Sri Lanka on top again as Ramesh Mendis, Praveen Jayawickrama run through West Indies

Despite Chase’s five-for, visitors are 273 runs behind Sri Lanka

Andrew Fidel Fernando22-Nov-2021Stumps West Indies worked themselves back into the game in the first two sessions, taking Sri Lanka’s last seven wickets for 105. But then they gave up all the ground they had gained in the evening, losing six wickets for 54 runs.Essentially, what this means, is that despite Roston Chase’s five-wicket haul, West Indies are 273 runs behind Sri Lanka, with only four wickets remaining. They bat deep, but the pitch is already taking substantial turn, particularly for Sri Lanka’s spinners. So dominant were the slow bowlers of both sides on day two, that no batter could make a half-century; Dinesh Chandimal and Kraigg Brathwaite came closest, hitting 45 and 41 respectively.Sri Lanka lost their overnight pair in the first hour, and lost the remainder of their batters either side of lunch, but still, it was the last session of the day that was most dramatic. West Indies had restricted Sri Lanka to 386 – a good score, but not the gargantuan one that the hosts had threatened at the end of day one. Brathwaite and makeshift opener Jermaine Blackwood (he was taking the place of the concussed Jeremy Solozano, with concussion substitute Shai Hope to come in at No. 4) made a half-decent start, too, putting on 46 for the first wicket. But as is often the case in Galle – though often not as early as the second day – once one partnership is broken, several wickets fall in quick succession.Blackwood was the first to be dismissed. He had been lbw on 2 against Dushmantha Chameera, but the umpire turned down the appeal and Sri Lanka did not review. He had seemed to have become comfortable at the crease, particularly against Lasith Embuldeniya, whom he launched for a straight six, but then missed a straightening delivery from the same bowler, and was correctly adjudged lbw (Blackwood burned a review).Four overs later, Praveen Jayawickrama – the other left-arm spinner in Sri Lanka’s XI – got a ball to erupt from the straight, and take Nkrumah Bonner’s glove on the way to slip, where Dhananjaya de Silva took a sharp catch to his left.Roston Chase had figures of 5 for 83•AFP/Getty Images

Offspinner Ramesh Mendis then took two wickets in two big-spinning balls, split across two overs. His first victim was Brathwaite, who was caught at leg slip. His second was Shai Hope, who was snaffled at short leg – both batters having been out off the inside edge. Mendis would also have Chase caught at short leg before the day was out, after Jayawickrama had nightwatchman Jomel Warrican caught behind. Although West Indies have Jason Holder and Kyle Mayers at the crease, and Joshua de Silva and Rahkeem Cornwall to come, it is not guaranteed, on what has suddenly become such a devious surface, that they will surpass the follow-on score.The first dismissal of the day, however, had been the strangest. Dhananjaya de Silva had added five runs to his overnight 56 and seemed to be batting nicely, when he was a touch late playing a defensive shot to a back-of-a-length Shannon Gabriel ball. He made a good connection, but the ball dropped by his feet and seemed to be bouncing into the stumps, so he turned around to swipe at it. He only nicked it the first time, and had to swipe again, but on that second occasion, dislodged the bails with his bat, and was out hit wicket.Dimuth Karunaratne, who was on 132, had started the day nervously, and was out to some excellent wicketkeeping having added only 15 to his score – Joshua da Silva whipping off the bails after Chase had drawn Karunaratne forward with a loopy offbreak.Jomel Warrican, who had gone wicketless on day one, took three wickets either side of lunch – the dismissal of Ramesh, whose glove Warrican collected with a delivery that leapt off the surface, being the most spectacular of the three. Chandimal, who had battled the spinners as well as anyone on day two, was out to Chase, after Rahkeem Cornwall anticipated and intercepted a reverse sweep. Chase dismissed Embuldeniya to complete his fourth five-for in Tests. At the time, it had seemed like West Indies had clawed themselves to near parity by keeping Sri Lanka’s total under 400.

