Joe Cooke heroics help Glamorgan trump Essex and reach Royal London final

Career-best showings with bat and ball help see off Sir Alastair and co

David Hopps16-Aug-2021Glamorgan 293 for 5 (Rutherford 67, Cooke 66*) beat Essex 289 (Cook 68, Walter 50, Cooke 5-61) by five wicketsJoe Cooke started the season as a careworn Championship opener trying to make the grade, but life became a far grander affair for him at Sophia Gardens in the semi-final of the Royal London Cup as he summoned the best performance of his life with bat and ball to lead Glamorgan into Thursday’s 50-over final.Cooke’s 5 for 61 helped to keep Essex in range at 289 after they had threatened to run away with the match. And after Hamish Rutherford’s explosive retort put Glamorgan in the ascendancy, Cooke, now acquainting himself with No. 7, was a model of sound judgment with an unbeaten 66 from 56 balls as he shared an unbroken stand of 111 in 17 overs for the sixth-wicket with Tom Cullen.Considering the hold that Simon Harmer’s offspin has had upon county cricket in the past few seasons, there could be no sweeter finish for Cooke than to launch him straight for four and six in successive balls to win the match, the winning blow sailing through the trees at the Taff End to threaten the riverside walkers: probably the nearest thing to marketing that the competition has had all year.Glamorgan’s opponents in their first one-day final since 2013 will be determined by Tuesday’s semi-final between Durham and Surrey – and Durham must try to negotiate a safe passage without their leading wicket-taker in the competition, Paul van Meekeren, who has a long-standing deal in the Caribbean Premier League with St Kitts and Nevis Patriots and must leave early to quarantine ahead of their opening game on August 26.The Sophia Gardens pitch appeared to possess two distinct moods, offering excellent batting conditions in the first half of both innings, but then markedly losing pace and bounce as the ball softened to make strokeplay difficult. Essex certainly suggested as much as they lost their last seven wickets for 64 in the last 62 balls.Cooke scotched that theory. In an unfamiliar role, he met Essex’s spinners with composure and when the captain, Tom Westley, finally had to return to seam with 26 needed from four overs, he grasped the moment. Essex were not about to entrust the job to Ben Allison, whose four new-ball overs had bled 46 in the face of Rutherford’s 44-ball 67. Instead, they turned to Jack Plom, but he conceded 16 – 15 of them to Cooke, who began the over by driving a half-volley back over his head and ended it by chopping him over short third for another boundary.Cooke made a habit of releasing the pressure on himself by taking a boundary at the start of the over, never more evident than when he welcomed the return of Ryan ten Doeschate, 41 now, with a flat bat over his head when 42 were needed off six. Essex did not bowl Paul Walter – only six overs for 59 this season, quite a comedown for an allrounder who once had the Essex sage, Keith Fetcher, purring at his potential.Perhaps the umpire, Ian Gould, who these days bestrides the county circuit like a latter-day Dickie Bird, but without the engaging histrionics, would have been privately relieved at Glamorgan’s victory. It was Gould who inadvertently stopped Cullen’s pull shot with his shin at square leg at a critical juncture. At least Gould had the decency to refuse treatment; Dickie would have required a fleet of ambulances and a chapter in his next book.”It’s a pretty cool and special feeling,” Cooke said. “Because Hamish scored so quickly, we knew we could keep it ticking over. It was a good pitch and hard to bowl. Some of the good balls were going for four. My first spell with the ball wasn’t great and Alastair Cook got a hold of me so to come back with wickets in my second spell was pleasing. I’m enjoying a different role in this team and I’m always in the game both batting and bowling.”Rutherford, a seasoned campaigner who knew that Glamorgan needed a flyer, and he had to provide it, broke Allison with five successive leg-side boundaries – the last of them clearing the ropes at square leg. There were 23 in all in the over. When Rutherford fell against Harmer at long-on, Kiran Carlson’s sparky run-a ball 36 maintained the momentum while Nick Selman batted in the shadows. When Selman was fifth out with 108 still needed, Essex might have imagined themselves slight favourites.Essex’s batters did not do much wrong. In a debilitated competition, it was good to see Alastair Cook’s trademark cut shot to the fore as he made 68 from 66 balls before he fell in exasperating fashion, overbalancing to a nondescript leg-side wanderer to be stumped. Essex’s two young batters, Josh Rymell and Feroze Khoshi, played their part in setting up the innings, as did Walter’s half-century, but the finale was feverish and Cooke’s medium pace was the beneficiary as back-of-a-length deliveries brought excessive reward.The real hero was the old fox, Michael Hogan, whose 10 overs cost 21. There is an imbalance in English cricket between young one-day batters (a veritable plague) and young one-day bowlers. Hogan, true to the verities of the game at 40, is a constant reminder of what can be achieved.

