After NZ's T20I dominance, will the ODIs offer Pakistan some respite?

Visitors Pakistan would want to ensure their white-ball game isn’t all doom and gloom, while hosts NZ are keen to blood-in new talent

Danyal Rasool28-Mar-2025If Pakistan thought they were at rock bottom before they turned up in New Zealand, the hosts spent the entirety of the T20I series disabusing them of that notion. Sandwiched between one surprise win in the third T20I, Pakistan picked up hidings in Christchurch and Dunedin before travelling up to the North Island for another couple at Mount Maunganui and Wellington. Each game demonstrated how rapidly Pakistan were sinking, and how much further they could still possibly plunge.Little that could happen in the ODIs will convince anyone they have resurfaced. Not least because this is the point in the calendar when ODIs matter least of all, weeks out from the end of a Champions Trophy that went very differently for both sides. The ODI World Cup remains a couple of years away, and the satisfaction of a bilateral ODI trophy in the midst of IPL season and the PSL just a fortnight away will be ephemeral.Besides, the ODIs these two played in Pakistan in the Champions Trophy as well as the build-up to it were a true enough indication of their respective current qualities. With each side boasting full-strength sides – unlike, at least for New Zealand, this series – New Zealand convincingly beat Pakistan on three occasions, going on to win a tri-series as well as making a run all the way to the final of the Champions Trophy. Pakistan, at home, won just one game in five and crashed out of their prestigious home tournament five days after it began.Pakistan have brought in their more experienced players and boast a largely full-strength squad, insofar as that means much given the pathos of the visitors’ current cricketing state. Babar Azam, Mohammad Rizwan, and Naseem Shah are all back, while Haris Rauf was added earlier this week.Besides, somewhat bizarrely, Pakistan come into this series with a surprisingly good bilateral away record. The ODIs in Pakistan’s leg of their season may not quite have gone according to plan, but before that, they won three successive bilateral series away from home, losing two games and winning seven as they bested Australia, Zimbabwe and South Africa. It was partly why there was such unbridled, and ultimately, ill-placed optimism in the build-up to the Champions Trophy; this was the one format Pakistan still felt they were highly competitive in.Related

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They may still be over the next week, even as eyeballs this season will be defined by where they fell short instead. On tracks that suited their fast bowlers, Pakistan played an attractive brand of cricket that focused on getting opposition sides out early – ideally within 40 overs and all through the high pace of their quick bowlers. It took a lot of pressure off their batters, who ended up making short work of what their bowlers had guaranteed were below-par chases.However, this relied on a few key factors that do not necessarily chime as favourably for the visitors at present. Saim Ayub’s glittering run of form was instrumental in establishing that path to victory, his combination of big runs at high strike rates breaking the backs of most totals. Shaheen Afridi, meanwhile, looked more impressive towards the tail-end of that 2024 season than he ever has since his injury in 2022, but has been dropped from this format after poor showings in the ODIs in Pakistan. It makes it trickier to recreate a winning template at the very time Pakistan have well and truly broken out of their winnings habits.New Zealand have no such problems with winning habits. It is perhaps unfair, if not uncharacteristic, for one to have to scroll this far down to see first mention for a side that manages to combine machine-like consistency with such joyfully progressive cricket, all on a shoestring budget and, in sheer numbers, a vanishingly small pool of players.But they know how to do this, having taken part in several series against Pakistan over the last three years that have required them to field second or third-string sides. It was mentioned, at least patronisingly if not disparagingly, that a number of their squads for Pakistan tours appeared to have a Plunket Shield or Super Smash feel to it.But New Zealand have gone on to demonstrate this as a sign of quality rather than weakness, as evidenced by their impressive strength in depth most recently in their T20I hammering of Pakistan in the absences of multiple stalwarts.Even in the ODI series, the fresh, exciting talent comes from the hosts rather than the visitors, including the upcoming debut of 21-year old Lahore-born allrounder Mohammad Abbas, whose father Azhar Abbas once played first-class cricket in Pakistan. The 23-year old Canterbury batter Rhys Mariu, who averages just under 62 for his first-class side, has also been called up following Tom Latham’s sidelining with a hand fracture, while 22-year old legspinner Adithya Ashok returns to the ODI squad. Under the captaincy of Michael Bracewell and the more established core of the New Zealand side, it is hard to imagine a healthier, gentler introduction to international cricket anywhere in the world.New Zealand’s stewardship of a sport that is not their national identity, through the cultivation of an elite performance culture that straddles the balance between demanding excellence and sinking their players under the weight of those demands, has seen this side rise to the top in a financial environment where they have no right to do so. Pakistan’s profligacy with their finances, inconsistency of vision, and impulsive short-term decision-making on the other hand makes them the antithesis of all of that.A contest between single-sport cricket mad nation of a quarter of a billion against a pair of Pacific Islands where five million people would probably rather play rugby, this contest should be a mismatch. Of late, it has been shown to be exactly that. Just not the way you might think.

