Rogers leads Middlesex fight

England Test captain Andrew Strauss failed again with the bat, leaving Chris Rogers fighting almost single-handedly to save Middlesex from following on against Gloucestershire

29-Jun-2011
ScorecardEngland Test captain Andrew Strauss failed again with the bat, leaving Chris Rogers fighting almost single-handedly to save Middlesex from following on in their County Championship Second Division match against Gloucestershire at Uxbridge. Rogers, capped once by Australia, hit an unbeaten 125 as Middlesex, replying to Gloucestershire’s imposing 459 for 9 declared, struggled to 283 for 7 – still 27 runs away from making the visitors bat again.Strauss, who has only one more game – a guest appearance for Somerset in next week’s tour match – to rediscover his form before the Test series against India starts, had to wait until an hour before lunch on the third day to get to the crease. He got off the mark first ball with a thick edge behind point for two but faced only six more balls before Jon Lewis trapped him leg before with a delivery that swung into him. He has now scored 20, 4, 0, 3 and 2 in his last five innings.It was a clever piece of bowling by Lewis, who has dismissed Strauss cheaply in six of his last eight innings for Middlesex against Gloucestershire, and completed a good morning for the fast-medium bowler who won a solitary England cap in 2006. Lewis had earlier reached his 13th first-class 50 and gone on to a career-best 71, beating his previous highest score of 62, made against Worcestershire at Cheltenham 12 years ago.He had joined Ian Cockbain in an eighth-wicket stand of 97 which ended when Cockbain was caught behind off Corey Collymore for 127, scored off 233 balls and containing 16 fours and a six. Collymore also spread-eagled Lewis’ stumps but not before he had struck his
swashbuckling 71 off 79 balls with six fours and three sixes.There was to be no more joy for Lewis as Rogers, whose innings featured 15 fours and two sixes in 230 balls, shared successive partnerships of 71, 50 and 86 with Sam Robson, Scott Newman and Neil Dexter. But Middlesex ran into trouble after all three of them got out to poor shots.Robson was caught behind for 38, carving at a short ball from Ian Saxelby, Newman (23) slapped Jack Taylor to mid-off and Dexter (41) pulled Saxelby to deep square leg. Three more wickets went down for seven runs in 19 balls late on, but Tim Murtagh held out with Rogers until the close.

Shahidi wants 'one good home venue' and more Tests for Afghanistan

Afghanistan captain hopes the ACB “will try harder to give us opportunities against good teams in the future”

Vishal Dikshit and Daya Sagar08-Sep-2024Apart from hoping to play Test cricket more frequently going forward, Hashmatullah Shahidi wants “one good home venue” in India instead of going from place to place, as they currently cannot play international cricket back home in Afghanistan.Afghanistan will host New Zealand for a one-off Test starting on Monday in Greater Noida, near Delhi. Their other home Tests since becoming a Full Member have been in Dehradun, Lucknow and Abu Dhabi. Sticking with one home venue will make them a stronger and more effective team in red-ball cricket, Shahidi said.”If you see, India is our home and when we host teams, the other nations have played more cricket than us here,” Shahidi said while addressing the media the day before the Test. “So hopefully we will get one good venue here in India and we stick with that. If we stick with one venue, it will be more effective for us.Related

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“And one more thing, if you see our players, they have good record in first-class cricket because we play in our own grounds [in Afghanistan]. We know our own conditions very well. So hopefully that time comes in future that teams come to Afghanistan. Then our average will be even higher than what it is right now and hopefully our cricket board and BCCI give a good venue for us in India and we play a lot of cricket in one venue.”Afghanistan have played nine Tests in their six years at this level, and even though they are slotted to play 22 Tests in the current FTP – from 2023 to 2027 – only a handful are against the top sides. In the current FTP, Afghanistan have so far played against Bangladesh, Sri Lanka and Ireland, and after the New Zealand game, have Tests scheduled against Zimbabwe (six), Ireland (three), India (one), Australia (one) and West Indies (one).”In six years, nine games is not, I cannot say it’s a lot,” Shahidi said. “If we get a lot more chances with the good teams, we will improve, and our cricket board is doing that job. Like with New Zealand, if you see their history of Test cricket and where they are in the rankings right now, it’s a good opportunity for us and hopefully our cricket board will try harder to give us opportunities against good teams in the future. I think if we get more chances on regular basis, we will improve a lot because if we see as a team and as a country, we are brave people and we always accept challenges.It all looked rather wet and forlorn the day before the Test in Greater Noida•Daya Sagar/ESPNcricinfo

