Cook, Flower claim tactics 'vindicated'

Alastair Cook and Andy Flower insisted their tactics had been “vindicated” after England won the second Test against New Zealand by 247 runs to clinch a 2-0 series victory.

George Dobell28-May-2013Alastair Cook and Andy Flower insisted their tactics had been “vindicated” after England won the second Test against New Zealand by 247 runs to clinch a 2-0 series victory.While Cook admitted he endured some nervous moments waiting for the rain to clear, he also defended his decision not to enforce the follow-on and to delay his declaration until after lunch on day four. By then England had a lead of 467 and meteorologists were warning that the fifth day could be severely curtailed by rain.So it proved, too, with only 45 minutes possible before lunch and play not resuming until 3pm. But it was long enough for England to claim the final four wickets they required to secure victory.”The result definitely vindicates the decision,” Cook said. “There is absolutely no doubt about that at all. To win by 250 runs is a good win and in just over three days cricket effectively, it is an outstanding performance. You are judged as a captain on results. In this game we have won by 250 runs.”I would not say it was a sleepless night but we were praying for an opportunity to get enough time to go out there and win the game. Clearly, I woke up this morning and the first thing I did was look out the window. We knew rain was about but we thought there would be a few windows of opportunity.”While there was much to celebrate for England – the form and fitness of Graeme Swann, the hostility of Steven Finn and the batting of Joe Root and Cook – one or two areas of concern remain.The form of Nick Compton, 39 runs in four innings this series, was a disappointment and debate over his position will continue. With Kevin Pietersen back in training and likely to return to the middle order for the Ashes, moving Root to open is one option that is sure to be discussed in the coming weeks.Neither Cook nor Flower would commit to Compton’s selection for the Ashes, but Cook did admit that changing such “an important position” ahead of such high-profile games would constitute “a risk”.”He’s struggled in these few Tests, certainly,” Flower added. “The Ashes is quite a long way away. Let’s allow the dust to settle on this series. Then we’ll chat about the line-up and the conditions and the opposition.”He’s got to go away, get back into form and score some heavy runs for Somerset. He goes back into a couple of one-day games. Hopefully the one-day games will be good for him. He can go out and enjoy hitting the ball. That will be the catalyst for him going into the first-class game feeling confident.”Flower, in particular, appeared to take exception to the line of questioning from some media following the game. Talking to the BBC, he said: “I thought it was a very good performance by our side. We won by over 200 runs. Cook scored another hundred. He has 25 Test hundreds; more than Viv Richards or Greg Chappell. Swann is back in form and his elbow has come through surgery recently. The two young Yorkshire guys have had a great game. Finn on a flat deck has bowled outstandingly well. Those are all things that I’d prefer to focus on than some of the negative things you mention.”But both Cook and Flower admitted there were some areas where England could have performed a little better. While Cook referred to criticism of Trott’s sedate progress on the third evening, 11 in 69 balls despite England beginning their second innings with a lead of 180, as “nit-picking”, Flower accepted that “he could have been more urgent”.”We had a great example of running between the wickets and the right sort of balance between defence and attack and urgency from the two young Yorkshire guys in the first innings,” Flower said. “They batted beautifully. Trott could have learned a little from those two. But the following morning he put us in a great position to win the game.”Flower and Cook justified the decision not to enforce the follow-on, believing the wicket would only deteriorate as the match progressed. “We chose to bat again and get well ahead of them,” Flower agreed. “We thought we would have enough time on a wearing pitch to take the last 10 wickets and that’s how it proved.”The start of the final day was noticeable for Flower remonstrating with the groundstaff to remove the covers more quickly.”I shouldn’t be out there doing the officials’ job,” Flower said. “It wasn’t raining so I’m not sure why the covers weren’t being removed. I don’t understand why it took so long to get the game started, regardless of the position that we were in. The officials have a responsibility to get the game going when conditions suit and it wasn’t raining. The lack of activity was baffling.”But in general, Flower was in the mood to celebrate the encouraging performances of Swann and the two young local batsmen, Root and Jonny Bairstow.”Swann bowled superbly in the first innings; the ball came out of his hand absolutely beautifully,” Flower said. “I didn’t actually think he bowled as well in the second innings. I don’t think he was quite comfortable with the ball. But he still took 6 for 90 and turned the match our way. I’m very encouraged by the way he’s bowling and very happy for him that his elbow has come through surgery as well as it has. He’s been really dedicated and disciplined in the way he’s rehabilitated his elbow and he seems in better physical condition than he has been for a while.”Root looks an excellent cricketer. His decision making in the middle; his balance has been excellent so far. It was great to see him get a hundred on his home ground and it was nice to see the enthusiasm and passion the Yorkshire supporters showed Joe.”It was also great to see Bairstow bat with him. I know how happy Jonny was for Joe to get that 100, which was really nice to see. They are both good young men. Very different characters. But hopefully they will both have very successful England careers.”

