McMullen earns maiden call-up to Scotland squad for T20 World Cup; Wheal, Davey return

Ali Evans, Gavin Main, Adrian Neill, Chris McBridge and Oliver Hairs – all part of recent series against New Zealand – have been left out

ESPNcricinfo staff22-Sep-2022Allrounder Brandon McMullen has earned a maiden call-up to the Scotland side for the T20 World Cup scheduled in Australia next month. Brad Wheal and Josh Davey, the pace-bowling duo who weren’t part of the white-ball series against New Zealand in July, have been called back into the 15-member squad to be led by Richie Berrington.Pace bowlers Ali Evans, Gavin Main and Adrian Neill, and batters Chris McBridge and Oliver Hairs – who were all part of that home series – have been left out.According to a Cricket Scotland release, McMullen has been called up on the back of his impressive performances at the Regional series and A team matches with both bat and ball. Wheal, meanwhile, finished fifth on the top wicket-takers’ table at this season’s Vitality Blast with 22 wickets in 13 matches playing for champions Hampshire, after which he also played in the Hundred.ESPNcricinfo Ltd

Davey, who represented Somerset across formats this summer, finished with 15 wickets in 11 matches in the Blast. He also topped the wickets charts for Scotland in the T20 World Cup last year, finishing with nine wickets in five games, including 4 for 18 against PNG.The squad includes the experience of Berrington, George Munsey, Matt Cross and Calum MacLeod in the batting department, while the bowling line-up also features Mark Watt, Safyann Sharif and Hamza Tahir. Cross has been named vice-captain of the side.The release also mentioned that “forty players were considered for selection” after analysing the performances at men’s T20 Blitz cricket at Ayr and Clydesdale.Related

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“It was good to see other younger players put performances in under pressure, and I have no doubt their opportunities will come in the not-too-distant future,” head coach Shane Burger said. “We have selected 15 that we believe will make the desired impact we are looking for. For those players who are not going to the World Cup, we look forward to seeing them challenging for international honours in years to come.”The squad has a blend of youth and experience alongside locally based players and County representatives. The balance of the team and chemistry is crucial to contributing to performances at the World Cup. We believe we have a good mix of the above and have selected players that are in form and can perform under pressure.”The only T20Is Scotland have played since last year’s T20 World Cup – where they finished winless in Group Two after qualifying for the Super 12s – are the two matches against New Zealand in July. They are scheduled to play warm-up games against Netherlands and UAE ahead of their first-round matches in the upcoming tournament, where they are placed alongside West Indies, Ireland and Zimbabwe in Group B.Scotland will take on West Indies in their opening match in Hobart on October 17.Scotland squad: Richard Berrington (capt), George Munsey, Michael Leask, Brad Wheal, Chris Sole, Chris Greaves, Safyaan Sharif, Josh Davey, Matthew Cross (wk), Calum MacLeod, Hamza Tahir, Mark Watt, Brandon McMullen, Michael Jones, Craig Wallace

Buttler, spinners lead Thunder's rout of Hurricanes

Fawad Ahmed, Arjun Nair and Chris Green combined for figures of 12-0-61-6 to help Sydney Thunder defend 166

The Report by Alex Malcolm30-Dec-2017
Scorecard and ball-by-ball details
Arjun Nair took 2 for 17 from four overs•Getty Images

