Rejuvenated Aaron's India dream still burning bright

The 28-year old has endured seven stress fractures, but the need to cut down pace hasn’t crossed his mind even once

Deivarayan Muthu15-Oct-2018Seven stress fractures have slowed down Varun Aaron’s career, but he still retains the “madness” to bowl fast and hopes to work his way back into national reckoning or at least the A team.”The madness to bowl fast is still there even after seven stress fractures,” Aaron told ESPNcricinfo. “If I wanted to cut down on pace or go by the safer route, I’d have done it by now. Fast bowling in India isn’t easy because of the wickets and conditions too, but it’s fun at the end of the day when you see the ball thudding into the keeper’s gloves.”India’s fast-bowling resources are well-stacked now, but the desire to get back to doing what he did in Bengaluru in 2015 still exists.”Why would I want to bowl fast if I don’t want to return to the Indian team? I haven’t got many chances to prove myself at India A as well. So, the opportunity is Vijay Hazare and Ranji now, and I want to make the most of it. I’m sure I will play for the country again.”Aaron last played for India in the Bengaluru Test against South Africa in 2015, when he bowled an absolute beauty that straightened late and hit the top of Hashim Amla’s off stump. He has now returned to Bengaluru as one of Jharkhand’s senior players for the 2018-19 Vijay Hazare knockouts.He had played a vital role in Jharkhand topping Group B with seven wins in nine games (the other two were washed out), taking at least three wickets in each of his last four matches in the enervating Chennai heat. Aaron attributed his improved fitness and rhythm to his county stint with Leicestershire, after “surprisingly” finding no takers at the 2018 IPL auction.He played three first-class games, claiming nine wickets, including a match haul of six that fashioned Leicestershire’s first win after 19 matches. He subsequently toiled away on flat pitches in the one-dayers, picking up seven wickets in six matches at an economy rate of 6.39. These are just bare numbers. The placid tracks there made him dig deep into his reserves and prepared him for the long domestic season back home.

“Earlier before the county stint, I used to move the ball away, but now the inswinger is coming along well and I also developed a few cutters and slower balls in England.”

“The county stint was the best thing that happened to me,” he said. “The win against Glamorgan was [special]; it was their first win in I think 21 [19] championship games. So, I was really happy to be a part of it and more than being part to be able to contribute to that win was a really good feeling. The number of matches we played in a really short span of time and different conditions we encountered in again short spans of time helped me improve my bowling and fitness.”The wickets in the one-day games were pretty flat. See in the one-dayers there were a lot of 300-plus scores. It’s about adaptability and being able to develop a vast skillset to make the most of different conditions.”Aaron added an inswinger and cutters to his repertoire, which is serving him well in the Vijay Hazare Trophy. One such slower cutter tricked Tamil Nadu captain B Indrajith and tipped a thriller Jharkhand’s way in the Chennai leg of the tournament.
“Earlier before the county stint, I used to move the ball away, but now the inswinger is coming along well and I also developed a few cutters and slower balls in England.”Rapid pace: check. Variations: check. Accuracy? Work in progress. Even in his previous stint with India in 2015, when he bowled ball to Amla, Aaron regularly strayed on the pads and was picked off rather easily. “Yes, there was a problem with my lines and lengths,” he said. “Coming back from injury, coming into the team, and then another injury hampers your rhythm. I’ve had a longer run of being fit now and it has helped keep my rhythm going. I’m in brilliant rhythm now and consistency isn’t an issue anymore.”Jharkhand had lost won the Vijay Hazare Trophy in 2010-11, when Aaron cranked upto 153kph. Can they regain the title this season? Aaron, certainly, believes so.”We have had a brilliant side for the last four years,” Aaron said. I feel with the talent we have we can only do justice if we can win a couple of trophies this year. More than anything else, we’re really looking to dominate the domestic scene this year.”Because we’ve got fast bowlers – Rahul Shukla is back from injury and with what I could contribute too – and (Shahbaz) Nadeem is there in the spin attack. Virat (Singh), Ishan (Kishan) and Saurabh (Tiwary) in the batting line-up. We believe we can win Vijay Hazare and then the Ranji, which is the dream of every domestic player in India.”

Why aren't T20 teams scoring bigger more often?

If more sides approached T20 less like traditional cricket forms and embraced all-out hitting without worrying about wickets, they would end up consistently pushing the envelope

Jarrod Kimber16-May-2019Andre Russell’s left foot pointing to midwicket, his right knee bent, and his arms swinging through a ball that’s about to be called a wide is not what you think of as a traditional cricket shot. Test batting has actually slowed down in recent years, meaning T20 cricket has never been less like it. The runs-per-over figure in the last three years for Tests is 3.2, for ODIs 5.3, and in all T20s it is 8.2.T20 has lit a fire under attacking batting, and for someone who believes Test batting is proper cricket, it’s hard to look at T20 hitting and not think it’s crazy. We’ve not only perfected the cow-corner hoick but the inside-out hockey-slap, the back-of-point slice, and a host of other shots where someone will lose their Adam’s apple. Players now understand how to hit the ball hard.But the actual gains in run rates across formats are pretty low. Players aren’t adding an extra run a year in T20, and ODI cricket hasn’t become as much like T20 as some would think. The highest run rate in ODIs over a year was in 2015 – 5.5 per over; and that included extras. Viv Richards scored at 5.4. In ODIs last year the economy rate was 5.3 (mocking the whole “300 is par” notion), though it had risen from 5.12 in 2009. Even if you look at the lowest yearly run rate in the last decade, 5.05 in 2012, against the highest, in 2015, it’s only an 8% rise.ALSO READ: Types of T20 teams: the six-hitting sideThe run rate in T20 has grown slightly more quickly. In the last decade, the lowest run rate was 7.48, in 2013; last year it was 8.4, which is an 11% rise. Unlike a good T20 innings, it has been steady rather than spectacular.And that is because T20 cricket is still anchored in what we might call “normal cricket”. In 2018 the T20 batting average for all batsmen was, at 25.06, the highest it has ever been, suggesting that batsmen are putting more value on their wickets now than in previous years. They might hit a lot of sixes, and they might get quicker with their scoring, but they still play T20 like normal cricket, just with more urgency. It has not truly become a sport in its own right just yet, although it is well on its way.In computing and science, people talk about theoretical limits. In nature, the theoretical limit to how fast something can travel appears to be the speed of light (about 300,000km/s). The fastest observed human is Usain Bolt, clocked at 44.72kph. So there appear to be natural limits depending on mass, physiology and other factors. For T20 cricket we have a theoretical limit of how fast batsmen could score if they did not worry about losing wickets – the scoring rate off free hits.Since 2008, the scoring rate off free hits stands at 12.54 (runs per over); so batsmen can’t score at much faster than two runs a ball. As T20 currently stands, 12.5 is our theoretical limit, which translates to an innings score of 250.At the moment the rise of the run rate off normal deliveries is fairly in sync with the run rate off free hits. A couple of years one has increased while the other has fallen – or vice versa – but overall they are rising fairly equally. (The free-hit run rate has swung more but that is mainly because there are so few free hits every year, amounting to a fraction of a percentage point of all runs scored.)

