R Ashwin surges to No. 1 in Test bowling rankings

Ravindra Jadeja stays on top of the allrounder charts, with Ashwin in second place

ESPNcricinfo staff01-Mar-2023India offspinner R Ashwin has replaced England’s James Anderson as the No. 1 bowler in the ICC Test rankings.Ashwin’s rise was the result of him taking six wickets in the second Test of the ongoing Border-Gavaskar Trophy against Australia in Delhi, and he has the opportunity to extend his lead at the top in the remaining two Tests of the series.Anderson had displaced Australia’s Pat Cummins as the No. 1 bowler on February 22, after taking seven wickets in the first Test against New Zealand. At the age of 40, he was the oldest top-ranked bowler since Australian legspinner Clarrie Grimmett in 1936. However, Anderson took only three wickets in the second Test against New Zealand, which wasn’t enough to hold off Ashwin’s surge up the charts.Related

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India’s Jasprit Bumrah and Pakistan’s Shaheen Shah Afridi have moved up one spot each to fourth and fifth in the latest rankings update, despite neither bowler having played a Test since July last year. This is because England’s Ollie Robinson has dropped down two spots to No. 6.India’s left-arm spinning allrounder Ravindra Jadeja moved to eighth in the Test bowling rankings following his Player-of-the-Match performance – 10 wickets and 26 runs – in the Delhi Test against Australia. He also leads the Test rankings for allrounders, with Ashwin in second place.England’s Joe Root moved up to eighth in the allrounder’s rankings and also to third in the rankings for batters, after scoring 153* and 95 in the Wellington Test last week. Marnus Labuschagne and Steven Smith are first and second among Test batters.Harry Brook, after playing just six Tests, has already jumped to 16th place among batters, level with Virat Kohli. Brook has scored 809 runs in ten innings at a strike rate of 98.77.

Pooran to Pant: 'That first step you take, that's when you become motivated'

Pooran, who suffered an accident in 2015 that prevented him from even walking for six months, knows what Pant is going through at the moment

ESPNcricinfo staff14-Apr-2023Nicholas Pooran has been where Rishabh Pant is at the moment. An accident similar to the one Pant was in late last year had put Pooran in hospital eight-and-some years ago; he required two surgeries, and it was a good six months before he could walk again. Pooran understands that the position Pant is in might leave him “depressed and frustrated”, but is confident he will bounce back.Pooran, playing for Lucknow Super Giants in IPL 2023, said he has been in touch with Pant, who will be out of action at least for the rest of the year. Pant was present at his team Delhi Capitals’ home game against Gujarat Titans a few days back, but needed help to get out of the car and get to his seat at the Feroz Shah Kotla.”It’s very challenging. It’s one where no one understands. Sometimes, I can remember… I have been chatting with Rishabh obviously. Both of us have a really good relationship. But there’s times when you go into a place where you’re very depressed, and frustrated, because you want the healing process to happen so fast. But it’s difficult,” Pooran said ahead of Super Giants’ next game, on Saturday at home against Punjab Kings.Related

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On December 30 last year, Pant was driving to see his mother in Roorkee in Uttarakhand when his car hit a road divider at around 5.30am. He escaped without life-threatening injuries even as his car went up in flames. He has since undergone knee-ligament surgery at a Mumbai hospital.It was in January 2015, when he was just past his 19th birthday, when Pooran, while driving back from a training session at home in Trinidad & Tobago, swerved to avoid an oncoming car, drove into a sand heap and back on to the road, where another car rammed into him. He was knocked out and regained consciousness only after reaching a hospital. He required surgeries to repair the left patellar tendon, which had ruptured, and on his right leg to repair an ankle fracture.Speaking from his experience dealing with the low phase, Pooran said, “Sometimes you don’t see progress. In life, you want to see progress, you want it to happen so fast, but it doesn’t happen the whole time. It’s very challenging, but [you] need to believe in yourself.”Need to believe that whatever happened, happened for a reason. Can’t question it, because you won’t get an answer. You need to believe in your God as well. Have faith in yourself, have faith in your hard work.”And then, if all goes well, things change for the better. For Pooran, it was seven months before he could start jogging again, and another month before he took part in his first net session.”As soon as you see… that first step you take, once you can see that improvement, I think that’s when you become motivated,” he said. “Rishabh will come out of this. He’s a strong guy. He will come out of this. And he will be better. You just need to believe in yourself; he needs to spend time with himself and understand who are the people for him and who is against him. This is where you know who are your family and who are your friends.”It’s a difficult period in anyone’s life. Everyone has different challenges. Challenges come in different forms and ways. But it’s a blessing in disguise [in a way], and you’ll figure it out. Everyone goes through challenges. He’ll get back up.”