Shakib: 'I am happy Bangladesh beat New Zealand without me'

Mortaza delighted at pacers stepping up for the team, says BCB could use Mirpur as a venue to develop quicks

Mohammad Isam08-Jan-2022Senior players Shakib Al Hasan and Mashrafe Mortaza have praised Bangladesh after their historic Test win against New Zealand in Mount Maunganui a few days ago. Shakib, who withdrew from the tour to spend time with his family, said that the victory proves the visitors don’t have to rely just on the senior players alone.”I don’t think my presence was necessarily important (in New Zealand),” Shakib said. “I am actually happy that they did it without me. Not just me… (but the others too). I think what really delighted me was that the notion, particularly in the media, that not many players apart from the four or five senior ones can win games for the team – that will be changed. If they are handed the responsibility, these youngsters will play better.”Related

  • Mominul expects other teams will view Bangladesh differently after drawn series in NZ

  • New Zealand look to bounce back against joyous Bangladesh

  • Ebadot: 'If you are fit enough as a fast bowler, you can do anything'

  • Bangladesh 'crossed all the barriers to bring a wonderful win'

  • Mominul Haque 'didn't sleep at all' leading into final day

Shakib said that the victory was sweeter coming off a year of disappointing performances. The team endured two winless streaks of 10 matches each in 2021, from February to April and then from October to December.”We made an unbelievable start to 2022. I am very happy. Credit goes to all the players and coaching staff for playing well under so much pressure and in these conditions. Everyone tried hard. This was always going to be a challenging year after a difficult time in 2021 for us. I hope we can continue in this manner. Bangladesh do not play this well all the time”Not everything will change after a Test win. But it creates the opportunity for change. I think if we can hold onto this belief, particularly the BCB, we can do well in the World Test Championship,” Shakib saidMashrafe, who is preparing for this season’s BPL, said that fast bowlers winning a Test match for Bangladesh was their biggest takeaway. Bangladesh pacers picked up 13 wickets at Bay Oval, the most they have ever bagged in a Test match. Their previous highest was 11 against Zimbabwe in Harare in 2013.”Taskin (Ahmed) and Ebadot (Hossain) proved that if they put in the hard work, they can improve. It is good to see the pacers winning a game for us, but this win doesn’t necessarily answer all the questions.”This is not a reply to all the criticism in recent times. Rather, we should learn from this, that we can win matches if we give players the opportunity. Cricket boards should invest and see what’s happening so that it could bring better results in the future,” Mashrafe said.He also heaped praise on Ebadot for being patient and spoke about how the fast bowler has reaped the rewards after being given a long rope in Tests in the last two years.”Ebadot’s improvement isn’t recent. He has been playing for a while and has been kept in consideration in Tests. He must have been given assurance that he will play. He knows this is his career, his future. He has to serve the team.”Ebadot’s wickets [in New Zealand’s second innings] won us the game. It could have been a drawn game. You have to give the player a bit of time. He got set slowly. Rahi has been giving service for a long time (unclear). Giving them a bit of time always brings a good result,” he said.Mashrafe said that the BCB could look at turning one of their major venues to develop fast bowlers. “I think they could look at Mirpur to help the fast bowlers since the ball here goes up and down. It, however, depends on how much you depend on the fast bowlers. So it is good that the pacers won us the game,” he said.

Lyon excited about bowling partnership with Swepson

All of Australia’s away tours in the current WTC cycle are in the subcontinent

Andrew McGlashan02-Jan-2022Nathan Lyon is excited about the prospect of forming a spin partnership with Mitchell Swepson, but the weather forecast and recent history at the SCG may count against it happening this week against England in the fourth Ashes Test.With the Ashes secured and England providing weak opposition there is a school of thought that the upcoming Test is a prime opportunity to blood Swepson, the Queensland legspinner, ahead of Australia’s overseas campaigns in Pakistan and Sri Lanka later in the year.The emergence of Cameron Green as a viable option for a third quick, having had a major impact with the ball this series, would allow Australia to field a balanced attack. But showers are forecast throughout the contest while the SCG has not been a happy hunting ground for spinners of late.Lyon bagged a 10-wicket match haul against New Zealand in 2019-2020 but averages 40.94 on the ground while over the last decade spinners have averaged 48.17 – the third highest of all Australia’s men’s Test venues.However, Swepson is as ready as he’ll ever be for his chance at Test cricket. With all three of Australia’s World Test Championship away series in the current cycle on the subcontinent, he could have a big say in how the side builds on their Ashes success.”I think Swepo has been Queensland’s best player for a number of years,” Lyon said. “Obviously I’m a big fan of spin bowlers so probably watch him a lot closer than what I watch Marnus [Labuschagne] or Uzzie [Khawaja]. He’s been around our group for a long period of time now and when he gets his opportunity, no doubt he will take it and run.”I’m excited about our relationship, our friendship is fantastic already, but really excited about the opportunity to bowl in tandem with Swepo whenever that may come, whether that’s here in a couple of days or in Hobart or in Pakistan.””I love bowling in partnership with spinners for sure. I’ve done it a lot in subcontinent conditions so if the opportunity does come to play two spinners I know we’ll really enjoy building that partnership. We’ve been doing it in the nets but it’s a lot different.”Usman Khawaja is likely to replace Travis Head in Sydney•Getty Images

