she was “appointed official captain” prior to the T20 World Cup in February. A senior official at CSA told ESPNcricinfo that the board “understood Sune was given the captaincy permanently”, with Chloe Tryon as her understudy.After ESPNcricinfo first published this story, a CSA spokesperson said Luus had “asked to step aside to focus on her cricket.” The same reason was not made public on any CSA channels.Related

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Privately, it has been communicated that Luus does not want to lead under the existing management structure.Tryon will not travel to Pakistan after requesting a “leave of absence”, according to CSA, which further underlines what several sources have called “significant challenges” facing the women’s team. Chief among them is an unhappiness in the squad with the decision not to appoint a new coach after the T20 World Cup, with Hilton Moreeng now in his 11th year in the job.Moreeng had been informed that CSA was going to advertise his post this winter, which he was welcome to reapply for, but that did not happen. Instead Moreeng’s tenure has been extended until December 31, and he will oversee South Africa’s series against Pakistan, New Zealand and Bangladesh.Last week, ESPNcricinfo reported that a group of players had written to CSA expressing their desire for change in the backroom staff. It is understood that while the players do not have a personal issue with Moreeng, they are looking for a different approach and fresh ideas after more than a decade of development under Moreeng.Tumi Sekhukhune is back in the squad while Chloe Tryon has opted out of the tour•Sportsfile via Getty Images

In that time, he presided over the professionalisation of the women’s game and took the team to the last two 50-overs World Cup semi-finals and the most recent T20 World Cup final. His success is believed to be a reason why a section of the CSA board has pushed for him to continue, and neglected to seek a replacement over the off-season.Similarly, CSA did not hold any camps for their women’s team from the end of the World Cup until earlier this week, though several players have been involved in overseas leagues. They also did not have any discussions over the captaincy, leading to an 11th hour appointment ahead of the Pakistan series. One source said “someone has dropped the ball” when it comes to the women’s game and there was a lack of focus on this area of the game after the highs of the team’s T20 World Cup performance.The bulk of the squad who will travel to Pakistan – 12 of the 15 – were part of the T20 World Cup group. Tumi Sekhukhune has replaced Shabnim Ismail, who retired from international cricket in May, allrounder Nondumiso Shangase, who captains the Dolphins, is back in the squad, and there is one uncapped player: wicketkeeper-batter Meike de Ridder. Tryon and Annerie Derksen, who is recovering from a fractured finger, are the two other players from the T20 World Cup who are not in this squad.South Africa will play three T20Is and three ODIs in Pakistan between September 1 and 14. The ODIs are part of the ICC Women’s Championship, which determines qualification for the next World Cup.South Africa squad: Anneke Bosch, Tazmin Brits, Nadine de Klerk, Mieke de Ridder, Lara Goodall, Sinalo Jafta, Marizanne Kapp, Ayabonga Khaka, Masabata Klaas, Sune Luus, Nonkululeko Mlaba, Tumi Sekhukhune, Nondumiso Shangase, Delmi Tucker, Laura Wolvaardt.GMT 1510 The article was updated to reflect the CSA spokesperson’s statement on Luus stepping down.

Winfield-Hill innings boosts Diamonds' finals hopes

Opener’s 89 holds her side together before Katie Levick, Phoebe Turner defend modest total vs Thunder

