Aamer Jamal joins Warwickshire for Championship, T20 Blast stint

Pakistan allrounder goes straight into squad for upcoming fixture against Nottinghamshire

Matt Roller25-Apr-2024Warwickshire have signed allrounder Aamer Jamal on a multi-format contract until the end of July, after he was left out of Pakistan’s ongoing T20I series against New Zealand.Jamal announced himself to the world by taking 18 wickets in three matches in his maiden Test series for Pakistan in Australia late last year, and has also played six T20Is. He was part of a training camp at the Pakistan Military Academy in Kakul earlier this month, but does not appear to be part of their T20 World Cup plans after missing out on selection against New Zealand.He will be available until the end of the T20 Blast group stages and has been named in Warwickshire’s 14-man County Championship squad to face Nottinghamshire at Edgbaston from Friday. “He’s jumping out of his skin to be on the park on Friday,” Gavin Larsen, Warwickshire’s performance director, said.Related

Aamer Jamal leaves Warwickshire early after injury-blighted stint

Mark Robinson, their coach, said he would make a late call on Jamal’s inclusion after he arrived in Birmingham on Thursday. “He’s raring to go. It’s fantastic he’s itching to get straight into action with us but he hasn’t played a competitive game for a few weeks, so we’ll see where he’s at and make a decision tomorrow.”Larsen said: “He really captured the cricket world’s attention in Australia. He took the Aussies on with good pace, bounce, and a combative approach, all attributes you want in a fast bowler. Pat Cummins was named player of the series but you could have made a very strong argument for Jamal to have been awarded that title.”Jamal joins his compatriot Hasan Ali in Warwickshire’s squad, who was also left out of the ongoing New Zealand series after being invited to Pakistan’s recent training camp. They will fill Warwickshire’s two permitted overseas spots until the end of July, while Hasan’s contract includes an option to extend into September.Warwickshire will be without Moeen Ali, their T20 captain, for at least the first half of the Blast as he is expected to be named in England’s provisional T20 World Cup squad next week. The club said in January when Alex Davies was appointed club captain that a decision over the T20 captaincy would be made nearer the start of the Blast.They have strengthened their T20 bowling attack significantly in the off-season with the additions of George Garton and Richard Gleeson, though Gleeson could yet miss the start of the Blast. He was recently signed by Chennai Super Kings as an injury replacement at the IPL, and they are on course to qualify for the play-offs which run until May 26, five days before Warwickshire’s opening match.Sam Hain, who has missed the start of the Championship season due to personal reasons, played for Warwickshire’s 2nd XI but does not feature in their first-team squad this week. For Notts, Olly Stone – who left Warwickshire at the end of the 2022 season – is back in the squad after a groin injury and could play his first Championship game since May 2023.Elsewhere, Sam Cook will lead Essex for the first time this week when they face Durham, with club captain Tom Westley on paternity leave. They have brought in Harry Duke on a short-term loan deal from Yorkshire with Adam Rossington and Michael Pepper both injured and Jordan Cox unable to keep wicket after breaking his finger during the Hundred last year.Ollie Pope and Gus Atkinson are both in Surrey’s squad to face Hampshire at The Oval, though Ben Foakes has been rested by the ECB. In Division Two, Rehan Ahmed is back in Leicestershire’s squad after two weeks away on a pilgrimage, while Josh Hull – a tall left-arm seamer recently name-checked by Rob Key as an England prospect – returns from a side strain.

Atherton's exit, and Thorpe's miss

A selection of Cricinfo’s writers recall their lowest Ashes moments

Cricinfo staff19-Jul-2005As the 2005 Ashes prepares to get underway, Cricinfo asks a selection of its writers and senior staff members to recall their most memorable Ashes moments – good, bad or downright ugly. Last week, it was the highs. Now, it’s the lows.

