Tongue sets England's eyes on prize with 350 more needed for victory

KL Rahul hopes England’s desire to go for win will play into India’s hands

ESPNcricinfo staff23-Jun-20252:39

Manjrekar: A fascinating final day looms

Josh Tongue says that there has been no mention of the word “draw” in the home dressing-room at Headingley, a state of affairs that KL Rahul believes will play into India’s hands as England seek to hunt down a target of 371 on the final day of the first Test.England have drawn only once in their 36 Tests since Ben Stokes took over as captain, when rain washed away the prospect of a result at Old Trafford in the 2023 Ashes. There is a chance that the weather will play a role on the final day in Leeds, too, but the equation otherwise stands at 350 more runs – or ten wickets – required in 90 overs for a positive result.Tongue said that there was no situation in which England would consider a draw to be a good result, saying, “[We will] just go for the win. That’s the clear message in the changing room. It’s just [about] being as positive as we can. They’re going to bowl well at times tomorrow. It’s just crucial we soak up that bit of pressure and reapply it. I don’t see why we can’t chase that down.”Related

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Rahul, who top-scored with 137 in the third innings, echoed Tongue’s sentiments, and said that England’s attacking approach would suit India’s bowlers. “There’s definitely going to be a result,” he said. “That’s what England have said very openly, and their style of cricket suggests that as well. It gives us a good opportunity to pick up ten wickets. We know how they’re going to come out and bat on day five.”The wicket today was a very tricky wicket: I spent a lot of time batting there and I didn’t feel set at all at any given stage. The wicket’s taken a beating, and tomorrow might break even more… We know their style of cricket, so [we’ll] try to keep that in the back of our heads and try to see what lines and lengths we can bowl and how we can get them out.”Rahul also revealed that India had fallen short of the target they were hoping to set, after collapsing from 333 for 4 to 364 all out. “There was a little bit of discussion about how many runs we need on the board or… maybe giving them a few overs to bat in the evening today and see if we can pick up a wicket or two,” Rahul said. “Ideally, from the position we were in, we would have wanted at least 40 or 50 runs more.”Tongue said England were “really confident” after seeing out the final six overs of the day. “If you look at our batting line-up, it’s very strong. We play a positive brand of cricket. Chasing 371 is going to be a good thing for us to do tomorrow. Getting through that first 30-45 minutes tomorrow is going to be crucial, and then hopefully [we will] get the winning runs.”

ECB hopeful India's women may yet feature in the Hundred

BCCI staying firm on refusal to allow male players permission to feature in new tournament

George Dobell and Nagraj Gollapudi20-Feb-2020The ECB is in talks with the BCCI about agreeing the involvement of some of the India women’s team in the inaugural edition of the Hundred later this year. However, the chances of India’s men also being allowed to play in the tournament remain slim.Players such as Harmanpreet Kaur, who will lead India at the forthcoming Women’s T20 World Cup, and Smriti Mandhana have previously featured in England’s T20 Kia Super League, which has now been disbanded to make way for the Hundred. Their presence in the 100-ball competition would be a boost for the ECB’s new format, as well as raising its visibility around the world.ESPNcricinfo understands that the ECB is currently engaged in discussions with the BCCI about allowing such a move. But while that may be seen as a way of preparing the ground for India’s male stars to participate in future editions of the Hundred, BCCI officials have poured cold water on the idea.ALSO READ: Expanded Hundred could help ‘working class connection’ – HarrisonA few India internationals, such as Harbhajan Singh and Yuvraj Singh, have expressed an interest in the Hundred, but the BCCI has long exercised tight control over granting permissions to play in limited-overs tournaments overseas. Virat Kohli, India’s captain, even questioned the need to “experiment” with a new format.The ECB last year conceded that India’s men were unlikely to be involved from the outset. “I can’t commit to the involvement of India players,” Tom Harrison, the ECB’s chief executive, said. “It’s a political conversation as much as anything.”In December, the BCCI’s top three administrators were in London to meet ECB counterparts. The BCCI team was led by former India captain Sourav Ganguly, who was elected as the Indian board’s president last October. Ganguly was flanked by Jay Shah and Arun Dhumal, the BCCI secretary and treasurer respectively.It is understood the BCCI was open to considering the ECB’s request of looking into Indian women participating in the women’s leg of the Hundred, but since then there has been no firm decision taken on that front. “We have had discussions on county cricket and women players might be allowed,” a senior BCCI official told ESPNcricinfo.As for the question of India men’s cricketers participating in the Hundred, there has been no change in the BCCI’s stance. It will not allow India men to participate in any overseas T20 or other similar leagues.The BCCI official reiterated that by allowing the men to participate in overseas leagues, it would hurt the IPL, the biggest cash cow for the BCCI. In 2017, global sports broadcaster Star India bought the consolidated global rights for IPL for a record US$2.55 billion for a five-year period, the biggest deal in cricket.The official also pointed out that with the Future Tours Programme planned in advance, players could be at risk of missing bilateral events, which is another stream of revenue the BCCI heavily relies on.The first draft for the men’s Hundred took place in October. Harbhajan was the only Indian player to put his name forward, but he subsequently withdrew after it was suggested he would have to retire from international competition – and potentially forego an IPL contract – if he wanted to be considered.