Watts returns for World Cricket League

Scotland’s selectors have named a 15-man squad for the ICC World Cricket League Division 1, to be held in the Netherlands from June 30 to July 10

Cricinfo staff04-Jun-2010Scotland’s selectors have named a 15-man squad for the ICC World Cricket League Division 1, to be held in the Netherlands from June 30 to July 10. The emphasis is on youth, as the squad has nine players aged 25 or under, but Fraser Watts’s excellent recent form in the domestic leagues has also earned him a place.Gavin Hamilton and Ryan Watson are both unavailable due to work commitments, while Freddie Coleman is taking time off in the lead-up to the event to concentrate on finishing his school term. This gives opportunities to young batsmen Ewan Chalmers, Preston Mommsen and Josh Davey, who have also been included in the squad to take on the hosts in a four-day Intercontinental Cup and one-day international match prior to the tournanment.”The World Cricket League will be a highly-competitive event, and it gives our players an excellent opportunity to test themselves against the other leading Associates,” said Peter Steindl, Scotland’s head coach. “We have picked the squad with the future as well as the present in mind, so I am looking forward to seeing how the players cope with the tournament environment.”Scotland squad: Gordon Drummond (capt), Richie Berrington, Josh Davey, Ewan Chalmers, Gordon Goudie, Majid Haq, Omer Hussain, Neil Laidlaw, Dougie Lockhart, Ross Lyons, Gregor Maiden, Neil McCallum, Preston Mommsen, Matthew Parker, Fraser Watts

Plenty left in the tank: Khawaja eyes more Ashes glory and mentoring role for Konstas

Usman Khawaja hopes to start forging something good with Sam Konstas in the West Indies in the lead up to the Ashes

Andrew McGlashan24-Jun-20251:10

Head not fazed by big-name absences

Usman Khawaja won’t overstay his welcome in the Australia team but is adamant he has more to contribute and sees a significant role for himself in helping nurture Sam Konstas on his return to Test cricket against West Indies.Khawaja scored a career-best double-century earlier this year against Sri Lanka but his form returned to the spotlight with twin failures against Kagiso Rabada in the World Test Championship final. That continued a trend of lean returns against pace bowling following the challenges posed by Jasprit Bumrah last season and New Zealand’s quicks earlier in 2024. However, speaking after Lord’s, head coach Andrew McDonald all but confirmed that Khawaja’s position was secure for the Ashes later this year.Khawaja, who was the second-highest-scoring opener in the last WTC cycle, behind Yashasvi Jaiswal, and Australia’s leading scorer overall, stands by his longer-term record and believes any downturn is more a symptom of his role in the side at a time when top-order batting has been a challenging prospect. Since the start of 2024 he averages 25.29 against pace, only a little below the global average of all openers of 27.84, compared to 65.80 against spin.Related

  • McDonald asks for 'a bit of patience' as spotlight remains firmly on Konstas

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  • Konstas keen to settle into Test cricket