Mike Atherton bows out for the final time © Getty Images
Headingley 1997, and Thorpe drops a sitter in the slips off Matthew Elliott. I was working on a building site at the time with headphones in. At that moment, not only did the series change, but that summer altered forever. The next thing we knew, Mike Smith (the luckless bowler, in case you’d forgotten) had been dropped, Australia had retained the Ashes and Diana had died – I blame it all on Thorpe. Edward CraigWaugh’s calf injury at Trent Bridge in 2001. A lesser individual might have cashed his chips then and there, but Tugga not only came back in time for The Oval, but was still around 18 months later to mastermind another demolition job on home soil. When it happened though, you feared it might be most inappropriate of endings – a warrior going off lame. Dileep PremachandranMissing Shane Warne’s Gatting ball. Picked thewrong moment to get some air on the steps. A neighbour cheered thedismissal instead. It looks great on the replay. Peter EnglishSwitching on the radio – as a student, Pay TV was not an option – andhearing England had won the toss on the first day of the 2002-03 series. Great! But … wait …! Nasser Hussain, in his wisdom, sticks Australia in, and you didn’t need TV pictures to realise that he had done so for all the wrong reasons. By lunch the Aussies were 116 for 1 and a short time later Simon Jones was out of the match and the series with a ruptured knee ligament. The Ashes disappeared just as quickly. Andrew McGlashanThe day that hope finally died. Another lost cause for Mike Atherton to salvage, another fatal snick, and a final dismissal – his 19th – at the hands of Glenn McGrath. The crowd rose as one as the Australians, to a man, applauded from the crease an opponent who had averaged a distinctly unworthy 29.68 in his 33 Tests against them. They were thanked for their magnanimity by an apologetic semi-wave of the bat. The poetic futility of this moment overwhelmed me, as the very definition of a lost cause was played out before my eyes. That evening, I finally got round to tackling another lost cause, and dumped my long-suffering girlfriend. Andrew MillerFor England fans, the Saturday at Lord’s has made a traditionally depressing spectacle. The sight – and silence – of Ian Botham’s trudge back to the pavilion after making a pair in 1981 was chilling but, for heart-sinking reality-dawning awfulness, nothing beats the third day of the 1989 Test. England had restricted Australia to 276 for 6 overnight, with Steve Waugh unbeaten on 35. He finished 152 not out while the tailenders Merv Hughes (30), Trevor Hohns (21) and Geoff Lawson (Test-best 74) laughed in England’s faces. The last four wickets added 263 and by stumps England were 58 for 3. This was one of the most significant days in recent Ashes history and produced another seismic shift towards Aussie world domination. John SternAtherton, his mind cluttered by impending retirement, misses an easy catch off Tufnell, and the great jungle-dweller is smashed into Test history by the Aussie top-order. Alex Chamberlen

Dhoni, the fab fifth

Dileep Premachandran comes up with the plays of the fifth day of the Lord’s Test between England and India

Dileep Premachandran at Lord's23-Jul-2007

Show Pony Dhoni shows his class and forms a formidable partnership with the rain as India hold on for a draw © Getty Images
Show Pony Dhoni?: That’s what some have taken to calling India’swicketkeeper in these parts. As much as the Fab Four who are no longerfab, Mahendra Singh Dhoni had a whole lot to prove when he walked to the crease thismorning. His first-innings dismissal had been a shocker, his keepingpatchy, and his technique remains among the most ungainly you’ll see atthis level. But what Dhoni has is heart, and an ability to adapt, and heshowed that with an innings that spanned 159 balls. There was plenty offlirtation with Dame Fortune, as edges evaded fielders, but he stuckaround for the denouement, rotating the strike and thumping the oddboundary. India’s hero.Sledge of the day: Gamesmanship standards have undoubtedlydeclined, with coarseness and crudity almost completely replacing humour.Matt Prior came up with a gem though soon after Dhoni had arrived in themiddle on a filthy, grey morning. “Yuvraj is looking brilliant in thenets, isn’t he Dhoni?” he piped up. Not quite in the Eddo Brandes-GlennMcGrath- biscuit category, but well worth a chuckle.The big trees also fall: After a calamitous start, India werestarting to dream of a miracle when VVS Laxman and Dhoni stepped up thescoring after lunch. On came Chris Tremlett, who had looked both incisiveand innocuous on Test debut. A magnificent full delivery that cut backappreciably crept through Laxman’s defence and pegged back the stumps.Laxman’s pose was a familiar depressing one, keeling over like a treeattacked by a chainsaw.So near, and yet so very far: Just before the players went off forbad light, Monty Panesar had a huge appeal against Sreesanth. SteveBucknor, who doesn’t get too many Christmas cards from Indian fans,pondered long and hard, as he’s prone to, but the finger never went up.Replays showed that it might have clipped the top of middle stump. Afortuitous escape for India, though they would argue that there were insuch a mess mainly because Rahul Dravid didn’t get any benefit of doubt.Timing, timing: Unlike the Australians, the English have seldomseen the best of Laxman. But in one Tremlett over, there were twosignature strokes, little more than wafts of the bat that sentback-of-length deliveries through point. The fielders gave chase, but evenwith the ball going up the slope, it was futile.The forgotten man: One of those watching his former team-matesstrive to save the Test was Aakash Chopra, the Delhi opener who onceforged such an effective combination with Virender Sehwag. Not even acontender despite his experience of English league cricket, Chopra couldonly watch anxiously and hope for rain. Like this Indian team, he had seenbetter days, most notably in Australia and Pakistan in the 2003-04 season.Omens and all that: India’s record at the ground some callheadquarters is pitiful, but they can take encouragement from their greatescape here. In 1986, when they won the series, Dilip Vengsarkar’s 126 andKapil Dev’s relentlessly accurate swing bowling set up a five-wicket win.And going back even further to 1971, the defiance of Eknath Solkar stavedoff defeat, with India finishing on 145 for 8 in pursuit of 183. A monthlater they went to the Oval and clinched the series, with Chandrasekhar’sMill-Reef deliveries wreaking havoc.

