Kirby gets no luck as Kervezee impresses

Moeen Ali has put Worcestershire the verge of a first-innings lead against Gloucestershire, but on another day Steve Kirby would have taken a bag of wickets for the visitors

George Dobell at New Road30-May-2010
ScorecardSteve Kirby bowled his heart out but went unrewarded and left the field injured•Getty Images

Steve Kirby must wake up some mornings feeling rather like Sisyphus. He was the unfortunate fellow who so offended the gods that he was sentenced to an eternity of pushing a rock up a hill, only for it to roll down just before the peak. Which is how Kirby must feel trying to win games for Gloucestershire despite his butter fingered slip cordon and his mis-firing batting line-up.Just what Kirby has done to offend the gods remains uncertain. Sisyphus seduced his niece, took his brother’s throne and betrayed Zeus’s secrets; Kirby is, by all accounts, an excellent uncle and has shown no inclination to seize any thrones.Yet he has enjoyed no fortune. Despite earning a well-deserved reputation as one of the best fast bowlers in the country and coming tantalisingly close on several occasions, he has never won an England cap. And, on a day when he could easily have claimed 4 for 20, he instead conceded nearly six an over, remained wicketless and limped off the field 10 overs before the close suffering from what may well have been a broken heart.He deserved better. Generating sharp pace on a sluggish wicket, he troubled all the batsmen only to see two relatively easy catches put down off his bowling and several other edges fly to the third man boundary.The end result was a match that remains evenly poised at the halfway stage. Though the hosts, seven points behind third-placed Gloucestershire but with a game in hand, at one stage looked to be on the verge of establishing a substantial first innings lead, the visitors fought back strongly in the final overs.At one stage Worcestershire, with seven wickets in hand, trailed by just 31 runs. Gloucestershire then claimed 3 for 7 in 23 balls, as the day finished with Worcestershire 16 behind but only four wickets left. Gloucestershire, who have not won a first-class game at New Road since 1986, are right back in the match.The best batting of the day came from Alexei Kervezee. The 20-year-old, who qualifies for England in December 2011, oozed class as he cut, pulled and drove with delicious timing to pass 50 for the fifth time in the championship season. Twice he skipped down the pitch to loft the left-arm spin of Vikram Banerjee for straight sixes and his half-century – studded with seven fours and two sixes – occupied only 45 deliveries.Moeen Ali was slightly less convincing. Though he unleashed some typically languid drives down the ground, and flicked the ball off his legs sweetly, his innings was interspersed with some nervous moments outside off stump. Several times he flashed only to see the ball pass perilously close to the slips, while he also edged Banerjee between keeper and slip on 32.Still, Moeen and Kervezee’s partnership bodes well for the future of Worcestershire cricket. With a combined age of just 42, they added 107 in 18.3 overs of fearless, joyful strokeplay that helped their side rebuild from 107 for 3.Batting had looked far less straightforward for their colleagues. Both Daryl Mitchell and Vikram Solanki were undone by the extra bounce of a pitch that remains unreliable, with Mitchell caught at short-leg off the glove and Solanki caught off the glove at gully. Though Phil Jacques prospered for a while, he departed to an outside edge after feeling for one outside off stump.Things could have been even better for Gloucestershire, however. Solanki was dropped twice, both times off the deserving Kirby, once before he had scored and again when he had just two. If the first chance, to Steve Snell at second slip, was straightforward, the second, to the normally reliable keeper, Jonathan Batty, was as simple as they come.The value of Kervezee and Moeen’s partnership became apparent once Kervezee played around a straight one from Lewis. Ben Smith, who hasn’t scored a first-class century since the dawn of time (or July 2006 for those who like their statistics a little more precise), departed later the same over to a fine, diving slip catch as he prodded forward, while Richard Jones was bowled by a surprisingly sharp yorker from Gidman.Moeen remains, however, and, if he earn his side a lead of around 100 on the third day, will have done much to set up victory that could prove vital in the promotion race.Earlier Gloucestershire were grateful for the contribution of Chris Taylor as their batsmen struggled once again. They currently average the lowest score per wicket of any side in the country and are the only team without a first-class century in the campaign.It’s fair to say that some in the Worcestershire dressing room were underwhelmed by the comments about Matt Mason in the first day’s report. They pointed out that Mason’s record last season, 43 championship wickets at 27.58, compares favourably with most. And that he was more than capable of standing without help on a bus.Mason made his point quite eloquently on the pitch, too. While he lacked pace, he maintained a tight line and length and used his height to generate enough bounce to unsettle all the batsmen. Gidman and Marshall both paid the price for prodding outside the off stump as Mason utilised the uneven bounce sensibly and showed the benefit of his experience.He might easily have had a third wicket. Had Moeen, at third slip, clung on to a chance offered by Taylor when the batsman had just 50, Gloucestershire would have been 201 for 9. As it was, the tail carved out another 44 runs, with Taylor compiling his highest score of the summer. He pulled one six off Richard Jones but paid the price for making room against Alan Richardson was comprehensively bowled.Meanwhile Franklin departed to a routine outside edge, Banerjee was brilliantly (if somewhat fortuitously) caught at slip as he edged a full-blooded cut and Lewis paid the price for a flat footed drive.

