Zimbabwe top popularity charts in Lahore

The first Twenty20 was a must-watch game for us as we wanted to show the world how much we love cricket and that Lahore is safe and sound for any team to visit us without any fear

Waqas Ahmad23-May-2015The first Twenty20 was a must-watch game for us as we wanted to show the world how much we love cricket and that Lahore is safe and sound for any team to visit us without any fear.Imaginary selfie of the day
Slogans of “selfie” welcomed Ahmed Shahzad in every part of the ground. During the 15th over of innings while fielding in front of me at long-on boundary he stretched his arm and took an imaginary selfie. The crowd behind him went mad. He was not distracted by the chants as three balls later he pouched a well-judged catch running backwards.Key performer
There were few big names playing from both sides but Mukhtar Ahmed proved a dark horse. He started Pakistan innings with a flicked four and then twice hit a hat-trick of boundaries. He also broke the record of most fours in an innings by a Pakistan player. He reached his fifty with a six over long-on and the crowd went ecstatic.One thing you’d have changed
During 1996 World cup final, the Gaddafi stadium accommodated 60,000 spectators but after many renovations, its current capacity is less than half now. And today not a single seat was unoccupied. All stands were packed; around a dozen people outside the stadium asked my group if we wanted to sell our tickets to them. Thousands of cricket lovers had to go back as they failed to find any tickets, missing a golden opportunity. So if I had the power I would have definitely enhanced the capacity of stadium.Wow moment
When the umpire Ahsan Raza, who was shot while shielding the match referee Chris Broad back in the March 2009 attacks, entered the ground, he knelt down and performed the .Wow moment 2
When the Pakistan national anthem started, emotions were at their peak and many eyes started to shed the tears of joy. There was jubilation, too, as the people wanted to show the world they were a peaceful cricket-loving nation.Catch of the day
Ground fielding from both teams was poor. Wahab Riaz missed a simple chance off his own bowling but in the 16th over of Pakistan innings when Mohammad Hafeez came down the pitch and hit the six over bowler’s head, a policeman enjoying the match in an under construction stand caught it comfortably.Shot of the day
Mukhtar Ahmed hit a straight six off Chris Mpofu off a good length delivery and made it look very simple but the shot of the day for me was the one by Shahid Afridi. The crowd cheered whenever a wicket fell during the chase expecting Afridi to show up. When he did come to bat everyone was on their feet shouting, “Boom Boom” and he did not disappoint. I already pointed my friends where he would hit the ball and my hero followed my direction, hitting the low full-toss straight down the ground.Crowd meter
All stands were choked and they did not remain silent for a single second. No opposition can get the support in the sub-continent the Zimbabweans got. Whenever a Zimbabwe player came near the boundary, the crowd went, “Zimbabwe, Zimbabwe” and players acknowledged the crowd happily. As Elton Chigumbura mentioned at the end of the day, they had never experienced such a warm support from the spectators.Banner of the day
A 30-feet long banner “We miss you, West Indies” in the Fazal Mahmood enclosure caught my eye from a long way away.Overall
The atmosphere was awesome as people had gathered around the stadium five hours prior to the match, ignoring the 45 degree heat of Lahore. The security arrangements were top notch and officials greeted spectators with smiles on every check point, something I never expected. The whole country thanked the Zimbabwe players and everyone praised the officials who helped to organise the match. At the end of the day, I am sure we have won many hearts around the globe with our .Marks out of 10
9.5/10Waqas Ahmad, known as Chaudhary, is an Electrical engineer with a telecom company. He follows cricket all around the globe and is the captain of his colony team.

Morgan's streak and record chases

Stats highlights from the fourth ODI between England and New Zealand at Trent Bridge

Bishen Jeswant17-Jun-20151:41

England’s chase of 350 in Nottingham was the fourth-highest successful chase in ODIs

