Stats: Mumbai Indians ace second-highest IPL chase, as Kieron Pollard equals fast fifty for the franchise

Jasprit Bumrah suffers his most expensive spell in T20s

Sampath Bandarupalli01-May-2021138 – Runs scored by the Mumbai Indians in the last ten overs, the most by any team in a successful IPL chase. Mumbai broke their own record of 133, set against the Kings XI Punjab in 2019. The 138 runs by Mumbai are also the third-most in the final ten overs of a successful T20 chase.Trinbago Knight Riders scored 144 runs against St Lucia Stars in CPL 2018 when they needed 139 runs in the final ten, a week after being on the receiving end of a 139-run effort by Jamaica Tallawahs in Port of Spain.ESPNcricinfo Ltd219 – The target chased down by Mumbai, which is the second-highest successful chase in the history of the IPL. The highest chase is by the Rajasthan Royals against the Kings XI, when they chased down a 224-run target in Sharjah last year. Tonight’s chase against the Super Kings was the first successful chase of a 200-plus target by Mumbai in the IPL across eight attempts.ESPNcricinfo Ltd0 – Quicker IPL fifties for Mumbai than the 17-ball effort by Kieron Pollard today. Pollard himself in 2016, Ishan Kishan in 2018 and Hardik Pandya in 2019 also had fifties off 17 balls for Mumbai previously, all against the Kolkata Knight Riders.This was also the fastest fifty by any player in the IPL against the Super Kings. KL Rahul in 2019 in Mohali and Sanju Samson in 2020 in Sharjah had fifties in 19 balls against the Super Kings. The unbeaten 87 from Pollard is also his highest IPL score.ESPNcricinfo Ltd16 – Sixes hit by the Super Kings batters in this match, the most by any team in an IPL match against Mumbai. The previous most was 15, by the Knight Riders in 2019 in Kolkata. In reply tonight, Mumbai struck 14 maximums, the most by them in an IPL game against the Super Kings.0 – Instances of more than one century partnership in an IPL innings before the Super Kings’ innings tonight. Faf du Plessis and Moeen Ali added 108 runs for the second wicket, before Ambati Rayudu and Ravindra Jadeja shared an unbeaten 102-run stand for the fifth wicket.218 for 4 – The Super Kings’ total is their highest against Mumbai. Previously, 208 for 5 in Chepauk in 2008 was the only instance of the Super Kings posting 200+ against Mumbai in the IPL.62 – Runs conceded by Lungi Ngidi in this game, the most by any player in an IPL match for the Super Kings. The previous most conceded by a CSK bowler in an IPL game was 58 by Mohit Sharma vs Sunrisers Hyderabad in 2015, and Sam Curran earlier this season against KKR.56 – Runs conceded by Jasprit Bumrah, in four overs, in this match, which is the most by him in a T20. The previous most conceded by Bumrah was 55 against the Delhi Daredevils in Delhi in 2015.

Liam Livingstone's travelling roadshow – next stop, Taunton

Somerset host Lancashire in quarter-final at world’s highest-scoring T20 venue

Matt Roller25-Aug-2021Roll up, roll up and see The Beast. Shane Warne’s moniker for Liam Livingstone is yet to catch on but it will be only a matter of time before it does if his monstrous six-hitting form continues, not least with the T20 World Cup looming in the middle distance.Livingstone’s travelling roadshow has had stops in Southampton, Birmingham, Nottingham, Leeds and north London over the last month, which has seen him become the Hundred’s leading run-scorer, top six-hitter and poster boy. He has already hit 78 sixes in 2021 and will never have a better chance of joining Andre Russell (2019) and Chris Gayle (2011, 2012, 2013, 2015, 2016, 2017) in the elite club of T20 hitters to have scaled Mount 100 in a calendar year.His next stop is Taunton – the highest-scoring T20 venue in not only the country, but the world – for Lancashire’s Vitality Blast quarter-final against Somerset on Thursday night. The pitches are flat and the boundaries are barely 70 metres long in any direction. The average scoring rate of 8.92 runs per over is unmatched and Somerset’s group game against Middlesex this year was the only time in the 19 seasons of domestic T20 cricket there that they have defended a score below 170 on home soil.Leading T20 six-hitters in 2021•ESPNcricinfo LtdLivingstone has played a solitary innings in a Taunton T20, a skittish 16 off 18 balls on England debut four years ago as South Africa closed out a narrow win. It is the sort of innings it is near-impossible to imagine him playing now: he is averaging 45.69 with a strike rate of 156.52 in T20s this year and on the rare occasions that he has failed, it has been early on rather than after chewing up balls.He insists the biggest factor has been a shift in mindset but has also put in the hard yards. Whereas once he would have been given a run in the England side, he was summarily dropped from the T20I side after two games and only returned four years later at the age of 27, by which stage he was near enough the finished article. He has played 97 T20s for eight teams in the last two-and-a-half years, travelling the world to give himself exposure to different roles and conditions across the franchise circuit, and has taken a keen interest in the technical aspects of his batting.”Going around the different leagues and travelling the world isn’t always easy,” he said last week. “It’s not always the glitz and glamour that people think it is but that hard work is paying off for me. It’s been a breakthrough couple of months and the biggest thing is that I don’t have too many expectations on myself anymore. I go out each game making sure that I’m taking it all in and knowing that this doesn’t last forever.”I used to swing as hard as I could but hopefully I’ve grown up a little bit. I’m a bit more experienced and I’m trying to become more consistent at hitting sixes, which I have done over the past year. It’s such a valuable thing to have in your armoury and it’s something that’s set me up to be able to be picked up in the PSL, the Big Bash or wherever it is around the world.”He made a key technical change before England’s washed-out ODI against Sri Lanka in Bristol, working with Paul Collingwood and Marcus Trescothick in the indoor school, narrowing his six-hitting base to allow his back hip to drive through. The result was a record-breaking 42-ball hundred against Pakistan in only his sixth T20I and he has not looked back in the weeks since.”I used to lose a lot of my power with too wide a base, so I’ve narrowed it a bit,” he explained during a recent six-hitting masterclass with Sky Sports. “We did loads of sessions going into that self-isolation period and as soon as I came out of it, it worked perfectly.”My biggest thing nowadays is making sure that I have a strong base and if I’m balanced, I have the ability to use my back hip which gives me a lot of power. I’m making sure that I’m not losing my front foot too much, which means I lose the back hip and then all of sudden lose my power.”Related

  • Liam Livingstone credits work with Paul Collingwood, Marcus Trescothick for record-breaking ton

  • Liam Livingstone ransacks 92* as Birmingham Phoenix soar into Hundred final

  • Moeen Ali, Liam Livingstone, Rashid Khan and Adam Milne in men's Hundred team of the tournament

Livingstone’s impressive balls-per-six ratio was cited as the main reason he was picked up by Rajasthan Royals in the 2018 IPL auction and he is aware that it makes him stand out. “We talk about being able to hit big sixes as an entertainment thing because it’s great fun but it’s also a great thing to have: you can back yourself to clear an 80-metre boundary with a long-on in, rather than just being able to clear a 30-yard circle for a one-bounce four.”There is added pressure on Livingstone to perform on Thursday night because Lancashire are suffering an availability crisis: Keaton Jennings (calf), Richard Gleeson (back) and Luke Wood (side strain) are all expected to miss out while Jos Buttler is on England Test duty, Finn Allen is self-isolating in Bangladesh and Saqib Mahmood will stay at Headingley as Covid/concussion cover despite missing out on selection. They will also have to overcome their struggles on the road, having lost five out of their six away games in the group stage.But in current form he will prove hard to stop. Livingstone is in a rare purple patch were no situation seems insurmountable when he is at the crease: in the Hundred final, his freak run-out from the cover boundary saw him dismissed for 46 off 19 balls and meant the end of Birmingham Phoenix’s hopes with a single throw. Perhaps Will Smeed and Tom Abell have picked up a flaw after sharing a dressing room with him for the last month; if not, they could be in for a long night.