All-round Soumya Sarkar show gives Bangladesh T20I series win in high-scoring contest

Shamim Hossain’s unbeaten 15-ball 31 sealed the win after Sarkar’s half-century

Mohammad Isam25-Jul-2021Shamim Hossain gave another glimpse of his talent with a 16-ball unbeaten 31 that helped Bangladesh eclipse Zimbabwe’s 193 with four balls to spare in Harare. The home side, who went down by five wickets in the end, would have felt in control of the game for the first 30 overs of this game.But Soumya Sarkar and Mahmudullah turned things around in the second half of the Bangladesh innings, with their 63-run third wicket stand, before Shamim, playing only his second T20I, took down the Zimbabwe attack with six fours that were well planned.Shamim’s calculated assaultAfter Sarkar fell in the 14th over following his 49-ball 68, Bangladesh still needed 61 off 39 balls. Afif Hossain struck two sixes in his five-ball stay, before getting bowled by Wellington Masakadza. Mahmudullah played his trademark flick off Tendai Chatara, before Shamim punched back.He played a tennis-like forehand through the covers, before reverse-sweeping and then pulling the part-time seamer Dion Myers, who inexplicably bowled one short ball after another. Regis Chakabva took a superb catch to remove Mahmudullah, who made 34 off 28 balls, in the penultimate over but Shamim and Nurul Hasan ensured they needed just five runs in the last over.Shamim banged Masakadza straight down the ground, before pumping him for a single to complete the win. As Shamim punched the air in triumph, the home side were crest-fallen around him. But when Wessley Madhevere, Chakabva and Ryan Burl were hitting it around the Harare Sports Club, they must have believed something was up for them.Madhevere tees offTadiwanashe Marumani’s swats – two going for fours and one for six – in the first two overs signaled Zimbabwe’s intent. Madhevere then put away Taskin Ahmed with two pull shots, before he drove one straight, for three fours. Taskin pulled back the length again next ball, but Madhevere was equal to the task.He placed the pull-shot between the two fielders. Next ball, he flat-batted another full ball for the fifth boundary in a row. Marumani hammered Saifuddin for his second six before he was bowled off his pads for 27, to round off Zimbabwe’s best Powerplay score, 63 for 1, against Bangladesh. This was also Zimbabwe’s first fifty-plus opening stand since February 2018.Chakabva’s sixer festivalZimbabwe needed some sort of consolidation after such a start, but Chakabva took off in the other direction. He rammed into Bangladesh’s bowling attack with six sixes in 15 balls, particularly his switch-hits going well into the stands. After hitting Nasum Ahmed for a reverse slog-sweep, Chakabva pasted him over midwicket for three consecutive sixes in the eleventh over.He also struck Shakib Al Hasan and Sarkar for a six each, over midwicket and a switch hit over point, respectively. Chakabva threatened to at least equal Malcolm Waller’s fastest T20I fifty for Zimbabwe, as it looked like Bangladesh really had to come up with something special to get rid of him.The Naim-Shamim magic momentIt came immediately after Chakabva’s three-six over. He reached out to a Sarkar delivery way outside off-stump, to play a premeditated and conventional slog-sweep. Mohammad Naim ran hard to his left from fine-leg to take the catch, and parry it back to Shamim who was lurking nearby. Naim’s timing was wonderful, but so was Shamim’s awareness to complete the catch.Sarkar struck again later in the over when he bowled Sikandar Raza, much to Bangladesh’s relief at that stage. He missed a full ball to get out for his second duck in the T20I series.Burl heavy on SaifuddinMadhevere got out shortly after reaching his second successive half-century, leaving the last five overs to Burl. Dion Myers supported him with three fours in his 23, before the left-hander got down to business. He struck three fours and two sixes in his 15-ball unbeaten 31, all of them off Saifuddin, who was again a surprising choice in the death overs, going for 35 runs in the 18th and 20th overs.Bangladesh behind the eight-ballZimbabwe didn’t let Bangladesh get off to a flyer, quickly removing Naim in the third over when the left-handed dragged a Blessing Muzarabani delivery on to his stumps. Sarkar and Shakib tried to keep up to the run-rate but mishit a number of balls, as they looked for boundaries.Shakib struck a four before hitting two sixes off Luke Jongwe, but later in the same over, he holed out to long-off, having made 25 off 13 balls. Zimbabwe dried up the boundaries at this stage, as the visitors reached 90 for 2 at the halfway mark.The turnaround Mahmudullah’s slogged four at the end of the tenth over broke a 15-ball boundary duck. Sarkar, on 37, got a second life in the next ball when Chakabva missed a stumping chance. He had earlier been dropped on 25. But something clicked with Sarkar and Mahmudullah as they took 50 runs in the next four overs.Sarkar smacked Masakadza for two fours before Mahmudullah did the same against Jongwe in the following over. Sarkar repeated the dose on Myers, before he got out trying to clear long-off in the 14th over.The scoring momentum brought down the run-rate to less than nine an over, but it stopped when Muzarabani conceded just two runs in the 15th over. But Shamim and Mahmudullah didn’t let this bother their big-hitting momentum, completing the win in the last over.

