Nottingham Forest eye up Tom Lawrence move

Nottingham Forest are reportedly interested in making a controversial summer move for Derby County midfielder Tom Lawrence.

The Lowdown: Lawrence off this summer?

The 28-year-old has been a key player for the Rams over the years but he was unable to prevent them from being relegated from the Championship in 2021/22.

Lawrence is out of contract at Derby at the end of next month, at which point he will be able to leave on a free transfer ahead of next season.

It feels highly unlikely that the midfielder will be content with playing League One football in 2022/23 and a new report suggests there is plenty of interest in him.

The Latest: Forest preparing for PL

According to TEAMtalk, Forest are one of a whole host of clubs interested in signing Lawrence this summer, including Premier League pair Southampton and Leeds United.

Steve Cooper will have to battle several top flight sides to secure the signing, with his side’s potential promotion surely key given the interest from above.

The Verdict: Wouldn’t go down well

Should Lawrence trade Derby for Forest, there is no doubt that it would be controversial, given the rivalry that exists between the two clubs.

It would certainly be a bold move by the Welshman, who was once described as a ‘wonderful player’ by Gary Bowyer during his time on loan at Blackburn Rovers.

A tally of 90 goal contributions (50 goals and 40 assists) in 264 Championship appearances speaks volumes about his pedigree, though, and it seems Forest are already plotting for life in the Premier League, as they are willing to go head-to-head with Southampton and Leeds, not to mention Scottish Premiership pair Celtic and Rangers.

In other news, a Nottingham Forest bid for one player is expected this summer. Find out who it is here.

Celtic must seal deal for Gustavo Hamer

Celtic celebrated their Premiership title in style last weekend as they thrashed Motherwell 6-0 at Parkhead before lifting and parading the trophy around the ground.

It was an emotional afternoon for multiple reasons as fans celebrated the title success as well as saying goodbye to two long-serving midfielders – Nir Bitton and Tom Rogic.

Both players will leave the club upon the expiry of their contracts at the end of next month and Ange Postecoglou will need to source replacements for them heading into the 2022/23 campaign.

One player the Hoops have been linked with a swoop for is Coventry gem Gustavo Hamer and he can be Ange’s dream heir to Rogic’s midfield throne.

In the Premiership this season, the Australian produced six goals and six assists – creating 1.5 chances per match – in 32 appearances, whilst also completing 1.6 dribbles and 3.4 duels per game for the Scottish giants.

He is a cultured midfield presence with the ability to make key contributions in the final third and his exit will leave a big hole in the squad heading into next season.

In Hamer, they can find a player who can have a similar impact on the team. He has showcased his quality in the second tier in England as he has enjoyed a fine season south of the border.

The Dutchman, who joined Coventry for £1.5m, chipped in with three goals and nine assists in 37 Championship starts, which means that both he and Rogic directly contributed to 12 goals in their respective leagues.

He created 1.6 chances per game for the Sky Blues as he proved that he can be a consistent creator for his side from a central midfield position, along with winning 3.3 duels per game as he battled hard in midfield.

His teammate Marko Marosi called him “unbelievable” and EFL pundit Ali Maxwell previously dubbed the gem a “class act”. This shows how he has impressed his peers and those in the media with his performances for the English club.

At the age of 24, he also has plenty of time left to develop and improve as a player. This means that he can be the short and long-term replacement for Rogic at Parkhead as he is a player Postecoglou can work with over the course of a number of seasons.

Therefore, he can be the heir to the Australian gem and Celtic must ensure that they can get a deal over the line for the Dutchman this summer.

AND in other news, £5m bid rejected, now worth £31.5m: Celtic had a giant howler on 190 G/A “lion”…

Leeds landed a special talent in Gyabi

Leeds United and Victor Orta have made a very conscious effort since the club’s return to the Premier League to invest in a number of talents for the future, with the likes of Joe Gelhardt, Sam Greenwood, Crysencio Summerville, Kristoffer Klaesson, Cody Drameh, Sonny Perkins, Wilfried Gnonto and Darko Gyabi all arriving at Elland Road over the last two years.

