No-one wants to be nasty … but that wasn't much of a contest

Condescension is rife after Sri Lanka’s erratic efforts in a one-sided Lord’s Test

Andrew Fidel Fernando01-Sep-2024It’s got to that point in the series. You see it often now, when Sri Lanka tour England, Australia, India, and sometimes, New Zealand as well (when they roll out the grassy pitches). We’re at that stage where the home side seems, almost from day one, to be breezing so effortlessly to victory, their internal narrative dilemmas become more conspicuous than the contest between the two teams. Sports need to create drama, and well, this is the all the drama we’ve got.Is the temporary captaincy weighing too heavily on Ollie Pope?Is Gus Atkinson a serious allround option, long term?Has Jamie Smith already proven he’s worthy of a long stint in the team?Sri Lanka, though, are fighting, right? They’re showing they can play… well some of them. Kamindu Mendis is swimming in runs. That’s good news, given he’s just 25. Milan Rathnayake’s got a bit of fire about him, correct? There could be something there, for the future maybe? And they came out in the second innings and made England work for the wickets for almost 87 overs.We’re speaking almost entirely in condescensions now. We have to disassociate the Sri Lanka batting of the second innings from the Sri Lanka batting of the first innings, in order to pay these compliments. We pretend that “fight” was not necessitated by crumbling failure in other portions of the game. Because, you know, what else is there to do? No one wants to be nasty.Related

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Cricket is an entertainment business, and there are economic pressures to make this seem more like a contest than it is, to defend players and decisions more than they deserve occasionally, and perhaps most of all, to convince the audience they are getting a better show than they actually are. We attempt to do this even when the stands in the most famed cricket ground in England are roughly no more than 35% full on the fourth day of a Test, on a Sunday in the most reliably good-weather portion of the English summer. (In the spirit of only paying backhanded compliments, here’s one to the English weather.)There is an argument that the prices charged for a seat at this venue are too high. There is an argument that it is precisely this kind of financial opportunism that has made the Test game poorer, as India, Australia, and England, the three biggest cricket economies, carve up profits without sufficiently investing in other nations, leading to the game having become less vibrant – maybe across formats, but especially in Tests – over the last 10 years.There are other arguments too, but we’ve cornered ourselves. We’re not pretending that the playing field is even – or even close to even – any more, because these seem like foregone conclusions. Instead, here we are again, pulling punches even on teams that have done poorly even by their own standards.We’re not laying into Dhananjaya de Silva choosing to bowl first under cloudless skies on the first day as harshly as we could be. In de Silva’s mind, England having been 216 for 6 soon after tea on that day is vindication for his decision, and we’re not going to describe Atkinson’s 118 off 115 balls as an accident that was waiting to happen.England’s seamers have dominated Sri Lanka’s top-order across both Tests to date•Getty ImagesWe’re not going to roast the Sri Lanka top-order as severely as we could. Almost every decision taken in this Test was an attempt to protect senior batters. This is something de Silva himself suggested, when he said: “Our top order was struggling in the last match. I needed to give them a break and see what the pitch was doing, and then we’d have a bat.” This, despite one of the first things that anyone learns about Lord’s is that the overhead conditions are more consequential to the threat bowlers pose than the nature of the surface. (“You look up at Lord’s, not down .. etc etc”)On day four, Sri Lanka sent in a “lightwatchman”, at 43 for 2, when the skies became gloomy in the middle session, to protect the next three batters, each of whom has between 55 and 110 Tests on their record. At which point, you start to wonder what is going on. They are sending the bowlers out to bowl when the skies are clear because the top five is struggling, and bowlers out to bat when cloud comes over. Are they just throwing bowlers’ bodies at all their problems like sandbags at a flood?There are further weirdnesses. De Silva said experience in English conditions was key to doing well in this series, and actively lobbied for more exposure, but then left out Vishwa Fernando who had taken 17 wickets at 13.35 for Yorkshire in three matches earlier this season. He suggested more solidity from the top three would have helped the rest of the batting order to prosper, but then asked Nishan Madushka to keep wicket and open the batting, which surely has to have struck almost everybody as a bad idea.However, it is increasingly beginning to feel, in these global cricket conditions, that even when we make these critiques, they do not bite as hard as they should. They do not have the effect they once did, because what is the flood that Sri Lanka have to contend with in this series compared to the tectonic forces acting upon the game?It is possible audiences are aware of this too. If Australia had been in such a modest position at the start of day four, would the stands have been so empty? Would more spectators have shown up to Lord’s to watch mighty India fall in similar circumstances? It feels more likely. Those series feel rambunctious. This one feels as though fans of the home team are just hoping for some good cricket and little moreBut we’re not in an Australia or India series. We’re here, noting that Sri Lanka made it through to the second new ball in the second innings. That three batters crossed fifty in one innings, compared to just one in the first dig. We use words like resilient, and valiant, to describe a batting performance in fairly sedate conditions. Because, if you take in everything else that is happening in the game, we are in danger of straying into flagellation. And no one wants to be nasty.

The good news for Pakistan? England have problems. The bad news? Pakistan have bigger ones

England aren’t quite the force they were on their all-conquering 2022-23 tour. That, however, is no consolation to a struggling Pakistan side

Danyal Rasool04-Oct-2024Pakistan have been confronted by two sets of very different challenges in their last two Test series. First, they lost the unwinnable; no Pakistan Test side had managed anything other than defeat in Australia since 1995. Then, at home, they lost the unlosable, suffering their first and second Test defeats to Bangladesh. Now, with England on their shores to play three Test matches, they face their most intriguing challenge: the possible.It is perhaps this kind of match-up, where success is unlikely but eminently achievable, that is best placed to determine the upper limits of Pakistan’s grasp, and most in danger of exposing the pace of their slide. Moving past Pakistan’s defeats in Australia as a grim rite of passage that they cannot escape requires some generosity; setting aside an excellent Bangladesh side’s clean sweep in Pakistan as a freak event demands excessive charity. One was too predictable, the other too dramatic, and neither conducive to rational assessment. But a home series against England is precisely the sort of contest Pakistan have cherished competing in. This is a litmus test.Related

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Pakistan’s psychological scars may have begun to prick once more at the memories of what England dished out in 2022-23. But while the tendency to group all of their results under the all-encompassing term Bazball remains undying, England now are scarcely the formidable side that delivered Pakistan’s only home-series whitewash to date. In the intervening two years, England have just about split the 19 Tests they’ve played, winning 10 and losing eight; six of those wins have come at home against West Indies, Sri Lanka and Ireland. Five of their seven away Tests have ended as defeats. None of the four seamers who played any part in the 2022-23 Pakistan tour are in their current squad, and captain Ben Stokes is a serious doubt for the first Test in Multan.With that limited context, England’s triumph two years ago appears an aberration, not the heralding of a new dawn. Greater England sides than this have found playing in Pakistan a struggle; until their 2022 victory, England had managed just one away-series win against Pakistan in 60 years. Months after their iconic Ashes win in 2005, they fell 2-0 on Pakistani shores, and that famously hard-nosed 2009-12 England side were swept away by Pakistan at their adopted UAE home ground in 2011.But zoom out for greater context, and you run into Pakistan’s problems. It’s difficult for them to draw encouragement from their opposition’s away record when they haven’t won a home Test in three-and-a-half years, and though England did lose a dead rubber to Sri Lanka to cap off their red-ball summer, it was overshadowed by Pakistan’s own dismantling at Bangladesh’s hands.Abrar Ahmed’s 11-wicket debut two years ago seems like a distant memory•Matthew Lewis/Getty ImagesEngland’s seamers might never have played in Pakistan, but Pakistan are going through their own fast-bowling identity crisis as they struggle for speed, form, fitness or a combination of the three. England’s spinners are inexperienced, but Pakistan’s supply isn’t brimming either, and Abrar Ahmed’s 11-wicket debut in Multan two years ago is now a distant memory. And when it comes to batting, Pakistan’s problems are in a different league.Earlier this week, captain Shan Masood appealed for time and patience, but is also clever enough to understand those will be offered in stingy doses with severe prescriptive restrictions. And against an England side perceived to be better than it perhaps is, a competitive series with enough of the numbers in the result corner presents the only viable opportunity to change attitudes about his side.Pakistan have had a month to reflect on that Bangladesh series, and played domestic one-day cricket in the interregnum; the wisdom of that remains up for debate. But at some point, the only way to read into the quality of this Test side will be the results they get rather than the promise they show, the quality of the opposition or the capriciousness of the pitch. This Pakistan side is either good enough to beat England at home, or they’re not. Zak Crawley’s comments about the dangers of underestimating Pakistan would suggest England are blocking out the external noise about their supposed superiority over the hosts, and are approaching this series as a contest of equals.Pakistan still have a distance to travel to demonstrate they have earned that tag. But either way, the upcoming three weeks should go a long way towards illuminating whether that Bangladesh series was a wake-up call, or simply the new company Pakistan keep.