“If we get three- or four-match series in one time, I think it will be very good for us as a side. If you look at our past, we get one Test match and we start preparing for that ten days before. So it’s not easy to come to red-ball cricket. Playing matches will make us even better on judging the ball and playing good cricket in red-ball format, compared to playing in the nets. So if we play three-four games back to back I think it will be better.”Ranked 12th in the ICC Test rankings, Afghanistan are a force in the white-ball formats, ranked ninth in ODIs and tenth in T20Is. They took down teams like England, Pakistan and Sri Lanka in the ODI World Cup last year and made it to the semi-finals of the T20 World Cup in June this year after beating New Zealand, Australia and Bangladesh.”About Test cricket, 100% we want to improve,” Shahidi said. “We want to show to the world our best format is Test cricket. And I mentioned before that we accept all kinds of challenges, and I am telling the boys also that these opportunities are very big opportunities for us, each and every one to show our skill, to show our talent and make… if I am a batsman, make a big score, big runs. So your name will be among the big names in the future. So if you want that, this is the place and time to show. I think we have that ability to do it and need to show it.”At this stage, it’s not clear how much red-ball action Afghanistan will get from this Test as a weather threat looms over the game, with rain and moderate thunderstorms forecast for the coming week.

Kapp, Luus score fighting half-centuries after India post record total

Ghosh struck a quick 86 as India declared their first innings on 603 for 6

Srinidhi Ramanujam29-Jun-2024South Africa showed great fight to reach 236 for 4 on the second day of the one-off Test in Chennai after India declared their first innings at a record 603 for 6. At stumps, the visitors were still 367 runs behind. But on a pitch where Indians bowlers were able to extract sharp turn and bounce from the second session of the day, Sune Luus and Marizanne Kapp, with their half-centuries and a 93-run stand for the third wicket, displayed commendable resilience and technique.After a 3-0 defeat in the ODI series and conceding 525 on the first day of the Test, South Africa did not let India dent their confidence on Saturday.Related

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After India declared their innings in the morning, Laura Wolvaardt and Anneke Bosch looked composed in the six overs before lunch, with the captain punishing a half-tracker from Sneh Rana and an overpitched delivery from Pooja Vastrakar for four. This was before Wolvaardt struck a confident drive through mid-off in the first over of the innings by Renuka Singh.However, Rana – who got the ball to spin more than any other spinner – got the first breakthrough in the eighth over when she bowled one rare short ball. But it kept low and Wolvaardt completely missed her pull to be trapped lbw. Bosch and Luus stayed on for the next 23 overs, stitching 63 runs. However, Bosch, who hit four fours and a six, fell a few overs before tea. Rana was at it once again. After the previous ball spun sharply, Rana bowled one full outside off. Anticipating the turn, Bosch leaned forward and nicked it to Deepti Sharma at slip.Richa Ghosh took just 54 balls to bring up her half-century•BCCI

At 96 for 2, South Africa found stability via Kapp and Luus who blended caution with aggression. Luus respected the good deliveries, scoring almost equally on the off and leg side. In all, she scored 65 off 164 balls that included six fours and one six over long-on against Rana.The duo put on 93 before Deepti broke the stand when she beat Luus’ inside edge and trapped her lbw. Luus reviewed the on-field decision but it was in vain. Delmi Tucker became Rana’s third victim when Richa Ghosh took a sharp catch to dismiss her for an eight-ball duck.Kapp, like Luus, played more off the back foot and scored predominantly on the off side, with seven of her eight fours coming in that area. She reached 50 off 87 balls and remained unbeaten on 69 off 125 at stumps. She fought cramps and a stiff back towards the end of the final session, but didn’t throw her wicket away.Once Tucker departed, Nadine de Klerk joined Kapp with the pair stitching an unbroken 38-run stand off 56 balls. De Klerk showed good intent in the final hour and hit five fours in her unbeaten 27 off 28 balls.Earlier, Ghosh and Harmanpreet Kaur started sedately but soon converted their starts into half-centuries. The pair stretched their stand to 143 runs. Harmanpreet made 69 off 115 balls before being dismissed in the 15th over of the day when fast bowler Tumi Sekhukhune trapped her in front to leave India at 593 for 5.Ghosh hit seven more boundaries on Saturday, 16 in all, her 90-ball innings, using her strong wrists to good use to play powerful cut shots. She fell for her career-best 86 when she missed a sweep off left-arm spinner Nonkululeko Mlaba and was lbw.

