'There are girls all over Pakistan who want to play cricket but they need opportunity' – Fatima Sana

Pakistan have a poor World Cup record, but she feels they are well prepared ahead of their opener against India

Firdose Moonda11-Feb-20231:16

Fatima Sana: I look up to Ellyse Perry and follow her

“If you are a Pakistan [contracted] player, then you have everything. But if you are not a Pakistan player, you don’t have as much. You only have normal things like school cricket, college cricket and that’s it.”That’s how Fatima Sana described the disparity between the professional and the aspiring in Pakistan’s women cricket, which is only set to get bigger as the women’s game enters the big-money franchise era.On Monday, the WPL auction will be held in Mumbai, with the expectation that it will change the women’s game financially and perceptively. And Pakistan will have their noses pressed against the windows when 105 players at this T20 World Cup go under the hammer, none of them in their squad.Related

Mandhana ruled out of Pakistan game with injury

Devika Vaidya is a step away from her World Cup dream

Tensions between India and Pakistan mean that, just like the IPL, no Pakistan players will be part of the WPL. If that isn’t enough of a cold shoulder, the Women’s PSL which was due to be played in March, has been postponed to September thus delaying Pakistan’s own opportunity to enjoy a local franchise tournament. The FICA women’s global employment report, released earlier this week, labelled Pakistan women’s cricket “fledgling professional,” with “limited coverage and funding,” and said “fundamental changes are required to create a recognised pathway for female cricketers in Pakistan to make a viable living out of playing professional cricket.”Those changes are actually happening in fast-forward in India, where the WPL is confirmed as the wealthiest women’s league around, and may be worth more than even some men’s leagues. That may not be such a big deal to Pakistan if they could simply ignore the whole thing, but they won’t be able to. Their first opposition in the tournament is India, who they take on 24 hours before the auction, and who will know the Pakistan match is their last opportunity to impress for a big pay cheque.Given all that and Pakistan’s poor World Cup record – they have won only a quarter of their 28 matches and never made it out of the first round – are they feeling a little undone? Not according to Sana. “We’ve prepared ourselves best because we played against the best side, Australia, before the World Cup so that will help us,” she said.Fatima Sana: “In Pakistan, the [cricket] structure is not as good as Australia’s”•PCBPakistan played three ODIs and two T20Is in Australia [the third T20I was rained out] and lost all of them by big margins in the build-up to this World Cup but the results did not concern Sana. “When you play against the best team, you will learn a lot of things. It’s a great chance for us to become a top four team.”For Sana, the learning came from meeting her hero, Ellyse Perry, who she has idolised since childhood and played against once before, but was too nervous to approach. “When I was 11, I first saw Perry and I saw her bowling the last over in a match against England or New Zealand and I thought I will follow her and look up everything to do with her. After that, she became the best allrounder in the world, so that motivated me,” Sana said. “At the last World Cup, I saw her only, I didn’t say anything. Now when I was against Australia, I asked a lot of things about cricket.”The knowledge-exchange wasn’t what Sana enjoyed most about meeting Perry. “The best thing is that I was bowling and she was batting and that was everything for me. I was trying to get her out and next time I will do it.”If the next time comes at this World Cup, it will have to be in the semi-finals at the earliest, since Pakistan and Australia are in different groups. As much as the romantics among us would like this scenario to play out, the realists will caution against imagining it and secretly maybe Sana would say the same. When asked about whether she was concerned about the growing gap between cricket’s haves and have nots, she conceded that “they have a good structure in Australia where they support Under-19, Under-16 and Under-15 teams. In Pakistan, the structure is not as good as Australia’s.”What Pakistan lacks in their structures, they make up for in talent and Sana is one example of that. She began playing cricket in the street with her brothers, who encouraged her to develop her bowling. She was also able to play a range of other sports and competed in the national athletics championships at Under-19 level. She explained that she only really had that opportunity because she grew up in a city, where access is easier than some of Pakistan’s smaller towns or more rural areas. “In Karachi and Lahore, we have lots of girls playing cricket but we need places like Multan and other places [to also develop players]. There are girls who want to play cricket in those areas but they need an opportunity.”That’s a well-worn trope, especially in women’s cricket, but as the WPL auction looms large over this week, it remains as true as ever.

'It wasn't an easy decision' – Woakes on sacrificing IPL chance for the Ashes

Skipping IPL 2023 gives him the opportunity to play county cricket and push for a Test recall

Matt Roller19-Dec-2022When the longlist of players who had entered next week’s IPL auction was first circulated around franchises at the start of the month, Chris Woakes’ name was a surprise omission.Woakes has played for three different teams in his three IPL seasons – Kolkata Knight Riders in 2017, Royal Challengers Bangalore in 2018 and Delhi Capitals in 2021 – and would almost certainly have found a suitor on December 23. While he might not have sparked the scale of bidding war expected for his England team-mates Ben Stokes and Sam Curran, the demand for seam-bowling allrounders is always high at mini-auctions.But after missing the whole of the 2022 summer with injury and watching the transformation of England’s Test team under Stokes and Brendon McCullum from afar, Woakes explained that he will instead spend April and May trying to force his way into Ashes contention through performances for Warwickshire in the County Championship.”It wasn’t an easy decision, by any means,” Woakes told ESPNcricinfo. “There’s still a part of me that wishes I could go because the IPL is a great tournament and financially it could be very rewarding – but I didn’t want to make the decision solely on finance. It’s a tricky scenario: having just won a World Cup, potentially stock could be high. There are obviously some other players who are likely to go big but I could have been next on the list behind them.”I had conversations with a lot of people and some with franchises as well, who sounded keen, which made it harder to pull out. But having not played any cricket in the English summer last year, it’s a good opportunity for me to set myself up for, hopefully, a really strong summer with England.”It’s an Ashes year and I haven’t played much red-ball cricket. I need to suggest to people and remind people that I can play red-ball cricket and get through it – both from a fitness point of view, but also to show what I can do to try and have a go at being part of the Ashes.”Related

