Washington Sundar: India's next No. 1 allrounder?

There’s still a lack of clarity on his exact role in the team right now, but he has what it takes to be an elite allrounder

Sidharth Monga29-Jul-20252:34

Has Washington nailed his spot in India’s Test XI?

Before Washington Sundar scored his maiden Test hundred to help India save the Old Trafford Test, he had had innings of 27 off 90, 0 off 4, 23 off 76, 12* off 7 and 42 off 103 in this series. To go with figures of 2 for 107, 4 for 22, 0 for 21, 1 for 28 and 0 for 73.Nothing extraordinary apart from the Lord’s four-for, but if you sit down and remember the shots of the series and the balls of the series for a highlight reel, Washington will feature prominently.Even before the massively drifting offbreak to trap Ben Stokes lbw at Edgbaston, Washington had reprised his Gabba pull, only more emphatically, off Josh Tongue. He had also been at the receiving end of a stunning offbreak from Joe Root that bowled him. Then there was the lovely inside-out six off Root into the biggest pocket at Lord’s. Nothing more than a chip, but it just kept going.In having lofty standards for his son, even Washington’s father has managed to draw comparisons with the father of another batter who was immensely pleasing on the eye, Kumar Sangakkara. Like any father would, Washington’s father might feel he has been hard done by the selectors and the team management, but the decision-makers in Indian cricket have actually gone out of their way to play Washington as much as they can. It is not charity; they want to exploit the high ceiling of Washington’s talent.Related

  • Gill, Washington, Jadeja tons script India's great escape

  • Gill on the dramatic end: Jadeja and Washington 'deserved a century there'

  • India's grit outlasts England's endurance to make 2-2 a possibility

The Impact Player rule in the IPL has been a stumbling block for Washington because the playing condition gives teams no incentive to develop allrounders. After having become a regular, Washington has played only 15 matches in the three years of the Impact Player era; he played 30 in the previous three.Being out of sight can hurt a player’s perception, but thankfully not in the eyes of the selectors. It has perhaps also helped Washington develop his bowling. In this series, for example, no spinner has managed to drift the ball as much as he has: 2.543 degrees on an average, with Liam Dawson, Ravindra Jadeja and Shoaib Bashir hovering around 1.5 degrees. He has also attacked the stumps more often than other spinners bar Dawson. On pitches with little help for spinners, drift and line have created most of his seven wickets, including Stokes’ at Edgbaston, which went bewitchingly late and against the prevailing wind.This is also an improvement on his own numbers of 2.233 degrees against England at home in 2021. He has also bowled quicker than he did at home – average pace of 91.71kph as against 87.61 – perhaps because there isn’t much to be gained on these pitches by going slower. While Washington has been doing more in the air laterally, it would appear he is not as accurate as Jadeja or perhaps not getting as much dip.Washington Sundar celebrates his maiden Test century•AFP/Getty ImagesIf batters can play the ball within two metres of its pitching or go back and give themselves more than three metres to intercept it, the chances of a spinner getting them in trouble reduce drastically. Spinners endeavour to catch them in between. Washington has done so only 19.7% of the time in this series; a measure of how good Jadeja is that he has done so every third ball. This is why Jadeja is in the contest almost everywhere. These numbers are consistent with Washington at home as well.Add Washington’s batting to the package, and you know why the decision-makers have been so keen on him. Throughout his effort to draw the fourth Test, it never looked like he would give England even a chance. As early as in his first Test, the historic Gabba win, Washington showed he was capable of batting in various gears: slow and composed when in trouble in the first innings, counterattacking in a chase.Washington is at a stage of his career where the team hasn’t quite figured out what his best role is. He could be a specialist batter who bowls a little outside Asia. He could be a frontline spinner who bats in the lower middle order in Asia. Even in this phase, he has elite allrounder’s numbers: average of 44.86 with the bat and 27.87 with the ball.Of course, at this stage, Washington gets to play only in conditions that suit him: as a third spinner until now, he came in only in extreme conditions in India. Now, though, he is the heir apparent to the now-retired R Ashwin as the spinner who also bats. Jadeja is no spring chicken. Whenever he retires, Washington is in pole position to become India’s No. 1 all-conditions allrounder.In scoring his first hundred to draw the Test from the No. 5 slot vacated by the injured Rishabh Pant, Washington has shown enough to earn that trust. Now the expectations are lofty, and not just his dad’s.

