Talented Will Pucovski's tough road to the baggy green: a timeline

His path into the Test XI has been plagued by health issues – interspersed by bucketfuls of runs

Andrew McGlashan06-Jan-2021January 2017: Professional debut
Having dominated the Under-19 Championships with a record-breaking tally of 650 runs at 162.50 on the back of run-scoring feats at school and club cricket, Pucovski made his List A debut for a Cricket Australia XI against the touring Pakistan team. He opened the batting for a side that also included Cameron Green and made 10 before falling to Hasan Ali.February 2017: First-class debut
Less than a month later he was in the Victoria Sheffield Shield side, making 28 in the first innings against New South Wales before the next day, on his birthday, suffering a concussion when he was hit in the head while in the field.October 2017: More concussion worries
Playing in a One-Day Cup match against Queensland he was hit by a short ball from Ben Cutting and forced to retire hurt. He did resume his innings but was soon dismissed and later diagnosed with delayed concussion. A month later, in a Futures League match, he was struck again and retired hurt.February 2018: First milestone
Just over a year after his first-class debut, Pucovski made his first significant impact with his maiden first-class century when he struck 188 off 414 balls against Queensland in the Sheffield Shield. “It was pretty special, especially out on the G,” he said.Will Pucovski won the Bradman Young Cricketer Award in February 2019•Getty Images

March 2018: Hit again
Two weeks later, Pucovski was subbed out of the Sheffield Shield match against New South Wales after being hit by a short ball from Sean Abbott. He did not play again that season.October 2018: Doubling up
That first Sheffield Shield hundred was well and truly eclipsed at the start of the following summer when Pucovski made 243 against Western Australia in Perth. He became the ninth player to score a Shield double-century before his 21st birthday. However, a week later it was announced he was taking a break from the game for mental health reasons. He would later reveal how he had little recollection of the innings. “It was one of those things where what it looked like from the outside wasn’t quite matching up with what it was on the inside… I was more confused than at any other time in my life,” he told Fox Cricket’s podcast in January 2019.”I actually look back on it and don’t have much of a recollection on the innings, which is rare for me.” He returned a couple of months later making 67 in his comeback match.January 2019: Test call-up
In the wake of the series loss to India, the Australia selectors made a number of changes to the batting line-up for the series against Sri Lanka and one of those was a maiden call-up for Pucovski. The batting contenders were then played together in a CA XI against the Sri Lankans in Hobart where Kurtis Patterson scored two centuries and, despite not being in the original squad, was handed a Test debut ahead of Pucovski. A few days later he was released from the squad to manage his mental health. “Will’s decision to speak up and continue to ask for assistance in managing his ongoing mental health is extremely positive,” CA doctor Richard Saw said. He returned to the Victoria side a couple of weeks later, scored an unbeaten 131 against Tasmania and helped his state to the Shield title.July 2019: Australia A tour
He was part of the Australia A squad that toured England alongside the World Cup and Ashes squads in 2019, although he did not earn elevation to the Test squad. However, the tour did bring a maiden one-day century when he struck 137 against Gloucestershire.This season, Will Pucovski has already been part of a Sheffield Shield record stand of 486 with Marcus Harris•Getty Images

November 2019: Mental health break
Pucovski started the 2019 season with a century against South Australia – albeit on a road at the Junction Oval – and added a half-century in the next match. He was then included in the Australia A side to face Pakistan in the pink-ball warm-up match in Perth. During that game he made himself unavailable for Test selection to manage his mental health. “Will’s decision not to nominate for Test selection was the right one in the circumstances and one that everyone in the Australian cricket family supports,” said Ben Oliver, CA’s head of national teams.February 2020: Trip and fall
Pucovski had returned to action a couple of weeks later, making 82 in his comeback against New South Wales, but his season was halted in February by another concussion caused when he tripped and hit his head taking a run while playing for a CA XI, which he was captaining, against England Lions on the Gold Coast. He had not returned to playing before the pandemic hit.Related

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October 2020: Double doubles
Part of the Victoria squad that was required to quarantine for two weeks in Adelaide before the Sheffield Shield, Pucovski began his season in breathtaking style with back-to-back double-centuries against South Australia and Western Australia. His first was part of a Shield record stand of 486 with Marcus Harris. At the age of 23, he had three double-centuries to his name.December 2020: Another blow
In November, Pucovski was included in Australia’s Test squad to face India. “It’s been a long journey but I don’t think I could be in a much better place to take this challenge on,” he said. However, in the closing stages of the Australia A match against India at Drummoyne Oval he was struck on the helmet when he got into a tangle against a bouncer from Kartik Tyagi. He was diagnosed with concussion – his ninth – and was ruled out of contention for the first two Tests.

