New Zealand unhappy over 'inconsistent' referrals

New Zealand’s tension on a day when they lost 11 wickets spilled into frustration with the umpire decision review system

Brydon Coverdale at the Basin Reserve21-Mar-2010New Zealand’s tension on a day when they lost 11 wickets spilled into frustration with the umpire decision review system and the captain Daniel Vettori was spotted heading to the match referee’s room after Australia enforced the follow-on. Their first innings ended when Tim Southee’s caught-behind dismissal was upheld, despite replays failing to confirm if there was an edge.Southee felt he had not hit the ball but the UDRS is designed only to overturn blatantly wrong calls, and the lack of hard evidence one way or another meant the on-field decision remained. The coach Mark Greatbatch was defensive when asked if Vettori had spoken to the match referee Javagal Srinath, initially denying it before telling a New Zealand journalist who pressed the issue in a heated tete-a-tete that “you obviously knew that he went there, so why did you ask the question?””It would be fair to say with the system at the moment it is a little bit inconsistent,” Greatbatch said eventually. “We just asked the question whether the system in place at the moment is consistent. The match referee said yes, so [we’ll] get on with it.”Earlier in the match, Tim McIntosh had been caught off a no-ball that was not picked up by the on-field umpire and Brendon McCullum was also lbw off an over-step, which was noticed when he asked for a referral. Despite New Zealand’s concerns over the review system, Greatbatch was even more displeased with his batsmen.They lost their last six first-innings wickets for 45 in the morning, including an ugly top-edged pull from McCullum, a lazy run-out in which Daryl Tuffey failed to ground his bat, and four catches behind the stumps. Greatbatch said Tuffey’s run-out was “schoolboy stuff” and the general batting effort was disappointing.”We talked about judging line well and we haven’t judged line that well in this game,” he said. “We know they hit the deck hard and a lot of the balls aren’t actually hitting the stumps. It’s just a matter of judging that line well so you soak up that pressure. They’ve bowled very good areas for a long period of time and we haven’t been able to be positive enough to break those shackles.”The only positive to come out of the day for New Zealand was McIntosh’s attritional 83 in the second innings, a 273-minute effort that featured excellent concentration. McIntosh fell late in the day when he prodded to short leg off Nathan Hauritz and his departure left them at 187 for 5 at stumps, still trailing by 115 with two days to play.”He’s that type of player, he focuses well, he watches each ball, he relaxes in between,” Greatbatch said of McIntosh. “It would be nice to see him keep going but he batted nearly five hours and if two or three other guys did that we’d still be well in the Test match. [He has] great focus and he learns quick. He’s battled hard against a bloody good attack.”

Cummins after loss to KKR: 'Old mate Starcy turned it on again'

SRH captain said he loved how “brave the guys were in a high-pressure situation” like IPL and that there was a “lot of fun”

ESPNcricinfo staff26-May-20241:09

Moody: SRH’s batters have failed to adapt to conditions that are not batting friendly

Sunrisers Hyderabad (SRH) were “totally outplayed” by Kolkata Knight Riders (KKR) in the final of IPL 2024, Pat Cummins has conceded.Their eight-wicket defeat, completed with 57 balls to spare, was set up by Mitchell Starc’s blistering new-ball spell, in which he swung the ball around corners and took out the big-hitting Abhishek Sharma and Rahul Tripathi.”I thought they bowled fantastically,” Cummins said at the post-match presentation. “Unfortunately, [my] old mate Starcy turned it on again. Obviously, not enough tonight, [we were] totally outplayed.”Related

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SRH didn’t recover from the damage caused by Starc and the other KKR quicks, and were eventually bundled for 113. The longest partnership SRH managed was for the ninth wicket, and it lasted just 22 balls, which meant they could neither hit their way out of trouble nor take the innings deep and explode at the end.”It was a bit of a tricky wicket,” Cummins, who had won the toss and opted to bat, said. “I think if we got 160, it would have been like we were in the game. [It] didn’t feel like a 200-plus wicket, again [we fell] well short. But maybe, [if] we found a few extra runs [it] might’ve given us a chance.”You hope you get a few boundaries away [early on], you’re into the game. But they bowled fantastically well, didn’t give us anything [to work with]. Similar [to Qualifier 1] last week in Ahmedabad. They bowled really well, so, full credit [to them].”Despite the failure in the final, SRH’s batting line-up pushed the boundaries of aggression during the course of the tournament. Their openers, Abhishek and Travis Head, were key to this IPL being a high-scoring season. SRH broke multiple records and did it repeatedly to set the benchmark regardless of the risk involved, which pleased Cummins.”The style that the guys played,” Cummins said, “particularly with the bat, takes a lot of skill to not only get 250, [but] also [to do it] three times. You put yourself out there a fair bit. So I loved how brave the guys were in a high-pressure situation like the IPL. They took the game on, there was a lot of fun. [The] fans seemed to like it, back in Hyderabad. So, great season.”