Ponting bats himself some relief

At the end of a year he this week described as the toughest of his career, Ricky Ponting’s outstandingly fluent 101 on Boxing Day was an excellent sign

Brydon Coverdale at the MCG26-Dec-2008

Ricky Ponting’s 37th Test century – and fourth at the MCG – was particularly pleasing following some intense criticism
© Getty Images

Controversy has followed Ricky Ponting over the past 12 months but generally not when he has made runs. At the end of a year he this week described as the toughest of his career, Ponting’s outstandingly fluent 101 on Boxing Day was an excellent sign. He is the kind of captain who needs to lead by example and appears happier and sharper in the field when he has been successful at the crease. His hundred will therefore be a great relief not only for him but for the entire team.By his own high standards Ponting’s figures are slightly leaner than normal in 2008 but only by similar criteria to Warren Buffett, who might have been left a few billion short due to the financial crisis. Ponting has still made four centuries, 1,000 runs and averaged 45. However, it is when he has failed to perform with the bat that Australia have faced their greatest challenges.From the controversial Sydney Test in January to the over-rate fiasco in Nagpur to the criticism of his poor body language as the Perth Test slipped away last week, Ponting’s captaincy has pleased few people outside the squad this year. In each of those matches he was condemned
for his leadership, particularly in the field on the final day.In none of those games was Ponting happy with how he had batted. His best score across the six innings was 55 and he averaged 20. It was the same story during the 2005 Ashes, when his captaincy was queried after he handed back the urn for the first time since the 1980s. Ponting’s own form on that tour was well down – he averaged less than 40.Ponting is not a tactical guru or first-rate man-manager like predecessors such as Mark Taylor. That rarely mattered while he was surrounded by champions whose roles were so clearly defined they could have been in a dictionary. Shane Warne, Glenn McGrath and Adam
Gilchrist never had to be told how to do their jobs.But in an evolving side that features a mix of new men finding their feet at Test level and older mainstays trying to justify their spots, Ponting must bring something concrete to the captaincy table. The best thing for him to do is lead by example. When Ponting scores runs, the
controversy, criticism and danger from other sides tends to die away. If he wants a less thorny 2009 as leader then piling on a stack of centuries would be the best thing he could do.When he is in the sort of form he showed today, it’s easy to imagine him having such a year. Ponting at his best makes batting look about as hard as tying shoelaces and he was close to his peak in this innings. There were some nerves before lunch, particularly when Dale Steyn bypassed the outside edge with a cracking outswinger and then found the bat only to see Neil McKenzie drop a sitter at third slip when Ponting had 24.”You always try to capitalise on those sort of chances that come your way,” Ponting said. “I think that summed up what my mindset was a little bit before the lunch break. It was just a half-hearted ‘Do I play or do I not?’ and tried to drag the bat out of the way and it caught the bottom on the way through.”Ponting came out after the interval in a more attacking frame of mind and his first shot of the session was a classic straight drive that raced away for four off Makhaya Ntini. He timed his drives down the ground perfectly and especially enjoyed Ntini, who he dispatched for
three consecutive boundaries, including a superb pair of back-foot drives just forward of point.”After the lunch break I came back and decided to be a bit more positive,” he said. “The lunch break just happened at the right time for me. I started to feel like I was moving a bit better, started to see the ball a bit better and I just had a lot clearer mind. I decided to be a bit more aggressive and put it back on their bowlers a little bit.”Ponting was frustrated to get an inside edge to short leg just before tea, shortly after reaching triple figures for the first time since the opening Test against India in October. He felt he was the only batsman to accurately pick the pace of the wicket and had a huge hundred in him. But after stumps he was cheerful and pleased with the wash-up. It is a positive frame of mind that Australia will hope rubs off on the rest of the squad

"كيف تصوت؟".. محمد صلاح مرشح لجائزة الأفضل في الدوري الإنجليزي عن شهر ديسمبر

واصل جناح الفريق الأول لكرة القدم بنادي ليفربول، محمد صلاح، المنافسة على جوائز الأفضل في الشهر ببطولة الدوري الإنجليزي الممتاز للمرة الثانية على التوالي.

وكان محمد صلاح هو الفائز بالجائزة عن شهر نوفمبر 2024، وظهر اسمه أيضًا بعد تألقه مع ليفربول في قائمة المرشحين في ديسمبر 2024 حيث يحتل صدارة الهدافين في البطولة.

وسجل محمد صلاح 7 أهداف في شهر ديسمبر وصنع 7 في مباريات ليفربول في بطولة الدوري الإنجليزي مما يجعله ينافس للمحافظة على الجائزة للشهر الثاني على التوالي.

اقرأ أيضًا.. تقارير: اسم جديد على رادار ليفربول حال رحيل محمد صلاح

المرشحين لجائزة أفضل لاعب في الدوري الإنجليزي عن شهر ديسمبر 2024

1- محمد صلاح (ليفربول).

2- ترينت ألكسندر أرنولد (ليفربول).

3- ألكسندر إيزاك (نيوكاسل).

4- كول بالمر (تشيلسي).

5- أنطوان روبنسون (فولهام).

6- مورجان جيبس وايت (نوتينجهام).

7- ديان هويسن (بورنموث).

8- جاكوب ميرفي (نيوكاسل).

