'A bit more stressful' – Josh Inglis' up-and-down day as Australia captain

There was joy off the field, with the wicketkeeper receiving a Test call-up for the Border Gavaskar Trophy, but on the field, the team was soundly beaten

Tristan Lavalette10-Nov-2024At the end of an emotionally draining day that mixed personal satisfaction with helming a lacklustre Australia performance, Josh Inglis appeared relatively relaxed as he fronted the press for the first time as national captain.Somewhat reticent in his media interactions in domestic cricket, Inglis seemed comfortable in the bright lights as he reflected on a whirlwind day which started with his selection as the reserve batter in Australia’s first Test squad for the Border Gavaskar Trophy before finishing with an eight-wicket hammering in the series-decider against Pakistan at Optus Stadium.”A bit more stressful than just carrying the gloves. But it was a really, really cool experience,” he told reporters after the match.Related

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Inglis has been around for some time as a dynamic wicketkeeper-batter for Western Australia and Perth Scorchers in the BBL. He has in recent times established himself as Australia’s first-choice keeper in white-ball cricket. While he’s a World Cup champion, having helped Australia win the 50-over showpiece 12 months ago in India, Inglis has felt like he’s only really started to gain widespread national prominence this season.After a stunning start to the Sheffield Shield season, where he carved out match-turning rapid tons in consecutive matches, Inglis was bandied around – most notably by highly-regarded New South Wales coach Greg Shipperd – as a potential solution to Australia’s search for David Warner’s replacement at the Test level.While that left-field option was quickly hosed down, Inglis’ standing within Australia’s hierarchy was confirmed when he was selected to replace Pat Cummins as skipper for the third ODI and also fill the shoes of Mitchell Marsh in the subsequent three-match T20I series.Josh Inglis scored two centuries in the Sheffield Shield this season•Getty ImagesGiven his heavy workload with the gloves, Inglis has never taken the reins of Western Australia or Scorchers. With the ODI series coming down to the finale in Perth, there was excitement over Inglis being able to showcase his highly-regarded leadership capabilities and tactical nous.Hours before the match even began, Inglis was in the headlines after being somewhat surprisingly named in Australia’s 13-man first Test squad as selectors rewarded his rich vein of form and versatility.”I was thinking this week about the captaincy and not thinking too far ahead with the Test stuff,” Inglis said. “But I was really excited when Ronnie [coach Andrew McDonald] called me and let me know.”I’m just pumped to be there. Really enjoying my red-ball cricket this year. I feel like I’m playing well in that form of the game.”Inglis had the tough task of putting his emotions aside as he tried to galvanise a shorthanded Australia team missing their Test stars with the series on the line against Pakistan.The ODI series has been mostly viewed as an entrée to the blockbuster Test summer. But traffic near Optus Stadium was at a standstill before the match, although in an anti-climax it turned out motorists were heading to a 4WD car exhibition and not the cricket.Still a crowd of almost 20,000 fans were at the ground and mostly filled with partisan West Australians proud of their local hero leading Australia onto Optus Stadium.But Inglis lost the toss and it was downhill from there for Australia, whose struggles against Pakistan’s four-pronged attack continued on a fast and bouncy surface. Coming in at 36 for 2, Inglis hoped to perform the type of rescue job he has done many times for Scorchers, but he couldn’t get going and on 7 skied a short Naseem Shah delivery to Mohammad Rizwan.No Australia batter managed a half-century in the series with Inglis – along with Steven Smith – looking the most fluent in the opening couple of games but failed to convert.Josh Inglis on Test call-up: ‘I’m just pumped to be there. Really enjoying my red-ball cricket this year’•Getty Images”They’ve got four very good quick bowlers, and I thought they put pressure on our batters throughout and made it really tough,” Inglis said. “I guess everyone’s got to look individually and find ways to get better and keep improving.”Defending just 140, Inglis’ first foray into captaining the national team in the field was a tough initiation and he was under the microscope immediately after opting to hand allrounder Marcus Stoinis the new ball alongside Spencer Johnson.He held back speedster Lance Morris, his WA and Scorchers team-mate, until the 15th over. Morris, who often does not bowl with the new ball in white-ball domestic cricket, claimed Australia’s only two wickets when he dismissed openers Saim Ayub and Abdullah Shafique in the 18th over.”We thought Stoiny… just swinging the ball early and the extra protection for Lance coming back [from injury], he hasn’t played much cricket,” Inglis said. “But I thought he bowled beautifully today, bowled at good pace and did a bit with the ball too.”Among his new duties, Inglis also had to contend with the shot clock between overs. Under relatively new ICC regulations, a penalty of five runs is imposed on the bowling side if they fail three times in an innings to start the new over within a minute.”Obviously me being a keeper, it’s pretty difficult to be able to have a conversation with the bowler then get to my mark,” Inglis said. “And if we’ve got to make adjustments for the field, [be able to] do that [within a minute]. So I got two warnings pretty early.”We just had to be a bit sharper with that. And I guess I’ll get quicker as I go along.”Even though he has been selected in the Test squad, Inglis will lead Australia in the T20I series against Pakistan starting on November 14 as he builds on a day he will never forget.”It’s a totally different format and you don’t want this sort of disappointing feeling to linger,” Inglis said. “So we’ll debrief, we’ll talk about the game and where we can improve.”We just have to brush ourselves down and come back again.”

Superman Kamindu takes flight to save the day for SRH

It was SRH’s chance to get rid of the wooden spoon and Kamindu took it with both of his remarkable hands, dismissing an on-song Brevis

Alagappan Muthu26-Apr-20251:29

Will this win make SRH rethink their approach?

These days, people are taking to the sky more and more. Some believe there is a home up there. Maybe even life. Others have found ways to turn it into a tourist attraction. All of them are huge leaps of science. A triumph of the modern age. They could do worse than look at Kamindu Mendis and see how to celebrate. He couldn’t stop talking about his little trip off the earth.”Yeah, there’s been a lot of Sinhalese in our dressing room in the last little while,” Sunrisers Hyderabad coach Daniel Vettori said chuckling to himself at the press conference, “Which obviously I don’t understand. There’s a lot of Tamil which I don’t understand as well.”