Of course, batsmen cannot score at 12.5 for sustained periods because of the finite resource of ten wickets. Additionally, as so often happens in limited-overs cricket, there will be playing-condition changes that make that number redundant. So as long as five bowlers are needed, four fielders need to be inside the circle, there are six overs of Powerplay, and turf wickets continue to be used, it’s hard to see players crossing the 12.5 mark. If they keep improving at the current rate – in the last decade the scoring rate in T20 has gone from 7.57 to 8.4 – it will take them over 30 years to make it.But batsmen are still playing a game that is rooted in conventional cricket-think. If and when that changes, run rates could take a jump.***When I speak to T20 players and coaches, many of them point to batting averages or overall runs tallies. Batsmen still don’t want to get out, and coaches place a high value on consistency over explosiveness. T20 has changed that equation slightly, but it has not eradicated that thinking.In 2018 the average of all batsmen in T20 was the highest since the birth of the format. And this year is currently the second highest. Batsmen are batting longer, meaning more players get set – so if you think about it from a conventional standpoint, it would make sense that they score quicker than newer batsmen.ALSO READ: How batsmen began to go boom all the timeT20 batting line-ups still rely on the top order to a ridiculous degree: 496 players opened the batting last year in T20 in 717 matches (that is for both spots). At Nos. 5 and 6, over 500 players batted . Which tells you that we chop and change other batting positions because we struggle to work out what success is in those positions, while for openers a steady-as-you-go start is enough to get you multiple opportunities in that position.And that is because openers seem at first glance to be the most successful batsmen in T20. So they should be, given they have the field up for almost all of their innings, and even with mediocre years, can find themselves towards the top of the run tally or average list. Opening is the quickest-scoring batting position in T20, so even slower-scoring openers often have better strike rates than Nos. 4 and 5.If you throw in the No. 3, who gets some of the benefits that apply to openers, the first three batsmen face 57.6 balls an innings, or 48%. That does not leave the rest much of a chance to get started. Openers could go far quicker, but teams still fear the “lose three wickets in the Powerplay and lose 65% of the match” rule.It’s something teams still hold on to. A team like Adelaide Strikers seem to have taken this so much to heart that they don’t attack much in the Powerplay at all; instead they start attacking once the field goes out. This approach is steeped in traditional cricket thinking. Many of the losses that that 65% rule refers to are because teams slow down after they lose the three wickets and consolidate, and not just because they lost three early wickets. In part that is because they have stacked their batting at the top, but mostly because that is how batting always has been in cricket: your top order makes most of the runs, and if they don’t, you have to rebuild to set a new base.But what if the base is wrong to begin with?What if T20 batting isn’t about big contributions from the top but a series of contributions all the way through? In 2018, No. 8s on average faced 4.07 balls per match, and only appeared in 58% of possible innings. So that means they hardly get in, and when they do, it’s not for long.

The top six currently face 100 balls, or 83%. And often they do that by conserving their wickets and then trying to attack towards the end.To score a lot quicker, you could select a team of players who average 20 at 1.6 runs a ball; a top eight, perhaps. It takes 12.5 balls to make 20 at that speed, and if you had eight players who had the ability or temperament to do it, you would have 160 runs from 100 balls with 20 balls left in the innings. There would be two extra batsmen to consume the 100 balls, but they would be scoring what teams score in a match now, with 20 balls left. That comes down to ability, but you’d also need all-round skills, to not weaken the bowling. It so happens that a lot of the players who smash it loads do have bowling ability, like Russell, Sunil Narine, Colin de Grandhomme and Corey Anderson.Some of this goes back to traffic management. If you build a highway, the worst thing that can happen is, the highway is seen as the only option. You want to build a highway and still have a large proportion of people use other roads. Otherwise everyone will clog up the highway. If you rely too heavily on your top three and they bat slow for too long, they clog up the innings. If you have a multitude of scoring options, and everyone is trying to score as quickly as they can, the chances of traffic jams are limited.If your top three face 60 balls every game, unless they are incredibly fast scorers, you’re limiting what your other talent can do and allowing the opposition to stack their bowling in match-ups. If you have a collection of players who all can face 12-15 balls per game and go for it, everyone is a threat, and you’ll have a team with many diverse strengths and weaknesses.Even the king of T20 batting, Chris Gayle, gets himself set to ensure he scores big more often, knowing that his power can catch him up and then some. Gayle is one of 26 batsmen who have faced ten or more free-hit balls, and he is the only one with a strike rate of above 300 from them. So if even Gayle is getting set, getting a good average and ensuring his run total is high, what of mortal men? The average of all openers last year was 27 and they struck at 134. Not that long ago, batsmen who averaged 30 and had a strike rate of 130 were in demand, but openers have got so good in that position that they do score 30 at 130 as default.ALSO SEE: Russellmania hits T20This system, of players scoring faster and doing so deep into the batting order, might feel riskier at first, but it could lead to more consistent high scoring.Now while these big data trends often tell us a lot, they can be tricky. In the last three years, among all grounds used more than ten times, Trent Bridge has the highest run rate, 8.82 (which is a strike rate of 147). If you are playing at Colombo Cricket Club Ground or Multan Cricket Stadium, the runs per over are about 6.84. So a strike rate of 130 at Trent Bridge is not sensational, but in Colombo or Multan, it’s great.Sunil Narine successfully brought the pinch-hitter concept to T20s•BCCIFactors like this, not to mention collapses, weather, bowling match-ups, all affect what batsmen do. Also, there are teams like Sunrisers Hyderabad, Perth Scorchers and Chennai Super Kings, who have preferred to achieve consistent totals rather than score as many as they can, and that has helped them win titles.Even as T20 hitting has improved, cricket still finds a way, through bowlers or conditions, to make people go back to what they know.***There are ways – not exactly new ones – of extending your batting line-up and making each batsman more efficient.The pinch-hitter has been around in cricket for a long time. It was perhaps 1992 when the idea took a strong hold in ODIs, and pinch-hitters have been used occasionally since then. Narine has brought the trend back in T20 cricket. As an opener he averages 18 and strikes at 160. You’re not losing that much if you throw someone like him up: he won’t face many, if any, balls batting at Nos. 9 through 11, and he’s less likely to play for his average.There are plenty of players like Liam Plunkett, Adil Rashid, David Willey and Rashid Khan who have the game to be thrown up the order. If they will only face five or fewer balls anyway, targeting the Powerplay with a relatively unimportant wicket might work. You could also make the argument that batting at the death is harder, with the field out, a soft ball, and death-bowling specialists operating. You might want smarter batsmen there, whereas at the top, hitting is at its most simple. A score of ten off four balls at the top is worth more than ten off four at the death, as death over run rates are higher.But it is in the middle order that things get trickier.***Players who find themselves in the middle order are usually professional batsmen. They are trained a certain way. There are coaches who still get upset when a player hits a boundary and tries to hit another the next ball. Batsmen in the top six want to bat long and sensible, even if the definition of that has changed for T20.One of the most notable exceptions is Russell. He faces far fewer balls than a normal middle-order player – only 13 – and can bat anywhere from three to seven. Russell in the last two years, since he came back from his drugs ban, has averaged 31, but at a strike rate of 182.Najibullah Zadran strikes at 118 in T20 and 224 in T10, which is an indicator of how much further hitting can go•AFPRussell has been slowly improving over the years, averaging more. His enforced break from the game seems to have helped his batting. But unlike most middle-order players, his batting is not the sole reason he is in the team. He could afford to risk it all and only face a few balls a game because – like Narine – his bowling is strong. Now if his knees keep getting worse, he has more than enough of a reputation as a batsman to continue on the strength of that skill alone – but the ability to bat the way he does came from the original freedom his bowling allowed.Though there are few batsmen with Russell’s skills, he is not alone. Players like Anderson, Ben Cutting and de Grandhomme can score at inhuman levels. One major difference is that often these guys either aren’t bowling at all or they are the fifth or even sixth bowlers. Russell is a genuine front-line bowler. He can start batting in sixth gear without fear; most players cannot, either physically or mentally.Now imagine you had the ability to bat like Russell or Narine, but no second skill at all. There aren’t many teams who take punts on players who average around 20. Most coaches don’t see it as a passable average, no matter what the strike rate. Unless you are batting at No. 7 and giving something else in the field. So if you had any batting ability, pushing your average up while limiting your strike rate would be a fairly safe bet.These kinds of players need to be unlocked in order for batting to be spread more throughout the innings and for players to cut loose with fewer fears.***You can’t fault the players for taking the position that will help their career. But free hits have shown what is possible, and so has the T10 league. In the last T10, 21 players scored over 100 runs apiece, of whom 15 scored at over two runs a ball, and not one scored at slower than 1.5 per ball. What was interesting was the jump in strike rates for some players between T20 and T10.Andre Fletcher is the second highest scorer in CPL history. He can smoke fast bowling, including doing things like score 20 runs in four balls against one of T20’s most parsimonious bowlers, Mohammad Irfan. But after the Powerplay his strike rate often slows down 30 points or more. In the T10, without a natural slow-down period, and without the worry of having to bat for a long time, he struck at 214. In the last two years his T20 strike rate is 122; that’s some leap between the two.And it wasn’t just him. There are so many players, like Nicholas Pooran, Najibullah Zadran and Fletcher, who have so much more to give. So while there aren’t many Russells out there, the T10 and free hits have shown us that many batsmen can score at scary levels.

