'One of the best southpaws to don the Indian jersey'

Social media reactions on Suresh Raina’s retirement

ESPNcricinfo staff15-Aug-2020Minutes after MS Dhoni announced his retirement on Instagram, Suresh Raina too followed suit. Some on social media were caught unawares, while others wished him luck for the future.

T Natarajan and Washington Sundar: a tale of friendship and freakish Test debuts

Both faced hardships and injuries along the way, but emerged as heroes at Australia’s fortress

Deivarayan Muthu22-Jan-2021India Test cap No. 300: T Natarajan (Age 29)
India Test cap No. 301: Washington Sundar (Age 21)
Growing up, they were separated by age and by physical distance. But over the years, the careers of left-arm seamer Natarajan and allrounder Washington intersected several times – so much so that they became good friends. And then a freakish chain of circumstances saw them make their Test debuts, improbably, in India’s historic win at the Gabba.The early years
When Washington was a kid, he and his elder sister Shailaja, who has played for Tamil Nadu women, would hop into their dad M Sundar’s scooter to play cricket at the Marina Beach in Chennai. Sundar, a former Tamil Nadu prospect and long-time coach, then trained Washington and Shailaja at the Chepauk ‘B’ ground, with Washington seamlessly ticking off several boxes along the way: Chennai first-division league, age-group cricket for Tamil Nadu, and Under-19 cricket for India.

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As for Natarajan, who grew up in Chinnappampatti, a village about 370kms away from Chennai, cricket was escapism from poverty. You might be familiar with his backstory by now.Natarajan and his protégé G Periyaswamy, who is playing for Tamil Nadu in the ongoing Syed Mushtaq Ali T20 tournament, would hop into share autos to the neighbouring towns and villages, yorking oppositions.Natarajan soon became a tennis-ball star in Salem, as did Periyaswamy, but Natarajan didn’t play red-ball cricket until 2010 or thereabouts. He hadn’t even heard about league cricket in Chennai until his tennis-ball cricket team-mate and now godfather Jayaprakash helped him get a gig with the BSNL fourth-division team there.Related

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  • India created the greatest moment in their Test history

  • Gabba result has done justice to the game we love

TNPL 2016
By 2016, Natarajan had risen through the ranks in Chennai like Washington, although belatedly. In the 13th match of the inaugural season of the Tamil Nadu Premier League (TNPL), a nerveless Natarajan delivered six yorkers back-to-back in a Super Over, turning the heads of the IPL scouts. Guess who was one of the batsmen facing him? Washington kept out two of those yorkers, including the last ball.However, as the tournament progressed, Washington seized his other chances – both with ball and bat – himself attracting the attention of the IPL scouts.Washington Sundar made his India debut in 2017, the same year in which he was picked by the Rising Pune Supergiants in the IPL•Getty ImagesIPL 2017
Stephen Fleming, the then Rising Pune Supergiants’ coach, liked what he’d seen of Natarajan, and the franchise made the opening bid for the left-armer at the 2017 auction. The Supergiants’ management tussled with the Kings XI Punjab until the bid was escalated to nearly INR 1 crore (approx. US $136,936) from the base price of INR 10 lakh (approx. US $13,693). As it turned out, the Kings XI went all out for Natarajan and scooped him up for INR 3 crore (approx. US $410,809).The Supergiants didn’t get Natarajan, but they got Washington as a replacement player after R Ashwin had suffered an injury. Washington fronted up to take the new ball in the powerplay and helped them to within touching distance of winning the IPL title.As for Natarajan, he had a tougher initiation into the IPL and was perhaps weighed down by the price-tag pressure. He struggled to nail his yorkers like he had in the TNPL and tennis-ball cricket. The IPL jackpot, however, enabled him to realise his dream of establishing his own cricket academy in Chinnappampatti. Washington was among the chief guests Natarajan had invited to launch his academy after IPL 2017, but seemingly he couldn’t make it in the end.Battling injuries
Washington made his ODI and T20I debuts for India in 2017, while Natarajan returned to domestic cricket. Injuries didn’t help Natarajan either, with an elbow complaint forcing surgery in November 2017. It was around this time that Natarajan placed greater focus on his fitness. He went on a meat-heavy diet, bulked up and came back to become Tamil Nadu’s lead seamer.

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On India’s tour to the UK in 2018, Washington suffered a freak injury while playing football. He had hurt multiple ligaments in his ankle, and although he didn’t need surgery, he was bed-ridden for several weeks. He then underwent rehab at the National Cricket Academy (NCA) in Bengaluru and eased his way back into the state side, before returning to the national reckoning.T Natarajan emerged as IPL 2020’s yorker specialist, enjoying a breakout season in the UAE•BCCIIPL 2020
Natarajan was picked by the Sunrisers Hyderabad for INR 40 lakh (approx. US $54,774) in the IPL 2018 auction, but didn’t get a single game in that season as well as the following one. Washington, in contrast, got more game-time at the Royal Challengers Bangalore in IPL 2018 and 2019, but couldn’t quite replicate his 2017 performances at the Supergiants.Both Natarajan and Washington, however, enjoyed their breakout IPL seasons in 2020 in the UAE. While Natarajan emerged as the league’s new yorker specialist, Washington re-emerged as the new-ball powerplay expert.Natarajan unites with Washington in the India team
Washington was subsequently selected in India’s T20I squad for the Australia tour, with Natarajan, who was originally picked as a net bowler for that tour, joining his good friend in the T20I side after an injury to Varun Chakravarthy. For the first time ever, Natarajan and Washington were in the India team together, with Washington even reeling off a song from Rajinikanth’s blockbuster Tamil movie on social media, to celebrate Natarajan’s call-up #friendshipgoals.

From net bowlers to Test debutants to match-winners
Hours before the start of the ODI series in Australia, Natarajan was added to the ODI squad too as injury cover and later even made his international debut in the third match in Canberra. Washington wasn’t part of the ODI squad, but you could spot him in the huddle during Natarajan’s maiden cap-presentation ceremony, cheering his friend.Washington Sundar and T Natarajan: similar journeys before Test debutants together•ESPNcricinfo LtdIn the subsequent T20I series, Natarajan showed that there’s more to him than the yorker while Washington did his thing in the powerplay, as the pair helped India to a 2-1 series triumph.Through a chain of unprecedented circumstances and injuries to several frontline bowlers – including Mohammed Shami, Umesh Yadav and Ashwin – Natarajan and Washington then made their Test debuts together when the series was on the line in Brisbane.Both Washington and Natarajan were merely picked as net bowlers for the red-ball leg, but they showed they belong to the biggest stage, coming away with three wickets each in the first innings.

Washington snaffled his former Supergiants captain Steven Smith down the leg side for his maiden Test wicket and was then part of another thread that connected him with Natarajan. After Marnus Labuschagne pulled Natarajan to deep midwicket in the 66th over, Washington fumbled there, allowing a second where there could’ve just been a single. The next ball was a dot and coincidentally the subsequent one resulted in Natarajan finding Labuschange’s top edge.Washington torched the Gabba with the bat too, pulling off an outrageous no-look six off Nathan Lyon and topped it with a hooked six off Pat Cummins in the chase. Just like that, the two debutants helped India to a series victory for the ages.

Bowling remains Sunrisers Hyderabad's stronger suit

Bairstow and Williamson could both feature in their playing XI, but the lower middle order remains a concern

Hemant Brar07-Apr-20213:28

Are Sunrisers Hyderabad stronger than last season?