Trent Rockets eliminate Birmingham Phoenix to keep own knockout hopes alive

Nat Sciver-Brunt and Ash Gardner set up nerve-jangling win at Edgbaston

ECB Media12-Aug-2024Trent Rockets were victorious in a nervy must-win encounter against Birmingham Phoenix in the Hundred at Edgbaston on Monday. The Rockets drew level on points with third-placed Northern Superchargers to keep themselves in the hunt for a place in the knock-outs, as they came out on top by three wickets with just three balls to go in a tense affair.Birmingham Phoenix won the toss and chose to bat, with both sides sitting on six points in the table and looking for the opportunity to keep their seasons alive. Phoenix had to make do without Sophie Devine, forced to miss out through injury.That required a batting order shuffle for Phoenix but their shuffled top order didn’t last long: three wickets fell early for the home side as they lost captain Ellyse Perry, Fran Wilson and Amy Jones in the opening 15 balls before they had reached double digits. Alexa Stonehouse grabbed the big wicket of Perry, Sciver-Brunt dismissed her one-time housemate Wilson and her maid-of-honour Jones first-ball.ESPNcricinfo Ltd

“I was very happy with how the ball came out today,” Sciver-Brunt said. “I probably haven’t had that much success or that much consistency, so I was very happy with my personal bowling performance today.”Phoenix’s recovery was as impressive as it was crucial, with Sterre Kalis and Indian international Richa Ghosh putting on 95 for a record fourth-wicket partnership in the women’s Hundred. Ghosh made 41 from 36 and Kalis 47 from 44 as they took the hosts to 112 for 6.After her early wickets Sciver-Brunt finished with figures of 2 for 16. Australian international spinner Ashleigh Gardner also picked up a critical late couple of wickets to take 2 for 17.Nat Sciver-Brunt and Ashleigh Gardner took two wickets each•Gareth Copley/Getty Images

Phoenix needed early wickets to help them defend their below-par total and they managed just that, with Bryony Smith and Nat Wraith dismissed in the first 20 balls. Unfortunately for Phoenix, that brought Sciver-Brunt to the crease, the leading run-scorer in The Hundred this year – and indeed the record-holder for the highest aggregate ever in the women’s competition.With Sciver-Brunt and Gardner at the crease the visitors looked to be cantering in the chase, but a flurry of wickets at an inopportune moment from balls 70-80 – including a timely run-out from Perry – made things suddenly appear much tricker for the Rockets. Not for the first time, the Rockets found themselves trying to scrap over the finish line, but this time it was a must-win encounter.They benefitted from a debatable no-ball call, which saw Josie Groves reprieved having initially been given out caught, but on this occasion they had enough in the locker to get over the line – Katie George there at the end alongside Groves to keep alive Rockets’ hopes of going further in the Hundred.”In terms of the chase, we probably got ahead of it a bit earlier and gave ourselves a bit of relief towards the end, so the pressure didn’t build up too much,” Sciver-Brunt said. “For the two batters to come out at the end, who hadn’t faced many balls, they were very brave, and I was really pleased for them to get the job done.”We’ve had so many close games, so to come out on the right side of it this time feels really good. It’s still all in our hands, if we beat the Oval Invincibles in our last game then we will be in that top three.”

