Scott Edwards takes Netherlands captaincy in his stride after mid-series coronation

Australia-raised batter takes over from Pieter Seelaar with sights set on T20 WC homecoming

Matt Roller21-Jun-2022Scott Edwards became the Netherlands’ seventh ODI captain on Sunday after Pieter Seelaar’s persistent back injury flared up and by the time he walked off the field at the close of play, he had succeeded him on a permanent basis.Seelaar’s retirement was confirmed midway through England’s run-chase and Edwards has been aware for some time that change was imminent, but speaking to ESPNcricinfo the day before the third and final ODI, he admitted that his new status as captain “hasn’t sunk in”.Edwards is an Australian by birth and was raised in Victoria but has always been aware of his Dutch heritage. “My grandma was born and raised here through the war, and moved across with my grandpa to Oz,” he said. “I was – weirdly – born in Tonga, which is where my old man was working, and grew up in Oz, but I’ve always had that family affiliation with the Netherlands.”He played a season of club cricket for Excelsior on the outskirts of Rotterdam in 2015 as an 18-year-old, fresh out of school, and formed a link with Ryan Campbell, who became the national team’s head coach in 2017.”I went back to Australia and started an electrical apprenticeship but I got halfway through and binned it off when the chance came,” Edwards explained. “I had a connection with Cambo when I was here and he just called me up when there was an opportunity for a tour. I haven’t looked back from there.”Edwards is one of a handful of contracted players in the Dutch set-up and earns a living through coaching, as well as playing club cricket for VOC in the Netherlands and for Richmond back home in Australia. “This is my base but I spend time in Australia if there’s not much cricket going on in the winter,” he said. “In the last couple of years it’s got less and less… I’ll be pretty much based here from now on.”If the Netherlands reach this year’s T20 World Cup – the second set of qualifiers are in Zimbabwe next month – then it will be a homecoming for Edwards, with the tournament due to take place in Australia from October 16. “I’ve got lots of family and friends over there who would come across and support the Dutch,” he said. “That would be pretty cool.”More immediately, one of Edwards’ first tasks in his new role is to improve his Dutch. “All our training is in English,” he said, “and I know a little bit [of Dutch] but it’s something I’m working on. I’m hoping that the more time I spend here, the better I’ll get. My life is obviously becoming more over here than it is in Australia and part of that becomes learning the language. I struggle with it, but I’m working on it.”As well as keeping tidily, Edwards has been hugely impressive with the bat against England, going into Wednesday’s third ODI with exactly 150 runs after innings of 72 not out off 56 balls and 78 off 73, the second of which included an audacious reverse-scoop for six off David Willey: “It was a last-minute decision,” he said with a grin, “and it came off.”He has been particularly comfortable against spin, scoring 78 runs off 58 balls against England’s slow bowlers, in keeping with his career as a whole: he is the only man to have faced more than 50 balls from Rashid Khan in ODI cricket without being dismissed and has been used effectively in the middle order.Related

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“As an Associate cricketer, this is as good as it gets,” Edwards said. “Even the Barmy Army coming across – it’s pretty surreal when you’re out there. We’ve had these moments where we’ve been well and truly in the game, we just have to have more of them. These big teams make you pay if you make mistakes so we’ve got to get a bit better with our fielding and catching, and when we’re on top with the bat, we’ve got to cash in like they have.”The Netherlands’ summer fixture list – which included West Indies’ tour earlier this month, with New Zealand and Pakistan due to tour last in the season – is their most high-profile schedule ever, thanks primarily to their involvement in the ODI Super League, earned by winning the World Cricket League in 2015-17.But the ICC have already confirmed that the Super League will be scrapped after its inaugural edition meaning that full-member nations will not have any contractual obligation to return. “It’s a massively disappointing one for us,” Edwards said. “There was a lot of hard work to get into the Super League and it’s been awesome being a part of it.”The more of these series that happen between full members and Associates, the closer that gap becomes. Hopefully we can keep getting these teams across to the Netherlands. It’s been nice to do well personally this week. As a team, it would be awesome to finish the series with a win.”

Hardik Pandya's rare all-round feat, and Rishabh Pant's career-best innings

The victory at Old Trafford helped India achieve only their fourth ODI series win in England

Sampath Bandarupalli17-Jul-20224 Bilateral ODI series wins for India in England. Their previous victories came in 2014, when they won 3-1; in 1986, when the series was level 1-1 but India were declared winners based on higher scoring rate; and in 1990, when India beat England 2-0.125* Rishabh Pant’s career-best score that led India to victory in the 3rd ODI at Old Trafford. It is the second highest score for an Indian wicketkeeper in England, after Rahul Dravid’s 145 against Sri Lanka during the 1999 World Cup. Pant’s 125* is also the second highest score for an Indian wicketkeeper in an ODI chase, behind MS Dhoni’s 183* against Sri Lanka in 2005.ESPNcricinfo Ltd2 Number of scores higher than Pant’s 125* while batting at No.4 or lower for India in an ODI chase. Virat Kohli scored 139* in Ranchi in 2014 and 133* in Hobart in 2012 while batting at No.4 against Sri Lanka.Related

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4 Players with 50-plus runs and 4-plus wickets for India in a men’s ODI. Before Hardik in the third ODI against England, the previous player to achieve this feat was Yuvraj Singh against Ireland in the 2011 World Cup. Hardik’s spell of 4 for 24 at Old Trafford was his career-best performance in ODIs. Coincidentally, his career-best figures in Tests and T20Is – 6 for 50 and 4 for 33 – have also come against England in England.ESPNcricinfo Ltd3 Number of ODI series lost by England at home since the start of 2015. Both their previous series defeats in this period came against Australia – in 2015 and 2020.19.2 England’s batting average in this series, their lowest in a men’s ODI competition comprising three or more games since July 2007.2011 The previous instance of India successfully completing an ODI chase after losing three or more wickets in the first ten overs – against West Indies in Cuttack. Since then, India had lost nine chases in which they lost three or more wickets, up until the victory against England at Old Trafford.

Devon Conway: 'Having success in T20 leagues has given me the backing that I can perform in any environment'

The New Zealand keeper-batter on playing in the IPL, tackling spin, and his side’s chances in the T20 World cup

Interview by Deivarayan Muthu13-Oct-20223:47

Devon Conway – ‘I know the importance of using the feet and sweeping in India’

Devon Conway has established himself as a reliable all-format player for New Zealand lately and is also making his presence felt on the T20 franchise circuit. He speaks here about his dual skills, stints with Somerset in the Vitality Blast and Chennai Super Kings in the IPL, and the prospect of New Zealand winning the T20 World Cup in Australia later this year.It has been almost two years since you made your international debut. How do you look back on your progress as an all-format player for New Zealand during this period?
I’ve been very fortunate to get the opportunity to play in all three formats. It has been good to get that support from my team-mates and the support staff. It has been a good two years for me, so I’m very happy with the way things have gone and just hoping to keep producing and contributing to the team as best possible, and just keep finding ways to improve as a player.You recently opened the batting with Martin Guptill in the T20Is in the Caribbean. Having also opened more regularly for Wellington Firebirds, is that a role you enjoy?
Yeah, I’m very happy to get the opportunity at the top of the order [for New Zealand]. I have a fair bit of experience batting up the order, especially for Wellington, and getting the opportunity to open the batting alongside Ruturaj Gaikwad at Chennai Super Kings and learning from him there, and also from Martin Guptill, who has played so much international cricket. Taking the gloves as well is something I enjoy.Related

