Glenn Phillips: the part-timer who doesn't do part time

In the highest-scoring match in ODI World Cup history, Glenn Phillips returned incredible figures of 3 for 37

Sidharth Monga28-Oct-2023Matches in a World Cup come so thick and fast that there is hardly any buzz at a venue two days before the game. Two days before this fixture, Australia were only arriving in Dharamsala and then racing to the Bhagsu Nag waterfall for a quick dip. New Zealand had been around for nearly a week so they began training.Glenn Phillips, who had done the Triund trek with his wife Kate, was the first to break away from fielding practice. He picked up a ball, pitched two stumps on a side pitch in the main ground, got one of the support staff to wear a mitt and keep wicket, and bowled for an hour. No break or batter. Just bowl, bowl, bowl. On a good length, wicket to wicket, always. Towards the end, Tom Latham joined him with wicketkeeping gloves on.It’s a common sight at almost every New Zealand training session. A wicketkeeper batter who doesn’t keep much after a back injury, Phillips is obsessed about becoming an allrounder. It is a bit of a strange choice in this era because the field restrictions make life difficult for part-time bowlers, and cricketers have become much more professional: with the amount of cricket increasing, batters tend to look after their bodies and not bowl in the nets to reduce risk of injury.Related

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Phillips has gone to the other extreme. He even changed his domestic team to Otago, where he gets to bowl more. Over in England, he bowled a lot while playing for Gloucestershire. He is so into bowling he is half serious when he gets upset that TV graphics don’t classify him as an allrounder.Phillips has always been like that. If he gets into something, he gets into it properly. He tries to understand it, and then work the hardest he can to get it right. Be it walking in the hills, which also partly explains his move to Otago, archery or bowling. Always used to contributing in more ways than one, Phillips needed to add bowling to his skill set once wicketkeeping became difficult.And what a good job Phillips has done with the ball in this World Cup in an unforgiving era for part-time bowlers. He has six wickets at an average of 17.16 and economy rate of 4.68. In Dharamsala, though, he went from being a serviceable part-time bowler to a rescuer, registering figures of 10-0-37-3 in the highest-scoring World Cup match of all time, in which runs were scored at 7.71 an over across 100 overs.Just for a measure of how incredible this performance was, ESPNcricinfo registers Phillips’ impact as only slightly behind the bloke who scored 109 off just 67 balls to set Australia up for 388.Glenn Phillips doesn’t do half measures•AFP/Getty ImagesAustralia were 144 for 0 in 13 overs when Phillips started bowling. While he finished his 10 overs on the trot, again a tribute to bowling fitness built through hours in the nets, the other end conceded 59 runs for no wicket in nine overs.What Phillips did was what he practised: try to turn the ball hard but more importantly keep it within the stumps. He got the rampaging David Warner and Travis Head with offbreaks that didn’t turn, cramping the left-hand batters for room.None of his team-mates will be surprised at Phillips’ success with the ball. “If you came and watched some of our training you’d see that he bowls a lot of overs,” Daryl Mitchell said. “That’s what GP does. He’s a threat across all three aspects of the game, with bat, ball and in the field, and we’re very lucky to have him.”Phillips comes across as an intense person. He probably trains the hardest, running fast after every ball, and he was the first to dive on this sub-par Dharamsala outfield in this match, and kept doing it repeatedly. By all accounts, though, he is a fun person to be around, and knows the line between dedication and obsession.If only the broadcast graphics changed his job description to an allrounder, Phillips might be even more fun to be around.

England at the IPL: 'Refreshed' Buttler, rusty Livingstone, and WC tune-ups for fringe players

Despite some high-profile absentees, there are 13 contracted England players across seven franchises this season

Matt Roller19-Mar-2024The 17th IPL season gets underway in Chennai on Friday and runs until the end of May, with strong English representation. Despite various high-profile absentees, there are 13 England players under contract across seven different franchises, with plenty at stake in the build-up to the T20 World Cup in June.

Missing stars

England’s all-format players spent four months in India during the off-season across the World Cup and their Test tour, and many have opted to skip the IPL as a result in favour of some time at home. The result is that the cast of Englishmen at IPL 2024 is slightly weaker than in most recent seasons, though there are still more than a dozen players involved.Ben Stokes and Joe Root both made themselves unavailable before the auction, while the ECB blocked Jofra Archer from entering as he continues his rehabilitation from injury. Gus Atkinson, Jason Roy (both KKR), Harry Brook (DC) and Mark Wood (LSG) have all pulled out of their deals in the past six weeks for personal reasons or to manage their workloads.

All eyes on Punjab Kings

Jonny Bairstow is the only England player set for a third stint in India since October, having also featured in the World Cup and in last month’s Test series. He was retained by Punjab Kings despite missing the last edition through injury and has only played a dozen T20 games since the end of IPL 2022, but has an excellent track record in the IPL across three previous seasons.He is joined by three international team-mates at Punjab in Liam Livingstone, Chris Woakes and Sam Curran, who was retained on his record INR 18.5 crore (£1.8m) salary despite struggling for form over the past 12 months. Trevor Bayliss, England’s World Cup-winning 2019 coach, is in charge, adding to the sense that English viewers will follow Punjab’s fortunes more closely than any other franchise.Livingstone’s T20 form has fallen off a cliff since IPL 2023, averaging 20.76 with a strike rate of 129.30 across his last 40 matches in the format. He is still highly likely to make England’s World Cup squad, but could do with a strong tournament to rediscover his rhythm and confidence ahead of their title defence in the Caribbean.

Buttler’s back

Jos Buttler was the MVP at IPL 2022 but had a quieter season in 2023 as Rajasthan Royals failed to qualify for the knockout stages, with more ducks (five) than half-centuries (four). He cut a tortured figure at the 50-over World Cup in India, unable to turn England’s fortunes around as they crashed out in the group stages and averaging 15.33 with the bat, but has said recently that he feels “refreshed” after a rare six-week break.”I’m feeling good, feeling refreshed,” Buttler told talkSPORT last week. “[Going to] South Africa at the start of the year was brilliant for me: I really enjoyed the tournament [the SA20]… a change of environment with some different people and to get out of the England bubble for a little bit is good sometimes, and had a bit of quiet time now before a busy period with the IPL and the World Cup.”Buttler’s leadership – both with the bat and in the field – was vital to England’s T20 World Cup triumph in Australia in late 2022, and their coach Matthew Mott will hope that a strong season with the Royals will give Buttler the ideal preparation for their title defence in the Caribbean.Jos Buttler had a forgettable IPL 2023 with five ducks, but will be hoping to turn his form around before the World Cup•BCCI

World Cup tune-ups

Several members of England’s likely World Cup squad will find themselves running the drinks at some stage in the tournament, with the number of overseas players allowed to feature for each team still capped at four per match. Will Jacks and Reece Topley are both likely to spend much of the season on the RCB bench, while Moeen Ali and Phil Salt are not guaranteed starters.But even if they do not end up playing much, the chance to focus on T20 cricket for an extended period of time should prove beneficial: for England players who are not involved in the IPL, the only competitive cricket on offer to help prepare for the World Cup comes in the early rounds of the County Championship season.England have only played five T20Is – all in the Caribbean in December – in the last six months and do not have any fixtures scheduled until a four-match series against Pakistan from May 22. While the outline of their squad looks relatively clear, a fringe player like Luke Wood, Tom Kohler-Cadmore or Tom Curran could yet make a late bid for inclusion based on IPL form.