BCCI Apex Council to discuss Ranji Trophy fate

A decision on the matter will be taken during a meeting on January 17

PTI12-Jan-2021The Indian cricket board is set to organise a curtailed Ranji Trophy tournament from next month, and in all likelihood, in the same six bio-bubbles created for the ongoing Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy. A decision with regards to this will be taken during the BCCI Apex Council meeting on January 17, scheduled to be held virtually.There are seven items on the agenda, and at the top of the list is domestic cricket, which also includes junior and women’s categories. “As of now, there is 90 per cent chance that Ranji Trophy will start in February and we will have the same six bio-bubbles created for the Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy. The groupings will also be same — five groups of six teams each and one group of eight teams,” a senior BCCI source privy to the development told PTI on conditions of anonymity.The logic behind having the same bio-bubbles is that it’s already set and will be more convenient for operational purposes. “It could well happen that the league stage of the Ranji Trophy will be held before the IPL and then the knockouts, quarters, semi-finals and final held after the T20 league so that best teams don’t lose out on best players. It’s up for discussion. The women’s national tournament will be on and all age-group tournament will be held,” the source said.Other items on the agenda include the 2023-2031 ICC FTP cycle, for which the BCCI might ask for a bigger IPL window to host the ten-team tournament that is set to start from next year. The IPL will require a minimum of two months’ window and the other boards need to agree to have their players released for the better part of the tournament. It is expected that India will be playing a lot more bilateral series with more emphasis on T20 and Test cricket and lesser number of ODIs. There has been a constant debate on whether bilateral ODIs are fast losing their context.The ICC tax exemption issue is also slated to come up for discussion in the meeting. It is already decided that India will ask the global body to deduct from its annual revenue of USD 490 million in case they don’t get exemption from the central government on existing tax laws. The council will be intimated as to what the government’s stance is on the matter.

Quarantine restrictions to force South Africa to use separate T20I and Test squads

The red-ball players will leave Pakistan early to quarantine before the home series against Australia

Firdose Moonda22-Jan-2021Both the South African and Australian Test squads will quarantine ahead of their yet-to-be-confirmed three-Test series in March, in what will be the strictest biosecure bubble yet in South Africa. Unlike for the England and Sri Lanka series, where training could begin after the squads had taken their first Covid-19 tests – though social interaction was not allowed until after the third test – for the Australia series, players on both sides will be confined to their rooms for a longer period of time.For that reason, South Africa’s Test squad will leave Pakistan on February 9 to begin their quarantine period at home. A separate squad will play the three T20Is in Pakistan on February 11, 13, and 14 in what CSA director of cricket Graeme Smith sees as an inevitable consequence of the times and something member boards will have to work together to ensure the cricket calendar is as unaffected as possible.Related

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“When you work on biosecure environment protocols for Covid-19, you work with other member nations and if member nations don’t support each other and play cricket, cricket’s going to find itself in a very challenging space,” Smith said. “Your objective is to find the protocols that work for both. In working with Cricket Australia (CA), we’ve come to a lot of those medical conclusions and how that’s going to look. There will be an initial quarantine period before that series. Unfortunately, we would have to play two different squads at the time.”While the dates for the Australia series are expected within the next week, ESPNcricinfo understands they are at an advanced stage and will see Australia playing Tests at SuperSport Park and the Wanderers in March. Although Smith told Australian media late last year that he would like to have fans at the grounds for the matches, with South Africa battling through a second wave of the coronavirus pandemic, that is highly unlikely. Currently, the country is on Level 3 Lockdown (of five levels, with five being the strictest) and no spectators are allowed into stadiums, while all sports events have to finish by 8pm. The lockdown status will be reviewed before February 15 but even if it changes, it is unlikely to make provision for crowds. Insiders have confirmed that CA has already asked for more extreme measures than either the ECB or SLC required, and CSA is doing all it can to make it happen.The series is the marquee event of this South African summer which has already seen a T20 series against England (but the ODIs that were to follow were postponed following concerns about the bubble in Cape Town) and festive season Tests against Sri Lanka. The men’s team are currently on their first tour to Pakistan since 2007 while the women’s team are hosting Pakistan, with more fixtures in the pipeline. But for CSA, the Australia series is a money-making opportunity through television rights, and a key series because of the historic needle between the two sides.”We would love to get our home summer completed, and Australia are a big part of that home summer. Not only do we want to get it played, we want to compete in that series,” Smith said. “We saw from the Australia-India series the hype around Test cricket. I think it’s going to be a great test of where we are as a squad. We are motivated. The last time a Test series with Australia happened in South Africa it was very heated and we all know what went on. We are very excited to be able to host Australia, but that comes with certain restrictions and medical protocols.”The same is likely to apply to another other cricket played in South Africa this summer, and possibly beyond. The domestic franchise one-day cup is currently being played in a biobubble in Potchefstroom, which was organised late last year after it became clear that having teams travel to various venues around the country would not work. That was the case for the franchise first-class competition, in which two games were affected by Covid-19 in the penultimate round of 2020, and the final round was postponed.All indications are that any other domestic cricket that takes place, including the remaining first-class fixtures, a franchise T20 cup and semi-professional cricket, which has been dormant since before the pandemic hit, will have to take place in biosecure environments as well. “I’m quite positive that with all the Covid-19 issues we’ve been able to get cricket played. There’s going to be a focus on trying to get semi-pro underway,” Smith said.With South African domestic cricket’s impending restructure to 15 provincial teams and no franchises, this season’s semi-professional matches are important for players who are pushing to be contracted next season. At least 75 cricketers across the current franchise and provincial structures will find themselves out of a job, so competing for places is their work this summer.Just as it is for the national men’s team. After slipping as low as eighth on the Test rankings last summer, and winning just one of the five trophies on offer, they are in a period of rebuilding and although Smith would like to see results, he believes this season is one of patience instead. “We want our team to win as much as possible but I wouldn’t say that’s the defining thing for me this season. I would like to answer a few questions in my own head. I think the selectors and the coaching staff would want to do the same,” he said. “(Because of the pandemic) there are going to be more opportunities for players than in the past. I’m really excited to see who puts their hand up and who are the people we can back into the future.”