Ishan Kishan continues to skip Ranji Trophy

Deepak Chahar and Shreyas Iyer also missing in action despite being specifically told to play first-class cricket

Edited PTI copy16-Feb-2024Ishan Kishan’s absence from the Ranji Trophy continued as the wicketkeeper-batter, who plays domestic cricket for Jharkhand, skipped the final round of matches that started on Friday.Deepak Chahar and Shreyas Iyer were also missing in action. Iyer was, however, having issues with his lower back and groin. These three players – Kishan, Chahar and Iyer – were specifically told to play for their respective state teams in first-class cricket.Recently, BCCI secretary Jay Shah was asked about centrally contracted players missing domestic tournaments. Shah said he would send a directive that all fit centrally contracted players needed to make themselves available for selection in domestic cricket.”If you are fit then no excuse will be entertained,” he said. “This applies to all centrally contracted players, they have to play. The player cannot decide his future, the selectors need to decide that. If the player is good in red-ball, he has to play.”In the absence of Kishan, Kumar Kushagra continued doing wicketkeeping duties for Jharkhand. Jharkhand, who have only one win and ten points from six matches so far, are playing Rajasthan at home.Kishan, who had asked for a break midway through India’s South Africa tour, has been training in Baroda with his new Mumbai Indians captain Hardik Pandya.Mumbai, Iyer’s domestic team, have already qualified for the quarter-final. They are playing their last league match against Assam, also at home.

Shoaib Malik given ten days' leave from Pakistan's tour of England

PCB grants all-rounder time off to deal with ‘personal issues’

ESPNcricinfo staff29-Apr-2019Senior Pakistan allrounder Shoaib Malik has been given ten days’ leave from his team’s pre-World Cup trip of England to deal with “personal issues”.Malik will miss Sunday’s T20I and the first ODI against England on May 8. He is expected to rejoin the side before the second ODI on May 11. The reason for his unexpected exit has not been revealed by PCB.”The Pakistan cricket team management has given leave to Shoaib Malik so that he can return home to deal with a personal issue,” PCB said. “He is expected to rejoin the team in 10 days’ time. The PCB will not be making any further comments and fully expects all concerned to respect Shoaib’s privacy.”Malik’s selection for the World Cup raised eyebrows, given that he averages 13.6 with the bat in 23 innings in England. This year’s World Cup will be his last as he has confirmed he will retire from ODIs after the tournament.He made a comeback in Pakistan ODI side in a home series against Zimbabwe in 2015 after being dropped for two straight years following the 2013 Champions Trophy. Since his return he has become an integral part of the side.His career average in 282 games is 35.12 with a strike rate of 81.75, which, since his return, has risen to 44.24 and 93.16 respectively. However, in ten of his last 11 ODI innings, the 37-year-old Malik has been dismissed between 10 and 31. He has struggled to serve as the launchpad Pakistan want at No. 5.Pakistan won their tour match against Northamptonshire by eight wickets on Monday.

Cloete, von Berg keep Spartans in play-off race

Nelson Mandela Bay Giants were kept to 137 for 9 in a chase of 166 on a slow pitch in Port Elizabeth