There were only four players of the 21 who made over 100 runs in the last T10 series whose strike rates didn’t rise by 40 or more: Alex Hales – whose strike rate in the last two years is 146 outside of Trent Bridge and 209 at his batting-friendly home; Cameron Delport, who struggled to get going in the T10 tournament; Hazratullah Zazai, who has been striking at 189 recently, so it’s hard to improve on that too much unless you are Russell (who hit three fours and 17 sixes in the T10); and Narine, who has been at 153 in T20, and went up to 187.So we can assume that Narine is batting near his natural scoring limit, and it seems like most players are not. It’s not a surprise to learn that despite getting into pretty much any side as first or second bowler, he has also spent years working on his striking – at first, hitting sixes over fours as a tail-end cameo man; and then, after Aaron Finch promoted him to try and upset frugal left-arm spinner Michael Beer, he became a semi-frequent short-innings opener.But this is a low sample size, and for all we know, the wickets were made for batting. Also, I talked to one bowler in the T10 who admitted it was hard to get up for only bowling 12 balls a day knowing you were about to be destroyed. However, like the free hits, it shows what is possible when you embrace the hitting and stop worrying about wickets.ALSO READ: Why hitting is more optimal than batting in T20Russell was an aggressive player from the start, and with two first-class hundreds in 17 games, he is a decent batting talent to begin with. But what he did was use all those elements to become the biggest force he could be with the bat. And still, his strike rate jumped 89 in the T10.It is not simple for a team owner to buy all the Andre Russells in the world, because there’s only one. And even cheaper versions, like de Grandhomme, Anderson, Willey and Chris Morris, are still quite pricey.But what free hits, T10, Narine and Russell have shown is that T20 can get a lot quicker. It’s just a question of when it will happen.If you are a specialist batsman, it’s not that easy to make a call when it is your livelihood on the line. T20 tournaments are short. If you tried going all out for one series and ended with an average of 16, would it matter that your strike rate was 180? While individual players will try it, how long before batsmen as a whole go for this approach? It might even be dictated by the people who choose teams and not the batsmen themselves.There is definitely a limit to T20 scoring at the moment, and considering that in no year have we topped the nine-runs-an-over mark, that seems to be it. Not long ago, it was eight runs an over. These limits are not natural, though; they’re man-made. As more specialists come into T20, players try new methods and continue to work out what is actually possible, the sky may not be the limit, but 12.5 will not stay as the theoretical one.

The two lucky events that helped Royal Challengers Bangalore's cause

In a match of narrow margins, two lucky events – both involving Faf du Plessis – helped Royal Challengers Bangalore finish on the right side of a one-run result

ESPNcricinfo stats team21-Apr-2019In a game of slim margins, every chance or half-chance is potentially result-changing, and so it proved in the cliffhanger in Bengaluru. Royal Challengers Bangalore ultimately squeaked through by a run, but the result could have easily gone the other way had a couple of dismissal-related events not turned out the way they did.Coincidentally, both these events involved Faf du Plessis. In the sixth over, with AB de Villiers on a run-a-ball 14, du Plessis made a fine attempt at mid-off to take a catch but failed to latch on to it. Du Plessis did finally take the catch to dismiss him, but by then de Villiers had made 25 off 19, which means he added 11 from five balls from the time he got the reprieve.According to ESPNcricinfo’s Luck Index, which puts a run value to every lucky event in a match, had that chance – or half-chance – been taken, Royal Challengers would have scored seven fewer runs that they eventually did, and the end result could have been different. The run cost is calculated by allotting the extra deliveries batted by de Villiers to the rest of the batsmen in the team, and simulating the rest of the game to calculate how many runs they would have scored off those deliveries.ESPNcricinfo LtdThe other event is even more interesting. In the fourth over of the chase, the following happened, to quote ESPNcricinfo’s ball-by-ball commentary:
3.2 Yadav to du Plessis, no run, oh my word how has that missed? Shaping away from him and in fact it shaved the stump. At 141 kph, but the bails stay nailed on. Faf’s lucky day. He was squared up and missed it, should have been bowled, but he’s still there. Umesh has a wry smile.Du Plessis was then on 5 off ten balls, and was eventually dismissed for five off 15. According to Luck Index, the other Super Kings batsmen would have scored six runs off those extra five dot balls that du Plessis faced. That means Royal Challengers were actually lucky that the stubborn bail refused to budge, given what happened in the subsequent deliveries to du Plessis.Umesh Yadav was unlucky to miss out on a wicket off that ball, but for the rest of his team-mates, dismissing a batsman actually helped their cause.These were two dismissal-related events which helped Royal Challengers’ cause. In a game of such close margins, there were a few other events too, which had an impact of greater than one run. One of those happened off the first ball of the ninth over, when a delivery from Marcus Stoinis was deemed a legal ball. Replays suggested that his front foot might have gone over the line. It was an extremely tight call which went in the Royal Challengers’ favour, but Luck Index calculates that had the call gone the other way, Super Kings would have benefited by three runs – one run for the no-ball and two for the free-hit ball. That would have potentially altered the result too.

'In the zone' Aparajith aces the Vijay Hazare Trophy with his all-round show

The Manchester United fan put up a stellar performance despite a family bereavement midway through the tournament