  • Voges backs Inglis as top-four Test batter

“I can’t understand how I can [have a problem against seam bowling] if I can score so many runs in [Sheffield] Shield cricket or be the highest run-scorer for Australia in the WTC cycle,” he said in Barbados ahead of the opening Test. “I open the batting for Australia. So I get out to seam more than I get out to anyone else. It’s just part and parcel of the game.”I wish I could face more spinners, but you don’t always get that opportunity. So, I’m facing the new-ball bowlers with the new ball every single time. I went back from Sri Lanka to domestic cricket and scored a hundred against Tasmania. I pretty much faced seam the whole time there [and] against Riley Meredith, who is one of the fastest bowlers in the country.””I understand I’m 38 years old. People will be looking for an excuse. [But] I think I’ve got a role to play: open the batting, starting off, and setting a good platform for Australia.”Since David Warner’s retirement in early 2024, Khawaja has had five opening partners: Steven Smith, Nathan McSweeney, Konstas, Travis Head and, latterly, Marnus Labuschagne in the WTC final. Khawaja spoke of the rapport he built with Warner in their 41 innings together at the top, which included almost a sixth sense of what the other was thinking – “I knew when and where he was going to drop and run a quick single, and I was ready for it” – and hoped to start forging something similar with Konstas in the West Indies with an eye to the Ashes.”With young Sammy coming in, it’s an added role [for me],” he said. “To help Sammy along through his journey, trying to impart as much knowledge as I can. I won’t be around forever. But it’s very important that I can do whatever I can, obviously first and foremost, [to] have a solid partnership between us but then bit of stability at the top [and] also guide him through this journey. He’s still very young, he’s a 19-year-old boy, and it’s quite exciting.”There’s obviously this series and then a big Ashes coming up. [You] probably want a little bit of stability at the top. It’ll be tough to chop and change, and opening is a tough place. Mentally it can be very tough. Going out there against the new ball and sometimes just getting a good ball and low scores.Australia are hoping Sam Konstas is the answer to the spot left vacant by David Warner•Getty Images

“I’m just looking forward to playing with Sammy, as much as on the field as helping him off the field. I’ve been through a lot in my life, a lot of ups and downs. There are lots of things I’ve seen throughout my career and most of them are not technical. More mindset things. If I can help Sammy through this journey, especially over the next couple of series, try and impart as much knowledge I can to him.”The Sydney Test at the end of the Ashes is often referenced as a stepping-off point for Khawaja but, unlike Warner, he is not outlining a precise route to retirement. After the England series, Australia won’t play Tests again until Bangladesh visit for a series in the Top End in August.”For me, I feel like I have plenty to give still,” he said. “To be playing this series and the Ashes is the pinnacle. That’s the one we all love winning and being involved in… after that there is a bit of a gap between that and the next Test series. We’ll cross that bridge when we get there but for me it’s about making sure I stay in the moment. Because if I’m not in the moment, I don’t think I’m doing the right thing by myself and the team.”I’m not the guy who’s going, ‘I want to play for another ten years’. I’m very attuned to whatever is best for the team [and that] is what I’m trying to do. I’m not here for myself anymore. I’m here for the team. I could have stopped playing two years ago, really. But I found that I was still contributing, still trying to be the best player for the team at that opening spot, trying to do what I can do, [and] that hasn’t changed for me. When it does, you guys will surely find out.”

WBBL round-up: Devine hits five sixes in an over, Renegades beat Hurricanes again

All the standout performances from Sunday’s WBBL action, including match-winning all-round efforts from Sophie Devine and Heather Graham

ESPNcricinfo staff10-Nov-2019Sophie Devine’s unbeaten 56-ball 85, featuring five sixes in the 20th over of the Adelaide Strikers,/b> innings, helped set up their 17-run win over Melbourne Stars at the Karen Rolton Oval.The 31-run last over, bowled by legspinner Madeline Penna, took Strikers to 164 for 4 after Devine – who became only the second player to achieve the WBBL career double of 1000 runs and 50 wickets – and compatriot Suzie Bates added 54 runs for the opening wicket.Devine’s onslaught not only spoiled Penna’s figures – until then, she had conceded only 19 in three overs – but also ensured Stars were set a target that would warrant substantial contributions from their batters. However, save for a 41-ball 52 and 51-ball 70 from the South African pair of Lizelle Lee and Mignon du Preez respectively, no Stars batter was able to get into double-digits.After Devine struck second ball of her opening spell, removing captain Ellyse Vilani for 1 in the second over, Lee and du Preez put on 112 runs for the second wicket. But Lee’s dismissal by Bates in the final ball of the 15th over triggered a collapse, during which the visitors lost seven wickets for 32 runs. Devine and Bates took two wickets apiece, while Amanda-Jade Wellington returned 3 for 31 to help Strikers climb to the top of the table as Stars remained stuck at the bottom.Molly Strano picked up the early wickets•Getty Images