An electric innings from Jos Buttler and some sublime spin bowling from Fawad Ahmed, Arjun Nair and Chris Green saw Sydney Thunder destroy Hobart Hurricanes in Launceston.Buttler smashed four sixes and five fours in his innings of 67 from 41 balls to set up a solid total at University of Tasmania Stadium, a ground not previously used in men’s BBL cricket.Then the spinners bamboozled the Hurricanes top order to secure the Thunder’s second win of the tournament. The Hurricanes have remained winless but the schedule has done them no favours. They looked rusty after nine days between games and the Hurricanes and the Stars will be the only two teams to have played only two matches prior to the New Year.The Buttler did itButtler has an excellent T20 record. In 206 career matches, he averages 28.11 and strikes at 143.45 playing in a variety of roles for a number of different teams across both international and domestic cricket. But his last 12 T20s in the Bangladesh Premier League and the BBL have been extremely lean. He has averaged 9.5, striking at 110.69 with a highest score of 26.He delivered in spades in Launceston. A boundary in the first over settled him, then Kurtis Patterson’s hat-trick of boundaries in the second over allowed Buttler more time to adjust to a surface he had not previously seen before. After Patterson fell, Buttler and Shane Watson only scored at seven an over until the end of the 11th over. Then Buttler exploded, targeting debutant Thomas Rogers. He struck four sixes in an over. The second travelled 108 metres. The third came from a no-ball that was called for an above head-high bouncer. The ensuing free hit was hammered 110 metres onto the roof of the stand at midwicket. The run-rate had vaulted above nine an over by the end of the 13th before Buttler gave away his stumps to Clive Rose in the 14th and was bowled.ThunderstruckWatson kept rolling, striking two boundaries in the 15th over but the innings fell flat following a bizarre run-out. Watson and Callum Ferguson aren’t the nimblest between the wickets as both have a history of injury issues. Watson assumed a second run was on after Ferguson worked a ball into the leg- side but Ferguson didn’t run. Watson was left stranded, later admitting he didn’t hear the call of “no”. Rose, Jofra Archer and Tymal Mills bowled superbly to concede just 27 in the last four overs. They gave up just one boundary and it was when Archer parried a simple catch at long-on over the rope for six after Mills had forced a miscue from Ryan Gibson.Hurricanes’ solid startD’Arcy Short and Alex Doolan have produced three consecutive 50-run opening partnerships, including the two warm-up games and round one of the BBL. They looked on again when Short struck two fours and a six to three different parts of the ground in the second over of the innings from Gurinder Sandhu.The rate was slowed by wickets. Mitchell McClenaghan bowled Short through the gate and Ben McDermott also played a shot he would regret. He produced a wild slog off Sandhu with the score at 1 for 35 after 4.1. The top-edge was well caught by Buttler running back towards third man. George Bailey joined Doolan and the pair kept the required rate under nine through seven overs.Hurricanes in a spinThe Hurricanes lost 5 for 34 in the next eight overs of spin. Fawad and Nair took a wicket each in the eighth, ninth, 10th and 11th overs respectively to kill off the game. Ahmed, Nair and Chris Green delivered 22 dot balls in 48 deliveries and conceded just one boundary in total. Jofra Archer hit Green over long-on for six second ball having strangely walked out at No. 9.The Hurricanes decided to promote Cameron Boyce to No. 6, and bat Rose in front of Archer at No.8. Boyce averages 8.41 in T20 cricket at a strike rate of 104.12 with a highest score of 24 not out. Rose’s numbers are better (16.75 and 131.37) but they are not as good as Archer’s, who averages 18.87 and strikes at 143.80. Even the basic eye-test, frowned upon in sabermetrics, would reveal he is a far better batsman than Boyce and Rose. He proved it with an impressive, but ultimately fruitless, 25 not out from 16 balls as the Thunder cleaned up the tail.

Livingstone named for New Zealand as Ballance pays price

Mark Wood has earned a recall as Jake Ball and Tom Curran miss out from the Ashes squad

ESPNcricinfo staff10-Jan-2018
Liam Livingstone has been drafted into England’s squad for the two-Test tour of New Zealand in March and April, after Gary Ballance paid the price for England’s 4-0 thrashing in the Ashes – despite not featuring at any stage of the series.James Vince and Mark Stoneman have both been handed another chance after mediocre Ashes series, a move endorsed by coach Trevor Bayliss. The naming of the squad for New Zealand had been delayed by 24 hours due to Joe Root’s illness and the selectors resisted wholesale changes despite the 4-0 Ashes defeat.Livingstone, 24, made his international debut in the T20 series against South Africa last summer – and though he failed to impress with 16 runs in two innings, he has long been seen as one of the brightest young prospects in English cricket.He made 805 runs for Lancashire in the County Championship in 2017, including an impressive 224 against Warwickshire in September, and has earned a call-up ahead of the likes of Dan Lawrence, Joe Clarke or his county team-mate Haseeb Hameed, who was England’s find of the winter in India in 2016-17, but struggled to rediscover his best form after recovering from a broken hand.

England Test squad for New Zealand

Joe Root (Yorkshire), Moeen Ali (Worcestershire), James Anderson (Lancashire), Jonny Bairstow (Yorkshire), Stuart Broad (Nottinghamshire), Alastair Cook (Essex), Mason Crane (Hampshire), Ben Foakes (Surrey), Liam Livingstone (Lancashire), Dawid Malan (Middlesex), Craig Overton (Somerset), Ben Stokes (Durham), Mark Stoneman (Surrey), James Vince (Hampshire), Chris Woakes (Warwickshire), Mark Wood (Durham)

“Liam has been a player that we have been impressed with for quite some time, having performed well in the county system with Lancashire and over the past couple of years with the England Lions,” said James Whitaker, the national selector.”He is a very talented and tough cricketer who has the ideal qualities and character to be successful in the Test arena.”During the recent Lions tour of Australia, he was a standout performer and showed a lot of maturity in his attitude and put in some strong performances. We are particularly impressed with the way he bats against spin and is equally adept against the seamers. Liam is also highly regarded at his county Lancashire and will captain the side in the Specsavers County Championship during the 2018 campaign.”The other notable inclusion is Durham’s fast bowler, Mark Wood, who flirted with a recall ahead of the Perth Test in December after England’s lack of out-of-out pace had been exposed in the first two Tests. In the end he was not deemed sufficiently match-fit to be risked in a Test match, despite having impressed for England Lions on their camp in Queensland, but now he’s back in the squad in place of Jake Ball, after recovering from the ankle problems that undermined his Test comeback against South Africa last summer.”After a frustrating period with injuries, Mark is now back to full fitness and is looking forward to being part of our Test plans, said Whitaker. “He will play a significant part in our forthcoming ODI tour of Australia and we will be paying close attention to his efforts over the next few weeks.”Ben Stokes is included, though his involvement remains subject to any relevant legal or disciplinary developments in relation to the incident in Bristol in September. Should the ECB Board receive formal confirmation that Stokes has either been charged or that he will face no charges, they would convene within 48 hours to make a decision on his availability for the team at that stage.In addition to Ballance and Ball, the Surrey seamer Tom Curran also misses out from the squad that completed the Ashes.”All three players (Gary Ballance, Jake Ball, Tom Curran) have worked hard on the recent Ashes tour,” said Whitaker. “Unfortunately, they miss out on selection for New Zealand. All three will return to county cricket and will be looking to start the season well with a view to staking their claim to get back into selection reckoning. They are talented players and I am sure their time will come again.”

