South Africa begin T20 WC prep with spin test against Pakistan

Pakistan will look to create consistency and work on their batting ahead of the big event

Firdose Moonda15-Sep-2024Pakistan’s problems: Inconsistency from a team in transition
Pakistan are on their third captain in the last 18 months since last year’s T20 World Cup and their latest, Fatima Sana, will take the reins for the first time in this series. The 22-year-old bowler takes over from Nida Dar, who succeeded Bismah Mahroof, and has the job of creating consistency, especially at major tournaments.Pakistan have only won one match each in the last three T20 World Cups and will go into this tournament with tempered expectations of what would represent success. In a group that includes two tournament favourites – Australia and India – and the in-form Sri Lanka, getting to the semi-finals will take some doing, especially given their recent form.Related

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Since last year’s T20 World Cup, Pakistan have played 23 T20Is, won nine and lost 14 but among their victories have been series wins over South Africa (at home) and New Zealand (away). They’ll fancy themselves against New Zealand in the group stage, and other wins will be a bonus.Pakistan would also like to see an improved commitment to professionalisation from their board. In its 2022 women’s report, global player body FICA (now called WCA) said “fundamental changes are required to create a recognised pathway for female cricketers in Pakistan to make a viable living out of playing professional cricket,” and as recently as this week, that was evident. Players did not receive daily allowances at their training camp which has left some players low on morale ahead of an important event.Muneeba Ali is Pakistan’s leading run-scorer this year•Asian Cricket CouncilPakistan’s focus in this series should be on run-scoring, which is an area they have underperformed. Muneeba Ali is their highest run-scorer in T20Is this year with 280 runs from 12 matches. Their bowlers have enjoyed the bulk of the success with left-arm spinner Sadia Iqbal collecting 18 wickets at 14.33 in T20Is this year.South Africa captain Laura Wolvaardt said she “expects Pakistan to bowl a lot of spin so we are prepared for that,” both in the series and when they get to the UAE. South Africa’s stunning slide at home South Africa’s long-running search for an ICC trophy came the closest it ever had last February when the women’s team became their first senior side to qualify for a World Cup final, and that too at home. But a perfect opportunity to build on their success was squandered. There were delays in appointing a new coach and they will travel to this World Cup with an interim appointee Dillon du Preez on the back of a string of poor results.Since reaching the 2023 final, South Africa have played 18 matches in the format, won five and lost 10 with three no-results. They have not won one out of the six series they’ve played and lost series to Pakistan, Australia (both away) and Sri Lanka (at home) as well as a match to Bangladesh for the first time in a T20I.None of that will matter to a fan base desperate for a major trophy and ever-expected after both the men’s and women’s sides reached the last T20 World Cup final. South African supporters will need to be reminded that women’s cricket has grown especially strong in India since the last T20 World Cup, and with Australia and England always a step ahead, their team will have to find something or someone special to challenge for the trophy.Marizanne Kapp and Laura Wolvaardt are crucial players in SA’s top order•Getty ImagesHappily for South Africa, their new all-format captain Wolvaardt is among the best players on the global stage and leads with bat and on the field. She is their leading run-scorer in T20Is this year, followed by No. 3 Marizanne Kapp and her opening partner Tazmin Brits. All three of them have more runs than Pakistan’s Muneeba this year. While that speaks to the strength of the top order, it also points to problems lower down, especially as former captain Sune Luus has struggled. In the last 18 months, she averages under 20 with the bat, which makes South Africa extra reliant on allrounders Nadine de Klerk and Chloe Tryon for middle-order firepower.Both those players have the additional concern of their bowling attack, which has been underwhelming since Shabnim Ismail’s retirement. De Klerk is South Africa’s highest wicket-taker with eight wickets in nine matches this year and South Africa will be expecting more from the likes of Ayabonga Khaka, Tumi Sekhukhune and young Ayanda Hlubi at the World Cup.Their spin contingent features a newcomer, 18-year old Seshnie Naidu, who could make her debut against Pakistan in this series, as she prepares for the big time. “It will be awesome for her to get a game and a taste of international cricket. I’ve faced her a bit in the nets and she has good control for such a young legspinner,” Wolvaardt said.Advantage Pakistan? Mostly, Wolvaardt wants to use the series as a barometer for whether South Africa have progressed since being blanked 3-nil by Pakistan a year ago in Karachi. “It will be a great judge to see if the work we have done behind the scenes is working,” Wolvaardt said.In that series, South Africa scored 150 batting first twice and failed to defend it and then could not chase 151 in the third match. “We’ve been talking a lot about finding that extra 10 to 20 runs,” Wolvaardt said.It’s unclear whether those runs will be needed at Multan Stadium, which will host a T20I for the first time. Wolvaardt described the experience of being the first international T20 side to play at the ground as “special.”