How South Africa's Test team became the sum of its exceptional parts

Pace-bowling reserves, a wealth of big run-scorers, and a captain leading from the front all contributed to WTC final journey

Firdose Moonda06-Jan-2025Let’s start with some statistics: South Africa have won seven successive Test matches, the second-longest winning streak in their history. In this World Test Championship cycle, they’ve been victorious in eight out of 12 matches and since Shukri Conrad and Temba Bavuma took over as Test coach and captain respectively, they have won 10 out of 14 matches.It doesn’t matter who the opposition were, that is a mighty impressive list of numbers, especially for one player: Bavuma. He has captained South Africa nine times and not lost once. Is it time that he takes the credit for this cycle of success, which has included a clean sweep of the summer?”No, I’d never do that,” Bavuma joked afterwards. “Probably amongst the players I would, but not in the media. What I’ve always felt as captain, you’re only as good as your bowlers, firstly, but then you’re obviously as good as the rest of the team as well. And I think the bowlers individually have been superb.”At Newlands, Shan Masood identified South Africa’s pace pack as the “key difference” between the two sides, primarily because they were able to bowl quicker than Pakistan’s attack. On a flat deck, extra pace was one of the few ways that bowlers could create chances and Kwena Maphaka, Kagiso Rabada and Marco Jansen did.But that’s only one example of where having a varied and strong attack has put South Africa in a position of advantage. At SuperSport Park, the inclusion of Corbin Bosch worked as a charm, even as Pakistan batted poorly against him. At St George’s Park against Sri Lanka, a slower surface, Dane Paterson’s ability to nip the ball around came to the fore and in Durban, Jansen’s extra bounce and Sri Lanka’s hour of madness changed the course of the series.Kwena Maphaka’s first Test wicket got his team-mates rallying around him•AFP/Getty ImagesThough quicks are expected to do well in South African conditions, if you consider that South Africa have had six frontline options – Lungi Ngidi, Gerald Coetzee, Nandre Burger, Wiaan Mulder, Lizaad Williams and Anrich Nortje – unavailable for all or parts of the summer with injury, the extent to which the quality of the depth has been tested is clear. If Bavuma is only as good as his bowling resources, then he is exceptional, because that is what they are.It’s an accepted trope, especially in South Africa, that batters win moments and bowlers win matches, series and tournaments, and yet giving the credit to the attack is only half the job and Bavuma knows it. “The other guys as well, being the batters, they’ve also done their jobs when the time is needed.”In this cycle, South Africa have had 14 centuries by nine different players and five of them scored a hundred for the first time. The standouts are Ryan Rickelton, who became the first double-centurion in South Africa in eight years and as a South African opener in 12; Tristan Stubbs, who scored two hundreds after being given a role in the top-order, and Kyle Verreynne, who contributed three to the cause. And though Bavuma said “there’s nothing special about me as captain,” he should be on that list too.Related

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He has scored two hundreds in this cycle, and three as captain, a position he clearly thrives in. Since taking over the leadership, Bavuma averages 57.78. In the last two years, his conversation rate has significantly improved and there’s a reason for it. “I understand my game a lot better,” he said. “I’m trying to stay within my strengths as much as I can. I’m not trying to play like anyone else. In my early days, I was always being told, ‘you need to trigger’. I tried that but it was never natural for me. Now I’ve kind of put that aside.”That’s the technical explanation but there is also a more soulful one. “I’m probably at ease,” he added. “I’m not trying to prove anything to anyone else, just myself. I stay true to who I am and what my ambitions are and make sure I stay grounded. Like the guys always say, ‘don’t get too high, don’t get too low, just be yourself’. I’m a lot calmer about things as well. I don’t take them as personally. Maybe there’s a sense of me, in a good way, not caring as much.”Bavuma is now a decade into his international career and has finally been able to shed the many labels that have been attached to him. He was the first black African South African to score a century and has carried the hopes of a nation for so long that it was clear it had become a burden, especially when he was also tasked with leading their white-ball sides. For the first time Bavuma acknowledged his lowest point was the 2023 ODI World Cup (though some may point to the 2022 T20 World Cup). He was the only member of the top five who did not score a hundred, then played the semi-final with an injured hamstring, and has since said he felt he was “ridiculed and berated” for that.Ryan Rickelton, one of five first-time centurions in this WTC cycle, gets a hug from his captain Temba Bavuma•Gallo Images/Getty ImagesIn this cycle, Bavuma has played the home summer with heavily strapped elbows, has clearly not been able to extend fully on the pull shot and has still racked up the runs while captaining in a way that Verreynne, in a Cricket South Africa Instagram post, described as “being the backbone of this team.” But Bavuma believes in the vertebrae that form the spine.”I have not been taking on too much responsibility,” he said. “I’ve been identifying guys within the team who can take care of certain things. A guy like Aiden (Markram), he does that quite well. And guys lean to him a lot easier than they would to me. If you think about the bowling, there’s Keshav and KG, they kind of take care of that. And then the batting, there’s Ashwell (Prince, batting coach) in this space. For me, it’s to manage everything. I don’t feel as much pressure as I did at the beginning. I’m a lot calmer and don’t take things as seriously and as personally.”He also credited the coaching staff, under Conrad, for allowing the players the “freedom to be themselves”, which is clearly paying off. Conrad believes in characters, not calculations and so all those numbers we listed up top will never tell the full story of how South Africa got to the WTC final. They did it with some luck, a heap of a belief and a unit that stuck together.And for the next few months they can say: See you at Lord’s.

Have any allrounders taken more wickets and scored more hundreds than R Ashwin?

Also: What is the most deliveries a batter has consumed in the nineties before going on to make a hundred in a Test?

