As it happened – England vs New Zealand, 1st Test, Lord's, 1st day

All the updates, news and stats from the first Test at Lord’s

Alan Gardner02-Jun-2021*Most recent entry will appear at the top, please refresh your page for the latest updates. All times are local

6.35pm: Conway’s day

Devon Conway celebrates his century on debut•PA Images via Getty Images

That’s stumps folks. New Zealand will be pretty pleased with that and no one more so than Devon Conway, who scored a century on debut. Henry Nicholls showed impeccable temperament in support as the pair put on an unbroken stand of 132 for the fourth wicket.Ollie Robinson, one of two debutants for England alongside James Bracey, took 2 for 50 to end the day the best of the home side’s bowlers, who all toiled hard, but the day belonged to the tourists – and Conway. Please join us again tomorrow. We look forward to bringing you all the action then.

5.55pm: Nicholls in nick

Henry Nicholls showcased his ability to occupy the crease for long times again•PA Images via Getty Images

Henry Nicholls may be the least starry member of a NZ batting line-up that contractually doesn’t do starry, but he is again demonstrating his value as a middle-order rock. This is the fourth innings out of his last five in which he has faced more than 100 balls, and he has played the foil to Conway beautifully, happy to tick along at half of his partner’s scoring rate while focusing on maintaining a control percentage in the region of 90%. Probably the reason he’s No. 6 on the ICC’s batting rankings.

5.30pm: Not Picking a Spinner in Test Cricket Dept

A back-foot punch through the covers by Nicholls off Root – now in his 10th over – takes New Zealand’s fourth-wicket partnership into three figures. Surely this is a window for Dan Lawrence’s liquorice allsorts before England take the second new ball?

5.25pm: Dig in, plod on

James Bracey makes a diving stop on Test debut•AFP/Getty Images

James Bracey almost gets into the action with an attempted stumping of Henry Nicholls – but the batter managed to get his toe back over the line in time. Bracey missed a half-chance off Conway shortly after he had reached his hundred, a top edge clearing his glove tips, but he’s otherwise been neat and tidy, largely going unnoticed – which is pretty much what you want from your keeper.New Zealand, meanwhile, will be delighted with how this session is going, with Conway and Nicholls approaching a century stand.

5pm: Devon knows they made him so good

Want to know more about the guy in the black helmet who’s calmly bossing the show at Lord’s on debut? Look no further than Shashank Kishore’s interview with Conway from last year, when he was closing in on eligibility for New Zealand.Devon Conway poses after his triple-century for Wellington•Getty Images

ESPNcricinfo Ltd

4.40pm: Tons of fun for Conway!

Devon Conway became the 12th New Zealand men’s player to score a century on Test debut•Getty Images

No such thing as the nervous 90s for Devon Conway, whose insouciant flick off the pads through backward square leg has taken him to a debut hundred. He’s first New Zealand Test debutant to score a century since Tom Blundell in 2017 – and the sixth man overall to do so at Lord’s. The 29-year-old has waited a long time for this moment, but you’d imagine he couldn’t have dreamed for a better start to his Test career.

4.35pm: Conway keeps climbing

A sniff of a chance for England a few overs ago, and that seems to have brought Conway to life as he realises there’s spot on the Lord’s honours board for the taking. With leg slip having just been stationed, Conway got away with a fine glance off Robinson that flew for four beyond the reach of a diving Zak Crawley. A more genuine flick for four followed in the next over, from Anderson, aided by a misfield at midwicket, and then Robinson was steered for four down to third man to take Conway into the 90s. In response, Root has turned back to the extra pace of Mark Wood.

4.15pm: NZ raise the 150

New Zealand’s batters have avoided falling victim to the interval this time, with Conway and Nicholls bedding in again against a combination of Anderson and Robinson – the latter chugging up from the Nursery End for the first time today. Lord’s is basking sleepily in the sunshine and, if there was a normal-sized crowd in, you’d probably see a few champagne corks littering the outfield in front of the Grandstand by now…

3.40pm: Tea

Devon Conway made an accomplished debut•Getty Images

An unbeaten half-century on debut from Devon Conway kept New Zealand on the front foot after two sessions of the first day at Lord’s. England, led by two wickets from another debutant in Ollie Robinson, tightened up during the afternoon but struggled for breakthroughs on a placid surface.Conway lost two experienced partners in the shape of Kane Williamson and Ross Taylor, but demonstrated an unflappable temperament to remain ensconced at tea. With Williamson playing on to James Anderson in the over after the break, Conway buckled down and scored just four runs in 45 minutes, before stroking a boundary off Stuart Broad to reach his maiden fifty.Broad troubled Taylor during a spell from the Nursery End, but it was Robinson who removed New Zealand’s No. 4, pinning him on the front pad to be plumb lbw and leave the tourists on 114 for 3. Conway and Henry Nicholls then restored a sense of equilibrium as Joe Root resorted to bowling himself in the absence of a frontline spinner.

3.25pm: Mid-afternoon matters

Afternoon, George. Firstly, how good is it to be back at Lord’s? And secondly, how impressed have you been by Ollie Robinson so far?
It’s great to be back. On days like this – those rare days when the sun shines and doesn’t set til 9.30 or so – this is a fantastic city.Robinson has lost little in comparison to Anderson or Broad. And that’s pretty high praise, isn’t it? Given that it’s his debut and he is contending with the slope, he has looked comfortable at this level. He’s managed to move the ball both ways – the one that comes into the batter seems to move more sharply – and he’s bowled a good length. He looks like a guy who could go on and enjoy a decent career at this level.You mention Anderson and Broad there. Were England a little bit conservative in picking both here? We well know how good they are…
Maybe a little. But equally, had they not, they may have been accused of complacency. They both have excellent records, after all. It’s not an unreasonable selection. Two debuts in a game is probably enough, isn’t it?True, though it might have been fun if Root had deputised his new vice-captain to tell Anderson he was being rested… Playing both means no frontline spinner, though (Root has just brought himself on). Lack of faith in Jack Leach or an acceptable reading of the conditions?
Most of all, it’s a reflection on the absence of the allrounders. Without Ben Stokes or Moeen Ali or whoever, it’s very hard to get the balance of the side right. And there’s no doubt it isn’t right now. But three seamers wouldn’t have been right and while they could have played five bowlers, it would have meant Bracey at No. 6 and Robinson at No. 7. So there wasn’t a perfect solution.In the end, it probably underlines the value of a spinner who can bat. So whatever Moeen or Dom Bess’s issues in recent months, they have a potential way back into this side. Also, never forget the old adage: players always become better for not being in the side. I don’t think there’s much evidence Leach would have taken five wickets by now. He would have been useful, for sure, and no doubt more useful as the game wore on. But I think England have bowled pretty well on a flat wicket and against a quality batting line-up.