  • Knee surgery leaves Woakes in race to be fit for T20 World Cup

  • Curran, Stokes and Green to be in second set at IPL 2023 auction

  • Green gung-ho about IPL despite Warner's warning

  • Root puts name forward for IPL auction after lengthy T20 absence

  • Stokes to Green – six players who could fetch big money at the IPL auction

Woakes spoke to Rob Key, England’s managing director, during the T20I tour to Pakistan in September, who reassured him that he was still seen as an all-format player. “He was very clear that I was still a part of the Test plans,” Woakes recalled, “but obviously I needed to get myself fit, and get my knee right.”Having taken the new ball during England’s successful T20 World Cup campaign, he was then left out of the squad for the ongoing Test series but is at peace with his omission. “At that moment, the World Cup was the priority,” Woakes said, “and we needed guys going to Pakistan that had fitness behind them, or that bowl a touch quicker. My success in the subcontinent with a red ball has been quite limited, so I feel like it made sense.”With two young daughters at home, he has been awake early in the morning watching the series on TV. “To go 2-0 up in Pakistan is an incredible effort. They’re such hard surfaces to force results on, so to do it in the fashion that they have has been amazing. Credit should go to Ben’s captaincy and the way the bowlers have bowled as well: you can score as many runs as you want to but unless you can take 20 wickets, you don’t win Test matches. It’s been great to watch and I’d really love to be a part of it.”Woakes made his Test debut in the final match of England’s Ashes win in 2013 but missed their 2015 victory through injury and has been part of one drawn series and two defeats in Australia in the years since. As a result, he is desperate to have a crack at them next summer. While his stock fell slightly after a difficult 2021-22 winter – he took 11 wickets at 52.36 across England’s Australia and Caribbean tours – he remains a formidable bowler in English conditions, with a career average of 22.63 in home Tests.”Winning an Ashes series where you play a really strong part would be extremely rewarding”•Getty Images”Winning an Ashes series where you play a really strong part would be extremely rewarding. It’s something that I probably would like to tick off,” Woakes said. “The 2019 series was a tight one with some amazing games to be part of, but there’s nothing like winning an Ashes series. Fingers crossed, that’s something we, as an England team, can do in the summer.”Skipping the IPL will give him the opportunity to play for his county, Warwickshire, in the early months of the Championship season. A combination of England commitments and injuries has heavily restricted his availability in recent years: he played a crucial walk-on role in their 2021 title win, but has only made five appearances for them across formats in the last three seasons.”The IPL is hard to turn down because the best players go there, it’s financially rewarding and it’s been brilliant for my career,” Woakes said, “but the trade-off is that opportunity to play for Warwickshire, which I’ve always loved doing. It’s tricky as an international player, particularly with the current schedule, and more so as a bowler: you don’t get the opportunity to come back and play much for your county.”I don’t blame members and fans for giving myself and many other players a bit of stick for not playing for their counties enough, but the schedule means it is just so hard to do now. I love playing for Warwickshire and I’d love to play more, it’s just almost impossible. It’ll be a good time to put the Bear back on and hopefully put in some early performances and get myself in the reckoning for the Ashes.”His involvement in the inaugural ILT20, where he has a contract with Sharjah Warriors, means that the financial blow of missing the IPL will be less severe than it might otherwise have been and illustrates that he has plenty of attractive offers coming his way from the franchise world.But Woakes insisted that, at 33, he has no intention to give up red-ball cricket any time soon and that his knee – which kept him out of seven Tests and 15 white-ball internationals in the summer – feels “a lot better than it was” after surgery in August left him in a race against the clock to be fit for the World Cup.Woakes took the new ball at the T20 World Cup•Alex Davidson/Getty Images”That time might come, but while I’m still capable and still available for selection, my appetite for Test cricket is still really high,” he said. “With the age I am, as a fast bowler, you can easily get sucked into being pigeon-holed as being close to the end, almost. You’ve seen with Stuart [Broad] and Jimmy [Anderson] – and I know they don’t play white-ball cricket – that we try and keep ourselves as fit as we possibly can and there’s no reason why you can’t play until you are a lot older nowadays.”I’ll try and play as long as I possibly can. I certainly don’t want to hang on. That decision might be made for me and if that’s the case, I might be a white-ball specialist one day, but whilst I can and whilst I’m enjoying it, I’ll try and be that three-format cricketer for as long as I possibly can.”Woakes looks set to travel to South Africa for England’s ODIs in late January, and is yet to discuss with the team’s management whether he will travel to New Zealand for the Test series or Bangladesh for the white-ball tour in February-March, with the short turnaround between the two tours likely requiring England to pick completely separate squads.But for now, Woakes has the rare chance to spend the Christmas period at home with friends and family. “It’s been nice to spend a bit of time decompressing, letting it all sink in after the T20 World Cup. My two young girls have been keeping me busy: my eldest daughter is four-and-a-half and my youngest has just turned two. Especially having missed last Christmas, to have a whole December at home will be really nice.”

Coach Sammy's first test as West Indies stars take on UAE's bright talents

This is also a chance for the teams to ramp up their prep for the ODI World Cup qualifier, set to begin on June 18

Deivarayan Muthu03-Jun-2023

In focus: Coach Daren Sammy

Daren Sammy hasn’t even coached West Indies in one competitive game yet, but his selection has already been questioned in the Caribbean. Former West Indies batter Ramnaresh Sarwan is the latest to question Sammy’s appointment ahead of Shivnarine Chanderpaul, who had led Jamaica Tallawahs to the CPL title last season.Related

  • Hope set to continue as 'more aggressive' enforcer at No.4

  • Sammy's checklist: get Russell, Narine, Hetmyer back

  • Paul, Motie in West Indies squad for World Cup Qualifier

  • UAE and West Indies to play three ODIs in Sharjah

Sammy is no stranger to taking charge of a side amid turmoil. More than a decade ago, Sammy had been named West Indies’ captain in a major shake-up after having played just eight Tests. He thrived as a leader, particularly in T20 cricket, marshalling West Indies to world titles in 2012 and 2016. Can he find similar success as a coach though he had never done this role in international cricket before?Sammy has already had “in-depth” discussions with Shimron Hetmyer, Andre Russell, Evin Lewis and Sunil Narine about their return to the West Indies side, but for now he has to contend with the absence of the seniors. Among them, Hetmyer had publicly made himself available for the upcoming World Cup qualifier later this month but was eventually left out of the squad.

Paul, Drakes return

Both Keemo Paul and Dominic Drakes have overcome injuries to come back into West Indies’ white-ball team. Odean Smith is also part of the squad for the UAE tour, but among the seam-bowling allrounders Paul seems to be the frontrunner to start at the World Cup qualifier along with Romario Shepherd, who has been rested for the UAE series following his IPL stint with Lucknow Super Giants. Paul was with the Super Giants in India, too, as a net bowler, having worked with the Super Giants franchise in the inaugural SA20.Paul had also proven his form and fitness for Guyana in the West Indies championship in March before heading to the IPL. Paul gives West Indies an extra new-ball option and also has T10 experience in the Emirates, having been part of Delhi Bulls in the most recent edition of the Abu Dhabi T10 league.As for Drakes, he can also bowl with the new ball and has T10 experience with Bulls, but he isn’t part of the West Indies side for the World Cup qualifier. Raymon Reifer is the other left-arm seam-bowling allrounder in the squad for the UAE trip.Keemo Paul was recently with Lucknow Super Giants in the IPL as a net bowler•AFP / Getty Images

Sinclair, Cariah in the spin mix

With Akeal Hosein taking a break after his maiden IPL stint and fellow left-arm fingerspinner Gudakesh Motie injured, West Indies have recalled offspinner Kevin Sinclair. The 23-year-old last played for West Indies in August 2022, but he elbowed his way back into the side on the back of a strong domestic season, where had contributed handsomely with the bat as well.Sinclair also turned in all-round performances for West Indies A in Sylhet last month and is set to step into Hosein’s shoes in the UAE. He will likely be paired up with wristspinner Yannic Cariah, who had travelled with the West Indies senior team to South Africa and then more recently with the West Indies A team to Bangladesh. Roston Chase and Kavem Hodge are the other spin-bowling options for West Indies.If Sinclair starts for West Indies in Sharjah on June 4, he will have a short turnaround, having only finished his West Indies A duty in Bangladesh on June 2.Alick Athanaze was the top run-getter at the 2018 Under-19 World Cup in New Zealand•IDI/Getty

Will Athanaze make his WI debut?