As it happened – India vs England, 3rd Test, Ahmedabad, 1st day

Updates, analysis and colour from the first day of the third Test

Andrew Miller24-Feb-2021*Most recent entry will appear at the top, please refresh your page for the latest updates. All times are local

Stumps: India 99 for 3 (Rohit 57*, Rahane 1*) trail England 112 (Crawley 53, Patel 6-38) by 13 runs

That will be stumps after an eventful close to an eventful day with England finally getting a much-needed breakthrough after being denied on three earlier occasions, no less.First, Rohit top-edged Leach, and Pope, leaping high to his right from short leg, couldn’t quite hold on with his outstretched left hand to what would have been a breath-taking catch. A short time later, Kohli, on 24, sent an Anderson delivery straight to gully, where Pope got his hands to it and put down a straightforward chance. As the claret spurted from Pope’s split right index finger, it was fair to say blood was spilled, pride was hurt and England’s task became ever tougher. England then appealed for the stumping of Rohit after some swift work by Foakes off the bowling of Leach. It was tight, but the batsman was given not out.Leach finally had Kohli out, chopping onto his stumps for 27 with just two minutes left to play on this opening day. With that, India ended the night just 13 runs in arrears with plenty of first-innings wickets in hand.Rohit Sharma whips one away•BCCI

Another first-day fifty for Rohit

Very different conditions, a very similar upshot. Rohit Sharma brings up his fifty from 63 balls with a flick through midwicket off Ben Stokes, as India march ever closer to first-innings parity. He’s been made to work more visibly than was the case in his remarkably transcendent century at Chennai, particularly while Anderson and Broad were in partnership, but there’s no slowing him down when the opportunities arise – as they have done with mounting frequency now that the lacquer has gone off the ball. England are still grumbling about the footmarks – they are forming deep craters in the landing zone now – but they could and should still have been India’s problem had their batting endured for longer than 50 overs. Not a lot the umpires are going to do about that.

Archer and Leach make the incisions

It took him 27 balls in the end to get off the mark, and it seemed he’d done the hard work to bed into a long and fruitful innings. But in the end, Jofra Archer’s extra pace lured Shubman Gill into an awkward flapped pull at a bouncer outside his eye-line, and Zak Crawley trotted in from square leg to complete a simple steepling catch – or as simple as such things get out of the night sky.And then, one over later, Jack Leach emulated Axar Patel and found the same means of extracting even Indian batsmen well used to such conditions. Round the wicket to Cheteshwar Pujara, who poked forward and played for the spin, only to be clobbered on the pads by the one that skidded on through. No review, and suddenly one had brought two. England aren’t out of their hole, but at least they’ve found a stepladder.

Shades of Adelaide (no, not that match…)

England’s pace-bowling core get together for a chat•BCCI

Uncompromising signs for England after the early exchanges of India’s innings. The eagle-eyed Matt Roller has sensed a familiar story unfolding…”The first 10 overs of India’s innings have worrying parallels to a previous day-night Test, from an England perspective, Matt writes.At Adelaide in 2017, they won the toss and opted to bowl first, but bowled too short with the new ball: in the first 10 overs of Australia’s innings, 35% of balls were back-of-a-length, and 65% on a good length – England didn’t bowl a single full ball. Australia racked up 422 for 8 declared, and won by 120 runs.In the first 10 overs of this innings, there has been a similar issue. According to ESPNcricinfo’s ball-by-ball data, exactly half of the balls Broad and Anderson have bowled have been short or back-of-a-length, with 43% on a good length and four full balls. Given their need for early wickets, the scarcity of full balls seems like a surprise.I asked Anderson in a press conference on Sunday where the likely absence of reverse swing with the pink ball would prompt England to attack more with the new ball. “I don’t think we’ll bowl any differently to how we normally bowl with the red ball,” he said. “We’ll be assessing conditions as we do and bowl accordingly. If it’s swinging around we’ll be more attacking, bowl a fuller length, have extra catchers in; if not, we’ll go a little bit more defensive.”Clearly, the ball has swung, and England have set attacking fields. To me, that suggests this has been a failure of execution rather than one of planning.”

Broad and Anderson probe without effect

It’s been metronomic, and the pressure on Shubman Gill in particular has been ramped up like never before, but Broad and Anderson haven’t yet managed to break India’s opening stand, and that ten-over window of excess lacquer is fast closing. Broad, for the second time, thought he had his man when he pinned Gill on the knee-roll but couldn’t extract the lbw – DRS showed it would have been clipping leg – and Gill still hadn’t got off the mark by the end of the ninth over, with 24 dot-balls to his name.For all their length-hitting diligence, Jofra Archer might appreciate a go while the ball is still hard, and before the dew gets too embedded in the leather. Rohit, with 10 from 28, is steadfast at the other end, with the mood of England’s bowlers not helped by the state of their landing zones – the groundstaff have twice been called out to give the footholes a pummelling.