And, while a number of these youngsters have already started making inroads into Jesse Marsch’s first-team squad – particularly Gelhardt, Greenwood, Summerville, Drameh and Klaesson – summer signings Perkins, Gnonto and Gyabi are yet to make a senior appearance for the Whites – although, considering their undoubted talent, it would appear only a matter of time before they do.

Indeed, while both Gnonto and Perkins are exceptionally talented young footballers, the £5m addition of Gyabi looks to have been an incredibly smart move by Orta, as the former Manchester City and current England U18 international is a player who has already generated a considerable amount of hype in his short professional career – and it is not difficult to see why.

Despite arriving at Thorp Arch as recently as July, the 18-year-old has already made a real impression within Michael Skubala’s U21 squad, having already scored one goal – a thunderous drive from outside the penalty area in a 5-1 win over Nottingham Forest – and provided his teammates with one assist over his four appearances in the Premier League 2 in the 2022/23 campaign.

These returns have seen the central midfielder come in for a significant amount of praise, with Joe Donnohue claiming in a post on Twitter that Gyabi is a player who “moves through the gears really well, escapes pressure and can pick a forward pass,” while Yaw Ampofo claimed that Gyabi “will be excellent,” before suggesting it is “just a matter of time” before his makes his debut.

Jesse Marsch also appears to be extremely excited about the future of Gyabi, with the 48-year-old manager stating of the playmaker following the Whites’ pre-season victory over Brisbane Roar (via Leeds Live):

“We were excited from the start about the possibility of adding him to the group and now watching him live and seeing his mentality to improve, even more so. I would say with him, with Archie Gray, with Cree Summerville, with Sam Greenwood and with Joffy Gelhardt, we have a core of really young talented players that we think can be a big part of the future.”

As such, Orta’s capture of Gyabi this summer – a move that “sent shockwaves” through the Manchester City academy, according to Simon Bajkowski – very much looks to have been the director of football unearthing a real diamond, as it would appear only a matter of time before the former Millwall starlet who Neil Harris dubbed “exceptional” explodes into the Premier League scene.

What is the longest gap between World Cup matches for any player?

And is Rahkeem Cornwall set to become the heaviest Test cricketer ever?