Last chance for Kohli to find runs before India's Super Eight campaign

The weather in Lauderhill could severely impact the contest between Canada and India

Ashish Pant14-Jun-20241:40

Should India give Kuldeep Yadav a game?

Match details

Canada vs India
June 15, Lauderhill, Florida, 10.30am local time

Big picture: Rain threat in Florida

Canada are facing their toughest test of the T20 World Cup as India aim to go into the Super 8 stage with a clean sheet, but the fixture is at the mercy of the weather in Florida. Friday’s game between USA and Ireland was washed out at the venue, and there’s an 85% chance of rain on Saturday.If the game does go ahead, India could test out their bench strength. They have played the same XI in their first three group games, but with qualification secure and no points advantage carried forward to the Super Eight, they could give the likes of Kuldeep Yadav or Sanju Samson some game time.Related

  • Similar but different India have tough choices to make with their batting order

  • Johnson: That was my best international innings

  • Hardik hits his rhythm to get rid of the blues

India’s final group game is also Virat Kohli’s last chance to find form before the more competitive Super Eight stage. Of all the batters itching to get out of New York, he is right up there. His move to the top of the order has yielded scores of 4, 1 and 0, and Kohli is not even among the top 150 run-scorers of the tournament. He does not have exceptional numbers in Florida, though: 63 runs in three innings at an average of 21.00.Virat Kohli has not yet fired as an opener in the T20 World Cup•Associated Press

With USA confirming their Super Eight berth from Group A along with India, Canada have been knocked out, having earned only two points from their first three games. They have been competitive at their first T20 World Cup though, having scored 194 in their opening game against USA and then securing a comfortable win against Ireland. They even gave Pakistan a scare, and will hope to sign off at their best against their most high-profile opponents.

Form guide: India on a roll

India WWWWW
Canada LWLLL

In the spotlight: Aaron Johnson and Hardik Pandya

Despite making his T20I debut only in November 2022, Aaron Johnson is already Canada’s second highest run-scorer. He had a tremendous start to his international career, scoring four fifties and one century in his first seven T20I innings, and has sustained his form. No other Canada batter has more runs than Johnson’s 400 in 12 innings since the start of 2023. He is coming into this game on the back of a confident 52 against Pakistan.Hardik Pandya has seven wickets in three games at the T20 World Cup•Associated Press

Hardik Pandya has not had much to do with the bat, but has been an asset with the ball. He is India’s joint highest wicket-taker so far in the competition, with seven wickets in three games, and has stifled batters in the middle overs. Hardik has hit those hard lengths and finished the New York leg with an economy of 5.41.

Team news: Will India give Kuldeep a go?

Canada’s move to bring in Ravinderpal Singh for Dilpreet Bajwa did not work, with Ravinderpal out for a second-ball duck. They might go back to Bajwa against India.Canada (probable XI): 1 Aaron Johnson, 2 Navneet Dhaliwal, 3 Pargat Singh, 4 Nicholas Kirton, 5 Shreyas Movva (wk), 6 Ravinderpal Singh/Dilpreet Bajwa, 7 Dilon Heyliger, 8 Saad Bin Zafar (capt), 9 Kaleem Sana, 10 Junaid Siddiqui, 11 Jeremy GordonIndia could rest one of their fast bowlers and bring in Kuldeep, whose wristspin might be required in the Super Eight stage in the West Indies.India (probable XI): 1 Rohit Sharma (capt), 2 Virat Kohli, 3 Rishabh Pant (wk), 4 Suryakumar Yadav, 5 Shivam Dube, 6 Hardik Pandya, 7 Ravindra Jadeja, 8 Axar Patel, 9, 10, 11 Jasprit Bumrah/Mohammed Siraj/Kuldeep Yadav/Arshdeep SinghFriday morning was extremely wet at the venue•ICC/Getty Images