The highly-rated Alick Athanaze is among four uncapped players in West Indies’ squad for the UAE series. Athanaze was the leading run-getter at the Under-19 World Cup in 2018, ahead of Shubman Gill, but early in his domestic career he was dropped by Windward Islands. That snub fuelled him to work even harder to become one of the mainstays of Windward Islands’ batting and the captain of the team.Athanaze had also recently captained Team Weekes in the Headley Weekes tri-series at home. Earlier in the Super50 Cup, West Indies’ 50-over domestic tournament, Athanaze was Windward Islands’ top scorer, with 292 runs in six innings at an average of 48.66 and strike rate of 96.05, and sixth highest overall.Athanze, though, isn’t part of West Indies’ side for the World Cup qualifier, but his left-handedness at the top or middle, especially in the absence of Kyle Mayers and Nicholas Pooran, could help West Indies counter UAE legspinner Karthik Meiyappan and left-arm fingerspinner Aayan Khan.Vriitya Aravind is on the verge of becoming UAE’s highest run-getter in ODI cricket•Peter Della Penna

Aravind, Waseem, and UAE’s WI connection

The T10 and ILT20 leagues in the Emirates have somewhat helped UAE bridge the gap between their local tournaments and international cricket. The franchise leagues have also given UAE’s bright talents the chance to work with the West Indian stars. Both captain Muhammad Waseem and wicketkeeper Vriitya Aravind were part of the MI Emirates side in the ILT20, which also included Nicholas Pooran, Dwayne Bravo, Kieron Pollard and Andre Fletcher. Waseem had emerged as MI Emirates’ second-highest scorer in the tournament, behind Pollard, while Aravind got the opportunity to pick the brains of Pooran.

Aravind’s boundary-line chat with Carlos Brathwaite – they were team-mates at Chennai Braves in the T10 league – was among the most defining images of the ILT20.Aravind, who was the second-highest run-getter in ODI cricket last year, suffered a slump this year, but is back to form once again, having rattled up scores of 185 and 174 in the ACC Premier Cup in Nepal. He is now 19 runs away from surpassing Rohan Mustafa as UAE’s top scorer in ODI cricket.

Stats – Dube lays into RCB again in record six-hitting spree

The numbers that mattered as a high-scoring thriller between RCB and CSK went down to the last over

Sampath Bandarupalli18-Apr-202333 The number of sixes hit in the match between Royal Challengers Bangalore and Chennai Super Kings, the joint highest in an IPL game. This has happened twice before, with CSK involved in both the previous games: RCB vs CSK in 2018 in Bengaluru, and Rajasthan Royals vs CSK in 2020 in Sharjah.Related

When Dhoni and CSK took over RCB's home advantage

Chennai Super Kings win run-fest despite Maxwell, du Plessis fireworks

As it happened – Royal Challengers Bangalore vs Chennai Super Kings

444 Total runs scored by RCB and CSK at in Bengaluru on Monday – the sixth highest aggregate for an IPL match and the highest in Bengaluru. The most runs scored in an IPL match at this venue before this was 425 during last week’s contest between RCB and Lucknow Super Giants.226 for 6 CSK’s total in this match was their third highest in the IPL. Their highest score in the league is 246 for 5 against Royals in 2010, while their second highest is 240 for 5 against Kings XI Punjab (now Punjab Kings) in 2008.ESPNcricinfo Ltd226 CSK’s total was also the highest by a visiting team in Bengaluru, surpassing Kolkata Knight Riders’ 222 on the opening night of the IPL in 2008. It is also the third highest score conceded by RCB.17 Sixes hit by CSK in their innings, their joint most in an IPL match. They have hit 17 sixes on three occasions previously, including twice against RCB in 2018 and 2022.15 The number of sixes Shivam Dube has hit against RCB in 105 balls across three innings. Dube has scored 193 runs at a strike rate of 183.8 and an average of 96.5 against his former franchise. At the same time, he averages 20.29 against the other IPL franchises.RCB – Shivam Dube’s favourite opponents•ESPNcricinfo Ltd75 for 2 RCB’s powerplay score in this match was their second highest in the IPL. Their highest powerplay total is 79 for 1 against Kochi Tuskers Kerala in 2011.36 The number of runs Faf du Plessis’ reprieve by MS Dhoni in the second over of the chase cost CSK. Du Plessis was dropped on 0 off the second ball he faced. He finished with 62 off 33 balls. According to ESPNcricinfo’s Luck Index, the other batters would have scored 26 off 31 had the catch been taken.

Alyssa Healy: Growing the women's game in India is our real job

Australia icon looks to broaden her horizons during transformative stint at WPL

Vishal Dikshit14-Mar-20232:47

Healy: I like to lead from within the group and empower players

Captain Alyssa Healy gathered her UP Warriorz team-mates one day in the team hotel and asked each one of them to write down their answer to the question: “What do I want to get out of this season?” whether on or off the field. Many overseas players wrote about learning the Indian culture, someone wrote about enjoying every moment of the WPL, one about sharing her experiences and another about learning from the seniors, and so on.The objective of this exercise was break the ice between the players, get them to trust each other, and form a well-knit unit, and not just a squad of 16. Even though Healy does not take the credit for this – it was suggested by the team owner Jinisha Sharma – she says “it was a little tough initially” for them to get together and form relationships quickly, because the squad didn’t have much time to know one another between the T20 World Cup, which ended on February 26 in South Africa, and the WPL, which began on March 4 in Mumbai.Now that the team has been together for two weeks and a few games, Healy is unflinchingly working towards her own objective for the WPL: to get the most out of the Indian domestic players.