Where they finished in 2020

After just three wins in their first nine games, the Sunrisers Hyderabad bounced back to finish third on the points table. In the Eliminator, they beat the Royal Challengers Bangalore but lost to the Delhi Capitals in Qualifier 2.

Potential XI

1 David Warner (capt), 2 Jonny Bairstow (wk), 3 Manish Pandey, 4 Kane Williamson, 5 Vijay Shankar, 6 Kedar Jadhav, 7 Abdul Samad, 8 Rashid Khan, 9 Bhuvneshwar Kumar, 10 Sandeep Sharma, 11 T Natarajan

Batting

For the last couple of years, the dilemma for the Sunrisers has been which of Jonny Bairstow and Kane Williamson to leave out from their playing XI. In the second half of the previous season, they found their best combination with Wriddhiman Saha replacing Bairstow at the top, Williamson slotting in at No. 4 and Jason Holder shoring up both batting and bowling.This time, the presence of a fit Bhuvneshwar Kumar and new recruit Kedar Jadhav means the Sunrisers may no longer need Holder’s all-round skills. That opens up an overseas slot, allowing them to play both Williamson and Bairstow.While Saha has exceptional numbers in the powerplay, Bairstow is simply much better across different phases of the innings. Moreover, Warner and Bairstow’s opening pair is among the best in the IPL. On average, they give a start of around 60 in 6.3 overs.Mitchell Marsh’s late decision to pull out of the tournament shouldn’t hurt the Sunrisers much. In fact, it has allowed them to rope in Jason Roy, a perfect replacement for Warner should his groin injury worsen. The lower middle order, though, can still give them some headaches despite Jadhav’s inclusion.Sunrisers Hyderabad’s squad for IPL 2021•ESPNcricinfo Ltd

Bowling

Bowling has always been the Sunrisers’ stronger suit. Last season, they were hampered by Kumar’s injury, but his return – not only on the field but also to form – should please them. In the recently concluded T20I and ODI series against England, Kumar was by far India’s most economical bowler apart from picking up crucial wickets.Kumar should bowl in tandem with Sandeep Sharma in the powerplay and with T Natarajan at the death. Rashid Khan, meanwhile, showed in IPL 2020 that his wicket-taking powers haven’t waned. But if the Sunrisers want to include both Bairstow and Williamson in the XI, Vijay Shankar, Jadhav and Abdul Samad will have to bowl at least four overs between them. Else, they might have to consider playing Mohammad Nabi or Holder in place of either Bairstow or Williamson.The Sunrisers also recruited Mujeeb Ur Rahman at the last auction. And while they are scheduled to play five games on the slow Chepauk pitches, Mujeeb more like a backup for Khan as squeezing both of them in the first XI would weaken the batting.

Young player to watch out for

Eyes will once again be on Abdul Samad. Samad, 19, was picked by the Sunrisers at the 2019 auction for his six-hitting skills. In the last IPL, his strike rate of 170.76 was the fifth-highest among those with at least 100 runs in the tournament. He was also the top scorer for Jammu and Kashmir in the 2020-21 Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy, tallying 140 runs in four innings at an average of 46.66 and a strike rate of 148.93. If he can nail his role of a finisher, the Sunrises will have all their bases covered.

Coaching staff

Tom Moody (director of cricket), Trevor Bayliss (head coach), Brad Haddin (assistant coach), Muttiah Muralitharan (bowling coach), Biju George (fielding coach) and VVS Laxman (mentor)

Poll

NZ bowling coach on Southee's newest variation that bamboozled Rohit Sharma

Jurgensen reveals Southee’s unusual inswinger was developed at a camp in Lincoln just before the England tour

Karthik Krishnaswamy28-Jun-20211:41

Southee: ‘Not having express pace, I look to skin the cat differently’

There’s a lot more to it, of course, but at its deadliest, Tim Southee’s method is all about that old three-card trick: outswing, outswing, and the one that goes the other way.Except it isn’t just the “one” that goes the other way, but three different ways of delivering a ball that moves into the right-hander.Take the second-innings wickets of India’s openers in the World Test Championship final in Southampton. Both were lbw, playing for non-existent outswing, but the balls that dismissed them were entirely different.Shubman Gill, first to go, was out to Southee’s well-known three-quarter-seam ball, which is delivered with the seam scrambled, and moves into the right-hander off the pitch. Rohit Sharma, however, was bamboozled by something that hasn’t been seen all too often.Every now and again on this tour of England, Southee had delivered the traditional inswinger, with the seam canted towards fine leg, but most had come out of the hand noticeably slower than Southee’s stock ball. The ball to Rohit wasn’t the traditional inswinger; the seam was canted towards slip, like it is for an outswinger, but the ball was flipped around so its rough side – this was the 27th over of India’s innings – was facing the leg side. And unlike Southee’s attempts at bowling the genuine inswinger, this one came out at normal speed.It’s entirely possible that Rohit saw the seam position, judged the ball to be leaving him, and decided to shoulder arms. Instead, it veered in towards the stumps and struck Rohit’s front pad.3:21

Dale Steyn explains the concept of the three-quarter seam

The Dukes ball that is used in England moves significantly more – in the air and off the pitch – than the Kookaburra that’s used in New Zealand, and this allowed Southee to try and develop the inswinger on this tour.”I think all players in any sport are always looking to try and get better and looking at ways you can improve your game,” Southee said in a media interaction on Monday. “I obviously don’t have express pace, so you’re looking to skin the cat differently, and that’s using subtle variations and I obviously rely heavily on my outswing, but with the Dukes ball and the ability to move the Dukes ball a little bit more than what you can with the Kookaburra, a lot of work went in, leading into that series, about just trying to get the ball to move both ways.”Shane Jurgensen, New Zealand’s bowling coach, said Southee came up with the new variation during the camp New Zealand held in Lincoln before they left for England.”I actually think that wicket of getting Rohit out was a long time of Tim trying a few things and always trying to improve,” Jurgensen said. “I think that goes for every bowler in our group and I think that’s really stood out more in the last two years. It has always happened, but I really think it really started in our camps in May at Lincoln, when he was playing around with bit of an inswinger and it was good.”It took him a while to sort of get it and all of a sudden he learnt of possibly turning the ball around the other way and bowling it the exactly same way. [It] probably has a little more pace on it compared to the [traditional] inswinger and I think that’s been a credit to Tim.”He’s always looking to improve and he’s been such an outstanding performer for New Zealand for such a long time; 600-plus wickets for New Zealand now and that breakthrough of Sharma was at a really crucial time. In fact both of those wickets were, to give us a chance to get Virat Kohli in early.”