Women with 100 caps, and a man with 99

The regular Monday column in which Steven Lynch answers your questions about (almost) any aspect of cricket:

Steven Lynch30-Oct-2006The regular Monday column in which Steven Lynch answers your questions about (almost) any aspect of cricket:Two Australian women recently played in their 100th one-day international. How many others have done this? asked Rae Clarke from Sydney

Australia’s Belinda Clark is the highest capped woman in one-day internationals, along with Debbie Hockley of New Zealand © Getty Images
The two you’re talking about were Cathryn Fitzpatrick and Karen Rolton, who both won their 100th one-day caps in the first match of the recent Rose Bowl series against New Zealand at the Albion ground in Brisbane. They were the sixth and seventh women to join the list, which is headed by another Australian, Belinda Clark, and Debbie Hockley of New Zealand, who both played 118 matches. The other 100-cap wonders are the England pair of Clare Taylor and Jane Smit, both with 105, and Emily Drumm of New Zealand, who played 101. For a full list, click here.I noticed in a recent article about Mohammad Azharuddin that he played 99 Tests, and also scored a century in his first and last matches. Has anyone else done either of these things? asked Patek Sharma from Chennai
You’re right, Mohammad Azharuddin did indeed win 99 Test caps. No-one else has won quite as many without making it to 100: Curtly Ambrose played in 98 Test matches, and Nasser Hussain 96. Apart from Azhar, three other batsmen have scored hundreds in their first and last Tests, and they are all Australians: the current Indian coach Greg Chappell, Reggie Duff and Bill Ponsford. This excludes any current players, and the two men – Andy Ganteaume and Rodney Redmond – who scored a century in their only Test match.Ed Joyce and his brother made their one-day international debuts in the same match, which must be unique. Have any other members of the family played for Ireland? asked Donald Allsopp from Greenwich
Ed Joyce and his younger brother Dominick both made their official ODI debuts at Belfast last June. They both opened the batting: Dublin-born Ed scored 10 for England, but Dominick made a duck for Ireland. Their older brother Gus Joyce also played for Ireland, in the annual first-class game against Scotland in 2000. And they have twin sisters, Cecelia and Isobel, who have played official ODIs for Ireland’s women’s team. Isobel Joyce told the BBC in 2003: “There are nine children in our family so we all used to play in the back garden. Our brothers used to teach us how to bowl because they thought it was funny, but then we got quite good at it.” The only other instance of brothers playing against each other in a Test or a one-day international was back in 1891-92, when Alec and George Hearne played for England at Cape Town against a South African side which included their brother, Frank. A cousin, JT Hearne, also played for England in that match. Frank Hearne had earlier played for England, against South Africa, in 1888-89, and settled there after that tour. His son, GAL Hearne, later played for South Africa too.A friend told me recently about a cricket match he watched in Canada in 1989 between West Indies and the Rest of the World, and how it had a crowd of 46,000. Can you tell me some more about this match? asked Sid Raheem from the USA
Your friend has a pretty good memory – this was a match played in the Toronto SkyDome on November 5, 1989, to raise money (over half a million dollars) for the United Way of Greater Toronto charity. The dome’s roof was closed (it was freezing cold outside!). According to this article on the Canadian Cricket Association’s website the crowd was 40,570. As you can see from the scorecard the West Indies XI (actually there were 12 of them, with Viv Richards captaining) made 228, Carlisle Best top-scoring with 70, then the strong World XI replied with 217, Dave Houghton making 86 and Duleep Mendis 65.