Backroom influx

There has been a steady increase in the number of Englishmen involved in franchises’ backroom staff across the last few seasons, with Vikram Solanki notably guiding Gujarat Titans to consecutive finals – and the 2022 title – in his role as their director of cricket.Mo Bobat left the ECB last month to become the new director of cricket at Royal Challengers Bangalore, where he will work with the former England coach Andy Flower as well as James Bell (psychologist), James Pipe (physio) and Freddie Wilde (analyst). Carl Crowe is also back at Kolkata Knight Riders as a spin-bowling coach, after leaving Lancashire.

All the England players at IPL 2024Moeen Ali (CSK), Phil Salt (KKR), David Willey (LSG), Luke Wood (MI), Jonny Bairstow, Sam Curran, Liam Livingstone, Chris Woakes (all PBKS), Jos Buttler, Tom Kohler-Cadmore (both RR), Tom Curran, Will Jacks, Reece Topley (all RCB)

The two Starora overs that defined the IPL final

SRH’s opening duo of Travis Head and Abhishek Sharma had been dynamic, but they were stopped in their tracks with the title on the line

Karthik Krishnaswamy27-May-20241:21

What changed for Starc towards the end of the season?

They’re called Travishek because it’s the easiest way to combine their names, but it also makes sense because Travis Head takes first strike for Sunrisers Hyderabad (SRH) and Abhishek Sharma starts at the non-striker’s end. Almost as a rule.Before the final of IPL 2024, there had only been three exceptions to this. Abhishek had taken first strike twice against Royal Challengers Bengaluru, and once against Lucknow Super Giants. On all three occasions, an offspinner had bowled the first over.On Sunday, against Kolkata Knight Riders (KKR), Abhishek took first strike for the fourth time this season. This time he wasn’t facing an offspinner.He was, instead, up against Mitchell Starc.You could understand why Head might have felt less than enthusiastic about the prospect of facing Starc with a new ball. Just watch this. And that’s a video from six years ago. There was also this, of course, from last Tuesday in Ahmedabad:

Over all the years they have come up against each other, Starc has rattled Head’s stumps with full, fast balls bending past the outside edge, and rattled them with balls threatening to shape away before nipping back past the inside edge.For most of IPL 2024, Starc had looked like a bowler not quite in full control of the complicated mechanics of his run-up and delivery. The ball wasn’t coming out of his hand in quite the way he would have liked it to and was landing in the slot, meeting the middle of bats rather than swerving and ducking past their edges. By Tuesday, however, he seemed to have found that elusive thing they call rhythm. Right in time for a meeting with his old sparring buddy, Head.It fell to Abhishek, then, to negotiate Starc and the brand-new white ball.Related

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Abhishek could have been out three times in Starc’s first four balls. There was a swing and miss off the first ball, and a poke and miss off the second, both regulation balls from a left-arm swing bowler that left the left-hand batter outside off stump. Then, Abhishek opened his bat face, steered the fourth ball to the left of deep third, and took a chance on a tight second run. A better throw may well have beaten his dive.Looking back at how Sunday night unfolded, might SRH have to have lost Abhishek to any of those three balls, in any of those routine ways, rather than the way they actually did? Like, I mean, here’s how it happened:

Yes, KKR social-media admin person. That was, in all likelihood, the ball of the season. It was angled into the left-handed Abhishek, and it pitched around middle stump. It would likely have missed leg stump if it had continued along its initial trajectory, but it began to shape against the angle just before it pitched, with devastating consequences.It clocked 139kph, and that doesn’t sound hugely impressive when you pit it against the mid-to-late 150s balls that Gerald Coetzee and Mayank Yadav have bowled this season, but 139kph is blindingly fast when the ball swings like that. Particularly when it swings from that length. The length that freezes batters’ feet and squares them up. The length that shaves paint off the top of the stumps. The top, on this occasion, of off stump.You need all those inadequate words of description, because Starc, when asked about it in his post-match press conference, only had this to offer: “Not much to it. Run in, try and hit the stumps, try to swing it. That’s what I’ve tried to do for the last 14 years. Doesn’t always happen. I’ve been lucky enough that it’s happened twice in the last two games, with Trav as well.”I mean, that’s part of my experience that I’m supposed to be bringing to the group is to start us off and lead the way [with] powerplay wickets. We’ve seen how important they are through the tournament. We were fantastic in the powerplay again today, as we were in the first qualifier against them.”It’s always nice to bowl a ball like that, but there’s nothing special about the plan: just run in, try and bowl fast, swing it, and see if one can hit the top of the stumps. It’s nice when it comes off.”Abhishek Sharma is bowled by an unplayable delivery from Mitchell Starc•BCCIWith time, with distance, with a little less recency bias, we may be able to pick out other candidates for ball of the season. When that happens, our selection is likely to include another work of top-of-off artistry from a KKR bowler: Vaibhav Arora to Shai Hope at Eden Gardens.It was similar to Starc vs Abhishek, sliding past the outside edge to light up the bails, except it was from a right-arm bowler to a right-hand batter, and it was seam movement rather than swing.Both Starc vs Abhishek and Arora vs Hope showcased a key piece of KKR’s title-winning jigsaw. KKR took the joint-most powerplay wickets of any team in IPL 2024, and their 27 came in 14 innings as against Rajasthan Royals’ 15.Starc took 11 powerplay wickets, and Arora nine. KKR finished the season with two of its top four wicket-takers in that phase.IPL 2024 was – it still feels weird to use the simple past tense rather than the present perfect – the season of the stratospheric total, and the two finalists were the teams that reached for the stratosphere most often. But where KKR’s batting explosions could come from anywhere in a line-up of immense power and depth, SRH’s owed theirs, for most part, to a turbocharged opening pair and a six-hitting machine in the middle-order.After SRH won the toss and opted to bat on Sunday night, KKR’s clearest path to victory was to take these three out as cheaply as possible, and the top two as quickly as possible.Starc, with Abhishek in his sights rather than Head, had done half that job. The surviving half of Travishek now took strike to Arora, bowling right-arm over.Vaibhav Arora got Travis Head with sharp swing•AFP/Getty ImagesOver the last couple of years, as Head has dominated a World Test Championship final, a World Cup semi-final, a World Cup final and an IPL with his daredevilry, a theory has developed around how best to bowl to him, particularly early in his innings: angle the ball into him from right-arm around or left-arm over, and cramp him for room. Head likes to stay leg side of the ball against the fast bowlers and free his arms, and he’s bloody good at doing that – under no circumstances, then, should you give him any semblance of room.Before Sunday, Head had fallen four times to fast bowling in the powerplay this season. He had been out once to the right-arm over angle, when Chennai Super Kings’ Tushar Deshpande had slanted the ball across him and got him to hit towards the longer off-side boundary. He had been dismissed three times by the ball angling into him from left-arm over.Arora began from right-arm over, in theory Head’s preferred angle. It can be a difficult angle to bowl from if you’re bowling to someone like Head, because there’s only a tiny sliver of a line you can bowl without either offering room or straying onto his pads. It’s particularly tricky if, like Arora, you swing the ball away from the left-hander.1:09