Steven Lynch13-Aug-2019If Rahkeem Cornwall plays against India, will he be the heaviest Test cricketer ever? asked Junior Williams from Trinidad
He’ll certainly be close: the latest estimates put Rahkeem Cornwall’s weight at around 140kgs, or 22 stone (he’s also about 6′ 6″ tall, so among the tallest Test cricketers too). The problem is, it’s not usual for players’ weights to be faithfully recorded, so it’s difficult to be precise.Just about the only contender for Test cricket’s heavyweight championship is the former Australian captain Warwick Armstrong, who was quite svelte when he first toured England, in 1902, but had expanded considerably by the time he led a very strong side immediately after the Great War, winning eight Tests in a row against England in 1920-21 and 1921. Describing the 1921 version of Armstrong, Ronald Mason wrote: “He was an enormous man, huge-shouldered and heavy-hipped; he stood well over six feet and by the year of this his last tour had a disproportionate middle-aged spread. Estimates of his weight vary agreeably from 18 to 22 stone [114-140kgs].” Gideon Haigh, in his excellent biography of “The Big Ship”, says the latter-day Armstrong was “as manoeuvrable in the field as a Pullman carriage”. I did see Armstrong’s shirt when it was displayed in the museum at the Melbourne Cricket Ground, and it looked as if it might come in useful as an emergency sail.Since we can’t really be sure, I’d like to declare it a tie between Armstrong and Cornwall!Is it true that Don Bradman averaged 100 in Ashes Tests? Who’s in second place? asked Ricky Dooley from Scotland
Don Bradman didn’t quite manage to average 100 against England, but he still sits comfortably on top of the pile, with 89.78. Of those who had a dozen or more innings in Ashes Tests, the Australian opener Sidney Barnes comes next with 70.50, ahead of the England pair of Herbert Sutcliffe (66.85) and Ken Barrington (63.96). After the Edgbaston Test, Steve Smith had climbed to fifth place with 60.84.If you don’t impose a qualification, there is someone on the list with a three-figure average: Albert Trott made 205 runs in five innings for Australia in 1894-95. Three of them were not out, so he averaged 102.50.What’s the highest identical score by a batsman in both innings of a Test? asked Thanura Perera from Sri Lanka
You’ll probably be pleased to hear that a Sri Lankan holds this particular distinction: against India in Madras in 1982-83, Duleep Mendis hit 105 in the first innings, and followed that up with 105 in the second.The only other man to make an identical three-figure score in both innings of a Test was Misbah-ul-Haq with 101 and 101 not out for Pakistan against Australia in Abu Dhabi in 2014-15. Here’s the ever-expanding list of those who scored two centuries in the same Test.Anderson Cummins represented Canada in the 2007 World Cup, almost 15 years after he played for the West Indies in the 1992 edition•Getty ImagesLiam Plunkett played in the 2007 World Cup and then in the 2019 edition, after missing 2011 and 2015. Is this the longest gap between World Cup matches for any player? asked Gurdeep Singh from Malaysia
Liam Plunkett actually lies third on this particular list, a few days behind someone else who reappeared in the 2019 World Cup for the first time since 2007 – Shoaib Malik of Pakistan. Lameck Onyango of Kenya (1996 to 2007) and Carl Hooper of West Indies (1992-2003) also missed two World Cups, although the actual time gap between their matches was slightly shorter than for Shoaib and Plunkett.However, the overall leader missed three World Cups: fast bowler Anderson Cummins represented West Indies in the 1992 World Cup, and Canada in 2007, when he was 40. He went four days short of 15 years between World Cup match appearances.I know Sachin Tendulkar is the only man to play 200 Test matches. But who was first to 50, and 100, and 150? asked Pradeep Patel from India
Sachin Tendulkar did indeed become the only player to date to appear in 200 Tests, signing off against West Indies at home in Mumbai in November 2013.The first man to appear in 50 Tests was Syd Gregory, the Australian, who was born in 1870 on the Sydney Cricket Ground, where his father was a groundsman. Gregory reached a half-century of caps in 1909, during the seventh of his eight Test-playing tours of England.England’s Colin Cowdrey was the first to play 100 Tests: he marked the milestone, against Australia at Edgbaston in 1968, by scoring a century.And the first to 150 was Australia’s Allan Border, in the match against New Zealand in Brisbane in 1993-94: he marked the occasion by scoring 105, his 27th and last Test century. At the time, Kapil Dev came next with 127 caps.Finally there’s a clarification on one of last week’s questions:
A few people have queried the answer about only three pairs having bowled unchanged in the fourth innings of a Test, and winning. In trying to condense the question I managed to lose an important stipulation, which was that the bowlers had to have shared all ten wickets. The three shown last week are the only three of those. But there are five other instances (look at the fifth column) of a pair bowling unchanged in a final innings, without taking all ten wickets, usually because of run-outs.Use our feedback form or the Ask Steven Facebook page to ask your stats and trivia questions

Rahane buries Kotla ghost in tough conditions

Thanks to Ajinkya Rahane, India have posted the highest total of the series, and his average in India is past 22 now. That absolute failure of a series, which looked likely, can wait despite such tough conditions