Lyon did not believe a dodgy forecast (not entirely unusual for a Sydney Test) had to spell the end of Swepson’s hopes although it strengthens the likelihood that Australia will retain their usual balance. Josh Hazlewood is expected to train fully on Monday as he continues his recovery from the side strain he picked up in Brisbane and it could yet be that Scott Boland does not retain his place despite the 6 for 7 he claimed in Melbourne.”It seems to be every time we put stumps in the ground here it brings the rain which is unfortunate,” Lyon said. “Does it become a bit challenging for spinners? Yeah, it can if the ball gets wet, but we are pretty lucky these days with the quality of the groundskeepers who make the surface pretty dry and the ground drains pretty quickly.”Swepson will only be selected if he is genuinely part of Australia’s best attack to win the match with World Test Championship points available and the hunger to take the series with a whitewash to extend England’s barren streak in Australia that dates back to 2010-11.”There’s no more dead rubbers – and I’ve never considered them when you wear a baggy green – firstly because there’s the World Test Championship and we want to go 5-0 up,” Lyon said. “If the conditions suit then we pick the best team to win that Test to make sure we keep moving forward. The Ashes for me is the pinnacle but I’d love to be part of a Test Championship final to state our case for the No. 1 team in the world.”Australia’s squad will be bolstered on Monday by Mitchell Marsh and Josh Inglis who were driving up from Melbourne on Sunday – to avoid the risk of a commercial flight – having been added to as cover following Travis Head’s positive Covid-19 result which has ruled him out. Usman Khawaja is expected to come into the XI.Marcus Harris is also driving himself to Sydney having not joined the team’s charter flight as an extra precaution after he dined with Head. Nic Maddinson will remain in Melbourne for now but continues to be a stand-by player. All Australian squad members, staff and families returned negative results in the latest round of testing.This will again be the traditional Pink Test at the SCG which has become a central part of the Australian cricket calendar to raise funds for the Jane McGrath foundation. But Glenn McGrath will be unable to take part in the lead-up activities and at least the first two days having tested positive for Covid-19. It is hoped he may be able to attend by day three on January 7 which is the official Jane McGrath Day.

Ravi Bishnoi, Rohit Sharma hand India 1-0 lead as Pooran 61 goes in vain

Debutant Bishnoi’s 2 for 17 as well as Suryakumar and Venkatesh Iyer’s unbroken stand help construct India’s win

Deivarayan Muthu16-Feb-20221:59

Jaffer: A very positive approach by India to play two wristspinners

Ravi Bishnoi overcame a nervy start on debut and then let rip his wrong’uns to give India a 1-0 lead in the three-match T20I series. He bowled four overs full of wrong’uns, according to ESPNcricinfo’s logs, to help India restrict West Indies to 157 for 7, despite Nicholas Pooran’s half-century.What could’ve been a challenging chase was initially made to look like small fry by Rohit Sharma who hit 40 of the 63 runs India had scored in the powerplay. However, the target looked a whole lot bigger once Ishan Kishan, Virat Kohli and Rishabh Pant all fell in quick succession. India were 114 for 4 in the 15th over at that point; they were also sweating over the fitness of Deepak Chahar, who had suffered a blow on his bowling hand while fielding. He didn’t return to bowl his final over.As it turned out, India didn’t need his batting either in the slog overs, with Suryakumar Yadav and Venkatesh Iyer absorbing the pressure and sealing victory.Spotlight on Bishnoi
Bhuvneshwar Kumar found swing in the early exchanges and had Brandon King spooning a catch to backward point for 4. Kyle Mayers, the other opener, however, regularly jumped out of his crease or across his stumps to give West Indies some early impetus. He backed away and laced Bhuvneshwar through the covers before swatting Harshal Patel over backward square leg.Yuzvendra Chahal cut short Mayers’ innings at 31 when he trapped him lbw in the seventh over. Chahal could have struck first ball had Bishnoi not misjudged a skier at the long-off boundary. Bishnoi stepped back on the skirting and ended up conceding a six.Bishnoi was introduced into the attack in the very next over and missed his lines, darting three wides. He hit his rhythm soon after, dismissing both Roston Chase and Rovman Powell in the next over.Chase missed a fizzing wrong’un and was pinned lbw while Powell holed out to long-on. Bishnoi, too, troubled Pooran, keeping him to eight off nine balls against his legbreaks googlies.Ravi Bishnoi earned the Player-of-the-match award on international debut•BCCI

