Suryakumar Yadav in doubt for Mumbai Indians' season opener

The Mumbai Indians batter was last in action in December, when he made a hundred and also injured his ankle in a T20I in Johannesburg

Nagraj Gollapudi18-Mar-2024

Suryakumar Yadav was last seen in action on December 14, when he made a hundred in a T20I in Johannesburg•Associated Press

Suryakumar Yadav might not be fit in time for Mumbai Indians’ IPL 2024 season opener against Gujarat Titans on March 24 as he continues his recovery from an ankle surgery he had earlier in the year.While Mumbai Indians head coach Mark Boucher did not provide a definitive fitness update, he did not confirm that Suryakumar had been cleared to play by the BCCI’s medical staff either. He will miss the two warm-up matches MI will play on Monday and Wednesday before travelling to Ahmedabad.”Surya at the moment is on the guidance of the Indian cricket team as well,” Boucher said at the pre-season press conference in Mumbai on Monday. “Just waiting for updates on that. I don’t like to micromanage. We’ve got a world class medical team that’s in control of all of that. Yes, the past, we have had a few fitness issues. We are always going to be in that sort of domain of having fitness issues as other teams are as well.”Every time I look at my WhatsApp’s there’s reports of other teams also losing players. We trust our medical team that they’re doing the right things. Look, if we lose one or two from fitness perspective, it is what it is. That’s important and we just have to keep on the right track and sharp on replacements.”Suryakumar last played in December during the limited-overs leg of India’s tour of South Africa. He picked up an ankle injury while scoring 100 off 56 balls in the third T20I in Johannesburg and went on to have two surgeries – one for his ankle and another for a sports hernia. His recovery ruled him out of the T20I series against Afghanistan at home in January, India’s last international assignment in the format before the 2024 T20 World Cup in the USA and the West Indies starting on June 1.Suryakumar was aiming to return in the DY Patil T20 Cup, a private annual event in Mumbai, in the lead up to the IPL but he is presently at the National Cricket Academy in Bengaluru and is to receive clearance from the BCCI medical staff.

Erling Haaland inundated with transfer pleas after ‘I love Italy’ message – with Man City superstar enjoying trip to Rome with girlfriend Isabel Johansen

Fans have called for Erling Haaland to move to Serie A after he professed his love for Italy in a post on social media while on a summer break in Rome.

  • Haaland says "I love Italy!"
  • On holiday with girlfriend
  • Fans call for Serie A transfer
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  • WHAT HAPPENED?

    In a post uploaded to Instagram, Haaland confessed he loves Italy and praised the beauty of Rome, where he has recently spent time on holiday with girlfriend Isabel Johansen. The Norwegian pair were spotted wandering the streets of Rome and also attended a Dolce & Gabbana fashion show in recent days.

    Haaland's post was met with a series of responses from fans who called for him to move to Italy full-time with a Serie A transfer from Manchester City.

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  • WHAT HAALAND SAID

    Haaland's post to his 37.9 million Instagram followers read: "Rome is without doubt one of the most beautiful cities I’ve ever been to! And the food? Omg. Incredible. I’m enjoying the summer! Thanks D&G and the city of Rome for making the time here smooth. I love Italy!"

  • TELL ME MORE

    Fans flooded to the comments with responses, many in Italian.

    One fan said: "If you love Rome so much, come."

    Another added: "What if you come to Naples?! Ask KDB…"

    Journalist Piero Armenti commented: "Come to play in Italy."

    Another fan said: "Come to Rome, come to Serie A in the end it’s not that bad!!!"

    Someone else added: "Erling next to Dovbyk would be a great offensive partnership."

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    WHAT NEXT FOR HAALAND?

    Haaland is set to return to City for the new season, with a move to Serie A unlikely to materialise at this stage in his career. But fans have certainly shown that the 300-goal striker is welcome in Italy if he ever does decide to pursue a change of scenery and a new lifestyle. It has been suggested in the past that the prolific frontman would like to experience playing across Europe before his career is done.