Dewald Brevis had hit the ball like it had tried to make off with his pocket money. He’s got such fast hands. That’s where the comparisons with AB de Villiers come from. Bat speed generating ungodly power. He’d gone from 17 off 17 to 42 off 24 and was looking to go 48 off 25.Related

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Kamindu was at long-off. Actually no. For some reason, he chose a starting position well off the boundary line. When the ball was struck to him, everybody turned around. Pat Cummins had his mouth open as his eyes traced the path of what looked like a flat, hard six. Nobody expected what happened next to happen next.Kamindu moved to his left a total of 11.09m. That still wasn’t enough. He put in a full-length dive, both hands reaching out, and above him, reverse cupped. A second later, he hit the floor, with the most important thing in the world. It was clinging to him. He didn’t even feel the need to wrap his fingers around it anymore. He was actually whirling his hand round and round, daring it to fall off. But it didn’t. It was completely under his spell. First it was the red ball. Now it’s the white one too.”Which is his weak side, we never know,” boomed Ian Bishop on commentary, a beautifully executed double-entendre to refer to the fact that Kamindu is ambidextrous. He bowls with both hands. That is how he broke into international cricket. He was a curiosity. Then he scored runs so fast and so easily he was keeping pace with some guy called Don from 75 years ago and it became clear that he had more value than that.Brevis saw it and couldn’t believe it. Harshal Patel came down with a bad case of Oh My Broad face. Cummins took it upon himself to run to Kamindu and put him where he belonged. Where he seemed so at ease. Off his feet and in the air. IPL 2025 has been lousy with dropped catches. Maybe it needed to be for something like this to happen and balance the scales.Harshal Patel reacts to Kamindu Mendis’ sensational catch•Getty ImagesVettori needed a moment to find words that could make sense of it. “I think it’s just instinct,” he said. “It’s an innate ability to be able to move. To see the ball and time your diving. So probably one of those catches that even a brilliant fielder only has one or two in their career.”Chennai Super Kings (CSK) were 114 for 4 in the 13th over. Brevis had hit three sixes in the previous one. Kamindu was the bowler he took to the cleaners. They were looking at a total of 180, not 150, which would’ve been tricky. This was a pitch that forced 12 out of 17 batters to score at a strike rate below 125. CSK coach Stephen Fleming was filled with the feeling of what could have been. He was even reminded of a similar situation early in the season where Shivam Dube was beginning to tip the scales in a chase of 183 against Rajasthan Royals.”And again, we were probably victims of a match-winning catch,” Fleming said. “It was going well, it was an outstanding catch. We had Riyan Parag in a game at Guwahati, who took a great catch as well. So a couple of key moments there that they earned, did well.” The thing that was unsaid here is that while CSK have been at the receiving end of these bangers, they’ve been putting down clangers.ESPNcricinfo LtdThis game was so edgy and tense. “Yorker” came the cry as Matheesha Pathirana ran in to bowl. The knowledgeable Chennai crowd knew what to expect from one of its favourites. Except in trying to hit the blockhole, the bowler lost control and was lucky to land it on the cut strip.Aniket Verma was promoted up the order to throw the bowlers, particularly the spinners off their lengths. He’d done just about enough of that, hitting Sam Curran and Ravindra Jadeja for sixes and helping his team take 25 runs off two overs immediately after a wicket-taking over that went for just one run. The equation now read 49 off 37, which if not quite a cake walk is at least in a muffin stroll territory.Aniket slogged across the line, got out and left the field fuming. By the time he left the 30-yard circle, he had yelled at himself twice. He might also have used this time to stress test his pads, whacking his bat into them with full force.”By the end, it was sort of like, it was two teams that were nervous about winning, going hammer and tongs on a tough wicket.” With the clock nearing midnight and the match long done, Fleming had a wry smile as he said that. This was a weird T20. Things kept happening – which is the format’s forte – but most wouldn’t merit a place on the highlight reel. The bloopers, maybe. Still, this low-scoring scrap of a game did not come without a prize. It was a chance to get rid of the wooden spoon and Kamindu took it with both of his remarkable hands.

England brace for tougher times after perfect start to Charlotte Edwards era

India await in second assignment of women’s summer, but new head coach likes what she’s seen so far

Valkerie Baynes08-Jun-2025England Women can expect a tougher test of their new set-up when India arrive later this month, after West Indies’ tour ended in 3-0 sweeps of both T20I and ODI series.Such results don’t appear to be optimal preparation for the world’s No.2 ODI side to take on third-ranked rivals and World Cup hosts India. However, they provided a confidence boost after the nadir of six months ago, and allowed the hosts to experiment, gleaning some valuable insights in the process.It turns out the solution to their top-order conundrum in the 50-over format had been staring them in the face all along. England’s depth of talent has so often been boasted about as a welcome product of the professionalisation of the domestic women’s game, but by bringing that to the fore rather than leaving it in the background amid a reluctance to tinker, they have strengthened their batting and bowling options.”We are under no illusions that we are going to have tougher times ahead,” Charlotte Edwards, England’s new head coach, said on Saturday. “But equally, what we are seeing already is that appetite for people to want to keep getting better too – they can’t stand still because there’s someone probably in county cricket now scoring runs who’s winning games of cricket.”Reuniting Amy Jones and Tammy Beaumont as openers after five years was hugely successful, with both scoring back-to-back centuries in twin partnerships worth more than 200 each across the first two games. So too was the introduction of Linsey Smith and Em Arlott to the ODI bowling ranks.So much so that, in the third and final ODI in Taunton on Saturday, Jones dropped back to the middle order (where she wasn’t required) and Beaumont was rested along with Smith, coincidentally just as it was announced that fellow left-arm spinner Sophie Ecclestone would take a wellbeing break with a view to feeling ready to take on India.Charlotte Edwards wants to be able to pick from a pool of 25 players for every England match•Getty ImagesArlott, who made her international debut during the T20I leg of the tour and was rested for the second ODI, returned with devastating effect on Saturday, taking two wickets for one run in the space of six balls as West Indies lurched to 3 for 4 inside four overs.Meanwhile, Sarah Glenn made her first appearance of the series in Taunton and took 3 for 21 after a five-hour rain delay to help contain West Indies to 106 for 8 from 21 overs. She was subsequently named player of the match as England cruised to a nine-wicket victory with Nat Sciver-Brunt scoring an unbeaten 57 opening alongside Sophia Dunkley.Emma Lamb, who like Arlott and Smith had been called up after dominating the start of the domestic 50-over competition, scored a quick-fire 55 in the second ODI before making way for Alice Capsey to move up to No. 3 and score 20 not out.Of course England had the luxury to try just about anything against an already under-strength West Indies who travelled without injured big hitters Chinelle Henry and Deandra Dottin and were further depleted when star allrounder and captain Hayley Matthews succumbed to a shoulder problem. Matthews had been player of the T20I series, despite her side failing to win a match but was ruled out of the second and third ODIs after aggravating the injury while fielding in the first in Derby.Related