Liam Brickhill09-Dec-2018Gihahn Cloete targets the off side•MSL

AB de Villiers’ Tshwane Spartans kept their Mzansi Super League play-off hopes alive, holding Nelson Mandela Bay Giants to 137 for 9 to secure a 28-run victory at St George’s Park. Opener Gihahn Cloete’s third fifty of the competition carried Spartans to 165 for 4 on a pitch that played slightly on the slow side, and de Villiers then set the tone early in defence of the total, pulling off a stunning diving catch in the outfield. Shaun von Berg’s canny legbreaks were instrumental in maintaining Spartans’ control with the ball, and he collected 3 for 19 in four overs.While Spartans would have been even happier with a bonus point – they have yet to secure one so far this season – the victory nonetheless took them to fourth place on the points table, with two games in hand, as well as slightly improving their net run-rate. Giants remain third on 21 points with one more round robin game against Paarl Rocks on Wednesday. The inaugural MSL title race is still wide open for every team apart from Durban Heat.De Villiers did his first job right in calling correctly at the toss and opting to bat, knowing that a pitch that encouraged the spinners would be difficult to chase on. Cloete backed up the decision with a 59-ball 65 that anchored the innings and laid a platform. Pushed up to open, Cloete dealt with the early loss of Andrea Agathangelou by sharing in a 72-run stand with Dean Elgar, who hit three sixes in his 32.Together they took Spartans to 44 for 1 in the Powerplay, and even found ways to attack the spinners, hitting sixes off the captain Jon-Jon Smuts, Aaron Phangiso and Imran Tahir before Tahir had Elgar driving uppishly into the hands of Heino Kuhn at cover in the 10th over.Tahir should also have had de Villiers lbw in his third over soon afterwards. He rushed a slider on to the batsman’s pads to start the over, prompting an appeal that was turned down. There was another more vehement plea four balls later as Tahir rapped de Villiers on the pad with a legbreak only for umpire Shaun George to shake his head again. Replays showed the ball pitching in line and going on to crash into leg stump. Tahir was distraught. Even more so when de Villiers reverse-swept the very next delivery for four.De Villiers wasn’t at his vintage best, managing a slightly scratchy 33 before he was out in the final over, but Eoin Morgan gave the innings some impetus, swatting two sixes – the first via a leading edge – in a rapid cameo to push the total above par.Giants knew that a win in this game would virtually secure their place in the play-offs, but when they lost three wickets inside the Powerplay, their task looked increasingly difficult. Giants lost Jason Roy in the first over, and Rudi Second to de Villiers’ brilliant outfield catch minutes later. Seamer Lutho Sipamla overcame a no-ball and a Free Hit that went for six to dismiss Smuts for 26, and then the spinners took over.Von Berg trapped Kuhn lbw in his very first over, and Jeevan Mendis had Christiaan Jonker stumped with a ripping legbreak as Giants slipped into trouble at 73 for 5. When von Berg had Chris Morris caught reverse-sweeping to point and Duckett was run out seeking a single off a misfield for 47, Giants were 92 for 7 and suddenly a vital bonus point seemed a distinct possibility for Spartans.Sisanda Magala struck two enormous sixes to keep Spartans sweating, but he fell attempting a third off von Berg. De Villiers’ men went into the penultimate over with just two runs to play with in order to secure the bonus point and Giants’ last pair at the crease. Despite an lbw appeal and a scrambled single that might have seen Tahir run out, Sipamla couldn’t grab the vital wicket, but Spartans had already done enough at least to keep themselves in the hunt for the play-offs.

Richard Johnson joins Surrey as assistant coach

Former Middlesex and England seamer signs a three-year deal to become the new assistant coach at The Oval

ESPNcricinfo staff05-Nov-2018Richard Johnson, the former Middlesex and England seamer, has transferred his allegiance south of the river, after signing a three-year deal to become the new assistant coach at Surrey.Johnson had been part of Middlesex’s coaching set-up since 2011, a spell that included their County Championship triumph in 2016, and even stood in as interim coach this season after Richard Scott was sacked in July.However, having missed out on the permanent role at Lord’s – a job that instead went to the former Australia batsman, Stuart Law – Johnson has decided the time is ripe to switch to London’s other major county.There, he will take over the bowling duties from Ryan Sidebottom and Alfonso Thomas, who had been working with the club on a consultancy basis in 2018, although Geoff Arnold will be retained in his own coaching role.”Surrey are one of the biggest clubs in the country and proved their strength by winning the County Championship this year,” said Johnson.”This is an excellent chance to be part of something exciting moving forward with a high quality group of players both senior and younger.”There are plenty of people already at the club that I know well and I can’t wait to get in to the Kia Oval to start work later this month.”Director of Cricket Alec Stewart added: “First of all, I would like to thank both Ryan Sidebottom and Alfonso Thomas for their excellent work with us last season. When I spoke with them they both understood our need for a full-time bowling coach.”I’ve known Jono for a long time, having played Test cricket with him, and he has shown himself to be one of the very best bowling coaches in the game. I’m looking forward to seeing his expertise and qualities have a positive impact on our bowling group.”Johnson, 43, retired from the first-class game in 2007 after a career that included three Test matches, ten ODIs and 528 first-class wickets at an average of 28.58, including ten wickets in a single innings against Derbyshire in 1994.His credentials as a bowling coach have been enhanced by the development of talents such as Steven Finn, Toby Roland-Jones and Tom Helm, and he has also worked with the England Lions on recent overseas tours.