Pakistan battle in 355-run chase as late breakthrough buoys England

Brook century and trio of wonder-balls give England scent of famous series win

Andrew Miller11-Dec-2022Close Pakistan 202 (Babar 75, Shakeel 63, Leach 4-98) and 198 for 4 (Shakeel 54*, Faheem 3*) need another 157 runs to beat England 281 (Duckett 63, Pope 60, Abrar 7-114) and 275 (Brook 108, Abrar 4-120) For the best part of 32 overs, Imam-ul-Haq and Saud Shakeel thwarted an England attack that had been buoyed by a trio of superb deliveries in the first hour after lunch, to take a stiff Pakistan chase down to a potentially gripping fourth-day climax, and keep England’s hope of a famous series win on ice for another day … and potentially another Test.But then, with the shadows lengthening, and England starting to sweat on a route through a doughty 107-run stand for the fourth wicket, Imam leaned into an expansive drive out of the rough against Jack Leach, and scuffed a fast edge to Joe Root at slip to fall for 60 and crank the door ajar once more.Though Saud Shakeel endured to the close on 54 not out in partnership with Faheem Ashraf, the equation at stumps was simple. Six more wickets for England to take a 2-0 series lead with Karachi still to come, or 157 runs for Pakistan to draw level at 1-1 with their second-highest successful Test run chase of 355.Related

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It had been another gripping day of ebb-and-flow Test cricket, with Pakistan’s evening alliance mirroring their free-flowing opening stand of 64 in 15 overs before lunch, in which Mohammad Rizwan – promoted to open after Imam was sent for a scan on a damaged hamstring – and Abdullah Shafique saw off the new ball at a brisk tempo of 4.27 an over.Prior to that, England themselves had effectively auto-completed their second innings, with Harry Brook’s second Test century the highlight of a fast-forwarded hour of batting in which they lost their last five wickets for the addition of 73 runs. Despite the Test still having the best part of nine sessions to run at that stage, England’s approach reflected their belief that the surface still had plenty to offer their own bowlers, and – as with their 342-run declaration in Rawalpindi – by leaving Pakistan a nominally feasible target of 355, they would be all the better placed to induce errors.Harry Brook celebrates his second Test hundred•AFP/Getty Images

And, as had also been displayed in that first Test, England possess in James Anderson a trump card every bit as unique as Abrar Ahmed had proven to be in the course of his 11-wicket debut, but also 177 Tests and 20 years more experienced. Now as then, Anderson had been a notable absentee in the opening exchanges, as Stokes held his main man back to exploit the possibility of reverse swing. When he arrived for the first over of the afternoon, he quickly transformed the innings prognosis.Anderson’s first four deliveries of the session were negotiated safely enough, but the fifth was simply unplayable – a full-length seaming delivery that angled in at Rizwan then jagged wickedly around his outside edge to hit the top of off. Rizwan looked dumbfounded as he turned to survey the wreckage, but he had to go for 30 from 43 balls, and England had their opening at 66 for 1.Leach had been warming up to share the afternoon honours, but Stokes immediately signalled for Ollie Robinson to make it an all-seam attack. In his second over of the session, he too had produced a wonder-ball. With a hint of uneven bounce forcing Pakistan’s captain, Babar Azam, to play watchfully against the straight ball, Robinson instead hit the seam a full foot outside off, and Babar, seemingly grateful to be able to leave one, could only look on aghast at the ball zipped back to hit the top of off too.Babar Azam had his off stump pegged back by Ollie Robinson•Matthew Lewis/Getty Images