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The 2021 T20 World Cup in the UAE was your first Asian tour since a schools visit of Sri Lanka in 2005. But you immediately adapted to the conditions and brought out a variety of sweeps, including the reverse.
That has been the exciting challenge, experiencing different conditions and pitches in different parts of the world, trying to practise and emulate as much as possible in terms of training on different pitches. Even in New Zealand, I tend to practise the different options I might have to use in the subcontinent or on wickets where there is a lot of pace and bounce. I still haven’t nailed it down as exactly as I want to, but it’s a great process for me to learn and develop different shots.Do you see adapting quickly to different conditions as one of your strengths?
I think I’m very lucky to have a lot of experience around me. I tend to ask the guys who have been to these parts of the world how they go about it, how they construct innings, and how they’ve had success in the past. I then try to adapt it into my game.The way you countered Rashid Khan, Mujeeb Ur Rahman and Mohammad Nabi with your sweeps and reverse sweeps in the 2021 T20 World Cup was impressive. Did you play a lot of these shots at training as well?
I certainly did train hard on sweeping – both the [conventional] sweep and reverse. We have a very good facility in Lincoln, where we can get onto a spin machine called the Merlin. I have spent hours on that machine, sweeping and reverse-sweeping, particularly for the subcontinent. Also, working closely with Chennai [Super Kings] in the IPL, speaking to guys there who have played in the subcontinent for a number of years, just working out how they go about their sweep and reverse sweep and trying to access that game.New Zealand adopted an aggressive batting approach during their recent European and Caribbean tours. Has there been a discussion about going hard at the top in the lead-up to the 2022 T20 World Cup?
We try and encourage positive batting to get the team off to a good start. [You] need to put the opposition bowlers under pressure as much as possible and always take the aggressive option whenever there’s a bit of a pressure moment. If it doesn’t quite work today, it doesn’t mean we change the approach tomorrow. And we get full support not only from the leadership [group] but from within the team and the support staff, saying, “Go out there and express yourself.” That is the sort of language and things we try to practise to get that positive start to an innings.”For me, it’s about adapting to the situation. I’m happy to bat anywhere in the top order, wherever it is best for the team”•ICC via GettyYour Wellington team-mate Michael Bracewell has emerged as a new star for New Zealand. You have likened Bracewell to Neil McKenzie, one of your heroes.
I think it’s Michael Bracewell’s calm nature – he is very down to earth. He is always willing to ask questions and always willing to help as well, like Neil McKenzie. Always happy to have a conversation around batting and trying to help with whatever he can.Does the firepower of Bracewell, Jimmy Neesham and Glenn Phillips down the order help free you at the top?
We have firepower throughout our line-up. I think Mitch Santner might have often batted at No. 8 or 9, and when you have him alongside Tim Southee, who also gives it a good hit, we’ve got so much batting that allows us to go out and play with freedom and know that even if we lose a couple of wickets, we’ve got plenty of batting to come and lots of power-hitters at the end of the innings to put us in a strong position.Even before you forged a career at New Zealand, you floated up and down the order while playing league cricket in the UK. Did those stints help you become more flexible as a batter?
Yes, certainly. I’ve batted in all different positions throughout my career and for me it’s about adapting to the situation. I’m happy to bat anywhere in the top order, wherever it is best for the team. It’s important that I adapt to whatever situation the game is in and try to contribute wherever I can – whether it is at the top of the order or in the middle order.How do you view your progress as a wicketkeeper and has that role had a positive impact on your batting as well?
I think so far it has been really good. I’ve put in a lot of work on my keeping and I work quite closely with Tom Blundell in Wellington. He helps me with my keeping in white-ball cricket. It has been really nice to get the opportunity to keep in T20 cricket. That has helped my confidence behind the stumps and I certainly look forward to that in the future.In terms of my batting, yes, keeping does help my batting. Even though we batted first every time against West Indies, I can only imagine if I kept first, it would have allowed me to get a feel of how the pitch is playing – basically play an innings before I’ve even batted. It gives me an opportunity to be really dialled in by watching the ball for 120 deliveries per innings.Conway scored 252 runs at a strike rate of 145.66 from seven innings in the 2022 IPL•BCCIOn that tour, the same pitch was used for all three T20Is in Jamaica. How did you deal with that as keeper and batter?
That was certainly a challenge. In the first game, the wicket was really good and as time went on, in the second game, it started to deteriorate a little bit more. Obviously in the third game, it deteriorated even further. It’s about understanding that the conditions are changing, knowing that certain shots might be a little bit of a challenge to play in the third game as compared to the first game. It was a good challenge, but a lot of credit needs to go to the Jamaican ground staff for getting the wicket up to speed again and making it suitable for us to play three T20s on one surface.A couple of years back you got into a negative mindset with respect to your keeping when you dropped a crucial catch off Neesham in the Plunket Shield. How did you overcome that?
I experienced that when I dropped a very important catch. It sort of made me feel like I was nervous as a keeper. It made my hands feel stiff and tense. The most important thing as a keeper is… if you look at MS Dhoni, who has been one of the best keepers in world cricket, is how relaxed his hands are, how quick they are when he takes the ball to the stumps. That’s a key thing and it’s very important as a keeper to keep wanting the ball to come through and keep expecting it to come through.You don’t want to find yourself in a position where you’re almost hoping that the batter hits the ball so that you’re not involved in the game. That’s the space I sort of had to get away from. I want to be more relaxed behind the stumps and make sure I’m ready to catch every ball – that changes your mindset behind the stumps. That is something I need to control, which has been a good learning curve for me to experience.How did working with sport psychologist Natalie Hogg at Wellington help you overcome negative feelings brought about by cricket as well as the Covid-19 pandemic?
She has been fantastic. I’ve been working with her for a good five years now. She knows how to get the best out of me and to be there when I want to talk about anything. She has been very supportive. She gives me clarity and keeps my mind positive and keeps me thinking about taking the clear options and backing myself. As a player, you’re not always going to have good days, so how to manage that pressure, giving yourself the best chance to perform and doing the job for the team. Natalie has been good not only for my keeping but also for my batting.What were your takeaways from your stint with Somerset at the Vitality Blast last year?
