All posts by h716a5.icu

Central win on first-innings lead

A top-order slide from Central Zone would have given North Zone more than a glimmer of hope, but a century from Mahesh Rawat saved the day

ESPNcricinfo staff25-Oct-2014
Central Zone win on first-innings lead
ScorecardWith Central Zone securing the all-important first-innings lead on day three, the game was already all but decided. But a top-order slide from Central would have given North Zone more than a glimmer of hope. However, Mahesh Rawat, with some help from Nos. 8 and 9 Karn Sharma and Kuldeep Yadav, carried Central to 312 and safety.Rawat scored his tenth first-class century to arrest a collapse by which Central fell to 95 for 6; Faiz Fazal and Ashok Menaria were taken out for ducks, and Jalaj Saxena and Robin Bist for 2 apiece. Then Rawat built stands of 98 with Karn and 103 with Kuldeep, and the contest was truly over.North had to bat out a few overs before the day was done, and they sent in bowling allrounders Parvez Rasool and Yuzvendra Chahal to open – a move that demonstrated how insignificant play had become.Central will face South Zone in the tournament final in Delhi, from October 29.

Teams to play ODI as tribute to Hughes

Alastair Cook, England’s captain, said that the players from both sides wanted the game to go ahead as a tribute to Phillip Hughes

Alan Gardner in Colombo28-Nov-2014Alastair Cook, England’s captain, said discussions had taken place about whether to play the second ODI against Sri Lanka on Saturday but that the players from both sides wanted the game to go ahead as a tribute to Phillip Hughes, whose death on Thursday has left the cricket world stricken with grief. The players will wear black armbands, with a two-minute silence to be observed before the start.Hughes played against and alongside several members of the England squad and individuals will be free to opt out, should they choose. Moeen Ali, at Worcestershire, and Steven Finn and Eoin Morgan at Middlesex were team-mates of Hughes during time spent in county cricket, and the most likely to be affected, but the feeling is that everyone wants to be involved.Alastair Cook: “It’s a real reminder of how precious life is and how lucky we are to be playing cricket.”•Getty ImagesCook, an Ashes opponent on several occasions, spoke in thoughtful, measured tones about Hughes’ sudden passing after being hit by a bouncer, describing it as a “real reminder of how precious life is”. He said that player safety had inevitably been talked about but echoed the comments of doctors who called the accident “freakish” in nature.In a mark of how widely Hughes was held in affection, Cook spoke of chatting about batting technique as left-handers and their shared love of farming. The England team also took part in the #putoutyourbats campaign, with a picture posted on Twitter. “We might be playing for different sides and different countries but we’re pretty much the same guys, trying to do our best for our teams at a sport we love,” Cook said.England and Sri Lanka will meet at the R Premadasa Stadium for the second time in four days and Cook said the intention was to “show our respects in the right way for Phil and try and put on a good show”. He acknowledged that some of the match’s intensity might be lost but said that the team would try to play in the same manner as always, rather than dwell on the inherent danger of facing a projectile sent down with life-threatening force.”It was a really sad day yesterday, a tragic day for cricket and the words I say here aren’t go to do it justice,” Cook said. “It’s an incredibly sad changing room for us and all our thoughts are with Hughes’ family and friends and those Australian players who knew him so well.”As we know, this is a real tragic accident. I don’t think we should change the way we play cricket at all because I don’t think that’s the right way to go about it. We’ve got to make sure that we keep working as hard as we can, manufacturers and the authorities, to make cricket as safe as we can. This is a real reminder to everyone that we can’t take anything for granted, we’ve got to keep trying to improve player safety, even though improvements even since I started playing cricket have gone through the roof, especially helmets and the technology going into them.”Cook, a confident hooker and puller of the ball, said the events of the past few days were “a real reminder of how dangerous it can be” out in the middle. He will try not to let the possibility of being hit affect his approach to the game, however.”I certainly won’t change the way I play, it’s a natural thing and you cannot have those doubts when you walk out to bat, because you won’t be playing very well. It’s not right to talk about it right now but the game of cricket will move on. But it’s a real reminder of how precious life is and how lucky we are to be playing cricket.”The last of Hughes’ 26 Tests came against England at Lord’s in 2013 and he played in each of the preceding two Ashes series. He also made a big impact in the domestic game during stints at Hampshire, Middlesex and Worcestershire.”I’ll remember him as an outstanding talent,” Cook said. “I remember talking to him a fair bit after the series in 2013 and obviously both being left-handed opening batsmen – we probably went about things in a very different way but still pick each other’s brain. His love of farming as well, with his cattle, gave us some ground to talk on. He’s one of the guys I would have chatted to at the end of the game.”One of his final innings was an unbeaten 81 at Trent Bridge last year, as No. 11 Ashton Agar made 98 at the other end. Cook was the frustrated England captain looking on. “It just showed what a good player he was going to become, there’s absolutely no doubt. You don’t have a record in first-class cricket as good as he did, in all conditions, and not go on and be an outstanding Test player. There’s no doubt in my mind that he would have been a fantastic player for Australia and to be cut short like that is a tragedy.”