2.55pm: Vote, vote, vote

2.45pm: Robinson’s on, Taylor’s gone

Ollie Robinson roars in celebration after dismissing Ross Taylor•Getty Images

Ollie Robinson has his second, with England chipping out another big wicket after lunch. Pitched up, taking advantage of some still-tentative footwork from Taylor, thuds into the front pad – looked an easy decision for the umpire, Michael Gough. Robinson roars in celebration, “The Rig” threatening to pull the Lord’s rug from under NZ.

2.30pm: Conway on his way

Devon Conway celebrates reaching fifty•Getty Images

There’s been a bit of a post-prandial lull in proceedings at Lord’s, with 21 runs added in 9.5 overs… but Devon Conway now has a maiden Test fifty, after stroking Broad’s final ball of the tenth wide of mid-off for four. That makes him, notes my colleague Sampath Bandarupalli, the first visiting opener to score fifty on debut in England since 1993, which is a remarkable stat. Early days, of course, and he certainly struggled against Wood’s short-ball attack, but Conway has made a good impression.

2.10pm: Fair Warner-ing

Can’t escape the phoney war even if we wanted to…

2pm: Hungry?

James Anderson celebrates taking the wicket of Kane Williamson•Getty Images

England’s two old stagers have come out champing at the bit after their dressing-room nose bag. They’ve switched ends from this morning, with Anderson now looking to swing his stock ball to the right-hander up the slope, and Stuart Broad pumping the knees from the Nursery. Broad, who has dismissed Ross Taylor 10 times in Tests already, had the ball moving appreciably to beat New Zealand’s No. 4 three times in four balls. England upping the intensity after a low-key morning.

1.43pm: Gobbled up!

ESPNcricinfo Ltd

The lunch break does for Williamson after all… His first delivery back and he defends late against James Anderson, only to divert the ball down into off stump. That is the seventh time Anderson has bagged Williamson in Tests, for an average of 19.00. The NZ captain trudges off, he won’t be booking in for bed and breakfast today (though perhaps there’ll be some leftover Eton Mess in the dressing room to console him).

1.40pm: Fill your boots

Quite a spread on offer for the players at Lord’s, as you would expect. England will probably be hoping that Williamson was tempted into a second helping of pan-fried beetroot gnocchi during the interval…

1.05pm: Lunch

Debutant Ollie Robinson gave England their first breakthrough•AFP/Getty Images

England debutant Ollie Robinson struck in his opening spell in Test cricket but New Zealand enjoyed their return to Lord’s for the first time since the 2019 World Cup final, reaching lunch on the first day one down.Opener Devon Conway, another new cap, looked the part and was closing in on a maiden half-century – although he had to battle through a spell from Mark Wood during which he look uncomfortable against the short ball. Wood touched 96.1mph/154kph and was never less than rapid, finding Kane Williamson’s outside edge only for the New Zealand captain to play softly enough to pick up four down to third man.Even with the ground only 25% full, there was an appreciative hum as the game got underway – the first Test at Lord’s since the 2019 Ashes – and it was New Zealand’s openers who garnered the majority of the applause before Robinson broke through Tom Latham’s defence in his fourth over, the ball clattering into middle and leg stump via an inside edge.England included two players making their Test debuts, in Robinson and James Bracey, and went with a four-man seam attack. By contrast, in the absence of Trent Boult, New Zealand picked frontline spinner Mitchell Santner and another allrounder in Colin De Grandhomme.

12.50pm: Setting the pace

Solid first spell in Test cricket from Robinson, though I can’t help but notice Kane Williamson is still batting out there… Anyway, the most compelling battle at the moment is Wood peppering Conway. You probably don’t get too many bowlers bringing 95mph heat in the Plunket Shield, and Conway has had to duck and weave, taking a couple of painful-looking blows but also connecting with a pull that went for four. Wood made his debut here against Lord’s in 2015 but it hasn’t been the happiest hunting ground – he has eight wickets from five Tests and an average around 55. But he’s looked like a man who could transcend the conditions here.

12.40pm: Graduate studies

England’s newest Test wicket-taker is meat and drink for the Barmies…

12.30pm: Warming up…

Devon Conway bats on Test debut•PA Photos/Getty Images

At the other end, Mark Wood has fired it up right from the start, delivering consecutive deliveries clocked at 95mph/152kph and 96mph/154kph. The final ball of his opening over, a mere 94mph, was short and nasty and struck Devon Conway a blow on the forearm. Lord’s suddenly doesn’t seem so flat. However, that didn’t stop the NZ debutant from getting forward to one slightly overpitched in Wood’s next over and stroking four past mid-off.Conway is, of course, the untested ingredient in this teak-tough NZ batting order. The second opener’s spot has been a bit of a question mark, with Tom Blundell and Will Young used since Jeet Ravel’s tenure ended, but Conway, who averages 66.25 in NZ domestic cricket since moving from South Africa, already looks at home in Test whites.

12.20pm: Pint of Robinsons!

Finally, the Lord’s burble goes up a notch as England break the opening stand – and it’s the debutant Robinson who squashes Latham’s ambition with one that nibbles a fraction to hit the inside edge on its way into middle and leg stumps. That brings Kane Williamson to the middle, with Robinson having already spoken openly about his plan to target the New Zealand captain. Grab your popcorn, folks.

