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Cricket amid royalty

Horses and elephants maybe more common than a cricket ball in Jaipur, but the city has witnessed some memorable on-field performances

Devashish Fuloria21-Mar-2013Cricket is not the first thing that comes to mind when one talks about Jaipur. The city has always been a prime destination on India’s tourism map, and with all its forts, palaces and regal air, it is steeped in colour, culture and history. There is the iconic Hawa Mahal, surrounded by busy jewellery bazaars, and the Amber Fort is an elephant ride away. Think of a sport in Jaipur and polo is probably a better fit. But cricket not only exists in the city, it thrives there.The Sawai Mansingh Stadium, the main cricket venue in the city, hosted its first international match – an ODI against Pakistan – in 1983, but the ground was at the centre of attention when Pakistan president General Zia-ul-Haq came over to watch a Test between the neighbours in 1987. Since then it hosted the odd match for a couple of decades, including a few during the 1987 and 1996 World Cups, but it took another mercurial personality to lift the fortunes of Jaipur – Lalit Modi. The ground has been a regular venue for international matches since 2005.Ground page | Fixtures | MapGreat matches

India v Sri Lanka, October 2005
Kumar Sangakkara’s unbeaten 138 powered Sri Lanka to an imposing 298 in the first of the five-match ODI series and India’s chase was jolted when Chaminda Vaas took out Sachin Tendulkar in the first over. In walked MS Dhoni – still in his first year in international cricket – and launched a blinding assault, which included ten sixes and 15 fours in an unbeaten 183. India won with nearly four overs to spare.India v Pakistan, March 1999
In the Pepsi triangular tournament, Pakistan beat India three times in three matches to take the trophy. The first win, in Jaipur, was the biggest. Saeed Anwar’s 95 set the base for Pakistan’s 278, and when India started their chase, two of their best batsmen – Sourav Ganguly and Rahul Dravid – were blown away by Shoaib Akhtar. India never recovered from the early shock and were bowled out for 135 in the 37th over.India v South Africa, February 2010
South Africa needed 62 off the last five overs, but were eight down. The game was almost in India’s bag. Or so they thought. Dale Steyn and Wayne Parnell smashed the ball to all parts of the ground to bring the equation to ten off the last over. It came down to three off the last ball, but Parnell was run out attempting a second to give India a one-run win.Major players
Hanumant SinghHome team
Rajasthan had a golden run in the Ranji Trophy in the ’60s, when they made seven finals (though they went on to lose to Bombay every time). The second purple patch came almost 40 years later, when they took the Ranji title in 2010-11. They made sure that win was no fluke, by winning the trophy again the following year.With the IPL came glitter, and the home team – Rajasthan Royals – turned that into a Jaipur light-fest with a win in the opening edition. They have lost their stars of the first season – Shane Warne and Yusuf Pathan – though, and are yet to repeat their early success.

Trent Bridge chases, and teenage spinners

Stats highlights from another engrossing day at Trent Bridge

S Rajesh12-Jul-2013

  • The highest fourth-innings target successfully chased at Trent Bridge is 284, by England against New Zealand in 2004. In that game England, who batted second, trailed New Zealand by 65 after their first innings. It’s exactly the difference in the first-innings scores in this match, except that Australia, the team batting second, took the lead here. The highest by a visiting team is 208, by West Indies way back in 1980.
  • England’s star of the day was Ian Bell, who batted patiently and faced 228 deliveries – the second-highest he has ever faced in an innings against Australia – to score an unbeaten 95. It’s his 13th fifty-plus score against Australia, but he has previously converted only one of those into a century. During the course of that innings, Bell also became the 14th England batsman to get to 6000 Test runs. It’s a superb achievement, but his last 1000 runs have been rather arduous, stretching over 20 Tests and 36 innings. His previous 1000 runs (4000 to 5000) by contrast, required only ten Tests and 14 innings.
  • Bell’s 108-run undefeated stand is his second century partnership with Broad. The previous one had come against South Africa at Lord’s, exactly five years ago, when they put together 152 for the seventh wicket.
  • Broad’s Test batting average at Trent Bridge is 42.14, which is higher than the corresponding averages of all the specialist batsmen in England’s current team.
  • Alastair Cook’s 50 took all of 165 balls – a strike rate of 30.30 – which is the slowest of his 55 fifty-plus scores; the previous-slowest was his 60 off 178 balls at Headingley in 2008.
  • It was a surprise, though, that Cook got out after getting that half-century, because it was his first half-century as captain. On the seven previous occasions when he had gone past 50, he had scored hundreds. His previous six fifty-plus scores – dating back to July last year – had all been hundreds too.
  • Ashton Agar continued his extraordinary debut by dismissing Cook and Jonny Bairstow and finishing the day with 2 for 82, thus also becoming the first Australian teenage spinner to take a Test wicket. The previous youngest Australian spinner to take a Test wicket was Graham Hole, who was a month over 20 when he took a wicket against England in 1951. India lead the way in terms of wickets for teenage spinners, with 166 – BS Chandrasekhar and Ravi Shastri took 27, L Sivaramakrishnan took 26, and Harbhajan Singh and S Venkataraghavan 21 each.
  • The 110-run partnership between Cook and Kevin Pietersen took 296 deliveries, which means the scoring rate was 2.22 per over. Among third-wicket partnerships for England since 2000 which lasted beyond 40 overs, this is the second-slowest: the only slower one was between Mark Butcher and Nasser Hussain against West Indies in Port of Spain in 2004, when they put together 120 in 346 balls, a rate of 2.08 per over.