Shafique all but succumbed to a near-identical delivery in Robinson’s next over, but he wouldn’t survive for much longer. Stokes rang the changes once more, recalling his quickest bowler, Mark Wood, in the final over before drinks, and with his very first ball, he burst another off-stump rattler through Shafique’s defences, again from wide of the crease, but keeping low as it skidded on with extra oomph.At 83 for 3, Pakistan’s innings was pinned to the ropes. But with his notable willingness to save his seamers for the key moments, Stokes instead leaned heavily on his spinners with in-out fields, tempting Pakistan to hit through the phalanx of close catchers. Once again, his first-innings weapon, Jack Leach, was Stokes’ most trusted option, but with two left-handers lining him up, Leach endured some rough treatment, going at 4.40 in the course of his 20 overs. Until, of course, he produced the moment that repaid the faith, and unlocked England’s prospects of closing out the game.The opportunities had kept coming regardless, up until that moment – on 4, Shakeel top-edged a slog-sweep off Root that fell short of Wood, set a few metres too deep at midwicket, while on 19, Imam drilled a hard chance back down the pitch at Will Jacks, who couldn’t cling on. The biggest let-off, however, came deep into the final session, as Imam, then on 54, flicked his bat at a leg-side lifter but Stokes declined the review that would have shown a faint tickle. It was the slightest indication that England’s captain was starting to feel the heat, as Imam and Shakeel grew in confidence with a series of sweetly-timed cover drives, particularly off the then-leaky Leach.Despite the excitement generated by England’s trio of early wickets, England found little in the way of reverse-swing as the innings progressed, on a day-three pitch that was arguably playing at its best. Stokes himself resisted any temptation to break the emergency glass and bring himself on for a spell, although that prospect remains for an intriguing fourth-day finish, when only the draw will be off the table.Imam-ul-Haq and Saud Shakeel’s partnership frustrated England•PCB

In spite of Pakistan’s relative success in the morning session, the major milestone had belonged to Brook, who converted his overnight 74 to his second hundred in four innings on this trip. By the time he holed out to deep square leg for 108, Brook had racked up 14 fours and a six in his 149-ball stay, replete with powerful strokeplay and impressive judgement of length, particularly against the spin of Abrar, who was once again Pakistan’s most threatening bowler, as he finished with 4 for 120, and an 11-wicket match haul on debut.Abrar came in for some heavy blows in the first hour, however, with Brook seizing on a series of drags to the leg-side, and Stokes launching the same bowler over the straight boundary for six, to draw him level with his coach Brendon McCullum on 107 Test sixes, the most by any player.Before he could convert that start into anything more meaningful, however, Stokes got underneath a heave to leg, where Ali on the midwicket boundary ran round for a well-judged catch. Robinson then missed a slog to leg as Abrar skidded a googly through his gate for his 11th wicket, before Wood poked a fast legbreak from Zahid Mahmood to slip and Anderson missed a reverse sweep to wrap up the innings. At that stage, and again after lunch, England were perfectly content with their match situation. By the close, notwithstanding Leach’s late breakthrough, they were a touch less comfortable.

Angus Fraser moved from director of cricket role in Middlesex restructuring

Former England seamer said challenging period at London club had “taken its toll”

ESPNcricinfo staff23-Jul-2021Angus Fraser has stepped aside from his role as director of cricket at Middlesex as part of a restructuring of management at the club. Fraser will move to overseeing the academy and county age-group squads, with men’s team head coach, Stuart Law, now reporting directly into the chief executive.Fraser took over at his old club as managing director of cricket in 2009, having spent several years as the cricket writer at the , and saw the club lift the County Championship in 2016 for the first time since his playing days in the early 1990s.However, Middlesex were relegated the following season and struggled to adapt to life back in the second tier. Several members of the title-winning side have moved on, including Dawid Malan and Nick Gubbins in recent seasons, while success in limited-overs cricket has also been sporadic. This summer, Middlesex finished bottom of Group Two of the Championship, with one win from ten, and second-bottom of the Vitality Blast South Group.Related

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Fraser said that the recent challenging period had “taken its toll”, but was proud of his record in bringing through homegrown players – with six academy graduates given their first-team debuts over the last two seasons.”I have been enormously proud to hold the role I have with this great club, but the time is right for change,” he said. “I have found the last 16 months incredibly challenging on and off the field of play, and I could not have given more or shown more care for the club than I have, but it has taken its toll on me.”We all know that results this season have not been good enough, but I believe there are many reasons to be optimistic about the future. In the last few years Middlesex have chosen to invest in and develop its own home-grown cricketers, which can be seen from the teams that have represented the club. It is the right thing for a club like Middlesex to do and something we should be proud of.”These young men are benefitting enormously from the opportunities they are being given and I believe a number of them will become fine cricketers; players that will represent Middlesex and England with pride and will entertain cricket lovers for many years to come.”It is with a heavy heart that I step aside from this position, and I would like to thank all those that have helped and supported me over the years. I still believe I have a huge amount to give Middlesex Cricket and I look forward to helping the club in any way I can.”Law started work under Fraser in 2019, but saw the club finish eighth in Division Two in his first season and there has been minimal progress since. They won two games out of five in the Bob Willis Trophy last year, and finished fourth in the truncated Blast South Group, before results dipped again.The club has also experienced financial difficulties owing to the pandemic and the discovery of a historical administrative error in paying pension contributions. Richard Goatley, Middlesex’s chief executive since 2015, stepped down last month due to ill health.Andrew Cornish, Middlesex’s acting chief executive, said: “There is no hiding from the fact that performances on the pitch over the past couple of seasons have not met the expectations of the players, the coaches, the board and most importantly our members.”Like many organisations we face challenging financial times due to the pandemic, so never has it been more important to nurture homegrown local talent, whilst making strategic external signings. The board and I believe this new structure will provide the focus and clarity the club needs at this time.”I would like to personally thank Angus for all he has done for Middlesex Cricket to this point, for his commitment to the role and for his dedication to the club, and I am very much looking forward to continuing to work closely with him as we move forward.”