12pm: Top heavy

Joe Root doesn’t take long to turn to the newest member of England’s seam attack, with Ollie Robinson coming on from the Pavilion End in the 10th over. Steady start for the man they call “The Rig” down at Sussex – and he is a pretty impressive unit – putting it there or thereabouts in the channel at around 80mph. Despite the emphasis on physical attributes, and a reputation when younger as something of a tearaway, Robinson is a real thinking bowler – as Sussex coach James Kirtley elaborated to Matt Roller in the build-up.

11.25am: Steady boys

James Anderson•AFP/Getty Images

No alarums for the NZ pair in the opening exchanges, with Latham hogging the strike for the first three overs before allowing Conway his first go in Test cricket. Anderson and Broad haven’t seen the new ball swing much so far, and there’s been a steady diet of ones and two before Conway punched the first boundary wide of mid-off – politely applauded, as you’d expect.In theory, this pair should be right in Broad’s crosshairs. As my colleague Gaurav Sundararaman points out, since the start of the 2019 Ashes Broad has averaged 17.70 going round the wicket to lefties. But neither has looked like being Warnered just yet.

11.15am: Equality street

England’s men’s team and women’s teams will be wearing anti-discrimination t-shirts throughout the summer, “designed to show their collective stance against any form of discrimination in cricket”. Joe Root led his players out in them for the “moment of unity” that preceded play on the first day at Lord’s.

11am: Play ball!

Right then, time for the first warm-up match Test of New Zealand’s tour. Latham to face the new ball, the everlasting Anderson to run in from the Nursery End. England haven’t beaten New Zealand in a Test since the two teams last met here in 2015 – a watershed moment in England’s recent history, as Andrew Miller notes – and Kane Williamson’s side are, of course, over here to contest the World Test Championship final against India later this month. Then again, New Zealand haven’t won a Test series in England since the infamous 1999 tour. Whatever happens, let’s hope we’re in for a corker.

10.45am: Decisions, decisions

ESPNcricinfo Ltd

Callooh callay! New Zealand are batting first at Lord’s – could be interesting if they get 241. Slightly contrasting takes on the surface in the teams selected, certainly on the face of it. England have gone with four seamers, meaning no hard decision on splitting up James Anderson and Stuart Broad and no room for Jack Leach. Anderson in the process draws level with Alastair Cook as England’s most-capped Test cricketer. Ollie Robinson joins James Bracey in winning a debut, and it looks like Joe Root and maybe Dan Lawrence will share the spinning duties.New Zealand, meanwhile, have picked their regular spinner, Mitchell Santner, despite his lack of red-ball cricket (even by Kiwi standards) and the fact he sustained a cut to his left index finger during last week’s intra-squad warm-up match. Colin De Grandhomme returns after a year out of the side, during which time he had ankle surgery, preferred to Daryl Mitchell; and Conway, the 29-year-old South Africa-born batter, will be trotting down the steps of the Lord’s pavilion in just a few moments’ time to open the batting alongside Tom Latham.

10.29am: Box fresh

Two new Test caps confirmed for England – there’s a fair amount of fresh meat in the squad for this series – and we’re about to find out the exact make-ups of the XIs. New Zealand had already announced that Devon Conway is in line to debut last night, but there’s still the No. 7/8 axis and how they cover for Trent Boult’s absence.

10.15am: Lord’s, ladies and gentlemen…

The last year or so has been difficult. Needless to say, of course, but at the same time impossible to get past. There is plenty going in the world that matters more than cricket, and nothing much that will be changed by events here over the next few days. But nevertheless, here we are, at Lord’s for a Test match. The simple pleasures of peering out over that famously wonky greensward, taking in the 19th-century terracotta pavilion, watching the MCC members tootle about in their egg-and-bacon finery. England haven’t hosted a Test at this ground since the 2019 Ashes, and even with a capacity limited to 25% for this game, it’s going to feel like something of a homecoming. Throw in that their opponents, New Zealand, are currently one of the best sides in the world, the fact both teams have a wee bit of history from 2019 here as well, and it’s a potent cocktail. What’s more, the sun is blazing down, there’s barely a cloud in the sky and after the UK’s May weather blowout we are set fair. Time to loosen the tie, drink in the rays, and get our Test !

Virat Kohli – 'Can't be too worried about getting out, have to take more risks'

Captain backs positive approach after batters get caught in two minds on final day

Nagraj Gollapudi23-Jun-20213:57

What’s ailing Cheteshwar Pujara?

Virat Kohli, India’s captain, says that his batters may need to take more “risks” in tough conditions to provide more support to their bowling attack.Kohli’s India were bowled out for 217 and 170 in their two innings in Southampton, en route to an eight-wicket defeat against New Zealand in the inaugural World Test Championship final.Though they began the final day with an overnight score of 64 for 2 and a lead of 32, India were bowled out before tea in the best weather conditions of the match, with New Zealand’s four main seamers sharing the wickets around before Kane Williamson and Ross Taylor sealed a 139-run chase with 7.1 overs remaining in the match.Only Rishabh Pant, dropped on 5 in the morning session, found any meaningful resistance as he improvised his way to 41 from 88 balls before holing out to deep backward point, and during the post-match presentation Kohli told Michael Atherton that India were about “30-40 runs short” of a defendable target.Expanding on that point afterwards, Kohli said that some of India’s batting might have been too circumspect in their attempts to combat a well-structured and versatile New Zealand bowling unit.Related

  • In Rishabh Pant's defiance lies his defence

  • Final defeat leaves India's batting in the spotlight

  • Under the radar no more, New Zealand trump India to become Test world champions

  • Dig deep, get down and dirty – no one does it better than New Zealand

  • Kane Williamson toasts 'special feeling' as New Zealand finally get 'across the line'

