Fit-again Rodrigues returns to T20I squad for Women's Asia Cup

Taniya Bhatia and Simran Bahadur are the standby players for the squad of 15

ESPNcricinfo staff21-Sep-2022

Jemimah Rodrigues came back from the Women’s Hundred with an injured wrist and missed the ongoing tour of England•Associated Press

Fit-again Jemimah Rodrigues has returned to India’s 15-member T20I squad for the Women’s Asia Cup to be held in Bangladesh from October 1-15.Rodrigues missed the ongoing England tour because of a wrist injury that she picked up during her stint at the Women’s Hundred with Northern Superchargers. Since her return, Rodrigues has undergone three weeks of rehab at the National Cricket Academy in Bengaluru.Rodrigues’ inclusion is the only addition to the squad that lost 2-1 in the T20I series against England. Richa Ghosh, who impressed with her lower-order hitting during the series, retains her place as the frontline wicketkeeper.ESPNcricinfo Ltd

That meant Taniya Bhatia, who was the first choice wicketkeeper at the Commonwealth Games and didn’t get a game in the T20Is against England, has been consigned to the standby list along with medium-pacer Simran Bahadur. Hard-hitting top-order bat Kiran Prabhu Navgire, who made her debut during the England series, retains her place in the squad led by Harmanpreet Kaur.Meghna Singh and Renuka Singh are the two frontline seamers, with allrounder Pooja Vastrakar being the third-seam option. India’s spin stocks, meanwhile, are significantly varied. They have two left-arm spinners in Rajeshwari Gayakwad and Radha Yadav, while Sneh Rana and Deepti Sharma, both allrounders, offering right-arm variety.The Women’s Asia Cup is returning after a four-year gap. The seven-team tournament will be played in a round-robin format, with each team playing six matches in the league phase, before the top four advance to the semi-finals.India begin their campaign on the opening day (October 1) against Sri Lanka, before taking on Malaysia and debutants UAE on October 3 and October 4 respectively. They will then play Pakistan and Bangladesh on October 7 and 8 before rounding off their league engagements against Thailand on October 10.All matches will be held in Sylhet, where India last played during the T20 World Cup in 2014. Bangladesh are the current defending champions, having beaten India in a last-ball thriller in 2018 in Kuala Lumpur.India squad: Harmanpreet Kaur (Captain), Smriti Mandhana (vice-captain), Deepti Sharma, Shafali Verma, Jemimah Rodrigues, S Meghana, Richa Ghosh (wk), Sneh Rana, Dayalan Hemalatha, Meghna Singh, Renuka Singh, Pooja Vastrakar, Rajeshwari Gayakwad, Radha Yadav, Kiran Navgire. Standby players: Taniya Bhatia, Simran Bahadur

Fazal swings it Pakistan's way

Sixty years ago, Fazal Mahmood inspired Pakistan to an incredible triumph against England

Osman Samiuddin13-Aug-2014It had been a long tour by the time the first day of the final Test of the summer, at the Oval ended. In losing only two of the twenty-four first-class games until then and winning as many as five, Abdul Hafeez Kardar’s very young and very inexperienced Pakistan side had already done far better than most had expected. This was, after all, only their second international assignment and not even two years since they became a Test-playing nation.But they had been in England for over three months by then, having arrived on 2 May. It had been the kind of stretched, wet summer that drives men mad. They still had a month to go before returning by sea on the SS Batori, back to Karachi and on 12 August, the first day of the last Test, Pakistan’s batting – much their weaker suit – had been hustled out for a paltry 133. England’s debutantes Frank Tyson and Peter Loader – the former frighteningly quick – and the experienced Brian Statham shared the honours.Khalid Qureshi, a tall left-arm spinner, who was part of Pakistan’s first Test squad, to India in 1952-53 was in London at the time. He had chosen to take up a Pakistan government scholarship to train in England as an engineer and had thus opted to skip the tour. He probably wouldn’t have been picked anyway; Pakistan had a specialist left-arm spinner in Shujauddin Butt and Kardar, as all-rounder, was by then of the same genre.Though the pair had developed differences during the India tour – Qureshi’s father, a first-class umpire wrote pieces criticizing Kardar’s leadership – Qureshi dropped by to see his ex-teammates. ‘I used to visit the team quite often because I had weekends off,’ Qureshi remembers. ‘I met Kardar after the first day of the Oval Test and he said to me, “For god’s sake, I cannot wait for this tour to finish and be over so I can go back.”’Kardar had taken particularly badly some of the more patronizing sentiments reserved for his side. They had been crushed in the second Test at Trent Bridge and but for rain would probably have suffered similarly in the first Test at Lord’s and the third at Old Trafford. Kardar’s book on the tour, published the same year, was called ‘Test Status on Trial’ and before his retelling of the Oval Test, there was a chapter of the same title. In it, he questioned the dismissive coverage his side received in much of the press (other than newspapers such as The Times or broadcasters such as the BBC), asking whether they shouldn’t be more supportive of a young nation.Even his own didn’t given them a chance. On arrival in the UK, at a diplomatic function in London, Anjum Niaz recalls the high commissioner M.A. Ispahani’s quite undiplomatic assessment of the tourists. Niaz, a long-standing journalist and columnist, was an eyewitness to the tour, having travelled as a young girl with her father Syed Fida Hasan who was manager of the side. ‘He disdainfully called our own team “rabbits” at a reception,’ she says. ‘He said, “What do you expect from these people who need to be taught table manners?”Kardar was not one of life’s pessimists and never could it be said that he lacked confidence or belief. But such was his concern that on the advice of two senior players – the colourful Maqsood Ahmed and Fazal Mahmood – Pakistan seriously considered issuing a statement ahead of the final Test saying unequivocally that they would win the Test. The trio mulled over it during an informal meeting in the game against Warwickshire in Birmingham just a week ahead of the Test. Stuck between trying to prove that morale within the side remained high and appearing too brash, Kardar chose the conservative option and made no statement.Play had begun after lunch on the first day and Pakistan’s 133 followed scores of 87, 157, 90 and 25 for 4 in the previous Tests; in itself 133 represented a recovery from 77 for 8. The batting in unfamiliar conditions was abysmal: ‘unreliable and generally unpredictable’ with ‘a tendency to let fly in all directions,’ in the words of Geoffrey Howard, the popular manager of the MCC side.The second day was washed out, though not before Kardar’s unusually nervy mood came through again. Walking out to inspect the ground with England captain Len Hutton, Kardar said he thought play before lunch was unlikely. Hutton, unsurprisingly, thought otherwise. The umpires agreed and decided to start at 12.30 p.m., but almost as soon as they said it, a cloudburst put the ground under water for the rest of the day. Kardar wasn’t keen for his players to be out in such conditions, fearing England may run away with a lead.

