Torcedores do Vasco elegem o vilão na derrota para o Bragantino no Brasileirão

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O Vasco perdeu para o Bragantino no Brasileirão e os torcedores cornetaram o goleiro Léo Jardim. Os torcedores elegeram o jogador como o vilão da partida. A enquete foi realizada no canal do WhatsApp do Lance! Vasco.

continua após a publicidadeRelacionadasFora de CampoRizek dispara contra declaração machista de Ramón Díaz: ‘Foi a única que teve algum bom senso’Fora de Campo17/04/2024VascoRamón Diaz, após derrota do Vasco: ‘Complicado que quem decida no VAR seja uma mulher’Vasco17/04/2024Fora de CampoEx-jogador analisa derrota do Vasco e crava: ‘Resultado mais justo seria o empate’Fora de Campo17/04/2024

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Segundo os vascaínos, Léo Jardim foi pior em campo, com 86% dos votos (1,8 mil votos). Por outro lado, Vegetti foi quem os torcedores pouparam as críticas, com 90% dos votos (2,5 mil votos).

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Four Free Agency Destinations for Edwin Díaz After Rejecting Mets Qualifying Offer

Edwin Díaz is returning to free agency after turning down the qualifying offer from the Mets, which was worth $22 million. As such, he’ll be free to sign with any team entering his age-32 season.

Díaz could return to the Mets, where he’s played since 2019, but there will certainly be other teams in the mix to sign the talented reliever on the open market. After all, Díaz is a three-time All-Star and a two-time Hoffman Reliever of the Year award winner, and he’s coming off one of the best seasons of his career.

In turning down the qualifying offer, Díaz is signaling that he’s in the market for a long-term deal. He could be in line to make close to, if not more than Tanner Scott received from the Dodgers last offseason, when he signed a four-year, $72 million deal.

So, where could Díaz end up signing? Let’s take a look at a few fits for the veteran reliever.

New York Mets

A return to Queens would make plenty of sense for both sides. It doesn’t come as a surprise that Díaz turned down the qualifying offer, but that is in no way an indication that he doesn’t want to continue playing in New York.

The Mets’ bullpen would be relatively barren without Díaz owning the ninth inning. As it stands, the team has just three relievers under contract for the 2026 season: A.J. Minter, Richard Lovelady and Brooks Raley. They’ll certainly address the position in the offseason, and Díaz will be at the forefront of their scope.

Díaz has had a somewhat up-and-down tenure with the Mets, but he had a 1.63 ERA with 98 strikeouts and 28 saves last season. And with Steve Cohen still desperate to assemble a winner in Queens, letting Díaz walk doesn’t seem like a move that would help the organization achieve its goal of winning a World Series.

Toronto Blue Jays

The Blue Jays made a run to the World Series with Jeff Hoffman at closer. Díaz would be a significant upgrade over Hoffman, who blew seven saves in 2025 and had a 4.37 ERA. Díaz is one of the most established closing pitchers in MLB, with 253 saves in his career. The 31-year-old didn’t blow a single save last season, and having him out of the bullpen in Game 7 could’ve been exactly what Toronto needed against the Dodgers.

Spending big hasn’t been a concern for the Blue Jays, who have been willing to dole out hefty contracts in order to compete with likes of the Dodgers and Yankees, among others.

Hoffman is still under contract for another two years, but it may make more sense for him to return to the setup role in which he’s previously excelled. In 2023 and ‘24 with the Phillies, Hoffman was one of MLB’s best relief pitchers. He logged a 2.28 ERA across 122 appearances and even earned a trip to the All-Star Game in ‘24.

Los Angeles Dodgers

The Dodgers will likely be in on a number of this offseason’s biggest free agents as they look to continue their reign. The bullpen was by far their biggest cause for concern in 2025, and bringing in the reliable arm of Díaz would instantly help to alleviate their woes.

Of course, that would mean the Dodgers have nearly $40 million allotted to two relievers annually in Scott and Díaz. If Scott can return to form after leading MLB with 10 blown saves last year, Los Angeles would have the league’s most formidable one-two punch to handle the late innings, in addition to their top-tier starting rotation.

If money isn’t an issue, and it isn’t, the Dodgers should not balk at the idea of bringing Díaz to Hollywood. The idea of competing for championships alongside some of the biggest stars in MLB is anything but a tough sell, so it wouldn’t be too surprising to see Díaz pitching at Dodger Stadium in 2026.

Chicago Cubs

The Cubs have plenty of relievers hitting free agency this offseason, so they’ll certainly be in the market for new bullpen arms. The tandem of Danny Palencia and Andrew Kittredge was effective in 2025, but they could elevate the bullpen in a big way by bringing Díaz on board.

Palencia and Kittredge could work out as setup men, getting Chicago to the ninth inning for Díaz to shut the door on opponents.