ECB Reporters Network13-Sep-2023Northern Diamonds gave their chances of qualifying for the final stages of the Rachael Heyhoe Flint Trophy a massive boost with a comprehensive 48-run victory over cross-Pennines rivals Thunder at Sale Sports Club.Lauren Winfield-Hill continued her brilliant white-ball form for Diamonds with a barnstorming 89, before Katie Levick with four wickets and Phoebe Turner with three, sealed the win in a game which the hosts looked to be in control of at the interval after bowling out the visitors for a below-par 196.Diamonds got off to a quick start with Winfield-Hill beginning where she left off against Western Storm by hitting a trio of boundaries in the first few overs as the score raced along in the early morning sunshine.But Thunder hit back when Phoebe Graham produced a cracking delivery which nipped back and removed Sterre Kalis’s bails for eight.Winfield-Hill continued to dominate the bowling, hitting fours at will as Graham and fellow opening bowler Tara Norris proved expensive with the visitors reaching the end of the powerplay on 63 for 2.With Hollie Armitage departing just before that in the ninth over for nine, attempting to reverse sweep Hannah Jones, Diamonds gave a hint of the trouble that was to come as Thunder successfully introduced the spin of Jones, Fi Morris and Olivia Bell to brilliant effect.Jones had Emma Marlow trapped in front for nine before Bell ripped out Diamonds’ middle order with a succession of wickets which dragged the home side back into a game Winfield-Hill had threatened to take away from them.Rebecca Duckworth played well for her 27 off 54 balls as she and Winfield-Hill put on 46 runs for the fourth wicket before she was bowled by Bell leaving the former England opener struggling to find another partner of note.The pressure of carrying the innings eventually became too much for Winfield-Hill. who was bowled by the returning Norris for 89 off 90 balls including 14 fours. It was a superb knock but her departure hastened the end for Diamonds who quickly lost Leah Dobson and Turner to the rampant Bell before Levick became the Thunder off-spinner’s fourth wicket.By then the score was 169 for 8 and Naomi Dattani mopped up the tail’s dogged resistance with the wickets of Grace Hall and Jessica Woolston to leave Diamonds posting an underwhelming 196 all out off 46.4 overs.With both sides desperate for the win, nerves were jangling as Thunder began their innings with one delivery from Lizzie Scott’s first over going for five wides.Runs flowed for the first five overs until Liberty Heap was bowled by a fine delivery from Woolston for 14 to leave Thunder 27 for 1.Dattani looked to rebuild and the hosts passed 50 before she was brilliantly caught down the leg side by Winfield-Hill off Levick’s third ball with the spinner’s fourth ball trapping Morris in front without scoring to leave Thunder suddenly up against it at 54 for 3.A captain’s innings was required and Ellie Threlkeld looked up for the challenge as she and Seren Smale began to build a fourth-wicket partnership which slowly pulled Thunder back into the contest.A wicket looked vital for Diamonds and Turner obliged as she began a spell that would turn the match the visitor’s way with Smale top edging a delivery to depart for 33 before Threlkeld’s vigil ended slightly unluckily when she found Marlow on the leg side boundary for 31.With that the stuffing was knocked out of the Thunder reply and Turner took another one to claim Daisy Mullan without scoring with Levick accounting for Norris lbw for one.Graham quickly followed the same way to the same bowler for a third-ball duck and despite some resistance from Laura Delaney and Bell the game was up when the latter was run out for eight and Jones fell the same way as Thunder were dismissed for 148.

Brathwaite, Holder help West Indies edge towards win

After Jason Holder claimed career-best figures of 5 for 30 bowl out Pakistan for 208, Kraigg Brathwaite steered West Indies to within 39 runs of victory in Sharjah

The Report by Sirish Raghavan02-Nov-2016
Scorecard and ball-by-ball detailsJason Holder claimed career-best figures of 5 for 30•Getty Images