Farewell to the kid from Masterton

From having a name the principal couldn’t pronounce at school to hitting the shot to win the WTC – it’s been some journey for Ross Taylor

Andrew Fidel Fernando08-Jan-20223:26

‘Turning myself into a Test player was the biggest achievement’

When you’re a half-Samoan kid from Masterton, life has some possibilities laid out for you, but other paths seem steep and narrow. This being a small town deep in rural New Zealand, there’s always the chance paddocks could be in your future. If you were into sports, the region is better known – like many of this description are – for rugby.So if you’ve got shoulders the size of a milking shed, your fast-twitch fibres are in good order, and you have height, there’s gotta be a No. 8 jersey somewhere with your name on it, right? The principal at your primary school might have mangled your actual first name, Luteru, to the point where your mother just brought your one Anglicised given name to the front of the queue, but rugby announcers, even in the provinces, are by now well-versed with the Polynesian names on team rosters.Related

  • 'Couldn't be scripted better' – Taylor has a ball, and a wicket, as he signs off from Tests

  • New Zealand look to bounce back against joyous Bangladesh

  • Taylor second only to Kohli since 2015 World Cup

  • 'The camaraderie of this team is the best I've been part of'

  • Ross Taylor announces international retirement

But there was always the matter of the bat hitting the ball like a fearsome peal of thunder, and in those moments, the prosaic stuff – who you are, where you’re from – tend not to matter. And when you’re hitting, no matter how withdrawn and affable you are, or how nervous you might feel, coaches, teammates, and opponents see a strut. Don’t feed that rasping cut of his. Beware of those booming drives. And for the love of all that is holy, stay the hell away from those pads.In the early days, before there is a real defence, the hitting is a crutch. On first viewing, Martin Crowe thinks: here’s a slogger. Crowe would change his mind to such an extent that he becomes a treasured mentor and confidante, but his initial appraisal is echoed elsewhere. You’ve made the New Zealand team, scored some early runs, and rapidly become a fixture in the middle order. Life becomes big fast. And cricket bigger and faster still. At the IPL, you’re a million-dollar buy in 2011. When the slog sweep is pinging off the middle, you’re worth every cent.In international cricket, things are more complex. This is not a good New Zealand side that you are a part of. In fact, it is said, perhaps not uncharitably, that it is one of the worst. When in this context, you become captain, and hole out to deep midwicket playing that shot that is one of the foundations of your game, there are questions about responsibility. Or worse. On the global scale, New Zealand is a broad-minded and generous place. But even in New Zealand, athletes from certain ethnic backgrounds find themselves the subject of more cynical strains of criticism than others. You’re never told you don’t have the talent.Ross Taylor has a moment with his kids ahead of his 100th Test•AFPWhen the captaincy is yanked away, suddenly, and acrimoniously, there is a gash that needs healing, but also a growing. The next year, 2013, is the richest of your Test career to date – 866 runs flowing at an average of 72.16. The hitter is giving way to the hustler. You’re running the fast twos, trading in the slog for the paddle, the big heaves for the legside dinks, and this, in turn, becomes the bedrock of your ODI game, which in later years, is to hit the stratosphere. No one is making backhanded compliments about your talent now.Still, life is not without its trials. You have a growth in your eye that comes on so gradually you don’t notice you’re not picking bowlers out of the hand under lights any more. The Test schedule for New Zealand goes cold just as your own form is running hot. And oh, just to drive the point home, you literally get hit in the balls – a missed reverse-sweep in the nets leaving your gonads in such a state they require surgery, the injury forcing you to miss matches.In your last years come the serious milestones. Passing Crowe’s run tally of 5444, then his century count of 17, is moving even for watchers-on, deeply affecting for you. Stephen Fleming’s New Zealand run tally of 7172 tumbles too. When you play the cut or lay into a drive, a little of that early strut survives, but the batting is a little more like the man now: unruffled, determined, reserved. And while you’ve been on your own path, your team has transformed around you. The best your nation has ever produced, probably. It falls to you to hit the runs that win the World Test Championship – a whip off the pads to deep square leg. Sometimes life catches up and meets you where you want it.If we’re being critical, there is the matter of only briefly having threatened to push the Test average past 50 (although, if you play the majority of your innings on pitches where even normally unremarkable seamers can spit venom at any time of the day, these can feel like fantasy numbers). Could that conversion rate have been higher? We’re nitpicking.If you’re that kid from Masterton, though, with the name the principal can’t pronounce, you might look back and think that for all the publicly-played out travails, dramatic turns, and blows both physical and emotional, there could hardly have been a more gratifying road for you.

Just how formidable are South Africa at home, really?

Not all that much over the last decade and a half, if you go by the numbers

Sidharth Monga24-Dec-2021In between his pleasantries with the BCCI during his pre-departure press conference, India’s captain, Virat Kohli, spoke of the actual cricketing challenge in South Africa too. He rightly said South Africa has the most challenging conditions for a visiting batter, but as a team overall, South Africa might just be the friendliest of the big five countries that are generally thought to be the toughest for players from visiting sides to succeed in.The instant image that comes to mind when you think South Africa is of their fast bowlers running through visitors, but scratch a little and major victories for visiting teams spring up. Even on what seemed like a disastrous tour in 1996-97 – infamous for the 100 all out and 66 all out in Durban, India might have snuck a win in Johannesburg if not for one of those infamous Highveld electric storms. Ten years later, they won a Test with a fractious team, practically using only two fast bowlers.In the last 15 years, only Sri Lanka, West Indies, Bangladesh, Zimbabwe and Ireland have worse win-loss ratios at home.

India are yet to lose a Test out of the five they have played in Johannesburg, having won two and come close to winning two others. Australia and England, too, find themselves at home at this ground, having won more than they have lost. Kingsmead in Durban, of late, has almost become an away venue for South Africa: they have lost seven of their last nine matches there. Teams that are powerful at home don’t have two bogey grounds among their regular marquee venues. Add Port Elizabeth’s slow surface, and South Africa have three of the ten regular Test venues that have been the worst for home teams over the last 15 years.