The Cubs haven’t had a stable closer since Craig Kimbrel in 2018. They’ve tried to swing big at closer in the past, but the results haven’t been there. They landed Ryan Pressly in a trade with the Astros ahead of the ‘25 season, but he quickly lost the closer’s role and struggled in his lone year in Chicago. Diaz could be the long-term solution to their long-standing problem out of the back-end of the bullpen, though he’d come at a significant cost.

Yankees Sign Former All-Star Pitcher to Major League Deal

The Yankees made a move to fortify their pitching staff Thursday, signing veteran righty Paul Blackburn to a major league deal, per a team announcement.

Blackburn, 31, was designated for assignment by the Mets earlier this month, and has made seven pitching appearances, including four starts, in 2025. He struggled during his time with the Mets, leading to his release. This season, he owns a 6.85 ERA with 18 strikeouts and 18 earned runs in 23 2/3 innings.

The right-hander was an All-Star as recently as 2022, when he pitched for the Athletics. That year, Blackburn had a 4.28 ERA with 89 strikeouts and 30 walks across 21 outings.

In a corresponding move after signing and activating Blackburn to the active roster, the Yankees optioned right-handed pitcher Allan Winans to Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre.

Blackburn is in his ninth MLB season, and the Yankees will be the third team he's played for in his career. He's made a total of 93 appearances and 86 starts in the league, and owns a 4.96 ERA.

Blackburn will likely pitch out of the bullpen in the Bronx, and he'll join a bullpen consisting of Luke Weaver, David Bednar, Camilo Doval, Mark Leiter Jr., Tim Hill and Yerry De los Santos.

A's Unveil 'Sacramento' Alternate Uniforms to Honor Temporary Home

The Athletics will complete their first season in their temporary home of Sutter Health Park in West Sacramento, Calif., against the Royals on Sunday.

Between their departure from their longtime home in Oakland and the move into their new stadium in Las Vegas expected by 2028, Sacramento is home. It may not feel that way, though, as they became known simply as the "Athletics" this season. The franchise's stopgap home is set to feel a bit more natural next season as they unveiled new alternate uniforms Sunday that proudly read Sacramento across the chest.

The new jerseys will seemingly replace the team's current gold alternates with the "A's" logo on the left chest. According to MLB.com's Martín Gallegos, the A's plan to wear their new Sacramento gold uniforms for every home Saturday game next season.

Just one of two MLB franchises without a City Connect uniform, the new jerseys are a no-brainer to further relate to their new city even if they will only be there for a couple more years. The Athletics' '25 campaign will come to a close Sunday as they finish the regular season near the bottom of the AL West with the Angels. There's plenty to be excited about, though, with strong rookie campaigns from Nick Kurtz and Jacob Wilson, plus the deadline deal where they acquired top prospect Leo De Vries by sending Mason Miller and JP Sears to the Padres.

What is ailing Bengal cricket?

After making two consecutive Ranji finals 15 years ago, Bengal have been more in the news for controversies

Shamya Dasgupta12-Feb-2020Bengal last reached the Ranji Trophy final in the 2006-07 season, when they were undone by a Zaheer Khan-inspired Mumbai outfit. That was their second consecutive Ranji final, having lost to Uttar Pradesh the previous season. Since then Bengal have remained on the outside fringes on the Indian first-class circuit despite having won the Vijay Hazare Trophy and the Syed Mushtaq Ali T20 tournament once each [East Zone won the latter once too, when the format changed in 2016-17].This Ranji season there is once again a sense of optimism as Bengal remain in contention going into the final round of the league phase. They have been rather impressive in patches, but it won’t surprise anyone, including themselves, if Bengal fail to make the knockouts. Same old story, people will say, and move on.It is a paradox that the state that gave Indian cricket a pioneering administrator in Jagmohan Dalmiya, and a successful international captain in Sourav Ganguly, currently the BCCI president, has struggled and stagnated when it comes to cricket.Since Ganguly retired, only four players from Bengal have played for India: Ashok Dinda and Manoj Tiwary featured briefly in the mid-2010s but couldn’t quite stay the course; Mohammed Shami has become one of the premier all-format bowlers for India while Wriddhiman Saha remains the first-choice wicketkeeper in Test cricket.

“Any major, or even mid-level, cricket team should have at least a few back-ups. In Bengal, that is not the case”Deep Dasgupta