India head to supper with all ten intact

India 5 for 0 trail England 112 (Crawley 53, Axar 6-38) by 107 runs
Anderson and Broad prove a handful under lights, but nothing more than that as India’s openers chip off five runs in as many overs. From 74 for 2 to 112 all out, and now a lead of 107. It’s not looking pretty for England. A penny for Jofra Archer’s thoughts, who may well feel his recent new-ball efforts ought to have earned him a shot at rattling the top-order, not least Rohit Sharma. It’ll take some serious rattling now to prevent India striding into the distance in this contest…

Early drama as Gill is reprieved

Bowling in the twilight, with 1100 wickets’ worth of nous sharing the pink new ball, and it looks as though Broad has claimed a key early wicket as Shubman Gill fences low to Ben Stokes in the slips. The silence of the 50,000 crowd is astonishing – quieter even than an empty stadium – but the third umpire has one look at the replay and deems the ball has bounced! Root is fuming, clearly signalling that you can’t judge such a decision from one replay – the soft signal was out – and there’s certainly a good chance his fingers are under the ball on that angle. But on we go… later replays may have well have proven more conclusively not-out, but either way, England’s twilight revival will have to wait a while.

Axar applies the final swing of the axe

England 112 (Crawley 53, Axar 6-38) vs India
Another perfectly pitched non-spinning brain-melter of a delivery from Axar Patel, Ben Foakes rocks back for a cut but the ball skitters under his blade. Here endeth an abject England performance, and a gleeful rampage from India’s spinners. Imagine how they might fare when the conditions are in their favour in the second innings…Here’s S Rajesh with the stats of doom. “In the last 50 years, only the 6th time that England have lasted fewer than 50 overs in the first innings after winning the toss and choosing to bat”. It ain’t pretty, that’s for sure.

5.53pm: Stuart Broad is not batting any more

Axar Patel is all smiles after striking•BCCI

Down on one knee, a languid sweep-flog down the throat of deep square leg, and in his third Test innings, Axar Patel has his second Test five-for! Easy come, easy go. At least he hauled England into triple figures. And, given the balance of England’s attack, at least the sun is likely to be setting when their turn comes with the ball. The witching hour approacheth… but they may need necromancy from Anderson, Archer and Broad to revive this corpse of a contest…

5.53pm: Stuart Broad is batting.. this is not a drill

5.24pm: Use your feet, people!

England’s innings is in freefall, and Nagraj Gollapudi is fairly sure he’s spotted the reason why:
“Will the ball spin or not? That is the key question any batsman asks when batting on a dry turner like in Ahmedabad, Nagraj writes. That doubt clearly has plagued all England batsmen including Joe Root, who had dominated Indian spinners in the first Test of this series with a masterful double century. Root showed not just self-confidence but the art of reading spin. Of course, that was a flat pitch. But the basics of playing spin do not change much regardless of the surface, as good batsmen will tell you.One of the basics is using your feet. By stepping out of the crease, using the feet, the batsman can not just smother the spin, but also play the ball before it pitches on difficult pitches which can create that doubt. Jonny Bairstow, Ollie Pope and Root will look at their dismissals today and tell themselves why, why did I not jump out of the crease and defend.By the time Jofra Archer was bowled, England’s batsmen had stepped out a mere 5 times while playing off the back foot 49 times in a total of 137 deliveries as per ESPNcricinfo’s bbb logs. Those numbers clearly indicate England’s batsmen were left in doubt big time on how to play.”

5.18pm: Axar to Archer – bullseye!

Well, it was resistance of sorts while it lasted. Archer actually unfurled the lesser-spotted sweep on a couple of occasions, nailing one through midwicket off Ashwin to get off the mark, and he even cut another four through backward point off Axar. But, as with so many of his colleagues, the threat of big spin made him extra vulnerable to the one that didn’t do a lot. A floppy drive off a full length, feet going nowhere, and back goes his off stump as Axar wriggles a length ball through his defences.

5pm: Ping! Next batsmen please …

Virat Kohli and R Ashwin celebrate after England lost a wicket just after tea•BCCI

Ollie Pope joins the procession, and it’s another beauty from Ashwin. Flighted, dipping, tricksy off the pitch, bursting past a lunging forward push and pegging back the off stump. Foakes and Stokes have a job and a half to do now, for India’s spinners are weaving a web.And moments later, it’s all on Foakes! Stokes plays back to Axar, and is struck in line with off stump. Up goes the finger, it’s clipping the top of middle. He’s missed a fairly regulation back-foot block there.As Sampath, our newest recruit to the stats-cave, noted at the break: “Three wickets by Indian spinners in the first session today. The previous 15 D/N Tests saw a total of three wickets going to the spinners in the first session on day 1.” It’s fair to say there’s a new day-night record in the offing here…And Rajesh, our uber-statsgruppenmeister, has been playing around with control percentages, just to add to the sense of swirling doom that is enveloping England’s campaign:Control percentages in the first 27 overs in the first innings in each of the three Tests:

1st Test: 90.3 (Eng 67/2)

2nd Test: 84.5 (Ind 106/3)

3rd Test: 80.5 (Eng 81/4)
It’s getting harder and harder to keep a handle on these surfaces …

Lunch (or tea, or elevenses or whatever)

England 81 for 4 (Stokes 6*, Pope 1*) vs India
Zak Crawley drives•BCCI

Well, that was riveting, fluctuating, and agenda-setting. Plenty evidence that the new ball will talk while the lacquer is in situ, but also oodles of evidence that India’s three-pronged spin attack will dominate all other iterations of the pink ball. Zak Crawley produced a masterful half-century in the circumstances, but even he was becalmed when Ashwin joined Patel in a twin-spin assault. Ishant Sharma struck early in his 100th Test, and Root’s lbw to Ashwin completes a difficult first session for the visitors.

