Arsenal: Marquinhos just had his Saka moment

A much-changed Arsenal side kickstarted their Europa League campaign with a victory over FC Zurich in Switzerland on Thursday evening,

Mikel Arteta rotated his starting XI in a bid to keep them fresh for the weekend’s visit of Everton in the Premier League, though that game now looks set to be postponed following the death of Queen Elizabeth II, which was announced right before half-time.

The Gunners went into the break tied with the Swiss champions after Marquinhos’ first goal on his full debut for the side was cancelled out by Mirlind Kryeziu’s spot-kick as Eddie Nketiah fouled Ola Selnaes inside the penalty box.

He made amends soon after the break, however, heading in at the far post as the young Brazilian turned provider. Arsenal sit atop of Group A after PSV Eindhoven, who they play next week, drew with Bodo/Glimt.

It was quite the night for Marquinhos, who was making his first-ever competitive start for the north London giants, and it’s fair to say he announced himself on the European stage in a familiar fashion to his teammate, Bukayo Saka.

The England sensation was handed his first full home debut in this very competition, featuring against Qarabag back in December 2018, then in September, during the following season, he bagged his first-ever goal and also two assists in a 3-0 win over Eintracht Frankfurt, also in the Europa League.

It seems as if the former Sao Paulo gem is following in his footsteps with an eye-catching display against Zurich, where he also created as many as four chances, which was more than fellow full debutant Fabio Vieira, though not as much as the five that Granit Xhaka managed from a deep-lying midfield role.

The 5 foot 9 dynamo also provided three accurate long balls from four attempts (75%), registered a successful dribble and even put in two interceptions to thwart the home side, as per SofaScore.

Marquinhos’ fine display saw him earn the ‘Star Man’ title from Simon Collings of the Evening Standard, who wrote: ‘Enjoyed a dream debut as he got on the scoresheet with a well-taken goal from a slick move. Looked sharp all game and setup Nketiah’s goal with a great cross.’

Meanwhile, journalist Josh Bunting was equally impressed by the wide man, claiming that he “showed real heart and desire with his movement” and that he was “aggressive and astute.”

So forget Vieira or Nketiah, it was Marquinhos’ night over in Switzerland as he announced himself to the Gunners faithful with an excellent goal and assist.

It’s no wonder Arsenal didn’t sign another winger in the transfer market.

From Hong Kong to Nagpur: Anshuman Rath plots new roadmap

The former Hong Kong captain relocates to India where he hopes to qualify as a local and “one day play Test cricket”

Shashank Kishore13-Sep-2019After fighting his way up the cricketing ladder in Hong Kong only to hit a dead end because of lack of exposure and financial viability, Anshuman Rath, who was their captain until recently, has put a temporary hold on his international career to move back to India, the country his family hails from. He hopes to now qualify as a local and “one day play Test cricket.”Having made himself unavailable for Hong Kong’s T20 World Cup Qualifiers campaign in October, Rath, 21, is set to move to Mumbai, a city he will live and train in, as he looks to break through into India’s first-class system. Having held talks with a number of associations through his agent and father, who hails from Bhubaneswar, Rath has his eyes trained on Vidarbha, the two-time Ranji Trophy champions.

“When the Indian national anthem was played, I got goosebumps and was humming to the tune even though we were playing against them. That moment I thought maybe I could potentially play for them in the future.”Rath on playing India at the Asia Cup

Over the past few weeks, he has held talks with Prashant Vaidya, the VCA’s Director of Cricket, and while no formal agreement has been reached yet, Rath is hopeful of completing the paperwork soon. However, just merely holding an Indian passport won’t guarantee an immediate entry into India’s domestic system. Rath will have to serve a one-year cooling-off period before becoming eligible in October 2020. At the same time, his moving away from Hong Kong for good and his Indian citizenship means he can enter the IPL auction as a local uncapped player. For the moment, though, he is set to feature in club cricket in Nagpur.”The VCA has spoken to Saba Karim (BCCI’s general manager) about my road map, and all indications are that they are the team I’m most likely to turn up for, provided I put in the hard yards in club cricket and show them performances that will help my selection,” Rath told ESPNcricinfo. “They have been very professional. They have won the Ranji Trophy for two years in a row now, and they have a credible reputation.”The amount of talent there is in India, it’s easy for state sides to overlook me, but the VCA have been very transparent and supportive. Their message is: ‘The door is open’, but I have to do whatever I can to put myself up for selection. I’m not going to be put on a pedestal. At the end of the day, if you’re scoring runs, you will be picked. Hopefully, I can do that. They’ve kept me in the loop with everything, and about the club system there. The facilities are top notch and I’m looking forward to it.”ALSO READ: The brains and the brawn behind Vidarbha’s rise to the topThe India move is the latest chapter of what Rath calls a “nomadic” career. As a 14-year old, he moved from Hong Kong, where his family was based, to the UK and went to the famous Harrow School. As a teenager, he emerged as one of the most promising pathway cricketers alongside current England stars like Sam Curran and Ollie Pope at Middlesex. However, “complex visa rules” that don’t allow players from Associate countries to feature as full-time professionals left him with no option but to return to Hong Kong after putting his college degree on hold.”It’s been brewing for a while now,” he said. “Being in the English system and having grown up there, you understand simply how different the Associate system is. My dream is to play Test cricket and unfortunately Associate cricket doesn’t provide that platform. Mark Chapman is a prime example. He used Associate cricket as a benchmark to play a higher level of cricket in New Zealand. The opportunities are rare, it’s not financially viable playing in Hong Kong. I don’t want to have three-four years here and then move away. I’m looking at the next 10-15 year horizon, and for that, the India move is the best way forward.”Rath had a quick chat with Simon Cook, the former Hong Kong coach who had a decade-and-a-half long career with Middlesex. It merely reinforced the decision he had already made. “Simon Cook knew of my ambitions from when I was playing in England,” Rath says. “I knew this was likely to happen one day, so it’s a bittersweet feeling for me, even though I’m excited about going to India. The guys at Hong Kong Cricket have been extremely cooperative about it and understand the choice I’ve made.”At this time last year, Rath nearly orchestrated a mighty upset against the Rohit Sharma-led India at the Asia Cup. He put on a 174-run opening stand with Nizakat Khan to set the tone for a chase of 286; Hong Kong eventually fell short by 26 runs. Twelve months on, he looks back at that game with a lot of fondness. Incidentally, that was his last official ODI for Hong Kong, for whom he finishes with an average of 51.75 in 18 ODIs.