'I'm going to enjoy watching the young guys have a crack'

Chris Martin looks back on a 13-year career career: from shouldering the New Zealand attack to match-winning spells against South Africa, and his endearing batting skills

Interview by Brydon Coverdale03-Jul-2013After 13 years of international cricket, why have you chosen now to retire?

I think I’ve probably known for a good six to twelve months that the passion and desire wasn’t quite there and it was time to get out. I did want to get out by walking off the park in a Test match, so I stuck in there and gave that a good nudge, but the odds are that a 38-year-old around New Zealand’s bowling group at the moment isn’t really required. I’m going to sit back and enjoy watching the young guys have a crack.Do you feel you’re leaving with the pace stocks as strong as at any time in your career, with guys like Southee, Boult and Bracewell all coming through?
Yeah, and it’s nice to see a group of bowlers coming through. Watching the good sides over the years, they tend to have a pack, a nice steady rotation of guys that can put pressure on each other to succeed and complement each other. I think Australia showed that with various people around Glenn McGrath and Shane Warne, they had guys like Jason Gillespie and Michael Kasprowicz and Brett Lee, and New Zealand, in general, have had a bit of a revolving door of pace bowlers over the years. I’m probably the only one who really stuck it out for any length of time. But I’d like to see this group play together for another six to eight years, it would certainly make the captain’s job a lot easier.Only Richard Hadlee and Daniel Vettori have taken more Test wickets for New Zealand than you. That must make you incredibly proud?
I am pretty pleased. I was never the most skillful or naturally talented, but I did have enough skill and enough talent, and with hard work and determination I was able to stick in there and prove to myself that Test cricket was something that I was good at and enjoyed. I’m pleased to be on the table among some of our better players with the ball.Is there a career highlight that sticks out?
I had a good Test match comeback against South Africa at Eden Park, where I got 11 for the match. We ended up with a Test win, which for New Zealand is pretty few and far between. It’s never about that personal stuff, but if that helps us win a game then it definitely sticks in the memory. I had another game against India in India a couple of years ago when I got a five-for in a short space of time. I will remember that very fondly, because that’s not a place you go to as a fast bowler and expect to do well.You were getting some terrific swing in that match in Ahmedabad – that must have been a rarity for Indian conditions?
It’s a bit strange with the balls these days, sometimes you turn up and the ball just does crazy things and you’re not actually doing that much different. If it hoops, then you’ve got to make hay when that happens.Your record against South Africa was especially impressive, and against Graeme Smith, in particular. What was it about bowling to them that you enjoyed?
My style of bowling, bringing the ball back into some of their right-handers with their forward press, was helpful, as well as straightening the odd one for the edge. To the left-handers, in particular, I’ve always swung the ball from the stump line away from them. Smith, with the way he plays and closes the bat, he found me pretty tough to handle at times. Mentally you have to bring your A-game against the South Africans, because they’re such hard-nosed competitors. They had the better of us on most occasions, but every now and then personally I had good days against them.

Over time, I did have aspirations to at least make it a little less horrendous to watch