Melbourne Renegades completed a double against Hobart Hurricanes at Junction Oval, a day after Renegades captain Jess Duffin had guided them to a win in a last-ball thriller against the same opponents.Renegades’ victory on Sunday, though, was starkly different: they beat Hurricanes by eight wickets with 26 balls to spare, thanks to a 62-run second-wicket stand between Tammy Beaumont and Danni Wyatt in a 109-run chase.Wyatt struck the winning single in the 16th over to complete an unbeaten 44-ball 54, in the company of Duffin, who finished on 6. Medium-pacer Belinda Vakarewa, who returned figures of 2 for 16 from her four overs, was the only Hurricanes bowler to be among the wickets, removing opener Sophie Molineux and then Beaumont for a 32-ball 37.With the bat, too, Hurricanes showed little spark. After being sent in, they lost their openers inside the first two overs, and only Heather Knight reached the 20-run mark. Five other batters got into double figures, but failed to convert them into substantial scores as Player of the Match Molly Strano returned her season best 3 for 19, ably supported by Molineux and Maitlan Brown, who gave away 24 and 19 runs respectively for two wickets apiece.Tahlia Wilson pulls out the sweep•Getty Images

Perth Scorchers, too, accomplished their second straight victory after Sydney Thunder fell short of a 152 chase by seven runs at the Karen Rolton Oval.That, despite losing the toss, Scorchers were able to post 151 for 5 was down, in part, to batters Georgia Redmayne, Natalie Sciver and Heather Graham, all of whom made 30-plus scores. The trio’s contribution came in the wake of openers Amy Jones and Meg Lanning falling to the fast-bowling tandem of Shabnim Ismail and Rene Farrell inside the powerplay.Redmayne (35 off 35) and Sciver (37 off 22) put on a 59-run third-wicket stand, but fell within five balls of each other. From 88 for 4, Graham lifted Scorchers past 150 with a 20-ball 33, which included two fours and as many sixes, aided by Nicole Bolton’s run-a-ball 16 and Jemma Barsby’s 7-ball 11.Solid contributions from the top four, including a 20-ball 30 from opener Naomi Stalenberg and a 27-ball 29 from No. 4 Alex Blackwell, meant Thunder needed 51 off 32. However, after Blackwell was dismissed by Kim Garth, Player of the Match Graham took the next threeThunder wickets in only eight balls across two overs, the slide leaving No. 3 batter Tahlia Wilson stranded on an unbeaten 39-ball 47, Scorchers clinching the game by seven runs.

Tom Latham, Dhananjaya de Silva hundreds headline exciting day

The opener added an unbroken 70-run stand with Watling to reduce the deficit to 48 at stumps on day three

The Report by Deivarayan Muthu24-Aug-2019
A compact century from Tom Latham and a more adventurous one from Dhananjaya de Silva headlined an absorbing day of cricket at Colombo’s P Sara Oval. De Silva’s 109 off 148 balls – 77 of them came today, off 86 balls, in the company of the tail – carried Sri Lanka to 244 and seemingly a position of strength, but Latham did well to stand up to their spin barrage even as the track showed signs of breaking up. The left-hander forged a crucial, unbroken 70-run stand with BJ Watling and trimmed the deficit to 48 at stumps on day three.This was Latham’s tenth Test hundred; only John Wright (12) has more among New Zealand Test openers. Watling, meanwhile, surpassed his former captain Brendon McCullum to become the leading run-getter among New Zealand Test wicketkeepers.Both Kane Williamson (20) and Ross Taylor (23) nicked off cheaply, but Latham saw off the new ball and later deployed a proactive approach against spin. His strengths – a still head, decisive footwork and intense focus – were on bright display against Dilruwan Perera, Lasith Embuldeniya and de Silva. He was also particularly strong off the back foot, cutting and pulling with purpose, but when the ball was full enough for the sweep, he nailed it into the leg-side gaps. As many as 81 of his 111 runs came on the leg side.It was only fitting that Latham raised his half-century with a hard, flat sweep to the square-leg boundary. He then reached his hundred with a full-blooded pull to the midwicket boundary against Dilruwan’s offbreaks.At the other end, Watling struggled against the ripping turn and bounce on offer but, as ever, his composure kept him on the wicket, unbeaten on 25.Lahiru Kumara celebrates a wicket•Associated Press