Pakistan seriously considered issuing a statement ahead of the final Test saying unequivocally that they would win the Test

The next day was the pivotal one where the shape of the Test, if not the balance, became clearer. Fourteen wickets fell, 193 runs were scored and champions did what champions do. Nearly 25,000 people watched it (almost 17,000 were paid admissions, so the gate money for Pakistan would be significant for their future growth), testament in part to the popularity of tourists who had played attractive cricket in good spirit through the summer.Play began at 11.30 a.m. but the sun had been out since the morning, gradually drying up a soaked surface. Had Fazal been the god of weather himself he might not have produced more ideal conditions for his work. He put on the same kit in which he had run through India in Lucknow just under two years before, to set up Pakistan’s only Test win, and settled in to bowl straight through. For nearly three and a half hours he bowled, through the entirety of the innings. When he finished thirty overs and six wickets later, he had secured Pakistan a three-run lead.It was a typical Fazal spell; long, tight and unyielding, attacking lengths and sharp cut both ways. Resistance came from the class of Hutton, Peter May and Denis Compton, who between them contributed 93 of England’s total. But none mastered Fazal. Hutton edged a boundary early on through slips; he then played on, the ball rolling on to the stumps but not dislodging the bails. There was also one confident drive through extra cover but soon after, shaping to play on-side he failed to recognize the Fazal autograph – the leg-cutter. It snaked away, Hutton edging it high for wicketkeeper Imtiaz Ahmed to catch behind slips. At lunch, England were intact but edgy. Fazal meanwhile was in the zone; there were 11 maidens in his first 15 overs.May and Compton steadied affairs a little thereafter but never with any great conviction. Kardar’s athleticism broke the partnership at 56, a one-handed catch at gully sending May back. That was the onset of England panic and three more wickets fell before they reached three figures. Having not gotten far with a more cautious approach, Compton decided to go on the offensive, often improvising greatly. On 31, he was remarkably given two lives. Fazal dropped him off his own bowling first, running back and fumbling a high, mistimed drive.Wazir Mohammad, comfortably one of the worst fielders in a poor fielding side, then made a mess of a simple chance on the boundary between mid-wicket and long-on the very next delivery. As if that wasn’t enough, on 38, Wazir dropped him again, also off Fazal. Pakistan’s fielding had hounded them through the entire tour like a determined heckler turning up randomly but persistently to spoil the mood. And they knew the gargantuan folly of dropping Compton; Imtiaz had missed a chance when he was on 20 in the second Test at Trent Bridge and he went on to make 278.Here, however, he ran out of partners and luck. By the time he reached fifty, Pakistan were into the tail at one end. Soon Compton fell too, stepping out to drive Fazal but only edging another leg-cutter behind. It was, Compton said later, one of his ‘most difficult and memorable innings’. With untiring support from the faster but wayward Mahmood Hussain at the other end, Pakistan was able to wrap up the England innings swiftly.Peter Loader’s three wickets helped bowl Pakistan out for 133 in the first innings•Getty ImagesSpirits emboldened, Hanif Mohammad and Shujauddin came out to negotiate the last hour or so – the latter had been promoted following his gutsy, unconquered, near-two-hour 16 in the first innings (and with a brave innings against Tyson and Northamptonshire earlier). Hanif had arrived in England with a reputation, a child genius of an opener blessed with uncommon patience. He had scored consistently against the counties but his Test scores, on paper, looked thin. The substance of his spirit, however, was unquestioned.In the first test at Lord’s, he took over three hours to score 20 while Pakistan crashed to 87. In the second innings, he made 39, constructed patiently over two and half hours. At Trent Bridge he made his only half-century of the Test series, an innings that showcased the naturally attacking game Hanif always insisted was his; in two separate overs from Statham and Alec Bedser he struck three boundaries each, racing to fifty in 35 minutes with ten boundaries.Outside the Test circuit, there had been plenty of evidence of this aggression; he made 145 in just 205 minutes, with 88 runs in boundaries against Somerset two weeks before this Test. At the end of June, ahead of the second Test, he had raced to 87 in 70 minutes (17 fours and a solitary, rare six) against a Combined Services XI. That was an innings of protest at his demotion in the previous game against Nottinghamshire when Pakistan had to chase a target in quick time.Now, deep into the third day at the Oval he launched a similar blitz. Statham was hit for three fours in his first three overs and Loader for another; Kardar couldn’t understand why Hutton didn’t open with Tyson, whose furious pace had so unsettled Pakistan in the first innings. Pakistan raced to 19 without loss in five overs, all the runs coming from Hanif. Hutton switched on just a touch late, turning to the spin of Johnny Wardle and Jim McConnon on a drying pitch now given to turn. Hanif fell immediately edging Wardle to slip and, with the score doubled, Shujauddin went too, a handy, irritating hand in the bag.Pakistan stumbled at the close of play, losing two more wickets and a lead of 66. But Hanif’s mini-innings and Shujauddin’s resistance showed, above all, that on the seventh anniversary of the country’s birth, Pakistan was up for an almighty scrap.The fight continued on the Monday after the mandatory rest day, through Wazir, Hanif’s elder brother. Known to family and friends as ‘Wisden’ for his mildly obsessive nose for cricket trivia, Wazir’s tour had been a strange one. There had been some resilient contributions from the lower reaches of the middle order, none more than a 69 against Northamptonshire, which took Pakistan from 209 for seven, to 368. He actually ended up topping the batting averages through the summer, but his fielding was so poor – the reprieves of Compton the most recent, damning evidence – he almost didn’t play.’He had been dropping catches and so Kardar decided to drop him for that Test,’ remembers Anjum Niaz. ‘However, the selection committee headed by my father and the assistant manager [Masood] Salahuddin and Fazal, all outvoted Kardar. So Wazir did play, and his contribution was crucial for Pakistan. They said later that nobody could face Tyson, except Wazir who held his own against him at Northants.’In front of 24,000 people, Pakistan lost four wickets within the first hour of the morning, three to an increasingly threatening Wardle. Only 85 ahead, with two wickets in hand, fat ladies the world over were singing when Wazir and the spinner Zulfiqar Ahmed came together in a defining ninth-wicket stand. The union was at once cautious and bracing; Zulfiqar, the team jester and Kardar’s brother-in-law to boot, took his chances. He cut Wardle, before pulling him for boundaries, happily mixing unorthodox defence with fortuitous runs through slips and third man. The humour stood him in good stead; after every Tyson over that he emerged unscathed, he would turn to the pavilion and wave, making sure his more established colleagues were watching and learning how to play fast bowling.Wazir played a straight foil, an innings of Karachiite smarts to counter Zulfiqar’s carefree Lahori musings. Having taken nearly half an hour over his first run, he stole singles to the covers, to fine leg, to midwicket, some sharp, others downright foolish. Through other moments he simply kept bowlers out, concentrating as hard as his brother was becoming renowned for. In this manner the pair gradually deflated the bubble of England’s momentum, over nearly two hours. Hutton made regular changes, the realization slowly dawning upon him that the game might be slipping.