Phillip Hughes also struggled against you – he was caught in the cordon cheaply four times from four innings in Australia in 2011-12. Did it feel like every ball you bowled to him you were a real chance?
Yeah, there are certain techniques that really hate facing me. I think Phil, with his feet not really moving and not quite knowing where his off-pole was, he was having a tough series. That series against Australia was probably what made me play another couple of years. I thought after winning in Hobart, that kind of success of a New Zealand side beating a quality Australian side is something you want to taste again. So I was keen to stick in there for another couple of years, especially with the bowling group we had.That win in Hobart must have felt like a very special achievement given New Zealand’s lack of success against Australia in Tests over the years?
We were playing against a mortal Australian side rather than an immortal Australian side, which I had the brunt of for most of my career. You want to test yourself against the best but the Australian side [of past years] was something quite special. It was a tough period for New Zealand against Australia, but hopefully we can put up a bit more fight over the next few years.”I’m pleased to be on the table among some of our better players with the ball.”•New Zealand CricketWhich batsmen did you find the most challenging to bowl against?
People who pick up length very quickly. Adam Gilchrist and Ricky Ponting were the two who could make you feel very ordinary very quickly. A lot of people say that about the batsmen who tend to take slight risks against you and put you off your game. Other players do it in different ways. A guy like Jacques Kallis will grind you down and you could still be bowling to him six or seven sessions later. At various times, you bump into a guy who is at his peak, and I bumped into Ricky and Adam at their peak. They were both pretty scary, along with Matty Hayden. He was another imposing guy to bowl to.Did it bother you that you didn’t play much ODI and T20 cricket for New Zealand?
The thing about playing for the one-day side is they tend to get slightly better results and that builds a good team culture and environment. They always seemed to be having a bit more fun than the Test guys. But I think over time, I had more breaks and more opportunities to stay strong and fit and play quite a good role in the Test side because of that. There’s a catch there in terms of income, but I think the way it panned out my main skill was bowling and I couldn’t hit a lot with the bat and in the field, so it was realistic that I just played that one format for quite a while.You mentioned your batting there – it certainly endeared you to fans around the world, but did you ever get embarrassed about it?
Absolutely, it’s human nature to be embarrassed by something you’re completely inept at. Over time, I did have aspirations to at least make it a little less horrendous to watch. I was just no good. If I didn’t have a sense of humour about it then I’d probably beat myself up a wee bit. But I’ll have to take a knock on the chin professionally and say that I wasn’t quite up to it. But the irony of getting the applause and getting the odd standing ovation when I hit a boundary was never lost on me. I’ll remember those fondly.Were you always well aware of your batting stats, ducks and average and that sort of thing, or did you just put that out of your mind?
The batting average was around 4 for a while, which was not completely ridiculous. But when it started coming the other way I wasn’t taking much notice. I suppose the number of ducks that I had over my Test career wasn’t pretty reading, but what I can say in my defence is that I did turn down a lot of ones!You once said that you hadn’t learnt to bat properly as a young player because you didn’t have a driver’s licence and rode your bike to training and couldn’t carry a bat with you – was that really the case?
It was semi tongue-in-cheek but there was a lot of reality in it as well. I didn’t get my driver’s licence until I was 28. The way cricket practice operated when I started was the bowlers turned up and bowled to the top six or eight and then you went home. That’s pretty much how it worked. Now guys take a lot more pride in being multi-skilled. I missed the boat a wee bit on that. But I was always very fit because I would ride to practice.What’s next for you now – coaching or something completely away from cricket?
I think you have to step away from cricket and I’m quite looking forward to that. It will make when I do come back a little more fun and I can do it on my own terms. But I’ll always be available to whoever needs me for a chat and a coffee or beer. I’ll stay connected in some way but at the moment I think it’s best to figure out what else I’m good at and what else I’m passionate for and get into it.You must be looking forward to spending a lot more time with your family?
Yes, I’ve got a wife and two little girls. One is one year old and one is three and a half. They won’t know much about me as a cricketer but they’ll get to know a lot more about me as a dad, which is good.

Stokes stands out amid the rubble

England’s Ashes tour has been one car cash after another but in Ben Stokes they have found a cricketer who should be with them for many years

George Dobell19-Dec-2013It has long been a sporting cliché that sides can “take the positives” from even the most humbling defeat but there have been times on this Ashes tour when it would have taken a pack of sniffer dogs, a team of forensic scientists and Miss Marple at her most snoopy to find even a crumb of comfort in England’s performances.But, amid the rubble, one man has stood out. Ben Stokes has only played one fine innings but its quality and the context in which it was made marked him out as a player of outstanding potential.While the cream of English batting curdled under the Perth sun, Stokes showed his class and his character in scoring a second innings century of unusual excellence. In a bad tempered series, it was heartening to see the Australian team abandon hostilities between the sides to offer their congratulations when he reached the landmark.He’s not the finished article. He is still, at present, a fourth rather than third seamer and there will be times, throughout his career possibly, when he infuriates with his shot selection. His first innings dismissal at Perth, wafting at a wide one, was almost as awful as his second innings century was wonderful. But such things must be expected of a young man at the start of his journey in the international game.He is learning fast. A year or so ago, he was a quite rapid but quite unreliable bowler. He has improved his control and learned new tricks; his ability to reverse-swing the ball will be valuable around the world and, after his first innings dismissal in Perth, he was careful not to be drawn into poking at deliveries away from his body second time around.The only worry – and it is a worry that extends far beyond Stokes – is that he will be exhausted before he has the time to develop to his peak. As an allrounder who is good in the field, he will be flogged in every format – IPL included – in every innings, up and down the country, round and round the world, until he is broken, jaded, cynical and rich. There’s nothing wrong with that last word, of course. It’s just it seems to be a predominant short-term priority that takes little heed of the long-term need for rest and relief. Players like Stokes are precious; it would be a shame to see their talents squandered in meaningless limited-overs series.Stokes spoke to the media on Thursday. While he did not say much of particular note – at one stage he said “there’s no ‘I’ in team”; you really shouldn’t expect “I have a dream” from 22-year-old sportsmen – there was something deeply impressive about the way he conducted himself. He was confident, alm and he looked every journalist in the eye as he answered their question with that steely self-confidence which will serve him well. In Joe Root and Stokes, England might just have the foundations of a team that can, one day, make amends for their side’s wretched performance in this Ashes series.Stokes’ strengths may, at times, be interpreted as weaknesses. His refusal to be intimidated by Mitchell Johnson on his debut in Adelaide earned him a call to the match referee’s office after the game. It was subsequently agreed that any physical contact between the pair was accidental but Stokes’ feistiness was noted with admiration by the members of both dressing rooms. Here, clearly, was a guy who will not back down in a fight.

“I showed Andy Flower I wanted to play for England and get back into the fold and made sure I wanted to change his mind.”