Simmons puts faith in struggling West Indies batters, adds voice for better pitches

The coach is hopeful of surfaces more conducive to run-scoring against India in Trinidad

Deivarayan Muthu21-Jul-20222:14

Phil Simmons: We need to win for the Caribbean people

West Indies’ head coach Phil Simmons has said that batting out 50 overs is their top priority as they rebuild for next year’s ODI World Cup. Since the 2019 World Cup, West Indies have played out 50 overs just six times in 39 innings, and have lost nine of their 13 ODI series since that tournament, including a series defeat against Ireland at home earlier this year.”The main thing is how we bat our 50 overs…we have to bat 50 overs and put our innings together and partnerships together,” Simmons said two days out of the ODI series opener against India in Port-of-Spain. “Somebody has to be looking to score a hundred and hold the team together. Batting-wise that is it.”Simmons, however, isn’t overly concerned by the bowling attack, which couldn’t bowl out Bangladesh once in the most recent three-match ODI series in Guyana, and the fielding.”The bowling and the fielding has been improving daily,” he said. “We rank ourselves very highly on the fielding. The bowling, we had couple of games on those wickets where people might say we should’ve gotten more wickets but the wicket got better every time we fielded because they had put out the second roller on it and it had dried out from earlier in the day.Related

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“So, the bowlers have been doing well and we have to continue restricting and getting wickets – that’s the only way we can keep totals low and continue to win games.”Despite the repeated batting failures, Simmons showed faith in the current group and put down some of their struggles against Bangladesh earlier this month to the subcontinent-style spin-friendly pitches at the Providence. Captain Nicholas Pooran was also critical of the surfaces after West Indies were swept 3-0 by Bangladesh.”I can’t look past the batters here yet,” Simmons said. “I think you judge people on good wickets. We had good performances in Netherlands and good performances in Pakistan. You come [home] and you get indifferent wickets where guys have to fight for runs and we agree that we should’ve fought a little harder, but I can’t come down [on them]. Let’s see what happens. These wickets [at Queen’s Park Oval] look really good and let’s see how they play and we can judge them from this.”Simmons expects a better batting performance from West Indies on what he believes will be a truer pitch in Port-of-Spain. Simmons said that he has already seen signs of improvement from the batters during West Indies’ two training sessions at the Queen’s Park Oval so far. The pitch for the game, however, could still be a bit of an unknown quantity as the venue has not hosted an international game since August 2019.Phil Simmons wants to hold judgement on West Indies’ batting line-up•AFP/Getty Images

“The first difference is that the surface here [in Port-of-Spain] looks like some work has been put into it,” Simmons said. “It has been prepared and it looks good. That is all you can go to…they are true wickets that we’re going to play these three games on and it looked really good the last couple of days we’ve been there, so [we will] wait and see how they play on Friday.”You expect a better batting performance. I think we don’t really want to make any excuses and in the last game we showed what we should’ve shown in the first two games…I’m not hiding the fact that they were bad cricket wickets on the whole, but I expect different here. The wicket has looked good and yes it [India] is a stronger bowling team but we expect a better batting performance.”Simmons also called for better-prepared pitches across the region if West Indies are to produce quality batters and bowlers in the future. He echoed former captain Kieron Pollard’s comments from last year, when he termed the Barbados pitches “absolutely ridiculous”.”You have to let them [groundstaff across the Caribbean] know [about the sub-standard pitches],” Simmons said. “It’s not nice, it’s something that we’ve to work on throughout the Caribbean because the better wickets we get for our young players to grow up on, the better batsmen we get, the better fast bowlers and spinners we get. So, yes, it’s a conversation we have all the time.”Allrounder Keemo Paul didn’t bowl in the third ODI against Bangladesh last week after sustaining a hamstring injury. Paul had suffered multiple injuries in the last couple of years and around that point he even doubted whether he would return to international cricket.Simmons was pleased with Paul’s rehab although he said that the decision on his potential inclusion would only be taken on the eve of the first match against India.”He has looked really well,” Simmons said. “He’s been going through his paces with the physio and the S&C [strength & conditioning coach] in the last couple of days we’ve been here. He looked really well today, but we can only make a decision tomorrow when we see again if he’s ready for the game, but he has progressed really well.”