Wazir played a straight foil, an innings of Karachiite smarts to counter Zulfiqar’s carefree Lahori musings

Eventually Zulfiqar fell for 34, the sixth of Wardle’s eventual seven victims but having helped put on 58 priceless runs. That was the cue for Wazir to uncoil, having gathered steadily. He now opted for strokes in front of the wicket, twice driving Loader through covers and driving Statham straight making 18 of the 24 runs of the last wicket stand with Hussain. When Hussain fell after 25 minutes–having done well to go beyond Alf Gover’s conclusion that he ‘only carried his bat to take guard’ – the broad significance of those 24 runs was immediately clear; last-gasp momentum shifts in cricket hold great, almost superstitious, value and more so in a match with so much swing anyway. The exact significance of it would emerge later.After nearly three hours, Wazir was left unbeaten on 42, worth at least twice as much given the circumstances, having doubled Pakistan’s score with the last two wickets. ‘There are very few players who have batted so well for their side at No. 8 in a Test match,’ Kardar wrote later, relieved no doubt he had been outvoted, possibly chastened that he had to have been. England needed 168 to wrap up the series 2-0.Again, Fazal had other ideas. Another headstrong character not given to self-doubt, Fazal was convinced the total was defendable. Dismissing Hutton, Compton, May and Tom Graveney – the very meat of England’s batting – in the first innings helped. ‘This time I had adopted a new strategy,’ he wrote in his autobiography. ‘I would change the line of the ball every now and again. For instance, I would bowl the leg-cutter from the return crease which was a wicket-taking ball. There was also a hidden in-swinger from the return crease, an in-swinger from the middle of the crease and an in-swinger from close to the stumps.’In particular, Hutton struggled to pick the variation, playing and missing repeatedly. In the over in which he fell he was hit on the pad three times in four balls. He was almost caught driving just over covers, which induced a quasi-sledge from Fazal: ‘This is not Hutton-like.’ Next ball he was gone, caught behind, inevitably, to the leg-cutter. Fazal reckoned that over two innings he had bowled twenty-seven different types of deliveries at the great man to dismiss him twice.But for all of Fazal’s incisiveness, England’s quality still threatened to come out on top. Two partnerships of substance took the score dangerously close to the target. Reg Simpson and May put on 51 in just 40 minutes and as the surface became harder, May especially settled into an elegant groove with Compton providing support, albeit cautiously. Hussain was proving expensive at one end and the spinners Zulfiqar and Shujauddin were economical, but without bite. May looked authoritative, twice hooking Hussain for boundaries.When they began the chase, England had 155 minutes of the fourth day left and when May and Compton were at the crease, it looked like the game might finish that evening. The rush was to prove fatal, because at 109 for 2, with an entire day to come there was no need for it. According to Fazal, Kardar looked like he knew the game was up. So he went up to Kardar just as the captain was contemplating a change, snatched the ball from him and arbitrarily told him to stand on the off-side and rushed in to bowl before Kardar could change his mind. Wanting to force matters, May pushed at one that didn’t come onto the bat, only lofting it to Kardar: breakthrough.Hanif Mohammad: a child genius of an opener, blessed with uncommon patience•Getty ImagesEngland’s eagerness to finish the game that day – Hutton was said to be worried about the weather as well – then manifested itself in another vital, strategic miscalculation. The wicketkeeper Godfrey Evans was sent in above Tom Graveney because he was thought to be a more flexible option, capable equally of batting out the day but also of finishing off the game; if they chose to go for it, England had just over half an hour left in the day to make 59. Kardar shrewdly called for a drinks break as Evans walked in, sensing that this could be a moment. Bowlers, fielders and the leader took stock.It paid dividends. Fazal worked away at Evans’ legs before knocking back his stumps: 115-4. In came the protected Graveney and minutes later he too was gone, leg-before to Shujauddin to a ball that kept a little low: 116-5. With that, the last recognized batting pair of Compton and Wardle was at the crease. As the threat of an England win on the day receded, the field came in, as many as six close-in fielders crowding around the pair.Fazal was in the zone, feeling it, dropping ball after ball precisely where he wanted. With a couple of overs remaining in the day, he turned to Kardar. ‘Hafeez, what if I get Compton out?’ In Punjabi, Kardar replied, ‘Then we win the match.’ Compton duly edged one behind where once again Imtiaz made no mistake: it was his sixth catch of the game, all off Fazal. England ended the day alive but shaken and dazed at 125 for 6 and looking, as would be pointed out, a batsman short.An uneasy evening followed for Kardar. He visited Fazal’s room to discuss the match, only to be met coldly. ‘He asked what I thought about the match,’ Fazal wrote. ‘What should be the line of action? I said that he was the captain and that he should know better.’ The two of them never really got along, a tension between them built on several layers.Both formed separate power centres in the side, Kardar as captain, Fazal as match-winner. Fazal pointedly called him Hafeez – not Kardar as was now the norm – for that is how he had known him before Kardar went to Oxford. A man rooted firmly in the spirits of Lahore, Fazal sneered at Kardar’s sudden transformation post-Oxford into a haughty, snooty and worldly leader. There was also friction from the fierce rivalries of the Lahore club scene; Fazal felt Kardar was biased in not picking players from Mamdot club, where Fazal initially played and Kardar had also before leaving.Nothing contributed as much, however, as the rivalry between Mian Mohammad Saeed, Fazal’s father-in-law, and Kardar. Saeed was Kardar’s predecessor as Pakistan captain in their unofficial Tests before they got status; before the tour Saeed had been in the running to return as captain with the support of many players, but eventually lost out after political intervention, possibly prompted by Kardar. On tour, Kardar was constantly wary of Saeed’s supporters undermining him – not just the players, even the manager.Kardar spent much of the night wondering whether to open with spin to support Fazal the next morning or opt for a seam bowler. Wardle was left-handed so Kardar felt Zulfiqar’s off-breaks were an option. But he remembered too that Wardle was a capable batsman and had biffed Pakistan around in an entertaining 72 in their game against Yorkshire at the end of June. The team arrived at the Oval for the last morning in a quiet mood, reflecting their captain’s pensiveness. Zulfiqar, as he often did, lightened the mood by producing a morning headline pleading with Wardle: ‘Oh Johnny can you stop Pakistan?’