Road to 2022 T20 World Cup begins as new-look India host weary New Zealand

NZ will be without Williamson, Jamieson and Conway, while India ponder on sixth batter

Saurabh Somani16-Nov-20213:02

Rahul Dravid: Rohit Sharma’s growth as leader and person has been ‘phenomenal’

Big Picture

On a shortlist of things you would like to do after losing a World Cup final to a traditional rival would be turning up in a different time zone a mere three days later to play another series. However, New Zealand can’t afford to think of that because they will be confronted by an Indian side that is looking for some redemption after an early exit in that very same World Cup – partly contributed to by a loss against New Zealand itself.This is a new-look Indian side, with Rohit Sharma as captain and Rahul Dravid as coach, along with several first-choice players taking a well-earned break. The depth in Indian cricket is such though that India can still put out a strong team that will start as favourites, especially at home.While one T20 World Cup is done, in some sense, the preparation for the next one starts with this first game because it is just 11 months away. And both teams missing some key personnel may not be the worst thing because it will allow them to test those who are otherwise on the fringes.Related

  • Rohit and Dravid focused on giving India the security to play fearlessly

  • Southee admits bubble fatigue taking its toll: 'It weighs you down'

  • Ind vs NZ: Rohit to lead; Kohli, Bumrah, Hardik absent

New Zealand might find it a bit tough to pick themselves up mentally so soon after the loss in the T20 World Cup final, but while India will be smarting from their early exit, they also have a lot of players who have spent extended times in biosecure bubbles, which is wearying at the best of times. The grind of international cricket is such though that both sides have no option but to get on with it and trust that things will be fine on the field once the competitive juices of match-play flow.

Form guide

India WWWLL

New Zealand LWWWWNew Zealand beat India in their recent meeting at the T20 World Cup, as India exited early•Getty Images

In the spotlight

Rohit Sharma as captain is not unknown quantity by any means, but this will still feel like something approaching fresh territory. He will be leading India as the full-time T20I captain for the first time, and has a completely revamped backroom staff now. There were signs in the T20 World Cup that Rohit was looking to be more aggressive upfront instead of playing his normal method of settling in and then unleashing sixes. Will he continue with that, or revert to his tried-and-tested method during the settling-in period of a new role and new coaches?From being a middle-order bat converted to an opener, Daryl Mitchell suddenly finds himself as one of the lynchpins of New Zealand’s weakened batting in this series. His T20 World Cup heroics showed not only that he could take on tough challenges, but also that he backed himself to do so. The fresh challenge now for him will be to extend his good run to this series.