Ironman Doggett has Shield glory in sights after career resurgence

South Australia paceman credits off-season hobby for marked increase in bowling speed and stamina

Alex Malcolm23-Mar-2025Brendan Doggett is slightly torn about his upcoming stint with Durham in the County Championship.On the one hand, the 30-year-old is excited about a great opportunity to continue playing after a season in which he got himself back into Australia’s Test squad following an outstanding performance for Australia A, and has helped South Australia reach the Sheffield Shield final.On the other hand, he misses out on doing something that he has loved over the past few Australian winters, something he believes has helped his cricket career immensely, and that is compete in the Port Macquarie and Cairns Half Ironman triathlon events.”It’s bit of a left-field one to be honest,” Doggett told ESPNcricinfo. “I did two last off-season, one the off-season before.”But I just think running and riding and swimming, most of it’s low impact besides the running.Related

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“I start seasons fit and fresh. I feel like that’s been a little bit of success to my injury woes. It’s just helped me stay fit and strong and healthy, and then, the mental side of it too is sort of taking me away from cricket, and allowed me to dive into something else that’s physically demanding in a way, but it’s allowed me to have a little hobby outside of the game.”Peter Siddle, who has just retired aged 40 after an extraordinary 20-year first-class career that included 67 Tests, got heavily into road cycling in the latter part of his career to help maintain an incredible fitness base whilst not overloading his body.But Half Ironman’s are another step up altogether. The triathlon includes a 1.9km swim, 90km ride and 21.1km run.While most professional fast bowlers opt to lower their golf handicaps during their time off, Doggett has been spending his off-season weeks riding 250-300kms, running 30-35kms and swimming 6-10kms in preparation.There were no concerns in terms of the impact that type of training would have on his cricket as South Australia’s sports science staff saw nothing but upside. Swimming was great for his shoulder mobility and his back and core strength. The only issue they saw was road running and hence his weekly running loads were capped compared to what an elite triathlete might do. He does not do any triathlon training during the season.He got into the sport via his brother Samuel, who also competes. But Doggett hasn’t just been making up the numbers in the races either.Doggett claimed a career-best 6 for 15 against India A in Mackay•Getty ImagesDoggett competed in two last winter prior to his domestic pre-season starting with South Australia. In May 2024, he completed the Port Macquarie course in 4 hours, 30 minutes and three seconds (4:30:03) to finish 47th out of 1104 competitors and 10th of 152 in his age group. Less than six weeks later, he completed the Cairns race in 4:17:23 to finish 37th overall. He finished less than 17 minutes behind race winner Sam Musgrove, who went on to finish top five in his age group at the World Championship in Hawaii later in the year.”I felt like I was more nervous at the start line of a Half Ironman than taking the new ball for a Big Bash game or a Shield final,” Doggett said.The benefits have been enormous on his game. His last two Australian summers have been his best in first-class cricket. He’s taken 65 wickets at 22.55 across two seasons, including a career-best 6 for 15 for Australia A against India A in Mackay. He also has bowled 236.4 overs this summer in eight games, the most overs and appearances he has ever made in an Australian first-class season since his debut summer of 2017-18.”I don’t know whether that’s part of it, or if it’s just getting older, the body’s maturing and learning how to bowl long spells,” Doggett said.All that propelled him back into the Test squad as cover for the Adelaide and Brisbane Tests against India after Josh Hazlewood suffered a side strain. It was the first time Doggett had been in a Test squad since he was a shock inclusion on the 2018 tour of the UAE for a two-Test series against Pakistan.”It was nice to be in and around that environment again after quite a long break,” Doggett said. “But I guess for me and my journey in cricket, I was fairly injury-ridden there for probably five or six years and just never felt like I was ever going to get to that place again.Brendan Doggett has been part of a formidable South Australia attack•Getty Images”Last year and this year have been game-changers for me with my body. I’ve held out throughout the seasons. My perspective on the game has changed a lot. I’m here to enjoy it and make sure that I’m always having fun. That comes with being a new dad, I’ve got a two-year-old now so the game looks very different.”I think that’s been a big change, just the attitude and not too much pressure on. It’s helped me succeed, I guess, and play with a bit more freedom and bowl how I want to bowl and walk off the field feeling satisfied and happy.”Australia’s selectors are big fans of Doggett’s skill-set. He can sustain higher speeds than most in Australian domestic cricket throughout long spells and is a weapon on flatter surfaces with his ability to keep the stumps in play. He could be considered for an Australia A tour of India that is likely to take place in either August or September this year.He will get another opportunity to impress for South Australia in the Sheffield Shield final at Karen Rolton Oval this week. He has already won two Shield titles with Queensland and performed well in both his previous finals, taking bags of 5 for 101 from 31 overs against Tasmania in the 2017-18 final and 3 for 37 against New South Wales in the 2020-21 decider.”I was trying to sit back and reflect on how I felt leading into both my previous Shield finals, I was probably a bit naive to be honest,” Doggett said. “I was the younger squad member, so I sort of had people to lean on. But it’s a bit of a different situation for me now, a bit more of a senior figure in our squad, and especially in our bowling attack.”Thereafter he is set to play four games at Durham, linking up with two former Australian players in coach Ryan Campbell and director of cricket Marcus North.”My body is feeling good so it’s a good stage of my career to go over there and play some more cricket,” Doggett said.