Ollie Robinson suspended from all international cricket

Seamer unavailable for second Test pending disciplinary investigation into historic tweets

ESPNcricinfo staff06-Jun-2021Ollie Robinson has been suspended from all international cricket pending the outcome of a disciplinary investigation following historic tweets he posted in 2012 and 2013.As a result, Robinson is unavailable for selection for the second Test against New Zealand starting at Edgbaston on Thursday.Announcing his suspension on Sunday, the ECB confirmed that Robinson will leave the England camp immediately and return to his county, Sussex.Robinson issued an apology on Wednesday after admitting to posting “racist and sexist” comments on Twitter as a teenager. News of the tweets emerged shortly after Robinson walked onto the field at Lord’s in his Test debut earlier that day. It was also just after England and New Zealand players had stood on the side of the field shortly before the start of the first Test in a ‘moment of unity’ with the home players wearing T-shirts which denounced various forms of discrimination.Speaking after the drawn first Test, in which Robinson took a total of seven wickets – with 4 for 75 and 3 for 26 – and scored 42 in England’s first innings, Joe Root, the England captain, said that while Robinson’s debut had been “exceptional” from an on-field performance point of view, his historical actions off-field were unacceptable.”He’s contributed well with the bat, his performance with the ball was excellent,” Root said. “He’s showed high levels of skill and he’s definitely got the game that can be successful in Test cricket.”But in regards to the stuff that’s happened off the field, it’s not acceptable within our game. We all know that. He addressed the dressing room straight away. He obviously spoke to you guys and other media outlets straight away, fronted up to it. He showed a lot of remorse from that point onwards. You can see it’s very genuine from how he’s been around the group and the team.Related

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“I couldn’t believe them [the tweets], personally. I didn’t really know how to take it on the surface. I think the most important thing is Ollie is part of this dressing room and we had to support him. We had to try and do everything that we could to give him an opportunity to learn and understand he has to do better.”I think it’s a great lesson for everyone within our game that we can all do more. We all have to keep looking to educate ourselves, trying to better the environment for everyone, trying to be as inclusive as we can, keep making everyone feel comfortable to play what a wonderful sport we have.”In the lead-up to the first Test, Root had said that the ‘moment of unity’ would mark the start of a year of action to improve inclusivity and diverstiy within the sport.”It starts with us players at the top of the game,” he said on Sunday.” We set out the week with that moment of unity and we’re doing a lot of work behind the cricket that we want to make big change in the game and we want to make it more inclusive, more diverse.”I think the most important thing is we keep trying to do everything we can to better our sport, that we keep learning and we keep finding ways of making our game as best as we can.”We can look back about how this could have been handled better, but the fact is it shouldn’t have happened. And if we continue to keep trying to better the game right now, then in years to come this shouldn’t be an issue. This shouldn’t be something that happens within cricket. We’ve got to move forward from this, learn from this and do everything we can to make sure it doesn’t happen again.”The ECB promised to conduct a full invstigation once the Tweets emerged.After play on Wednesday, Robinson said: “On the biggest day of my career so far, I am embarrassed by the racist and sexist tweets that I posted over eight years ago, which have today become public. I want to make it clear that I’m not racist and I’m not sexist.”I deeply regret my actions, and I am ashamed of making such remarks. I would like to unreservedly apologise to anyone I have offended, my teammates and the game as a whole in what has been a day of action and awareness in combatting discrimination from our sport.”