William Clarke, playing for “England” against Kent took a hat-trick which included the wicket of John Fagge in both the innings © The Cricketer International
Following on from last week’s answer about hat-tricks involving three separate overs, it must therefore be possible to take the wicket of the same batsman twice in the same hat-trick. Has this ever happened? asked Mark Annear
As far as I can tell it has happened only once – and an awfully long time ago! It was a match between Kent and England at Canterbury back in 1844. William Clarke, an underarm bowler and a pioneering figure in those days of wandering “England” teams, ended Kent’s first innings with the wicket of John Fagge, then started the second with the wickets of Ned Wenman and Fagge, again, batting at No. 3 this time instead of No. 11.I read a news article that said Russell Crowe was being lined up to play Bill Woodfull in a new film about Bodyline. Is he any relation of the New Zealand Test-playing Crowes? asked Amy Franklin from Adelaide
Russell Crowe is the cousin of Martin and Jeff Crowe, the former New Zealand captains: like them he was born in New Zealand (although he was brought up in Australia). They all played together for a Crowe XI in a match in Malta in 1999 (Russell outscored Martin, which I imagine pleased him immensely!). As far as the film goes, it will be interesting to see whether it comes to fruition – there have been various plans for a Bodyline film over the years, but the bravest attempt remains the Australian TV mini-series of a few years ago. The news story I read said that Crowe might play “Bill Woodruff”, and also talked about the England bowling spearhead “Harold Lawford”, which was rather worrying … Steven Lynch’s new book, The Cricinfo Guide to International Cricket 2007, is published on Wednesday (November 1). Click here for more details.

A feast for left-handers

Stats highlights from the second day of the Bangalore Test

S Rajesh09-Dec-2007

Sourav Ganguly and Irfan Pathan piled on the runs, as left-handers scored 515 out of India’s total of 626 © AFP
Sourav Ganguly continued from where he had left off on the opening day, making his highest Test score, and his first double-century. His 239 is the seventh-highest by an Indian, and the highest by a left-hander for the country, going past Vinod Kambli’s 227 against Zimbabwe in Delhi in 1992-93. Ganguly’s century was also the 50th by an Indian batsman against Pakistan. Ganguly’s knock lifted his aggregate for 2007 to 932, which is next only to Jacques Kallis’ 1125. (Click here for the list of highest run-getters for 2007.) With Irfan Pathan getting a century as well – to add to the efforts of Ganguly and Yuvraj Singh – it was a rare instance of three left-handers scoring a century in an innings. This was only the third such occasion in Tests – Justin Langer, Matthew Hayden and Adam Gilchrist achieved it against New Zealand in Brisbane in 2001-02, while Marcus Trescothick, Andrew Strauss and Graham Thorpe feasted on South Africa in Durban in 2004-05. The four left-handers in the Indian team – Gautam Gambhir being the fourth – totalled 515 runs in the innings, which is only the fourth time left-handers managed an aggregate of more than 500 in an innings. The record for the two highest contributions by left-handers is held by West Indies, and on both occasions Brian Lara was the protagonist – he contributed 400 out of 612 against England in Antigua in 2003-04, and 375 out of 556 against the opposition in 1993-94. Matthew Hayden’s 380 against Zimbabwe in Perth helped the lefties add 549. The 178-run partnership between Ganguly and Pathan is the highest seventh-wicket stand for India against Pakistan, going past the 155 that Roger Binny and Madan Lal added at the same ground in 1983. Pathan finally managed to get a three-figure score after having fallen in the nineties twice in Tests. He needs just 63 more to get to 1000 Test runs. India’s total of 626 comes in ninth on the list of highest scores by the team, and is their fifth-highest at home. Yasir Arafat became only the eighth Pakistan bowler to take a five-for on debut, and while his performance was extremely encouraging for a team struggling with their bowling resources, a look at the careers of the other seven doesn’t augur well for him. None of them have gone on establish themselves as regular threats with the ball: Mohammad Sami is the highest wicket-taker in the list, with 78, but he has laboured 33 matches for that haul. Shabbir Ahmed has been the most effective, with 51 wickets in ten Tests, but a suspect bowling action has severely limited his international career.

Best performance on debut by a Pakistan bowler

Bowler Debut performance Versus Venue & year

Mohammad Nazir 30.1-3-99-7 New Zealand Karachi, 1969-70 Mohammad Zahid 20-30-66-7 New Zealand Rawalpindi, 1996-97 Arif Butt 21.3-1-89-6 Australia Melbourne, 1964-65 Shahid Nazir 22.4-3-53-5 Zimbabwe Sheikhupura, 1996-97 Sahid Afridi 23.3-6-52-5 Australia Karachi, 1998-99 Mohammad Sami 15-4-36-5 New Zealand Auckland, 2000-01 Shabbir Ahmed 18.1-2-48-5 Bangladesh Karachi, 2003 Yasir Arafat 39-5-161-5 India Bangalore, 2007-08 When he reached 29, Salman Butt became the 44th Pakistan batsman to get to 1000 Test runs.

A strange and sublime rivalry

How does India, a team that has never consistently staked a claim to No. 2, repeatedly manage to look the mighty Australians in the eye and not flinch?