4 Number of 50-plus scores for Eoin Morgan this series, the most by an England captain in any ODI series. This is also the joint-most by any captain in ODI history during a bilateral series.0 Number of times England had previously chased down a 300-plus target in home conditions. England’s successful chase of 350 in this game was their first biggest in ODI history having only scored 300-plus in a successful chase on two previous occasions.36 Number of balls to spare when England achieved victory in this game, the second-most in ODIs where a 350-plus target has been successfully achieved. The only instance when a team won with more balls to spare was when India achieved their target of 360 against Australia, in 2013, with 39 balls to spare.198 Partnership runs between Morgan and Root in this game, the highest for any wicket by an England pair in ODIs against New Zealand. This is also the second-highest third-wicket stand for England against any team in ODIs.73 Number of innings in which Kane Williamson reached 3000 ODI runs, the fastest by any New Zealand batsman, easily surpassing the previous record (90 innings) held by Martin Guptill. The world record is 57 innings, held by Hashim Amla.21 Number of 50-plus scores during this series, the most for any five-match bilateral ODI series played in England. The most for any bilateral ODI series in England is 24, during the seven-match Natwest Series between India and England in 2007.9 Number of century stands posted by Ross Taylor and Williamson, the joint-most for any New Zealand pair along with Nathan Astle and Stephen Fleming. However, Astle and Fleming batted together 118 times while Williamson and Taylor have only been out in the middle together on 37 occasions.3 Number of times Williamson has scored 300-plus runs in a bilateral ODI series, the most by any New Zealand batsman and the second-most by any batsman. The only batsman to do this on four occasions is Rahul Dravid, between 1999 and 2005. Williamson has currently scored 346 runs this series.470 Partnership runs between Taylor and Williamson this series, the most by any New Zealand pair during a bilateral series, surpassing their own record of 463 against India at home in 2014. The world record is 590 runs, between Imran Farhat and Yasir Hameed against New Zealand in 2003.3.4 Number of innings per 50-plus score for Martin Guptill when opening the batting, the best ratio for any New Zealand opener (min. 30 innings). Guptill has 26 50-plus scores from 89 innings. He scored 53 in this game.1585 Number of partnership runs posted by Guptill and Brendon McCullum when opening the batting, the most by any New Zealand opening pair. They went past Bruce Edgar and John Wright (1520) during their opening stand of 88 in this ODI.7 Number of 300-plus scores this series (both teams combined), the most in any bilateral series involving either England or New Zealand, and the second-most ever in any bilateral ODI series. The only series with more such scores (9) was between Australia and India in 2013.28 Runs scored by Mitchell Santner off the 48th over of New Zealand’s innings, the second-most by any batsman in an ODI in England. The most is 30, scored by Dimitri Mascarenhas against India at The Oval in 2007.10.3 Number of overs in which England scored their first 100 runs, their second-fastest in ODIs (since ball-by-ball data is available, i.e. 2001). Their fastest is 9.2 overs, against India in 2011, though that was a 23-overs per side game due to rain.

Bangladesh surge to 145-run victory

ESPNcricinfo staff07-Nov-2015Tamim Iqbal, who was troubled by Tinashe Panyangara early in his innings, settled down and stitched a useful partnership of 70 with Mushfiqur Rahim•AFPSikandar Raza dismissed both Tamim and Shakib Al Hasan in quick succession to leave Bangladesh shaky•AFPMushfiqur, however, anchored the side, sharing a crucial 119-run partnership for the fifth wicket with Sabbir Rahman•AFPAlthough Bangladesh lost a few quick wickets at the end, Mushfiqur’s fourth ODI hundred set the base for their score of 273 for 9•Associated PressJongwe, promoted to open in place of Richmond Mutumbami, who injured his ankle while keeping, gave the visitors a brisk start•AFPShakib then came into the attack and rattled the chase with subtle variations in length and flight•Associated PressHe went onto claim his maiden five-wicket haul in ODIs while his captain Mashrafe Mortaza passed 200 wickets•Associated PressElton Chigumbura offered some resistance with 41 off 51 balls but it was only a matter of time before Bangladesh surged to a 145-run victory•Associated Press

SL scrape to one-wicket win after Narine's three

ESPNcricinfo staff01-Nov-2015Once play began, Suranga Lakmal had the measure of West Indies’ top order and a disciplined spell from him reduced them to 24 for 3•Associated PressThe clouds arrived again, during the 15th over of West Indies’ innings, and this time, the delay stretched to well over three hours. On resumption, the match was reduced to 26 overs a side•AFPAfter the break, Andre Russell stepped up and whacked 41 off 24 balls, with three sixes and as many fours.•Associated PressHe had good support from Darren Bravo, who shared in a 58-run, fifth-wicket stand•Associated PressThe most manic charge came from Jason Holder who slammed 36 off 13 deliveries to lift West Indies to 159 for 8•AFPWith Sri Lanka needing 163 to win, Tillakaratne Dilshan got them off to a bright start, making use of West Indies’ short lengths•AFPDilshan raced to a fifty off 25 deliveries – his fastest in ODIs – and put Sri Lanka in a comfortable position, but his wicket triggered a slide•Associated PressAfter Angelo Mathews’ dismissal in the 16th over, Sri Lanka’s chase was almost thrown off track by Sunil Narine’s triple-wicket over•AFPJonathan Carter then took two wickets off two balls in the 24th over to leave Sri Lanka 11 runs short of the target with only one wicket in hand•AFPAjantha Mendis, however, inched the score forward and capitalised on a free hit from Johnson Charles to help Sri Lanka scrape home to a one-wicket win•Associated Press

