Ghosts of Sydney cast uneasy shadow over Australia's Karachi quest

They remain on course for a rare win in Asia, but recent near-misses will be in the back of their minds

Andrew McGlashan15-Mar-2022An Australia win is still the favoured result in this Karachi Test, but as Babar Azam ended his wait for a century then walked off alongside Abdullah Shafique it was less certain than when they claimed the second wicket of Pakistan’s innings shortly after lunch on the fourth day.Eight wicket-taking opportunities (which then need to be taken) should be within Australia’s grasp, but this is a scenario that has confronted them a couple of times in little more than a year, both times at the SCG, when they have been unable to secure victory by bowling out the opposition in the fourth innings.Related

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In early 2021 they were denied by India – who then famously went on to take the series in the following game – and just a couple of months ago England clung on nine wickets down to take their only morsel of comfort from the Ashes. Against India Australia began the final day needing eight wickets and against England 10. While those SCG pitches did not break up, there were signs on the fourth day that the Karachi surface may not deteriorate quite as much as expected either.In those Sydney contests, missed catches also ended up proving crucial in allowing the opposition to survive. Australia have shelled one in this innings when Shafique edged Pat Cummins to Steven Smith at slip. Smith was standing reasonably close, but it was a catch that should have been taken. Pakistan would have been 38 for 3 with Fawad Alam, on a king pair, next in and the ball starting to reverse.”That’s when reverse-swing was starting for us, the ball was quite hard, and yesterday that’s when we got the breakthroughs,” Australia’s assistant coach Michael Di Venuto said. “It was a drop that we would have liked to have taken and Steve’s got outstanding hands so it’s a catch he would take 99 out of 100. It can be tough, the slips have to stand really close, and unfortunately on this occasion it went down.”[Yesterday] when the ball was hard and reversing we got a couple of breakthroughs and were able to put a hole in them. Today they got through that, the ball softened and it doesn’t do as much. We probably thought there might have been a bit more in the wicket today as far as spin and variable bounce [were concerned], but once the ball softens, there was occasionally, but those chances just didn’t come for us.”Australia will believe that with another new ball (which is currently two overs old after Cummins took it in the closing moments), and then the opportunity when reverse-swing comes into play, that they can create the chances needed. However, it will also be a big day for the spinners. It would be unfair to place the burden of winning a Test match on debutant Mitchell Swepson’s shoulders, but Nathan Lyon was the frontline spinner in both those Sydney Tests.Across those two final innings against India and England he claimed 4 for 142 off 68 overs. This scenario, the fifth day of a Test on the subcontinent with a mountain of runs to defend, is what an experienced spinner should dream of.He struck early in Pakistan’s second innings when he undid Imam-ul-Haq for the second time in the match, this time angling a delivery into his front pad which would have smashed middle stump. Only Imam will know why he reviewed, and it may later have played a part in why Azhar Ali did not when it would have saved him against Cameron Green.However, from then on, Shafique and Babar played Lyon with a reasonable degree of comfort. It was Swepson, with a few sharply-spun leg-breaks and later some turn from the footmarks outside leg stump, who caused more uncertainty. It could be especially challenging for the left handers who are to come in Pakistan’s order but there remains the expectation that the quicks will be a threat.”While [the new ball] is shiny…and when reverse swing comes in – 20 overs has generally been when it’s started with the harder ball – will be a crucial period for us,” di Venuto said.Twenty-four hours ago Australia could barely have dreamed of the position they had put themselves in. It remains firmly in their grasp for a significant victory – just their third in Asia since 2006 – but tomorrow is a very important day for this evolving team.

Four games that defined the IPL's top four

Whether through luck or tactical ingenuity, Titans, LSG, RR and RCB have all had to overcome adversity to reach the playoffs

Karthik Krishnaswamy23-May-2022Gujarat Titans vs Chennai Super Kings, PuneBefore the season began, you probably wouldn’t have tipped Gujarat Titans to qualify for the playoffs, let alone get there as table-toppers. That they’ve achieved this despite having obvious holes in their batting has largely been down to three things: their strength as a bowling unit, the match-winners in their lower middle order, and luck going their way in a number of close games.Related