Sidharth Monga07-Oct-2008

Dravid and Laxman run Australia down, again, in Sydney earlier this year © AFP
Somewhere along the way, around the mid-1990s, Australia grew sick and tired of beating the pulp out of South Africa, England and the rest. They needed – and deserved – rivals who would bring the best out of them and they would bring the best out of: an opponent against whom history would define Australia’s great teams. Rivals they would genuinely respect and desperately want to beat. West Indies were in gradual decline, England and South Africa too meek to stand up, Pakistan too inconsistent, and Sri Lanka and New Zealand played too sparingly.The call was answered, both surprisingly and expectedly, by India. Surprising because India have hardly ever been the second-best Test side in the world. Expected because India had begun to gather together all the ingredients needed for a healthy rivalry with the best team in the world.Over the last 12 years India have been the only team to have challenged Australia consistently enough for their contests to be termed a rivalry, unlike the Ashes or India v Pakistan, say. It has had all the ingredients. There has been great cricket – think VVS Laxman and Rahul Dravid in Kolkata, think Harbhajan Singh in Kolkata and Chennai, think Ricky Ponting and Dravid in Adelaide, think Sachin Tendulkar in Sydney, think Michael Clarke in Bangalore. There have been extremely close matches, and dramatic subplots, in the form of captains who couldn’t stand each other, high-profile farewells, colourful characters, sledging rows, and one near-diplomatic crisis. They have stretched each other, the umpires involved (who know how much rides on every decision), and at times the playing conditions.Saving the best for Oz
Why should India produce their best against Australia, often bouncing back from pedestrian efforts against other teams to do so? The only year they have finished at No. 2 in the ICC’s Test ratings was 2006, a year in which they didn’t even play Australia. Before they beat Australia in 1997-98, they drew twice against Sri Lanka and lost to West Indies and South Africa. Before Steve Waugh’s farewell series, where India retained the Border-Gavaskar Trophy, they lost to New Zealand away and managed a drawn series against them at home. Immediately after the exciting series in Australia earlier this year, India struggled to draw at home against South Africa. In each case, apart from the one disastrous series in 1999-2000, India have always given Australia a hard time on the field. Twice they stopped the victory march of the conquerors at 16 in a row, in Kolkata in 2000-01, and in Perth earlier this year.India have saved their best for Australia, the first box that needs to be ticked for any rivalry to thrive. They cherish the fight, and in this case the fight cherishes them too. Historically Australia have hated losing to England and New Zealand, but on the evidence of the recent exchanges, India may have usurped those teams. And with their new-found aversion to losing against India, Australia have shown they enjoy the contests.Well begun at home
India are good at winning in India, which means they know what it is like to beat Australia. When in the nineties Australia managed to beat most teams in their own backyard, the Final Frontier still remained. “Australia’s performances overseas are not matched by many teams,” says John Buchanan, whose first tryst with India was in the 2000-01 series. India had tasted success against Australia at home before that, in 1996 and 1997-98, and when under Sourav Ganguly and John Wright they became better travellers, they were hungry for more.That don’t impress me much
When Australia visited in 2000-01 they didn’t know what the wall felt like: they had rarely been pushed to it for two years. They had just completed a 5-0 drubbing of West Indies, of which Steve Waugh wrote in , “That wasn’t how Test-match cricket was supposed to feel.” All Australia were fighting at that point was themselves – and the complacency that creeps in at such times. Yet there was one team that plain refused to acknowledge their supremacy. India have managed to pull some of the Australians down. Once a team reduces Shane Warne to paying 47 runs for every wicket he takes, it wins more than half the battle Waugh mentions in his book how Ganguly managed to get under the Aussies’ skins, putting the boot on the other foot. “They have won most of their games at home, beaten West Indies 5-0 at home, beaten India, Pakistan at home,” Ganguly said in an interview before the series. “They toured here in ’96 and lost. They toured here in ’98 and lost. So obviously that’s going to be at the back of their mind.””You had to give him an ‘A’ for effort in his attempt to annoy us,” Waugh wrote, “and in particular me. It worked to a certain extent.” It helps that India are a naturally aggressive side. That they don’t give Australia a headstart.Ganguly got India to think big. He believed Australia could be beaten, and he got his team to believe that. There were men in the side who would stand up against Australia’s intimidatory tactics, so that when it came to the crunch Australia were not the predetermined winners. If others could choke against Australia, Australia could also choke against India – like they did in the final innings in Kolkata in 2001.Freakshow
To think big was one thing, to do big was another. India, importantly, has had players who have looked forward to the contest and have performed beyond themselves against Australia.Australia are a work of committee, more so now that Shane Warne is gone; they usually have everything down to a plan. They are professional, efficient and well-prepared. They are vulnerable against individual brilliance, the sort one doesn’t get to see everyday. South Africa try to play Australia’s game, and fail; India try to play their own game, and fight. It was Laxman and Dravid in Kolkata and Adelaide, Harbhajan in the 2000-01 series, Virender Sehwag in Chennai, and Tendulkar in Sydney. Ganguly stood up to Australia too, with that century under immense pressure in Brisbane. It has to be more than a coincidence that the freakish, once-in-a-generation type performances from India all tend to come against Australia.And it’s not just the Indians. It has usually taken individual efforts from left field (Brian Lara in 1998-99, Kevin Pietersen at times) or the unknown (the surprising early reverse swing in England in 2005) to topple Australia. Perth this year has perhaps been the only exception.”It’s actually a back-handed compliment. All it shows is – it’s a credit to them – it takes special performances to beat them,” says Dravid, who has produced two such and been close witness to a few others by Laxman, Tendulkar and Ganguly.What is it about Australia that inspires these efforts? “To be honest,” says Dravid, “personally speaking, we don’t go out thinking: this is Australia and I need to raise my game. Perhaps there is a huge sense of personal satisfaction because they have been such a competitive team for the last two decades. Perhaps you know subconsciously that when you perform against Australia there will be a high visibility.”It has also helped that the composition of the two teams hasn’t changed drastically over the years. That has helped the development of one-on-one rivalries. The England side that played in Australia in 2006-07 bore little resemblance to the one that saved the Ashes legend from becoming a myth two years ago. There was no Simon Jones to torment Michael Clarke. On the other hand, Harbhajan Singh still gets to have a go at Ponting.Change your enemy
Apart from raising their own game (Laxman averages 50.63 against Australia, as opposed to 43.79 overall; Tendulkar’s corresponding figures are 56 and 54.23, Harbhajan’s 28.81 and 30.87), India have also managed to pull some of the Australians down. Once a team reduces Shane Warne to paying 47 runs for every wicket he takes, it wins more than half the battle. It is a message that has been strong enough to push the Australians out of their comfort zone.