Sri Lanka ended the day with their own wicketkeeper Niroshan Dickwella having to give up the gloves to substitute Dinesh Chandimal after hurting a fingernail. Dimuth Karunaratne, the captain and often a key player in second innings of Test matches, also left the field with a thigh problem. Things were so different in the morning.De Silva was centre stage then, scoring 109 of the 151 runs that Sri Lanka made while he was out in the middle. There were sumptuous drives through cover, lofts straight over fast bowler’s heads and equally importantly those nicked singles that helped him keep strike and frustrate New Zealand. The innings was not without luck though. He was on 9 when Trent Boult missed a sitter of a caught-and-bowled chance and even when he was on 99, he very nearly inside-edged Tim Southee onto his stumps.But those moments faded away in light of the way he collared Ajaz Patel and struck three successive fours off the left-arm spinner, the pick of them an inside-out shot over extra-cover. It provided a throwback to his first runs in Test cricket: a similarly regal inside-out loft off Steve O’Keefe in Pallekele in 2016.Ajaz, however, found success at the other end when he pinned the other overnight batsman Dilruwan with an arm ball that skidded off the pitch. Southee then went around the wicket and softened Suranga Lakmal with a short-ball attack, which resulted in the batsman taking his eyes off and fending one behind to Watling. In his next over, Southee removed Embuldeniya to come within one scalp of joining Boult in reaching 250 Test wickets in the same game.De Silva, of course, persevered, even if the earlier moments of carefree abandon had given way to nerves as he approached his century with only the No. 11 at the other end. But a slash over backward point finally gave him what he wanted and he celebrated it by blowing kisses to the crowd. It was shaping up to be a very good day for Sri Lanka but now the Test match is back in the balance and the neutral fan should be bubbling with excitement.

Bancroft has 'fire in belly' for Ashes debut – Klinger

‘He is the most in-form batsman in Australia at the moment,’ says Western Australia team-mate

Mohammad Isam and Andrew McGlashan20-Nov-2017Cameron Bancroft will be the first Australian opener to debut in an Ashes Test since Michael Slater in 1993, but his Western Australian team-mate Michael Klinger believes he has “the fire in the belly” to make a success of his elevation.Bancroft, who was previously selected for the postponed tour of Bangladesh last year, has ousted Matt Renshaw, the Queensland opener, after he endured a torrid start to his domestic season having shown promise early in his Test career.Bancroft’s numbers, which included an unbeaten 228 against South Australia, became impossible for the selectors to ignore and the main question as the squad approached was whether he would bat at No. 6 or become David Warner’s latest opening partner.Klinger has watched Bancroft’s development at close hand for WA and also recommended him to Gloucestershire as an overseas player in 2016. He has seen the player become more attuned his game and learn what sort of a batsman he wants to be.”I have been lucky enough to have a lot to do with Cameron,” Klinger, who is currently at the BPL, told ESPNcricinfo. “I batted quite a lot with him in the first couple of years in first-class cricket, I have spent a lot of time talking to him about cricket and just feeding off each other. I think he has learned a lot in the last two years.”I think he probably went through a period when he tried to over-score too much. He has gone back to batting long periods of time. He knows he has developed enough shots and skills. He knows if he bats for long periods of time, he can score freely. Mentally he has the fire in the belly to bat long periods.”While his double century in Perth earlier this month is the headline number from his season, it was a pair of half-centuries (76 not out and 86) against a New South Wales side boasting Australia’s Test attack that could well have done just as much to propel him to his first baggy green.”Last year he probably didn’t have as good a year he would have liked,” Klinger said. “He started this year brilliantly in the one-day competition and certainly in the Sheffield Shield to come and score, I think, 70 and 80 against an attack that had Starc, Hazlewood, Cummins and Lyon was a super effort. To finish off with a 200-odd not out sealed the deal. He deserves his spot. He is the most in-form batsman in Australia at the moment.”And Klinger had no doubt that he would be able to handle the pressure that comes with not only a Test debut, but in an opening Ashes Test.”I think he has been waiting for a while now. You won’t find a harder trainer than him, certainly. He is very astute. I am looking forward to seeing him how he will cope with the pressure. There’s no doubt he will cope really well. He will make sure he will have everything in place and ready to go.”