These players are amazing and it’s not about us, it’s almost about them and helping grow the sport hereHealy on the young Indian players within the UP squad

“I feel like sometimes we forget that this is the WPL, and this is the Indian league and we’re the foreigners coming in to play a part and play a role and do our job,” Healy told ESPNcricinfo. “But this is more so about growing the game in India and seeing these young, amazing Indian players get a chance on a big stage to show everyone what they can do. I think sometimes the international players come in and sort of overshadow that fact.”There’s a lot of talk about all the international players making all the runs and taking all the wickets, but what the UP Warriorz in particular have as a strength is we’ve got some really good Indian players within our squad that are really going to shine at the right times, and our job as international players is to complement that and do our job where we can.”Warriorz have won only two of their first four games, but they can boast a line-up that covers most bases, if not all. They have the fastest bowler in the world, Shabnim Ismail, who has already bowled 127.5kmh; their spin duo of Sophie Ecclestone and Deepti Sharma has picked 13 wickets together with economy rates of 7.03 and 8.20 respectively in a high-scoring tournament; Grace Harris is a belligerent finisher, and Tahlia McGrath has struck two half-centuries already, with an overall strike-rate of nearly 160.Alyssa Healy has been leading from the front for UP•BCCIIt is the Indian names, however, that Healy wants to focus on. Twenty-eight-year-old hard-hitting batter Kiran Navgire, allrounder Devika Vaidya who is now opening the batting for them with the captain, middle-order batter Simran Shaikh, and Under-19 star Shweta Sehrawat, who opened initially but has been moved down the order now.”A Deepti Sharma, a Raja [Rajeshwari Gayakwad]…everybody knows them already, they’ve played for India, but there’s players like Devika, to come in and do what she did [making 36 not out in a ten-wicket win against RCB] and just remind everyone that these players are amazing and it’s not about us, it’s almost about them and helping grow the sport here,” Healy elaborated further. “I’ve been trying to communicate that to them and that’s where the trust is being formed, that I’m here for them, I’m here to promote them, I’m not here to promote myself and give myself the best opportunities to go out there and make runs or take wickets. I want them to do that and them to be really proud of themselves at the end of the tournament.”Healy has, after all, already played nearly 250 international games for Australia, plus all eight seasons of the WBBL (including two titles), and she also featured in the last season of the Hundred as well, for Northern Superchargers. She will be 33 later this month, and with the kind of maturity that often comes with age, exposure and experiences, Healy wants to give back to the game, even if it means to players of another team, who have been coming close to beating Australia in recent finals.”A big thing is that cricket is such a small part of our lives and at the end of the day it’s not everything in our lives either, and we sort of forget that, we get wrapped up in how important cricket is and it’s the be-all and end-all,” Healy explained. “But at the end of the day, you’re going to retire and you have your whole life ahead of you so if you can learn some skills or learn how to be a well-rounded person in your cricketing career, I think that’s going to be beneficial for the rest of your lives, so an exercise like that (about achieving something from WPL) is really exciting for the group to think, ‘ok, what do I want to get out of the WPL?’Meg Lanning, Beth Mooney, Harmanpreet Kaur, Smriti Mandhana, and Healy unveil the WPL trophy•BCCI”It’s not just about runs and wickets and being the best player in the competition. A lot of them have written out there that they want to dive in and experience our culture and get to know me, and for me, mine is like to dive in and experience the Indian culture a little bit more and get to know some of these girls and their families outside of cricket, and things like that. Making a commitment and putting it on a board means that you’re accountable for that and you walk in there every day and say, ‘am I living that?’ So that was a big push from Jinisha [Sharma, the owner], which I was really excited by, because it’s sort of one of my life mottos as well.”According to Lisa Sthalekar, the Warriorz mentor, Healy went to Deepti, the vice-captain after joining the squad to say, “I’m here to help you, this is your side, you’re from UP, I’m the outsider, let me help you guide this team, because you’ll be in this team for as long as you want whereas I’m here for a small amount of time.” Sthalekar has known Healy for well more than a decade from her domestic cricket days and was Healy’s team-mate in each of her three debuts in international cricket, back in 2010 and 2011. She says Healy has always been about the bigger picture “for as long as I can remember”.Related

ESPNcricinfo Awards 2022 Women's ODI batting nominees: Alyssa Healy and Nat Sciver-Brunt drop jaws in World Cup final

UP Warriorz name Alyssa Healy as captain

WPL stars to look out for – Mandhana, Shafali, Harmanpreet, Mooney and more

Metres matter, but short boundaries not the only reason for the run-fest in the WPL

“People may love her or hate her, she does polarise people, but one thing is that she’s always seen the game broader than just her own experience in that one moment,” Sthalekar said. “A prime example is that T20 World Cup [final in 2020] at the MCG. She could have had blinkers to the World Cup final thinking ‘it’s in my home country, we are expected to win, we only just got into the final’. But what does she and all the rest of the players do? They open the blinkers up and go, ‘this is actually bigger than us. This is about past players, it’s about volunteers, it’s about women’s sport in this country’. She took all of that on and went, ‘I’m just going to live this moment and enjoy it,’ and she had a smile from ball one, even before she hit a four, and then just soaked it up.”Healy took India down in that 2020 final with a momentous and brutal 75 off 39 that gave Australia an 85-run victory. Exactly three years later, she is now leading a side full of Indians – some experienced and many raw – to share her experiences with them, to groom and chaperone them, and prepare them for the big stage where she has lifted many a trophy.

Can RCB maximise home advantage in the first half of the season?

Kohli’s return to form and Maxwell’s fitness are a big boost, as RCB play six of their seven home games in April

Shashank Kishore24-Mar-2023

Where RCB finished last season

Royal Challengers Bangalore finished fourth in the league stage with eight wins and six losses, making the playoffs for a third successive season. There they vanquished debutants Lucknow Super Giants in the Eliminator, courtesy a century from Rajat Patidar, the fastest by an Indian in IPL history. However, a place in the final wasn’t to be as they were beaten by eventual runners-up Rajasthan Royals in Qualifier 2. Their quest for a maiden IPL title continues.

RCB squad for IPL 2023

Faf du Plessis (capt), Virat Kohli, Glenn Maxwell, Mohammad Siraj, Harshal Patel, Wanindu Hasaranga, Dinesh Karthik (wk), Shahbaz Ahmed, Rajat Patidar, Anuj Rawat, Akash Deep, Josh Hazlewood, Mahipal Lomror, Finn Allen, Suyash Prabhudesai, Karn Sharma, Siddarth Kaul, David Willey, Reece Topley, Himanshu Sharma, Manoj Bhandage, Rajan Kumar, Avinash Singh, Sonu Yadav, Michael BracewellRelated

  • Hazlewood set to miss at least seven matches of IPL 2023

  • Harshal Patel: 'I'm always thinking about how I can offer my team more value'

  • IPL 2023 – why it's going to be a season unlike any other

  • Rajat Patidar to miss first half of IPL 2023 with heel injury

  • Michael Bracewell joins RCB as replacement for Will Jacks

Player availability – Will Josh Hazlewood make it?