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

In those circumstances, Arora bowled the perfect delivery. It started some way outside leg stump, and then began to swing, pitching roughly in line with leg stump and reaching Head when it was just about in line with off stump. Head’s feet tend not to move all that much even when he plays some of his best shots; it can even be an advantage when he can free his arms and swing cleanly with a vertical or horizontal bat. This ball, though, drew a defensive response, and it mattered that his back foot was stuck in its initial position. He followed the ball with his hands, showing only half his bat face.Head has enjoyed days when he has offered similar responses to similar balls early in his innings and survived. Cricket can be like that, with the slimmest margins between the play-and-miss and the edge to the keeper.On another day, Head may have survived this Arora ball, and forced him to go back and bowl another ball, and another ball, all the time contending with the small margins of bowling to a champion.On this day, it was Arora who ran towards his KKR team-mates, arms extended, as if to show just how much this wicket meant to the balance of this match. “Thiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiis much.”This IPL final was 12 balls old. KKR were already in front, by a significant margin. The tournament’s best new-ball pair had won a decisive victory over its scariest opening partnership.Move aside, Travishek. Make way for Starora.

Amid chaos and randomness, South Africa hold their nerve (for a change)

From being put on the backfoot by Nepal, they dragged themselves back courtesy Shamsi and Baartman

Firdose Moonda15-Jun-20242:32

Morkel: South Africa need to have more intensity with bat

Time stopped in Kingstown. The ball Aasif Sheikh top-edged off Kagiso Rabada swirled in the humid island air. Then, like those old slo-mos where you see everything in staccato, Rabada moved to get under it, extended his arms and the ball came tumbling down. And down. And down. And down through his hands and onto the floor. And the clock restarted.Aasif cracked the next ball over cover for his first boundary, with the confidence of a player who was in no danger of being dismissed a minute before. Nepal, chasing a modest 116 for their first win over a Full Member, were up and running.That moment is important, not to isolate Rabada’s error – dropped catches happen to all kinds of players in all sorts of moments – but to highlight how mini-moments change matches. Let’s say Rabada had held on and Nepal were 6 for 1 in the second over, with one of their four most experienced batters dismissed, and suddenly we’d have been looking at a very different situation.Related

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We may even be talking about how, despite how good their spinners had been, they were pinned back too early in the chase to mount a challenge. Instead, Aasif went on to hit two more boundaries in the powerplay, Nepal did not lose any wickets in that period and they were 34 for 0 after seven overs: slow but steady in their reply.

****

Time stopped. For Tabraiz Shamsi, it may have felt like it stopped in December, when he last played for South Africa.Granted, the T20 team only played three matches together before the World Cup – against West Indies – but Shamsi was not used in any of them and was also benched for the first three matches of the T20 World Cup 2024. Once the No.1 ranked bowler in the format and still South Africa’s leading wicket-taker in T20Is, Shamsi has found himself sidelined in an XI that prefers the strength of their pace and the guile of Keshav Maharaj. But on a slow Saint Vincent pitch, with South Africa already through to the Super Eight, they thought it would be “a great opportunity for him to get some game time,” as Aiden Markram said at the post-match press conference. What a masterstroke it proved to be.Shamsi’s second ball got South Africa’s first wicket when Kushal Bhurtel saw it tossed up and decided to reverse-sweep but missed completely. His fourth ball was a beauty that spun back into Rohit Paudel’s offstump and removed the Nepal captain for a duck. Just like that, South Africa were on top. Albeit not for very long.Aasif was still there and he shifted momentum in the 13th over, when he took 13 runs off Rabada’s second over, as Markam rotated through his seamers before he gave himself a spell. He conceded that South Africa got their combination wrong and would have played both spinners if they had read conditions better. “Our fast bowling unit has been bowling really well in this competition. You want to back that and give them the freedom to perform but in hindsight, we would have played both spinners.”3:06

Morkel: Nepal’s bowling made life difficult for SA

Shamsi probably did the job of two anyway. He was brought back in the 18th over, with Nepal needing just a run-a-ball, and fired one in down leg, where Dipendra Singh Airee gloved an attempted sweep and then got his last delivery to spin between Aasif’s bat and pad to take the off bail. A second double-wicket over put South Africa in the position to complete a clean sweep of the group stage. But they had to wait, and work, for it.