Kaushal Silva on coaching Hong Kong: 'No one is going to hand us anything'

The former Sri Lanka opener chats about the challenges of coaching an Associate team and what he’s learning from the experience

Shashank Kishore08-Sep-2025Searing Dubai heat, a fresh squad of players of whom he knew no one, and no time to breathe. That’s how Kaushal Silva’s tenure as Hong Kong’s head coach began two weeks ago.The former Sri Lanka opener had barely been able to shake off jetlag before he was thrown into the thick of preparations for the Asia Cup. Within hours of arrival, he went straight into planning sessions, centre-wicket practice, and match simulations.”It’s been a baptism by fire,” Silva, 39, tells ESPNcricinfo. “I haven’t even been to Hong Kong yet. I flew straight from Melbourne [where he lives] to Dubai for our preparatory tour before the tournament.Related

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“The players had already been training back home, and my assistant Andrew [Lloyd] and I were coordinating over the phone to finalise combinations and training plans. Once we got here, it was about getting straight to work.”The work, as Silva describes it, has been less about endless batting and bowling drills, and more about mastering the smaller yet crucial details. His first priority was to get the players outdoors, playing on big grounds and on turf pitches – which they hadn’t been able to do for over two months at home due to non-availability of grounds and rains.”The shift from indoor to outdoor cricket is massive,” Silva says. “We were lucky to have excellent facilities here and to spend time on centre-wicket pitches. It’s those little things that help players polish their game.”After retiring from international cricket in 2019, Silva emigrated to Australia and stumbled into coaching almost by chance. Former Hong Kong coach Trent Johnston encouraged him to combine playing with coaching at club level at Victoria, and Silva jumped at the opportunity.That same year, he completed his Level 3 course at the ICC Academy in Dubai. He calls that moment a “turning point” in how he viewed the game.In Australia, Silva designed grassroots programmes and even ran his own academy while working his way into Victoria’s district and state set-ups with both boys’ and girls’ pathway players. Most recently, he headed the cricket program at a leading private school while continuing to coach a premier-division team.Kaushal Silva emigrated to Australia after retiring from international cricket•Francois Nel/Getty ImagesWhen the Hong Kong job came along just over a month ago, he saw it as a new challenge, and the perfect opportunity to blend his experiences as a player and coach to build something meaningful for an emerging cricket nation. Coming from Sri Lanka and Australia, where international and first-class cricketers have year-round access to high-performance centres, masseurs, physios and coaches, Silva has now begun to experience firsthand the challenges of working with an Associate team.”You don’t have the same resources,” he says. “Sometimes you only get training at certain times of day, and often only indoors. But that’s the reality. We can’t let it become an excuse.”Instead, he has challenged his players to – as the cliche goes – control the controllables.”If we want to go on a journey to regain ODI status [Hong Kong lost it in 2018, soon after that year’s Asia Cup], we have to change our mindset,” he explains. “No one is going to hand us anything. We prepare with what we have, and we prepare as best as we can. That’s the message I want these players to believe.”That belief has started to translate into performances. Hong Kong have played four practice games on this tour, winning two of them. Silva’s message has been about playing what he calls fearless but smart cricket.”I don’t want recklessness,” he says. “I want them to think ‘how do we use the bigger boundaries’, ‘how do we hit into pockets’, ‘how do we convert ones into twos?’ These are small adjustments, but they can make a big difference.”These aren’t things they’re used to being challenged [on], because in Hong Kong, a simple chip over the infield is a boundary. There’s no concept of running twos. It’s either singles or fours. These may seem like small things, but it’s massive.”Given how little time there has been between his appointment and this Asia Cup, Silva has prioritised building relationships. He has already had one-on-one chats with every player in the 20-man prep squad – it was pruned to 17 on Sunday – to understand their backgrounds, their motivations, and their training habits.”This tournament is my chance to observe them in pressure situations,” Silva says. “How they react to others’ success, how they respond when the heat is on. All that helps me figure out how to support them better.”‘As a player, I used to think [coaches] weren’t telling us much. But now I understand. Sometimes, too much information can be a problem.’•AFPSome of Silva’s philosophy on coaching has been absorbed from Sri Lanka’s coaches during his playing career – Trevor Bayliss, Paul Farbrace and Stuart Law.”As a player, I used to think they weren’t telling us much,” he says. “But now I understand. Sometimes, too much information can be a problem. First, you have to understand the person. Only then can you guide them.”That people-first approach, he believes, will be key to Hong Kong’s progress.”Managing personalities is everything,” he says. “How I get the best out of one player might be completely different to how I get the best out of another. That’s my strength and that’s what I’m still figuring out with this group.”At the Asia Cup, Hong Kong play their first two games within three days, against Afghanistan and Bangladesh. Then there’s the inevitable storyline: Silva coaching against the country he represented at the highest level, on September 15.”Of course it’s exciting,” he says. “But for us, it’s just another game. From day one, I told the boys: we are here to compete, not just to make up the numbers.”That belief, Silva says, will define Hong Kong’s campaign. “Whoever makes fewer errors wins the game. It’s as simple as that. And that can be anyone, including us.”