'We need to keep improving to stay on top' – Lanning

Australia Women’s captain Meg Lanning said after her side’s eight-wicket loss in the Women’s World T20 final that other teams were catching up and even going past them

ESPNcricinfo staff03-Apr-2016Australia Women’s captain Meg Lanning said after her side’s eight-wicket loss in the Women’s World T20 final that other teams were catching up and even going past them. Australia had posted a competitive 148 for 5 after opting to bat but witnessed a solid opening stand of 120 from West Indies, before the match was sealed with three balls to spare. It was the first time a team apart from Australia, England and New Zealand won a global tournament in women’s cricket.”We’ve spoken about it a lot, that everyone is sort of catching up and going past, I guess,” Lanning said. “We need to keep improving to make sure we stay on top. We did that [this tournament], I think, but we weren’t good enough today to beat the West Indies. It just did not go our way today.”There’s no easy games in women’s cricket any more. If you’re not on, not 100%, you’re not going to win. We certainly found that out at this tournament.”Australia coach Matthew Mott felt that they fell a little short of the target that would have taken them to their fourth straight World T20 title. Australia were set for a big score when they were 92 for 2 after 12 overs but scored only 17 runs in the last three overs, as Deandra Dottin conceded only one run in the final over.”We knew we were in for a big fight today and halfway through our batting innings I thought we’d really put our foot on it,” Mott said. “But we missed a couple of opportunities to bury the game and other teams will knock you over in that case. “I thought the Windies batted exceptionally well tonight.”Lanning also admitted that they “needed 160-plus” to set things up for a win. Mott further said that there were still positives to be taken out of the tournament”As you saw in the back end of our innings even when we were out of the game, we didn’t give up, and I think that’s part of the culture in this team and I think it’s exciting,” Mott said. “We didn’t get over the line tonight but we put ourselves in a position to win and in the end it’s a line ball, they can come down to a couple of key moments and we didn’t quite win them tonight.””It has been a tough, long road but if we won today I think we would have said what an amazing preparation we had. No excuses, I think we put our best foot forward, we were just a little bit shy of the mark today but the spirit that’s been shown in this group over the last few weeks in particular is something we’re really proud of.”I know this group is going to be really strong for a long time and it’s great that other teams are challenging Australia. Any team could win it out of this tournament and the West Indies turning over a good side like New Zealand in the semi is a great example.”Lanning also heaped praise on West Indies opener Hayley Matthews, who struck a 45-ball 66 to set up her side’s win.”She’s very talented, she had a good series against us,” she said. “It was not a surprise, she played exceptionally well.”

UAE storm to main draw with convincing win

United Arab Emirates stormed to the main draw of the Asia Cup after a convincing 71-run win against Oman in Dhaka

ESPNcricinfo staff22-Feb-2016
Scorecard and ball-by-ball detailsFile photo – Mohammad Naveed returned figures of 2 for 14 from his four overs•AFP

United Arab Emirates entered the main draw of the Asia Cup after a convincing 71-run win against Oman in Dhaka. UAE won all three of their qualifying matches to finish first on the points table and book their berth.Oman were still alive going into the last match of the qualifying group, but had to chase the target in 13.5 overs after opting to bowl. UAE just needed a win to qualify.Oman were given a boost in the second over after Rohan Mustafa was run-out after failing to slide his bat into the crease. The innings was quickly resurrected by Mohammad Shahzad, who struck a fifty in the previous game, and Muhammad Kaleem. The pair added 86 in 65 balls to set a strong platform for the middle order. Sufyan Mehmood, drafted in for this game, removed Kaleem for a 40-ball 50.Left-arm spinner Aamir Kaleem brought his side back into the contest with two wickets in three balls in the 14th over, dismissing Shahzad and Shaiman Anwar. However, the momentum swung again as Muhammad Usman played a match-turning cameo to lift his side to 172 for 6. He plundered 35 off his last 10 balls and finished with an unbeaten 46 off 22, an innings that featured six fours and two sixes. His innings earned him the Man-of-the-Match award. Aamir Kaleem took two more wickets in the final over to finish with figures of 4 for 36.Oman’s hopes of qualification were dashed within seven overs of the chase, as they were reduced to 38 for 5 in the search for quick runs to get ahead on net run-rate. UAE took two more wickets in the next four overs to effectively kill the match.The rest of the innings was a formality as Oman crawled to 101 for 8 in 20 overs. Zeeshan Maqsood offered resistance with a 42-ball 46 but no other batsman crossed 15. Fast bowler Mohammad Naveed was the pick of the bowlers with figures of 4-1-14-2.