Steven Lynch24-Dec-2024What is the most number of balls a batter has spent in the nineties before going on to make a hundred in a Test? And what’s the longest time someone has spent on 99 before reaching 100? asked Ben Cox from Australia
This is one of those questions that is difficult to answer definitively, because we lack ball-by-ball data for a lot of early matches – and the increased rates of scoring these days means, according to the Australian statistician Charles Davis, that records for slow scoring are more likely to be incomplete as they are more likely to involve the older matches for which we don’t have full details.Given that, the longest spell known for a batter in the nineties is 75 balls, by the England opener Cyril Washbrook, in the third Test against West Indies at Trent Bridge in 1950. Remarkably enough, Washbrook is also in third place on this list, as he’d warmed up in the previous Test at Lord’s by spending 68 balls in the nineties. Charles warns: “For him the number of balls could be plus or minus two or three owing to unmarked leg-byes in the scorebook.”In between comes Jack Hobbs, with 72 balls in the nineties for England against Australia at Lord’s in 1926. Another England player, Michael Vaughan, spent 68 balls in the nineties against Sri Lanka in Kandy in 2003. The leading non-Englishman is Bruce Mitchell, with 67 balls in the nineties against England in Cape Town in 1949.In Kandy, Vaughan spent 87 minutes in the nineties, a time that looks to have been exceeded only by Saqlain Mushtaq, who was in the nineties for around 98 minutes (66 balls, including 17 on 99) while approaching his only Test century, against New Zealand in Christchurch in 2001.When Glenn Turner reached the first of his twin centuries for New Zealand against Australia in Christchurch in 1974, he spent only 43 balls in the nineties, but a record 36 of them came while he was on 99. England’s Derek Randall was stuck on 99 for 28 balls against New Zealand in Wellington in 1984. The New Zealand opener John Wright spent 17 balls on 99 against England in Christchurch in January 1992, being stumped off the last of them and not reaching his century.At the other end of the scale, Ben Stokes uniquely spent just one ball in the nineties against Australia at Lord’s in 2023, going from 88 to 100 with successive sixes off Cameron Green.R Ashwin not only took 537 wickets in Tests but also scored six centuries. Who’s the next-highest wicket-taker with six hundreds under his belt? asked Gawtham Patel from India
You’re right that R Ashwin finished his Test career with 537 wickets and six centuries (and a total of 3503 runs). Another Indian, Kapil Dev, finished with 434 wickets and eight hundreds in Tests, while Ian Botham ended up with 383 wickets and 14 centuries.In all, eight men who scored six or more Test hundreds also reached 200 wickets. The figures of Jacques Kallis are pretty remarkable – 292 wickets and 13,289 runs, with no fewer than 45 centuries!Yashasvi Jaiswal has reached 100 four times in Tests now, and gone on to 150 each time. Is this a record? asked Nikhil Shrestha from India
You’re right that Yashasvi Jaiswal has converted all four of his Test centuries to date to 150s: he started with 171 on his debut, against West Indies in Dominica in 2023, and has added 209 against England in Visakhapatnam in 2024, an undefeated 214 in the next match in Rajkot, and 161 in the first Test of the current series against Australia in Perth.The only other man to do this was another left-hand opener, South Africa’s Graeme Smith. His first four Test centuries were 200 against Bangladesh in East London in 2002, followed by 151 against Pakistan in Cape Town in 2003, and innings of 277 at Edgbaston and 259 at Lord’s in the first two Tests against England in the summer of 2003. Smith’s run was broken when he was out for 132 against West Indies in Johannesburg in 2003: Jaiswal’s run is still ongoing.Graeme Smith converted his first four Test hundreds into 150s, three of which were double-hundreds•Getty ImagesHas anyone younger than Sam Konstas opened the batting for Australia in a Test? asked Davey Moore from Australia
If he makes his Test debut for Australia against India in Melbourne on Boxing Day, the precocious New South Wales batter Sam Konstas will be 19 years 85 days old. There have been only three younger Australian Test players: Ian Craig (17 in 1953), the current captain Pat Cummins (18 in 2011), and Tom Garrett (18 in the first Test of all, in 1877). But none of them opened the batting as teenagers: at the moment the youngest man to go in first for Australia remains Archie Jackson, against England in Adelaide in 1929 – and he marked his Test debut with a memorable 164. So if Konstas plays – and opens – in Melbourne, he will indeed be the youngest to do so for Australia.Overall, he is quite a way down the list. The youngest man to go in first in a Test match is Mohammad Ashraful of Bangladesh, who was 17 years 188 days old when he opened in the second innings against Pakistan in Dhaka in 2002. Four other 17-year-olds have opened in Tests: Vijay Mehra and Parthiv Patel for India, Hanif Mohammad for Pakistan, and Ibrahim Zadran for Afghanistan.How many people have been out for 99 in their first Test? And anyone in their last? asked Andrew Lucas from England
Only three men have been out for 99 on their Test debut. The first was Arthur Chipperfield, for Australia against England at Trent Bridge in 1934, and he was followed by Robert Christiani of West Indies, also against England, in Bridgetown in 1948. The most recent case was by Asim Kamal, for Pakistan against South Africa in Lahore in 2003. Chipperfield and Christiani did later reach three figures in a Test, but the unfortunate Asim never did.Only one woman has fallen for 99 on her Test debut: Jess Jonassen, for Australia against England in Canterbury in 2015.The only man to be out for 99 in his final Test was the South African Bruce Mitchell, against England in Port Elizabeth (now Gqeberha) in March 1949. Alyssa Healy was out for 99 in her most recent Test, for Australia against South Africa in Perth in February 2024, but she will presumably play again.Shiva Jayaraman of ESPNcricinfo’s stats team helped with some of the above answers.Use our feedback form, or the Ask Steven Facebook page to ask your stats and trivia questions

Rules of three: how England have dealt with a most thorny batting position

The Pope-Bethell question highlights how picking a No. 3 has never been easy for them

Vithushan Ehantharajah19-Jun-2025On Wednesday lunchtime, it was announced that Ollie Pope had been entrusted as England’s No. 3 for the start of the Test series against India.In previous eras, that news would not be, well, news. Pope averages 43.06 in the position, where all but one of his eight centuries have been scored – the last of which, 171 against Zimbabwe, came a month ago.And yet, he embarks on this first Test at Headingley under pressure from a challenger in the immensely talented Jacob Bethell, who has still not registered a professional century. Bethell’s only relevant experience is a stint moonlighting at first drop in New Zealand at the end of last year. The crux of his case? High elbow, big flair, bigger vibes.Amid all the pontificating around loyalty to Pope, or whether Bethell shapes up better, the broader framing of Pope vs Bethell speaks to a sea change in how Test cricket regards the No. 3 position.Just last week, Wiaan Mulder and Cameron Green, allrounders by trade and certainly not top-order batters, slotted in at three for South Africa and Australia in the format’s showpiece event. India are now unsure of theirs, as the only person to do it for more than one Test since Cheteshwar Pujara’s last appearance in the previous World Test Championship final, Shubman Gill, moves to four as captain.Related

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As far as English cricket goes, this feels like a seminal moment that has been in the offing since Pope took the job in the first place. Then, it was a calculated play from someone reared as a six. Upon Ben Stokes’ appointment, Pope clocked the gap in the batting line-up. He picked up the phone and made his case to Stokes, who was impressed by Pope’s forwardness. And so, the gig no one had nailed since Jonathan Trott – nor wanted – was his.

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English cricket’s relationship with the No. 3 position is no different to that of any other Test-playing nation. But it has changed dramatically in recent years.Ironically, the best vessel to explore England’s at-times toxic relationship with the position is Moeen Ali. Moeen excelled at it domestically (averaging 51.85 across 79 knocks for Warwickshire and Worcestershire) without ever nailing it at international level (180 runs at 20). Moeen only did it nine times in his 118 Test innings because he was never entrusted to do it well.In 2018, during a home series against India, he was recalled to the England side for the fourth Test, in Southampton. Halfway through that first appearance in six months, his captain, Joe Root, came to him for a favour.”Rooty kept getting out lbw to Jasprit Bumrah,” Moeen recalls. “So he asked me to bat three.”

Moeen did not mind. He was fresh from 219 at three against Yorkshire, and moreover, he found the concept quite cool, even if he was unsure he was worthy of it.The feelings of inadequacy he harboured were based on the names you’d associate with the position. Sift through the greatest batters of all time and you’ll find plenty of No. 3s. From an English perspective, there exists a Mount Rushmore of Ken Barrington, Wally Hammond, Ted Dexter and Bill Edrich, who did it for a meaningful period of time (30 innings or more) and averaged over 50.”I didn’t really have… I don’t know what it is,” Moeen says, “but you know, Ricky Ponting, Hashim Amla, when they get hundreds and how they’re massive hundreds? That. It was short term, and I knew it was never going to be given to me.””Given” feels apt. Because No. 3s were chosen, and in the case of some of the names listed above, it was based on technical proficiency and mental strength. Ergo, the best batters at a country’s disposal. And yet here was Root, the man who would go on to become England’s all-time biggest Test run-scorer, glad to be rid of it.Root did it 20 more times after picking the role back up for the 2019 Ashes, but was clearly reluctant. So much so that one of Stokes’ first moves as captain was to ring-fence him at four. (The great irony, of course, is Root’s career-best 262 last year in Pakistan came at three, after Ben Duckett suffered an injury in the field, moving Pope and Root up a spot. Root did not even entertain the idea of staying there.)It feels instructive that Root and the rest of the “Fab Four” of Virat Kohli, Steve Smith and Kane Williamson have all been on similar journeys with the No. 3 position. Only Williamson has stuck with it, while the rest have, well, “retreated” to the sanctuary of four at the behest of their teams. Three might offer gravitas, but in a stats-driven era, offering generational talents the best chance of scoring big and scoring often, against an older ball and more worn bowlers, is the value play.Five years on from that mid-game favour to Root, Moeen offered the same to Harry Brook during the third Ashes Test at Headingley. With Pope out injured, Brook had gone in earlier for the first innings – primarily to keep Root at four – and made an uncomfortable three runs. Here was another generational talent – the fastest to a thousand Test runs ever, by the way – being hamstrung by the job, at the first time of asking.The stand-in: Moeen Ali first batted at three as a favour to Joe Root, and finished his career batting there three times in the 2023 Ashes•AFP”Even before Brooky batted in the first innings at Headingley, I personally believed he’d be better at No. 5,” Moeen says. “Three, it wasn’t high for him because he’s not good enough, but like Root way back when, it was about getting more of him at No. 5.”In the second innings, Moeen himself only managed 5. Brook, however, back in the comfort of his usual spot, all but sealed the chase for England with 75, the first stage of hauling back Australia’s 2-0 lead. They completed that about turn at The Oval, with Moeen seeing out the series at No. 3.”Brook’s got really good technique, he’s good against fast bowling, good at taking the game on and assessing situations. But that doesn’t ensure he’s going to enjoy three. A lot of batting is mental. But three is more so.”