Deivarayan Muthu in Bengaluru24-Oct-2019Five hundred-plus runs with the bat. Ten-plus wickets with the ball. And if he doesn’t get you with bat or ball, he gets you in the field. Case in point: his direct hit to run out Gujarat’s Piyush Chawla in the Vijay Hazare Trophy semi-final on Thursday. All of this, despite a family bereavement midway through the tournament.B Aparajith’s paternal grandfather passed away on the eve of Tamil Nadu’s Group C clash against Railways in Jaipur. But he stayed back with the team and produced a brilliant, all-round performance – 4 for 30 and 111 not out – to trump Railways.Aparajith downplayed it, saying, “I was just in the zone and things happened.”ALSO READ – Dinesh Karthik and the story of Tamil Nadu’s unbeaten runHe brings up “I was just in the zone” quite a few times during this conversation with ESPNcricinfo even as R Ashwin engages in some friendly banter, screaming: “Come on, Apar.”Much like his batting and bowling, Aparajith’s fantasy football team is on the rise as well. His only worry for now is the form – or the lack of it – of Manchester United.”I’m still a fan of Manchester United, but I don’t boast about it much these days,” Aparajith laughs. “But [in] these 11 games in the Vijay Hazare we’ve done well as a unit and I’m personally happy with my form as well. When your contributions result in victory, it obviously brings more satisfaction.”While Aparajith has been one of the batting leaders of Tamil Nadu’s middle order for a while, it is the way his bowling has come along that has been a surprise. Given Tamil Nadu’s wealth of spin options, Aparajith was often deemed surplus to the side’s requirements, but the team needed him this season, especially when Ashwin was unavailable and Washington Sundar was recovering from a niggle.ALSO READ – Shahrukh Khan, and a potential box-office hitAparajith explained that captain Dinesh Karthik had “defined his role” during the pre-season camp in Tirupur and credited his senior for making him dig deep into his reserves.B Aparajith celebrates his hundred with childhood friend Vijay Shankar•PTI “I have got good feedback and confidence from the captain when I’m bowling,” he said. “Dinesh [brother] has helped me, and even before the start of the season he told me ‘you will have a role in the bowling department as well’. So he asked me to be prepared for it. I trained hard in Tirupur and I had awareness about my bowling.”Dinesh not only gives confidence, but he’ll also push you. He’ll tell me [it’s okay], even if he [the batsman] hits a four, you back yourself and bowl that ball. Sometimes he tells you have to go defensive. So he also gives me freedom and challenges me as well.”ALSO READ – The rise of B IndrajithA couple of seasons ago, Aparajith was struggling for form, shunting up and down the batting order. He now seems to have nailed down the No. 3 spot, having struck four fifties and hundred from there in this season’s Vijay Hazare Trophy.”Batting has also been going well. Touchwood! I’m very confident with my batting rhythm now,” he said. “To do well in both centres [Jaipur and Bengaluru] on challenging wickets is pleasing. You have to keep performing to stay in your position. Even if I’m the captain, I may bring somebody else to this situation if you don’t bat well and score runs. If I keep doing well at No. 3, I will stay at No. 3. I’m ready to take another role for the team as well, but sometimes when you don’t perform well, you will not get the slot you might want.”Aparajith attributed his all-round success to his off-season training, which included gymming, running and batting stints at Chemplast, his local club in Chennai.”Fitness is a must in modern cricket and I had placed a lot of importance on it before the season,” he said. “I feel those fitness sessions have helped me play back-to-back games in different cities. The sessions are like a school timetable – from Monday to Friday. I have three days of strength training and maybe two days of running. And on every morning at 6.30am I make sure I’m batting at the Chemplast nets.”Aparajith, though, is missing his twin brother B Indrajith, who had led the state last season and is now recovering from a shoulder injury.”We’re all missing him in the team, and I’m missing him even more. He follows every ball on our app, and we generally talk a lot about cricket. It’s not easy to be at home watching your friends play. Last time when we won Vijay Hazare [in 2016-17] he was also with the team. We’re sure he will come back soon.”Tamil Nadu, who are unbeaten in the tournament, will run into an equally formidable and star-studded Karnataka side in the final at M Chinnaswamy Stadium on Friday. Aparajith said he wasn’t putting “too much pressure” on himself and looking to go about things calmly just like he had done in the 11 games leading up to the final.Batting: check. Bowling: check. Fielding: check. Big points in fantasy league: check. The Vijay Hazare title?

'As an allrounder I have a lot to do in every department because competition has gone up'

As she gears up for her KSL debut, Deepti Sharma is also honing her skills as India’s premier allrounder to take on a hectic international schedule later in the year

Annesha Ghosh05-Aug-2019On June 24, 2017, Deepti Sharma made her World Cup debut at age 19, in India’s tournament opener, her first game in England. She got a wicket off her very first ball – Natalie Sciver caught behind. It also happened to be the first wicket via the DRS in women’s cricket. The left-hand batting allrounder would go on to finish the tournament with 216 runs, and as India’s leading wicket-taker; skipper Mithali Raj called her one of India’s future captains.Two years on from that breakout performance, though, Deepti’s primary skill, batting, is not quite where it ought to be. Fellow left-hander Smriti Mandhana took over the opening slot in the 2017 World Cup and made it her own. Since then, Deepti, the holder of India’s highest individual score in ODIs, has been shunted up and down the order across formats, and has had to make do with limited, infrequent opportunities with the bat. But as she gears up to make her Kia Super League debut in the UK, one of only four Indians – Mandhana, Jemimah Rodrigues and Harmanpreet Kaur are also playing – in the tournament, she is hoping for a second wind.”Some days,” she says, “things would go fine and I’d click [in ODIs]”. That happened in sweltering Nagpur last year. Elsewhere, as on a flat Potchefstroom track in February 2018, she finished with an inadequate 112-ball 79 as an opener; and a 49-ball 27 in Mumbai, from No. 6. In T20Is, since January 2018, she has batted in 15 of 24 completed matches – six times at Nos. 6 and 7, twice at Nos. 8 and 9, and seven times at Nos. 3, 4 and 5. “Irrespective of where you bat, how much you score, how quick or slow you score, or how many wickets you get, if India lose, it means you needed to do better on the day,” she says.The lack of clarity about one’s role in the team can often cause young allrounders to devolve into bits-and-pieces players. But Deepti, who is currently second on the list of ODI allrounders, after only Ellyse Perry, says she has averted this by conscientiously raising the quality of her offspin.”I back myself as an allrounder,” she says, “and batting-wise, I have prepared myself to go in anywhere. If the team wants to use me as a floater or gives me a designated position, I am happy fulfilling any role they assign. The Indian team has entered a stage where each one of us has a lot to prove, and as an allrounder, I have a lot of work to do in every department because the competition has gone up.”

“The younger Deepti would think that once you made it to the Indian team, you’ve achieved a lot. What she didn’t realise back then is that to stay there is a different challenge”

The youngest Indian, male or female, to take a five-wicket haul in ODIs, Deepti is the second fastest (43 matches) and second youngest woman to the career double of 1000-plus runs and 50-plus wickets in the format. She is also among the more reliable fielders in the Indian side, alongside Harmanpreet, Rodrigues and Veda Krishnamurthy.During the ODI series opener in New Zealand earlier this year, both those skills were on display. First, she handed India a momentum-changing breakthrough in the 14th over, her rocket arm catching Sophie Devine short. Later, in the 17th over, she set up Suzie Bates with a string of dot balls under overcast conditions, bowling her for her 50th ODI wicket.Deepti says that a good run in overseas leagues can help recalibrate international careers. For an example, she only needs to look to Mandhana, who went through a lean patch during the World Cup, stringing together a series of single-digit scores after making 90 and 108 in the first two matches, but topped the batting charts when she came back to England for her maiden KSL stint.”Smriti becoming the Player of the Tournament [in KSL], becoming the leading run-getter last year, showed that Indians can not only do well, but excel. The way her consistency improved after that brief lean patch, it’s been very encouraging for all [of us in the Indian dressing room]. She’s kept scoring runs and, as ever, kept her composure while batting, which I admire in her.”Deepti will also be Mandhana’s team-mate in the KSL – both are set to play for last season’s finalists, Western Storm. Earlier, after her World Cup performance, Deepti was briefly on the radar of WBBL teams, but an offer didn’t materialise. So, during the Women’s T20 Challenge in May this year, when Storm got in touch with Deepti via Mandhana, she was quick on the trigger. A second franchise, Lancashire Thunder, offered her a contract ten days later, but she didn’t waver.”The Indian team has entered a stage where each one of us has a lot to prove”•Annesha Ghosh/ESPNcricinfo”I had a chat with Trevor Griffin [Western Storm head coach] on WhatsApp,” says Deepti, “and since Smriti had played there last year, that’s also a bit of an assurance, for I know there’s someone I already know and have played with, who knows the group, the coach and the culture.”The three-team Women’s T20 Challenge, held in Jaipur last May during the IPL, also brought learnings she hopes to use in the days leading up to the World T20 in February-March next year, and the World Cup in 2021.”Sophie [Ecclestone, England spin-bowling allrounder] is only 19 or 20, but in the Women’s T20 Challenge, I saw how sorted she was,” says Deepti. Ecclestone bowled the penultimate over in the opener, where she gave away only two runs defending 21.”You look at Sophie and you won’t think she is ever under stress. Suzie Bates, too, gave off a similar impression, but in reality you know each one of them is under pressure because this is top-flight competitive cricket after all. Their approach to high-pressure situations is something I think we [the Indian team] have a lot to learn from.”Deepti pulled off an impressive bowling performance herself in the tournament, in her side Trailblazers’ second game. She was handed the ball in the 18th over, with the opposition, Velocity, just two shy of victory. Deepti bowled three batsmen, including her ODI captain Raj, in five deliveries, capping off a sequence where Velocity lost five wickets for no runs. Deepti’s figures in that match read 4 for 14.”In T20s, I try to bowl slightly flatter, but not without variations,” says Deepti. “I make it a point to use the crease, the box, more than in ODIs, and I practise all of that both with the new ball and for the slog overs. Bowling wicket to wicket may seem simple but it helps me get in a few dot balls here and there.”