“Vidarbha’s message is: ‘the door is open’, but I’ve to do whatever I can to put myself up for selection. I’m not going to be put on a pedestal. End of the day, if you’re scoring runs, you will be picked”Rath on his next move

Hong Kong have endured a bumpy road since that memorable Asia Cup outing, finishing last in WCL Division 2 in Namibia earlier in the year, where Rath topped the run charts. This relegated them to the third tier of the ICC’s 50-over competition for Associates, with the side having already lost its ODI status in 2018. Partly, Rath’s decision also stemmed from the ICC’s decision to reduce the World Cup to a 10-team show. With things unlikely to change for 2023, it’s a decision he says he had to make “sooner than later.””When I wasn’t allowed to play in England, I had to find a new base to develop my game and progress,” he says. “If you told me a year ago that I’d be in the Indian system, it’s not like I would’ve said ‘you’re joking’ because I had to decide at some point. In that game against India, when the Indian national anthem was played, I got goosebumps and was humming to the tune even though we were playing against them. That moment was when I had the realization that I could potentially play for them in the future. I want to give myself every opportunity to do so. There are no guarantees, but at least I know the ball is in my court and there is a structure and a pathway for me to make it happen.”

A giant in the T20 format

The difference between Chris Gayle and the next-best on key parameters indicates his excellence in the format

S Rajesh18-Apr-20172478 The difference in aggregate between Chris Gayle and the next-highest in the T20s – Brendon McCullum is in second place with an aggregate of 7596. To put that aggregate difference in perspective, the difference between the aggregates of McCullum and the 20th-ranked Mahela Jayawardene is only 2069.284 The difference between the number of sixes hit by Gayle and the next-highest in T20s – Gayle has struck 743 sixes, while Kieron Pollard is second with 459. The difference between Pollard and the 20th-ranked Cameron White is only 247.

Top run-getters in T20s
Player Mat Runs Ave SR 100s
CH Gayle 290 10,074 40.62 149.51 18
BB McCullum 272 7596 31.51 138.31 7
BJ Hodge 270 7338 36.87 131.27 2
KA Pollard 363 7087 30.54 151.72 0
DA Warner 227 7156 35.42 143.40 5
Shoaib Malik 271 6909 37.34 123.44 0
DR Smith 289 6767 26.22 126.79 3
V Kohli 212 6667 41.40 132.91 4
SK Raina 250 6589 33.44 138.80 3
LJ Wright 266 6296 28.61 144.8 6

74.8 Percentage of Gayle’s T20 runs which have come in boundaries – he has hit 769 fours and 743 sixes. Among batsmen with at least 4000 T20 runs, the next-best percentage is Virender Sehwag’s 69.7.

Highest % runs in boundaries in T20s (Min 4000 runs)
Player Runs SR 4s 6s % bound
CH Gayle 10,074 149.51 769 743 74.79
V Sehwag 4061 147.83 487 147 69.69
RE Levi 4386 143.85 446 211 69.54
MJ Lumb 4955 138.02 595 175 69.22
DR Smith 6767 126.79 642 323 66.60
BB McCullum 7596 138.31 726 357 66.43
SR Watson 5636 138.95 497 287 65.83
DA Warner 7156 143.40 718 297 65.04
KA Pollard 7087 151.72 458 459 64.71
Yuvraj Singh 4254 132.23 327 241 64.74

18 Number of different teams for whom Gayle has played T20s. Apart from West Indies, they are: Barisal Bulls (also named Barisal Burners), Chittagong Vikings, Dhaka Gladiators, Jamaica, Jamaica Tallawahs, Karachi Kings, Kolkata Knight Riders, Lahore Qalandars, Lions, Matabeleland Tuskers, Melbourne Renegades, PCA XI, Royal Challengers Bangalore, Somerset, Stanford Superstars, Sydney Thunder and Western Australia.15 T20 hundreds for Gayle in the period between 2011 and 2015, from 174 innings, which is an average of 11.6 innings per hundred. In the period before 2011 he scored one century in 51 innings, and since 2015 he has scored two in 56 innings. During the five-year period between 2011 and 2015, no other batsman scored more than five hundreds; the next-best was Michael Klinger with five.6 Consecutive calendar years – from 2011 to 2016 – in which Gayle struck at least two T20 hundreds. Before 2011, he had hit only one T20 hundred.

Chris Gayle’s T20 career
Period Inngs Runs Ave SR 100s Dot % BpB
Before 2011 51 1379 29.97 134.79 1 45.8 4.9
2011 to 2015 174 7094 48.58 152.36 15 42.4 4.4
2016 onwards 60 1601 28.58 151.18 2 47.3 4.3

1 Batsman with a strike rate better than Gayle’s 149.56, among the 49 who have scored 4000-plus T20 runs: Pollard has a strike rate of 151.72.43.6 Dot-ball percentage for Gayle. Among batsmen with 4000-plus runs, only two batsmen have a higher dot percentage: Dwayne Smith (46.5), and Lendl Simmons (45.8). (For matches where ball-by-ball data is available.)