Malik, Dhawan dismiss Services for 226

A round-up of the matches played in Group C of the Ranji Trophy on December 7, 2014

ESPNcricinfo staff07-Dec-2014
ScorecardFile photo: Rishi Dhawan picked up three wickets for Himachal Pradesh•ESPNcricinfoThe new-ball pair of Vikramjeet Malik and Rishi Dhawan took three wickets each as Himachal Pradesh bowled out Services for 226 in Delhi after putting them in. Soumik Chatterjee (42) and Devender Lochab (32) were the only ones among the top eight batsmen to go past 20. Had it not been for No. 9 Deepak Punia’s counterattacking 64 off 67 deliveries, Services would have struggled to reach 200 as they were reeling on 147 for 8. Punia cracked nine fours and two sixes and was last man out, going caught behind off Dhawan. The legspinner Karanveer Singh took two wickets, including that of key batsman Rajat Paliwal. Services reached 19 for no loss at stumps.
ScorecardHyderabad captain DB Ravi Teja’s 96 led his side to 281 for 6 against Andhra in Visakhapatnam. Andhra captain Mohammad Kaif decided to bowl but Hyderabad had an opening partnership of 70 between T Suman (35) and Akshath Reddy (55). Andhra managed to send back the openers eventually and Hanuma Vihari fell cheaply but Teja and B Anirudh (45) put on 107 for the fourth wicket before the latter’s run-out ended the stand. Teja faced 167 balls and struck 13 fours before falling late in the day. DP Vijaykumar and B Ayyappa picked up two wickets each for Andhra.
ScorecardGoa lost their way after a strong start but recovered to finish on 313 for 6 after being inserted by Kerala in Wayanad. Amogh Desai (75) dominated an opening stand of 92 with Swapnil Asnodkar but debutant seamer Basil Thampi and Nizar Niyas struck regularly after that to reduce Goa to 168 for 5. Saurabh Bandekar and Darshan Misal hit sixties in a partnership worth 108 to lift the visitors again. Bandekar’s exit ended the stand in the 72nd over but Misal carried on to remain unbeaten on 67.
ScorecardTripura were shot out for 135 in Guwahati but hit back to reduce Assam to 68 for 4. Tripura had been reduced to 37 for 5 before former Baroda batsman Rakesh Solanki (30) and Manisankar Murasingh (47) scraped some runs. No other Tripura batsman managed more than 16. Krishna Das and Sibsankar Roy picked up three wickets each while Arup Das took two. Assam were in trouble at 35 for 4, having lost captain Dheeraj Jadhav for 3 and former Tamil Nadu batsman Arun Karthik for 5. Gokul Sharma dug in till stumps and Abu Nechim struck a few boundaries to take the partnership to 33.

NZ battle expectation, SL battle indifferent form

New Zealand and Sri Lanka kick off their final phase of preparation for the World Cup in conditions that should be similar to those they encounter in February and March

The Preview by Andrew Fidel Fernando10-Jan-2015Match factsSunday, January 11, 2015
Start time 1100 local (2200 GMT)Big PictureSeven-match ODI series usually prompt groans from all but tournament broadcasters and host boards, but with the World Cup close enough to salivate on, New Zealand and Sri Lanka kick off their final phase of preparation, in conditions that should be similar to those they encounter in February and March.For now, New Zealand will be producing more drool at the prospect of a World Cup. They are soaring on good vibes from an outstanding Test series, their batsmen and bowlers are in form, combined with perhaps the best fielding outfit in the world. Perennial dark-horses in world tournaments in the past, now they are among the bonafide favourites.They have the advantage of playing at home for the next few months, but with that comes expectation. There is significant public pressure on New Zealand to do well in a home World Cup. That it was at Hagley Oval where Brendon McCullum made a whirlwind 195 and Trent Boult bowled several high-quality spells, albeit all in another format, may add to the team’s confidence.Sri Lanka’s returns have been a little more mixed in the past four months. They handed out a token thrashing to England at home, but had been steamrolled by India a few weeks prior. Collectively, they will be distraught at having lost the Tests 0-2, but individually, there were some bright performances from men who are expected to play key roles in the ODIs.Lahiru Thirimanne’s unbeaten Wellington fifty will be particularly heartening, as he and Angelo Mathews seek to make a troublesome lower middle-order secure, while Dimuth Karunaratne’s 152 in Christchurch has effectively earned him a World Cup berth, and created a new opening option for Sri Lanka.Form guide(last five matches, most recent first)