India and Australia take a moment to recalibrate as Gabba stalemate leaves everything up for grabs

On paper, Australia remain favourites, but India wouldn’t be too displeased either with how things stand going into the MCG

Andrew McGlashan18-Dec-2024At 2.33pm on Wednesday the players left the field at the Gabba for the final time. A short while later, the approaching rain hit the ground and the umpires didn’t wait too long to bring down the curtain on a rare five-day Test that felt much longer than that. The evening before, KL Rahul had joked he’d got more tired walking up and down to the dressing room than he did in the middle.And yet, the final day included its fair share of intrigue. There was a curious Australia second innings in which Steven Smith appeared at No. 6; Jasprit Bumrah taking his series tally to 21 wickets at 10.90; a (seemingly brief) injury scare around Travis Head; and finally the most surprising development, the international retirement of R Ashwin.It means Ashwin won’t be at the MCG, where he had such a big impact on India’s victory in the 2020-21 series, when the teams reconvene on Boxing Day tantalisingly poised at 1-1.But how do you assess the tied scoreline? Offer that to India before arriving and there’s a good chance they’d have bitten your hand off for it given the historic success of Australia in Perth and Adelaide especially and the fact they were coming off a whitewash against New Zealand. After the first Test, though? Perhaps they would have hoped for more.Related

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From Australia’s point of view, it feels under where they would have expected to be for the same reasons of their records at the venues but it’s been a strong response to the thrashing at Optus Stadium. Last week’s pink ball gave them a leg up when it was desperately needed. Despite the odd-looking second innings in Brisbane, they were never on the back foot in this match once Head and Smith had lifted them from 75 for 3.India were not shy of celebrating when they saved the follow-on through the fighting efforts of Bumrah and Akash Deep. Rohit Sharma had a wry smile on his face when he was asked if India’s joy at that moment was a reflection of deeper cracks in the side.”I have been here enough to understand what are mind games and what are chit-chatters and all of that,” he said. “From our personal point of view, we were behind the game. Obviously, it is a little victory for us to avoid that follow-on, looking at how the weather was going to play, looking at where the game was heading. Eventually, we ended up in a draw.”With Australia being ahead in the game, they didn’t manage to get the result. For us to celebrate that, it was a little victory for us. There is no harm. We enjoy each and every moment. We saw two guys who were fighting for the team and we were really happy with that. So, we were celebrating how these two guys batted at the end.”Cummins, playing his role in the mid-series fun, later laughed off suggestions that India took more than Australia from how the game panned out.”Can’t say I’ve ever been scared of momentum,” he said. “Don’t really care about that. Think we can take a lot from this week. A couple of great partnerships. To be sent in on a wicket and score 450 and then be a bowler down and manage to bowl India out for 250 when the wicket was probably a bit better, think we can take a lot from that.”Heading to Melbourne, both sides have similar issues to confront around the top order. For India, the form of Rohit and Virat Kohli remains a concern, Yashasvi Jaiswal has not been able to back up his 161 in Perth and Rishabh Pant has been kept quiet, particularly by Cummins.For Australia the spotlight is on openers Usman Khawaja and Nathan McSweeney. Marnus Labuschagne’s half-century in Adelaide has eased some pressure on him, but he was again out loosely to Nitish Kumar Reddy in this Test. Bumrah is proving a mighty handful for the top order although Cummins added little should be read into Australia’s second innings at the Gabba given the attempt to set a target.Pat Cummins and Mitchell Starc took on most of Australia’s bowling load•AFP/Getty ImagesMitchell Marsh’s series has also yet to take off: he walked when he didn’t nick one in Adelaide and has bowled six overs in two Tests, despite Australia being a bowler down for most of the game in Brisbane. Two excellent catches aided his team in this match, but he has yet to suggest he can hit the heights of last season when he was named the Allan Border Medalist.However, one area where Australia have better depth than India is the pace bowling. While Josh Hazlewood’s injury is a significant blow, it is quite the luxury to know that Scott Boland is waiting in the wings to return on his home ground where he is such a force. Meanwhile, Rohit did not sound confident about Mohammed Shami being available at all during the series although Akash, who is often compared to Shami, was much better than his 1 for 95 would suggest.On balance, Australia remain favourites for the series although that is largely based on the stunning form of Head, a revived Smith and the durability of Cummins and Mitchell Starc.And so the roadshow heads to the MCG, a surface that has been a fast bowler’s dream in recent seasons, with the prospect of a record opening-day crowd. The weather forecast, whisper it, looks good for Boxing Day (it’s also good for Brisbane the moment the Test leaves town) and there is a series where everything remains up for grabs. Merry cricket Christmas.

Best figures on IPL debut: Ashwani the first Indian with a four-for

There was no looking back after Ashwani struck with his first ball in the IPL

Dustin Silgardo31-Mar-2025

Alzarri Joseph | 3.4-1-12-6

MI vs SRH, Hyderabad, 2019Joseph, then just 22, was not slated to play IPL 2019 and only joined the Mumbai Indians (MI) squad as a replacement for Adam Milne. With Lasith Malinga unavailable because of his national commitments, Joseph got a game and had a dream start, dismissing David Warner in his first over. Vijay Shankar fell in his next, before Joseph dismissed Deepak Hooda, Rashid Khan and Bhuvneshwar Kumar in the space of four balls. He finished things off with the wicket of Siddarth Kaul as Sunrisers Hyderabad (SRH) were bundled for 96. Three of Joseph’s wickets were bowled as the SRH batters struggled to handle his pace.

Andrew Tye | 4-0-17-5

Gujarat Lions vs Royal Pune Supergiant, Rajkot, 2017Tye got his first IPL contract at age 31. By then, he was already known for his arsenal of slower balls, in particular his knuckleball, from his exploits in the BBL and the T20Is he had played for Australia. On IPL debut, he took four of his five wickets with knuckleballs as he restricted Rising Pune Supergiant/s in the middle and death overs. A hat-trick in the 20th over capped a fine display of his T20 skills. A year later, Tye saw his price tag rise from INR 50 lakh to INR 7.2 crore, as Kings XI Punjab (now Punjab Kings) splurged on him.

Shoaib Akhtar | 3-0-11-4

KKR vs DD, Kolkata, 2008Returning from a long injury layoff, Akhtar made a dramatic entry midway through the first IPL season, dismissing the Delhi Daredevils (now Delhi Capitals) top four within his first 15 balls to derail their chase of 134. He got Virender Sehwag with swing, Gautam Gambhir and AB de Villiers with bounce, and Manoj Tiwary with pure pace. Akhtar would play only two more matches in the IPL, with Pakistan players not picked by any of the teams from 2009 onwards.