Shami's participation in IPL 2024 in doubt due to ankle injury

India fast bowler has been missing in action since the final of the ODI World Cup in November 2023

Nagraj Gollapudi23-Feb-2024India fast bowler Mohammed Shami is a doubtful starter for Gujarat Titans in IPL 2024. ESPNcricinfo has learnt that Shami is likely to undergo ankle surgery, potentially just before the tournament, which would rule him out of most if not all of it. The IPL will be played between March 22 and May 26 this year.Shami has not played any cricket since India’s defeat in the World Cup final against Australia on November 19. He had been nursing his ankle throughout that tournament, but still finished as its highest wicket-taker with 24 strikes.Should he be ruled out for any length of time, Titans will be going into the new campaign without two key players, having already seen Hardik Pandya move to Mumbai Indians. Shami was their highest wicket-taker in their title winning 2022 season, with 20 strikes in 16 matches, and he was the overall highest wicket-taker last year with 28 strikes in 17 matches.Shami had been taking injections to treat his ankle during the World Cup and continued to do so even after the tournament. While he was not named in India’s white-ball squads for the tour of South Africa that followed, Shami was expected to return for the two-match Test series. But, on December 16, in the only medical update provided on the senior fast bowler, the BCCI said Shami’s “participation” in the South Africa Test series had been “subject to fitness” and since he “has not been cleared” by the BCCI medical staff, he was ruled out of contention.Early in January, Shami said he had “stiffness” in the ankle but he was hoping he would be ready for selection for the home Tests against England. “My rehabilitation is well on track and the medical experts at NCA are happy with my progress,” he told the . “There is slight stiffness in my ankle but that’s fine. I have started my training sessions and I believe I will be able to make a comeback in the England series.”However, Shami did not feature in either of the India squads put out by the Ajit Agarkar-led panel, initially for the first two Tests against England and recently for the final three Tests of the series.On January 22, Shami was in Hyderabad at the BCCI awards following which he reportedly travelled overseas to consult specialists about his ankle. It is understood that he will be visiting a surgeon next week before taking a final call on the matter.While the BCCI’s medical team has been monitoring Shami, he has not been at the National Cricket Academy in Bengaluru, which is where contracted cricketers normally do their rehab. It could not be confirmed whether the BCCI or Shami had kept Titans in the loop on his recovery timeline. Neither the BCCI nor Titans have made any public statements about him recently.

Explained: Why Bryan Mbeumo was left out of Man Utd squad in West Ham friendly win after completing £71m transfer

The reasons for £71 million ($95m) signing Bryan Mbeumo sitting out Manchester United's friendly date with West Ham have been explained.

Completed big-money move from BrentfordHaving to be patient in pursuit of debutNot yet fit enough for pre-season actionFollow GOAL on WhatsApp! 🟢📱WHAT HAPPENED?

The Cameroon international winger has become another big-money addition at Old Trafford. After a protracted transfer saga, Mbeumo finally linked up with the Red Devils after bidding farewell to Brentford.

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He is ready to embrace a new challenge, having been a boyhood fan of United during Cristiano Ronaldo’s first spell with the club, but is having to be patient in pursuit of his first minutes as a Red Devil.

WHAT MAN UTD SAID

The decision was taken not to involve him in a pre-season clash with West Ham at MetLife Stadium in New Jersey. United explained that call on their by saying: "The buy from Brentford is being eased into life with the Reds, as he is earlier in his pre-season preparations than the rest of the squad and is not quite ready to play a match yet."

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Fellow new recruit Matheus Cunha was handed a starting berth, with the Brazilian hoping to thrive as United’s new No.10, while Noussair Mazraoui missed out due to a "knock" – with Mbeumo’s international colleague, Andre Onana, another of those to be nursing an injury at present.

CA revoke Xavier Bartlett's NOC for County Championship stint with Kent

Kent sign Beyers Swanepoel as replacement after newly-contracted seamer pulls out

ESPNcricinfo staff04-Apr-2024

Xavier Bartlett made his international debut in February•Cricket Australia/Getty Images

Cricket Australia have blocked Xavier Bartlett from playing in the County Championship for Kent, denying him a No-Objection Certificate (NOC) shortly after offering him his first national contract.Bartlett had a breakout season in the 2023-24 Australian summer, making his ODI and T20I debuts against West Indies in February and taking 20 wickets – the most in the competition – in Brisbane Heat’s Big Bash League season. His impressive performances earned him a first central contract, which was announced by CA last week.He was due to play around five Championship games for Kent in the early stages of the season but has been denied permission by CA, in order to manage his workload. Nathan Lyon’s stint with Lancashire was recently reduced significantly for the same reason, though CA have denied that they were behind Aaron Hardie’s withdrawal from his contract with Surrey.Bartlett’s initial deal covered at least eight T20 Blast fixtures and Kent are awaiting confirmation as to whether he will be made available for that competition.Simon Cook, Kent’s director of cricket, said: “National boards are always going to protect their best assets, so it wasn’t a shock when we received news from Cricket Australia that they would be withdrawing his NOC. This decision has potentially not ruled him out for the Vitality Blast, and we’re continuing to discuss our options with Cricket Australia.”Related