Henry Blofeld, Test Match Special's Dear Old Thing, announces retirement

Henry Blofeld, the veteran BBC commentator, has announced that he will retire from his role with Test Match Special this summer, after 45 years on the airwaves.

ESPNcricinfo staff23-Jun-2017Henry Blofeld, the veteran BBC commentator, has announced that he will retire from his role with Test Match Special this summer, after 45 years on the airwaves.Blofeld, 77, aka “Blowers”, became a household name at the height of TMS’s reach in the 1980s and 1990s, on account of his distinctive voice, complete with the catchphrase, “my dear old thing”, and his regular digressions into the habits of passing pigeons and London buses.He had been a fine cricketer in his own right as a schoolboy at Eton College in the 1950s, but his prospects of a first-class career came to an end at the age of 17, when he was knocked off his bicycle by a bus and spent 28 days in a coma.Instead he went into print journalism in the 1960s, after an abortive stint in banking, and went on to make his debut on TMS in 1972. He will commentate on three more Test matches this summer, before hanging up his microphone in September, during the third Test between England and West Indies at Lord’s.”All good things come to an end,” he wrote on his website. “After nearly fifty years in the Test Match Special commentary box, I have decided the time has come for the last of the old farts to hang up his microphone.”By his own admission, Blofeld’s deteriorating eyesight has made his recent stints more error-prone than he would wish, and there is a sense in his farewell statement that he wished to leave the broadcasting scene on his own terms.”In all honesty, at the age of almost 78, although I am still rather keener than mustard, I find it harder work than I once did. The one thing I don’t want to do more than anything, is for my incompetence to let TMS down.”I leave, supremely confident that TMS is in the safest of hands, led by the ageless Aggers [Jonathan Agnew]. In the end, I think he will come to be seen as the best of the lot.”Listeners will now be relieved to know that their chances of being told the right name of the fielders at third man and fine leg have greatly increased.”I hope some will be sad that they will now hear less about the lifestyles of pigeons, seagulls, and helicopters although I fear the general feeling will be one of huge relief.”Now, I shall be able to come to the cricket without worrying about who is lurking down at third man. I shall also be able to have a drink without feeling I am being politically incorrect. And hallelujah to that!”

Workload blunting pace attack – Shine

The heavy workload required of England-qualified seamers is comprising their ability to bowl at high pace, according to Kevin Shine

George Dobell09-Nov-2015The heavy workload required of England-qualified seamers is compromising their ability to bowl at high pace, according to Kevin Shine.Shine, the ECB’s lead fast bowling coach, has defended his record of developing and protecting fast bowlers and suggested that any lack of pace in the England attack when compared with the quickest bowlers from other nations is due almost entirely to the draining schedule with which they are confronted.While England’s two leading seamers, James Anderson and Stuart Broad, have both enjoyed outstanding years in Test cricket and are currently rated No. 2 and No. 4 respectively in the ICC’s rankings, there have been times – such as at Lord’s or in Abu Dhabi – when they have been confronted by flat wickets which have negated their skills. At such times, the relative lack of pace in England’s attack has been shown up by the likes of Mitchell Johnson and Wahab Riaz.But, according to Shine, England’s bowlers enter the professional game capable of bowling as fast as those from any other nation, but are forced to bowl within themselves due to their schedule.