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But the fact that the third ODI amounted to batting practice for England’s regular middle-order, who had up to that point been under-used, and that a re-jigged bowling line-up got their job done illustrated that their desired competition for places has arrived – something not present for the failed T20 World Cup and Ashes campaigns.”It is going to be difficult to pick teams moving forward,” Edwards added, “but that’s the place we wanted to be and we don’t want to be picking from 15 or 16 players. We want to be picking from a pool of 25 players, which I genuinely think we are now. We’ve probably got there quicker than I thought we would.”A significant factor has been Edwards’ insistence on England-contracted players playing domestic cricket in the lead-up to the West Indies series.While some will rest ahead of India’s arrival, others were set to leave the ODI squad and rejoin their domestic teams for the Vitality Blast as early as Sunday.”There’s a group of fast bowlers now really vying for a few spots,” Edwards added. “I don’t think we’ve had that, probably in the last five years, in terms of about five or six bowlers who could all open the bowling for England. And a really good group of batters who are really pushing each other to get better and better, which I think is a really healthy place to be in as a team. It makes it harder for us now to select teams, but equally more exciting for us moving forward.”England play five T20Is against India starting at Trent Bridge on June 28, followed by three ODIs. And while Edwards admitted that, with this year’s World Cup in mind, she would have preferred to have played more ODIs, England will host the T20 World Cup in a year’s time.”That’s why we played around with the team a little bit today,” she said. “But equally, we understand that the T20 format is a format that, for next summer is really important as well, so we’ll manage that.Linsey Smith took her chances after a long period out of the selectors’ thoughts•ECB via Getty Images”We absolutely know that, in a couple of weeks’ time at Trent Bridge, that’s going to be tough. They’re one of the best teams in the world, they’ve got some of the best players, so we’re going to have to be right on it when we get to the 28th of June. But we’ve taken a lot of confidence from this and that’s the most important thing. We can only play what’s in front of us and we’ll look to do that again when we play against India.”West Indies failed to qualify for the 50-over World Cup immediately before heading to England. That they couldn’t put up more of a fight in the T20Is, despite knocking England out of that World Cup last October, was unsurprising given their over-reliance on Matthews.There were some small highlights for West Indies, who will return home to host South Africa in the first of three ODIs starting on Wednesday, then three T20Is.At just 20 years of age, Realeanna Grimmond offered cause for optimism with her half-century on ODI debut in the second game in Leicester, as did 21-year-old Jannillea Glasgow with a 24-ball 44. But their development, along with that of teenage quick Jahzara Claxton is a long-term project.Shane Deitz, West Indies head coach, expected to have Henry back to face South Africa and said Matthews’ recovery would be managed through that series, but Dottin remained another month away from full fitness.”We had a chance to bring some players in and that’s what we’re looking for,” Deitz said. “Our season, so to speak, begins in February next year – 2026 is a massive year for us. We’ve got 15 ODIs that obviously go for the next World Cup qualification, a Test match [against Australia] and a World Cup.”What we do over the next eight months off the playing field is going to be the key thing for our performance next year. We’ve got a lot of things we can work on off the field, the team culture and then a lot of fitness and skill work. We’ve got a great opportunity now to play a few games against South Africa and then have a really good off-field programme for seven or eight months, and then come back in 2026 and take on the rest of the world.”

How do you solve a problem like Bumrah? We asked Williamson and Elgar

Two batters who have had their fair share of squaring up against the Indian fast bowler talk about what it takes to survive the test

Interviews by Nagraj Gollapudi20-Nov-2025A top batter facing Jasprit Bumrah is among the most absorbing contests there is in cricket these days. As Osman Samiuddin wrote on this site a while ago, Bumrah is a one-person species. Everything about his bowling is unique and no amount of high-end tech has helped batters solve the Bumrah riddle so far. In an attempt to dissect the powers of one of the greatest bowlers of the modern era, we asked Kane Williamson and Dean Elgar, two accomplished batters, among the rare breed to average over 40 against Bumrah across all international cricket, to help us understand the challenge.What is the unique challenge Bumrah presents?Kane Williamson: Whenever you face Bumrah it feels like Test cricket. Because he is that good even in white-ball cricket. I recall that semi-final in Mumbai in the 2023 World Cup where he had it swinging late both ways. Gosh, it was about survival for about 40 minutes.He obviously has the ability to move the ball both ways with incredible accuracy, and deception of pace – because he sort of quite gently arrives at the crease and then shoots these balls out with good pace. He is such a level-headed competitor as well, so you know you are always in a real fight. He’s quite composed and he’s going to be disciplined as well. He very rarely misses. And as a batter, that presents a huge challenge.Related