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There has been something of a generational shift among modern players. A societal awakening, a cultural acceptance, that it is okay to not be okay at three.Speak to players in county cricket and few covet the position. A straw poll of domestic batters unearths broadly consistent views. “If you grew up as an opener, the waiting is tough,” says one county veteran. “You’re often in early, on green county decks, the bowlers are up and about,” says another whose years at three were in service of trying to attract selectors’ glances. “It can be a bit of a mug’s game.”The No. 3 has always been a hybrid of opener and middle-order batter. In England, however, the accent has been more on the former, given the Dukes ball and the lavish movement available through the air and off the pitch.Trott embodied this. Resolute, impenetrable, risk-averse and with an ability to bat time. His average of 45.72 from 73 innings is the best of all Englishmen to do it in the last 35 years. And yet, the only better No. 3 than Trott in the last 55 years was one of the most revered stroke-makers the world over.David Gower wasn’t prepared for life at three but he grew to love it. “When you have a good day at three, it’s a great day,” he says•M McKeown/Getty Images”You’re going to tell me that I was very good?” David Gower asks, as much scepticism as hope in his voice.He was: 2619 of his 8231 runs came at three, as did eight of his 18 centuries. Only 56 of his 204 innings came at the position, yet only Dexter (51.81) did it as many times and averaged more than Gower’s 49.41.By his own admission, Gower treated one to six broadly the same, even with the differing wait times. By the time he was first entrusted with the role, during the 1981 Ashes, England’s Mount Rushmore was already in place. Not that he was bothered. All he saw was opportunity.”I suppose you do have to be aware of the history. But there are a lot of people who look at No. 3 and say that is your pivotal position. If I’m honest, I can’t say I was ever giving it too much thought growing up. The great thing about batting three or four is, you have normally got time to make big scores.”The first stanza of his Test career came in the middle order, in keeping with his spot at Leicestershire. And then, ahead of the fourth Test at Edgbaston of the ’81 Ashes, Mike Brearley asked Gower to step in at No. 3 after Bob Woolmer and then Brearley himself had failed. After a duck and 23, Gower was back to the middle with Chris Tavaré seeing out the remainder of the series at first drop.”I wasn’t really ready for it,” says Gower. “I’d played pretty much my whole Test career at five, and four and five for Leicestershire. I remember feeling slightly uneasy about it. Not prepared at all. As simple as it sounds, I was not used to putting the pads on straight away and getting out there.”A year later, Gower was back at three for the 1982-83 Ashes. He would finish as England’s top run-scorer with 441 runs, the start of eight years as a solution to one-down.

“Everything clicked. Whatever it was – whether I liked Australian conditions or the bowling… a year later one is more ready, confident. And instead of it going slightly wrong and therefore [feeling] unsure about it, the first innings of that series – a 72 at the WACA that should have been 150 – it felt perfect.”So began a deep love for three. The kind that sets Gower apart from other batters who have talked about the position. There is no mention of new-ball challenges, anxious waiting or crippling pressure. Just glory and liberation.”That longer, more successful, stint at three ended up defining me,” he says. “It gave me kudos. When you have a good day at three, it’s a great day. Because even if you’re piggybacking on a good opening partnership, you’re still amplifying the good news.”He highlights his 157 at The Oval in 1985 – against Australia – as his favourite knock at three. England needed to avoid defeat in that sixth and final Test to win the Ashes back. He walked in at 20 for 1 on the first day and went off as the second man out much later that same day.”Coming in relatively early on day one, with a little slice of luck as one looped off the shoulder of the bat and cleared the slips… and then, this most sublime day.”Everything slots into place. Nice pace, nice bounce. And you walk off with 157 to your name. That is your absolute pinnacle. Days like that, No. 3 was incredibly special and incredibly satisfying. The day that makes it all worthwhile.”Another aspect of Gower’s play that suited the position – by no means a prerequisite but certainly a desired trait – was his style. Being easy on the eye, particularly early on in an innings, has a calming influence on a dressing room. Pope’s frenzied starts, for instance, do not reassure those outside the current set-up.Gower’s 157 at The Oval in 1985 was a career highlight•Getty Images”You’d rather not be noted for your freneticism – when you bat, or in life,” Gower says. “With myself – and I always have to make this point – the perception was very different to reality.”If I appeared – to use the dreaded words ‘laid-back’ – part of that was a construct for my own benefit. Portraying an air of calm is a good thing, for your own sake and ultimately for the team’s sake. The days that you walk out and it all clicks straight away are few and far between, even for the greatest.”For Gower, the role was as much about the duty of assuming a starring role as the accolades that come with it.”Ideally, if you go No. 3, it’s like being promoted. You’re a prefect – you’re meant to be setting an example.”But I always have to believe that your own personal day is there to be treasured as well, as much as the contribution to the team. Those interviews when players say, ‘It’s all about the team.’ Oh f**k off. You’re allowed to be proud of yourself, especially if you’ve succeeded there.”