Battles within wars: Harbhajan v Ponting is among the key rivalries that India v Australia has spawned over the years © AFP
The last time Australia toured India, in 2003-04, they gave up their preferred mode of out-and-out attack and employ – quite successfully as it turned out – a defensive approach. That India got Australia to change their game is a credit to them; that India did not then manage to get a step ahead is a discredit.What makes Australia play a game they are not used to is a mix of conspicuous disregard and self-belief from the opposition.”The bowling attack has been important for us,” says Dravid. “We know that we have the capability to take 20 wickets. Not only on turners, but even if the opposition gives us tailor-made tracks. Actually we have won a lot of our away Test matches on tracks that have assisted bowlers.”We are not just looking to draw Tests against Australia, we are looking to win. It is a big switch.”A grudging respect
Buchanan agrees with Dravid’s assessment. “India is a very strong side in terms of quality players,” he says. “They have a strong batting side, backed up by good bowling and strong leadership. In terms of all-round strength, it is one of the sides – perhaps the side – that can challenge Australia.”Australia have started acknowledging, grudgingly perhaps, that they are in for a long fight whenever they face India. While Waugh criticised Ganguly, he didn’t miss the fact that Ganguly was a proud man who injected toughness into his side. “I know that they know they are in a contest,” says Dravid. “I think they enjoy that. For a lot of time, Australia has had it really easy against many teams. Probably we are the only team over the years where they have gone in knowing there is competition.”But despite all that has been going for India, Australia have been the better team in this rivalry. Dravid acknowledges that. “Let’s be fair, even though we have competed, they have played some really good cricket. They have won at home, they won against us last time, they hold the Border-Gavaskar Trophy.”Interesting times await the rivalry. Australia are a team in transition, India won’t be able to resist change for long. The new personnel will have a legacy to carry. The two teams owe each other a lot: they are as much partners as they are rivals. But it suits all concerned that the moment they are on the field, the gloves are off.

McKenzie's costly drop

Plays of the day from day one of the Boxing Day Test between Australia and South Africa at the MCG

