Mets Fans Were in Shambles After Latest Fathomable Collapse vs. Braves

The first half of the season went about as good as the Mets could have hoped. The team jumped out to a comfortable lead in the National League, having gone 45-25 in their first 70 games.

Since then, the wheels have come off completely. New York has lost 13 of its last 15 games and eight of its last nine, many of which have included painstaking blown leads and inexplicably un-clutch performances.

Thursday night was much of the same, as the Mets fell victim to another late blown lead against the rival Braves. New York entered the eighth inning with a 3–2 lead, but trade deadline acquisition Ryan Helsley's struggles out of the bullpen continued as he surrendered a pair of runs to give Atlanta 4–3 lead. The Braves would hold on to win by that same score.

Mets fans wish they could say this was an unbelievable collapse, but given the state of the team of late, it was totally believable.

The loss puts the Mets at 64-57 on the year, and they're just a half-game ahead of the Reds for the final National League wild-card spot.

Naturally, Mets fans were in full panic mode on social media after another disastrous defeat.

Phillies Trade Rumors Bring Back Bad Memories for Bryce Harper: 'I Hated It'

Phillies president of baseball operations Dave Dombrowski stoked some flames among baseball fans last week when he admitted he's not sure whether Bryce Harper will ever become an "elite" player again.

Dombrowski's surprising comments gained steam across the Philadelphia sports world, even with some wondering whether that's an indication the franchise could look to move on from the eight-time All-Star. The Phillies president clarified his initial comments in a recent appearance on

"First of all, to me, Bryce Harper's one of the best players in the game of baseball," he said Thursday. "They asked me, 'What type of year do you think he had?' And I said, 'He had a very good year, I don't think he had an elite year.' And when I say that, when I think of Bryce Harper, it's a compliment, because the reality is there are eight, 10 players in the game of baseball every year, when they're not in the MVP consideration. … It's not an elite year for them.

"So the reality is, he's a great player, he's a future Hall of Famer. … Now I've been reading that, . That couldn't be farther from the truth. We love him, we think he's a great player, he's a very important part of our team. I've seen him have better years.”

The unsubstantiated rumors have hit Harper's ears, which caught him by surprise and left him downright disappointed.

“I have given my all to Philly from the start,” Harper said via Matt Gelb. “Now there is trade talk? I made every effort to avoid this. It’s all I heard in D.C. [with the Nationals]. I hated it. It makes me feel uncomfortable.”

Gelb reported in that Harper was hurt by Dombrowski's initial comments at his end of season press conference. The 14-year veteran slashed .261/.357/.487 with 27 homers and RBIs for the Phillies this season. His .844 OPS was his lowest since 2016 when he was still with the Nationals, while his .261 batting average was the lowest mark since his first season with Philadelphia in '19.

He missed most of June with a wrist injury, making 132 appearances in total on the year, which he mentioned led to the lower numbers compared to his high standard.

“All players get hurt,” Harper said to . “I hurt my wrist this year and missed a month. Of course I don’t have full-year numbers. It’s disappointing to hear me being questioned about my contribution to the team. Just really hurt by that notion because I love Philly so much.”

The 33-year-old star has six years left on the massive 13-year, $330 million deal he signed to join the Phillies in '19. There isn't an opt-out clause in his deal, which ties him to the franchise through the '31 season when he'll be 38 years old.

“I wanted these fans to know Philly is my home, so from the start, I made the commitment to stay here for the rest of my career,” he said. “No opt-out, even though I was advised otherwise. I trust [Phillies owner] John [Middleton].”

Harper clearly hopes to remain a Phillie for the foreseeable future. If anything else happens to bring his name into trade rumors, though, he certainly won't be happy.

When Graeme Hick asked the tough question

The batting coach gained considerable respect for approaching the subject of executive pay