Ashwani Kumar | 3-0-24-4

MI vs KKR, Mumbai, 2025Not much was known about the 23-year-old left-arm seamer from Punjab when he made his IPL debut in MI’s third match of the 2025 season. Ashwani had played just a handful of domestic matches but had been part of trials at Punjab Kings (PBKS) before and impressed in the 2024 Sher E Punjab T20 competition. With his ability to skid the ball onto batters and surprise them with bounce, he ripped through Kolkata Knight Riders’ (KKR) middle order on debut. Ajinkya Rahane sliced one to backward point, Rinku Singh was out to a short ball, and Manish Pandey and Andre Russell both lost their stumps as Ashwani became the first Indian to take a four-for on IPL debut.

Kevon Cooper | 4-0-26-4

RR vs KXIP, Jaipur, 2012After impressing in the Caribbean T20 and Champions League T20, Trindiad & Tobago allrounder Cooper was picked by Rajasthan Royals (RR) ahead of the 2012 season. He made an instant impression in the IPL, taking four wickets against Punjab with his combination of full balls and slower ones and helping RR defend 191 easily. He took another three wickets in his next game and remained an integral part of the RR side until 2015.

After career of 'more lows than highs', Jagadeesan hopes to build on recent gains

“I hope that I keep getting a lot more,” Jagadeesan says of the India jersey from the Oval Test, which will get pride of place among the jerseys on the walls of his house

Deivarayan Muthu27-Aug-2025Tamil Nadu wicketkeeper-batter N Jagadeesan frames his various jerseys and puts them up on the wall at his home in Coimbatore. His father CJ Narayan, who played cricket for Tata Electric in Mumbai before the family moved to Coimbatore, had left a frame empty for years, reserving it for his son’s India jersey. Last month, Jagadeesan fulfilled his father’s and his own dream by being part of India’s famous Test win at The Oval, though as a reserve player.”The India jersey is now going into the frame, and I hope that I keep getting a lot more,” Jagadeesan tells ESPNcricinfo. “To be part of a match that was so intense and thrilling made it even more special. For us to go and win the game from a situation where a lot [of people] might not have expected us to, it was really special. It was definitely a moment that gave me goosebumps.”Jagadeesan’s maiden India call-up was reward for his prolific run over the past two Ranji Trophy seasons. During the period, he had racked up 1490 runs in 26 innings at an average of nearly 65. Only Karun Nair has scored more runs (1553) than Jagadeesan across the previous two Ranji seasons, with the benefit of more innings (33), among batters from the Elite Group.

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Jagadeesan has been on the fringes of India A and part of the wider pool of targeted players shortlisted by the BCCI’s Centre of Excellence over the past 12 months.”Definitely, it [being part of the team management’s plans] gives you a lot of confidence because you taste success at the next level,” he says. “I mean, even playing for my Under-13 district team in Coimbatore, that was also a taste of success, right? Likewise, every time you taste success one step higher, it always gives you a lot of confidence and it also makes you feel grateful to be presented with that opportunity. In a country where there are a billion people, only a few thousands max get to do what I’m doing right now.”After the TNPL, Jagadeesan returned to the red-ball grind, training with the India team in London and, upon arrival in Chennai, he turned out for his club Vijay CC at the Guru Nanak College ground and kept wicket to Sai Kishore’s big-turning deliveries ahead of the Duleep Trophy in Bengaluru. Another bumper domestic season could take Jagadeesan a step closer to a Test debut. “100%, as I said, [playing for India] is the ultimate goal. I also have the goal of winning a Ranji Trophy for Tamil Nadu. But I just feel that things will have to happen as well. Personally, I have to just make sure that I contribute to the team as much as possible.”Jagadeesan is particularly upbeat about Tamil Nadu’s chances this season, thanks to their expanding fast-bowling pool. Sandeep Warrier and Gurjapneet Singh, who will team up with Jagadeesan for South Zone in the Duleep Trophy, are back to full fitness, while D Deepesh and RS Ambrish have come in with the experience of having played for India Under-19s in England. Sonu Yadav and rookie A Esakkimuthu, who hit speeds north of 140kph in the TNPL, lend more depth to the seam attack.”Till now, the result has not come – that is winning the Ranji Trophy – but I know for a fact that we’ve been putting in the effort towards winning it,” Jagadeesan says. “Ranji Trophy is not a single-man show. Fast bowlers are something which we were always in search of.”Going into this season, we have a healthy competition among the fast bowlers. Earlier we used to have around three fast bowlers. Now, we have six-seven. And that’s definitely a very good sign for the team. Tamil Nadu has immense talent. As long as we step onto the field and do our jobs religiously, this will be a team that will go on to achieve a lot of things.”

'Maybe I have something…' – the phenomenal rise of Noor Ahmad

The Afghanistan spinner is only 20, a match-winner in his own right, and travelling around the world playing in various T20 leagues with aplomb

Shashank Kishore08-Sep-202515:43

Can Afghanistan make the final of the Asia Cup?