PCB appoints Dr Najeebullah Soomro to head revamped sports medicine department

A PhD from the University of Sydney, he is an expert injury epidemiologist and sports scientist

Umar Farooq03-Aug-2021The PCB has appointed Dr Najeebullah Soomro, a Perth-based doctor, to head its revamped sports medicine department. He will take over as the chief medical officer, and is expected to relocate to Lahore in October, and be based at the city’s National High-Performance Centre.Dr Soomro is presently working as a part-time doctor with South Fremantle Football Club, a second-tier Australian Rules Football club that competes in the Western Australia Football League. An MBBS from Karachi’s Dow University of Health and Sciences, he completed a PhD from the University of Sydney with a doctoral thesis on prevention of cricket injuries.It is this expertise on cricket injuries that the PCB will hope to utilise. Over the last decade a number of players, and fast bowlers especially, have picked up injuries and either struggled to return after rehabilitation, or to maintain pre-injury standards. That led to a significant lack of trust between players and the department, leading to a number of them seeking medical advice, services and rehabilitation abroad.The PCB’s medical department was earlier headed by Dr Sohail Saleem, but he was forced to resign following the outbreak of Covid-19 inside the PSL bio-secure bubble last year, which led to the tournament being postponed. The PCB subsequently formed an independent fact-finding panel to review the matter, but it is still unclear if Dr Saleem was actually held accountable in the report.According to the PCB, Dr Soomro has collaborated with Cricket Australia to create the world’s first cricket injury prevention programme and injury surveillance mobile app for community cricket. Dr Soomro has also trained as an injury epidemiologist and sports scientist, though this will be his first position in such a high-profile role.It’s not Dr Soomro’s first stint with Pakistan cricket, though. He had earlier worked with the PCB as a member of its sports medicine committee between May 2019 and September 2020.The appointment is part of an upgrade of the PCB’s medical department, now integrated with the high-performance centre. The domestic cricket department, which functioned separately with the national cricket academies, has also merged with the high-performance centre, which is responsible for player development for top-drawer cricket.

Ben Stokes fired up for 'redemption' shot in semi-final against Australia

In the “most important game” of his career Ben Stokes is hoping to continue his excellent form with bat and ball

George Dobell at Edgbaston09-Jul-2019Ben Stokes believes he is in good shape with bat and ball for the “most important game” of his career.Stokes is no stranger to the big occasion having memorably played in a World T20 final, a Champions Trophy semi-final and numerous other high-profile international and IPL matches. But he feels the chance of reaching a World Cup final and beating England’s oldest cricketing enemy on the way, add up to make Thursday’s semi-final against Australia more significant than any of them.”Is this the most important game I’ve played? Yes, to date. Definitely,” Stokes said. “Playing against Australia is a big occasion in any sport. The rivalry goes way back. Beating them is that touch better than any other team. Losing to them at Lord’s was massively disappointing, so I think there will be a bit of redemption in knowing we have the chance to beat them and get to that final.”While Stokes has, at first glance, enjoyed a much better tournament with the bat than the ball, averaging 54.42 with the bat at a strike rate of 95.01, it is his bowling that has given him most satisfaction. For although he has bowled only 43.5 overs in the nine games to date and claimed a relatively modest seven wickets, he is conceding only 4.65 runs per over, making him England’s most economical bowler. The secret of that success, he feels, is understanding his role with the ball.”The thing I have been most happy with has been my bowling,” Stokes said. “I’m in a very good place with my batting. I have just continued to work on the same things but also tried to test myself. I’m not letting up because this is the crucial moment: lose this and we’re out. I think just having the confidence of being in lots of situations over the past four years has made it easier. Batting at No. 5, I either rebuild or have to get on with the game.”But the most pleasing thing has been my bowling. I had a chat with Eoin Morgan to get my head around my role. Being fourth or fifth seamer, I sometimes put too much pressure on myself to influence the game. So I spoke to them about not trying to take a wicket every ball and instead aim at going for five or six an over. I might get a wicket doing that anyway and it’s helped offer the team more. In the last couple of years, it’s probably where I have let the team down.”Stokes has made between 79 and 89 four times in the tournament so far, but insists he is not bothered by falling short of individual milestones. Instead, he is only motivated by contributing to team victories.”I’m not too fussed,” he says. “I won’t walk away disappointed if I don’t get a hundred – that’s not what I’m about. I think going into a semi-final knowing all of our top four have hundreds is a great place to be. Both openers have hundreds, Joe Root and Morgs have hundreds. It’s very impressive.”I’m massively proud [to be part of this team]. When our careers end we’ll be able to look back and say we have played with the world’s best, got to No. 1 but more importantly, played with a good bunch of people. I believe this team is the best at what they do and we’re trying to build a path for many years to come: this is what England stand for and how we want to play.”I don’t feel like I have to prove anything to anyone except myself. [The Bristol incident] opened my eyes to a lot of things, but I don’t have to prove anything to anyone. It’s just showing I can deliver on the biggest stage. Winning is the most important thing and if you can help the team out with an individual performance, that’s all that counts. People can say good things, bad things, it just won’t bother me.”