Late NOCs, and a stressed-out captain

Sylhet Super Stars’ campaign began in farcical circumstances, included three narrow defeats, and ended with even their captain bogged down by pressure

Mohammad Isam11-Dec-2015

Tournament overview

Sylhet Super Stars had some hope of making it to the last four even on the last day of the league phase, but as their 71-run defeat to Comilla Victorians showed, they were not really up to it this season. They won three of their 10 matches, giving them a fifth-place finish, just above Chittagong Vikings.Sylhet could consider themselves unlucky too after losing their first three games to Chittagong, Barisal and Rangpur, by the closest of margins – one run, one run and six runs. But their troubles had already begun before their first match, when due to a bungle up between them and the BCB, they did not have the necessary signatures to field Ravi Bopara and Josh Cobb. When the pair finally got their NOCs, it came through a few minutes after the toss, but they were still sent to play despite not having their names in the team sheet.The match was delayed by an hour and during the discussion out in the open, Tamim Iqbal and one of the Sylhet owners got into a slanging match. Sylhet ultimately lost that game and the next three before they finally won for the first time in Chittagong, against Comilla by 34 runs. Upon returning to Dhaka, they crushed Barisal Bulls in a nine-wicket win before Junaid Siddique, Bopara and Shahid Afridi inspired them to the third win, against Dhaka.Mushfiqur Rahim left the captaincy just before their second win, with coach Sarwar Imran saying that the Bangladesh Test captain could handle the pressure of losing close games, coupled with his wicketkeeping and batting duties. Indeed Mushfiqur’s batting suffered, but barring Mohammad Shahid ,none of the other locals really stood out either with their performances. Sylhet would also feel that their foreign recruits, particularly Bopara with the bat, could have given them a lot more.

High point

With Sylhet facing certain elimination, Junaid Siddique and Ravi Bopara steered a tricky chase against Dhaka Dynamites in their penultimate match. When they had exited after making fifties, Afridi swept Farhad Reza for consecutive sixes in the final over to seal the win. Their celebration looked more like relief but they needed that win to stay relevant till the last day of the league phase.

Low point

Their worst moment was when Mushfiqur walked into the Mirpur field with Bopara and Cobb behind him, despite not having their names in the team sheet at the toss about 30 minutes earlier. The situation went into a tail-spin with Chittagong refusing to take the field until the matter was resolved. Ultimately the BCB had to ask Sylhet to play without the English pair, and they went on to lose the game by one run.

Top of the class

Bopara did not start well with the bat but he was effective with his military medium-pace, with much variation. In Sylhet’s first win in the tournament after four losses, Bopara took four wickets and scored 50 while his second half-century also came in a Sylhet win. He finished with 10 wickets, but must have wanted to score more than the 132 runs he managed.

Under-par performer

Mushfiqur was the highest scorer in the last BPL, in 2013, when he inspired Sylhet Royals to the last four. This time however, he was weighed down by the captaincy so much that he left the role towards the end citing extreme pressure. Afridi took over as captain, while Mushfiqur ended up with just 157 runs in the 10 matches.

Tip for 2016

The team owners, Alif Group, would have to approach the player selection differently in the BPL’s next edition. They missed out on Brad Hodge but the likes of Bopara, Cobb and Ajantha Mendis did not perform according to expectations. Their local players, except Shahid perhaps, left a lot to be desired.

Hunger for big runs drives understated Anmolpreet

A calm approach and an appetite for accumulating runs held Anmolpreet Singh in good stead in the World Cup semi-final against Sri Lanka Under-19s