Pant’s innings attracted criticism in some quarters, particularly the shot that led to his wicket, but Kohli warned that it would be counter-productive to cramp his expansive style – one that has proved crucial in recent months, from their historic series win in Australia last winter to the more recent home victory over England.”Rishabh is just going to be a very expressive player whenever he gets an opportunity,” Kohli said. “Whenever there is a situation that needs to be understood, I think he assesses it really well. When things don’t come off, you can say that it was an error of judgment and that’s acceptable in sportKyle Jamieson celebrates after dismissing Cheteshwar Pujara•AFP via Getty Images

“We don’t want him to lose his positivity or his optimism in changing the situation for the team, and that’s where his USP lies, and we will definitely continue to back him to play that way and find ways to put pressure on the opposition and find ways to score runs, which is his natural game.”India’s next assignment is a five-Test series against England, starting in August, and Kohli warned that his team would need to heed the lessons of this defeat if they are to combat a similarly well-disciplined seam attack, featuring the likes of James Anderson and Stuart Broad, who won the corresponding series in 2018 by four Tests to one.”You need to find ways to disrupt that,” Kohli said. “If you don’t put their bowlers under pressure then they have the fitness and the consistency to bowl long spells and keep bowling all day in the same areas and trouble you, and the more momentum you give them, then invariably they get the breakthroughs they want.””The mindset has to be to score runs and find ways to score runs,” he added. “You can’t be too worried about getting out because you are [then] bringing the bowler into the game completely and not moving the game forward. We know that, as a batting unit, if we consistently put up 300 on the board then it is a different kind of pressure on the opposition with the kind of bowlers that we have.”The idea from here on will be to try to score runs and not worry about getting out in testing conditions,” Kohli said. “That’s the only way you can score and put the opposition under pressure, otherwise you’re just literally standing there hoping that you don’t get out and eventually you will because you’re not being optimistic enough.”I think you have to take more risks and calculated risks and be confident about taking those risks against a quality bowling attack like New Zealand.”

Post-Kolpak era – Olivier, Viljoen, Abbott, van Zyl and Harmer return to South African domestic set-up

Hashim Amla, Vernon Philander and Wayne Parnell have all been named in the Western Province squad

ESPNcricinfo staff20-Apr-2021Duanne Olivier, Hardus Viljoen, Kyle Abbott, Simon Harmer and Stiaan van Zyl, who had all left the South Africa set-up with Kolpak deals, have returned to the country’s Division 1 competition for the upcoming season.All Kolpak registrations were cancelled at the end of 2020 following the end of the United Kingdom’s transition period with the European Union, and meant that those playing county cricket on such deals were released from their terms and were eligible to represent South Africa again.Earlier this year, Abbott became the first high-profile returnee to South African domestic cricket after signing a short-term deal with the Titans ahead of the One-Day Cup.Related

  • Duanne Olivier on South Africa comeback: 'I think my nerves will be shot through the roof'

  • Stiaan van Zyl leaves Sussex, returns to South Africa domestic circuit

  • Kyle Abbott signs for Titans as post-Kolpak era begins

  • Revamped two-tier SA domestic structure ready to take off

  • New structure: 2 tiers, 15 first-class teams, 205 players

On Tuesday, the CSA announced the final squads of the eight top-tier provincial teams after the new domestic structure was finalised early last month by an independent committee. South Africa’s revamped two-tiered domestic set-up, which eliminates the franchise model and reverts to the old provincial set-up, has come in place this (2021-2022) season, and in it, eight teams will make up the first tier – with 16 contracted players each – and seven teams will play in the second tier – with 11 contracted players each. Boland, Central Gauteng Lions, Eastern Province, Free State, KwaZulu-Natal (Coastal), North West, Northerns and Western Province are the eight teams that will compete in Division 1.Meanwhile, big guns such as Hashim Amla, Vernon Philander and Wayne Parnell have all been named in the Western Province squad.”This is an exciting time for everyone involved in South African cricket as we look ahead to a new era that will start in 2021/22,” CSA acting chief executive officer Pholetsi Moseki said in a statement. “At initial glance, the squads all look extremely well balanced and that can only bode well for everyone as we anticipate a strengthened domestic cricket system.”Chris Morris, who has not been awarded a national contract, has signed with Northerns.Squads
KwaZulu-Natal (Coastal): Marques Ackerman, Ottneil Baartman, Eathan Bosch, Ruan de Swardt, Daryn Dupavillon, Sarel Erwee, Thamsanqa Khumalo, Kerwin Mungroo, Lifa Ntanzi, Thando Ntini, Bryce Parsons, Keegan Petersen, Grant Roelofsen, Jason Smith, Prenelan Subrayen, Khaya Zondo, Andile Phehlukway (national contract), David Miller (national contract), Keshav Maharaj (national contract).Central Gauteng Lions: Bjorn Fortuin, Wiaan Mulder, Lutho Sipamla, Kagiso Rapulana, Ryan Rickleton. Joshua Richards, Sisanda Magala, Dominic Hendricks, Tladi Bokako, Malusi Siboto, Duanne Olivier, Ruan Haasbroek, Tshepo Ntuli, Mitchell van Buuren, Codi Yusuf, Levert Manje, Kagiso Rabada (national contract), Rassie van der Dussen (national contract), Temba Bavuma (national contract), Reeza Hendricks (national contract).Boland: Janneman Malan, Pieter Malan, Hardus Viljoen, Ismaeel Gafieldien, Ferisco Adams, Siyabonga Mahima, Christiaan Jonker, Ruan Terblanche, Imraan Manack, Shaun von Berg, Michael Copeland, Zakhele Qwabe, Clyde Fortuin, Achille Cloete, Stiaan van Zyl, Ziyaad Abrahams, Kyle Abbott.North West: Delano Potgieter, Lesego Senokwane, Nicky van den Bergh, Senuran Muthusamy, Nono Pongolo, Eldred Hawken, Heino Kuhn, Lwandiswa Zuma, Shaylen Pillay, Wesley Marshall, Ndumiso Mvelase, Eben Botha, Johannes Diseko, Duan Jansen, Chad Classen, Jason Oakes, Dwaine Pretorius (national contract).Eastern Province: Matthew Breetzke, Wihan Lubbe, Sinethemba Qeshile, Jon-Jon Smuts, Eddie Moore, Marco Jansen, Glenton Stuurman, Rudi Second, Akhona Mnyaka, Lesiba Ngoepe, Diego Rosier, Tristan Stubbs, Dane Paterson, Kabelo Sekhukhune, Mthiwekhaya Nabe, Tsepo Ndwandwa, Anrich Nortje (national contract).Northerns: Lizaad Williams, Okhule Cele, Theunis de Bruyn, Dayyaan Galiem, Gihahn Cloete, Junior Dala, Neil Brand, Sibonelo Makhanya, Corbin Bosch, Aaron Phangiso, Chris Morris, Dewald Brevis, Ayabulela Gqamane, Jiveshen Pillay, Grant Mokoena, Simon Harmer, Aiden Markram (national contract), Lungi Ngidi (national contract), Quinton de Kock (national contract), Tabraiz Shamsi (national contract), Dean Elgar (national contract), Heinrich Klaasen (national contract).Free State: Mbulelo Budaza, Gerald Coetzee, Patrick Kruger, Wandile Makwetu, Migael Pretorius, Jacques Snyman, Pite van Biljon, Raynard van Tonder, Farhaan Behardien, Patrick Botha, Matthew Kleinveldt, Gregory Mohlokwana, Mangaliso Mosehle, Alfred Mothoa, Dilivio Ridgaard, Nealan van Heerden.Western Province: Zubayr Hamza, Kyle Verreynne, George Linde, Tony De Zorzi, Nandre Burger, Yaseen Vallie, Kyle Simmonds, Jonathan Bird, Hashim Amla, Mihlali Mpongwana, Tshepo Moreki, David Bedingham, Aviwe Mgijima, Vernon Philander, Basheer Walters, Wayne Parnell, Beuran Hendricks (national contract).