Matt Parkinson retained in England squad for Trent Bridge with Jack Leach doubtful

Legspinner took 1 for 47 on debut at Lord’s as Leach’s concussion replacement

Matt Roller05-Jun-2022Matt Parkinson has been retained in England’s 14-man squad for the second Test against New Zealand, starting at Trent Bridge on Friday, with Jack Leach a doubt after suffering a concussion in the first session of the first Test at Lord’s.Parkinson took 1 for 47 from his 15.3 overs in New Zealand’s second innings after driving down to London from Manchester at short notice on Thursday as a concussion replacement for Leach, who had landed awkwardly while diving over the boundary rope in the sixth over of the match.Leach stayed with the squad at Lord’s this week but is not expected to return to training before Thursday – the day before the second Test – in line with the ECB’s return-to-play guidelines after concussions. He has suffered concussion at least twice before in his professional career and is a major doubt, though he has been included in the squad.As a result, Parkinson has been added to an otherwise-unchanged squad, which sees Harry Brook and Craig Overton retained after missing out on selection in the first Test.Related

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Parkinson’s figures were unremarkable at Lord’s but his contribution was underlined by Ajaz Patel’s match return of 0 for 22 from two overs in conditions that were not conducive to spin bowling. Parkinson did not bowl a maiden but conceded a respectable 3.03 runs per over and had Tim Southee caught at slip with a trademark full, flighted legbreak.”The way that Parky’s Test career has gone, following the team round every tour and not getting an opportunity, that pretty much sums up how he was going to get his chance: Leachy gets concussion and he finds himself driving down to play,” Ben Stokes, England’s captain, said. “But when it came to bringing Parky on, his role as the legspinner is to come on and change the game, not to hold the game.”I said, ‘just get the field that you’re comfortable with and look to take wickets with every ball that you bowl’. Yesterday, bringing him on at the end was because I just felt that Tim [Southee] hits quick bowling really well and that’s Parky’s niche: he knows how to bowl at people when they’re trying to come hard, because of his T20 bowling.”It was just a great opportunity to get him into the game and it was good to see him get his first Test wicket as well. He’s a really popular guy among the group. He’s been on a lot of tours with us, we all know him really well, and everybody was very excited to see him play – albeit in unfortunate circumstances.”The ECB said on Monday that Brook and Parkinson would both be made available for T20 fixtures at the start of the week: Brook for Yorkshire against Nottinghamshire on Monday night, Parkinson for Lancashire against Leicestershire on Tuesday.England squad for second Test: Alex Lees, Zak Crawley, Ollie Pope, Joe Root, Jonny Bairstow, Ben Stokes (capt), Ben Foakes (wk), Matthew Potts, Stuart Broad, James Anderson, Jack Leach, Matt Parkinson, Craig Overton, Harry Brook

Russell Domingo: 'When we have a bad session, we have a really bad session'

Bowling unit a positive, but Bangladesh coach wants batters to find ways to avoid collapses

Mohammad Isam14-May-2022Bangladesh are looking for ways to get out of tight spots in Test cricket, something that hurt them repeatedly in South Africa last month. But how? Russell Domingo believes the batters must be more focused when batting in poor light, and be more mindful of conditions. He also wants the team to be ruthless, and kill off games, as Kyle Mayers had done so memorably last year in Chattogram, where the first Bangladesh vs Sri Lanka Test will be played from Sunday.”When we have a bad session, we have a really bad session,” Domingo said. “If we lose one or two wickets, we can’t lose five. It is something we are trying to address all the time. We are trying to stay calm in the dressing room, so that the batsmen stop the rot.Related

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“Against Pakistan, we were 200 ahead and then we lost wickets. Against the West Indies, we probably should have won the [Chattogram] Test when they chased down 395. We won the Test in New Zealand. We played really well in the first four days in the Durban Test. The challenge is to sustain that in the second Test.”I definitely think we have the ability to beat any side if we play really well for the full five days. Not for four days.”Domingo pointed out that top-order batters Najmul Hossain Shanto, Mahmudul Hasan Joy and captain Mominul Haque had pretty much downed the shutters during the Durban Test, expecting the umpires to call off play in the failing light. The better approach, he explained, would have been to assume play would go on.”Two years ago, we wouldn’t have played under those conditions with the light being that dark. But with Test cricket wanting to play as much as you can, we have to be willing to face that,” Domingo said. “I think sometimes you are thinking that you will come off the next over. You have to expect to play the entire day because of lights coming on and umpires keeping you on the field for as long as possible. That’s a big change in mindset.”You can’t just be playing to get to the end of the over. You have to play as if you are playing till the close of play. We need to make that mental shift. You have to keep looking to score, you can’t keep blocking out those last overs. You are thinking it is three overs, but it might be 16 overs. You find yourself under pressure.”Maybe we did a bit of that in the Durban Test when Shanto was batting with Joy and Mominul. They stopped playing, and we lost a few wickets. We have to play in dark conditions because stadiums have lights, and laws of the game are changing.”As for Mominul, he wanted the team to learn the lessons from the South Africa series, but didn’t want to spend too much time thinking about the results.”Batters tend to overcome what they did in the previous series. We are also thinking along similar lines but we don’t want to spend too much time thinking about the previous series,” he said. “Conditions are also different, so it is important how we can adjust here. I think it’s important how we use lessons from the previous series.”Shakib Al Hasan’s return is good news for Bangladesh•AFP/Getty Images