Vishal Dikshit in Mirpur09-Feb-2016Anmolpreet Singh’s batting position in the India Under-19s team is No. 3, squeezed in between three established names – Rishabh Pant, Ishan Kishan and Sarfaraz Khan. Anmolpreet can easily go unnoticed whether it’s because of his batting style or unfamiliarity with the fans. He didn’t play any of India’s league matches that were on TV, he has not played Ranji Trophy and his name was not in the recent IPL auction.In spite of all that Anmolpreet has stamped his name on the No. 3 spot by leading India to the World Cup final with a solid 72 that helped them put on a challenging score of 267 against Sri Lanka in the semi-final. He came out to bat with the score at 23 for 1 when the Sri Lanka Under-19s pacers were nipping the ball around on an overcast morning. The score soon became 27 for 2 and India’s top order was left shaken again.Anmolpreet had a more experienced Sarfaraz at the other end but his own inexperience hardly showed. He displayed impressive technique with plenty of classical straight-bat shots and gauged the situation like a player who had already played on the Mirpur pitch.”The wicket was tough and the ball was doing a bit. So my discussion with Sarfaraz was to rotate the strike,” Anmolpreet said after the match. ” [We wanted to bat long] and then we could hit boundaries.”Anmolpreet’s first chance in the World Cup came in the quarter-final, against Namibia, in which he scored a quick 41 and took three late wickets. Before that, he scored a heap of runs in matches that were not shown on television.He was recently named the Under-19 Cricketer of the Year by the BCCI for his prolific run in the 2014-15 Cooch Behar Trophy. He topped the run-scoring charts with 1154 runs in 10 innings at an average of 144.25 with the help of five hundreds and two fifties; no other batsman in the tournamnt scored more than 850. One of the centuries was a mammoth effort of 322 against Jammu & Kashmir.Anmolpreet’s nature of accumulating runs is not recent. In the 2013-14 season, he had helped Punjab Under-19s lift the Vinoo Mankad Trophy with a measured knock of 79 in the final against Bengal and finished the tournament with 300 runs at an average of 50 with three fifties to his name. In the Cooch Behar Trophy that season, he finished with an average of 107.80 by amassing 539 runs from five innings with two hundreds and as many fifties.His hunger to score big emerged during his early years in Patiala and a childhood spent following his cousins to cricket grounds to watch inter-college matches. Sports was running in the family a generation before: his father was the captain of the India handball team and represented the country from 1982 to 2000. When Anmolpreet’s talent came to the fore, he joined the DMW Academy and the Black Elephant Club in Patiala to hone his skills.”My father would guide me on how to go about things, but I have been coached by different coaches at different academies,” Anmolpreet told the BCCI website last month. “I started getting more matches from the Army Ground [in Patiala] and then I got a coach who also guided me. He taught me the basics. From there I shifted to the Dhruv Pandove Stadium where I still train.”He went on to represent Punjab Under-16s and Under-19s and made his Twenty20 debut for Punjab in the Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy last year. He got a chance to bat only once in two T20s but his outings at the Under-19 level had impressed the selectors enough to try him out in two tri-series before the World Cup. On his Youth ODI debut, he scored 28, followed it with a fifty and averaged 27.25 with the bat before the World Cup started. It wasn’t enough to throw an established player off his perch in the XI that was taking shape.He didn’t get to bat in the warm-ups even as other batsmen registered fifties and hundreds. That was, however, followed by a poor stretch of runs from Ricky Bhui, India’s first-choice No. 3 who had also played the last World Cup in 2014. The Indian team management gambled by dropping an experienced player for a youngster for the knockouts and it paid off.”You can trust in each of the 15 players we have,” Kishan said about Anmolpreet’s inclusion. “We know they can perform when the team needs. We have seen Anmol’s batting and he performs in matches even if the situation is bad. He also bowls. We always think about the team, and he has proved himself.”Anmolpreet didn’t look perturbed at all that he had not been given a chance before the quarter-final. “When Ricky did not score, sir (Rahul Dravid) gave me a chance and I did well.”His offspin bowling option does provide India another spinner on the slow tracks in Bangladesh, even though their pacers and frontline spinners have not had to depend on part-timers so far. Whether you ask him about his batting approach today, or in the triple-hundred against J&K, or while batting in general, he says: . He will now hope he can do the same in the final, if the opportunity arises, and with his cricketing career.

When Mohit got his bluff wrong

Mohit’s poor execution may have cost Kings XI the game, but to say that he did so without any reason wouldn’t be giving him credit for his otherwise pin-point execution all season