“Irrespective of where you bat, how much you score, how quick or slow you score, or how many wickets you get, if India lose, it means you needed to do better on the day”

As far as batting goes, Deepti says she has altered her approach this past domestic season, playing for Bengal, and later while training under her elder brother Sumit during a visit to her home town Agra.”I tried to adopt a slightly more aggressive approach,” she says, “because if at any point the team wants me to perform a role in that mould, I should be able to do that. My strength is playing in the V, but I’ve been trying to get more confident in other scoring areas too, with the slog sweep, the lofted strokes.”That helped during the New Zealand tour earlier this year, but the series as a whole was a mixed bag for her. Deepti’s standout performance came in the third and final ODI, where she made 52 – but in a losing cause: India collapsed and folded for 149. In the three T20Is that followed, she made 5, 6 and an unbeaten 21. There were, however, takeaways from the tour.”First, working under [WV] Raman sir,” for whom it was the first assignment as India’s head coach. “He keeps encouraging me, and pretty much everyone – it helps my confidence. Second, relearning the importance of watching the ball at the point of release because there’s a lot of wind in New Zealand, so it gets more challenging there. It’s a simple thing we are taught in our early days of formal training with the bat, but a reminder about how vital it is can have a big impact on our batting.”When it comes to her bowling, one aspect in particular has attracted attention.”Soon after [R] Ashwin’s mankading incident [the Jos Buttler dismissal in the IPL], many people started saying maybe I would also do this someday,” says Deepti with a chuckle about her tendency to stop in her delivery stride or pull out of her action altogether. “It’s a way to upset the batsman’s rhythm, and I think it works for me. I started doing it out of sheer whim, and then it became a habit. Everyone in the Indian team knows Deepti does this, so they just let me be, but no opposition batsman has ever told me anything about it.”Which side of the debate does she come down on?”If I have to mankad, I’ll give the non-striker a warning first, because even though it’s within the laws, I don’t think it’s in the spirit of the game.””In batting, I’ve tried to adopt a slightly more aggressive approach, because if ever the team wants me to perform a role in that mould, I should be able to”•Getty ImagesNow in the fifth year of her international career, Deepti says captaining her former domestic sides UP and Central Zone, and India Green last year, and playing and living in a new city, Kolkata, as a professional for Bengal since the 2017-18 season, have helped broaden her perspective on playing for the national team.”The younger Deepti would think that once you make it to the Indian team, [you’ve achieved a lot]. What she didn’t realise back then is challenge Women’s team [To stay stuck in is a different challenge, so what if it’s the women’s team?] A cricket team is a cricket team, and each one of us has to prove our worth.”A hectic international schedule awaits her – India will host South Africa in September, then fly to the West Indies the following month. A tri-series in Australia in January 2020 will precede the World T20, and she could also be in contention for a place in the A side that will tour Australia in December this year. There are plenty of opportunities, but a steady stream of rookie talents making their way into the Indian team means there is that much more competition for each of those slots.Deepti says she is aware of the challenges facing her and is gearing up to tackle them head-on. ” aggression type aggression hain [My aggression is a quiet aggression],” she says. “I mean, my personality is such you’ll see that aggression reflect in my desire to get better in all three departments. I am not someone who will show aggression in any other way. I am quiet and shy by nature.”She says the uptick in interest in the India women’s cricket team following the 2017 World Cup has brought in some new pressures. “After the tournament, we got greater financial security and recognition. Earlier, I used to be really shy even to say yes to selfie requests, and although it doesn’t come naturally to me even now, I’m learning to tackle these [requests],” she says.On the cusp of turning 22, some things haven’t changed for her, though. The hair still remains close-cropped. Social media posts are still only part of “being an athlete managed by a player-management company”. And she continues to be as soft-spoken: every third syllable she utters still makes a listener lean in to catch it.Most of all, by Deepti’s own admission, she continues to be every bit the Suresh Raina fan, who during India’s World Cup opener tweeted that Deepti was one of his favourite players.”It’s still that Raina inside-out six that I want to nail,” says Deepti. “It never was perfect, and still requires a lot of work. I’ll keep at it until I get it right.”

Why Singapore beating Zimbabwe is a big deal

All you need to know about the side behind the latest shock result in international cricket