Arafat Bhuiyan joins Kent after graduating from SACA programme

Bangladesh-born fast bowler goes straight into XI to face Surrey in County Championship

ESPNcricinfo staff18-May-2023Arafat Bhuiyan, a British-Bangladeshi seam bowler, has become the seventh graduate of the South Asian Cricket Academy (SACA) to sign professional terms, after joining Kent for the remainder of the 2023 season.Bhuiyan was born in Dhaka, Bangladesh, but has UK residency, and has taken 17 wickets for Kent’s second XI, including best figures of 4 for 81 against Hampshire earlier this month. He made his first-class debut in Kent’s ongoing fixture against Surrey at the Kia Oval.He currently plays his club cricket in the Kent Premier League for Blackheath, and has also featured for Surrey, Essex and Derbyshire’s Second XIs in the past six years, as well as stints for MCC’s Young Cricketers side in 2019, and SACA this year.”I’m over the moon to have signed for Kent,” Bhuiyan said. “It’s a dream come true to become a professional cricketer and I feel all my hard work has paid off.”I’m grateful to Kent, especially Second XI Coach Mark Dekker, for the faith they have showed in me, and hope I can perform well if given the opportunity.”Bhuiyan moved to Birmingham to be part of SACA’s winter training programme, and credited that experience for fast-tracking his professional ambitions.”I would also like to thank Dr Tom Brown from SACA for giving me the opportunity to train and for accommodating me during the Winter in Birmingham,” he said. “I can’t speak highly enough about the amount of work he is putting into this programme.”Kent’s Director of Cricket, Paul Downton, added: “Arafat comes highly recommended from our pathway coaches and has impressed with his pace and control with the ball for us this year. He brings much-needed depth to our bowling attack as we head into a busy period of the season.”

Shadab stars with the bat to keep Sussex's slim hopes alive

The Pakistan allrounder rescued the innings from 44 for 4 and also played his part in the field

ECB Reporters Network23-Jun-2023Sussex claimed victory over Glamorgan by 20 runs with Shadab Khan staring with bat to set up a straight forward win for his team.Sussex were in trouble early in their innings but Shadab led a brilliant fight back to post an imposing 182 for for 6. The Pakistan allrounder was well supported by Michael Burgess and James Coles as the Sussex middle order took the game away from the home side.The mainstay of the Glamorgan batting effort was New Zealander Cam Fletcher who made his first meaningful contribution for the side having been signed as injury cover for Colin Ingram. However there was little support for Fletcher and the Glamorgan innings fell away in the face of a professional Sussex bowling performance.Both of these teams have a mathematical, if improbable, chance of making the knockout stages of the Blast but it will be difficult for either side to turn around the net run rate advantage held by other teams in the South Group.It was an outstanding start from the Glamorgan bowlers inside the powerplay with Timm van der Gugten claiming three vital wickets in the opening overs. Van der Gugten dismissed both openers with full balls that were caught inside the circle and got Oli Carter caught at fine leg when he attempted a scoop shot.Jamie McIlroy also chipped in with a wicket inside the fielding restrictions, with a stunning catch down the leg side by Chris Cooke sending the Sussex captain, Ravi Bopara, back to the dugout. That left Sussex 46 for 4at the end of the powerplay and in urgent need of a partnership.A 58-run stand between Michael Burgess and Shadab took Sussex past the 100-run mark and started to build a platform. Shadab was the player leading the fightback as he secured his second half-century of this Blast campaign, but Burgess played his part as he made 29 from 22 balls before he chopped a ball from Andy Gorvin on to his stumps.Shadab found another willing partner in James Coles as they attacked in the back end of the Sussex innings after a successful rebuilding job. The final five overs saw 65 runs added to the visitor’s total. Shadab pased fifty from 39 balls but put on another 36 runs from the next 14 deliveries he faced to finish on 87 not out.The Glamorgan chase got off to the worst possible start when captain Kiran Carlson was caught in the gully from the first ball of the innings, but Will Smale and Sam Northeast did a decent job of recovering from the early loss of Carlson with a stand of 37.Smale looked to be really getting going before the extra pace of Tymal Mills did for him. He was bowled for 25 to leave Glamorgan 37 for 2. Northeast, back to opening after a spell in the middle order, looked in fine form as he made 44 from 30 deliveries before he was caught on the boundary by Harrison Ward off the bowling of Bopara.Cooke was run out in bizarre fashion at the non-strikers end by Shadab. Fletcher drilled the ball straight back at the bowler and Shadab stopped the ball with his foot with a touch that was worthy of Lionel Messi before calmly picking it up and running out Cooke.The timing of that shot was indictive of how well Fletcher struck the ball throughout his innings. He had made just one run from his two previous visits to the crease for Glamorgan, but he found some form here on his way to 57 from 40 balls.As wickets fell around Fletcher there was little he could do as the required rate crept up to make a win mathematically impossible by the time the last over started and he fell attempting to swing for the fences as Sussex closed out the victory.