When Kohli says the conditions are the most challenging for visiting batters, he is right. There is England-like seam movement, and Australia-like pace and bounce at three of South Africa’s venues. Durban and Port Elizabeth can assist spin and reverse swing. That means visiting bowlers, too, find sporting conditions if they are good enough.Most crucially, Tests sides falter in away Tests because their attacks don’t have the depth for those conditions, but sometimes in low-scoring matches you can manage without depth, as India did in Johannesburg in that 2006 game, when they needed a fourth bowler for only 22 overs in the whole Test.

The differences in averages above tell you that while India and Australia totally obliterate opposition sides at home, England and South Africa are comparable in the extent of opportunity their conditions provide visiting sides. Pitches in both places afford generous amounts of seam movement, or let opposition sides into the game at certain venues. In New Zealand, the difference between away batters’ and away bowlers’ averages has been 17.7 points over the last seven years, with their swing bowlers using the peculiar conditions, which keep getting better for batting as the match grows older. A three-year rolling comparison shows how South Africa and England are close to each other.

One of the reasons England might have a better record than South Africa at home despite similar numbers for visiting bowlers could be that South Africa hardly play long series. As the length of a series increases, the strengths of home sides tend to pull them ahead of visiting sides over the duration.

You are not out of a series even if you lose the first Test in South Africa, as has been witnessed on two of India’s last four tours. In 2006-07, India squandered a 1-0 lead; in 2010-11, they came back from a crushing defeat in the first Test to end up 1-1. Also, the home side is much less likely to win two on the bounce in South Africa.

In an era where most home teams are making the most of home advantage by playing on pitches and in a manner that seek to eliminate the opposition bowlers, South Africa’s pitches remain arguably the most sporting. If you have a good attack and at least one good spinner, you are never out of it in South Africa, which is what India will be thinking as they look to turn those odd Test wins into their first series win in the country.

Stats inputs from Shiva Jayaraman

From sleepless nights to soaring heights, Abhinav Manohar lives his IPL dream

The 27-year old Karnataka finisher was bought for INR 2.6 crores by Gujarat Titans

Shashank Kishore14-Feb-20222:12

Abhinav Manohar – ‘Hardly got three-four hours of sleep a night the past week’

When Abhinav Manohar got picked to play for Karnataka as a 27-year-old last November, he was the second one from his family to play professional cricket. Sharanya Sadarangani, his first cousin, currently represents the German women’s national team.On Saturday, Abhinav added another feather to the family cap when he was signed by Gujarat Titans at the IPL auction. The Hardik Pandya-led team overcame a fierce bidding war with Kolkata Knight Riders and Delhi Capitals to secure his services as a finisher. Abhinav’s eventual contract of INR 2.6 crore (USD 346,000 approx.) was 13 times his base price.It was quite the turn. Five years ago, he returned dejected from a trial with Mumbai Indians after he had “failed to bat to potential” when asked to achieve a certain target during a practice match. But having gone back this time, not just to Mumbai but to a few other teams as well, he was quietly confident of breaking into the IPL. To the extent that the entire family had parked themselves on the couch to watch the auction proceedings live.Related

'Your mindset can't be same every innings' – Shubman Gill shrugs off strike rate debate

Questions from IPL auction: How did Warner go for such a low price? Why did Mumbai splurge on an injured Archer?

IPL 2022 mega auction: Mumbai Indians splurge on Tim David and 'non-playing' Jofra Archer

Zaheer Khan: To see Bumrah and Archer bowling in tandem 'will be worth the wait'

IPL Auction 2022 Stats: Harshal Patel's 5275% hike, Krishnappa Gowtham's slide, and more

“I’ve not been sleeping well, have hardly been getting 3-4 hours of sleep a night for the past week,” Abhinav tells ESPNcricinfo. “Just the excitement and nervousness of ‘will I get picked or will I not get picked?’, I guess. It’s been on my mind and [Saturday] was a bit too much. I haven’t processed it fully. I guess it will take me a couple of days. We were all watching it at home together.It’s a remarkable rise, because until three months ago, Abhinav wasn’t even on Karnataka’s selection radar. A shrunk domestic calendar thrown in disarray due to Covid-19 left open the possibility of him losing another year. Abhinav was prepared mentally, and thought he’d give himself time until 30 to make a mark in cricket with “no back-up options”. And then out of nowhere came a ray of hope.He had the backing of runs in club cricket for Bangalore United Cricket Club (BUCC) in KSCA’s first-division league. But he’d had that for three seasons now. The only difference this time was Karnataka needed to shore up their batting. Karun Nair’s form had been patchy, and they wouldn’t have the services of Devdutt Padikkal, Mayank Agarwal and KL Rahul for the Syed Mushtaq Ali T20s. Enter Abhinav.Until then, he only had a reputation of being a big-hitter in local cricket. This was going to be a real test. But even before he could soak in the feeling of having made his debut, he was walking out to avert a crisis against Saurashtra. Karnataka had slipped to 34 for 3 in pursuit of 146, and needed a bailout. Abhinav not only did that, but saw the team home in a tense final-over finish. By the time he walked off the field, he had hit four fours and six sixes in his 49-ball 70. He finished the SMA T20s with 162 runs in four innings at a strike rate of 150.Abhinav Manohar rose to prominence at the Syed Mushtaq Ali T20s in 2021•Abhinav ManoharThen in the final against Tamil Nadu, he showed the ability to rotate strike and take the innings deep. Karnataka were three down for 32 inside the Powerplay, and needed a revival. Abhinav started slowly on a sluggish surface, but recovered to finish with a 37-ball 46 that helped put up a total of 152. It nearly proved enough, but for Shahrukh Khan’s last-ball six.Following the scores from back in Bengaluru was his proud coach Irfan Sait. Abhinav’s father and Sait ran their business establishments on the same lane in Bengaluru’s commercial street many years ago. The Manohars ran a footwear store and Sait had a clothing store. This acquaintance turned into friendship, before Sait took Abhinav under his wing at his cricket academy.Sait trains hundreds of children and admits that initially, Abhinav was just like any other trainee. But four years in, he noticed how his commitment stood out. As he approached 14-15, where children, and their parents, decide between pursuing studies or cricket, Abhinav showed no signs of slowing down. And when he scored a century after copping a blow on his forehead, Sait knew his ward had the wares to succeed.”Arshad Ayub would send an Under-14 team from Hyderabad every summer for matches, and we would put together our best teams across age-groups. Abhinav made it to this team and in one of the games, got a quickfire century after getting hit on the forehead. That made everyone sit up and take note of this boy’s batting, especially the big-hitting prowess.””Generally at that age, kids are careless, and can be reckless with their stroke play. The opposite happened with Abhinav. He suddenly went into a defensive mode for a while, and that became detrimental to his game. His natural game was to attack, and as he made it through to Under-16s and Under-19s, that natural game returned. It took a while though for him to make some changes.”Abhinav needed to transform in other ways too. Having battled weight issues as a teenager, he worked on not just slimming down but also developing a regimen that has helped aid his big hitting. He has taken a leaf out of Rahul and Manish Pandey’s training routines and follows that to the hilt. Among his goals is to become an all-format player.”To play for Karnataka is a big thing. It can be as hard as breaking into the Indian team,” he says. “The batting line-up is full of stars, and me being a batsman, after age-group, you wonder what you’re doing. You think if you will get a chance, how long will it take? Luckily my parents didn’t put pressure on me to get a job. My father just said keep trying and things will fall in place. Glad it has.”