Australia fast bowler Josh Hazlewood is recovering from Achilles tendonitis. He flew home midway through the Border-Gavaskar Trophy in February after missing the first two Tests. Hazlewood’s fitness is going to be monitored given Australia have the World Test Championship final and the Ashes coming up immediately after the IPL ends on May 28.England batter Will Jacks, who was identified as cover for Glenn Maxwell, was ruled out with injury. New Zealand allrounder Michael Bracewell has been named his replacement.Rajat Patidar, meanwhile, could potentially miss the first half of the season with a heel injury. The batter is undergoing rehab at the National Cricket Academy (NCA) and has been advised three weeks of rest, after which an MRI scan will determine his participation in the second half of the season.Josh Hazlewood was a crucial player in RCB’s run to the playoffs in 2022•BCCI

What’s new with RCB this year

They signed left-arm seamer Reece Topley as a back-up for Hazlewood, and Jammu & Kashmir’s Avinash Singh, a tearaway quick capable of bowling over 150kph. But most of the squad and coaching staff is the same.

The good – Glenn Maxwell’s recovery, Virat Kohli’s form

After Maxwell broke his leg in a freak accident in November, RCB were scurrying for allrounders at the auction. There was some uncertainty even as late as February, but Maxwell has since returned to competitive cricket and is set to start.Virat Kohli’s return to form also comes as a big relief for RCB. Between the last IPL and now, he ended his drought of hundreds that lasted over 1000 days with a T20I century against Afghanistan in September. More recently, during the Ahmedabad Test against Australia, he made his first Test hundred since 2019.

The not-so-good – Who after Harshal Patel and Mohammed Siraj?

Beyond Harshal Patel and Mohammed Siraj, their Indian pace stocks are thin on experience. If Hazlewood isn’t a sure starter, they will need Reece Topley or one of their uncapped picks to deliver.

Schedule insights

With six of their seven home games scheduled for April because of elections in Karnataka in May, RCB cannot bank on home advantage during the business end of the season, when teams look to maximise points to consolidate their standing.It’s an additional challenge RCB have to overcome to buck their trend of finishing the league poorly. In 2020, they lost four straight games heading into the playoffs. In 2021, they began the second half with two back-to-back losses before huffing and puffing into the playoffs. In 2022, they managed just three wins out of seven in the second half. How will 2023 play out?

The big question

March 26, GMT 0240 The piece was updated with news of Rajat Patidar’s injury.

In World Cups, pressure comes with the territory. It's what makes winning sweet

Champions, like Virat Kohli, embrace pressure and rise in its presence. They know how to shut out noise, and when to be buoyed by it

Sambit Bal10-Oct-2023Leading up to the World Cup, Rahul Dravid, whose press conferences have humour – often self-deprecating – and wisdom in equal measure, was asked about the inconveniences of India’s punishing travel schedule during the tournament.Indeed, no other team will log more air miles during this tournament, go through more airport routines, and play at more venues. Their World Cup began with a 2500-kilometre leg from Guwahati to Thiruvananthapuram, a route so thin that no direct commercial flights exist on it. With their two warm-up games in those cities washed out, all that travel would turn out to be an exercise in futility.Through the course of their league games, each played at a different venue than the one before, they will have travelled about 13,000km, roughly 3000 more than second-placed England. Pakistan, in contrast, will clock only about 7000km, mostly on account of playing their warm-ups and their first two matches of the tournament proper in Hyderabad.Related

  • Topley relieved England stuck to their attack first ask questions later ODI blueprint

  • Malan slams 140 as England roar back with Bangladesh demolition

  • The pressure's all mine (2009)

  • 'In high-pressure moments the quality of decision-making matters more than skill' (2016)

  • When the going is always tough (2017)

This, of course, is not the only nuisance during a home World Cup in India. As the class of 2011 could warn you, the chatter will be relentless: from airport lounges to in-room dining, the players will have no escape from their compatriots demanding the trophy be won. From 24-hour newsrooms to zillions of social-media handles, the stream of opinion and advice will be ceaseless. Unlike in 2011, when the team studiously shunned many forms of external aggravation – newspapers, websites and news channels – doing so will be a hopeless task in 2023, calling for monk-like abstinence from cell phones.And the demand for tickets – what an absolute menace. Each team member is allotted three per game, but hundreds of acquaintances beg for one or more. It prompted Virat Kohli, who must get more such requests than most, to put out a social-media post: don’t ask me for tickets, enjoy the World Cup from your homes, please. Another player made “No tickets please” his WhatsApp profile status. Others avoid calls from the usual suspects.

Sachin Tendulkar waited about 20 years to be a World Cup winner. Shubman Gill, Mohammed Siraj, Shreyas Iyer and Ishan Kishan have that opportunity at the first go, in front of their own people

But it took Dravid only a couple of minutes to set things in perspective. He was responding in Hindi, so I will paraphrase. What trouble, he said. What an exciting opportunity, instead, to go to so many different places, let fans have a chance to see their favourite players, from airports to stadiums. We are playing a World Cup at home, in front of our people. What can be bigger than that? What can be more exciting?He should know. Despite a long and sterling career, he never got that opportunity. Neither did some others from that golden generation, including Sourav Ganguly. VVS Laxman never got to play a World Cup at all, and he carried that hurt for years. Only Virat Kohli and R Ashwin from the current squad know what it is like to play a World Cup at home. Rohit Sharma, who has called this World Cup the biggest event of his career, knows how utterly rotten it is to miss out: he lost out in 2011 by a whisker.What a blessing it is, then, for those making their World Cup debuts at home. Sachin Tendulkar waited about 20 years to be a World Cup winner. Shubman Gill, Mohammed Siraj, Shreyas Iyer and Ishan Kishan have that opportunity at the first go, in front of their own people. Of course there will be pressure. But pressure follows expectation. And expectations are placed only on champions.Pressure, as Billie Jean King said, is privilege.King, winner of 39 tennis Grand Slam titles, won the highly publicised Battle of the Sexes match in 1973 after she accepted an obnoxious challenge from Bobby Riggs, a former Wimbledon winner and a serial baiter of women tennis players. Riggs was 55, and 26 years older than King, when the match was played, but he had earlier that year defeated Margaret Court, another Grand Slam winner, then ranked No. 1, in straight sets. The King vs Riggs match carried a winner-takes-all prize of US$100,000, a fortune in those days. But there was a lot more at stake: King was stepping up, too, for liberals and feminists, who had been appalled by Riggs’ comments, which included this gem: “Women belong in the bedroom and the kitchen, in that order.”And everywhere the players go, the fans want a piece of them•Getty ImagesAmong Indian players, no one will have known pressure more intimately than Tendulkar, and I had the opportunity to talk to him about the burden once. How was it going out to bat with a knowledge that a fifty wouldn’t be enough because a hundred was expected? His response was similar to King’s. “I have never seen it as a burden,” he said. “I would rather have people, and my team-mates, expect things of me than not expect anything. It’s an honour. I am fortunate to be in that place. It shows that people care.”Kohli hasn’t merely followed Tendulkar’s path in run-scoring, he has inherited the universality of his mass appeal too. To be at the MA Chidambaram Stadium for India’s World Cup opener was to be exposed to the full force of Kohlimania. His mere presence at the boundary was electrifying: wherever he went on the field, it led to instant and spontaneous cheering and chanting of his name, which stood out for its authenticity against the announcer’s continual, and grating, attempts to orchestrate crowd responses over the public address system.When it mattered, Kohli paid it back in equal measure, first by absorbing the blows Australia were delivering – they had reduced India to 2 for 3, a score from which no team had won chasing in an ODI – and then slowly and inexorably taking the match away.That’s what champions do. They embrace pressure and rise in its presence. They know how to shut out the noise, and when to be buoyed by it. They know how to ride the wave of emotion and how not to be swept away by it. They also accept failure as inevitable and they know how to leave it behind, like they do a game after the last ball is bowled. Kohli played and missed, chopped a ball past his stumps, and was dropped on 12. Unruffled, he extracted full toll.He has known what it is like to win a World Cup at home, having had the good fortune to experience it in his first World Cup. He now has the chance of an encore in what could be his final World Cup. And having missed out on one, what might Rohit not trade to get on board? The World Cup comes once in four years; for many, a home World Cup comes once in a career. It’s a chance to create memories for a lifetime.Pressure? Who has won a World Cup without embracing it?