Pitch and conditions: Rain alert

Thursday was dry but Friday was a washout in Lauderhill. The forecast for Saturday morning is not promising, with scattered thunderstorms predicted throughout the day.

Stats and trivia

  • Apart from West Indies, who play some international matches here, India have played the most T20Is (eight) in Lauderhill: five wins, two defeats and one washout.
  • Rohit Sharma is the top-scorer in T20Is at this venue: 196 runs, with two half-centuries in in five innings.
  • Arshdeep Singh has the second most T20I wickets in Lauderhill: seven in four innings, with an economy of 7.88.
  • Arshdeep has bowled six overs in the powerplay at this T20 World Cup and conceded just one boundary.
  • Out of the 56 overs India have bowled in the tournament, only nine have been delivered by spinners
  • Canada have never faced India in a T20I.

Quotes

“I saw them last month in April. Those guys were working really hard. I am happy for them. It is a motivation for us, going into the next tournament that USA have down, so can we. In that way, we can look at it.”
“Regarding this stadium, we played earlier so we are slightly aware of the conditions, what we get. Yes, the weather is challenging here, you don’t know about when the rain comes and all, but we have been prepared for all these things. So, we are focusing on what we can control and at this point of the time, we can’t control the weather conditions. So, we are trying to prepare ourselves in the best possible way but we want a game to happen.”
India fielding coach T Dilip isn’t bothered about the conditions

Mithali Raj confused by early end to Bristol Test against England

Twelve overs were still left in the game when umpires called bad light and the players started shaking hands

Annesha Ghosh26-Jun-20214:02

Mithali Raj – ‘The current bowling attack, especially the spinners over the years have won matches for us irrespective of the wicket we played’

Mithali Raj, India’s Test and ODI captain, has expressed surprise at how their one-off Test against England ended last week. According to her, the visiting side wanted to continue batting when play was called off on the final day with 12 overs still left to be bowled. In response to this assertion from Raj, England captain Heather Knight explained that bad light was the reason for the premature close to proceedings in Bristol.Though no result other than a draw was possible at the time, two of India’s five Test debutants, Sneh Rana and Taniya Bhatia, were batting on unbeaten scores of 80 and 44 respectively, their rearguard ninth-wicket stand having swollen to 104.”We wanted to continue the play and that’s what we informed to the opposite captain, and they continued,” Raj revealed on ahead of the ODI series opener between the two sides. “But then I was told by Sneh Rana because even I was a little on the back foot when I saw the bails coming off and them walking out. So I asked her what happened and she said it was a bad light call taken by the umpire.”That’s what they were told. But then I saw the teams were congratulating [each other], so the umpires told that since both the teams are congratulating, it’s pretty much taken that the match is over. That’s what I was told by Sneh Rana. So that’s what happened.Knight, meanwhile, revealed that Raj was nowhere to be found when England were ready to accept a stalemate.”It became apparent to us that it was going to end in a draw, so we asked to shake hands with the Indian team,” Knight said. “We couldn’t actually find Mithali, so I think eventually a message got back on to us to that we were to carry on, which was fine. And then the umpires [Chris Watts and Sue Redfern] took us off for bad light and then the Indians came over and shook our hands. So that was what happened.”Knight also confirmed that the first ODI on Sunday will be played on a fresh pitch and that Sophia Dunkley, who made a first-innings unbeaten 74 on her Test debut last week, will make her maiden ODI appearance.”Yes, I have [had a chance to take a look at the pitch],” Knight said. “You’ll be pleased to hear it’s a fresh one. It looks pretty good, [with] an even covering of grass. Yeah, [it] looks like a reasonably good batting deck as it usually is with a fresh wicket in Bristol.”The teams head into the three-ODI series, which kicks off the limited-overs leg of the multi-format tour, on an even keel, with two points apiece. Wins in the white-ball games, which also features three T20Is, will be worth two points each.