Daniel Brettig17-Jun-2020On April 21, Cricket Australia’s staff were still trying to make sense of the stand downs imposed on more than 200 of their number, and fear and uncertainty were rampant.It was one of many days punctuated by a video conference call from then chief executive Kevin Roberts, who was also to speak to the media for the first time to explain CA’s scorched earth approach to preparing for the possible financial toll of the coronavirus pandemic.These calls had, prior to the stand downs, been characterised by general bonhomie and vague expressions of optimism by Roberts. Even on the day that he announced that a host of staff were to be stood down, there had been a combination of shock and sympathy for the chief executive, before the arithmetic of the decision-making was more widely understood.ALSO READ: Timeline: Three months that brought down CA chief Kevin RobertsBy April 21 however, there was greater understanding and frustration, particularly with one point. How was it possible that the majority of stood down staff would be left with just 20% of their usual salaries, while executives were retained on 80% of their own, far more substantial pay packets.But it required bravery and outspokenness, particularly in an environment where every single staff member was apprehensive about their future and how it might be decided upon, to speak up and ask the obvious.Over the preceding few months, there had been mirth about the fact that in the Amazon documentary , Australia’s longtime batting coach Graeme Hick was seen and not heard throughout, despite hours of footage of meetings, training sessions and matches. Based on that glimpse into the team, many had been left to conclude that Hick was not one to speak up, and in truth, he seldom has been, preferring to be a quiet assistant to the batsmen.But in this moment of fear, uncertainty, apprehension and doubt, but also mounting frustration, anger and incomprehension, it was Hick who asked Roberts the key question about why there was such an inequitable split of financial pain. How, Hick asked, was the 80% pay figure reached for executives?In the face of such a direct and challenging question from the ranks, Roberts fell back on one of the old cliches of selectors dealing with a particularly knotty decision. This was a judgement call, made back in March.He then pivoted to suggest that by eliminating all performance bonuses for executives, the pay cut for the top tier of his management was actually more significant than the 80% figure indicated, before adding that he was happy to work around the clock, all week long, to get his staff back on deck. Roberts insisted, as he also did publicly around that time, that in the likely event that things would get worse, he would take a bigger pay cut.ALSO READ: Kevin Roberts’ exit as Cricket Australia CEO won’t heal all woundsBut he also stated that, in his mind, a 20% pay cut while working extra hours was hopefully an equal share of the load relative to an 80% pay cut while being stood down. This response went down like the proverbial lead balloon, as did the suggestion on the same day that some of the stood down staff could find themselves working at Woolworths. Hick, though, had gained a lot of respect from the rest of the staff for being willing to ask a pointed question at such a fearful time.Fifty-seven days later, about a cricket tour’s worth, the agony of stand downs while waiting for redundancies has ended for 40 CA staff, and Hick is among them. His place as Steven Smith’s chief throwdown merchant will likely be replaced by Marnus Labuschagne rather than support staff, as the players are made to be more self-sufficient by having fewer coaches around them. There is no suggestion that Hick’s question played any role in the subsequent decision to part ways.But it is to be hoped that Hick’s courage in that April 21 moment is not forgotten. He had at least challenged Roberts and CA in a way that many more did subsequently, whether other staff, state associations, or the Australian Cricketers Association, and in concert with a rapidly improving Covid-19 outlook ensured that far fewer employees lost their jobs than otherwise.Earl Eddings, the CA chairman, spoke with respect for departing staff. “When you lose really good staff like today, it’s really gut-wrenching, and through no fault of their own, there’s a crisis that’s hit everybody,” Eddings said. “To lose 40 really good people is really soul-destroying. So this has been really tough, and saying goodbye to those people is incredibly difficult.”But even as he held his own videoconference to the media, Eddings was watched by two state chairmen – Queensland’s Chris Simpson and Cricket Victoria’s Paul Barkerwere also present. The circumstances that compelled Hick to stick his head above the parapet have left CA needing to make far better explanations than Roberts had done.

Who are the most economical bowlers in T20 leagues?

We use Smart Economy Rate to analyse bowlers’ performances depending the match situation they were bowling in

ESPNcricinfo stats team01-Apr-2020In the second article in a new series where we use Smart Stats to analyse various aspects of cricket, we look at the most economical bowler in T20 cricket since January 2019. Smart Stats is a part of Superstats, a new set of metrics by ESPNcricinfo to tell more enriching and insightful numbers-based stories. To know more about Superstats, click here.Traditional cricketing statistics sometimes do not reveal the actual impact of a bower. ESPNcricinfo’s Smart Stats takes into account the context of players’ performances and shows just how exceptional certain bowlers were when compared to others.ESPNcricinfo LtdLet us first look at the top five most economical bowlers in terms of conventional economy rates, taking a minimum of 15 innings for bowlers since January 2019. Ravindra Jadeja tops the charts with an economy rate of 6.35. Jasprit Bumrah is the lone fast bowler in the list, conceding 6.63 runs per over. Shoaib Malik is third-best conceding 6.72 runs per over and Imran Tahir and Australia’s Chris Green complete the top five.Although these are excellent numbers when seen in isolation, game context throws up a different narrative. Malik, Jadeja and Tahir have bowled 80%, 78% and 68% of their overs respectively between overs seven to 15 (the middle-overs phase), when the field is spread, the batsmen aren’t in overdrive, and boundaries are relatively tougher to score. Dive a little bit deeper and you will find that the situations the three bowlers have bowled a majority of their overs in have also not been as tough as some of the others.ALSO READ: Who is the MVP across all T20 leagues over the last 12 months?Smart Economy Rate (SER) brings out the true value of the bowlers. It takes into account not just the overs bowled and runs conceded but also the match situation, in terms of pressure on the bowler at the time, the overall match run rate, and the batsmen a bowler bowled to. Keeping a top-quality batsman quiet in a high-scoring match counts for much more than doing the same to a tailender in a low-scoring game.Sunil Narine’s SER was the best among bowlers who bowled at least 15 overs. His conventional economy rate during this period was 7.04. It was actually worth 5.19 on the Smart Economy scale. Bumrah is easily among the best in the business and he is the only bowler in both the lists. His SER is 5.21. Jofra Archer (SER 5.57), Sohail Tanvir (5.68) and Rashid Khan(5.84) make up the top five .Of the 72 overs that Narine bowled, 37% were in the Powerplay, in which he conceded just 4.37, and 20% were in the last five overs, where his conventional economy rate was 9.48. In 63% of the matches he played, he conceded under 7.5 runs per over. The two matches where he conceded 11 an over were games where the required run rate was more than 12 when he was bowling.ESPNcricinfo LtdAlthough Narine has been struggling with injuries recently, his ability to control the flow of runs is remarkable. Bumrah, Rashid and Tanvir had lower conventional economy rates than Narine, but the situations Narine has faced have been a marginally tougher. The high-scoring pitches at Eden Gardens and Port-of-Spain, where he has played a majority of his matches, have also played a role in this. Rashid is an exception, in terms of bowling more in the middle and still maintaining a good SER. Almost 65% of Rashid’s overs are in the middle but, unlike Jadeja or Malik, Rashid also bowls a fair number of his overs in the Powerplay and death, and bowls them well, conceding just 7.1 and 8.3 respectively.Among the seamers, Bumrah is easily the standout, and he is ranked second in both conventional and smart economy rates. He bowls just 21% of his overs in the middle phase, and is the captain’s go-to bowler almost every single time the team is under pressure. In 13 out of 16 instances he has conceded less than eight runs per over on the flat tracks in Mumbai. The three instances when he did concede over nine runs per over were all in high-scoring games, in which the overall match run rate was more than nine.Tanvir, who finished as the Purple Cap winner way back in the inaugural edition of the IPL in 2008, is still a force to reckon with. His uncanny action and his strong performances in the Powerplay and death make him a useful resource even today in T20 leagues across the world. He bowls only 9% of the overs in the middle, and usually bowls all the difficult overs. Green is in sixth place in the SER rankings and is another underrated bowler. He is a Powerplay specialist, bowling 50% of his overs in that phase. However, he still needs to be tested across other leagues, such as IPL, and in internationals, to stake his claim.