Sidharth Monga in Delhi03-Dec-20151:44

Manjrekar: Rahane benefitting from playing a lot straighter now

The last time Ajinkya Rahane played a Test in Delhi he was a nervous youngster debuting on a square turner. He had got there after scoring heavily, and after long resistance had managed to get past the preference for anyone but him: flashier batsmen, batsmen returning from injury, batsmen over the hill; even Ravindra Jadeja had got in ahead of him. It was understandable he was nervous; this debut had just taken too long coming. He played two shots befitting a nervous debutant, the second one under no pressure of the match situation, and we were left wondering if he had blown his chance because he was dropped for the Tests against West Indies later in that year, 2013.Then India embarked on a testing spell of 13 straight Tests outside Asia and four more outside India. Sachin Tendulkar had just retired. The timing of that retirement, not letting the replacement bed in during home Tests, was unfortunate, but you can’t say Tendulkar planned it that way. He must have been confident he could make it to South Africa too. At any rate this left Rahane with a big challenge: you want to get yourself a Test spot, do it in these testing conditions.In the 17 Tests that he played away from home, Rahane succeeded on every tour. He missed a hundred in Durban by four runs, scored one in Wellington, went on to score a match-winning hundred at Lord’s, surprised the aggressive Virat Kohli with his aggressive batting in Australia, which took some heat off the future captain, and piled on top of them a second-innings hundred in Sri Lanka.Rahane’s biggest challenge of conditions, though, came at home when India chose to play on rank turners to negate the might of AB de Villiers and Hashim Amla. They were prepared to pay collaterals, for which they deserve their due credit. The biggest price was perhaps paid by Rahane, coming in at No. 5 by which time the ball has scuffed up and starts to turn even more. He also has to score runs with the lower middle order, considering he was the last specialist batsman in the first Test. Coming to Delhi, Rahane averaged under eight at home.It is easy to make a flawed argument that only one of four Rahane’s dismissals was down to the pitch, when a half-volley found enough time to stop at him and take the edge. On two other occasions he had played without reaching the pitch of the spin and once played a loose drive to Morne Morkel. Rahane was making mistakes on tough pitches. It is ironic that Rahane was having his first poor series at home. . In his last chance, Rahane has turned it around, at the venue that might have had some demons for him.To add to the demons from the debut was India’s position in the game. At 66 for 3, on a pitch that played easier than Nagpur or Mohali, India needed a big effort from somewhere. Rahane came in determined. It helped that Kohli looked in great touch. Along with certain periods in de Villiers’ innings in Bangalore, Kohli looked the most authoritative a batsman has looked this series. Rahane could afford to bed in a little inconspicuously.”I think what has been happening in the past two Test matches was that he was slightly hurrying through his shots earlier on in his innings,” batting coach Sanjay Bangar said. “But he reworked his strategy a bit and is willing to spend time in the middle during initial stages waiting for the loose balls. All credit to Ajinkya for the way he turned out after first two games with low scores to turn things around for himself. It speaks a lot about his character, speaks a lot about the character young Indian batsmen possess.”There seemed another small change, which batsmen usually make on pitches with variable bounce: stay low, cover the low bounce, have a low back lift. When preparing to face spinners here, Rahane hardly took his bat up. The tap on the pitch as the bowler ran in came from a much lower height than it did earlier.While Rahane was looking to take his time early on, he was lucky he got two loose balls pretty early. Two boundaries hit in the first 22 balls he faced – off a short ball and a full toss – and Rahane looked in for the long haul. The responsibility, though, grew after the freak dismissal of Kohli after more than an hour of the most assertive all-round batting in this series. Two more wickets fell soon, as they tend to do on such pitches, and India were 139 for 6.At Lord’s, on a similarly testing pitch, India were 145 for 7 once. Rahane was on 28 then, he was on 31 now. He spent 16 balls on that score. Between Kohli’s dismissal and this spell, he had scored one run in 22 balls. This is the time of his innings when Rahane likes to flow freely. Here a combination of the team situation and a testing pitch asked for caution. He had paid the price for pulling the trigger too early in the series, he wasn’t going to do that now.At Lord’s, Rahane got support from Bhuvneshwar Kumar, and here Jadeja provided him solidarity. Thanks to Imran Tahir’s inconsistency, South Africa’s three-man attack had to wilt at some time. Smart Rahane kept his back lift short until the fingers grew tired in the longest session of the day. And then he punished every error in length severely. What was more remarkable was his defence, and his being prepared to defend, until such bad deliveries arrived.Rahane now has the highest individual score of the series. Thanks to him India have posted the highest total of the series, and his average in India is past 22 now. That absolute failure of a series, which looked likely, can wait despite such tough conditions.

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.

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.