Nottinghamshire sign Zimbabwe Under-19 wicketkeeper Dane Schadendorf on two-year deal

Teenager became a viral hit with a legside stumping that evoked MS Dhoni in his prime

Matt Roller09-Dec-2020Nottinghamshire have announced the signing of Dane Schadendorf, a teenaged wicketkeeper who played for Zimbabwe in the 2020 Under-19 World Cup, on a two-year contract.Schadendorf became a viral hit in the warm-up matches ahead of the tournament, thanks to a legside stumping in a fixture against New Zealand that evoked MS Dhoni in his prime. He also made 81 against eventual finalists India in a warm-up match, though was less successful in the World Cup itself with 138 runs in nine innings. He was born in Harare, but will qualify as a local player in county cricket thanks to a British passport. He had played club cricket for Caythorpe as well as for Nottinghamshire’s Under-18s and second XI in the 2020 season.”My game is probably more suited to white-ball cricket at the moment, but I’m working really hard on my red-ball game, and I think I’m getting better,” Schadendorf said. “My aims for the next year or so are just to get off to a good start here, score as many runs as I can, and try to stake my claim for a place in the first team.”Mick Newell, Nottinghamshire’s director of cricket, said: “We believe there’s a high ceiling of potential there… we hope to see him pushing for a place in our first team in the near future.”Schadendorf follows his compatriot Nick Welch in signing a county contract. Welch, a 22-year-old top-order batsman, gained British citizenship in September and played five games for Leicestershire in the T20 Blast.Welch will play for Mountaineers in the Logan Cup, Zimbabwe’s major domestic competition, which started on Wednesday. There is further representation from county cricketers in the tournament in the shape of Shane Snater, the Essex seamer, and Ben Curran, the Northamptonshire opener and brother of Sam and Tom, who will both play for Southern Rocks.

Prepared to work my way back into Test team – AB de Villiers

AB de Villiers has put most of the uncertainty of the last few months behind him and said he wants to enjoy cricket in his last few years

Firdose Moonda in Paarl18-Oct-20172:31

‘It felt like my first game again’ – AB de Villiers

It can sometimes be confusing listening to AB de Villiers. Some days he wants to captain, some days he doesn’t. Some days he wants to keep wicket, some days he doesn’t. Some days he isn’t sure how much longer he wants to keep playing, some days he wants to go on for as long as he can.But it is never confusing AB de Villiers. Every time he walks out, he wants only one thing: runs. For the team, for himself, for the fans. De Villiers deals in runs.For most of the last two years, he hasn’t been doing that at all. Since January 2016, de Villiers has battled injury and uncertainty and when he has been available for South Africa, he has not been at his best. Even as recently as June, his future was cloudy with a chance of retirement.South Africa had crashed out of the Champions Trophy to start a three-month tour of England on an embarrassing note. De Villiers was not staying on for the Tests that would follow and was unsure what kind of role, if any, he would play going forward. His former captain and close friend Graeme Smith wrote a column in confirming de Villiers actually wanted to walk away from the whites at some point early in the 2016-17 summer but was convinced to stay on and allowed to take a sabbatical from the longest format.The decision was met with mixed feelings: some felt de Villiers had earned the right to rest, others that he was picking and choosing, and in all that, the team had to find a way to sort-of move on, unsure whether they were making a clean break or just treading water until he returns. All de Villiers said at the time was that he would wait for the new coach to be announced before making a decision.Int the months before the coach was appointed, de Villiers welcomed a second son into the world, launched a coaching tips app and enjoyed his first offseason in more than a decade. When Ottis Gibson was confirmed coach, he had made his decision. He made himself available across all three formats.”I needed a couple of months away with the family and then Ottis made contact. I had met him before he was announced coach and I knew he was a great guy. He wanted to know where I was headed with my career and I told him I wanted to get back in the side,” de Villiers said.But not as captain.AB de Villiers marked his return with a 68-ball hundred•Getty Images