Tom Harrison denies gambling on Hundred as ECB face £380 million loss

Chief executive insists new competition remains ‘cost centre’ at DCMS hearing into Covid-19 outbreak

George Dobell05-May-2020Tom Harrison has reiterated the ECB’s commitment to The Hundred despite facing accusations of gambling cricket’s future on the tournament’s success, but concedes that English cricket’s losses this summer could reach £380 million if the entire season is wiped out.Appearing in front of a panel of MPs as part of the Digital, Culture, Media and Sport (DCMS) inquiry into the impact of Covid-19 on sport in the UK, Harrison was accused of “betting the house on red” in terms of investing so heavily on the controversial competition.But despite accepting the ECB could be facing losses of £380 million as a result of the Covid-19 pandemic, Harrison insisted “even more effort” would be put into The Hundred once cricket resumed and maintained the tournament would be a “profit centre” for the game from its launch.At one stage Julian Knight, the DCMS chair, put it to Harrison that the ECB had taken “a huge gamble” on The Hundred. In doing so, he alluded to the relatively heavy start-up costs of launching a tournament which feature a new format of the sport and a decline in the ECB’s financial reserves – they have fallen from £73 million in 2016 to £11 million when the last set of accounts was published 12 months ago – which has left the game less well placed to deal with the pandemic than might have been the case.”When you say it’s a profit centre,” Knight said, “there’s been widespread disquiet over the advent of The Hundred and the fact there was a large outlay to bring it about. You’ve bet the house, effectively, on red and unfortunately, the casino is closed.””I wouldn’t categorise The Hundred as a gamble,” Harrison replied. “It’s a profit centre for cricket as has been demonstrated. It was going to bring in £11 million of profit to the game this year. It carries with it an extra dividend to the counties, which is critical revenue to them.”At a time like this, when we are facing enormous pressure on finances, it seems to me even more important we focus on the areas of the game which are going to generate interest, audience and commercial revenue. Especially with the weight of evidence we had behind the Hundred in terms of the ticket sales, in terms of traction the competition was getting in the very audience we were setting out to get.Tom Harrison, the ECB’s chief executive•Getty Images