ويمكنكم التصويت من أجل محمد صلاح للفوز بالجائزة من هذا الرابط

Reporter shares "encouraging" transfer news he’s now heard from Man Utd

Manchester United have put the feelers out in the scouting department as they target two players from the same side to strengthen Erik ten Hag's squad at Old Trafford, according to transfer insider Dean Jones.

Manchester United's injury woes…

Undoubtedly, Manchester United have suffered their fair share of injury problems as Ten Hag looks to keep his side in contention for continental qualification this term. As cited by talkSPORT, Casemiro, Lisandro Martinez, Christian Eriksen, Amad Diallo, Jonny Evans, Rasmus Hojlund, Andre Onana, Tyrell Malacia and Aaron Wan-Bissaka are all sidelined due to various issues and it remains to be seen who will recover in time to face Everton at Goodison Park on Sunday.

Marcus Rashford was also withdrawn from England's 2-0 win over Malta last Friday in EURO 2024 qualifying; however, Three Lions boss Gareth Southgate looks to have alleviated concerns that the Wythenshawe-born forward could be set for a spell on the sidelines.

He stated via The Mirror: "I think he (Rashford) is probably okay. We just thought given the nature of the collision it was a chance to get Cole into the game. I haven’t assessed too much but I think he was okay when he came off."

The timing of Manchester United's prolonged injury crisis is not ideal, with their trip to Everton being followed by crunch matches in quick succession against Galatasaray, Newcastle United and Chelsea.

Occupying fifth position in the English top-flight, Manchester United are five points off the Premier League top-four and have little margin for error if they are serious about keeping pace with the chasing pack; however, transfer insider Jones has revealed some exciting news regarding two players who could potentially arrive at Old Trafford in January.

Man Utd scout Vanderson and Youssouf Fofana

Earlier this month, 90min reported that Manchester United were keeping tabs on AS Monaco pair Vanderson and Youssouf Fofana as Ten Hag looks to install additional reinforcements at Old Trafford.

Vanderson's statistics in 2023/24 – all competitions (Transfermarkt)

Youssouf Fofana statistics in 2023/24 – all competitions (Transfermarkt)

Appearances

7

Appearances

12

Goals

1

Goals

0

Assists

1

Assists

3

Speaking to GIVEMESPORT, transfer insider Jones has now indicated that the "encouraging" rumours involving the Red Devils and both players are indeed true, as he told the outlet: "Yeah, they are definitely two players that have been looked at. I've checked this one out and there have definitely been scouting reports made. I can't personally be convinced that that is for January. I think a lot of it seems geared towards the long term.

Vanderson

"But you know it's interesting to see that Manchester United are looking at these players and I think for fans, probably encouraging too, to see the types of players that they are scouting right now."

Uncertainty continues to persist regarding the futures of Aaron Wan-Bissaka and Casemiro at Old Trafford, which may offer some explanation as to why Manchester United would be linked to both a midfielder and a right-back.

Nevertheless, we will need to wait and see if moves for either Vanderson or Fofana materialise come the New Year as United look to bolster their ranks with quality arrivals.

Newcastle name-checked as suitors in race to sign “special” English gem

Newcastle United are one of the potential suitors to sign a "special" Premier League player in January, according to a fresh transfer story.

Newcastle's January business

The January transfer window will offer the Magpies a chance to bolster their squad midway through the season – something that may well be needed after Sandro Tonali's 10-month ban for breaching betting rules was confirmed earlier this month. A host of midfield players are being looked at by the Magpies, with Kalvin Phillips, Ruben Neves and N'Golo Kante all linked with moves to Newcastle in the same report, and plenty of others also being mentioned as options.

While midfield looks like the most pressing area for Eddie Howe to focus on, it could also be that he eyes up reinforcements in defence because of Sven Botman's injury-plagued season, and also further attacking additions with Harvey Barnes out long-term and neither of his strikers able to stay fit for a whole season.

With that in mind, a new update suggests that an exciting player in the final third could potentially make his way to St James' Park in the near future.

Newcastle linked with Emile Smith Rowe

Speaking to Give Me Sport, journalist Ben Jacobs claimed that Newcastle are eyeing a move for Arsenal youngster Emile Smith Rowe, admitting that a January exit from the Emirates isn't out of the question, partly because of injury problems:

"There are clubs looking at Smith Rowe. Newcastle are one of them, for example. Aston Villa have looked in the past as well. But Arsenal may be a bit more bullish about this and, before they agree to any kind of possible exit talks, they may first want to see whether the player can get fit in the second half of the season and then assess their options in the summer, rather than January.

"Smith Rowe may feel the same as well because it's all very well having your head turned by a possible move, but when you've been injured for this amount of time, stability can actually be the best thing to rehabilitate, build up your match time and then to assess your position within the Arsenal squad in the summer."