Pooran revives West Indies
Like Bishnoi, Pooran, too, had a scrappy start and was on 17 off 19 balls at one stage. He finally broke free when he clattered a pull over the square-leg boundary off Chahal. Pooran was particularly severe on the legspinner, taking him for 26 off a mere 12 balls, including three sixes. He reached his fifty off 38 balls when he carved Chahal through backward point for four.Kieron Pollard, who had recovered sufficiently from the knee niggle that had forced him out of the last two ODIs, also did his bit, scoring an unbeaten 24 off 19 balls. He had slid down the order to deny India’s wristspinners a favourable match-up. Instead, Akeal Hosein was bumped up to No.6, but he could manage just 10 off 12 balls. Nevertheless, Pooran and Pollard hauled West Indies closer to 160.The storm and the calm
Rohit went on a boundary-hitting spree in the powerplay, using the hardness of the new ball and quickness of the outfield to his advantage. After whipping Romario Shepherd for six and pulling Sheldon Cottrell for four, he cranked up the tempo against Odean Smith, going 4,6,4,6.It was Chase’s offspin that delivered West Indies the breakthrough and slowed down India. He first had Rohit caught at the midwicket boundary before getting Kishan too. Kishan had been the tortoise to Rohit’s hare, labouring to 35 off 42 balls.Kishan’s wicket triggered a mini-collapse as India lost 3 for 21. Chase bowled into the pitch and despite the onset of dew later in the evening, he extracted some turn and bounce to unsettle India. However, the left-arm spinners Hosein and Fabian Allen released all the pressure at the other end.Suryakumar and Venkatesh cashed in, putting on an unbroken 48 off 26 balls and leaving West Indies still searching for their first win on this tour.

Khawaja 160 and Carey 93 grind Pakistan into the ground

On a Karachi pitch that is showing signs of deterioration, Australia have amassed 505 for 8

Tristan Lavalette13-Mar-2022Captain Pat Cummins resisted declaring late on day two of the second Test with Australia preferring grinding a weary Pakistan into the ground, as they passed 500 in their first innings on a Karachi pitch showing signs of deterioration.Australia reached the close in a commanding position at 505 for 8 with Mitchell Starc 28 not out and Cummins yet to score. Starc and Alex Carey batted almost through the entire final session in an attempt to break the back of Pakistan, who have spent two whole days in the field but in-form openers Abdullah Shafique and Imam-ul-Haq were surely relieved not to have faced a tricky period before stumps.Cummins is set to face scrutiny for not sending Pakistan in late on the day although Australia gave a clear indication they want to bat just once in this pivotal match in a belief the pitch will deteriorate further. Australia batted their highest number of overs in an innings in Asia since 1956, but inconsistent bounce and sharp turn was evident later in the day.Carey fell for 93 just before stumps and agonisingly short of his maiden century after batting fluently to energise an otherwise dull final session, where everyone was seemingly waiting for Australia’s declaration but it never came.Australia’s indefatigable innings was dominated by Usman Khawaja’s brilliant 160 off 369 balls as he fell just short of his highest Test score of 174 against New Zealand at the Gabba in 2015. His 11th Test century – and first in the country of his birth – was marked by unwavering concentration, but he could only score 33 runs off 103 balls on day two underlining the changing nature of the pitch.Khawaja’s innings ended midway through the second session when he was bowled by a cracker of a delivery from offspinner Sajid Khan, who produced drift and sharp turn to hit the top of off stump.After a memorable first innings in the city his family hails from, the 35-year-old departed to a standing ovation from a boisterous crowd having become the first Australian Test centurion in Pakistan since Mark Waugh’s 117 in Peshawar in 1998.Alex Carey fell seven short of a maiden Test century•AFP/Getty Images