New Zealand:WWLWL
Sri Lanka:WWLWLIn the spotlightOverlooked for the second Test, but preferred over James Neesham for the World Cup squad, Corey Anderson is one of the more exciting all-round talents the cricket world will look forward to following over the next few months. In 10 matches at home so far, he averages 51.83 with the bat, with a strike rate of 180 – thanks in no small part to that world-record hundred against West Indies. He is not coming into the series with a lot of form, however, having had modest returns in the UAE ODIs and an unremarkable List A outing last week.Kumar Sangakkara hit a sublime 203 in the Wellington Test, but was troubled by Trent Boult’s outswing throughout the series. Thrice he was out to Boult in single-figures, though one of those dismissals was somewhat controversial, and each time he had been attempting an expansive stroke. He is likely to play more freely in the ODIs, and attempt to unsettle the bowlers before they dictate terms, but the Boult v Sangakkara battle will be one to watch.Teams newsTim Southee has been rested for the first two matches, owing in part to his heavy workload in the Tests. Matt Henry has been called into the squad as cover. Ross Taylor will also have the first game off and may have his place filled by Grant Elliott. New Zealand also have both Nathan McCullum and Daniel Vettori in their squad, but only one of them is likely to play. Mitchell McClenaghan, Adam Milne and Kyle Mills may also be competing for two spots.New Zealand: (probable) 1 Martin Guptill, 2 Brendon McCullum (capt.), 3 Kane Williamson, 4 Grant Elliott, 5 Tom Latham, 6 Luke Ronchi (wk) , 7 Corey Anderson, 8 Nathan McCullum, 9 Mitchell McClenaghan/Adam Milne, 10 Kyle Mills, 11 Trent BoultSri Lanka will want to trial Dimuth Karunaratne as opener, which means Mahela Jayawardene will bat at No. 4. They may also reintroduce Nuwan Kulasekara into the XI, after solid performances in domestic cricket. They might also toy with the idea of playing an extra batsman or allrounder, and rely on Angelo Mathews and Tillakaratne Dilshan to make up the remaining overs.Sri Lanka (probable): 1 Dimuth Karunaratne, 2 Tillakaratne Dilshan, 3 Kumar Sangakkara (wk), 4 Mahela Jayawardene, 5 Angelo Mathews (capt.), 6 Lahiru Thirimanne, 7 Thisara Perara, 8 Jeevan Mendis/ Dhammika Prasad, 9 Nuwan Kulasekara, 10 Sachithra Senanayake, 11 Suranga LakmalPitch and conditionsHagley Oval has hosted only two ODIs before, but the pitch is unlikely to be as green as the one the Test was played on. Expect good bounce, carry and a hint of turn. The weather is forecast to remain fine for the duration of the game.Stats and trivia New Zealand only played 11 ODIs at home in the last year. They won six, lost three, tied one and the other was washed out. Brendon McCullum has played 18 ODI innings against Sri Lanka, but his average of 17 against them is his lowest against any side. Sri Lanka have lost seven of their 10 most recent completed matches in New Zealand, stretching back to 2001.QuotesThere’s a lot of cricket between game one against Sri Lanka and early February. We get to see a lot of different players in different positions and different scenarios. We’ll put them under pressure, test them and see how they react. I think it’s the ideal lead-up to that World Cup.
Over the years, the older guys have maintained high standards, and the youngsters looking at them will be lifted because of that.

Khurana, Khadiwale build Maharashtra lead

Two batting collapses followed by a solid partnership in the latter half of the day ensured that the Group B match between Delhi and hosts Maharashtra remained wide open going into the last day