World Cup pressure, an Ashes special, and toppling New Zealand – Meg Lanning picks her three best innings

The Australia captain goes down memory lane and into the heart of three distinctively match-winning Lanning hundreds

Annesha Ghosh23-Oct-2020As Meg Lanning, the Australia captain and premier top-order batter, approaches ten years in international cricket, we asked her to pick her three best innings. She took us down memory lane and into the heart of three distinctively match-winning Lanning hundreds, all accomplished away from home.152* off 135 balls vs Sri Lanka, Bristol, 2017 ODI World Cup
“Lanning 152* trumps Atapattu 178*” read the headline for ESPNcricinfo’s report on the league-stage match. That’s all the background you need to grasp the full impact of Lanning’s 11th ODI hundred that culminated in her personal ODI best.Lanning: “We were a bit stunned, to be honest. [Chamari] Atapattu had come out and whacked us all around the park. It probably wasn’t something we expected and that was part of the problem, I guess. They made 250-260; it wasn’t an outrageous score, but just the fact that perhaps it wasn’t a team we expected [to perform that way]. But she played unbelievably well. I remember saying to Ellyse Perry before we went out to bat, ‘We’ve got to do something here. It’s up to us to really win the game for us.’ A 150 not out chasing, in a World Cup game where we were under the pump a little bit – that was why that was special.”Lanning holds two of the top five highest individual scores in women’s T20Is•Getty Images133* off 63 balls, 1st T20I vs England, Chelmsford, 2019 Ashes
Lanning: “I hadn’t been hitting the ball too well, to be honest. It sort of came from nowhere (). I played some shots on that day that I wouldn’t usually play. Everything came out of the middle, everything went in the gaps. It just clicked. It was just one of those days when you feel you are one step ahead of what the bowlers are trying to do and the fielders. You’ve got to make the most of it when that happens. That was good fun.”Lanning made two back-to-back hundreds against New Zealand in the 2015-16 ODI series•Getty Images114* off 113 balls, 2nd ODI vs New Zealand, Mt Maunganui, 2016
Lanning: “It was the Rose Bowl series against one of our most familiar opponents. We were under the pump because they had smashed us in the T20s in Australia [in 2012-13]. We were heading into the 2016 T20 World Cup. We lost the first ODI, so we were struggling a bit. We came good in the last two. That century was a memorable one.”