Sidharth Monga in Mohali15-May-2016Bluff. Not to be confused with double bluff, which, sometimes, excitable and excited commentators use synonymously. Shane Watson recently used the word bluff in a flash interview. In a joint interview alongside James Faulkner, Dwayne Bravo told the IPL website earlier this season, “Nowadays, batsmen have an idea as to where the bowler will bowl. So a bluff is very important to catch a batsman off guard. Like Jimmy (Faulkner) said earlier, you might look a bit like an idiot when the bluff does not work in your favour.”Watson’s point was you cannot afford to telegraph to the batsman with your field what exactly you are going to bowl and then go ahead and bowl that ball every time.Mohit Sharma can count himself as one of those best finishing bowlers this IPL. He has been using the slower balls to good effect, especially with a yorker added to his arsenal. The game on Sunday was especially made for slower balls. As Kings XI Punjab began to pull Sunrisers Hyderabad back in defense of 179, they kept bowling cutters into the pitch. Starting with the 10th over, the only boundaries hit until the end of the 14th – three of them – came off deliveries bowled at regulation pace. Mind you, even a set David Warner couldn’t hit a single slower ball to the fence, and these overs were predominantly filled with slower deliveries.The asking rate finally crossed 10 at the end of the 14th over. It was clear that slower balls was the way to go now because they were gripping the surface and were impossible to time if the batsmen made any premature movement. In the 15th over, though, Deepak Hooda began to improvise. He shuffled across the stumps, and waited and waited for a slower bouncer from Marcus Stoinis before pulling it over short fine leg, almost like waiting at the net in volleyball before smashing a lob from your team-mate. In the next over, Yuvraj Singh showed he was prepared for the slower balls when he lofted Sandeep Sharma for a huge six over midwicket.Thanks to those two hits, Sunrisers kept with the asking rate of 10 an over for two overs, but Axar Patel bowled a superb 17th over, including three balls at the new batsman Ben Cutting to take it up to 39 off the last three overs.Now Kings XI went to perhaps their best bowler of the tournament, Mohit. Thanks to that Axar over, Mohit had again found some breathing space to bowl those slower balls. The field – both third man and fine leg inside the circle – suggested so. We were now expecting the slower ball too, but that is what messes with the bowler’s mind. How many slower balls before the batsman starts to expect them and is waiting for them? There were already signs that the batsmen had started to find their way around the slower ones. Also the shorter boundary was leg side for Yuvraj, the man on strike at the start of the 18th over. You still have to show him the field for the slower ball, though.Now Mohit’s trademark slower, the back-of-the-hand legcutter, which is usually effective and is his trusted delivery, can be well under 110kmph. This time Mohit tried the other one: the offcutter, at 128kph, barely a drop from his peak pace of mid-130s. Yuvraj wasn’t taken by surprise, the bluff had been called, and a big six was hit. The next ball was at 136kph, just outside off, and Yuvraj steered it in the gap between point and short third man. Now with the pressure gone, Cutting picked the 106kph slower ball later in the over, waited for it, and slugged it between long-on and deep midwicket for four.The game was over with Mohit not bowling to his field, but to say that he did so without any reason would be to not give him enough credit after he has been doing the job for Kings XI all season long. This was in all likelihood a bluff gone wrong. Perhaps he should have bowled another slower ball before the bluff. Perhaps he should have bluffed with a yorker.Death bowling is not a science, there are nights when it leaves you with just perhapses, especially with the heavy bats. Sunday night was one such for Mohit.

Come on folks, you need to be realistic

The third day began with much hope for Sri Lanka but it ended with talk of progress being restricted to small moments

Andrew Fidel Fernando at Lord's11-Jun-20164:21

Jayawardene: Sri Lanka are trying to make it harder for themselves

If you are a Sri Lanka fan, you might have woken up this morning with high hopes. Your team’s openers had made a triple-figure stand. One of the openers had a Lord’s century in his sights. Could Sri Lanka bat long enough to bring Rangana Herath’s spin into the game, you might have wondered. Might batsmen leave the field with a strut of a peacock this time, instead of eyes of a puppy dog?Having probably sobbed yourself to sleep in the foetal position after the second day of each of the previous Tests, it is understandable if you became a little excited by an overnight scoreline of 162 for 1. But, listen, you must be realistic. This is a Sri Lanka team in the throes of consecutive periods of transition. They have administrators who travel en masse to Lord’s and spend millions on shows and tournament songs, instead of paying domestic cricketers a living wage. So it’s silly not to expect frequent collapses, don’t you think? It’s vital not to have pie-in-the-sky dreams like a first-innings deficit of only two figures.It has often been said this series that Sri Lanka have not played the swinging or seaming ball particularly well. Well, that’s probably fair. In Hamilton last December, it was said that Sri Lanka didn’t play the short ball particularly well. Also, in the middle of 2015, they did not cover themselves in glory against legspin (Yasir Shah) or offspin (R Ashwin). And, okay, when the ball was not doing much in the morning session here, they appeared to have substantial issues against non-swinging, non-seaming, non-turning deliveries as well. Five top-order wickets fell for 43 runs.But think about all the balls Sri Lanka didn’t get out to. There appear to be no major weakness to short, wide balls, for example. Long hops have been almost laughably ineffective against them. If England had bowled loopy, knee-high full tosses, all day long, well, those, I’m sure, would have been sublimely defended back down the pitch. It’s not all bad.Having tottered to low first-innings Headingley and Chester-le-Street, it must also be mentioned that at Lord’s, there was significant run-scoring to bookend the mass self-immolation in the morning session. Kaushal Silva and Dimuth Karunaratne had half-centuries. Kusal Perera and Herath – who has outscored two top-order team-mates this series – put on a heartening 71 together.At Lord’s Sri Lanka scored more than England’s highest first-innings scorer, for once. They didn’t fall over in the street and drown in a puddle like total idiots. They walked all the way up to the top of the bridge and only then, plunged off it. Returning this team to competitiveness is a long process, by many accounts. Here was progress of the strictly slow-and-drawn-out variety.And fine, it wasn’t 450-wicket swear word maestro James Anderson taking the wickets this time. It was a cherub-faced Chris Woakes and topple-heavy Steven Finn bowling themselves into form. But it’s not always the highly-rated spearheads that get wickets you know. Supporting bowlers can be quite skilled too. Just look through the list of bowlers who have delivered incisive spells at Sri Lanka recently. Neil Wagner is not that bad a bowler. Amit Mishra can be a handful. Stuart Binny as well. And so, okay, Kraigg Brathwaite only had three first-class wickets before he took 6 for 29 at the P Sara in October, but he’s underrated, surely? Either that or it was a very dusty pitch.In the field, Sri Lanka missed three clear catches in the evening. Wicketkeeper Dinesh Chandimal didn’t even attempt to pouch the easiest of the lot. Perhaps there is no real improvement in that department per se, but maybe Sri Lanka are learning to devise strategies that account for the drops. Like the Pakistan quicks of yore, Nuwan Pradeep went at the stumps to get his wickets. When he was on a hat-trick in dim light, and in the middle of one of the spells of his life, his captain didn’t bother to give him a third slip. Angelo Mathews is often accused of being over-conservative, but you can see his reasoning here, can’t you? There is no point to non-catching catching men.Sri Lanka were still hanging in the match by a thread as the third day wound to a close. This was thanks largely to the efforts of their depleted attack. At Headingley they had already been pummeled by this stage. At Chester-le-Street they were fighting to make England bat again. Yes, sure, their 288 all out is by a distance the lowest completed first-class total at Lord’s this year, but in there were several patches of competence, am I right?Please…. am I right?