Noor Ahmad lives life on the fast lane. Of late, it’s been a blur of flights, visas, new teams and cricket grounds and hotels. Cricket has kept him so busy that his parents shifted from their hometown, Khost, to Kabul to be able to adjust to their superstar son’s fly-in-fly-out life.”A few years ago, who could have thought I would be here? With talent, hard work and family support, I’m here today,” Noor tells ESPNcricinfo. And “here” for him is everywhere. From Chennai (IPL) to Dallas (MLC) to Manchester (Hundred) to Gqeberha (SA20), Noor has been living out of a suitcase.Noor says he can count the days he has actually not spent on the field – either playing or at training – in the last six months. “CSK, MLC, Shpageeza, back to India for the UK visa, the Hundred,” he ticks off the assignments.Related

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And from the Hundred, he landed in Dubai to link up with the Afghanistan squad for a short preparatory camp. On Sunday night, he finished the tri-series with Pakistan and UAE in Sharjah, and after less than 48 hours, he will line up to play Hong Kong in the Asia Cup opener in Abu Dhabi.Isn’t he tired?”I’m still young, the body can take it, no problems for me,” he says with a smile. “Cricket is what I love. I can’t stay without playing cricket. Yes, travel-wise, it’s been a tough few months. I haven’t got enough rest, but I’m still enjoying it. The body is feeling good.”Noor suddenly remembers he has missed something from the schedule he just went through. He clicks his fingers and adds with a laugh, “Actually, one week off after the IPL at home, no nets, no cricket. After the IPL, I got that time at home. But you see, I can’t stay without cricket for more than one week. I started bowling again.”When he was younger – he is still only 20 – Noor says opportunities were hard-earned. “When my brother first took me to an academy, when I was 12, I remember standing in long lines, getting to bowl just one ball every ten minutes. Because there were so many bowlers. Most of them spinners.””Playing alongside MS Dhoni was the real highlight” – Noor Ahmad on his stint with Chennai Super Kings•AFP/Getty ImagesThen came the moment that made him believe he might be special. Afghanistan batter Noor Ali Zadran happened to face him in one of these sessions and told him, “You are very good, keep going.””That was the indicator for me, maybe I have something,” Noor says. Slowly, more and more national players came to the camp, and Noor bowled to them all. “Some I even got them out,” he says. “Then they all told me, ‘Don’t leave cricket, you have a bright future’. That motivated me so much.”The only problem was that Noor was also a bright student. “First in my class till I was there,” he says. “Then I started to go to the academy, thanks to my brother who also loved cricket but couldn’t take it up professionally.”When I missed class for a few days, the teachers and the principal came to my dad and asked what had happened. They told him I had started playing cricket and should come back to the school as I had a good future. My dad agreed with them. It was hard for my brother to convince my father but he asked him for some time.”Today, Noor’s father watches all his matches without fail. “They even installed a Dish TV connection so that they can watch all matches.”Barely a year into his cricket, Noor was captivated by Rashid Khan, himself a teenage sensation when he broke through. Noor first met him during an Under-16 camp in Kabul, introduced by coach and former captain Raees Ahmadzai.

“I had an arm injury in 2021. I struggled for a year. I could bowl but would always be in pain. That affected my legbreak, my control. It took me a year to recover”

“Rashid came to watch me bowl, and I think he was impressed,” Noor says. These days, Rashid is a mentor, a sounding board. Schedules don’t allow the two to catch up often, but there’s an admiration the younger star has for the 26-year-old veteran.”Whenever I have questions, or want to chat, or need to share with someone, Rashid is the first person for me to go to,” Noor says. “I try not to think too much about bowling, but whenever I have something that I must share, I share with him.”Noor’s eyes twinkle when asked about his maiden IPL season with Chennai Super Kings. “Getting Man of the Match in my first game was special,” he says, “but playing alongside MS Dhoni was the real highlight.”
Could he elaborate?”Of course. He keeps things very simple for everyone. You don’t have to think too much. He just says, ‘Assess the situation, do what is needed’. He had complete trust in what I wanted to do. No pressure. We just had to stick to our strengths.”Noor finished IPL 2025 as the second-highest wicket-taker; his 24 wickets in 14 games were only fewer than Prasidh Krishna’s tally of 25 wickets in 15 games. The change in teams – he had earlier played for Gujarat Titans (GT) – worked wonders.ESPNcricinfo LtdAt GT, Noor bowled in tandem with Rashid. But, over the past two seasons, Noor has consistently outshone his celebrated compatriot, a sign of how quickly he has grown from Rashid’s understudy to a match-winner in his own right. At CSK, he had the opportunity to be the main spinner, with R Ashwin in and out of the XII.Noor’s journey hasn’t been without its fair share of setbacks. In 2021, an arm injury left him bowling through pain for nearly a year. His control wavered, he didn’t feel confident bowling the wrong’un, and was often left frustrated.”The fizz I get on the ball is natural,” he explains. “When I was at my initial stages, I used to bowl a lot of googlies and ended up bowling less of the legspin. Then I had an arm injury in 2021. I struggled for a year. I could bowl but would always be in pain.”That affected my legbreak, my control. It took me a year to recover. Again, I had to work on my legbreak because of the injury. But it’s fine now. I think I have strengthened my arm so much now. Earlier, I used to save myself to be able to bowl with little pain. I was tired of being injured, I was like, why am I not getting better?”