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Elgar: He is extremely intense. You can see he hits the wicket with a different intensity and that’s what separates him at the moment: his intensity of play. So it’s almost like every ball is an event. There’s no soft deliveries that a batter can score off.Has there been a spell in Test cricket that illustrates the challenge?Williamson: The one that certainly comes to mind is the World Test Championship final in 2021, precisely in the first session of the second day [day five; the first and fourth days were washed out and rain affected the second and third days too], where I was engaged in one of the most intense and fierce duels of my career, with Bumrah giving no respite. I scored seven runs in the whole session, including a boundary late in that period. I still find it unbelievable.He probably went at one-and-a-half runs an over or something like that. And that was through asking questions all day and getting some assistance out of the surface. I would’ve loved to have scored quicker, but it didn’t feel like that was an option! I played and missed, played and missed, sort of managed to keep a few out and then it was trusting that we’d get something somewhere at some stage (), and Bumrah and Co. didn’t give us much.You see him with the Dukes in his hand and that is an added challenge because he is going to get so much more assistance with that, versus facing him in New Zealand against the Kookaburra. And so yeah, that session in particular, and that whole game, where it did provide some assistance to fast bowlers. If there’s absolutely anything, whether it’s swing or even some sort of seam movement off the surface, someone like Jasprit’s going to exploit that.Elgar: The Johannesburg Test in 2018, which was his debut series. The pitch at Wanderers was not at all easy for batters. Jass hit me everywhere, including on the helmet after the ball kicked up suddenly from short of a good length and caused some trouble for me.The pitch was very favourable to bowlers – very quick, uneven bounce, a lot of balls were rising off lengths, which was quite unusual. The Test was very close to potentially being called off. Jass, who we had never seen before, managed to get a lot out of that pitch with his unique action and fierce pace. It was among the best spells of fast bowling I had ever faced. And I can tell you, having faced him over two more series – in 2021-22 and 2023-24 – in South Africa, the challenge only became more severe.Kane, in that WTC final, the conditions were clearly seam-bowler friendly, but how did Bumrah attack while also managing to keep you quiet, as he did?Williamson: His mode of attack is no different to any good fast bowler: attacking the top of the stumps and then trying to move the ball and either bringing in the edge or lbw or bowled. As a batter, I’m telling myself: you know you are going to get some good balls. So you are trying to limit the damage with a strong defensive position and then taking any opportunity you can to get off strike or put away a ball where he might have missed. But having said that, you are not really relying on [him missing] because it doesn’t happen all that often, but you still need to be in that frame of mind [to capitalise when the chance comes].That’s what the best [bowlers] in the world are able to do: they are so relentless in how they operate that you are always trying to hold firm with your plan as long as you can.How confident were you defending against Bumrah?Elgar: I have always had this theory about facing quality, really, really high-end seam bowlers or fast bowlers: if you defend them well and if you leave them well, that’s quite a high percentage of the battle done. And then they’ll give you some scoring options because they get frustrated [at] not penetrating your defence, and then you can maybe have a few more options of scoring. But leading up to that, you really need to have your defence on point [and] leave very well against high-quality fast bowlers – despite knowing that they don’t really leave your stumps.That was my theory of playing Jass: defend like your life depends on it, leave well, and obviously, if he bowls in your areas to potentially just get a single, do it. But [he was] accurate, so accurate at high intensity, high pace. So you need to be so locked in, you need to focus on what you need to do irrespective of what the ball does off the surface.He’s also very accurate. I can’t remember him bowling, like, a cut-shot ball. A lot of the times that would be my scoring option. If the ball’s swinging back in, that’s something that I’ll always look to play, [mixed in] with a lot of defence or even leaving it well, but you need to be really on point with that. Yeah, he caused a lot of headaches.Williamson: I certainly worked hard at trusting my defence, but in this game you know that you can get good deliveries where you might be in your best position and it’s still not quite good enough. And Bumrah probably bowls more of those balls than anybody else. So you are still trusting it [defence] but you are also accepting the fact that if you are in your best position and it’s not good enough, then you have to walk off and so be it.Elgar copped a fair few body blows from Bumrah in the latter’s debut series in 2018•BCCIWhat makes Bumrah as good as he is, and what role do his variations play there, along with his discipline and deception?Williamson: Across formats he’s hands down the best bowler in the world. Certainly in the white-ball format, with his slower ball, which is one of the best in the world, and his ability to bowl yorkers, which has proven to be such a difficult thing [to counter]. He’s amazing at that, not to mention, when he gets a new ball in his hand, which we see in Test cricket all the time. So the way he can operate in all facets. He is so versatile and there’s that deception: he’s still bowling 140-plus and he basically jogs to the crease. There’s so many elements to what he does that makes it quite special, unique and world-class.Elgar: Jass is two different bowlers [depending on whether he is] bowling from over or round the wicket. I always felt it was a lot easier when he is bowling over the wicket because all you are looking to do is play the ball that’s swinging back at you, and if the ball is going away from you, you look to leave that or defend it as best as possible. And when he switches to around the wicket, he’s got that natural ability to bring the ball back in to you but also the away-swinging ball for the left-hander, so you feel like you need to play at a lot of balls that you shouldn’t be really playing at.How much do you read cues out of his hand?Elgar: Reading the seam from the bowler’s hand is a traditional way to understand what he is up to, but with Jass the difference is, he has these very, very subtle wrist positions. And also, his arm speed is so quick as well. That’s how he generates his intensity [when he delivers] the ball. So you really have to focus so much harder on his hand, but you can see the seam when it’s coming down.He has such amazing wrists. So you need to really watch the ball quite hard [in addition to him having an] unusual action. You need to really focus hard on or how the seam is coming out: if the seam’s pointing towards the slips, I know the ball’s going to swing away and I have got to really leave it well and defend well and not over-attack. If the seam is pointed towards the stumps, then I know I need to be even more compact and play that ball down the ground.Williamson: It is not easy to read Bumrah’s hand. You watch as closely as you can, but really you are trying to identify the biggest threats [deliveries] so you are playing for the ones that bring in the most modes of dismissal. But it is very, very difficult with the slower ball to read his hand, because his arm speed stays the same and he gets a lot of drop.The way he lets the ball go in front of himself, and his action as well, it kind of means it’s probably a little bit closer to the batter [than with other bowlers], therefore you have probably got a little bit less time, and he can slightly adjust his wrist and get it swinging both ways. It sort of really speeds up the process. So with less time, with the ball that’s moving sideways, that’s a really good recipe and a great asset to have in your artillery [as a bowler].Wristy business: Bumrah can introduce several variations with just subtle adjustments to his wrist position•Getty ImagesThe way he gets shape and swing from letting the ball go in front of himself, it does mean that the ball moves late. In some ways it’s like when you face a [mystery] spinner and you struggle to pick the [variations]. So you are sort of trying to create a game plan that allows for that versus seeing the big inswinger or seeing the big outswinger and being able to adjust because you pick up all those cues. So I do think that’s a massive strength of his that separates what he can do from other bowlers.Bumrah is not among the tallest bowlers, and his point of release is lower than for most others too. Do you face him as a skiddy bowler or a hit-the-deck bowler?Williamson: I always have seen him as more of a skiddy bowler. It has to skid, doesn’t it, when it’s coming from that height, at that pace? But it’s heavy. When someone bowls a heavy ball, they are getting something out of the surface and it’s bouncing on you, which is different to when they are fast through the air but it may not feel heavy. You might play a defensive shot, but if the ball is heavy and it’s bouncing in terms of coming at you off the pitch, then you can get defensive nicks where if a player has any laziness in his position – then those are the margins these top bowlers will expose.Elgar: I played Jass like a hit-the-deck-bowler. But generally a hit-the-deck bowler is not a swing bowler, he is more a nip bowler. Jass is hit-the-deck with swing. With the newer ball, I found he would be a touch fuller, allow the ball to do more in the air, and then when the ball got older, he would pull his length back and really hit the deck harder and try and see if there’s any lateral movement in the wicket.Does Bumrah get into your head in a way many other bowlers do not?Elgar: A lot of times you play the name, which is one of the battles a batter has to fight: don’t play the name, play the ball. So in that sense, you always know that he is a massive risk. He is a wicket-taker. He’s a big threat in the bowling attack. So you almost have to fight that before you go out. When you get through that and you’re able to put the player aside and just focus on what he has to deliver and you play the ball, that’s already quite a big victory. That battle was a constant first hurdle.But I’ll never deny it and say, no, he didn’t get in my head. That would be a lie. But in saying that, I would think that I also got into his head. [When] you can fight the demons that are in your mind, that’s also really another battle that can work in your favour. In that 2023-24 series we both had some good duels, and that is a period where I batted at my most fluent. I was telling myself: everything’s coming to an end [Elgar retired at the end of that series], so it’s almost like the shackles were released and I was actually able to show people that I’m actually quite a fluent player when my mind is totally, totally clear. And that’s probably the one time that I thought I had the upper hand against Jass. But yeah, he’s just a massive challenge. There’s just no release from him, let’s put it that way. There’s no easy way out.