Time to temper expectations as India enter Test transition

It’s a natural cycle for all teams except that the high number of injuries has made it more challenging for India

Sidharth Monga10-Jul-20232:18

Can India’s inexperienced quicks master the Caribbean challenge?

India’s pace attack on the Test tour of the West Indies carries a total experience of 88 Test wickets between them; Mohammed Siraj, the leader of the pack, has 52. The last time India played a whole Test series without a single fast bowler with 100 wickets was against West Indies in 2013-14 at home where fast bowling didn’t really matter that much.For a series in conditions where you need at least three fast bowlers, you need to go to the current coach Rahul Dravid’s playing days: the 2011 tour of the West Indies. All it has taken to get such a raw attack is for one bowler, Mohammed Shami, to be rested. India seem to have moved on from Ishant Sharma. We don’t know if, how much, or how effectively Jasprit Bumrah will play Test cricket. Umesh Yadav is either injured or dropped, but he is anyway on the wrong side of 35.This has not happened all of a sudden but this is the point where the realisation is right in the face: the great Indian Test team is in transition. Great as the spinners are, especially with their added contribution with the bat, India have had great spinners operating in tandem before. What really set this team apart from other Indian teams was the unprecedented availability of at least three fit, experienced and high-pace fast bowlers at any given point of time.Related

India and West Indies meet on the path to a better future

Why India needs a director of cricket

Ganguly on Rahane as Test vice-captain: 'I don't understand the thought process'

Pujara dropped; Jaiswal and Gaikwad in India's Test squad for WI

India’s scarcely believable, freakish series win in Australia in 2020-21 seems to have spoilt the Indian fan, media and even the board. That’s probably why India’s defeat in the World Test Championship final – the final, mind you – was casually called a disaster or a debacle. India were up against the only team in Test history to feature four bowlers with 200 or more wickets, a side which could afford to rest one of them because of the impending Ashes. In conditions that favoured fast bowling so much that India didn’t even play R Ashwin.India might not have a title to show for it, but they have dominated Test cricket as much as is possible in an era where most international sides are equally professional. They have lost just three home Tests in ten years, won consecutive Test series in Australia, drawn one in England, and come agonisingly close to winning one in South Africa. They have made both of the WTC finals despite a freakish number of injuries since the start of that Australia tour in 2020-21.Expectations, though, need to be tempered now. Amid the euphoria of the World Cup win in 2011 and the bold assertion of the BCCI in cricket politics and economy, it was almost forgotten what a weak pace attack India had in 2011, which led to eight straight Test defeats in England and Australia. If not such drastic reversals, we should be prepared for at least a downturn of some degree from this team in transition.Yashasvi Jaiswal is set to make his Test debut in the Caribbean•ICC via Getty ImagesAnd don’t get swayed by their failure to qualify for the ODI World Cup, West Indies are a potent threat at home. They have beaten England in successive home series, drawn with Sri Lanka and Pakistan, but have been dominated by India and South Africa.West Indies’ pace attack has only got better since they lost to India in 2019. Kemar Roach is among the top-five wicket-takers for West Indies, Shannon Gabriel is headed towards the top ten, the allrounder Jason Holder averages under 30 with the ball, and Alzarri Joseph is nearing his prime.Although historically Rosseau and Port of Spain are not known to be so, if West Indies can somehow create surfaces that take India’s spinners out of the equation, don’t be surprised if the visitors are in trouble in the series.It is not just a bowling transition for India. The future of the team’s leadership, you would assume, depends on how the World Cup goes, which means the captain and the coach can’t quite formulate longer-term plans yet.The selectors, who have to maintain some sort of continuity, seem to have started playing their shots. They seem to be mindful they don’t want to be blooding two or three rookie batters all at the same time. That’s why Yashasvi Jaiswal is all set to replace Cheteshwar Pujara at No. 3. Virat Kohli, Rohit Sharma and Ajinkya Rahane are closer to the end of their careers than the middle.This is a natural cycle for all teams except that the unexpectedly high number of injuries has made it more challenging for India. There are injuries and age in the bowling department, uncertainties around batters and captains, and the game-changing wicketkeeper is indefinitely out after his car crash at the turn of this year.The situation is not too different from when India went to the West Indies in 2011. They rested Zaheer Khan, and suddenly they had an inexperienced attack. The initial replacements either didn’t have express pace or lacked supreme fitness. It took about four years of rebuild and the introduction of a freakish generational talent in Bumrah for India to reach a level where they compete in almost all conditions in the world.There are two more important away tours at the end of this year (South Africa) and the next (Australia) on which hinge India’s chances of making it to the WTC final. India will have done extremely well if the expectations remain high by the end of this cycle.

Graeme Swann moulds young England spinners dreaming of another series win in India

The former offspinner talks about his career, coaching, and how his England team would have fared against the Bazball side

Vithushan Ehantharajah23-Nov-2023It is coming up to ten years since Graeme Swann called time on a distinguished England career. Yet even with a CV that boasts three Ashes victories, including in Australia in 2010-11 (a success which led to England’s No. 1 Test ranking), a Test victory in India in 2012 and a T20 World Cup, there is one great regret.”I wish I got a hundred, that’s something that really annoys me,” he reveals. The highest score of “only” 85 against South Africa in December 2009 grates the offspinner who did manage four first-class centuries.”I look back now and think, ‘Why didn’t you just have that extra five minutes here and there in the nets?’ Why not listen to the little devil on your left shoulder rather than the one on your right that said, ‘Just bat through until tea’ rather than ‘Imagine hitting this bowler for six right now’? I always listened to that idiot.”I still dream about cricket. I take slip catches in my sleep. I’m always fielding or batting in my dreams – never bowling. Which probably tells me something – that I was a very frustrated batsman.”At this point, I offer a different perspective. Perhaps Swann does not think about bowling because, well, what more was there to achieve? In the land of the living, 255 Test dismissals put him seventh on England’s all-time list, second behind Derek Underwood’s 297 as the country’s most productive spinner, at an average of 29.96. Impressive numbers through performances that elevated him as one of the best fingerspinners of his era.Related