Carnage and fun – the madness at the death in T20 cricket

The agony and ecstasy of this part is really what differentiates T20 from every other form of the game

Jarrod Kimber16-Apr-2022Nicholas Pooran pulls a six, and it is such a powerful hit that it seems to change the recent perception that he is overrated by the T20 hipsters of the world. That is what big hits do. What big moments do. You smash a six to win a game, and people take notice. Sunrisers needed 28 from 18 against Gujarat Titans, and Kane Williamson was out and Rahul Tripathi had limped off. And it was Pooran and Aiden Markram who did the job.T20, like basketball or netball, is inclined to produce close games; a short-form sport where each team has an equal amount of opportunities to score, and so we get a lot of matches that finish near the end. Plenty of clutch moments, pressure-cooker finishes – all the clichés you hear about.And so when a player pulls off something like what Pooran did against Titans, it becomes the story for a little while.Related

  • Mid-season trends: Retained players underperform while uncapped Indians thrive

  • Selfless and versatile Rahul Tripathi finally getting his due

  • The art of the T20 finisher

  • The weird world of T20 pinch hitters

  • The future is tall

But last season Pooran was in another close match, and Markram was his partner again, albeit for a different team. In that game against Rajasthan Royals, Punjab Kings needed ten runs from 15 balls with eight wickets in hand.It should have been easy, as Chris Morris was bowling for Royals, and he got the yips and started bowling full tosses. He delivered three of them, one which almost bowled Markram as he ducked thinking it was going to hit him. Another one of those shocked Pooran so much that he could only push it for one.Then they needed eight from 12, and Mustafizur Rahman was bowling to Pooran, and bowled two deliveries from wide of the crease. So wide that the umpires probably should have checked for back-foot no-balls. Instead, Mustafizur got through the over conceding only four runs, and had Markram dropped as well. But it meant Kings needed four from the last over.Kartik Tyagi came on to bowl this last over. He had done this twice in the IPL before and gone for nine and 27 runs.Tyagi started with a full toss, Markram found a fielder and there was no run. Next ball, Markram tried to finish it in one hit from a full ball but tanked it to square leg for a single. The next delivery, Pooran tried to run one off the face, which he did successfully, but straight to the wicketkeeper. Deepak Hooda was the new man in, three off three were needed for Kings to win and ESPNcricinfo’s win predictor still had them at a 100% chance of winning.

Tyagi bowled a wide, but it wasn’t called because Hooda had moved across. Next ball he bowled another, Hooda didn’t move across as much, and edged behind. So far in this over there had been one full toss, two potential wides, one wicket and a single.Now Kings needed three runs from one ball. Tyagi delivered wide – but legally so – as Fabian Allen missed it, and Royals won. Tyagi delivered two wides and a full toss, and yet went for only one run in the over.If you look at the entire 15-ball stretch, there were four full tosses, three different bowlers, four batters, two balls outside the wide line, two potential back-foot no-balls, seven singles, two wickets and eight dot balls. There was some good bowling in there, but there were more than enough bad balls and wides for Kings to win the game easily.But sometimes mad things like this happen at the death of a T20 game. It is such a different form of cricket, the most like baseball of any cricket in how close it is to the simpler binary equation of strikes and home runs. Consolidation, keeping wickets in hand, bowling normal lines and lengths – they all go out of the window.Batters are swinging off their feet, bowlers can bowl four great balls and two average ones, and find their overs going for 14. We call it the death because it is the end of the innings, but it has the kind of finality about it that death does. A good over can be three runs; a bad over, 20. The agony and the ecstasy of this part of the game is really what differentiates T20 from every other form of the game.There was a tremendous example of this when West Indies took on England for the fifth and deciding T20I in Barbados a few months ago, where Jason Holder took four wickets in four balls in the final over of the series.Holder bowled a collection of poor balls but ended with four wickets in four balls against England in the final T20I this year•Getty ImagesHolder was defending 20 runs, and Sam Billings and Chris Jordan were at the crease targeting a short leg-side boundary. Because England were six down, and that many were still needed, West Indies had to be firm favourites.Jordan has always had all-round talent, but in T20s, he has never really mastered hitting boundaries. And then last year, he went berserk, and started smashing it everywhere. Billings is more of a middle-overs anchor, but he has power. Last year alone he hit 28 sixes, almost one a game. Oh, and he was 40 from 26 at this point. So England had a good outside chance of winning this.Holder has turned himself into a death bowler in the last three years, and he is very good at taking wickets in this period. Since the start of 2019, he has the fourth-best average in the last four overs for a minimum of 250 balls bowled: 13.29.First ball, Holder was going at Billings, and it was a wide full toss that Billings mishit to long-on. It was also a no-ball. So Holder delivered a wide, no-ball full toss, but Billings tried to drag it to the short boundary, and this double mistake only cost Holder two runs. Although it did mean that it was now 18 from six. With a free hit to come.The extra ball was wide and full, and was a fine free-hit delivery, but Jordan left it assuming it would be called wide. It wasn’t.The next ball was another full toss, and again Jordan tried to clear the short side, but mishit the ball, and the catch was taken right on the boundary. But that was okay, as they still had Billings, who would now be on strike.Holder went for the wide yorker, but missing his length, delivered a half-volley. Billings had already committed to the short leg-side boundary, he hit it straight up and found the leg-side fielder. Holder had missed his length twice but both set batters were gone.With Adil Rashid facing, Holder tried a slower ball that was miscued to the midwicket fielder again. It was a good length to hit, though the change of pace helped him. A better-set batter could have savaged it.

The death is a scramble. It is often messy. Bad balls win games, good shots get caught, and so much is going on that we are just trying to process the results, and often forget about the process.