‘Scaffolding’ vital for fast bowlers – Pont

Not everyone is convinced by the ECB’s fast bowling programme at Loughborough. Ian Pont, the independent fast-bowling coach who has worked with Dale Steyn and Shoaib Akhtar among others, believes the ECB fails to understand the basic tenets of fast bowling and that it is this failure – not workload management – that continues to hinder progress.
In particular, Pont suggested that there are familiar defining characteristics in the best fast bowlers and that, at present, the ECB do not fully understand how to recognise or coach them.
“We fully understand there are not 1000 ways to throw a javelin, swim, cycle a bike, row a boat or throw a punch yet we seem to have an aberration when it comes to teaching how to bowl fast and straight,” Pont told ESPNcricinfo. “And that’s purely because structures are not taught.
“One of the greatest discoveries in the modern era is that you can improve your speed and control by altering key parts of your bowling position at the crease. But the difficulty for many coaches has been the challenge of what to help alter and the drill that goes with the positive tweaks.
“There is confusion over a bowler’s style, which is unique to them, and their structure, which is common to all. And it is this structure that is the main thing to focus in on.
“By working on the fast bowling skeleton correctly you can make a difference. Understanding how to do that is what makes a coach worth his weight in gold. Managing a fast bowler’s workload isn’t what makes him bowl fast in the first place. Creating ‘scaffolding’ so he can do that is what’s vital.”

“It is a workload thing,” Shine told ESPNcricinfo. “When you see bowlers come in to the game they are fresh, they are firing and eventually time takes its toll.”Our bowlers bowl an awful lot. Our bowlers bowl more than any other bowlers in the world.”We know from the testing we do and the speeds we get, that we can compete [with other nations] at high pace. But to sustain that is really tough, so we work a lot on our skills, knowing that we have fall backs if the pace falls off a bit. We look at seam positions, we work on reverse swing and wobble seam. We have got pace, but doing it day-in, day-out is very, very tough.”They are probably capable of short spells of getting up to that 90mph mark, but once again there is a huge cost of doing that day in and day out. Our bowlers carry injuries. They bowl in pain at times. And that’s part and parcel of the fast bowler’s job.”The long-term figures support Shine’s stance. No bowler, either spinner or seamer, has bowled as many overs across the three international formats as Anderson since the start of 2012 or 2013, at which point Broad moves to second on the list. And while Sri Lanka’s left-arm spinner Rangana Herath has bowled the most since the start of 2014, Broad and Anderson remain the two busiest seamers.The stats are especially stark when it comes to comparing workloads in Test cricket. Since the start of 2012, for example, Anderson has bowled 1821.4 overs across 47 Tests. Dale Steyn, by contrast, has bowled 1081.3 overs across 31 Tests and Mitchell Johnson 854.1 across 25 Tests.Shine also insists that the ECB coaches at the centre at excellence at Loughborough deserve credit for the return to form of Steven Finn and the sustained performance of Broad and Anderson. While the ECB has been accused of meddling in the actions of several bowlers and, as a consequence, diminishing their performance, Shine says that quite the opposite is the case.”It was Loughborough that suggested that Jimmy Anderson, who had been through a re-model, went back to being natural,” Shine said. “At 18, Broad was in a dangerous position. We put the information to him and he decided to make some changes. And with Finn, we knew when he shortened his run that there were issues with that and we’ve been able to help return him to better form.Steven Finn made a successful comeback to Test cricket after two years struggling with his action•Getty Images

“Fast bowling is a very individual thing. One size doesn’t fit all. We don’t try to change bowlers, but if we see a bowler who is likely to get hurt or who wants to add some pace, we will put that information to them and to suggest changes. It is always up to the bowler.”I’m pretty sure that, in the last six or seven years, I’ve not recommended any major changes to any bowlers.”They were words supported by Middlesex seamer James Harris. Harris was widely reported as having criticised Loughborough last summer, but insists now that his words were misrepresented.”It’s true that I went to Loughborough in an attempt to find some extra pace,” Harris told ESPNcricinfo. “But it was very much my choice to do it.”I changed my action in search of that pace and, to some extent, I found it. But it came at a cost and I concluded that whatever benefits I made weren’t worth the loss of wrist position and movement that I suffered as a consequence.”It was reported as if I was slagging off the ECB, but really I was just saying that I had tried something and it hadn’t worked. The whole process was consensual.”Among the fast bowlers currently working at Loughborough are Jamie Overton, Tymal Mills and, intriguingly, Stuart Meaker. Meaker featured in only three Championship games for Surrey last season, but remains the fastest England-qualified bowler measured at the ECB’s centre of excellence. In recent weeks, he has been timed within 1mph of his top speed.

