Tottenham 2025-26 kit: New home, away, third & goalkeeper jerseys, release dates, shirt leaks & prices

Everything you need to know about the new Tottenham Hotspur kits for the 2025-26 season.

Home

Home Kit

  • Keeping the iconic navy sleeves while incorporating a fresh grey and ashen slate pattern beneath the arm
  • The outer part of the sleeve maintains the Club’s classic lilywhite colour, offering a modern twist on a traditional look

From

$105

Buy Now!

Away

Away Kit

  • Sleek black base with grey accents, white logos, and a modern square tile pattern spelling “SPURS.”
  • Finished with a round-neck collar featuring grey piping and “Spurs” lettering on the inside

From

$155

Buy Now!

Home

Home Kit

  • Keeping the iconic navy sleeves while incorporating a fresh grey and ashen slate pattern beneath the arm
  • The outer part of the sleeve maintains the Club’s classic lilywhite colour, offering a modern twist on a traditional look

From

$105

Buy Now!

Away

Away Kit

  • Sleek black base with grey accents, white logos, and a modern square tile pattern spelling “SPURS.”
  • Finished with a round-neck collar featuring grey piping and “Spurs” lettering on the inside

From

$155

Buy Now!

Home

Home Kit

  • Keeping the iconic navy sleeves while incorporating a fresh grey and ashen slate pattern beneath the arm
  • The outer part of the sleeve maintains the Club’s classic lilywhite colour, offering a modern twist on a traditional look

From

$105

Buy Now!

Away

Away Kit

  • Sleek black base with grey accents, white logos, and a modern square tile pattern spelling “SPURS.”
  • Finished with a round-neck collar featuring grey piping and “Spurs” lettering on the inside

From

$155

Buy Now!

Tottenham Hotspur fans can expect a fresh blend of tradition and innovation in the club’s 2025-26 kits, as Nike introduces new designs for the home, away, and third strips. Since beginning their partnership with Spurs in 2017-18 and securing a long-term deal in 2018 reportedly worth £30 million per year, Nike has mostly stuck to a familiar aesthetic — but this season brings more daring changes, particularly in the away and third kits. AIA once again features as the main shirt sponsor, maintaining a sponsorship streak that dates back to 2014.

Shop Spurs 2025-26 kits at NikeBuy now

From subtle sleeve tweaks on the home shirt to a vibrant third kit inspired by past glories, there’s plenty for supporters to take in as Ange Postecoglou’s side prepares for the new campaign. GOAL takes a look at what Son Heung-min, James Maddison, and the rest of the squad will be wearing throughout the 2025-26 season.

  • READ MORE: All the new 2025-26 football kits
  • X/SpursOfficial

    Tottenham 2025-26 home kit, release date & price

    Shop Spurs 2025-26 kits at NikeBuy now

    Tottenham Hotspur have officially revealed their Nike Home Kit for the 2025/26 season, available now exclusively through the Club and Nike, both in-store and online.

    This season's kit introduces a refined update to last year’s design, keeping the iconic navy sleeves while incorporating a fresh grey and ashen slate pattern beneath the arm. The outer part of the sleeve maintains the Club’s classic lilywhite colour, offering a modern twist on a traditional look.

    The launch was marked by a powerful video campaign featuring legendary former captain Ledley King, who leads fans in a heartfelt pledge of loyalty to Spurs, reinforcing the deep-rooted connection between the Club and its supporters.

    The Elite version of the jersey is available to purchase for £125 now, whereas the Stadium version is available at £85.

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  • Nike/Spurs

    Tottenham 2025-26 away kit, release date & price

    Tottenham Hotspur's 2025/26 away kit, crafted by Nike, was unveiled on June 26, 2025.

    It marks a bold return to black for the first time since the 2014-15 season. The design features a sleek black base complemented by subtle grey accents and white logos, creating a modern and minimalist aesthetic.

    A distinctive square tile pattern, incorporating the letters "SPURS," adds depth and character to the shirt. The round-neck collar, adorned with grey piping and "Spurs" lettering on the inside, enhances the kit's polished look.

    Similar to the home kit, the elite version of the away shirt is available to purchase for £125, while the stadium version is priced at £85.

  • Footy Headlines

    Tottenham 2025-26 third kit, release date & price

    According to leaks, Tottenham Hotspur's 2025–26 third kit introduces a vibrant design that pays homage to the club's history while embracing modern aesthetics. The jersey features a bold Dynamic Yellow base, complemented by navy logos and pacific blue detailing, marking the first return to this color scheme since the 2020–21 season.

    A standout feature is the reintroduction of the classic Spurs crest, used between 1999 and 2006, adding a nostalgic touch for long-time supporters. The kit utilizes Nike's Total 90 template, known for its distinctive paneling and retro-inspired elements, aligning with Nike's broader initiative to revive this iconic design across its elite teams.

    This Tottenham 2025–26 third kit is anticipated to launch in August 2025.

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  • Tottenham 2025-26 goalkeeper kit, release date & price

    Shop Spurs 2025-26 kits at NikeBuy now

    There is no information available about the 2025-26 Tottenham goalkeeper kit – not even leaks are available. Watch this space to find out about the kit when it is announced.

Killing the golden goose

Shahid Afridi’s shock retirement from Test match cricket has reopened the debate about the current volume of international cricket. Is the surfeit killing the game. Cricinfo’s readers have made their views plain

Cricinfo staff13-Apr-2006Shahid Afridi’s shock retirement from Test match cricket has reopened the debate about the current volume of international cricket. Is the surfeit killing the game. Cricinfo’s readers have made their views plain. What do you think?