“I had a long run as a captain. I had some fantastic ups, and also quite a few lows in between. I just felt like it was enough. I wanted to enjoy the last few years of my career. I know what Faf is capable of as captain, and I think he’s going to become one of the best leaders we have had in this country. We’re going to give him all the support we can.”Instead, de Villiers wanted to play with the freedom that he thrives under and which Gibson seems to be willing to provide. Though he didn’t reveal exactly what it was about Gibson that he liked, he hinted that having someone with good knowledge and a strong sense of direction helped. “He is quite a confident man and knows what he wants. You get the feeling we know where we are going as a team,” de Villiers said.With 19 months between now and the World Cup, Gibson’s immediate task is to begin moulding the team into a unit that could challenge for the title. He understands that because of the difference in quality between the two sides, this series is not going to give him accurate feedback on whether that process has begun, so all he can ask for now is that they play as ruthlessly as possible.On Sunday, openers Quinton de Kock and Hashim Amla answered that call when they marched South Africa to the biggest margin of victory with an unbroken stand; on Wednesday de Villiers did. His 176 is not just about the numbers. It’s about the manner in which he flayed the opposition bowling, almost from the first ball.While other batsmen had been struggling to find the boundary, de Villiers breached it at will and accelerated as his innings took shape. His first 50 runs took 34 balls and the next 50, also 34 but then he needed just 36 balls to add a further 76 runs in a late blitz that included six of his seven sixes. That he did all that without playing an international game in more than three months speaks of his quality.”I was still nervous,” de Villiers said. “It took me an over or so to remember I had a good net in Kimberley and I am in good form. I had to remind myself that I am hitting the ball well. It was great to be out there with Hashim, he has a very calming influence. I am hitting the ball as well as ever. I just spent a bit of time out there and then some of the boundaries kept flowing.”Thoughts of a double hundred were on everyone’s mind but de Villiers’, who insists he does not play for records. But there’s reason to believe he may yet break a few more.De Villiers appears relaxed and ready to do his bit in a big summer for South Africa, that only really kicks off early next year against the touring India and Australia. Before then, there is the small matter of finishing Bangladesh off, and the inaugural four-day day-night Test over Boxing Day, for which de Villiers is available.Having not played a Test since January 2016 though, he does not expect that door to open as easily as the limited-overs’ one did.”If selected, I will be there but I can’t accept that I am going to be in the squad. I have been out of the squad for a while and guys that have come in have done well. You don’t just walk into the Test team,” he said. I am going to have to work my way back. I am prepared to do the hard work.”And that much is as clear as can be.

Paine in doubt for start of season

Tim Paine, Australia’s backup wicketkeeper, is in doubt for the start of the summer after breaking his finger at training last week

ESPNcricinfo staff29-Aug-2011Tim Paine, Australia’s backup wicketkeeper, is in doubt for the start of the summer after breaking his finger at training last week. According to a statement from Cricket Tasmania, Paine, the state’s vice-captain, broke his right index finger, the same finger he fractured last November during the Australian Cricketers’ Association All-stars game.Although the injury does not require surgery, Paine will be out of action for at least four to six weeks, and is in doubt for Tasmania’s first match of the home summer, against Western Australia on October 11. Paine’s injury came as Australia’s first-choice gloveman, Brad Haddin, struggled for batting form in the recent one-day series in Sri Lanka.Haddin began the series opening with Shane Watson but was demoted to the lower middle order after he failed to have any impact, and he was especially unconvincing against the spin of Ajantha Mendis. At 33, Haddin hopes to have several years of international cricket left in him, but he can’t afford a lengthy form slump.Paine, 26, who holds a Cricket Australia contract, has impressed during his four Tests and 26 one-day internationals. He is seen as a future leader, and captained Australia A during their winter tour to Zimbabwe this year.His injury means that should Haddin have any fitness troubles during the ongoing tour of Sri Lanka, the Australians would most likely send for the young Victoria gloveman Matthew Wade, or the Queensland veteran Chris Hartley.