Nigar pushes Bangladesh to believe they can beat big teams

Women’s team captain calls for more support from the public: ‘Cries of Bangladesh, Bangladesh always gives me motivation’

Mohammad Isam13-Jul-2023A mindset change, where Bangladesh are relishing the idea of going toe-to-toe with bigger, more established teams, played a big part in their beating India in the third women’s T20I in Mirpur on Thursday, said captain Nigar Sultana. Although it was only a consolation win after the visitors took a 2-0 lead, it was still a step in the right direction. Bangladesh beat India for the first time in five years, the last two wins coming in the 2018 Asia Cup, which they went on to win.After restricting India to a below-par score for the second game in a row, this time Bangladesh did what they could not two days ago – chase it down.”We are really happy today,” Nigar said. “We have won here after a long time. We have always had close matches against India. We felt that if we played a little better, this series would have been ours. We also have a lot of cricket [three ODIs] left. That’s why we didn’t celebrate in that way. I keep telling everyone that only when you allow your brain to tell yourself that we can beat India, we can definitely beat them. I think I am successful in that way but there’s a lot left to do as a team. I think we could beat a team like India due to our change of mentality.”Nigar also explained the way Bangladesh went about the chase and highlighted Shamima Sultana’s performance. The opening batter made a valuable 42 to help steer a chase of 103.”A run chase becomes easier when one of the top-order batters stays till the 14th or 15th over,” Nigar said. “Shamima did it well. I was telling her to stay till the end. I am handling my end. ‘You play your shots. If we can take 5-6 singles per over, then that 8 or 10-run over is around the corner.’ I didn’t think the equation was too complicated. Taking singles made the chase easy for us.”The ball wasn’t coming on to the bat in this wicket. An aggressive shot could have been costly. I told her to carry on playing shots. If she carried the innings deep, it will make the equation easy for us.Shamima Sultana steered the chase with her 42•BCB

“She also plays the sweep well although she got out playing the sweep in the last two matches. But I told her that you should play the shot that you’re good at. I told her not to stop it, but make sure she plays the sweep properly. Sweep is the best shot on slow and low wickets.”The win was a little bit more special for the women’s team who were playing at the Shere Bangla National Stadium after eleven years. They won an ODI and a T20I at this ground in 2012, but have had to wait a long time for the BCB to give them games at the country’s No. 1 cricket stadium.”Mirpur is a special ground,” Nigar said. “We have won after playing here after a long time. It is a huge achievement for the team. I hope we get to play more matches here in the future. Whenever the men’s team play here, people watch those matches on TV or they pack the galleries here.”I have been playing for Bangladesh for a long time but never played in this ground. I think all our families had this regret about not playing in Mirpur.”Nigar has urged for more support at the ground though, as all three matches in Mirpur lacked a big crowd. “I would appeal to the public to come to our matches. It always gives us positive energy. When I am batting in the middle, cries of “Bangladesh, Bangladesh!” always gives me motivation. I am playing [for] the country, let me fight a bit more. The energy is a bit different. I thank those who came today. It is their support that has taken us this far.”Meanwhile, India assistant coach Apoorva Desai said that there’s no regret at the scoreline being 2-1. They hope to make it 3-0 in the ODIs starting on July 16.”I think we are also trying a lot of players,” Desai said. “Almost four people have debuted. We’re also doing some changes. And yeah, we would have loved to win today. We were 20 runs short on that wicket. Last three-four overs, if they would have batted sensibly, it was [possible to push to] 120-125 [which] was [the] par score. So, I think, yeah, we’ll come hard in the one dayers. Take the learnings there and, and push for a 3-0 series.”