“I understand there is significant resistance to The Hundred. There has been for two years. That does not make it a bad idea. Or an idea that’s not likely to succeed. We will put even more effort into The Hundred post this crisis because I think cricket will desperately need, in a hugely competitive landscape, cricket will need to pull every lever to ensure cricket remains relevant in a society that has so much choice.”Later, Harrison was pressed on his claim that The Hundred was projected to make a profit in its first year. For while Harrison suggests the costs of the tournament are £39.1 million – against a projected income of £51 million – it is understood that figure excludes the £1.3 million a year guaranteed to each of the first-class counties for the five-year duration of the tournament.”Is it correct the Hundred will only make a profit if you exclude the £1.3 million payment guaranteed each year to each first-class county?” Giles Watling asked.ALSO READ: Case for Hundred ‘much greater’ due to Covid-19 outbreak – Harrison“Yes, but the £1.3 million every year to each county is a dividend and not part of the P&L (profit and loss) of the tournament,” Harrison said. “That is part of the deal, if you like, that was done with the counties to give the ECB permission to create a new tournament with all the objectives sitting behind it. It’s is not linked to the P&L. It’s a dividend that is a crucial part of the agreement that we have with the first-class counties.”Harrison believes the Hundred’s significance is more than financial, though. He also told the MPs the ECB had evidence the tournament was appealing to a new audience that could help the game broaden its appeal and move away from its reliance on the broadcast deal with Sky.”We’d sold 170,000 tickets in February for this year’s men’s and women’s Hundred,” he said. “The game had never sold that number of tickets at that speed before with the exception of the Cricket World Cup. So we were in a very strong position to achieve exactly what we set out to achieve in terms of growing the audience for cricket in this country.”The profile of ticket buyers was extremely encouraging. The evidence we have from the data behind those ticket sales it that was largely under-40s with the intention of taking children to those events. In some circumstances as a first opportunity to see live cricket. That’s precisely the kind of audience we were after.ALSO READ: ECB, CWI hold ‘positive talks’ on rescheduling Windies Tests“But let me be clear: we are heavily reliant on cricket’s existing audience as well. The more we can create a groundswell of audience that is representative of our country – multi-cultural, diverse, men and women, boys and girls, from all parts of the country – the better prepared we will be to sustain our wonderfully diverse sport in this country with all its weird and wonderful formats.”At the moment, we’re very heavily [reliant] – to the tune of three-quarters of our revenue – on one broadcaster. Anyone looking at a business plan for the long-term health of a sport will be looking at that number and thinking it’s a big risk. The Hundred helps us look at different ways of diversifying our revenue in the future and securing the future of 18 first-class counties.”Despite his confidence in The Hundred, Harrison admitted the game was facing “the most significant financial challenge cricket has ever faced”. Having previously suggested the game could be facing losses of up to £300 million if the entire season was lost, he now feels that figure could be significantly higher, and conceded that the sport was already “staring at a £100 million loss this year, whatever happens”.”It could be as bad as £380 million,” he said. “That’s the worst-case scenario. It’s the loss of 800 days of cricket across the ECB and professional clubs.Unquestionably, it’s the most significant financial challenge cricket has ever faced.”

From Test debut to forgotten man, Mason Crane can't wait to make comeback

Young Hampshire legspinner is itching to return after two back fractures and a long stint on the sidelines

Matt Roller01-Apr-20190:44

Crane ‘feeling strong’ after 2018 injuries

“I just want to get on the field. I’ve had enough now, I just want to get back out there.”It’s nine months since Mason Crane last played professional cricket. He started 2018 with a Test debut at Sydney, where he became England’s youngest-ever legspinner, but ended it as a forgotten man, on the slow road to recovery after a pair of back fractures.”I’ve had the definition of an up-and-down time of it,” he reflects on a sunny spring afternoon at the Ageas Bowl. “If you go back 18 months, I’ve been on an Ashes tour, and ended up in New Zealand where [the injury] happened.”It was difficult to come to terms with it at the start. It took a lot of getting used to – not playing cricket, not being able to do pretty much anything.”But I’ve come through the other side now. It’s been a lot of days in the gym, a lot of slow progress, but I’m feeling really strong now, really good about it. So hopefully, come the first time I’m out in the middle, I can perform.”The story of Crane’s Ashes debut, when he was thrust onto the biggest stage as a 20-year-old, is well-known, and his figures – 1 for 193 in 48 overs – barely told half the story. But it was the weeks that followed which summed up a difficult year.After a long, gruelling tour of Australia, it would surely have made sense for Crane to be given some time at home to rest and recover.But England had other ideas. Instead, Crane was sent to the West Indies with the Lions. He started to lose form, and captain Keaton Jennings trusted him less and less. As Jomel Warrican and Jack Leach thrived on turning wickets, Crane took one wicket across 27 overs, and was dropped for the third and final unofficial Test of the series.”Personally, I don’t think I should have been there,” he says. “It’s one of those things. I can see why I was sent there, but hopefully people can see why I was against going.”ALSO READ: Dawson lurks as England narrow World Cup optionsBy the time he landed in New Zealand ahead of the Test series, Crane was in no place to play international cricket. Injury soon followed, and after an initial recovery, a recurrence during the county season ruled him out for six months.”The way it’s gone, after the injury, I feel like a better player now. Hopefully in a couple of years, I can look back and be almost grateful that I’ve had this experience, and now I feel like if I can combat that, I can combat pretty much anything.”Crane does not expect to play in Hampshire’s first two Championship games – “as a legspinner in England with Liam Dawson in the squad you have to be realistic” – but this summer’s schedule is perhaps the most conducive to spinners since the turn of the century.Crane was the leading wicket-taker for Hampshire as they charged to the Royal London Cup last year, and after that tournament’s early finish, he will have a run of four-day games at the height of summer before the start of the Vitality Blast.”This schedule is better,” he says. “It helps us. It gives us a slightly different role: in April or September, if you do play you’re normally trying to hold an end. As a legspinner, you’re not really expressing what you can do.””Hopefully, this gives me an opportunity. We’ve got a couple of outground games this year too – hopefully it’ll spin and I’ll get to play. I also have to realise that I’m 22 years old, that I’ve got time on my side. I feel like I’m improving all the time, and hopefully I’m able to force my way into the team no matter what time of year it is.”Mason Crane in action on his Test debut•Getty Images