Lanning makes a successful return to cricket with a brisk half-century in WNCL

Australia captain makes 51 off 48 in WNCL for Victoria against WA in her first game back after six months out with a medical issue

ESPNcricinfo staff26-Sep-2023Australia captain Meg Lanning has made a successful return to professional cricket after six months out with a medical issue, striking a 48-ball 51 in her first game back in the WNCL for Victoria against Western Australia in Perth on Tuesday.Lanning quietly made her long-awaited comeback in the WNCL having not played since the WPL in India in March after missing the women’s Ashes entirely due to an undisclosed medical issue.She was not selected for Australia’s upcoming T20I and ODI series against West Indies, which starts on Sunday, with the national selectors and medical staff preferring she made her return in domestic cricket.

She delivered with a free-flowing half-century at the WACA. Following a huge slice of luck off her seventh ball of the innings, where she was caught in the gully off a no-ball from Piepa Cleary, she took full advantage thumping six fours and a six in her half-century. She got her innings going against the offspin of Lilly Mills, thrashing her through cover and over long-off against the spin. She then unfurled cuts and pulls against Australia legspinner Alana King and two delightful sweeps off Amy Edgar’s offspin.She reached 50 off just 47 balls but fell one ball later, chopping Zoe Britcliffe onto her stumps trying to late cut behind point. Lanning’s return augurs well for her chances to be part of Australia’s multiformat tour of India in December and January, which follows the WBBL.Lanning’s 51 was a rare success for Victoria as they were bowled out for 176. Ellyse Perry made just 8 on her comeback from a knee injury while Australia team-mates Annabel Sutherland and Georgia Wareham both fell for 1.

Asia Cup discussion on the cards at IPL final

Heads of the Indian, Sri Lankan, Bangladeshi and Afghanistan boards will meet in Ahmedabad but a final decision will be taken only after consultation with the PCB

ESPNcricinfo staff25-May-2023Where will the Men’s Asia Cup be played? Will it even be played? Answers to these questions are likely to emerge at an informal meeting in Ahmedabad on May 28 where heads of the Indian (BCCI), the Bangladeshi (BCB), the Sri Lankan (SLC) and the Afghanistani (ACB) cricket boards will be present to watch the IPL final.Pakistan are the hosts of this year’s Asia Cup scheduled for September, but with India declining to travel there, the Asian Cricket Council (ACC) has been looking at alternatives. Recently the PCB had suggested a hybrid host model for the six-team tournament where four of the 13 matches will be held in Pakistan. The rest, including the final, would be held overseas. However, no final decision has been reached by ACC which is locked in discussions with PCB.It is understood that Pakistan are not expecting any major pushback about the hybrid model. The only issue left to iron out is where India and their opponents will be based. The choice is between Sri Lanka and the UAE.The six teams to contest the 2023 edition of the Asia Cup are India, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, Afghanistan, Nepal and hosts Pakistan. ESPNcricnfo reached out to at least four boards to inquire if a consensus had been reached on adopting the hybrid model recommended by PCB, but all four said no final decision had yet been taken.BCCI secretary Jay Shah, who is also president of the ACC, said on Thursday that the presidents of BCB, SLC and ACB will be at the IPL final in Ahmedabad. “We will hold discussions with them for outlining the future course of action in relation to Asia Cup 2023,” Shah said.However, officials privy to the Sunday meeting have pointed out that a final decision on the Asia Cup will only be taken by the ACC in coordination with PCB. No date yet has been set for the next ACC meeting.