Georgia Adams: From a farmer's field to an Edgbaston final in 12 months

Southern Vipers captain on England radar after leading RHF Trophy run charts

Matt Roller25-Sep-2020In May, eight weeks into the UK’s lockdown, Georgia Adams didn’t expect to play any cricket until 2021. Three months later, she will captain her Southern Vipers team in a televised 50-over final, which she goes into with 420 runs in her last six innings.”It’s been a bit of a whirlwind,” she laughs. “I got very pessimistic, which isn’t like me. I was convinced we weren’t going to get any cricket. Even when we got our retainer contracts and go the OK to train, we were still very much unsure what was actually going to go ahead.”Instead, the Rachael Heyhoe Flint Trophy has been a major success. All players have been paid to play, fixtures have been held at men’s county grounds, and live streams on YouTube have attracted nearly half a million views. With an average first-innings total of 220 across the season, runs have been easier to come by, with better pitches giving players value for shots.”Last year in a county game, we turned up and were playing in a farmer’s field with no sightscreen,” Adams says. “The jump from that to playing at the Ageas Bowl, Hove, The Oval is amazing for us. You get more reward for playing your shots; you’re not worrying as much that a ball is going to take off and fly over your head.”County cricket has always been a decent standard in terms of the players in it, but on some pitches 120 won you the game. That’s not what anyone wants to watch, and not what anyone wants to play in. It’s been great to see across the board that people have cashed in at these grounds.”Adams herself has been in the form of her life. She is leading the run charts heading into Sunday’s final against Northern Diamonds, and has scored consistently throughout the competition: 37 on the opening day is her lowest score, and only four other players in the tournament have even half as many runs as her 420.In a must-win game against Western Storm, she played the innings of the tournament, hitting 154 not out off 155 balls at the Ageas Bowl. “I was trying to bat and bat and bat,” she explains. “And then after I reached 100, every time I tried to hit the ball it just seemed to ping off the middle. Days like that don’t happen very often.”Her form has not gone unnoticed. Adams has consistently been involved in England development and academy squads, but is yet to make an international debut. She knows Lisa Keightley, the England head coach, from her time in those squads, and was name-checked by Heather Knight in a recent interview with ESPNcricinfo.But as Adams sees it, the major boost to women’s cricket this year is that international selection is no longer the be-all and end-all: she looks certain to be awarded a full-time contract next month, which will ensure she no longer has to work part-time as a coach alongside her playing career.Georgia Adams has captained Southern Vipers into the final•Getty Images”[Playing for] England is something that I’ve always had one eye on,” she says. “It’s always been my dream, my end goal, and if the opportunity does come around, hopefully I’ll be ready to take it.”But it’s such a tough side to get into: you look at the calibre of batters they’ve got in the side, and it’s phenomenal. They’re such a strong unit, and they’re only getting better and better.”In the last year or so, I’ve just thrown myself into enjoying the game and making the most of it. It’s an amazing thing for people to now be able to say: ‘well, I didn’t play for England, but actually I was a professional cricketer’. I honestly didn’t think I’d ever be able to say that, so it’s a dream come true that I can, however clichéd that sounds.”Adams says that batting has not been the only area of improvement for her this season; she says she has “grown as a captain tenfold” thanks to the influence of head coach Charlotte Edwards. She has been impressed by the speed at which young, amateur players have developed their tactical understanding, and is enthusiastic when speaking about their young stars.They include 17-year-old Ella McCaughan, who has opened the batting when Danni Wyatt has been away with England, No. 3 batter and gun fielder Maia Bouchier, and Charlie Dean in the middle order. Their new-ball bowlers in the final will be the tall 19-year-old Lauren Bell – who swung the ball prodigiously on KSL Finals Day last summer – and left-armer Tara Norris.Adams admits that she is not overly concerned by the fact her father, the former England batsman Chris, will be unable to attend on Sunday, with the game played behind closed doors at Edgbaston. “Apparently he’s the worst at watching games ever: he gets so nervous, pacing round, so it’s probably better that he’s at home and not stressing anyone else out,” she explains.And how special would it be to come out on top? “It would mean so much,” she says. “The type of cricket we’ve been playing, we deserve to lift the trophy. We want to inspire girls in our region to play, and lifting the trophy would really tick that box.”

South Africa gear up for four-day franchise competition – and Test-captaincy auditions

The rebuilding of the national side, young players to watch out for, and other talking points