Peter Siddle signs for Durham as Scott Boland succumbs to heel injury

Boland's Durham stint under threat due to heel injury

'Doesn't make sense' – Clarke questions CA capping Lyon's county stint

Turner signs with Durham for a third straight Blast season

Aussies in county cricket: big opportunity for fringe names to push Test credentials

In Bartlett’s absence, Kent have signed South African allrounder Beyers Swanepoel on a contract which covers all formats and runs from May 1 until the end of the 2024 season. Swanepoel, 25, was part of the Sunrisers Eastern Cape squad that won the SA20 earlier this year and will be playing in county cricket for the first time.”We’re really excited by the potential that Beyers has and what he can offer us this season,” Cook said. “We looked very carefully at him earlier in the year but at that stage he hadn’t played the required games to qualify as a viable overseas signing for us. He’s a genuine allrounder who provides extra batting depth for us across all formats – a gap that we’ve looked to fill with our overseas players this year.”Swanepoel said: “I’m absolutely thrilled to join a historic county side such as Kent and to play in all formats of the English county game. I hope to learn a lot whilst I’m here amongst a very talented squad. I spoke to former Kent overseas players before I signed and they couldn’t recommend Kent highly enough as a place to come and improve my game in English conditions.”Kent will start the season with Wes Agar as their only available overseas player, and face Somerset at Canterbury in the opening round of fixtures on Friday.

Expect big runs in T20I series finale, but don't go looking for World Cup answers

It’s India last T20I game before the World Cup, but the tournament is only in June and there’s a whole IPL to get out of the way first

Karthik Krishnaswamy16-Jan-20243:09

Can Dube be India’s World Cup spin-hitter?

Big picture: Final T20I crucial and irrelevant at the same time

It has been nearly five years since India lost a bilateral men’s T20I series at home. They have won 13 in that time, and drawn two.It’s a proud record, and it must mean a lot to India’s players and coaching staff, but what does it actually in an attention economy devoted to the ICC event cycle? In one vocal and hard-to-please corner of social media, Sunday’s series-sealing six-wicket win against Afghanistan was notable chiefly for India’s refusal to bat first after winning the toss. They hadn’t challenged themselves enough, and to not challenge yourself with a T20 World Cup imminent is, well, unpardonable.That T20 World Cup is now even more imminent. The series finale in Bengaluru is India’s last T20I before that tournament. That tournament, however, is still nearly five months – and an entire IPL season – away.Bengaluru, then, occupies a strange and hard-to-categorise space. It is both a crucial game in the lead-up to a global tournament and a dead-rubber match far removed from any event of real significance. If it is to mean anything at all, that meaning may only become apparent months from now.How much simpler it must be, then, to merely play the game, and truly live it one ball at a time.

Form guide

India WWWLW

Afghanistan LLWLWAxar Patel has had an outstanding series so far•BCCI

In the spotlight

Axar Patel has had a terrific series with the ball, and Washington Sundar a tidy one, and while neither has had a chance to bat as yet, the presence of two spin-bowling allrounders at Nos. 7 and 8 enabled India’s top order to bat with freedom in the first two T20Is. Conditions in the West Indies – and possibly the USA – may allow India to use this combination during the T20 World Cup, and the flat pitch and short boundaries of Bengaluru will give them another chance to pressure-test it.Afghanistan’s lack of batting firepower has often stopped them from turning their bowlers’ good work into wins against top teams. Their hopes of breaking their T20I duck against India may, therefore, rest on the shoulders of their most dangerous top-order batter. While India shackled Rahmanullah Gurbaz successfully in Mohali, he threatened to break free in Indore, where he rushed to 14 off eight balls before he mishit Ravi Bishnoi to mid-on. Afghanistan will hope Gurbaz can turn those signs of rhythm into a meaningful contribution.