How many bowlers have taken hundred or more wickets in each format?

And what’s the ODI record for most caught-and-bowleds by one bowler?

Steven Lynch11-Nov-2025In one of South Africa’s recent ODIs, four Pakistan batters were caught and bowled, three of them by Nqaba Peter. Were either of these records? asked Mendel Bacher from South Africa
You’re talking about the second ODI in Faisalabad last week, when four men were caught and bowled during Pakistan’s innings. That equalled the ODI record: there were also four in England’s innings against Australia in Adelaide in January 1999, two each by Brendon Julian and Shane Warne.Three of last week’s quartet were held by the South African legspinner Nqaba Peter, which is a first for one-day internationals. There are 11 other instances of three caught-and-bowleds in an ODI innings, but none of them was taken by the same bowler.Jasprit Bumrah has taken 99 wickets in T20Is. How many bowlers have 100 or more in each of the three formats? asked Paritosh Gupta from Canada
You’re right that Jasprit Bumrah currently has 99 wickets in T20ls, to go with 226 in Tests and 149 in ODIs. He needs one more T20I scalp to become only the fifth man to reach three figures in all three formats, following Tim Southee (391 in Tests, 221 in ODIs and 164 in T20Is), Shakib Al Hasan (246, 317, 149), Shaheen Shah Afridi (121, 132, 122) and Lasith Malinga (101, 338, 107).Another current player, Jason Holder, is close to completing the set: going in to the final match of West Indies’ T20 series in New Zealand later this week, he has 97 wickets to go with 162 in Tests and 159 in OIDIs. Sikandar Raza of Zimbabwe also has 99 wickets in T20 internationals, but he’s taken only 40 in Tests and 94 in ODIs.Who are the batters and bowlers with the best averages in their last 25 Tests? asked Rammohan Roy from India
The leading batter in his last 25 Tests will come as little surprise: Don Bradman averaged 105.09 in his last 25 matches, with 3468 runs, including 15 centuries. Next as I write is New Zealand’s Kane Williamson, who averages 66.67 in his last 25 Tests: if that should fall, second place would revert to Kumar Sangakkara (64.05). Among those who played 50 or more Tests, Andy Flower averaged 63.83 over his last 25, Shivnarine Chanderpaul 60.91, and Clive Lloyd 60.14.The leading bowler is another current player: Jasprit Bumrah has taken 120 wickets in his last 25 Tests at an average of just 17.63. Among regular bowlers, Alec Bedser (18.68) and Curtly Ambrose (18.78) also averaged under 20, while Josh Hazlewood – who is about to play in the Ashes – has taken exactly 100 wickets in his last 25 Tests at an average of 20.35.Bermuda appeared only in the 2007 ODI World Cup, and is best remembered for Dwayne Leverock’s blinder to dismiss Robin Uthappa•Getty ImagesIn the climax of the 1968 Oval Test, John Inverarity was the last Australian to get out, having opened the innings. How often has an opener been the tenth wicket to fall? asked Robert Watts from England
When John Inverarity was the last man out in that famous match at The Oval in August 1968, it was only the fifth time an opener had been the last wicket to fall in any Test innings. The first was a more famous Aussie, Victor Trumper, against England in Melbourne in January 1904, and then it didn’t happen for more than 44 years, until Len Hutton was the last to go against Australia at The Oval in August 1948 as England were all out for 52.It’s become slightly more common in recent years, but there have still been only 29 instances all told. Three of them involved West Indies’ Desmond Haynes, who uniquely was last out in both innings against New Zealand in Dunedin in February 1980. Haynes also managed it against India in Delhi in November 1987; no one else has done it more than once.In the Lord’s Test in June 2021, the debutant Devon Conway did this for New Zealand, and Rory Burns followed suit for England.Are there any teams who have appeared at just one World Cup? asked Harrison Miller from England
Three teams have appeared at a single men’s 50-over World Cup. A side representing East Africa appeared in the first one, in 1975 (when the matches were of 60 overs each); Namibia made their sole appearance in 2003, and Bermuda in 2007.Three different countries have played at just one T20 World Cup: Kenya played for the only time in the inaugural edition, in 2007, while the most recent tournament in 2024 featured Canada and Uganda for the first time. Bermuda and Uganda (and East Africa) have featured in just the one World Cup over the two formats.In the women’s game, Scotland and Thailand have appeared in one T20 World Cup (and never in the 50-over version), while Jamaica, Trinidad & Tobago and Young England all participated for the only time in the inaugural ODI World Cup in 1973.Shiva Jayaraman of ESPNcricinfo’s stats team helped with some of the above answers.Use our feedback form, or the Ask Steven Facebook page to ask your stats and trivia questions

Perfect for Bruno: Man Utd preparing club-record bid for "world-class" star

Manchester United supporters have for so long been used to countless levels of success and trophies – often having the bragging rights over the supporters of their rivals.