KL Rahul curbs his enthusiasm to make his comeback count

In just this one innings, he has already left alone almost as many deliveries as he did across five Tests in England in 2018, and it’s already paying off

Nagraj Gollapudi06-Aug-20213:54

Laxman: This could be a breakthrough innings for Rahul’s career

At times things are simpler when you don’t have too much time to think about them. KL Rahul might agree.On August 2, Rahul had walked into Trent Bridge for India’s training session thinking he would not be playing the first Test starting two days later, even though his century against a County XI during the warm-up game, batting at No. 5, put him in contention. Mayank Agarwal – one of Rahul’s best mates, and Karnataka team-mate – batted alongside Rohit Sharma in the nets, preparing to play the Test. Then, about a quarter of an hour into the session, Agarwal was hit by a short delivery from Mohammed Siraj, and he was ruled out of the match with a concussion soon after. Things moved swiftly from thereon for Rahul, who was given extra time to bat during that nets session. Two days later, at the toss, India captain Virat Kohli said Rahul would be opening alongside Rohit.It was on India’s previous trip to England when Rahul’s technique and temperament unravelled against the England fast men. In the first four Tests, Rahul had an average of just 14.12, and overall he was bowled five times and out lbw three times, a higher tally of such dismissals than any player across both teams. Despite that wretched form, Rahul finished the tour on a high note at The Oval, with a belligerent 149 in the final innings of the series. Failures followed in Australia and in the West Indies, though, and convinced the selectors that they had to drop Rahul.Still, Rahul went about his business. He made runs in white-ball cricket, both in the IPL and for India and eventually made his way back into the Test reckoning, with the idea being to shift him from the opening slots down into the middle order. With his ability to accelerate quickly and being a 360-degree batter, the team management and Rahul agreed that he could be a good option in middle now that Rohit along with Shubman Gill, Agarwal and Prithvi Shaw were slotted as openers.But now, with an injured Gill back in India, Shaw still in quarantine after heading over to England from the limited-overs series in Sri Lanka, and Agarwal concussed, doors reopened at the top of the order for Rahul. He might have overthought and over-complicated things in 2018, but three years later, at 29, Rahul is more experienced, more assured, more responsible. Perhaps taking charge of the captaincy at Punjab Kings in the IPL has given him that extra confidence.KL Rahul readies himself for day three at Trent Bridge•Getty ImagesAll this matters only because opening in Test cricket is the most demanding of batting jobs, especially in the overcast conditions that have persisted over the first two days of this Trent Bridge Test. Rahul was posted seemingly out of his comfort zone and asked to help set the tone for India, not just for this Test but for the series.Being naturally aggressive and one of the best stroke-makers in cricket at present, the biggest challenge for Rahul – and Rohit too – was to curb his enthusiasm. But, especially as an opener in England, abstinence does pay. Ask M Vijay. In the first two Tests of the 2014 England tour, played at Trent Bridge and Lord’s, Vijay left 122 (first innings) and 101 (second innings) deliveries respectively. Vijay scored 146 in the first innings in Nottingham and then 95 at Lord’s where India went 1-0 up having drawn the first Test.In this Test, Rahul invoked his inner “Monk” – as Vijay is nicknamed by the cricketing fraternity. In this innings, Rahul left 76 deliveries, which is next only to those efforts by Vijay for an Indian batter in England since that tour. More strikingly, it is also only 10 fewer deliveries than the 86 Rahul had left alone in the entire five-Test series in 2018, when he played 10 innings and faced 450 deliveries.One important reason Rahul could leave all those balls alone was because he was absolutely confident about where his off stump was, something he struggled with three years ago. That allowed Rahul to pick the right deliveries to play. What also helped him get settled in was that, in the first hour on Thursday, the England fast bowlers bowled well outside off stump and limited fuller deliveries. Runs did not come easy but Rahul respected the conditions. He stayed patient.That helped in the animated contest he had with Ollie Robinson, who tried to disrupt his concentration by exchanging words at times. While he did not shy away from responding, Rahul seemingly stayed calm and responded most deafeningly with the bat. Robinson’s plan involved pitching consistently on a good length, on the fourth stump, and nipping the ball away with the idea to lure Rahul to push at it. Rahul did not budge; he would stretch forward and upon reading the line leave the deliveries confidently. Rahul was also aware that with Robinson’s height, he could trust the bounce.Rahul also made subtle technical tweaks as compared to 2018. According to former India keeper Dinesh Karthik, who is on television commentary for Sky Cricket, Rahul has narrowed down the wide stance he had in 2018. Along with that, Rahul had also straightened and shortened his backlift – combined with a big stride, all these changes were allowing Rahul to meet the ball quickly and with a full face of the bat.Related

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There were some errors of judgement, of course. Twice Anderson induced edges of Rahul. Twice it flew to the slips. Twice Rahul survived: first on 52 when Dom Sibley spilled one to his left, and then on 78, as Joe Root failed to grasp a thick edge with the reverse-cupped hands. England’s plan was now to bowl fuller, attack the stumps, make the Indian batters play more to create the chances. Root’s drop came in Anderson’s first over after lunch.In his next Anderson persisted with his plan. Rahul pushed an on-drive for a double and then punched an elegant cover drive for four. Anderson pushed Rahul back with a short delivery that climbed to Rahul’s shoulders. Two balls later Anderson lured Rahul with length delivery on the fourth stump, the type of ball that Rahul had previously been taking a good stride towards, having a good look at, and leaving alone. This time, though, he went for a drive and watched Anderson celebrate.For a moment Rahul stood there even as Anderson and England were celebrating. The umpire had to raise his finger to force him to retreat back to the dressing room. Rahul was furious at his mistake. Furious at getting carried away, at getting distracted.As ESPNcricinfo’s expert VVS Laxman said today, this was a “breakthrough innings” for Rahul. On his comeback in whites, Rahul showed what he has learned from his time away from Test cricket: respect the conditions, respect the format, read the match situation, and wait for the loose ball.The chance might have come courtesy unfortunate circumstances for his friend and team-mate, but Rahul has so far proven that he has earned this recall.

TNPL, strong leadership mould Tamil Nadu into dominant T20 force

Despite missing several senior players, Tamil Nadu had a well-rounded squad to clinch two domestic T20 titles in three seasons

Deivarayan Muthu23-Nov-2021.A well-rounded squad
Tamil Nadu’s current side has almost all the ingredients needed to succeed in T20 cricket. They have a reliable legspinner in M Ashwin, a tall fingerspinner who can bowl across phases in R Sai Kishore, an explosive finisher in Shahrukh Khan, a yorker specialist in T Natarajan, a left-handed opener in C Hari Nishaanth and anchors in N Jagadeesan and Vijay Shankar. All these players bring with them IPL experience and even if they are not available, Tamil Nadu have back-ups in M Siddharth, GS Raju, Vivek Raj, P Saravana Kumar and R Silambarasan, who was more recently part of Chennai Super Kings as a net bowler.Aparajith’s offspin has often been deemed surplus to Tamil Nadu’s requirements in the past. But when the team needed him in the 2019-20 white-ball season in the absence of both R Ashwin and Washington, he stepped up to line up the left-handers.Aparajith was unavailable for this Syed Mushtaq Ali knockouts and was instead on India A duty. Tamil Nadu, however, had another fingerspin-bowling allrounder in R Sanjay Yadav who marked his homecoming from Meghalaya with sharp spells and cameos against Goa and Kerala.Related

  • R Sai Kishore: 'Upgrading myself has been my driving force'