Team news

India may give one or more of Sanju Samson, Kuldeep Yadav and Avesh Khan a go in Bengaluru with the series already in the bag.India (possible): 1 Rohit Sharma (capt), 2 Yashasvi Jaiswal, 3 Virat Kohli, 4 Shivam Dube, 5 Jitesh Sharma (wk), 6 Rinku Singh, 7 Axar Patel, 8 Washington Sundar, 9 Arshdeep Singh, 10 Avesh Khan/Ravi Bishnoi/Kuldeep Yadav, 11 Mukesh Kumar.Qais Ahmad was the leading wicket-taker in Afghanistan’s last series before this one, against UAE. There is a chance he may get a chance in Bengaluru if they feel the need for a legspinner.Afghanistan (possible): 1 Rahmanullah Gurbaz (wk), 2 Ibrahim Zadran (capt), 3 Gulbadin Naib, 4 Azmatullah Omarzai, 5 Mohammad Nabi, 6 Najibullah Zadran, 7 Karim Janat, 8 Mujeeb Ur Rahman, 9 Noor Ahmad/Qais Ahmad, 10 Naveen-ul-Haq, 11 Fazalhaq Farooqi.Qais Ahmad could get a look in•UAE Cricket Board

Pitch and conditions

The M Chinnaswamy Stadium is renowned for its run-fests, but there are times when the venue belies that reputation. The most recent T20I here, a thriller in December, was heavily influenced by the spinners, with Bishnoi and Axar combining to take 3 for 43 in their eight overs as India successfully defended 160 against Australia.That match came close on the heels of the ODI World Cup, which featured five Bengaluru games. The groundstaff have had plenty of time since then to prepare a fresh pitch for this game, so more typical Chinnaswamy conditions can be expected. There was a generous tinge of green on the pitch on the eve of the match, though much of the grass cover is likely to be trimmed before the start of play.The forecast promises a clear, pleasant evening with temperatures in the mid-20s Celsius.

Stats and trivia

  • Mohammad Nabi is 67 runs away from becoming the second Afghanistan batter to score 2000 in T20Is
  • Nabi (98) and Najibullah Zadran (95) are closing in on 100 sixes in T20Is
  • Axar needs one wicket to become the ninth India bowler to 50 in T20Is
  • Of India players with at least 200 T20I runs, Rinku Singh (176.07), Yashasvi Jaiswal (163.81) and Shivam Dube (149.45) have three of the four best strike rates. Suryakumar Yadav (171.55) is the other member of the top four

Quotes

“Coming to India is pretty tough, but it gives us a good base about where we are and it exposes you in areas that perhaps need improvement. So that’s great for us. Especially going forward to the [T20] World Cup and wanting to be as good as we were in the previous 50-over World Cup and hopefully we can go even better.”

Uncapped Ghazanfar, Kharote in Afghanistan squad for ODIs against Ireland

Mystery spinner Allah Mohammad Ghazanfar and left-arm spin-bowling allrounder Nangeyalia Kharote have broken into the Afghanistan senior side for the upcoming three-match ODI series against Ireland in Sharjah. Both Kharote and Ghazanfar had played for Afghanistan in the Under-19 World Cup.Senior spinners Rashid Khan (back surgery) and Mujeeb Ur Rahman (right phalanx sprain) continue to recover from injuries.”Rashid Khan and Mujeeb Ur Rahman continue to recover from their respective injuries and are unavailable for selection,” ACB chief selector Ahmad Shah Sulimankhil said in a statement. “However, we have included some of the top-performing youngsters in Nangeyalia Kharote and Bilal Sami. Allah Mohammad Ghazanfar is a very talented cricketer and has demonstrated excellent skills during the U19 World Cup. He will provide cover in Mujeeb Ur Rahman’s in the ODI series against Ireland.”Fast bowler Bilal Sami, who was among the reserves for Afghanistan’s most recent ODI series against Sri Lanka, has been promoted to the main squad. Sami is also uncapped in international cricket. In all, he has played 10 List A games so far, taking 23 wickets at an average of 21.60 and economy rate of 6.21.Wristspinner Qais Ahmad, who had struggled for control in Sri Lanka, has been demoted to the reserves. Zia Ur Rahman and Shahidullah Kamal are the other reserve players in the side.Afghanistan squad: Hashmatullah Shahidi (capt), Rahmat Shah (vice-capt), Rahmanullah Gurbaz (wk), Ikram Alikhil (wk), Ibrahim Zadran, Riaz Hassan, Azmatullah Omarzai, Mohammad Nabi, Gulbadin Naib, Nangeyalia Kharote, Allah Mohammad Ghazanfar, Noor Ahmad, Bilal Sami, Fazal Haq Farooqi, Naveed Zadran and Farid Ahmad Malik
Reserves: Zia Ur Rahman, Shahidullah Kamal, Qais Ahmad