Team news

India will have to decide on who their sixth batter will be from among Shreyas Iyer, Ruturaj Gaikwad and Venkatesh Iyer. While Shreyas was the incumbent before his injury in the first quarter of the year, Gaikwad has been on a form tear since the second leg of the IPL. Venkatesh also had a good second leg, and offers a bowling option. Moreover, he has batted at Nos. 5 and 6 with some regularity for his home state Madhya Pradesh, and it is those positions India need to look at given a surfeit of options at the top. Pure form favours Gaikwad even as the all-round option is Venkatesh, while Shreyas has the experience of batting lower down for India, and doing well against England.Among bowlers, playing three spinners gives India greater batting depth. Bhuvneshwar Kumar is the most experienced seamer, so the team might want to stick with him ahead of Avesh Khan or Harshal Patel.India (possible): 1 Rohit Sharma (capt), 2 KL Rahul, 3 Ishan Kishan, 4 Venkatesh Iyer/Shreyas Iyer/Ruturaj Gaikwad, 5 Suryakumar Yadav, 6 Rishabh Pant (wk), 7 Axar Patel, 8 R Ashwin, 9 Bhuvneshwar Kumar, 10 Mohammed Siraj, 11 Yuzvendra ChahalNew Zealand were already without Devon Conway, and can’t count on Lockie Ferguson being fully ready yet. On match eve, they have lost Kane Williamson too. That does leave them a bit thin in the batting, and could mean someone like Kyle Jamieson getting a go ahead of Adam Milne.New Zealand (possible): 1 Martin Guptill, 2 Daryl Mitchell, 3 Glenn Phillips, 4 Mark Chapman, 5 Tim Seifert (wk), 6 James Neesham, 7 Mitchell Santner, 8 Kyle Jamieson/Trent Boult, 9 Tim Southee (capt), 10 Adam Milne/Lockie Ferguson, 11 Ish Sodhi

Pitch and conditions

The last time a T20 game at the senior level was played at the Sawai Mansingh Stadium in Jaipur was during the IPL in April 2019. The pitches then were batting friendly, although bowlers could extract something from them. The larger ground dimensions gives spinners some cover too, and since 2019, they have had a better average and economy rate than fast bowlers. However, no T20I has been held there yet. It is a night game, so dew could be a factor.

Stats and trivia

  • Martin Guptill (3147) and Rohit (3038) sit second and third respectively on the overall T20I run-tally. They both have a shot at overtaking Virat Kohli, who leads the run charts with 3227 right now.
  • Tim Seifert has enjoyed playing against India. His average (46.66) and strike rate (156.42) are not only far above his career figures of 24.51 and 132.64, but also the highest for him against any T20I opponent.

Quotes

“They are a very good team, they are well led, they are well planned and well prepared, and yes, they have beaten India recently in a few tournaments – those are the facts. Herein lies a really good opportunity for us to keep improving and keep getting better, and hopefully the next time we get an opportunity in a big tournament against them, we put one over.”.
“It’s busy and we haven’t really had a chance to stop and think after the disappointment in the way things finished in the T20 World Cup final, but we have to shift our focus to this series and then obviously for the Test series. To represent your country is a great honour, so that gets me up and going.”
New Zealand’s stand-in captain Tim Southee is not too fazed by his side’s relentless schedule

Virat Kohli expected to return for final Test in Cape Town

Question marks remain over Siraj’s availability for the decider after he picked up a hamstring niggle at the Wanderers

ESPNcricinfo staff06-Jan-2022Regular India Test captain Virat Kohli, who missed the second Johannesburg Test with back spasms, should be back for the decider in Cape Town with the series tied 1-1.”Virat is feeling better already, he’s been in the nets last couple of days and he’s been fielding and running around on the field,” stand-in captain KL Rahul said after India’s seven-wicket loss on the fourth day. “I think he should be fine.”Later, at the press conference, head coach Rahul Dravid spoke on similar lines. “From all accounts, he should be fine,” Dravid said. “He’s had the opportunity to run around a little bit, he’s had the opportunity to test it a little bit, I’ll be down only now at the moment in the nets with a few throwdowns and stuff, so hopefully with a few net sessions in Cape Town, he should be good to go.”I haven’t had a detailed discussion with the physio as yet, but from everything I’m hearing and from just having a chat with him, he’s really improving and should be good to go in four days’ time.”If Kohli comes back, it could mean that Hanuma Vihari, who impressed with an unbeaten 40 in India’s second innings, could return to the bench. With India continuing to back their senior batters, the likes of Vihari and Shreyas Iyer – who made a Test century on debut in November, but was out of contention with a stomach bug in Johannesburg – have had to bide their time for playing opportunities.Dravid was full of praise for Vihari – making mention even of his first-innings contribution when he made a solid start before getting caught at short leg off a steep lifter – but said young players have always had to wait their turn in international cricket.”Firstly I think Vihari played really well in this Test match, in both innings in fact,” Dravid said. “I think in the first innings he got a nasty one, unfortunately for him it popped up and the fielder got his fingertips to it and took a really good catch, and he batted beautifully in the second innings, so that gives us a lot of confidence.”Shreyas has also done that two or three Test matches ago, he’s got runs as well, and I think they’ve just got to take heart from the fact that whenever they’re getting the opportunities they are doing well, and hopefully their time will come. You look back on some of our guys who are now considered senior players, they also had to wait their time.”They also had to score a lot of runs, they’ve had, at the start of their careers, it’s probably been a bit stop-start as well. So it happens. It’s just the nature of the sport, it’s the nature of the game, and it will happen, so I think they can take heart [from their performances] and we can take a lot of confidence from the way Vihari batted in this game, he really played well, that should give him a lot of confidence, and it certainly gives us a lot of confidence.”Ahead of the third Test, there remains a question mark over pacer Mohammed Siraj, who went down in this Test with hamstring trouble and could bowl only 15.5 overs out of the 147.2 India sent down. “Siraj, we’ll have to monitor him over the next couple of days,” Rahul said. “He’s been feeling better with each day, he’s starting to get more and more confident with his bowling, especially with what happened on the field with his hamstring, it’s not easy to come back from that and go 100% straightaway.”If Siraj is not fit, India have back-up in the experienced Ishant Sharma and Umesh Yadav for the match, which starts on January 11.