Harris nine-for destroys Durham

James Harris claimed an extraordinary haul of 9 for 34, including a spell of 7 for 21 in 8.1 overs this morning, as Middlesex made light of their batting capitulation on the third afternoon to storm to an 187-run victory

Andrew Miller at Lord's05-May-2015
Scorecard2:53

‘Been a long couple of years’ – Harris

Once upon a time, it all came so easily for James Harris. In his second Championship appearance, at the County Ground in Bristol in May 2007, he celebrated his 17th birthday with a haul of 7 for 66 for Glamorgan, a revelatory return that marked him down as a boy with an extraordinary future.Eight years later, and 11 days shy of turning 25, there’s still plenty time yet for that future to manifest itself. But with today’s career-best haul of 9 for 34 at Lord’s, Harris achieved more than simply consign his teenage precocity to the archives.”I came to Middlesex as a fairly big signing,” said Harris. “But I’ve had two lean years which have really hurt me. I expected to be doing this sort of thing straight from the off, so it’s been a long time coming and I’m delighted.”It should, by rights, have been a tense fight to the finish on the final day at Lord’s. The morning dawned with foreboding grey skies to dent Durham’s hopes of adding 235 runs to their overnight 24 for 2, but with a howling gale buffeting straight down the ground, Harris was twice forced to abort his run-up as he struggled to reach the crease.The original plan had been to come off after a couple of overs and leave Ollie Rayner to lob his spin into the breeze. But then the wickets started tumbling and suddenly Harris was walking in the air.”Once you get into a bit of a rhythm, you don’t tend to feel tired or any exterior things,” said Harris. “It didn’t swing too much, it just did a little bit off the surface which is perfect for me. I was on a bit of a roll and thankfully it kept happening.”Full and focused, with an exemplary rhythm and a little bit of movement off a length. The scorecard will suggest that the wicket became a minefield, with two completed second innings adding up to 18 runs fewer than the 178 that Sam Robson scored on the match’s first day. But not a bit of it. It was simple, old-fashioned, you-miss-I-hit hostility. And every one was a coconut.The simplicity of his performance was irresistible. Durham’s batsmen didn’t dare lay a bat on ball for fearing of nicking off to the cordon, but couldn’t risk leaving it either, as Michael Richardson discovered when he shouldered arms and found only his leg stump left standing.Callum McLeod and Paul Collingwood fell for ducks to consecutive deliveries, and when Phil Mustard and Scott Borthwick picked out second and first slip respectively, Harris had claimed five wickets for five runs in the space of 16 balls, and finished with 7 for 21 in 8.1 overs all told on the day.It was a reversion to the energetic excellence that had first brought him to the public eye and just another high-profile example of a talented young bowler shrugging off the strictures imposed by a cabal of well-meaning coaches, to do what comes naturally and reap the rewards.”They’d been trying to change things since I was very young,” said Harris, “both in the programmes at Loughborough and in bits and bobs, because every young bowler wants to bowl at 90mph-plus and swing it round corners. It’s what you need to do if you’re a seamer to get international batsmen out.”We went searching for a lot of things, we changed a lot of things, and we probably found the half a yard we needed, but it was to the detriment of skill and moving it around. I don’t care if you bowl 100mph, if you don’t move it around you’re probably not going to be too successful.”They were strong words, softly spoken. Harris added that he was grateful to have undergone the alterations, because otherwise he might always have wondered what might have been. But on the evidence of this stellar day at Lord’s, not to mention Harris’s own testimony of the dark days of soul-searching that he’s been subjected to in recent years, it’s hard not to wonder why they couldn’t have just let him be.”There were a lot of cold dark hours in Finchley indoor school,” Harris said. “My body was feeling pretty poor, my action was feeling pretty poor, I’d lost my wrist through parts of last year and there were times when I wasn’t holding it down the seam.”He ended up being loaned back to Glamorgan at the end of a 2014 season in which managed a grand total of 17 wickets in 245 overs, compared to the 13 in 34.4 that he’s ended up with in this contest.”I’d decided before I went that I was going to go back to being as natural as possible, because it was feeling horrible, the changes, the Brett Lee style different load-up that we tried to do to be faster, it really wasn’t working for me.”I tried to be better, it didn’t work, simple as that. I had to bite the bullet and go back to what I knew and what made me successful in the first place.”By the time Harris had equalled his career-best seven wickets in an innings, he was still on course to emulate his Middlesex bowling coach, Richard Johnson, whom he credited for his assistance in deconstructing his action, in claiming all ten wickets in an innings.Instead, his thunder was stolen by another man who is in the process of relearning what once came so naturally. Steven Finn, hitherto unnoticed as he ploughed a furrow from the Pavilion End, found an inside-edge off Usman Arshad that lobbed to Sam Robson in the gully, as he continued a battle to shake off the tinkering that, of recent England vintage, James Anderson and Liam Plunkett have also had to endure.”I’ve had the luck today but he is bowling beautifully and it won’t be long before he’s back in the wickets and I’m not taking them at the other end,” said Harris.But at least when that happens, you sense it will once again be on the bowlers’ own terms.