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There’s been no shortage of dramatic games in their journey to this point, but their comeback win over Chennai Super Kings defined their season. It began with the bowlers. Super Kings were 124 for 2 after the 14th over, but Alzarri Joseph, Mohammed Shami, Yash Dayal and Rashid Khan conceded just 27 off the next five overs. It left Titans chasing 170 rather than, say, 190.Even so, Titans were still vulnerable because Hardik Pandya was out injured, compromising their depth to the extent that Rashid was slotted at No. 7. At 87 for 5 in the 13th over, that lack of depth was going to be severely tested, even with David Miller batting brilliantly.You know what happened next. The 18th over began with Titans needing 48 off 18 – ESPNcricinfo’s Forecaster gave them a 4.2% chance of victory – before Rashid whipped Chris Jordan for 6, 6, 4, 6 to transform the match. Cometh the hour, cometh another unlikely hero.R Ashwin brought out the big hits against Lucknow Super Giants, but didn’t overstay his welcome, opting to retire out in the 19th over•BCCIRajasthan Royals vs Lucknow Super Giants, Wankhede StadiumEven before a ball was bowled this season, Rajasthan Royals’ strengths and weaknesses were clear. Their top five and their bowling attack were among the best in the league on paper, but it wasn’t clear how they would bridge the gap between those two ends of their line-up.They unveiled the solution to that issue in their fourth match of the season, against Lucknow Super Giants. Reduced to 67 for 4 in the tenth over of their innings, Royals promoted R Ashwin to No. 6, giving viewers their first glimpse of their intention to maximise his batting ability. They would use him in other roles in future games – most often as a pinch-hitter at No. 3 – but now they were sending him in to see out the remainder of the middle overs in Shimron Hetmyer’s company, with Riyan Parag held back for later.Ashwin performed his role perfectly, but just when he threatened to overstay his welcome, his innings stretching into the 19th over, he ran off the field and became the first batter to tactically retire out in the IPL. With Hetmyer rushing to an unbeaten 59 off 36, Royals set Super Giants a target of 166.Royals’ bowlers then did their bit to seal an enthralling victory. Trent Boult picked up two wickets in his first over, Ashwin bowled four boundary-free overs, and Yuzvendra Chahal – whose last two overs were held back for the 16th and 18th of Super Giants’ chase – made the decisive intervention with figures of 4 for 41.Mohsin Khan has been instrumental in giving Super Giants crucial breakthroughs•BCCILucknow Super Giants vs Delhi Capitals, Wankhede StadiumThe flexibility afforded by a plethora of allrounders was tipped to be Super Giants’ trump card. As things have turned out, that flexibility has been a bit of a mixed blessing so far, at least with the bat, leaving Super Giants with an unsettled middle order.With the ball, though, the flexibility has allowed KL Rahul to use and hide bowlers as and when needed. This was particularly in evidence in a successful defence of 195 against Delhi Capitals at the Wankhede Stadium.With Mohsin Khan and Dushmantha Chameera dismissing the Capitals openers early, Rahul gambled by bringing Krunal Pandya on for the fourth over despite Rishabh Pant being at the crease. He may have hoped that Pant would treat the left-arm spinner with more respect than normal given the match situation, or for Pant to go after Krunal and lose his wicket in the process. The move backfired, however, with Pant hitting three fours and a six in a 19-run over. Capitals took 34 off the next two overs and ended the powerplay at 66 for 2.But Super Giants’ wealth of bowling options eventually helped them claw their way back. It allowed them to hide their fingerspinners, who weren’t having the greatest of days; Krunal bowled just that one over, and Krishnappa Gowtham – who was taken apart by Rovman Powell in the 12th over – only two. Then, with Capitals needing 50 off the last four, Super Giants were able to use up their main fast bowlers’ last three overs in the 17th, 18th and 19th, since they had Marcus Stoinis in reserve. It came down to 13 needed off four balls, and Stoinis did his job, stringing together three crucial, back-to-back dots by denying Axar Patel elevation.Dinesh Karthik slammed a 34-ball 66 to lift Royal Challengers Bangalore to 190 against Delhi Capitals•BCCIRoyal Challengers Bangalore vs Delhi Capitals, Wankhede StadiumRoyal Challengers Bangalore have been IPL 2022’s worst powerplay team. With the ball, they’ve been both the most expensive (economy rate of 8.05) and least penetrative (average of 45.13) team in this phase. With the bat, they have the lowest run rate (6.40) and the third-worst average (25.61). But they’ve found ways to make up for this, just about often enough to sneak into the playoffs.Perhaps the best example of Royal Challengers overcoming their powerplay weaknesses was their victory over Capitals, who were eventually their closest rivals for fourth place.Sent in, Royal Challengers lost both openers in a 40-run powerplay, and Virat Kohli two balls later, before crucial knocks from Glenn Maxwell (55 off 34 balls), Shahbaz Ahmed (32* off 21) and Dinesh Karthik (66* off 34) helped them recover and set a challenging target of 190.David Warner put Capitals on track, propelling them to a powerplay score of 57 for 1. But Harshal Patel, Wanindu Hasaranga, Maxwell and Shahbaz combined to give away just one boundary in the next four overs, and Capitals’ required rate climbed to 11.10 at the halfway mark.Forced into taking chances, Warner hit Harshal for two boundaries in the 11th over but fell while attempting to switch-hit Hasaranga in the 12th. It began a collapse that saw Capitals lose four wickets for 21 runs in the space of 22 balls, and Royal Challengers were now in control, with 75 required off the last 30 balls. Late hitting from Capitals’ lower order spoiled the figures of Harshal and Hasaranga, but the result was never in doubt.

Forget Bazball, Adam Hose is leading Edgbaston's Bearsball revolution

Record-breaking Bears have piled on 200 in seven of their 14 Blast innings this season

Matt Roller06-Jul-2022After four-and-a-bit days of Bazball at Edgbaston, Bearsball is back. England may have spent the last month tearing up the record books under Brendon McCullum in Test cricket but in the T20 Blast, Warwickshire have not been far behind in their Birmingham Bears guise this season.In the first 19 years of T20 cricket, only one team worldwide (Somerset in 2018) had ever made 200-plus five times in a single season. But in the group stages of this year’s Blast, the Bears have broken that barrier seven times in 14 games – including a competition-record 261 for 2 against Nottinghamshire at Trent Bridge.They have scored at 9.92 runs per over to date, the second-highest rate by a team in any given season in T20 history. They finished top of the North Group for the first time since 2015 (when McCullum was their overseas star) and their reward is an Edgbaston quarter-final against Hampshire on Thursday night, in theory the first of three home knockout games on the way to a first title since 2014.At the heart of this remarkable batting form has been a middle-order engine room comprising of Sam Hain, Adam Hose and Chris Benjamin, who started the season at No. 4, 5 and 6 but have shifted up to No. 3, 4 and 5 since Dan Mousley replaced Jacob Bethell in the XI. All three have averaged 40-plus while scoring at a shade under 10 runs per over but Hose has been the standout: his 541 runs put him third in the country, averaging 60.11 with a strike rate of 165.44.Adam Hose and Chris Benjamin celebrate victory against Northants•Getty Images”It probably reflects the mindset shift that we’ve taken into this season,” Hose tells ESPNcricinfo. “We’ve managed to stay clear with our intent, freedom and clarity of mind, which we’ve taken into each game. Although you want to take responsibility as a batter, you look down our line-up and you know that if it’s not your night, it’s going to be someone else’s.”There have been testing moments, none more so than against Yorkshire when they were bundled out for 101. “It was important to remember that the brand of cricket we’re trying to play isn’t necessarily conducive to consistency,” Hose says. “We haven’t carried any baggage from those poor performances into the following game.”He credits Carlos Brathwaite, their captain, as a key figure in creating a culture of trust and belief in a deep line-up – one which sees Brathwaite himself carded to bat as low as No. 7. “We’ve been in pretty tricky situations at times, three or four down early doors, but we’ve still continued with that intent.”Related