The down side of that is that Stokes has sometimes got himself into trouble. He was arrested for “obstructing police” in December 2011 and then, in February of this year, he was sent home from the Lions tour of Australia for repeatedly indulging in late-night drinking.At the time it appeared he may have compromised his international future but, after an excellent season for Durham – he claimed 44 first-class wickets and scored 726 first-class runs – he has emerged as one of the few allrounders capable of batting in the top six and holding down a role in a five-man bowling attack. He has also settled down, had his first child and generally embraced the lifestyle choices inherent in a career in professional sport.”Andy Flower gave me another chance,” Stokes said. “I think I showed him I wanted to play for England and get back into the fold and made sure I wanted to change his mind, if he had any negative views on me. But he gave me that second chance and I’m pretty thankful for that.”Yes, I have grown up in the last year. I took a look at the bigger picture and realised we’re icons, so you’ve got to be doing the right things on and off the pitch.”I’d like to be the genuine allrounder. In the last two years, my bowling has come on a hell of a lot. With my batting, the consistency hasn’t been there yet but I hope, with experience, everything will come together.”There will, no doubt, be some bumps on the road, but in Stokes England have a cricketer who should be with them for many years.

Australia's longest day

It wasn’t easy, and it certainly wasn’t without its fair share of twists, but Australia held their own to pull off one of their most impressive wins in recent itmes

Daniel Brettig in Cape Town05-Mar-20140:00

Cullinan: Australia the smartest thinkers in the game

Thirty-two balls remained in the Test match when Australia’s spearhead Mitchell Johnson hit Vernon Philander on the pads. He was bowling around the wicket at a sharp angle, the ball arrowing well down the leg side. On tired legs, with an anguished face, Michael Clarke referred the decision. It was the surest sign of desperation.When the not out decision was relayed by the big screen, Australian shoulders slumped just a fraction. Would they be denied again as they had been in Adelaide 17 months before? Would they end the richest summer unsatisfied?Thirty balls remained in the Test match when Clarke called on Australia’s heartbeat Ryan Harris. Whenever the Test match ended, Harris was due for knee surgery. Overdue in fact. Bone floats around the joint sticks out of it at times, revolting but also inspiring some of his teammates. He was also handicapped by a hip problem, and team management had budgeted for only 8-10 overs from him in the fourth innings.His previous over, the 24th, seemed sure to be his last of the match, having looked ragged and barely made Dale Steyn play. But those slumped Australian shoulders straightened up as Harris set off on his run. He had delivered before, he would do so again, no matter how he was feeling, no matter the circumstances.Three balls and two bowleds later, it was all over. Australia had the Ashes, won at home, and added to it new-found credibility won abroad in the most searching circumstances. Newlands will be remembered for decades, and it will stand out among the seven Test matches won by Australia in 2013-14 for how far the team was stretched.Clarke’s men always made the running in the match, but had to wring every last drop of effort from themselves to dislodge the best and most stubborn opponent of all. Harris’ closing burst, well beyond anything the medical staff had expected from him, symbolised the effort required. The last bastion of summer was the hardest of all to crack, and when it finally did the sense of achievement was palpable.Ryan Harris wheeling away in celebration after bowling out Morne Morkel will be the indelible image of Cape Town for years to come•Getty ImagesNinety-eight overs and seven hours are an awful long time to take six wickets, on a fifth day pitch with a five-strong bowling attack. Six balls among 588, with a new ball thrown in around halfway. With 41 overs thrown in from the previous night, the Australians had given themselves as much time as Clarke and the coach Darren Lehmann thought wise, before the “cooking” of bowlers became a factor. There are days when such a scenario can result in a finish well before lunch, the fielding side enjoying the fruits of their labours before the sun has peaked, and the batsmen ruing the mistakes earlier in the match that put them in such a position.But as much as Australia wished for it, Newlands on March 5, 2014 was not one of those days. The creeping doubt and fear of another Adelaide 2012 loomed ever larger, as Clarke fretted increasingly over his declaration.Signs were ominous in the first session when Kyle Abbott made himself about as hard a nightwatchman to dislodge as Fanie de Villiers had been in another Adelaide match two decades ago. It took James Pattinson’s location of some reverse swing to find a way past him, and there was to be no rush of wickets following. Partnerships crept up in terms of balls rather than runs, as did Australia’s anxiety and anger.Much of it was directed at Faf du Plessis, who had not only been at the centre of the 2012 rearguard, but had also raised the ire of Australia by his insinuation of ball tampering on day three of the Test. Warner was particularly antagonistic, but his brio, while crouched at silly point, was prolonged by the fact that neither du Plessis nor his batting partners were going anywhere in a hurry. Every wicket had to be earned, as Harris did when he coaxed an edge from AB de Villiers after beating him repeatedly with the second new ball. In a day of hard-won gains, this was perhaps the most significant.