A day of intrigue and mystery

It was a day of confusion in the Caribbean with claim and counter claim but no sign of an end to the dispute

Cricinfo staff28-Jun-2005A day of confusion in the Caribbean ended with the announcement by the West Indies board (WICB) that it was preparing to select an alternate squad for the forthcoming tour of Sri Lanka following the continued refusal of most of those originally picked to sign the board contract. At the close of play on Monday, only five players had agreed to tour.Late last night, the WICB issued a press release stating that it had submitted counter proposals to those put forward by the West Indies Players Association (WIPA) on June 22, as well as submitting an amendment to the controversial Clause Five of the contract which has been at the heart of the dispute.The counter proposal, sent by Roger Brathwaite, the board’s CEO, to Dinanath Ramnarine, the president of WIPA, on June 25 laid out a four-point plan which clarified existing processes involving the role of Justice Adrian Saunders, the judge appointed last year to arbitrate in the dispute. Crucially, the board’s proposal would allow the tour to go ahead while the arbitration process continued, a move WIPA will almost certainly interpret as little more than stalling tactics.But what is not clear is if the counter proposal included the amendments to Clause Five, as these seem to have emerged after negotiations between an agent representing some of the players and Brathwaite during the course of Monday. Those changes have not materially altered the contract, but have sought to clarify the rights of the players to enter into personal endorsement deals.But the stumbling block is that those discussions appear to have taken place without the involvement of WIPA, who in the meantime have submitted their own response to Brathwaite’s letter of June 25.The mood of WIPA will hardly have been improved by the board’s failed attempt to outflank it by going directly to the A-team players in Sri Lanka to try to get them to agree to replace their senior colleagues.

Time for Vaughan to inspire another fightback

In Michael Vaughan’s tenure as captain, England have lost just seven matches out of 38, but on each and every occasion he has bounced back with a victory in his very next game

Andrew Miller at The Oval08-Aug-2007A lucky escape at Lord’s followed by a thumping victory at Trent Bridge – India are the team with the momentum going into tomorrow’s crucial final Test at The Oval. But those of a superstitious persuasion should be wary of writing off this series just yet. In Michael Vaughan’s tenure as captain, England have lost just seven matches out of 38, but on each and every occasion he has bounced back with a victory in his very next game.


Michael Vaughan’s side has time and again shown the ability to pull things back after a defeat
© Getty Images

Lord’s and Trent Bridge, South Africa 2003

Vaughan’s first Test as captain was less of a baptism and more of a drowning. Nasser Hussain’s abrupt abdication after the drawn first Test at Edgbaston gave the new incumbent just two days to get used to his new role, and Vaughan looked as ill-fitting as the navy blue England cap that he would soon trade in for his more familiar sun-hat. A first-day batting collapse gifted South Africa every modicum of momentum, and Vaughan’s opposite number, Graeme Smith, capitalised to thrilling effect. After his 277 in the first Test, Smith followed up with 259 in the second, to secure a monstrous lead of 509. England showed more spine second-time around, with Andrew Flintoff shattering his bat during a memorably hard-hitting 142, but Makhaya Ntini’s ten-wicket haul sealed a very famous win.Ten days later, and England were back with renewed intent, although their eventual 70-run victory owed every bit as much to Vaughan’s correct call at the toss as it did to James Kirtley’s sterling six-wicket haul on debut. First-innings runs made the difference between victory and defeat on a damaged pitch that crumbled alarmingly as the match went on, and centuries from Hussain and Mark Butcher took England to 445. James Anderson’s second five-wicket haul of the series gave England a lead of 83 – which was put into perspective when Shaun Pollock snaffled 6 for 39 in England’s second-innings total of 118. By now the two-layered surface had shifted like the San Andreas Fault, and Kirtley ensured that South Africa never came close to their target of 202.Headingley and The Oval, South Africa 2003