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Earlier this year British actor Tom Hardy revealed he was told by a producer he could never play Mr Darcy in , a role that subsequently went to Matthew Macfadyen. “All women have an image or a vision of what Mr Darcy looks like,” the conversation went. “And I’m afraid, Tom, you just aren’t it.”If you are willing to extrapolate the desired prim-and-properness of a Mr Darcy as translating to the desired prim-and-properness of a No. 3, then Mark Butcher was very much Hardy rather than Macfadyen.The game never truly bothered Butcher. “It’s not in my nature to stress about cricket,” he says. He admits to getting bored easily, and being prone to lapses in concentration.Yet no one in English Test history has three-ed more: 78 innings, five more than Trott, averaging 38.30. That rises to 42.32 when you isolate the 40 innings when he was given the role outright upon his recall in 2001. All six of his hundreds at three came during this stint, including the pièce de résistance – unbeaten 173 against Australia.173 and all that: Mark Butcher bats at No. 3 in the Headingley Test of 2001•Laurence Griffiths/Getty Images”That was basically a fluke, really,” says Butcher of his return to the XI. “Michael Vaughan, Mark Ramprakash and a whole number of others who’d have been in the side ahead of me were injured into that year’s Ashes. There were two spaces at three and five. I was delighted to be back playing, but the fact it was at three was cool.”Cool because Butcher was a rarity – a No. 3 fanboy. He did it growing up, only opening because it was the clearest route into the Surrey team. Opening the batting was his job, but three was his passion, fuelled by West Indies’ Larry Gomes who, ironically, was no specialist at three, playing just 19 of 60 Tests there.”Way back to the 1984 England versus West Indies Test series, Gomes was a hero of mine. He went under the radar with the likes of [Gordon] Greenidge, [Desmond] Haynes, and Viv Richards coming behind him. He batted three that series and made a mountain of runs in an understated way. He provided the stability for the lunatics to smash it around him. Because of Gomes, I grew up knowing there was a certain amount of respect to batting at three.”Underpinning this ambition was Butcher’s personality, which, despite being counter-intuitive to three, worked just fine. The stresses others associate with the role were perks to him.He loved the fact an innings could start second ball or on the second day. Even if it was the former, he preferred it to opening because those extra five minutes were “enough to get the karma right”. Most instructive was how he regarded the variety of uncertainty as “perfect”. He looked upon first-drop like a snooker player arriving to the table after a missed pot – a unique combination of ball placings and frame situations to be negotiated immediately. Or else.”It was always a different start,” says Butcher. “And as I’ve come to know myself better, not having the same thing to do all the time is a very, very handy thing for me.”If you think about that relatively logically – if you put someone who is naturally not the most disciplined in the world into a role where that is very much required, you get the best out of them in those circumstances.”In any venture I’ve done, I’ve found that if the emphasis is on something other than myself, I’m more likely to get a good result. You take on responsibility for other people rather than just yourself and it becomes an easier thing to do.”Nasser Hussain’s time at No. 3 was something of a rite of passage for him. And he didn’t enjoy waiting to bat. “I was a nervous watcher because I cared so much about getting runs”•Getty Images”That sounds very Butch,” laughs Nasser Hussain in the Lord’s media dining room when the above quote is read to him.”He had such a calm persona for a number three. The early wicket wouldn’t faze him. Even silly things – he used to refuse nightwatchman to stay at three. He’d say, ‘If I go in and get out, I can go out this evening. And if I don’t, I’m 20 not out.’ And he wasn’t a bullshitter. He meant it. He was perfect.”It was Hussain who gave Butcher his coveted position at No. 3 – because Hussain was done with it. The top order was constantly in its own state of flux amid the chaos of an ever-changing XI. Hussain, out of duty and pride, chained himself to three to offer stability. By the 2001 summer, he rightly untethered from it, and he would have done even if Butcher had not run with it.”Whether I did it or didn’t do it, did it well or did it badly, before I did it or after I did it, you always viewed it as such a key position,” Hussain says. “It suited me, and also taking responsibility. You’re captain, you bat – why don’t you take that responsibility? Look at the way Stokes does it. Don’t ask someone to do something you’re not prepared to do yourself. I’d have been asking someone else to do my job, which was at No. 3.”Hussain’s first go there famously came against India in 1996, following a second three-year gap from Test cricket. Umpire Darrell Hair neglected to spot a glove down the leg side, allowing him to register a career-resuscitating 128.Unlike Butcher, he had never thought about three. When informed that he would bat there for that Edgbaston Test, he was shocked. “I hadn’t batted at three, either for Essex or England previously. It was my way back in the side, but the worst part of my day was the wait to bat. I was a nervous watcher because I cared so much about getting runs.”Initially, three suited me – get your pads on. Often with Atherton, we’ve lost that wicket early,” he jokes. “So the waiting time was short. Three, then, suited my temperament.”Hussain went on to give it up, as part of what he describes as the usual bell curve on “the graph of being an England captain”; the initial boost of pride and the security of your position, before the pressure of the job takes hold and begins to weigh too heavy. “Suddenly the anxiety of waiting to bat becomes so low on your list that I slid down the order.”In 2000, a year before moving down for Butcher, Hussain came out fighting in the press during a particularly awful patch of form. Prior to the fourth Test against West Indies, he rallied against calls to give up the spot. Amid the usual underperforming-cricketer’s bluff of feeling technically fine (he was averaging 13 at that point of the series, which eventually dipped to 10.16) was mention of how, even in this grim patch, he deserved respect for his service at three.Jacob Bethell received plaudits for doing the job in New Zealand•Getty Images”After David Gower, there were nine or so people tried at number three,” Hussain said on the eve of that match at Headingley. “But four years ago, I stepped in and have got seven hundreds in 40 Test matches with an average of near 40.” It was actually 12 players tried at three in the period after Gower’s final Test there – the first of the 1990-91 Ashes.Twenty-five years removed, Hussain makes an important distinction. It was captaincy, rather than three, that was dragging him down. “Often in my era, you came in at six and you moved up the order. And hence, if you’re moving up the order, you should be getting better if you know what I mean?” he says. “I think that weighs on you a bit, that if you’re England’s No. 3, being ‘average’ just won’t cut it, either for you, in the team, in the public eye or in the press.”But honestly, it was my own expectancy of how I wanted to do well. I never viewed the position as the poisoned chalice.”It is at this point that Hussain asks for his numbers at three. He’s shocked to hear he did it 65 times across 40 Tests.”I don’t view myself as a No. 3. But actually, Jamo [Steve James] wrote in the about Ollie Pope, and there was a list of England No. 3s on it – and I was featured. And I thought, ‘Well, yeah, I was one of England’s No. 3s.'”He takes stock a second time when he hears he averaged 40.55 in the role. “If you look at those stats – and I very rarely piss in my own pocket – but I did quite well. It is now something I do look back on with pride that I did not let the position down. You can survive as captain – as I did, averaging 10 one year! – but I didn’t let that position down, really.”That Hussain, for all his status in the game, is humbled at how he performed there underlines the status of No. 3, at least in previous eras. Gower, similarly, was taken aback by just how good he was. “Right, so that’s five points better than normal,” he says of his 49.41. “Interesting… well I guess I should have another go?” he jokes, with a nod and a wink at the current Pope-Bethell predicament (which this England set-up does not regard as a predicament at all).”It probably takes something like this to put it all together,” Gower says, “put some figures on it, for me to go, ‘Oh, it actually wasn’t so bad, was it?'” Even Moeen, who signed off his Test career with three innings at three at the end of the 2023 Ashes – making one fifty and averaging 31 – wonders what might have been.”It was mainly done because I thought it was best for the team. But from a personal point of view, it was to prove to myself a little bit that I was still good enough to bat three. I left thinking ‘Man, if I was given that a bit more for a bit longer, I definitely could have done it.'”The ones that did it aren’t sure how well they did it. The ones that didn’t wish they had done it more. As for those doing it now? Perhaps it is healthier they do not know how much what they are doing used to once mean.

Deepti the batter makes a quiet statement

Her promotion to No. 6 raised a few eyebrows, but she showed her finishing chops with a match-winning, unbeaten 62 in the first ODI

Shashank Kishore17-Jul-2025There’s little doubt that Deepti Sharma could walk into India’s ODI squad as a bowler alone. Her three five-wicket hauls – the most by an India player in Women’s ODIs – speak volumes of her bowling pedigree. Her batting, however, has often been a subject of debate – not over her ability but her approach.Across 92 ODI innings, Deepti’s strike rate sits at a modest 67.91. For someone who usually bats in the lower middle order, there’s a general sense that she hasn’t quite unlocked her full potential, despite being nearly a decade into her international career.She has struck at 77.74 since the start of 2022, but that’s still in the bottom half (35th) of the 57 batters to have scored at least 500 ODI runs in this period.Related

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Which is why eyebrows were raised when she was promoted to No. 6, ahead of Richa Ghosh and Amanjot Kaur, in the first ODI against England on Wednesday in Southampton. India were 127 for 4 in the 28th over, with the required rate already nudging six an over.Deepti responded with an unbeaten 64-ball 62, forging crucial partnerships with Jemimah Rodrigues (48 off 54) and Amanjot (20* off 14) to help seal a four-wicket win with 10 balls to spare.”Whatever matches I’ve played, I’ve batted in similar situations,” Deepti said at the post-match press conference. “I knew the calmer I am, composed I am… that was the turning point. The focus was on building a partnership with Jemimah. I knew if we worked on the partnership, we could take the game close.”Deepti turned the strike and kept milking runs along with Rodrigues, with the pair adding 90 for the fifth wicket off just 86 balls. Deepti had only hit two boundaries until her 32nd ball – when she gave Lauren Bell the charge and walloped a six over deep midwicket – but had made 29 off her first 31 deliveries with largely risk-free cricket.Deepti hit three fours and this one-handed six over midwicket•Getty Images”I was not nervous because I’ve played in these kinds of situations earlier,” Deepti said. “I knew if I play till the end with Jemi, we can take the game deep. I was confident that if I was there till the end, I could finish the game. I was focusing on that. If Jemi hadn’t got out we could’ve finished the game earlier. After that, Richa and Aman played well, finishing the game with two boundaries. Credit to her.”Deepti spoke of communicating well with Rodrigues during the partnership. One of the plans was to be prepared for Lauren Filer’s bristling pace and potential short-ball tactics. Filer, easily the quickest bowler in sight in the first ODI, extracted lift off the surface every time she hit hard lengths.The ball she bowled to dismiss Rodrigues in her second spell – her sixth over – didn’t come out of the blue. Rodrigues attempted a scoop behind the wicket but only managed a tickle to the keeper with Filer finding extra bounce with her short ball. At that stage, India still needed 45 off 51 with five wickets in hand.Filer continued to trouble the batters – Deepti got lucky on 53 when she got cramped for room and sent a top-edged pull flying to the boundary – but England couldn’t quite exert pressure from the other end. And Deepti’s pragmatism helped India ride the wobbles.”We knew she’ll have to bowl in the end, and we planned really well for that,” Deepti said of the tussle with Filer. “We knew she’ll bowl short balls. We were pretty ready. The fields she put behind the stumps, it was clear. We were clear of our plans.”The win marked India’s fourth straight ODI victory in England, building on from their 3-0 sweep in 2022. They are building momentum heading into the World Cup, which they will host from September 30, but Deepti isn’t looking that far ahead yet.”As a team we’ve done some really good things, in Sri Lanka [where India won the tri-series in April] and here also. The World Cup is a little too far. We’re not thinking about that. We’re just thinking one match at a time.”