Shahid Afridi: opting out because of overkill
© Getty Images

I agree 100%. Too much cricket, particularly one-day cricket, is killing the sport and its appeal. Pakistani spectators don’t exactly flock into stadiums for Test matches but, as a fan, I can tell you, every time Shahid Afridi is in the playing 11, all Paki fans make their best efforts to see him. He is the biggest attraction in any form of the game in Pakistan. Now, with his retirement from Tests, the not-so-full stadiums during Test matches will be even more deserted. Waqas KhanI do understand the players’ frustration at a very busy schedule. When looking at possible solutions, I hope the ICC realises the difference in taste for the game here and in the subcontinent and does not polarise the game even more. Raz KhanTo restore Test cricket to its pre-eminence, countries should send their 2nd XI to half of their one-day matches on the basis of ‘resting’ players or ‘blooding’ new ones. Two benefits: the majority of their ‘best’ players only play Test cricket, and extend their careers in this field, and second-tier players get international experience thus increasing the talent pool for playing in Tests. If the crowds want to see the best players, they will have to go watch Test cricket! Hamish MueckeThere is too much cricket, no doubt about it. Players carry niggles all the time. Yes, it’s their profession and they should be fit, but this is also a game. And a game should be enjoyed, not suffered. Bilal FayyazAbsolutely NOT, this question is for people with a low appetite for Cricket. There is no reason to reduce any form of cricket – Test or one-day. One-days have got exciting over the years and so have Test matches, haven’t we seen more results in Tests than before? If at all there is a concern for health and a personal life of players, there is always a choice for the player and the managing committee to rotate them if they are fatigued. There is so much attention, interest, coverage and revenue from the game, why should it be reduced? Shri BudkharGreed could kill Test cricket – I perfectly agree with the author, too much cricket and ugly cricket like 20/20 can kill the golden goose. Ramesh Kumar

There is a joy in waiting, in looking forward to an important game. All-round cricket in all kinds of weather and on ill-prepared pitches is no fun. Biren Shah

I couldn’t agree more. For too long, money has dictated the game, to the detriment of the game (much as with football, we only have to look at the example of the Champions League etc to see where cricket might end up in a few years’ time). The effect is already being felt as bowlers are becoming overworked and batsmen reap the rewards (the recent match between The Australians and the South Africans being a prime example). Wake up ICC before it is too late. Ben KnightToo much cricket is most definitely killing the game. I know in our country we used to wait anxiously for cricket matches, no matter who was playing. And cricket lovers use to remember the statistics of each match. But now that atmosphere of anticipation is missing and people do not even remember the dates of forthcoming matches of Pakistan. And too many matches are taking their toll on the players as well. Zeeshan ZahoorI love cricket, and love that there is so much on. But if it is affecting players in that they have too big a workload, then there must be less. If matches, because of their sheer abundance, lose their appeal and value to the players themselves, then what enjoyment can the fans have? Furthermore, I cannot begin to just imagine what their families must be facing. I think less cricket, despite being in a money-hungry world, is the practical way to go. It will save the players, which I would have thought would have been the most important thing to the game … but sadly, I may be wrong. Ashish SharmaIs too much cricket killing the game? Absolutely! As soon as there’s too much cricket being played, the intensity level and the competitiveness on the field drops significantly. Not to mention the physical toll it takes on the players’ bodies. For the audience, we get to see time and time again the same players battle it out against each other and it becomes repetitive and boring. India v Pakistan clashes used to be of extreme importance. Now, however, there is no pressure on Indian & Pakistani players when they play each other, as they know if they do not perform up to par, they will get another chance in a few months’ time to redeem themselves. Saeed ChaudhryI agree wholeheartedly with Andrew Miller’s comments. The common issue seems to be a weak ICC and a selfish BCCI. It is unavoidable that India would one day flex its muscles, yet why do the rest of us follow this blueprint? Having spent my life living in both Australia and England, I share the mutual passion for true cricket – Test matches. I have watched the whole India v England Test series and not a ball of the one-dayers. They are also losing their appeal in Australia, where crowds attending the regular triangular tournament have fallen drastically. Perhaps the ICC could amend the Test rankings to penalise teams that play too much one day cricket (ie India)? Gary DaveyToo much cricket is definitely killing the game! Just look at what it has done to Afridi. Cricket lovers all over the world will miss watching one of the most entertaining players in the game. Afridi’s contribution to Pakistan’s revival in fortunes in Test cricket over the past year has been crucial and it’s a shame that we won’t see him in England, playing a part in an intriguing series. Rayan MalikI couldn’t agree more. I think Afridi is making a pretty sensible call – he needs some family time, sometimes. The whole thing about the one-day game versus Test matches is an old debate, and it will probably get older still. The big problem is that the game is being exploited for every last shekel by the ICC, who do not seem to have its best interests at heart. It’s a sad situation, but hard to see a solution. Daniel McBreartyI don’t think cricketers should complain about playing more games, because these cricketers get paid to do a job. I mean, I work every day and I probably would work harder than them, and I still get paid less per annum. They get paid to play – who really cares if they are not fit, they have to do the job just like you and me, day in and day out. The cricket associations also need to make money, and if playing more games is the answer, then more games they shall play. I feel no sympathy towards the cricketers, they should work for their pay cheques. SidToo much cricket isn’t killing the game, but over-familiarity has made a considerable difference in people’s desire to sit and watch a game which lasts around for most of the day. Pakistan v India is one of the most anticipated tours but because of the growing amount of matches it has killed the joy and entertainment. UzairToo much cricket is certainly killing good cricket. There is a joy in waiting, in looking forward to an important game. All-round cricket in all kinds of weather and on ill-prepared pitches is no fun. Biren ShahI think the number of Test matches are fine, however, I believe there should be far less ODIs. They should get rid of these silly, relatively insignificant ODI tournaments, and stick to having a five-match ODI as the warm-up to the Test series. James Carlisle

Cometh the hour

England set the right tone in the first over at Lord’s and took the momentum into the rest of the morning