Srinath Sripath30-Sep-2019Double-take, but did you say Singapore’s men’s senior team beat Zimbabwe’s men’s senior team on Sunday?Yes, that’s right.At cricket?That’s why we’re talking about it.The Zimbabwe of the Flowers, Taibus, Taylors and Streaks?The same.An exhibition game right, that doesn’t count towards anything?Nope, it very much is official and it very much does count. Zimbabwe are playing a T20I tri-series in Singapore, where Nepal are the third side. And since April 2018, when the ICC granted T20 status to all its members, each and every 20-over game between any of the 104 member nations counts towards official records.Wow. But it must’ve been a fluke?Not so much. Singapore are among the fastest rising member nations around the globe. Just last month, they beat Nepal and made it to the qualifiers for the T20 World Cup, as one of 14 teams. Six of those will actually make it to the 16-team World Cup next year.ALSO READ: Singapore create history by clinching T20I victory over ZimbabweZimbabwe were probably not at their strongest…They certainly haven’t fielded their full-strength side for this series, with a number of big names like Brendan Taylor, Craig Ervine*, Chris Mpofu and Sikandar Raza missing for varying reasons. Instead, they’re looking at this tri-series to give an opportunity to some of their younger and upcoming players, but none of that is to take away any credit away from Singapore. To put things in perspective, Singapore were playing a Test nation for the first time, and their players had a combined experience of 43 T20Is, compared to Zimbabwe’s 136.And Zimbabwe are still a Test nation right?Yes, they’re still among the ICC’s 12 Full Members, the elite sides who play all three formats. But they have been hit by one crisis after another. They are currently under suspension because of government interference in their cricket administration, and barred from competing in ICC competitions, which has ruled them out of the T20 World Cup Qualifiers. And they have also been hit by the retirement of former captain Hamilton Masakadza, one of their longest-serving players and leading batsman.Singapore are ranked just six places below Zimbabwe in the men’s T20I rankings•ESPNcricinfo LtdThat’s sad. Where has all this left them?As low as 15th on the ICC men’s T20I rankings, which means they are only six places above Singapore who, at 21, are at their highest-ever ranking. They’re above the likes of Kenya and Canada. You might remember that Zimbabwe (with Masakadza’s help) beat seventh-ranked Afghanistan just a couple of weeks ago.SEVENTH-RANKED Afghanistan lost to FIFTEENTH-RANKED Zimbabwe? Is that what you just said?Yes, but let’s focus on Singapore.Sure. Tell me more about their side. Aren’t the players all just South Asian expats living there?Singapore have been lurking as a solid team in 50-over cricket for a long time in the World Cricket League era, the second-tier one-day competition for Associates, with a mix of players comprised primarily of south Asian expats. But their fortunes took a dramatic shift this year with the arrival of Tim David, a Perth-based hard-hitting batsman who has been a member of the Perth Scorchers in the Big Bash League.The 23-year-old David qualifies for Singapore by virtue of being born there and has played a massive role in Singapore’s recent success in all formats. He made 77 off 43 balls against Nepal in July in a win that sealed Singapore’s place in the upcoming T20 World Cup Qualifiers, top-scored with 41 off 24 balls in the win over Zimbabwe and was the tournament’s leading scorer with four half-centuries in five innings in the recent opening round of the new Cricket World Cup Challenge League one-day tournament (which has replaced the World Cricket League) held in Malaysia, where Singapore went 4-1 a week before this tri-series with Nepal and Zimbabwe.Are Singapore the smallest ever nation to beat a Test team like Zimbabwe?Hong Kong come close. They’ve beaten Bangladesh in the past. But Singapore probably are the smallest nation to beat a Test side in an official international game. They have less than a third of Zimbabwe’s population, and roughly 3% of geographical size. Sure, New Zealand and Ireland have fewer people, but they aren’t tiny city-states, are they?Singapore beat Nepal to make it to the World T20 Qualifiers•ESPNcricinfo LtdWhen are Singapore playing in this World T20 Qualifier? And how can I follow their progress?They are competing less than a month from now, and need to qualify out of a group featuring Scotland, Netherlands, Papua New Guinea and Namibia, all ranked above them. The tournament runs from October 18 to November 2 in the UAE.Anything else I should know?Singapore only played their first T20 international three months ago, and have since won four of their five games. After Afghanistan, Nepal and Oman, they could be the next big success story from South Asia. While Afghanistan and Nepal’s rise are more widely known, Oman, who famously beat Ireland in the 2016 T20 World Cup, will go into the T20 World Cup Qualifiers as one of the favourites.*Oct 1, 09.25GMT: The piece was amended to reflect the fact that it was Craig Ervine missing in action for Zimbabwe, not his brother Sean

Fast starters and spin specialists: domestic batsmen to watch in The Hundred draft

Delray Rawlins, Lewis Gregory and Cameron Delport are among the domestic players in line for deals

Matt Roller17-Oct-2019Fast startersWith the number of balls squeezed even tighter than in T20, losing wickets should become even more accepted. Aside from the elite handful who can ‘catch up’ and do so more often than not – think Babar Azam, Moeen Ali, and David Warner – players who eat up balls early in an innings and take a while to get in should largely be avoided: an innings of 30 off 25 will end up being vastly inferior to an innings of 15 off 10.
It is a much-worn cliché that certain batsmen ‘go hard from ball one’, but in practice very few do so. Those that do, therefore, should be snapped up.Ed Pollock carves one through the off side•Getty ImagesEd Pollock was used poorly by Birmingham Bears in this season’s Blast, dropped after five failures in as many innings despite being tasked with the high-variance job of striking at 200 from the get-go. Over the course of the past three seasons, he strikes at 164.61 in the first five balls he faces, and 169.16 in the first ten, making him one of the men who should be able to use the 25-ball Powerplay well.Counterintuitively, Arron Lilley’s reputation as a batsman would almost certainly be greater if he didn’t bowl offspin too. He is generally thought of as a bowling allrounder, but as a batsman alone is worth picking up for his destructive hitting early in an innings; his first-five-ball strike-rate of 157.77 over the last three seasons could see him picked up as a bargain option.Adam Lyth’s struggles in the 2015 Ashes still affect his reputation negatively, but he is a massively undervalued T20 batsman. He struck at 178.72 after five balls of an innings this Blast season, and 190.90 after ten. He is a superb hitter of pace in particular.No obvious weaknessUnder the competition’s regulations, bowlers will be able to stay on for a second set of five balls from the same end. That means that batsmen with an obvious weakness against a particular type of bowling will have nowhere to hide: it will be very easy for them to get tied down.Therefore, batsmen who score quickly against both pace and spin ought to be particularly valuable.Wayne Madsen is a superb player, and has a remarkable record over the last three Blast seasons. He averages over 40 against seamers and spinners, and scores similarly quickly against both (142.5 vs pace, 147.7 vs spin). He should be high on a few teams’ lists.Wayne Madsen plays a shot•Getty ImagesPhil Salt was unfortunate not to get picked up as a local icon, and his exceptional fielding and ability to fill in as an occasional wicketkeeper will count in his favour. He bashes both pace (SR 171.2) and spin (SR 146.3) in the Blast – although his struggles in the PSL hint at a potential weakness against top-quality spin – and will add to his T20 experience in the Big Bash this winter. He should be snapped up early.Almost nobody dared bowl spin to Cameron Delport in the Blast this summer, and with good reason, given he scored at a strike rate of 193.7 against it. But he is almost as destructive against pace, striking at 161.2. With a larger sample size – across all leagues over the last three years, he is almost level-pegging against both bowler types.Death hittersOne of the perennial issues with the Blast as far as England were concerned was that with so many teams, the vast majority of talent ends up batting at the top of the order. That has left a dearth of specialist finishers, though there are still a handful who have demonstrated their worth over the past two seasons.Lewis Gregory was not far off an IPL deal this year after lighting up the 2018 Blast with his death hitting, and has been thrown into England’s T20 squad as a reward. There remains some scepticism over his ability against spin, but the sample size is very small after only one season as a finisher – and will teams hold back their best spinners just to deal with him?Ravi Bopara was perhaps surprisingly overlooked in the local icon draft, and will be an asset to whichever team signs him. Despite his reluctance to fulfil the role, he is immense as a finisher, striking at over 200 in that phase, and will be in high demand come October 20.Ravi Bopara swings into the leg side•Getty ImagesRoss Whiteley is a supreme six-hitter, and would surely have got more of a chance worldwide if his six sixes in a Karl Carver over had been shown on television rather than on a shaky fixed camera. He strikes at 178.0 in the last five overs, and would be a useful pick in a slightly lower salary band.Middle-over acceleratorsThe overs immediately after the Powerplay are typically used for consolidation in T20: overs 7-10 see teams tick over, neither losing wickets nor scoring quickly. Generally, that comes about because an opener slows down having made use of the fielding restrictions, or because a middle-order player has come in and is still getting set.That means that those batsmen who can score quickly in that phase are crucial.Delray Rawlins should be a perfect signing. He scores quickly right from the start of an innings, is ideally suited to tackling the inefficiencies of the overs immediately after the Powerplay, bowls useful spin, and is a brilliant fielder to boot. He has a base price of £50,000, but it might be worth snapping him up in an earlier round, such is his talent.Delray Rawlins in full flow in the Blast quarter-final•Getty ImagesTom Abell has reinvented himself completely as a T20 player in the past two years, adding deft, innovative shots to a solid attacking game against both pace and spin. He goes at 138.3 in overs 7-10, and should be well-placed to keep a team motoring with the field back.Tom Moores has been around long enough that it is easy to forget he is still only 23, and is an ideal man to keep things moving in the middle in The Hundred. He has scored at a strike rate of 143 in overs 7-10, is unusually strong against spin for an English batsman, and is among the best available options for a domestic wicket-keeper.Spin specialistsIt is often missed that English grounds tend to be more conducive to spin than pace in T20. Host venues include the low-scoring pair of the Ageas Bowl and Old Trafford, and spinners have been cheaper than seamers at each team’s ground in the competition over the last three Blast seasons. Domestic batsmen who can play spin will be crucial.Peter Trego is out of contract at Somerset, but remains a useful player even at 38. He has scored at a strike rate of 174.7 against spin over the last two seasons, and should be available on the cheap.Ben Duckett in action for the Lions•Getty ImagesYou’d never guess it after watching his struggles on England’s 2016-17 Test tour of India, but Ben Duckett is a great player of spin in T20, with a vast range of shots around the ground including a trademark reverse-sweep. He has scored at 169.8 against slow bowlers over the past two seasons, and would be an asset to most sides.There is no shortage of English openers in the draft, but Miles Hammond is unusual in his ability against spin. He scores at a strike rate of 157.7 against it, and is a fast starter who will fly in the Powerplay.