****

Time stopped. After four deliveries in the upper 140s, Anrich Nortje opted for a slower ball at 114kph and Sompal Kami had a little bit – but only a little bit – of time to set-up for a shot that could change the game.Then, like those old fast-forwards when everything moves so quickly that the audio makes a strange, squeaking sound, he swivel-pulled one of the game’s fastest and scariest quicks, over mid-wicket, into the parking lot. Nepal needed 10 more runs off the last seven balls, and eight off the final six.It was over to Ottneil Baartman, who bowled the penultimate over against Bangladesh earlier this week and left Keshav Maharaj 10 to defend. Two dot balls into the over, Baartman looked every bit the bowler for the job. But Gulshan Jha sent the next ball screeching through point for four and Nepal were four runs away from what could have been their first win over a Full Member, perhaps their biggest victory yet.In situations like these, players with more experience of handling pressure win out in small moments, and for decades those players were not South African. Baartman, who had never even travelled or played outside his home country before this event, could have fallen into the category of ‘unsure,’ but he’s had two seasons in the SA20 as part of the winning team and has collected memories of success.So he held his nerve and bowled according to the plan laid out by Markram. “I didn’t want to go too full because then it would be an easy hit. So it was about hitting that hard length and using the short ball to our advantage,” Markram said. Baartman’s last two balls were short and Gulshan could not make contact, but in hope, he ran off the final one in pursuit of a Super Over.In the chaotic seconds that followed, Quinton de Kock collected the ball and threw it towards the non-striker, it deflected off Gulshan towards Heinrich Klaasen, who was coming in from mid-wicket and he reacted quickly to run Gulshan out. “It was a funny ending,” Markram said. “But sometimes you become really grateful to get random victories like this.””Random” is probably the best word to describe how it all played out. Why Gulshan slowed down instead of sped up, we will never know. Maybe it had something to do with his perception of time being suspended in the most surreal of sporting moments.”We were very close but we were a little far,” Paudel said, smiling through his obvious disappointment. Turns out it was distance, not time, that separated Nepal from a historic win.

Bangladesh look to shut out the noise and find rhythm in Rawalpindi

Their country is in the midst of political upheaval, the cricket board is seemingly on its way out, and there are batting issues to grapple with; can Bangladesh find their voice?

Mohammad Isam18-Aug-2024If it wasn’t for the heavy security, Bangladesh’s cricketers would have been a common sight in the Islamabad-Rawalpindi metropolitan area. Bangladesh have two teams here – one preparing for the first Test at the Rawalpindi Cricket Stadium and the other, the Bangladesh A team, playing against Pakistan A in two four-day matches at the Islamabad Club. As Islamabad went into a Sunday siesta, the cricketers were out training in the heat of the two venues, located within a 10km radius of each other.It was a rare sensible move from the BCB to have the second-string team shadowing the seniors during a crucial Test tour. It could also be the last move made by the current BCB administration, who are, seemingly, on their way out. The cricketers, however, can’t afford to think about what’s happening at the BCB headquarters in Mirpur. Hard as it might be, they’ll also have to take their minds off the political turmoil and euphoria of the last four weeks back home, because they have a job to do in Rawalpindi.Six players from the Test side have already played in the Bangladesh A team’s first four-dayer. It wasn’t a great outing for the visitors, though. They have already suffered two injuries, with Mahmudul Hasan Joy ruled out of the first Test with a groin strain and Mushfiqur Rahim also picking up a finger injury during the game. There wasn’t much joy for the others either, except Nayeem Hasan who showed great fighting spirit with bat and ball.Related

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The offspinner bowled the most overs of any Bangladesh A bowler in their only innings in the field, finishing with a neat 1 for 88 from 23 overs. What may have enthused Bangladesh even more, however, was his 55 in the second innings. He played that innings after stepping in at No. 5 with the two injured batters ruled out of action on the fourth day. The tenacity he displayed over nearly two hours is exactly what Bangladesh might need in their Test series.The 24-year-old Nayeem is known to be a quiet personality. But he has often shown great presence of mind in the field. Many believe that he is under-utilised, having only played 10 Tests in the last six years. Nine of them have come at home. His only overseas Test appearance, in 2019, ended badly when he had to leave the field due to a concussion. He has, however, developed himself into Bangladesh’s back-up spin option with strong domestic performances, having taken 44 wickets at an average of 17.88 in the 2023-24 season.Nayeem Hasan expects a flat pitch in Rawalpindi and feels patience will be key for Bangladesh’s bowlers•AFPHaving played at the Islamabad Club and after Bangladesh’s first training session in Rawalpindi, Nayeem laid out what he felt would be the theme of this Test series.”From what I have observed here so far, it will be a game of patience,” Nayeem said. “We are going to play on good wickets. It will be relatively easier for batters. A straight bat can be hard to beat but we cannot panic. We have to hold our area. There’s generally not going to be any help for spinners. There will be turn from outside the stumps, so we have to force the batters to make mistakes. As much as we have to attack, we also have to protect.”Having observed how the Pakistan A fast bowlers had operated in the four-day game, Nayeem believes Bangladesh’s quicks could make an impact too.”Pakistan A bowlers reversed the ball. On both sides. They maintained the ball very well [in the four-day game]. Our fast bowlers have done well with the new ball in the recent past. They also know how to reverse the ball. We will all have to make them work hard for runs.”Bangladesh spin coach Mushtaq Ahmed imparts knowledge at a training session•BCBBangladesh’s bowling hasn’t been too much of a worry of late, but the same cannot be said about their batting. Zakir Hasan, Mushfiqur and Mominul Haque weren’t among the runs for Bangladesh A. Mahmudul scored a fifty in the first innings, but he is out injured. Shakib Al Hasan has played plenty of T20s recently, but not a lot of red-ball cricket, while captain Najmul Hossain Shanto and Litton Das must be itching to score runs after going through lean patches this year.Nayeem’s runs may have brought Bangladesh some solace, particularly since they could go in with a longish tail. Nayeem feels he has levelled up with the bat since the Bangladesh Tigers camp in Chattogram in July, which was disrupted by clashes between government forces and student protesters.”It was good to score some runs,” Nayeem said. “Like my bowling, I think my batting has also picked up since the Chittagong camp. I made runs against skillful bowlers, and all three of the fast bowlers are in their Test squad.”I have felt that my bowling has been in rhythm since the Chittagong camp. We played practice matches there. I feel that wickets are not important in these wickets in Pakistan. I must be more focused on bowling well. I have been working with [Bangladesh spin-bowling coach] Mushtaq [Ahmed] . It has been very rewarding working with him.”Bangladesh have two more days to prepare for the first Test, which begins on August 21. The second Test, too, has moved to Rawalpindi, which could play in the visitors’ favour. Bangladesh will know this neck of the woods, maybe not as well as the home side, but at least better than previous touring sides that have struggled to adapt to the pitches and conditions.