'In T20, I was looking to get a batsman out, not worrying about going for a four or six' (2018)

Flintoff, Swann take up mentor roles for England Lions

Major India Test venues set to miss out on England series

Moeen replacing Leach makes England stronger, claims Swann

“Yes, maybe,” replies Swann. “I get your point, 100%. You know, I’ve never really delved into the dream world. But now I do, and you’re absolutely right.”It was on the eve of the Ashes Boxing Day Test in 2013 that Swann called it quits after 60 Tests. A nerve issue in his right elbow, which had been under the knife earlier that year, meant he had lost the feeling in his fingers. With the urn gone after the three matches, he decided that was that.England eventually succumbed to a 5-0 whitewash, amplifying the sentiment Swann had deserted his team-mates. It was the only time he felt mischaracterised by the media. “But there’s no point holding grudges,” he says, phlegmatically, before joking: “And the one guy I’ve got a grudge against, one day I’ll push him in the sea.”That the third Test in Perth was his last game of cricket underlines the terminal nature of the injury. Nevertheless, stepping away altogether was tough. “You keep thinking – could I have waited? Could I have seen if my elbow got better? And then I’d see England playing again and get massive pangs of jealousy.”I’ll be honest, I still get it now. I think it’ll help when Jimmy Anderson breaks a hip or something by the time he goes. But seeing your mate still doing it and being on the outside, it is hard. It’s not enjoyable. I’d love to be a grey-haired, wily old spinner playing for England like him. I don’t think I could have kept my fitness up, to be fair.”That’s life. I was dealt an amazing hand for five years, if I bemoan the end of it, it’ll take away from how amazing those five years were.”

“Being able to get involved and hopefully do something for the good of the team and English cricket, it gets me out of bed with a skip in the morning”

England still have not got over Swann. Beyond the wickets was a level of control, particularly in the first half of matches, which allowed Andy Flower’s chart-topping team to operate with him as one of a four-man attack alongside three quicks.It is a balance England have not replicated since. Since Swann’s retirement, debuts have been handed to ten spinners – 12 if you broaden the criteria to include Will Jacks and Liam Livingstone, both selected in Pakistan last winter to pitch in with the slow-bowling load.Moeen Ali has come closest to stabilising an XI in the manner that Swann did, while Jack Leach has developed a similar attacking verve as the designated Bazball spinner. But it speaks of a lack of depth that Moeen reversed his retirement last summer when Leach was ruled out of the Ashes with a stress fracture. And with Moeen now back in Test retirement, options for the upcoming five-match series in India are looking light on the ground.Swann was integral to success in 2012-13, with 20 wickets at 24.75 as part of a dual-spin threat with Monty Panesar (17 at 26.82) to secure England’s first win in India since 1984-85. Now, as they look to repeat history against the No. 1 side in the world, he has a different part to play.The 44-year-old is currently out in the UAE with the England Lions, working with the eight spinners among the 20-man squad as an ECB spin consultant, a role he fulfilled last winter. This time around, there is an onus on ensuring potential bolters can deal with being thrust into the bright lights of a Test series in India.Swann appeals for Rahul Dravid’s wicket in his first over of Test cricket, Chennai, December 2008•Anthony Devlin/PA Photos/Getty ImagesLancashire left-arm spinner Tom Hartley and Sussex’s Jack Carson, an offspinner with Swann-like traits, could receive maiden Test call-ups. With the Lions due to tour alongside the Test series with red-ball matches against India A, others could play themselves into contention. Brendon McCullum and managing director Rob Key will drop in for a portion of the training camp to gauge what options there are before picking their squad for the series.Thus, players having such ready access to Swann is a boost. And high on the list of frequently asked questions is what Test cricket is actually like.”A lot of them are just worried about what it’s like in Test cricket; do you have to bowl magic balls or do anything different? You actually don’t – the pressure of Test cricket is felt by the batsmen, just as much, if not more than the bowler.”I was exactly the same back in the day. I thought you had to be absolutely better than you’ve ever been every time you bowl in Test cricket. You actually don’t. You have to be yourself and be very consistent. That’s probably what I try to get over the most – they’ve all got the balls in their locker to take wickets in Test cricket already.”Much of what Swann imparts is on the mental side. Performance director Mo Bobat noted how beneficial it had been for all players to tap into his tactical nous. It was a characteristic that was perhaps lost in his enthusiastic, at times class-clown persona, but was a vital part of the whole package, underpinning his skills, and a reason why he would often pick up wickets early in his spells. Notably in the first over on Test debut in Chennai back in December 2008 when he picked up both Gautam Gambhir and Rahul Dravid.

“I still dream about cricket. I take slip catches in my sleep. I’m always fielding or batting in my dreams – never bowling. Which probably tells me something – that I was a very frustrated batsman”

“It comes with experience and age, which these lads haven’t got at the minute. But I definitely think as a bowler, you should know how to get a guy out as he’s walking to the crease, just by the way he holds his bat, the way his pads are on…”Pads?”Oh you can gauge so much. If his back knee is dirty, he’s a sweeper. If the bottom of his pads are loose, they tend to be light-footed and like going down the wicket. If they’ve got a very heavy grip, they’re more likely to be a bat-pad candidate. If they grip it very high up, they’re going to look to hit you over the top. Things like that.”You can pick up all these little clues before you’ve even bowled a ball. You don’t want to be giving him ten balls to work him out. If you’re trying to settle into a spell, you miss out on the best opportunity to get them out. You should have worked him out before he even gets to the crease.”All of this was developed over time. Beyond a solitary ODI cap in January 2000 in South Africa, where he irked head coach Duncan Fletcher enough to not feature again under his tenure, Swann’s introduction to Test cricket came at the age of 29.Made at Wantage Road, then refined at Trent Bridge after moving from Northamptonshire to Nottinghamshire, ability grew with maturity. While the county career arc of moving from a smaller county to a Test match ground is nothing out of the ordinary, Swann feels modern domestic spinners lack the opportunity and guidance he was afforded.On still missing playing cricket: “Seeing your mate [James Anderson] still doing it and being on the outside, it is hard. I don’t think I could have kept my fitness up”•Philip Brown/Getty Images”A lot of these spinners when they play [for England], they are 21-22. I was very lucky in the end the way my career panned out. By that stage you’ve got so much more knowledge and experience under your belt that it’s a lot easier to adapt.”I had brilliant captains. Growing up in Northampton on dust bowls, we always had attacking fields. Then Chris Read and Stephen Fleming at Notts just left me to do it myself, provided I could justify why I wanted fields for a positive reason.”I think that’s what Ben Stokes does and why he is getting so much out of Jack [Leach]. You do have to try and take wickets every ball, you can’t just be that guy who lands it on the spot and waits for a mistake.”Swann hopes Stokes’ influence will ensure more captains take a punt on their spinners, particularly earlier in the season when the convention is to leave them out. He also appreciates his job as a consultant means he must use his contact time with the young spinners wisely.That he is even coaching at all is a change of tack. “I didn’t ever think I’d enjoy coaching, or get as much out of it,” he says. He regards himself as a freelancer, balancing work with the ECB and Trent Rockets men under his former coach, Andy Flower, with commentary gigs.He expects news on whether he has made the cut to commentate on the Test tour of India will come at the last minute, which could eat into his availability for the Lions. But it is clear the pull of moulding the next generation of English cricketers – maybe even finding the next Graeme Swann – has a unique appeal. Even a sense of duty.