Holder’s final ball was his first really top delivery in this over. He bowled Saqib Mahmood to end the game. West Indies won, Holder was given the Player-of-the-Match award, almost completely for this over. And it wasn’t a good over. He wasn’t even bowling that well earlier in the match. He had conceded 25 runs from his first two overs, and his only other wicket had been off a half-tracker to Moeen Ali.Rather, it was Akeal Hosein who had changed the game. He took 4 for 30, destroyed England’s middle order, and also had to bowl at the death as a left-arm finger spinner. According to ESPNcricinfo’s Impact metric, Hosein was the best player by a distance, and Holder was the eighth-best.Holder’s was a collection of poor balls that were helped by the fact that England needed 20 runs, were fancied with the short boundary, and that a couple of lower-order batters were thrown in afresh.It is hard to hit boundaries. It is even harder when your team is behind, and you are obsessed by only one boundary. But we remember the wickets as good, and not as per the situation.Which brings us back to Sunrisers’ win over Titans the other night. With 18 balls left, 28 were needed. The first of those balls, from Lockie Ferguson, was a short one to Pooran who mistimed a pull off the toe of his bat. Ferguson had to do a hand-brake turn to get back to where the ball was dropping, but ultimately he shelled it.The next two balls from Ferguson were down the leg side – one was called a wide, the other flicked away for a free boundary. Next ball, Ferguson went short again and Pooran flick-pulled it for six. After this, Ferguson nailed some yorkers; then Mohammad Shami started with hard lengths to ensure that only singles and a double could be scored.Many six-attempts aren’t sixes; they are mishits or just misses•BCCIBut when Shami went short to Pooran again, he top-edged over the wicketkeeper’s head for a boundary. To finish the over, Markram nailed a four off an attempted yorker from Shami that just missed its mark.Ferguson went short again to start the last over and Pooran hit it back to Trinidad, and the game was over.There were more good balls from Ferguson and Shami than Royals delivered in that game last season. They could have dismissed Pooran twice, and Markram struggled right until he got one off the middle.The same two batters who couldn’t manage ten from 15 with a bunch of full tosses and wides last year, needed only 13 balls to get 28 off much higher quality bowling.We look for clutch and pressure performances, and overlook that both teams are often going so hard, mad things will happen. Average batting – or very lucky bowling – can win you a game sometimes. The death is a scramble. It is often messy. Bad balls win games, good shots get caught, and so much is going on that we are just trying to process the results, and often forget about the process.It is really hard to bowl a delivery that can’t be hit for a four or a six. It is not easy to try and hit a six every ball. These are high-risk acts. Most six-attempts aren’t sixes; they are mishits or just misses.When you see this much drama, do you really want to check that the story was told correctly? Or do you want to scream at Pooran’s six, Holder’s four in four, or Tyagi’s record-breaking over?Because when you take a forensic look at the death overs of a T20 game, what you often find is utter carnage. And fun times.

Lyon: 'Remarkable to be around for that long and have played a role in Australian cricket'

The offspinner returns to Galle, the scene of his Test debut, as one of the most prolific Australian bowlers

Andrew McGlashan25-Jun-20221:29

Nathan Lyon on Sri Lanka Tests: ‘We’re expecting it to spin from ball one’

“In my head I thought, ‘oh no, that’s going to be short and wide’ but lucky enough that wasn’t the case.”Nathan Lyon, 23 years old with just five first-class matches and 14 wickets, who a year before was on the Adelaide Oval groundstaff, marks out his run. “Here he is, an offspinner bowling to left handers, normally offspinners like that,” says Tony Greig on commentary.Lyon comes round the wicket to Kumar Sangakkara, the delivery lands perfectly around off stump, grips and dusts off the dry Galle surface, draws the great left-hander forward, takes the edge and Michael Clarke grabs a brilliant one-handed catch, low to his left at slip.At that moment, Lyon becomes just the third Australian to take a wicket with his first ball in Test cricket – the other occasions happened in the 1890s. There are still only 20 to have done it in the history of the game (bizarrely, Shaminda Eranga did it later in the same series and Lyon’s fellow debutant, Trent Copeland, had struck with his second delivery just an hour earlier).”All I tried to do was bowl my best ball,” Lyon recalled, speaking to ESPNcricinfo, as he prepared to return to Galle for Australia’s upcoming two-match series. “I honestly thought it was going to be hit for four in my memory, but lucky enough Kumar nicked one. When you’re able to nick the left hander off it’s a nice feeling. That’s one of our dismissals.”Michael Clarke grabs a low chance to remove Kumar Sangakkara•AFPLyon’s rapid elevation to the Test side, with just a handful of matches under his belt, came at a time when Australia were still searching to fill the void left by Shane Warne. They had cycled through a variety of options in the four years since with none really sticking.”I was pretty nervous just being around the likes of Ricky Ponting, Michael Hussey, Michael Clarke and these guys,” Lyon said. “Michael Clarke and Greg Chappell were the ones who informed me [I was playing]. I was pretty pumped…to be told I was going to be the only spinner was a bit of a shock but it was pretty goddam exciting to be honest.Related

  • Nathan Lyon: 'I've never conquered this game of cricket and never will'

  • Adam Voges: 'Not the one that spins and beats your outside edge that is the dangerous one'

  • Smith 'will be fine' for first Test against Sri Lanka, recovering Starc doubtful

  • Lyon tames Lahore as Australia's ghosts disappear

  • Australia keen to expose 'scarcity' of spin stocks in Sri Lanka

“I’d always dreamt of having that moment, always dreamt of being at the top of my mark in a Test match and seeing what I potentially could do.”A few hours after that first scalp, Lyon walked off with a five-wicket haul to his name having run through Sri Lanka’s lower-order. The surprising nature of his debut is emphasised by his memory of that experience.”Before that I’d never really taken many five-fors in my life so didn’t really know what to expect,” he said. “I probably didn’t understand the size of the events that had just happened.”Lyon returns to Galle this week with 108 Tests and 427 Test wickets to his name, long since established as Australia’s GOAT offspinner and now only behind Warne and Glenn McGrath in their overall tally.

I was pretty nervous just being around the likes of Ricky Ponting, Michael Hussey, Michael Clarke and these guys