However, over recent years, the Red Devils faithful have often been disappointed, with only a handful of FA Cups and Carabao Cups to show for their efforts.

The club have also gone an unthinkable 12 years without a Premier League triumph, with no manager able to win the title since Sir Alex Ferguson’s retirement.

Ruben Amorim is the latest manager to try his luck at Old Trafford, with the hierarchy already handing the 40-year-old over £200m worth of additions since his arrival 12 months ago.

However, despite his spending spree in the summer transfer window, he could be about to be handed another significant backing from the board to aid his quest for success in the role.

United’s hunt for a new midfielder in the January window

The recent additions may have massively improved the options in the final third, but neglected the central midfield department, which desperately needs addressing in the winter.

Jobe Bellingham has been one name mentioned with a potential move to Old Trafford in recent weeks, after failing to nail down his side in Borussia Dortmund’s starting eleven.

The 20-year-old has started just two Bundesliga games in 2025/26, which could see the Englishman being tempted to return to his homeland to reignite his once-promising career.

However, he’s not the only player currently in their sights, with Nottingham Forest sensation Elliot Anderson another midfielder the Red Devils hierarchy are targeting.

According to one Spanish outlet, Amorim’s side are currently preparing a bid in the region of £100m for the England international – a deal that would be a club-record, surpassing the fee paid for Paul Pogba.

The report also states that the hierarchy have been closely monitoring the 23-year-old in recent months and are preparing a move before his value soars further amid his recent international success.

Why United’s latest target would be perfect for Bruno

Bruno Fernandes has for so long been a shining light within the United ranks, but he’s had to take on a new responsibility within the first-team side in recent weeks.

As a result of the big-money additions in the final third, he’s had to drop into a slightly deeper number eight role – a position which is a slightly unfamiliar one to him.

Given his previous attacking midfield role, the 31-year-old still likes to get forward and impress – as seen by his tally of four chances created against Forest – the most of any player on the pitch.

However, if Bruno is to continue to do so during Amorim’s spell, he desperately needs a deep-lying option alongside him to regain possession and allow him to reach the heights he achieved last season.

Casemiro has recently partnered the Portuguese international, but at 33, he’s coming to the back end of his career – with a long-term replacement needed in January.

Anderson could provide Amorim with just that, with the 23-year-old having the talents to be an immediate fan-favourite whilst having the potential to improve further in the years ahead.

He’s developed into an elite-level number six in 2025/26, with the Englishman ranking at the top of 13 different categories for all midfielders in the Premier League this season.

Numbers such as 2.6 tackles won and 7.7 duels won per 90 showcase his ball-winning capabilities, which have led to one commentator labelling him as “world-class.”

Such numbers would allow Bruno to operate in his slightly more advanced role, taking the defensive responsibility away from him and reach his peak levels – as seen in 2024/25.

Games played

10

Goals & assists

1

Pass accuracy

87%

Progressive passes

8.9

Passes into final third

8.8

Take-ons completed

2.5

Ball recoveries

8.5

Tackles made

2.6

Duels won

7.7

Anderson has also thrived with the ball at his feet, subsequently registering 8.9 progressive passes and 8.8 passes into the final third per 90 – figures which would hand Bruno the ammunition he needs to create chances in attacking areas.

Other numbers, such as 2.5 take-ons attempted and 8.5 ball recoveries made, further highlight his phenomenal all-round quality – with the younger certainly one of the country’s hottest properties.

A deal for his signature would certainly cost the hierarchy a pretty penny, but it would allow the club to land the deep-lying option they have been craving for many months.

The prospect of Anderson partnering with Bruno at the heart of the side is one for the fanbase to get excited about, with such a duo potentially leading Amorim to new heights during his tenure at Old Trafford.

Not Bruno or Mbeumo: Man Utd star is becoming one of the "best in the world"

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'Touch and go!' – Thomas Frank issues concerning Tottenham injury update ahead of Man Utd clash this weekend

Thomas Frank issued a concerning injury update on Mohammed Kudus ahead of their Manchester United clash this weekend. The Ghanaian playmaker, who joined Spurs from West Ham United in a £55 million ($72.5m) summer move, has become one of the club’s most consistent performers this season. He has scored once and set up five goals across 15 appearances. But just as he seemed to gain momentum, disaster struck again.

Spurs sweating on Kudus fitness

Kudus picked up a knock during training last week, ruling him out of Tuesday’s emphatic 4-0 Champions League win over FC Copenhagen. Now, his participation against United is also uncertain. 

Speaking in his pre-match press conference on Friday, Frank cut a cautious figure and said: "Kudus is touch and go for tomorrow, we’ll see."

In Kudus' absence, Brennan Johnson, who started on the right flank in midweek, is expected to retain his spot. The Welshman impressed with his intensity against Copenhagen and should be a handful for United defenders. 

AdvertisementGetty Images SportTottenham's injury list grows longer

The north London side’s growing injury list continues to stretch the squad thin. Radu Dragusin, Dejan Kulusevski, and James Maddison all remain long-term absentees, while Yves Bissouma and summer recruit Kota Takai are still awaiting their first minutes of the season. To make matters worse, promising youngster Lucas Bergvall will sit out the United game after suffering a concussion during last weekend’s narrow 1-0 defeat to Chelsea. 

Frank also offered an update on Dominic Solanke’s slow recovery. The striker has been limited to a total of 59 minutes this season. Solanke’s ankle problems have kept him sidelined since pre-season, and he even underwent a minor surgery on October 1. And while his rehabilitation is progressing, Frank insists the club won’t rush his return.

"I think the international break will be the big decider, because we have two weeks there, to push with the next steps," said Frank.