Mumbai or West Zone, Kotian's your man for a crisis

The allrounder entered at 179 for 5, with Ruturaj Gaikwad seemingly running out of partners, and did what he does best

Ashish Pant05-Sep-2025Around an hour and a half after lunch on the opening day of West Zone’s Duleep Trophy semi-final against Central Zone, Tanush Kotian jumped down the track and smashed offspinner Saransh Jain for two straight fours. It is unlikely these two boundaries will be spoken about too much in the broader context of this match, but when Kotian hit them, they seemed to shift the momentum of the innings.West Zone were 179 for 5 in the 44th over. Shreyas Iyer and Shams Mulani had fallen in the space of eight overs, and while Ruturaj Gaikwad had reached his century, he seemed to be running out of support. Enter Kotian, Mumbai’s crisis man. He began steadily, getting right behind the line against the quicks, moving his feet swiftly against the spinners, the ball pinging off the centre of his bat. But he couldn’t find the gaps at the start. That changed with his charge against Jain. It changed things not just at his end but at Gaikwad’s too.Related

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West Zone went into the tea break on a high, and kept their foot on the pedal when play resumed. They crashed 73 runs in the first 11 overs after tea, and while Gaikwad did most of the scoring, Kotian ensured he did not clog up the strike.”I’ve played for Mumbai for the last three to four years, so I have an idea of how to bat down the order and how to absorb the pressure,” Kotian said of his innings. “I know how to take chances, when to take chances, and where to rotate the singles and build the game. That’s what I’ve implemented in this match.”Ruturaj was a set batsman in front of me. I just wanted to build a partnership with him, taking it ten runs at a time. That’s what I was planning. I was trying to play as many balls as I could and just wanted to rotate.”Kotian was happy to be the bystander in a 148-run stand with Gaikwad, which came off 184 balls. It was the first time the two had batted together in a first-class game, but Kotian said he “developed a good bond” with Gaikwad and learned a lot along the way.”We have played on the same team before but because he is an opener, we haven’t had a chance to bat together,” Kotian said. “It was quite fun to bat with him, the way he was rotating the singles, and he was also guiding me on how to play, what to do on this wicket, where to take a single.”I learnt a lot from him in this game and the way he was batting, the shots he was playing, it was fun to watch. He was giving me a lot of confidence with the shots he was playing. I think we were batting at a run rate of close to 4 or 4.5 yesterday; that was a plus point.Kotian has been part of the Test squad, but he isn’t worrying about when he’ll get to wear the India cap•PTI “Strike rotation was a key part of our partnership. We were hitting the ball straight to the fielder and running. It was about understanding, just the eye contact and we were off. I think we developed a good bond and that contribution benefited us.”Since his comeback to the Mumbai team in 2022, Kotian has often rescued Mumbai from tricky situations. Now, he was at it for West Zone, his 76 vital to their reaching 438 in the first innings. Kotian says he thrives on the challenge of batting with the tail, and, as a bowler himself, understands the importance of extra runs down the order.”It’s all about how I can utilise myself, because I have the capability to bat well,” Kotian said. “Whenever I go [to bat], I don’t think about how many wickets have fallen, or that the team is in trouble. I have confidence. I just focus on my game, analyse it properly. ‘How can I play my shots, and how can I get the team out of that pressure situation?’ That’s my game plan.”I try and play time and take it one hour at a time. My goal is to reach the next drinks break and take it from there. If I can take it one small session at a time, the opposition automatically gets bogged down and after that it gets easy to score.”Kotian has had a busy couple of seasons. Apart from being a regular in the Mumbai line-up, he has also been part of India A squads in Australia and England. When R Ashwin retired midway through the Border-Gavaskar series in 2024-25, Kotian was the offspinner India called up as his replacement. The India cap seems like the next step, but Kotian says he doesn’t want to get too far ahead of himself.”I have not changed anything in these last six months,” he said. “What I have always done, I am continuing the same. I am not thinking too far ahead. I just like to stay in the present and plan each session accordingly.”Whatever happens in the future is in the selectors’ hand, but I try to give my 100%, whether it is batting or bowling.”Kotian is one of the few genuine allrounders in the Indian first-class setup. Before this semi-final, he averaged 25.93 with the ball and 43.50 with the bat after 38 matches, numbers that would make specialists in either discipline proud. With Ashwin’s retirement, a space has opened up in the Indian Test side, and with the numbers Kotian has accumulated, that cap may not be too far away.

Stokes returns to the source as Ashes odyssey comes full circle

England captain is back in the city of his maiden hundred in 2013, after a wild ride through a series that defines him