“I was only talking to family the other day about where things started,” he said.  “So it is pretty remarkable when you look back to 2011 and see where we are at this stage but obviously it was a dream come true to play just one Test, so I’ve been pretty lucky.”Lyon’s career was not entirely smooth sailing after his remarkable start, but he has only ever missed four Tests since his debut and after returning to Test side during the 2013 Ashes in England he has played 86 consecutive matches (although given Australia’s current injury challenges that is a statistic given with caution). When pressed, Lyon picked out a period around 2014-15 when he really started to feel things had clicked for him, although even now he takes nothing for granted.”It’s a good question and to be honest I hate answering it,” he said. “Because as soon as you feel comfortable that’s when things get taken away from you.”After a bit of toil as wickets briefly dried up during the 2020-21 season, then the wait extended by Australia’s absence from the Test scene due to Covid-19, Lyon crossed the 400-wicket milestone against England at the Gabba last year and in his most recent outing took 5 for 83 to secure Australia’s significant series victory in Pakistan during March.Nathan Lyon walks off after completing a five-wicket haul on debut•AFP”They’d been a lot of media talk in the last couple of years when we’d played on some very docile wickets and we weren’t able to get the win,” Lyon said of clinching the win on the last day in Lahore. “That was on my mind heading into the last Test, but was pretty proud of the way the boys went about it.”Now he’s back on the subcontinent with Australia hoping to further their push for a place in the World Test Championship final. This is Lyon’s second return to Sri Lanka after his debut series having been part of the 2016 tour where they lost the Tests 3-0. His 16 wickets at 31.93 paled on comparison to Rangana Herath’s 28 at 12.75 and he knows the focus will likely be on him.”There’s an excitement level when you head over to a place like Sri Lanka, also with my personal history there,” he said. “There’s always nerves. If you talk to Mitchell Starc he’ll say I’ve debuted about 95 times out of 108 Tests. That’s not nerves from the fear of failing, it’s more from of really caring about the team and wanting to perform well for your mates.”While conditions are likely to be more extreme than those Australia overcame in Pakistan, Lyon did not believe it would require an entirely new approach. “Don’t think it changes too much. You get in trouble where you change and try to force the game,” he said. “When talking about the subcontinent, it’s about a good squad mentality and that’s what I believe you need to perform over there. You can’t do it by yourself.”Lyon regularly cites John Davison as the key mentor of his career – “I think he is the best spin coach in the world” – but on the theme of always looking at the next challenge he is excited by the opportunity to work with Daniel Vettori who will begin his role as an assistant coach.Nathan Lyon: “There’s an excitement level when you head over to a place like Sri Lanka”•Getty Images and Cricket Australia”It will be brilliant to have Dan on board. I want to sit down and nut out some plans and talk to him about cricket in general, but specifically spin bowling.”He is hopeful, too, that the embryonic partnership with Mitchell Swepson that began in Pakistan will get another chance. “If you look at Swepo, he probably didn’t have the dream debut but it’s something he should be very proud of,” he said. “I’m excited about our partnership and ticking off some big goals as the spin twins.”He is also encouraged by the longer-term prospects of Australian spin bowling. Offspinner Todd Murphy, who has drawn comparisons with Lyon, and Tanveer Sangha have been with the A squad, while Matt Kuhnemann has already been elevated to the ODI side.”It’s really good to finally see them be able to play some A tours away from home. It will only improve them,” he said. “They may find a couple of hard days but I promise you one thing, there are a lot more hard days than good days in Test cricket.”From that heady start in Galle, Lyon has experienced plenty of both. But what would his response have been if, 11 years ago, someone had told him this is how his career would play out?”You’re an idiot. Would have found it extremely hard to believe. It is pretty remarkable to be around for that long and have played a role in Australian cricket. It’s been very enjoyable and something I’m very proud about, but it’s never anyone’s given right to have that opportunity. In my eyes the hard work is still to be done. I still want to improve.”

Necessity the mother of Saha's powerplay brilliance

He recognises that a high-risk approach early on is the only way for him to remain relevant in a rapidly evolving format

Karthik Krishnaswamy24-May-20222:49

Saha: I like taking risks and that helps in the powerplay

Of all batters who’ve faced at least 500 balls in the first six overs of IPL innings, only ten have scored their runs at above eight an over (133.33 in strike-rate terms). In ninth place on that list, sandwiched incongruously between Chris Gayle and Adam Gilchrist, sits Wriddhiman Saha.Gayle. Saha. Gilchrist.Gayle. . Gilchrist.Among Indian batters, only Prithvi Shaw, Virender Sehwag, Rahul Tripathi and Suryakumar Yadav have scored quicker than Saha in the powerplay.You might know these facts already – certainly their broad outlines – because they seem to get wheeled out at some point during every IPL season. Here’s a piece from 2020, for example, that says much the same thing.Then, Saha had come into Sunrisers Hyderabad’s XI towards the end of the season and smashed 87 off 45 balls in his second game. It hadn’t been an easy decision to play him; Sunrisers wanted to bring Kane Williamson into their XI, so they had to leave out Jonny Bairstow and give Saha the keeping gloves.It is typical of Saha to slip into teams in that manner. You barely notice him, until you do. Which only makes it easier to forget him afterwards.And so it was that no team bid for Saha on day one of the 2022 auction, and that Gujarat Titans, desperate for a wicketkeeper having seemingly forgotten to sign one, snapped him up late on day two. Soon after that, they also signed Matthew Wade. Neither commanded a massive auction price, but Wade secured the bigger winning bid.Wade, of course, began the season as Titans’ No. 1 keeper.But as he has done in past IPLs, Saha waited for his chance, got that chance, and grabbed it. Since April 17, when he made his first appearance of the season, only Jos Buttler and Ruturaj Gaikwad have scored more runs in the IPL than Saha’s 312. Titans’ top order had been their biggest problem area through the initial part of the season; he’s slotted in and made it look a lot less problematic.Why then did he not start the season? Well, because there are – and have always been – sound reasons for teams to use Saha as a back-up rather than first-choice keeper. His powerplay strike rate might only be a few decimal points behind Gayle’s, but the powerplay is only three-tenths of a T20 innings. Gayle’s genius, at his peak, lay in what he could do after the field restrictions ended.Wriddhiman Saha understands his game inside out•BCCISaha is a rather more limited kind of player. He’s adept at chipping and whipping the ball over fielders on the 30-yard circle, and it’s a bonus if it carries beyond the boundary. As soon as there are five fielders outside the 30-yard circle rather than two, his boundary-scoring options are greatly restricted.Over his IPL career, Saha has a strike rate of 113.93 in the middle overs – a significant drop from his powerplay figure of 134.67. This season has followed the same template: 138.56 in the powerplay, 101.13 in the middle overs.Saha’s game is dictated by these constraints. He cannot play himself in in the belief that he can make it up with a flurry of boundaries later. So he sets off like there’s no time to lose, jumping out of his crease against the fast bowlers, lofting the ball over leaping infielders, and targeting leg-side gaps with swipes off his hip and a pick-up shot that’s all his own, executed with a whirl of his arms rather than just his wrists.He bats with little fear of losing his wicket, because his team probably doesn’t mind him losing it in the effort to maximise the powerplay. He bats, in short, like a less explosive Sunil Narine.According to ESPNcricinfo’s intent data, Saha has offered an aggressive response to 60 of the 153 balls he’s faced in the powerplay this season. That’s roughly 39%. Among Indian top-order batters who’ve scored at least 100 runs in the powerplay, only Yashasvi Jaiswal (52%) and Tripathi (42%) have looked to attack more often in this phase, with Shaw sitting a few decimal points behind Saha.!function(){“use strict”;window.addEventListener(“message”,(function(e){if(void 0!==e.data[“datawrapper-height”]){var t=document.querySelectorAll(“iframe”);for(var a in e.data[“datawrapper-height”])for(var r=0;r<t.length;r++){if(t[r].contentWindow===e.source)t[r].style.height=e.data["datawrapper-height"][a]+"px"}}}))}();

To put that in perspective, KL Rahul, Virat Kohli and Shubman Gill, Saha’s opening partner at Titans, have all managed attacking-shot-percentages of between 24% and 27% during the powerplay.These are far more gifted batters than Saha, who can – in the current stage of T20’s evolution, at least – afford to approach the first six overs in this manner, because they have an extra gear for later. Saha, out of necessity, bats like someone out of a utopian vision of T20’s future.”Batting in the powerplay suits my style of play,” Saha said on the eve of Titans’ Qualifier against Rajasthan Royals. “For many years I have preferred to bat in the first six overs, and go in and play a few risky shots. It helps the team, and it allows me to contribute.”If I can contribute in the first six overs and build a good partnership, it becomes a little easier for the batsmen who come in later. They can maybe take two-three extra balls to settle, and maybe we can put up a big score.”There is selflessness, perhaps, in Saha’s wholehearted embrace of this high-risk approach, but more than that there is clear-eyed pragmatism. He understands his game inside out and recognises that it’s the only way someone with his limitations can remain relevant in a rapidly evolving format.