Kashif Ali, Ben Cox fifties set up Worcestershire win over Durham

Liam Trevaskis hat-trick threatens to derail Rapids’ run but Josh Baker, Brett D’Oliveria dismantle Durham

ECB Reporters Network01-Aug-2023Worcestershire Rapids made a winning start to their Metro Bank One-Day Cup campaign defeating Durham by 42 runs at Seat Unique Riverside.Kashif Ali was the star of the Rapids’ batting effort as posted 76 to anchor the innings. A brilliant hat-trick from Liam Trevaskis threatened to derail Worcestershire’s total as he become the first Durham player to achieve the feat in List A cricket. But Ben Cox added a brisk half-century to propel the Rapids beyond the 300-run mark.The home side made a bright start in their chase of 319 through a knock of 79 from Graham Clark. But, Josh Baker and Brett D’Oliveria combined with six wickets apiece to dismantle the Durham line-up. Jonathan Bushnell took the game into the dying stages, but the Rapids held their nerve to close out a comfortable win.The Rapids were put in by Durham skipper Alex Lees and D’Oliveira presented a chance from the first ball that Bushnell put down at point. The same fielder shelled another tough opportunity to send the opener on his way, and D’Oliveira settled in alongside Azhar Ali to reach fifty inside the eighth over.The home side responded as Paul Coughlin removed D’ Oliveira, but the bowlers found life tough in the early stages. Ollie Gibson overstepped twice, bowled a wide, and was smashed for a six by Azhar Ali in a tumultuous second over. But the Durham seamer regained his composure to skittle the former Pakistan international.The arrival of spin then put the clamps on the Rapids’ run rate as George Drissell and Trevaskis settled into a tight line and length, which brought the wicket of Rob Jones. But, Kashif and Jake Libby provided the foundation of the Worcestershire innings with a stand worth 82 for the fourth wicket.Kashif made his intentions known early on as he took the attack to Trevaskis and planted the ball over the rope with a dismissive strike. He accelerated the innings operating at a run-a-ball and reached his second List A fifty with his second maximum.After Libby fell for 45, Kashif consolidated before priming himself to push forward again in the final 10 overs, beginning with two sixes to take Drissell’s final over for 19.But Trevaskis created Durham history and turned the momentum of the Rapids’ chase with a sensational hat-trick. The left-arm spinner ended Kashif Ali’s brilliant knock of 76 before clean bowling Matthew Waite and Joe Leach to rip through the lower order. Worcestershire needed to scramble to push for 300 after being reduced to 248 for 7, and Cox delivered with a quick-fire 57 from 49 to steer his team to a competitive total.Durham made quick runs in their response as Clark found his rhythm with early boundaries. Lees appeared to be finding his range against Gibbon, but the Rapids man made the breakthrough to send the Durham skipper on his way for 12.Clark and David Bedingham formed a solid partnership for the second wicket to stabilise the innings. Clark worked his way to a deserved fifty to continue his impressive form from just 44 balls. The two players were set against the Rapids pace bowlers, but the introduction of Baker tempted Bedingham to take on the boundary where he was caught on the fence for 31.Clark fell into the same trap after surviving two dropped chances, presenting Baker with his second wicket through the quick work of Cox behind the stumps.The loss of the experienced duo allowed the Rapids to turn the screw as Ben McKinney, Michael Jones and Trevaskis fell cheaply to send the required rate above seven runs per over courtesy of impressive bowling from the leg-spin of D’Oliveira.Bushnell gave Durham a glimmer of hope with his first List A fifty to take the game into the final four overs, but the visitors closed out the victory with late wickets.