Bavuma overcomes nerves to bring up his third Test hundred

Before the second innings in Durban, the South Africa captain had 22 fifties but only two hundreds to his name

Andrew Fidel Fernando29-Nov-2024Yes, it is a bowlers’ era, and sure, this is not the strongest South Africa batting order there has ever been, but eventually people are going to look across your stats, find the column under “Hundreds”, and check.Temba Bavuma is aware of this. Painfully aware.Before the second innings at Kingsmead, he had only two trips to triple figures, compared to 22 fifties. The rock to throw at him is that this is a poor conversion rate, even if many of those fifties came in difficult match situations. Both his team-mates and his opposition, for example, have praised his first-innings 70, for having taken South Africa from a truly modest total to a halfway-respectable 191, given the conditions.Related

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Still, that column on the stats page has eyes on it. And on Friday, at Kingsmead, he raised the count to three, hitting 113 against Sri Lanka. Will people wonder how he has been doing as captain and see that he averages 54.22? Will they wonder how many of his innings have come at No. 6 and lower (51 off 103 innings, by the way), and reason that these are not positions where centuries are harder to come by? Perhaps not many will. Hundreds are kind of a big deal.”Getting to a three-figure mark is always a lot more satisfying, personally,” Bavuma said, about making centuries vs important fifties. “When you bat in positions where the team is in trouble, and you get to a 50 to 60, I guess it’s good in terms of getting the team into a competitive position. But once you’re able to go over, you really get the team into a strong position.”Hundreds are a currency as a batter as well, I guess that increases that value. There’s obviously a lot of confidence that comes from scoring a hundred, and I think in terms of the batting line-up we’re getting to a stage where we’re starting to believe that in each innings, someone is able to go and get a hundred, so it’s good to add to that confidence.”

“Getting to the three-figure mark was quite nerve-racking. I went over to him and said, ‘Stubbo, please get me on strike. I can’t wait on this end'”

Bavuma’s approach to the hundred was fraught, however. Between getting to 80 and getting to triple figures, there was an edge that dropped short of the slips, a ball that jumped up and hit him on the glove, plays and misses, and an lbw shout and a review to the shot (it came off his glove) he got to triple figures off. Bavuma had, in fact, been asking for the strike.”I think I’m not too good when I get to the 80s and 90s. I’m going to try and get there [to a century] as soon as I can. They had the second new ball as well, and there was still something on offer for the bowlers. I was always looking to score.”Then, obviously, getting to the three-figure mark, it was quite nerve-racking. Against the spinner [Prabath Jayasuriya], I got one off the first ball, and then the next two balls Tristan Stubbs blocked. I went over to him and said, ‘Stubbo, please get me on strike. I can’t wait on this end.’ He was able to do that, so I was always going to play that shot.”The shot was a paddle sweep, and he just managed to get a glove to the ball before it hit him on the pads in front of the stumps.”It was a bit high risk, but the way the spinner was bowling, I was thinking of getting to that three-figure mark and then kind of starting again.”Sri Lanka reviewed that lbw, shout, but Bavuma had known he had got enough on it. He politely waited for the big screen to show the little spike as the ball brushed his glove.Then he celebrated his third hundred.

Ironman Stokes beats his body and recaptures his peak

It seemed for an age that his bowling exploits were capped by physical ailments but in Manchester, the Stokes of old turned up and made things happen

Vithushan Ehantharajah24-Jul-2025

Ben Stokes celebrates his five-wicket haul•Getty Images

The raise of the ball was done with all the enthusiasm of a man lifting a plunger out of a blocked toilet.Ben Stokes’ fifth five-wicket haul, completed on day two of the fourth Test against India, means only he, Ian Botham, Garry Sobers and Jacques Kallis have taken as many alongside scoring at least 10 centuries. No cricketer should be shy of entering that kind of club. But Stokes looked a little sheepish.You could understand where Stokes was coming from to an extent. It was likely a mix of not wanting to take the glory – his modus operandi since assuming the Test captaincy – and a tinge of embarrassment that it had been a long time coming. His last five-for, against West Indies at Lord’s – came back in September 2017.Related

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A few weeks on from that career-best 6 for 22, Stokes stayed up late in Bristol and, well, you know how that one went. And that, along with plenty of other situations, many beyond the allrounder’s control, has made days like these seem further away.It seemed his bowling exploits were capped. Some of those have been physical ailments and so, by proxy, all have been mental.But this 5 for 72 has, for now, kept India to 358 and allowed England a handy run out under the sun to trail by just 133 at stumps on day two. It also puts Stokes top of the pops with 16 dismissals this series. And moreover, back in a groove that, up until the last month, had seemed lost to the annals.Three batters trimmed off. Two bumped. Always threatening. Never knowingly under-bowled. All this signposted a return to the Stokes of old. Namely the one he was across 2019 and 2020 – a period he reckons was his peak.2:17

Crawley: ‘Owe it to myself to have a few good performances’

Funnily enough, there were no five-fors during this stanza. But even that was not necessarily about the 41 dismissals at 27.70 across both years, but the skill, control and durability across 368.1 overs.There are a specific 2.2 overs at the end of the final day of the second Test against South Africa at Newlands in January 2020, that Stokes rewatched heading into this summer. Desperate to recapture the perfect rhythm, high pace and immaculate lengths distilled in that match-winning spell of 3 for 1.”I used Cape Town as a visual thing for me,” revealed Stokes in Leeds, ahead of the series opener. “To look back at and go, like, ‘what was I doing there’? Because that’s when I felt really good.”Zak Crawley was in the cordon five years ago, taking a juggling blinder to give Stokes his second of that set, and was in prime position here to admire the similarities.”There’s so many similarities to that,” Crawley said at stumps on Thursday. “He was bowling quickly back then. He’s got that pace back now. And the way he just gets that away movement from the right-hander, that zip, which is as much as anyone in the world really. He gets that bounce.”He’s a proper wicket-taker and he can make things happen and that’s certainly the case when I first came into the side back then (2020). And he seems to have got that back now, which is a phenomenal effort considering the injuries he’s had and, well, he’s a little bit older now.”This summer, Stokes’ average speed – 135.38kph – is the third-fastest he has registered in a home season since 2019. His control evident from the shift from day one to day two, earning his final three wickets for just 25 in 10 overs.Day two boasted the highest degree of swing of any day this series, so Stokes pushed his length forward. Of Wednesday’s 14 overs, 19.7% were full (within 6.25m of the stumps) and the dismissal of Shubman Gill, his opposite number, was at the shorter limit of that threshold. Thursday’s Stokes went further, with 32.2% to fashion what swing there was into a weapon. Shardul Thakur skewed his drive to a diving Ben Duckett at gully, then Anshul Kamboj played down what became the wrong line for Stokes’ fifth.Arguably the more impressive milestone for Stokes had come on day one, ticking over the most he has ever bowled in a series, currently. It will certainly be the most meaningful to him.Previous roles as an enforcer or “break glass for match winner” quick meant he was kept to cameos. But he has always had the skills. The problem soon became his body. Thankfully, we appear to be through the tunnel.0:49

What makes Crawley and Duckett click as a pair?