How Gujarat Titans maximised their strengths and minimised their weaknesses

The factors include Miller’s unprecedented IPL form, Hardik’s dual impact, hiding Tewatia’s bowling, and more

Karthik Krishnaswamy31-May-20224:36

Vettori: Hardik and Rashid are two of the best five players in IPL

From having their chances almost universally dismissed to winning the IPL title in their debut season, Gujarat Titans went on a thrillingly unexpected ride. The concerns around their squad following the auction weren’t entirely unjustified, but in a 10-team tournament, every squad had its problem areas. Titans proved to be the best of them both at maximising their strengths and finding ways to work around their weaknesses.And over the two months of the IPL, a span of time in which poor form isn’t easy to turn around – witness the impact of Kieron Pollard’s struggles on Mumbai Indians, for example, or of Ravindra Jadeja’s on Chennai Super Kings – most of Titans’ key players found their rhythm at the right times. This set in motion a chain reaction that turned their eclectic collection of talents into a team with a repeatable formula for winning matches.Miller defies history

In the immediate aftermath of the auction, an ESPNcricinfo panel including former international cricketers Wasim Jaffer and Daniel Vettori put together a potential starting XI for Titans, and found no room for David Miller. This was before Jason Roy’s withdrawal, of course, but Miller’s recent IPL form hadn’t given the panelists much of a reason to pick him anyway.Related

  • Stats: Wristspinners' domination and middle-overs acceleration

  • IPL 2022: Buttler, Livingstone, Mohsin in Hardik-led ESPNcricinfo's Team of the Tournament

  • The Rashid Effect was always on show, the 'biggest achievement' just took its time coming

  • Hardik answers questions with one of the most influential all-round displays in an IPL final

  • Hardik's next goal after five IPL titles: 'To win the World Cup for India'

Scratch “recent”. Of the 58 batters to face at least 500 balls across the six IPL seasons from 2016 to 2021, Miller had the second-lowest strike rate – 118.65.Few, then, would have imagined that he would end IPL 2022 with 481 runs at an average of 68.71 and a strike rate of 142.72. Miller must have put in an incredible amount of work behind the scenes to achieve these successes, and Titans’ coaching staff may also have had a hand to play – not least for backing him, which he has highlighted more than once – but you wonder if he would have started the season at all had the squad contained one or two higher-profile middle-order options.3:36

Aakash Chopra deciphers David Miller’s technique against spin

Hardik’s dual impact

Hardik Pandya didn’t bowl a ball during the 2020 and 2021 seasons, so whether his body could hold up to any sort of bowling workload was a genuine concern before Titans began IPL 2022. As it turned out, he bowled in 10 of their 15 games, sent down an average of 3.1 overs each time he bowled, and executed his skills brilliantly: he finished with eight wickets at 27.75, and an economy rate of 7.27, bettered only by Rashid Khan among Titans’ regular bowlers.Hardik also assumed a new role with the bat, turning himself into an anchor at No. 4, and ended the season as Titans’ highest run-getter with 487 at an average of 44.27 and a strike rate of 131.26.His successes had knock-on effects on the rest of the team. Titans had one of the worst-performing top threes in the tournament – Wriddhiman Saha’s belated entry alleviated this issue in the second half of the season – but they only rarely suffered top-order collapses. Titans’ Nos. 5 and 6 faced more balls (493) than the batters in those positions from any other team, but only 13% of those balls came during the first 10 overs of innings. Of all teams, only Sunrisers Hyderabad (12%) and Rajasthan Royals (9%) had their Nos. 5 and 6 facing a smaller proportion of their balls during the first 10 overs.

It meant that Miller and Rahul Tewatia were not just in form but were also, for most part, getting to the crease at just the right times. It wasn’t a coincidence that the only time Miller had to bat during the powerplay – it became the platform for his best innings of the tournament – was when the injured Hardik missed a match against Chennai Super Kings.The workload Hardik took on with the ball, meanwhile, allowed Titans to hide Tewatia from the bowling crease. They used his legspin for only six overs through the entire season – and these were spread over five games – and his lack of bowling rhythm (he finished with an economy rate of 12.66) might have hurt them significantly if they had been forced to turn to him more often.Their lack of faith in Tewatia’s bowling was made clear when Hardik missed that match against Super Kings. Rather than replace him with a batter, they played the extra bowler and made Rashid bat at No. 7. And they stuck with that combination for the rest of the season, even after Hardik returned.

The extra bowler gave Titans enviable flexibility, allowing them to use certain bowlers only if the match-ups demanded it. It showed in how they used R Sai Kishore. Of all left-arm orthodox spinners to bowl at least 30 balls in IPL 2022, only one – Punjab Kings’ Harpreet Brar – bowled a smaller percentage of his deliveries to left-hand batters than Sai. In the final, Titans kept Sai out of the attack until Shimron Hetmyer’s dismissal off the last ball of the 15th over. Then, with only right-hand batters at the crease, they brought him on and he took 2 for 20 in his two overs.Rashid has a monster season

Rashid’s ability with the bat was put to test in the very first game when he was required to bat at No. 7, as he walked in with Titans 87 for 5, needing 83 off 44 to win. Who knows how Titans’ season would have gone if Rashid had been out early that day – not just from the standpoint of the two points they had probably have lost, but also the possible impact it may have had on their combination in later games.As it happened, Rashid played an innings for the ages that day, and showed it was no flash in the pan when he clattered an unbeaten 31 off 11 in a similarly dicey situation against Sunrisers ten days later.It goes without saying that Rashid was a massive contributor with the ball, too, and perhaps his greatest impact came in the death overs. Yuzvendra Chahal (78 balls) and Wanindu Hasaranga (36 balls) were the only spinners to bowl as many balls or more than Rashid’s 36 in the last four overs, but where they ended up with economy rates of 9.46 and 7.33 in that phase, Rashid went at 6.83, conceding just two fours and one six across the six overs he bowled.Those efforts played a significant role in Titans finishing with the best death-overs economy rate of any team this season.2:26