I absolutely loved my time with the Somerset team. I had known a couple of guys whom I had played with [in the second XIs] in 2010. A lot of those guys from then were playing in the first XI. Just getting the opportunity to bat with Tom Banton was also really cool. He’s such an explosive player and a great guy too. Also, it gave me the experience of playing as an overseas pro – a guy who has been signed to do the job and win matches for a county team. We made it to Finals Day, but unfortunately, I had to leave to play for the Southern Brave [in the Hundred], but yeah, to get the team through to Finals Day was very special.”[Keeping] gives me an opportunity to be really dialled in by watching the ball for 120 deliveries per innings”•Michael Steele/ICC/Getty ImagesDid you feel extra pressure as an overseas pro?
Yeah, I think for the first time in my career, I did feel a little bit of extra pressure. Before that, I’d never played as an overseas pro. It was a great learning curve for me to relax and just try and be myself, play the cricket I play and not be somebody different with the bat or the gloves. I was pretty grateful that I got that opportunity, and within a year I was signed to play for CSK. I’d gone through the experience with Somerset and I was able to deal with the pressures that came with being an overseas signing.Even before joining the IPL, you had the opportunity to work with CSK coach Stephen Fleming in the UAE ahead of the 2021 T20 World Cup. What was that like?
Working with Flem has been a very good opportunity as a player. We all know he is very experienced, so to learn from him and to get his advice around batting, especially as a fellow left-handed batter who gets the angles and plans.He is very clear with how he approaches things. He just brings that sense of clarity and calmness to my game, which I’m really grateful for. He’s a really good mentor to look up to. I’m very, very happy that he signed me for CSK, and hopefully I can continue playing many years for them in the future.You had a low-key start at CSK, then returned to South Africa for your wedding before coming back to score three successive half-centuries. Did being part of a franchise like CSK, which usually gives players a sense of security, help you deal with the highs and lows better?
It wasn’t so much of a challenge. Obviously, it didn’t go as well as I’d have liked to in the first game. With Moeen Ali being away during the first game, it gave me the opportunity to play, and even though I didn’t quite perform and we didn’t get the win, I was learning from that experience and then carrying the drinks for the next four-five games.I could sit back and learn from the guys – there was lot of experience in Robbie [Robin Uthappa], Rutu [Ruturaj Gaikwad] and Mahi [Dhoni] and Ambati Rayudu as well. Gathering information from them so when I did get the opportunity again, I felt a lot more comfortable with the job in hand. It allowed me to play with freedom and contribute with back-to-back fifties.Conway and Ruturaj Gaikwad had two century partnerships – 182 and 110 – for the opening stand in the 2022 IPL•BCCIThe highlights were your sweeps, of course, and the use of your feet against spin. How confident were using both those options?
Like I said, I practised pretty hard on those. I know the importance of playing those shots, particularly in India. I know I have to use those options, and like I said in one of the interviews during the IPL, I had to give credit to Mahi for the one game where he said: “I think you should use your feet and that is a strong option next game.” I certainly took that advice. Having the backing from the captain at the time and backing those options gave me more success against spin.There was also this shot against pace that stood out. Do you recall pumping a rapid delivery from Umran Malik over extra cover?
I remember it vividly, because Umran was bowling very quick that night. He is an exciting young fast bowler, but I think a lot of credit needs to go to Ruturaj, because he was on strike when Umran Malik came into the attack, and I think first [fourth] ball he hit him straight over his head for six. That sort of settled the nerves and we said, “Right, we can put him under pressure.” The way Ruturaj played gave us the confidence to try and play the same way against him.Since you are particularly strong against spin, teams tend to attack you with out-and-out quicks. Has playing the likes of Lockie Ferguson and Adam Milne in the nets helped you prepare better for that match-up?
It’s been a massive help facing these guys at the nets. Obviously not comfortable to face really fast bowling at the nets, but it gives you the chance to sharpen up your reaction time and find a way to face these fast bowlers, because every country these days has bowlers who bowl 145-150kph. It really keeps you in tune with your reaction time and your decision-making, so we’re lucky to have these bowlers in our environment.You were in South Africa when MS Dhoni finished the game off against Mumbai Indians and followed that finish from a restaurant in Johannesburg.
I was very upset that I wasn’t at that game to see it live. We know there is a huge rivalry between CSK and Mumbai, so I was very disappointed to not be there. But then again, just to see it on TV and to see how calm and collected Mahi and DJ [Bravo] were to finish off the game – yes, I was watching it in a restaurant from Johannesburg on the night before my wedding. It was almost like a little wedding present from them. It was a very special evening.”We will take a lot of confidence from the previous World Cup and implement it in our campaign this year in Australia and hopefully we can get across the line in the final”•Francois Nel/Getty ImagesHow much confidence has playing and succeeding in the big T20 leagues given you?
One, it gave me the backing that I can perform in different conditions in different parts of the world. There is a lot of pressure that comes with batting and there’s an element of self-doubt every now and then. You are never sure how it’s going to go, but once you feel like you’re contributing in these matches, it gives you confidence in your own ability. Having success for those particular teams has really helped me grow as a player and given the backing that I can perform for any team in any environment.A bizarre injury, where you broke your hand striking your bat in disappointment after being dismissed in the semi-final, sidelined you from the T20 World Cup final against Australia last year. How long did it take for you to get over it?
It was obviously very disappointing to go through that injury and it was a moment of madness. It was a very silly moment that I will remember for a long time. It took me about eight weeks to get over the injury and it put me out of the Indian white-ball tour straight after the World Cup. I certainly won’t be doing that again anytime soon.What are New Zealand’s chances of winning their first T20 world title?
I think we certainly have a good chance. We have a strong, powerful group of players who have been through the [last] World Cup and have performed, and we were very close to winning it. We will take a lot of confidence and learnings from the previous World Cup and implement it in our campaign this year in Australia and hopefully we can get across the line in the final.We will assess the grounds in Australia very quickly. We have a few guys who have played pretty much at all these grounds, so they will have good intel and experience as to how we can approach it. We need to ensure that we take the dimensions of the ground into consideration and that we execute shots that suit the fields that we’re going to play on.