Sohail Khan ends his exile in triumph

After five years in the wilderness, Sohail Khan seized his chance for a Test comeback and bowled Pakistan into the ascendancy at Edgbaston

Jarrod Kimber at Edgbaston03-Aug-2016In 2007-08, a young Pakistani paceman took 91 wickets in the season at 18. It was a record for Pakistani first-class record. And, in that same year, he took a 16-wicket haul in one match.Today he played his third Test.In 2008-09, a young Pakistani paceman took 56 wickets at 15. By the end of 2009 he had played six Tests.Sohail Khan was the man who took the 91 wickets – in two further seasons he had taken over 60. The 56-wicket man? Mohammad Amir. The chosen one. The prodigy.Khan played two Tests – the first of which, against Sri Lanka at Karachi in February 2009, was the last completed Test to have been played in Pakistan. He took 0 for 164 in the match, at more than six an over, on one of the flattest pitches ever produced. His next Test was against Zimbabwe at Bulawayo, in which Tatenda Taibu became his first and, for several years, only Test wicket, at a further cost of 81 runs.That was in September 2011. He has had to wait five years for another chance. The same amount of time for which Amir has been suspended.***The Hindu Kush mountains, among Pakistan’s most rugged locations, has started to produce more and more cricketers over the last few years. It is a world away from Lahore and Karachi, in weather and in life. And the players who come from there are often noticeably different.It isn’t often that a bowler talks about a training program that includes swimming across rivers, rolling rocks down mountains and chopping wood, but that was a big part of Sohail’s life as a young man. He wasn’t a gym-born cricketer, he was a mountain man. Later, he attended Rashid Latif’s academy where he was trained in modern cricket coaching methods. There, his weightlifter’s wing muscles were brought back under control, and became a young bowler of note.”Sometimes I bowl so fast that the ball sends the stumps flying before the batsman has even had a chance to bring his bat down,” he once told PakPassion. And he was a regular in fast-bowling competitions. But despite the training, the pace, and that massive pair of woodchopping shoulders, he had to wait until he was 23 to make his first-class debut.When he did, he enjoyed it. “I took three wickets in three overs,” he said. “I was bowling really fast and firing in bouncers, when one of my bouncers hit a guy on his helmet. The guy collapsed and passed out. After that I left the field and refused to continue bowling in case I hurt these guys.”He was a tearaway, a bouncer or yorker bowler, bowling with a Shoaib Ahktar run-up and a Waqar Younis mentality. He was raw and fast, but he wasn’t as rare, fast or special as Mohammad Amir.***Sohail Khan picks up his fifth wicket as James Anderson unsuccessfully reviews his lbw•AFPFind a good length, keep the seam in the right position, swing the ball, and ensure that there aren’t many chances to score. Sohail wasn’t reinventing modern bowling when he took the new ball for his Test comeback at Edgbaston.He wasn’t bowling lightning bolts or unplayable jaffas, he hit the right areas, he hit them a lot, he did it with a technically sound action, with a lot of bowling knowledge, and with an outswinger that would cause anyone problems. He showed patience, he built pressure, and the conditions helped him.This wasn’t the tearaway from the mountains, this was the professional first-class bowler, on top of his game, who had cut down on his pace after watching Jimmy Anderson’s success in English conditions. So this was someone bowling within himself as an intellectual move, not just a guy, at 32, slowing down with age.Sohail removed Alex Hales with a perfect new-ball outswinger. It couldn’t have been more romantic if the ball actually kissed the outside edge. The ball to Root was almost as good, even if Root was partly to blame for the wicket himself. Sohail wasn’t screaming like a loon who couldn’t believe his luck, he was celebrating like a well-worn professional who had taken wickets like this in the shadows for years, and had now got a chance to do it in a Test match. He pulled much the same trick for Vince’s outside edge.It was for Bairstow’s wicket, after extracting a bit of bounce out of the surface, that he showboated a bit and gave a comical head bob to show he was in control. Misbah had won the toss and bowled, Rahat Ali had one wicket, Sohail four at that point. He was in control. Amir had no wickets.