"It was clear that he was not ready before the international break, it’s more that we look after the international break, that’s what we’re aiming for. I think you always want to get it right, I think it’s important to get it right so he’s out there, can help the team, and we need him back." 

However, he did offer some positive updates as well. 

"The ones that have been out for a small spell, Cuti (Cristian Romero) and Destiny (Udogie), responded well, so fit and available," he said. 

Amicable resolution with Van de Ven and Spence

Frank has also had to manage an internal situation involving defenders Micky van de Ven and Djed Spence. In the aftermath of the disappointing defeat to Chelsea, the Spurs head coach encouraged his players to perform a lap of appreciation for the fans. However, television cameras caught Van de Ven and Spence walking away, apparently ignoring the manager’s request. At the time, Frank refused to publicly criticise the pair, choosing instead to defuse the incident.

"All the players are, of course, frustrated," he had said after the match. "They would like to do well, they would like to win, they would like to perform. I understand that. I think it’s difficult to be consistent in good times and bad times, that’s why I went around to the fans as I did, it’s more fun when we win, I can tell you that."

He added, "I understand why you ask the question. But I think that’s one of, how you can say, small issues. We have Micky van de Ven and Djed Spence doing everything they can. They’ve performed very well so far this season. Everyone is frustrated. We do things in a different way, I don’t think it’s a big problem."

However, the two players have apologised to the manager to reach an amicable solution.

"Micky and Djed came into my office yesterday and just said they wanted to say sorry for the situation," he informed. "They didn't want it to look bad or any misconception that you can get in this beautiful media world. So there was no disrespect meant at all towards me or the team. They were just frustrated with the performance from us and the booing during the game."

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Getty Images/GOALA pivotal match for Spurs

Tottenham’s 1-0 loss to Chelsea was another frustrating afternoon for the fans, who voiced their displeasure at full-time. Saturday’s showdown against United now carries enormous weight for both sides. A win could reignite Tottenham’s momentum and strengthen their Champions League ambitions. They remain sixth in the Premier League table with 17 points from 10 games and are level with Manchester United but eight behind leaders Arsenal.

Maresca must drop Chelsea star who had fewer touches than Sanchez vs Spurs

It was far from a rip-roaring classic at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium on Saturday evening between Chelsea and Spurs in the Premier League.

But, in the end, Enzo Maresca’s Blues wouldn’t care one bit, as a hard-fought 1-0 win was secured that sees the West Londoners jump into the top four positions temporarily.

Joao Pedro answered back to his critics with the winning strike in the tight clash, with the former Brighton and Hove Albion attacker now out of a ten-game streak of no goals, after placing a fierce first-half effort past a busy Guglielmo Vicario.

Pedro's redemption arc versus Spurs

In pre-season, Pedro looked every bit worth the £60m splashed out on his services in the summer, with goals galore coming his way in the Club World Cup.

However, in the bread and butter of the Premier League this season so far, Pedro has looked shaky, with only three strikes falling into his lap in the top-flight from ten games, before being handed a chance on a plate by a relentless Moises Caicedo against Thomas Frank’s hosts.

He thumped home the resulting chance that did come his way, with the up-and-down Brazilian stating at the full-time whistle when speaking to Sky Sports that he really “needed this goal” to get his personal season back on track.

Hopefully, more and more goals come Pedro’s way in the coming matches, as Chelsea aim to be nearer to runaway Premier League leaders Arsenal when another London-based rivalry is on the menu at the close of November.

While Pedro undoubtedly strengthened his grip on a first-team spot with this decisive winner, there is another Chelsea attacker – at this moment in time – who will sense they’re on uneven ground when it comes to their own concrete position in Maresca’s starting XI.

Chelsea star on borrowed time after Spurs

Alongside splashing the cash on some fresh recruits – such as their brand-new number 20 joining in the summer to up the entertainment levels in attack – Chelsea have also looked towards the next generation coming through in West London to steer the Blues to some captivating wins in recent weeks.

Indeed, both Marc Guiu and Estevao were recently on the scoresheet against Ajax, as the youthful attacking duo aim to be senior regulars down the line.

Guiu will feel knocked by Pedro looking revitalised away at Spurs, but Estevao will feel that he’s even more deserving of first-team minutes down the right flank shortly, when analysing how poor Pedro Neto’s below-par showing was on Saturday.

Minutes played

85

Goals scored

0

Assists

0

Touches

45

Shots

3

Accurate passes

20/25 (81%)

Accurate crosses

1/3

Successful dribbles

1/6

Possession lost

18x

Total duels won

2/11

Neto ended up being replaced by the much-talked-about Brazilian for the final moments, after a dire day at the office saw the former Wolverhampton Wanderers forward only complete one successful dribble from six attempts, while also only registering one accurate cross as a gung-ho option that often lacked the killer pass, to back up his rapid pace.

Moreover, when Neto wasn’t frustrating fans with an overhit cross or giving up the ball entirely – with possession given away a high 18 times – the £54m buy ended up just fading out of the contest entirely, with his tally of 45 touches even being beaten by Chelsea goalkeeper Robert Sanchez at the end, who amassed 51 himself on the way to clinching a clean sheet.

Thankfully, Neto’s dire afternoon didn’t cost his team the three points in the end but Maresca would surely fancy giving the likes of Estevao more chances in the first team soon over the hit-and-miss number seven, with the exhilarating 18-year-old already on to three goals and one assist for the season, despite his limited first-team starts.

Neto only has two goals next to his name, on the contrary, with Daniel Sturridge’s comments about Chelsea putting in an “absolutely brilliant” showing against Spurs for the most part still ringing true, even if the direct Portuguese attacker looks to now be on borrowed time in the first team picture.