Clarke’s men always made the running in the match, but had to wring every last drop of effort from themselves to dislodge the best and most stubborn opponent of all. Harris’ closing burst, well beyond anything the medical staff had expected from him, symbolised the effort required

The loss of shine from the fresh projectile forced Clarke to resort to other avenues, and it was in this that he found an uncomfortable echo of 2012. Then as now, Nathan Lyon bowled tidily and judiciously but with not the mystery nor venom to find a way past dead bats. Before the match, Shane Warne had remarked that most spin bowlers took time to learn ways to succeed early on, before taking advantage of the rough.Lyon’s issue is quite the opposite, as he loses potency the further a match goes on. Both his mentor John Davison and Warne are aware of this, but must work further with Lyon to find the key to last-day success. For now though, Clarke had to rely on Steve Smith’s leg breaks, and whooped alongside the rest when he winkled out du Plessis, lbw.That wicket was celebrated as though the critical one, but the final session stretched every Australian reserve of patience and physical stamina. In the cases of James Pattinson, who engaged in a prolonged verbal joust with Vernon Philander before letting slip an angry beamer, and Clarke himself when confronting Steyn, the weight of the occasion was too much for their decorum. Australia’s cricketers play their best when skirting the line between the aggressive and the boorish, and these moments of poor behaviour demonstrated the risks inherent in that. Clarke was wise enough to admit his fault in the aftermath.As time ticked by, the memories of all that Clarke’s men had achieved this summer could be recalled. Their ambush of England in Brisbane, Johnson’s destruction in Adelaide, the Ashes clincher in Perth, before the pageantry of holiday hidings in Melbourne and Sydney. Centurion flew past in a similarly pleasant blur, before Port Elizabeth’s reverse showed that the team retained numerous shortcomings in conditions not to their taste.To rebound from that at Newlands, on a surface similar in its sluggishness, demonstrated a great deal of the team’s progress, personified by the otherworldly batting of Warner, the naked intimidation of Johnson, and the burgeoning talent of Smith. As Clarke concluded:”I don’t think it’s fair to compare it to the Ashes series that we just played. But I think an honest assumption would be that it’s as good,” Clarke said. “Any time that you beat the number one team in the world that’s extremely special. For us to get over the line is very special for this Australian team. It certainly shows and represents that we’re heading in the right direction as a team. It’s our first bit of success away from home for a couple of years. I can’t thank my teammates enough for their heart, their attitude, and the hunger. Davey sits here as a great example of the two things I’ve spoken to this team about, having the right attitude and having that hunger inside you to want more, to want to become a better player every single day.”But the indelible image of Cape Town will be that of Harris, summoned for a final spell of bowling at the Kelvin Grove End when he was in a far fitter state for a looming date with his surgeon in Melbourne. Earlier in the match Johnson had spoken of how Harris’ will to overcome the physical hurdle of his troublesome knee had inspired plenty of others to ignore whatever minor ailments had affected them. At Newlands he went further than anyone could have expected, engineering a series victory that will stand comparison with anything achieved by Test teams from his country. At the moment of victory, Clarke was weary, relieved, and grateful. Australia’s longest day of summer had become their most memorable.

Comical running, and unsure outfielders

ESPNcricinfo presents plays from the India-Pakistan World T20 game

Mohammad Isam and Abhishek Purohit21-Mar-2014The run-out
Pakistan were involved in some comical running early on. In the second over, Kamran Akmal tried to rush a leg-bye as the ball rolled away close to the pitch. Ahmed Shehzad responded eagerly, and in an instant, the two were within hand-shaking distance, Akmal having covered some more ground. Suddenly, Shehzad decided he was running to the danger end, and abandoned the run. An astonished Akmal stopped in his tracks, turned around and tried to regain his ground but to his misfortune again, Bhuvneshwar Kumar found the stumps with a direct hit.The near run-out
Shehzad decided to make amends the very next ball by enthusiastically charging up the pitch as this one rolled fine down the leg side. Mohammad Hafeez was having none of it. This time it was Shehzad’s turn to apply the brakes and double back. He scrambled and dived, and MS Dhoni’s throw missed the stumps.The late reaction
Mohammad Shami had sent down a superb over and had taken his position at the long-leg boundary when Shahid Afridi had one of his almighty swings at Bhuvneshwar. Shami possibly did not think it would travel behind square, or he just did not pick it, or he was plainly caught napping. Whatever be the case, by the time he did and set off to his left, there was no way he was stopping the boundary.The half-attempt
Shoaib Malik was timing the ball inconsistently and at the end of the 15th over, his swipe caught a top edge and swirled towards Bhuvneshwar Kumar. But the fielder was in two minds, first rushing forward and, when the ball started to die towards him, pulling out only slightly. It was enough for the ball to drop short, and slip into the boundary.

Remembering Desert Storm, 16 years on

Our ESPNcricinfo correspondent revisits the scene of one of India’s most celebrated ODI triumphs