***And yet, there he was at the top of his mark, looking confused. This strapping man, looking more like a Lollywood action hero than a Pakistani fast bowler. His run-up starts somewhere here, but instead of charging in, he looks down trying to remember where it should be.You can usually tell the difference between a bowler who is completely in control of his game, and one who is going to have a lot of good and bad days. It is in their run-up. And Sohail’s run-up seems to start from a different place almost every ball.But this isn’t some special trick of shortening his run-up for effect. He can start from four different places in one over. At one stage he has three markers, and he seems to ignore all three of them. Another time he moves his marker to a random area, as if it was getting in his head. And regularly, no matter where he started to run in from, he would lose his run-up as he approached the crease.But even when he got it wrong, he somehow, against cricket logic, still got it right at the crease. It may not be perfect, or always correct, but he is a bowler, and you don’t need to see his massive shoulders or huge frame to know that. He may forget his lines, but he knows bowling.***Sohail Khan’s dismissal of Alex Hales was his first wicket for five years•AFPTop-class athletes don’t often come back from long lay-offs and perform at the same level they were at before. Often they struggle, and disappear, like Ian Thorpe, Australia’s Thorpedo. Several female tennis players have managed it, as well as a few athletes, such as Justin Gatlin and Lance Armstrong, who may have had outside assistance. Many an old boxer, most notably George Foreman, have been lured back for some lesser glory. But it is hard enough to make it when you have spent your whole life working for it, it is harder still when you have missed out on a whole tranche of your development.Occasionally there are people like Dennis Lillee, who broke his back in 1973 but rebuilt his body and mind to become the ultimate bowler. But mostly when players lose a part of their 20s, they don’t come back the same. Michael Vick, the NFL quarterback, and Mike Tyson both lost parts of their careers to prison, and returned as different beasts. So too did Muhammad Ali, despite winning two further belts after returning from his political exile. Michael Jordan was never the same scoring machine after he left for baseball.Mohammad Amir had all the hype, the limited-overs spells, the viral wickets against Somerset, the many dropped chances off Cook, and the winning wicket at Lord’s. But right now, he isn’t the same bowler that he was aged 19, on the 2010 tour of England. Maybe he won’t ever be. Or maybe he will be next week.But if he can’t be, we shouldn’t be surprised. Five years out of the game, five years of not learning, of not conditioning his body, of not perfecting his action, of not getting through the tough days, of not developing his game, seem to have left with him the odd good ball, the odd great ball, and several other parts of game in which he is under-developed.Sohail’s five years out of Test cricket, on the other hand, have been spent perfecting his game. Doing all the things that Amir robbed himself of.***Sohail’s penultimate spell involved a quest for reverse swing. And the ball did swing for him. At times he used it well, but he also looked like he was riding an imaginary horse into the crease, and even the horse was tired. It didn’t look like he had another spell in him. But Misbah-ul-Haq brought him back to finish the day with the new ball.With every passing delivery, he looked more and more like a man longing for his hotel bed over a five-wicket haul. His pace was dropping so steadily, the speed gun attendant may have thought the batteries were slowly going flat in his machine.By the start of the last over of the day, Sohail wasn’t so much limping to the crease, more running as if there was an invisible man holding him back. The ball was swinging massively out of his hand, but if you are bowling at 68 miles per hour, sometimes the ball swings through boredom. Many great Pakistani fast bowlers might have seen his speed as an affront to their trade.Part of Sohail’s lack of pace was down to his efforts to get the ball to swing, but equally he could barely run in any more. Sohail was tired. It was only Steven Finn slapping him down the ground for four that woke him up. And suddenly he was back in the mid-80s, trying to knock his head off. He didn’t, because he still wasn’t that quick, and instead Finn hooked him away for another four.And yet, the pace might have gone, but the skills were still there.He delivered the perfect inswinger to James Anderson. It looked plumb on first impact, and Sohail appealed like it was. When it was given out, he fell to his knees. He ended up in a sajda, but his gesture was that of an exhausted man falling to the ground, having bowled through his spent body to take a five-wicket haul in a Test match.The only energy he could muster wasn’t for the wicket celebration, it was for the now-regulation Pakistani celebratory push-ups as he walked off. But his woodchopper’s shoulders still had enough latent power to perform a clap between each repetition.Amir cashed in with a couple of wickets at the end of the day. But for once it wasn’t about him. It was Sohail Khan’s day. No matter what Sohail does, he will never be the leading man, the star, the human headline. But all those years in the cricket wilderness, working at the academy, throwing rocks in the Hindu Kush, learning an outswinger, meant that he was ready.For Sohail, those five years might have felt like forever, but he used his exile well.