4.25pm: Crawley nailed by one that skids straight on

So, about that selection of a solitary spinner then? At least in England’s defence they’ve gone for the left-armer, for Axar Patel has been India’s biggest menace this morning, and his second scalp of the session is an innings-wrecking blow. Zak Crawley’s tremendous innings is ended as he plays forward to two consecutive deliveries – the first rips past his edge, the second pitches on an identical length but skips straight on. Ben Stokes winces at the non-striker’s end as he tells his team-mate not to bother with the review. That smacked the knee-roll and was going nowhere but into the stumps. It’s going to be a challenge to scrape past 200 now … anyway, about that new ball under lights?

4.10pm: Fatal misjudgement from Root

Ashwin’s trickery extracts the key quarry! The longer Joe Root endured, the more ominous his innings was looking, especially with Crawley showing no signs of easing up his tempo. But on 17, he plays back to a dipping delivery from round the wicket, and is pinned on the crease as Ashwin finds some extra bite from an off-stump line. The finger goes up straightaway, and though Root reviews, it’s more in hope than expectation. Sure enough, it’s umpire’s call, flicking the top of leg stump, and that’s a massive, massive blow to England’s hopes. Had these two endured to lunch, they could have claimed the session spoils. Instead, Ben Stokes is out to face his nemesis …

4pm: Fifty for Crawley, from 68 balls

Zak Crawley and Joe Root bumps fists•BCCI

Remarkable stuff from Crawley, who is leaving Joe Root for dead as he keeps the runs pounding, in spite of an increasingly threatening spell of left-arm spin from Axar Patel. But the manner in which he reaches his fifty is typical of the innings so far. A sumptuous open-faced drive through the covers is followed by a wickedly biting ball that moves like a chevron from middle-and-leg past the groping outside edge. But then, one ball later, Axar loses his length and gets clobbered through extra cover for his sins.

3.43pm: Crawley in no mood for creeping

This innings from Crawley is just beginning to evolve from fluent cameo into something really rather significant, as he brings up England’s fifty with yet another effortless, under-played flick off his legs as Ishant strays a touch too full. After the stodgy but valiant fare on offer from Sibley and Burns in the first two Tests, England seem now to have an opening batsman with the game to make the running in tricky conditions, much as Rohit Sharma did on the first day at Chennai.And as the data below from our ball-by-ball analysis shows, that full length is travelling today, to all parts of that 225-degree arc in front of square.ESPNcricinfo Ltd

3.08pm: Jonny be gone … for a duck

Axar Patel celebrates after dismissing Jonny Bairstow•BCCI

It’s a game of two halves right now, one replete with creamy, dreamy drives and clips from Zak Crawley. whose defensive prod clean through mid-on to get off the mark was a thing of wonder, and whose timing off the seamers has been auspicious from the outset. But, India have three spinners in their line-up too, and Axar Patel needs just a solitary delivery to make his mark on the game!

Jonny Bairstow’s reputation against spin was enhanced by some telling dlsplays in Sri Lanka, but he got in a right tangle as Axar came round the wicket, nailing the perfect in-between length on middle and off, and thumping his shin past the inside edge as Bairstow poked uncertainly forward. He goes for the review, out of bewilderment and mild embarassment more than anything, but India’s celebrations are uninterrupted. That is smashing the timbers, and England’s No.2 and 3 are gone without opening their account. Lively times!

2.50pm: Stokes, Foakes … Woakes? Nope …

Fans of rhyming tercets, look away now. Even in an age of random-team generation, England still can’t get their cause celebres inked onto the same scorecards.ESPNcricinfo Ltd

2.40pm: First impressions are everything, right?

Ishant Sharma celebrates after dismissing Dom Sibley•BCCI

… in which case, don’t go making too many plans for cricket-watching on Sunday! Two overs down, and no runs on the board, and already Ishant Sharma and Jasprit Bumrah have extracted some startling movement with their shiny pink orb. Ishant’s first delivery simply launched itself at Rishabh Pant’s gloves, from a good-to-full length, while his fifth of the same over scuttled through to the keeper as if it had been stunned with a mallet in mid-air. A couple of deliveries wobbled off the seam too, though nothing like as extravagantly as Bumrah’s heat-seeking inswinger at the end of his first over. Dom Sibley dabbed it away with insouciance, but battle has been joined.Pink balls galore …•BCCI

… too right it has! A leg-bye (and no-ball) to rotate the strike for the first time in this match, and Ishant’s opening delivery to Sibley is perfection. Hitting the seam, straightening off the angle into the right hander, hitting the splice, flying comfortably to Kohli at second slip. He’s gone without scoring, and into the fray comes Jonny Bairstow, fresh from his break back in the UK. Hope his visualisation went well during quarantine …