As for more micro elements, Domingo wanted the batters to rotate the strike more often and not wait for boundary balls. “I think the important thing is to try to get singles to get off strike,” he said. “Whether that means we are using the paddle, using your feet or going deep in the crease. Maybe we are just blocking and looking for the four ball a bit much.”Domingo, however, was hopeful of the bowling attack continuing its progress. Bangladesh are without Taskin Ahmed and Mehidy Hasan Miraz, but the good news is the return of Shakib Al Hasan, though likely at limited capacity.”I told the bowlers this morning that we got 36 wickets in two Tests in South Africa. I don’t think Bangladesh has got that many wickets [in an overseas series in the past],” he said. “We are confident that we can take 20 wickets in the Test. But we need to have five bowling options. We have been short in that particular department when Shakib doesn’t play. Someone who can bowl those 12-13 overs a day, which is so important.”Shoriful Islam was likely to slot in, while one of Nayeem Hasan and Mosaddek Hossain should play too. “They had a big contribution in our win in New Zealand. We will miss them here definitely,” Mominul said about the missing players. “One of them [Mehidy] has developed into an allrounder too. They were quite settled in the side. But it is an opportunity for those who replace them, so that they too can say that they deserve the spot.”

Our women's team didn't get 'fair chance' to qualify for World Cup – Thailand board president

The ICC will discuss facilitating ODI status for certain Associates during its meetings in Dubai that start on Thursday

Tristan Lavalette06-Apr-2022With their Women’s World Cup dreams dashed after the qualifying tournament in Zimbabwe in November was abandoned midway because of the newly detected Omicron variant, dejected Thailand players cried.Their batter Natthakan Chantham shared the pain through a social media post after the team was unable to progress to the 2022 Women’s World Cup. The reason behind not qualifying was Thailand not having ODI status even though they had beaten Full Members Zimbabwe and Bangladesh before the qualifying event was aborted.”The players were so disappointed,” Cricket Association of Thailand president Ravi Sehgal told ESPNcricinfo. “We should have been given a fair chance to qualify. We couldn’t qualify for the World Cup because we don’t have an ODI ranking as we have never had ODI status.”We have worked very hard to get our standard to this point with entirely ethnic Thai players. But we still need help.”Sehgal petitioned the ICC and board directors in December with an impassioned plea for Thailand to be granted ODI status. He didn’t get his wish but the issue is broadly set to be discussed during ICC meetings that start in Dubai on Thursday.The ICC is looking at facilitating ODI status for certain Associates wanting to pursue the 50-over format and provide them with additional funding, while re-examining World Cup qualification pathways for Associates. Currently, being a Full Member or qualifying for the ICC Women’s Championship is the only way to get ODI status.Last year the governing body awarded Test and ODI status for women’s teams of Full Members, but Thailand don’t have that because of the stunted growth of their men’s team (although both Afghanistan’s men’s and women’s team were given Full Member status despite there not being a functional Afghanistan Women team as such).”Our men’s development isn’t at the mark of our women’s, so we have focused on women who have done exceptionally well,” Sehgal said. “The women’s team will be more confident with more international matches, especially if they have opportunities to regularly play against the top ten countries.”Additionally, there was also brief confusion over which matches had ODI status. In September 2018, the ICC said for the purposes of simplification, all matches in tournaments – such as World Cup qualifiers – where some teams have ODI status and some don’t will be considered ODIs.Thailand and USA celebrated their ODI status during those qualifiers only for it to emerge later the qualifier matches that involved a non-ODI-status team were to be categorised as “other one-dayers”.”This issue is important because Associates who deserve ODI status should have it and I think in principle it should have widespread support,” said Sumod Damodar, who is an Associate Member representative on the Chief Executives’ Committee. “What happened to Thailand was disappointing. Did Thailand merit better treatment? Yes. They beat two Full Members. They should at least be given special dispensation to get ODI status.”Thailand, who memorably lit up the 2020 Women’s T20 World Cup, were at the top of Pool B of the qualifiers when the event was called off as the Omicron variant spread through southern Africa leading to border closures and travel restrictions.With the tournament unable to be rescheduled, the three highest-ranked teams in the ODI rankings progressed to the World Cup and the next two got a place in an expanded ten-team Women’s Championship.