Apart from these four, Bengal’s current captain Abhimanyu Easwaran has been watched closely by the national selectors, but his poor form in the current season – 182 runs at 20.22 in 11 innings before the final round – has put pressure on the 24-year-old who shifted to Kolkata from Dehradun. There is also Ishan Porel, who was part of the 2018 Under-19 World Cup-winning squad and is currently part of the India A outfits.But overall, Bengal have continued to remain outsiders on the Ranji circuit. If it has featured in the headlines, it has been because of controversies.Tiwary, who has been their best batsman this season so far, was removed as captain at the outset. No reasons were given.There was the incident involving Devang Gandhi, former opening batsman and now national selector, being spotted in the Bengal dressing room during a break in play in one of the Ranji games, and being removed, though CAB officials played down the incident.The biggest story, however, involved the removal of Dinda, the team’s senior-most pacer, from the squad altogether after ugly scenes with the bowling coach Ranadeb Bose.But these stories, and this season, aren’t an exception. Even though, after eight rounds of the Ranji Trophy, the team is up at No. 4 in the Elite cross pool [groups A and B combined]. Fair to ask then, what’s so rotten in the state of Bengal?”It’s not one thing,” a senior member of the squad told ESPNcricinfo. “I feel the selection policy is the main problem, selection has not been up to the mark. We have a young captain, but he doesn’t always get the team he wants. The controversy from the start of the season [the captaincy swap], Dinda’s problems, the dressing room atmosphere is not right… if the senior-most bowler and the bowling coach don’t get along, if they don’t see eye-to-eye, eventually it will have an effect.”He revealed that the Dinda incident created factions within the dressing room, even though no one was willing to take responsibility or put things in order.Who is running the ship?Matters of discipline are usually handled with firm hands in the team management, by the captain or the coach. In Bengal’s case, the centre of power is slightly elsewhere – in the hands of the CAB, led by Avishek Dalmiya now, and Ganguly not too long ago.Sourav Ganguly congratulates the new CAB president Avishek Dalmiya and joint-secretary Snehashish Ganguly•PTI Late in the 2018-19 season, as Bengal floundered, former Bengal captain Arun Lal was appointed as mentor, even though former Mumbai captain Sairaj Bahutule was still the head coach. Lal then took over as the coach this season. People in the know say Lal was brought in because of increasing dissent in the ranks following a succession of poor results under Bahutule. “I am someone the players are comfortable with, and the association officials trust,” Lal said, explaining his new appointment.Lal is one of the nicest people you’ll meet, and Bengal cricketers concur. But the players’ vote is split on Lal the coach – “helpful” to one, “bad-tempered” to another. Another player called Lal “a good salesman” tasked with selling a “rubbish product” [Bengal cricket]. Players agreed Lal could be a good motivator but hasn’t really been in touch with modern cricket.

“The selection policy is the main problem, selection has not been up to the mark. We have a young captain, but he doesn’t always get the team he wants”An unnamed team member