“He [Dhoni] keeps things very simple for everyone… He just says, ‘Assess the situation, do what is needed.’ He had complete trust in what I wanted to do. No pressure”

It took him a year to fully recover. And since then, there’s been no stopping him.Afghanistan’s rise as a cricket force has made him hungrier. “We were in the T20 World Cup semi-final last year. This year we should be in the Asia Cup final. That’s the mindset,” he says. But his ultimate dream is still ahead of him: “Winning a trophy for the country – World Cup, Champions Trophy, any world tournament. It’s something that I’ll remember.”Away from the game – which is rare – Noor enjoys watching Real Madrid and Manchester City play. He loves exploring the best Afghan restaurants in whichever city he is at. At the IPL, off days or travel-day nights were spent playing FIFA with Dewald Brewis and Matheesha Pathirana. As hectic as it may be, there’s a rhythm to his life and he enjoys it.But there is one thing he is waiting to tick off. He hasn’t been back to his hometown in three years, but friends send him videos of crowded academies, which lifts him. “Academies are busier than before, many are coming up. I think they’ll have a better chance to play,” he says with hope. “I can’t wait to go back. Hopefully soon.”For now, there’s another tournament. Another trophy to chase. And Afghanistan’s globe-trotting superstar is as ready as ever to take flight.

Patience running thin back home amid Bangladesh's batting gloom

Former captains Mohammad Ashraful and Akram Khan point at systemic issues around team selection, lack of batting plans, and players not adapting to the modern way

Mohammad Isam16-Oct-2025Bangladesh’s seemingly never-ending issues in the batting department remains in focus as they head into another ODI series – this time against West Indies at home – within three days of their 3-0 whitewash at the hands of Afghanistan.There is a confidence problem within the batting group, with captain Mehidy Hasan Miraz conceding after their 200-run defeat in the third ODI that they wanted to bat 50 overs but were struggling to.Fans are irate too. On Wednesday, one group gave the Bangladesh players an unsavoury welcome, including inflicting damage on some players’ vehicles. Another group urged people to stay away from the Shere Bangla National Stadium for the first ODI against West Indies on Saturday.Related

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Former Bangladesh captains Mohammad Ashraful and Akram Khan have both said that Bangladesh’s batting approach and overall strategy in the last 12 months have left them baffled.Ashraful, who has recently started his coaching career, said that the problems begin at the top, with Bangladesh’s top-order. Only Saif Hassan, playing his maiden ODI series, played the lead in whatever starts Bangladesh got against Afghanistan. Tanzid Hasan and Najmul Hossain Shanto scored 22 runs in five innings between them. Mohammad Naim scratched around for seven in his only appearance.The situation was slightly better against Sri Lanka in July, although Tanzid and Parvez Hossain Emon scoring a fifty each hardly made a difference to the team’s performances. Shanto made 37 runs in three innings back then.”I think the biggest concern is the lack of runs from the top order,” Ashraful told ESPNcricinfo. “It has been going on for a while now. Shanto isn’t scoring runs, so that’s becoming a problem. In fact, the lack of runs from the top order goes back quite a long way. During the West Indies series last year, it was Mahmudullah, Jaker Ali and Mehidy Hasan Miraz bailing us out every time. We did put up reasonable totals but I kept feeling that we were at least 50 runs short in those three matches. Even before that, in the previous Afghanistan series last year, we couldn’t get good starts because of poor strike rates.”Ashraful said that the lack of runs from Shanto and Litton Das, and Mehidy’s lukewarm batting tempo through the middle-overs, have dented Bangladesh severely. Among the batters around the national side these days, Mehidy is the most experienced with 113 ODIs, while Litton is on 95 and Shanto 55.Litton Das has been in and out of the ODI team•AFP/Getty ImagesLitton’s ODI career has stalled after a prolonged batting drought in the format. He has scored only 35 runs in his last nine innings going back to December 2023. He has been dropped twice from ODIs, although he is a Test regular and the T20I captain.”Whenever the team’s established batters don’t score runs, it makes life difficult for the rest,” Ashraful said. “Litton has been in and out of the ODI team for a while now. He is sometimes out of the squad, and then they bring him in on the back of some runs in another format. He returns, and then he fails again.”I also feel that since Mehidy began batting at No. 5, he is scoring runs but not how modern batters go about it. We are going back to our time when a batter would score 65-70 off 100 balls.”

“The ODI team hasn’t settled down. There’s too much chopping and changing. I think many of these decisions are being taken due to pressure from media and social media”Mohammad Ashraful

Bangladesh have been going through a batting transition in the last 24 months. Those who exited the format – Tamim Iqbal, Shakib Al Hasan, Mushfiqur Rahim and Mahmudullah – possessed vast ODI experience. Tanzid, Towhid Hridoy, Mehidy and Jaker have since taken over those batting positions and the swaps haven’t been smooth.Tanzid no longer enjoys a blanket backing from the management. Hridoy’s honeymoon period is long gone – he has failed to make meaningful contributions since the century against India in the Champions Trophy. Jaker is struggling, too, in the last few months.Akram, the BCB’s cricket operations chairman across two terms in the last ten years, is sympathetic.”I think there’s too much pressure on the players,” Akram told ESPNcricinfo. “They are not a bad team. These are not bad players. Generally, however, I am not seeing the ability to play big knocks. I don’t see the batters planning their innings, or at least breaking them down to phases of 15 balls each. Batting like this was possible in Abu Dhabi where we saw that only one innings got close to the 300-run mark. But we didn’t plan well.ODI captain Mehidy Hasan Miraz has been among the runs, but his strike rate has been a concern•AFP/Getty Images”I think the coaches should be held accountable. Losing one in ten matches is okay, but when you lose most games, there will be questions. It is high time we understand the importance of the men’s cricket team. Their level of performance reflects the overall health of cricket in the country. I think there’s a lot of room for improvement.”Ashraful also feels there should be better decision-making in the selection of the side. Apart from what he said about Litton, he pointed to the selection policy when it came to Soumya Sarkar.”The ODI team hasn’t settled down. There’s too much chopping and changing,” Ashraful said. “I think many of these decisions are being taken due to pressure from media and social media.”It will be a tough series against the West Indies. It won’t be like the ODI series in the past few years. West Indies are fresh from a Test series in India where two of their batters struck centuries in the second Test. I think that makes them a team with more confidence.”In home conditions, however, “we can always hope to do well,” Ashraful said. Which, of course, might only serve to paper over the cracks.