With endurance and resilience, Mushfiqur Rahim scales the summit

Bangladesh’s most durable cricketer has finished 20 years in international cricket and joins the 100-Test club shortly

Mohammad Isam18-Nov-2025The fist clenched in glee. The cherubic smile. The hours and hours of training. The meticulous care invested in his batting every day. These are some images and qualities from a 20-year career that come to mind when you mention the name Mushfiqur Rahim.Through the good and the bad times, Mushfiqur has built himself into a Bangladesh legend, and is now on the cusp of becoming the first cricketer from his country to play a hundred Tests. Two decades of putting his head down, of running and batting and performing. As a measure of his pioneering presence, Bangladesh itself is only 25 years old as a Test nation and has played 155 Tests.When any long career approaches a major milestone, it calls for reflection. To last as long as Mushfiqur has in the tough terrain of Bangladesh cricket is an achievement in itself. It’s worth remembering that some of those he played alongside in his debut Test, at Lord’s in 2005, are currently administrators and coaches. One is an exiled political leader.Related

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Mushfiqur has gone from debuting as a teenager to becoming the country’s oldest Test cricketer. He is the longest-serving international cricketer currently active. And it feels like he might be among the last of a kind – one of a handful of cricketers from outside the Big Three to have played a hundred Tests, joining Angelo Mathews, Dimuth Karunaratne and Kraigg Brathwaite who achieved the feat in recent years.Together with Shakib Al Hasan, Mashrafe Mortaza, Tamim Iqbal and Mahmudullah, Mushfiqur is one of the modern pillars of Bangladesh cricket. He went to school with Shakib, is close friends with Tamim, brother-in-law to Mahmudullah, and was a favourite of Mashrafe’s back in the day.Those four are gone from the international scene, and there have definitely been moments in Mushfiqur’s career when many believed he too would leave, particularly when he hung up his white-ball kit earlier this year. Instead, he has taken the speculation as a slight, responding with runs and hours of hard work. Talk to the players today and it’s clear Mushfiqur is still very much on the “why” segment of the retirement spectrum and not the “why not”.

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Mushfiqur was earmarked as a future Bangladesh cricketer in his early days at the BKSP, Bangladesh’s top sports institute. Faruque Ahmed, the current BCB vice-president, was the chief selector who picked Mushfiqur, only an age-group cricketer at the time, in Bangladesh’s squad for their maiden tour of England, in 2005.Dav Whatmore, Bangladesh’s coach in those years, remembers that handing Mushfiqur a Test debut was a big call, given he was only 16 at the time and lacked experience.Mushfiqur has reason to be fond of Galle, where he made his first double-hundred, in 2013, and where, four years later, he made 85 and 34•AFP/Getty Images”I saw a very talented young keeper-batsman,” Whatmore says. “Very young. But he had obvious ability with the bat, and after he hit a century the game before the first Test, we decided to pick him knowing it would be a baptism of fire. The one thing I recall even at that tender young age is his clear-minded preparation. I knew he would have a long career.”The series was indeed a trial by fire, for the side as much as for Mushfiqur. They were routed, and led to questions from some about Bangladesh’s Full-Member status. Others believed that young cricketers like Mushfiqur were the way forward.Faruque championed Mushfiqur, picking the 19-year-old ahead of veteran Khaled Mashud for the 2007 World Cup. When he became the youngest debutant ever at Lord’s, it had piqued interest, but this step up effectively threw Mushfiqur into the big time. He was one of three batters to get half-centuries in Bangladesh’s iconic win against India in the tournament. That his 56 came from No. 3 also went a long way to calming fans who were up in arms about Mashud’s exclusion.It still took him a bit of time to become a consistent performer, made all the more difficult in a team not used to winning. But alongside Tamim and Shakib, he showed enough glimpses for the selectors to begin relying on youth. When a group of top Bangladesh cricketers signed for the rebel Indian Cricket League, it heaped more responsibility on Mushfiqur and his young team-mates.Soon after that, in 2008, Bangladesh toured South Africa. In the second Test, in Centurion, Mushfiqur gave a great account of his ability. Tamim remembers the knock, to this day, as one of his best.”He struck Dale Steyn for two sixes and Steyn was on fire in those days,” Tamim says. “Innings defeats were the norm for Bangladesh. We were touring South Africa, where we lost badly on the previous tour. Mushfiqur showed great character against one of the best bowling attacks in the world.”By then Jamie Siddons had succeeded Whatmore. Like his predecessor, Siddons saw in Mushfiqur a young batter with tremendous work ethic, but also someone who could improve. He worked on Mushfiqur’s game against extreme pace and bounce, particularly his pull and cut, and on improving his backlift.Make mine a double: Mushfiqur celebrates in the 2018 Mirpur Test against Zimbabwe, where he finished with 219 not out in the first innings to level the series 1-1•Raton Gomes/BCBStill, those first years were tough for Mushfiqur and he was yet to truly settle into the consistency for which he became well known.

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The BCB thrust Mushfiqur into the captaincy when he was 24. Bangladesh had appointed younger captains in Shakib Al Hasan and Mohammad Ashraful but Mushfiqur was still trying to establish himself in the Test side. Less than two years later, however, he broke new ground by becoming the first Bangladesh batter to score a Test double-hundred, against Sri Lanka in Galle in 2013.Mominul Haque, who made his Test debut for Bangladesh in that match, remembers the innings for the transformational effect it had on the team. “I think when he made that double, it took Bangladesh’s batting to the next level,” Mominul says. “I rate that innings as Mushfiq ‘s best knock in Test cricket. To score big runs against that Sri Lankan bowling attack, it allowed the rest of us to dream big. I remember thinking, now we can also score a century in overseas conditions.”Mushfiq made life easier in partnerships. I have personally experienced it. It is not easy to make your batting partner feel comfortable, but these are the things that very experienced cricketers do. What he does is, he talks to the batter about everything that he knows about the pitch, conditions and opposition. Only the masters of the game can do this.”The double-century was soon followed by Mushfiqur’s first Test win, against Zimbabwe in Harare, although it wasn’t a tour he quite enjoyed. After Bangladesh lost the ODI series, he resigned from the captaincy, only for the board to convince him to reverse the decision a few weeks later.Mushfiqur, who has outlasted his more celebrated team-mates, with Tamim Iqbal in 2019•Getty ImagesMushfiqur’s captaincy coincided with plenty of highs and lows for Bangladesh cricket, from 2011 to the end of 2017. They achieved their first Test wins against England and Australia, and Mushfiqur had his most productive year as a batter in the last year of that span: he scored 766 runs at 54.71, with two centuries – in Wellington and Hyderabad – and three fifties. Bangladesh also won their first Test in Sri Lanka that year.That was Mushfiqur’s first batting peak. Tamim believes it owed to Mushfiqur figuring out his best way of training and keeping faith with it. “When he started his international career, he was an okay batter for a number of years,” Tamim says. “He had a lot of technical issues. He probably wasn’t scoring enough runs in those days. But to be a successful cricketer, the most important thing is to understand your game, your strength, and how you are going to prepare. It can be very different to others, even more different than the most successful cricketer in your team.”Mushfiqur led the team to seven wins and captained for a third of his career, 34 Tests. He averaged 41.44 with the bat as captain, slightly higher than his career average, but interestingly did better after letting go of the captaincy, with seven of his 12 hundreds coming in that time.The other major decision in his Test career was giving up the keeper’s role in 2019. That tough call paid dividends, as seen in the improved rate at which he converted fifties to hundreds, and the rise in his batting average from 37 to 45.In the five years starting with 2016, Mushfiqur scored 1763 runs, including two double-hundreds, and given that the bulk of that period fell after his captaincy, it shows he thrived when freed from the pressure of leadership.