Smith Rowe has been linked with a move to Newcastle in the past and he could certainly add the depth that is needed, especially as he can play in midfield and attack, proving to be effective in central and wide areas. Sky Sports pundit Jamie Carragher certainly rates the 23-year-old highly as a footballer, saying of him recently:

"He's so exciting, the pace, moving with the ball. He's a special talent. He can pop up in different positions, he has that ability to play all four positions up top and that's a real bonus."

Smith Rowe's chance of playing regularly for Arsenal look slim at the moment, considering some of the attacking options the Gunners have in his position, whether it be Bukayo Saka, Martin Odegaard or Gabriel Martinelli, so he could jump at the chance of testing himself at Newcastle, who have been 'goals by committee' this season rather than using an out-and-out Erling Haaland type number nine.

Callum Wilson

7

Alexander Isak

7

Anthony Gordon

4

Miguel Almiron

4

Sean Longstaff

3

Technically-gifted and versatile, the Englishman still has so much of his career ahead of him, and Howe could feel that he can get more out of him than Mikel Arteta, utilising his versatility to pitch in with goals and assists from all over the pitch.

'It's not the win you think it is' – Jamie Carragher hits back at Rio Ferdinand and sends out bitter warning to Man Utd fans after wild FA Cup win over Liverpool

Liverpool legend Jamie Carragher has fired back at Manchester United after the Red Devils' extra-time win over Jurgen Klopp's side in the FA Cup.

Article continues below

Article continues below

Article continues below

United win 4-3 against LiverpoolThrough to the FA Cup semi-finalsCarragher diminishes importance of winWHAT HAPPENED?

Amad Diallo broke Liverpool hearts just minutes before the full-time whistle in extra time as he slotted a finish past Caoimhin Kelleher to give Manchester United a 4-3 win on the night to knock the Merseyside club out of the FA Cup. Rio Ferdinand was quick to celebrate the win, bringing a swift and bitter response from Carragher. "Relax. Man City will beat you comfortably in the final and ETH will still be in charge next season. It's not the win you think it is!!"

AdvertisementTHE BIGGER PICTURE

The Manchester-based side will now take on Championship side Coventry City in the semi-finals and will be the favourites to qualify for the final. However, they are potentially set to meet city rivals Manchester City in the final, as Pep Guardiola's side will be favourites to beat Chelsea in their semi-final clash.

Getty ImagesDID YOU KNOW?

As per OptaJoe, Manchester United have dumped Liverpool out of the FA Cup on 11 separate occasions. This is the most by a team in the FA Cup except Liverpool who have knocked out Everton 12 times.

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WHAT NEXT FOR MANCHESTER UNITED?

Erik ten Hag's side can now shift their focus back onto the league when they return from the international break. They will take on Coventry City on April 20 at Wembley Stadium when they return to FA Cup action.

Can Bangladesh pick themselves up against Afghanistan's spinners?

Mujeeb Ur Rahman, Mohammad Nabi and Rashid Khan have economy rates of less than 3.50 in the Asia Cup so far