IPL 2022: Karthik, Tripathi, Livingstone in Aakash Chopra’s team of tournament

Shami bosses the powerplay

Mohammed Shami began the season with a first-ball, Test-match dismissal of KL Rahul. It was to be the first of 11 powerplay wickets for him, the joint-most in the tournament alongside Super Kings’ Mukesh Choudhary.And where Choudhary combined his wicket-taking with an economy rate of 8.53, Shami was frugal too, going at just 6.62 per over. In a tournament where the pitches had something in them for the new ball from start to finish, Shami could bowl Test-match lengths at the start, threaten both edges, and simply not allow batters to get away.While Shami was both incisive and frugal in the powerplay, Lockie Ferguson (8.33) and Yash Dayal (9.33) were on the expensive side but picked up six and five wickets respectively. It meant that while Titans were only the sixth-best powerplay team in terms of economy rate (7.63), they had the best strike rate (21.33) of any team in that phase. Nothing allows a bowling team to control a T20 game like early wickets, and Titans took them more often than any other team.Fortune smiles when it needs to

Luck plays an influential but little-spoken-about role in T20. It was refreshing, therefore, when Miller said this, after steering Titans to a dramatic victory over Super Kings: “We could have probably lost four out of six [matches], and we’ve won five out of six. The dice has definitely rolled onto our side.”Close results, by definition, can go either way, and while Titans enjoyed their share of luck in the early part of their campaign – most outrageously when Odean Smith conceded a needless, final-over overthrow to keep Titans’ mathematical chances alive – they also had the skill to capitalise on those moments. Titans, for instance still needed 12 off two balls after that overthrow, and Tewatia hit two sixes to seal a dramatic finish.But it also helps to be lucky with the coin, and Titans won 10 of their 16 tosses – their opponents in the final, Royals, won just four out of 17. Only Sunrisers (10 out of 14) and Mumbai (nine out of 14) won a greater percentage of their tosses than Titans did.On one occasion, in their second meeting with Kings, Titans decided to bat after winning the toss, in order to “put ourselves in difficult situations”. The decision backfired in that match, but, if you believe in that sort of thing, it gave them karma points.Titans went on to redeem those points on the biggest day of the season. Royals, so unlucky with the toss all season, won it in the final and batted. Royals made that decision even though they had won the only other match at the venue – Qualifier 2 against Royal Challengers Bangalore – while chasing, even though Titans had chased and beaten Royals in Qualifier 1, and even though Titans had a 7-1 record while chasing and a 4-3 record while batting first.Titans went on to win one of the more one-sided finals in IPL history, and improve that chasing record to 8-1.

What David Miller, Kagiso Rabada's IPL form means for South Africa

ESPNcricinfo examines the roles of various South Africa players via their recent IPL performances

Gaurav Sundararaman07-Jun-20222:02

David Miller: ‘I pride myself on finishing off games’

David Miller
Runs: 481 Average: 68.71 Strike rate:142.72
Miller had a fixed role for Gujarat Titans and played it so perfectly that he had his best IPL season. He remained not out in nine matches and was one of the best finishers this IPL. Of the 58 batters to face at least 500 balls across the six IPL seasons from 2016 to 2021, Miller had the second-lowest strike rate – 118.65. He, however, turned it around this season with impressive strokeplay against spin and stated that the role clarity he had with the Titans was instrumental in his success. Miller plays a similar role for South Africa and he will be hoping that he can continue his scintillating T20 form.Quinton de Kock forged a strong opening partnership with KL Rahul at Lucknow Super Giants•BCCIQuinton De Kock
Runs: 508 runs Average: 36.28 Strike rate:148.95
Having retired from Test cricket, de Kock has now turned his focus to white-ball cricket. He may not get the top billing that other IPL superstars get but he has averaged 36.28 and struck at almost 150, with three fifties and one century, this season. Powerplay performance is usually key to setting the foundation and de Kock did the job during this phase by striking at 136.7 with 12 sixes.Only Jonny Bairstow and David Warner scored at a faster pace than him among overseas openers. Most oppositions look to match up de Kock with offspin as he has struck at only 124 against this type of bowling. de Kock will look to remedy this in the lead-up to the T20 World Cup.Kagiso Rabada was the highest wicket-taker among seamers in IPL 2022•BCCIKagiso Rabada
Wickets: 23 Average:17.65 Economy rate:8.45
No pacer has bowled more balls than Rabada across formats since 2016. Also, no bowler has conceded more sixes than Rabada across the last three IPL seasons. Since start of 2020, Rabada has 98 T20 wickets at an economy rate of 8.23. In IPL 2022, Rabada was the most prolific wicket-taker among pacers, picking up 23 wickets at an average 17.65. However, Rabada was below par in a couple of areas: taking wickets in the powerplay and keeping it tight at the death. Since January 2020, Rabada has struck only once every 24 balls in the powerplay and has conceded 9.45 an over at the death. He, however takes wickets at the death, striking once every 10 balls. South Africa will be hoping for early wickets and death-overs bite from him in the forthcoming series.Aiden Markram and Nicholas Pooran finished games for Sunrisers Hyderabad•BCCIAiden Markram
Runs: 381 Average:47.62 Strike rate:139.05
Markram was a surprise addition to the Punjab Kings set-up in the second half of 2021. Many players from various countries were not willing to fly to the IPL, citing bubble fatigue, while Markram was ready to fly in from Sri Lanka. The move proved a turning point in his T20 career.In IPL 2022 he hit higher notes, scoring 381 runs at a strike rate of 139.05 for Sunrisers Hyderabad. Markram has played only 18 T20Is so far and will look to build on that. He now plays one of the toughest roles in T20 cricket – batting at No.4 or 5. In his short T20I career at this position Markram has done an excellent job. Since June 2021, only five batters have scored more T20 runs than Markram while striking at over 135 and averaging over 35. Markram also is a good player of spin and can be handy with his own offspin.Marco Jansen sent Virat Kohli back for a first-ball duck•PTI Marco Jansen
Wickets: 7 Average:39.14 Economy Rate:8.56
Jansen is yet to make his T20I debut but in his short T20 career, he has shown that he is ready for the big stage. In IPL 2022, Jansen took seven wickets at an economy rate of 8.56. He is best suited to bowling three overs upfront; in the recent IPL season he went at just 7.7 an over during the powerplay while taking five wickets. His left-arm angle could pose a threat to Indian players who often struggle with this type of bowling.Anrich Nortje’s bowling lacked enough penetration in IPL 2022•BCCIAnrich Nortje
Wickets: 9 Average:24.51 Economy rate:9.71
Nortje’s return to Delhi Capitals from injury seemed a bit rushed as he could not replicate his form from IPL 2020 and 2021. Nortje played only six matches this season, conceding 9.71 an over. He ended up giving up 12 runs or more in an over on nine occasions. Returning from an injury can be particularly hard and hence South Africa need to manage his workload well. Nortje is at his best when he is paired up with Rabada. However, if he continues to leak runs for the national team as well South Africa may turn to other options.Rassie van der Dussen, Dwaine Pretorious, Tristan Stubbs and Lungi Ngidi were the others who had IPL gigs but did not get enough games to prove their worth. They will be looking to push for T20 World Cup selection if they get more opportunities against India.

Game
Register
Service
Bonus