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Hose explains his own form as the product of a renewed focus on his mental wellbeing, after a quiet 2021 season where he became “outcome-focused… I was worrying about the end result without thinking about how I was going to get there”. He meditates daily, does yoga twice a week and has resolved to “approach each day with a smile on my face”.”It’s been really fun,” he says. “I had a bit of a lightbulb moment after last summer where I felt like something had to change. I stripped it right back through the winter and wanted to get back to playing with freedom and a smile on my face. Fortunately, I’ve found myself in that position this year.”I don’t just want to be Adam the sportsman, or Adam the cricketer. I want to be a well-rounded person and individual. I’ve focused on mental routines to keep me focused in the middle and have tried to strip everything back to enjoying myself, playing good cricket with my mates. It’s still a journey, but that stuff has been huge for me.”Hose has been empowered to play shots that he had previously reserved for the nets, too. “I’ve always had reverse-sweeps and scoops in the locker, but haven’t had that confidence to execute them. The main part of my game is still focused around good, strong, solid shots but at certain points in the game, why can’t I use them?”Hose launches Dane Paterson for six during the Bears’ record total of 261 for 2•PA Images/GettyHe has been rewarded with an England Lions call-up for next week’s 50-over games against South Africa, where he will be reunited with his ex-Somerset team-mates Tom Abell and Tom Banton, and will play for Northern Superchargers in the Hundred after missing out on last year’s competition through injury.He remains frustrated by a lack of red-ball opportunities – he last played a first-class game in 2019 – and contract talks with Warwickshire are ongoing, with his deal up at the end of the year. “I don’t want to say too much but what I want to make clear is that I’m desperate to be the best cricketer I can be in all formats,” he says. “There’s a lot to decide over the next few months but for the time being, I’m focused on getting us to Finals Day.”Hampshire are the team standing in the way, buoyed by James Vince’s stellar form and a run of nine wins in their last 10. Not that Hose thinks the Bears’ attack – Olly Stone and Henry Brookes’ pace, Jake Lintott and Danny Briggs’ complementary left-arm spin and Brathwaite’s change-ups – will be daunted.”We’ve been good at focusing on ourselves. We analyse the opposition and where they can be dangerous but without forgetting how dangerous we can be as an opponent. They’ll be looking at our bowling line-up expecting a good challenge. If we get Vincey and [Ben] McDermott out early, hopefully we can set up a good game from there.”

Tom Bruce, the free spirit who has finally found his identity as a cricketer

He was the next big thing, and then he wasn’t, but the New Zealand batter has bounced right back with a phenomenal sequence of scores

Hemant Brar07-Sep-2022Early 2021. Tom Bruce was having sleepless nights. He had played 17 T20Is for New Zealand but had fallen out of favour. However, it was his red-ball form that was haunting him. He hadn’t scored a first-class hundred for four seasons despite being one of the main batters for Central Districts. Worse, he no longer knew what his identity as a batter was.The dip in form wasn’t sudden. Bruce was still scoring runs, and managing half-centuries, but the returns were diminishing. Then, during the 2020-21 Plunket Shield, it plummeted – he scored just 275 runs in 13 innings at an average of 25.00. Eighty-one of those runs had come in just one innings, his only 50-plus score that season.Bruce hadn’t dealt with such a slump before.

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Bruce had burst on to the New Zealand domestic scene during the 2014-15 season. Making his debut as a 23-year-old for Central Districts, he smashed 88 off 65 balls against Otago in the preliminary final of the Ford Trophy, New Zealand’s premier List A tournament. At the receiving end of his onslaught, which included five fours and six sixes, were Neil Wagner, Jacob Duffy and Mark Craig.Related

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ESPNcricinfo reported Bruce’s arrival thus: “Not much about Bruce is common knowledge at present – not his age, not his place of birth, not his previous cricket pedigree, and not his playing style.”But soon, everyone took notice as he carried his form into red-ball cricket too, tallying 632 runs at an average of 57.45 and a strike rate of 70.30 in his first Plunket Shield season. In 12 innings, he scored six fifties and a hundred.In fact, his first three seasons were like a dream. On the field, he scored runs across formats. Especially in T20 cricket, with his inventive strokeplay. Off the field, he spent a lot of his time playing golf with Mahela Jayawardene, who was with Central Districts then. A call-up for the national side was imminent.In 2016, Bruce came close to making his ODI debut, but not for New Zealand. He has a British passport through his father, who was born in Edinburgh, and that made him eligible to play for Scotland. “I happened to be playing club cricket for Netherfield in 2016. Scotland was a few hours’ drive north and I had a connection there with Grant Bradburn [the former New Zealand player who was the Scotland coach then]. So we tried accessing that avenue of playing out of Scotland.”In May 2016, in his first outing for Scotland Development XI, Bruce scored an unbeaten 132 against a touring Durham Academy side. A debut against the touring Afghanistan team looked on the cards. He even had the support of New Zealand Cricket and Central Districts – he knew his chances of playing for New Zealand in the future wouldn’t be affected.

“It got to a stage where I would get to 50 and start counting down to 100. I would forget what I should have been doing, which is watching every single ball as hard as possible and making the best decision from there”

But he did not fulfil an ICC criterion: he had not lived in Scotland for long enough to represent them.”Sometimes, these things happen for a reason,” Bruce said. “As it happened, I came back to New Zealand the following season and I ended up representing the Black Caps in T20Is. So even if I had taken the field for Scotland, it would have been pretty short-lived.”Bruce’s T20I debut was against Bangladesh in Napier in January 2017. Luke Ronchi handed over the caps to him and his fellow debutants Lockie Ferguson and Ben Wheeler.”The message [from Ronchi] was pretty simple: just keep playing the way you have been playing at the domestic level,” Bruce recalled. “I was a bit of a free spirit back then – it was just sort of see the ball, hit the ball. And it seemed to work for me.”I took a catch early on in the game, and I remember the crowd [Bangladesh fans] sort of shouting at me, trying to stuff it up.”It was a good game as we chased down the target. I remember batting with Kane Williamson. We had an unfortunate run-out where I was left stranded. But I said to him, ‘Surely that means you got to stick with me for the next few games now.'”In the next match, Bruce struck an unbeaten 59 off 39 to help New Zealand seal the series. However, in the following 12 innings, he managed only one 30-plus score and was subsequently dropped from the side.He made a comeback with the second T20I against Sri Lanka in Pallekele in 2019 and scored 53 off 46 balls in a last-over win for New Zealand. But during his knock, he hurt his knee and was ruled out of the next game.Tom Bruce attempts an unorthodox shot during his half-century against Sri Lanka•AFPHis next outing for New Zealand came only in early 2020, against India at home. He played the final two T20Is of the five-match series, and was dismissed without scoring in both.”It was not easy,” Bruce said. “In the last two games against India, I wasn’t in a great headspace. My form had dipped and I was playing against probably the best team in the world at the time. So, it was going to be pretty tough to be successful.”Soon after that, the Covid-19 pandemic brought the sport, and the world, to a halt. And when cricket resumed, Bruce found himself out of the squad for the West Indies T20Is.”That was a pretty tough time,” he said. “I had been part of the last T20I squad before Covid, and then we had this big long break, and when the next T20 squad was announced, I never got a phone call or anything like that. It was sort of… not a dumping, but I just felt sort of left out. I knew my form didn’t warrant being picked. But it’s still nice to know [from the selectors ahead of the announcement] you are not going to be in the next squad even though you were in the last one. I held on to that for quite a bit. And it probably affected my next season.”