Vithushan Ehantharajah20-Nov-2025It is a phrase many of those on England’s 2021-22 Ashes tour remember. Uttered at a time when the team were already down. Three-nil to be exact, after the one Test they did not lose, in Sydney.There were echoes of Leonardo DiCaprio’s interpretation of Jordan Belfort in Martin Scorsese’s “Wolf of Wall Street”. A dramatic declaration of defiance echoing through a crumbling institution. The protagonist in this instance – Ben Stokes – rallying in the face of the approaching bankruptcy of body and mind rather than pocket.Stokes had injured his side on day two of the fourth Test, and was unable to bowl the final delivery of his 14th over of Australia’s first innings, which eventually swelled to 416 for 8. He struck 66 the next day, then 60 two days later, of which the 123 deliveries taken were of far more importance as England clung on for a precious, whitewash-staving yet ultimately inconsequential draw.Scans revealed a grade two tear – a tour ender in anyone else’s side. And at the back end of a debilitating Covid-restricted tour, a route home, to the sanctity of normality. But Stokes did not want to go. He did not want to leave his team in the lurch.It didn’t matter of course; a non-bowling Stokes scored four and five as Australia won by 146 runs inside three days to secure their 4-0 win. His presence on the tour had come about through cutting short a much-needed mental health break. And yet, rather than break him further, it eventually brought him light. Cracks in the despair that allowed the light of future, better days to shine through. Not just for him, but English Test cricket. Both have become one and, on Friday, are embarking on another Ashes. His last in Australia.”I understand what this series means in my journey as England captain,” Stokes said in his final press conference at Perth’s Optus Stadium.Stokes rushed back to action for the 2021-22 Ashes but wasn’t mentally or physically ready•Getty ImagesSuccess would be a crowning glory to an already decorated career, let alone a major honor as a national leader. As a person, it would be another significant moment of a life indelibly linked with this country.It was here, in 2013-14, that Stokes announced himself as a cricketer. A rounder, redder-faced 22-year-old, he started the series with his head down, grafting, as the greatest England team you ever did see set about stabbing each other in the back and keeping notes for their own autobiographies. Each walk to and from the Optus from the team’s luxurious Crown Towers hotel has taken Stokes past the WACA, where he blitzed that maiden century. The time that has since elapsed was hammered home earlier this week by Stokes’ wife, Clare, who reminded him their son, Layton, was one at the time.Stokes left the country as England’s sole comfort, but returned a year later seemingly surplus to the team’s requirement. At a loose end after being omitted from England’s 2015 World Cup squad, he undertook a four-match Big Bash League stint as Melbourne Renegades overseas player, replacing Kiwi Jesse Ryder.Related

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He dipped into the nightlife – as any young twenty-something in Melbourne should do – finding a kindred spirit in James Pattinson. Though only managing a couple of contributions – a 77 against Hobart Hurricanes and 2 for 22 versus Melbourne Stars – they were enough to pelt at the selectors. How could they leave out such a talent? They never did again and, seven years later, he had guided England to ODI and T20I World Cup wins.There is an argument to be made that Stokes’ experience on the fringes of the Ashes tour in 2017-18 might have been the most formative. The incident in Bristol that led to his ECB suspension that winter was itself a major blot on his character. But his experience of watching on from afar, powerless, as Joe Root’s first Ashes as captain unravelled was arguably the sharpest tool to have moulded the Stokes we see today. In his absence, the rest of the team caught the stray bullets; labelled a boozy team, even thuggish. Jonny Bairstow’s greeting of Cameron Bancroft – exaggerated as a “headbutt” – triggered umpteen headlines and a midnight curfew that exists to this day.A few weeks later, Ben Duckett was reprimanded for pouring a drink on James Anderson, who had already poured one on himself. Enough time has since passed for Duckett that, for old time’s sake, he even had designs on going back to the venue – The Avenue – while in Perth, only to find it had closed down. By contrast, Stokes refused to engage at all when the subject of that tour was brought up in a UK-only briefing at the team hotel earlier this week.Stokes recorded his maiden Test century on his last Ashes visit to Perth in 2013-14•Getty ImagesWhat is certain is that that absence partially motivated his late availability four years later. The determination to not let down his teammates, to fight with and for his best mate Root, and not shirk the flagellation that comes with a bruising Ashes defeat.Call it penance, call it contrition – but it was not wasted. From those depths, Stokes took stock. And when he was eventually handed the keys to English cricket in April 2022, had a plan that has, so far, taken him to 22 wins in 36 Tests as full-time captain.”I think what we’ve done over the last couple of years in particular is, we’ve made a team and a squad that have been able to gel together,” Stokes said.

This is the best version of Stokes to have made it to Australia. By extension, the team created in his image has a shot

“One big thing me and Baz [McCullum] firmly believe in is, if you create a tight-knit group, not only on the field, but off the field, then you create an environment where people are enjoying themselves away from the field, as well as on the field, because that’s just going to help team morale.”Beyond the talent, including the fastest pace attack they have ever taken to Australia, is the camaraderie that shines through. A greater togetherness has been married with the need for a more empathetic environment. When Stokes took over, the Test shirt was a heavy burden. Now, it is encouraged to be donned as a cape. His inkling three years ago that he needed to surround himself with “10 selfless cricketers” was sound, though perhaps a bit of an under-estimation. Those not part of the 12-man squad announced on Wednesday have been doubling as coaches; Matthew Potts spent yesterday hitting catches to England’s deep fielders, while Jacob Bethell – a left-handed thrower – was dog-sticking to batters on Thursday afternoon as they prepared for the challenge of facing Mitchell Starc.Joe Root struggled in Stokes’ absence on the 2017-18 tour, his first as captain•AFP”They’ve all proven themselves on the biggest stage that they can win games of cricket for England,” Stokes said of those now by his side. “They can change a game in a blink of an eye. In terms of telling them what to do cricket-wise … nothing. Just keep going out and doing what you’ve been doing, because it’s been pretty good since you’ve been going.”Much has been made of whether this is the best chance England have had in Australia since 2010-11. Their expectations in 2013-14 were arguably even higher, given that that tour featured many of the protagonists from the previous visit, and came off the back of England’s 3-0 Ashes win on home soil earlier that year. But then they were blindsided by Mitchell Johnson, and the rest was history.What is certain is this is the best version of Stokes to have made it to Australia. By extension, the team created in his image has a shot.Are they good enough to beat this Australia side? We do not have to wait long to find out. From Friday onwards, over the next six weeks in five different cities, we will finally be granted an answer. What we do know for certain is whichever way it goes, the players will not let each other down.