Indeed, it is easy to forget how young Crane still is, since he talks with a maturity that is not found in every young cricketer. After a whirlwind start to his career, time away from the game seems to have helped him.”I’ve blinked and this is my fifth season here – it’s crazy really. I think this injury really has given me a different perspective on it, and how much I just really enjoy playing as much as anything else.”As much as I want to do well, play for England, win a Championship, win a T20 competition, I’m just happy to be out there. At the start of this season especially, I’m happy to be here, happy to be fit, and hopefully I can be on the field to contribute to some Hampshire wins.”I don’t see why we can’t do well in all three formats – it’s an exciting team, we’ve got a new coach who has taken us in a really good direction so far. I’m really excited for us, and hopefully we can add some silverware.”It is a theme that Crane keeps coming back to: hope. After so long out injured, there is a tantalising uncertainty about what the future holds, containing within it that sense of mystery on which legspinners thrive.But for now, the day that has been nine months in the offing is in touching distance. For Hampshire, for England, and for the man himself, the idea of Mason Crane at the top of his mark again is a compelling prospect.”It’s been tough to get here,” Crane concludes, “but I’m really looking forward to getting started.”

Sri Lanka put their faith in Hathurusingha

Riding on the confidence gained from two massive wins, Sri Lanka captain Dinesh Chandimal is hopeful his team can continue what has been a bright start under the new coach in the tri-series final

Andrew Fidel Fernando26-Jan-2018A couple of wins is all it takes sometimes. That is what Sri Lankan cricket has been telling itself over the past year. “We’re not far off/ the talent is there/ the boys just need some confidence/the puzzle pieces just have to fit together.”The suggestion, of course, is that the state of Sri Lanka’s cricket is not as bad as on-field results suggest. And when the team occasionally pulls off a special victory, such as the 322-run chase against India at the Oval last year, this line of thinking only becomes more prevalent.On Saturday, this will be put to test. Two victories in their wake, Sri Lanka approach the tri-nation series final with their attack having hit their stride, and key batsmen having begun to find form. But beyond the morale, there is another reason feeding this team’s confidence. Their new coach – Chandika Hathurusingha – has begun to lead the ODI outfit out of darkness, it is hoped.”Actually, it was a hard time for the team and the Sri Lankan fans over the past two years, especially in the one-day format,” stand-in captain Dinesh Chandimal said. “But now, with the new coach, we’ve got some new strategies. We’ve got a lot of faith in him, and we’ve got some confidence. We’re not thinking about the result. We are always thinking about how to play good cricket when we’re in the middle. That’s the main change we have in the team.”Chandimal’s own reinstatement to the ODI team and his elevation to the acting captaincy was partly driven by Hathurusingha’s recommendation, so it is no wonder Chandimal feels kindly towards the new coach. Other players have also expressed confidence in Hathurusingha – Thisara Perera and Angelo Mathews having done so in the past two weeks. On the heels of two big victories, there is a little optimism.”Winning always gives you more confidence going forward,” Chandimal said. “But if you have a good coach and don’t have good cricketers, you can’t get the good result. Likewise, if you have good cricketers with a bad coach, you also can’t get the good result. Now we’ve got the right mixture, and we’ll hope to do well tomorrow.”If Sri Lanka can defeat Bangladesh on Saturday, the Hathurusingha era will have begun on a bright note – an outcome that seemed unlikely after Sri Lanka had lost their first two matches. Though no fewer than three players (Mathews, Kusal Perera and Nuwan Pradeep) will be out through injury, Sri Lanka hope the good vibes generated by Thursday’s thumping win will lift them in the final.”We just need to be competitive,” Chandimal said. “We have something up our sleeve for tomorrow, and if we can execute that in the middle, then I’m sure we can get a good result.”