Welcome back to the Gabbatoir, Asad Shafiq

He was expected to step up to the next level after his epic fourth-innings hundred in Brisbane three years ago, but things haven’t gone to plan

Danyal Rasool20-Nov-2019Perhaps he could have ducked out of the way. Maybe, with a fresher mind and quicker footwork, he could have got on top of it and fended it into the leg side; there was no short leg after all. Or possibly, that delivery from Mitchell Starc to Asad Shafiq was so ruddy unplayable that every possible universe had him edging it into the air, with a gleeful David Warner positioned directly underneath it.That was Brisbane 2016. Australia like to call the ground the Gabbatoir, as they well might; the home side has not lost a Test match here in 31 years, a streak that stretches to 30 games. But for a while at the end of the fourth day and that fateful fifth morning, Shafiq had Australian necks on the line. Coming in at number six and batting with the lower order, each tail-ender improbably giving him better company than the previous, Shafiq inched towards his hundred, and then surged well beyond it. Pakistan sneaked up on 400 – just 90 short of their target, and what would have been the biggest-ever fourth-innings Test chase – and then surged well beyond it.They were 41 runs away when Starc produced that magical ball to end the most extraordinary resistance. Four balls later, the game was won. The Gabbatoir was intact.It is tempting to wander down an alternate history where Shafiq took Pakistan over the line, just to see what would have happened to his personal career. This intensely private man would have likely seen his face staring back at him from billboards and cheesy television ads across the country, opportunistic politicians garlanding him with awards and cash prizes. It is possible he would have been appointed Pakistan captain at some point. It is possible he would have been called back into the limited-overs side for no reason whatsoever. But what would it have done for, and to, Shafiq the cricketer? In all probability, absolutely nothing.It feels odd to even be discussing Shafiq. He is one of the first names on the team sheet – and yet arguably the least talked about among all of them. Naseem Shah has probably received more attention this past fortnight than Shafiq has in his entire career, the buzz around Brisbane 2016 excepted.He has played 64 consecutive Tests and counting – well over any sustained run any Pakistani player has ever made, and yet decent money can be wagered over the idea that more people in Pakistan recognise Shaheen Afridi by face than do Shafiq. In a single-sport country where the media obsessively scrutinises what every player does on the field or off it, the mention of Shafiq’s name provokes only half-hearted chatter before everyone moves on. For most of his career, he was shunted down to No. 6 like an afterthought. He only earned a promotion from No. 6 after that innings in Brisbane, by which time he had broken Sir Garry Sobers’ record of scoring the most hundreds from that position.There’s every possibility the lack of attention has been beneficial to Shafiq’s career. When players are built up excitedly in Pakistan, they get torn down with even more frenzy, and in a country where what the press says has always had a not insignificant effect on selection decisions, it is better to fly under the radar, a technique Shafiq has perfected in the eight unbroken years he has been with the Test side.Tim Paine looks on as Asad Shafiq lunges forward to defend•AFPBut while the unassuming, private nature of the man could be spoken of as virtues, there’s also the fairly irrefutable point that he isn’t talked about because he hasn’t done much worth speaking of. Shafiq’s technique is stronger than most Pakistan batsmen’s, though his footwork while facing the moving ball still never feels quite certain. He has the tendency to take a half step either back or forward, without ever really committing to either footwork or shot. But there’s more to it than that, a sense of something elemental missing, something the best batsmen have. He should be in that category, but he has never taken that step up.If anything, his career since Brisbane has gone in the other direction. After that innings, his Test average stood a shade under 42. In 18 Tests since, he averages 32.09.Brisbane was been the perfect time for Shafiq to push his average closer to 50, with the promotion up the order imminent, and the retirements of Younis Khan and Misbah-ul-Haq only a few months away. It was when we were supposed to see him realise the potential that had been in gestation for six years. It hasn’t happened, and it makes you wonder if winning that Test, or being made captain, would have made any difference after all.There are mitigating circumstances still. Shafiq is a Test specialist in a side that plays that format far too infrequently for any player to be able to build up any sort of momentum or rhythm. The gulf in quality between Pakistan’s first-class competition and Test cricket is vast, and he has to make that step up before every series he plays. It is perhaps what has driven Yasir Shah’s recent inconsistency too. Pakistan last played a Test in January this year, away in South Africa. Shafiq scored 186 runs in that series at 31.00, with no centuries and two fifties. In a series dominated by seam bowling, they were decent numbers, good enough to ensure there was no pressure on his place, and yet nothing really remarkable. Just standard, Asad Shafiq numbers.And as Brisbane beckons to him once more, he strides into another series against Australia doing what he does best: looking good, and showing promise. It feels depressing to talk of a 33-year old in language reserved for someone of Naseem Shah’s age, but that is what you get with Shafiq. He comes in on the back of two exquisite centuries in warm-up games against Australia A and a CA XI in Perth, and, alongside Babar Azam, he is arguably Pakistan’s best hope of ensuring this isn’t going to be yet another Australian tour of misery, recriminations and inevitable, hopeless defeat.The introvert who shone on the most extrovert stage in world cricket, Asad Shafiq’s story threatens to take flight once more. The appetiser in Perth, as ever, has been salivating; you just have to hope that, at the Gabbatoir, there’s enough meat in the main course too.

Bad news for Mainoo: Man Utd ready move for "out of this world" £52m star

Football can be a cruel mistress at times, with players able to enjoy a meteoric rise, before coming crashing back down to earth with a bump – just ask Manchester United’s, Kobbie Mainoo.

It was less than a year ago that the teenage midfielder was the darling of English football amid his role in the Three Lions’ surge to the Euro 2024 final, with the United academy graduate starting every knockout stage game for Gareth Southgate’s side.

The now 19-year-old had only made his first Premier League start midway through the 2023/24 season, after putting in a Man of the Match display away at Everton in late November, yet was quickly able to establish himself as a central figure both for his club and for his county.

Indeed, the local hero memorably scored what proved to be the decisive goal in May’s FA Cup final triumph over rivals Manchester City, having rounded off a stunning, sweeping move from the rampant Red Devils.

From such highs, however, Mainoo found himself absent from the latest derby encounter at the weekend, with the playmaker edging his way back to fitness amid what has been an injury-hit campaign at Old Trafford.

Kobbie Mainoo

Doubts emerging over his future at the club – following talk of a stall in contract talks – have been added to by question marks over Mainoo’s suitability for Ruben Amorim’s 3-4-3 setup, with that uncertainty only set to be heightened by the latest transfer reports.