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Bruce’s white-ball form was still okay, if not spectacular. But not being able to score a hundred in red-ball cricket was weighing him down.”The first couple of seasons it wasn’t as much of a struggle because I knew I had scored a hundred the previous year. But then it got to a stage where I would get to 50 and start counting down to 100,” he said. “So when I would get to 60, I would be, right, I’ve got 40 runs left. I would get to 70, I would be, right, I have got 30 runs left. With this build-up of wanting to get to a hundred so badly, I would forget what I should have been doing, which is watching every single ball as hard as possible and making the best decision from there.”So it took a toll every time I got to 50. I was just counting down and, as most batters would say, that’s probably not a good method. But that is what my mindset was. I needed to get to those three figures.ESPNcricinfo Ltd”To achieve that, I found myself trying to be so defensively minded, which actually was to my detriment. I was trying to be someone that I wasn’t, and that took probably more toll when I was out there in the middle. So I would probably reach 50, but it was such a toll mentally that I would feel as if I had already batted for a long time.”For four seasons, I hadn’t performed to the level that was expected of me, or I expected of myself. And what everyone else was probably saying about me, I was saying it ten times worse to myself. I had sleepless nights knowing that I wasn’t performing and was letting everyone down.”Bruce was “pretty lucky” that he was afforded lots of opportunities, and he repaid the faith in style.In the 2021-22 Plunket Shield, not only did he end the century drought but also became the first batter in the tournament’s history to score double-hundreds in back-to-back innings. His last three knocks in the season were 90*, 208* and 204* as he finished with a chart-topping 858 runs at an average of 143.00.The first double-hundred was against Northern Districts in Whangarei. It was a good batting pitch but Northern Districts had quality bowlers in their line-up: Wagner, Scott Kuggeleijn, Brett Randell (the joint-leading wicket-taker of the season), and offspinner Joe Walker.The second one came against Auckland in Napier, where his team was 11 for 3 when he came out to bat.”I got into the season to find out who I was as a batter,” Bruce said. “I was still struggling a wee bit, but more than anything I was searching for my identity again as a player. It is a work in progress but with that strong season, I got back to being in a better headspace in my cricket and off the field.”To get over the line with a hundred and then turn it into a double-hundred and then do the same in the following game, it was actually more of relief rather than anything else. Obviously, I was really happy, but at the same time, I knew I hadn’t done it for the last five years. So when you look at it in that context, yes, it was a pretty bleak sort of time. Hopefully, it’s not another five-year break before the next one.”

But how did he turn it around?”I was having quite a good season without really scoring a hundred. I had a lot of not outs, a couple of 70s and another unbeaten fifty, before we declared or were bowled out. But yeah, in those last three games, I tried something different,” he said. “It was standing out of my crease, probably an extra foot or so, and then moving across to an off-stump guard. It was uncomfortable in the starting but soon I felt a lot more comfortable. It is scary to think now that it took only a couple of 40-minute sessions working with our coach.”By moving across, I figured out where my off stump was. As I was already on off stump, I knew I could leave everything outside my body and pick off the straight balls. And I could still pick up the short balls, which I love to, so it just made things a wee bit easier.”In New Zealand conditions, the ball seams and swings quite a bit. Standing outside my crease made me feel as if I had taken bowled and lbw out of the equation. If I were to get out, it was going to be through my own error, not through a bowler bowling just a good ball. So not only I was giving myself the best opportunity to score runs but also a solid defence.”When you change something, it doesn’t always breed results. But I was fortunate that when I did that, I scored 90 not out before we declared.”But, wait, why declare when he was batting on 90 and the team was still trailing by 235?”It will be a topic of conversation for many years to come, I think,” Bruce said with a laugh. “Me and our four-day captain [Greg Hay] have a good relationship, so we agree to disagree.”But basically, we were trying to force a result, because we had to win outright to stay alive in the tournament. I was given a couple of overs to get to the three figures and I only managed to get to 90. As it happened, we declared and Canterbury scored some quick runs and they put us in on day four. I think we were about 100 [99] for none at lunch, chasing 330 [317]. Then the rain came, and the match ended in a draw, so that probably compounded it because I was just ten runs away from what would have been my first hundred in a fair while.”I got into the season to find out who I was as a batter”•Getty Images”I still have arguments with our coach [Rob Walter] about it , and I let him know about my feelings about that one. But that might have spurred me on for the next two games, so we never know.”Earlier in the season, Bruce had notched up 193 runs (average 32.16, strike rate 113.52) in the Ford Trophy and 267 runs (average 38.14, strike rate 163.80) in the Super Smash. All that resulted in him being named the NZC domestic player of the year, jointly with Robbie O’Donnell.”It [the award] is something I am pretty proud of,” he said. “It’s probably the best and the most depth that New Zealand cricket has had in a long time. Which means our domestic competitions are strong as the players coming from there are performing at the international level. So if you can keep performing against these guys at the domestic level, you’re not far away from the Black Caps.”But you also know that there’s a lot of quality players in front of you that you need to be outperforming. So you know you’ve still got to bang the door down and stay optimistic.”Bruce, who is currently with New Zealand A on their tour to India, hasn’t played at the senior level since his double-hundred against Auckland in April. He missed the first four-day match against India A in Bengaluru because of personal reasons. But he has prior experience of playing in India. He toured India with New Zealand A in 2017 as well, and then stayed on as he was part of the T20I squad.”Having that experience has been vital; I know what to plan for,” he said. “We’re pretty fortunate that we were able to train on grass and had all different sorts of surfaces prepared [despite it being the winter off-season in New Zealand]. So we’ve prepared for surfaces that turn square, keep low, or are green. I don’t think in 2017 we quite had this sort of preparation.”But Bruce doesn’t have a goal for the tour, neither in terms of runs nor hundreds. Perhaps, in trying to find his identity, he has learnt that having goals, and the expectations that come with them, may not always be the best thing.