Then there is Abhimanyu, who is looked at as an outsider. Some believe he is playing for Bengal only to further his own ambitions of playing for India, even though his father, RP Easwaran, says the big reason for moving his son to Kolkata was the “flexible and open” Bengal cricketing system.”Not a born leader. No gut feeling. No decision-making. He is a puppet [of the selectors],” a team member says. But he also calls Abhimanyu a nice guy, and that burdening him with leadership duties will only hurt everyone in the process.Naresh Ojha, CAB vice-president, disagrees. “He [Abhimanyu] is a calm guy, a composed guy, he’s the right guy for the job. We have chosen him with a long-term view. It’s a matter of time. He is settling in, so give him a little time, and he will do well.”Lal, too, had endorsed Easwaran’s appointment. “He is a terrific batsman, very, very talented, and he has exceptional work ethic. I like him very much. He has been living alone in Kolkata, away from his family, for a while now, but it hasn’t affected his game at all. It’s quite remarkable. I also like that he is very respectful towards his seniors and towards his team-mates.”“We are handing debuts to 30-31-year-old players”In November 2015, former Bengal captain Raju Mukherjee resigned as chief selector of Bengal. “I am extremely disappointed with Raju’s behaviour. I used to respect him a lot but… this was totally uncalled for,” Ganguly was quoted as saying by at the time.Abhimanyu Easwaran has been watched closely by the national selectors, but his poor form in the current season has put him under pressure•Abhimanyu EaswaranThe issue was over identifying a replacement for Saha when the senior man had to leave for India duties. Raju had opted for a young man called Sayan Mukherjee, who was in the squad, but Shreevats Goswami ended up playing the next match, against Haryana, apparently following CAB interference. Raju tells his side of the story: “Sourav and I go back a long way, and we have been very close over the years. But this was not acceptable to me, and if I am not doing the selecting, then I see no reason to continue.”It’s probably not worth going too far back to look at baffling selection calls in Bengal. Dinda, a giant of the domestic circuit even if he could never quite stay at the highest level, played just one game this season, got three wickets in an eight-wicket win, and was then suspended following the altercation with Bose.His replacement was Akash Deep, a 23-year-old from Bihar, has done well, picking up 20 wickets in eight innings. But there have been other questionable selections when it comes to fast bowlers especially. Ayan Bhattacharjee, a 28-year-old who had last played a first-class match in 2016, was picked against Delhi, and bowled just six overs in a rain-hit match where Delhi did face 82 overs. He batted No. 8 and scored a duck. Then we have Nilkantha Das, who was handed a first-class debut at 31. Somewhere along the way, Kazi Saifi got a first-class debut as a batsman too, and scored 27 and 9 in his two innings so far.One disadvantage for Bengal compared to other sides like Vidarbha has been the pool of players graduating from the age group to Under-19 to Under-23 to Ranji ranks successfully. Those keeping a close watch say Bengal’s youngsters have failed to make the cut.Dubious selections, many believe, continue to hurt Bengal cricket. Two recent examples are Pradipta Pramanik and Aamir Gani. Pramanik, a left-arm spinner who is still only 21, hasn’t played first-class cricket this season at all despite a bowling average of 24.56. The same is the case with Banaras-born offspinner Gani, 23. His bowling average of 35.13 isn’t great for a frontline spinner, but he was in the set-up for four seasons before being shunted out.Deep Dasgupta, former India wicketkeeper-batsman and Bengal captain, agrees. “That just about sums it up, doesn’t it? That we are handing debuts to 30-31-year-old players. It’s not their fault, but something’s wrong somewhere that we can’t find a 20-25-year-old when we need one,” he says. “Any major, or even mid-level, cricket team should have at least a few back-ups. In Bengal, that is not the case.”“It’s a vicious loop”Another big factor affecting the grassroots as well as the senior level is the absence of quality coaches. CAB has hired the likes of WV Raman, Paras Mhambrey and Bahutule but insiders believe that has only hurt because there is no home-grown coach, except that the age-group level and in the academies. Despite most ex-Bengal players being coaches, but there is a vacuum of sorts, especially because many of them are not quite modern in their approach: one administrator brings up former Indian opener Pranab Roy, the state Under-16 coach, who is “still teaching kids to bat side-on”.Manoj Tiwary, who has been their best batsman this season so far, was removed as captain at the outset. No reasons were given.•PTI “It’s a vicious loop,” says an insider. “In the second division, outsiders are not allowed. Why not in the first division then? Play only local cricketers, and bring in professionals. If we had brought in, say, a Jalaj Saxena, he could have improved other cricketers. Abhimanyu and Ishan Porel aside, no one is good enough. We had players before who could have played in other states. Now, apart from these two players, no one is good enough.”A solid cricket structure is, Dasgupta believes, the way forward. He feels the problem is in the focus on the Ranji Trophy and the club circuit, and not on the feeder system. “Why can’t there be a full-time director of cricket, and a committee, come out with a proposal, debate… because the feeding system needs an upgrade,” he says. “School, college, university, corporate – we need to focus there. We can’t take away club cricket, but we need to build something around it that is of equal importance.”See, if you don’t focus on the Under-16s and Under-19s, it’s not like it used to be. There are far too many distractions now. If a talented kid from a middle-class family sees that he is not getting the right opportunities and the clubs are influencing the selection, he has other career options. Same with Under-19s, the college kids, the university kids. Of course, this is not just in Bengal, but in Bengal, there isn’t a lot of cricket. We haven’t got a proper second division in place. Kids play 50-100 games a year in Mumbai and Delhi and Bangalore, here we have 20-25 games in a year. In the second division, people who are 30-40 are playing. It should be restricted to youngsters, if we want a proper pipeline in place.”Dasgupta doesn’t quite say it’s a lost cause but agrees that it is becoming increasingly difficult for Bengal, with other parts of the country investing far more in cricket.”If we play 100 games a year, a failure in one game won’t faze me, it won’t put me under pressure. We need to get out of the shell. What happens here is that our boys play just a handful of games, and they need to do well in those,” Dasgupta explains. “We don’t have an office league anymore. Even when it was there, the top guys wouldn’t bother. The local structure, it looks organised from the outside, but it isn’t, it’s ruled by the clubs. When the clubs become powerful, they call the shots, they pull strings.”Dasgupta wants a stronger Under-16 set-up, including a two-day competition, to teach youngsters to “bat for three sessions” or “bowl 20 overs in a day”. He isn’t hopeful of that happening, though.Vision 2020 – what came of it?Incidentally, Bengal was one of the first states to take a forward-looking step when the CAB put in a place an ambitious Vision 2020 plan. It was launched in 2014 and was Ganguly’s brainchild – he was the CAB’s joint-secretary then, with Dalmiya still the boss. The plan was to get the cricketing greats from across the world to nurture young talent. “We want to help players in Bengal. I realise the need of having the expertise to take Bengal players ahead. These youngsters need special guidance and we can’t have better persons than Waqar [Younis] and Murali [Muttiah Muralitharan],” Ganguly had said at its inception.His ambition was to “build a centre of excellence” for Bengal cricket. “We want to be like a Mumbai or Karnataka, who keep producing players. Hopefully, we’ll be able to succeed.” Unfortunately, it hasn’t quite happened.The insider says Muralitharan and Laxman did spend a little time with the players, but for the rest of the time, local coaches were in charge. Ojha counters: “Vision 2020 was to put a system in place, to churn out a good number of players. It has worked, but not as well as we have expected. When an icon speaks, they will listen, they pick up things. It’s a continuous process, and we wait for deliverance. We are providing everything, now we wait for good performances.” It’s been six years.So far, it has been a decent season for Bengal in the Ranji Trophy, but players and coaches aren’t banking on any major success, not in a sustained way, for sure. It does seem like the rot runs deep. “Dada [Ganguly] can’t know everything,” a team member says. True. But systems must be put in place – like Dasgupta recommends – to set things right. For the long term. It needs vision. There are people with enough power and influence to do it. But Bengal continues to wait.