The Report by Amol Karhadkar in Pune23-Jan-2015
ScorecardFile photo: Chirag Khurana made his fourth successive fifty•ESPNcricinfo LtdTwo batting collapses followed by a solid partnership in the latter half of the day ensured that the Group B match between Delhi and hosts Maharashtra remained wide open going into the last day.Chirag Khurana’s fourth successive fifty and his unbroken 105-run association for the sixth wicket with Rahul Tripathi helped Maharashtra end the day with a lead of 210 at the Maharashtra Cricket Association Stadium. If Delhi, who conceded the first-innings lead for the first time this season, are to continue their streak of earning maximum points, they will have to stage a lower-order collapse on the last morning.For the second morning in succession, the bowlers held an upper hand in the opening session. The Maharashtra quicks exploited the misty conditions to their advantage. But it was a reckless shot by Gautam Gambhir off Khurana’s offspin that opened the floodgates.The Delhi captain had laid perfect anchor for more than five-and-a-half hours to help Delhi start the day at 240 for 4, 90 behind Maharashtra’s 330. They required Gambhir to not only get the seven runs required for his century but also continue his unbroken 91-run association with Rajat Bhatia for ensuring the lead for his side.With a hundred in sight, Gambhir tried to hoick over cow corner off the first ball he faced from Khurana. All he could manage was a top-edge which was pouched safely by Domnic Joseph at mid-on.Maharashtra didn’t waste any opportunity in taking the new ball, due after four overs in the morning. The pace trio of Samad Fallah, Anupam Sanklecha and Joseph then kept the ball in the channel to not let the Delhi lower order fire. Once Bhatia nicked Joseph to slips, Maharashtra were set for a sizeable lead.But Parvinder Awana’s lusty blows, including a pulled six that landed more than 20 rows back over square leg, reduced the deficit for Delhi even as Sanklecha ran through the lower order.The Maharashtra openers started on a positive note, middling the ball consistently. Sumit Narwal gave Delhi the breakthrough by forcing an edge off Swapnil Gugale in the fourth over after lunch. Harshad Khadiwale and captain Rohit Motwani continued to score freely till the former’s backfoot punch took an edge and flew to Unmukt Chand at second slip.That opened the floodgates again as Maharashtra lost four wickets, including Khadiwale’s, in 37 minutes for just one run. Motwani’s attempted hook off Vikas Tokas only rested in wicketkeeper Rahul Yadav’s gloves. Ankit Bawne’s extravagant drive to open his account after being tied down also had the same result. Kedar Jadhav attempted a shot that was a mirror image of Motwani’s, but missed the ball and was unfortunate to be adjudged caught behind.At 82 for 5, Delhi were sensing a comeback. But Tripathi and Khurana deprived them of any further rewards. The duo’s first task was to bat out the half hour remaining in the second session. They did it without a problem and put their heads down again in the last. They didn’t fall prey to Delhi’s attacking and hardly scored a run for the first half hour of the last session.Once they grew in confidence, they started displaying cuts and drives at will. Khurana was the more aggressive of the pair, reaching his fifty twenty minutes before stumps. His inside-out six off Manan Sharma was the shot of the day.

Harvey returns to Gloucestershire

Ian Harvey will return to Gloucestershire as assistant head coach this summer. Harvey, the former Australian allrounder, is a legend in the Westcountry having played a key part in the one-day success Gloucestershire enjoyed at the turn of the century.

ESPNcricinfo staff05-Mar-2015Ian Harvey will return to Gloucestershire as assistant head coach this summer. Harvey, the former Australian allrounder, is a legend in the Westcountry, having played a key part in the one-day success Gloucestershire enjoyed at the turn of the century.Harvey, 43, will return to work with recently-appointed head coach Richard Dawson, whom he played with at Yorkshire in 2004 and 2005. Harvey will walk back through the Grace Gates for the first time since 2006 – his final season for Gloucestershire.It was from 1999 to 2003 that Harvey is most fondly remembered, helping Gloucestershire to six one-day trophies and also becoming the first T20 centurion when he made 100 not out against Worcestershire in 2003.”It’s a really exciting time,” Harvey said. “Over the next few seasons we’ve got the opportunity to start pushing for trophies and for promotion. We are past rebuilding now, we have a lot of senior players here who’ve played a lot of cricket and it’s up to us as coaches to get the best out of these lads. If we do then trophies and promotion aren’t out of the question.”A lot of things at the club have changed but one thing that hasn’t is the supporters. They are one of the things that made it so enjoyable playing for this club and being successful. It is always nice to win but when you see how much enjoyment it brings them it makes the job even more worthwhile. Hopefully they can keep supporting us and help us get back to the way we were.”Dawson added: “We interviewed some very strong candidates and Ian stood out. He already knows about the club having been a major part of its most successful period. His passion for the club is clear to see and he wants to recreate the successful environment he experienced here as a player.”From a coaching point of view he was an exceptional bowler, batter and fielder so he covers all technical bases and adds to an already strong coaching team that includes Owen Dawkins and Mark Thorburn. He knows a lot of the lads from when he was here as a coach with the one day squad in 2013 and the lads enjoyed his enthusiasm and knowledge.”