Eyebrows were raised after tea as Carey and Starc resisted the temptation of throwing the bat to ensure the match went through the motions. That’s been a familiar sensation during this historic series.Australia just kept batting as Carey, who had been somewhat under pressure due to patchy glove work and batting, effectively reverse-swept his way to his second Test half-century of his career.An increasingly confident Carey powered to his highest score in what should be a tonic ahead of an important stint behind the stumps. While he capitalised on Australia’s strong platform, middle-order batters Travis Head and Cameron Green missed out after being dismissed during a lively second session where the match appeared to be moving only for that to prove fool’s gold after a laborious final session.Pakistan toiled amid oppressive conditions in their Karachi fortress. They did attempt a fightback in the second session with spinners Sajid and Nauman Ali conjuring sharp turn on a pitch showing the first signs of encouragement for bowlers seven days into the series, the first between the teams in Pakistan since 1998.Sajid bounced back with variations in pace and flight after notably struggling on day one where he pursued a defensive line of bowling before and after tea. The 28-year-old did a lot of heavy lifting and finished with 2 for 151 from 54 overs.Shaheen Shah Afridi couldn’t rouse the same energy he memorably produced during the tame draw in Rawalpindi apart from a lethal spell of reverse swing in the second session that was repeatedly thwarted by Khawaja’s stout bat.Pakistan’s flagging bowlers were understandably weary by the time they took the third new ball, which only made scoring easier for Carey and Starc who finally started upping the ante.In what felt like an eternity ago, Australia resumed day two at 251 for 3 and nightwatchman Nathan Lyon stole the show in the first hour with a breezy 38 to frustrate Pakistan’s bowlers hoping for early inroads. But he fell short of a maiden Test half-century after being comprehensively bowled by Faheem Ashraf in Pakistan’s only success in the morning session.Lyon’s unexpected cameo provided a rare source of entertainment in another hard grind of a day during this slow-moving series.

Notts made to scrap after Tom Clark, Steven Finn land blows for Sussex

Steven Mullaney digs in for unbeaten 78 after visitors slide precariously to 52 for 4

Paul Edwards08-Apr-2022Steven Mullaney is far too respectful a professional to say so publicly but his chief thought in asking Sussex to bat first on the opening morning of this match was that his fine attack could use an April-fresh pitch to trample on a weakened batting line-up, thus creating an immediate victory opportunity. 148 plays 110-1 at the end of the day might have been something like the line-score he envisaged. Well, Burns – both Rabbie and Rory after the latest Ashes series – could have advised one of Warrington’s more famous sons that such schemes “gang aft agley”, an observation that might not have enlightened Mullaney greatly, unversed as he surely is in late 18th century Scots. “Tits up” probably carries greater resonance in the Trent Bridge dressing room.Such a brusque verdict is too harsh an assessment of the first day’s play at Hove but by this second afternoon with the floodlights on and the ball seaming around, some variety of utter balls-up was suddenly more likely. For at that point Nottinghamshire’s skipper had seen Sussex make 375 in their first innings before his own team shambled to a miserable 53 for 4 in reply with their marquee players in the pavilion, two of them removed by the 33-year-old debutant, Steven Finn. Mullaney, though, has always been a scrapper as well as a leader and he was joined in a rescue operation by the highly regarded Lyndon James, who, as a Nottinghamshire-born Nottinghamshire batsman would probably earn you 500pts or so in The Observer’s Book of Cricketers

  • Matt Critchley debut ton adds to riches of new surroundings

  • Ben Foakes' unobtrusive hundred forces England to take note

  • Shan Masood misses Lord's ton but provides solid foundation for Derbyshire

  • This pair’s 108-run stand for the fifth wicket took the innings deep into the evening session and was distinguished just as much for its quiet obduracy – the shots they eschewed – as the two sixes Mullaney pulled into the stand off Jamie Atkins. But when James had made a poised 63, he top-edged a pull off Finn, Oli Carter completed his third catch and it was left to Tom Moores to help his captain take the visitors to 214 for 5 at the close.Yet as the sun finally came out one was left more with a sense of Sussex’s merits than Nottinghamshire’s deficiencies. Though Tom Haines’ bowlers flagged a little in the last hour as they struggled for success with an old ball, their achievements in the first half of this game were considerable. Even a relatively quiet morning’s play had given the home side useful rewards for their labours. True, Nottinghamshire took the last four Sussex wickets, but by the time Henry Crocombe was leg before to Liam Patterson-White five minutes before the scheduled luncheon interval Sussex had a fine total on the board. They had also taken one more bonus point from the first innings of this match than Nottinghamshire and you would have got decent odds against that on Thursday morning. The moment of the session was unquestionably provided by Tom Clark, whose pushed single to backward point off Patterson-White took him to his maiden first-class century, a moment he celebrated with great exuberance in the company of Archie Lenham, his batting partner.Too exuberantly, perhaps. Two balls later James angled the ball between the 20-year-old’s bat and pad, thereby leaving him to reflect that some batters regard reaching a century as just a staging post in their innings. That said, your first hundred is a significant achievement and Clark is nothing like the first player to get out before they had given much thought to starting again. Perhaps the scorecard should read: Clark ct Gottaton b James 100. He joins a long list of rueful batters while James adds his name to a host of grateful bowlers.Tom Clark raised his maiden first-class hundred•Getty Images