Shami clears first hurdle on comeback trail

The path back to the India side from injury has had a series of obstacles along the way, but Mohammed Shami is trying to navigate through them in time for the start of the World T20

Arun Venugopal in Kolkata10-Mar-2016The setting wasn’t as low-key as Mohammed Shami might have probably imagined. This was a warm-up game and yet there were at least 25,000 people at the Eden Gardens. There were several thousand more claps, whistles and screams until palms and throats gave in.This is also his home ground, a city where he made a memorable Test debut in Sachin Tendulkar’s farewell series. But there wasn’t anything about Shami on Thursday that betrayed nerves although some amount of nervous excitement would have only seemed reasonable.A spell of 4-0-30-2 against a batting line-up featuring Chris Gayle, Dwayne Bravo and Marlon Samuels is impressive in itself but its worth is multiplied when you place it against the backdrop of what he has gone through.Shami has over the last few weeks strived to go from 80-85% fit to being fully ready. It is learnt that he bowled to the India Women’s team at the NCA nets in Bangalore to assist in their preparations for the Women’s World T20, apart from playing matches with other men’s teams where specific situations – like bowling at the death, defending a particular total or opening the attack – would be recreated.But Shami would be the first person to insist on telling false dawns apart from real ones, especially after what has happened to him over the last two months. After all, the new year had begun well for Shami. He was nearly as thrilled about flaunting his suit as being on the flight to Australia with the rest of his mates. You couldn’t grudge his just deserts. This was a man who had, after a promising beginning, spent close to a year in pain, uncertainty and the sheer frustration of his knee coming in the way of playing at the highest level.But this new silver lining would soon be gobbled up by gloomy grey clouds as Shami’s return to India was advanced by an injury to the hamstring. It’s hard to surmise what he must have felt. Roughly as excruciating would be the analogy of a man being robbed soon after earning his wages.While on one hand Shami’s inner demons must have been multiplying, the team management too would have had a tough call to make. He wasn’t a part of the Asia Cup squad as well after being deemed to have not recovered sufficiently. But that Shami was picked for the World T20 was as much a leap of faith as an educated gamble; MS Dhoni & co. him. Period.Dhoni has never been shy about his admiration for Shami’s ability to provide thrust with the new ball and finish well at the death. Bouncers, made-to-order yorkers, Shami has always delivered what his captain wanted. His return to action has only added to the considerable gains that India have made recently.

“He just wanted to go out on the park and play. He has really worked hard all this while; coming back from a knee injury is not easy for anyone, not just a bowler.”Rohit Sharma on Mohammed Shami’s return at Eden Gardens

After India had set West Indies 186 to win in Thursday’s World T20 warm-up, he went about rolling out his bouncers and yorkers, not always achieving the desired results but nevertheless persistent in his attempts. For instance, the short-pitched stuff didn’t quite work on this flat, easy-paced surface as Gayle demonstrated with a pull, one of his two boundaries off Shami.After gong for nine runs in his first over, he began his second with a short ball outside off to Marlon Samuels and got away with a single. The next delivery was quick and had Johnson Charles stuck on his crease. Shami had closed in on his sweet spot. His third ball wasn’t exactly a yorker but was fast and full. Charles’ attempt to back away and carve him over cover only resulted in a caught behind. Shami, however, erred with his last two deliveries, going too full and too short on either occasion, and Samuels cashed in with two fours.By the time Shami returned in the 16th over West Indies had lost eight batsmen and were down for the count. He stuck to a length that was slightly shorter of a full length and attacked the stumps. One such delivery had Ashley Nurse charging out of the crease and scooping the ball to deep point.Shami finished with 2-0-11-1 in his second spell. There was no sign of restricted movement or controlled operation. His run-up was easy and the momentum generated by the smoothly-swinging non-bowling arm contributed to his rhythm. Rohit Sharma paid tribute to Shami’s performance, and said he managed to do what he intended to.”He just wanted to go out on the park and play. For a bowler to not play for so long it’s never easy,” Rohit said after the match. “So he just wanted to go out and feel the conditions and feel the atmosphere, and feel [the joy of] wearing the India jersey again. He has really worked hard all this while; coming back from a knee injury is not easy for anyone, not just a bowler. But he really worked hard and looking at [the fact that] he is playing his first game he did pretty well.”He bowled bouncers, yorkers, slower ones, that’s what we expect from him. The last game he played for India, till then he did pretty well for us. He was one of the main bowlers for us and expectations will be there from him, no doubt about it.”Dhoni has recently pointed to the happy dilemma he would face should Shami be fit, with Jasprit Bumrah sealing the other paceman’s slot. Shami would then have to compete with Ashish Nehra for the second seamer’s position and there is a possibility he might not find himself in the playing XI straightaway.But for now he is unlikely to entertain such worries and would rather focus on dialing up the momentum in India’s last warm-up match against South Africa in Mumbai on Saturday. Shami sure knows a thing or two about the value of taking baby steps.

The contradictory fear of the fast bowler

When he was a young and ferocious fast bowler, Len Pascoe wanted the batsmen to be afraid of him. But he also had his own fear. That he would hit someone too badly