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Another day, another audacious rescue act by Shardul Thakur

He did it on Thursday. He did it on Friday too. This time he got to triple digits with shots all around the park, and celebrated in style after what’s been a tough cricketing period for him

Vishal Dikshit24-Jan-2025Shardul Thakur likes batting in difficult situations. He had said as much on Thursday, after he had put together 51 off 57 after coming in with Mumbai 42 for 6 against Jammu & Kashmir. On Friday, he took the rescue act up a notch, delivering an unbeaten century at almost a run a ball having come in at 91 for 6, with Mumbai leading by just five runs.All this when the recent past has not been kind to him. Shardul the allrounder was a regular in and around the India set-up at the end of 2023 before a foot surgery kept him out for more than half of 2024, and he hasn’t found a way back in since. Even though he has added consistency to his batting: four of his 14 first-class half-centuries and both his centuries have come in the last two domestic seasons. And much of this has been crisis batting, including 109 off 105 from 106 for 7 against Tamil Nadu in the Ranji Trophy semi-final last season, followed by 75 off 69 from 111 for 6 against Vidarbha to set up the title win.And he went unsold at the mega auction ahead of the IPL 2025 season. “You have to forget whatever has happened in the past,” he had said on Thursday. It is perhaps this practicality that helps him stay in the present when he walks out to bat in tough situations.Related

Ranji round-up: Jadeja demolishes Delhi, Thakur rescues Mumbai yet again

Shardul Thakur on his rescue act: 'I like batting in difficult situations'

What worked in his favour on Friday was that the ball was more than 25 overs old when he came out, and had lost all its swing. So, when he saw width on offer, he didn’t shy away from slashing over the infield on the off side. When the fast bowlers pitched it short, he middled his pulls. And the shots kept coming.First ball after tea, when Mumbai were 174 for 7, Thakur punched Umar Nazir Malik through the off side for four and, three balls later, pulled a short ball to the boundary. In the next over he swept left-arm spinner Abid Mushtaq for another four to get to a 59-ball half-century. What did slow him down a bit was cramps; he had to call out the physio a couple of times after he crossed 50 and was clearly struggling between the wickets.The worst of it seemed to have passed by the time he got into the seventies, and his strokes reflected that. He pounced on fast bowler Yudhvir Singh outside off on 80 with such timing that he made it look like he was picking the length against a spinner. Two balls later, he clobbered Yudhvir over the covers with disdain to take the lead past 150 in style. On 94, he hooked Auqib Nabi and got a leading edge, but also four more. He was on 98, his team was still not on top of the game with the lead only 162, but Thakur kept going for it. He lofted the next ball straight down the ground, didn’t middle it at all, but it landed just beyond mid-off’s reach.

When Shardul Thakur saw width on offer, he didn’t shy away from slashing over the infield on the off side. When the fast bowlers pitched it short, he middled his pulls. And the shots kept coming.

Next over, against Mushtaq, he brought out the sweep on 99 and got the run that cued telling celebrations: he ran at speed (what cramps?) with his bat held high, punched the air, let out a scream, and pointed to the sky. It showed what the knock meant to him.The Mumbai dressing room, which had been dour and gloomy for most of the day, broke into rapturous applause, acknowledging a rare feat from a No. 8: Thakur was only the 13th player to score a fifty and a hundred in the same first-class match batting at No. 8 or lower since 2006.The J&K bowlers knew the pitch had nothing to offer now and they started peppering him with short balls. He took a blow on his chest near the left shoulder, got some ice treatment on the field, and still went on. He ramped Nabi’s short ball over the keeper for four, and eventually walked back unbeaten on 113 off 119 with Tanush Kotian – again, his support act from the semi-final last season – for company on 58 off 119.It was another Thakur knock that will go down as one that saved Mumbai’s blushes, even putting them a little in front after they’d been far behind. Maybe it will serve Thakur well to remember these bits of the past.

'He pushed hard for me' – Italy's Gianluigi Donnarumma reveals how Norway's Erling Haaland convinced him to move from PSG to Man City

Gianluigi Donnarumma has revealed how Erling Haaland convinced him to move from Paris Saint-Germain to Manchester City in the summer transfer window. The Italian goalkeeper left the European champions on deadline day to sign for the Premier League giants after falling out of favour under Luis Enrique, who had already signed Lucas Chevalier from Lille.

Donnarumma shares special bond with Haaland

Since his move to City from Paris on deadline day, Donnarumma has built a close friendship with the club's star forward Haaland. In an interaction with the , the Italy international opened up on his close bond with the Norwegian goal machine as he said: "I’d say we just got on well immediately. We have always respected each other, even before we met. We make a lot of banter about playing against each other in the national teams. I’d say they are in a better situation than us now, they have much more peace of mind. But there are still two games left to play. It will be difficult to face each other, as it will be difficult to play against him. I know how strong he is and what chances he can create. It will be hard to face him both as a player and as a friend."

He also rated Haaland as a better player than former PSG team-mate Kylian Mbappe as he added: "I think Erling does [have the hardest shot]. He is left-footed, so he is different from Kylian (Mbappe). They are both hard to play against. So it’s complicated. But I would rather have Erling playing for my side."

AdvertisementGetty Images SportHow Haaland pushed Donnarumma to join City

Speaking about Haaland and his move to City, Donnarumma told : "He's a fantastic guy, so calm and he loves his family and being with them. We hit it off. There's that synergy there where there's just a natural feeling. Even when we played against each other, we were in touch and after the games we even spoke often.

"Then I had the opportunity to come here, he wrote to me. He pushed hard for me to come and I think him so much for that. He's truly a great friend – and it's a good thing I play with him because it's so difficult to be against him! He's an alien!"

Donnarumma thanked City team-mates

The Italian custodian also thanked every member of the City squad for making him feel at home and helping him to adjust to the new conditions in the Premier League. Donnarumma has featured for Pep Guardiola's side in 12 matches across all competitions this season and has kept six clean sheets.

When asked about his performances, Donnarumma said: "I'm a bit angry because I could have kept more. I didn't expect to have such a positive impact on the Premier League. But the team helped me a lot because the moment I arrived, they welcome me very well. They helped me a lot in the first games, especially the first one which was just three days in. In the first training session, it felt like I had been there for two years. The league is very different, there's a lot of running, a lot of intensity so I had to adapt immediately. But the team has been fundamental for me in these first few months."

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Getty ImagesMan City hoping to reduce gap with Arsenal

After a forgettable outing in the 2024-25 campaign, Guardiola's men are back in form in the current season. They had a minor setback at the start of the season, where they lost back-to-back league games against Tottenham and Brighton but have now bounced back in style and are just four points behind league leaders Arsenal. 

City will be back in action in the league on Saturday as they take on Newcastle United away from home. They would aim to win the clash and reduce their gap with the Gunners at the top of the table.

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