  • M Vijay returns for TNPL 2022 after near two-year break

  • Shahrukh Khan's last-ball six takes Tamil Nadu past Karnataka

  • Sai Kishore thrives in new role

  • Ageless Dinesh Karthik 'extremely proud' of Tamil Nadu's title run

Consistency in selection and role clarity
Hari, Jagadeesan, Vijay and Shahrukh have become regulars on the batting front while Sai Kishore continues to bowl the tough overs at the top-tail of the innings. These players have all earned a consistent run, thus forming the core of a new-look side.”First thing I’d put down TN’s success is to the management that has backed almost the same team in the last three years,” Sai Kishore tells ESPNcricinfo. “We haven’t had much chopping and changing and if you see, it’s more like CSK as we play almost the same team. We all know our roles and what we need to do in the bowling attack. When Ash (M Ashwin) or Momi (M Mohammed) or Sandy (Sandeep Warrier) is coming into bowl or myself, we know our job and say when I go out of the line, everyone else will know. We have that openness in the dressing room, and the coaching staff has backed us always.”Vijay Shankar hit 199 runs in six innings at an average of 66.33 and a strike rate of 130.92•NurPhoto/Getty ImagesImpact of the TNPL
That Tamil Nadu have back-up options for every role and so much depth is down to the 20-over Tamil Nadu Premier League. What started as a league that would entertain the local fans when CSK were serving a two-year suspension from the IPL, has now become a strong feeder to the TN state side and IPL franchises. Cases in point: No.1 Hari to reserve player Saravana Kumar.When Natarajan was down with a knee injury during the Syed Mushtaq Ali tournament, Tamil Nadu roped in Saravana Kumar, who was the top wicket-taker in the 2021 TNPL, with 13 strikes at an economy of 7.84. After leaking 48 runs in 3.3 overs for zero wickets on his TN debut, he struck back in the very next match, bagging 5 for 21 in the semi-final against Hyderabad. B Sai Sudharsan, who was also plucked out of TNPL 2021, played his part for TN, making four thirty-plus scores.”It has given them the confidence to go out there and express themselves,” Tamil Nadu captain Vijay says of the TNPL. “That is why, maybe, we have played three consecutive finals. To qualify for that itself, I feel we’ve done something right. A lot of credit to the TNPL and the support staff. Sometimes I go with my instincts and when they back you for that, it is easier as a captain. We were on the same page when it came to making decisions. Saravana Kumar took a five-for, but we had to take a call for the final. Nattu [Natarajan] was fit and is one of the best death bowlers not only in Tamil Nadu but also in India.”Sai Sudharsan, Siddharth or Saravana Kumar everyone played their own game, they got comfortable [in their roles] and ready to accept the challenge at this level. You can’t go out in a T20 game and keep hitting. Sometimes, you need to understand the situation. In a couple of games, Jaggi and Hari had to bat out the initial phase, especially against Maharashtra, this may be a small thing, but it matters a lot. I always ask them to put their hands up and be ready for the challenge – it doesn’t matter if you lose or don’t perform well; it’s all a part of life.”

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Solid prep
Even in the post-Covid era, Tamil Nadu had solid prep in the lead-up to their triumphant Syed Mushtaq Ali campaigns in 2020-21 and 2021-22. The TNCA offered them access to centre-wicket practice at Chepauk and ahead of this season the squad had a camp in Chennai before travelling to Lucknow for the tournament. This, after the conclusion of the TNPL. The intra-squad matches at Chepauk, for example, in 2020-21 helped Shahrukh tune up when he was working his way back from injury.”Yes, we had a small camp this year in Chennai before going to Lucknow,” Vijay recalls. “I think we had one week-ten-day proper camp where he had good net sessions, practice matches, and we had centre-wicket and range-hitting. By the time we came here, we all were pretty prepared for all the situations.”The conditions, though, were tricky at some points because the toss was getting a bit crucial because of early starts. In the very first game against Maharashtra, we lost the toss, but we still managed to win. That was one of the best games [this season] I’d say and the game against Punjab which was a must-win for us.”Robust leadership
If Karthik played good cop-bad cop and got the team together in the past couple of seasons, this was Vijay’s turn. After being reappointed as the captain, Vijay’s first goal was to recreate the family atmosphere in the dressing room. Once he did that, he knew that everything else would fall in place. He even opted to stay back in the bubble despite becoming a new dad midway through the tournament.After Tamil Nadu successfully defended their T20 title, he credited the reserve players for their contribution.R Sai Kishore: “I’d put down TN’s success to the management that has backed almost the same team in the last three years”•R Sai Kishore”Having been part of Tamil Nadu for the last ten years, I can boldly say that this is one of my best experiences in a dressing-room atmosphere at Tamil Nadu,” he gushes. “That is the reason why I credited the reserve players at the presentation and even before the presentation, in every team meeting, I’d mention their contribution because I’ve been in their shoes before.”I have sat out so many games. I know how difficult it is to sit out and still keep yourself motivated, still to train. Those guys never missed a single training session, and unfortunately, because of the time constraints we had due to the bubble, a few guys couldn’t even have a proper hit in the nets. But still, they were pushing themselves every day, which is a very good sign.”According to Vijay, the extra responsibility also resulted in an upsurge in his batting. He finished the tournament with 199 runs in six innings at an average of 66.33 and a strike rate of 130.92.”It [Captaincy] has also helped me in my batting,” he says. “I was playing to the situation, and captaincy helped me to take more responsibility. After one of the IPLs I said, if I have a set role, I can perform better. This season I batted at No.4 or No.5, and I think, I did pretty well with an average of close to 65, which is really good for the team. This was probably the first time where almost every individual was together in the same room. We used to do something or the other, and we enjoyed it a lot.”

Joshua Da Silva lives the emotion as maiden century sets West Indies on course for glory

Landmark moment comes in front of biggest crowd and with oldest team-mate beside him

Cameron Ponsonby26-Mar-2022″Tears just came to my eyes instantaneously,” an emotional Joshua Da Silva said, just moments after bringing up his maiden Test century. “They are coming to me now, it means the most to me. Thanks to God and my parents, everybody supporting me. It means the whole world to me.”Pick any metric you want and this was a fantastic innings from Da Silva. Coming in at No.8 with the score 95 for 6, West Indies were staring at a match-losing deficit in reply to England’s 204. The early stages of his innings were restrained with just 13 runs coming off his first 86 deliveries. Fifty-three came off his next 86 as he began to open up. And then as he shepherded the final stages of the innings he returned to his shell with 34 coming off his final 85 deliveries.”I’m just batting balls,” Da Silva said at the close on day two when he was on 54 off 152 balls. “When I bat balls I know runs will come in the end, I’m not too fazed about what my strike-rate looks like. Stokesy and those guys got pretty upset with me but I’m just batting and having fun.”I love getting talk. It makes me want to go and make more runs and bat longer. It fuels me.”When Da Silva was finally given out caught behind, one ball after reaching his century, however, the talk turned to respect with each England player congratulating him on a fine innings. But in bizarre circumstances, Da Silva, who himself believed he had hit the ball, was called back to the crease on review after it turned out he made missed it. And so having left the pitch entirely, Da Silva returned. He defended his next ball straight back to Craig Overton who promptly whanged it as hard as he could back at Da Silva. England had gone from talk, to respect, to flat-out violence. And it was all Da Silva’s doing.One of the great things about individual achievements is that they are so often far from actually individual, as the joy and pride on show is shared by fans, friends and relatives alike. As Da Silva thumped the ball down the ground and to the boundary to bring up his century, his arms were just two of thousands also lifted above their heads in celebration.Related

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Back in England, a video surfaced of Johnno Gordon, Da Silva’s former captain from his time as an overseas player at Old Wimbledonians in 2017, shedding a tear as the moment arrived. The two remain close and had gone for dinner together in Barbados where Gordon had come out to support. Although, it must also be said – given that Gordon is the co-owner of the small independent cricket company Woodstock, who sponsor Da Silva – it can’t be completely ruled out that the tears of joy weren’t at the airtime his bats were getting on BT Sport.Closer to home, and Da Silva spoke of the moment being that much sweeter for having had his friend and club-mate from Trinidad Jayden Seales at the other end. Da Silva was on 65 when Seales came to the crease and, given that Seales had a first-class top score of just 7 at that point, there was little expectation that he would be adding too many more. Except from Jayden himself, of course.”Seales told me he has my back,” Da Silva said. “And I backed him 100%. He told me he is going to get me there and he did, so I can’t thank him enough for the role he played.”Da Silva is a Covid cricketer. His maiden tour was to England in 2020, the first to be played in a bubble, and so he has known no different to the restrictions in place and the lifeless and empty stadiums that have accompanied his 14-Test career so far. Support from his team-mates and from afar is all he’s known. But today he saved the best moment of his cricketing career for the first, and biggest, crowd that he will have played in front of as a West Indian.”Words can’t describe it. It’s been phenomenal, especially to have so many fans here and we have a lot of them in Grenada thankfully. To see them stand up and clap, especially for Mayers who’s been getting wickets for fun, it’s exceptional to see and be a part of.”Kyle was telling me this morning that I was going to get a hundred and how it would feel if I got one and just, words can’t describe. An exceptional feeling.”