Sidharth Monga22-Jan-2015On India’s 1980-81 tour of Australia, gutsy offspinner Shivlal Yadav was told by Rod Marsh: “Lenny is going to keep coming down.” Yadav says he was hit on the helmet, then shoulder, then forearm, then ribs, then the thigh. “When he broke my toe, I understood what Rodney meant.”Question: Could you see the batsman was afraid of you?
Pascoe: Oh I could smell it.Question: Did you like it?
Pascoe: I just didn’t want that bloke to be scared. I wanted the guys in the dressing room to be scared too. If you got him scared that’s it. Often when I took wickets, I would get them in batches. One, two bang. You just hit hard, hit hard.**One month previously, in Sydney, Len Pascoe bounced Sandeep Patil, who wasn’t wearing a helmet. Patil didn’t have the time to react, got front-on, and raised his bat to fend in panic. The ball missed both the gloves and the bat, and hit him so hard on the head it bounced back to where a silly mid-off would have been. Patil fell unconscious, and didn’t move for seconds. He was stretchered off the field, and sent straight to a hospital. That evening Pascoe called up his former captain, Ian Chappell.”So I remember after I hit Sandeep Patil, I had no more,” Pascoe says. “I spoke to Ian Chappell and said I want to retire. I was 32. And I said the game’s not worth dying over. I was worried about what I was becoming. It wasn’t me. I don’t know whether I grew up or the bravado of the fast bowler was stripped. I don’t know.”Pascoe played only three more Tests.**Welcome to the contradictory world of fast bowlers. They want the batsmen to be afraid of them, but they have their own fears, their own demons. Phillip Hughes’ death at the age of 25, in November last year, has only just made it okay to talk about them. If you listen to Pascoe, the fast bowlers have always had fears. Fears they will lose their run-up. Fears they will lose their rhythm. Fears they will hit someone too badly.Pascoe is 64 now. He looks bigger than he did when bowling in the company of Dennis Lillee and Jeff Thomson. He has a beard that looks like Patil’s current beard. Since retiring he has become a coach. He has worked with Glenn McGrath and Stuart Clark, with Steven Smith and Mitchell Starc. It is hard to believe he coached the metronomes that McGrath and Clark were. Two bowlers who believed in nicking the batsmen out, not hitting them. Pascoe also runs an entertainment business. He can now talk comfortably about the discomfort hitting batsmen brought to him, and why he kept on doing it.Here was a man after whom his club’s hometown named a hospital ward. Every Saturday Bankstown Hospital would receive cricket victims in Thomson-Pascoe ward. That despite being told years later by the groundsman at Bankstown that because of Thomson and Pascoe he used to make incredibly flat pitches. Pascoe was young, he was ferocious, his captains loved him because he could strike fear in the opposition, the fans loved the drama, and the women loved the fast bowlers. There was reason to feel powerful.Hughes’ death might have reaffirmed to us the dangers of cricket, which we had begun to take for granted with the advent of modern protection, but for Pascoe they were always there. He remembers clearly the first time he seriously injured a batsman, South Australian George Griffith. Two bouncers had been pulled away for fours, but the third one got him. Pascoe says he is still haunted by what followed. “He said, ‘Look Len it was not your fault. It was my fault because it was a poor shot.’ But what scared me is what he said next. Only a matter of half an inch either way from where he got hit, he wouldn’t be here today.”I knew he was pretty serious. But you’re young. There were no helmets around. But it always haunted me. When I saw him I said I got to apologise because I didn’t see him in hospital. And he said, ‘No, no, you have nothing to apologise for. I know where you’re coming from.’ And anyway, after that I kind of went surfing and fishing and cricket to me wasn’t my thing.”

“The only way I could get all I wanted was by being a fast bowler. And the person stopping me was the guy 22 yards away. But I didn’t hate him. But the more I got rid of them, the closer I got to everything I wanted out of life. Hating the batsman is not what it’s about. It’s not hate. He is preventing you from what you want.”

Cricket, though, brought opportunities next year, and more dangerous games. When Pascoe next hit a batsman too badly, he remembers, his mate Thomson had only recently lost his former flat-mate, the 22-year-old Martin Bedkober, to a blow to the chest while batting in a Queensland grade game. Pascoe bowled a bouncer in a grade game, to Sutherland’s Glenn Bailey, and hit him in the chest. “And he started vomiting blood, and I go, ‘Oh no…’ And he was taken off the field,” Pascoe says.There was this other time when he had had enough of John Benaud’s statements in the press. “Dion Bourne, the uncle of the Waugh boys, he’s my captain [at Bankstown],” Pascoe says. “And John is on his soapbox. And I just said to my captain Dion, ‘Let him talk about how we should have played the game. Should have declared whatever. Next week, I’ll close his mouth.’ And what happened was, Penrith took half of our players from Bankstown like Steve Small. Benaud was their captain.”The first guy is in. A fellow called Kenny Robinson. I just bowl normal to him, and he gets out. And then Benaud comes to the crease. First ball straight in the throat. He could not talk. We won outright. I went through them. And then we are all having drinks, and I looked at Dion and said, ‘Not much to say now.’ That one was one that I recall, and it could have gone badly as well.”There is a clear sense of feeling powerful when Pascoe is narrating these tales. There is another delightful one. “We are down at Bankstown Sports Club. Dion Bourne [whose nephews Pascoe coached later] and the other guy was Mike Stevenson, who was called Stench. Stench because he was a Pom. Till date he’s still Stench. Dion Bourne’s nickname was Lunch. Because he would have scored a hundred, and he would have had tomato sandwiches in his back-pocket while he batted. And he would come in and eat them. So we got Lunch and Stench. And we are playing snooker.”Thommo’s not a bad player. And Stench says, ‘Oh, you might be better than us at snooker but we’re better cricketers than you two.’ ‘Is that so?’ says Jeff. ‘Tomorrow afternoon, I’ll have two overs, Lenny will have two overs. You bat for four, and we’ll find out who the better cricketers are.'”So we got an umpire at one end just to say that’s out, that’s not out, that’s four and three. Stench goes in first. I hit him from a***hole to breakfast. I made sure I didn’t hit him in the head, but his legs are knocked out from under him. He has got bruises on his bruises. Then Thommo’s come on. Thommo had less idea where they were going than the batsmen did. He lets go at Stench. He has come out looking sad, sore and sorry and says, ‘Righto Dion it’s your turn.’ Dion says, ‘Bullshit, I’ve just declared.’ I had forgotten that but when Dion Bourne died, they told this story.”By the time it came to hitting Patil, Pascoe wasn’t enjoying them as much. “I retired soon after that,” Pascoe says. “Not because I couldn’t play anymore. After Patil, they all built up. And I did not bowl another bouncer to Sandeep Patil. He came into the dressing room and joked, ‘Lenny, I am so sorry for putting my head in the way of your ball.’ And I go, ‘What?’ And he’s got this big bandage on his head. The thing is that it did shake me up quite a lot. It was an accumulation of all these other blows. And you saw how he went down.”**Len Pascoe: “At the level that you are, if you wanted to hit someone you could.”•AFPWhat brought the change, then? After all when Pascoe was younger he was hitting batsmen even though he had known a mate’s flat-mate to have died of a hit.”Because there were things I wanted in life,” Pascoe says. He was the son of an immigrant. His father was a brick carter. Pascoe grew up with racial abuse, being called a wog at school, in the ’50s-60s Australia. He wanted a house of his own, he wanted the luxury to be able to stay in the outdoors that he loved. He had left school. He also wanted to leave brick carting, which did help him attain the strength needed to bowl fast.”The only way I could get all I wanted was by being a fast bowler,” Pascoe says. “And the person stopping me was the guy 22 yards away. But I didn’t hate him. But the more I got rid of them, the closer I got to everything I wanted out of life. Hating the batsman is not what it’s about. It’s not hate. He is preventing you from what you want.”At the time my thinking was, policemen risk their lives, army people risk their lives. And if you are going to be with the best, you have to survive. It is a matter of survival. Did you know that there were four jockeys killed in one year in 2014? There were two water skiers, champion water skiers. Extreme sport. And I put a post on Facebook saying cricket now is an extreme sport. To go in and face somebody from 80 to 90 miles an hour. That’s an extreme sport. In extreme sports, tragedies happen. Hardly a year goes by when a jockey doesn’t get killed.”Once you’ve achieved what you want, you are able to reflect and go, ‘What am I becoming?’ And, I remember saying to Ian Chappell that I want to give it away. And he said, ‘What if he hits you for six? Do you think he feels sorry for you?’ That kind of changed my thinking but I went on to play only one more season.”Bowling fast and risking injuries to the batsmen wasn’t just a ticket out of mundaneness, though. There was a whole package. When asked if he would have reacted differently to hitting batsmen in the early stages of his career had he been born into better means, Pascoe says: “When there’s a young fast bowler, the rest of the team feeds off him. They encourage him. The rest of the team wants to see the other guys scared. Here were a pair of young fast bowlers in Thommo and me. They couldn’t score more than a 110 between them. And here we got these fast bowlers. You are young, and pretty soon your ego gets the better of you. The bravado. You run around in fast cars. You are getting girlfriends. Your testosterone is running high. We are used to seeing batsmen get hit but they always get up. Bit like a movie. And then you see what’s happen to Phil…”