Three days later, and South Africa still seemed to be smarting from their defeat as they lost their first four wickets inside 15 overs on a traditional Headingley greentop. Kirtley and the long-lost Martin Bicknell grabbed both openers in the space of eight balls but Gary Kirsten remained to compile arguably the finest of his 21 Test centuries. He found improbable support from the debutant seamer, Monde Zondeki, who made 59 at No. 9, and from an indomitable position, England ended up surrendering a lead of 35.
Andrew Hall’s unbeaten 99 built on that slender advantage, and Jacques Kallis polished off all resistance with 6 for 54.And so the two teams headed for The Oval, for the match in which Vaughan’s England finally showed their true colours. The game could hardly have started any less auspiciously, however, as South Africa hurtled to 362 for 4 on the first day, thanks to Herschelle Gibbs’ 183. Two late dismissals redressed the imbalance a touch, but even when South Africa collapsed to 484 the following day, the damage appeared to have been done. Enter Marcus Trescothick, whose career-best 219 brought England back to parity, in partnership with the recalled Graham Thorpe, before Flintoff flayed a tiring attack in what was, to date, his greatest Test innings. He added 99 in 18 overs with Steve Harmison, who finished on 6 not out, as England declared on 604 for 9. The following day a demoralised South Africa were rolled over for 229, with Harmison taking 4 for 33, and England rattled to a nine-wicket win in an hour-and-a-half of full-throttle batting.Colombo v Sri Lanka and Kingston v West Indies, 2003-04
England still hadn’t quite got their game-plan nailed when they set off for a tough tour of the subcontinent. A tricky but successful tour of Bangladesh was followed by three back-to-back Tests against Sri Lanka in which Vaughan tried but failed to ape Hussain’s attritional approach of three years earlier. After clinging onto draws in the first two matches, thanks to heroic last-day batting efforts, they ran out of steam by the final fixture and tumbled to defeat by an innings and 215 runs – the third heaviest in their history. It was a watershed for the team. Never again would they let discretion be the better part of valour, and the stage was set for the most successful spell in England’s history.After a three-month break over Christmas, England set off for the Caribbean, where they had not won a series for 36 years. In the first Test at Kingston, they unveiled for the first time a five-man attack that would become rather familiar over the next 18 months – Harmison, Flintoff, Matthew Hoggard, Simon Jones and Ashley Giles. By the end of the Test, one man in particular had attained superstar status. For the first three days the match was balanced on a knife-edge, with England sneaking a lead of 28, but then Harmison hurtled into overdrive. In an incredible spell of spring-heeled hostility, he took 7 for 12 in 11.3 overs, routing West Indies for 47. And then there was no looking back.Cape Town and Johannesburg, South Africa 2004-05
Everyone remembers 2005, but few people recall quite how inauspiciously it began. After a incredible run of 11 wins in 12 matches, England’s momentum hit the buffers when South Africa were saved by bad light in the Boxing Day Test at Durban. Three days and a New Year party later, England were back in the field at Newlands, chasing leather in the baking sun as Kallis batted their resolve to oblivion. A 196-run defeat was the upshot, a margin that would have been even more emphatic had Harmison not top-scored from No. 11 with some cultured final-day slogging. A week earlier, England had come close to taking a 2-0 lead, but were now facing a trip to Johannesburg’s Bullring with the series level and the momentum with their opponents.At least, that’s how the pundits saw it. England, however, had by now made “bouncebackability” their watchword, and at the Wanderers they pieced together their most remarkable win of the lot. After four days of hard grind, a draw was the favourite result although South Africa still fancied their chances after overhauling England’s 411 and then reducing them to 197 for 5 second-time around. Instead Trescothick, 101 overnight, lashed his way to 180 on the fifth morning. With a lead of 325, England had two sessions to pull off the impossible. Most of the bowlers had by now gone lame, most notably Harmison, but into the limelight stepped the workhorse Hoggard, whose peerless spell of 7 for 61 – with brutal support from Flintoff – delivered victory with eight overs to spare.Lord’s and Edgbaston, Australia 2005