Exceptions prove the Rogers rule

That Chris Rogers’ batting and leadership will be missed to the game is beyond dispute. But it is equally easy to conclude that the lessons learned over the past 18 years will be rare gold for Rogers in coaching ranks

Daniel Brettig23-Sep-2016Perhaps it was the need to push on for runs and a fourth-innings target, perhaps it was something deeper. Either way, some uncharacteristic flourishes in Chris Rogers’ final innings for Somerset this season tended to indicate these were the parting shots of a prolific and valuable career.

Most first-class hundreds by Australians

117 – Don Bradman
86 – Justin Langer
82 – Darren Lehmann
82 – Ricky Ponting
81 – Mark Waugh
79 – Matthew Hayden
79 – Steve Waugh
79 – Stuart Law
76 – Chris Rogers

For many a year, Rogers had been crease-bound against spin, leaning heavily on advice conveyed by Lance Klusener in their time together at Northamptonshire: build a solid defence against spinners and wait for the bad ball. But here he was, dancing down to Samit Patel and lofting over long-on.More recently, Rogers had been haunted by the threat of the short ball, his fears exacerbated by the death of Phillip Hughes then maintained by numerous head knocks over the course of his last few Test assignments for Australia. Yet the last scoring stroke with which he moved to a 76th first-class hundred – only eight Australians have more – was a hook shot.Proof, then, that Rogers always had these shots in his locker, and perhaps a flightier personality would have used them more frequently. Instead, these moments in innings No. 554 were the exceptions that prove the rule: by knowing his limitations and working within them, Rogers carved out a batting method that stood up to more examinations than most. He also earned the belated validation of a memorable stint in the Australian Test side, years after he had given up hope of getting there for longer than his earlier solitary appearance.To finish in England was fitting, for it was largely on those northern shores that Rogers sculpted his way of batting. When he first travelled to play there his technique was more or less classically Australian: back and across to cover bounce and be in position to play cross bat strokes on the hard and true expanses of the WACA Ground.But the means by which Rogers would become a consistent and heavy run scorer were to come later, via help from the likes of Paul Nixon and Klusener. A double hundred against the touring Australian Ashes team of 2005 was significant not only as the innings that put Rogers on the map back home, but also as the first sign his English lessons were starting to take root. In the simplest terms, he worked on playing in straight lines down the pitch, and covering off stump without letting the bat get outside his eyeline to adjust for lateral movement.Combined with a flinty determination at the batting crease and an agile mind eager to make adjustments for the challenges posed by different bowlers, teams and circumstances, those fundamentals led Rogers to major run-making feats. Over the past decade only twice – once through injury and once through international commitments – did Rogers fail to top 1000 runs for the English season, sharing his runs and expertise with Northants, Derbyshire, Middlesex and Somerset.These sides, plus Australia, benefited too from Rogers the thoughtful leader, and Rogers the sociable after-hours organiser. At both Derbyshire and Middlesex he did not arrive as captain but was effectively promoted to the rank in the field. By the time he signed on to play at Taunton this year there was expectation of the battling club being given the “Rogers touch”, characterised by example with the bat, sound ideas in the field, dedication in training and yarn-spinning in the dressing room.An attentive brand of leadership has found its greatest 2016 exemplar in the growth of the left-arm spinner Jack Leach, proficient in his craft but also shy and reticent in a way Rogers doubtless recognised in his younger self. The following words were spoken after Leach had bowled Somerset to victory over Yorkshire at Headingley, as blunt as they were empathetic:”I am still a big believer that you need more than one good season to play for England. With Jack, I think his game’s in order, I think emotionally he still has a bit of a way to go and I don’t think he’d be upset with me saying that. He is still a young guy, he has only ever been in Somerset and the challenges in international cricket are a lot more difficult. If they pick him then good luck to him but they’d better look after him.”Protective of his men but honest with them also, Rogers’ parting gift to Somerset was to drive them to within a day’s good fortune of the club’s first ever County Championship. That his batting and leadership will be missed to the game is beyond dispute. But it is equally easy to conclude that the lessons learned over the past 18 years will be rare gold for Rogers in coaching ranks.

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