Toby Roland-Jones signs contract extension at Middlesex

Fast bowler backed after injury setbacks, and will stay with club at least until 2023

ESPNcricinfo staff28-Jan-2022Toby Roland-Jones will stay with Middlesex at least until the end of 2023, after signing a contract extension that will take him into his 13th year with the club.Roland-Jones has endured an injury-plagued few years, including a knee cartilage injury that took four months out of his 2021 season, following back and shoulder problems that had limited his involvement since 2018.However, he reaffirmed his importance to Middlesex with a five-wicket haul against Derbyshire on his first-class comeback in September, and with Richard Johnson having been appointed as the club’s new head coach, Roland-Jones will remain a key part of their plans for the coming seasons.”I am absolutely delighted to commit to Middlesex Cricket for the next two years,” Roland-Jones said. “I feel hugely fortunate that my passion for the club and the game continues to grow, as it has since the day I joined, back in 2010.”The excitement and potential in this squad gives us every opportunity to return this club to the level it should be at, and I look forward to playing any part I can to make that happen.”With the appointment of Richard Johnson as First Team Coach yesterday, we have a high-quality coach returning to the club, and someone who has previously worked with and helped so many of our players in the earlier parts of their careers. I know the players can’t wait to get started under him, and I’m sure he returns as eager as we all are to bring the club success.”Related

  • Richard Johnson returns to Middlesex as Stuart Law successor

  • Middlesex chairman criticised after claiming football 'is more attractive' to Black people

  • Stuart Law sacked as Middlesex head coach

  • Alan Coleman takes on top coaching role at Middlesex

  • Shaheen Shah Afridi joins Middlesex for 2022 season

Roland-Jones has made a total of 224 appearances for Middlesex across all three formats of the game, with a total of 545 wickets. His debut for the club came in 2010, when he picked up two five-wicket hauls in eight appearances, and in 2015, he made his maiden first-class hundred against Yorkshire at Lord’s.His place in club folklore was secured in the final match of the 2016 season, when he claimed a hat-trick against Yorkshire to secure the County Championship title. His final wicket completed a ten-wicket haul, and took his tally for the season to 54 at 28.22.The following year, Roland-Jones made the first of his four Test appearances, claiming five wickets on debut against South Africa at The Oval, but his hopes of starring in that winter’s Ashes were curtailed by the diagnosis of a stress fracture in his back.Alan Coleman, Middlesex’s head of Men’s Performance, said: “I’m delighted that we’ve been able to agree this extension to Toby’s contract. He is a huge character in our dressing room, a great influence to the rest of our group, and a key player for us on the field.”We saw at the back end of last season what he is capable of as a player, just like we have witnessed for many seasons beforehand, and I am certain that we’ll be seeing much more of that over the next two seasons.”

Malinga named Rajasthan Royals' fast-bowling coach for IPL 2022

Paddy Upton joins as “Team Catalyst” and will look after the players’ mental well-being