Dimitri Mascarenhas: 'Keep it simple, bowl our best balls for as long as we can'

London Spirit’s bowling coach on pushing for the knockouts, future ambitions and doing it for Warne

Matt Roller29-Aug-2022How would you evaluate your bowlers’ performance this season?
We’ve got some good ones, haven’t we? They’ve performed really well. They do their own scouting and we come up with plans for each batter, but at the end of the day, we try and keep it simple: we bowl our best balls for as long as we can, and that has been working. We can still get a lot better at the death – I don’t think our death bowling has been great – but we’ve performed consistently up front.Related

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There is a Hampshire flavour to your squad – and your bowling attack in particular. Is it fair to attribute that to the fact you’ve been involved?
I think it’s a little bit of a coincidence. Being a Hampshire person, I probably know those bowlers a bit better than other guys around the country. That’s helped with securing them. We brought Chris Wood back and had retained Brad Wheal and Mason Crane. We targeted Liam Dawson in the draft as well because we know how well he’s been bowling at all stages of the game. Those guys won the Vitality Blast this year as well, so they came in with a lot of confidence.Nathan Ellis was part of their Blast-winning team as well. He’s only taken five wickets but has been the tightest regular death bowler in the competition.
He’s had a little taste now of international cricket and you can see that in the way that he prepares. He’s a tough trainer: he works really hard and is always looking to get better. He’s got a really good white-ball skillset. He nails his yorkers as good as anyone, and he’s got a really gun slower ball.Dimitri Mascarenhas has held coaching roles with Melbourne Renegades, New Zealand and Essex•Getty ImagesWhat have you made of Jordan Thompson? He’s the joint-highest wicket-taker in the competition.
I’ve been very impressed. I hadn’t seen a lot of him, other than in the Big Bash last year where he had a pretty tough time of it. It’s good to see him getting some rewards. He’s worked really hard on his death bowling where it’s always tough, so hopefully he can play a big part in the final stages.What has your role been as bowling coach?
I do a fair bit of scouting myself, look at all the footage and come up with ideas. But at the end of the day, it’s up to them; I’m just a sounding board. If they need anything, I’m there to offer any help I can. Sometimes they take that information, sometimes they don’t, but what can you do? They’re the ones out there, and they’ve been brilliant. My philosophy is to keep it as simple as possible.Do you have any other coaching roles lined up?
I’ve had a taste of international cricket with New Zealand but I’d love to do a bit more franchise stuff over the next little while. It was good to play in the IPL during my career and it’d be nice to get back there at some stage. That’d be awesome. I was at Melbourne Renegades for three years and have had stints over here with Middlesex and Essex, which I loved, but I’m not doing much else at the minute.How have you enjoyed working with Eoin Morgan, your captain? Has he changed much since his international retirement?
You don’t see a noticeable difference but it’s been nice to see him go out there and get some runs. All the lads are loving his captaincy style, especially the bowlers. He gives them a lot of rope to do what they want to do. You know how Morgs likes to work: very relaxed, go about your business and play some positive, aggressive cricket, and have some fun.Mascarenhas poses with Shane Warne•AFP/Getty ImagesYou were close friends with Shane Warne, who coached Spirit last season but passed away earlier this year. Can you tell us about your relationship with him?
I’d known him for 20-odd years and we became really close, pretty much from the start. We had a lot of common interests: golf, poker… I spent a lot of time with his family as well, so I’m really close to all his kids. They’ve all been over here at some stage over the last three weeks. Warnie was an absolute legend. Everyone misses him dearly.Has he been discussed much throughout the Hundred?
Not a lot, to be honest. Darren Berry, who was very close with Warnie as well, is over here from Victoria [working as an assistant coach] and we mentioned it at the start. He played a huge part in setting up this team and the lads know that. He’s still here with us.How would it feel to go on and win the tournament for him?
We’ve got to try and make the finals first. His eldest daughter, Brooke, will be here tomorrow night. It’ll be nice to have her in the stands watching for what is a crunch, knockout game for us: we could finish top if we win; if we lose, we could be out. Warnie was desperate to come back and make amends for last year but I think we’ve done him proud so far: one more big game to go.

South Africa's big five questions: Captain, communication, pitches all on the to-fix agenda

South Africa, the Test team, are at a fork in the road – here’s what they need to address to revive their results and reputation

Firdose Moonda09-Jan-2023At least it is over. South Africa’s first series defeat in Australia since 2005-06 ended with a glimmer of hope after they resisted being swept 3-0 in Sydney. But even as they saved face, they were forced to confront the uncomfortable truth that they have fallen behind the top Test teams.”It’s important for us to be honest with ourselves in terms of where we are,” interim coach Malibongwe Maketa said. “As a country, we want to be competing against the top three [teams], but we don’t have the Test caps that they have at the moment. We’ve done well against them in the past, and unfortunately now they are slightly better than us. We brought the best team that we had, and we didn’t compete.”Some of South Africa’s problems are structural – thanks to a first-class system with not enough fixtures and players who cannot successfully step up to international cricket – and others are just plain bad luck. After beating India at home this time last year, they have had one first-choice batter sit out of every tour since due to illness or injury, which has meant that their best line-up has not been able to play together.Related

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You could argue that even if Keegan Petersen, Rassie van der Dussen and Temba Bavuma were all fit and firing at the same time, none of them even has a Test average above 35; you would be right in wondering if it would have made that much of a difference at all. The reality is that the deep-seated issues – lack of confidence, tough pitches, a weak domestic competition, and a scant Test schedule in the next cycle – cannot be solved by any one, or even three people, alone.It needs, as Maketa put it, a full-scale “reassessment”, and “the right processes in place”. It needs change. This is South African red-ball cricket’s fork-in-the-road moment, and there are some key areas they need to put in the spotlight to resurrect their Test fortunes.

The coach: two to succeed Mark Boucher

The change will start at the top with CSA due to appoint new coaches by mid-January following Mark Boucher’s resignation last year. The role will be split in two, with the Test coach also playing an overseeing role in the domestic first-class set-up, and a white-ball coach to head the ODI and T20I teams.Mark Boucher resigned as South Africa coach last year•Getty ImagesMaketa was shortlisted alongside Adi Birrell, Shukri Conrad, Rob Walter, Lance Klusener and Richard Pybus. Interviews were conducted three weeks ago, and ESPNcricinfo understands a decision will be made in the next ten days, with Conrad and Klusener understood to be the front-runners for the roles of Test and white-ball coach, respectively. At least two of the candidates listed have other offers or jobs elsewhere, and would need CSA to make them an offer in the next few days if they are to accept.There were no international names on the shortlist, which already says something about how attractive the job of coaching South Africa is (not very), and the kind of money on offer (not much compared with other countries).Once head coaches are appointed, CSA can turn its attention to a technically-strong support staff. Currently, South Africa have Justin Sammons, Charl Langeveldt, and Justin Ontong as batting, bowling and fielding coaches, respectively, but other former players such as Vernon Philander and Hashim Amla may also come into contention. CSA will also need to find a High Performance head, as Vincent Barnes will be retiring later this year.

The captaincy: time to give Dean Elgar, the batter, some space?

Dean Elgar has been in charge for Tests for less than two years, after taking over in complicated times when the Quinton de Kock experiment failed. Though he is South Africa’s most experienced Test player, was the obvious choice at the time and did a good rallying job upfront, the leadership appears to be taking its toll on his primary job: batting. Since being appointed full-time captain in March 2021, Elgar has not scored a single hundred, and averages 28.40, a serious drop from his average of nearly 41 when not playing as captain.Apart from his form, there are other concerns with Elgar’s leadership: from his knack of talking a much better game than he plays, to the way he manages his bowlers and field placings. Ian Chappell specifically dissected where Elgar went wrong in Australia, and it provides much food for thought about how Elgar has handled situations in other series.Temba Bavuma has been a poor choice as T20I captain, while leadership appears to be taking a toll on Dean Elgar’s batting•AFP/Getty ImagesOn the England tour in mid-2022, a stand-out blunder – though it was not Elgar’s alone – happened on the morning of the second Test in Manchester, when South Africa changed their winning combination from Lord’s to select a second spinner which turned out to be a complete misjudgement. Their team composition then forced them to bat first on a seamer’s surface, and the rest is history.South Africa’s entire leadership structure needs a relook, with Bavuma a poor choice as T20I captain – and even as a player in the format – and better suited to longer-format leadership. It is plausible that Bavuma could be moved to lead the Test side – although it’s also worth remembering that he has not scored a second Test century since his first one came in January 2016 – while someone like David Miller could take over both the short-format teams. That would free Elgar up to do what he does best: score runs.