Suved Parkar shows shades of Ajinkya Rahane in serene debut hundred

Armaan Jaffer and Sarfaraz Khan joined in the fun as Mumbai ended day one in a commanding position

Himanshu Agrawal06-Jun-2022You don’t have to watch Suved Parkar for long to be reminded of Ajinkya Rahane.There is the elbow guard, of course, but also the chin nudging the raised left shoulder while watching the bowler run in. And on Monday, the resemblance perhaps seemed even greater because it was Rahane’s birthday. But beyond the mannerisms, there’s the shared characteristic – the understated calm. Debut first-class century in the bag, Parkar took off his helmet off and raised his bat to the dressing room, no big show. Otherwise, too, he radiated equanimity.Parkar had arrived at the crease when Mumbai were 64 for 2, with both openers surrendering good starts. His first ask was to see out the eight balls that remained until lunch. He got a single. Easily done.For company, Parkar had the young – and also inexperienced – Armaan Jaffer. Initially, they focused on steadying the ship. So Uttarakhand captain Jay Bista, no stranger to being around Mumbai batters who can grind the opposition to the ground, to direct Akash Madhwal to shift to a short-ball strategy; 20 overs into the innings, he stationed a leg gully, a backward short-leg, a fine leg and a deep square-leg, while getting Madhwal to operate from around the wicket to both right-hand batters.Madhwal banged it in short. Jaffer and Parkar were being cramped for room, but they managed to keep the ball down each time Madhwal got one to climb at them. There was no apparent discomfort, and in the 23rd over, Jaffer pulled Madhwal to the deep square-leg boundary. That put an end to the short-ball barrage plan.Spin was introduced for the first time after 24 overs, and when left-armer Swapnil Singh dropped one short from around the wicket, Jaffer pulled him for six, with the ball threatening to land on a car parked beyond the boundary.Century-makers Darfaraz Khan and Suved Parkar have a mid-pitch conference•ESPNcricinfo LtdThis was a partnership built on the foundation of blocks and leaves, but every now and then came a shot of aggression. If Jaffer creamed a cover drive and punch-flicked a back-of-a-length ball wide of mid-on, Parkar opened his bat face deftly to pick up a boundary behind square.Both rode their luck on the way. On 35, a drive away from the body from Jaffer, found the outside edge only for the ball to evade first slip’s reach. There was no one at second slip. In the next over – the 36th of Mumbai’s innings – Swapnil tumbled to his left and dropped a catch off his own bowling when Parkar was on 18. With only six first-class matches for Jaffer before this one and none for Parkar, this was just the fortune they needed to be brave.At the start of the 43rd over, when their stand was worth 75 in 164 balls, Jaffer and Parkar shifted gears. The next three overs, bowled by Dikshanshu Negi and Mayank Mishra, brought 31 runs, as Jaffer pulled, lofted and drove, while Parkar twice went over the bowler’s head and cleared the straight boundary.Jaffer crossed fifty in the process; he had earlier smashed 125 in Mumbai’s innings win against Odisha in the group stage. Another quiet phase followed, after which Jaffer ended up edging Deepak Dhapola to second slip for 60. That ended a partnership of 112 in 37.2 overs.It was just the cue for another to begin.Sarfaraz Khan arrived at the crease and clattered three boundaries in his first seven balls. Not influenced, Parkar continued to tick the scoreboard over, playing his own game at his own tempo.After that frenetic start, Sarfaraz quietened down as Uttarakhand’s discipline improved over the next dozen or so overs. But for how long can you really keep Sarfaraz quiet? From 24 off 50 balls, he raced to his half-century, scoring 26 off the next 23 balls.At the other end, having busied himself with the task of accumulating singles and ensuring Mumbai didn’t lose their way, Parkar faced Madhwal when on 94. Madhwal pitched short and wide of off, and Parkar rose on his toes and punched to beat deep backward point to his left to move to 98. Three balls later, Madhwal went full and on the stumps, and Parkar clipped it wide of mid-on; or, more precisely, drove it wide of mid-on, with the full face of the bat meeting the ball right under his nose. Another little flash of Rahane, in the way the ball sped off his bat despite there being little to no follow-through.Sarfaraz Khan has scored 620 runs this season, at an average of 155.00, and he shows no signs of stopping•PTI Mid-on gave up the chase, and just beyond the boundary, Mumbai’s players rose to their feet. Off came Parkar’s helmet, and up went his bat.Four overs later, Parkar walked off the field, unbeaten on 104 off 218 balls. With him was Sarfaraz, batting on 69 off 104. The two of them and Jaffer had put Mumbai in a commanding position at 304 for 3.Jaffer is often remembered as his uncle Wasim’s nephew; but as he did as a 13-year-old back in 2010, he could yet smash records with the sort of skill and temperament he displayed against Uttarakhand.Sarfaraz, another schools-cricket prodigy back in the day, came into this game with scores of 275, 63, 48 and 165 in his four previous Ranji Trophy innings. By the end of the day’s play, he had 620 runs for the season – at an average of 155.00 – and was only four runs away from displacing Chetan Bist on top of the season’s run charts.By scoring a century on first-class debut for Mumbai, Parkar emulated a feat Rahane had achieved 14 years ago. Rahane apart, Parkar joined a list featuring Sachin Tendulkar, his captain Prithvi Shaw, and his coach Amol Muzumdar, among others.If he felt he’d done something special, he didn’t show it. “There is nothing different, you just have to show patience,” was how he summed it up.Parkar is only 21, while Jaffer is 23 and Sarfaraz 24. Who knows what the future holds?