Career-best T20 haul for Dom Bess sets up Yorkshire victory

Yorkshire within one point of Northants with a game in hand ahead of Friday’s Wantage Road clash

David Hopps23-Jun-2022It is tempting to say that this was a picnic for Yorkshire, but apparently such things are not allowed at New Road with several of them confiscated recently on spurious security reasons as spectators entered the ground. Anyway, you get the gist: Yorkshire won this one with five wickets and 32 balls to spare to keep their quarter-final ambitions bubbling. And Worcestershire, poor Worcestershire, with one win in 11, have rarely looked so downcast.One of the North Group’s pivotal matches is now scheduled for Wantage Road on Friday night. Yorkshire have closed to within one point of Northants with a game in hand. They are about to welcome back David Willey from England’s tour of the Netherlands, but Dawid Malan, another tourist, is again managing his long-standing achilles injury and will miss the most important match of the season. Adil Rashid is also taking leave from county and England duties to make the Hajj pilgrimage to Mecca.If Yorkshire reach the quarter-finals, they will also have to find a replacement for Finn Allen, who has been recalled for New Zealand’s white-ball squads for Ireland, Scotland and the Netherlands.What has happened to Worcestershire? They appear to be a shadow of the side that has been skippered so inspirationally by Moeen Ali in recent seasons. They have drawn every ounce of ability from themselves, winning the tournament in 2018 and finishing runners-up a year later, but Moeen has only managed four games this season, without much of an impact, as he wrestles, at 35, with how best to see out the remainder of his career.
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Even defending an under-par 150 for 5, they could have made Yorkshire labour because there was something in the pitch and they had chances to make inroads into Yorkshire’s all-important top four. When Josh Baker dropped Allen on 1 – racing from third man to spill a pull over the batter’s own head – it proved not to be costly as Allen soon hoisted another skier into the leg side. But dropping Tom Kohler-Cadmore on 7 had more of an impact. OK, so the guy with the big gloves on often takes the catch, but Gareth Roderick’s claim as he dashed into the leg side was taking it a bit too far when such a reliable fielder as Ed Barnard was stood there, facing the right direction, perfectly capable of taking it himself.Related