Fazal leapt for joy looking around for someone to hug. Some of the others ran towards Hanif. Some clapped politely as one might after a boring speech. Imtiaz, gloved hands behind his back, looked sheepish as if he might have broken something and was subsequently trying to avoid suspicion

Fifteen minutes before the start of play and Kardar still wasn’t sure of his opening ploy. A senior Pakistani government official arrived in the dressing room, a needless distraction. Only when he left five minutes before play began did Kardar finally decide to back his own instinct for pace and open with Hussain and Fazal. It almost paid off immediately, but Alimuddin dropped Wardle at second slip on 129 – off Hussain – and it seemed the slip might prove costly for Pakistan.But Kardar’s gut wasn’t wrong. Tyson fell after a tortuous half hour having added only six to England’s overnight total, caught by Imtiaz off Fazal. Wardle now saw the need to farm the strike and bat at both ends. Loader came in and drove Fazal past mid-on for an all-run four. Next ball he drove to cover and stole a single, bringing Wardle back on strike. Captain and bowler had a discussion. Deep midwicket was brought in to a short square leg; Wardle wasn’t going to chance slogs right now. Fazal instructed Shujauddin: ‘You put your right foot here, left foot there, unfold your hands and stand ready for a catch. The ball will come right into your hands and you just grab it.’He bowled the leg-cutter – coming into the left-hander – and Wardle duly prodded it straight to Shujauddin who didn’t need to move. The game was nearly up now. Loader soon skied the deserving Hussain to cover without addition to the total. McConnon and Statham were the final pair with 30 still to get, the former attempting to keep most of the strike. For nearly 15 minutes they stayed alive. But just before half past noon, not even an hour into the day and having played out five balls of Fazal’s 30th over, McConnon bunted the last ball out towards extra cover.The path the ball followed was perfect for Hanif, running in towards it from conventional cover and towards the stumps. Without stutter he picked up the ball one-handed and in his stride threw at the stump-and-a-half he could see. The ball struck and McConnon was short, adding to the misery by clumsily falling over as he ran on and slid. Umpire Frank Chester, standing behind the stumps rather than to the side to assess line calls, raised his left hand instantly, before McConnon had completed his fall. It was a slick piece of fielding not just for the side but for the time as well. It was over; Pakistan had won by 24 runs, exactly what their last wicket in the second innings had put on.Fazal leapt for joy looking around for someone to hug. Some of the others ran towards Hanif. Some clapped politely as one might after a boring speech. Imtiaz, gloved hands behind his back, looked sheepish as if he might have broken something and was subsequently trying to avoid suspicion. Others loitered around him not sure what to do. Kardar looked relieved, leading the side off with a beaming Fazal alongside him.Back home in Pakistan, the result reverberated instantly, for thousands upon thousands had been tuning into Radio Pakistan’s daily relay of BBC commentary. Coverage of each day of the Tests would start after lunch in the UK, after 6 p.m. Pakistan time. Either way this last day wasn’t going to last beyond lunch. Niaz Ahmed, president of the Sind Cricket Association twigged that the Test would be over before Pakistan got to hear about it, so he got on the phone to Iskander Mirza, then steadily working his way up the pecking order of power in Pakistan as defence secretary (he would soon become Pakistan’s last governal-general and first President).’My father rang up Mirza and told him about the commentary,’ says Jaweed Niaz. ‘He spoke to Radio Pakistan, who got in touch with BBC and they said they can’t do it. Mirza said “What nonsense, who is this BBC?” He then rang up the Duke of Edinburgh directly and complained. The Duke said of course they would do it. And they did, so that on the fifth day commentary started when play began.’From any angle it was an incredible outcome. Pakistan had become the first – and till now, the only – team to win a Test on their first tour to England and to not lose the Test series. The country had only organized its first first-class tournament the November before, which saw the birth of the Quaid-e-Azam trophy. They’d played their first official Test less than two years ago. In terms of first-class experience, the players were rabbits; only six of the entire 18-member squad had played more than forty first-class games by the time the Oval Test began.Fazal Mahmood bowled long, tight and unyielding spells to finish with 12 for 99•Getty ImagesMost of their experience had been built in a competitive club cricket structure in Lahore and Karachi and an even more intense college rivalry between the two great educational institutions of Lahore, Islamia and Government colleges. Ten of the eighteen players, in fact, were products of the two colleges and their games. And it was a young squad, with an average age of 24, with only two players over 30. But only Kardar had played more than 10 Tests and the Oval was only his 12th.On the other hand, England were a strong side, arguably the best in the world. In the decade between 1951 and 1961, they won 14 of 20 Test series, winning 42 out of 89 Tests. At home they were almost unbeatable, winning 9 out of 11 home series and losing only seven Tests. They’d beaten India 3-0 at home in 1952, Australia 1-0 in 1953 to regain the Ashes after 19 years and they went on to beat Australia 3-1 in Australia after playing Pakistan.They had Hutton, already a bone fide great; Compton who was among the finest; May who would establish himself as a post-war legend over the decade; Evans who was unparalleled at the time as a pure wicketkeeper; Tyson who was just beginning a brief, but fiery career as a very quick and very smart fast bowler; and Statham, who was well on the way to becoming one of the finest English fast bowlers ever.They all came from the finest domestic system in the game. They owned the game and were its modern creators. They had ruled over much of the planet, including the territory that was now Pakistan, until very recently. And now Pakistan somehow had beaten them in battle and shared the spoils of war. It was unthinkable. The players celebrated late into the night and early into the morning at a function organized by the High Commissioner Ispahani. Messages of congratulations poured in from all over the world.Kardar, who had fought tigerishly for Test status and from whom the tour had required so much, was most relieved. ‘With this victory, we had confirmed our status as a Test playing nation,’ he wrote. The next day, nine members of the team that played at The Oval turned up at Lord’s to play Canada. It was another wet, drizzly day though not as miserable anymore.This is an extract from Osman Samiuddin’s book on Pakistan cricket, due to be published by HarperCollins India in November 2014