Andrew McGlashan and Anand Vasu21-Jul-2005

Justin Langer suffers a painful blow from only the second ball of the match © Getty Images
When England have got it wrong to Australia’s opening batsmen, in the opening overs of past Ashes series, they have got it spectacularly wrong. Phil DeFreitas’s long-hops at Brisbane in 1994 and Darren Gough’s 18-run over at Edgbaston in 2001 immediately handed the advantage to their opposition. But, today at Lord’s England got the first over right and set a completely different tone.Steve Harmison made an almost instant statement when he struck Justin Langer on his right elbow with the second ball. Langer grimaced, then dropped his bat, before receiving a couple of minutes’ treatment from the Australian physio, Errol Alcott. Although the over went for nine, a clear message had been sent out and it was only the beginning. Here Cricinfo’s ball-by-ball commentary charts a bruising opening hour for Australia’s top-order.4.4 overs Harmison to Hayden, no run, short one again and Hayden goes for the pull. He misses it completely and cops one on the helmet! Hayden jarred as the ball hits him smack on the badge. Harmison has now struck both openers with well-directed short balls. Hayden just takes his helmet off to check that everything is OK.7.1 Hoggard to Langer, one run, just short of a length and outside the off. Langer pushed the ball towards cover and runs, Pietersen sprints in and has a shy. If that had hit, Langer was gone for all the world! Risky single, that.7.6 Hoggard to Hayden, OUT: There’s the peach from Hoggard. Perfectly pitched up, swinging in late, Hayden leans forward to drive and misses as the ball shatters the off stump! Hoggard strikes! Now you can bet he’ll be bowling another over or two!9.1 Hoggard to Ponting, no run, full and swinging away, Ponting drives hard at it and the edge flies to Pietersen in a close gully, and he puts down a sharp chance!10.4 Harmison to Ponting, no run, and it is Ponting’s turn now! Short ball, Ponting goes for the pull and cops a nasty blow on the grille of the helmet. Another disruption in play here as the helmet seems to have jammed on Ponting’s face and caused a bit of bleeding. It looks a bit gory there as the blood pours down Ponting’s cheek.While England struck the body blows in the first hour, the second hour would bring the real rewards, as England’s pace quartet ripped out Australia’s top order. So often Test matches start with a whimper as both teams size each other up, but these two sides already know each other inside out and finally they have been given the chance to show their true wares.

The power of three

A moving homage to Clyde Walcott, one of the legends of the game

Vaneisa Baksh27-Aug-2006

Walcott was the danger man: a mighty hitter with aggressive instincts that rendered bowlers impotent by the sheer force of his drive © Getty Images
“I can never do more for cricket than cricket has done for me,” he said, wrapping up an interview. “I can never put back what was given to me.”Within this acknowledgement of perpetual indebtedness lay an equally powerful statement: that Clyde Leopold Walcott would never give up trying to repay it. Who else would weigh his cricket life on such an untenable scale?Who could look at his contribution and say more was expected?Sir Clyde Walcott was more than a legend in his time; he was one of the three men who reconfigured West Indies history by defining an era that has come to be known as the age of the three Ws.West Indians, shaped by the molding hands of slavery, indentureship and colonialism, had liberated their spirits through an abiding individualism. Their cricket had thrown up outstanding and gifted players, men who stood out as sharply as silhouettes before the ascending full moon. Individuals whose talents summoned superlatives and overshadowed the team were the stuff of West Indian lore.That is, until the three Ws — Frank Worrell, Everton Weekes and Clyde Walcott — three Barbadians who coalesced into one majestic unit in the public imagination. For the first time in its richly individualistic history, West Indies cricket came to know the power of three. It was a superb blend of the similarities borne by their environment and the differences in their personalities and styles.Frank Worrell was the debonair diplomat, charismatic captain and astute tactician. Smooth, sleek, spirited and smart, he answered all the calls for a new West Indian leader. When he died in his early forties, the cricket world was immeasurably saddened. So young, so much was yet anticipated of this stellar being. The grief was as much for what had gone as for what was to come.Everton Weekes was rated the best batsman of the trio. Coming from a social background that threw needless obstacles in his way, his trajectory was not as steep and he was deeply conscious that scoring hundreds would not guarantee him a place on a West Indies team renowned for its predilection for favouring political and social considerations in its selection process. He would have to score five consecutive centuries to secure his position. Although cricketers revere him, he was the last of the three to be knighted, and his considerable expertise and talent has not been utilized and embraced within the sphere of West Indies cricket as it should have been.Walcott was the danger man. Powerfully built, standing at 6ft. 2ins. he was a mighty hitter with aggressive instincts that rendered bowlers impotent by the sheer force of his drive. Having learnt at Harrison College that he could double his chances of playing if he expanded his skills, he became a wicketkeeper. Though his height complicated this he was good enough to serve in this capacity for the West Indies though it later injured his back.It was fortuitous because although he made his debut for Barbados at 16 – and just after World War II he set a record stand of 574 (his highest, 314*) for the fourth wicket with Worrell against Trinidad in 1946 – he did not score well in his first international encounter with the MCC, and it was his safe gloves that kept him on the side until he and his bat reconciled.It was a grand reconciliation when the team toured India in 1948-49. Walcott kept wicket, but scored two centuries. On the famous 1950 tour of England, he and Weekes scored seven centuries each, with Walcott’s 168 at Lord’s ensuring the first West Indian Test victory in England. Later, in 1955, he set a record by scoring a century in each innings in two of the Tests against Australia.The three Ws kept abreast of each other, such was their synergy. Twice they all scored centuries in the same Test match. Against India at Sabina Park in 1953, Worrell made 237, Walcott, 118 and Weekes 109. The following year in Port-of-Spain, this time against England, Weekes made 206, Worrell, 167 and Walcott, 124.Soon afterwards, Walcott went to British Guiana to work on one of the sugar estates developing cricket. He coached, organised clubs and competitions, and helped improve and create facilities. He described his Guyana sojourn from 1954 to 1970 as “one of the most satisfying periods” of his life. From it emerged players like Rohan Kanhai, Basil Butcher, Lance Gibbs, Joe Solomon and Roy Fredericks. He eventually captained the Guyana team, and even led them to victory against Barbados in 1963. By the time he left, he had been President of the Guyana Cricket Board of Control for two years. Two years later, he would become senior vice-president of the Barbados Cricket Association before assuming the presidency of the West Indies Cricket Board of Control from 1988 to 1993.In this role, he sat at the ICC, and from 1993 to 1997, he became its first non-English chairman. He had also managed the West Indies team for seven tours from 1969 to 1987, including the first two World Cups in England and the third in India and Pakistan.If he felt that he had not contributed as immensely to cricket as it had to him, others disagreed. In 1966, he was awarded the Order of the British Empire for his contribution to cricket in Barbados, Guyana and the West Indies. In 1970, he received the Golden Arrow of Achievement Award for his contribution to Guyana’s cricket. In 1991, he was presented with the Gold Crown of Merit for his contribution to cricket and cricket administration in the Caribbean and in 1993 he was awarded a knighthood for his contribution to the game globally.In 1958, he published his autobiography, , and ended by acknowledging that the game will continue changing and improving, and that there will always be critics and confusions.”Perhaps,” he concluded, “when Frank Worrell, Everton Weekes, and myself are crusty old men, cricket authority will still be discussing the lbw law, the size of the stumps, the number of fielders on the leg-side…”And, no doubt, we shall shake our heads, complaining that ‘it’s not as good as it used to be.’ But you know, we will probably be wrong.”Worrell went too early, and Weekes is still going strong. Walcott left us at eighty. Went from the youngster defying his parents’ desire to make him a dentist to a life of cricket that segued into coaching and administration.He’d seen it all, lived it fully and more than repaid his imagined debt. We remain perpetually indebted for the gift of his cricket, the gift of his life.