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Kohler-Cadmore went on to make an unbeaten 46 against his former county and that was enough to ease Yorkshire home with the help of cameos from Adam Lyth and Harry Brook.Worcestershire could take solace from the display of Mitchell Stanley, the latest quick bowler to develop through their Academy, and who looked strong and willing in returning 2 for 40: two good wickets, too, Allen and Brook, the latter failing to clear mid-off with a front-foot thrash. Shadab Khan, the Pakistan allrounder, has yet to catch light with bat or ball – an excessive move outside leg stump to be caught at the wicket being his latest dismissal and Yorkshire will hope that like many top players he delivers when the pressure is at its highest.That Worcestershire made 150 for 5 was something of an escape because with four overs remaining, they were up a siding at 99 for 5. They added 51 from the last four because of two of the lesser-known figures of the Blast – Kashif Ali, Kashmir born, who has played 2nd XI cricket for five counties in an attempt to make the grade, and Gareth Roderick, who has made no T20 impact since he signed from Gloucestershire for the 2021 season and who had averaged 12 in his 32 previous T20 matches. Kashif is also the first product of the South Asian Cricket Academy to sign a contract with a first-class county. When he hit Waite for successive sixes in an over costing 24 runs, those who devised this vital rescue net in an imperfect county system deserved their satisfaction.It was an unlikely pairing to rescue Worcestershire’s innings, but they amassed an unbroken sixth-wicket stand of 73 in 46 balls, much of it in inferior light. Most of those were in a two-over flurry against Jordan Thompson and Matthew Waite which leaked 41 runs. The rest of the Worcestershire side managed only four fours and two sixes between them.Ed Pollock’s horrendous season since his move from Warwickshire continued – an uppercut to third man representing his latest demise – and Matthew Revis, whose bowling has been Yorkshire’s find of the season, swung one away from Brett D’Oliveira to have him caught at the wicket.Most delight, though, rested with Dom Bess, who returned T20-best figures of 3 for 15, and who may have never have bowled his offspinners so consistently fast or flat. Bess has been lightly used by Yorkshire, surprisingly so considering that his career economy rate is only 7.63 runs per over, and the lack of experience in Yorkshire’s pace attack. Yet previously this season he had bowled only 13 overs in nine matches and taken one wicket.Perhaps they have been concerned with undermining his four-day rhythm, but they need to risk it because the Championship is as good as lost and it is in T20 where they might just deliver the prediction of their outgoing captain, Willey, to leave them a T20 trophy as a parting gift at the end of the season. To do that, he must disappoint the county he is about to join. Such is the sporting life.

Aylish Cranstone, Kalea Moore fifties take South East Stars across the line

Heather Knight’s freak run-out sparks Western Storm collapse at Beckenham

ECB Reporters Network21-May-2022A century stand by Aylish Cranstone and Kalea Moore saw the South East Stars chase down 146 against Western Storm, winning by seven wickets in the Charlotte Edwards Cup at Beckenham.Cranstone scored 66 not out from 49 balls with six fours and put on an unbeaten 108 for the fourth wicket with Moore, who made 57 not out from 48 balls, including five fours. Claire Nicholas took 2 for 17.Georgia Hennessy was the Storm’s top scorer with 50 from 52 balls with six fours. Her opening partner, the England captain Heather Knight, chipped in with 35, while Bryony Smith took 2 for 22.The Stars won the toss and chose to field, but they toiled for the first half of the innings, with the visitors reaching 49 without loss after the powerplay.Yet having advanced to 81 for 0 the Storm stuttered, the breakthrough coming in the 12th over when Knight was run out by Alice Davidson-Richards, who deflected a violent drive by Hennessy onto the stumps at the non-striker’s end with Knight stranded.

Hennessy brought up her 50 with a driven single off Smith, but she was out to the next ball she faced when she was caught and bowled by the same bowler. Smith then took her second wicket when she had Sophie Luff caught by Freya Davies for 12 at mid-on.Danielle Gibson scored the first six of the match when she smashed Alice Capsey over cow corner, but she was out to the same bowler for 11, caught on the boundary by Phoebe Franklin. Fi Morris was then run out by Moore for 7 and Davidson-Richards trapped Natasha Wraith lbw for 5 with the penultimate ball of the innings, leaving Katie George to hit the final ball to boundary.Related

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The Stars’ chase got off to a rocky start when Nicholas claimed two wickets from successive balls in the fourth over. Smith was caught by Luff and Capsey bowled for a golden duck. The hosts were on 39 for 2 at the end of the powerplay and in the next over Franklin was caught for 8 when she hit Knight to Gibson.Davidson-Richards had damanged her hand, giving Moore an opportunity to move up the order. “It was a last-minute thing, me coming in,” she said, “but quite frankly I took the opportunity and I’m glad I did. It was actually a really nice wicket to bat on and with Aylish I felt very, very comfortable because she’s so experienced. I thought if, us two keep ticking we’re going to be perfectly fine.”Cranstone skied George’s final ball of the tenth over, but the chance was dropped, leaving the Stars on 72 for 3 at the halfway point. Smart running between the wickets helped Cranstone and Moore complete their 50 partnership; Cranstone reached her half-century with a driven two from Nicholas and Moore passed the same landmark in the penultimate over with two off Hennessy.Cranstone then hit the winning runs when she swept Hennessy for four with the final ball of the 19th over. “I thought if I keep ticking here, she can hit the bad ones,” Moore said, “although I must say, I don’t think I’ve run so many twos in my life.”We always know we can back each other to run, so with such a big boundary we always knew we could hit twos. It’s a very happy dressing room. It’s good that we bounced back from Wednesday and as team we did very well overall.”