The light was seen by Stokes back in 2023. An overdue left knee operation after the ODI World Cup cleared up what was threatening to become a chronic mess. And though two right hamstring tears in six months followed, the lessons from that first procedure – specifically, how much easier rehabilitation was with a sleeker physique – had already been learned.The biggest benefit for Stokes has been around recovery. Not only have performances been backed up, but the speeds have been consistent. The first innings averages tell the story; 134.3kph (Headingley), 135.59kph (Edgbaston), 136.71kph (Lord’s) and 135.2kph here.The gap between Lord’s and Manchester is probably the most insightful as far as where Stokes is at right now.After bowling 44 overs in the victory at Lord’s, including 20 on day five to help bag that 201 lead, Stokes spent the next few days in bed. As such, when it came to training on Monday at Emirates Old Trafford, he was ready to get back on the grind, even if he was still feeling a little tired.Two days out from the first Test at Headingley, Stokes had wowed his team-mates by bowling a mammoth 11-over stint. And while he was not going to do the same here, he did want to get the wheels turning. Unfortunately, the Manchester weather got in the way.Instead, Stokes beasted himself on Tuesday. After a gym session in the morning, he bowled in the Trafford Cricket Centre – Lancashire’s onsite indoor nets – which is by no means the done thing for a bowler on the eve of a match because the indoor surface is unforgiving on the joints. Not only did Stokes get through that, he followed it up with a long batting stint. Then he sent down 24 of the first 114.1 overs of this match.Without question, Stokes’ renewed fitness drive has allowed him to stitch together a series like this. He sensed it himself, which is why after 11.2 overs against Zimbabwe, back in May, he felt he did not need to play for Durham or England Lions to be right for India.At the same time, all this has come with a bit of balance. Captaincy, at least from the outside, feels a little easier. Given the fear at the start of his tenure centered around marrying those duties with his all-action nature, he seems to be at his most switched on while carrying the bowling burden.It’s worth noting that on day three at Lord’s, when Brendon McCullum sent over bowling consultant Tim Southee to suggest Stokes cap a spell at seven overs, Stokes had already decided that was that. He knew he had run that particular race. That he went on to bowl 9.2- and 10-over spells two days later owed more to a sense he had the wares to crack the game open than simply indulging a hero complex. Vindication of both came with the removal of KL Rahul in the former and a belligerent Jasprit Bumrah in the latter.On the subject of balance, Stokes seems to have found a sweet spot. The graft away from the field to allow the gut-busting on it is tempered in various ways. Though he stopped drinking alcohol as he recovered from a hamstring operation at the start of the year, he sups the occasional drink as a reward following a satisfying day’s play. Everything in moderation, including moderation.At 34, you might term this all as growth, and in some ways it is. Of a man getting better attuned with his body and still developing a greater affinity for the craft of bowling.It used to be said of Stokes that it was hard to discern what kind of allrounder he was, beyond one with an appetite for big moments. Detractors would say that was down to neither-here-nor-there numbers with bat and ball.Now, entering the twilight of his career, Stokes is, emphatically, a bowling allrounder. And that’s not because the batting numbers are taking a dip, but because he has never been a more complete bowler than right now.

Ed Smith: 'The brand power of Lord's can widen access to cricket'

MCC’s incoming president on the challenge of engaging with Tech Titans, and opening Lord’s up to state schools

Andrew Miller11-Nov-2025″For a lot of my life, I’ve been a little bit unsure about spending so much time thinking about sport,” says Ed Smith, the newly installed president of a 238-year-old sporting institution. “Is it disproportionate, should I do something else? Actually, the way things have gone in the last 15 years, I feel that sport really has never been more important, more useful, if that doesn’t sound too utilitarian.”There’s plenty to unpick in that soundbite from Smith, the former national selector whose latest role in cricket would appear to be rather more ceremonial in nature. After all, the list of his predecessors as MCC president reads like a print-out of Burke’s Peerage – among them, the late Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh, who served two terms in 1949 and 1974. With the greatest respect to the status of Smith’s new office, utilitarian principles haven’t traditionally seemed like a key criterion at Lord’s.And yet, it’s hard to imagine many more fascinating years to be at the helm of Marylebone Cricket Club, the modernisation of which has been one of English cricket’s subplots for decades. The club’s reputation may have been built on exclusivity, but the current remit is to broaden its appeal – and 2026 promises progress on two distinct, but complementary, fronts.First, there are the implications of the Hundred equity sale. In commanding an astronomical valuation of £295 million, MCC’s co-owned franchise, London Spirit, has demonstrated – in stark, financial terms – the central importance of Lord’s to the whole edifice of English cricket. Without the history and prestige of its grandest ground, the sport in this country would be significantly diminished.At the opposite end of the pyramid, meanwhile, there is next year’s maiden staging of the Barclays Knight-Stokes Cup, a newly conceived state-schools competition that will culminate in a Finals Day for boy’s and girl’s teams at Lord’s in September, and has already attracted entries from 1,084 teams across 750 schools, or one in five in the country.Smith served as England’s national selector from 2018 to 2021•Getty ImagesBetween these two apparent extremes sits Smith, with his remit to be a forward-facing, welcoming ambassador for the club – very much a non-executive, but a potentially crucial executor of MCC’s soft power, as it were.”I don’t like the word brand, but there is a brand power to Lord’s, and I would love that to be used for good and to widen access to cricket,” Smith tells ESPNcricinfo. “I’m very excited to do what I can do, and hopefully we can do a little bit of good in a year.”He pushes back at the suggestion that his role will mainly entail “pressing flesh” with the rich and famous who cross his path in the pavilion and president’s box. However, he doesn’t entirely dismiss the importance of his hosting role, particularly when it comes to engaging with the tech entrepreneurs who coughed up £145 million for their 49% share in London Spirit, and who are likely to pop along at some stage next summer to savour the spoils of their investment. To give him the credit that his intellectual reputation has earned, he potentially offers a higher-brow level of small talk than some of his forebears.”Yes, watching cricket at Lord’s with very interesting people is one of the things that happens in a president’s year,” he says. “People love coming to Lord’s – its draw has been clear in the partnership with the Tech Titans – so that’s not to be underestimated, even though there’s more to it than that.”Having spent a bit of time with some of them over the summer, I think they’re keen on winning and growing the franchise, and having some fun too. And there’s a fast-tracking potential here for some really exciting innovations, just because of the people involved and their opportunity to have a canvas.Related