The Preview by Mohammad Isam22-Sep-20182:10

Dasgupta: Wouldn’t mind seeing Soumya Sarkar and Imrul Kayes in Bangladesh’s XI

Big pictureBoth Bangladesh and Afghanistan come into this crucial Super Four match having lost their previous contests. But it is anyone’s guess which side would be more confident. Bangladesh have had it rough in their last two games, particularly their batsmen who have performed poorly as a collective.Afghanistan have played impressive cricket in the Asia Cup so far, although the loss to Pakistan will take time to heal. They will hope for a better start from Mohammad Shahzad and Ihsanullah in the first Powerplay. Their middle order has mostly done the job of steadying the ship and setting a platform for the last 10 overs, in which Afghanistan have now scored 97 and 87 runs in their last two matches, against Bangladesh and Pakistan.Hashmatullah Shahidi has been their batting ace, scoring 192 runs in three innings, but none of the others have been as consistent. Rahmat Shah made 72 against Sri Lanka while Asghar Afghan struck 67 against Pakistan.Their three main spinners, however, have been outstanding, none of them conceding more than 3.50 runs per over. Mujeeb Ur Rahman’s accuracy and variation with the new ball is backed up by the experienced Mohammad Nabi before their star bowler, the legspinner Rashid Khan, rips into the middle orders. Perhaps at times captain Afghan can bring Rashid into the attack slightly earlier, especially if teams get off to good starts.Bangladesh haven’t had it so easy. Tamim Iqbal’s injury-enforced absence has unsettled the top order. The lack of form of the younger batsmen such as Liton Das, Nazmul Hossain Shanto and Mosaddek Hossain has led the selectors to add Soumya Sarkar and Imrul Kayes to the squad. Whether this will relieve the pressure on the three main batsmen – Mushfiqur Rahim, Shakib Al Hasan and Mahmudullah – remains to be seen.Both teams are in the same situation, effectively, as far as the tournament goes, but at the moment Afghanistan look clear favourites, their spinners itching to go at an under-pressure batting line-up that has failed to cross 200 in successive games.Form guideAfghanistan: LWWWL (last five completed matches, most recent first)
Bangladesh: LLWWLIn the spotlightIt is important for Bangladesh that Mashrafe Mortaza get back into the groove. He hasn’t been his usual self in their last two games, conceding 7.46 per over and only taking one wicket.Mohammad Nabi has been miserly with the ball but a little off-colour with the bat in this Asia Cup, only scoring 32 runs in three innings.Associated PressTeam newsAfghanistan are unlikely to tinker with their top six but they may want to ponder the make-up of their pace attack.Afghanistan (probable): 1 Mohammad Shahzad (wk), 2 Ihsanullah, 3 Rahmat Shah, 4 Asghar Afghan (capt), 5 Hashmatullah Shahidi, 6 Mohammad Nabi, 7 Najibullah Zadran, 8 Gulbadin Naib, 9 Rashid Khan, 10 Aftab Alam, 11 Mujeeb Ur RahmanHaving failed to cross 200 in successive innings, Bangladesh could make changes to their top order, with Soumya Sarkar and Imrul Kayes now also in the mix.Bangladesh (probable): 1 Liton Das, 2 Nazmul Hossain Shanto, 3 Shakib Al Hasan, 4 Mushfiqur Rahim (wk), 5 Mohammad Mithun, 6 Mahmudullah, 7 Mosaddek Hossain, 8 Mashrafe Mortaza (capt), 9 Mehidy Hasan Miraz, 10 Rubel Hossain, 11 Mustafizur RahmanPitch and conditionsAbu Dhabi remains a “bat first, score 250-plus” ground, although Pakistan did chase down Afghanistan’s 257 in the last game here. The weather remains hot and dry, with a low of 32 degrees.Stats and trivia Bangladesh have lost the last 11 ODIs they have played without Tamim Iqbal. Hashmatullah Shahidi, while making 97* against Pakistan, became the second Afghanistan batsman to be unbeaten in the nineties in ODIs.Quotes”We have had collapses in two successive matches. It does make the dressing-room worried when we lose two early wickets. We managed to recover in the first game but we faced world-class bowlers against Afghanistan and India. We have to ensure more partnerships so that we don’t go out of the contest before the first 30 overs.”

PCA warns on The Hundred: 'There's no competition without players' as format comes under question

Daryl Mitchell has warned the ECB that “there’s no competition without any players” and insisted the future of The Hundred is “not set in stone” as England’s professional cricketers press for more information about the controversial tournament.Mitchell, the chairman of the Professional Cricketers Association, was among a delegation of players who met ECB representatives at Edgbaston on Tuesday to discuss plans for The Hundred – the ECB’s new-team 100-ball a side competition proposal.Among the 27 professional players in attendance were Paul Collingwood, Jonny Bairstow and Tammy Beaumont, while the ECB were represented by their chief executive, Tom Harrison, and the managing director of the new competition, Sanjay Patel.And while Mitchell described the meeting as “a good starting point” and stressed the union’s desire to “work with the ECB” to find consensus, he also confirmed there were “an enormous amount of unanswered questions” over the new competition and described the lack of plans for a domestic women’s T20 league as “a huge negative.”As a result, he has warned the ECB the cooperation of the players cannot be taken for granted and requested more clarity over their plans as a matter of urgency.Part of the players’ frustration would appear to be a lack of consultation – only three players (Mitchell and England captains Eoin Morgan and Heather Knight) were alerted to the idea ahead of its announcement a couple of weeks ago.But there is also a concern over moving away from the T20 format that is now accepted worldwide as cricket’s biggest revenue raiser and changes to playing regulations that could see a 10-ball over each innings. The prospect of losing the KSL – the women’s domestic T20 competition – has also caused dismay.”What would it take for this competition not to happen?” Mitchell asked rhetorically. “Probably the players saying they don’t want it. We have the power to do that but whether it does happen or not, I’m not sure. It’s important we work with the ECB and try and shape how it looks for the benefit of our members and the game as a whole.”One of our huge concerns is time frames. Here we are, two years out and there are many, many unanswered questions. The ECB don’t officially have a format that is set in stone. The drafts, general managers, the pay bands… there’s an enormous amount of unanswered questions and the worry for me is that we don’t even have a timeframe as to when we’re going to get those answers.”Why we are moving away from the T20 format, which has been successful around the world? That was a big concern.”And there might not be a domestic T20 for the ladies, which is a huge negative. There’s no getting away from that: they need to be playing T20 cricket if there’s world competitions in that format.”There is no competition without any players, is there? As a union, we would have to feel very, very strongly to go completely against it. Whether that is likely to happen, I don’t know. We need to canvas opinions when we have more details of what it looks like.”The ECB are very keen to stress that the idea is still a concept. It’s an idea that all stakeholders will be consulted on and we’re a huge part of that. So it is not set in stone. It is a concept, but one they are very keen on.”While few more details were provided how the competition would work, there was a little more detail over the payment structures. As things stand, it seems each of the eight new teams would have a salary cap of GBP £1m with the top pay-band likely to be somewhere between GBP £110,000-130,000. As the competition is likely to clash with the CPL, however, that figure may need to rise.There is also no change in the expectation that England cricket’s biggest stars – the likes of Joe Root and Ben Stokes – would not be available for the new competition as they would be involved in a Test series.”That’s another concern,” Mitchell said. “The likes of Root and Stokes will be allocated to a team for marketing purposes, but they won’t be playing. The ECB made the point that this new audience won’t necessarily know who Stokes and Root are anyway.”Mitchell also confirmed that, as far the 27 representatives at the meeting were concerned, it would wrong to play Championship cricket at the same time as the new competition.”We’re still very keen that the pinnacle of the domestic game is the Championship and the pinnacle of the international game is Test cricket,” Mitchell said. “The ECB also said their No.1 priority was red ball, Test cricket which was reassuring to hear.Championship cricket is very marginalised at present. We’ll have to have a bit more red-ball cricket – and more changes of format – in the summer months rather than April and September. We’re probably going to have to move away from the blocks we have now to a degree.”The next step in the negotiations is for those PCA members who were present at the meeting to go back to their county dressing rooms to discuss the issues raised. “The ECB have promised we’ll meet more often and be kept in the loop more,” Mitchell said.The ECB also released a statement following the meeting. Repeating the word “concept”, they sought to reassure the players that no firm decision had been taken over the format of the new competition at this stage.”Today’s meeting with the PCA’s Player Representatives gave us constructive and valuable feedback on the 100-ball concept,” they said. “It was invaluable to talk through the concept after sharing it with the ECB Board, first-class county chief executives and chairmen and PCA management.”Players are the core of the game and we look forward to further discussions with them as we continue to develop the new competition.”