Triple threat

Until 2006-07 batsmen managed scores of 300 once every four Ranji seasons. Since then all hell has broken loose

Sidharth Monga13-Nov-2011On Boxing Day five years ago, former India and Orissa batsman SS Das scored a triple-century. It took him 500 balls and close to 12 hours. It featured gradual acceleration. He scored 126 on the first day, and got to the triple on the second, leaving enough time to spare for his side to have a brief go at the Jammu & Kashmir batsmen. It was a tiring effort, as triple-centuries should be. Das didn’t bat in the second innings, an inconsequential affair once Orissa decided to not enforce the follow-on. His state association awarded him Rs 30,000.Not that Das is the reason for what has followed, but his innings – the first triple-century in the Ranji Trophy in more than six years – is to Ranji triples what the birth of Jesus Christ is to time: Before Das and After Das is a neat division. Before Das only 18 triples had been scored in more than 70 seasons; Ravindra Jadeja’s 314 last week was the ninth After Das, in less than five seasons, a development that alarms some and encourages others.Eleven of the 18 triples before Das’ were scored batting second; all nine after it have come batting first. The template earlier was to bowl the opposition out cheaply, secure first-innings points and then allow yourself long enough to bat to score those triple-centuries. Of the seven before-Das triples when batting first, two were scored in five-day games, which gave the batsmen plenty of time; only one of the nine corresponding triples after Das’ has come in a five-day match. Further, three of the pre-Das triples came in the late-eighties, when batting and bowling fetched teams a different set of points, which meant you didn’t necessary need to bowl sides out to win points. On the real flat tracks, teams hardly bothered at times.These statistics may not explain much but they are indicative of the change in attitude that has come about with the advent of one-day and later Twenty20 cricket. Batsmen are scoring runs quicker than ever, and can thus hit triples within such time as to allow their sides a decent go at first-innings points, if not an outright win, although Jadeja’s effort didn’t quite fir that pattern: the Cuttack track was so flat that Saurashtra couldn’t bowl Orissa out in 199 overs.Wasim Jaffer is the only batsman to have scored a triple-century each before and after Das’. He agrees there has been a change. Unlike his first, the second triple-century was scored batting first and took about 50 balls and 40 minutes fewer. “In the first one, I stayed on the field throughout the game,” Jaffer remembers. “I fielded two and a quarter days, and the rest of the time I batted. I was only 18 or 19, so physically it was not that challenging. Now probably if I had to do it again, I’ll have to push myself. It will test my stamina and fitness.” So now he scores quicker.Scoring fast cannot be done in a vacuum. There is a deeper disturbing trend three triple-centurions point to. “When I started there were quality spinners all around,” Jaffer says. “Murali Kartik at his best. We [Mumbai] had Nilesh Kulkarni, Sairaj Bahutule, Ramesh Powar came in. Sunil Subramaniam, Rahul Sanghvi, Sarandeep Singh. Harbhajan [Singh] was young then. Almost every team had a decent spinner, and they never gave away easy runs. To score 300 you have to bat against a lot of spin. I personally feel the quality of spin bowling in India is going down.”Sanjay Manjrekar, who scored his 377 against Venkatapathy Raju, Arshad Ayub and Kanwaljit Singh, has a similar tale to tell. “When I made my debut, against Haryana, there was Rajinder Goel, who had 750 wickets,” he says. “There was Sarkar Talwar, who had 350-400 wickets. Then I played Raghuram Bhat at that level. I played Gopal Sharma. They didn’t bowl a bad ball. That’s what stands out with these people. Gopal Sharma is the best offspinner I have faced, and Maninder Singh the best left-arm spinner. There was one match I played against Rajesh Chauhan. He bowled about 50 overs but didn’t give me one short ball. Not one