Shrikant Wagh takes 10 for 39 in ECB Premier Division

The left-arm seamer also hit 41 off 28 in a 135-run win for Stokesley Cricket Club against Middlesbrough Cricket Club

ESPNcricinfo staff02-Jul-2018Shrikant Wagh, the Vidarbha allrounder, took all ten wickets in an innings while playing for Stokesley Cricket Club in the North Yorkshire & South Durham Cricket League on Saturday. Wagh took 10 for 39 in 11.4 overs against Middlesbrough Cricket Club to set up a 135-run victory.Put in to bat, Stokesley made 232 for 9 in 50 overs in the ECB Premier Division match; Wagh contributed 41 off 28 balls from No. 5. Opening the bowling and continuing unchanged, Wagh then ran through Middlesbrough, who were bowled out for 97 in 22.4 overs.The result gave Stokesley 25 points, and they are now fourth on the ECB Premier Division table with 154 points from 11 games. Great Ayton Cricket Club (199 points), Barnard Castle Cricket Club (185 points), and Richmondshire Cricket Club (174 points) are ahead of Stokesley.This is Wagh’s second season with Stokesley, having played for them in 2015 too. The left-arm seamer has taken 37 wickets this season in League and Cup games, at an average of 12.05, and has also scored 341 runs at an average of 37.89.”It was very hot day on Saturday and the pitch was very dry so it was not easy to bowl on. I got the first five wickets in as many overs and I thought I have to try for a few more. But that was not easy,” Wagh told . “I had to bowl four overs for the next two wickets and I was really desperate for the rest. I thank my team-mates for encouraging me to go for it. For the last three wickets, we charted out a thorough plan, set a fielding. It worked.”Wagh, 29, has been a Vidarbha veteran, having made his debut in 2007. In 63 first-class matches, he has 1589 runs at 23.71 with one century, while taking 161 wickets at 31.03. He didn’t play a major role in Vidarbha’s run to the Ranji Trophy title in 2017-18, with injuries and the emergence of Rajneesh Gurbani keeping him out of the XI. He was more involved in the limited-overs fixtures, playing both the Vijay Hazare Trophy and the Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy.

Nottinghamshire canter clear in one-horse race, but red-ball reset threatens promotion party

High Performance Review may yet scupper season’s aim, as lowly Leicestershire are routed