2.30pm: England win the toss, changes galore

Good afternoon all, and welcome to a whole new ball-game. In Chennai last week, England endured a familiar fate in Asian conditions, as R Ashwin spun a web around their techniques to deliver India a series-levelling 317-run win. But we’ve crossed the country from East to West now, and fast-forwarded the hours of play by five hours too, to bring the brand-new floodlights of Ahmedabad’s 120,000-seater stadium into play. Oh, and there’s a pink SG ball in the mix too, which England’s bowlers are “licking their lips” to get hold of, according to Ben Stokes. I imagine Ishant Sharma, in his 100th Test, and the fit-again Jasprit Bumrah might be feeling similar sentiments. Whatever happens over the next five days, I daresay it won’t be standard Test fare.And as if to prove the point, we have wholesale changes on both teams, as England win a very useful toss, and get first use of the pitch while the afternoon sun is at its brightest. England, as expected, have made four changes – James Anderson and Jofra Archer return to lead the attack, although Stuart Broad retains his place, which is intriguing. Olly Stone and the home-again Moeen Ali make way, as do Dan Lawrence and Rory Burns with the bat. Jonny Bairstow and Zak Crawley are in. Crawley’s top score on tour so far is 13… a big ask to open up today.India have two changes, Bumrah is joined by the spin-bowling allrounder Washington Sundar, in place of Kuldeep Yadav and Mohammad Siraj.”It looks pretty dry, hot and humid,” says Virat Kohli, who is full of praise for the new stadium – which may only be half-full but 60,000 fans is still a larger capacity than pretty much every venue outside of the MCG.India 1 Rohit Sharma, 2 Shubman Gill, 3 Cheteshwar Pujara, 4 Virat Kohli (capt), 5 Ajinkya Rahane, 6 Rishabh Pant (wk), 7 Washington Sundar, 8 R Ashwin, 9 Axar Patel, 10 Ishant Sharma, 11 Jasprit Bumrah.England 1 Zak Crawley, 2 Dom Sibley, 3 Jonny Bairstow, 4 Joe Root (capt), 5 Ben Stokes, 6 Ollie Pope, 7 Ben Foakes (wk), 8 Jofra Archer, 9 Jack Leach, 10 Stuart Broad, 11 James Anderson.

Leigh Kasperek provides reminder of rare Australia vulnerability

The New Zealand offspinner took all the pace off the ball during a spell that included three wickets in an over

ESPNcricinfo staff11-Apr-2021Australia’s depth and confidence again shone through as they secured a 3-0 ODI series victory over New Zealand, to keep their record run going, but there was a glimpse at a potential weakness that teams could try to exploit.Offspinner Leigh Kasperek followed her six-wicket haul in the second match with a triple-wicket maiden on Saturday as Australia slipped from 73 for 0 to 80 for 4. The key to Kasperek’s success was how slow she was able to bowl – one delivery clocked at just 38kph – which coupled with a pitch that was holding and turning gave the batters nothing to work with.In the 12th over, Alyssa Healy was caught at long-on, Ash Gardner stumped by one which spun significantly then Rachael Haynes dragged on first ball.It was similar to how Australia had been undone in the first match of last year’s T20 World Cup when Poonam Yadav went through them with 4 for 19.Related

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“It’s something we need to get better at. We’ve spoken about it a lot as a group and guess we need to execute a bit better,” Meg Lanning said. “But credit to Leigh, she bowled extremely well and bowled to conditions really well.”The breeze was really strong and she was bowling into it so it was dropping a fair bit as well as the slower pace. Often when you see the ball tossed up a lot your first instinct is to come at it and perhaps we need to rethink how we want to play it.”We’ll need to address that and keep chatting about it, work out what we need to do to play that sort of bowling better because it will keep coming throughout world cricket. It can be quite effective, especially on older wickets so it’s good challenge for our batting group.”However, Lanning believes facing such conditions now was a valuable experience ahead of next year’s ODI World Cup back in New Zealand.”The conditions were tricky for batting. It was holding a bit and that’s probably what we’ll get through the World Cup, when we play at the same venues over and over again. I think there’s still a fair bit we can improve on and learn from, but this game was a great lesson for us.”Australia are likely to be next in action in September with India due to visit for ODIs and T20Is before the Ashes early next year then the World Cup. The players now begin six weeks of leave before beginning pre-season in late May while a significant number of them will be taking part in the Hundred in July and August.

Fawad Alam: 'Want to give our bowlers enough to attack'

Pakistan centurion says the slowness of the pitch and the old ball forced the batters to score slowly most of the day

ESPNcricinfo staff30-Apr-2021Pakistan have a lead of 198 runs with four wickets in hand in the first-innings exchange with Zimbabwe in Harare, but the scoring rate has hovered between 2.7 and 2.8. Fawad Alam, who scored his fourth Test century on the day, defended the batters’ approach, blaming the slowness of the pitch for the numbers on the board.”The batsmen know how the pitch is behaving. You must have seen that the ball hasn’t been coming on to the bat, and the pitch is getting slower with every passing session,” Alam said. “The ball was keeping low, but we tried to score as much as we could. They [Zimbabwe] even took the new ball late, and when they did, we scored more freely.”Credit should be given to the openers [Imran Butt and Abid Ali], the way they played and laid a solid foundation for the others. They might have scored slowly, but it helped us later on, allowing us to dominate.”Zimbabwe took the second new ball after 105.1 overs. Pakistan scored 59 runs in the first session in 32 overs and even went had a 17 overs without boundary at one stage. They got 99 in the second session, and then 113 in the final one thanks to the 45 runs in the last ten overs, when Hasan Ali hit two sixes.It wasn’t all Pakistan, though, as two wickets in quick succession – Azhar Ali followed by captain Babar Azam who fell for a golden duck – gave Zimbabwe a lift too. But Alam, in the main, made sure Pakistan came out on top by the end.”There was a plan to score 300 today but we were 25 runs behind,” he said. “It’s mainly because, when both Babar and Azhar got out, the pressure was on us for a while.”Scoring on slower tracks is always difficult as we have to create gaps to find runs. But it was a good day overall, and we still have three days in hand and tomorrow we want to add as much as we can to give our bowlers enough to attack. I can’t say how many, maybe another 50 or 100, but whatever we get we will keep them under pressure and wrap them within it.”