Ponting: Bazball left Australia searching for answers

The former captain praised the performance of Zak Crawley and the durability of Pat Cummins

Andrew McGlashan18-Aug-20237:13

Was the 2023 Ashes the best series ever?

Australia were left “scratching the head” about how to combat Bazball as the Ashes series went on, according to Ricky Ponting who believed the final 2-2 scoreline was a fair result. Ponting although remained adamant that the controversial ball change at The Oval played a decisive hand.The visitors went 2-0 up with a nerve-jangling two-wicket victory at Edgbaston and a more convincing display at Lord’s as they held off Ben Stokes’ onslaught, but they let a strong position slip at Headingley where England were able to win by three wickets.Two days of rain at Old Trafford enabled them to retain the Ashes after being plundered for 592 at 5.49 an over before their chance of a first Ashes series win in the country since 2001 slipped away on a dramatic final day at The Oval where an earlier change of ball brought England’s quick bowlers back into the game.Related

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“The two contrasting styles of play were great to sit back and watch,” Ponting told the breakfast show which is co-hosted by former Australia captain Tim Paine. “There was a lot of talk about Bazball and how England would approach it, and would that style stand up against the quality of the Australian attack – looking back, it probably did.”It probably had some of the Australian players, coaches and the captain at different times scratching their head as to how they were going to combat it. Think the 2-2 result, albeit probably slightly biased with a bit of controversy in that last Test with the ball changed the way that it was, that gifted England some conditions they probably shouldn’t have got, think the level of cricket played across the series, the 2-2 result was probably fair.”While Chris Woakes, who was named the Compton-Miller medalist as Player of the Series despite appearing in just three matches, and Mark Wood had huge impacts after coming into the side, Ponting pinpointed England’s sustained aggression with the bat as the key element in their fightback.Ricky Ponting praised the role of Zak Crawley•Getty Images

“It was more their top-order batting, I think, [that] we struggled to come to grips with,” he said. “The way that Crawley and Duckett were able to play at the start of every innings, really, they got England off to flying starts and put pressure straight back on the Australian attack. When that momentum started to build it was hard for the Australians to rein it back in.”Zak Crawley has got to take a lot of credit, he was the one going into the series who was under the most pressure. That 180 he got at Manchester was as good a Test match batting as you could see…as I said it had [Pat Cummins] and the boys scratching their heads as to how they were going to bowl at him.”Think even the Australian boys might be sitting back and looking at the way they played, [and asking] what can we do a little bit better to combat that in the future. Think a lot of other countries around the world might be looking at it as well and saying if we want to compete with Australia maybe this is the way we have to go.”Ponting backed the selection calls made by Australia throughout the series and praised Cummins’ ability to get through six matches including the World Test Championship final against India, although he did think there may be some new faces introduced to the bowling attack over the next 12 months.”As the series wore on, Cummo was probably the pick again, but Starcy was outstanding,” he said. “There were some questions about whether Pat could get through those six Tests and keep his intensity up; there might have been a bit of a flat spot when he was under a bit of attack at Manchester but the way he bounced back in the last Test, his pace at the start of the last Test was the best it’s been for a long time, so he kept coming.”As it went on, felt to me like they could have brought [Michael] Neser in at some stage in the right conditions. But I think what they did selection wise was right. We know there is enough [depth] underneath these guys, [Lance] Morris and those guys sitting back in the wings. Think we’ve got enough there and at different times I reckon through the next 12 months we might see some different faces in our bowling line-up.”