Era of aggressive Test fields over – Dhoni

MS Dhoni has said that while fielding strategies and placements on India’s slow, low turners have re-written the conventional textbook around attack and defence, the assessment of pitches and tactics appeared somewhat slanted

Sharda Ugra25-Mar-2013MS Dhoni has said that while fielding strategies and placements on India’s slow, low turners have re-written the conventional textbook around attack and defence, the assessment of pitches and tactics appeared somewhat slanted.Sixteen wickets fell on day three and four innings were completed over three days at the Kotla as India finished its 4-0 creaming of Australia. When asked whether surfaces like those in Delhi were right for Test cricket, Dhoni’s reply was sardonic and also contained his response to past criticism of his captaincy. “Well, you’ll have to answer what is ‘right’ and what is ‘wrong’ because your opinion really counts … When four fast bowlers play, it becomes strategy, when three spinners or four spinners play, it becomes a bad wicket.”He went on to give an example of how the interpretation of the same deep-field placements were different for different captains: “For Virender Sehwag, if you have a deep point and a deep-third man and a deep-square leg, it’s a strategy. If MS Dhoni has a deep point and a deep-square leg for David Warner, it’s a defensive field set. You have to see the mindset [of the batsman] and accordingly go ahead.”Dhoni also stated that the era of aggressive cricket, wherein having a mid-on up was common, has gone. Dhoni said: “The kind of cricket that we play has entirely changed … The era of seeing aggressive cricket, where you had to have a mid-on up, has gone.” The in-out field, used in plenty by the Indians, has become the norm with positions distributed between fieldsmen in catching positions and the boundary riders.In the Delhi Test, Dhoni described the offspinner’s conventional field: “You have a short leg, a backward, and a slip. And you have three fielders – deep midwicket, long-on and deep-square leg.” The latter three may have been conventionally considered boundary-saving, defensive fielders, but Dhoni said today’s field placements had much to do with studying the comfort zone and mindset of individual batsmen. Whether to employ a mid-on or long-on fielder was a decision that had to be made through a flexible reading of different batsmen, he said, and not on whether to stop the single or the boundary against all batsmen or the scoreboard situation.”You read the batsmen to see if he is in the mindset of rotating singles, if there’s a mid-on, deep midwicket and four catching fielders, and if he can rotate every ball. If he’s not having any problems, then you try to bring in the mid-on fielder or deep-midwicket fielder to build up the pressure.”If a batsman has more confidence going over the infield, “especially on wickets like these, it’s important that you don’t concede runs in a bunch”. The aim of the deep fielders was, he said, to deny the batsman the boundaries and check the opposition scoreboard from racing ahead. At a time like that, Dhoni said, he was fine with the batsmen taking singles because it created more chances. “If you rotate [the strike] four times, you get four runs and [on] those four runs, you can get them out as many times.”