“As a bowler, you should know how to get a guy out as he’s walking to the crease, just by the way he holds his bat, the way his pads are on”

“I enjoy the commentary, it’s great. But like Rob Key said when he started doing the [ECB managing director] job, whatever you say on TV, it doesn’t actually affect anything. It’s just your opinion.”Being able to get involved and hopefully do something for the good of the team and English cricket, that’s a different feeling altogether. It gets me out of bed with a skip in the morning rather than dragging myself out, moping after the dog in the park.”Nothing gets close to playing, I can tell you that. But that happens; you play and experience the best years of your life and I was lucky to be in a very successful England team for a few years. When I look at it, I still think we’d beat any England team. Even the Bazball one – we’d beat them. I don’t mind going at five an over if I get five-fer, it’s like playing against Pakistan!”But you’re always chasing, you’re always trying to get that feeling back. If you’re born into cricket, and raised playing cricket, you just want to be involved. After a while, you’re itching to get back out there. And I’ve loved every minute of it so far.”

Reeza Hendricks gives South Africa a selection headache they won't mind

He says he waits patiently for his chances and, at the Wankhede, he made the most of the one he got – despite only five minutes’ notice

Firdose Moonda22-Oct-2023Five minutes before Aiden Markram walked out at the Wankhede to toss in place of Temba Bavuma, Reeza Hendricks found out his name had been added to the team sheet. That’s not an exaggeration for dramatisation’s sake. That is exactly how it happened, according to the man himself.”It was literally five minutes before the toss; coach came up to me and said, ‘You’re in,’ and I said, ‘I’m in! Okay cool, let’s go,’ and that’s exactly how I found out,” Hendricks told the media afterwards. “I obviously had to scramble and get myself into a good mindset to play the game.”There are unanswered questions about why Hendricks was unaware that Bavuma was not well and why he wasn’t put on standby before the team arrived at the ground, or at some point during the warm-ups, which Markram said Bavuma tried to brave through. If Markram knew Bavuma was struggling, it would seem only reasonable that the player who would have to replace him – Hendricks – should have known that too. Especially given the importance of the match, which was South Africa’s fourth of the group stage and first since losing to Netherlands.Perhaps in the coming days we will know more about the sudden onset of Bavuma’s illness and its seriousness. What we know for now is that he had to leave the ground about an hour into the game and watched a match that took place at a venue he dreamt of playing in from the team hotel. He will get another opportunity to emulate his idol, Sachin Tendulkar, if he is well enough on Tuesday, when South Africa play Bangladesh at the same ground.We also know that Hendricks, who was drafted into the side at the last of last minutes, was able to compose himself quickly enough in the circumstances to score a confident 85 in his first fifty-over appearance in over a month and only his fourth ODI this year. “It was quite challenging,” Hendricks conceded. “I felt everything was quite rushed for about an hour and a half. I had to somehow try to calm myself down and obviously they bowled well upfront so that didn’t help either. Luckily I got settled and then things started to fall into place quite easily.”Hendricks watched as Quinton de Kock slammed the first ball through point for four and then nicked behind off Reece Topley the next ball. He watched Rassie van der Dussen come in, under some pressure after playing a reverse sweep straight to a Dutch fielder a few days ago, and approach England’s bowlers with caution. He watched 13 balls before he scored his first run, a stunning square drive to get his first runs of the tournament. There would be more, including the first six of the innings, off a Mark Wood cutter, and two down the ground off Joe Root, as well as a pantheon of pulls. Together with van der Dussen, he laid the launchpad for Heinrich Klaasen and the rest… well, you know what happened.That Hendricks can play is obvious to anyone. How long he will continue to play in the ODI team is the point of discussion.Historically, South Africa have applied a principle of preferential treatment for the incumbent, which means if a player missed a match, a series or even a few months with an injury or illness, they slot back into the starting XI when available. Keshav Maharaj is the most recent example and re-established himself as the first-choice spinner after returning from a ruptured Achilles. That means when Bavuma recovers, Hendricks will be back to the bench.That’s not an unfamiliar position to him after there was also no space for him in South Africa’s T20 side at last year’s T20 World Cup, despite him scoring four successive half-centuries in the format three months before the tournament. The reason? Bavuma returned from an elbow injury and, as the appointed captain, had to take his place in the team.Then, the situation was tense because Bavuma was in poor T20 form and has since stepped down from the leadership of the T20I side. Now, it is not quite the same. Bavuma averages 63.27 in ODIs this year and has scored three hundreds in crucial games. His World Cup returns so far are modest – 59 runs from three innings – but he led South Africa to two wins in their first two games. Although he lacks experience in India and has only played four ODIs in the country, he approaches the game as a scholar and his tactical acumen as captain has been widely praised. He is expected to be back in the side as soon as he returns to full health and, for now, there isn’t much arguing against that.Hendricks’ position is further complicated because South Africa have no other way to make room for him. The balance of the current side cannot accommodate seven specialist batters without leaving them a bowler short no matter which way you try to juggle it. They need Marco Jansen in the allrounder role at No.7 with three quicks and a spinner or two of each. While Markram is a bowling option, South Africa are unlikely to go in with four specialists and expect a full 10 overs from him in every match and Hendricks, who also bowls offspin, has only sent down seven overs in his ODI career.At least, this is not something Hendricks is completely unused to. He has never been a regular in the team and has become accustomed to his role as a back-up and approaches it philosophically. “It’s challenging but you have to make peace with the situation and see how things unfold. I have to try and control what I can and that means me being ready when the opportunity arises,” he said. “It doesn’t matter how it comes but I’m training every day, making sure I am on top of my game, controlling what I can and making sure I wait patiently for the opportunity to come. There’s no point beating around the bush and being hard on yourself. I try to stay in a good frame of mind and, when the opportunity comes, to make sure I am on top of my game.”On that front, he gets full marks. With a five-minute warning, he played an innings that set the tone for a statement win over England and put South Africa in a situation most teams would be only too happy to deal with: a problem of plenty. How they solve it could define this World Cup campaign.

Game
Register
Service
Bonus