Stoinis 'touch and go' for Australia's opening game

Coach McDonald says once fit, Stoinis and Green could play together in the XI

ESPNcricinfo staff05-Oct-2023Marcus Stoinis is doubtful for Australia’s opening match at the 2023 ODI World Cup, against India on October 8 in Chennai, because of a hamstring niggle he picked up in the first ODI against the same opponent in Mohali last month. Stoinis has not played a match since.”He’s got a slight hamstring complaint at this stage, so that’s why he missed the practice games and he’ll be touch and go for the first game against India,” Australia coach Andrew McDonald said in Chennai on Thursday while talking about Stoinis. “We’ve got the main session today and then another hit out tomorrow, so he’ll go through his work there and we’ll see whether he’s available for selection for game one but at the moment he wasn’t fit and available for those practice games.”Cameron Green found some form in the final warm-up match against Pakistan, but McDonald said one of the plans was to have both in the playing XI.”There’s a way that we can fit them both into the one side,” he said. “Over the last 18 months, we’ve had a pretty clear way that we want to build three ways of playing. One of those ways is definitely with all the allrounders and potentially two quicks, and you’ve seen that side in the past 18 months being played, so there is a real possibility that both of those players can be in the same XI and we haven’t ruled that out.”When asked about the other ways, he said: “You can change your batting line-up, you can change the structure of your top order. So behind the scenes, we’re pretty clear on the way that we want to go about it. And that’ll be surface-dependent and clearly body-dependent as well.”The World Cup is a long campaign, there’s no doubt going to be some sore bodies at certain times. We feel as though with [our] squad that we’ve got great flexibility, albeit at the moment obviously Travis Head sitting and where he’s at, that’ll give us greater scope to shift and manoeuvre the side the way that we have over the last 18 months.”Marcus Stoinis last played a game on September 22•Getty Images

Despite the plethora of fast-bowling options Australia possess, Stoinis opened the bowling in recent ODIs and T20Is, with encouraging success. That gave them the option of holding back one of their frontline quicks in the middle overs, a phase that could be crucial during the World Cup.McDonald added Glenn Maxwell finding form in the warm-up against Pakistan with a quick 77 and eight overs with the ball worked out nicely for them.”Cameron Green got a little bit of time in the middle also and clearly Glenn Maxwell being able to cope with the demands of the game that he played, a significant innings plus being able to back up and bowl as many overs as he did. He has pulled up really well. So a few of those moving parts that we had leading in have unfolded positively for us, which is nice. If you asked me that two weeks ago, I would have been a little bit worried but now everything seems to have come together nicely.”Legspinner Adam Zampa also hasn’t played since pulling up sore in the second ODI in Indore last month but he was not a concern, according to McDonald, and he had missed the two warm-ups more for workload management.Australia will have to wait for an update on Head until October 11 or 12 to have a clearer indication of when he can join the squad in India.

England's title defence suffers another crushing blow as Sri Lanka coast to victory

Jos Buttler and his team are not out of the tournament yet, but it is hard to see them recovering

Andrew Miller26-Oct-20232:23

Bond: England showing no willingness to adapt

Sri Lanka 160 for 2 (Nissanka 77*, Samarawickrama 65*) beat England 156 (Stokes 43, Kumara 3-35) by eight wicketsEngland’s World Cup defence is not dead yet. And more’s the pity, to judge by this latest hollow-eyed display from Jos Buttler’s ex-worldbeaters. The humiliations are coming so thick and fast that they are losing their shock factor but, suffice to say, this latest crushing loss – by eight wickets and in just 59 overs of the match’s 100 – was neither the largest nor the most shocking of an abject campaign.It was, however, the one that confirmed beyond any lingering doubt that this team of genuine England greats no longer has any miracles left within its dressing-room. The match-up was nominally eighth versus ninth in the tournament standings, but by the time Pathum Nissanka had slammed Sri Lanka’s winning six over long-on with a massive 148 balls remaining, you were left to wonder whether this England team, in this miserable mood, could even have matched their conquerors’ achievement of making out of the qualifying tournament in July that did for the likes of West Indies, Zimbabwe and Ireland.England’s realistic challenge in this match lasted no longer than the first six overs of each powerplay – at 44 for 0 after winning the toss, they momentarily threatened to turn on their power at long last, but then contrived to lose all ten of their wickets for 111 in 26 overs, with the pace of Lahiru Kumara and the timeless guile of Angelo Mathews foremost among their persecutors.And then, in reply, David Willey bagged two new-ball wickets to hint that, at 23 for 2, a low-scoring dogfight could be on the cards, only for Nissanka and Sadeera Samarawickrama to slam the door shut with a near-chanceless stand of 137 in 122 balls. And that, as they say, was a wrap. “We’ve been so far short of the standards that we set ourselves,” Buttler admitted after the match. “And for no apparent reason.”All smiles in the Sri Lanka camp as Lahiru Kumara picked up three wickets•Getty Images