Agarwal, Yuvraj give Daredevils victory at last

ESPNcricinfo staff15-Apr-2015Delhi Daredevils knew that defeat would make them holders of the longest IPL losing run (12), and gave it their all on the field•BCCIVijay was dismissed for 19, but Virender Sehwag’s aggressive 47 kept the run-rate at over seven an over•BCCIHe shared a 71-run, second-wicket stand with Wriddhiman Saha, who slammed three sixes during his 39 off 28•BCCIKings XI were 104 for 1 in the 14th over when the Daredevils spinners clawed the visitors back into the game. Saha perished after lofting JP Duminy to Nathan Coulter-Nile at deep cover•BCCISehwag fell in the very next over, and though Glenn Maxwell hit Imran Tahir for two sixes, he was bowled off a legbreak from the spinner. Tahir ended with figures of 4-0-43-3•BCCIAxar Patel and George Bailey tried to accelerate at the death, but Daredevils fought back to keep the hosts to 165. Kings XI’s innings ended with Axar’s slog safely pouched in the hands of Angelo Mathews•BCCIKings XI got an early breakthrough in their defence when Sandeep Sharma dismissed Shreyas Iyer for 6•BCCIBut Duminy was fluent, stroking his way to 21•BCCIUntil his innings ended in unfortunate fashion when he was run out after colliding with Axar•BCCIMayank Agarwal was unfazed, though, his 48-ball 68 featuring seven fours and two sixes•BCCIDaredevls’ record buy Yuvraj Singh also rose to the occasion, flicking three sixes over the leg side. He smashed 54 off 39•BCCIThe pair added 106 in 11 overs, as the visitors closed in on victory•BCCIHowever, neither batsmen could quite complete the chase, as two wickets in two balls injected gave Kings XI a glimmer. Yuvraj was the first to go, dismissed after Sandeep Sharma pulled a blinder from midwicket…•BCCI… and when Agarwal was bowled off a full toss from Anureet Singh, Daredevils were left needing seven off nine balls•BCCIMathews, though, ensured his team’s losing run wouldn’t stretch any further, sealing the win with a four down the ground with one ball remaining•BCCI

Sunrisers' playoff chances will slip away if they don't win against Mumbai Indians

Mumbai challenge could prove tricky since Rohit’s side have very little to lose

S Sudarshanan16-May-20222:35

Should Rohit experiment with batting down the order?

Big pictureOkay, let’s get this straight. Bowling isn’t really Sunrisers Hyderabad’s major worry. Yes, they have conceded runs at an economy rate of 8.74, which is the second-most. But it is not too much if you see that the best team has an economy rate of 8.09.That Sunrisers are still in contention for the playoffs – after five straight losses following five straight wins – is purely down to their batting from Nos. 3 to 6. Rahul Tripathi, Aiden Markram and Nicholas Pooran have been the key players at those positions and Sunrisers average 35.5 per dismissal for those spots combined, the best among the teams in IPL 2022.Kane Williamson’s run at the top of the order has been quite a forgettable one; his batting average of 18.9 this season is only better than Rohit Sharma’s 18.2 among captains. Moreover, his strike rate of 92.9 is the fifth-worst by any player to have batted in ten innings in an IPL season.With Abhishek Sharma being the leading run-getter for Sunrisers this season, it is perhaps time for Williamson to move down the order with either Glenn Phillips, who can bat anywhere in the top five, or Tripathi to take his spot at the top in order to maximise the powerplay. After all, Sunrisers have to win both their remaining matches in order to keep their hopes of a top-four finish alive.LIVE in the USA

Watch the match on ESPN+ in English and in Hindi.

For Mumbai Indians, though, it is all about continuing to check out how their players do at different spots with an eye on the next season, something they have already started. Very little of Tristan Stubbs could be seen against Chennai Super Kings and they could continue to back him in the middle order, while young Tilak Varma continues to impress. While Mumbai are playing for pride, stopping another team from qualifying could be enough motivation to bring out their A-game.In the newsMedium-pacer Akash Madhwal has joined Mumbai Indians as a replacement for the injured Suryakumar Yadav.Likely XIsMumbai Indians: 1 Ishan Kishan (wk), 2 Rohit Sharma (capt), 3 Tilak Varma, 4 Tristan Stubbs, 5 Tim David, 6 Daniel Sams, 7 Hrithik Shokeen, 8 Ramandeep Singh, 9 Jasprit Bumrah, 10 Riley Meredith, 11 Kumar Kartikeya SinghSunrisers Hyderabad: 1 Abhishek Sharma, 2 Kane Williamson (capt), 3 Rahul Tripathi, 4 Aiden Markram, 5 Nicholas Pooran (wk), 6 Washington Sundar, 7 Shashank Singh/Glenn Phillips, 8 Marco Jansen/Kartik Tyagi, 9 Bhuvneshwar Kumar, 10 Umran Malik, 11 T NatarajanStrategy puntBoth Rohit and Ishan Kishan strike at 90 or lower against Washington Sundar. As a result, it could pay for Sunrisers to bring the offspinner in early.Jasprit Bumrah has dismissed Kane Williamson once in ten T20 innings and Nicholas Pooran twice in three innings. That is perhaps a case for holding Bumrah back for the second half of the inningsStats that matter Sunrisers have won only one of their nine matches at the Wankhede Stadium, where Mumbai have a win percentage of 62.3 Mumbai have conceded 94 sixes, while Sunrisers have conceded 92, which are the second and the third most by a team this season. These two are in the bottom four in terms of hitting sixes

Wolves now tracking teenage gem with "great potential" for O’Neil – report

da realbet: Wolverhampton Wanderers have been credited with an interest in signing a teenage gem for Gary O’Neil as they look to continue their plans to build for the future.