Brydon Coverdale at the MCG26-Dec-2008
Simon Katich: bowled off a dead-ball, and then raised 1,000 Test runs for the year © AFP
A series of unfortunate events
When Jacques Kallis fell over while sending down a delivery in his fourth over and left the ground a couple of overs later, it had far greater consequences than South Africa being a bowler short. It also meant a reshuffle in the cordon. Kallis’ position at second slip was taken by AB de Villiers, who usually stands at third slip, and his spot in turn was occupied by Neil McKenzie. In the final over before lunch Ricky Ponting, on 24, edged Dale Steyn to third slip where McKenzie spilled a sitter. It was the first drop of the series for South Africa. But for Kallis’ injury, Ponting would have edged to de Villiers, whose catching in Perth was as breathtaking as his batting. Ponting went on to score a century and McKenzie was still looking contrite when the milestone came.Dead bowled
Simon Katich might have had a brief moment of concern when he pulled out at the last minute as Morne Morkel was in his delivery stride. Morkel sent the ball down and it crashed into middle and leg stump and Katich looked up hoping to see a dead-ball signal from the umpire Aleem Dar. The call did come from Dar, who had been waving his hands around his face to shoo away flies as Morkel ran in and the activity could have been what distracted the batsman. Katich picked the ball up and walked down the pitch to hand it to Morkel, also giving the bowler an apologetic pat on the back.Scaring the new guy
JP Duminy showed his composure on debut in Perth but he was a little less relaxed on the first day at the MCG. Duminy and Hashim Amla both chased the ball when Ponting drove to deep cover and Amla reached it first. He turned to throw and his wind-up was so enthusiastic thatwhen he ended up just lobbing the ball to his mate to relay it back to the wicketkeeper, Duminy was ducking and covering his head to get out of the way. The ball thudded into the turf just over the crouching Duminy and despite the jeers from the huge MCG crowd, the two men were able tosmile about the comical mix-up.Two grand
South Africa entered the match with four batsmen who had scored 1,000 runs in the calendar year and Australia had none. But in the first session Katich and Ponting both went past the mark, Katich in his 11th Test for the year and Ponting in his 14th. Katich’s milestone came when he went to 46 with a boundary glanced off Steyn; Ponting got there with a quick single that took him to 18. It was the fifth year in which Ponting had collected 1,000 runs and he added another record when he passed Neil Harvey to become Australia’s greatest Test run scorer against South Africa.The perfect man for the job
Even two years after his retirement it’s hard to escape Shane Warne at the best of times, let alone at the MCG on Boxing Day. Warne is commentating for Channel 9 during this match and for a split second it looked like he was so popular that he had even been asked to sing theAustralian national anthem before play. On closer inspection it turned out to be Eddie Perfect, the star of Shane Warne the Musical, which is now playing in Melbourne. He was – wait for it – pitch perfect.Matching Marshall
When Makhaya Ntini found Brad Haddin’s edge late in the day he reached an important personal milestone. Ntini drew level with his hero Malcolm Marshall on 376 Test wickets. “He has always been my hero and I modeled my action on him after I had to change it through injury,” Ntini said. “Unfortunately I never got the chance to see him in live action but he has been a wonderful role model for me and this means a great deal to me. To emulate your hero means that you are going somewhere with your life and I hope I can now get to 400 wickets as quickly as possible.”

'I wish Gary was our coach'

Indian team management’s newest instructions to its cricketers is breeding ground for lewd jokes, opportunity, sledging, and also social study

24-Sep-2009″I would just like to say that this is the sort of forward thinking the game needs. I am assuming the directive is not for sex to take place within the team and that partners are allowed to be involved. If the ICC want to make this tournament more exciting, then fly in the wives and girlfriends, or other parties, to improve the standard of cricket… I wish Gary was our coach.”
“I don’t think we ever had anything about our sexual habits written down in a dossier, and I am pretty sure we won’t get an advisory on that ever.”
“There is no doubt that sex increases your performance, provided it does not disturb players’ sleep and has no negative influence.”
“Is that in the team’s vision statement? Hmmm. That is some vision. I really don’t know what to say… you’ve caught me slightly off guard. Oh, I’m still blushing.”
“Both [Gary] Kirsten and [Paddy] Upton should be given honorary posts in the BCCI for their services. Like everyone, the players also need to have a normal life when they are touring with the team and sex is very much a part.”
“Oh, I don’t know about all this. I’ve been away from home for four months. I have forgotten how to do the stuff.””In our culture, we abstain from discussing our sex lives openly, which is why this has created a stir. But once you are in the ring, these things don’t matter.””Not all the cricketers are single, and WAGs don’t always travel on tour. Attitudes to sex are becoming more liberal, but it remains highly unlikely an adulterous cricketer could placate his seething bride by claiming ‘the coach told me to do it!'”
Telegraph”This is a completely new thing to me. I have never come across a theory like this. However, the times have changed now.”
“A good performance in an indoor sport can lead to a fantastic performance in an outdoor sport.”

Who's this Collingwood?