Farewell Jhulan Goswami, the link between two ages of Indian women's cricket

From the time the team were in it only for the love of the game, to now, when they are a respected, formidable outfit, she has been an inspiring, enduring presence

Shashank Kishore23-Sep-2022Retiring on the field is a privilege accorded to few in Indian cricket. So it is heartwarming that Jhulan Goswami will bid adieu to what will no doubt be rousing applause from fans and colleagues at Lord’s tomorrow, bringing to a close a career that began all those years ago in nondescript Chakdaha in Bengal.A farewell game of this magnitude is unlike any other in recent memory in Indian cricket. Several stars faded away quietly in recent years – Rahul Dravid, VVS Laxman, Virender Sehwag, Yuvraj Singh, Zaheer Khan, even Goswami’s good friend Mithali Raj. And when an injured Goswami sat motionless as India were knocked out of the 2022 World Cup in the last over of their group-stage game against South Africa in Christchurch, you wondered if another legendary career would meet a similar end. Thankfully, Goswami will get an exit of the kind she deserves, even if it may not be as celebrated as Sachin Tendulkar’s was.On Saturday, when she takes the field for one final time in India colours, she will complete a circle of sorts. Five years ago it was at Lord’s that she came within touching distance of cricket’s ultimate glory, against England in the 2017 World Cup final. While that dream was not realised, she can now proudly leave with a series win in England, India’s first in the country in 23 years.Related

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To the current generation, Goswami is the last link between two eras of Indian women’s cricket. For long she has been synonymous with the game in India, alongside the likes of Raj, Diana Edulji and Shantha Rangaswamy, among others. Until her farewell series, Goswami hadn’t played a single ODI for which Raj wasn’t in the XI.Goswami and Shikha Pandey were the flag bearers of India’s bowling for over half a decade, but apart from them, the fast-bowling cupboard was thinly stocked until recently, when new talent began to come through. While it may yet take a while before India can find someone to fly the flag for the next two decades, the signs are promising.Watching the dream crumble: at the 2017 World Cup final•Adrian Dennis/AFP/Getty ImagesLong before she became Jhulu to her younger team-mates, Goswami was a kid with stars in her eyes, mesmerised at the sight of Cathryn Fitzpatrick in the 1997 World Cup final at Eden Gardens, where Goswami was a ball girl. On Saturday, when she bowls alongside Renuka Thakur and Meghna Singh at Lord’s, it will be a symbolic passing of the baton: Thakur was once a starstruck academy kid and ball girl in Dharamsala when Goswami played for India at the 2016 T20 World Cup, and Meghna once waited in the lobby of a Kanpur hotel all day so she could make a beeline for Goswami when she arrived, just to be able to get a ball autographed.Goswami’s retirement, coming on the heels of Raj’s will truly mark the end of an era in Indian women’s cricket. A period of two decades or so in which they went from being a middling team that played for the love of cricket to one that commands respect and a standing, one that is followed with nearly as much passion as their men’s counterparts, and one that stands poised for a revolution next year, with the possibilities the women’s IPL will bring.Goswami’s career was marked by deep commitment, an abiding quest for perfection, and a willingness to fight the odds – she prevailed over injuries to back, heel, shoulder, ankle and knees. Her rise and the way she made a place for herself at the very top of the women’s game is also a celebration of the potential that lies in India’s small towns and villages.A common refrain when you talk about Goswami the cricketer is about how simple she is in life and in cricket. She has been old-school but modern. Old-school because she believed bowling fitness was greater than gym fitness, and modern because as she aged, she embraced the need to keep up with the demands of cross-format cricket, even if it meant stepping into the unknown.As a bowler, in how she was seemingly programmed to bowl to hit the top of off, she embodied the virtues of a clutter-free mind. She had a potent weapon in a devious inswinger early in her career, and to that she added one that hits the seam and holds its line. This latter talent was best showcased in the delivery that bowled Meg Lanning at the 2017 World Cup semi-final.Documented evidence of it is rare in domestic cricket, but several players will tell you how Goswami also had one of the meanest bouncers. And if they misfielded off her bowling, players would fear to look her in the eye for hours. But once off the field, she’d dance and sing with the same players, and if India won, she would treat them to ice cream and dessert.Goswami’s genial ways were as much a hallmark of her career as her bowling. She would not shy away from mingling with the youngest members of the group, making them feel warm and welcome. In defeat, she would play agony aunt, providing comfort. “Chin up, girls, we haven’t lost a war” was her famous quip, brought out at times when the dressing room was low after a loss. She believed that if you make sacrifices to make it to the highest level, you need to celebrate everything the game, and life, throws at you.At other times, like in that 2017 semi-final, she would be the immovable force, willing and able to look batters in the eye, to command her fielders to raise the volume and display on-field brilliance to show them “we are no less”. Symbolic, then, that she led by example in knocking Lanning over the way she did.On Saturday when the final run is hit or the last wicket taken, it’s likely there will be a few tears in the Indian dressing room and outside it. After all, Goswami has been a towering presence for over two decades, playing several roles: captain, older sibling, friend, mentor, philosopher, and more.As Rohit Sharma said recently, players like Goswami come along once in a generation. Those tasked with carrying forward her legacy couldn’t have asked for a better role model. India will miss a workhorse, but may yet benefit in gaining a mentor and teacher who could inspire in others the very virtues that made her a world beater.

Switch Hit podcast: No stopping the Baz bus

Alan is joined by Miller and Vish to chat through the Multan Test and England’s series win in Pakistan

ESPNcricinfo staff13-Dec-2022England claimed their first series win in Pakistan since 2000-01 as the Ben Stokes-Brendon McCullum era rolled on with victory in the Multan Test. On the pod, Alan Gardner was joined by Andrew Miller and Vithushan Ehantharajah to discuss umpiring controversy, Harry Brook’s tekkers and the Ben Stokes effect.