Stuart Broad on soft signal: 'Let's just do away with it now'

England seamer says current system puts on-field umpires in “really difficult situation”

George Dobell12-Jun-2021Stuart Broad has called for the ICC to “do away with” the soft signal following a controversial moment on the second day of the LV= Insurance Test against New Zealand at Edgbaston.Broad was convinced that Devon Conway had been caught at slip by Zak Crawley when the batter had 22. But the on-field umpires were unsure and referred the decision to the TV umpire, Michael Gough, with a soft signal of not out. Gough subsequently confirmed that on-field decision despite replays suggesting Crawley had his fingers under the ball. Conway went on to make 80 and help New Zealand build a strong position in the game.Related

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While Broad remains convinced that was the wrong decision, he expressed sympathy for the umpires and called on the ICC to step in immediately to abandon the soft signal protocol.”You can see from our reaction on the field that we thought it was out,” Broad told Sky Sports before play on the third day. “Zak thought he had his fingers under the ball and you only have to look at Joe Root’s reaction at first slip and James Bracey’s reaction behind the stumps – who are a yard away from it – to know that that ball has carried.”But I feel for the umpires in this situation. It’s not the umpires’ fault that they’re 40 yards away – potentially 60 yards in white-ball cricket – with maybe an obscured view.”It’s actually the ruling that’s putting the umpires in a really difficult situation. It’s having to get a soft signal. You’re going upstairs because you’re not sure whether it’s carried or not. So then to have to give an opinion whether you think it has, puts the umpire in a really tricky position. Then the third umpire’s hands are tied a little bit with whatever that on-field call is.”So, my question is: do you think that the ICC need to look at changing that rule because it just seems to put their staff in a tricky position?”Asked if he thought the process should be changed, Broad replied: “I do, absolutely. When you calmly look at the pros and cons of the soft signal, the cons completely outweigh the pros. So to me that looks as if it’s a poor ruling.”

The soft signal was introduced to counter the dangers of foreshortening from TV cameras, which are placed high above the action and unable to illustrate the action in 3D, but Broad is far from the first high-profile player to question its value. Jason Holder, the former West Indies captain, tweeted “How much longer will the soft signal cloud the game?” on Friday, while Virat Kohli has suggested the on-field umpires should be permitted not to commit themselves to a decision.The ICC has indicated it will look again at the protocol, but Broad, whose father, Chris, is match referee for this Test, was impatient for change.”I don’t really see the point of waiting for another ICC meeting in September or wherever it comes to discuss what’s going on in the game,” Broad said. “Surely the umpires are now in a position where they get unfairly criticised for a decision that they’re not sure about because they want to go and use the technology.”Let’s just do away with it now. The ICC should just come out and say ‘the soft signal is gone’. If the umpires are unsure, let’s go through the amazing technology we’ve got and get the right decision.”

James Anderson: England players committed to 'improving ourselves' in wake of Ollie Robinson row

ECB warn further action may be taken as more players are drawn into controversy

Andrew Miller08-Jun-202113:01

Newsroom: Was the ECB fair in its dealing with Ollie Robinson?

James Anderson says that England’s players are committed to “improving ourselves as people”, as the build-up towards Thursday’s second LV= Insurance Test against New Zealand at Edgbaston continues to be overshadowed by the emergence of historic offensive posts on social media.In the wake of Ollie Robinson’s suspension for a series of derogatory tweets from 2012 and 2013, the ECB has indicated that further action may be taken by the board, after other players in the national set-up were found to have posted unsavoury content in the past, including one player who made racist remarks before turning 16.An ECB spokesperson said: “Since we were alerted to offensive tweets last week, a number of historical social media posts by other individuals have been questioned publicly as well. There is no place for discrimination in our sport, and we are committed to taking relevant and appropriate action where required.”Given the concerns which have been raised are clearly now broader than a single case, the ECB Board will discuss how we deal with issues over historical social media material in a timely and appropriate manner. Each case will be considered on an individual basis, looking at all the facts. We will assess cases with the ECB Board before making further statements.”Anderson, who will take over from Sir Alastair Cook as England’s most-capped player if selected for his 162nd Test, admitted on Tuesday that there was a nervous atmosphere within the dressing-room, given the speed with which the issue has escalated, following the unearthing of Robinson’s tweets on the opening day of his Test debut at Lord’s last week.”It is a difficult time,” Anderson said. “As players we are trying to learn from this, and realise it’s important to try to get educated around these issues. We continue to do that with the ECB and PCA [Professional Cricketers’ Association], we’ve been doing workshops before the series to improve ourselves as people, basically. To try to make sure this doesn’t happen.”Related

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To the ECB’s embarrassment, the Robinson furore blew up on the same day that the team had lined up for a “moment of unity” before the start of play, wearing shirts denouncing discrimination on various grounds, including race, gender, sexuality, age and ability.The ECB chief executive, Tom Harrison, reiterated the board’s “zero tolerance” approach to such matters and Robinson, who made a public apology on what ought to have been the proudest day of his career, was suspended at the end of the match, pending an investigation.”I think it’s been accepted, he stood up in front of the group and apologised,” Anderson said. “You could see how sincere and upset he was. As a group we appreciate he’s a different person now. He’s done a lot of maturing and growing since then and he’s got the full support of the team.”Robinson’s comments, which included the use of the N-word, as well as derogatory opinions about women and people of Asian heritage, were posted between April 2012 and June 2013, when he was 18 or 19 years old. And while Anderson admitted that the lines were “blurry” when it came to judging players for comments made when they were young and naive, he acknowledged that there was no place for such remarks in society.James Anderson takes a breather in training at Edgbaston•Getty Images