Vandersay's six-for headlines Sri Lanka A's series win

In a match that Sri Lanka A dominated West Indies A, legspinner Jeffrey Vandersay picked up 6 for 47 to set up a 138-run victory in Dambulla

ESPNcricinfo staff21-Oct-2016
ScorecardFile photo: Jeffrey Vandersay picked up his ninth five-for in 29 first-class matches•AFP

Legspinner Jeffrey Vandersay took 6 for 47 in the final innings to lead Sri Lanka A to victory in Dambulla. West Indies A were set a target of 333 but with no one even managing a fifty, the hosts wrapped up a 138-run victory, and with it the series 2-1.The chase had begun positively with Kieran Powell, who had briefly flirted with a career in baseball, back at the top of the order and kicking things off with a 41-ball 44. West Indies A were 124 for 3 – chugging along at a run-rate just under four – when Vandersay blitzed through their middle order to bowl them out for 194. He took two wickets in the 48th over, including that of captain and top-scorer Shamarh Brooks for 46, handed the opposition five of their six single-digit scores and completed his ninth five-for in 29 first-class matches.While the bowling they faced was good, West Indies A would rue the fact that they collapsed from reasonably strong positions. In the first innings they had Shimron Hetmyer – 94 off 91 balls, with 17 fours – and Brooks – 54 off 100 balls – doing well before they lost eight wickets for 104 runs to concede a lead of 75. In the second innings, West Indies lost seven wickets for 70 runs to concede the match.Another measure of where West Indies A lost the match lay in the number of partnerships over 50. There were eight overall – and they contributed only two of them.Meanwhile, Sri Lanka A had begun the game with an agenda-setting 133-run stand between openers Kusal Perera (69) and Sandun Weerakkody (79) in the first innings. It was key to building a total of 318.Then fast bowler Kasun Madushanka and left-arm wristspinner Lakshan Sandakan took three wickets each and left-arm seamer Lahiru Gamage chipped in with two of his own to bowl West Indies A out for 243. All three were picked in Sri Lanka’s Test squad to play against Zimbabwe in Harare next Saturday.Sri Lanka A swelled a lead of 75 to match-and-series-winning proportions in their second innings with Weerakkody smacking 48 off 36 balls and Asela Gunaratne collecting 69 off 126 balls. Rahkeem Cornwall was the only opposition they faced, the offspinner picking up 4 for 87 from 26 overs to finish with 23 wickets from three matches.

Nic Maddinson anchors Victoria's fightback after New South Wales take big lead

New South Wales were held up in their push for victory with Nathan Lyon taking their only wicket

ESPNcricinfo staff27-Feb-2021Victoria gave themselves a chance to rescuing a draw against New South Wales with their top order putting in a stubborn display in the second innings led by Nic Maddinson’s half-century.They had conceded a lead of 174 on a day interrupted by light rain during the morning session but by the close Maddinson and captain Peter Handscomb had taken them to within sight of a lead.Maddinson and Marcus Harris added 73 for the first wicket before Nathan Lyon broke through when Harris lofted a catch to point as he tried to go down the ground. It was Harris’ third dismissal in four innings against Lyon and another start not converted by the Test opener.The New South Wales quicks went at both Maddinson and Handscomb with the short ball but the pitch at Bankstown Oval does not have much pace in it.Earlier in the day, New South Wales’ last three wickets had added a further 60 to the total either side of the stoppage for rain. James Pattinson removed Trent Copeland and Pat Cummins in the space of four balls before Victoria were frustrated by a final-wicket stand of 37 between Lyon and Harry Conway.If Victoria can save the game on the final day it would represent a good stint in Sydney having secured victory at the SCG last week before they were forced to extend their stay with this match relocated from Melbourne due to Covid-19 border restrictions.