Continental rift

A look at the east-west divide in cricket, which is borne out of double standards, racism and reverse racism, prejudices, stereotypes, or all of them and more working together

Ashok Malik03-Apr-2007


Gavaskar’s salvo against Ponting may have been a bit of pre-World Cup sledging in the time-honoured Aussie tradition
© Getty Images

It appeared the ultimate contrived controversy. As the 2007 World Cup began, Sunil Gavaskar and Ricky Ponting got into a slanging match. Gavaskar accused the Australians of being a badly behaved bunch, and contrasted them with the West Indies team of the 1980s, apparently fair-playing “popular winners”. What took things a trifle too far was Gavaskar’s remark that Australian players were so foul-mouthed they were a walking invitation to bar-room brawls. He referred to the late David Hookes, a cricketer who died after a fracas outside a bar.The Hookes allusion was decidedly tasteless. It left Gavaskar open to charges of (reverse) racism, and of taking his baiting of Anglo-Australian cricketers to an extreme. How would Indians have reacted if, for instance, Allan Border had told the media that he was worried Indian cricketers would get carried away after an on-field argument, given what road rage had pushed Navjot Sidhu towards?In the event, Gavaskar eventually apologised after an outcry from former Australian players. But just what was he getting at? How much of what he said was genuinely heartfelt, how much was just plain pre-tournament gamesmanship and needling, and how much actually indicated the undercurrents of racism in international sport? Most important – or perhaps least important – was he right in exonerating Clive Lloyd’s brigade as good sports who shone in comparison to the “Ugly Australians”: Caribbean Tom Brown versus antipodean Flashman?
Take one issue at a time, beginning with Gavaskar’s never-ending, and frankly tiresome, war with the Anglo-Australian cricket world.Sunny bays
Justifiably or otherwise, the former Indian captain carries a number of chips on his shoulder. In some ways he hasn’t forgotten umpire Rex Whitehead ruling him out leg-before at Melbourne in 1981, or forgiven Dennis Lillee for pointing a finger, calling him a four-letter word, and asking him to get going to the pavilion.There are other slights, too, that refuse to rest in peace. Gavaskar still pokes fun at the stuffy nature of the English establishment and the MCC, possibly because he was once refused entry to Lord’s by an official who didn’t recognise him.In 2001 when the English team came to India, Gavaskar accused them of playing “boring” cricket to avoid defeat. This again seemed odd, given the man’s own history. Was this the captain who, having won the first Test against Keith Fletcher’s England side on a minefield of a wicket, relentlessly pursued dull draws for the rest of the series? In one Test, Gavaskar took nearly 12 hours to reach 172. Wasn’t he being “boring” and playing for a draw?So what’s driving Gavaskar? Obviously the effect is more important to him than the content. As he has often told associates, he is alert – over-alert, some would suggest – to the mental games played by the Australians especially. These usually begin with, a co-commentator recalls Gavaskar describing almost avidly, a senior player or even a former star – but rarely the current captain – making some gratuitous statement or the other about how weak or pitiful the opposition is. This needles the rival team or puts pressure on a key player, and furthers the process of what Steve Waugh so eloquently termed “mental disintegration”.Was Gavaskar trying to do the same thing to the Australians, an ageing side with a patchy recent record in one-day cricket, just before the biggest limited-overs tournament of them all? At least Glenn McGrath thought so, in a remarkably mature assessment that essentially said: If he thinks we’re badly behaved, that’s his problem. Just keep David Hookes out of it.Is old gold?
Second, move to the comparison between the Waugh-Ponting Australian team and the Lloyd-Viv Richards era West Indians. Nostalgia has a strange way of dulling emotions, but it would be sobering to recall that Lloyd’s team were often criticised by their opponents for slow over-rates; for a cynical, bouncer-happy approach; for aiming at the tailender’s cheek bone; for sheer intimidation.In the 1983 Prudential Cup final, Balwinder Sandhu, batting courageously at No. 11 after a middle-order collapse, was hit on the helmet by Malcolm Marshall. “Bouncing the No. 11… not on,” said an English commentator, shaking his head.

It would be sobering to recall that Lloyd’s team were often criticised for slow over-rates; for a cynical, bouncer-happy approach; for aiming at the tailender’s cheek bone

It was a more virulent manifestation of this impulse that left India with half their batting order injured at Kingston in 1976, and no one to bat after the fifth wicket fell. This had a certain Sunil Gavaskar tearing into the West Indies – team, spectators, and society – in his book .Go back to another story from the winter of 1983. Played on a breaking wicket, the Ahmedabad Test was evenly poised till Lloyd took “extra-constitutional” measures. In his newspaper column Lloyd lit into the umpires, calling them biased, prejudiced, disgraceful, and worse. It worked. When play resumed, the gentlemen in white coats were clearly nervous, and prone to giving the visitors more benefits than there were doubts.Was Lloyd being unsportsmanlike or uncivil? By one reckoning, he was doing nothing wrong at all. In sport, teams and individuals play to win, not be recognised as honourable schoolboys. A lot of people like Vijay Amritraj, a far greater number remember John McEnroe. That is why, even if Indians may have brushed it aside as irrelevant, Ponting’s cutting remark that Gavaskar may want to consider the Indian team’s recent record told a story of its own.Cricket, colour-coded
Was Douglas Jardine racist? If you do a pop quiz among Indian cricket buffs, the overwhelming verdict, nine to one, would be, “Yes, yes, of course.” Jardine, protagonist of Bodyline, famously hated Australians and once called them an “uneducated and… unruly mob”. Perhaps he was classist too: an Oxford-educated patrician who thought nothing of using a strongly-built coal miner, Harold Larwood, to implement his grotesque “leg theory”, and then let that hapless bowler carry the burden of guilt.Yet what was India’s experience with Jardine in 1933-34, when he came here for a series in the winter following Bodyline? In Bombay, the city of his birth, Jardine made an effort to trace and visit his parents’ old and ailing butler – a small but touching gesture that no Australian, certainly, would have expected of the MCC captain.Next, read what Lala Amarnath has to say about the captain of the fielding side when he hit India’s first Test century at the Bombay Gymkhana. This extract from is illustrative: “When I completed the single to reach my century, CK Nayudu touched his bat at the crease and walked down the pitch to shake hands and congratulate me. Since the ball was still in play, the throw landed in the wicketkeeper’s gloves with CK out of the crease. The wicketkeeper, Elliot, looked at his captain for his approval to run the Indian skipper out, but the English captain disapproved with a gesture. It was a wonderful display of true sporting spirit.”