“That language and the subjects are obviously not acceptable,” he said. “Yes we do make mistakes, everyone does, and as people we’ve got to try improve and make sure this sort of stuff doesn’t happen and make sure people are aware it’s not acceptable.”I remember being that age and you do make mistakes,” he added. “You’re very young and inexperienced. It’s just a case of trying to make sure that, even at that age, we send a message that this is unacceptable language to use.”Anderson, who signed up for Twitter in 2009, acknowledged that one particular tweet of his from 2010 had come back to haunt him this week, after he cast potentially offensive aspersions about Stuart Broad’s haircut. He acknowledged that the players would need to vet their comments with more care in the future.”It’s something we are definitely going to have to look at,” Anderson said. “If there are any tweets from years ago, we do have to look at that and again learn from this and be better in the future, try and make sure we know it’s unacceptable to use these sorts of phrases and language.”If we educate people well enough, then that language and those tweets don’t go out in the first place. The historical stuff, for me 10-11 years ago, I’ve certainly changed as a person. That’s the difficulty. Things do change and you do make mistakes.Ollie Robinson’s historic Twitter comments came back to haunt him on his Test debut•AFP/Getty Images

“We have started workshops through the PCA and ECB,” he added. “The first one was on racism. It doesn’t matter how old you are, you can never know too much. It’s really important we keep doing this, keep buying into it, because it’s hugely important our game is as inclusive as possible.”Anderson insisted, however, that the England team did not feel let down by Robinson’s comments, despite the manner in which they had overshadowed the first Test, because he believed his remorse to be heartfelt.”I wouldn’t say let down, no. With the tweets coming 10 years ago, obviously there was initial shock there with the language that was used. But there was remorse. I think he’s definitely changed as a person and he’s definitely improved from this as well, learned from these mistakes I guess.”Robinson has received some unexpected support since his suspension, with Boris Johnson the UK prime minister weighing in on the subject, following an initial remark from Oliver Dowden, the culture secretary.Speaking on BBC Breakfast, the former England batting coach, Mark Ramprakash, decried the “irony” of the prime minister stepping into such a row, given that he himself has come under scrutiny in the past for derogatory comments, including about race and sexuality. Ramprakash added: “If I was Ollie Robinson, I am not sure I would want Boris Johnson involved and trying to support me.”Anderson, however, declined to comment on that development. “I think that’s way above my pay grade to be honest,” he said. “I don’t get involved in that. People have obviously got their political views but that’s nothing to do with us as a team.”

Mushfiqur Rahim to miss remainder of Zimbabwe tour

The wicketkeeper-batter is flying back to Dhaka for “family reasons”

Mohammad Isam14-Jul-2021Mushfiqur Rahim will miss the remainder of Bangladesh’s tour of Zimbabwe for “family reasons”, according to the BCB. He will travel back to Dhaka today from Harare. The visitors have an ICC Super League ODI series scheduled from July 16, and a T20I series from July 23.”The Bangladesh Cricket Board requests that all respect the privacy of Mushfiqur and his family at this time,” a BCB release said.Related

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Rahim played the one-off Test in Harare last week but, having injured his hand while batting, stayed off the field for most of the game. He was also initially supposed to skip the T20I series after the board granted him leave.He wasn’t named in the T20I squad against Zimbabwe but on Tuesday, chief selector Minhajul Abedin had said Rahim could be among the ODI squad players to stay back for the T20Is due to quarantine rules for the upcoming T20I series against Australia at home.The BCB and CA have agreed that everyone involved in the series must be in quarantine for ten days prior to entering the tour’s bio-bubble in Dhaka. As such, the selectors wanted Rahim and another player to be part of the bio-bubble in Harare, which is being considered as part of the ten-day quarantine.

Shreyas Iyer ruled out of Lancashire county stint

India batter continuing his recovery from shoulder injury suffered in March

ESPNcricinfo staff19-Jul-2021India batter Shreyas Iyer has been ruled out of appearing for Lancashire in the upcoming Royal London Cup. Iyer had signed as an overseas player for the 50-over tournament but required surgery on a shoulder injury suffered during India’s home ODI series against England in March.It has since been decided, following discussions between Lancashire and the BCCI, that Iyer will remain in India to continue rehab ahead of his planned return to cricket.”We are obviously very disappointed, as we were thoroughly looking forward to welcoming Shreyas to Emirates Old Trafford,” Lancashire’s director of cricket, Paul Allott, said. “Ultimately Shreyas’ long-term fitness is of paramount importance and Lancashire Cricket fully respects the decision.

“We wish Shreyas all the best with the remainder of his recovery, and from the conversations, which I have had with the player, believe that this is an arrangement he would be keen to revisit again in the future.”Iyer, 26, has played 51 times in limited-overs internationals for his country. He missed the truncated 2021 IPL after suffering a partial dislocation of his left shoulder in the field during the first ODI against England in Pune.Iyer said: “I am gutted to not be able to play for Lancashire this summer, a club that has such history and ambition. I hope to play at Emirates Old Trafford for Lancashire at some point in the future.”