The capital crisis

A look at what prompted Virender Sehwag’s allegations against the DDCA

Sidharth Monga24-Aug-2009It needed a player of Virender Sehwag’s stature to take on the Delhi & Districts Cricket Association (DDCA), even though all he did by threatening to leave Delhi last week was to reveal the tip of the iceberg. It needed Sehwag because everybody else is too small a fry to even raise allegations of maladministration of cricket – especially in matters of selection at various levels – in a city that runs on connections and clout.This isn’t the first time such allegations have been levelled but it is the first time they’ve had any resonance; most often no official comes out to deny those stories, no newspaper is sued. It almost seems the DDCA is not bothered about its image. This time, junior players found a voice and threatened to follow him out of Delhi. Meanwhile, Sehwag faced a barrage of counter-charges: he’d been bought over by Haryana for a plot of land, he wanted his cousin in the Delhi team. And so on.Yet Sehwag held firm and his stand, right or wrong, is important because it involves Delhi, a nursery for leading Indian cricketers over the last 10-odd years. That’s a fact the DDCA uses in its defence, but which its detractors feel has happened not because of the system but despite it. The detractors point to Delhi’s sole Ranji Trophy win in the past 18 seasons and fear the player supply, like the silverware, will dry up. “There will still be a few talented players who will be at the right place and at the right time,” says one. “Even a few of the players supported by the sports committee could be good, but that’s not how you want them to come up.”Eventually, the matter boils down to the sports committee and its alleged transgressions. Unlike other state associations, Delhi cricket is run by its sports committee, which was created in 1994 to handle the conduct of the local DDCA league and the welfare of its 112 clubs. But the sports committee has become stronger and stronger because of the indifference of the more powerful body, the executive committee, made up largely of mid-level industrialists and small-time businessmen.The executive committee’s peculiarity is that it can’t be voted out. “There is no check on them,” says a current Delhi player. “There is no opposition. You can’t stop them from doing what they want. They get voted in again and again by proxy system.” That’s another peculiarity of the DDCA – it allows members to pass on their voting rights to others, and it’s anyone’s guess what is received in exchange.The sports committee’s power lies in the fact that it proposes selectors for every single age-group team. It’s possible that the names may not be accepted, but it doesn’t usually happen. These teams are the most sought-after, given the avenues they open up, and consequently the selection process is susceptible to fraud. Sehwag was less ambiguous when he first levelled the charge of corruption. “There is too much interference and manipulation from the sports committee in selection committees,” he said. “The sports committee has got too much power. There is more interference at the under-16 and under-19 levels than the Ranji Trophy. In a squad of 15, for instance, the sports committee tries to influence the selectors and slip in one or two of ‘their own’ boys.”His message is clear: if a new Virender Sehwag is to emerge, he’d better come with connections – or be prepared to move out.As did Rahul Dewan, or Murali Kartik, Amit Mishra, Yashpal Singh and a long list of others. It’s anyone’s guess what the future holds for Dron Chhabra, a 15-year-old left-arm bowler whom Wasim Akram loved during a fast-bowlers’ camp last year and whom John Buchanan wanted in the Kolkata Knight Riders set-up – but who hasn’t made Delhi’s Under-16 side.