The most anticipated series in living memory lived up to its billing from the very first morning. Australia had not lost at Lord’s since 1934, but when Harmison battered Justin Langer’s elbow then bloodied Ricky Ponting’s cheek in a vicious five-wicket spell, their record was all too vividly at stake. But up stepped Glenn McGrath to remind the Poms who was boss. Responding to a first-innings total of 190, he used the slope to perfection to take 5 for 2 in 31 balls. Pietersen, on debut, muscled England back on track with a hard-hitting fifty, but it was his drop of Michael Clarke in the second innings that would be the decisive moment of the game. Clarke made a match-breaking 91, and a demoralised England folded without resistance on the fourth afternoon. After all the hype, normal service had been resumed. Or so we thought.The press were in a lather but England resisted the temptation to tinker, and the outcome was the closest finish in Ashes history. It all started with a freak incident in practice, when McGrath – the Lord’s destroyer – stepped on a stray cricket ball and tore ligaments in his ankle. Ponting refused to err on the side of caution and chose to bowl regardless, and England’s liberated batsmen hurtled to 407 in just 79.2 overs. That was enough to secure a lead of 99, but when Shane Warne ripped a monstrous legbreak into Andrew Strauss’s stumps before the close of the second day, England had seen enough to know that trouble lay ahead. Sure enough, they collapsed to 131 for 9, but Flintoff – supported by Simon Jones – thumped 51 precious runs for the tenth wicket, before derailing Australia’s innings with two wickets in his first over. At 175 for 8, the match was in the bag, but Australia refused to comply. Warne, Brett Lee and Michael Kasprowicz gnawed away at the requirement, before Harmison – with a final throw of the dice – hammered a short ball into Kasprowicz’s gloves, for Geraint Jones to complete a nerve-shredding two-run win with a tumbling take down the leg-side.Lahore v Pakistan, 2005-06 and Headingley v West Indies, 2007

England’s post-Ashes party started at The Oval on September 12, and ended at Multan two months later, when Shoaib Akhtar and Danish Kaneria engineered a remarkable 22-run win. Vaughan was missing from that match – his knee had given way during a warm-up in Lahore – but he was back in the saddle for England’s second defeat of the series – an innings-and-100-run rout at the Gadaffi Stadium, when England’s bid for a seventh consecutive series win was uncompromisingly thwarted. There it seemed his tale would end. One operation followed another, as he was forced to pull out of the India tour the following March, as well as an entire home season and the Ashes rematch Down Under.But finally, he did make his return – 18 months and 16 matches later – on his home ground at Headingley in May 2007, where he marked his comeback with an emotional century and a record-equalling 20th victory as England captain, a thumping innings and 283-run win over West Indies.

Sehwag's short ball malaise

Edwards had a short-leg and leg-slip in place and angled the ball into Sehwag’s ribs – a form of bodyline – and had Sehwag hopping all over the place in extreme discomfort

George Binoy04-Jun-2006Virender Sehwag’s ineptness against the short ball is now well known among bowlers all around the world. England exploited it superbly with balls that rose sharply just outside off stump and, today, Fidel Edwards exploited the same weakness but in a different manner.Edwards had a short-leg and leg-slip in place and angled the ball into Sehwag’s ribs – a form of bodyline – and had him hopping all over the place in extreme discomfort. Edwards almost had him twice – a lob off the gloves fell beyond the diving short-leg fielder and another fell agonisingly short of leg-slip. It was a fascinating battle but one that was cut short when Edwards suffered a hamstring injury. The following graphic compares the length bowled to Sehwag by Edwards and the other fast bowlers.In the first innings, Edwards had bowled to a different plan. There was plenty of outswing on offer and though Edwards pitched nine out of 11 deliveries short, they were not targeted at the rib cage. With the pitch easing out for batting, Edwards targeted Sehwag with short-pitched stuff but the other bowlers kept it much fuller, primarily because they weren’t as quick as Edwards and couldn’t generate the necessary bounce off a slow pitch. And this meant that though Sehwag struggled against Edwards, there was no sustained pressure from the other end.Sehwag wasn’t in control of six of the 16 balls he faced from Edwards, while he was in control of 35 of the 43 balls bowled by the other fast bowlers. Edwards challenged Sehwag to pull – one of his most awkward shots – and forced him to fend uneasily off his hips without any semblance of control. The others, however, allowed him to free his arms on the offside and even over pitched on his pads and conceded easy runs. There won’t be such a release of pressure when Sehwag tours South Africa in December, or England and Australia next year and he had better buckle down and sort out this obvious weakness.

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