short ball in that big hundred I got.”Aakash Chopra, who scored his triple for Rajasthan, is surprised because he noticed a different set of trends just before the triples started coming. “For two-three years fast bowlers did well because of SG Test balls,” he says. “Also, after T20 happened, I felt teams weren’t scoring that many runs, or at least the teams weren’t lasting that many overs.”He is convinced now that that change was temporary, and that spinners have become even more important. “The pitches haven’t changed much at all. On these pitches, beyond a point fast bowlers can’t do much. It’s up to the spinners to come out and take wickets. To entice you, to beat you in the flight. Especially when a batsman is in an aggressive mood and is going after the bowling – you get more chances of mishits.” The change of balls cannot be blamed because the pronounced seam on the SG ball remains a spinner’s friend, as Harbhajan Singh has often said.Then again it’s not a phenomenon restricted to the Ranji Trophy. More and faster triple-centuries are being scored in Test cricket too. It is a natural trickle-down from the highest levels, where the batsmen have lost all fear and bowlers have failed to catch up. As Manjrekar points out, “Sehwag and Gayle are scoring triples, not Dravid.” Sehwag and Gayle don’t score triples waiting for the bad balls – which the the spinners of old didn’t provide.”During our time 300 was all about patience,” Manjrekar says. “Now it is about scoring runs. During our time it was all about playing time. You needed the patience to grind. I could have played quicker, and scored whatever I did quicker, but that wasn’t the trend then.”Chopra, who himself scored an old-fashioned triple that went into the third day, is left marvelling. “Surprisingly, they are able to sustain that kind of strike rate for longer durations,” he says. “For a short while you can go and smash at 70-80-90 strike rate, but to do it over a day, a day and a half, I am sure that is difficult.”Peter Roebuck, the columnist and former Somerset captain, described a Test triple as being the work of a lifetime expressed in a single innings. It’s just that nowadays such voluminous work can be expressed in 322 balls, as Rohit Sharma did at the Brabourne Stadium in 2009-10. He once lasted just 294 balls in a whole Ranji season. In about a day now, he had faced more balls and scored nearly twice as many runs. Now the work of a lifetime doesn’t necessarily involve seeing off tough spells and pacing an innings by sessions and new balls.Wasim Jaffer: the only batsman to have scored a triple-century each before and after Das’•ESPNcricinfo LtdChopra wants more balance on this front. Despite all the respect he says he has for the sustenance of high strike rates over such long periods, he wants to see the bowlers strike back. The first round of this year’s Ranji Trophy has produced only one result out of 13 matches. That one result was made possible by Rohit’s quick 175.Mumbai’s captain, Jaffer, looks at the positives of quick scoring. “The younger generation is looking to score quickly, which is good for the game,” he says. “There are fewer dull draws. The game is going in the right direction, as long as you score runs quickly and give your bowlers time to take 20 wickets.”Jadeja’s triple, though, was eventually worthless for his team because it didn’t fetch them any points. It has earned him respect, though. “It’s great to see that they want to get the 300s in the era of T20,” Manjrekar says. “You can say quality of attack and all that, but you have got to admire the batsmen who have grown up in this T20 atmosphere but are still scoring big. My respect for Jadeja has grown. You can’t scoff at a 300. It is a special innings.”But “special” is a word that might need revisiting some time in the future. Three hundred used to be a special total in ODIs once upon a time. Now it’s merely par for the course. The Ranji triple-century hasn’t yet reached that level of abuse, and might never do. As with ODIs, though, should we brace ourselves for a quadruple, something the Ranji Trophy last saw in 1948-49?