Muralitharan and Ranatunga discuss the definition of a no-ball with umpire Ross Emerson at Adelaide in 1999
© Getty Images

Race, nationalism, parochialism, identity – no area of human endeavour is free of conflicts devolving around these, and there is no reason why cricket should be the singular exception. Yet it would be important to note that for every determined and proven theory of racism, there is an equal and opposite theory.Indian cricket fans often argue that the Australians and the South Africans – consistently, the two best white teams in the world – don’t understand or appreciate subcontinental social niceties; that they can’t figure out why the prototypical Indian or Pakistani or Sri Lankan cricketer is so strait-laced, mild-mannered, and diffident, rather than a matey pub-hopper with a redoubtable vocabulary of cuss words. They are nonplussed that somebody like Muttiah Muralitharan has taken Australian sledging to heart.Yet there is the other side of the story. So used are cricket’s “traditional” cultures to the deferential, goody two-shoes demeanour of subcontinental cricketers that when an Arjuna Ranatunga stands up for his beleaguered spinner and fights the umpires and the Australian media, when Sourav Ganguly writes a little script of his own and keeps Steve Waugh waiting for the toss, when Imran Khan says he has no patience for Ian Botham and Allan Lamb because they are not in his class, there are howls of protest; it is not laughed away or grudgingly appreciated as clever gamesmanship.Sometimes there are overt double standards too. In 1996 the Australians famously boycotted the Sri Lanka leg of the World Cup, claiming to be worried about Tamil Tiger violence. After 9/11, with greater reason perhaps, they opted out of a tour of Pakistan and played instead in “neutral” Colombo and Sharjah. Yet in July 2005, when terrorist bombings shook London, there was no question or serious talk of not playing the first Ashes Test at Lord’s two weeks later.Having said that, how much do “coloured” cricket societies do to keep the stereotypes alive? It is easy to admonish Australian aggression as overdone, but name the cricket journalist in India who has not written long essays bemoaning India’s lack of Aussie-style steel. As Indian coach, Greg Chappell has been asked by a dozen interviewers as to how he plans to inculcate “Australian aggro” into the Indian team. To be fair to him, he has not taken the question seriously.The fact that it is asked, however, does point to the obverse side of excessive sensitivity to racism – that it sometimes betrays an inferiority complex. That’s another pitch, to be tackled another day.

Monty emulates Bedi

Monty Panesar became the first spinner to take six wickets in a first-innings of an opposition’s batting at Lord’s since Bishan Singh Bedi took 6 for 226 in 1974

S Rajesh and HR Gopalakrishna20-May-2007Monty Panesar has captured the imagination of cricket lovers throughout the world, and over the last two days he gave further proof of his talent, becoming the first spinner to take six wickets in a first-innings of an opposition’s batting at Lord’s since Bishan Singh Bedi took 6 for 226 in 1974.For a spinner to take six wickets is the first innings is unusual, but it’s even more uncommon for five of those dismissals to come through the lbw mode. Thanks to Asad Rauf’s brave umpiring – three of those dismissals were pad-first cases, when the batsmen played with their bats behind their pads – Panesar achieved a feat that’s only been done four times before, and never by a spinner. Terry Alderman, Curtly Ambrose, Richard Johnson and Mohammad Zahid are the only others to have nailed five lbws in a single innings.

Bowlers who have nailed five lbws in a single innings

Bowler Figures Against Venue & year

Terry Alderman 33.5-6-105-5 Pakistan Melbourne, 1989-90 Curtly Ambrose 22.4-10-45-8 England Barbados, 1989-90 Mohammad Zahid 20-3-66-7 New Zealand Rawalpindi, 1996-97 Richard Johnson 12-4-33-6 Zimbabwe Chester-le-Street, 2003 Monty Panesar 36.1-3-129-6 West Indies Lord’s, 2007 Panesar also became the first England bowler in 12 years to take six in a single innings at Lord’s – the last one to do it was Dominic Cork, when he took 7 for 43 in 1995 against … you guessed it, West Indies again.After Panesar did his bit, though, England still needed quick runs to try and force victory, and they found their man in Kevin Pietersen, who blasted a 138-ball 109. He’d missed out in the first innings, but he made up for that lapse this time around, against one of the friendliest West Indian attacks to have ever toured England. Usually happy to test the batsmen with short deliveries and bouncers, this West Indian attack had neither the pace nor the inclination to push the batsmen on the back foot: off the 138 balls Pietersen faced, only two were bouncers.The result was Pietersen had ample opportunity to plonk his front foot forward and drive on either side of the wicket. As the table below shows, 78 of his 109 runs came from front-foot drives.

How Pietersen got his runs in the second innings

Stroke Balls Runs Fours

Front-foot drive – off side 33 48 9 Front-foot drive – on-side 34 30 1 Other strokes 71 31 1 The 135 runs he scored in this match has pushed Pietersen’s average back over 50 – he now averages 50.50 from 24 Tests with seven centuries. (Click here for Pietersen’s cumulative career average.)