Firdose Moonda30-Oct-2020Temba Bavuma, Aiden Markram, Dean Elgar, Keshav Maharaj and Rassie van der Dussen will be on an audition of sorts when South Africa’s four-day franchise competition kicks off on Monday. The quintet is considered to be in the running for the national Test captaincy and although only Bavuma is leading his franchise, the form and influence the rest have on their teams may play a role in who new convenor of selectors Victor Mpitsang chooses for the most prestigious job in South African cricket.Mpitsang, who starts work full-time on Monday, will also be looking for an opening batsman after last season saw Pieter Malan fill in for an injured Markram, an opening bowler after Vernon Philander’s retirement, and potentially a middle-order batsman depending on how much longer Faf du Plessis wants to play international cricket. All that makes this season’s domestic competition even more crucial for the rebuilding of the national side. Here’s our team-wise preview and what to expect when things kick off.LionsThe defending champions have bulked up their squad with bowlers from the Cape, including Sisanda Magala and Lutho Sipamla from the Warriors and Tladi Bokako from the Cobras. They already have Beuran Hendricks, Dwaine Pretorius and Kagiso Rabada in their ranks, which gives them an arsenal of fearsome quicks to call on at the spiciest pitch in the country, the Wanderers. Though they won’t want it to be too green and mean as many Lions batsmen need to be among the runs for the national side. Bavuma, who played only one Test last summer, leads the pack but van der Dussen and Reeza Hendricks are not far behind.Last season standing: Winners
Captain: Temba Bavuma
Coach: Wandile Gwavu
Keep an eye on: Wiaan Mulder did not feature for South Africa in any format last summer as he battled injury, and his team-mate Dwaine Pretorius got the Test allrounders spot and Andile Phehlukwayo the white-ball role. But at 22, and with a strong skillset, Mulder is one to watch out for the future.TitansThe Titans lost their coach Mark Boucher to national duty in the middle of last season but managed a strong second-place finish under Mandla Mashimbyi, who has taken over full-time. They are the franchise that could hold the key to the Test top-three, with Markram, Elgar and Theunis de Bruyn all calling SuperSport Park their home. Further down the order, Heinrich Klaasen also has national ambitions. Lungi Ngidi headlines their attack which includes the experience of Junior Dala and the youth of Lizaad Williams, Okuhle Cele, Dayyaan Galiem, Matthew Arnold and Ryan Cartwright.Aiden Markram pulls•Getty ImagesLast season standing: Runners-up
Captain: Grant Thomson
Coach: Mandla Mashimbyi
Keep an eye on: Thando Ntini moved upcountry from the Cape over the winter and the Highveld conditions are expected to bring out the best in him. But we may have to wait a while to see what Ntini has to offer as he is nursing a hamstring injury.WarriorsJon-Jon Smuts’ elevation to the national team meant the Warriors selected a new four-day captain for this summer. Yaseen Vallie, who is also among the senior-most members of the squad, has been asked to lead the franchise’s red-ball team. The line-up also features last summer’s second-highest run-scorer Edward Moore, who opens the batting, Rudi Second, who brings experience, and youngsters Sinethemba Qeshile and Matthew Breetzke, both of whom are regarded as future internationals. Having lost Sipamla and Magala to the Lions and Andrew Birch to retirement, the challenge for the Warriors will be to have an attack that can step up. Anrich Nortje, Wihan Lubbe, Mthiwekhaya Nabe’s roles will be crucial in that regard.Anrich Nortje lets out a roar in celebration•BCCILast season standing: Third
Captain: Yaseen Vallie
Coach: Robin Peterson
Keep an eye on: Glenton Stuurman has been touted as a ready-replacement for Philander because of his ability to move the ball both ways and his miserly average.KnightsThe only franchise with a new coach this season found the highest-profile one they could. Allan Donald has returned to Bloemfontein to take on his first head coaching gig at home and has a talented group of players to work with. Young tearaway Gerald Coetzee, who was named as one of ESPNcricinfo’s 20 players to watch in the 2020s, will lead the attack, which also includes Migael Pretorius, who has moved from Johannesburg. Equally exciting is their batting line-up which has the experience of Pite van Biljon and Farhaan Behardien, who had left the Titans to go Kolpak but has since returned to South Africa, and youngsters Matthew Kleinveldt, Jacques Snyman and Wandile Makwetu.According to Kagiso Rabada, Gerald Coetzee has the potential to be a ‘South African great’•Getty ImagesLast season standing: Fourth
Captain: Pite van Biljon
Coach: Allan Donald
Keep an eye on: Raynard van Tonder was the leading run-scorer of the tournament last season and must be among the contenders for a Test call-up, whether as an opener or a No. 3.DolphinsIn Durban, the Dolphins have been steadily building towards becoming a more competitive unit and they have the ingredients to be serious challengers this summer. David Miller has expressed an interest in pushing for a Test spot but Keegan Petersen, who was selected for net sessions under Jacques Kallis’ tutelage last summer, may beat him there. Their attack revolves around their spinners, which include Maharaj, last season’s leading wicket-taker, Prenelan Subrayen, and two-time Test cap Senuran Muthusamy, but there’s a batch of quicks bubbling under. Almost two-metre tall Kerwin Mungroo, Daryn Dupavillon and Lifa Ntanzi make up the pace pack.Keshav Maharaj celebrates a wicket•BCCILast season standing: Fifth
Captain: Marques Ackerman
Coach: Imraan Khan
Keep an eye on: Ackerman and Grant Roelofsen were respectively the third and the sixth leading run-scorers last season and although neither of their names has come up in the public discussion around the Test team, the numbers may do the talking for them and force their case.CobrasAs the only team that did not win a single four-day match last summer, the Cobras will enter this season with a point to prove. They’ve revamped their squad with the acquisitions of top-order batsman Tony de Zorzi, allrounder Corbin Bosch and offspinner Imran Manack, all from the Titans, and allrounders Calvin Savage, from the Dolphins, and Onke Nyaku, from the Warriors. They’ve also ploughed their own depths to sign Jonathan Bird, Ziyaad Abrahams and Isma-eel Gafieldien. In the Malan brothers, Janneman and Pieter, new captain Zubayr Hamza and Jason Smith, the Cobras have all the makings of a strong side but they’ll want victories to show for it.Zubayr Hamza in action for the Cape Cobras•Cape CobrasLast season standing: Sixth
Captain: Zubayr Hamza
Coach: Ashwell Prince
Keep an eye on: George Linde was named the South African Cricketers’ Association’s (SACA) Most Valuable Player last season, in recognition of his all-round excellence across formats. Linde earned a Test cap in India last October and although Maharaj will be difficult to dislodge from the South African side, Linde provides strong competition.

Joe Root's 100th Test: Standing on the shoulders of giants, his best yet to come

The England Test captain, just past 30, seems to have skittered into the upper echelons without breaking sweat

Andrew Miller03-Feb-2021Three names. Three titans of England cricket. All toppled in the space of a single stupendous innings.First went Geoffrey Boycott (8114 Test runs), deftly vaulted with a cut in front of square. Next, it was Kevin Pietersen (8181), nailed on the sweep, into the shins of short leg and away for the deal-sealing single. And 50 runs later still, David Gower (8231) was swept away too, as Lasith Embuldeniya was picked up from outside off with as much ceremony as a bottle of milk from the doorstep.And now, on the eve of his 100th Test and fresh from a definitive haul of 426 runs in two Tests against Sri Lanka, here Joe Root stands – squarely on the shoulders of giants with a total of 8249 runs to his name. With perhaps the clearest view imaginable of the peak years of his career still stretching out in front of him.Related