Robust, ruthless, riveting

Few bat with his sense of abandon and certainty, or his way of reducing cricket to its essentials

Ayaz Memon15-Feb-2008


The ball is meant to be hit, the bat is a wonderful instrument with which to do so
© Getty Images

When he walked even though the umpire had ruled him not out in the semi-final against Sri Lanka in the 2003 World Cup, Adam Gilchrist took a quantum leap to become my favourite cricketer. He had always hovered around the top – along with Brian Lara, Sachin Tendulkar, Steve Waugh, Jacques Kallis, Shane Warne, Muttiah Muralitharan and Rahul Dravid – but this extraordinary gesture was the clincher. It revealed that cricket was not just a sport but rather a way of life for him. I am an emotional, conservative sort in such matters.While the commercialisation of cricket has been good, there is a great deal to be said still for integrity. Alas, this quality is altogether too rare in the current game. Therefore, a player who thinks and behaves differently is one to cherish.And, by god, Gilchrist is an Aussie too! By his own admission, his decision to walk did not go down well with his team-mates. Ricky Ponting, if I remember correctly, was candidly critical of Gilchrist after that match, and there were rumblings of dissent from others too. But Gilchrist has been unfazed, indeed even more convinced that he would do it again.I know of scores of cricketers who would scoff at such an ethic. The craving for success blinds most of us to the need for honesty. Gains in the here and now are considered paramount, but Gilchrist’s story holds out an example; and a moral. Shortly after the World Cup, I am informed, he signed a record A$2 million deal with sports-goods manufacturer Puma. Yeah, good guys win too.But enough philosophising. Gilchrist does not need a moral certificate to establish his credentials. What makes him an all-time great is the plain and simple way he plays his cricket. The logic of his batsmanship is uncomplicated, unfussy: the ball is meant to be hit, the bat is a wonderful instrument with which to do so. Very, very few players in the history of the game have done this as easily or exhilaratingly. At the last World Cup I asked Wasim Akram which batsman he found the most difficult to bowl to. He named Tendulkar, Lara and Waugh, for obvious reasons, but rounded off his assessment with fulsome praise for Gilchrist. “He can hit the first ball he faces, or the best ball you bowl, for a four,” said the great Pakistani.That’s two fantastic virtues about batsmanship in one short sentence. Perhaps no more are necessary to describe Gilchrist’s cricketing prowess. Akram, of course, had had the earliest experience of Gilchrist’s ability. Pakistan were touring Australia when Gilchrist made his debut in 1999, scoring a rousing 81 in the first Test and a spectacular, match-winning, unbeaten 149 in the second after Pakistan had all but sewn up the match. Within a couple of weeks of playing international cricket, Gilchrist had quelled the uproar over Ian Healy’s ouster from the Australian side and given ample notice of his own genius.I watched that innings on television and wondered if it was a fluke, such was the derring-do and fluency. It seemed improbable that a batsman so young in international cricket could bat with such abandon, even if he had his wicketkeeping skills as a buffer against failure. But a little over a year later Gilchrist made another swashbuckling hundred, this time in Mumbai against India, which dispelled the doubts. Australia were in deep crisis when Gilchrist joined Matthew Hayden, and the two left-handers broke the shackles with a truly awesome display of power-hitting. What impressed me most about Gilchrist was his refusal to surrender even in a grave situation. He was cool, but only in demeanour. In his batting he was robust, ruthless, riveting. There is no better way to play the game. Gilchrist struggled on the slow turners in the subsequent Tests of that series as the Indian spinners bowled flatter at him and he forgot to use his feet. But the Mumbai hundred had established him as a man with pluck, passion, and the mental strength to tide over any crisis.

It is simplistic to say that Gilchrist is an exciting batsman. There are a few such around in contemporary cricket. But I doubt anyone bats with the same abandon or the same sense of certainty in strokeplay

A year later he played one of the more remarkable innings in cricket history – a hell-for-leather 204 to set up a win against South Africa. As he reveals in his book, Gilchrist was then going through deep emotional turmoil with the licentious press insinuating that his child was in fact his team-mate’s. To turn a crisis into a personal challenge and then into personal triumph appears to have become the hallmark of Gilchrist’s career. As mentioned earlier, he was a contentious replacement for Healy; now, apart from sundry blazing innings in Tests, he has also become arguably the best batsman in one-day cricket. When Steve Waugh, while eating ice-cream, made up his mind to open with Gilchrist, he was taking a huge gamble, which must now rate as a historic decision, for Australia have won two successive World Cups since.It is simplistic to say that Gilchrist is an exciting batsman. There are a few such around in contemporary cricket. But I doubt anyone bats with the same abandon or the same sense of certainty in strokeplay. He is lean and sinewy, with strong forearms that swing freely in his high back-lift and follow-through. Quick of eye and reflexes, he can adjust in a nanosecond to play off the front or back foot. He is orthodox in the sense that he drives through the line, but he is otherwise a tremendous improviser. I also rate him the best cutter and puller in contemporary cricket.I have not dwelt too much on his wicketkeeping because that is a given, otherwise he would never have made it to this level. Only Clyde Walcott, the big-built West Indian, exceeds Gilchrist’s batting average, but Walcott faded out as a wicketkeeper quickly and concentrated only on his batting. Gilchrist keeps wicket with greater athleticism (though he may lack Healy’s finesse at times) than any other keeper, and bats with the aplomb of a master. His strike-rate of 82 in Tests, 94 in one-dayers makes him perhaps the most dreaded in the world.Find me a More Valuable Player.

Game
Register
Service
Bonus