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“It’s a really exciting partnership, but I’m just keen to get stuck in and do some hard graft behind the scenes, and not just on the major match days.”It’s clear, however, that Smith’s main passion for the coming year lies at the grassroots end of the club – in particular, making sure that the inaugural Knight-Stokes Cup is as much of a success as it needs to be.”I come from a family of teachers,” he says. “Both my grandfathers were state-school head teachers, and my mum’s dad founded a secondary modern school in 1953 outside Bristol. He’d lock his office door and go and roll the cricket square, because he believed you build a school’s community and identity through doing things together. Sport is one of, if not the pre-eminent, way of coming together as a community.”He accepts, however, that the world has moved on since the 1950s, and that harking back to times long gone is clearly not the way to resolve the disconnect that has opened up between the nation’s summer sport and its largest pools of future fans and players.”There are all sorts of ways in which teachers’ time has become precious,” Smith says. “Their roles have become much more regulated, what they do is much more scrutinised by the state. However, the need for them to do lots of different things hasn’t gone away, and amid the rise of smartphone addiction and social media, I think this is the moment for us to restate the case for sport in education.London Spirit was the most sought-after franchise in the Hundred equity sale•ECB/Getty Images”People being distracted is a commercial driver of a lot of modern life. Sport is a way that we can lose ourselves in play, while also pursuing mastery. Whether you end up being very good or no good at all doesn’t really matter. If you’re lost in doing something, and the concentration and the absorption that comes with that, then you’re probably going to get an awful lot out of it.”Smith has a vested interest in the debate, seeing as his own son and daughter, aged 12 and 9, are budding cricketers whose school was one of the first to sign up for the regional qualifiers.”It was great to see the excitement that comes from a good idea that’s been well launched,” he says. “To see that interest and excitement in young peoples’ faces at home on that first day was great, and shows what can be done.”Let’s be realistic. No one believes it’s the total solution to nurturing, reigniting and elevating cricket in state schools. There need to be other contributions from other perspectives, whether that’s the state, whether that’s the schools themselves, whether that’s counties running their pathways.”There’s lots of different pieces that have to come together if there’s going to be a real transformation. But this is a very good contribution, it’s a start that everyone at the MCC is really determined to build on, and I’ll be doing everything I can to support it this year.”It should be said, there has been a certain degree of revisionism regarding the origins of the Knight-Stokes Cup. From the outset last summer, and in subsequent communications from the club, the project has been framed as an MCC-led initiative when, in fact, the creation of a “national Under-15 state school finals’ day for boys and girls” was one of the specific recommendations of the Independent Commission for Equity in Cricket (ICEC), whose damning report in 2023 castigated English cricket in general, and MCC in particular, for institutional “sexism, classism and elitism”.Smith doesn’t dispute that the club is still playing catch-up in terms of its public image (he unapologetically ducks the thorny issue of Eton-Harrow, stating that it falls outside the remit of his one-year term). He does, however, point out that MCC has long had genuine advocates for state-school cricket among its leadership: most notably, Mark Nicholas, the club chair, and Lord King of Lothbury, his own predecessor as president.In 2005, those two (along with the former Worcestershire chair Duncan Fearnley) were co-founders of the charity Chance to Shine, which has taken cricket back into hundreds of primary schools in the intervening 20 years, and given a first taste of the sport to literally millions of pupils.

“Amid the rise of smartphone addiction and social media, I think this is the moment for us to restate the case for sport in education”Smith is an enthusiastic advocate of MCC’s new state-schools competition, the Knight-Stokes Cup

“There’s obviously a huge amount more for the game to do, I don’t think anyone doubts that,” Smith says, “but they’ve done so much to get cricket bats into the hands of boys and girls at a really young age, and help them fall in love with the game.”We often talk about sport at the sharp end – what it looks like by the time it’s very visible to us, and when it’s manifested as elite teams and national teams. But of course, all that relies on what happens beneath the waterline of the iceberg, and the health of the game more generally.”Some of that, Smith adds, was on display at the MCC Foundation’s national hubs final in September. It was the fifth such staging of a competition that attracted teams from 164 regional sites across the country, and for whom the prospect of competing at such a prestigious venue was a significant drawcard.”I attended the finals day at Lord’s with my family, and I was partly watching the cricket and partly watching the crowd,” he says. “Whether it was a player or a parent, or a sibling, or a supporter, I watched them file out of the ground, and I saw a lot of smiles on a lot of faces. Your expectation is that their love of cricket would be deeper and stronger after that day. That’s one of the things that Lord’s can do.”Plenty other issues will fall across Smith’s desk in the course of his presidency. In particular, there’s the juicy prospect of the maiden Hundred auction in March – an event that surely cannot help but whet the appetite of a former England selector? On the contrary, he’s keen to be respectful of his designated place within the club structure.”I’m very interested in recruitment and selection, but the people who are living it every day are the best in the business,” he says, deferring to London Spirit’s management duo of Mo Bobat and Andy Flower, who will take charge of all such matters. “I’ve got a lot going on, and hopefully I can add value as president, but in a good organisation, you want people to be given clear authority and role clarity about what they’re up to.”

The Indian commentator who is now the voice of Afghanistan cricket

Jodhpur’s Devender Kumar does commentary not only in international Afghanistan games but also their domestic fixtures