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It hardly required a surge through the records for confirmation, but it is unequivocal now. Root’s place among the elite of English cricket – English sport, even – is a given. It won’t be long before he has overhauled two more England giants in Alec Stewart (8463) and Graham Gooch (8900), both of whom were past their 40th birthdays by the time their gargantuan careers were done, with bodies of work as weighty as the trademark strokes that had contributed to them.Root, by contrast, is barely a month into his 30s and seems to have skittered into the upper echelons without breaking sweat – perhaps not quite as literally as the one Englishman whose feats lie beyond his immediate grasp, but unlike the famously anti-perspirant Alastair Cook (12,472), Root has rarely made the arduous business of run-scoring look quite such a life-and-death struggle.Quite the opposite in fact. Other players of his standing have had to factor some very human failings into their genius. Gower’s grace came with a self-destructive caveat, while KP’s ego was his vice as much as his virtue, but Root’s career to date has been remarkable for its lack of obvious grit in the oyster.In Sri Lanka, for instance, the range and poise of his sweep shots seemed to catch a fair few onlookers unawares, as did their companion trait, his effortless reading of length, which enabled him to play back with confidence to the spinners. And yet, by the time these methods had been drummed into the narrative over the course of 1000 minutes of crease occupation, it was as if Root had finally been conferred a signature shot to rival Ponting’s pull or Tendulkar’s high-elbowed drive.And not unlike Tendulkar, a similarly fresh-faced boy wonder in his heyday, Root’s hypnotic thrum of excellence has inured him to the wild highs and swirling lows that many great batsmen have had to endure. He may never play an innings quite as startling as Ben Stokes at Headingley, for instance, but then again, he may never need to. A nudge through midwicket here, a steer down to third man there… when Root, as the cliché goes, is able to put 10, 20, 30 runs on the board before anyone’s really noticed, he’s drawing the jeopardy in a wholly different style.But now, you sense, there’s a stark choice to be made – and it surely is a choice, because the extent of Root’s talent doesn’t really leave his long-term returns to chance. Does he see his exalted status among England batsmen as a summit in itself, or is it a base camp in his bid to tackle the game’s most rarefied heights?For several years now, Root has been readily bracketed among world cricket’s contemporary “Fab Four”, alongside Virat Kohli, Steven Smith and Kane Williamson. But, as his near-contemporary, Andy Murray, can attest from his own attempts to keep pace with Roger Federer, Rafael Nadal and Novak Djokovic, it is one thing to be considered as the best that your country has ever produced, it’s another thing entirely to make the step up to all-time legendary status.Murray bust a gut to bridge the gap and found his best endeavours weren’t enough, and Root too has watched the pack pull away in the past few seasons. He, however, has the game, and the time, and the fitness levels too (he’s never yet missed a Test through injury) to make a proper play for top billing if his mind is fully on the task – and perhaps for the first time since inheriting the Test captaincy at the end of his rookie phase in 2016, he has a team situation in which Test cricket can be close to an unwavering focus.For if ever there were mitigating circumstances for a slackening in Test-match standards, then Root can claim to have lived them. When Cook handed him the reins at the end of the 2016-17 tour of India, England were deep into their transition of priorities from red-ball to white, with Root himself – as England’s 50-over safety valve – utterly integral to the process.In Sri Lanka, the range and poise of Root’s sweeps seemed to catch a fair few onlookers unawares•SLCHe arrived on the bridge with Trevor Bayliss and Eoin Morgan already setting the agenda – England had not long since reached the final of the World T20, where Root would surely have been Player of the Final and Tournament too, had it not been for Carlos Brathwaite’s intervention in Kolkata. And with all roads hurtling towards the 2019 World Cup final at Lord’s, his role in the Test team became more akin to a rally co-driver than the actual bloke behind the wheel. Find a route, any route, and get us there before the batting runs out.And sure enough, his returns hit a sharp bend or two on the way. At the end of his maiden summer as Test captain in 2017, Root was averaging a world-class 53.76 from 60 Tests. That figure has now dipped to 49.39 from 99. For his first five years as an England cricketer, he had never gone more than two series in a row without ending a campaign with an average in the high 50s: for seven consecutive series from the spring of 2018 through to the end of the 2019 Ashes, that figure didn’t emerge from the 30s.Built into that downturn, however, was the suggestion that Root never actually fell out of form in the conventional sense. Instead, he began to attract criticism for his failure to kick on from typically solid starts – having previously converted a healthy one in three of his fifties to hundreds, up to and including his career-best 254 against Pakistan in July 2016, that ratio drifted out to one in eight (or three hundreds from 24 fifties) over the course of the next 24 months.And reductive though it may be, that sense of a job half-done had its origins in the same cycle of matches that England are about to embark upon again, which means there’s no time quite like the present for Root to lay down some house rules and reframe the terms of the debate.In consecutive winters between November 2016 and January 2018, England played ten Tests in India and Australia, much as they are due to do now, and were trounced by a combined 8-0 scoreline. Root himself scored a century in the first of this run of games – a draw in Nagpur – but could only manage an average of one fifty per match thereafter (ten in 19 innings all told), his intermittent resistances blipping off England’s scorecards like faint proof that his team still had a pulse.ESPNcricinfo LtdIt is an indictment of his lack of support that he still topped England’s averages for both series – 491 at 49.10 in India, 378 at 47.25 in Australia – and, taken in isolation, his resolve was admirable. Never more so than in the New Year’s Test in Sydney when, under the searing summer sun, he batted himself to a standstill: 141 runs for once out in the match, before retiring with sunstroke on the futile final day of the series.But the optics of that final day were revealing too. As Root lay exhausted in the dressing room, with none of his team-mates being cruel enough to wake him, Australia cavorted with the urn on their infamous four-fingered salute of a podium. And leading the dance, with a monstrous haul of 687 runs at 137.40, was Root’s then-opposite number Smith, the recipient of the Compton-Miller Medal that Root himself had claimed on home soil two-and-a-half years earlier.Twelve months prior to Smith’s star turn, Kohli too had left Root in his wake with 655 runs at 109.16 in India’s own 4-0 thrashing, including, in Mumbai, the third of what would prove to be a remarkable run of six double-hundreds in 18 months. And, as if to prove that home conditions weren’t a prerequisite for either man’s success, both have since gone on to outshine Root on consecutive England tours: 593 runs for Kohli in 2018, and an eye-watering 774 for Smith in 2019.Such are the standards that Root must set himself if he is to reclaim his place among the best batsmen of his generation. His Galle double-whammy was an indisputably strong start, but tellingly it was also the first time he had scored two hundreds in a series since the aforementioned 2015 Ashes.But, perhaps more importantly, he’s now feeling the natural uplift of being captain of a winning team. Since Chris Silverwood took over as head coach at the end of 2019, a sense of decorum has been restored to their batting. England have passed 400 in six of their past 13 first innings, and picked off eight victories, having not managed the milestone once in the preceding two years and 23 attempts. And what’s more, having been forced to grow into his role – and not always comfortably – Root is discovering, not unlike his lesser-mentioned counterpart Williamson, that unshakeable decency engenders loyalty, not least from the most important man in his ranks, Stokes, whose support has been unstinting even in the team’s most wayward days.That, in turn, is beginning to foster a formidable team spirit, even in the adversity of lockdown. In the wake of the Sri Lanka win, England’s media manager Danny Reuben posted on Instagram a scene of England’s dressing-room celebrations, or rather their quiet contemplations, as the squad lay back in their seats to listen to the coach debrief them on a job well done.It showed something else too. A trick of the light, on the one hand, but a glimpse, maybe, of a new, more battle-hardened Root Mk 2 – the imp, imperious, if you will. His cheekbones were straining against a taut, conditioned face, giving the look of a man who had thrived in some of the most oppressive batting conditions imaginable, on and off the field, and was already hungry for more.For it’s quite something to be a World Cup winner, and a Test caps centurion, and (before long, surely) the England captain with the most Test victories to his name too, and yet give off the impression that your greatest challenge is still to come.