Without ODI status, Thailand missed out on both. Qualifying for the Women’s Championship would have guaranteed more matches and more funding; instead, Thailand have not played since and aren’t scheduled to return to the field until the Asian Games in September.”We receive only a little bit of government funding,” Sehgal said. “Our competitions are funded by local governments. We are low on local priority because there is little commercial value for cricket in Thailand.”But we are now playing cricket in 23 of 70 provinces in Thailand. We are maybe the only country in the Associate world without a foreign player in our team and it started from scratch 12 years ago.”Thailand, whose women’s team is ranked tenth in T20I rankings, has become a rousing symbol of genuine growth beyond the cricket heartland although concerns remain of their momentum being eroded without consistent fixtures and funding.”Thailand is a great story for every Associate member and they provide an inspiration, especially for countries like Indonesia, Brazil and Germany who are growing,” Aminul Islam, the former Bangladesh captain who is now the ICC’s development manager for the Asia region, said. “They have had a good model, such as consistency of coaches and development programs, so the pillars are there for sustainable success.”Thailand is proof that cricket is growing beyond British colonies and they are building a cricket culture. But they need to play more matches.”While it is unclear how things will play out during upcoming meetings in Dubai, and when coveted ODI status might become attainable, Thailand will turn their attention to qualifying for the 2023 Women’s T20 World Cup.”We will do what we can to keep going and get better through our own means,” Sehgal said. “We can’t stop this momentum now.”

Four wickets to Hardie puts WA one step closer to hosting Shield final

Victoria routed for 114, with Hardie claiming 4 for 24, before Sam Whiteman’s 63 put WA infront as they seek to host their first Shield final in 24 years

AAP and ESPNCricinfo staff23-Mar-2022Victoria’s push to host next week’s Sheffield Shield final hit a major hurdle as Western Australia’s seam attack, led by career-best figures from Aaron Hardie, made light work of the competition’s in-form batting line-up at the WACA.Victoria could only muster 114 after being asked to bat first, while WA raced to 2-119 by the close of day one.Sam Whiteman led the way with a boundary-laden 63 off just 85 balls, while fellow opener Cameron Bancroft was the second wicket to fall on 30 with the scores level.Shaun Marsh remains unbeaten on 11, with nightwatchman Matthew Kelly on 4.But it wasn’t all bad news for the ladder-leading Vics, with the lack of bonus points earned at the matches in Adelaide and Hobart meaning the Vics are effectively assured of a spot in next week’s decider.Western Australia are already halfway towards the victory they need to both reach and host the Shield final thanks to some high-quality seam bowling.Hardie led the way with a career-best 4-24, knocking over a host of big names in the process.Hardie skittled last week’s centurion Travis Dean (3), Shield top-scorer Peter Handscomb (1), the in-form Nic Maddinson (4) as well as Jake Fraser-McGurk (4) during a dream first session.Opener Will Pucovski looked good in his latest comeback from another high-profile concussion but, having done the hard work, the youngster was caught behind wafting at a loose leg-side delivery from Kelly for 22.Kelly (2-27) returned to end the Vics’ biggest partnership – 47 between Matt Short (43) and Sam Harper (18). But Harper’s dismissal kick-started a tail-end collapse as the Vics lost 5-23 to end their innings after just 43.5 overs.Debutants lined up for each team with Victoria fielding medium-pacer Cam McClure and Western Australia including 17-year-old prodigy Teague Wyllie.

Jack Leach, Saqib Mahmood find tenth-wicket fight to halt West Indies rampage

Familiar failings undermine England top order before tail comes to the rescue in fine style

Andrew Miller24-Mar-2022Close England 204 (Mahmood 49, Leach 41*, Seales 3-40) vs West IndiesIf variety is the spice of the Spice Island, then the pitch at St George’s served up a two-course taster on the first day in Grenada. After ten days of often enervating attrition in Antigua and Barbados, the façade of English batting competence crumbled at the first sign of heat from a pumped-up West Indies seam attack, before a mighty final-session rescue act from England’s tenth-wicket pair dropped a sizeable hint that the truest mischief in the surface had already been and gone.And by the close, who could rightly say where the balance of the series truly lay? In slumping to a nadir of 67 for 7 in the hour after lunch – a passage of play that included three key wickets for no runs in ten balls, and six consecutive single-figure scores from Nos. 2 to 7 – England seemed hell-bent on resetting their very own red-ball reset. After the earnest insistences from Joe Root and Paul Collingwood that lessons had been learned and progress had been made since the all-too-recent misery of the Ashes, the hyper-implausible figure of Kyle Mayers begged to differ, as his startling morning figures of 5-5-0-2 instigated a collapse that could have come straight out of Scott Boland’s playbook.But then, out of the wreckage strode the batting saviours of Jack Leach – still as diffident as ever, even with his contrasting heroics at Headingley and Lord’s to serve as cult-status proof of his unlikely prowess – and England’s newest recruit Saqib Mahmood, who fell to the day’s final ball for an agonising 49, the highest score of his professional career. With Leach left high and dry on 41 not out, Nos. 10 and 11 had top-scored in a Test innings for the first time since 1885, when Australia’s Tom Garrett and Edwin Evans had made 51 not out and 33 not out respectively, in what turned out to be a thrilling six-run win against England.Related