Karthik Krishnaswamy in Sharjah23-Apr-2014Mitchell Johnson dug it in short, and Karn Sharma swatted at the ball more in hope than with any idea of where he wanted to hit it. The ball soared over the roof of the East Stand and fell somewhere on the street beyond. It would have been a memorable sight, had it not been the third time in the match that a six had flown out of the ground. It was the 17th six of the match.Exactly 16 years ago, when cricket bats weren’t so springy and sixes weren’t so plentiful, back when sixes still had the power to thrill you, there had been a famous match in Sharjah- an ODI between India and Australia. Sachin Tendulkar had struck five sixes that day, sending the commentators into paroxysms of excitement, during an innings of 143 that is among his most talked-about centuries in coloured clothes. It was a century made in swirling dust and came to be known as “The Desert Storm”.Next to me, 16 years later, sits a man who was here, at this ground, when Tendulkar played that innings. Madhu, now a 41-year-old systems administrator had just moved to Sharjah from Hyderabad back in 1998.To someone who, to his eternal regret, went off to sleep as soon as Ajay Jadeja was dismissed, and therefore missed the most exciting bits of Tendulkar’s innings, this man seems incredibly blessed. He didn’t just watch all of the innings when it happened; he was only 75 or so yards away and, in all probability, dancing in the aisles.”I don’t remember too much, actually,” he says, when pressed for details. “It happened such a long time ago.”No, you want to tell him. It didn’t happen a long time ago. It only happened in 1998.There is enough evidence right here, though, that it happened way back in 1998. Tom Moody, who took two wickets that day, is now Hyderabad’s coach. VVS Laxman, who was mostly a spectator in a 104-run partnership with Tendulkar, is one of their mentors.Madhu puts his arm around the boy seated next to him, a boy who is possibly six feet tall. “This is Nikhil, my brother’s son. He was just one year old then.”Some people, then, have grown older. But the stadium itself, Madhu says, hasn’t changed too much, underneath all the IPL branding.”They’ve put in new seats, but otherwise everything is pretty much the same. In those days, the Indians and Pakistanis used to sit in different stands. They wouldn’t mingle too much. And back then,” he says, pointing at the VIP boxes to our left, “a lot of Bollywood actors would sit there.” That certainly hasn’t changed.Above us, the long-stemmed ceiling fans also look like they have been here for decades, and haven’t been dusted all that often in that time. The area outside the stadium, too, can’t have changed too much. It’s clearly not undergone any sort of gentrification. There are a couple of tyre shops right next to the stadium, and the streets in the vicinity are full of shops selling spare parts, sanitary ware, floor tiles and diesel generators.

Sachin Tendulkar had struck five sixes that day, sending the commentators into paroxysms of excitement, during an innings of 143 that is among his most talked-about centuries in coloured clothes. It was a century made in swirling dust and came to be known as “The Desert Storm”

The main stadium road is called Second Industrial Street. You can watch streams of cars go down it, if you turn to your right from the Members’ Enclosure. Back in the 90s, TV broadcasts of Sharjah matches would often cut to the traffic, and it looked just as it does even now. Unless it is a strange trick of the memory.Tendulkar’s 143, and his 134 in the final two days later, won India a trophy named after a fizzy drink. The IPL’s main sponsor is the rival fizzy drink. Tendulkar also won a car for his efforts, and the entire team piled into it after the presentation ceremony to drive a couple of laps around the outfield.Photographs from India’s celebrations contain one face that was then considered exotic: Andrew Kokinos, the team’s Australian physiotherapist. Sixteen years later, seven of the eight IPL teams have foreign head coaches.Everything, then, is different, but Tendulkar’s 143 still resonates well with most. At one point, during Glenn Maxwell’s manic innings, the words Desert Storm had flashed on the replay screen in big bold capital letters. Sure, this is the desert, and it’s become something of a cliché, but you’d like to think the guy keying in the text wouldn’t have reached for it if it hadn’t been for the original Desert Storm.

Jayawardene joins Gavaskar and Lara, owns the SSC

Stats highlights from the first day of the SL v SA Test at the SSC, where Mahela Jayawardene scored yet another hundred

Shiva Jayaraman24-Jul-201434 Test hundreds that Mahela Jayawardene has made, having drawn level with Sunil Gavaskar and Brian Lara. Jayawardene needs two more centuries to catch up with Rahul Dravid, who is the only other batsman within striking distance of Jayawardene given that the Sri Lanka batsman only has a maximum of five more Test innings before retiring. Kumar Sangakkara also has 36 Test centuries, but is likely to end up above Jayawardene in this list.11 Number of hundreds Mahela Jayawardene now has at the Sinhalese Sports Club, Colombo – the highest any batsman has in Tests at one venue. Jayawardene was already leading this list before his latest century at this venue. Don Bradman and Jacques Kallis are next with nine hundreds at the MCG and Newlands, Cape Town, respectively.1031 Runs scored by Angelo Mathews since the New Year Test against Pakistan. Only Sangakkara has outscored Mathews in Tests during this period. Mathews has scored three centuries and five fifties in 15 innings and has averaged 85.91.131 Partnership runs between Jayawardene and Mathews – Sri Lanka’s highest for the fourth wicket against South Africa, beating the 118-run partnership between Roshan Mahanama and Arjuna Ranatunga in Centurion back in 1998.10 Number of times Sri Lanka have lost their first two wickets before reaching 20 in their innings, including today. The last such instance came seven years ago against Bangladesh, when Sri Lanka were two down for just 14 on board.21 Debutant wicketkeeper Niroshan Dickwella’s age on Test debut; he is the third-youngest wicketkeeper at 21 years and 263 days to make his debut for Sri Lanka. Asanka Gurusinha, who made his debut at the age of 19 years and 52 days against Pakistan in 1985, is the youngest Sri Lanka debutant wicketkeeper.5 Number of times Kumar Sangakkara has been out for a first-ball duck. Including this, three of the five instances have come at this venue.18 Hundreds Jayawardene has scored at the SSC and Galle put together. He has currently scored 5135 runs at these venues at an average of 76.64 from 74 innings. He has taken nearly a hundred more innings at other venues to score the remaining 16 of his 34 centuries. At other venues, Jayawardene ‘s 6511 Test runs have come at an average of 39.7.