Wolves building for the future but struggling in the present

da bwin: It has been a nightmare start to the Premier League season for Wolves and O’Neil. After seven games, they are one of four sides without a win (along with Ipswich Town, Crystal Palace and Southampton), while they have taken just a single point for their efforts, putting them bottom of the table.

In their favour, they have endured one of the toughest fixture lists in the Premier League so far, with games against Arsenal, Chelsea, Liverpool, Aston Villa and Newcastle United already out of the way for the Old Gold, but it remains a disappointing start to the campaign and O’Neil is under early pressure to turn things round amid fan disgruntlement.

Their poor form stretches into the back end of the 23/24 campaign, with Wolves having won just one of their last 17 Premier League games, but it is not yet expected to cost O’Neil his job even as it continues into October. It follows a summer in which they lost key duo Max Kilman and Pedro Neto, netting the club almost £100m which was not all reinvested in the playing squad.

Max Kilman

When it was, it was spent on younger players, with no outfield player over the age of 23 signed, and only Sam Johnstone falling into that category across the squad. Now, they could well continue that theme with the club linked with another exciting young talent.

Wolves’ summer additions

Player

Age

Fee (as per Transfermarkt)

Andre

23

€22m

Rodrigo Gomes

20

€15m

Sam Johnstone

31

€11.9m

Pedro Lima

18

€10m

Tommy Doyle

22

€5m

Bastien Meupiyou

18

€5m

Carlos Forbs

20

Loan

Jorgen Strand Larsen

24

Loan

Wolves chase South Korean gem

That is according to South Korean journalist Joel Kim, who relays reports from South Korea that Wolves are now closely monitoring talented attacker Yun Do-Young ahead of a potential future move.

The 17-year-old, who Kim describes as a player witth “great potential”, has managed a goal and two assists in senior Korean League football thus far after breaking into the first team earlier this season, with just 500 senior minutes to his name.

Football Scout Trey took to X to dub him “one of the best prospects in South Korea”, and he has represented South Korea at youth level, making his U20 debut last month at just 17 years old after progressing through the U19 and U17 setups.

Wolves now eyeing unbeaten O'Neil replacement compared to Sir Alex Ferguson

The pressure is growing on O’Neil…

ByTom Cunningham Oct 11, 2024

Wolves, of course, already boast South Korean talent Hwang Hee-Chan, who arrived for just £15m from RB Leipzig and has been a hit at Molineux, scoring 22 times in 102 games for the Old Gold and becoming a fan favourite thanks to his work rate even if his finishing can be wayward.

Were Yun Do-Young to follow in his compatriots footsteps at a fraction of the cost, the 17-year-old may become a very popular signing in the Midlands very quickly.

Chelsea in direct contact with £161k-per-week star ahead of potential move

Chelsea are thought to be in direct contact with a £161,000-per-week attacker, ahead of a potential move for the player in 2025.

Chelsea debating move for new striker next year

The stellar form of Nicolas Jackson – who’s bagged four goals and three assists in eight appearances so far this season – is giving Todd Boehly and BlueCo serious thinking to do ahead of both January and next summer.

Man United perform U-turn with £200k-per-week Chelsea star now top target

The Red Devils really want him.

ByEmilio Galantini Oct 9, 2024

Despite their widely reported links to a fresh centre-forward option, Chelsea ended the last summer window without the signing of a new striker, but Jackson’s impressive performances are making a statement and earning praise from manager Enzo Maresca.

“The way he works off the ball has been fantastic. He and Cole, sometimes had to defend three-on-two,” said Maresca on Jackson’s excellent form.

“So I am happy with Nicolas in terms of numbers – goals and assists – but especially happy because the way he has worked has been fantastic.”

Nicolas Jackson scores for Chelsea

However, despite the Senegalese proving all of his doubters wrong, it is believed that Stamford Bridge chiefs remain in debate over whether to re-enter the market for a world-class new frontman.

Reliable journalist Simon Phillips, writing via his Substack recently, claims Chelsea are monitoring Ipswich Town star Liam Delap, among a plethora of other targets, as club employees ponder moving for a chief goalscorer who can lead Maresca’s lead line.

The signing of a striker in January is still a very real possibility at Chelsea, according to Phillips, with Delap, Benjamin Sesko, Viktor Gyokeres, Victor Boniface, Evan Ferguson and familiar face Victor Osimhen on their target list.

Chelsea made a last-gasp summer bid to sign Osimhen, involved in a high-profile race with Saudi side Al-Ahli for his services, but the Nigerian couldn’t agree a move to either side and he ended up signing for Turkish Süper Lig champions Galatasaray on loan.

Media sources claim Osimhen’s Galatasaray deal has a break-clause, though, meaning interested sides could swoop in to secure his services as soon as the winter window.

Chelsea in direct contact with Osimhen ahead of potential move

According to journalist Rudy Galetti, via X, Chelsea are in direct contact with Osimhen and maintain their interest from the summer – so a move for the £161,000-per-week attacker is still plausible.

The 25-year-old boasts two goals and four assists across four appearances in all competitions for Galatasaray, as he looks to impress elite suitors and work his way towards a more favoured destination.

Osimhen’s new release clause stands at around £75 million, if clubs wish to strike a deal in January, but sides could also sign him for £63 million if they wait until next summer instead (RAI Sport).

Appearances

25

Goals

15

Assists

3

Shots Per 90

3.86

Key Passes Per 90

1.05

Successful Take-Ons Per 90

0.73

Ex-Chelsea midfielder John Obi-Mikel, who knows the player personally, recently revealed that he was pining for a move to west London before having to settle for the Super Lig.

“I know what Victor wanted, I know what the club offered him, I know where we got to, we finally got to a compromise, both sides had to compromise, I was just some little things here and there, paperwork, medical, and a few issues we just couldn’t get over the line and we didn’t have much time,” said Obi-Mikel on Osimhen’s failed Chelsea move.

“Both sides really played their part in terms of getting the deal done, and I commend Chelsea for that because I can see their ambition of where they want to take this club now and also on Victor’s side, how much he really wanted to come to the club.”

How does the ACSU function?