Relentlessly attacking Mohammed Shami needs a defensive trick up his sleeve

He is a mighty fine bowler but the addition of a defensive skill could make him a world-class one

Karthik Krishnaswamy in Christchurch27-Feb-2020Batsmen don’t like to be beaten, but if you’re the captain, and one of your fast bowlers is making the ball do all sorts of things in the nets, you might get excited even if you’re at the receiving end.Virat Kohli was certainly excited when Mohammed Shami swerved two successive balls into him in the nets at the Hagley Oval. “Ravi !” he yelled out to his coach, who was stationed where an umpire would be. ” (it’s reversing like it does in India)!”The next one beat Kohli’s inside edge and hit his front pad, and Shami raised a celebratory arm in his follow-through, a wide grin on his face. This time, Kohli didn’t need words to express what he felt, and simply went “ohoho!”As excited as Kohli was, he wasn’t going to let Shami walk all over him. To his next ball, he stepped out of his crease and crashed a flat-bat drive through the covers.” (you’ve ruined it),” Shami said, referring to the condition of the ball.” (So what do I do)?” Kohli replied. ” (Just stand back and keep getting hit on the pad)?”Those three balls, crudely, encapsulated Shami the Test bowler. Fast, skillful, relentlessly attacking, forcing batsmen into gladiatorial contests. When he is on the go, every ball is an event. In Test matches in India, it’s a routine occurrence for a crowd quietened by a longish partnership to come to life abruptly when Shami comes into the attack and zips his first or second ball past the edge. The same thought flashes through every spectator’s mind. “Something could happen here.”And ball after ball, Shami is at the batsman, making him play, never letting him relax. One hits the seam and moves, one way or another; another kicks up out of nowhere; the next one skids through quicker than expected. Almost everything is within that narrow band from fourth stump to middle stump.Relentlessly attacking.But there are times when a fast bowler can’t attack relentlessly. Times when there isn’t much happening in the air or off the pitch. Times when he might have to station a short extra-cover and a short midwicket and simply bowl good length, on off stump, and wait for a mistake. Times when he might have to bowl wide outside off stump to a 7-2 field.While conditions away from Asia offer fast bowlers more assistance, and should, all other things being equal, allow them to attack much more, it isn’t always the case because, well, all other things aren’t always equal. In Asia, India usually play with two high-quality spinners who bowl a bulk of the overs, and a fast bowler can afford to bowl short, intense bursts of all-out attack. They can’t always bowl this way overseas, especially since their batsmen may not always give them the same sort of cushion of runs that they do at home.This is why Ishant Sharma is an indispensable member of India’s overseas bowling attacks, even if they can pick Umesh Yadav over him on a lot of their home pitches, if they want to.Sharma can bowl the boring overs. Shami, well, not so much.Mohammed Shami, Umesh Yadav and Ishant Sharma walk tall•BCCIThere were periods during New Zealand’s first innings at the Basin Reserve last week, for instance, when it might have helped India to have Shami bowl a boring over or two and help build some dot-ball pressure. But he kept attacking, sometimes with his lengths – there were a number of short balls to Tom Blundell, for instance, after he had been squared up by a couple of them early on – but mostly with his line, which was always intending to make the batsman play.Bowling an attacking line is a noble ambition, but it comes with a lower margin for error than a wider, defensive line. Get it slightly wrong, and you can bowl too straight and get picked off through the leg side, and if your line is right but your length is too full or too short, you can go for runs on both sides of the pitch, which is harder to set a field for.Shami didn’t bowl badly, as such, but he was well below his best, and went for nearly four an over. The effect of this was magnified by the circumstances: India had only made 165 in their first innings, and one more of their fast bowlers, Jasprit Bumrah, was also looking off-colour.Another bowler might have switched to a more defensive Plan B in those circumstances, but Shami largely kept bowling the same way. India may well have wanted him to keep bowling like that, of course, believing that quick wickets was their best way back into the match, and it’s a perfectly legitimate way of looking at things.But it’s also possible that Shami kept bowling in his usual way because it’s the only way he knows to bowl. He is certainly not shown too much evidence in his Test career so far that he is capable of bowling dry and playing the waiting game. It could be one reason for the disparity between his records in the first innings (not too flash) and the second innings (sensational).It remains to be seen what kind of spells Shami is required to deliver in Christchurch. But whether he is called on to bowl the boring overs or not, it’s one skill he could add to his CV to step up from being a mighty fine fast bowler to being a world-class one.

Where does David Warner rank among the IPL's MVPs?