    Still Sussex were not done. Finn’s third scoring shot for his new county was a pulled six off James and Lenham’s quietly useful 24 was only ended by a brilliant diving catch by Ben Slater on the long leg boundary. That gave Luke Fletcher his only wicket but his figures of 1 for 96 were not harsh; rather they recalled the blustery, sun-soaked riot of Thursday morning when the good ship Luke was blown off course by the stiff westerly. Neither were Patterson-White’s 5 for 84 particularly generous but they did make one wonder when a spinner had last bowled 45.1 overs in April in England.Sussex’s emboldened bowlers were quick to make inroads after lunch. Slater had faced just four balls before his ugly jab to his fifth, a delivery slanted across him from Crocombe, only edged the ball into his leg stump. Finn then took his first and second wickets for his new county in the space of 18 deliveries when he shaped the ball away to both Haseeb Hameed and Joe Clarke. Hameed remained crease-bound whereas Clarke pushed forward a little more culpably. It made little difference to the outcomes. Carter did the necessary behind the stumps and Sussex were 39 for 3 in 11 overs. Haines and his players, nine of whom are Academy products, celebrated each wicket with modest mayhem.Throughout it all, Ben Duckett had batted in a manner of his own devising, one seemingly at odds with his colleagues’ difficulties. There was a pulled six into the members’ enclosure off Crocombe and a beautifully timed back cut off Finn. However, having spent less than an hour making 31 runs, the Nottinghamshire left-hander played a horrid flat-footed slash to a ball from Atkins and Tom Alsop took his first slip catch for Sussex.Things look a trifle brighter for the visitors this evening but their deficit is still 161 and even parity would amount to modest glory for this Sussex team. Clearly Nottinghamshire will need to bowl and bat more capably in the second half of his game. If not, there remains a strong likelihood that, in the language of British military radio, this whole contest could go tango uniform for them.Sussex’s supporters, though, might allow themselves a tentative celebration. For it is Friday evening in Brighton. The pier is already bedizened for summer, the Channel is calm, and no doubt the lager is slipping down quite nicely in The Blind Busker.

    Somerset recruitment pays instant dividends as Rilee Rossouw stars on debut

    Kent make false start to title defence in opening-night rematch of 2021 final

    Matt Roller25-May-2022,” Billings said over the stump mic as Rossouw charged down and lofted him over extra cover for six but the Afghan legspinner endured a rare off-night, with Abell slog-sweeping him for six more over long leg as he struggled to grip the ball in the dew.Rossouw played three seasons of Blast cricket as a Kolpak player at Hampshire and rarely fired, but his record around the world – particularly in the PSL for Multan Sultans earlier this year – is excellent and Abell had no hesitation in labelling him “world-class”. He made 156 in a 50-over game at Taunton five years ago and will enjoy the short boundaries there this season.Billings had to rely heavily on his seamers, but despite the early dismissals of Tom Banton and Will Smeed, they struggled for potency and with wickets in hand, the chase was a cruise. “We just got outplayed, unfortunately,” Billings reflected. “They played outstandingly well. It’s a long tournament and it’s good to get a performance like this out of the way early on.”

    Ish Sodhi signs up with Canterbury for 2022-23 after ten seasons with Northern Districts

    Legspinner says he “wanted to be home a bit more and spend more time with the family” in Christchurch