England had had the best part of a week to regroup from their shambolic loss to South Africa, but before a ball had been bowled, the scars of that trouncing were plain to see. Not only did Buttler bat first after winning another toss – a direct response to that catastrophic toasting in the Mumbai heat – he also presented a team-sheet that was a complete volte face from the Wankhede line-up, with the inclusion of three allrounders in Liam Livingstone, Moeen Ali and Chris Woakes, where none had featured a week earlier.The theory was that a reversion to such depth would free England up to play their natural attacking game, and so it proved in a misleadingly energetic powerplay flurry. Dawid Malan lashed six fours in as many overs in another brief but imposing cameo – five of them launched in trademark fashion over the covers as Dilshan Madushanka offered too much width.Related

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  • Are defending champions England out of the World Cup?

But the signs of England’s anxiety were never far from the surface. Had Sri Lanka trusted their instincts, Jonny Bairstow would have fallen lbw first-ball, after replays showed that his straight drive to a Madushanka yorker had first flicked his front pad. And when that first incision finally came, the rest of a devastatingly off-colour line-up followed all too obediently.Sri Lanka’s catalyst was a familiar England foe. Mathews would not have been called into their squad but for a tournament-ending injury to Matheesha Pathirana, but at the age of 36, his first over in an ODI for three-and-a-half years dripped with nagging intent. His second delivery, to Malan, popped without pace off a perfect line and length to skim past the splice; his follow-up was rinse-and-repeat, and this time there was a thin scuff on ultra-edge as Sri Lanka instantly reviewed the on-field not-out verdict.Three overs later, and Mathews was back in the action, this time from backward point. Joe Root’s bereft search for ODI form has mirrored that of his team as a whole, and so what better time for a catastrophic run-out to rear its head? After grinding out three singles from his first nine deliveries, Root mistimed a cut off Maheesh Theekshana, and set off for a single. The bounce, however, could not have plopped into Mathews’ grasp more invitingly, and Root was already off the field by the time the third umpire’s superfluous verdict flashed up on the big screen.Ben Stokes cuts a dejected figures as he trudges off for 43•Associated Press

From 44 for 0 after six overs, England had now lost 2 for 15 in the rest of their powerplay. And with Lahiru Kumara’s arrival adding an extra pep to Sri Lanka’s performance, Bairstow decided attack was his team’s only defence. His next shot in anger was a flappy pull across a length ball from Kasun Rajitha, and Dhanajaya de Silva didn’t have to move as the chance embedded in his bread-basket at mid-on.At 68 for 3, enter Jos Buttler: struggling with his own form, and with panic seizing his team once more. Six balls later, he was gone to yet another snick to the keeper, his third such dismissal in five ill-at-ease outings. This time, at least, it was not a tentative prod to match his downfalls against New Zealand and South Africa. But his attacking slash to the extra pace of Kumara had the same effect regardless, as Kusal Mendis leapt spectacularly to his right to cling on.England’s innings was less than 15 overs old, and already they were into those allrounders. But Livingstone, alas, barely qualifies as such right now – his sixth ball from Kumara screeched into another uncomfortably planted front pad as he trooped off for 1, for a tournament tally of 31 runs in four innings. His departure left England five-down after 17 overs, and the race to the bottom was well and truly on.Stokes and Moeen briefly stemmed the tide to add 37 runs in 46 balls, riches by the standards nosediving around them. So long as Stokes was picking his moments for outright aggression – as he did with four pulls of varying power through the legside and a bullet drive through the covers – England retained the belief that their miracle man had another epic stored up his sleeve.But to do so, he required support from the other end, but what he got was a dereliction of duty. On a run-a-ball 15, Moeen ruined this fleeting impression of permanence with a floppy cut to point, as Mathews returned for his fourth over and used his nous and lack of pace to prise out his second key wicket of a killer return. And one over later, Woakes’ dismal campaign hit a new low with a fourth-ball duck – a fierce cut to point off Rajitha, well grabbed by a swooping Sadeera Samarawickrama, whose confidence was sufficient to convince the third umpire that a blurry replay was no reason to doubt that the chance had carried.Pathum Nissanka hit the winning runs – a six•Getty Images