Katherine Brunt says pressure will be on New Zealand in crucial World Cup encounter

Hosts facing elimination if they cannot arrest slump in form, as group-stage hots up

ESPNcricinfo staff19-Mar-2022Katherine Brunt believes that the pressure will be ramped up on the tournament hosts New Zealand in Sunday’s crucial group-stage encounter at Eden Park, as they take on England in what is effectively a knock-out contest in an extraordinarily tight race for the Women’s World Cup semi-final berths.England, the defending champions, made a disastrous start to their campaign with a trio of narrow defeats against Australia, West Indies and South Africa in their opening three games. However, they ended a run of six consecutive ODI losses by beating India by four wickets in their last outing, and it is now New Zealand who are encountering a slump in form following back-to-back losses to the tournament’s two unbeaten teams, Australia and South Africa.Failure to reach the semi-finals would be a desperate disappointment for Sophie Devine’s team, who can expect a strong home support in Auckland, but whose hopes of qualification would be all but over if they slumped to their fourth loss of the group stages.Looking back on England’s own experiences of hosting the World Cup in 2017, Brunt recalled how their opening-match defeat against India in Derby had served as a “wake-up call”, meaning that they never sailed quite so close to elimination in the first round.”We didn’t experience that ourselves in 2017 because we had that wake-up call very early on,” Brunt said. “So we got ourselves right pretty early and then won every game thereafter. So we didn’t have that nervousness of everything being a knockout.”So, I would say that would definitely add some tension, especially with it being at Eden Park, and I’ve no doubt there’ll be a very good outpouring of people for that game to support their country. So 100%, it will add pressure on them.”An extraordinary tournament was treated to another thrilling finish overnight, as Australia maintained their 100% record by hunting down a record World Cup target of 278 with three balls to spare. Quite apart from being a spectacle in its own right, the result was good news for England, as it means that they and India have each lost three games.Related

  • New Zealand vs South Africa – a Kapptivating contest

  • Peerless Lanning leads the way as Australia make it five in five, enter semi-finals

  • Shamilia Connell discharged from hospital after getting all-clear

  • Australia's 17th successful ODI chase in a row, Meg Lanning-Ellyse Perry dominance

Assuming both sides win their remaining fixtures, Net Run Rate could be the deciding factor in the race for a top-four finish, with England potentially having an advantage in that regard given that they have two matches against the group’s bottom two sides, Bangladesh and Pakistan, to come.”Obviously we’re in a position where we are relying on other people’s results,” Brunt said. “So there’s something of becoming a fan of other teams, as it may be, which is not what you want but that’s just the reality of it. But it’s been great to watch all the other nations, and be a part of games like that, putting on exciting games of cricket.Reflecting on the glut of cliffhangers in the tournament to date, Brunt added: “As players it’s certainly never a situation you want to be in, and every game has been that kind of situation. Obviously in the last three games we’ve lost, we’ve probably lost by a total of about 20 runs [three wickets, 7 runs, 12 runs], which is mad.”These things generally happen rarely, so for every game to be going down the wire just shows you how many nerves there are, and how much teams have improved. We don’t necessarily take it for granted or think less of these teams, it’s just we’ve not played these teams in forever. People can improve in six months, never mind three or four years. So it’s been a learning experience along the way, and it’s great to see everybody playing good cricket and different people coming out of the woodwork.”Despite the victory over India, Brunt is conscious that England’s standards have been a long way short of the levels that carried them to the title in 2017. But, she said, after a bruising Ashes campaign and a tricky first three weeks at the World Cup, an experienced squad can yet be galvanised by the chance to finish their winter on a high.”We’ve had 10 weeks with our backs against the wall,” Brunt said. “We fought a lot in Australia. We gave everything in the Ashes. From there we were probably not in the best headspace. But we are certainly learning to show fight and adapt quickly, and move on pretty quick from disappointments”You can’t be in form all the time. But what you can do is always show fight and turn up, and that’s what we’re doing. It might not be pretty at times. But that’s just how we’ve got to do it, and how we’re going to get past each game. Hopefully things will improve.”

Game
Register
Service
Bonus