Queensland on top; Ferguson falls cheaply

Queensland were in control after two days against South Australia in Brisbane

ESPNcricinfo staff18-Nov-2016
ScorecardCallum Ferguson managed only 4•Getty Images

Queensland will claim a major first-innings advantage some time on day three after continuing to dominate South Australia in the Sheffield Shield match at the Gabba.Jack Wildermuth and the wicketkeeper Chris Hartley pushed the Bulls as far as 7 for 475 declared before Luke Feldman and the former Redback Peter George tore into South Australia’s batting, including the Adelaide Test aspirants Callum Ferguson, Travis Head and Jake Lehmann.On 4, Ferguson edged Feldman behind to Hartley, and on 7, Lehmann did likewise to George. Head made it as far as 37 before he was beaten and bowled by George.At 5 for 73 the Redbacks were in dire trouble, but their situation was improved somewhat by the intervention of the gloveman Alex Carey and the wrist spinner Adam Zampa, who played contrasting innings to at least push South Australia past 200.Chadd Sayers, who went wicketless in the Bulls’ first innings, will also spend the night wondering how much his fruitless spell will have affected his chances of being named in the Australia Test squad.

Latham ton sets up win for New Zealanders

The well-drilled New Zealanders exposed familiar flaws in Australia’s young batsmen on their way to a dominant opening performance, trouncing the Prime Minister’s XI by 102 runs at Manuka Oval, despite the absence of their resting captain Brendon McCullum

The Report by Daniel Brettig at Manuka Oval23-Oct-2015
ScorecardTom Latham struck 12 fours and 2 sixes in his knock of 131•Getty Images

New pink ball, same old problems. The well-drilled New Zealanders exposed familiar flaws in Australia’s young batsmen on their way to a dominant opening performance, trouncing the Prime Minister’s XI by 102 runs at Manuka Oval, despite the absence of their resting captain Brendon McCullum.The national selector Rod Marsh had described this as “one of the strongest Prime Minister’s XI sides we have selected in recent years”, but the inclusion of probable Test players such as Peter Siddle, Usman Khawaja, Joe Burns, Cameron Bancroft and Adam Voges allowed the tourists to strike an early psychological blow in conditions similar to those expected for the inaugural day-night, pink-ball Test at Adelaide Oval next month.Marshalled by stand-in captain Tim Southee, the New Zealanders did so in fine style, running up a healthy 8 for 307, thanks largely to an opening stand of 196 between Martin Guptill and Tom Latham. While Guptill fell short of his century, Latham carried on to 131, shrugging off the loss of both Hamish Rutherford and Ross Taylor for ducks.Southee and the highly impressive Trent Boult then made the pink ball speak in a language still foreign to the local batsmen, slicing the top off the PM’s XI innings with full, swinging deliveries they will hope to replicate during the Tests. Khawaja, Bancroft and Burns were all hoping to press their claims this night, but none could find a way to survive as the invitational team slid quickly to 3 for 13, and more or less out of contention.Of the international batsmen present, only Voges could make any headway, and his neat 55, following 81 for Western Australia in his last Matador Cup start, shows evidence he has pulled himself out of an early-season dry spell that reaped just 50 runs in five innings. The Australian Capital Territory product Ryan Carters then played with invention and intelligence, though never in with a realistic chance of hauling in the target.On an overcast Canberra afternoon, Siddle and Jason Behrendorff found only the merest fraction of early movement, allowing Guptill and Latham to get quickly into stride. The visibility of the pink ball did not appear to be a major issue for batsmen, fielders or spectators, and the PM’s XI captain Michael Hussey appeared to have little answer to the long stride of Guptill and the power of Latham.Guptill’s exit opened up one end, and both Rutherford and Taylor would have been miffed to be out without scoring to the functional spin-bowling of David Hussey and Ashton Agar. Jimmy Neesham and Mitchell Santner contributed cameos to support Latham, and a healthy tally was posted.Khawaja had admitted the PM’s XI did not get much in the way of preparation for this game, by dint of the fact they assembled on the Thursday night for a Friday game. Even so, his brief stay was not convincing, missing a swinging full toss by Southee to be nearly lbw before driving optimistically at Boult and edging into the slips.Bancroft’s Test credentials have been endorsed by plenty of sound judges, but if he is to be a success he will have to stretch further forward than he did to Southee, who found late away-swing to turn the young West Australian around and flick the outside of off stump – a fine ball that could have been better played. Burns looked momentarily better, but he was tempted into a drive at Boult and dragged onto the stumps.From this position, the PM’s XI could hope only to minimise the margin, and Voges, and then Carters, showed good presence of mind. They were helped by the fact that the ball did not deign to move much once it had lost most of its shine, as Southee rotated his bowling resources.In addition to their attractive batting and precise bowling, the New Zealanders also excelled notably in the field. Santner clutched a wonderfully athletic catch low to the ground to dismiss Agar, before Doug Bracewell threw down the stumps to account for Siddle.At the start of the day, the two teams had been greeted by Australia’s new Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull amid considerable fanfare. But Turnbull was gone not only from Manuka but also Canberra by the evening, moving on to other engagements. By contrast, the Australian selectors may find themselves without that kind of mobility should New Zealand continue to play as well as they did here – batting talent is not so easy to fly in.