Latest on Man Utd's search for a midfielder

The midfield ranks could be in need of something of an overhaul this summer, even with the signing of Manuel Ugarte last year, with Christian Eriksen looking set to depart amid the impending expiry of his contract, while fellow veteran, Casemiro, remains linked with an exit.

As such, there remains the need for Amorim to be handed at least one new addition to bolster that department, with GIVEMESPORT reporting that the INEOS regime are ready to sign Atalanta star, Ederson.

As per the report, United are believed to have the Brazilian ‘in their sights’ ahead of the looming summer window, should they qualify for the Champions League, with Amorim seeking a suitable partner to Ugarte in the centre of the park.

Transfer Focus

Mega money deals, controversial moves and big-name flops. This is the home of transfer news and opinion across Football FanCast.

The suggestion is that the 25-year-old would command a fee of around £52m if he were to leave the Serie A side, with the piece noting that the Red Devils will not ‘pay over the odds’ to get the deal done.

Having been part of the side that claimed Europa League glory against a then-unbeaten Bayer Leverkusen last season, Ederson could represent a worthwhile addition for the Old Trafford outfit ahead of next term.

Why Ederson's signing would be bad news for Mainoo

Not only would the signing of a new midfielder perhaps enhance talk regarding the potential sale of Mainoo – who has been linked with a move to Chelsea – it would also throw into doubt the Englishman’s place in the starting lineup, were he to stay put in Manchester.

The 2022 FA Youth Cup winner had made his mark last season under Erik ten Hag while operating as a deep-lying midfielder or in a number eight berth, albeit with Amorim seemingly uneasy with deploying the teenager as part of his own midfield two, after stating that Mainoo had been “struggling a lot defensively” following his arrival.

Those defensive woes had led the Portuguese coach to push Mainoo into a number ten berth, prior to his injury setback, with the youngster notably scoring and assisting in that role against FCSB in January.

Whether that can be a permanent home remains to be seen, however, particularly with United already boasting the likes of Amad, Mason Mount, Alejandro Garnacho, Joshua Zirkzee and Bruno Fernandes, who are all more natural fits as one of the two number tens.

Mainoo then may have to fight his way back into contention in a deeper role, albeit with Ederson perhaps likely to represent a better fit for what Amorim wants, with The Athletic’s Carl Anka previously outling that the ‘central midfielders in Amorim’s 3-4-3 are chosen for their athleticism and tackling qualities first and foremost’.

Games (starts)

30 (27)

Goals

3

Assists

1

Big chances created

6

Key passes*

1.0

Pass accuracy*

88%

Tackles*

1.5

Interceptions*

1.1

Ball recoveries*

5.2

Total duels won*

55%

Possession lost*

10.5

Those are traits which the Atalanta man has in abundance, with former England boss Fabio Capello describing him as “out of this world” due to his “ability to combine running, physicality, technique and intelligence”.

The right-footer – who has scored three goals and registered one assist in 30 Serie A games in 2024/25 – has showcased that ball-winning prowess after averaging 5.2 recoveries per game in the league this season, while having been dribbled past just 0.3 times per game.

Mainoo, by contrast, averages just four ball recoveries from his 18 Premier League outings, having also been dribbled past 0.7 times per appearance – outlining those defensive ‘struggles’ that Amorim alluded to.

Not managing to find a home in his side for a “generational” talent like Mainoo – as hailed by teammate Rasmus Hojlund – may appear a mistake, yet for what the 40-year-old is trying to do with his 3-4-3 set-up, it is Ederson who seemingly fits the bill.

Described as a “machine” by journalist Carlo Garganese last term, the £52m man could be just what is needed to revitalise this struggling United side.

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Pep may have just unearthed his new Raheem Sterling at Man City

This season could have been catastrophic for Manchester City, but they’re now very much on course to salvage the campaign.

On Wednesday night, even without the sidelined Erling Haaland, the Sky Blues swatted aside Leicester at the Etihad, thanks to first-half goals from Jack Grealish and then Omar Marmoush.

Manchester City's KevinDeBruynecelebrates scoring their second goal with teammates

This victory propelled Pep Guardiola’s team up to fourth, ahead of a fascinating Manchester derby at Old Trafford on Sunday.

The Citizens could also bookend a generally miserable season with silverware, through to the FA Cup semi-finals for a seventh successive season, set to face high-fliers Nottingham Forest at Wembley in three and a half week’s time.

As Man City rebuild, and Guardiola continues to rejig his team, has he found his new Raheem Sterling?

Raheem Sterling's Manchester City career

As outlined by David Mercer of Sky News, Sterling has spent his entire career ‘in the spotlight’ with ‘newspaper controversies’ often overshadowing his sporting talent.

This was certainly the case when he made the £49m move from Liverpool to Manchester City in 2015, with former Manchester United defender Paul Parker labeling him ‘overpriced’, claiming Man City paid ‘a lot of money’ for a player who hadn’t ‘really done anything that’s worthy of that price’.

Well, fair to say, Sterling did justify his price tag in sky blue, scoring 131 goals and providing 73 assists in 339 appearances for the club, winning four Premier League titles, an FA Cup and five EFL Cups.

Guardiola labeled him ‘so important’ to their success, while Vincent Kompany believed, at his peak, Sterling was ‘one of the best wingers in the world’. His form at Chelsea and now Arsenal subsequently show Man City were vindicated to sell him for £47.5m when they did.

Now, can Man City’s current mercurial talent, who exists under a similar level of media scrutiny, rediscover his best form and become a key figure for Guardiola once again?

Man City's new Raheem Sterling

By opening the scoring against Leicester on Wednesday, Jack Grealish ended his 473-day wait for a Premier League goal, dedicating it to his younger brother Keelan, who tragically died exactly 25 years ago to the day.

On Wednesday, Guardiola chose to deploy Grealish as the central playmaker, handing him his first Premier League start since Christmas, a decision that was certainly vindicated.

The England international certainly made a strong case to start as the number ten in Sunday’s Manchester derby too, considering both Phil Foden and Kevin De Bruyne continue to misfire, notably reduced to a role among the subs.

Minutes played

90

Goals

1

Assists

0

Touches

68

Accurate passes

51/55 (93%)

Shots

2

Key passes

2

Duels won

1/9

Fouls won

1

By his own admission, Grealish has not been at his best this season, but he still has plenty to offer between now and the end of the campaign.

Similar to Sterling, Grealish exists under intense media scrutiny, which John Nicholson of Football365 describes as ‘grotesque’ and hyperbolic stupidity in pursuit of content’.

Chalkboard

Football FanCast’s Chalkboard series presents a tactical discussion from around the global game.

The most recent example of this came just last month when the Daily Mail ran a story about Grealish spending an evening in a pub in Newcastle, supposedly ‘stumbling’ out in the early hours of the morning.

Back on the pitch, Gareth Southgate described Grealish as “fantastic”, so let’s compare his campaign to those of the aforementioned Foden and De Bruyne, attempting to decipher who Guardiola should start going forward.

Appearances

28

31

39

Minutes

1,430

1,698

2,674

Goals

3

4

10

Assists

5

7

6

Chances created

51

54

70

Take-on success %

41.2%

37.5%

40%

Shot-creating actions per 90

5.56

6

4.66

Pass completion %

87.8%

75.9%

84.8%

Touches per 90

37

60

51

As the table outlines, Grealish comes out on top when it comes to dribbling and pass completion, with Foden registering the best statistics overall, albeit he’s played 1,200 more minutes than his compatriot and 1,000 more than De Bruyne.

Manchester City's Jack Grealish

So, while none of the trio have been at their best, Grealish might just be the man in form, suggesting their ‘new Sterling’ should start at Old Trafford this weekend.

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