Rhinos' top order sets up big win

A round-up of the Logan Cup matches that ended on February 11, 2015

ESPNcricinfo staff11-Feb-2015A strong first-innings display with the bat set Mid West Rhinos up for a nine-wicket win against Mountaineers at the Mutare Sports Club. Rhinos, after being inserted, rallied around century stands for the first and third wickets, as Bothwell Chapungu (74), Bradley Wadlan (75) and Prince Masvaure (65) all stroked fifties to lift the team to 419.Mountaineers never really got going in their reply, as Michael Chinouya (4 for 74) and Neville Madziva (3 for 21) wrecked their top order, ensuring that the team folded for 206. Rhinos enforced the follow on, and Mountaineers put up a more stern resistance in their second essay, as Forster Mutizwa hit an unbeaten 127, with 16 fours. However, Kudzai Sauramba, who made 55, no other batsman stayed long enough at the other end to provide Mutizwa enough support, as Mountaineers were bowled out for 310.It meant that Rhinos needed 99 for victory, and they amassed that target inside 14 overs, thanks to an unbroken, 91-run partnership for the second wicket between Wadlan and Masvaure.An all-round effort from pacer Taurai Muzarabani, who took a hat-trick and scored a vital 70, paved the way for Mashonaland Eagles’ nine-wicket win over Matabeleland Tuskers. The win was Eagles’ second in five Logan Cup games this season but wasn’t enough to lift them from the last position on the table, although it brought them close to Mountaineers’ tally of 16.Tuskers had reached a promising 280 for 5 on the first day after being put in to bat but Muzarabani bundled them out early on the second morning. He dismissed John Nyumbu, Brian Vitori and Steve Chimhamhiwa off successive deliveries in the 98th over, before returning to dismiss Keith Dabengwa, who top-scored for Tuskers with 141 off 268 deliveries. Muzarabani’s 5 for 63 was his maiden five-for in first-class cricket.Fifties from opener Simbarashe Gupo (89) and Greg Lamb (64) propped up the Eagles innings but lack of support from the other batsmen left them tottering at 242 for 9. Muzarabani then stitched together a valuable 140-run, tenth-wicket partnership with Brighton Mugochi, the only century stand in the match. Both batsmen went on to notch up fifties before Mugochi was dismissed by Chimhamhiwa for 61. Muzarabani remained unbeaten on 70 off 114 deliveries with nine fours and a six.With a lead of 75, the Eagles attack, led by Trevor Garwe’s 4 for 24, bundled Tuskers out for 127. A 49-run, opening partnership between Keith Kondo and Gupo set up the 53-run chase, which they completed in 13 overs for the loss of one wicket.

Serene Smith guides Royals to third straight win

A perfectly paced unbeaten 79 from Steven Smith anchored a chase of 165 and steered Rajasthan Royals to a seven-wicket win over Mumbai Indians

The Report by Karthik Krishnaswamy14-Apr-2015
Live scorecard and ball-by-ball details4:15

Agarkar: Mumbai should have used their bowlers better

A perfectly paced unbeaten 79 from Steven Smith anchored a chase of 165 and steered Rajasthan Royals to a seven-wicket win over Mumbai Indians. It was Royals’ third win in three games and Mumbai’s third loss in three. Once again, Mumbai’s top order failed, and even though Corey Anderson and Kieron Pollard gave their innings an explosive finish, their sluggish start proved the difference between the two sides.Royals kept wickets in hand through their chase, and built momentum steadily, with a 64-run second-wicket stand between Ajinkya Rahane and Smith laying the foundation for the final charge. When Rahane was dismissed, Royals needed 73 from 41 balls, with eight wickets in hand.Deepak Hooda, promoted to number four, provided some of the impetus, lofting Shreyas Gopal for two massive sixes in one over, before Lasith Malinga took out his leg stump after spotting him walking too far across his stumps. This left 52 to get from 31.At the fall of Hooda’s wicket, Smith was on 35 off 31, and had struck two fours and no sixes. The change of gears was swift, and it happened in the 17th over. Malinga speared his first two balls into the blockhole. The first one was straight and Smith walked across to clip him over midwicket. The next one was a bit wider to compensate. Smith opened his bat face and steered him past backward point. Fifteen came off that over and Royals were left needing 24 from 18 balls; they got home with five balls remaining.Having chosen to bat, Mumbai were going well enough – 24 for 0 in the middle of the fourth over – when Aaron Finch, stretching for the final stride of a quick single, pulled up with what looked like a hamstring strain. That stalled the momentum the openers had gathered; only four runs came off that over, and Parthiv Patel, coming back on strike after Unmukt Chand managed only one run off the first three balls of the next over, miscued a Dhawal Kulkarni slower ball straight to mid-off. When Rohit Sharma nicked a Stuart Binny outswinger to slip in the seventh over, Mumbai were 31 for 2 – effectively 31 for 3 – and their run-rate had dipped below six an over.By the 10-over mark they had lost Chand and were 45 for 3. Only one run came off the 11th over, bowled by Chris Morris, who kept cramping the left-handed Anderson for room, jagging the ball into him off the pitch and extracting awkward bounce on a couple of occasions to rap him on the handle and the gloves.With some balls skidding through and others stopping on the batsmen, runs were looking extremely hard to get. But Anderson and Pollard stayed alert for the slower balls, ensured they maintained stable bases, and began finding the big hits. Both picked up sixes off James Faulkner in the 14th over, and the run-rate climbed back above five an over.The recovery seemed to have ended when Anderson mishit another Kulkarni slower ball straight to long-off in the 15th over, but replays showed the bowler had overstepped, just about. It was just the sort of luck Mumbai needed after injury to Finch, and they made full use of it. They were 83 for 3 after 15 overs; over the next five overs they came within two runs of doubling their score.Tim Southee, bowling primarily length or just short of it, took the bulk of the punishment – his last two overs went for 36, with Pollard and Anderson hitting him for four fours and three sixes – but no one went unscathed. James Faulkner went for 17 in the 17th over, and Chris Morris, till then the pick of Royals’ seamers, went for 15 in the final over.Anderson kept his plans simple – clear his front leg and swing freely to hit down the ground and over the leg side. Pollard dealt in his trademark one-handed clubs and flat-bat swats down the ground, but also pulled off a couple of stunning flicked sixes. Given the fact that the bowlers were generally looking to go full, and given both batsmen’s power in the V, it was a little strange to see mid-off in the circle and fine leg back on the rope on a couple of occasions. By the end, though, Smith’s batting would ensure his tactics became a distant memory.