'I decided I'd finish the match' – Vihari

Hanuma Vihari had an eventful IPL debut. He dismissed Chris Gayle, held the Sunrisers Hyderabad chase together and was in the middle as the match was tied

Nagraj Gollapudi08-Apr-2013The plan Sunrisers Hyderabad team-mates Hanuma Vihari and Ashish Reddy discussed before Vinay Kumar started the final over of their match against Royal Challengers Bangalore was to play every ball and not panic. Sunrisers needed seven to register their second win in as many matches. “If we did not waste a single ball then seven runs were possible in the final over. But Ashish got out on the first ball,” Vihari said a day after Sunrisers won a thriller in the Super Over.When Dale Steyn walked in, the message was clear. “We discussed hitting bat on ball and running hard between the wickets and looking to take the match to the last ball,” Vihari said. He watched Steyn take two runs from the second delivery of the over and then play and miss the third. “I decided I’d finish the match if and when I get the strike,” Vihari said. He finally took strike with the Sunrisers needing four runs off the final two balls, which was reduced to two off the final delivery after he dug out a “good yorker” to get a double.For the final ball, Vihari stood deep in the crease. As soon as Vinay delivered the ball, Steyn charged blindly forward. But Vinay second-guessed his opponent with a smart slower delivery. “I expected a yorker, but he bowled a slower ball. I tried to hit it hard for two runs but could not connect.” Vihari ran a bye and could not believe it was a tie.It was a bittersweet moment for Vihari and Sunrisers. Having restricted Royal Challengers to a modest 130, the hosts faltered frequently in the chase. And when the Lankan pair of Kumar Sangakkara and Thisara Perera departed in quick succession, the onus was on Vihari. Despite his age – 19 – Vihari decided to play the guiding hand to his partner Reddy, an aggressive player. Their 23-run partnership for the seventh wicket snatched the momentum in Sunrisers’ favour. “A player like Ashish can strike at any given point. So I was telling him to pick the right ball and if it was not in his range to focus on taking singles and keep the dot balls count low,” Vihari says.It’s this sensible streak that prompted the team management to promote Vihari to No. 3. Sangakkara, Sunrisers’ captain, had decided to drop himself to No. 5 to counter the middle overs from the Muralis – Muttiah Muralitharan and Murali Kartik. “When early wickets fell, Tom [Moody] told me I would bat at No. 4. My plan was to take it as close as possible to the target,” Vihari said.Despite his batting prowess, Vihari’s most telling impact had come with the ball – in fact his very first ball of the match. Sangakkara had already told him that he would be bowling with the new ball against Chris Gayle since the Jamaican had got out a few times in the past to off spinners. Being the only off-break bowler in the team on Sunday, Vihari executed the plan nicely: pitching on the off he got a little bounce that surprised Gayle, who went for the cut and was caught behind.  “I have kept the picture of the Gayle wicket,” Vihari says of his best souvenir.A wristy player, Vihari is a good striker of the ball and plays shots on both sides of the wicket. His best innings to date has been against Mumbai in the Ranji Trophy this season when he scored a career-best 191 runs in a drawn match.John Manoj, Vihari’s coach at St. John’s Cricket Academy in Hyderabad, noticed that the youngster could hit the ball “very hard” when he picked him as a nine-year-old. Manoj’s best student has been VVS Laxman, who is the mentor at Sunrisers now. Manoj had helped Vihari join the St. Andrew School in Bowenpally in Secunderabad and observed a keen student in Vihari. “I observed him playing confidently against the ball on the rise against fast bowlers from a tender age,” Manoj said. Last year Laxman was impressed by Vihari’s strokeplay on wet practice pitches and enquired more about the youngster.At the beginning of the IPL, Laxman told Vihari to “express himself and play his natural game” without getting distracted at all about playing such a big tournament. The significance of those words has not been lost on Vihari.Vihari dedicated his Man-of-the-Match award to his mother, who was at the ground with his sister, and his late father, who’d died in 2005. At the time, the 11-year-old Vihari was playing in a school tournament. His mother asked him to play cricket since his father always wanted him to play cricket. “It was two days after his death but my mother asked me to go ahead and I decided to respect her word,” Vihari says.