Ashwin knows Chepauk inside-out, turns Bangladesh inside-out

A whole lot of local knowledge went into a performance that brought him his tenth Player-of-the-Match award in Tests

Alagappan Muthu22-Sep-20242:52

Manjrekar: Ashwin as good as he was five years back

R Ashwin has a job on his hands. He fails on the first try. It’s not even close. There’s even a chance he isn’t as focused as he should be. His daughter forgives him and gives him a second go at opening what looks like a bottle of (rosewater soda) she’s carried down to the ground. But again it doesn’t go well. Dad’s not on his game. He’s facing too many distractions. This is the problem with scoring a century and taking a six-for and winning a Test match for your country on home soil.Ashwin remembers the first step he ever took into Chepauk. He vlogged about it on his YouTube channel, about attending trials at the Under-14 and Under-16 levels and waiting to see if he’d made the cut. He cherishes being part of this ground’s history; he was here when Sachin Tendulkar scored that epic hundred against Pakistan and he wouldn’t let his father take him home until he bought him pads just like the ones Tendulkar wore.He remembers the bus he took to get to the ground when he was younger. “12G [you have to catch bus No. 12G],” he said in an episode for in 2023. “It will go straight to Anna (road). There, if some uncle is nice enough to give you a lift, you can get to the ground in like 10 minutes. If not, (you have to trudge all the way with the kit bag).”Related

  • India and Bangladesh brace for lower bounce on black-soil pitch in Kanpur

  • Ashwin: 'Bowling and batting are very separate sports in the same game'

  • Ashwin's double act of hundred and six-for secures 1-0 lead for India

  • Stats – Ashwin equals Warne; Pant goes level with Dhoni

He has memories of being coached not just by those he went and trained with but people who just happened to see him play on the street. “Everybody loves giving advice, especially when it comes to cricket. Once when I tried to hit a ball and it took an inside edge and wandered away – no run. Leg side, no runs. One uncle who was going to the hospital – there’s a hospital near my place – he just came to me and said, ‘Pa, how many matches have you seen? You play with a straight bat and the ball will go beautifully down the ground. . Keep the bat-face straight.'”The century that he scored and the five-for that he took here against England in 2021 are still etched in his mind. “I’ve wondered if I would ever play on this ground and if people would turn out and clap for me,” Ashwin said two years ago. In truth, they went way beyond that, calling his name out to the tune of “Sachiiiiin-Sachin” even when all he did was take his cap off his head, because they knew this meant he was coming on to bowl.R Ashwin picked up 6 for 88 in Bangladesh’s second innings•BCCIIn that game, against England, his home crowd gave him a feeling he is very familiar with, having seen millions of masala movies, but for perhaps the first time, he was experiencing it from the other side. For those five days, he was Rajinikanth in or Shah Rukh Khan in or Tom Cruise in . And he doesn’t get that too often, if only because Test cricket in India doesn’t follow a set schedule like it does abroad. Melbourne knows it’ll get a Boxing Day Test. Lord’s knows it’ll be the biggest event of the summer. Ashwin and his beloved Chepauk don’t have that luxury. At 38, even he isn’t sure if he’s played his last Test here.”I don’t know,” he said in the press conference on Sunday. “What is a Chepauk swansong? Every time you walk out to the park, it’s a swansong. You are talking about a Test match, yeah. Maybe, maybe not. Who knows? Like I said, every day, every Test match I am playing is a big thing. Not only for me, you can ask any cricketer, to go through a Test match or a Test series is a grind. And you never really know what is next when it comes to Test matches. Because you put in that effort, everything, and then you need to be lucky enough to get those performances, also work hard and simultaneously manage your ups and downs. These are all huge challenges for any Test cricketer. So I haven’t thought so far ahead but if that was my swansong, what a swansong!”Rescuing India from 144 for 6 and on the way levelling MS Dhoni’s count of Test centuries. Sealing a 280-run win and on the way levelling Shane Warne’s count of five-wicket hauls. Being a threat on a pitch that didn’t necessarily take that much spin until the third morning. Walking away with a tenth Player-of-the-Match award. All of this was a result of painstaking preparation – Ashwin worked heavily on his batting prior to the TNPL – and a rapid assessment of the conditions he was faced with when he came on to bowl.”The beauty about a red-soil [pitch] is, you put revs on it, there is value [even if there is no turn]. Because there is bounce. You will get hit but there is bounce. You play on some black clay surfaces around the country elsewhere, without naming them, you have to do a lot of hard work. You put a lot of revs and see nothing come out of it. And sometimes, it’s better to not put revs on in certain places. So, to even understand all these things, to begin to understand and talk about it, is a fair amount of learning for me. And it’s happened over the years. Like I said, this one’s got solid bounce. And I love to play on a surface like this and get hit than play on another surface.”Knowing what the pitch will do is only one part of the challenge. The batter presents the other one and Ashwin has to find a way to get through them. On the third evening, he had seen evidence of the bite that was available to him if he dropped his pace right down. Mominul Haque went for a sweep and both he and the wicketkeeper Rishabh Pant were beaten comfortably by extravagant bounce. That ball only clocked 80.4 kph.5:08

Ashwin: If it was my Chepauk swansong, what a swansong!