The top six: proactivity needed in the era of Bazball

If Elgar and Bavuma are to be retained for now, the only other batter that should be part of future plans is Kyle Verreynne. He is the only member of the top six that is under the age of 30, and has shown glimpses of the talent that sees him boast a first-class average of over 50. Verreynne is a modern batter who is aggressive against the short ball as also against spin, and is fearless in playing his strokes, qualities which the rest of South Africa’s top six lack.They are made up of slow starters, steady blockers and those with a defensive mindset which may have worked in Test cricket a decade ago, but is simply not the way the game is being played at the moment. If South Africa are to keep up with the pace of Test cricket and join the Bazball-style revolution, they need batters who can score runs at a higher tempo, take risks and advance the game.CSA said Ryan Rickelton “has an ankle injury that forced him to be overlooked by national selectors, but allows him to be picked by his domestic team”•Lee Warren/Gallo ImagesOf course, the likes of Tristan Stubbs and Dewald Brewis need to rack up some numbers in first-class cricket before they can be fast-tracked into the national set up; but already, Tony de Zorzi, Jordan Hermann, Matthew Breetzke and Ryan Rickelton should be looked at.And speaking of Rickelton, our next point…

Communication: CSA falling behind in this game

Perhaps even weaker than South Africa’s batting is CSA’s lack of clear communication, and Rickelton is a case in point. After debuting – without shooting the lights out – at home against Bangladesh, Rickelton picked up an ankle injury after the England tour that requires surgery but can be managed for now. He opted to delay going under the knife, in the hope he could play this summer: in Australia, at the SA20 and against West Indies. He was wrong.When CSA found out about the injury, it opted not to take him to Australia for fear that if it worsened, it would not be able to fly a replacement out in time. So far, so good. Except that in a baffling press statement, CSA said that Rickelton “has an ankle injury that forced him to be overlooked by the national selectors, but allows him to still be picked by his domestic team”.At best, that is clumsily worded. At worst, it is a way of deflecting from revealing the full story – something the board did with Lizelle Lee’s retirement, and which it routinely does with selections that are made with transformation targets in mind – and creates a culture of distrust among players and fans. And it blew up badly for CSA when Rickelton then went on to score four hundreds – two each in first-class and List A cricket – across five matches. He may not be the saviour the Test team needs, but having him at home just looked bad.The players are understood to be frustrated by a lack of clarity in the communication, and have – through their association – asked for improvement. That includes a relook at the first-class structure, because they all recognise it is not fit for purpose.Interim coach Malibongwe Maketa is among those who has advocated for less-hostile domestic pitches•ESPNcricinfo Ltd/Sidharth Monga

The pitches: less spice for more reward

It is a well-worn trope that South African surfaces are some of the toughest – if not the toughest – to bat on in the world, and have bred a generation of batters who cannot play free-flowing and high-octane cricket. And so there have been calls for that to change. Maketa is among those who has advocated for less-hostile domestic pitches to produce better international batters.”With the younger batters, do we expose them to better wickets to get enough runs to perform at this level, or do we say that we are a team that’s going to win at home and we make it difficult for people coming?” Maketa said.”We come here, and on good wickets, our control is going to be challenged. If we are comfortable to win at home, we can leave it the way it is, but we want to be successful all around the world. To win the World Test Championship, you have to come here [in Australia] and win; you have to go to India and win. We don’t want to be a team that only wins at home.”CSA has recognised this, and is making a concerted effort to make domestic pitches less spicy to encourage more run-scoring. The number of hundreds produced in the first-half of the four-day competition this season – 16 – shows it is paying off. But it is only the start. It will likely take several seasons for this change to bear fruit.

Gill magic makes an unusual batting method look perfectly natural

His whole game is centered around his back foot, to the extent he plays some completely unique shots

Karthik Krishnaswamy11-Mar-20232:01

Tait: Shubman Gill has a huge future ahead of him

Cricket is beautiful for an endless list of reasons. One of them is just how differently two batters will play the same ball, from the same bowler, landing on the same spot on the same pitch.Take the fast bowler’s good-length ball aiming to finish near the top of off stump. Some batters might typically play it off the back foot, and some off the front foot. Some might get right behind the line and punch to mid-on, some might stay leg-side of the ball and dab with soft hands towards gully, while some others might shuffle across their stumps and work it to square leg. Some batters can do any of these things, depending on the conditions, the quality of the bowling, and the match situation.Related

  • Patient Australia made to grind hard for big rewards

  • Gill century leads strong India reply on day of attrition

  • Gill showcases his all-format expertise with latest century

On Saturday, Mitchell Starc bowled one such ball to Shubman Gill, delivering from left-arm around and clocking 139kph. He’d been achieving a bit of reverse-swing from that angle, and he’d largely been attacking the stumps through this spell, bowling a length that was on the fuller side of good. There were two fielders back on the hook, though, so there was always the threat that a bouncer could be on its way.Gill was perhaps shaping for the short ball when Starc delivered this one. It wasn’t short, but perhaps on the shorter side of a good length. On this pitch in Ahmedabad, it was still ending up somewhere near the top of off stump.Other Test-quality batters, facing that same Starc delivery, would have offered other responses to it. Gill played a shot that’s all his own and no one else’s. It wasn’t a pull, and it wasn’t a short-arm jab either. Gill plays the short-arm jab as well as anyone in the game, but that’s an angled-bat shot.No, this was a perfectly straight-bat shot, sort of like a back-foot straight drive finishing with left elbow high. It was a back-foot straight drive in every way other than orientation, because rather than running away down the ground, this shot beat short midwicket to his right and left deep square leg in futile pursuit to his left.Gill moved from 51 to 55, and Starc, walking back to his mark, wore a grin that combined admiration, disbelief and resignation. How on earth do you play a shot like that?In his press conference at the end of the day’s play, Gill explained that he developed this shot as a byproduct of learning to pull and hook fast bowling in his formative years. “I used to practice playing bouncers with a plastic ball on cement, and the balls that were a little fuller, it just kind of developed, because I practiced it over and over and it was more instinctive than anything else.”Set up for the pull, play the straight-bat, wide-of-midwicket drive if it isn’t quite short enough.Shubman Gill’s game is built around his back foot play•BCCIIt’s remarkable how much of Gill’s batting revolves around the pull. He stands tall at the crease, holds his bat up with his hands by his back hip – he holds it incredibly still, without waggling it around like so many others do – and as the bowler releases his bat goes higher still, and wider, in a backlift that often takes his hands away from his body.It’s the perfect position from which to pull, with the bat going from high to low, allowing him to control the shot and hit it along the ground most times. And when the ball is fractionally short outside off stump, he can drop his bat down along the line of the ball and send it scudding through point or cover with minimal follow-through. It’s another hugely fascinating Gill shot, neither a cut nor a punch, with his bat angle somewhere in between the horizontal of the former and the vertical of the latter, and he played it on multiple occasions on both Friday and Saturday in Ahmedabad.Gill’s set-up, basically, is built for attacking back-foot play against fast bowling, and if you’re watching him for the first time you might wonder how he’ll cope against bowling that’s fuller, either in the corridor or attacking his stumps. He’ll surely bring his bat down at an angle, you might think, and play across the line.But if you’ve watched him enough, you’ll know he’s just one of those incredibly gifted players who make unusual methods work, and make it look entirely natural. Part of the secret is just how still his head is, and how good his balance is as a consequence: seldom does his head fall over and cause him problems.Not long after that remarkable shot against Starc, Gill had an opportunity to show off this balance, as Cameron Green searched for lbw with a full ball angling into off and middle. Gill’s bat came down perfectly straight, down the line of the ball, and it simply pinged away off the face of his bat between mid-on and midwicket.