England’s blocker attacks, the DJ plays crap music, and spectators pretend it’s summertime in Jo’burg

Gregory Anderson26-Sep-2009Choice of game
The voice on the telephone said: “We have tickets for England v Sri Lanka, you keen?” Of course! As for a prediction, following Sri Lanka’s annihilation of South Africa, and England’s recent forms against the Australians, Sri Lanka seemed the likely victors.Team supported
Supporting South Africa in this tournament feels like staying with a repeatedly unfaithful girlfriend, but the heart overrides the mind.Accesories
Field glasses – an inspired choice for all without bionic eyes. Highly recommended. Watch those batsmen and their feet moving around in the crease. It’s hypnotic.Key performer
Paul Collingwood, famous for using his trusty bat “Blockingwood”, accidentally walked onto the field with the wrong bat and proceeded to be possessed by the spirit of a batsman who scores at almost a run a ball. (In response, Shah blocked his way into the Cricket Boredom Hall of Fame.)One thing I’d have changed about the match
Sri Lanka lost their top four for a cumulative total of 12. You’d think it was South Africa in a semi-final. The advantage would not have been handed to England if at least one of them had made a worthwhile contribution.Face-off I relished
The prospect of watching Tillakaratne Dilshan flay the best efforts of England’s bowlers was tantalizing, but his two runs were an anti-climax.Wow moment
The instant Kumar Sangakkara’s lightning-fast catch and stumping ripped Shah’s innings out of ultra slow motion into high speed. Sangakkara and Muttiah Muralitharan deserve humanitarian awards for ending that innings.Shot of the day
Collingwood’s pull shot for six off Lasith Malinga. Who is Collingwood?Crowd meter
Percy, Sri Lanka’s 13th man, rallied the troops against the Barmy Army, who by all accounts were mostly AWOL. There was also an attempted Mexican Wave, which soon became a Joburg Ripple. If anyone else did anything noteworthy, it was well hidden.Fancy-dress index
To the man in shorts and a t-shirt, you prove the theory that no matter how cold it gets in Joburg, some lunatic will delude himself into believing it’s always hot, while sane people wonder what the first signs of hypothermia are.Entertainment
“Hang the DJ! Hang the DJ! Hang the DJ!” Combine this lyric with 1990s club anthems and it all makes sense. Totally random, arbitrary songs. At one point there was a Bob Marley tune, which proves that even a stopped clock tells the right time twice a day.ODI v Twenty20
Twenty20 is cricket’s drive-through. It’s still fun, but at the cost of ODIs? Soon it’ll just be a coin toss.Marks out of 10
6/10. To win by six wickets is impressive, but good grief, couldn’t England have done it with some flair? Overall positive, but marks deducted for Sri Lanka’s batting collapse and lethargic fielding, England’s stodgy batting (Mr PC excluded), and the ghastly overage teenybopper PA muzak. However, it was amazing to see these world-class players outside of the bright box in my lounge

Revenge of the south

A free ticket to watch your team? Doesn’t get much better than that

Siddhesh V01-Apr-2010The game
I got a free ticket for this game and went in hoping for a Chennai Super Kings revival. Thankfully I got what I wanted – a Chennai win that would be revenge for the defeat against the Royal Challengers Bangalore during the first leg.Key performer
M Vijay for his amazing knock. The 24-run over was nerve-wracking to watch because from where we were sitting every delivery looked like a wicket-taking ball.One thing I’d have changed
The catch Manpreet Gony dropped off Robin Uthappa. The entire stand was on its feet thinking it would be first blood for Chennai. Instead we got a dropped catch, followed by a boundary off the next ball. Really disappointing.Face-off I relished
I was looking forward to Kumble v Hayden. Unfortunately Hayden didn’t last long.Wow moment
Vijay’s second six in that mammoth 24-run over was spectacular. We turned to see the ball deposited in the adjacent stand.Player watch
Vijay and Gony fielded near us and we called out to them. Vijay often waved at us and responded. During the second innings we cheered for Pietersen but sadly didn’t get much of a response out of him.Shot of the day
Suresh Raina’s expansive hit over cover for six off the fifth ball of the 19th over came at a time when things were looking pretty bad for Chennai. That one shot settled the match.Crowd meter
KP hit a mammoth six that landed a few rows below us – the only one that landed in our stand. Two of Vijay’s sixes landed in the stands on either side of us. From where I was sitting, the ground was a sea of yellow. After the initial enthusiasm, though, I tired of taking part in endless Mexican waves that were going around faster than the ball was flying around the park.Hardship factor
The canteen was packed during the innings break, which meant a mad grab for whatever you managed to get your hands on. It would have helped if the food counters were better managed.Entertainment
When Sivamani is around, entertainment is never far away. The PA system was belting out the Chennai theme song and there was plenty of dancing.Twenty20 v ODIs
Twenty20 is pure entertainment. ODIs, on the other hand, are good value for money.TV or stadium?
Stadiums are always a lot of fun. Twenty20 is best watched in a stadium. The television gives you experts’ analysis and other technical details but you don’t need that in a Twenty20.Marks out of 10
8. The atmosphere was very lively throughout. The cheering went on for a while after the winning runs. It was not the perfect game for Chennai, but what matters is the win was achieved over one of the table leaders, and that is always memorable.

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