ESPNcricinfo staff11-Mar-2022Rajasthan Royals have roped in Lasith Malinga as their fast-bowling coach ahead of IPL 2022, and Paddy Upton as “Team Catalyst”.Malinga, who retired as a player in 2021, is the highest wicket-taker in the IPL with 170 scalps across nine seasons for Mumbai Indians. In 2018, he was Mumbai’s bowling mentor as well, and earlier this year, he was appointed Sri Lanka’s bowling strategy coach for the T20I series in Australia.At Royals, Malinga will work alongside his former captain Kumar Sangakkara, who is the franchise’s head coach and director of cricket, and Steffan Jones, who was named as high-performance fast-bowling coach last week.”It’s a wonderful feeling for me to return to the IPL and an absolute honour to join Rajasthan Royals, a franchise that has always promoted and developed young talent,” Malinga said. “I am excited by the pace bowling unit we have going into the tournament and looking forward to supporting all the fast bowlers with the execution of their game-plans and their overall development. I’ve made some very special memories in the IPL with Mumbai Indians and now with Royals, looking forward to new experiences and creating great memories in this journey.”Upton returns to Royals having previously worked as their coach from 2013 to 2015 and then in 2019, leading them to a top-four finish in 2013 and 2015. He will be with the team for the first four weeks of the season, after which he will support them virtually.”Being the Team Catalyst, Upton will play a crucial role in establishing team integration by bringing them together as a cohesive and mutually supporting unit, and look after their mental well-being with the use of various mental conditioning processes and activities that aid in maintaining a healthy culture and environment, especially within the restrictions of being in a bio-bubble,” a Royals statement said.Sangakkara said both Malinga and Upton would be great additions to the coaching staff. “Lasith is arguably one of the greatest T20 fast bowlers of all time, and to have a personality like his around the training ground, and the expertise he brings to the table, is certainly something we feel the team can benefit from,” he said. “We have some of the best fast bowlers in our squad and we are delighted that they will have the chance to work with Lasith and get to learn and develop further.”It’s the same with Paddy, who has been a great servant for the Royals, and has done an exceptional job in building that cohesion between players and also conditioning them mentally. We believe he will act as a great addition to our coaching staff.”Trevor Penney (assistant coach), Zubin Bharucha (strategy, development and performance director) and Dishant Yagnik (fielding coach) will continue in their respective roles.

Litton: 'Nasum bowled a game-changing spell'

In-form batter feels left-arm spinner’s success is testament to his persistence in developing his skills

Mohammad Isam03-Mar-2022Litton Das feels Nasum Ahmed’s superb spell of 4 for 10 in the first T20I against Afghanistan is a testament to the left-arm spinner’s persistence in developing his skills. Nasum’s bowling in the powerplay in which he decimated the Afghanistan top order changed the game, according to Litton, who himself made an important contribution of 60 off 44 balls to Bangladesh’s total of 155 for 8.”When we got together in the dressing room for a team meeting mid-innings, we said that this was not a big score, neither is it a small score,” Litton said. “Batters have to think if the chase is to get 150-160 runs. Whether they should be aggressive or not. Whether to preserve the wickets. Nasum bowled a game-changing spell. It would have been a different game if he didn’t give us the early breakthroughs, like if they were 40 for 1 in the powerplay. I think it was a better wicket, so he bowled brilliantly.”Bangladesh bowled Afghanistan out for 94, the fourth time in the last eight months they’ve bowled out an opposition for a double-figure total. This was Nasum’s third four-wicket haul in T20Is, and it equalled his best figures in the format, which he took against New Zealand last year.”I have never believed that he is like your average left-arm spinner,” Litton said. “I play him a lot in the nets. He always tries to do things differently, particularly in his change of pace. I think that’s important in T20s. A batter finds it easy to pick a bowler who bowls in one rhythm.”Litton, whose partnerships with Mahmudullah and Afif Hossain gave Bangladesh the platform for a big finish, put his improved form in the last few months down to his mentality.”Everyone says cricket is a mental game,” he said. “If you think clearly, you will have a lot of time in your hand. I would still say that you get time in T20s even though it is the shortest format. That’s mainly because I am in the top-order. I think it is all in the mindset, when you decide how you want to play in each format.”Litton is one of the few Bangladesh batters who is a regular in all three formats. He said that he was confident of going after Afghanistan’s bowling having played Mujeeb ur Rahman in the BPL, but added that being in form in other formats also helped him in T20s.”I think both the format and being in good form matter. It is a different ball game in each format. You have to rush a bit in T20s. You have enough time in ODIs and Tests. Being in good touch helps you in every format.”We had around 160 in our plans. If we thought of getting more runs, it would have been high-risk batting, especially against their quality of spinners. I was playing Mujeeb well, having faced him regularly in the BPL. I had the confidence to use the circle.”