“This is what I told myself again and again, that if I got another opportunity, I’d not put pressure on myself to convert when I got set, but remain free-flowing. It was more mental, and that’s what I mostly focused on.”Shubman Gill

Green’s hands, for seemingly no reason whatsoever, went up towards his head.Gill barely moves – and barely seems to need to – against fast bowling, and sometimes, you wonder if he has the footwork to cope against quality spin. When you watch him from front-on, he doesn’t seem to stride all that much when he defends spin off the front foot.But at one point during his 113-run second-wicket stand with Cheteshwar Pujara, the TV commentators pulled up side-on footage of both batters defending off the front foot. Gill’s stride, which had looked so effortless from front-on that it had seemed like no real stride at all, was massive, so much so that in this particular example he seemed to be over-striding and ending up with his head behind the ball. Pujara’s stride, considerably shorter, put his head on top of the ball.It was just one example of over-striding, of course, and in Ahmedabad, Gill was troubled by neither pace nor spin, to the extent that there were only ten false shots in his 235-ball innings.The day had begun with Gill batting on 18, and on this surface, it felt as though he had a hundred for the taking if he batted through the first hour or so. Such has been his form, across formats, that the sight of good batting conditions immediately raises expectations of a big score. Gill is squarely to blame for this, having come into this series with scores of 116, 208, 40*, 112, 7, 11 and 126* in his last seven international innings.He had to wait his turn, though, with the team management backing KL Rahul through a run of lean scores. Asked about this, Gill said not only that he was fine having to wait, but also that it was fair for India to have given Rahul a long run after he’d found a route back into the side on the back of an injury to Gill.”I think I got out of the team when I got injured in 2021 after the World Test Championship [final] and then obviously KL came in and he did really well for us,” Gill said. “He scored a century in England, and at that period, to be honest with you, I don’t think I had performed as well in Test cricket, up to that point, up to my expectations.1:52

Gill didn’t live up to his own expectations at the start of his Test career

“[I was looking] just to be able to keep trying to get better at certain areas that I wanted to work on. If you’re doing the right things, you’ll get your chance, and then it’s just about performing, and that’s what I was trying to look [at].”One of the areas Gill worked on was his mental approach after he’d failed to convert a series of starts, referring to a period during which he scored 52, 1, 44 and 47 in two Tests against New Zealand at home in late 2021, and then 17 and 4 in the one-off Test in Birmingham in July 2022.”I felt that when I was getting set, I was getting over-defensive, I was getting too cautious, thinking ‘I’m now set, I to convert this [into a big one],’ and putting myself under a lot of pressure. That’s not my game. Once I’m set, I get into a rhythm, and that’s my game.”It was about understanding that I was fine if I got out playing my way rather than playing in a way that wasn’t mine. I was getting set and getting out defending. I felt that I’d accept it if I was set and got out playing a shot – I’d know it was a shot I play well, and that I didn’t execute it – but I got caught up trying to adapt my game into something it wasn’t, and that wasn’t acceptable. This is what I told myself again and again, that if I got another opportunity, I’d not put pressure on myself to convert when I got set, but remain free-flowing. It was more mental, and that’s what I mostly focused on.”It’s not that Gill can’t defend, of course. You don’t reel off hundreds like Gill has done at every level if you don’t have a defence. Gill’s advice to himself was more to do with staying in the moment and being himself.Gill was himself right through his innings of 128 in Ahmedabad. He was himself when he stepped out and launched Nathan Lyon for a towering six in the last over of day two. He was himself while sauntering to his half-century off 90 balls. In the post-lunch session, when Steven Smith got his bowlers to dry up the runs by packing one side of the field, Gill went through a phase when he scored nine runs off 53 balls – he was resolutely himself then as well.And soon enough, Green, bowling to a 6-3 leg-side field and reversing the ball into the stumps, bowled two balls that didn’t quite reverse enough. Gill punched the first one through cover point without having to move his feet, and drove the second gloriously, with a small step forward to transfer his weight into the shot, between extra-cover and mid-off.There is time in Test cricket, and entire days of it on pitches like this one in Ahmedabad. Gill is used to having time, even when it’s just that extra millisecond he seems to have that most others don’t while facing the fastest of bowlers. His batting style is utterly unique, but there’s a timeless, willowy grace to it too, which he often accentuates, like he did in Ahmedabad, by batting in full sleeves.Gill’s batting is all about time, and Test cricket is the natural home for it. In Ahmedabad, a feeling that has gathered momentum over the past few months struck you once again, with even greater force. Gill’s time is the here and the now and the foreseeable future.

Gill magic makes an unusual batting method look perfectly natural

His whole game is centered around his back foot, to the extent he plays some completely unique shots

Karthik Krishnaswamy11-Mar-20232:01

Tait: Shubman Gill has a huge future ahead of him

Cricket is beautiful for an endless list of reasons. One of them is just how differently two batters will play the same ball, from the same bowler, landing on the same spot on the same pitch.Take the fast bowler’s good-length ball aiming to finish near the top of off stump. Some batters might typically play it off the back foot, and some off the front foot. Some might get right behind the line and punch to mid-on, some might stay leg-side of the ball and dab with soft hands towards gully, while some others might shuffle across their stumps and work it to square leg. Some batters can do any of these things, depending on the conditions, the quality of the bowling, and the match situation.Related