Stoic Ganga proves a point

If patience and stoicism were not deeply ingrained in Daren Ganga, he would have already lost hope in his career as a West Indian Test player

Vaneisa Baksh in St Kitts23-Jun-2006


Daren Ganga answered his critics in telling fashion with his third Test century against India in St Kitts
© Getty Images

If patience and stoicism were not deeply ingrained in Daren Ganga, he would have already lost hope in his career as a West Indian Test player. Fortunately, they are the hallmarks of an essentially positive character because he has had to endure harsh, often baseless, criticisms over the years.At Warner Park on the second day of the third Test against India, Ganga scored his third Test century with that same patience and stoicism. He wasn’t the only one to thrive in the first innings, with Chris Gayle adding 83 and Ramnaresh Sarwan producing a superb birthday ton. What was interesting was that they all played absolutely within the parameters of their natural games – Gayle was powerful, Sarwan was stylish and Ganga was disciplined. In that framework they managed to build the best opening total that West Indies has managed through this series.For years, the West Indies team has been searching to find the right combination of skills and experience. Gayle and Sarwan, after a long period of erratic performances, seem to have reached a point of maturity. And it’s because the selectors have allowed them a measure of continuity in the team. Ganga’s temperament carries a stabilising force that is necessary for a team that is still full of dash and without direction. However, the anchor can become the albatross for a public that is impatient for action and a team that just wants to hit everything out of the grounds.So to Ganga had been thrust the Larry Gomes role, but he was only 19 when it came. It was an enormous amount of pressure for such slender shoulders. Remember, he had come to the team with a reputation for stylish, technically correct batting … and runs. The transfer from first-class to Test cricket weighed him down and one could observe that during his debut innings at Durban, when he eked out a painstaking 28 off 94 balls. What followed was a series of in-and-out appearances in the team. Until April 2003, when he scored his maiden Test century against Australia, he had only gone past fifty three times in 17 Tests.He followed it up with another century but then came another long hiatus, when he was dropped for the England tour in March 2004 after a thrashing in South Africa. Faced with apparent rejection by the selectors, Ganga assembled his trademark stoicism and projected his energy towards the Trinidad & Tobago side, which he captained. He scored 265 against the Leeward Islands in March 2005 – an innings with 36 fours and two sixes – and led his team to a double victory in the 2006 Carib Beer Series, the first regional title for the team in 21 years.One of his charges, Darren Bravo (the younger brother of Dwayne) described him as a captain who is “very supportive of players”. It’s an element he brought to the T&T team. He has been described as solid, fair, nurturing, developmental, responsible, decent, and honest. If it all sounds a bit too good to make him likeable to a bunch of young players, they do ascribe some fun to his personality. He is just a cool character.Sill, despite his calm demeanour, Ganga has been ruffled by criticism that prevails regardless of performance. Here, they were heightened by perceptions that his inclusion in the team spelled the end of the fledgling career of Runako Morton, the local boy from Nevis. Hardly had the press conference begun, when he dedicated his century to his childhood friend Sanjeev Moonan, than he was faced with a barrage of questions about the pressure to perform.


Ganga has always been stylish and technically correct, but he has struggled for consistency at Test level
© Getty Images

“You’ve got to turn negatives into positives,” he said calmly. “I know a lot of people were getting impatient with me with regard to my own personal game and with regards to me opening the batting with Gayle. But these things motivate me and I must add that I had a very good chat with Brian, who knew that I was under a bit of pressure and helped by seeking me out, especially at such a time. He’s been through situations such as these, he’s had his criticism and he’s bounced back.”The day before, Lara had bristled at suggestions that Morton was dropped because of politics. He mentioned that he’d had a chat with Ganga at breakfast on the first day, where they’d discussed Ganga’s different styles while playing for T&T and West Indies. “It’s all about being under pressure,” Ganga said of the contrast. “Every time I walk to the crease to play for West Indies, I’m under pressure. I need to perform. That definitely adds to it. It’s about dealing with that pressure.” He added that it had been nearly two-and-a-half years since he’d last played; indeed, he’d missed ten Tests before being recalled for the New Zealand tour this year.”I didn’t have too much match practice,” he added, “and that showed in the first two Tests [of the ongoing series]. I got starts but didn’t really convert.” He thought he’d matured in the past two-and-a-half years, and felt he’d passed a certain developing stage in his life – the Under-24-average phase – to a point of greater confidence. “To compare my average to my present form and present maturity is not a good judgment. I’ve proven myself in domestic competitions and proven myself in New Zealand.”He doesn’t sound too sure though; all through the press conference he referred to the “pressure” to perform. It is clearly a weight he still carries, though his talk with Lara seems to have eased the burden for this match. Just as he was about to finish, one of the local journalists asked, quite brazenly, “Daren, who is your godfather?” It was a stupid question, but symbolic of the continuous jabs to his self-confidence. Sarwan and Gayle found their way through the early years because someone kept the faith even when they had erratic periods. Ganga hasn’t had that stretch of stability to nurture him and ease the pressure. It is a great pity because it’s something he’s brought to West Indies cricket.

An eye on Ranji – Part 2

Cricinfo profiles the Super League teams in Ranji Trophy

Cricinfo staff29-Oct-2007

Bengal


Manoj Tiwary, with his performances last season, got within a shoulder injury of the Indian team
© AFP