David Hopps07-Sep-2022Nottinghamshire 201 (Montgomery 43, Wright 3-26, Barnes 3-32) and 390 for 7 dec (Clarke 67, James 61, Hameed 60) beat Leicestershire 93 (Evans 50*, Fletcher 4-23) and 257 (Finan 58, Mullaney 3-29) by 241 runsJust as Mark Wood can ride an imaginary horse during a Test match, so Nottinghamshire fear they are again contesting an imaginary promotion race as they approach the winners’ enclosure. For the moment, they can do little else but hope. But at least in a Championship season which still has no confirmed denouement, and in a format that has no confirmed future, they have all but done what they can, stretching their lead in Division Two to 34 points with a thumping 241-run win inside three days against Leicestershire.Nottinghamshire’s nearest pursuers, Middlesex and Glamorgan, have three matches left to their two, but they play each other at Lord’s next week. Their next match, against Worcestershire at New Road a week on Tuesday, will be a promotion party. Presumably.Their latest win ended amid some drama as the players trooped out after six o’clock, the rain briefly relenting, Leicestershire nine-down, floodlights blazing, and the threat of a dodgy weather forecast on the final day. They grabbed that wicket within 10 balls as drizzle again began to fall. The Gods then are shining upon them, but the question remains as to whether they will be doubly blessed by the cricket authorities, who would have forced even Zeus to procrastinate and form another sub-committee.The bigger picture was that Nottinghamshire’s win came on the day when Andrew Strauss openly lobbied in a podcast for his oft-signalled preference for a future of three divisions of six and warned that if the counties did not accept a reduction in the amount of Championship cricket played, then more and more players would take the easy option and abandon county cricket for an ever-growing number of worldwide T20 leagues. Result: disaster.Basically, the High Performance Review message is that you old guys might want to watch wall-to-wall Championship cricket, but we young guys don’t want to play it, so you’d better get used to the idea before the walls come tumbling down.Strauss will officially unveil his proposals to the ECB Board next Wednesday, with Richard Thompson taking the chair for the first time. The Board will then decide what exactly to propose to the counties, and when, and there is every chance that a September deadline will not be met. There is also a growing sense that any changes might not come into effect until 2024. If that is so, Nottinghamshire, then your promotion might actually exist.Nottinghamshire would deserve as much. They finished fourth in the Conference system in 2021, a format introduced because of Covid-19, but when the counties voted to revert to two divisions this summer, that achievement was ruled irrelevant. Instead, they were demoted to the Second Division on the basis of their bottom-placed finish in Division One in the last pre-Covid season two years earlier.For all Strauss’s warnings, it is eminently possible that county cricket could opt to stare down the possibility of a talent drain (after all, they have suffered an ECB-approved talent drain for years) and calculate that a surfeit of short-form global tournaments will ultimately implode.But the contention that England’s professional circuit needs the best versus the best has more in its favour. One look at Leicestershire insisted as much. They can be grateful that Strauss is not trying to dismantle the 18-team professional system in the naïve belief that shrinking a game somehow makes it stronger, but their inadequacies are a powerful advocacy of a steeper pyramid system that three divisions of six would bring.They were largely dire on the third day at Trent Bridge, entirely lacking in conviction and application once their openers had departed, happy to tumble to defeat in fatalistic fashion until the merriment of a last-wicket stand of 83 put a gloss on proceedings that they did not deserve. Leicestershire’s last-wicket pair even survived a statutory extra half-hour to reach tea at 251 for 9, their stand worth 77 in 13.2 overs and the last man, Michael Finan, a 26-year-old triallist from Cheshire, finding himself the possessor of a maiden Championship fifty on debut – an innings that involved Nottinghamshire pounding the old ball at him from short of a length with a short leg and five fielders back for the catch, and Finan surviving through a mixture of luck, judgment and dropped catches.Related

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  • Nottinghamshire put foot firmly on Leicestershire's throat

  • Ben Raine bowls Durham back into contention

There followed a rain delay of more than two hours before the sides reappeared. Leicestershire had six overs plus an extra half hour to withstand. The skies were dark and the floodlights were on. From the 10th ball, Finan edged Dane Paterson to second slip where Matthew Montgomery held a low catch. Notts celebrated as if it matters, and let’s hope that this time it does.Leicestershire have not won a first-class game in 11 attempts and look as weak as when they failed to win a single match in 2013 and 2014. A threadbare squad not been helped by the absence of Wiaan Mulder, who has been called up by South Africa, and Ben Mike, who is bound for Yorkshire at the season’s end. They have competed more ably in white-ball formats, only missing a place in the T20 Blast quarter-finals when they were docked points, and reaching the Royal London Cup play-offs, but over four days they are again scraping the barrel. It is due to freakish circumstances that they are playing Nottinghamshire in this season’s Championship, but in the longer format the gulf in class has been apparent.Leicestershire’s director of cricket, Paul Nixon, sounds increasingly dismayed by their four-day failures. “There were too many soft dismissals, too many times we got ourselves out. It’s tough when the odds are against you, but that’s the mindset of a winner. You’ve got to believe that you’re the man who is going to take responsibility for your team and if people haven’t got that mindset, I don’t want them playing for Leicestershire County Cricket Club.”Their openers did resist the new ball gamely enough, albeit rendered largely strokeless. Sam Evans had batted through the first innings for 50 out of 93, no other player reaching double figures (extras contributed 17). His downfall, though, was disappointing as, foot planted a few inches down the pitch, he stretched for a drive at a wide ball from Paterson and edged to the keeper.With Hassan Azad also embedded, Notts appeared to be faced with a bit of a grind on a slow surface, only for their skipper, Steven Mullaney, to change the tone with a pre-lunch spell of 3 for 15 in four overs. He swung the ball prodigiously at times and offered subtle variations of pace. A straight one from around the wicket had Azad lbw; Louis Kimber, who has been promoted to No.3 on the back of excellent 50-overs form, checked a drive to mid-off; and a huge inducker did for Colin Ackermann, who was lbw.As Ryan Patel and Harry Swindells contrived to flick catches to midwicket, six wickets had fallen for 121. Ed Barnes, struggling for oxygen as high as No. 7, banished the doubters in a positive innings of 37, even if his eventual demise was slightly embarrassing as Brett Hutton, having loaded the legside field, banged one in that followed Barnes as he backed away, and he popped a catch to short leg in self-protection while falling on his bottom.Mullaney reckoned Nottinghamshire looked “rusty”. But only Leicestershire had disintegrated.