Patient Australia made to grind hard for big rewards

Gill century leads strong India reply on day of attrition

Gill showcases his all-format expertise with latest century

On Saturday, Mitchell Starc bowled one such ball to Shubman Gill, delivering from left-arm around and clocking 139kph. He’d been achieving a bit of reverse-swing from that angle, and he’d largely been attacking the stumps through this spell, bowling a length that was on the fuller side of good. There were two fielders back on the hook, though, so there was always the threat that a bouncer could be on its way.Gill was perhaps shaping for the short ball when Starc delivered this one. It wasn’t short, but perhaps on the shorter side of a good length. On this pitch in Ahmedabad, it was still ending up somewhere near the top of off stump.Other Test-quality batters, facing that same Starc delivery, would have offered other responses to it. Gill played a shot that’s all his own and no one else’s. It wasn’t a pull, and it wasn’t a short-arm jab either. Gill plays the short-arm jab as well as anyone in the game, but that’s an angled-bat shot.No, this was a perfectly straight-bat shot, sort of like a back-foot straight drive finishing with left elbow high. It was a back-foot straight drive in every way other than orientation, because rather than running away down the ground, this shot beat short midwicket to his right and left deep square leg in futile pursuit to his left.Gill moved from 51 to 55, and Starc, walking back to his mark, wore a grin that combined admiration, disbelief and resignation. How on earth do you play a shot like that?In his press conference at the end of the day’s play, Gill explained that he developed this shot as a byproduct of learning to pull and hook fast bowling in his formative years. “I used to practice playing bouncers with a plastic ball on cement, and the balls that were a little fuller, it just kind of developed, because I practiced it over and over and it was more instinctive than anything else.”Set up for the pull, play the straight-bat, wide-of-midwicket drive if it isn’t quite short enough.Shubman Gill’s game is built around his back foot play•BCCIIt’s remarkable how much of Gill’s batting revolves around the pull. He stands tall at the crease, holds his bat up with his hands by his back hip – he holds it incredibly still, without waggling it around like so many others do – and as the bowler releases his bat goes higher still, and wider, in a backlift that often takes his hands away from his body.It’s the perfect position from which to pull, with the bat going from high to low, allowing him to control the shot and hit it along the ground most times. And when the ball is fractionally short outside off stump, he can drop his bat down along the line of the ball and send it scudding through point or cover with minimal follow-through. It’s another hugely fascinating Gill shot, neither a cut nor a punch, with his bat angle somewhere in between the horizontal of the former and the vertical of the latter, and he played it on multiple occasions on both Friday and Saturday in Ahmedabad.Gill’s set-up, basically, is built for attacking back-foot play against fast bowling, and if you’re watching him for the first time you might wonder how he’ll cope against bowling that’s fuller, either in the corridor or attacking his stumps. He’ll surely bring his bat down at an angle, you might think, and play across the line.But if you’ve watched him enough, you’ll know he’s just one of those incredibly gifted players who make unusual methods work, and make it look entirely natural. Part of the secret is just how still his head is, and how good his balance is as a consequence: seldom does his head fall over and cause him problems.Not long after that remarkable shot against Starc, Gill had an opportunity to show off this balance, as Cameron Green searched for lbw with a full ball angling into off and middle. Gill’s bat came down perfectly straight, down the line of the ball, and it simply pinged away off the face of his bat between mid-on and midwicket.

“This is what I told myself again and again, that if I got another opportunity, I’d not put pressure on myself to convert when I got set, but remain free-flowing. It was more mental, and that’s what I mostly focused on.”Shubman Gill

Green’s hands, for seemingly no reason whatsoever, went up towards his head.Gill barely moves – and barely seems to need to – against fast bowling, and sometimes, you wonder if he has the footwork to cope against quality spin. When you watch him from front-on, he doesn’t seem to stride all that much when he defends spin off the front foot.But at one point during his 113-run second-wicket stand with Cheteshwar Pujara, the TV commentators pulled up side-on footage of both batters defending off the front foot. Gill’s stride, which had looked so effortless from front-on that it had seemed like no real stride at all, was massive, so much so that in this particular example he seemed to be over-striding and ending up with his head behind the ball. Pujara’s stride, considerably shorter, put his head on top of the ball.It was just one example of over-striding, of course, and in Ahmedabad, Gill was troubled by neither pace nor spin, to the extent that there were only ten false shots in his 235-ball innings.The day had begun with Gill batting on 18, and on this surface, it felt as though he had a hundred for the taking if he batted through the first hour or so. Such has been his form, across formats, that the sight of good batting conditions immediately raises expectations of a big score. Gill is squarely to blame for this, having come into this series with scores of 116, 208, 40*, 112, 7, 11 and 126* in his last seven international innings.He had to wait his turn, though, with the team management backing KL Rahul through a run of lean scores. Asked about this, Gill said not only that he was fine having to wait, but also that it was fair for India to have given Rahul a long run after he’d found a route back into the side on the back of an injury to Gill.”I think I got out of the team when I got injured in 2021 after the World Test Championship [final] and then obviously KL came in and he did really well for us,” Gill said. “He scored a century in England, and at that period, to be honest with you, I don’t think I had performed as well in Test cricket, up to that point, up to my expectations.1:52

Gill didn’t live up to his own expectations at the start of his Test career

“[I was looking] just to be able to keep trying to get better at certain areas that I wanted to work on. If you’re doing the right things, you’ll get your chance, and then it’s just about performing, and that’s what I was trying to look [at].”One of the areas Gill worked on was his mental approach after he’d failed to convert a series of starts, referring to a period during which he scored 52, 1, 44 and 47 in two Tests against New Zealand at home in late 2021, and then 17 and 4 in the one-off Test in Birmingham in July 2022.”I felt that when I was getting set, I was getting over-defensive, I was getting too cautious, thinking ‘I’m now set, I to convert this [into a big one],’ and putting myself under a lot of pressure. That’s not my game. Once I’m set, I get into a rhythm, and that’s my game.”It was about understanding that I was fine if I got out playing my way rather than playing in a way that wasn’t mine. I was getting set and getting out defending. I felt that I’d accept it if I was set and got out playing a shot – I’d know it was a shot I play well, and that I didn’t execute it – but I got caught up trying to adapt my game into something it wasn’t, and that wasn’t acceptable. This is what I told myself again and again, that if I got another opportunity, I’d not put pressure on myself to convert when I got set, but remain free-flowing. It was more mental, and that’s what I mostly focused on.”It’s not that Gill can’t defend, of course. You don’t reel off hundreds like Gill has done at every level if you don’t have a defence. Gill’s advice to himself was more to do with staying in the moment and being himself.Gill was himself right through his innings of 128 in Ahmedabad. He was himself when he stepped out and launched Nathan Lyon for a towering six in the last over of day two. He was himself while sauntering to his half-century off 90 balls. In the post-lunch session, when Steven Smith got his bowlers to dry up the runs by packing one side of the field, Gill went through a phase when he scored nine runs off 53 balls – he was resolutely himself then as well.And soon enough, Green, bowling to a 6-3 leg-side field and reversing the ball into the stumps, bowled two balls that didn’t quite reverse enough. Gill punched the first one through cover point without having to move his feet, and drove the second gloriously, with a small step forward to transfer his weight into the shot, between extra-cover and mid-off.There is time in Test cricket, and entire days of it on pitches like this one in Ahmedabad. Gill is used to having time, even when it’s just that extra millisecond he seems to have that most others don’t while facing the fastest of bowlers. His batting style is utterly unique, but there’s a timeless, willowy grace to it too, which he often accentuates, like he did in Ahmedabad, by batting in full sleeves.Gill’s batting is all about time, and Test cricket is the natural home for it. In Ahmedabad, a feeling that has gathered momentum over the past few months struck you once again, with even greater force. Gill’s time is the here and the now and the foreseeable future.