Rock and Roll It Podcast: Rohit Sharma's white-ball legacy

Dustin Silgardo, Sidharth Monga and Karthik Krishnaswamy get together to discuss India’s former ODI captain

ESPNcricinfo staff06-Oct-2025Indian cricket was pushed into a new era on Sunday when Shubman Gill was elevated to ODI captaincy. He takes over from Rohit Sharma, who led the team through a prosperous period, which included a record of 15-1 during the 2023 World Cup and the 2025 Champions Trophy. Dustin Silgardo, Sidharth Monga and Karthik Krishnaswamy get together on the Rock and Roll It podcast to discuss Rohit’s impact on the game and what awaits him in the future

Mandhana hits the second-fastest women's ODI century

Her 50-ball ton was also her 13th in ODIs

Deep Gadhia20-Sep-20253:00

Mandhana: I always back myself to be in ‘zen mode’

50 – balls taken by Smriti Mandhana to score her century against Australia on Saturday. It is the second-fastest in Women’s ODIs behind the record effort of Meg Lanning, who got there in 45 balls against New Zealand in 2012. During Australia’s innings, Beth Mooney scored her ton off just 57 balls – it was the joint second-fastest century in the format at that point, and is now the joint third-fastest.13 – Mandhana’s hundred is her 13th in women’s ODIs, placing her joint-second alongside Suzie Bates. Only Lanning with 15 tons is ahead of Mandhana. Her 13 hundreds are also the most by any opener ahead of Bates’ and Tammy Beaumont’s 12.This is also the second instance of Mandhana scoring back-to-back ODI hundreds, after she scored two against South Africa last year. Beaumont (in 2016, 2018 and 2025) is the only other batter to have done so more than once.198.41 – Smriti Mandhana’s strike rate during her knock of 125 in the third ODI, is the second highest by a player in an innings of 100 or more, overcoming Beth Mooney’s 184 in the first innings. Meg Lanning remains the only centurion to have a strike-rate of over 200 during her knock of 103 against New Zealand in 2012.ESPNcricinfo Ltd11-0 – Australia clinch their 11th bilateral ODI series win over India, and are yet to lose a series against them. They have now won nine consecutive ODI series, last losing to England 2-1 in the 2023 Women’s Ashes. The last team, apart from England, to defeat Australia in a bilateral ODI series was New Zealand, when they won 2-1, back in 1999.781 – Runs aggregated in the third ODI in Delhi between India and Australia is the most in a women’s ODI. England and South Africa also aggregated 678 runs in Bristol during the 2017 World Cup.111 – 99 fours and 12 sixes hit in the match in Delhi, the most in a Women’s ODI. England and South Africa hit 91 boundaries (83 fours and eight sixes) in Bristol in 2017.369 – India’s score in the second innings is the highest by any team in a run chase in women’s ODIs, surpassing South Africa’s 321 for 6 in an unsuccessful attempt chasing 326 against India in Bengaluru last year.96 for 2 – India’s powerplay score, during their chase of 413, is the second-highest by any team in the first 10 overs, where data is available. West Indies scored 156 for 3 against Thailand at Lahore earlier this year during the ODI World Cup qualifiers.412 – Australia’s total is their joint-highest in ODIs. They scored 412 for 3 against Denmark in the 1997 World Cup, which included Belinda Clark’s historic 229 not out in Mumbai.It is also the highest total against India in ODIs, the previous highest being 371 for 8, also by Australia in Brisbane last year.Getty Images138 – Mooney made her highest score in ODIs bettering her unbeaten 125, also against India, in Mackay in 2021. It is also the second-highest score against India in ODIs behind Claire Taylor’s 156 at Lord’s in 2006.9.73 – Arundhati Reddy’s economy rate in her spell of 3 for 86 in 8.5 overs. It is the most expensive spell (min five overs bowled) by an India bowler in Women’s ODIs. Reddy’s 86 runs conceded are also the second-most for an India bowler behind Priya Mishra’s 88, also against Australia in Brisbane in 2024.

'Simplicity is everything' and impossible is Nadine for South Africa

It was the latest in South Africa’s list of unlikely wins, and the hero of the hour was Nadine de Klerk, not usually the first name that comes to mind when thinking of game-changing players

Vishal Dikshit10-Oct-20253:14

Review – You ain’t seen Nadine yet!