After subsiding for 208 to set West Indies a target of 153, Pakistan took five wickets to leave the Sharjah Test tantalisingly poised at stumps on day four. But, just 39 runs away from claiming their first win of the UAE tour, West Indies held the edge thanks to Kraigg Brathwaite’s immovable presence at the crease.Brathwaite, who had carried his bat through the first innings for 142, was at the crease on 44, having seen his side through a startling wobble that had left them 67 for 5. He looked calm and solid throughout his knock, assured in defence and adept at rotating the strike. Shane Dowrich, who kept him company in an unbroken 47-run sixth-wicket stand that saw out the day, was less convincing early in his innings, playing Wahab Riaz with feet rooted to the crease and stumps exposed. Nonetheless, he settled in to hit some telling boundaries towards the end of the day and tilt the balance back in West Indies’ favour.That West Indies found themselves with the upper hand was thanks in no small part to some loose cricket from Pakistan. In a tragicomic collapse after lunch, Pakistan lost five wickets for 33 runs, including 3 for 4 in the space of 18 balls, to be bowled out for 208.The slide began in the seventh over after lunch, when legspinner Devendra Bishoo had Mohammad Nawaz caught at short leg. He landed the ball on a good length in the rough outside the left-hander’s off stump and extracted just enough turn to pick up an inside edge to Leon Johnson, who stuck out his left hand to take a sharp catch.Bishoo’s next wicket came four overs later, when Azhar Ali, batting on 91, gifted his wicket away. Seeing a liberally flighted delivery, Azhar started shaping for a sweep, before realising the ball was too far outside off stump for the shot. Instead of leaving the ball alone, Azhar then offered a limp drive and only succeeded in guiding it to Darren Bravo at first slip.Thirteen balls later, Mohammad Amir perished to one of the most entertaining run-outs conceivable to leave Pakistan in even greater trouble. Wickets were now falling at increasingly short intervals; the next one came after four balls when Wahab Riaz turned a Holder delivery to Johnson, who took a remarkable reflex catch at short leg, off the face of the bat.Zulfiqar Babar then chipped in with a six and a four in a seven-ball 15 that took Pakistan past 200 and their lead past 150. But Holder trapped Yasir Shah in front for a duck to conclude a breathless passage of play and collect figures of 5 for 30. It was Holder’s first five-wicket haul in Tests and put his team within sight of their first Test win under his captaincy.Having left the door wide open for West Indies, Pakistan then proceeded to give them encouraging nudges towards the threshold. Off the fifth delivery of the chase, Amir found Johnson’s edge only for Misbah-ul-Haq to put down a regulation chance at third slip. Amir’s frustration was compounded in his next over, when Sami Aslam, at first slip, made a total hash of another chance off the same batsman.But shortly after tea, West Indies lost 5 for 38 in a period of play that brought Pakistan roaring back. Yasir got the first three of those wickets. Johnson, looking to pull a shortish delivery, was hit in front when the ball did not rise as much as he expected. Bravo was set up beautifully by four legbreaks before Yasir slipped one in that did not turn as much and took the outside edge. Marlon Samuels went for an irresponsible loft with long-off in place and holed out to Babar.Then Wahab bowled Jermaine Blackwood when the batsman brought down an angled bat to a ball that honed into the stumps from around the wicket. When Roston Chase flicked Wahab in the air to midwicket, West Indies were tottering.Perhaps fittingly, West Indies’ recovery was engineered by a man who had hardly been off the field throughout the match. With Dowrich for company, and Holder and Bishoo still to come, Brathwaite can expect decent support as he attempts to steer his team to their first win in 14 Tests.

Moores appointed as Nottinghamshire head coach

Peter Moores has been appointed as Nottinghamshire’s head coach, as the club aims to bounce back from a disappointing 2016 season

ESPNcricinfo staff06-Sep-2016Peter Moores has been appointed as Nottinghamshire’s head coach, as the club aims to bounce back from a disappointing 2016 season.Moores, who was signed as a coaching consultant at Trent Bridge in July 2015, has been handed a three-year deal and takes over the day-to-day running of the first team from Mick Newell, who will continue to oversee the club’s wider fortunes as director of cricket.In addition to his two spells as England head coach, from 2007 to 2009 and again from 2014 to 2015, Moores took charge of the ECB’s National Academy Director for a two-year period from April 2005 and is a two-times winner of the County Championship, with Sussex in 2003 and with Lancashire in 2011.”To be offered the chance to become Head Coach of a Club like Notts, at a venue as special as Trent Bridge, is a terrific honour,” said Moores.”Working with cricketers one-to-one for the last year has been an ideal way to get me back in to county cricket, and it means I already know this group of players very well, which will give me a head start in some ways.”The passion for being a head coach again is there and the club has the ambition to be competing for trophies across all three formats of the game, so it’s a fantastic opportunity.”The appointment comes at a perilous moment for Nottinghamshire, who look doomed to relegation from the top tier of the County Championship. However, with Yorkshire on the look-out for a new director of cricket following confirmation of Jason Gillespie’s impending return to Australia, the club has moved quickly to retain the services of a man whose coaching abilities are held in high esteem on the county circuit.
Newell, who has been in charge of Nottinghamshire’s first XI since 2002, guided the county to two Championship titles in 2005 and 2010, but has accepted the time is right to step back from club’s day-to-day running.”Having a director of cricket and head coach working in partnership is something that’s happening a lot in county cricket, and we feel the time is now right to introduce it at Notts,” said Newell.”Peter will run the professional squad his way, he’ll pick the team and we’ll now work closely together in reviewing everything we do in relation to our playing and coaching, to ensure that we’re ready to bounce back strongly from what’s been a disappointing season.”It’s also vitally important that we work on our player pathway, ensuring that we’re doing everything right to develop our professional and international players of the future.”