Lack of lower-order runs compound Australia's batting woes

Australia hope Starc and Green’s return to the XI will “bridge the difference” between them and India

Alex Malcolm21-Feb-2023Australia face an uphill battle trying to find lower-order runs in the third Test in Indore and it may shape their selection.Australia are still picking up the pieces from their second-innings collapse on Sunday in Delhi where they lost 8 for 28 in 74 balls to concede a 2-0 series lead to India. India’s lower-order batting, meanwhile, has been one of the major differences between the two sides in the series so far.But the visitors did have India 139 for 7 on the second day before Axar Patel and R Ashwin added 114 for the eighth wicket to ensure India did not concede a first-innings deficit.Related

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Similarly in the first Test in Nagpur India were 240 for 7, leading by just 63 before Ravindra Jadeja, Axar and Mohammed Shami added 160 for the last three wickets to hand the home side an insurmountable lead of 223.By contrast, Australia were 162 for 6 in the first innings in Nagpur to be all out for 177. They were 227 for 6 in the first innings in Delhi only to be bowled out for 263. Peter Handscomb was set at the other end on both occasions but was unable to garner any support from Australia’s bowlers.Australia batting coach Michael Di Venuto admitted it is difficult to help inexperienced spinners Todd Murphy and Matthew Kuhnemann find a way to contribute with the bat in Indian conditions when even Steven Smith is having trouble handling Ashwin and Jadeja.”That’s a hard one especially when two guys are brand new to Test cricket and coming in there,” Di Venuto said. “Nathan [Lyon] has shown some good resolve. It’s encouraging. Potentially changes. Potentially Starcy [Mitchell Starc] comes in who’s done well with the bat here in the past. That adds a little bit more depth to the batting. Patty [Cummins] showed in the first innings a good method of defence and attack, so it is there. The younger ones, that’s a work in progress. That’s a big learning curve for them with the bat and the ball.”There is a clear gap in talent with the bat between Australia’s and India’s bowlers. Axar Patel averages nearly 34 in first-class cricket and 31.80 in Test cricket, while Ashwin is batting at No. 9 in this current India team with five Test centuries to his name. Coach Andrew McDonald noted India’s depth of batting.”They bat right through to nine, and that’s the reality,” McDonald said on Monday. “On the flip side to that, we’ve got to make sure we bridge that difference with our lower order as well. That’s been a clear distinct difference in the two Test matches so far, where you get a team five down and suddenly they creep out. They got 400 in that first game in Nagpur, it wasn’t a 400 wicket.”By contrast, Australia have had Cummins batting at No. 8 with a Test average of just 15.93. Intriguingly, after 17 Tests of their respective careers, Cummins had a higher Test average (20.95) than Jadeja (20.62). Jadeja has become a world-class allrounder, fulfilling his Test batting potential having scored 12 first-class centuries overall, including three triples, while Cummins has regressed.

“Plans certainly weren’t wrong. Our plans were good. Guys under pressure moved away from their plans of what worked and you pay the consequence in this country.”Michael Di Venuto

That gap in talent was part of the reason Ashton Agar was so heavily considered as Australia’s second or third spinner, given he has three first-class hundreds, a Test 98, and averages 28.32 with the bat in first-class cricket. But it is understood he was struggling so much with the ball in training, having taken just 20 wickets in his last 12 first-class games at a cost of 63.45 and a strike rate of 131, that he and the selectors mutually decided he was not in the right place to play in Australia’s four-man attack. The selectors are currently considering whether to fly him home to play some domestic cricket in Australia.Starc’s return from injury would bolster Australia’s batting at No. 8 but it may come at the expense of the third spinner unless Cummins is unable to play given his personal situation.”We need to find runs,” McDonald admitted. “We knew that before we came away, that runs is always the biggest challenge in India. We felt like we’d be able to take 20 wickets but how we find runs is really important. So do we bat a little deeper? Mitchell Starc coming in, he’s had some good success with the bat, albeit he’s a lower-order player. He got 99 in Mohali and 62 in Pune on a spinning wicket as well, so does he come into calculations? Do we play two quicks? All those conversations are happening but the bottom line is we do need to find runs, and that’s our big question.”Cameron Green will return in Indore which will balance the side even more. That could also open the door for Australia to do something radical and play eight batters if they had confidence in taking 20 wickets with playing just three specialist bowlers, Green and Travis Head as support. But that option would probably only be considered if an extreme spinning pitch is presented in Indore.Ultimately Australia’s top order needs to do the heavy lifting with the bat. Former Australia opener Matthew Hayden, who is working as commentator on this series, has offered his support and expertise to the Australian team but it remains to be seen whether any players will reach out.Di Venuto believes Australia’s batters aren’t trusting the methods and plans that they have been working on.”Plans certainly weren’t wrong. Our plans were good,” Di Venuto said. “But if people go away from their plans they get in trouble as we saw. I think if we look back at the position we were in at 2 for 85, executing our plans very well in that second innings and ahead of the game and the wheels fell off after that.”Guys under pressure moved away from their plans of what worked and you pay the consequence in this country.”Batting, it’s a pretty simple analogy I think, you’ve got to swim between the flags in this country. If you go outside the flags and your game plan you are going to get in trouble.”Each individual has got their own method which we think can work. But if you’re coming over here and you’re not a sweeper and you’re trying to sweep, that’s not going to work. I think we have some good examples of that and saw that.”

Saud Shakeel provides another flicker to Pakistan's ever-guttering flame

History says England have the series in the bag, but Pakistan’s exceptions remain their rule

Danyal Rasool11-Dec-2022The morning session oscillated delicately between overwhelming English control and the gentlest whiff of a Pakistani opportunity; the dance redolent of a first date where one side is keen to pull away out of sight, even as the other desperately clings on. England were so sure they were steering clear, though, they didn’t quite clock Pakistan’s power to hang on and drag the dalliance out by at least one more day.Pakistan’s first-innings implosion on Saturday might have seemed tactically baffling. But the pay-off came today as England, lulled into what might still turn out to be a true sense of security, gave away their last five wickets with the profligacy of a billionaire frittering away their fortune on a social media company. It still left Pakistan needing their second-highest fourth-innings chase to level the series, a feat that, even for a city as steeped in the folklore of yesteryear as Multan, would be historic.But Pakistan draw their belief not from the blind faith they place in their collective process, à la England, but from the occasional jarring exceptions to the general trend of their Test batting decline. There might be collapses aplenty straddling more than just this generation of Pakistan’s Test cricket, but like the occasional brilliant flashes of light from a flame that’s invariably going out, Pakistan’s batting can occasionally sparkle with a luminescence that is no longer characteristic of it.Since the start of 2014, no other side in the world has chased down totals in excess of 300 as frequently as Pakistan. Just this year, one vintage one for spectacular batting implosions, Pakistan ran down 342 in Galle, and amassed 443 for 7 in Karachi against an Australian attack that had rolled them for 148 48 hours earlier.Mohammad Rizwan opened the batting alongside Abdullah Shafique after Imam-ul-Haq had been sent for an MRI scan on a dodgy hamstring, and injected the sort of gentle intent that has seen him earn both praise and criticism in the shortest format. Joe Root was dispatched for ten in his first over, Shafique looked particularly comfortable, and as lunch arrived, Pakistan were well placed having scored 64 undefeated runs.Lunch at the Multan Cricket Stadium strikes a steady balance between bland mediocrity and mediocre blandness, but even a Michelin Star chef would have struggled to leave English fans salivating quite as much as the visitors’ newish-ball spell after the interval. With James Anderson, Ollie Robinson and Mark Wood each producing their best deliveries of the series, Saud Shakeel and Imam found themselves in a scrap to take the game beyond the weekend.Both men have plenty to prove in this format, but Shakeel appreciates that point more than Imam. He had travelled with this Test side from time to time before making his debut in Pindi, but Zahid Mahmood’s experience would tell him that earning a reward for patience is no guarantee of success.Related