The bowler in him understood that he needed to be slow through the air to get purchase. The batter in him then augmented that piece of information. “Tamim [Iqbal] is standing next to you,” Ashwin told the host broadcaster. “He’ll tell you that if you keep going slower on these surfaces, you can go on the back foot a lot more.”Ashwin combined this knowledge to set his traps. At first, he would feed Bangladesh the quicker, flatter deliveries to keep them pinned on the crease. Then he’d toss one up and if everything went to plan, the batter, having been set up to expect a certain pace and a certain length, would be undone.”I was earning my right to bowl slower every now and then. Because on certain pitches where you get help out of surface, you can afford to toss the ball a little more, but this is a surface where need to change up your pace, change up your length, and then pull the one that’s slower. So very often the one that was reacting off the surface was really slow.”Three of his six wickets came off deliveries in the early 80s.Two others spoke of how good he is at picking apart a batter’s defence. He bowled around the wicket for virtually the entire Test match because there were a lot of left-hand batters and he was playing on their inside edge. He would bring them forward with his length and leave them stranded with his overspin, because the ball was primed to dip on them and then kick up off the pitch.Shakib was caught at short leg as this sequence played out.The best of the lot was Mominul, bowled on the outside edge. Ashwin was somehow able to get enough turn to beat the bat but not so much that he would miss the stumps. Going a little wider of the crease helped create the angle into the batter and make him play down the wrong line and then he did something with the seam to limit the help he would get off the track.Normally an offbreak bowler would have the seam pointing to first slip. This one was pointing a lot squarer. It also turned scrambled as the ball began its descent into the pitch. An upright seam is usually the driving force behind the turn and bounce that a fingerspinner gets. Here Ashwin put limits on both specifically so that what happened had a chance to happen – beating the batter but not the stumps. It doesn’t always work this way. Sometimes the turn might not be enough, and the angle takes the ball straight into the middle of the bat. But this was Chepauk and Ashwin knows it has always got his back. “Some energy just pulls me into this ground.”

Wolves make their move! Molineux club approach Middlesbrough boss Rob Edwards after sacking Vitor Pereira amid relegation battle

Wolves have reportedly approached Middlesbrough boss Rob Edwards after cutting ties with Vitor Pereira, whose nightmare reign ended with a humiliating 3-0 defeat to Fulham last weekend. The Portuguese manager produced no wins during this current Premier League campaign and was sacked less than 24 hours after the final whistle at Craven Cottage, which left them at rock bottom of the table.

  • Rob Edwards: The comeback story in the making?

    According to , Edwards has emerged as the frontrunner to take over in the West Midlands. He has quietly built a strong reputation in the Championship and is one of three high-profile names on Wolves’ radar as they scramble to find a steady hand. The 42-year-old is currently under contract with Middlesbrough until June 2028, meaning Wolves would need to pay significant compensation to lure him back to familiar territory. Meanwhile, for Boro, who have climbed to third in the table under Edwards after 14 games and seven wins, losing him now would be a massive blow. However, the report mentions that the pull of returning to Wolves, the club where he spent a good amount of time as a player and coach, could prove irresistible.

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    From youth coach to potential saviour

    Edwards’ connection to Wolves runs deep. He made 111 appearances for the club during his playing days before turning to coaching, where he spent several formative years in their youth setup. His journey began with the under-18s in 2014, followed by a stint with the senior coaching staff a year later, and eventually led the under-23s in 2019. Edwards later took the managerial reins at Forest Green Rovers in 2021, guiding them to promotion, before moving up to the Championship with Watford. 

    However, his time at Vicarage Road was short-lived as he was sacked after just ten games. But redemption came swiftly when he joined Luton Town as he masterminded an incredible promotion campaign in 2022–23, dragging the Hatters into the Premier League against all odds. 

  • Edwards plays coy, but doesn’t rule it out

    When asked about speculation linking him to a Wolves return, Edwards tried to steer clear of the gossip, but his words only added fuel to the fire.

    "You know my links to the club [Wolves]," Edwards said. "But my full focus is on this job here, which is a brilliant job, and trying to turn things around. Speculation is hard for me to comment about. We've done a decent job so far. It's all speculation anyway. I never get drawn on stuff that's all hypothetical and I don't want to get drawn on that.

    "I love being Middlesbrough manager and that's what I want to think about. All I can say is I've not given it a single thought because my focus is just on this. It's all the stuff that my daughter was telling me about."

    While Edwards remains the prime target, Wolves have also explored other options. Michael Carrick, who is currently without a club, is also said to be under consideration. However, his lack of Premier League experience could be a stumbling block. Former Wolves boss Gary O’Neil was also sounded out, but he reportedly withdrew from the race. 

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    Teti has also left Wolves

    The turmoil at Wolves goes far beyond the manager’s office. On Tuesday, the club confirmed that director of professional football Domenico Teti had left by mutual consent, just months after joining as part of the club’s leadership team. 

    Executive chairman Jeff Shi said: "Domenico approached his role with total professionalism and built strong working relationships across the club during his time with us. He made a positive contribution to our football processes and has carried himself with integrity throughout. We thank him for his efforts and support and wish him every success in the future."

    With just two points from ten matches, Wolves are fighting for survival. For now, interim head coach James Collins will step into the hot seat, taking Friday’s press conference before leading Wolves into a daunting clash against Chelsea at Stamford Bridge. It’s their final fixture before the international break, and potentially their final chance to avoid complete collapse before a new era begins. They are eight points away from safety, and if they are to claw their way out of the bottom three, the next appointment must be the right one.

Why MLB Teams Include Players to Be Named Later in Trades

With the MLB trade deadline fast approaching, there's likely to be an influx of deals that come across the ticker over the next several weeks as teams attempt to load up—or unload—their rosters ahead of the postseason.