Williamson and new-ball duo NZ's best-ever – Hadlee

Sir Richard Hadlee believes New Zealand are entering this three-Test series against Australia with their finest-ever new-ball combination: Trent Boult and Tim Southee

Brydon Coverdale in Brisbane04-Nov-20152:09

‘Southee-Boult is most successful NZ bowling combo’ – Hadlee

When New Zealand last won a Test series in Australia, in 1985, the country’s all-time greatest cricketer, Sir Richard Hadlee, was the difference. Thirty years on, Hadlee believes New Zealand are entering this three-Test series with not only their finest-ever new-ball combination – Trent Boult and Tim Southee – but also the man who will come to be regarded as New Zealand’s best batsman of all time, Kane Williamson.They are significant words from the most important figure in New Zealand’s cricket history. They are also pretty hard words to argue with. All three men were junior members of the side that beat Australia in Hobart in 2011 in the last Test between the nations, and they are key reasons why this could be New Zealand’s best chance for a series win in Australia since Hadlee’s era.Hadlee made similar comments about Boult and Southee during this year’s World Cup, and with the red ball both men are also near the peak of their powers. Both are 26, both swing the ball both ways, and both are in New Zealand’s top eight wicket-takers of all time. The left-right new-ball combination will test Australia’s changing top order in helpful Gabba conditions.”I think I can confidently stand here and say without doubt that that combination will be, if it’s not already, the most successful bowling combination in the history of New Zealand cricket,” Hadlee said on Wednesday. “To work in tandem as they do, they will put a lot of pressure on any batting line-up, anywhere in the world in any conditions.”It is not just with the swinging ball that New Zealand will threaten Australia. Williamson is the fulcrum of the New Zealand batting line-up, having joined Don Bradman, Garfield Sobers, Sachin Tendulkar, Graeme Smith and Neil Harvey as the only men to have 10 Test centuries before the age of 25. But there is damaging potential throughout their batting order.”I think Kane Williamson will be our best ever batsman by the time he finishes his career,” Hadlee said. “The fact that by this stage he’s scored ten Test centuries at 24 years of age, and in the history of the game only six players have scored ten Test centuries by the age of 25. That includes the likes of Sir Donald Bradman, Sir Garfield Sobers and Sachin Tendulkar. So he’s in very good company.”Technically [he’s] very good, he just has a desire to occupy the crease and score runs. Taylor is a fine batsman averaging 45, McCullum can be very destructive, and you can’t underestimate the likes of BJ Watling, the New Zealand wicketkeeper-batsman, who is averaging 40 himself. Neesham is averaging 43.”When you look at the run-making potential in the side, they can put runs on the board and you’ve got bowlers who can get wickets. This is a very capable side, it’s a confident side, and they’re playing a good, bright, brand of cricket. Attacking, entertaining, and at times high risk, but that can bring great rewards as well. It’s a very, very good side.”Hadlee said he expected McCullum to pile the pressure on to Australia’s newer players, including Joe Burns and Usman Khawaja, but he stopped short of declaring New Zealand favourites. When Hadlee claimed match figures of 15 for 123 at the Gabba in 1985, New Zealand won the toss and bowled in humid conditions on what he called a “frisky” pitch.”It is difficult to win here,” he said. “We’ve only won three Test matches in our history here in Australia – the Gabba here in 1985, then Perth in ’85, and then four years ago in Hobart, where Doug Bracewell got his career-best of 6 for 40. It is difficult to win here, simply because you’re playing Australia in Australia, conditions vastly different here than what they are in New Zealand.”Hopefully these guys can take some lessons from what went on in the past and the bowlers get in there and get their lines and their lengths right and not go searching. If you go searching and you miss your target you concede runs. Good old-fashioned basic fast bowling … That hasn’t changed in the history of the game. If you put the ball in the right place and do a bit with it, you’re going to challenge batsmen and batsmen can make mistakes.”

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