Stats – Virat Kohli ends his Test century drought; Nathan Lyon tops Derek Underwood

Stats highlights from the fourth day in Ahmedabad, where Virat Kohli scored his first Test ton since November 2019

Sampath Bandarupalli12-Mar-202341 Consecutive innings in Test cricket without a hundred for Virat Kohli before his century in Ahmedabad. Kohli’s previous longest run without a Test century was 13 innings – before his maiden hundred in 2012.Kohli’s last Test century, his 27th hundred, came against Bangladesh in November 2019 in Kolkata, where he scored 136 in the day-night match. Kohli scored 1028 runs at an average of 25.70 with six fifties in the 41 innings during his century drought.15 Test innings without a fifty for Kohli before his 186-run knock in Ahmedabad, his longest streak without a fifty-plus score in Test cricket. His previous longest streak without a Test fifty was ten innings in 2014.8 Hundreds for Kohli in the Border-Gavaskar Trophy, the joint-second most by any batter. Sachin Tendulkar leads the list with nine tons, while Ricky Ponting and Steven Smith have eight centuries each.241 Balls Kohli needed to complete his century. It is the second slowest of Kohli’s 28 hundreds in Test cricket. His slowest century came against England in Nagpur in 2012 off 289 balls.3 Instances of fifty-plus partnerships for each of the first six wickets in a Test innings, including India in Ahmedabad. Australia became the first team with six fifty-plus stands for first six wickets during their first innings against West Indies in 1960 Brisbane Test, while Pakistan replicated the feat against Bangladesh in 2015 in Khulna.10 Sixes hit by India during their first innings, the most by them in a Test innings against Australia. Previous highest were eight sixes – in Mumbai, 1986 and Chennai, 2013. It is only the fourth instance where Australia bowlers got hit for ten or more sixes in a Test innings.56 Wickets for Nathan Lyon in Test cricket against India in India. Lyon’s 56 wickets in India have come in 11 Tests with five five-wicket hauls. These are the most wickets for a visiting bowler in India, surpassing Derek Underwood, who had 54 scalps in 16 matches.178.5 Overs batted by India during their first innings in Ahmedabad, their longest Test innings in nearly six years. They batted 210 overs in their first innings in the Ranchi Test in March 2017 against Australia.

South Africa, West Indies and the fight to protect Test cricket

Players and staff from both sides make stirring calls to invest in the game outside of the Big Three

Firdose Moonda07-Mar-2023Just underneath the West Indies’ crest on his practice kit, Kraigg Brathwaite wears a badge of personal significance. It’s a photograph of his late grandparents, one of whom passed away just two years ago, and if he could, he would put it on his match day whites as well. While that’s not allowed, Brathwaite has the pin on him at all other times, to keep his relatives close to his heart and take them with him wherever he goes, even as close to the cricket field as possible.”Test cricket means a lot to us in West Indies,” Brathwaite said, ahead of the second Test against South Africa in Johannesburg. “Our fans really follow Test cricket a lot and they want the Test team to do well.”That may sound like an overly optimistic statement to make, given the decline of West Indies as a Test power and especially given their record on the road. They last won an away series against a top eight team in 1995, when Brathwaite was three years old, no-one else in the squad was older than seven and five others had yet to be born. The glory days are well beyond any of their current recollections, though doubtless they’ve been regaled with stories of that old dominance and have dreams of reaching those peaks again. But in a climate of T20 leagues, where Test matches outside of those between India, Australia and England feel low-profile, it will be very difficult.

We cannot be excluded on the basis of not being leading lights in Test cricket. We are, and so are the West IndiesSouth Africa coach Shukri Conrad

Against that backdrop, Braithwaite is a chip off the old block. He is now a one-format player – 13th on the West Indies all-time Test run-scorer’s list – his last ODI was nearly six years ago and he hasn’t played any T20 cricket. At all. If it were up to him, West Indies would play more Tests, more often and would progressively improve. “You learn from playing. These two back to back tours – Zimbabwe and South Africa – have been good. You get rhythm,” Braithwaite said. “Some guys may not have done well but I think the more you play, the more you get familiar and it’s just better for us, as cricketers. When it’s spaced out so far, sometimes it’s tough.”South Africa are about to experience how tough that could be. They have no Test cricket scheduled for the next nine months and only play two-Test series until 2026. For a team that reached No.1 in the world just over a decade ago, their slide into a sort of obscurity has come quicker than expected, and everyone from star seamer Kagiso Rabada to new red-ball coach Shukri Conrad wants to stop it. While Rabada asked for Tests to be “prioritised a lot more,” Conrad believes dwindling interest, despite what Braithwaite said, is one symptom of where things are going wrong.”Our and their proud traditions and heritage should be ample proof that we need to play more Test cricket. We cannot be excluded on the basis of not being leading lights in Test cricket. We are, and so are the West Indies” Conrad said. “But the sad reality is, in places like the West Indies and hopefully not here, the lack of Test cricket might mean that interest starts waning. That’s a place you never want to reach, because once a youngster doesn’t have the desire to play for his country that spells the beginning of the end.”The biggest crowd in Centurion last week came in when South Africa’s Women’s T20 World Cup finalists arrived•AFP/Getty ImagesYou only had to glance at the almost empty grass embankments at last week’s SuperSport Park Test to see what Conrad means. A mid-week game, that started on a Tuesday and ended on a Thursday, pulled only a few hundred fans and most of them turned up when South Africa’s women’s side arrived to sign autographs following their run to the T20 World Cup final. There were smatterings of school kids at other parts of the Test but in general, inconvenient scheduling has meant this series will be poorly attended and deepen the impression that the red-ball game is dying in places outside the Big Three.That is partially true for a variety of reasons, and one of them is that Test cricket is perceived as boring. So enter Bazball and other styles of play in that ilk.Related

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When they came together in the English summer, Ben Stokes and Brendon McCullum made it clear that one of the things they were going to advocate was an entertaining style of play, even if it meant losing, to get bums on seats. Incidentally, they’ve only lost two matches since then and their brand of aggressive cricket has been spoken about as revolutionising the game. South Africa have toyed with trying something similar, and called it brave cricket, except that it wasn’t that at all and they lost series in England and Australia as a result.Now, they’re trying to figure out their batting blueprint, with a line-up where almost no-one is sure of their place. “It’s a unique set of circumstances. We don’t play a lot of Test cricket, so I’ve got to find novel ways. If that plays itself out in giving everybody a go and seeing how they react, so be it,” Conrad said. “That brand will take longer on the batting front. There’s patience required in terms of the batting side.”The problem with that, is that in 2023, with options aplenty for thrill-seekers, the waiting game is the one thing people don’t want to play, even if it brings it’s own subtleties and storylines – things that will be remembered long after the result. For example, West Indies arrived at their Wanderers training session with a massive pink teddy-bear named Suzie which was has to be carried by a particular member of the squad.”We play a game for warm up – a little tennis game and we always have a Man of the Match, who is the worst player of that game who has to take care of it,” Brathwaite explained.So who is it? This time it was Kyle Mayers. “Most of the squad has had a turn but unfortunately Mr Kemar Roach hasn’t gotten it yet.”Roach is the oldest member of the West Indies touring party. He is their fifth-highest wicket-taker now, going past Joel Garner’s tally of 259 in the first Test. He still wants to play for “two, three, four, five, six, seven…” years because he’s still motivated by his team-mates and “wanting to get amongst the greats.”If there’s one thing this series is showing is, it’s that there’s life in this old format yet, even in places where it seems there may not be.

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