He’s had a similarly productive time since 2021, scoring a little under 2000 runs. This has been his busiest period as a Test cricketer; he retired from T20Is and ODIs in 2021 and 2024 respectively.Habibul Bashar, Mushfiqur’s first Test captain and a former Bangladesh selector for years, has seen Mushfiqur from up close. He believes that Mushfiqur’s passion and humility, coupled with his decision to give up wicketkeeping, have helped him in his latter years”I remember telling him about how Kumar Sangakkara gave up the gloves in Tests,” Bashar says. “I think initially he wasn’t comfortable, but then adjusted quite well. He could also bat in the top four or five. It is down to his passion at the end of the day.”Mominul, who with 74 matches sits below Mushfiqur on the table of most-capped Bangladesh Test players, has made Mushfiqur’s mantra of hard work his own. “I think the biggest lesson that you can take from him is his lifestyle,” he says. “You can have skills but you can only apply [them] as long as you have a disciplined lifestyle.”I have never seen him eat more than he needs. Those who want to play for Bangladesh for a long time, they must look at him.”Mushfiqur has touched many lives in his two decades in the international game. He inspired a generation as a teen prodigy. He broke through as a young performer at the 2007 World Cup in one of Bangladesh’s biggest campaigns, and his captaincy ushered in a strong period for the team. He has seen many eras of cricket come and go, and has withstood more than his share of criticism.With the latter phase of his career, he has set a template for Bangladesh cricketers to follow when it comes to having a second wind and prolonging their careers meaningfully. Joining the 100-Test club is just reward for a man who has run what must feel like the iron man triathlon, and lived to tell the tale.

Bareknuckle Baz-brawl produces Ashes all-nighter for the ages

ESPNcricinfo UK editor Andrew Miller buckles up to recount the big moments that kept England fans going through the small hours

Andrew Miller21-Nov-20254:01

Speed of England’s collapse gave them better bowling conditions

Ashes first-day dramas have been a staple of England’s winters for more years than most fans would care to count. But this latest opening gambit might just have taken all the biscuits, and every other snack needed to stay awake all night. Andrew Miller tries to fight sleep long enough to remember the madness he just watched…Full disclosure. I am writing this at 11.19am on [checks notes] Friday, November 21, which is, of course, the day that every England cricket fan has had in their calendar for months. But, unless you happen to be one of the 40,000-strong crew to have made the long journey down under – and well done you if you are – you’ll by now have realised that that date is completely wrong.Because, of course, for the purposes of Ashes nightowl action, everything in Australia actually happens on the day before it happens. This phenomenon gets me every time, just like the changing of the clocks (including – full, full disclosure – as recently as last month, when I set my sights on a 1am start for England’s ODI debacle in New Zealand, only to discover the 1am in question was the one that jumped backwards an hour at 1.59am).And so, in short, I am a borderline catatonic mess right now. My 2025-26 Ashes experience started at roughly 8pm on Thursday, November 20, when I said goodnight to my family, lay in bed for three fitful hours of non-sleep, then got up again early to pace around the living room, confuse the dog, watch the first hour of because TNT’s bolt-on coverage hadn’t factored in any sort of extended build-up, then settle in for the longest, wildest night of my sports-watching life.Related

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Australia on the ropes after frenetic 19-wicket opening day

Shots fired in battle for Ashes as England roll out heavy artillery

That’s quite the statement, I know. But, hell, I’ve been doing this Cricinfo ball-by-ball business for a fair old while now, and cocking my ear to Ashes first-night bedlam for significantly longer still. And even by the (almost universally) horrific standards of my previous experiences, the opening night of Bazball Down Under was a doozy.Here then, before I expire, is a barely coherent stream-of-consciousness intended to weave its way through my very personal Ashes first-day history before landing on a spectacle in which 19 wickets tumbled in 71.5 overs, or at a rate of one every 22.68 balls.My first Ashes first-night came way back in November 1994, in typically clichéd fashion: via , under the covers in the dead of night at school, with Michael Slater mashing Phil DeFreitas through the covers to trigger that knowing dread that has probably never fully left any England fan of a certain age.My first first-night in a professional capacity came eight years later in 2002, in a post-student hovel in Finsbury Park, where we collectively punched the ceiling upon Nasser Hussain’s correct call at the toss, only to sink into our sofas and tinnies and despair in equal measure after you-know-what call.My “job” back then was to watch the first session from home, jump in a cab to Shepherd’s Bush in the lunch break, grind through the pre-diluvian gears of Wisden.com’s formative internet commentary service, and bash out some words at the close before crashing out to rinse and repeat. They truly were the Golden Years…He did it again: Mitchell Starc struck in the first over to remove Zak Crawley•Getty ImagesFour years later still, in 2006, I’d made it to Australia for the first time, in the overflow press-box high in the gantries of the Gabbatoir, where I was actually too far away from either the action or a replay screen to tell for certain that Steve Harmison’s first ball had landed in the hands of, not first, but second slip. But I was close enough to feel that dread descend once more, across both the fans in the stands and more importantly the England team.Next on this indulgent whistlestop witter-tour, it was back to the Gabba to watch Andrew Strauss cloth his third ball to point and for Peter Siddle claim a birthday hat-trick. Then, on through various miserable iterations, it was back to Blighty during Covid, for Rory Burns’ spectacular first-ball faux-pas, which is memorable to me only because my wife romantically offered to stay up to midnight to share the occasion, then laughed uproariously, and headed straight to bed.Which brings us, not exactly directly, to November 21 (sort of 20), 2025, and a hotch-potch of already fading vignettes that might just be my eyelids drooping. I’ve got a fairly well-set routine for nights such as these. Lots of tea. Enough fruit to sedate a fruit-bat. As few carbs as possible (because they are heavy and send you to sleep) and tons of emergency chocolate biscuits because fruit is boring and sugar rushes are very useful if you need to sound exciting/excited at 5am.Well, that wasn’t exactly a problem on this night of nights. Although, it has to be said, that first-over wicket of Zak Crawley turned out, in my line of work, to be a strangely dislocated affair.It’s hardly the fault of TNT’s equally dislocated commentary team that their paymasters have chosen not to dispatch them on an actual Ashes tour. But – for the purposes of ball-by-ball text commentary – the audio cues of a properly embedded commentator who can actually see the full context for a moment of sporting drama is really rather crucial. When, instead, the moment is relayed by a slightly confused third party who sounds like he’s talking through a locked bathroom door, it does somewhat draw the sting. Apologies if I sounded flat in that remarkable moment. I was too busy trying to join my own dots to colour in the picture.

“England’s brutal, blunt-instrument bowling response was hard and fast, like a Tony Greig parody tribute, as Jofra Archer, then Gus Atkinson, then Mark Wood, then Brydon Carse, took it in turns to crank up the wheels and rattle the pads, lids and elbows of Australia’s line-up”