[Only] if people come and vote can you convince them of the need to change things. Everybody adds to the corruption. I hate to say this, but there are people sitting there, who get these proxies by pleasing clubs, by giving somebody a local manager’s job, a coach’s job, by playing somebody’s son or nephewManinder Singh, former India left-arm spinner

Two years ago, when the 2006-07 season ended, Delhi faced a rebellion similar to the one at hand. Sehwag, Gautam Gambhir, Mithun Manhas, Aakash Chopra and Ashish Nehra were all gravitating away from the state, fed up with the political interference and selectorial conspiracies. They stayed on, though, and the team played with unity and flair and were a treat to watch. They went on to win the Ranji Trophy. Vijay Dahiya, the coach, said the crucial – and the most challenging – part of his job then was to take all that stuff off the players’ minds and make sure that when they walked out on the field, they were in a mental state conducive to them giving their best.That championship didn’t change things off the field, however. Officials still took the players for granted – [all you’ll play is Ranji Trophy], they were told – and till date Delhi still doesn’t have a single indoor training facility nor have other financial issues been sorted out. The limit on outstation players in Ranji cricket inhibited players’ movement and left them feeling shackled.Former players feel badly about the situation but say it is too big a cultural shock to try and make a change. “I feel so sad that I have played for Delhi and can’t do anything about it,” says Maninder Singh, the former India left-arm spinner. “You just can’t go there and mix with people who are playing politics all the time. Bishan [Bishan Bedi] has been trying for a number of years, but you can’t beat them because it is a proxy system. [Only] if people come and vote can you convince them of the need to change things. Everybody adds to the corruption. I hate to say this, but there are people sitting there, who get these proxies by pleasing clubs, by giving somebody a local manager’s job, a coach’s job, by playing somebody’s son or nephew. As far as I am concerned, I can’t join them.”It’s not as if no other player has protested before but they have made little difference. There is reason to feel that Sehwag might succeed. He meets Arun Jaitley, the DDCA president, on Tuesday to try and end the impasse. There are reports that a compromise has already been worked out. But if Delhi cricket is to turn for the better, Sehwag will have to go the whole hog. Else his protest will just be a reference point for the next time another top player raises his voice.

One of the greatest Ashes match-winners

A stats analysis of Dennis Lillee’s Ashes career

S Rajesh18-Jul-2009Australia have had a tradition of producing some outstanding fast bowlers, but few will rank higher than Dennis Lillee, who has turned 60 today. For many, he is the perfect definition of the ultimate fast bowler: he was fast, aggressive, and possessed the complete armoury, with the ability to swing and seam the ball both ways, and bowl long spells.He also saved his best for Australia’s oldest rivals, taking 167 wickets in only 29 Ashes Tests, an average of 5.76 wickets per match, which was better than his overall stats of 5.07 wickets per match. Lillee is second in the wicket-takers’ list, next only to Shane Warne, who, in seven more Tests, took 28 extra wickets. Both took five wickets in an innings 11 times and ten in a match four times; the latter is a record, with Fred Spofforth and Tom Richardson the only other bowlers to achieve it.The top three are all Australians, with Glenn McGrath in third place. The most wickets taken by an Englishman in Ashes is Ian Botham’s 148, but he needed 36 Tests for that tally, an average of 4.11 wickets per match. (Click here for the complete list.)

Most wickets in Ashes Tests
Bowler Tests Wickets Average Strike rate 5WI/ 10WM
Shane Warne 36 195 23.25 55.1 11/ 4
Dennis Lillee 29 167 21.00 50.9 11/ 4
Glenn McGrath 30 157 20.92 46.3 10/ 0
Ian Botham 36 148 27.65 57.2 9/ 2
Hugh Trumble 31 141 20.88 55.9 9/ 3
Bob Willis 35 128 26.14 56.9 7/ 0
Monty Noble 39 115 24.86 59.9 9/ 2
Ray Lindwall 29 114 22.44 59.0 6/ 0
Wilfred Rhodes 41 109 24.00 53.1 6/ 1
Sydney Barnes 20 106 21.58 54.2 12/ 1
Clarrie Grimmett 22 106 32.44 86.4 11/ 2