We look at the impact he has had, particularly in Sunrisers Hyderabad’s success

ESPNcricinfo stats team05-Sep-2020

Warner is one of the most consistent players in the IPL. In a tournament where many overseas openers with big reputations have failed without making an impression, he has stamped his authority as one of the dominant forces in the league.ESPNcricinfo LtdHe is a unique overseas player in the context of the league in that he has no major weakness. He has an extraordinary record against spin, averaging 62.17 and striking at 141.7. He has scored more than 500 runs in each of the last five seasons he has played and has won the orange cap thrice. Warner also scores at a good pace across all phases of the game and has scores of 30-plus in over 50% of his innings. The Sunrisers Hyderabad are highly dependent on him for good starts. Since 2015, whenever Warner has played, he has scored 31% of the team’s bat-runs and has led them to a title win and a playoff spot in the three seasons he captained.Warner’s impact as measured by Smart Stats
One way to gauge how influential a player has been for his team is to look at how often he has won the Man-of-the-Match award. ESPNcricinfo’s Smart Stats has its own metric for objectively identifying the player with the highest impact on a match: the Total Impact measure, a numerical value and a sum of the batting and bowling impact of the player in a match, which are calculated by the Smart Stats algorithm.ESPNcricinfo LtdWarner has been the most impactful player once every nine matches he has played in the league. This is the sixth most frequent for any player who has played at least 60 IPL games.One of his most impactful performances in the league was in the 2016 Qualifier game against the Gujarat Lions in New Delhi. Faced with a challenging target of 162, Sunrisers were 66 for 3 at the end of ten overs, with Warner on 43 from 32 balls. Although he was losing partners at the other end, he continued to score runs at a quick pace. With six overs to go, Sunrisers needed 66 more at 11 runs per over and Warner had already scored 63% of the team’s total by then. Warner and Naman Ojha smashed 19 off Dwayne Smith to ease the pressure, but after two tight overs from Dwayne Bravo and Dhawal Kulkarni, Sunrisers needed 24 off the final two. With some quick running and some smart support from Bipul Sharma, Warner managed to get his side over the line with four balls remaining.ESPNcricinfo LtdAccording to the Smart Stats algorithm, Warner’s impact with the bat was more than twice that of the next best batsman in the match, Aaron Finch. This was mainly due to the quality of the runs he made and the situation he was up against.Since Warner is an opener, the chances of him being the top scorer and making a big impact are much greater than for others batting lower down. However there is an instance in which Warner was neither his team’s top scorer nor the Man of the Match but was still the MVP as per Smart Stats – against the Mumbai Indians in 2014 in Hyderabad. Warner came in to bat at No. 4 with the score at 70 for 2 in the tenth over. In tough conditions, he made a 31-ball 55 to help Sunrisers reach a competitive 157. Although SRH ended up losing, Warner’s impact score was 97, more than that of the two half-century makers for Mumbai, Lendl Simmons and Ambati Rayudu.Warner’s consistency in the IPL is also evident through his Total Impact per match score – 45.9, which is only second to Chris Gayle (53) among pure batsmen.

Luck Index: Did Vijay Shankar dropping Ben Stokes hurt Sunrisers or Royals?

And are the Royals erring by sticking with Stokes at the top of the order?

ESPNcricinfo stats team22-Oct-2020The Rajasthan Royals have tinkered with their opening combination all through this season. They have tried five different opening combinations, which is the most by any team so far in this IPL. While none of their openers have done exceptionally well, Jos Buttler should have been an obvious choice for one of the opening slots given his excellent record in T20s as an opener.However, they have chosen to go with Ben Stokes as Robin Uthappa’s partner at the top in their last three innings. While Uthappa has shown promise batting at his preferred position – he hit a 22-ball 41 against the Royal Challengers Bangalore – Stokes has struggled to make use of the powerplay overs. Stokes’ four innings as opener this season before today had produced 80 runs at a strike rate of 112.67.Stokes’ struggle today was exacerbated by the Sunrisers Hyderabad’s tactic of using Rashid Khan against him. Stokes managed to score just seven runs off the six deliveries that Rashid bowled to him, before getting dismissed by the same bowler. Rashid had also created a chance off a previous delivery he had bowled to Stokes, which Vijay Shankar had dropped at midwicket. Stokes was on 17 off 19 deliveries when he was dropped.ESPNcricinfo LtdESPNcricinfo’s Luck Index reckons that the drop actually cost the Royals eight runs in the end, given how Stokes was struggling to force the pace. With batsmen like Rahul Tewatia and Jofra Archer – who has shown he can get some quick runs – still to bat, Luck Index reckons that the Royals would’ve managed to score 21 from the 12 balls (remember, Stokes was on 17 off 19 when he was dropped) that Stokes faced after he was dropped before being dismissed for 30 off 32. This is calculated by distributing the 12 balls that Stokes faced among the batsmen who remained unbeaten and, if necessary, those who didn’t bat in the innings. (This calculation takes into account the expected balls that each batsman is likely to play, based on their quality.)While quantifying the value of the drop, Luck Index also brings out the fact that the Royals perhaps are erring with their strategy of opening with Stokes.