Five years to 'inspire a generation' – ECB unveils strategy for future-proofing English cricket

ECB chief executive says the sport cannot rely on its traditional audience forever

Andrew Miller14-Jan-2019The future of cricket in England and Wales depends on its ability to reach out to people and communities that have never previously considered the sport was for them, according to Tom Harrison, the ECB chief executive, at the unveiling of the board’s strategic plan for 2020-24.Speaking at the launch of “Inspiring Generations”, a 35-page document that places youth participation and a diversification of the sport’s traditional fanbase at the heart of the ECB’s strategy for the coming five years, Harrison also insisted that it was a “myth” that The Hundred, the proposed new competition and the source of significant disquiet among cricket’s traditionalists, has been designed solely with that new audience in mind.”The new competition is designed to appeal to cricket fans,” Harrison said, an assertion that sought to reframe the ECB’s message of the past 12 months – in the wake of statements from the likes of Andrew Strauss, the former director of England cricket, who had said it was aimed at “mums and kids”, and Eoin Morgan, England’s one-day captain, who claimed that the point of the product was to “upset people that already come to a game”.Mistakes had been made in the ECB’s unveiling of the new competition, said Harrison, but he believes that now was the time for the game to “come together” for the greater good.”[The competition] addresses three key principles: time, complexity and the perceptions of cricket that are out there,” he said. “It is designed to do a certain job for a certain period of the season. The bottom line is that growth over the next few years is fundamentally important to us as a game. You cannot keep relying on the same audience … the world is changing quickly. Success in five years’ time will be people saying ‘cricket is a game for me’.”A huge amount of the ECB’s strategy remains to be finalised in the coming 12 months, not least the sign-off for The Hundred itself, which is expected to be sent out to the 18 first-class counties in the coming days.As yet, there are no confirmed teams or sponsors for the competition either, and while Harrison remains adamant that the best players in the world will be attracted to take part when it is finally launched, India’s captain, Virat Kohli, is already a notable sceptic.Harrison, however, was at pains to point out that, in the scope of the ECB’s five-year plan, the new competition forms just one of 26 activities across six priorities for growth – ranging from a greater focus on women’s and girls’ cricket to the use of the 39 existing county teams (first-class and minor alike) as “delivery networks” to improve the links between the professional and recreational game.Tom Harrison•Getty Images

“It’s a strategy with six key focuses, it sets a clear ambition for the game,” said Harrison. “We want cricket to grow, but we want to rely on our existing infrastructures, on existing assets. The new competition is just one of those tactical approaches. But so is digital investment. So is our women’s and girls’ strategy. These are the areas we can make a difference and grow.”The Hundred’s greatest significance, however, may lie in what Harrison believes it has already achieved for the sport – namely luring the BBC back to the table as free-to-air broadcast partners, and persuading Sky Sports to part with the bulk of the £1.1 billion of the last rights deal – a sum of money which transformed the relationship between board and broadcaster from merely transactional to a full-blown strategic partnership.”Before a ball is bowled, The Hundred is a profitable venture,” said Harrison, who confirmed an operational budget for the tournament of £180 million across five years. “We would not be on free-to-air TV without the new competition. We would not have the premium in the new rights process if The Hundred hadn’t been there. It’s not an afterthought.”It’s really, really important that we demonstrate as a major sport in this country that we have the capacity to grow, and the intention to grow, and the ambition. It’s also good for business. We think we can do that, Sky agree with us, and they are helping us with that because ultimately it’s good for their business too. And the same goes for BBC. In terms of scale and reach, it’s a powerful combination that we haven’t been able to talk about before.”The full details of how Sky’s involvement will manifest itself from 2020 onwards will be revealed in due course. However, having spoken in the past of the transformative effects of the Sky Ride programme on participation in cycling, Harrison added that the broadcaster had committed a sum of £50 million to attracting a new audience and perpetuating the value of their investment. One benefit that is already in the offing is the distribution of free subscriptions to registered cricket clubs, potentially in time for this year’s World Cup.Another key priority for the coming five years is to shed the perception that cricket is a sport for the moneyed middle classes. The vast majority of England’s current Test team were privately educated, while the ECB’s extensive research – dotted throughout “Inspiring Generations” – shows that more than 80% of the sport’s current spectators are white and male, with an average age of 50.”There’s a lot more that we can do to make cricket more open to communities that haven’t felt part of it in the past,” Harrison said. “We need to shed that tag of elitism and privilege that we carry around with us. We don’t believe it’s good enough, for example, for us to be in only 22% of schools. We’ve got to do more.”The alternative to embracing a vision of concerted collective action, says Harrison, is unpalatable.”If we didn’t do all of that, I think we might be managing decline,” he said. “I fundamentally believe we can mean more to more people. And I fundamentally believe in the power of cricket to do amazing things. A powerful sport in terms of what it can mean to people. It connects communities, inspires people, and it can change your life. That’s the purpose statement that sits behind the whole strategy.”