Starc's ten-for powers Australia towards crushing victory

Sri Lanka subsided again with the bat as they slid to a 366-run defeat before tea on the fourth day

Report by Andrew Fidel Fernando04-Feb-2019A rampant Mitchell Starc devastated the Sri Lanka top order, sending the visitors hurtling to a fourth-day 366-run defeat at Canberra. Sri Lanka failed to reach a total of 200 for the third time in four innings in Australia; and none of their batsmen were able to cross fifty. They have now been winless since late October, and have lost six of the last seven Tests they have played.For Starc, this Test has been an emphatic return to form, after a tough home summer. He sealed the victory with his tenth wicket in the match – the second time he has achieved a 10-for, the other occasion also having been against Sri Lanka. Starc was not quite as quick on day four as he had been in the first innings, but having alread roughed up a number of Sri Lanka batsmen in this Test, he was no less fearsome. He required only seven deliveries to make his first breakthrough of the morning, and from there, the wickets tumbled at an alarming rate. The visitors’ highest partnership, between Kusal Mendis and debutant Chamika Karunaratne, was worth only 46. Pat Cummins was Australia’s next-best bowler, claiming 3 for 15.What will especially irk Sri Lanka is the swiftness of their surrender. Where in New Zealand they had fought with the bat, in the second innings at Wellington and Christchurch. On a Canberra pitch that saw three Australia batsmen make hundreds, only one Sri Lanka batsman played out over 100 deliveries (Lahiru Thirimanne in the first innings), and only one passed fifty (Dimuth Karunaratne, also in the first dig). Their best score in the second innings was Mendis’ 42 off 69, and even that had been achieved only with a heaping of good fortune.Here is a statistic that lays out how pitiful their batting has been across this series: never before, even when they were fresh to Test cricket in the 1980s, have they scored fewer runs in a two-Test series than their tally of 647 here. On average, each batsman only contributed a little over 17 runs.Starc had triggered the collapse with the first ball of his second over in the morning, when he swung a ball deliciously late, moving it through the gate of opener Dimuth, to remove his leg-stump bail. Dinesh Chandimal was out later in Starc’s first spell, edging an angled delivery to third slip on four. Cummins caught-and-bowled the dogged Thirimanne roughly midway through the session – the bowler hurling himself forward in his follow through to intercept a lob, centimetres above the pitch.Starc then came back just before lunch to peg back the off stump of Niroshan Dickwella with a 147kph delivery, before immediately having a leaden-footed Kusal Perera caught behind. The wicket that completed his 10-for was that of No. 11 Vishwa Fernando, whom he bowled with a pinpoint yorker.Mendis offered a modicum of resistance, hitting a four off his second ball, and generally playing with more freedom than he had previously in the series. He had an intriguing battle with Nathan Lyon, who almost had him caught sweeping, on the midwicket boundary, where Joe Burns took the catch and flung the balls back infield, but was shown to have touched the rope with his feet (though in any case, the relay catch was not complete by a team-mate).But like several of his teammates, Mendis eventually fell softly, carving the legspin of Marnus Labuschagne straight to cover, where Kurtis Patterson took a comfortable catch.The match was over before tea, Australia relieved to have so thoroughly dominated this series, after the chastening losses to India.

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