“When there’s a young fast bowler, the rest of the team feeds off him. They encourage him. The rest of the team wants to see the other guys scared. Here were a pair of young fast bowlers in Thommo and me. They couldn’t score more than a 110 between them. And here we got these fast bowlers. You are young, and pretty soon your ego gets the better of you. The bravado. You run around in fast cars. You are getting girlfriends. Your testosterone is running high. We are used to seeing batsmen get hit but they always get up. Bit like a movie. And then you see what’s happen to Phil…”

When he hit Patil, Pascoe was no longer a 21-year-old with girls after him. “I was married, and I had two kids,” he says. “When I am coaching fast bowlers now, I say that the bouncer is an intimidatory delivery. It is a delivery aimed at a batsman much the same as a boxer has to throw a knockout punch. What you can do is learn how to bowl that bouncer properly. For instance, if you are playing on a synthetic wicket with a two-piece ball don’t be a hero and bowl a bouncer at that batsman. That’s stupidity. The two-piece ball is rock hard and you are on synthetic. And it’s going to fly. You should be very conscious of where you’re bowling it and why you’re bowling it.”What then is bowling a bouncer properly? “The first bouncer I would bowl to a batsman would be a fact-finding mission,” Pascoe says. “I will have mid-on and mid-off tell me what his foot movement is. If I bowled a bouncer I’m not there to hit him with it. I will bowl that bouncer over leg stump, and high over leg stump. So that I can see is he going back and across or is he getting cramped. Then I would move my line. The more you go down leg side the finer it will go. The higher you do it, the higher they’ll hit it. As you come more towards off stump, they start hitting you squarer and squarer. If you can detect there is a weakness. Say you bowl a bouncer over middle or leg stump and he’s going back and across and he’s inside, the next one you bowl him is not as high but it is over middle-stump and he’s walked right into it. And it’s cramped him up. You’re setting up a target. Setting him up. This is the level you get to.”**Pascoe wants one thing made clear. He was not just a bouncer bowler. He loved his professional wrestling. “Now that’s where the façade and the World Championship Wrestling come in,” he says. “They all think this is bouncer, bouncer, bouncer, but my best ball was the offcutter. I took more wickets with the offcutter, and took more lbws. I took five in the Centenary Test, and three of them were offcutters. Lbw. Look at my first Test wicket. Tony Greig. Bouncer followed by yorker. Stumps went all over the place.”But Pascoe did aim to hit the batsmen, didn’t he? “At the level that you are, if you wanted to hit someone you could.””And did you fear hitting someone too badly?””Yes, if you hit someone.””Did you always fear hitting someone too badly?””Yeah.””Even when you were young?””It’s funny. You are angry and you want to create fear, but at the end of the day you cool down and want to have a think about what just happened. A bit like wrestling, where you are hitting someone but you are taught to hit them without injuring them.”**There is a Bollywood movie called [Fifty-six So Far]. It is based on police trying to get around loopholes in the law by faking encounters and killing those whom they believe are criminals but are likely to get away if trialled properly. Fifty-six is supposed to be the count of encounter-murders kept by one of the policemen. The main protagonist in the film reflects on his own fears, “It is important to kill, but it is even more important to stay away from the habit of killing.”Now batsmen are no criminals, but with big bats, slower pitches, smaller outfields, better protection equipment, the fast bowler’s world is a bit like that of the conflicted policeman’s. They don’t all show it, but if Pascoe is any indicator, they must all come face to face with that fear.