Rocchiccioli takes four as Western Australia dominate

Tasmania fold for 179 after winning the toss as WA look to secure a home final for the second straight year

Tristan Lavalette02-Mar-2023Offspinner Corey Rocchiccioli claimed four wickets on the pace-friendly WACA surface as defending Sheffield Shield champions Western Australia continued their stranglehold over Tasmania after a dominant day one performance.Rocchiccioli equalled his best first-class figures of 4 for 31 to tear through Tasmania, who were bowled out for 179 after winning the toss.In reply, WA were 1 for 67 at stumps as they eye victory to secure a home final for the second straight year.Opener Cameron Bancroft, the leading Shield run-scorer this season, looked in superb touch before prodding offspinner Jarrod Freeman to short-leg on 28.With rain falling, a rarity in Perth this time of year, there was a 20-minute delay late in the final session but Sam Whiteman refocused on resumption alongside nightwatchman Rocchiccioli to complete WA’s strong opening day.With their hopes of qualifying for the final in the balance, Tasmania were desperate to make amends after copping a 383-run thrashing to WA at home last week.Skipper Jordan Silk elected to bowl in humid and overcast conditions. It seemed a risk on a green-tinged surface and with seam bowling dominating the bat in the matches at the ground earlier in the season.But in the first Shield match at the WACA in almost three months, the surface appeared benign with Tasmania openers Tim Ward and Caleb Jewell relatively untroubled in a 72-run partnership.They almost batted through the opening session until Jewell fell just before lunch for 40 after being brilliantly caught by Mitchell Marsh at slip off the bowling of Rocchiccioli.No.3 Jake Doran had a reprieve moments later when he was dropped by Bancroft at slip as Tasmania reached lunch at 1 for 80.Having bowled within themselves in the first session, WA’s attack was ignited by a stunning one-handed return catch low to the ground from quick Charlie Stobo to remove Ward for 44.It triggered a collapse for Tasmania, who lost 3 for 11 with Doran and Mac Wright falling to brilliant line and length bowling from Stobo and Matt Kelly.But Silk and Tim Paine steadied the ship with a fighting partnership to thwart a WA attack intent on opening up the lower order.Marsh, who impressed with his rotation of bowlers, pulled a masterstroke by reverting back to under-used Rocchiccioli just before tea. Once again, the offspinner snared a wicket before a break when he removed Silk for 18.As the threat of a thunderstorm loomed, Tasmania’s lower order were blown away after Paine holed out for 17. They lost their last six wickets for 30 to ensure Tasmania failed to reach 200 runs for the third straight innings against WA.Rocchiccioli finished with the spoils having retained his spot in the side as spinning allrounder Ashton Agar, who was sent home from Australia’s tour of India after being overlooked for selection, focuses on white-ball cricket.Agar is set to play in the 50-over Marsh Cup final between WA and South Australia on March 8 before returning to India for the ODI leg of the tour.Marsh, meanwhile, stepped up his preparation for the ODI series having recently returned from a three-month injury layoff. The allrounder will play as a specialist batter in his first Shield match in two years.Tasmania dropped wicketkeeper-batter Ben McDermott, a former Australia ODI and T20I player who has struggled this domestic season, while veteran seamer Peter Siddle was rested.