Mahela Jayawardene at SSC and Galle
Venues Mat Inns NO Runs Ave 100/50
SSC and Galle 48 74 7 5135 76.64 18/19
Other venues 99 173 9 6511 39.70 16/29
Overall 147 247 16 11646 50.41 34/48

Clarke broken but not beaten

The young Michael Clarke wouldn’t recognise this broken old man. But he’d respect him. He’d want to be him, injury and all. Because Michael Clarke is now the hero he has wanted to be since he was born.

Jarrod Kimber at Adelaide Oval10-Dec-20146:30

‘Clarke as big as McGrath and Warne’

The last meaningful thing Michael Clarke did on day one was lay face down in the dirt and push at the ground. It is a pointless stretch when your back is that bad. It did nothing. Clarke had to hobble off the field. Physically limited, emotionally drained.The rumours started early in the morning. They hit Twitter soon after. Clarke would bat. He was at the ground. He was in the nets. He was padded up. And then, as Steven Smith bounced onto the ground excitedly, next to him wasn’t Mitchell Johnson, but a slightly rotund looking Michael Clarke.Either wearing a backbrace, or as one Cricket Australia official joked, perhaps he’d eaten too much pasta the night before. Clarke was chunkier. Unlithe. Looking more former athlete, than current. Perhaps because of this, or the sparse damp crowd, it took just a little longer for people to notice it was Clarke on his way out.The shots were different as well. He had brought back his bad-back pull shot. Part international cricketer, part old man moving items on a clothing rack. Cuts were dispatched, often without any need, or ability, to move the feet. Clarke even used the guide over the slips. It was mullet batting. Business on the pads, party outside off.Clarke’s leaves weren’t authoritative or dismissive; they were jumpy and occasionally mildly hysterical. The inside edge of the bat would have been shocked with how much work it had to do. Clarke also gave the early waft, that to be fair, he can perform whether injured or not. He never truly seemed to get out the way of short balls, some just missed him as he shrugged his shoulders, ducked his neck and waited for impact.Crossing from end to end may result in what we call runs, but it’s overstating what Clarke was doing. Singles looked painful and resulted in much effort and little pace. Clarke would often lean forward, hoping the momentum would get him home. India threw the ball at his end like he was Arjuna Rantunga. Clarke completed four twos and one three. All of which looked like the end of marathons, not 44 or 66 yards. The bat seemed amazingly heavy in his hands, it always seemed clutched, not held. When running it seemed to be almost weighing him down.When the rain first started, Clarke was the first man to start leaving the field. It was the only time he was the quickest to move. He looked dispirited when the umpires decided to play on. When they did leave the field later on, Smith ran off, Clarke walked slowly.The stump microphone was more brutal on Clarke than any short ball. Heavy breathing and groaning became the soundtrack for his innings. A cricket phone sexline. If it was turned up louder, you could probably hear his spine clicking in and out of place. Louder still and you’d have heard the internal monologue of pain.When he finally made the 100th run, he couldn’t jump. He could barely raise his bat. It wasn’t a celebration. It wasn’t a testimonial. It wasn’t a relief. It was just another struggle to overcome•Getty ImagesThe crowd applauded everything, even mishits to the legside that almost got runs. Clarke slashed hard outside offstump, and picked up singles off his hip on the legside. His feet moved to the spinner, but not in any meaningful or attacking way. It was Clarke on lithium. The Clarke we know since his back was attacked by this invisible troll.Not sublime. Not silky. Not smooth. Sore. Slow. Skewed.There was once a Clarke who danced down the wicket, slapped the ball without fear, and attacked like a desperate dog. It now seems like a dream, because the new version has been with us for so long. Crooked and cautious. New and unimproved, but still better. It scores important hundreds overseas. Can bat through bodyline tactics without any movement. Handles broken arms during an innings.We’ve seen all this before. The stretching. The groaning. The slow movement. The target for short balls. The batting handicap. But this added something else.Clarke has buried a friend. Fronted the media. Given a eulogy.There were parts of Clarke’s triple-hundred that appeared stage managed. His overcoming the back injury was done in private at Old Trafford. The hundred at the Gabba was punchy, admirable, but not epic. Cape Town might have had a broken arm, but it was a broken arm we found out about months later.This was on the news. Front pages. Twitter. Facebook. Radio. Kitchen tables. Pubs. Trains. Offices. Schools. Everywhere.When he made it to 98, India even went bodyline. But short of an asteroid landing on a good length, nothing ever looked like stopping Clarke. Career and life-ending problems confronted him, and he shuffled and slashed past them.The young Michael Clarke wouldn’t recognise this broken old man. But he’d respect him. He’d want to be him, injury and all. Because Michael Clarke is now the hero he has wanted to be since he was born. Not just A captain of Australia but one of THE captains of Australia.When he finally made the 100th run, he couldn’t jump. He could barely raise his bat. It wasn’t a celebration. It wasn’t a testimonial. It wasn’t a relief. It was just another struggle to overcome. Clarke was restrained physically, restrained emotionally. His entire innings was the embodiment of what has happened to Australian cricket over the last fortnight.Broken, but not beaten. And somehow, despite it all, stronger than before.

Process is proven, results need refining

Should India’s World Cup be judged by the standards of their seven straight wins or their single defeat?