Axar Patel reminisces and executes in throwback to crunched tennis-ball action

He and Bumrah started off as tennis-ball bowlers in matches of six to eight overs in Gujarat. Friday night was not too different for them

Sidharth Monga24-Sep-20223:21

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When the two had finished bowling, Jasprit Bumrah and Axar Patel, born a month apart in Gujarat, started reminiscing their childhood where they started off as tennis-ball bowlers in matches of six to eight overs.Axar told Bumrah that the eight-over shootout against Australia in Nagpur reminded him of the childhood: “Full feel aaya [it felt exactly the same]. It is death overs from ball one: batters come and swing without regard for their wicket.”Add the Pandya brothers to the list, and you have four contemporary players who took the unconventional route. Sunil Gavaskar holds a theory about Gujarat cricket that the Gujarati people have an immense love for the game of cricket, but they are also practical people. For long it remained the pursuit of the royalty; the common Gujarati got into cricket only when the parents could see a professional future for their kids.Related

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And it trickled all the way down to local tournaments where the prize money would be good, and where the talented kids could be guns for hire and make decent amounts of money. Once the love and the enterprise met, the whole state of Gujarat – and not just the cities of Ahmedabad and Jamnagar – became a force to be reckoned with.At the heart of it for most Gujarati cricketers are these tennis-ball games of extremely crunched action.Not that it matters to Axar what the length of the match is. He is used to bowling in the powerplays, and the truncated match was no different for him. It could be a patronising observation from an outsider but Axar himself says his is a simple game with the ball: don’t leave the stumps, stay out of the hitting arc, and don’t get too upset if a good ball is hit for a boundary.In the eight-over shootout in Nagpur, Axar Patel’s two overs – one of them in the powerplay – went for only 13 runs•Getty ImagesIn this match, Axar started in the powerplay with long-on and midwicket back. Immediately the batters started to give themselves room, hoping to hit with the turn, but Axar bowled either arm balls or cross seam, which meant the turner would be the change-up delivery. His control of length was as good as ever.In his second and his last over, Axar even managed to bowl four straight dots at the left-hand batter Matthew Wade. Wade tried to move around, and tried both kinds of sweep, but Axar didn’t waver off his areas: flat and into the stumps.Axar’s two overs for 13 runs – one of them in the powerplay – registered just 3.42 smart runs conceded on ESPNcricinfo’s superstats. Adam Zampa trumped Axar on total impact with his one extra wicket and also because the other Australian bowlers around him got carted, but it was Axar’s spell that set the game up.Axar has come into the side because of injury to Ravindra Jadeja, but it has been apparent over the last two to three years that he is a significantly better bowler in the shortest format than Jadeja. It is Jadeja’s batting that kept Axar out; and now that he is in, Axar has a job to do with the bat too.Delhi Capitals gave him the finisher’s role this IPL, and at India he is being used as the cheap wicket to pinch-hit and also give Dinesh Karthik a more suitable entry point. Axar says he has been practicing for just that in the nets: brief and high-impact innings.As Gavaskar will tell you, if you show a cricket-loving Gujarati a payoff at the end of it, there is no telling how far they will go.

The Pakistan women's team in 1997: the girls who believed they could

An excerpt from a new book on the rise of women’s cricket in Pakistan chronicles the side’s first appearance at a Women’s World Cup

Aayush Puthran25-Aug-2022Unveiling Jazbaa”Pakistan have won the World Cup just by turning up here.”It was a bizarre announcement by Brijmohan Lall Munjal, the founder of Hero MotoCorp – principal sponsors of the 1997 World Cup – while welcoming the neighbouring country during the tournament’s opening ceremony in New Delhi. For a team which had only just entered the world of international cricket and had the most unpromising of results, the description bemused many. But those who were aware of what had transpired en route to their arrival in India’s capital weren’t surprised. Shaiza Khan, the Pakistan women’s captain, and her team had, despite everything, escaped Pakistan after being put on the Exit Control List – a tool used by the government to restrict criminals charged with grave crimes.Shaiza’s team may have returned from their first cricket tour with massive defeats, but their act of touring abroad and playing cricket under the banner of Pakistan had gained them a great deal of media coverage. It flustered the two groups in Lahore – headed by Tahira Hameed and Shirin Javed, respectively – who had aspired to achieve what Shaiza eventually did by taking her team for an international tour to New Zealand in a relatively short span of time. The factions, who had fought each other over two decades for the title of the PWCA, had now turned their sights on Shaiza, giving the Lahore vs Karachi tussle in Pakistani cricket a different turn.Together, the three groups could have mustered ample financial and political clout to advance women’s cricket in Pakistan. Instead, it turned into a battle of egos, with all three using their respective resources against each other.Related

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“In Lahore, it was only a specific class of women who played cricket,” Afia Salam, the journalist, notes. “Shaiza and Sharmeen weren’t playing with their own class of women in Karachi. They were playing with women who didn’t have the opportunities elsewhere, who wouldn’t have been able to play cricket on their own. That’s the difference.”With Shirin Javed having family links to influential people in the PCB, many resources from the Pakistan board were not forthcoming for the PWCCA. As a result, the latter was unable to gain easy access to established coaches. Even those who supported them in spirit refused to help them in an official capacity due to the fear of missing out on opportunities which would come along with the PCB.One of the solutions Shaiza came up with was to look outside Pakistan. Having witnessed first-hand the quality of cricket being played by the women in Australia and New Zealand, she was convinced that a female coach from one of these two countries would be invaluable for the team. So they called the Australian Cricket Board.
Jodie Davis, a 30-year-old Canberra cricketer, who had captained her club side against the touring Pakistan team earlier in the year, was approached for the role by the Australian Sports Commission in July 1997. Davis had coaching experience with the Australian Institute of Sport, and it had been nearly a decade since she had played for the country. It was an enticing offer to make the step up to coach a national team. “I agreed straightaway without understanding what I was getting into,” she says.

“There were times when we would book training sessions and the PWCA would turn up instead, and there would be a confrontation. At one point, they even tried to steal our uniforms”Jodie Davis, Pakistan women’s coach at the 1997 World Cup