Royals look to return to winning ways against table-toppers CSK

Royals’ Impact Player strategy and use of Holder has come into sharp focus following back-to-back losses

Sidharth Monga26-Apr-20235:32

Dasgupta: Jaiswal needs to find the right tempo after powerplay

Big picture: Royals are under threat of losing steam

Not for a long time have these two teams been thought of and spoken of as the two finalists of the first IPL. Fifteen years later, halfway into the 16th IPL, you think of Chennai Super Kings and Rajasthan Royals as the top contenders because they have been that good.Without making drastic changes in personnel, CSK have become the most explosive team with the bat even though they like to start a little conservatively. Their pace bowling is slightly thin but they are putting up large totals to give them the cushion.A large total is what Royals put up for CSK in their first encounter this IPL only for CSK to come within striking distance. Even though they might be among the top teams on the table, Royals are under threat of losing steam having lost their last two matches.In sharp focus will be Royals’ toss and Impact Player strategy. Their XIs have not tended to depend on the toss. Last time they named just the five bowlers in their field-first XI, and didn’t have a proper batter in the substitutes should they need one in the second innings.Royals’ use of Jason Holder the batter, too, remains a mystery: he has batted just two balls in seven matches, and has been sent behind R Ashwin regularly. With 10 needed off two balls in the last match, with even Ashwin dismissed, they chose to send Abdul Basith, an IPL debutant with a highest T20 score of 27, ahead of Holder.

Form guide

Rajasthan Royals LLWWW (8 points from 7 matches)
Chennai Super Kings WWWLW (10 points from 7 matches)

Team news: Stokes and Chahar still unlikely

Before their last match, the CSK coach Stephen Fleming had said Ben Stokes had “another little setback” on his road to recovery. Deepak Chahar is also unlikely to return to action soon.Yashasvi Jaiswal could pose a threat to CSK with his big-hitting•PTI

Toss and Impact Player strategy

Rajasthan Royals
The last match in Jaipur was played on a slow and low pitch where scoring was difficult. Assuming a similar pitch is in the offing, Royals might like to include Adam Zampa in their plans, especially considering how they have been using Holder just as a specialist bowler.Possible XII: 1 Yashasvi Jaiswal, 2 Jos Butter, 3 Sanju Samson (capt. & wk), 4 Devdutt Padikkal, 5 Riyan Parag, 6 Shimron Hetmyer, 7 Dhruv Jurel 8 R Ashwin, 9 Trent Boult, 10 Yuzvendra Chahal, 11 Sandeep Sharma, 12 Adam Zampa/ Jason HolderChennai Super Kings
CSK have had great success with a fixed combination for the last three matches, but if the pitch is slow there might be temptation to go in with Mitchell Santner in place Matheesha Pathirana. Ambati Rayudu will continue to be the batter to not field.Possible XII: 1 Devon Conway, 2 Ruturaj Gaikwad, 3 Ajinkya Rahane, 4 Moeen Ali, 5 Shivam Dube 6 Ambati Rayudu 7 Ravindra Jadeja, 8 MS Dhoni (capt. & wk), 9 Matheesha Pathirana/ Mitchell Santner, 10 Tushar Deshpande, 11 Maheesh Theekshana, 12 Akash Singh

Stats that matter

  • Of all the IPL venues, sixes are hit most infrequently in Jaipur: one every 29.7 balls.
  • Ruturaj Gaikwad strikes at under a run a ball against the two RR opening bowlers, Trent Boult and Sandeep Sharma.
  • Only Bhuvneshwar Kumar has got Jos Buttler more often in T20s than Moeen Ali: 44 balls, 60 runs, four wickets.

Pitch and conditions

Even if the pitch is not as slow as it was in the first match in Jaipur, Sawai Mansingh Stadium has historically not been a high-scoring venue. So don’t expect too much fireworks.