Sharda Ugra28-Mar-2015India’s exit from the World Cup with a crushing 95-run defeat to Australia should be neither surprise nor shock. Or even a cause of lamentation. It was the conclusion of a World Cup campaign that was built on thin ice given the team’s limitations and its ability to skate lightly over them.Following a miserable two months in Australia, it was their opening World Cup game against Pakistan that served as the best way to jump-start the creaking Indian wagon. It gave the team lift-off and helped them get going for their next match – against South Africa at the MCG, which was to be in real terms their toughest group game.It was a match won in a way India know best and have been doing so for a while (at one point, in Test matches overseas as well): batting first, maximising their batting skills to pile up the runs and using the weight of those runs to dictate the course of play. This with an 86,876-strong crowd that turned Melbourne into a home game and added to the suffocation of a mounting asking rate.Despite the passion and drama surrounding the match against Pakistan, the South Africa game was India’s best. After South Africa, the Indians moved for a month through the tournament like a maglev train on a cushion of air.  In the semi-final against Australia, the maglev’s poles were reversed and the cushion of air instantly deflated.Seven straight wins were unexpected, given what preceded in Australia, and for that the class of 2015 must be given due credit. India’s batsmen put their full range out on display, the fielding was arguably of the highest quality seen by an Indian team and the bowlers’ sharpness was shining-razor stuff.What also worked in their favour was the quality of the opposition that they faced as they moved through the group – Pakistan, South Africa, UAE, West Indies, Ireland, Zimbabwe – which was always due to happen because of the World Cup’s current format. With Super Sixes and the like, the level of urgency increases with every match as the event wears on; in this format, two groups, top eight to knockouts, things can actually flatten out through the group stages depending on the draw.After back-to-back victories in Perth, India’s main aim was to top the group and the competition that stood between them and the No.1 position was Ireland and Zimbabwe. It could have been easier, but fiendishly difficult it was not. A quarter-final line-up against Bangladesh was a draw that worked in India’s favour. Bangladesh matched them – but only for a very brief period. After that it was back to a familiar template.The real surprise of the India campaign was the transformation of the quick bowlers from scatter-gun specialists into a well-tooled pack•Getty ImagesThe semi-final proved what was always known: that India were one batsman short and using Ravindra Jadeja as a bowling allrounder was not going to work against high-quality outfits. That had, in fact,  happened before – in the tri-series that had been called a “waste of time” by team director Ravi Shastri. One good use of the time that the tri-series could have served was to remind India that their batting reserves were meagre.Against teams with high-skilled bowling in a World Cup knockout, one of their top batsmen would have to produce a miracle innings, ideally their most experienced batsmen with 100-plus ODIs under their belt. Rohit Sharma, Virat Kohli, Suresh Raina and MS Dhoni fall in that category but none could really respond in Sydney. Given that the next World Cup is going to be held in England, separating those batsmen who can tackle lateral movement and play attractive strokes from those who can only do one of the two may be a good idea for the future.The real surprise of the India campaign was the transformation of the quick bowlers from scatter-gun specialists into a well-tooled pack. Mohammed Shami, Umesh Yadav and Mohit Sharma had enough time to work out what worked best for them in Australia, and hit the intangible yardage between short and good length. They not only asked questions of batsmen but punished those who failed to answer them, including the rampaging South Africans. Against Australia, along with the spinners, they applied brakes in mid-innings but at the end found a familiar nemesis – wild-eyed lower-order hitters.What did this World Cup prove with respect to the India bowlers in ODIs even under the current lot of regulations? That India’s quick bowlers can be high-pedigree thoroughbreds as those from anywhere else in the world, but need to be looked after like the real ones on four legs.What are the omens for the future? The ODI team between now and the 2019 World Cup could well look largely similar, especially in terms of batsmen, who are always given a greater leeway to “develop.” The bowlers, particularly the quicker ones, are a brand Indian cricket administration has always struggled to handle capably.The biggest change that India will have to deal with is captaincy, as it will have captains in different formats, with the Test captain a younger and most ambitious man. Minutes after India were knocked out, Dhoni told the TV cameras that he felt fit and was running around suitably, and would think about his ODI future only after the 2016 World T20. A day before the semi-final, in an interview to the BCCI website, Kohli was asked how being captain had affected his outlook towards ODI cricket and he said, “I have been vice-captain for the ODI side and I would keep giving inputs to MS about the things that I felt he could use. Now, in recent times knowing the fact that I probably will have to lead the side in the ODIs as well in the future at some point of time, I see more of how Dhoni changes his bowlers, at what stages and situations of the game.”Amongst Kohli’s many fine qualities as a cricketer, batsman and competitor, patience and forbearance do not quite figure in the top three. There is little doubt that in between this World Cup and the next one, a churn will be afoot.A frequently repeated argument during India’s struggles in Australia was about the team being happy with the processes they were involved in and the attacking brand of cricket they had been playing. At the end of these four months, we return to the process versus result debate. Should India’s World Cup be judged by the standards of their seven straight wins or their single defeat? The seven victories are worth celebrating and enjoying on the given day, what they did for the confidence of the squad and their general feel-factor. Look back to the 2011 World Cup, though. It was played at home and despite that made for a hard, chaotic scramble all the way to the title.Which one do you prefer?

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