Netherlands coach Ryan Campbell in hospital following heart attack

Former Australia ODI wicketkeeper-batter is awake after being in an induced coma for several days but remains in intensive care in a UK hospital

AAP and ESPNcricinfo19-Apr-2022Netherlands head coach and former Australia ODI wicketkeeper Ryan Campbell is in intensive care in a hospital in the UK after suffering a heart attack on Saturday.The 50-year-old was at a playground with his children at the weekend, before collapsing. It was reported on on Tuesday morning AWST that he remained in an induced coma although under the care of his doctors he has made some attempts successfully to breathe on his own.On Wednesday morning AWST, his brother Mark Campbell told that he was out of his coma but remained in ICU under observation.”They’ve taken the heavy sedation off, so he’s actually woken up,” Mark Campbell said.”Now they’re just looking at trying to work out what’s wrong with his heart.”He did a few tests and they’re saying there doesn’t appear at this stage to be any brain damage, his brain wasn’t starved of oxygen.”They’re not sure now why his heart is still being arrhythmic. So that’s another issue that they’re now going to look at over there.”He’s been in intensive care since Saturday night.”His wife is there with him and one of his friends from Hong Kong has flown to be there.”The family have been overwhelmed with the messages of support we’ve been getting from all over the world,”He has coached the Netherlands cricket team since April 2017 and led them on the recent limited-overs tour of New Zealand. He had been travelling back to Europe from the tour, and had visited friends and extended family in his home city of Perth just a week earlier.A swashbuckling batter and wicketkeeper who made his name in Western Australia, Campbell played two ODIs for Australia in 2002 when Adam Gilchrist was absent to spend time with his newborn son.During an illustrious 98-game first-class career between 1994 and 2006, Campbell starred for Western Australia with 6009 runs at an average of 36.31.WA cricket CEO Christina Matthews offered her support to Campbell’s family..”WA Cricket is in shock to hear of Ryan’s medical emergency after suffering a major heart attack over the long weekend,” Matthews said in a statement.”On behalf of all WA Cricket staff, players and the wider cricket community, I would like to pass on our heartfelt thoughts to Ryan, his wife Leontina and their family at this time.”We know he is in the best care, and hope he pulls through and is able to make a full and speedy recovery.”He played for Hong Kong during the 2016 Twenty20 World Cup at the age of 44.

Hardik's next goal after five IPL titles: 'To win the World Cup for India no matter what'

Titans captain says putting together a strong bowling unit made the difference for them in the tournament

Sidharth Monga30-May-20222:16

Hardik – ‘Have always enjoyed responsibility, it gets the best out of me’

Five IPL finals, five titles. One, now, as a captain in his first season with a team making its debut and representing his home state of Gujarat. Player-of-the-Match performance in that final, including the wickets of the big three of the opposition. Yet, Hardik Pandya’s bigger goal in life is to win a World Cup with India. Moments after he collected the winners’ trophy and finished his other obligations, Hardik was asked what his short-term and long-term goals were now that he had completed a successful comeback after injury troubles had taken away his bowling, and consequently his place in the Indian sides.”Absolutely to win the World Cup for India no matter what happens,” Hardik said. “I am going to give it everything I have. Always been that kind of guy, to put the team first. For me the goal will be simple: to make sure my team gets it the most.”Playing for India has always been kind of dream come true no matter how many games I have played. It has always been a pleasure for me to represent the country. The kind of love and support I have got, it is only from the Indian team point of view. Long term, short term, I want to win the World Cup no matter what happens.”Related

  • How Gujarat Titans maximised their strengths and minimised their weaknesses

  • All-round Hardik Pandya leads debutants Gujarat Titans to dream title

  • 'The stuff dreams are made of'

  • 'I wanted to show what I have worked hard for, and today was the day' – Hardik Pandya