The big question

Mohammad Nawaz, Haider Ali's cameos clinch tri-series with stunning counterattack

Haris Rauf bowled economically with 2 for 22 to restrict New Zealand despite Kane Williamson’s 59

Deivarayan Muthu14-Oct-2022
An audacious assault from Haider Ali and Mohammad Nawaz blindsided New Zealand and gave Pakistan the tri-series title in Christchurch. Their stand included smashing 33 in eight balls starting from the 15th over to offset a powerplay slowdown and help Pakistan chase down 164. Though Haider and Asif Ali holed out at the death, Nawaz coolly closed out the game for Pakistan for the second day in a row, along with Ifthikar Ahmed.After having hit an unbeaten 45 off 20 balls at No. 4 against Bangladesh on Thursday, Nawaz stepped up with an unbeaten 38 off 22 balls as a pinch-hitting No. 4 once again, offering Pakistan a great deal of flexibility for the T20 World Cup in Australia to immediately follow.Pakistan were 74 for 3 in the 12th over when Nawaz and Haider got together. Michael Bracewell had completed another misery spell, picking up 2 for 14 in his four overs. Haider, however, launched the first ball he faced from Ish Sodhi for six and then combined with Nawaz to take 25 runs off Sodhi in the 15th over. From thereon, there was only one result possible, and that was Pakistan winning their last T20I before heading for the World Cup.How just one huge over off Ish Sodhi ballooned Pakistan’s win probability•ESPNcricinfo Ltd

After New Zealand had been asked to bat, their captain Kane Williamson found form with a 33-ball half-century. However, Haris Rauf, who was featuring in his 50th T20I, handcuffed New Zealand in the end overs with his variations, coming away with 2 for 22 in his four overs. New Zealand managed only 33 for 4 in their last five overs, a passage of play which eventually proved decisive.Williamson breaks out of the funk

Before Friday, Williamson had last scored a T20 fifty in April, when he opened the batting for Sunrisers Hyderabad in the IPL. His niggly elbow has also disrupted his rhythm in the recent past. After being rested for the previous match against Bangladesh, Williamson showed signs of his best during an innings of 59 from 38 balls.He dashed out of the blocks with four fours in his first five balls and continued to show attacking intent against spin. Williamson charged at Nawaz and pumped him into the sightscreen for six, and even attempted a reverse sweep off Shadab Khan. He struck up a 50-run partnership with Glenn Phillips off 37 balls after New Zealand had lost Finn Allen and Devon Conway in the powerplay.Rauf proves unhittable
Rauf, who replaced Mohammad Hasnain, got to work in the powerplay by digging one into the pitch and having Conway chopping on for 14 off 17 deliveries. He then splintered the toe of Phillips’ bat by cranking his pace up to 143kph. Rauf not only hustled batters for pace at the death but also dared them to manufacture it for themselves by bowling cutters into the pitch. His last two overs cost Pakistan just seven runs. At the other end, Naseem Shah backed Rauf up with his slower legcutter and on-pace yorkers.Mohammad Nawaz and Haider Ali added 56 off only 26 balls•Joe Allison/Getty Images

Bracewell impresses with the ball again
After Tim Southee – playing his 100th T20I – and Trent Boult conceded a combined 19 runs in the first two overs, Williamson threw the new ball to Bracewell. The offspinner drew a top edge from Babar Azam and had him skying a catch to Wiliamson at midwicket. Bracewell then won his match-up against the left-hander Shan Masood, leaving Pakistan at 64 for 2 in the 11th over. He ended the series with eight wickets at an incredible economy rate of 4.94, strengthening his case for a spot in New Zealand’s World Cup XI.Nawaz seals the deal
In the next over, Sodhi pinned Rizwan lbw for 34 off 29 balls. Haider and Nawaz, though, changed the mood and tempo of the game with a whirlwind 56-run fourth-wicket stand off only 26 balls.Nawaz fulfilled his role as the spin-hitter, the same one that Shadab had played for Pakistan in the early exchanges of the tournament. After smoking Sodhi for back-to-back sixes, Nawaz also swatted the inexperienced seamer Blair Tickner into the grassbanks to rush Pakistan home.In the absence of both Lockie Ferguson and Adam Milne, New Zealand’s pace attack didn’t have the kind of penetration or depth that Pakistan’s had on Friday.

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