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Only time will tell whether this stand will be as critical, but together Leach and Mahmood sapped the resolve of an all-too-easily deflated West Indies attack, whose collective legs were weary after the exhaustions of the first two Tests, and whose adrenaline bonked all too soon after the fall of Chris Woakes to the second ball after tea – at which point, with England in tatters at 114 for 9, their opponents seemed mentally to check out and put their pads on in anticipation of what promised to be the decisive innings of the series. They were still waiting, 90 runs and more than 46 overs later.Nevertheless, the final analysis of England’s innings revealed two men with scores in the 40s, and next to nothing else – and so on balance, West Indies’ decision to bowl first remained amply justified, even in a topsy-turvy fashion.From the outset it had been clear that a cracked and grassy surface with more than a hint of moisture underneath would be a prime bowl-first deck. However, when Kraigg Brathwaite unleashed an apparent four-pronged seam attack, following the decision to reinforce their batting at the expense of the spinner, Veerasammy Permaul, few could have expected it would be that extra batter, Mayers, who would prove to be the morning’s most penetrative option.For the first 40 minutes of the day, England’s openers Alex Lees and Zak Crawley seemed just about to have the measure of conditions that were closer to Chester-le-Street and Canterbury than they had faced all winter, as they withstood a torrid but occasionally over-eager burst from Jayden Seales in particular, to inch along to 23 for 0.But then West Indies clocked that less might well be more on a surface offering purchase for those who were willing to grip the ball on the track in the manner of an old-fashioned English seamer. And so Mayers, with his Darren Stevens-esque medium-paced wobblers, was tossed the ball in advance of West Indies’ fastest option, Alzarri Joseph. And from that moment on, it was a different dynamic.Kyle Mayers grabbed two early wickets for West Indies•Associated Press

Crawley, a centurion in Antigua, quickly lost patience with Mayers’ impertinence in the channel outside off. Having made his discipline on the drive such a feature of that apparent breakthrough innings, it was a familiar failing that sent him on his way for 7 as he flung his hands through a cunningly bowled legcutter, and spooned a simple chance to Brathwaite in the covers.Enter Root, with a hundred in each of the first two Tests of the series, but reunited with a situation more akin to England’s collapse to 48 for 4 on the first morning of the series in Antigua. And Mayers never offered him a chance to settle. His fourth ball hit the seam and wobbled wildly round Root’s outside edge; five balls later, Mayers scrambled that same seam, and kissed the edge of a defensive push down the line to have Root caught behind for a nine-ball duck.Lees’ introduction to the Test team has now featured a new highest score in four of his five innings, which must count as progress of sorts. He played a compact holding role throughout the morning session, but before England’s position could be claimed to have improved, they were three-down for 46 at lunch. Dan Lawrence – another player who seemed to have made visible strides in the first two Tests – had no answer as Seales returned with his discipline reframed. Despite burning a review after been pinned on the knee-roll by a nipbacker, he was sent on his way for 8 from 31 balls.In Antigua, England’s pre-lunch struggles had proven to be their nadir; here, however, they was merely the prelude. Four overs after the break, Ben Stokes – his blood pumping after a restorative century in Barbados – tried to take on Joseph’s short ball, and shovelled a spliced pull straight back into the bowler’s lap for 2 (53 for 4).Five balls and no runs later, Lees’ vigil was ended in uncompromising fashion by a pumped-up Roach, who was adamant that he’d found the edge two balls earlier, but when Brathwaite declined to waste his final review, he merely bombed the edge from round the wicket once more, and this time there was no doubt as Joshua da Silva sent him on his way for 31 (53 for 5).And then, as if it prove that the events of the previous fortnight had been a fever-dream, Jonny Bairstow capped England’s dramatic reversion to the mean with their third wicket for no runs in the space of 10 balls. Joseph – easily the quickest bowler on either side in the absence of Mark Wood – bent his back on another off-stump lifter, and Bairstow nicked off to da Silva for the 15th duck of his Test career, and his fifth since the start of 2021.From 53 for 6, it was now a familiar race to the bottom for England’s lower order. Ben Foakes was duly pinned on the crease as Seales ripped a bail-trimmer through his defences for 7, at which point England’s run of scores – +31 708207 – read like they were planning an international call to the Netherlands to fill the dead playing time on the final two days of this Test (though hopefully not for a T20I, to judge by past experience).Saqib Mahmood produced unexpected resistance from No. 11•Getty Images