    ESPNcricinfo staff22-May-2022New Zealand legspinner Ish Sodhi will be representing Canterbury in the upcoming 2022-2023 domestic season after ten seasons with Northern Districts.Residing in Christchurch with his family for the past five years, Canterbury Cricket in a statement said that he has “decided to fully entrench himself in the tapestry of the city by pulling on the red and black this summer.””It was a really tough decision, being from one association for all my life, I leave with a heavy heart,” Sodhi said. “But to be in a position where I can be bold enough to make that decision speaks a lot of my development at ND.”Family has played the biggest part [in the move south]. Being down here for the past few years and my daughter is just about to turn two years old so I just wanted to be home a bit more and spend more time with the family.””I just want to come in and contribute as much as I can to the environment.”Sodhi, 29, is expected to join the team during the winter pre-season training in the newly constructed Sir Richard Hadlee Sports Centre.Peter Fulton, Canterbury’s head coach, said that a “new challenge” will help Sodhi work towards his goal of a comeback into the Test side.”Clearly, we are delighted to secure the services of Ish for the 2022-23 season,” Fulton said. “He lives in Christchurch and has a young family, so I am really pleased he has now decided to play his cricket for Canterbury.”I am really looking forward to working with Ish and can’t wait to see him on the field at Hagley Oval wearing red and black.”I know Ish harbours ambitions to play Test cricket again so hopefully a new challenge will be exactly what he needs to achieve that goal.”In the previous Plunket Shield season, Sodhi played three games and picked up nine wickets at an average of 17.44. In the recently-concluded season, Canterbury finished second on the points table, with Auckland winning the championship. Canterbury have won the domestic titles four times in the past.

    Jimmy Neesham's four-for in vain as Tim David sets up thriller for Lancashire

    Tense two-wicket victory sealed in anticlimactic fashion at Old Trafford

    ECB Reporters Network03-Jun-2022Lancashire’s batters held their nerve to secure a tense two-wicket defeat of Northants Steelbacks off the final ball of their Vitality Blast match at Emirates Old Trafford. Needing six to win off the final over, the home side’s chances appeared to have gone when Jimmy Neeshamdismissed both Danny Lamb and Tim David but with three needed off one ball, the New Zealander bowled a wide and then a no-ball to give Lancashire the spoils.However, Tim David’s 26-ball 42, which included a trio of sixes, had been just as vital in enabling Lancashire to remain unbeaten in this year’s Blast and preserve their home 100% record against Northants, whose total of 153 for six had always looked competitive on a used, tacky pitch.All the same, Northants’ innings began badly when Richard Gleeson’s superb yorker uprooted Lewis McManus’s off stump in the third over, but Josh Cobb hit Tom Hartley’s first two balls for leg-side sixes and the visitors eventually notched a respectable 53 runs off their Powerplay, 18 of those runs coming off Hartley’s first set of six.The visitors’ attempts to accelerate were then frustrated by the loss of two wickets in successive overs. First Josh Cobb was caught at long on by David off Liam LIvingstone for 21; then Ben Curran was bowled for 37 when attempting to reverse sweep a leg-spinner from Luke Wells, who probably owed his selection for this game to Matt Parkinson’s late call-up to England’s Test side.Northants reached the halfway point of their innings on 81 for three but Rob Keogh and Saif Zaib were finding it difficult to increase the scoring rate on a sticky pitch against an accurate attack.Just 25 runs had been scored off the previous 23 balls when Keogh was run out for 18 by Wells’ direct hit from mid-on and any hopes that Neesham might improve matters were dashed when the New Zealander was bowled by David for three, thus giving Lancashire’s overseas signing his first wicket for the county.Tom Taylor was bowled attempting a deeply ambitious reverse sweep off Luke Wood and it needed Zaib’s leg-side six off Gleeson in the nineteenth over to ensure his side got to 140. A front foot no-ball in the final over also boosted the total and Zaib reached his fifty off 36 balls.The Northants batsman finished unbeaten on 57 and his side’s total looked competitive in the conditions. Wood took one for 27 but the pick of Lancashire’s miserly attack was Livingstone, whose four overs cost 21 runs.Lancashire’s attempt to overhaul 153 began poorly when Keaton Jennings was bowled by Taylor for two and the same bowler had Steven Croft caught at point by Zaib for 10 after the Lancashire veteran had added 29 in 17 balls with Phil Salt.The home side ended their Powerplay on 47 for two, six runs and one wicket worse than Northants had been. Lancashire’s attempts to increase the scoring rate were then hampered by the loss of two wickets to the spinners, first when Livingstone’s top-edged sweep was caught by Taylor to give debutant leggie Alex Russell his first senior wicket and then when Salt was leg before to Graeme White for 37.Three huge sixes by David enlivened home supporters and left Lancashire needing 48 off the final six overs, only for Dane Vilas to be caught on the boundary by White off Neesham for 32. Vilas’s team still needed 33 off four overs and then 23 off three but Luke Wells holed out at deep midwicket off Neesham and 18 were required off the final twelve balls, thus setting up the tense climax to a fine game.Neesham finished with four for 26 but it will be no consolation.