Monster talent on show as Capitals, Royals go head to head

Royals face selection dilemma with injured Stokes out

Alagappan Muthu14-Apr-2021

Big picture

These teams are fire. Delhi Capitals once struggled to find an identity for themselves. Now they are the home of young Indian batting geniuses. Rajasthan Royals see-sawed from one extreme to the other, not so much a cricket team as an unruly teenager. But now mum’s put her foot down – yes, we want you to picture Kumar Sangakkara as mum – and they’ve finally promised to behave.Sanju Samson threatened to exceed those expectations on Monday, when he stayed calm even though he couldn’t time the ball at the start of his innings. By the end of it, he wasn’t so much a man with a piece of wood in his hand, he was King Kong with an axe. If the new captain can reprise this zen at the crease for, say, a full season, the Royals are going to be trou-bleeee.The Capitals probably aren’t too worried though. They have got monsters of their own. Well-rested ones too. Hear them roar in T-minus 24 hours. Give or take.

In the news

  • Anrich Nortje will not be available for the game against the Royals too due to delay in getting his Covid-19 test result. His South African fast-bowling partner Kagiso Rabada, though, has joined the team following his negative test result, and is available for selection.
  • Ben Stokes wows the world with his acrobatics. He doesn’t need to. He’s got power. He can banana swing the ball. But he still insists on trying to be the best fielder in the world and hurt his finger to rule himself out of the IPL.
  • In better news for the Royals, Jofra Archer has been cleared to train again. Only train. Not play.
  • The Capitals’ Axar Patel is unlikely to take any part in this game as he continues to recover from a bout of Covid-19.

Likely XIs

Rajasthan Royals: 1 Jos Buttler, 2 Manan Vohra, 3 Sanju Samson (capt & wk), 4 Liam Livingstone, 5 Shivam Dube, 6 Riyan Parag, 7 Chris Morris, 8 Rahul Tewatia, 9 Shreyas Gopal, 10 Chetan Sakariya, 11 Andrew Tye/Mustafizur RahmanDelhi Capitals: 1 Prithvi Shaw, 2 Shikhar Dhawan, 3 Ajinkya Rahane, 4 Rishabh Pant (capt & wk), 5 Marcus Stoinis, 6 Shimron Hetmyer, 7 Chris Woakes, 8 R Ashwin, 9 Kagiso Rabada, 10 Amit Mishra, 11 Avesh Khan

Strategy punt

  • Losing an allrounder like Stokes can potentially break a team because he just doesn’t have a like-for-like replacement. All you can do is plug the batting hole or the bowling hole and pray that in the end you made the right choice. Liam Livingstone might be that choice. He was Perth Scorchers’ second-highest scorer as they stormed into the Big Bash finals only two months ago. He also hit 28 sixes in that tournament, the second-most after Alex Hales.Avesh Khan celebrates after dismissing MS Dhoni•BCCI/IPL
  • Once a bowler who appeared enchanted by his own pace, Avesh Khan now seems to have learnt how to use it better. Take his wicket of MS Dhoni for example. He knew it was crucial to hit that back of a length and cramp the Chennai Super Kings captain for his natural talents to yield any results. If he can keep this up – especially in the powerplay when he got the white ball to move around – the Capitals can use their big guns, when they’re ready, to address a problem they had in the 2020 season. Their economy rate of 8.62 through the middle overs (7-16) was the worst among all the teams.

Stats that matter

  • A T20 opener needs to get off the blocks quickly. But from 2008 to 2013, Shikhar Dhawan’s strike-rate in the powerplay was just 118. Perhaps that was a function of him playing second fiddle to the likes of David Warner when he was at Sunrisers Hyderabad. However, since his move to the Capitals in 2019, he too has become a fearsome ball-basher, with a strike-rate of 143 in the first six overs.
  • Last season, Royals had the worst economy rate (12.28) and picked up the fewest wickets (17) in the back end (16-20) of an innings. So, they broke the bank to fix it. Chris Morris had an economy rate of 7 in the last four overs of a game in IPL 2020. It was the best among everyone who bowled at least 50 deliveries in this phase. But, based on the events of their last match, perhaps even he needs a little help. So, is it time for Andrew Tye? The Australian maintained an economy rate of 8.3 in the death in the recent Big Bash League, the third best among those who bowled at least 50 deliveries in this phase. Only Rashid Khan (8.00) and Adam Milne (8.36) fared better.
  • Among those who have taken at least 30 wickets in the IPL, Rabada’s strike-rate of 13.1 is the absolute best. He even manages to improve on that while doing the most difficult part of his job – death bowling, where he conjures a wicket every eight balls.

Hazlewood returns for last three Tests, Cummins available for Melbourne

Australia name a 15-player group for the Melbourne, Sydney, and Hobart Tests; Khawaja could be considered to open

Andrew McGlashan20-Dec-2021Josh Hazlewood has returned to Australia’s squad for the remainder of the Ashes, while captain Pat Cummins is available again for Melbourne following his Covid-enforced absence in Adelaide.Australia have named a 15-player group to cover the Melbourne, Sydney, and Hobart matches, which includes all those who featured in the second Test along with Usman Khawaja and Mitchell Swepson.Related

  • Smith: 'That's the best I've seen Starc bowl in a while'

  • Jhye Richardson relieved with comeback five-for after 'tough' first innings in Adelaide

  • Harris' unconvincing start unlikely to affect his place in the XI

  • Text snub: How Australia came close to losing more bowlers

  • Cummins is as much the ideal captain as Joe Root isn't

Hazlewood was ruled out of Adelaide with a side strain he sustained at the Gabba. He was replaced by Jhye Richardson with Michael Neser then being handed a last-minute debut when Cummins was forced to withdraw on the morning of the game.Naming the squad for all three remaining Tests would appear to be a show of faith in opener Marcus Harris, who has struggled so far, although Khawaja could be considered as an opener.Mitchell Starc has appeared to be battling a back problem during England’s second innings – although it has not affected his performance – which may put a question mark against him for Melbourne given the tight turnaround between matches.If any of Australia’s big three quicks are not available for the third Test, it will be a decision between Richardson and Neser to fill the breach. Neser took a wicket with the second ball of his Test career and produced an excellent spell to claim Dawid Malan on the fourth evening. Richardson was expensive in the first innings but bowled excellently in the second innings with a brute of a delivery removing Haseeb Hameed.The Melbourne pitch for this year’s Ashes Test will likely be very different to the one which produced a tame draw in 2017-18. The surface has improved in recent seasons, and there was significant life in the Sheffield Shield pitch earlier in the summer.The SCG, the venue for the fourth Test, produced a draw last season against India when the visitors were able to bat out the final day. This series will then conclude with a second day-night match in Hobart following the shift away from Perth due to border restrictions.Australia squad: Pat Cummins (capt), Alex Carey, Cameron Green, Marcus Harris, Josh Hazlewood, Travis Head, Usman Khawaja, Marnus Labuschagne, Nathan Lyon, Michael Neser, Jhye Richardson, Steve Smith, Mitchell Starc, Mitchell Swepson, David Warner.