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  • Duckett: 'No real mystery' to Abrar's spin

He saw off a barrage from England’s fire-breathing quicks post-lunch, never once worrying about a strike-rate that was likelier to dip into single figures than rise into three. That temperament demonstrated why Shakeel has the highest control percentage against seam bowling among all Pakistan batters; of the 222 seam deliveries he has faced, he has been in control of 93.24%, edging out his captain Babar Azam at 93.04%.In the era of Brendon McCullum’s England, who sometimes feel as if they’ve reinvented Test cricket since the summer, it’s easy to get carried away, and believe you can fly even if you do not have a magic carpet. The mood even caught PCB chairman Ramiz Raja on Saturday, as he told Sky Sports’ Michael Atherton he wanted Pakistan to select T20 players in the Test side to replicate what England were doing.Saud is not a T20 player. He certainly does not have a magic carpet. But he possesses the maturity to recognise the futility of chasing after toys he cannot afford, and has learned not to lust after them either. In his first 33 balls, he had scored five runs. In his four innings for Pakistan so far, he hasn’t once managed a strike-rate in excess of 60. Juxtaposed against England’s modern, flashy shotmaking, he feels like a typewriter in the age of the smartphone, and just as exciting.But he averages in excess of 66 in the fourth innings across his first-class career, and with two days left in this match, it matters little how quickly those runs come. Across this series, no Pakistan player has negotiated pace better. He’s unbeaten on 54 off 123 overnight, but that’s exactly what he is: unbeaten. Imam might have contributed more runs, and scored them at a greater clip, but a flash at dusk outside off means he won’t be worrying England anymore.Shakeel was called up to make his ODI debut against South Africa in 2021, shortly before being ruled out of the tour with a quad injury, so he’ll be well aware of the limited value of a good day in an otherwise rough week. And even when the Sunday Multan crowd – the biggest of the Test by far – witnessed Pakistan enjoy their best day of the series, they would walk away fully aware the bulk of Pakistan’s work still lay ahead of them.Even so, England have been dragged back for another date, the prospect of nothing to separate the two sides as they fly together onto Karachi very much real. The visitors may yet feel they’re well placed to escape Pakistan’s clutches, but Shakeel’s grit, and the contradictory weirdness innate in Pakistan’s batting record this year, ensures there’ll be plenty of butterflies in English stomachs overnight.

Bangladesh kingpin Shakib once again proves he's the man for big moments

Mehidy Hasan Miraz was the hero of the chase, but it was Shakib Al Hasan who set up Bangladesh’s win with an outstanding spell

Mohammad Isam05-Dec-20222:11

Jaffer suggests Shakib deserves more recognition

Shakib Al Hasan should have stolen the headlines for his five-wicket haul in the first ODI against India, but it was Mehidy Hasan Miraz who got most of the attention in the end. Either way, the home side’s dramatic one-wicket win has replaced the FIFA World Cup for prominence in the local media.Brazil and Argentina flags had adorned hundreds of buildings around the Shere Bangla National Stadium. Many spectators came wearing football jerseys. There was the odd Argentina flag in the stands too, with a full house for most of the first ODI – up until when the win looked comfortable for Bangladesh. Then their team slipped and several fans didn’t stay till the end. Those who did, witnessed a miracle. By the end of the evening, Shakib and Co. had made sure they had firmly turned the fans’ attention back to cricket.Related

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It was Shakib who did the star turn in the first half of the game. It was his blockbuster first over, an economical spell and a fine finish that combined to give him his first five-for against India. His 5 for 36 is his third-best figures in ODIs, and also the best by a left-arm spinner against India. The visitors couldn’t recover from his regular blows, and coupled with Ebadot Hossain’s maiden four-wicket haul, India were kept to 186, the second-lowest total for which they have been bowled out by Bangladesh in ODIs.Shakib swung the game with his first four deliveries. Second ball, he bowled an arm ball that zipped past Rohit Sharma, who was waiting for it to spin. Then he had Virat Kohli caught at cover by a sprawling Litton Das.When Washington Sundar and KL Rahul began to put up a bit of resistance, it was time to reintroduce Shakib again. Third ball into his third spell, he had Sundar caught by Ebadot at point. He then produced another wicket-taking delivery to remove Shardul Thakur with a ball that turned to beat his outside edge before hitting the off stump. Two balls later, Shakib completed his five-for with a regulation lbw against Deepak Chahar.Coming into the series, Bangladesh – and Shakib – did not have much to celebrate. Shakib had underperformed in the recent T20 World Cup where Bangladesh were knocked out in the group stage, scoring just 44 runs across five matches and taking six wickets. In the tri-series against New Zealand and Pakistan before the World Cup, in which Bangladesh remained winless and Shakib experimented with a curved run-up, he shone with the bat but he went wicketless in the three matches. And just last week he was hit for five sixes in an over by Nicholas Pooran in the Abu Dhabi T10. Since the end of May this year, he has only 10 wickets in 15 international matches across formats, with an average of 44.70 and a strike rate of 50.40.Shakib Al Hasan had many reasons to celebrate against India•WaltonShakib has had his share of lows over the past few years – from disciplinary issues to concerns around his form – but, at the same time, he’s always played a role in Bangladesh’s big moments. Think back to his 114* against New Zealand in the 2017 Champions Trophy (which came amid murmurs that there were some who wanted him dropped from the XI), or his ten-for in Bangladesh’s maiden Test win against Australia.In T20 franchise teams, Shakib is often picked as a bowling allrounder, and is sometimes called upon in powerplay. In the Bangladesh side, though, the emergence of several fast bowlers in the last few years has given him a breather from always bowling at crucial stages; he often comes on in the middle overs and finishes his spell before the death.His ODI role, though, has remained the same for several years dating back to 2006-07. Shakib almost always bowls in the same periods in this format – late in the powerplay and through most of the middle overs. And since Abdur Razzak’s wane in the mid-2010s, Shakib has assumed a more wicket-taking role. Now he is closing in on 300 ODI wickets, underlining the importance of his bowling for Bangladesh.Shakib’s importance to Bangladesh cannot be overstated: he’s an experienced bowler, one of their leading batters, and a gun fielder. He rarely goes without making an impact with bat or ball for a long period. His confidence never seems to dip. And he also makes sure to turn up against big teams – just like he did against India on Sunday. Mehidy deserved the credit for the heroic finish but Shakib’s five-for confirmed that he remains the primary match-winner in this Bangladesh side.