Pakistan's anti-performance and other facts from Newlands

A statistical analysis of what went down in Cape Town

Andy Zaltzman25-Feb-2013Fact illustrated by the Newlands Test #1: Cricket is a team gameCricket is not as much of a team game as other team games. But it is a team game nevertheless. The Newlands Test proved this in enough spades to open a half-decent DIY store. Pakistan had individual performances that should have laid the foundations for victory. They also had collective frailties than made defeat almost inevitable. They posted the only two centuries of the match, and had the leading wicket-taker. But they still lost, and quite comfortably ‒ becoming just the third side in Test history to lose a Test in which they have had both (a) two or more centurions with the bat, and (b) a ten-wicket haulster with the ball.This they achieved because they also had: (c) three significant batting collapses, (d) both openers out for ducks in the same innings, (e) a combined match analysis of 1 for 181 by their opening bowlers, and (f) Vernon Philander, with his Dickensian name and his 19th-century statistics, on the other team.Thus, Younis and Shafiq’s outstanding twin 111s, and Ajmal’s ten wickets, ultimately came to nothing, and left those three players in elite company in the annals of Test defeats by teams with two tons and a ten-for. Gavaskar, Amarnath and Bedi were similarly let down by their team-mates at the WACA in 1977-78. No prizes for guessing which two scored the hundreds and which one took the ten wickets. Hobbs, Sutcliffe and Woolley all scored centuries at the SCG in 1924-25, but despite their efforts, and Maurice Tate’s heroic 11-wicket bag from 89 eight-ball overs ‒ in today’s squad-rotational game, he would have been rested for about 15 months after that kind of workload ‒ England were soundly walloped. Their problem was that they blended those three centuries with 13 single-figure scores (compared to Australia’s three – similarly, at Newlands last week, the single-figure dismissal tally was South Africa 2 Pakistan 11).India lost that high-scoring Perth game in 1977-78 due to a second-innings collapse after their two centurions were out, and because Bedi was left more unsupported than a county championship match on a wet Wednesday afternoon in April in the immediate aftermath of nuclear Armageddon. Chandrasekhar and Venkataraghavan could only manage three wickets between in the match, and those were the final three wickets in the first innings.Other than these three games, teams boasting two or more centuries and a ten-wicket haul have won 82 Tests and drawn 6. So it took a fairly determined all-round anti-performance for Pakistan to lose in Cape Town, despite three outstanding individual displays in the country that has in recent years been least hospitable to visiting sides. Ajmal became only the fourth spinner to take ten in a Test in South Africa since the Second World War (only Murali had done so since 1957), whilst Younis and Shafiq, coming together at 33 for 4, became the first visiting pair to compile a double-century stand in South Africa since April 2006.They were also just the third pair to add 200 in South Africa and end up on the losing side. Overall, of the 510 double-century partnerships in Test history, 244 have contributed to a victory, 234 have been in drawn games, and only 32 ‒ just over 6% ‒ have preceded a defeat.Pakistan’s fate in what was a gripping and fluctuating match until their second-innings subsidence was ultimately decided not by the potentially match-winning excellence of Younis and Shafiq’s batting and Ajmal’s wizardrous tweakery, but by the endemic frailty of their batting ‒ 15 Pakistan batsmen were out for less than 20 in this match. At least this was a step forward on the first Test, when 16 of their 20 dismissals were for 18 or less.Losing 15 batsmen for less than 20 does not necessarily mean you will lose a Test. But it does certainly give you a headstart in the race to the losing line. Statistically, teams are nine times more likely to lose than win a Test if they do so (47 wins, 430 losses) (thanks be to Statsguru, fount of all knowledge) (or at least, fount of some extremely useless pieces of knowledge). Fact illustrated by the Newlands Test #2: A Test hundred in South Africa is a good inningsTo illustrate how tough batting in South Africa is for visiting teams, particularly this decade, a fact: of the last 11 centuries scored by away batsmen since 2009-10, only two have been scored by players with fewer than 50 caps – New Zealand’s Dean Brownlie (in his eighth Test), in the second-innings of a Test that had long been a lost cause, and Asad Shafiq ‒ 18 Tests ‒ last week. Younis was in his 81st Test; previously Cook and Bell posted three figures for England in their 50th and 51st Tests respectively in the 2009-10 series; for India the following season, the undeniably experienced Tendulkar centurionated himself in his 175th and 177th matches; in 2011-12, Australia’s only hundred-maker was Clarke (73rd), who was then followed by Sri Lankan veterans Sangakkara (105th) and Samaraweera (70th and 71st). Fact illustrated by the Newlands Test #3: South African lower-order batsmen aren’t quite what they used to beRobin Peterson’s match-turning 84 was the first time a South African batting at 8 or lower has scored 80 in a Test for almost eight years, since Nicky Boje hit 82 against Zimbabwe in March 2005. In the seven years between January 1997, when Lance Klusener slapped a rapid hundred against India batting at 9, and January 2004, when Mark Boucher, batting 8, flayed West Indies with his penultimate Test century, South African lower-order batsmen scored six hundreds, two undefeated 99s, and two more scores in the 80s.