Daya Sagar13-Sep-2024In 1998, during Desert Storm innings, when a 10-year-old Devender Kumar heard this piece of commentary by Tony Greig on the six Sachin Tendulkar smashed off Michael Kasprowicz, he was dazzled. Greig’s voice attracted him so much that Devender decided commentary would be his career path.”One day I was flicking channels when I heard this piece of commentary on air,” Devender tells ESPNcricinfo on the sidelines of the washed out Afghanistan-New Zealand Test in Greater Noida. “I was attracted to Tony Greig’s voice and the rhythm of his commentary. I felt like this was something special and I should take it up.”After this, I started practising commentary for hours. My father was in the Army and had an analog radio that played both short and medium wave-length radio stations. I used to listen to commentary from all sports, not just cricket, and then repeat this exercise for hours.”This commentary journey, however, was not at all easy for Devender, who hails from Chutarpura, a small village in Jodhpur, Rajasthan. He neither spoke English nor had any sports background. Apart from this, he did not know what he had to do to become a commentator. He practised every day by listening to news and commentary on the radio. He loved the three-hour weekly ” programme on the BBC, through which he got to listen to commentators like John Murray and Alan Green on various sports, including football and tennis.Devender Kumar also does commentary on Afghanistan’s domestic games•Special Arrangement”Through this show, I used to get news from sports the world over every Saturday and Sunday,” Devender says. “In the beginning, I couldn’t even understand what they were saying, because I didn’t know English at all. But their way of talking, the rhythm of their voice, all this attracted me a lot.”Gradually, I started reading English newspapers which improved my vocabulary and I could understand what they were saying. Due to this, my interest in sports and commentary increased and now it has become a 24-hour job.”During this time, Devender also did a nursing course after completing school. After the course, he got a job offer in the USA, but he turned it down because he wanted to pursue commentary full-time. This happened in 2006, in the second half of Tendulkar’s career. Devender just had to commentate on at least one Tendulkar games before his retirement. A job in the USA may have stopped him from achieving this dream.To pursue his dream, Devender came to Jaipur from Jodhpur. He felt that after coming to the capital of his state, his path would become easier and within six months he would start commentating in international matches. But the process to the top was a long and arduous one.Devender used to go to the Sawai Mansingh Stadium every day. Whenever he saw any game going on, he would sit there, roll the newspaper as a mic and start commentating. He practised commentary on many sports including cricket, football, tennis, basketball, handball, volleyball, karate, kabaddi and horse polo. While many people liked Devender’s commentary, a lot of them also made fun of him. But he did not care. He was engrossed in his passion. He had to become an international commentator.Devender says the trend continued for the next ten years. He would wake up at 3am and listen to a radio programme called ” to learn English. After this, he would walk to the stadium which was an hour from his house, at 5am, and observe the different games and commentate on them.”This became my daily routine. I didn’t care about Diwali or Holi, summer or rain,” Devender says. “I would go to the stadium and wherever I saw a game taking place, I would start doing my commentary. Some people used to make fun of me, some even called me ‘crazy’, but some people also liked my commentary. I started getting some work because of this.Devender Kumar with Pashto commentators Fazal Rahimi and Sharafuddin Shakir in Kabul•Devendra Kumar”Then people organising tournaments in Jaipur started calling me for commentary and I used to get INR 500 per day in return. Even if I would get work for three or four days, it would be enough to meet my monthly expenses because the rent for the room I lived in was only INR 500 per month. The remaining money was enough to cover my other expenses.”Gradually, Devender began getting work outside of school and local tournaments in , All India Radio and even Doordarshan Jaipur. He also started doing radio dispatches for Ranji Trophy matches held in Jaipur and got commentary gigs for polo matches held in Jaipur for DD Sports.In 2009, when the now-defunct Champions League T20 was held in India, Lalit Modi, the then IPL chairman who was associated with the Rajasthan Cricket Association, saw Devender’s passion for commentary and sent him to Delhi for an internship. There he met Alan Wilkins for the first time and Wilkins became Devender’s mentor. During this time, Devender also met many other commentators and when the Afghanistan Cricket Board (ACB) needed a commentator, one of them suggested Devender’s name to the board.He was signed up and as luck would have it, his first stint was an ODI match between Ireland and Afghanistan on December 5, 2017 in Sharjah.Devender still gets emotional remembering that day. “I couldn’t believe that I was sitting in the commentary box where Tony Greig served Sachin’s Desert Storm to the world,” he says. “It took me an innings to sink it all in and only when I was going for the commentary in the second innings, I felt that a dream of mine had come true. That is when I posted on my social media, ‘I am making my international cricket debut’.”Today, Devender is the voice of Afghanistan cricket. Since 2016, he has done commentary on almost every international match that Afghanistan have been a part of. He has no professional cricketing background but has the experience of commentating in over 100 international matches. Apart from the international games, Devender also does commentary in Afghanistan’s domestic 50-over and T20 tournaments. He travels to Kabul every year for those and is also called the ‘Voice of Kabul’. Devender has now visited Kabul several times and says the city is a “second home” for him.”When I first got the offer to go to Kabul, people were asking me a lot of questions, but I was clear,” he says when asked about the political situation in Afghanistan. “I can go anywhere for my job because I love it immensely. I had no doubts about going to Kabul.”In fact, once there was a blast at the Kabul Stadium during a domestic T20 game [in 2022]. Many people wanted to call the game off and many international players went home overnight. I not only continued to do commentary in the game but also stayed in Kabul till the end of the tournament. I’m an Army man’s son so these things don’t scare me.”After Tendulkar’s retirement in 2013, Devender’s dream of commenting on his batting remained unfulfilled. But he does not want any of his other dreams to remain unfulfilled. Last year during the Men’s ODI World Cup, he ticked off one of those by calling the India vs Afghanistan match for BBC Test Match Special. He now wants to move to other sports and is confident of fulfilling that dream of his as well.This story was originally published in ESPNcricinfo Hindi and can be read here

Padres Playoff Offensive Futility Continues in Game 1 Loss to Cubs

The Padres struggled to score again in a playoff game. It's a story the team's fans know all too well after the team's failure in the NLDS last season.

On Tuesday, the Padres scored a run in the second inning against the Chicago Cubs, breaking a 25-inning scoreless streak in the postseason. Then they didn't score again in a 3–1 loss. San Diego has now mustered only one run in its past 33 postseason innings.

Last season, the Padres beat the Los Angeles Dodgers 6–5 in Game 3 of the NLDS, scoring all six runs in the second inning before being shut out for the rest of the game. L.A. then blanked San Diego in Game 4 and Game 5, totaling 24 consecutive shutout innings to end the Friars' season.

On Tuesday, San Diego scored on a Xander Bogaerts double in the top of the second inning to take a 1–0 lead. Despite several chances to plate another run, the Padres couldn't capitalize as they finished 2-for-7 with runners in scoring position.

Chicago battled back with back-to-back solo home runs from Seiya Suzuki and Carson Kelly in the fifth inning. The Cubs tacked another run on in the eighth inning to secure a 3–1 lead.

Cubs relievers tossed 5 2/3 shutout innings after starter Matthew Boyd was pulled with one out in the fifth inning. They didn't allow a hit or a walk and struck out four batters after Boyd left the game. Chicago's pitchers retired the final 14 Padres batters in order to end the game.

San Diego managed only four hits and one walk on the day. The top three in the Padres' lineup, Fernando Tatis Jr., Luis Arraez and Manny Machado, went a combined 0-for-10 with three strikeouts and a walk.

It will be do-or-die for the Padres on Wednesday, but history is working against them. Since MLB moved to its current playoff format in 2022, no team that has lost the opening game of a wild-card series has come back to win it. San Diego's offense will need to wake up if the team wants to have any chance.

The Cubs have home-field advantage and all the momentum.

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