Hardik has come close to winning a world title with India on three occasions, but all three ended in heartbreak. In 2016, his final over against Bangladesh carried India into the semi-final of the T20 World Cup but India lost to West Indies. In the Champions Trophy final against Pakistan next year, he displayed some of his hitting prowess in a scarcely believable innings, but it was too little and too late. In the semi-final of the 2019 World Cup, Hardik and Rishabh Pant carried out a mini rescue after three early wickets, but New Zealand eventually prevailed.In the IPL, though, Hardik has won every time he has got to the playoffs, four times with Mumbai Indians and now with Gujarat Titans. Asked if this was a little extra special, Hardik said yes, but only just.”Obviously, this will be a little special because I have won it as a captain,” he said. “The four that I have won before this are equally special too. Winning IPL is always special. I consider myself very lucky that I have played five finals and have lifted the trophy five times. Obviously this will leave a legacy because we are a new franchise, playing for the first time, and we are champions in the first season. But the four that I have won before this were equally special.”It will also come as personal vindication for him and coach Ashish Nehra, who invested more energy in putting together a strong bowling unit. They went into every match with six frontline options – if you count Hardik the bowler – and Rahul Tewatia as a seventh back-up bowler. Hardik said this was their philosophy from pretty early on.”Specifically, we both [Nehra and he] lean towards the bowlers,” Hardik said. “People say T20 is a batters’ game but I have always maintained that bowlers win you matches. Because if the batters don’t get a par score, if you have a gun bowling line-up, the bowlers can pull things back. We have always given ten runs fewer [than par]. Even when others have conceded 190, we have gone for ten fewer. Those ten runs win or lose you matches in the bigger picture.”For me and Ashu [Nehra], when we were starting, we wanted to create a strong and experienced bowling unit. So that even if there are times when batters don’t click, you can pull back with the bowling.”

Last-gasp Liam Trevaskis takes Durham across the line

Stand-in skipper’s late flurry seals run chase and ends Lancashire’s unbeaten start

ECB Reporters Network10-Jun-2022Liam Trevaskis produced late heroics to guide Durham to a final-over victory over Lancashire Lightning in their Vitality Blast clash at Seat Unique Riverside.The home side appeared to be on the verge of their fourth straight defeat in their chase of 131 amid outstanding bowling from Richard Gleeson, despite knocks of 46 from Ned Eckersley and 36 from Michael Jones. However, with the pressure on Trevaskis, the skipper blasted 16 runs from seven balls to steer his side over line with vital late boundaries with three balls to spare.Lancashire had produced an under-par effort with the bat, mustering only 130 from their 20 overs, with the main contribution coming from Steven Croft’s innings of 55. Durham debutant Nathan Sowter and Andrew Tye claimed three wickets apiece to limit the visitors, which proved to be crucial later in the day in delivering the win for the hosts and Lancashire’s first loss in the tournament this season.Lancashire opted to bat on a used wicket and Phil Salt looked to use the powerplay to his advantage. The opener scored quick-fire boundaries, including three in a row against Trevaskis, to get the visitors off to a bright start.However, the Durham skipper had his revenge from the fourth ball of his opening over as Salt fell for 23. In a sign of things to come, Keaton Jennings endured a difficult seven balls at the crease, scoring only three runs before he was bowled by Tye.Related

  • Feroze Khushi cracks 67 as Middlesex lose fifth in a row

  • Sussex lose 8 for 23 as Gloucestershire seal stunning comeback win

  • Brad Wheal, Chris Wood take Hampshire to four on the spin

  • Masood drives Derbyshire as top billing is shared in notable double-header

  • Alex Hales drives thumping win to put Nottinghamshire back on course

Sowter then put the clamps on the visitors after only completing a loan move from Middlesex hours before the contest. He prised out Dane Vilas lbw for 12 before taking the key wicket of Tim David bowling the powerful right-hander for only six.Further wickets from Tye and Raine allowed Durham to keep the pressure on the Lightning, while Sowter returned for his final over to remove Tom Hartley, ending the innings with impressive figures of 3 for 22.Croft was the only Lancashire batter to offer resistance with a determined half-century from 49 balls, but he fell going for a big strike to Raine in the final over before Matt Parkinson was run out from last ball of the innings, leaving the visitors with work to do to defend their total.Durham lost Graham Clark to the first ball of their reply as Liam Hurt produced a brilliant delivery first up to bowl the opener. Gleeson then came to the fore cleaning up David Bedingham and Ollie Robinson for single-digit scores to bring the Lightning back into the game. Jones steadied the Durham innings by picking his moments to find the fence and seeing off the initial threat of Gleeson.The opener made 36 before he had a rush of blood to the head and attempted a risky sweep against Hartley and was pinned lbw. Hartley drew another false stroke to notch his second wicket as Raine was caught miscuing his slog-sweep to Croft at deep backward square leg. The wickets gave the Lightning a glimmer of hope as the required rate climbed above seven for the first time.Eckersley appeared to have Durham in position to whittle off the remaining 21 runs from the final three overs, but Gleeson’s return to the attack turned the tide as he bowled him for 46 and Brydon Carse for 2.Durham needed heroics from their captain in the middle, and Trevaskis delivered by striking Hurt for a four and six in back-to-back deliveries in the penultimate over before seeing his team over the line to secure their third win of the campaign.