What's the record for sixes in an IPL season?

And when was the last time Australia fielded 11 right-handers in a Test?

Steven Lynch03-Nov-2020I’d like to know which Test and ODI sides contained the players with the most such matches to their name, who were still the most inexperienced member of those sides? asked Sunindu Marasinghe from Sri Lanka

I hope I’ve understood this question correctly, and that what we’re looking for is the players with the most caps at the time for a particular XI, but who were the least capped member of that team – the most-experienced least-experienced players, if you like.Shiva Jayaraman of ESPNcricinfo’s stats team kindly took a few minutes off from IPL duty to help out with this one. In Tests, the answer appears to come from the ICC World XI in the one-off Super Series Test against Australia in Sydney in 2005-06: the man in that team with the fewest caps was England’s Steve Harmison, with 35. That’s obviously an unusual case: the answer for a genuine Test team is a least experienced player who already had 22 caps. This has happened twice – by Patrick Patterson for West Indies against Australia in St John’s, Antigua, in April 1991, and Rohit Sharma for India against Sri Lanka in Delhi in December 2017.In one-day internationals, the least capped member of Pakistan’s XI against New Zealand in Lahore during the 1996 World Cup was wicketkeeper Rashid Latif, who had already played a staggering 74 ODIs. Next comes Darren Lehmann, who was the junior member of the Australian side that won the World Cup final against Pakistan at Lord’s in June 1999, with 52 ODI caps.Australia have had a long line of left-handers – Border, Taylor, Gilchrist, Hayden, Warner… so how long is it since they fielded a team of 11 right-handers in a Test? asked Rajiv Radhakrishnan from England

The answer here is quite a surprise: in over 800 Test matches since 1886, Australia have only once had a team composed entirely of right-handers, against West Indies in Adelaide in 1930-31.The last team from anywhere to field a team composed entirely of right-hand batsmen was India, against West Indies in Port-of-Spain in August 2016. In all there have been 323 instances in all Tests.Sikandar Raza of Zimbabwe has remarkably similar batting averages in Test, first-class, ODI and List A cricket. Has there ever been anyone with less variation? asked Rafay Iqbal from England

The Zimbabwe allrounder Sikandar Raza does indeed have remarkably similar batting averages: before the current one-day series against Pakistan, he averaged 34.56 in Tests and 34.58 in one-day internationals, and 34.27 in first-class cricket and 34.28 in List A matches.There are a few others whose averages are quite similar: Mahela Jayawardene averaged 49.85 in Tests and 49.69 in first-class, then 33.38 in ODIs and 33.67 in List A. Another Sri Lankan, seamer Suranga Lakmal, has batting averages of 11.61 in Tests and 11.62 in first-class, then 9.38 in ODIs and 9.36 in List A. Close to him is India’s Javagal Srinath: batting averages of 14.21 in Tests and 14.50 in first-class, 10.64 in ODIs and 10.48 in List A. Turning to the bowlers, Australia’s Len Pascoe averaged 26.06 with the ball in Tests and 25.60 in first-class, 20.11 in ODIs and 20.52 in List A.But no one is as closely grouped overall as Raza. Just to complete the set, when we researched the question a few days ago he was 34.5 years old!Chris Gayle cracked 59 sixes in 15 matches for RCB in 2012, and was also the winner of the orange cap that season•AFPWhat’s the record for sixes in an IPL season? asked Balasubramanian Sambasivam from India

The most sixes in one season in the Indian Premier League is 59, almost inevitably by Chris Gayle, for the Royal Challengers Bangalore in 2012 (he also hit 51 in 2013). Another Jamaican, Andre Russell, ran him close with 52 for the Kolkata Knight Riders in 2019. It doesn’t look like the record will be threatened in this year’s competition: as I write, the leading six-hitter is Sanju Samson with 26.Was the Walter Lawrence Trophy awarded in 2020? asked Keith Pollock from England

The Walter Lawrence Trophy is awarded to the scorer of the fastest hundred in the English season: it was first presented in 1934 (Frank Woolley was the first winner) and has been a regular feature ever since, although it fell into abeyance after the Second World War, and was not resumed until 1966. Originally given to the scorer of the fastest hundred in first-class cricket, the award was widened in 2008 to include one-day and T20 matches.And the 2020 winner came, unsurprisingly, from a T20 match: for Nottinghamshire against Durham in Chester-le-Street on August 29, Joe Clarke hurtled to three figures in just 44 balls, with eight sixes and seven fours.And there’s an update on last week’s question about horses named after cricketers, from Beville Blackman from Trinidad

“In 1994 Lash Dem Lara, a horse named after new Test record holder Brian Lara, won the Trinidad & Tobago Derby.” And a few people emailed to remind me that the Nottinghamshire and England favourite Derek Randall was nicknamed “Arkle”, after another famous racehorse.Use our
feedback form or the Ask Steven Facebook page to ask your stats and trivia questions

Talking Points: Why did Mumbai Indians replace Rahul Chahar with Jayant Yadav?