At least Chris Woakes and Craig Overton broke the run of single-digit scores, not that this had been their original plan for first-day heroics, following their unlikely (and some might say, unwarranted) reprieves in England’s seam attack. But Roach prised them apart after an eighth-wicket stand of 23 – at the time, England’s joint-best of the innings – as he leapt wide on the crease to spear an outstanding nip-backer into the top of off stump (90 for 8).Woakes held the line well for the remainder of the session – during which time, in the absence of a regular spinner, Brathwaite even turned to Nkrumah Bonner and Jermaine Blackwood for an over apiece of speculative moon-balls. It seemed he had merely been stalling for time, especially when Woakes drove loosely at his second ball after the break to be bowled by Seales for 25. But it didn’t quite turn out like that.At first it was simply a matter of holding up an end – and few batters do that better than Leach, as shown by that epic 1 not out alongside Stokes three years ago. But as their stand extended, and both men’s eyes got in, a late-evening counterattack was the order of the day. Mayers, brought back in the hope of more magic, was slapped into the stands by Mahmood, while Leach’s love of a length ball became more and more apparent as he brought his favourite cover-drive out of mothballs.The new ball came and went, with ample swing but no major threat, but Blackwood’s return for the day’s final over proved a passion-killer for Mahmood, as he thwacked a fierce drive through the line to move to the brink of a memorable fifty, only to get too greedy to his very next ball, and under-edge a wild hoick into his own stumps. Nevertheless, he had given his team a chance – and his A game is still to come on what promises to be a pivotal second day.

Ben Stokes' absence adds to England's batting concerns for Trevor Bayliss

The England coach admitted it was taking longer than he hoped to form a consistent top order but hoped victory in a tight contest would breed confidence

George Dobell05-Aug-2018England coach Trevor Bayliss admitted the team are “under no illusions” about the improvements they will have to make if they are to retain a lead in the Test series against India.England took a 1-0 lead at Edgbaston, but not without some nervous moments. As well as batting collapses in both innings – they subsided from 216 for 3 to 287 all out in their first innings and were 87 for 7 in their second before Sam Curran’s intervention – England’s slip fielding continued to cause concern with both Alastair Cook and Dawid Malan, who has been omitted for the second Test, putting down relatively easy chances by Test standards.And, to complicate matters further, England are likely to be without Ben Stokes at Lord’s. The man who produced the definitive performance on the final day of the match, taking the key wicket of Virat Kohli and claiming 4 for 40, is due to stand trial in Bristol from Monday and, unless there is an adjournment, will miss the second Test.That left Bayliss urging his squad to “take up the slack” left by Stokes’ absence but hoping that the confidence gained by a hard-fought win will boost his side.

Bayliss adds voice for worldwide use of Duke balls

Trevor Bayliss has become the latest figure to suggest the Duke’s ball should be adopted in Test cricket around the world.
Following R Ashwin’s assertion that the Duke’s ball was the best available, Bayliss joined the likes of former Australia batsman Ed Cowan in suggesting its use provided a better balance between bat and ball in ensuring bowlers retained some weapon throughout the majority of the game.
“It would be nice [if all Test cricket was played with a Duke’s ball],” Bayliss said. “It means you would get a bit of sideways movement [more often].
“I’m a fan of Test cricket and you watch these lower-scoring games and they do, most of the time, give a good Test match for the fans. If you’re a good enough batsman, you’ll score runs. If you’re a good enough bowler, you’ll take wickets. It’s a good contest.”

“I’d be lying if I said our batting wasn’t a concern,” Bayliss said. “It always has been. We’re losing plenty of wickets in quick succession. It will be difficult without Stokes. It means that someone else has got to take up the slack. These guys are under no illusions we’ve got things to work on batting-wise and catching-wise.”It’s been that way for a while. We’ve got things to work on and it’s taken a little longer than everyone would have hoped but it’s always good to win because it does get down to confidence. Hopefully winning this one and having that confidence will be a good thing.”Bayliss did feel there was some mitigation for England’s performance with the bat at Edgbaston and that they deserved some credit for their performance with the ball.”At Edgbaston, the batting has to be taken in context,” Bayliss said. “Throughout the game there were wickets falling left, right and centre. All the batters were in trouble, even Virat Kohli, who I don’t think was all that comfortable early on. It was difficult to bat, probably more difficult than it looked from outside.”And I thought we bowled pretty well in this game. India are a very good team. But we’re very much in the hunt here. When the ball is moving, we’ve shown that a few of their guys struggle against the moving ball. I’m sure that they’ll be going away working out how they can play it as we’re going working on how to play the offspin.”Bayliss also defended England’s slip catching, suggesting the best fielders were already in the cordon. But, after accepting that Malan had “tied his shoes on for his hands” at Edgbaston, he said Joe Root was not as reliable in the slips as was sometimes presumed and that Stokes was reluctant to field there. Instead, he suggested Jos Buttler could be the man to replace Malan.”We’ve got our best slippers in the cordon at the moment,” Bayliss said. “That’s why Joe Root is not in there. I know Stokesy will get brought up but he’s a very reluctant slipper. And he can’t be in 10 places unfortunately.”It is just a confidence thing. It’s just that bit of anxiety or stiffening of hands as it comes along. We’re doing plenty of work on it. It’s just disappointing, more so for them than anyone else.”Buttler’s only just entered the team and he’s seems to be going pretty well there. I think you’ll see him in and around there a lot more often going forward. Keaton Jennings looks like he moves pretty well in there also.”

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