Daredevils face another spectre in Kotla

On their tour to the west and the south-east of the country, Delhi Daredevils managed to bury the ghost of 11 straight losses. But back in Kotla, they face another equally discomforting spectre

The Preview by Devashish Fuloria19-Apr-2015Match factsMonday, April 20, 2015
Start time 2000 local (1430 GMT)3:12

Agarkar: Two consecutive wins will help Delhi

Big pictureOn their tour to the west and the south east of the country, Delhi Daredevils managed to bury the ghost of 11 straight losses. But back in the Kotla, they face another equally discomforting spectre. Daredevils have lost their previous eight games at their home venue, a sequence that stretches back to 2013. No wonder then that while the teams from other big cities – Mumbai, Chennai and Kolkata – have built up strong fan bases, Daredevils are still waiting to connect.The inclusion of Yuvraj Singh, therefore, was not just based on cricket, it was perhaps thought to be the hook for fans. That hook is yet to work, but the signs are encouraging. Daredevils’ young Indian openers have quietly racked up more than 100 runs each, the legspinning duo of Imran Tahir and Amit Mishra is a constant threat, and the batting is yet to show it’s full colours. The only vulnerability at the moment seems to be in their pace bowling, and with Mohammed Shami ruled out, it is most likely to be that way throughout the tournament.Kolkata Knight Riders have no such problems. The defending champions are well served with Morne Morkel and Umesh Yadav up front. However, the most interesting aspect of their start to this season is the lack of dependability on Sunil Narine, who has been economical, but has managed just one wicket.Watch out for…Daredevils’ opening pair of Mayank Agarwal and Shreyas Iyer may be the least illustrious among all teams, but over the course of the three matches, they have proven to be one of the most stable ones. There might have been an inclination in the Daredevils team management to bring Quinton de Kock at the top, but that can wait now as the two Indians have not only been able to give good starts, they have also picked up a half-century each. Agarwal, then, also made a match-winning impact in the field with a brilliant save on the boundary.With 25 wickets in the 2012 IPL, Morne Morkel, then playing for Daredevils, was the leading wicket-taker. It was his pace, bounce and his partnership with Umesh, who had picked up 19 wickets, that helped Daredevils top the table at the end of the league stage. Morkel has already picked up five wickets this season and would look for a happy homecoming at the KotlaStats and trivia In seven out of their previous eight matches at the Kotla, all of which they have lost, Daredevils have batted first Mishra is the most-successful bowler on the ground. He has taken 25 wickets, of which 20 have been for Daredevils. Umesh and Morkel, with 24 and 21 wickets respectively, are the next two in the list There have been 45 IPL ducks at the Kotla, second only to the Wankhede in Mumbai, where 58 batsmen have been dismissed without scoring

Devon, Cornwall excited by Championship debate

If the County Championship is extended to 21 teams and a Minor County needs to be elevated, a combined Devon and Cornwall team could be the answer