Cook suffers the swing of one-day fortune

If he didn’t have a pretty good idea already, Alastair Cook now knows how quickly the emotions of an England one-day captain can shift

Andrew McGlashan at Headingley01-Jul-2011If he didn’t have a pretty good idea already, Alastair Cook now knows how quickly the emotions of an England one-day captain can shift in the matter of a few days. From a performance where everything went right at The Oval he was left pondering an insipid display at Headingley where, except for a couple of short spells, England weren’t at the races.They still had a chance at the mid-point of the match, especially as last year they chased 295 to beat Pakistan, but no one could anchor the innings. In that game last summer Andrew Strauss scored a superb hundred and it appeared Cook could do the same, but his innings ended limply went he lofted to deep cover for 48.”I think it was gettable but one of us needed to play a special innings,” he said. “I think they got a few too many and the last 10 overs went for 100. We didn’t get our skills right at the end. All of our top six got in but no one did a Mahela Jayawardene to get us close.”However, while admitting no one went on to make the telling contribution – Eoin Morgan’s electric 52 off 40 balls was the top score – Cook defended the approach of England’s top order. Craig Kieswetter and Kevin Pietersen were both caught on the boundary while Morgan was stumped off Suraj Randiv, but Cook said it’s part of the risk-and-reward strategy of the format”It’s part of one-day cricket, you have to take those risks to keep the scoreboard ticking and when you don’t execute it well it looks a poor shot. I thought a lot of our shots were the right choice, we just didn’t play them well enough.”Two matches into Cook’s full-time reign is far too early to be drawing any conclusions – this was his first defeat in five matches as ODI captain – but the start of this series has been another example of the lack of consistency that has so often been the major issue with England’s 50-over cricket. For every 110-run win there is a 69-run defeat just around the corner. Even when they win one-day series – as they did three times last summer against Australia, Bangladesh and Pakistan – it is not without a mid-series wobble (Bangladesh and Pakistan) or a late fade with the job done (Australia). It is why their ranking has stayed mid-table for so long.England’s performance in the field highlighted how their standards had slipped just three days on from their victory in London. Graeme Swann’s costly miss at slip to give Mahela Jaywardene a life on 7 was called “an 80-20″ chance by Cook, but England train hard to take those types of catches, while Swann spilled another at short fine-leg off the struggling Stuart Broad.”It was a very tough chance and you aren’t blaming them,” Cook said. “It wasn’t a game-turner but in our fielding we aim to take those chances and we work hard in practice. I’m not blaming Swanny for that one.”The other problem for Cook was a lack of control with the ball in an attack heavily based around four pacemen. Three of them went at seven or more per over which undid any pressure built up by probing spells from James Anderson and Graeme Swann. Broad’s problems continued with a wicketless 10 overs for 70, leaving him with no scalps since the Test series and just eight for the summer, while Tim Bresnan didn’t enjoy his home ground return.Jade Dernbach was the other bowler to have a rough day with his nine overs costing 63. That is no issue for a player in just his second game but he did get involved in a slightly hot-headed confrontation with Jayawardene in the 38th over which required words from umpire Billy Bowden. Jayawardene’s suggestion appeared to be that Dernbach altered his path to impede the batsman although Cook was quick to defend his fast bowler’s attitude.”I enjoyed it, I think that’s the passion you need to play cricket with,” Cook said. “You’ve got to have that passion and pride to play for England and it’s important not to take a backward step.”Tillakaratne Dilshan also insisted he had no issues with the exchange – “it happens on the cricket field,” he said – but perhaps what Cook should have done is told Dernbach to have a look at the scoreboard. Jayawardene was on 116 when the two exchanged views. It was a moment that summed up a poor day for England.

Diamonds and rust

India had an eventful, often turbulent year, marked by all kinds of leadership-related turmoil, but it was a surprisingly successful one as well

Siddhartha Vaidyanathan07-Jan-2008

India won their first big international title in over two decades, the World Twenty20, in 2007 © Getty Images
Crash out of one world event, storm to victory in another; fumble over the appointment of a coach, win a rare Test series in England; get flustered after one player resigns from captaincy and another refuses the job, revel in the newly appointed captain, dominating Pakistan in the process; panic after an informal league lures domestic players, watch the closest Ranji Trophy league round in recent memory.Rarely did a day go by in 2007 without Indian cricket throwing up something or the other. If it was an unnamed member of the team management leaking news at the start of the year, an unnamed selector was doing the same by the end of it. If none of the board officials made the headlines, there was always Sreesanth.Scratch the turbulent surface, though, and you have one of India’s most successful years. The year began with them squandering a series-winning opportunity in Cape Town and ended with a thrashing in Melbourne, but India made up with a couple of series wins against England and Pakistan in between – one after 21 years, the other after 27. Throw in a win in the World Twenty20 and you had a year to look back on fondly.If India rose steadily in Tests, in limited-overs cricket they oscillated from the pathetic to the inspirational. If they could do nothing right against Bangladesh in the World Cup opener, they were unstoppable against Australia in the World Twenty20 semi-final. When India won an ODI, it was usually owing to Sachin Tendulkar. Whether it was his 76-ball 100 in Vadodara that sealed the series against West Indies, or the twin 90s against South Africa in Belfast, or his magical 94 that helped level the series at The Oval, or even his uplifting 97 against Pakistan in Gwalior, he was the guiding force. His only weakness? Falling in the nineties.He was far quieter in the Test arena, preferring the path of least risk. Eclipsing him were two contrasting batsmen: the languid Wasim Jaffer and the enigmatic Sourav Ganguly. Jaffer’s efficient run-scoring underlined his coming of age as a batsman over the last couple of years, but it was Ganguly who made for the poignant story. Banished into exile a little over a year ago, he returned to conquer, batting better than he had ever done before. A number of moments stand out but his towering double-hundred in Bangalore will be talked about the longest.India went through much of the year without a coach. Greg Chappell resigned after the World Cup debacle and the board didn’t think it was urgent to appoint someone on a long-term basis. Ravi Shastri, Chandu Borde and Lalchand Rajput handled the responsibilities over different series before Gary Kirsten was finally handed a two-year contract.Captains changed too. Rahul Dravid relinquished the job after the England series and the selectors gave Mahendra Singh Dhoni the responsibility in the shorter formats. Anil Kumble was handed the reins for the longer version, though the appointment was likely to last only a couple of series at the most. Banished into exile a little over a year ago, Ganguly returned to conquer, batting better than he had ever done before. A number of moments stand out but his towering double-hundred in Bangalore will be talked about the longest High point
The final of the World Twenty20 against Pakistan will top the list. India’s first victory on the world stage for 22 years was engineered by a bunch of rookies who started without much of a chance. Dhoni was leading a group of unknowns, but they turned in one fearless performance after another to strike gold. The Test series win in England must come a close second.Low point
The first-round exit from the World Cup. India were outclassed by Bangladesh and Sri Lanka and never looked good enough to mix it with the best. A bunch of ageing stars dawdled in the field, and a helpless captain and garrulous coach bungled at the top.Several shenanigans of the board will vie for a close second.New kids on the block
A number of promising stars were part of the World Twenty20 squad. Rohit Sharma and Robin Uthappa shone bright but it was probably RP Singh who emerged the strongest, going from a second-change bowler to a new-ball exponent. He was probably India’s most consistent bowler in England, and began the New Year leading the attack.What does 2008 hold?
There’s no doubt that a number of voids will open up. With Dravid, Ganguly, Laxman, Tendulkar, and Kumble nearing the end of their careers, India could be in for a serious depletion. The challenge would be to phase these players out gradually, blooding new talent at the right time and making sure the boat isn’t rocked too hard. It may turn out to be the most challenging task yet.