Team review: Sunrisers Hyderabad boosted by team effort in injury-affected season

The Sunrisers could do with an experienced, Indian middle-order batsman for the next season

Hemant Brar09-Nov-20203:39

Moody: Rashid, Natarajan standout performers for Sunrisers

Where did they finish?
After just three wins in their first nine games, the Sunrisers Hyderabad bounced back to qualify for the playoffs for the fifth straight season. They were third at the end of the league stage, tied with the Royal Challengers Bangalore on 14 points but ahead on net run rate. The Sunrisers beat the Royal Challengers in the Eliminator but couldn’t get past the Delhi Capitals in Qualifier 2.What went right?
The move to bat Kane Williamson at No. 4. It not only lent stability to an otherwise inexperienced middle order but also gave the openers more freedom. In all, Williamson scored 317 runs at 45.28 with a strike rate of 133.75, including a match-winning half-century in the Eliminator and a 45-ball 67 in Qualifier 2. Before the start of the tournament, the debate was if Williamson should be in the playing XI. By the end, David Warner was calling him the team’s banker.The gamble of benching Jonny Bairstow in order to fit both Williamson and Jason Holder in the playing XI also proved fruitful. Coming in as Bairstow’s replacement, Wriddhiman Saha provided the Sunrisers with flying starts in Warner’s company, while Holder played a couple of decisive knocks with the bat apart from picking up 14 wickets in seven games.Plus, the Sunrisers peaked just at the right time, winning their last three league games against what turned out to be the three other teams qualifying for the playoffs. It was a team effort, with different players putting their hands up at crucial times. Holder, Sandeep Sharma and Saha were some of the unlikely heroes for them during this period, while youngsters Abdul Samad and Priyam Garg, and Abhishek Sharma showed spark that promised a bright future.What went wrong?
Injuries to key players at key junctures. A thigh injury ended Bhuvneshwar Kumar’s season after the fourth game. Vijay Shankar kept picking up niggles, which robbed them of their sixth bowling option. Saha’s torn hamstring meant they had to play Shreevats Goswami for the playoffs. Amid all this, it took them as long as nine games to find their best XI.Jason Holder congratulated by SRH team-members after yet another key strike•BCCIKey numbers

  • Seventy-one. The number of yorkers bowled by T Natarajan in the tournament, more than double the next best. He conceded 57 off these 71 deliveries – an economy of 4.81 – while picking up five wickets, including that of AB de Villiers in the Eliminator.
  • Four, the number of bowlers (Rashid Khan, Natarajan, Sharma and Holder) with ten or more wickets for the Sunrisers at the end of the league stage. The only other team with four such bowlers were the Mumbai Indians.

Star performers
Rashid Khan was by far the best player for the Sunrisers. Of late, the teams have started playing out his four overs, and while Khan also maintains his main aim is to bowl economically, he was equally incisive this time around. With 20 wickets in 16 matches at an economy of 5.37, he was not only the leading wicket-taker for his side but also the go-to man for Warner each time he wanted to wrest back control.Warner once again showed why he is the most consistent batsman in the IPL. Despite a slow start to the season, he was at his belligerent best in the second half and finished with 548 runs at an average of 39.14 and a strike rate of 134.64. He has now scored at least 500 runs in each of his last six IPL seasons.What needs immediate fixing?
If all their players are available, they have most bases covered for the next edition. A fit Shankar can replace Garg in the playing XI. A fit Kumar can replace Holder, with Mohammad Nabi coming in for Shahbaz Nadeem. Having said that, they can still do with an experienced, Indian middle-order batsman.