South Africa take a lot of pride in turning things around.England, for example, know this. Three years ago, South Africa had been handed a 6-0 thrashing on their white-ball tour of England. Seven months later, at the T20 World Cup, South Africa – far from being the favourites – edged England by six runs for a historic maiden World Cup final appearance.Coming into this World Cup, their recent record of five straight ODI losses to India in subcontinent conditions wouldn’t have given them much confidence for the game on Thursday. And the memory of the 69 all out against England at the start of the tournament would have still been pretty fresh. But South Africa found a way, once more, somehow, under pressure, against the home team, and when they were again far from being the favourites, to win the game, and win it in the last ten overs.Related

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De Klerk upstages Ghosh as South Africa win thriller

The performance that turned the tables on India came from a player who is hardly the most celebrated or feared or the best-known in the South African camp. Nadine de Klerk. She did take a three-for against Australia in the 2020 T20 World Cup semi-final, but she’s hardly the player oppositions mark as among the first few to target.On Thursday in Visakhapatnam, de Klerk was thrown perhaps the biggest challenge of her career so far. In India’s home World Cup, with nearly 13,000 Indian fans thronging the stands, she walked out with the score at 142 with South Africa’s top six gone. The equation was a stiff 110 to get from 85 balls. The Indian spinners were tightening the strangle in the middle overs. When de Klerk joined Chloe Tryon in the middle, they knew their best shot was to take the game deep, even with ten runs an over to get in the last four-five overs.But, to get there, de Klerk didn’t take the safest or most cautious of routes. She swept away the worries against left-arm spin by putting away Shree Charani for four and followed it with a fearless shimmy out of the crease to find the gap on the leg side for the same result.Nadine de Klerk found ways to pierce gaps that few players are able to•Associated PressDe Klerk has trained herself for a power game that requires her to go for big hits. She has featured in T20 tournaments around the world and mastered the skill of hitting powerful sixes. Being a multi-sport athlete, she has kept herself fit physically and mentally to keep up with the rigours of being an allrounder, even if it means performing day-in and day-out, as South Africa had to do on Thursday after travel from Guwahati to Indore to Visakhapatnam for their third match. She has been given the job to “finish games off”, and now she was planning her way through it.She decided to “take the game on” and her experience of being a former hockey player helped her “hit those awkward gaps where normally there are no fielders”. If mid-on and mid-off were in the circle, she went over them; if they were dropped back, she dispatched the ball square for more runs to make the Indian team sweat.”I think today it was just about not trying to overhit the ball,” she said after the game. “I think simplicity is everything. I think today was just about really backing myself and not trying to overhit it and just time the ball. It was quite a good wicket.”

“I guess when it comes to the back ten [overs], you can really start backing yourself and try and take the game on. And if it does come off, that 70 or 80 runs in the last ten makes a massive difference in these totals”Nadine de Klerk

She and Tryon brought it down to 60 from 36 – ten an over in the last six like they had planned – but now, Tryon started to face issues in her heavily strapped left leg. She got treatment after hobbling around for a while and the onus, naturally, fell on de Klerk, who took down Sneh Rana for a six and a four at the start of the 46th over to make it 42 off 28 before Rana trapped the struggling Tryon lbw on 49.”Yeah, I think it obviously got a little bit more tricky when she [Tryon] got out, but I think even though her leg gave her a bit of problems, I think she’s probably one of the best finishers in world cricket,” de Klerk said. “We know she can clear any boundaries. I think when we were batting together, we were still pretty confident to chase the score. I guess it’s just about the belief and the character at the end of the day, and we just wanted to stick it out and fight really hard because we knew how important this game was for our team.”With India now into South Africa’s tail, de Klerk thought it was best to target the quick bowlers as pace was easier to work with under the lights with some dew around, and she went after India’s most inexperienced, Kranti Gaud. There was the punch on the Protea emblem on her jersey with her left glove, right hand holding the bat aloft after launching Gaud well beyond the deep-midwicket boundary to get to her third ODI fifty. That was followed by a straight six that deflated the Indians further, having brough the equation down to 23 from 18 with. It was an 18-run over.And the celebrations begin…•ICC/Getty Images”I think the most important part is, and we’ve seen it in this World Cup, is you just have to stick it out,” de Klerk said. “Doesn’t matter if you’re batting No. 8 or 9, if you give yourself a chance. I mean, Richa [Ghosh] did it today for India as well. Just try and bat time. And I guess when it comes to the back ten [overs], you can really start backing yourself and try and take the game on. And if it does come off, that 70 or 80 runs in the last ten makes a massive difference in these totals.”With Ayabonga Khaka at the other end, de Klerk farmed the strike and took it upon herself to wipe out almost all of the remaining runs, with two mighty sixes in three balls against Amanjot Kaur finishing things off.A day before this game, de Klerk had said there were “going to be a lot of ups and downs” in this World Cup and “this World Cup is all about fight and character at the end of the day”. Who knew those words would narrate her own story a day later and reverberate so loudly in a stadium with thousands of Indian fans gone quiet after she hit the winning runs, before being mobbed by her team-mates.And South Africa’s record against India in the last three World Cups? Three-zero. Try turning that around.

Pumas now happy for Juarez to join Celtic as Hoops eye secret release clause

Pumas are now reportedly happy to let manager Efrain Juarez join Celtic, who could take full advantage of their former star’s secret release clause at the Mexican club.

The Bhoys once again struggled on the European stage in midweek, losing 3-1 against Midtjylland, as Martin O’Neill saw their problems in full for the first time. The interim boss has continued to distance himself from the permanent job, despite recent reports suggesting that he could yet be the next man to take the hotseat.

For now, the 73-year-old is set to remain in the dugout for Celtic’s Scottish Premiership clash against Kilmarnock this weekend, but Parkhead chiefs are continuing their search.