Despite two amazing seasons, Bengal are without any trophies and they must be wondering what more they need to do. This season, they face a hard task of picking themselves up after two of their most experienced players – Deep Dasgupta and Rohan Gavaskar along with many others – have defected to the Indian Cricket League (ICL). They have made it to two finals in a row, but somehow managed to stumble at the last hurdle and had Dasgupta and Gavaskar still been with the team, they would have been strong favourites to go the distance again.Allrounder Laxmi Ratan Shukla, vice-captain last season, has been appointed the captain of the side after he decided to not join the ICL. Shukla, averaging only 32 in first-class cricket, will be looking to make a statement both as a leader and as a batsman. But the major batting attraction once again will be Manoj Tiwary, second in the overall run-getters’ list last season. He was unfortunate in getting injured just before what could have been his ODI debut, but is back among the runs after a shoulder injury. Apart from Dasgupta and Gavaskar, Abhishek Jhunjhunwala and Subhomoy Das are their big batting losses to the ICL.There is good news though: SS Paul, their leading bowler in 2005-06, is back to full fitness after he missed the whole last season with a knee injury. Along with Ranadeb Bose, the highest wicket-taker last season, vice-captain Saurashish Lahiri and Sourav Sarkar, Bengal can still boast of the most solid bowling attack in the country.With five of their six matches to be played at home, they should be backing themselves to make it to the knockout stage third time running.What they did last season
Bengal’s performance last season was an almost perfect mix of efficiency and flair: while Bose never let them miss Paul, with consistent and stable medium-pace bowling, Tiwary led the batting in typical aggressive style. Sourav Ganguly put in his cameos whenever he was available to play. They were almost perfect because they fell at the last hurdle: unable to overcome a strong and star-studded Mumbai side.They also showed resilience when in an away game they rolled Hyderabad over for 76 after having fallen behind by 109 in the first innings. They led their pool with 17 points from three outright wins and two first-innings leads. Bose and Tiwary led the statistics and they were solid until the finals.Men to watch
Tiwary, Bose and Paul would want to continue from where they finished off last season. Tiwary with 796 runs at 99.50, Bose with 57 wickets at 14.22 and Paul with 36 wickets at 25.38 in the previous season; came close to national selection, but face a fresh domestic season ahead. Tiwary still stands with a realistic chance for a call-up anytime, while for Bose and Paul it is another opportunity to put up a statement.

Hyderabad


VVS Laxman may play only two games for Hyderabad
© AFP

Probably the side most hit by the ICL, Hyderabad go into the season with a new look side with few expectations. They have always been difficult to ignore, hovering in and around the top four, but it would require something special to reach the knockout stage this time. Anirudh Singh, who led their one-day team for part of the last season, Ambati Rayudu, Ibrahim Khaleel, Indershekar Reddy, Kaushik Reddy, Shashank Nag, Alfred Absolem and D Vinay Kumar have defected to the ICL, removing a major chunk of their Ranji side.VVS Laxman has been appointed captain, but he is unlikely to feature in more than two games, what with India having Tests scheduled against Pakistan and Australia. Laxman, Arjun Yadav, the vice-captain, Pragyan Ojha and Daniel Manohar will be the only four Hyderabad players with the experience of more than 10 first-class matches.They will be comforted by the schedule – four of their games are at home – and might be tempted to prepare sporting tracks, giving themselves a chance of winning outright.What they did last season
Finishing third in a tough group represented a satisfactory effort, but it could easily have been a special one. They had the better of some early draws before getting within striking range of the semi-final slot. A calamitous collapse against Bengal – having gained a 109-run lead they fell for just 76 – jeopardised their chances and left them a bit too far behind. A win there could have almost certainly ensured a knockout spot.Ravi Teja, the dashing opening batsman, was the find of the season with 393 runs at 43.66. Rayudu and Anirudh turned in some consistent performances as well, but won’t be featuring in this edition.Men to watch
Teja is definitely one for the future though he will want to break the century barrier at the earliest opportunity. Medium-pacer MP Arjun made a good impression in his first few games and would be expected to lead the attack this time around. Left-arm spinner Ojha, one touted as good enough for India, will also have to shoulder a big responsibility.

Saurashtra


Saurashtra will want Cheteshwar Pujara to continue last season’s form
© ICC

With a record that has veered from the middling to sloppy, Saurashtra have rarely made an impact in the Indian domestic circles. For long viewed as minnows who could be easily rolled over, Saurashtra are gradually establishing themselves as a side with surprise potential. Relying on budding talent, they have a bigger challenge ahead of them this time: all their games are away from home. They are one of the few sides without too many changes – none defected to the ICL – and as a seasoned observer pointed out, “nothing much has changed in Saurashtra in the last 15 years”.What they did last season
They started poorly, conceding a first-innings lead against Uttar Pradesh, losing to Baroda and Andhra Pradesh and missing out on the lead against Tamil Nadu as well. A couple of inspired home wins against Delhi and Haryana, both engineered by handy left-arm spin from Rakesh Dhurv, provided plenty of cheer and they ended the season with a high-scoring draw against Karnataka. They will hope to get more out of draws – the inability to take the first-innings lead was a concern – and notch up tall totals on their travels. Their batsmen have usually adjusted well to the slow and flat nature of the Rajkot strip, but countering difficult conditions away would be the major challenge.Shitanshu Kotak and Cheteshwar Pujara – one an experienced hand, the other an emerging one – managed more than 500 runs each last year. Dhurv ended with an impressive 25 wickets, at an average of 21.60, and Sandeep Jobanputra, the new-ball bowler, complemented him with 21.Men to watch
Pujara is probably the one closest to the getting on the national radar, that too only for the longer format. He has shone bright in the Under-19 levels and displayed the patience and all-round strokeplay to rack up big scores. Ravindra Jadeja, a left-arm spinner who fields athletically, could develop into a bits-and-pieces player in the one-day version. Dhurv and Kamlesh Makvana will lead the spin department.

Middle order needs to fire for SL

Jayasuriya’s return, after a terrific Indian Premier League and his Asia Cup final century, makes a massive difference to Sri Lanka, as he is the only real power player they have

Jamie Alter in Dambulla17-Aug-2008

Sanath Jayasuriya’s performance has had a big impact on Sri Lanka’s sucess-loss ratio
© AFP