The anti-corruption and security unit (ACSU) in the IPL explained

Nagraj Gollapudi21-May-2013What is the anti-corruption and security unit (ACSU)?
The ACSU is the ICC watchdog, hired by the BCCI to provide cover to the players and monitor the activities both on the ground and the team hotel.How does the ACSU operate?
The ACSU duty usually begins between one and two months before the tournament. In addition to carrying out reconnaissance at every venue, one of the initial exercises the ACSU officers carry out, as part of the awareness programme, is to impart education to players on the history of corruption in cricket. They are then told how the modus operandi of the bookies, how they usually groom players, how the bookies operate, how the players can be lured, the different ways a bookie can make the initial approach, what needs to be done in case of an approach, if there is a threat to the player’s life or if someone is trying to blackmail him what steps need to be taken, the dos and don’ts in every situation. That template is listed out to the players and officials from every team before every IPL.What is the strength of the ACSU in the IPL?
Although the exact number of the ACSU workforce is not known, at every IPL venue there are at least two ACSU officers providing cover at the team hotel as well as the grounds on both match as well as non-match days. In addition, every year a certain number of active Indian police officials are recruited on a temporary basis to lend a helping hand. From the 2013 season, in the wake of the spot-fixing scandal, the BCCI decided to appoint an extra vigilance officer who will travel with every team.What does BCCI’s anti-corruption unit do?
In 2012, the BCCI appointed its own domestic anti-corruption unit under the stewardship of former ICC ACSU head Ravi Sawani. Along with him there are four other officers – all former cops – who have been exclusively hired to put an anti-corruption structure in place and install programmes designed to educate all the teams in domestic cricket in India.Do both ACSU and BCCI’s anti-corruption unit work together during the IPL?
No. ACSU works independently. The BCCI’s anti-corruption unit is not involved in the IPL.What happens if the ACSU spots anything dodgy or a player informs the unit that an approach was made?
The ACSU officer does not have the power to arrest anyone. Based on the evidence he can prepare a report by referring to the tournament code of conduct before passing the information to the BCCI’s ACU, which then will forward the report to the board’s disciplinary committee, which has the powers to determine the punishment.From when was the ACSU involved in the IPL?

In 2008, the ACSU served the IPL merely in the role of observers. In 2009 the BCCI initially hired a private security agency when the tournament was shifted to South Africa but were eventually persuaded to bring the ACSU on board. That contract, which stipulates that the BCCI pays a one-time fee to the ACSU for the year, has been renewed every year till date.Has the ACSU has caught anyone red-handed?
Considering the ACSU acts like an undercover agent, they remain invisible and so do their activities. Reportedly, the ACSU frequently receives information from players, coaches, team or franchise officials about approaches and suspicious behaviour, but they are never made public. The ACSU acts with discretion and in case the matter is serious, the BCCI is made aware.How do the players report anything suspicious?
The hotline number for the ACSU is displayed prominently in press boxes and dressing rooms.

Em evolução técnica, Du Queiroz vai se tornando essencial no Corinthians

MatériaMais Notícias

da bet7k: Titular nos dois últimos jogos do Corinthians, contra Deportivo Cali, da Colômbia, pela Libertadores, e Red Bull Bragantino, pelo Brasileirão, e sendo destaque em ambos, Du Queiroz tem ganho cada vez mais papel de importância no Timão.

continua após a publicidadeRelacionadasCorinthiansVítor Pereira, do Corinthians, evita julgamentos em declarações de Jorge Jesus sobre o FlamengoCorinthians09/05/2022CorinthiansVítor Pereira revela desgaste por sequência de jogos do Corinthians: ‘Raciocínio está mais lento’Corinthians09/05/2022CorinthiansVítor Pereira exalta entrega do Corinthians contra o Braga: ‘Gosto de jogar bem, mas prefiro ganhar’Corinthians08/05/2022

da supremo

> GALERIA – Veja todos os técnicos estrangeiros da história corintiana
> TABELA – Confira a tabela e simule os jogos do Timão no Brasileirão

Ao lado de Róger Guedes, o garoto é o atleta do elenco corintiano com mais jogos em 2022 até aqui. Foram 22 partidas disputadas, sendo 17 como titular – mesmos números do atacante.

Em relação aos minutos em campo, Du é o terceiro jogador de linha do plantel no Timão, atrás apenas do zagueiro João Victor e também de Róger Guedes.

A juventude do camisa 37, que tem 22 anos, poderia ser fator preponderante para essa presença massiva, já que o Corinthians vive um processo de rodízio no elenco principal e isso não comprometeria fisicamente principalmente atletas mais experientes. E, realmente, a superioridade na resistência joga a favor da prata da casa, porém, a evolução técnica e o cumprimento do papel tático são os principais fatores que tem transformado Queiroz em presença constante nos jogos do Timão.

Muito questionado por parte da torcida no início da temporada, Du Queiroz tem se mostrado cada vez mais eficiente nos aspectos defensivos e potencializando a sua principal característica, a qualidade no passe.

Du é o segundo atleta do Corinthians com mais passes certos neste Brasileirão até aqui. São 170, com apenas12 errados, um aproveitamento de 93,4%, ficando atrás apenas de João Victor no clube do Parque São Jorge.

O camisa 37 também registra bons números nas viradas de jogo, algo fundamental na posição que ele atua, como primeiro homem do meio-campo. Em cinco jogos da competição foram três, todas bem sucedidas.

O crescimento de Du Queiroz aconteceu no mesmo período em que o Timão acertou a contratação de Maycon, por empréstimo até o fim do ano.

Acreditava-se que o jogador, que veio cedido pelo Shakhtar Donetsk, da Ucrânia, por conta do conflito entre os ucranianos e a Rússia, ocuparia o setor de primeiro volante, algo que não era da origem do atleta quando deixou o Corinthians, em 2018, mas que ele desenvolveu na Europa.

No entanto, a chegada de Maycon além de não ter impactado no trabalho de Du Queiroz, também potencializou o futebol da cria corintiana, que se fixou como primeiro volante, tendo sempre ao seu lado um escape.

E o Timão, que vinha em uma tendência de jogar em 4-1-4-1, com apenas um cabeça de área, dois meias na armação encostando na área, e dois atletas pelos extremos do gramado, passou a ter mais uma cara de 4-2-3-1, com dois meias de qualidade na saída de jogo, com um à frente armando o time, sendo esses os principais sistemas usados por um treinador como Vítor Pereira, que não tem apego algum com esquema tático.