Occasionally, said deals will include a or PTBNL for short.

What's a PTBNL? I'm glad you asked. Here's a look at the often-used tactic in baseball trades, why they're employed, and a list of notable players who were once only dubbed a"player to be named later":

What Is a Player to Be Named Later?

A "player to be named later" is an unnamed player involved in a trade between two teams, allowing clubs to get deals done before officially finalizing it. PTBNLs are often chosen from a short list of players that the negotiating teams agree on prior to the trade being finalized. They are generally minor leaguers or journeyman MLBers.

Why Do MLB Teams Include Players to Be Named Later in Trades?

MLB teams include PTBNLs in trades for a multitude of reasons. Most commonly due to the team receiving the player either a) not being sure of the position they'd like to fill or b) giving themselves more time to evaluate the talent on the other clubs roster.

Having a PTBNL in your back pocket can help you deal with roster restrictions, as traded players must be placed on the receiving team's 40-man roster upon completion of the transaction. Additionally, players on the injured list cannot be traded, which allows teams to acquire them once they clear the list.

Ironically, on some occasions, a traded player has returned to the original team as the PTBNL of their own trade.

Who Are Some Notable Players That Were Named Later?

Some notable players in MLB history who were once acquired as a PTBNL include:

  • David Ortiz
  • Trea Turner
  • Moisés Alou
  • Michael Brantley
  • Scott Podsednik
  • Dmitri Young
  • Marco Scutaro
  • Jesse Orosco

The new Nuno Santo: "World-class" manager wants to hold talks with Wolves

Wolverhampton Wanderers supporters will already be fearing the worst regarding their side’s bottom-of-the-table position in the Premier League.

Only a sorry two points have been accumulated so far this season, with the Old Gold hierarchy ultimately left with no choice but to sack Vitor Pereira, after Wolves slipped to their disastrous eighth loss of the campaign already away at Fulham on Saturday.

Now, the hunt is on to appoint a miracle worker in the West Midlands, who can turn around this awful start, with a whole host of names being tipped to take on the vacancy.

The latest on Wolves' hunt for a new manager

The only certainty at the moment is that Gary O’Neil will not be re-entering the Molineux dug-out.

Indeed, rumours had begun to circulate that O’Neil was the favourite to take over from Pereira and return in dramatic circumstances. But, the ex-AFC Bournemouth head coach has since withdrawn himself from the race, after holding advanced talks.

Moreover, Michael Carrick is also on Wolves’ radar, with the former Middlesbrough manager still looking for work after being let go by Boro.

With three caretaker matches in charge of Manchester United also under his belt, he could potentially relish the chance of being a saviour for Wolves in the top division.

Carrick’s replacement at the Riverside Stadium in Rob Edwards is also high up the alleged priority list, having previously lined up for Wolves as a player, before earning his managerial stripes at Luton Town and beyond.

Yet, the most out-there name being linked to the Wolves vacancy right now could be viewed as Erik ten Hag, with reports from ESPN indicating that the Dutchman is ‘interested’ in holding talks with the Molineux outfit over the vacant job.

It’s stated that Ten Hag would like to return to the Premier League after his torrid spell at Manchester United, having had his already tattered managerial reputation put through the wringer again when axed three games into his Bayer Leverkusen stint this season.

Still, even with his back-to-back failures hanging over him, ten Hag has been a success in his career elsewhere, as Wolves potentially prepare to welcome a new Nuno Espirito Santo-style figure to Molineux.

How Ten Hag can be Wolves' new Nuno Santo

Despite his sketchy recent track record, the ex-Ajax manager would also be seen as an upgrade on O’Neil walking through the door.

Indeed, despite being the butt of many a Red Devils joke by the time of his dismissal, the 55-year-old guided United to 44 top-flight wins from his 85 games in charge. O’Neil has only 25 league wins next to his name on the contrary.

With other high-profile managers also struggling to get a tune out of the Premier League giants, since he left the Theatre of Dreams, it’s clear the problems run far deeper in Manchester than just who occupies the stressful dug-out.

Nuno has also been up against it in the top division since exiting Wolves, with spells at Tottenham Hotspur and Nottingham Forest not exactly going to plan. But, having overseen 73 wins in charge of the Old Gold in the top-flight, he is still heralded as one of the finest bosses they have possessed in the elite division in recent memory.

Ten Hag’s managerial numbers

Games managed

568

Clubs managed

6

Wins

355

Draws

93

Losses

120

Trophies won

9

Sourced by Transfermarkt

Despite his wobbles, Ten Hag will hope he will be seen as a similarly ambitious appointment, like when Nuno entered the Wolves dug-out in the Championship after successful stints in La Liga and Liga Portugal, when taking in his glittering managerial numbers above.

The unemployed boss collected three Eredivisie titles as manager of Ajax, with a Champions League semi-final run also being spearheaded by the Dutchman, who has been noted as being a “world-class” operator by his former United midfielder in Fred.

An FA Cup success also came his way during his hot-and-cold reign in Manchester, as the 55-year-old attempts to become a much-loved name at Molineux by steering Wolves away from certain relegation.

If he pulls that unbelievable feat off, he will definitely be seen as the second coming of Nuno – with Ten Hag also regularly setting his teams up in the Portuguese’s preferred 4-2-3-1 make-up – as another bold coup of an appointment potentially goes down a treat.

After all, landing Ten Hag would surely be seen as a more exciting development than retreading old ground with O’Neil.

Wolves want Rob Edwards after Gary O'Neil snub, timeline of appointment revealed

Is the former Luton Town boss the right man for the job?

By
Henry Jackson

Nov 4, 2025