Tim Wigmore28-May-2015ECB discussions about whether the County Championship could be extended to include 21 teams in three divisions of seven have stirred the interest of Ireland and Scotland, who are eager to consider any opportunities to join England and Wales’ professional system. But even if agreements could be reached with both countries the ECB would still need to find a 21st Championship team – and that would mean persuading a Minor County to put their suspicions behind them and take the plunge.Twenty-three years after Durham became the 18th first-class county there might now be an opportunity for another minor county – or even two or three – to be elevated. The ECB’s chairman Colin Graves is known to be intrigued about whether a national pyramid‎ is possible of the sort that broke down football’s closed shop when the re-election system that largely protected the status quo was finally abandoned in 1986.The mood in cricket is much more conservative, with a number of leading minor counties doubting their potential to join the County Championship, but if the ECB take that route they could find salvation in the furthest south-west of the country where Cornwall and Devon officials believe they could potentially combine to field a joint side.21st team: The Candidates

Devon/Cornwall
Strengths: Strong tradition of cricket, successful current sides – Devon or Cornwall have won eight of the past 21 Minor Counties Championships. And, in Truro, Exmouth and beyond, some of the most beautiful grounds in the country.
Weaknesses: A couple of hours further away than Taunton. To cultivate support in both counties, would probably need to play at several grounds.
Population: 1.6 million
Staffordshire
Strengths: Historically the best minor county – and the reigning champions.
Weaknesses: Lacks an obvious home ground – minor counties games are played over six or seven club grounds every year. Borders four first-class counties and might not inspire as much new talent as alternative sides. Already very successful at cultivating links with first-class counties.
Population: 1.1 million
Norfolk/Suffolk
Strengths: Have a good local following, with Norfolk-Suffolk matches on weekends often attracting 1000 spectators.
Weaknesses: It would be a “ridiculously long journey,” according to Kieron Tuck, the Norfolk Cricket Development Manager, who says the county has “less playing resources” than Durham did when they were elevated. The recent record of the two in the Minor Counties Championship – one shared title apiece since 1980 – is not stellar.
Population: 1.1 million.
Oxfordshire / Buckinghamshire
Strengths:
Some beautiful grounds, including Wormsley.
Weaknesses: Both counties doubt the viability of the idea. “For any pair of minor counties it would be a major challenge,” says Kevin Beaumont, the secretary of Buckinghamshire. A lack of potential spectators “could be a problem,” says Chris Clements, the chairman of Oxfordshire Cricket.
Population: 1.4 million

“It’s a brilliant idea. That could work for Devon and Cornwall – we would both be able to support that,” Sean Hooper, the chief executive of the Cornwall Cricket Board, says. To Jim Wood, the chairman of the Devon Cricket Board, the concept is “delightful”. “It’s a great idea but would need a lot of careful planning.”Hooper has long been motivated by the idea of Cornwall having a first-class side; as an undergraduate at Loughborough in the early 1990s, Hooper wrote his thesis on whether the county could emulate Durham in having a first-class county. “If Durham can do it why can’t Cornwall? What’s stopping us?”Population is perhaps the simplest answer – while Durham has a population of 902,500, Cornwall’s is only 536,000. But a combined team with Devon would cover a combined population of over 1.6 million. And, at a time when English cricket is trying to reconnect, Hooper believes that it would make cricket far more accessible to those in the West Country: it is 143 miles from Penzance to Taunton.”There’s nothing for our children to see in terms of first-class cricket. We’ve got to go two or three hours to Taunton to see a first-class cricketer. Anything that could bring that closer to Cornwall would be fantastic,” Hooper says.Worryingly for cricket, rugby has made big strides in Cornwall, benefiting from the success of the Cornish Pirates professional rugby side, who play in the second tier. “12-year-old children are training like professionals because they can see that they can realistically play rugby. They can see it as a real job opportunity,” Hooper says. “Because they don’t see any first-class cricket they don’t see it as a real aspiration.”Rugby as a profession is a real choice whereas cricket is still a far-fetched choice,” he says. “Some aspiring cricketers see professional rugby in Cornwall and they can see that as a real career and job route whereas they can’t see that with cricket. Anything that enabled us to have that would be great.” This is the most compelling argument in favour of extending, rather than reducing, the number of county sides: it could help discover more talent, and ultimately make cricket a more attractive option to talented young sportsmen. Indeed, it has been suggested that, by increasing the number of professional contracts on offer in Australia, the Big Bash League has made cricket a more enticing prospect to those who might otherwise have chosen Aussie Rules.Cornwall can already claim to boasting a strong cricket infrastructure. Ten of 11 in the side who won the Minor Counties Championship in 2012 played local schools cricket in the county.Since Durham’s elevation to first-class cricket, Devon have been the most successful minor county, winning seven of the last 21 Championships. They have also produced a notable series of players for Somerset, including the Overton twins and Lewis Gregory. But Guy Lavender, the chief executive of Somerset, said that the county is “not protectionist at all” over the rest of the Southwest and that it could even benefit from a rivalry with a Devon-Cornwall side. “We used to play Devon regularly and it was an incredibly popular fixture,” he says. “It would be very healthy to have opportunities for new counties to come into county cricket.”Still, a new team would face significant obstacles. The most obvious would be financial, and the challenge of fielding a team for 12 first-class fixtures. Perhaps the most realistic way to manage the challenge would be, as Hooper suggests, beginning life as semi-professional, with only a few of the most talented players awarded professional contracts. Splitting the costs between two counties, could also make the notion more feasible.Getting grounds ready to host six first-class games a season would also be a challenge. While Wood says there is “good infrastructure already” at the grounds, he says there would need to be “considerable” investment at them for the benefit of players and spectators. The grounds at Truro and Exmouth often hosted first-class opposition in county one-day competitions in the past, while Truro has also hosted women’s international cricket. And there certainly appears to be an audience who would embrace first-class cricket: attendances for minor counties games on Sundays in Cornwall and Devon can approach four figures. “For big games we’d get several thousand spectators,” Hooper believes. “We’d be able to be competitive very, very rapidly.”