Pakistan depart with eye on ending 20-year wait

Misbah-ul-Haq said it was important for the players to apply themselves and not get overawed by the conditions on their tour of England

Umar Farooq18-Jun-2016Misbah-ul-Haq, Pakistan’s Test captain, has said it is important for the players to apply themselves and not get overawed by the conditions on their tour of England, where they play four Test matches, five ODIs and a one-off T20 international.Pakistan left for England from Lahore on Saturday morning, determined not to stir the memories from their previous tour, in 2010, when Salman Butt, Mohammad Asif and Mohammad Amir were mixed up in the spot-fixing scandal.Pakistan last played a Test seven months ago in the UAE, against the same opposition. Since then many of their players, including Misbah, have been idle for a large portion of time, though players like Sarfraz Ahmed, Amir and Wahab Riaz have played in limited-overs cricket. From the current touring party, only Azhar Ali, Amir and Wahab Riaz were a part of the squad that travelled in 2010. The inexperience has led to former players being sceptical of how they will fare, but Misbah exuded confidence on the eve of the team’s departure.”This is true that it will be a challenging series, but, overall, we have experience of playing good cricket irrespective of the conditions, and that is what we are confident about,” he said. “Our batters have scored enough runs … they all have done well in Test cricket, so I don’t see how it [the inexperience in English conditions] will make much of a difference.”We only have to apply ourselves, have to fight, and these boys love challenges. This is another challenge for them and they are ready for it. Nothing is easy and each time we have to fight it out to win, so this is yet another task for the boys. If we succeed in scoring around 350 runs in a Test [innings], we will have bright chances of winning. Our bowling attack is also outstanding and it has the ability to destroy even the strongest of batting line-ups. We need to be focused and should not get overawed by English conditions. I see the tour as a big opportunity for our players to prove their mettle and play their due role in Pakistan’s victory.”Pakistan have not won a Test series in England in 20 years, after their 2-0 triumph in 1996 under the leadership of Wasim Akram. Both their previous tours ended in defeats – 0-3 in 2006 and 1-3 in 2010. Including their first tour, in 1954, Pakistan have played 13 Test series in England and have won three, consecutively between 1987 and 1996. England have won seven, while three were drawn.Pakistan arrive in England as the No. 3-ranked team in the world, one place above England. Pakistan will have a two-week conditioning camp in Hampshire, before they formally begin their tour with a three-day practice match against Somerset from July 3. Misbah said it was important to focus on the cricket and not let the unsavoury moments of the past affect them.”It indeed is a tough series, but the easy way to deal with this tour is to just focus on your game,” Misbah said. “We don’t have to look around and there is no need to peep into the past, otherwise you will never move ahead. Just believe in your training, your practice and enjoy your cricket. This is the only way to keep away from controversies.”It’s not like Pakistan never played well in England conditions. No doubt they are good in their own conditions and very familiar with their venues, but we have a chance. Bowling is our strength and we are also coming with a winning state of mind. So we have an opportunity to do our best and it’s hope that keeps you alive, otherwise you can’t do anything.”With Amir set to play his first Test in more than five years, Misbah backed him to come out of the shadow of the spot-fixing controversy. After serving a five-year ban, Amir, who was the Man of the Series in 2010, has become an automatic selection, allowing him to resume his Test career and pick up from where he left off at Lord’s. “Whatever happened in past is gone, but it has resulted in some solid life lessons for him,” Misbah said. “He has changed, and now he has an opportunity to prove himself as a bowler and as a person as well.”So performance is the only way he can reintegrate himself with the England fans and he can do it. He is mentally strong and can handle pressure, and I expect him to play an important role in Pakistan’s victory.”

England's stand-in captain Moeen Ali sets up series decider with all-round show

Moeen hits seven sixes then takes two key wickets to keep West Indies at bay

Matt Roller29-Jan-2022Moeen Ali set up a Sunday-night decider in England’s series against West Indies at the Kensington Oval, leading from the front as stand-in captain with 63 off 28 balls and two key wickets in the run chase.With Eoin Morgan ruled out of the series after injuring his quadriceps in the warm-ups on Wednesday, Moeen struck seven sixes – four of them off consecutive balls in Jason Holder’s 18th over – as England surged to 193, building on the platform set by Jason Roy’s scratchy 52.West Indies started brightly in pursuit, reaching 56 for 0 after the powerplay with Kyle Mayers making a sprightly 40 on his return to the side, replacing Shai Hope at the top of the order. But England’s spinners put the squeeze on: Moeen removed both openers, and Adil Rashid and Liam Livingstone both made breakthroughs on a dry pitch.Holder and Kieron Pollard kept the run chase alive, but a middle-overs slowdown meant the task was beyond them. The result set up a deciding final match on Sunday night, with the series squared at 2-2.Roy’s late arrivalAsked to bat by Pollard for the third time in the series, England struggled to adapt to the pace of the pitch – the same one used in their one-run win last Sunday night – early on, with Tom Banton plinking a pull to mid-on to give Holder a wicket in his first over. Roy, who was given a life when Holder put down a return catch, looked particularly out of form, creeping to 11 off 19 balls and swearing in frustration over the stump mic after failing to beat the infield yet again.But 15 balls later he had brought up a half-century, clicking into gear by clubbing Sheldon Cottrell 101 metres over midwicket, and England raced to 80 for 1 after nine overs with James Vince also hitting his straps at No. 3.Pollard put the brakes on with another canny spell of slow-medium cutters, exchanging words with Roy after angling the ball into his pads to defend the short off-side boundary. He conceded only one run (plus a leg bye) off the seven balls he bowled to Roy, roaring in celebration when Nicholas Pooran gobbled up a thick outside edge from a legcutter.Moeen cuts looseWhen Vince miscued a wide offbreak from Akeal Hosein to short third, England had lost their two set batters in the space of seven balls and the innings threatened to fall away. Moeen and Livingstone traded sixes – Livingstone’s, a 91-metre pull over midwicket, was the only boundary Pollard conceded – but a canny 17th over from Cottrell left them 134 for 3 with three overs left.Related