But, fear not, because the drama just kept on coming, and coming, and coming. And so, too, did the vital support network of an overnight cricket hack – the bellicose/surrender-monkey bleatings of my various and varied WhatsApp groups.These fall into three broad categories. ESPNcricinfo colleagues in Australia and elsewhere in the globe, exchanging match updates and expletives in equal measure, as well as more prosaic news about who is actually driving the site at any given moment. Next there are the friend groups, many of whom are former colleagues (certainly the ones who are conditioned to stay engaged with an Ashes Test all night, and with whom all exchanges are a variation on the word “brawling”), and finally, my Camel Cricket Club compadres who are, for the most part, defeatist Englishmen, trolling Kiwis, meme-addicted South Asians and off-duty first-responders, drowning in too many tequila shots in far too few overs.The chaos was real, on the pitch and in the ether. Starc was bowling left-arm swing from the Gods – unrelenting in his pace and carry, harassing the pads and outside edge of every man in his sights, simply by existing in that freakish slingy left-arm manner of his. But in between whiles, Ollie Pope was everything he’s not supposed to be, continuing his life-long Ian Bell impersonation by producing an innings every bit as good (and destined to be forgotten) as Bell’s first-day 76 at the Gabbatoir in 2010 – when his greatest contribution to England’s Ashes-winning cause was to curl his lip up at a post-match suggestion that England were cooked, and shoot back: “Of course not”. There and then, the Shermanator became an Ashes Panzerfaust.And then there was Harry Brook. Yeegads. I know Bazball is not everyone’s cup of tea, but the utter chutzpah of dancing down the track to Scott Boland’s second ball after tea, to smoke an inside-out six over extra cover. By now, it really didn’t matter that TNT were gargling in their bath-tub. The inner monologue was taking over for the purposes of bashing out the BBB action, fuelled by the paranoia and bravado of the nightowls pinging on my phone – not to mention the army of commentators on feedback. What we were witnessing was magnifique (until Brook’s limp glove down the leg-side, whereupon England pretty much opted to autocomplete their innings) but was it actually la guerre? I think, by the close of play, even the sceptics were having to accept that England have rewritten their own rules of Ashes combat, and don’t really give a monkey’s what anyone outside their dressing-room thinks.Ollie Pope was England’s surprising mainstay on a nervy first morning•Getty ImagesAnd so to the final act of a fevered night-sweat of an Ashes shift. England’s brutal, blunt-instrument bowling response. Hard and fast, like a Tony Greig parody tribute, as Jofra Archer, then Gus Atkinson, then Mark Wood, then Brydon Carse, took it in turns to crank up the wheels and rattle the pads, lids and elbows of an Australia line-up that barely knew its batting order two days out from the series and somehow ended up even more confused mid-match.It was relentless, it was magnificent, it made the guzzling of emergency chocolate so redundant that I forgot it was even in the fridge. And then, swaggering into the mix came the maker-of-things-to-happen Ben Stokes, channelling the best/worst of Ian Botham to burgle a six-over five-wicket haul cut from the purest, most eye-boggling vibes ever smuggled through Australia’s customs.Somehow, despite batting with a sense and responsibility that England couldn’t bring themselves to locate if they tried, Australia somehow managed to produce at least three of the five worst dismissals of the day – starting with Travis Head’s limp welly to mid-on and culminating in Starc’s heave through the line.And now, somehow, we’re all meant to park this now, shake off the caffeine/sugar/tequila and go again tonight? Preposterous sport.Postscript (and not a word of a lie): As if the night’s batting was not enough of a car-wreck already, just as I was finally preparing to flake out and get ready to go again I heard, from over my garden wall, the unmistakeable sound of a lorry striking the infamously low bridge near my house in East London that has been luring unsuspecting truckers to their doom for generations. If you don’t believe me, check TFL for Mildmay Line updates. It’s been a deeply weird night, and I’m not sure which part of me is pointing up anymore.

Ashes tracker: Labuschagne shines as Konstas stumbles

Labuschagne, Khawaja, Renshaw, Weatherald all make runs in Brisbane but NSW coach says selectors need to be wary of how tough the WACA pitch was for Konstas

Andrew McGlashan and Alex Malcolm08-Oct-2025

Queensland vs Tasmania

Marnus Labuschagne would no doubt have wanted the win for Queensland, but from a personal point of view the match could not have gone much better as he struck a fluent 160 (albeit given lives on 61 and 98) which pushed him closer to a Test recall. The selectors have been on record that they are keen to get Labuschagne back in the side, so they may not need much more convincing after this hundred followed his one-day century a couple of weeks ago. Where he bats, though, would likely remain a question.Related

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“I felt good out there,” Labuschagne said. “It felt like I was reading the conditions well. I took the game on at certain times. I feel like I’ve really stripped it back and my focus is just scoring runs – it’s not really too technical…just what I need out there to score runs.”There is a slight oddity in talking up a Labuschagne recall at the same time he lost his ODI spot. His returns in that format had also slipped since a strong run in 2023-24 but the benefit of not facing India is that he will now have two more Shield outings before the Test squad is selected. It might be best for all concerned to focus on Labuschagne the Test batter, at least for this season.On the flip side, Matt Renshaw threw out his early-season reminder with a robust hundred a couple of days before he was confirmed for a return to Australia’s white-ball set-up. It means he will miss at least one round of Shield and probably remains significantly back in the pecking order – for now.Meanwhile, Usman Khawaja, whose age and recent returns are in the spotlight although he has already been guaranteed his spot for Perth, made an encouraging start with a neat 69. After an early drop on the first day, he also held a couple of excellent catches on the fourth.That drop from Khawaja offered Jake Weatherald an early life on the opening day. Weatherald ended the match with twin half-centuries, a far-from-shabby return for someone certainly in the Ashes mix but perhaps a missed opportunity to bang the door down on a flat surface, especially when he flicked to midwicket in the second innings.One the bowling front, this game did not have many names in the way of immediate national significance but Michael Neser’s five wickets – and considerable workload – suggests he would be ready to go should the selectors need reinforcements. It will be interesting to watch whether his workload is managed over the next few weeks.Marcus Harris punches off the back foot•Getty Images

South Australia vs Victoria

All eyes in Adelaide were on Scott Boland, Marcus Harris, and to a lesser degree Nathan McSweeney and Campbell Kellaway. But 19-year-old Ollie Peake stole the show with a brilliant 70 not out in the fourth innings to guide Victoria home in a tricky chase. Peake won’t be considered for this Ashes series and Australia doesn’t need another middle-order player at the moment but it is not beyond the realms of possibility that he could push for the 2027 Ashes depending on how he progresses and where Australia’s batting is at.Harris showed why he is still in the selectors thinking as a possible Ashes opener with a patient 61 in the first innings batting in a new role at No.3. Entering at first drop for Victoria won’t preclude him from being considered as an opener based on McSweeney’s elevation from being South Australia’s No.3 to Test opener last summer. Harris will kick himself he didn’t make a bigger score in the first innings, cut short by a lazy piece of running and a sharp direct hit. He then nicked a good one from Jordan Buckingham from around the wicket early in the second innings.Boland was excellent in both innings despite picking up only three wickets. He bowled without luck at times and was shown immense respect by South Australia’s batters. He still had the skill to knock over Henry Hunt and Jake Lehmann on the second morning after both had made day one centuries. Boland’s second innings figures of 1 for 16 from 12 overs played a huge part in stifling South Australia’s push to set a bigger total for Victoria to chase. There’s a strong chance Boland could be rested from Victoria’s next match against New South Wales after a total load of 35 overs as CA manage him carefully in the lead-up to the Ashes.McSweeney had a game to forget coming back from a decent Australia A tour of India. Scores of 0 and 6 can happen to a No.3 but facing 21 and 23 balls across those two innings without being able to get off strike won’t help his case to push for Ashes selection. Kellaway showed signs in the second innings with a handy 40 that featured some good rotation given he only struck one boundary. But he is long way back in the queue of openers pushing for Ashes selection.Peter Handscomb issued a reminder of his class with a first innings century. He remains one of the best domestic batters year in year out but it is highly unlikely he will be considered for the Ashes even if injuries were to occur to Australia’s middle-order.Sam Konstas fell cheaply in his first Shield innings of the season•Getty Images

Western Australia vs New South Wales

Sam Konstas’ scores of 4 and 14 were the headline but New South Wales coach Greg Shipperd believes the difficulty of the WACA surface needs to be considered when judging against other scores around the country. Only one batter in the game passed 43, and that was NSW No.7 Will Salzmann, while highest score by a top four batter on either team was 36 and only three top four batters passed 20 across four innings. Shipperd said he had already spoken to the national selectors about the pitch.”They’re well aware of my thoughts around the particular wicket and just to be mindful of how tough it was out there,” Shipperd said post-match.”It didn’t do any of the top-order batters favours. The contest between the bat and ball was skewed in the bowlers’ favour and both bowling teams did their job.”It’s a pretty hard way for the batting group on both sides to start the season. I guess you look over to the eastern states and see runs galore being scored.”There was a memo that went out last year about finding that balance. It’s a delicate balance. This probably just lent slightly the wrong way and made it difficult for batters on both teams, particularly with the new ball.”Cameron Green celebrates a wicket in his first over•Getty ImagesCameron Green also found life tough with the bat, returning scores of 19 and 24, with his second innings cut short by a stunning return catch from Charlie Stobo. Green made a positive return to the bowling crease bowling four overs in the first innings and claiming a wicket. But he was unable to bowl any more as CA did not want him bowling on consecutive days and WA did not bat long enough in their first innings to allow for a full day’s rest in between his bowling stints.Nathan Lyon took a wicket in each innings on a WACA surface that also offered plenty of spin and bounce as well as sideways movement for the quicks. Corey Rocchiccioli took four wickets for the game to continue to build his case to be the Test side’s first reserve spinner behind Lyon in Australian conditions at least.Like Konstas, Ashes long shots Cameron Bancroft and Kurtis Patterson fell cheaply in both innings on the tricky batting track.