Recent reports have claimed that Ipswich Town’s Kieran McKenna is now open to joining the Scottish giants, but it remains to be seen whether he’d leave Portman Road in the middle of a campaign which has so far been disappointing.

Meanwhile, Nicky Hayen is also a reported candidate. The Club Brugge manager knows all about beating the top clubs in Scottish football, having smashed Rangers 9-1 on aggregate in the Champions League qualifiers earlier this season and defeated Celtic last season. Now, he could be on his way to the home dugout in Glasgow.

Once again, however, luring him away from Club Brugge will not be an easy task. Instead, the Hoops may have no choice but to turn towards former player Juarez, who has previously shared that he dreams of managing the club.

Pumas happy to let Juarez join Celtic

As reported in Mexico and relayed by Sport Witness, Pumas are now happy to let Juarez join Celtic, who could trigger a release clause that allows the 37-year-old to leave for free when a European club comes knocking.

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It would save Celtic a transfer fee and it would welcome someone who knows the standards of the club, given that Juarez played for the Bhoys between 2010 and 2012. Whether he has the right managerial experience for the role is another question, though, and the Scottish club may find that out after reportedly scheduling an interview over zoom.

The former player, who uses a 4-2-3-1 system, has taken charge of just two sides and is yet to even reach 100 games as a manager. At this point in time, it should be questioned whether Celtic can afford to take such a gamble.

Games

33

Wins

11

Draws

10

Defeats

12

Juarez’s time at Pumas hasn’t exactly been the greatest success, either. The Mexican has lost more games than he’s won and averaged just 1.3 points over 33 games in charge. It suddenly makes the club’s willingness to let him leave make all too much sense for Celtic to make their move.

For the time being, those at Celtic Park should trust O’Neill with the job until a suitable candidate emerges.

Celtic schedule first interview with Efrain Juarez

Stuart Pearce says ‘outstanding’ Aston Villa star stole the show in win over Arsenal

Arsenal suffered a devastating 2-1 defeat to Aston Villa at Villa Park on Saturday lunchtime, surrendering their five-point lead atop the Premier League table in dramatic fashion.

Emiliano Buendia’s stoppage-time winner completed a remarkable comeback for Unai Emery’s side, dealing a significant blow to the Gunners’ title aspirations.

Matty Cash gave Villa a deserved first-half lead with a thunderous finish at the back post in the 36th minute, capitalizing on Arsenal’s struggles to contain the hosts’ energetic pressing.

The right-back’s half-volley from a deflected cross caught David Raya off guard, sending Villa Park into raptures and rewarding the home side’s dominant opening period.

Mikel Arteta responded decisively at the interval, introducing Leandro Trossard and Viktor Gyokeres for the ineffective Eberechi Eze and Mikel Merino.

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It would be a head turner.

ByEmilio Galantini 7 days ago

The Belgian substitute made an immediate impact just seven minutes into the second half, converting a rebound after Emiliano Martínez could only parry Bukayo Saka’s initial effort. Trossard’s poacher’s instinct at the back post hauled Arsenal level and appeared to shift momentum decisively in the visitors’ favour.

Arsenal dominated possession throughout the second period, creating numerous opportunities to snatch victory. Noni Madueke struck the side netting late on when well-positioned, while Declan Rice orchestrated attacks from deep despite struggling with the calf complaint that troubled him against Brentford midweek.

However, Villa refused to surrender tamely.

Emery’s tactical substitution proved inspired as Buendia replaced Matty Cash in the 85th minute, pushing the hosts into a more aggressive attacking shape with Lamare Bogarde dropping to right-back.

The Argentinian playmaker delivered the decisive intervention deep into stoppage time, reacting quickest to a loose ball inside Arsenal’s penalty area and firing home to secure all three points.

The defeat represents Arsenal’s second loss of the campaign and ends their 18-match unbeaten run across all competitions. More significantly, it allows Man City the opportunity to reduce the gap at the summit to just two points, should they defeat Sunderland later today.

Emiliano Martínez

7.8

Declan Rice

7.7

Matty Cash

7.5

Boubacar Kamara

7.5

Martin Odegaard

7.2

via WhoScored

For Villa, the victory extends their remarkable home form to just one defeat in their last 25 league matches at Villa Park, maintaining their challenge for Champions League qualification while sitting third in the table.

It also begs the question, are Emery’s men now genuine title contenders?

Stuart Pearce says Youri Tielemans stole the show against Arsenal

With that debate now set to rumble on, former England defender Stuart Pearce has picked out one Villa star to thank for an absolutely incredible afternoon for Emery in the Midlands.

Commenting on the game for talkSPORT, Pearce named his Player of the Match — £150,000-per-week midfielder Youri Tielemans.

The Belgian international apparently stole the show against Arsenal, with Pearce calling his display in the engine room ‘outstanding’.

Tielemans, who is out of contract in 2027, has just made a firm case to the Villa hierarchy when it comes to his long-term future.

The 28-year-old returned to full fitness fairly recently after missing six league games with a calf problem and was left out of the starting eleven for Villa’s thrilling 4-3 win at Brighton.

Emery’s decision to start Tielemans today was a masterful decision, and that performance will give the player huge confidence ahead of Villa’s trips to FC Basel and West Ham.

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