  • No changes in West Indies T20I squad to face India from England series

  • Morgan's endgame approaches as England prepare to do without him

  • Off-field issues cramp West Indies' style with series up for grabs

  • Simmons rubbishes 'victimisation' claims after Powell-Smith swap

  • Resilient Powell serves up lethal cocktail to leave England punch-drunk

What followed was a masterclass in death-overs hitting from Moeen. Holder, whose first two overs cost just three runs, leaked 28 off the 18th, including four consecutive sixes from Moeen: a drag over long-on, a dead-straight hit into the press-box window, a languid swing over extra cover and a wristy pick-up over square leg.Shepherd had Livingstone caught off a steepler with the first ball of the 19th but then suffered some rough treatment himself. Moeen clipped two into the leg side to bring up a 23-ball half-century – his fastest for England – before hitting two more sixes, including a sumptuous chip over extra cover with the full face of the bat.He miscued Holder to long-on at the start of the final over, and Phil Salt – down at No. 7 – skied his first ball into the covers, but Sam Billings, recalled in place of Harry Brook after missing Wednesday night’s game through illness, clubbed the last two balls for six. England added 59 in the last three overs, and Holder’s final two cost 41 runs.Moeen Ali scored a quick-fire fifty•Getty Images

Spin strangleMayers impressed at the top of the order, hitting Moeen for two sixes over the leg side and thumping Tymal Mills’ first three balls for four, six and six, but West Indies’ chase faded badly against spin in the middle overs. Moeen made the first breakthroughs, having Mayers and Brandon King caught at long-off and long-on respectively, while Rashid maintained the pressure from the other end.Rovman Powell had played Rashid out during his hundred on Wednesday night, milking him for 11 off 11 balls, but his notorious weakness against wristspin was enough for Billings to bark over the stump mic: “Still love this match-up!” Three balls later, he ripped a googly through the gate which crashed into middle-and-off stump.56 for 0 after the powerplay became 84 for 3 off 13, and after Pooran hit Livingstone for consecutive sixes, he holed out to long-on looking for three in a row. Holder’s 36 off 24 – his highest T20I score – kept West Indies’ hopes alive, but Reece Topley and Chris Jordan kept their composure to close things out at the death.

'An impressive record the girls won't take lightly' – Alyssa Healy on Australia's 22-match winning streak

Healy admits it’s a “special feeling” to have overtaken the record of 21 matches held by Ricky Ponting’s team in 2003

Andrew McGlashan04-Apr-2021Australia insist they hadn’t spoken about a potential new ODI winning streak of 22 matches and had largely downplayed the topic when asked in the lead-up, but having secured the victory over New Zealand in the first ODI in Mount Maunganui, Alyssa Healy admitted it was a “special feeling” to have overtaken Ricky Ponting’s team.In the end, it came at a canter as unbeaten half-centuries Ash Gardner and Ellyse Perry secured the run chase with more than 11 overs to spare.”I guess now the dust has settled. It’s a pretty special feeling and one I definitely think the girls won’t take lightly – it’s a pretty impressive record to break,” Healy, who struck 65 off 68 balls, said. “It’s a special record. A lot of players in that room – me in particular – have idolised Ricky Ponting growing up; he’s exactly how I wanted to bat and take on the game.Related

  • Schutt, Healy, Perry and Gardner rise in ICC ODI rankings

  • Australia women's record run in ODIs: how they made it 22 wins in a row

  • Gardner, Healy and Perry star as Australia shatter ODI record

“So for us to break a record that had him all over it is pretty special for this group. No doubt when we get back in the dressing room and flick our phones on there might be a bit of hoo-ha about it. We genuinely hadn’t spoken about it but think everyone has some smiles on their faces which is pretty cool.”Australia have been pushed at times during their run, which started back in March 2018, but plenty of the victories have been handsome margins. One of the aspects that most stood out for Healy was the span of the victories – it has taken more than 1100 days to go from the first win of this run to today’s moment. By contrast, Ponting’s team achieved their streak in the space of five months in early 2003.”There’s been a lot of years between those games. We don’t play at lot of cricket for Australia, especially over the last 18 months,” she said. “That’s been the most impressive thing that we can come back as a group and still be as consistent as what we have been.”Twenty-one players have been used in that time and Healy is one of four – alongside Beth Mooney, Rachael Haynes and Gardner – to have appeared in them all. “It just makes my hamstrings feel a little bit tighter than they did before the game,” she joked. “It is pretty special individually, I guess, to have the longevity that I’ve had throughout my career is pretty surreal actually. At the same time, it’s been really fun being part of a team that’s had so many different people come in and play a role.”Australia are in no mood to stop, either. The Rose Bowl – the trophy for which these teams contest their ODI series – has been held by Australia for more than 20 years, and remains up for grabs with two matches left in this series. “[New Zealand] are only 1-0 down in the series, they can still win the next game and take it to a third,” Healy said. “We’re wary of that.”In regards the schedule that Healy alluded to, their next cricket after this tour remains uncertain, although it is likely to be a series against India alongside next season’s Ashes before the World Cup back in New Zealand next March where they are desperate to atone for their semi-final loss against India in 2017.

Game
Register
Service
Bonus