A combined Cornwall and Devon could tap into the deep love for the sport in the West Country and make cricket seem like a more viable career choice for talented children.

Among other minor counties, there is recognition of the flaws of the existing structure. “Half the counties in the UK are operating in a completely different way to the other two and there’s no interchange between the two,” Kieron Tuck, the Norfolk Cricket Development Manager, says. The County Championship is even more of a closed shop than the old Football League. Until 1986, the side that finished bottom had to apply for re-election to the league, and was almost invariably allowed to stay in: Hartlepool United were re-elected 14 times between 1924 and 1984.Besides a new team in the West Country, a Norfolk team (possibly a joint outfit with Suffolk) would seem the most realistic addition to the Championship; apart from Cornwall, Norfolk is the only other minor county not to border a first-class team. But Tuck is not optimistic about the idea.”I don’t think I’ve ever heard anyone say Norfolk should be a first-class county – it’s just not on the radar because the differences are so enormous between what you’d need and what we’d have. It’s just not possible realistically,” Tuck says. “You’re talking about a fundamental shift – from amateur cricket, which is what minor counties cricket basically is, to a professional format. It is a massive jump.”Based on playing strength – they are the current minor counties champions, and no side has won more titles than their 11 – Staffordshire certainly has a claim to join a 21-team structure. “If we had first-class status it would be a massive boost for the county,” Jason Britton, the Development Director of Staffordshire, says. But the financial and logistical hurdles are such they he “couldn’t put any timescale” on when the minor county could be elevated. “It would need significant investment and probably some sort of benefactor to move us into the situation we’d need to be in,” he says. “It’s a surprise that people are talking about it.”Although Staffordshire has a population of over one million, it is still served well by first-class counties, bordering Warwickshire, Worcestershire, Leicestershire and Derbyshire. Staffordshire have what Britton calls a “very strong relationship” with Derbyshire (six members of Derbyshire’s squad have strong links to Staffordshire), which it would be reluctant to jeopardise. Other minor counties also have similarly strong links: Chris Clements, the chairman of Oxfordshire Cricket, says there is a “pretty hot” pathway into the county game from the county, as Jack Brooks has proved, while Oxfordshire also benefit from Sussex providing coaching. “We wouldn’t want to put anything like that at risk,” he says.If minor counties are unable, even by merging, to form first-class sides, an alternative is to resurrect the Unicorns, an outfit made up of the best players outside the 18 counties who played in the 40-over competition from 2010 to 2013. “I’d love to see it as a Unicorns team – it would be an excellent thing,” Kevin Beaumont, the secretary of Buckinghamshire, says. “A representative team from the 20 minor counties would have a real chance of competing.” He also believes it could help players get contracts at the current 18 first-class counties. But, as the experience in the 40-over competition showed, a nomadic team suffers from a lack of identity. There is no precedent for a team without any geographical base thriving in a professional sports league.So, should the County Championship need a 21st team alongside the existing 18 first-class counties and sides from Ireland and Scotland, a combined Cornwall and Devon team is shaping up as the best option. It could tap into the deep love for the sport in the West Country and make cricket seem like a more viable career choice for talented children.Simultaneously, more could be done to cultivate cricket lovers in counties lacking professional teams. “One of the big shames is we lost the involvement in the one-day cup against the first-class counties,” Beaumont laments. “That was exposure for the players and brought cricket into some of the shires where it doesn’t exist. I’d love to see a competition like that resurrected.”

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