Stokes, by this stage, was 34 not out from 58 balls, but at 123 for 7, even he had no inkling of whether to stick or twist. He had already survived one flying edge to the gully, where this time Samarawickrama had not been able to cling on, as well as an overturned review for lbw after under-edging a reverse-sweep against Theekshana. But on 43, and with exactly 20 overs of the innings still remaining, Kumara’s head-hunting approach found him out. Another full-blooded pull found a top-edge to deep midwicket, and the substitute Dushan Hemantha didn’t have to move.Willey showed what might have been at the end of the same Kumara over by clobbering England’s first and only six over deep midwicket. But the fight had been extinguished at the other end of the pitch. Willey had faced just two more legal deliveries before Adil Rashid left the building, gormlessly run-out at the non-striker’s end as Mendis gathered a leg-side wide and spotted him dawdling back towards his crease in a less volatile recreation of Bairstow’s Ashes extraction at Lord’s. And when Mark Wood gave the charge to the excellent Theekshana to be stumped for 5, England had been routed, with exactly 100 balls left unused, for 156 – the lowest all-out total ever made in men’s ODIs at the Chinnaswamy.Sri Lanka’s own frailties meant that the run-chase was not a done deal, especially once Willey – one of England’s few reliable competitors – had removed Mendis and Kusal Perera in the space of his first three overs. But Woakes, England’s white-ball attack leader, lacked penetration yet again, and in the absence of further powerplay incisions, neither Rashid nor Wood was able to provide the X-factor that such an uncompromising situation demanded.Rashid’s fifth ball was smoked onto the roof at long-on as Nissanka showed the sort of gumption against his opponents’ chief threat that England as a collective were unable to find. His fourth half-century in consecutive World Cup knocks was sealed with a sublime drive through the covers off Wood, but the numbers that mattered the most were the two points that his innings ensured would be added to Sri Lanka’s qualification cause. They too, are not dead yet in the race for the top four. Unlike England, however – who are already braced for impact as they face table-toppers India in Lucknow on Sunday – Sri Lanka will stride onto next week’s clash with Afghanistan believing that they can get right back into the mix.

Gurbaz 100 powers Afghanistan to big win in first T20I against UAE

UAE were reduced to 56 for 4 in the chase of 204, meaning even an unbeaten 70 from Vriitya Aravind was not enough to stave off heavy defeat

ESPNcricinfo staff29-Dec-2023Rahmanullah Gurbaz cracked his maiden T20I century, helping Afghanistan to 203 and eventually a 72-run win in the first T20I against UAE in Sharjah. The hosts were never quite in the chase after being reduced to 56 for 4 in the first ten overs.Gurbaz’s knock of 100 came off just 52 deliveries, with seven fours and as many sixes. He dominated a second-wicket stand of 137 off 77 balls with Ibrahim Zadran, who was appointed the stand-in captain for the series.The boundaries kept flowing regularly from the bat of Gurbaz, who got to his fifty off 24 balls with a six off Ali Naseer in the ninth over. He went 4, 6, 4 against Basil Hameed in the 16th, reaching his hundred off 50 balls – also with a six – in the following over. Afghanistan scored 62 in the last five overs, with the finishing touches provided by Azmatullah Omarzai’s unbeaten cameo of 19 from eight deliveries.Chasing a challenging score, UAE lost Khalid Shah in the first over. Fazalhaq Farooqi, back in Afghanistan’s squad along with Naveen-ul-Haq after being sanctioned by the ACB earlier this week for expressing a desire to be left out of the central contracts list for 2024, got Khalid and also Samal Udawaththa in the fifth over.In between, Naveen removed Muhammad Waseem, before Qais Ahmad got the fourth wicket to leave UAE needing another 148 in the last ten overs. Vriitya Aravind fought back with 70 not out but his effort only helped reduce the margin of defeat for the home team.The big win gave Afghanistan a 1-0 lead in the three-match series, with the second match also taking place in Sharjah on Sunday.

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