Is England's use of signals from the balcony a big deal?

There’s not a lot in it at the moment, but there could well be in future

Gaurav Sundararaman07-Dec-2020In the third T20I between England and South Africa last week, England’s analyst Nathan Leamon trialled a signal system for communicating with players, by propping up pairs of placards bearing a letter and a number each on the balcony. It was done, England explained afterwards, with permission from match officials but almost immediately, a broader question arose. Does this kind of real-time support from the coaching staff represent an evolution, or does it constitute too much tinkering with the game?Cape Town wasn’t the first instance (England actually used it through the series). Earlier this year Leamon and his team at the Multan Sultans used a similar signal strategy. More controversially, during the 1999 World Cup, Bob Woolmer communicated with Hansie Cronje on-field through an earpiece.ALSO READ: How T20 went from being a bit of fun to downright futuristicInformation has traditionally been passed from coaches to players on the field during designated drinks breaks, strategic time outs, or when bats or gloves are sent out to the field. In some cases, the 12th man or the coach talk to the captain boundary side. All of that still happens but what England did could spark a change in how this is done, eventually bringing it up to the level of such sports as the NFL or the NBA. Of course, one of the fundamental differences between those sports and cricket is that the manager or coach are the primary decision-makers there, while in cricket the captain is. As a result, historically, the involvement of coaches and support staff in real-time decision making has been limited in cricket.Cricket has predominantly been played out on skills and technique. But T20 has allowed data-based strategy and tactics to come to the forefront. For example, data-based decisions can lead to your weakest bowler bowling the first over of an innings, knowing that the particular opening batsman up against them takes some time to settle; or not sending out your best batsman in his usual position because he has a below-par average against legspin. You would never see this happen in the longer format.Thanks to franchise cricket around the world, there is also a greater amount of data to work with in T20, compared to Tests and ODIs, for which teams tour a country once every three or four years – so much can change in that period that it leaves a fair amount of data irrelevant.ALSO READ: ‘MS Dhoni a pure instinct man’ – Rahul Dravid, N Srinivasan discuss data and leadershipMost cricketers have grown up without data, though, so the ability to understand, filter and use it correctly needs time, education and experience. That is why the relationship between the captain and the analyst is crucial. Both need to understand that data-based decisions should not be judged on outcome alone. What data does is help provide logical justification for decision-making, and in many cases validates the instincts of the captain.The format is still young enough to have teams at opposite ends of the spectrum when it comes to use of data. At one end you have MS Dhoni and the Chennai Super Kings making the IPL playoffs ten years out of 11 using instincts and experience, and at the other are Rohit Sharma and the Mumbai Indians winning five titles with data underpinning heavy research and meticulous planning. But as the format evolves and grows, it will be important for captains to adapt and remain open to tools and techniques that can give them an advantage over their peers.Since the captain is the primary decision-maker on the field in cricket, the involvement of analysts, coaches and support staff is still limited•Getty ImagesAt the moment most of the use of data in T20s is to do with match-ups and venue-related information. Neither of these really requires signals from off the field. Venue details are easy to understand, while a captain can easily remember match-ups, since it is just six to seven batsmen to plan for. And anyway, you have time outs and water breaks to send the message across if needed.However, signals could be useful to remind the captain of plans if bowlers drift away from them. For example, if the strategy is to bowl wide yorkers to Hardik Pandya at the death and the first two balls of an over are short and hit for six, it makes sense for a signal to be sent out immediately to correct course. You might think this is something captain and bowler should be able to do by themselves on the field but you’d be surprised how many still don’t orchestrate execution to such a specific degree. Waiting for an over to finish might make it too late. An alphanumeric code grid used to communicate details of line and length can be a simple and powerful way to minimise damage and remind a captain of plans.Another potential instance where signals could help is to make sure not only that the right field is set, but that the right fielders are in the right positions.ALSO READ: Nathan Leamon: ‘Analysis is easy. The trick is turning it into info players can use’Think about the possibilities that open up if wearable technologies such as RFID chips or smart watches are allowed, which can provide real-time data on performance and movements in the field. Once these technologies trickle in, we could see involvement from specialised coaches and analysts in real time, leading to strategic field changes in the middle of an over. If there are real-time stats tracking player fatigue, informed decisions can be made whether they can continue or be taken out of the attack, if they are a bowler; or whether to hit out and get out, or retire out, if they are a batsman. Potentially, you could change a game as a coach on the back of a finding in real time.Although there is a lot of noise and interest around data analytics in T20 at the moment, its use is at a nascent stage. Compared to sports like football and basketball, where thousands of data points are collected, cricket is still far behind. The first step towards catching up is to capture as much data as possible: more data on fielding, on tracking player movements through the day, on real-time health parameters, on players’ speeds. None of this is collected currently, let alone organised coherently.Cricket needs more investment, but also regulatory support from the ICC in allowing wearable technologies, or in-stadia cameras to capture relevant data. As data collection evolves and league cricket flourishes, such signals will add new dimensions not only in the aspect of high performance but also for broadcasting and fan engagement. For instance, after an IPL season or a Test series, a team could potentially release recordings of the interactions that the support staff and captain had during the season to fans. We’re still far from that, but for now England have started something. It is only a matter of time before others get better at it.

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