It didn’t take much time for her to realise that Australia and Pakistan were not just geographically far apart but culturally distant as well. It had taken her three months from giving her verbal agreement to landing in Pakistan, largely due to the financial constraints. Barring her airfare, food and accommodation, there weren’t any financial perks to the job. “They wanted me to come over immediately. That was something I couldn’t do because there was no pay involved and I had a job here, which was paying for the house,” she explains.However, she began her preparation for the new assignment long before she received any payment, sending day-to-day plans for each week. She prepared cards, laminated them and sent photographs to help the players understand her drills and training methods. The routine was structured – start easy and get harder. Since at that time she was also serving as batting coach for her housemate, Australia cricketer Bronwyn Calver, she knew that the challenge with the Pakistan team was going to be different. “The programme that I sent over was basic. There was no point trying to jump down the track and getting them to prepare similarly to the Australians.”When she eventually arrived in Pakistan, in October 1997, just over two months before the World Cup, she came with a bag full of cricketing goods donated by the Australian team. Christina Matthews, the Australia wicketkeeper, provided the slip-catch cradle, while others chipped in with balls and other training gear.Davis was serious about cricket and so were the Khan sisters, who picked her up at the airport and drove straight to the training ground at the army ground barracks in Lahore. On a flat piece of land, with no grass or nets, Jodie couldn’t spot a cricket field. But with most grounds either not available for the team to use or with their prices quadrupled to discourage them, it was the only place where they could practise.From the nearly 40 girls who assembled, Jodie’s first task was to play selector and identify the best squad for the World Cup. Which was a struggle, to say the least. Several players had turned up in traditional outfits and sandals for practice. “It turned out, they hadn’t even been training before I arrived,” she notes in disappointment. “I found my programme in the corner of the lounge room. They hadn’t even opened it.”The welcome wasn’t what she had expected, but it offered her a foretaste of the more dramatic events that were to follow. It also gave her an idea of why training for the World Cup wasn’t the only challenge they were up against. During a selection trial that the PWCCA had planned to organise at Kinnaird College, members of the PWCA got into a physical altercation with them.”There was some pushing and shoving, and stuff was thrown at us from the outside,” Jodie recalls. “I was taller and more imposing than most of the players, so Sharmeen and I tended to be the muscle when these sorts of events occurred. Both groups were quite fiery.”With the possibility of playing a World Cup in sight, the battle to hold the rights to the name of Pakistan women’s cricket team stepped up a level between the groups from Karachi and Lahore. The two groups from Lahore, who were already fighting over the title of PWCA, now had to contest another rival in the form of Shaiza in Karachi. With the aid of the PCB, the PWCA started to rope in sponsors and announced in the media that the team assembled by them would represent Pakistan at the World Cup.Captains of all 11 teams line up before the World Cup•Courtesy of Kiran Baluch”There were times when we would book training sessions and they would turn up there instead,” Jodie reveals. “There would be a confrontation. At one point the PWCA even tried to steal our uniforms. Shaiza was paranoid that they were spying or stealing or trying to undermine the team.”The PWCA were constantly emailing the IWCC to say they were the official team and wanted details of the World Cup travel and team arrangements. The poor World Cup organisers were very confused, and Shaiza spent lots of time trying to ensure the PWCA didn’t succeed. The PWCA had photos of their “team” and boasted in the media that they were going to the World Cup.”The PWCA hadn’t just boasted, they had prepared a team, named a squad and booked their tickets for India. More importantly, they had even got hold of the names of those in the squad that Shaiza was going to take to the World Cup and resorted to despicably underhanded tactics to prevent them leaving the country.Three days before Shaiza and her team were to leave Lahore for New Delhi for the tournament, she was informed by people close to her at the airport that the members of her team had been put on an Exit Control List. However, poor governmental administration meant the list had only reached the airport in Lahore. Shaiza was certain that an escape route from Karachi was still possible. Fearing that the visas from the Indian High Commission office in Islamabad wouldn’t reach them in time, she left for the national capital while the rest of the team made a quick dash to Karachi.Davis, though, didn’t have permission to travel to Karachi. Following the murder of two US consular officials there in 1995 – communications technician Gary Durrell and secretary Jackie Van Landingham, who were killed in their car by unidentified gunmen – the city was identified as unsafe by the Australian Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade. “I was a bit nervous about that,” she explains, but left with no option, she joined the team.”In Karachi, since it was also the weekend, we knew that they wouldn’t be able to get us on Exit Control,” Kiran Baluch, the vice-captain, recalls. But then another obstacle confronted them. When they reached Karachi airport and tried to book their flights, they discovered that the only available one leaving for India was a small aircraft, which had room for just 33 passengers running at full capacity.Sharmeen, Kiran and Maliha Hussain began another mad dash – to the control tower, to the head office of Pakistan International Airlines (PIA), and back to the airport, using the World Cup invitation from India in a desperate plea with PIA to replace the aircraft. “They eventually changed to a bigger plane and issued us tickets,” says Kiran. “Once we were on board, the captain announced that we were going for the World Cup and everyone on the flight cheered for us and wished us well.”As they soon found out, though, they weren’t the only ones to reach India. Tahira Hameed had turned up with Khawaja Parvez Masood, a cricket enthusiast who worked in the administrative department of Aitchinson College. So did the PWCA’s Shirin Javed, Azra Parveen and Bushra Aitzaz. All trying to make a case for being the rightful representatives of Team Pakistan.Brijmohan Lall Munjal was flanked on the dais by Anuradha Dutta, secretary of the Women’s Cricket Association of India, when all 11 participating teams lined up in symmetrical rows for the inauguration of the tournament. Since the PWCCA was the only body affiliated with the International Women’s Cricket Council, the governing body for the women’s sport at the time, Shaiza’s team stood in the row reserved for Pakistan, dressed in green blazers and white shirts.

“Once we were on board the plane, the captain announced that we were going for the World Cup and everyone on the flight cheered for us and wished us well”Kiran Baluch, Pakistan vice-captain at the 1997 tournament

It was the first time the cricketing world, outside of Australia and New Zealand, had caught a glimpse of the Pakistan team.Chander Shekhar Luthra, a journalist with , who covered the team extensively during the tournament, recalls, “We didn’t know what the Pakistan women’s team would be like. We assumed they would be coming from orthodox families, some of them possibly even wearing burkhas. We were so wrong. They were well spoken, well exposed, liberal and knowledgeable women. Their lifestyles were ahead of their time. Beyond their lives and cricket, we even ended up discussing the works of Salman Rushdie.”Nooshin Al Khadeer, who played for the Karnataka state side against the team as a 14-year-old in the warm-up match before the World Cup, was awestruck when she came across Shaiza during a dinner party at the Capitol Hotel in Bangalore. “That was the first time I had seen a woman smoke. When all the players were introduced to the team, we learned that she was the captain of Pakistan. It was quite fascinating, I thought she was pretty cool.”Purnima Rao, who played for India in that World Cup, and was equally ignorant about the Pakistan women’s backgrounds, added, “They looked extremely confident.” That confidence was palpable to her because Shaiza genuinely assumed the team was good enough to make a mark, if not to beat a couple of teams and qualify for the knockouts.Pakistan were scheduled in Group A, alongside Australia, England, South Africa, Denmark and Ireland – of whom the top four would qualify. She assumed her team had enough skill to outdo Denmark, and possibly give a tough fight to Ireland and South Africa. Her optimism wasn’t quite in sync with that of her coach, though.”Shaiza had probably talked it up,” Davis believes. “When she was speaking to the media, her father, and the PCB, she said, ‘We’ll win games, and our aim is to make the quarter-finals.’ Her expectations were high and she voiced it.”A harsh reality check came before the tournament opener, when they lost a practice match against Karnataka in Mandya, which was attended by a crowd of almost 27,000. Pakistan were humbled by the state side on a matting pitch. “It was all too foreign for them,” Davis notes. There wasn’t a lot of quality at her disposal. Kiran and Shaiza had the technique to stay [at the crease], and Sharmeen was a powerful hitter. Maliha Hussain could contribute too – with both bat and ball. But that’s all there was in the batting department. Sharmeen was the chief medium-pacer, while Shaiza and Kiran provided spin options. Nazia Nazir and Sadia Bano were the other players who, in Davis’ words, “could bowl on the pitch”.She went on to add, “Nazia wasn’t bad, Sadia wasn’t too good.” Most of the others were just making up the numbers. Sixteen-year-old Asma Farzand was handling wicketkeeping duties, since she had the strongest legs and most coordinated movements and wasn’t one of the seven bowling options in the team. Their limitations were soon exposed.Barbara Daniels on her way to 142 not out. England made 376, but Pakistan also registered their highest total of the tournament against them, 146•Craig Prentiss/Allsport/Getty ImagesTheir campaign began against Denmark, the team against whom Pakistan believed they had their best chance of winning. However, when they were put in to bat, they were rolled for 65 after little more than two hours of play. Shaiza, who had walked out to bat at the fall of the second wicket, remained unbeaten but on only 11, as the last six batters were dismissed without scoring. Denmark’s attack was largely filled with medium-pacers. The Pakistan batters had to make the pace for their shots. Past the top four, there weren’t many who could do that. Even as the new-ball pair were played out safely, Susanne Nielsen and Janni Jonsson combined to pick up seven wickets. To add to Pakistan’s woes, Sharmeen, Nazia and Asma were run-out.Denmark took nearly as much time to chase down the small total but lost just two wickets in the process, both picked up by Kiran. Shaiza conceded only 18 runs from her ten-over spell, nine of which were wides, making up the majority of the 14 wides bowled in the innings. The defeat might have made a few holes in Shaiza’s inflated hopes but it gave a more realistic idea of where the team stood. Six players from her side were making their debuts, while there were no international newcomers for Denmark. Regardless of the fact that Denmark were a low-ranked team, they had been a part of international cricket since 1989.After their tame surrender against the weakest opposition, Pakistan stood no chance against the next opponent: England, the defending champions, the favourites, and the joint powerhouse of women’s cricket. With only a day’s break between the two games, the players had to travel three hours to Bangalore before catching a flight to Hyderabad and then taking an eight-hour bus ride to Vijayawada. It was already a hectic travel day, which was only made worse by an eight-hour delay to the flight. Having landed late at night, the players had sleep to catch up on, but also a near 300-kilometre bus ride before they reached their destination. To make matters worse, the driver tried to make up time by speeding on the rough roads, and the journey was so hair-raising that few managed to rest. Not surprisingly, even the view of the lush, picturesque Indira Gandhi Stadium framed by rolling hills didn’t do much to stimulate them the next day.That they were not match-prepared was ultimately immaterial as the contest was always going to be heavily one-sided. One of the Pakistan players overheard the English cricketers telling their bus driver to arrive at lunchtime, so confident were they that the contest would be wrapped up by then. It was probably a fair assessment, but it riled the Pakistan team and when Shaiza won the toss, she elected to field.The English batters thrived against Pakistan’s inexperienced bowling attack. Janette Brittin and Barbara Daniels scored centuries, sharing a 203-run stand for the second wicket as England amassed 376 for 2. Fatigue from the hectic travel and low fitness levels meant that several Pakistan players suffered injuries in the course of their 50-over stay on the field. It got so bad that they eventually ran out of substitutes and Davis had to take the field.