In the months after the World Cup, Sri Lankan cricket went through a transition of sorts, as experienced cricketers like Marvan Atapattu and Russell Arnold retired and younger talent was brought in. All throughout Mahela Jayawardene called for the need to give the newer players more time and for the seniors to take up more responsibility.Now as the World Cup finalists they currently sit at No. 7 in the ICC ratings for one-day international sides, having won two out of six series. Immediately after the World Cup, Sri Lanka lost to Pakistan 2-1 in Abu Dhabi. A 3-0 whitewash of Bangladesh was followed by a rare home loss, and that to England, hardly the best ODI side in the game. After a poor CB Series in Australia Sri Lanka were beaten 2-0 by West Indies, ranked eighth in the world. It really couldn’t get much worse than that.The most consistent problem was a deficiency in the batting department, which failed to function as a cohesive unit. Sanath Jayasuriya blew hot and cold, Jayawardene and Kumar Sangakkara sparkled intermittently, and a lack of fire power in the middle and lower order hurt Sri Lanka. The middle order revolved around a mix of bits-and-pieces cricketers and one-day specialists, and no one stood out. One or two batsmen performed in each game, but that is rarely enough.In the last year Tillakaratne Dilshan averaged 29.76; Chamara Silva 24.42; Chamara Kapugedera 33.07; Maharoof, restricted to seven games due to injury, averaged 11.25. Chaminda Vaas failed to chip in with runs and the most successful lower-order batsman was Nuwan Kulasekara, who averaged 26.75. In one-day cricket you need runs on the board. Sri Lanka failed to always put those up.Like all sides searching for a settled team, they also experimented. Upul Tharanga and Mahela Udawatte opened the batting at times, with mixed success. In Pakistan Sri Lanka bumped Sangakkara up to open the innings because it was felt they needed another bowler. Kapugedera was shuffled around and injury to Maharoof only compounded their woes.Sri Lanka failed to bat well consistently against England at home and in Australia, where they only won two games. The 3-1 scoreline against England should have been the wake-up call to spur them into a period of intense development and progress as a team, but the CB Series was equally disappointing. Their highest total was 238 and the batsmen averaged just 22.44 runs per wicket – that doesn’t win you games. Sri Lanka failed to get big knocks from Sanath Jayasuriya and Sangakkara, like they played in last two games of the Asia Cup, and that has a huge effect on their performance.In the few games of the CB Series that two of the top three got starts, the rest were unable to work a way out when the opposition tightened its line. In a sense the senior Sri Lankan batsmen ignored the very lesson they had been stressing to their younger team-mates, of staying out in the middle as long as possible.Jayawardene admitted a few personnel changes also attributed to this dip in form, but he gave no excuses. “We did not consistently lift our standards since the World Cup,” he said. “We certainly are not there but we’re maintaining it. We turned it around a bit in the Asia Cup, where we were consistent with the bat, ball and on the field. That’s the toughest thing for international sides.”In a sense the Asia Cup marked a revival. Sri Lanka batted consistently well, but there was one massive factor – Ajantha Mendis. His success, come in such a short period, gives them the option – momentarily – of scrutinising their batting combination.Jayasuriya’s return, after a terrific Indian Premier League and his Asia Cup final century, makes a massive difference to Sri Lanka, as he is the only real power player they have. A well-rested Jayasuriya can offer dimension to Sri Lanka’s unit, but the fact is that plenty of responsibility falls on Jayawardene and Sangakkara. The middle order needs to come good.Sri Lanka have been able to fall back on a bowling unit which picked up a lot of wickets recently, but Jayawardene wants to move on from what happened in Australia. He recognised Mendis as a trump card, an attacking option, but called on others to contribute. Sri Lanka need to re-learn a lesson taught to them before the World Cup – when you cruise, you often cruise downwards.

Yusuf makes a statement

Yusuf played his part to perfection in the finale, flattening Chennai with a match-winning all-round show

Cricinfo staff01-Jun-2008
Yusuf Pathan’s hurricane knocks have caught the attention of the national selectors (file photo) © Cricinfo Ltd
Soon after moving to Jaipur, Shane Warne wrote a paper which would serve as the vision for the Rajasthan Royals over the next 44 days. Warne’s plan culminated in success as the Indian Premier League’s least expensive franchise edged the Chennai Super Kings in the final.In the paper titled ‘What’s My Role’, Yusuf Pathan’s task was: “1. Be aggressive, dominate the start of the innings. Play with freedom, take ’em [bowlers] on. 2. [Bowl] Stump-to-stump off-spin. 3. Field in the ring early on and in the deep later.”Yusuf played his part to perfection in the finale, flattening Chennai with a match-winning all-round show. First, his accurate line cramped the batsmen, and he dismissed the openers in his first two overs. His tight bowling frustrated the dangerous Albie Morkel, who became his third victim – mistiming a pull. Yusuf’s strikes dried up the runs and ensured Chennai could manage only a modest total.With low-scoring encounters the trend at the DY Patil Stadium, Chennai were still hopeful and their confidence soared as Rajasthan stumbled to 42 for 3 in the seventh over. In walked Yusuf at a stage when his team desperately needed someone to deliver.One of Yusuf’s strong points is his willingness to attack in any situation. In the World Twenty20 final, his first game with the national team, he hit Mohammad Asif out of the ground. He was sent up the order and he understood his brief clearly. Today was the same.Rajasthan appeared edgy as the asking-rate climbed above ten, but Yusuf was unperturbed. After pulling L Balaji for two boundaries, he survived a close call when Suresh Raina failed to latch on to a skier off Muttiah Muralitharan. That was the turning point and in Murali’s next over, Yusuf twice sent the ball into the crowd over long-on. By the time he was done, he had scored 56 off just 39 and taken Rajasthan within touching distance of a memorable win.Yusuf’s power-hitting had been influential in several earlier matches as well: 61 off 28 balls in the third game against Deccan Chargers, 55 off 33 against Kolkata Knight Riders and 68 in 37 in the return match against Deccan. Despite these scores, he admitted he was nervous before he went in. “I spoke to [Jeremy] Snape, the team’s mental conditioning coach, and after that I felt good,” he said. He was scratchy to begin with, but Shane Watson took the pressure off at the other end as Yusuf found his groove.Yusuf has pummelled attacks with his clean hitting in domestic games, and his three first-class hundreds in the season gone by have come at a strike-rate well over 100. Irfan Pathan had also acknowledged his elder brother’s prodigious talent. “I always thought he was the more talented. It’s just that I got lucky and got a break [ for India] sooner.” Yusuf’s hurricane knocks in the IPL finally convinced the national selectors to pick him for India’s ODI squad for Bangladesh tri-series and the Asia Cup.Mahendra Singh Dhoni, India’s limited-overs captain, was well aware of the threat Yusuf posed. “He is one of those players you have to get out,” Dhoni said. “You can’t let him stay for long because he will score runs and that, too, at a fast rate.”Warne called Yusuf’s performance “fantastic”. When Warne had presented his vision paper to every individual he had given a tag of responsibility to each player. Yusuf’s read “The Statement Maker”. The laconic man from Baroda lived up to his billing and made the most telling statement when it mattered.

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