    Warwickshire squeeze home Blast quarter-final into Edgbaston's packed schedule

    Lancashire spare Derbyshire’s blushes over potential Michael Bublé clash

    Matt Roller04-Jul-2022Warwickshire will squeeze a home quarter-final into Edgbaston’s packed schedule after talks with the ECB and have slashed ticket prices for Thursday’s fixture against Hampshire.Edgbaston is hosting the ongoing, rescheduled fifth Test between England and India, which is due to finish on Tuesday, and will then stage the second T20I between the same teams on Saturday. It will then host a County Championship game later this month, the women’s T20 competition at the Commonwealth Games, four Hundred matchdays (including three double-headers) and four Royal London Cup games before the end of August, putting huge demands on its groundstaff and testing the appetite for cricket in the Midlands.The original schedule for the Blast’s quarter-finals involved two games on Friday to avoid a clash in television slots with England’s T20Is, but after talks with the ECB, Warwickshire have moved the game to Thursday night. The game will be streamed live online but not televised, with Sky Sports showing the first T20I instead.Adult tickets are available for £10 in advance, with juniors either free or £1. “We’ve been working with ECB over the last few weeks to try and accommodate a home quarter-final at Edgbaston, despite the LV= Insurance Test Match and Vitality IT20 taking place in the same week,” Alex Perkins, Warwickshire’s sales and marketing director, said.”We’re delighted that we’ve been able to make this work and give our members and fans the opportunity to support the Bears in a big quarter-final at home. We hope members, fans and the local community will come out in force to make it a memorable occasion and we have reflected this ambition with a one-off pricing model in order to create another special Edgbaston atmosphere.”Related

    • Moeen Ali signs for Warwickshire on three-year deal

    • Aussies in the Blast: Who stood out during the group stage?

    • Hartley applies the long handle as Lancs leap into home quarter

    • Smeed loves living in the 90s as Somerset defeat Surrey

    • Hampshire warm up for quarters with ninth win in ten

    Surrey have also cut prices for their quarter-final against Yorkshire at the Kia Oval on Wednesday, with adult tickets £15 in advance and under-16s free, while Lancashire’s start at £12 for adults and £1 for juniors. Somerset’s home ground, Taunton, is the smallest quarter-final venue by a distance and tickets are on sale at the usual price.The Bears’ defeat to Lancashire on Sunday night did not affect their status as North Group winners but did spare Derbyshire’s blushes by pushing them down into third, meaning they will play Somerset in Sunday’s fourth quarter-final.Derbyshire have only qualified for a home quarter-final once in the competition’s previous 19 seasons and did not foresee that they would this year, having rescheduled a Michael Bublé concert at the County Ground to July 9. If Lancashire had lost on Sunday, Derbyshire would have been unable to use their home ground and were expected to cede home advantage altogether, leading Dominic Cork, their former captain and coach, to fume on Sky: “If Derbyshire miss out on a home quarter-final because of a concert, it’s nonsense, absolute nonsense.”Surrey, Yorkshire and Lancashire are all bracing to be without several first-choice players due to England’s T20I series. The ECB said that there may be some scope for players to be released from the squad at short notice but that the situation is “quite fluid” and decisions will be made on a “case-by-case” basis.”It’s always difficult but we’ve had that in the past and we know what’s coming,” Dane Vilas, Lancashire’s captain, said. “It’s good for the guys that they get recognition for playing well and I’ve always said, if you play well in a good team, you’re going to get selected which is fantastic and that’s what we want. It’s going to be a bit of a headache for us but we’ve got the guys who want to come in and play.”The Blast’s semi-final draw is predetermined by group standings and has thrown up the possibility of a first-ever Finals Day Roses match, with the winner of Surrey vs Yorkshire drawn to play the winner of Lancashire vs Essex. In the other semi-final, the winner of Bears vs Hampshire will play the winner of Somerset vs Derbyshire.Quarter-final fixtures:
    July 6 (6.30pm) – Surrey vs Yorkshire, The Kia Oval
    July 7 (6.30pm) – Bears vs Hampshire, Edgbaston
    July 8 (6.30pm) – Lancashire vs Essex, Emirates Old Trafford
    July 9 (7pm) – Somerset vs Derbyshire, TauntonSemi-final draw:
    Winner of Surrey-Yorkshire vs winner of Lancashire-Essex
    Winner of Bears-Hampshire vs winner of Somerset-Derbyshire