Punjab Kings sweating on Bairstow's availability

Kings still waiting for medical clearance from ECB as England batter recovers from freak leg injury

Matt Roller and Nagraj Gollapudi11-Mar-2023

Jonny Bairstow was retained by Punjab Kings ahead of the upcoming season•BCCI

Will Jonny Bairstow be fit to play the IPL? Punjab Kings are waiting anxiously for an answer to that question, with the IPL getting underway in about three weeks. ESPNcricinfo has learned that Kings are waiting for medical clearance from ECB on Bairstow, who is recovering from the freak leg injury he suffered last September.

Bairstow broke his left leg and dislocated his ankle on September 2, days before the third and final Test of England’s home series against South Africa. He slipped while playing golf with friends in Yorkshire, suffering multiple fractures in his fibula, which required a plate to be inserted when he underwent surgery in London a few days later, and also sustained ligament damage.He has since missed all the cricket England have played, including the T20 World Cup where he was meant to open with his captain Jos Buttler. He has also missed tours to Pakistan, South Africa, New Zealand and Bangladesh, as well as the ILT20 where he was due to play for Abu Dhabi Knight Riders.The ECB’s timeline had previously suggested that Bairstow could make his return at the IPL, which starts on March 31. Bairstow has been in constant touch with Kings’ medical staff, who are believed to be optimistic about his progress.However, the franchise needs definitive clearance from the ECB, and is waiting to hear if Bairstow will be fully or partially available for IPL, as well as what sort of workload he can handle. While Kings await confirmation from the ECB, they have shortlisted a handful of possible replacements, but have not yet finalised a player.Bairstow recently started running again for the first time, posting a video on his Instagram page on February 27 showing him completing some 30-second intervals on a running track. He is understood to be progressing as planned. At this stage, his participation in the Ashes – which starts at Edgbaston on June 16 – is not in doubt.The injury snapped a spectacular run of form in Test cricket for Bairstow: in ten Tests in 2022, he had scored 1061 runs, and was the leading scorer in the format. He still ended 2022 fourth on that list, and had the most centuries for the calendar year, with six.Kings retained Bairstow this season, having bought him at the 2022 mega auction for INR 6.75 crore (US$ 825,000 approx.). Last year, he scored 253 runs in 11 innings, averaging 23 with a strike rate of 144.57, with two half-centuries.Bairstow is one of three England players at Kings, with Liam Livingstone and Sam Curran. Livingstone, who is on track to return from his own knee injury at the IPL, was retained after impressing in 2022, while Kings made Curran the costliest buy in IPL history, paying INR 18.50 crore (US$ 2.256 million approx.) at the latest auction in December.

'Everyone in this room thinks Arsenal will win' – Ruben Amorim admits Man Utd have lost fear factor but vows to make Old Trafford 'an enjoyable place' again

Ruben Amorim has admitted Manchester United have lost their fear factor at Old Trafford, but insists he will turn the stadium back into a fortress. Ahead of their Premier League opener against Arsenal, the Portuguese coach vowed to make the Theatre of Dreams "an enjoyable place" again for Red Devils fans after last season's struggles.

  • Amorim admits Old Trafford lost its aura after last season
  • Man Utd have spent £210m on Sesko, Cunha and Mbeumo
  • Portuguese coach vows to restore fortress mentality
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  • WHAT HAPPENED?

    Manchester United endured a miserable 2024-25 campaign, losing nine home league games and finishing 15th in their worst top-flight season in over five decades. Amorim, who replaced Erik ten Hag last November, has overseen a major summer rebuild with the arrivals of Benjamin Sesko, Matheus Cunha and Bryan Mbeumo. The trio were signed to inject attacking firepower and help restore confidence at Old Trafford.

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    WHAT AMORIM SAID

    Speaking to the media, Amorim said: "We’ve got to make it (Old Trafford) an enjoyable place for our fans. That is really important. We start with one game against Arsenal, a very good team. Everyone in this room thinks Arsenal are going to win. I know that. But we will be there on Sunday to change things.

    "It’s not a mental thing – but it’s not just the players, it’s also the fans. In the (friendly) game against Fiorentina, you could feel it. The fans were a little bit nervous. This feeling, you cannot change it in one day or one game. It’s a feeling that we have to fight. Everyone together – the players, the coaches and the fans. Together, we are going to change things. If you want to win things and be a very strong team, then especially at home you have to win games.”

  • THE BIGGER PICTURE

    The pressure is on Amorim after a £210 million ($285m) summer spend and the potential exits of the Red Devils' 'bomb squad'. United’s priority this season is to re-establish their home ground as a place opponents fear visiting. Amorim insists building momentum at Old Trafford is key to challenging for trophies again.

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    WHAT NEXT FOR MAN UTD?

    The Red Devils host Arsenal at Old Trafford in their Premier League opener on Sunday, with Amorim targeting a statement victory. New signings Sesko, Cunha and Mbeumo are all expected to feature as fans hope to see a more ruthless United.

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