Juntos, Maycon e Du Queiroz já deram sete passes para finalizações em cinco jogos do Campeonato Brasileiro – três de Du -, sendo que a primeira se tornou assistência para gol no último domingo (8), quando o camisa 37 aproveitou a bola cortada por Willian para servir Renato Augusto, que finalizou da entrada da área e garantiu a vitória corintiana por 1 a 0 sobre o Massa Bruta, no início do segundo tempo.

Contudo, a sequência de Du no Corinthians tem tudo para ganhar uma pausa nesta quarta-feira (11). Por ter jogado boa parte da partida contra o Fortaleza, no último domingo (1º), por conta da lesão sofrida por Paulinho, e sido titular contra Deportivo Cali-COL e Red Bull Bragantino, a tendência é que o camisa 37 seja reserva no confronto decisivo da terceira fase da Copa do Brasil, diante da Portuguesa-RJ, na Neo Química Arena, nesta quarta-feira (11).

continua após a publicidade

É hoje? São Paulo busca quebrar jejum como visitante contra o Red Bull Bragantino

MatériaMais Notícias

da realbet: O São Paulo enfrenta o Red Bull Bragantino neste sábado (23), às 16h30, no Nabi Abi Chedid, pelo Campeonato Brasileiro, buscando vencer o adversário pela primeira vez como visitante desde que o clube de Bragança Paulista se juntou com a Red Bull, em 2020.

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da esport bet: > GALERIA
Presidente do São Paulo vira meme após montagem com Roberto Carlos

TABELA
​> Veja tabela do Brasileirão 2022 e simule os próximos jogos

De lá para cá, foram três jogos do São Paulo em Bragança Paulista contra os donos da casa, sendo que em todos o Tricolor foi derrotado. Na primeira, vitória do Massa Bruta por 4 a 2, pelo Brasileirão, no fatídico jogo da discussão do então treinador Fernando Diniz com o meia Tchê Tchê.

Depois, em duelo válido pelo Brasileiro de 2020, mais uma derrota, desta vez pelo placar de 1 a 0, com gol de Luan Cândido. Para fechar a trinca, o São Paulo foi derrotado por 4 a 3 na segunda rodada do Paulistão desse ano. O Tricolor saiu atrás, virou o marcador, mas levou a virada no final.

Além deste jejum fora de casa, o retrospecto do São Paulo contra o Red Bull Bragantino no Morumbi também não é muito bom. Desde a junção, foram quatro jogos, com uma vitória (1 a 0), um empate (1 a 1) e duas derrotas (3 a 2 e 2 a 1).

VEJA TODOS OS JOGOS DO SÃO PAULO CONTRA O RED BULL BRAGANTINO FORA DE CASA

Red Bull Bragantino4 x 3São Paulo – Paulistão 2022
Red Bull Bragantino1 x 0São Paulo – Brasileirão 2021
Red Bull Bragantino4 x 2São Paulo – Brasileirão 2020

'Managed environment' in place for Women's World Cup, no strict bubbles or daily Covid tests

“There are some general guidelines that are required, but we’re asking players and teams to just be sensible,” says Geoff Allardice

Shashank Kishore28-Feb-2022Strict bio-bubbles and daily Covid tests have been done away with for the 2022 Women’s World Cup in New Zealand, with the ICC planning to stage the tournament in a “managed environment” instead. The rules have been put in place after considering the fact that all teams and officials in the host country would have undergone Mandatory Isolation Quarantine (MIQ) upon arrival.”I think the approach is around having a managed environment around the tournament,” ICC chief executive Geoff Allardice explained in a chat with the media. “Testing will be infrequent; it won’t be daily testing. It’s really about players taking responsibility knowing they are in the country for a month and living away for that period not locked into a very tight bubble. It’s not going to be practical; it’s certainly not going to allow teams to play their best on the field.Related

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  • Lanning: Nine players at the WC would be 'interesting'

“There are some general guidelines that are required, but we’re asking players and teams to just be sensible, stay away from areas that are likely to create transmission. The other thing is, we found out in last few tournaments – like at the Under-19 World Cup [in the Caribbean in January-February] – is even though we had number of positive tests, the number of people displaying symptoms were very low. We want to focus on keeping people safe and healthy. It’s a bit of a change from where we may have been six months ago.”Allardice stressed on how tough the logistics of ensuring all teams reach New Zealand – whose borders are only partially open – first and then facilitating adequate preparation time following MIQs have been.”In November, the New Zealand government increased quarantine period to ten days, so we added extra time for teams to prepare. Then it went back to seven days. So, logistically, it has been challenging with dates and timings,” Allardice said. “They are now restrictions on number of people who can attend matches. We’re hopeful as the situation unfolds, we might be able to get a higher capacity at venues during the second half of the tournament.”With Covid still a major concern, the ICC has tweaked the playing conditions to ensure that all games go ahead as planned. One of the measures is to allow teams to take the field if they have a minimum of nine fit players available. Teams have been allowed extra travelling reserves to prevent such a scenario from cropping up.Allardice said learnings from staging the qualifying tournament in Zimbabwe last November, and the men’s Under-19 World Cup this year, had been taken into consideration while formulating regulations for this tournament.”I hope it doesn’t apply,” he said. “It was something we had to do over the last few months since the Omicron outbreak. In almost all of our tournaments, we have been challenged with number of players being unavailable due to isolation for positive Covid tests. We had quite a close call in the West Indies with the men’s Under-19 World Cup, where a number of teams had outbreaks.”We needed to have some contingency plans. I know they have attracted a bit of attention, but in terms of having to think these things through, how you give teams the best chance to prepare knowing what might happen, that’s the reason we came up with that protocol. The bottom line is, we want 11 vs 11. We have squads of 15, all teams are travelling with reserve players as a contingency.”The announcement or introduction of those protocols was very much given the uncertainty of the event we were dealing with. We had the Women’s World Cup Qualifier in Zimbabwe where one team was marginal in terms of players available for some of the matches. We had the same situation at the Under-19 World Cup [in the Caribbean]. Fingers crossed we don’t have to get anywhere near it. But there may be situations where if a team doesn’t have an XI available, we needed protocols to deal with that.”

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