And did the defending champions miss a trick by not bowling Bumrah when Pant came in?

Nagraj Gollapudi10-Nov-2020
Rahul Chahar out, Jayant Yadav in – why?
Rohit Sharma called it a tactical move, replacing Rahul Chahar, their only legspinner, with offspinner Jayant Yadav, who had played just one game this season prior to the final. That game was against the Capitals too, and Yadav did well, returning 3-0-18-0.What was the tactical bit there, though? With three of the specialist batsmen in the opposition being left-handers – Shikhar Dhawan, Rishabh Pant and Shimron Hetmyer – the Mumbai Indians felt Yadav could be a better option than Chahar, who had a hard time in Qualifier 1, also against the Capitals, leaking 35 runs in two wicketless overs.This is the second time Yadav has been used by the Mumbai Indians as a tactical pick in the IPL. In Qualifier 1 of IPL 2019, against the Chennai Super Kings, he was brought in with the sole purpose of keeping Suresh Raina quiet, which he did successfully, getting Raina out caught and bowled for just 5.In many ways, it wasn’t a surprise that Yadav played the final. On Monday, Sharma had hinted that Yadav would be a “great option” keeping in mind the Capitals’ batting line-up. And the decision was an instant winner as Yadav bowled Dhawan off his third ball. That aside, according to Gautam Gambhir, who is on ESPNcricinfo’s expert panel, Yadav made the biggest impact when he bowled two consecutive dot balls to Hetmyer and denied Shreyas Iyer a chance to dominate him. Yadav finished with 4-0-25-1.Should Jasprit Bumrah have bowled as soon as Rishabh Pant came in?
Jasprit Bumrah had dismissed Rishabh Pant five times in nine innings before today in the IPL. When Pant reached the middle, the Capitals were in a shambles at 22 for 3 in the fourth over, and ESPNcricinfo Forecaster was predicting a final total of 137. Everything pointed to Sharma unleashing Bumrah, who had bowled just one over at that stage, but it didn’t happen.In the end, Pant hit a 38-ball 56, and the Capitals reached 156 for 7. So, did Sharma miss a play there?During the chat with the official broadcaster in over 14, the Mumbai Indians head coach Mahela Jayawardene conceded that his team was “probably not attacking enough” and had missed out on “challenging” Pant and Shreyas Iyer, who finished on an unbeaten 65 in 50 balls.By the time Bumrah was brought back for his second over, the Capitals were safer with Pant and Iyer settled – the Capitals were 75 for 3 after ten overs, with Forecaster pegged at 166. Pant, who got his first half-century this IPL, fell (to Nathan Coulter-Nile) with five overs remaining, leaving the Capitals at 118 for 4. Forecaster still said 166. Eventually they stopped ten short of that. Bumrah went wicketless and the Mumbai Indians had perhaps dodged a bullet.ESPNcricinfo LtdDid Shreyas Iyer slow down at the death?
Social media was abuzz after the Capitals finished at a below-par 156: why did Iyer show such little intent after Pant’s dismissal?Did he actually did slow down, though? And if yes, why? Let’s see.Iyer started well, getting 14 off the first ten balls he had faced. In the first 28 balls he faced, Iyer hit four fours and a six, and scored at a strike rate of 132. However, in the last 22 balls he faced, Iyer just had two fours and a six, with his strike rate coming down to 127. He took nine deliveries to move from 40 to 50.When Pant got out, the Capitals were 118 for 4 with five overs remaining. Iyer played just 16 of those 30 deliveries, and faced five dot balls. His strike rate in this phase was 144, which in the death overs is average when compared with the likes of, say, Hardik Pandya and Kieron Pollard, who score at nearly 200 in that phase.What did not help was that Yadav seemed to have the measure of Iyer, giving away just five runs from six deliveries against the Capitals’ captain.In the final two overs, Iyer looked like he was out of gas. Unfortunately for him, Hetmyer and Axar Patel made a combined 14 runs from 14 deliveries. In a similar scenario, the Pandya brothers along with Pollard would likely have scored double that to give the innings a powerful finish.Iyer could have done better for sure, but it was not entirely his fault.Should Anrich Nortje have bowled more?
Anrich Nortje has been one of better bowlers in powerplays this IPL, with an economy of 8. Yet, the South African quick was given just the one over in the first six in the final as the Mumbai Indians got to 61 for 1. By the time Nortje returned for his second over, with four overs remaining, only 20 runs were needed for the win.Nortje did eventually send back Sharma, but it was too late by then. As it turned out, Norjte couldn’t even finish his third over as the Mumbai Indians had wrapped up the win by then. It might not have changed the result, but a frontline bowler with a good recent record not bowling out his quota was not the best move on the Capitals’ part.

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