“It doesn’t matter what happens to these girls for the rest of their lives, they have all worn the Pakistan cap, and have memories of playing cricket against the likes of Belinda Clark and Cathryn Fitzpatrick. You can’t take these things away from them”Jodie Davis

Even though victory was impossible, they did achieve one objective – England were kept in the game beyond lunch. Sharmeen and Maliha, who had bowled 19 overs between them earlier in the day, put up strong resistance with the bat, stitching together a slow 67-run stand. At one point Sharmeen even tonked Melissa Reynard and Karen Smithies for three sixes. Those two batters fell in quick succession to Reynard, but Kiran and Shaiza continued the defiance. Pakistan managed to score 146, losing by 230 runs. But more importantly, they had shown the steel to bat out their entire quota of overs.”That game was our highlight of the World Cup,” Jodie admits. “For a team that’s out on the field after only three or four hours of sleep, having lost to Denmark and then conceding 376 runs, running around… to bat out 50 overs and lose only three wickets against a team like England was quite an achievement. On top of that, we hit their fast bowlers for sixes. That was the pinnacle.”The confidence gained from that showing wouldn’t last long, though, as two days later in Hyderabad they came up against the other tournament favourites, Australia. Shaiza had the luck of the toss again. However, this time, she chose to bat. Three of the top four batters registered ducks. Sharmeen, who was the only one to get off the mark, made one run. Kiran Ahtazaz, who was making her debut, was the only player to get into double digits, top-scoring with an unbeaten 11. Pakistan folded for 27 in less than 14 overs. Australia chased down the total in 37 balls, losing only Zoe Goss in the process, run-out for a duck.With ample time remaining after the game, the Pakistan players took advantage of the net facilities available at the stadium to train. Any access to quality net training was gold dust, especially since they needed to beat South Africa in their next encounter to keep any hopes alive of securing a place in the quarter-finals. With a day’s rest, they headed off on another long journey to Baroda, more than 1000 kilometres away in the western part of India.The extra practice didn’t help much. Pakistan produced a more disciplined bowling performance, reducing South Africa to 100 for 4 at one stage, but a counterattacking 63-ball 74 not out by Ally Kuylaars lower down the order propelled South Africa to 258 for 7, a total way beyond what Pakistan had managed till then. Much of South Africa’s score was also helped by a generous offering of wide deliveries – 46 in total, with all six bowlers contributing to it.However, Sharmeen and Maliha put on an 84-run stand for the opening wicket, helping Pakistan to a strong start. While the latter had crawled to 16 in 76 balls, Sharmeen had blazed away to 48. Once the duo was separated, the rest of the order crumbled. The remaining nine batters added only seven runs as Pakistan folded for 109.The defeat dashed their hopes of going any further in the tournament, but given all the promises Shaiza had made in Pakistan, a victory against Ireland was much needed when they headed north to the wintry climes of Gurgaon’s Karnail Singh Stadium for their last match of the competition.The desire to win, however, struggled to fuel their energy levels. They were a tired bunch by then. “We had 16 flights in 22 days,” says Davis. “A lot of these girls had never been away from home, never flown. They were missing their families. They were carrying sores, niggles and injuries. They weren’t used to playing every day, and we were training every day. There was no recovery facility. We didn’t have a physio or a masseur. They weren’t used to exercise or injuries. Against England, they were on the field as they scored 360. That’s a long time chasing the ball. They didn’t have any previous experience of that sort of pain, and it was difficult to work out whether some of them had a serious injury or were just experiencing extreme muscle soreness.”Polaris Publishing LtdIreland were equally determined to secure a crucial victory against what was, by then, their easiest opposition, to qualify for the quarter-finals ahead of Denmark. Put in to bat, skipper Miriam Grealey scored a half-century, and Catherine O’Neill and Clare O’Leary made handy contributions, scoring 45 and 48 not out respectively, as Ireland posted 242 for 7. Barring Maliha, who batted for nearly an hour and a half for a 69-ball 11, none of the Pakistan batters provided resistance. O’Neill returned figures of 4 for 10 to cap an excellent all-round display, and Ireland won by 182 runs.”To go home with no wins was disappointing,” the Pakistan coach admits. “If they had played against the other teams the way they played against England, then we would’ve had a chance. But it didn’t happen.”Shaiza, Sharmeen, Kiran, Maliha and Meher [Minwala] stayed in India till the end of the tournament, while the rest of the players flew back home after the Ireland match. In a meeting between the three Pakistani groups and the IWCC on 26 December, it was noted that since Shaiza’s group had an affiliation with the international body, only it could represent Pakistan going forward. Davis’ tenure with the team came to an end and she tagged along with the Australian side through the Christmas period before flying home with them.”The Pakistan team looked, for all practical purposes, like a real cricket team,” Davis says with hindsight. “They had the whites, the cricket gear, even though it was all borrowed from Shaiza and Sharmeen. To get anywhere close to looking like a cricket team was where it started for them. Five or six girls, who were pulled out of the countryside, had to get permission from their fathers to play. The parents thought that there was no point in sending their daughters to play cricket. For those girls, getting trips in the country, flying overseas and staying in hotels – they would’ve never experienced that in their lives before. Every week that we would train, more girls kept turning up, wanting to train with us, wanting to be a part of the team, right up to until when we left for the World Cup. There were proud fathers bringing them along, wanting them to play for Pakistan.”For the girls who had a bit more life experience, that World Cup was a highlight of their cricket career. But for those other girls, those who would’ve otherwise only married and had kids, to travel to India and play for their country, it probably changed their lives. It was more than just cricket. It doesn’t matter what happens to them for the rest of their lives, they have all worn the Pakistan cap, the uniforms, and have memories of playing cricket against the likes of Belinda Clark and Cathryn Fitzpatrick. You can’t take these things away from them. Pakistan now have a very competitive team, good athletes, and more players have come in as the game has progressed. The class of 1997 laid it out for them.”If they’d waited for 11 good players to start a team, they would have never got there. They just had to get it going and it all started with two sisters.”

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