Celebrity-driven Mumbai struggle to find their way back from the precipitous fall

They seem to have become a team driven by big names as much as by success, and results have inevitably suffered

Matt Roller09-Apr-20233:30

Moody: Huge gulf between superstars and the other players at Mumbai

From 100 yards away, the golden letters and numbers on the back of Mumbai Indians’ royal-blue shirts are almost impossible to read. Perhaps that is the point: at this franchise, most players’ identities are obvious from the stands of the Wankhede Stadium. If they are not, then they are not worth knowing.No squad in the IPL is as skewed towards star power as Mumbai’s. Their seven highest earners are on a combined INR 85 crore (USD 10.4 million approx), nearly 90 percent of the salary cap. Their eleven lowest earners are on INR 20 lakh (USD 24,000) each, the league’s minimum wage. They have superstars and squad players, with almost nothing in between.On Saturday night, two of those superstars were missing. It had been apparent for some time that the IPL’s most successful franchise would have to make do without Jasprit Bumrah, the leader of their bowling attack, in 2023; news that Jofra Archer, their other big-name bowler, had picked up a niggle meant that their fixture against Chennai Super Kings was always likely to be a challenge.Related

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Mumbai started brilliantly, racing to 61 for 1 after the powerplay. Rohit Sharma threw his hands at the ball when Super Kings’ seamers offered him width, the capacity crowd roaring in celebration at each of his four boundaries. Akash Ambani watched on from his plush leather sofa in the stands; Sachin Tendulkar smiled in the dugout.After Rohit was cleaned up by Tushar Deshpande, Ishan Kishan took over. He had struck three boundaries off Sisanda Magala’s first four balls and then slapped down the ground for consecutive fours, his sweat-drenched forearms glistening under the floodlights. And then, as the field spread… nothing.In the space of 16 balls, Mumbai lost four wickets for 12 runs, collapsing spectacularly against Super Kings’ left-arm spinners. Mitchell Santner and Ravindra Jadeja bowled with skill and guile, varying their pace and extracting just a hint of turn. There was an unfortunate element to two of those wickets: the ball Suryakumar Yadav gloved behind was sliding some way past leg stump, while Jadeja’s catch off his own bowling to remove Cameron Green was a freak dismissal.ESPNcricinfo LtdYet from that moment on, there was an unmistakable sense of inevitability around Mumbai’s defeat. For the second game in a row, they were a long way short with the bat, scraping up to a total of 157. Shorn of their two star bowlers, their attack never stood a chance of defending it, even against a Super Kings batting line-up missing Ben Stokes and Moeen Ali through injury and illness respectively.It is worth dwelling on the make-up of that attack. Mumbai opened the bowling with two left-arm seamers: one of them made his professional T20 debut last weekend, aged 25; the other was traded from Royal Challengers Bangalore during the off-season. Their change seamer has taken six wickets in his T20 career. Their two fingerspinners are base-price rookies. Their frontline legspinner is a 34-year-old, who went unsold last season even as two new teams were added to the league.Mumbai were taken to pieces in the powerplay, not by Ruturaj Gaikwad or Devon Conway but by Ajinkya Rahane. Rahane is a stylish batter with international pedigree, but went into this game having made nine appearances across the past two IPL seasons, only once passing 30. As he took Arshad to pieces, plundering 23 runs from his second over, Rahane exposed Mumbai’s attack for what it was.Two games into the season, Mumbai are in a mess. They have overcome bad starts before, and the nature of this format is that if a couple of their big names find form simultaneously, they could go on a winning streak that takes them into the play-offs and beyond. But it is harder than it has been previously to see that happening.If this fixture really is Indian cricket’s answer to El Clásico, the meeting of its biggest and best clubs, then Mumbai are in their galácticos era, signing the biggest names in the sport simply to prove that they can, just as Real Madrid did soon after the turn of the century.Rohit Sharma has his head down•BCCIIt is a phase unwittingly personified by Green, who was signed for INR 17.5 crore at December’s auction and has now been thrown into the IPL with huge expectations on him. The only previous time he has played a full season was as a 20-year-old, when he averaged 15 and didn’t bowl a ball for Perth Scorchers.Green is a phenomenal talent, who will doubtless dominate at international level for years to come – but was he really the player Mumbai needed? His two innings of note in this format were as an opener, where Mumbai already have an established pair; with the ball, he is being asked to learn on the job.Ahead of the auction, Mumbai needed domestic bowlers to complement Archer and Bumrah; in their absence, they need them even more now. Ignoring that obvious hole in their squad to throw their money at Green was like adding another layer of gold paint to a Bentley without an engine.More pertinently, it was a signing that would not have been countenanced by the Mumbai of old; a franchise that almost never overpaid for a player, who stuck to a clear set of principles in constructing a balanced squad with depth in every area. Somewhere along the way, they seem to have become a team driven by celebrity as much by success. Results, inevitably, have suffered.Three seasons ago, Mumbai strolled effortlessly to a second consecutive title and their third in four years with a side so strong that it was hard to see how they would ever fade. On Saturday night, they lost for the 12th time in their last 16 games. There is still time for them to climb back to those old heights this season, but it has been a precipitous fall.

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