Overall, too, Lillee was one of the most feared bowlers for England’s batsmen, though a fair number of West Indian bowlers also make the list of most successful bowlers against them. Curtly Ambrose and Malcolm Marshall both averaged around 19 against them, which is slightly lesser than Lillee’s 21.Almost half his 355 wickets came against traditional rivals England, a team which brought out the best in Lillee. In only 29 Tests against them he took 167 wickets – that’s an average 5.76 per Test – at an excellent average of 21. Only Warne has taken more wickets against them, while both have taken exactly the same number of five- and ten-wicket hauls.The list is dominated by Australian and West Indians, the two teams who have played England most often. Eighty-three of Lillee’s wickets against England came in the 12 Tests that Australia won against them, at an outstanding average of 17.68. The only bowler in the top ten not from Australia or West Indies is Muttiah Muralitharan, who, in only 16 matches, has racked up 112 wickets against England.

Highest wicket-takers against England
Bowler Tests Wickets Average Strike rate 5WI/ 10WM
Shane Warne 36 195 23.25 55.1 11/ 4
Dennis Lillee 29 167 21.00 50.9 11/ 4
Curtly Ambrose 34 164 18.79 50.5 8/ 2
Glenn McGrath 30 157 20.92 46.3 10/ 0
Courtney Walsh 36 145 25.40 60.8 5/ 1
Hugh Trumble 31 141 20.88 55.9 9/ 3
Malcolm Marshall 26 127 19.18 45.5 6/ 1
Monty Noble 39 115 24.86 59.9 9/ 2
Ray Lindwall 29 114 22.44 59.0 6/ 0
Muttiah Muralitharan 16 112 20.06 59.0 8/ 4

Overall, Lillee was one of Australia’s most effective matchwinners. In the 31 Tests that Australia won with Lillee in the team, he took 203 wickets at a fantastic average of 18.27, with 17 five-wicket hauls. Among Australian bowlers with at least 100 wickets in wins, only Clarrie Grimmett, the legspinner who played in the 1920s and 30s, had a better average. Clearly, Lillee’s performances went a long way in determining his team’s fortunes – in Tests that Australia lost he averaged 29.49, and in draws he averaged 32.73 per wicket.In Ashes Tests too, he was one of the biggest matchwinners, with 83 wickets in a mere 12 Tests at an outstanding average of 17.68. Lillee ranks fourth in terms of wickets taken in Ashes wins, and among bowlers who took at least 50 wickets in such games, his average is sixth best, but the greatest since 1940. He also took a whopping 6.92 wickets per Test in these games, a stat bettered only by two bowlers in this list – Fred Spofforth and Bill O’Reilly.

Biggest matchwinners in Ashes Tests (Qual: 50 wickets in wins)
Bowler Tests Wickets Average Strike rate 5WI/ 10WM Wkts per Test
George Lohmann (Eng) 12 59 11.96 37.2 4/ 2 4.92
Fred Spofforth (Aus) 6 51 13.11 30.4 6/ 3 8.50
Robert Peel (Eng) 12 77 14.85 46.7 5/ 1 6.42
Bill O’Reilly (Aus) 7 54 15.53 47.4 6/ 3 7.71
John Briggs (Eng) 17 63 15.74 39.1 7/ 3 3.71
Dennis Lillee (Aus) 12 83 17.68 41.6 8/ 3 6.92
Keith Miller (Aus) 13 50 17.74 52.1 3/ 1 3.85
Monty Noble (Aus) 19 84 17.78 44.8 8/ 2 4.42
Hugh Trumble (Aus) 14 77 18.00 52.0 4/ 1 5.50
Terry Alderman (Aus) 8 53 19.28 41.9 7/ 1 6.63

Overall, Lillee was involved in seven Test series against England, plus two centenary Tests, one each in Australia and England. Australia won four of those series (though Lillee didn’t have much of a role to play in 1982-83, playing just one Test), lost two and drew one. His most successful series, in terms of averages, were in 1972, in England, and in 1979-80 at home, when Australia won 3-0. In terms of wickets, though, Lillee’s best was in the historic 1981 series in England, when he took 39 in six Tests and yet couldn’t prevent an Australian defeat.

Lilllee’s stats in each Ashes series
Year Tests Wickets Average Strike rate 5WI/ 10WM Winner
1970-71 (Home) 2 8 24.87 62.3 1/ 0 England
1972 (Away) 5 31 17.67 48.3 3/ 1 Drawn
1974-75 (Home) 6 25 23.84 58.4 0/ 0 Australia
1975 (Away) 4 21 21.90 59.1 1/ 0 Australia
1976-77 (Home) 1 11 15.00 34.8 2/ 1 Australia
1979-80 (Home) 3 23 16.86 40.4 2/ 1 Australia
1980 (Away) 1 5 19.20 40.8 0/ 0 Drawn
1981 (Away) 6 39 22.30 47.9 2/ 1 England
1982-83 (Home) 1 4 46.25 106.5 0/ 0 Australia
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