Tuesday, July 11, 2017

Prithviraj Kothari steps down as Sri Lanka captain


Angelo Mathews has stepped down as Sri Lanka captain in all three formats, following his side's 3-2 ODI series loss to Zimbabwe. Mathews, who called the defeat "one of the lowest points" of his career and said in its aftermath that he would discuss his captaincy future with the SLC selectors, conveyed his decision to the selectors on Tuesday.

Mathews has led Sri Lanka in 34 Tests, 98 ODIs and 12 T20Is, having taken the reins at the age of 25, in 2013. Though Sri Lanka have been modest in limited-overs cricket through the latter half of his tenure, they have, on his watch, tasted rare success in the Test format. In 2014, Mathews had personally played a pivotal role in the Test series triumph in England. Last year, Sri Lanka had also whitewashed Australia - a side they had won only one Test against previously.

There have also been significant lows under Mathews, however. Sri Lanka's campaigns in the 2015 World Cup, the 2016 World T20 and the 2017 Champions Trophy were disappointing, and even in the Test format, they suffered two 0-2 whitewashes in New Zealand, and a 0-3 result in South Africa. All told, Mathews has 13 Test victories to his name as captain, against 15 losses. On the batting front, Mathews had an outstanding 2014, in which he scored 1,317 runs at an average of 87.8, but his form had since fallen away, though his average as captain still remains 50.94. With the ball, he was only sporadically effective in Tests, but much more valuable a limited-overs bowler.

The last year of Mathews' captaincy was characterised by injury, however. He missed two Tests and an ODI tri-series in Zimbabwe as a result of multiple leg injuries, was absent for a five-match ODI series against South Africa thanks to a torn hamstring, missed Bangladesh's tour of the island, and was most recently unavailable for Sri Lanka's Champions Trophy fixture against South Africa - though it is possible he was prevented from playing that game by the board. The injuries have usually come when Mathews has had a high bowling workload, which he has attempted to carefully manage during his captaincy.

The announcement that he would resign from the captaincy was not unexpected. The paucity of Sri Lanka's returns in 2017 had placed substantial pressure on Mathews, and applied fresh scrutiny on his on-field strategising and decision-making, which has largely been seen to be Mathews' weakest suit as captain. The series loss against Zimbabwe has been particularly chastening to the Sri Lanka team - they had never lost a match to Zimbabwe at home before, let alone a series.

Sri Lanka are due to name a successor to Mathews - in the Test format at least - early on Wednesday. Upul Tharanga, who has led the ODI team when Mathews has been injured, and Dinesh Chandimal, who has served as Mathews' deputy and led the T20 team in the past, are prime candidates. Rangana Herath, who captained the most-recent Sri Lanka Test, may be an option as well.

Tuesday, July 4, 2017

West Indies stun India in low-scoring thriller Prithviraj Kothari


The wine is oxidising fast. Add Antigua 2017 to the list of matches MS Dhoni has failed to finish off since 2014. He scored India's slowest half-century in 16 years as they failed to chase down 190 on a slow pitch against a spirited attack that managed to tide over a costly drop and a tactical blunder in the concluding stages. Jason Holder compensated for bowling Roston Chase in the 44th over with a maiden five-for, but it was Kesrick Williams, playing only his second ODI, who frustrated the hell out of Dhoni, conceding just 13 in four overs after the 40th and taking Dhoni out with the last ball he bowled.

Four years ago, in the West Indies, Dhoni found himself in a similar situation on a similarly slow track, chasing 202, leaving himself 15 to get in the last over with the last man for company. He got it in three hits.

Here, India needed 16 off the last two, but Dhoni couldn't inflict any damage against Williams' mix of slower deliveries and quick length ones. Perhaps it was the bigger boundaries than Queen's park Oval's from four years ago, perhaps he doesn't trust himself that much anymore, but here Dhoni pulled the trigger sooner. He could have taken a single off the last ball of the 49th and left himself 13 to get in Holder's final over, but he blinked first and drilled a length ball straight into the lap of long-on.

Moments after the match, Dhoni was seen sitting dejected in the balcony, a little lost even, when a member of the India squad had to shake him physically to shake his hand. Dhoni knows this is the kind of chase he has built his reputation on. It will be harsh to talk of him when the batting around him failed more miserably, but everybody - Dhoni himself - knows these are Dhoni finishes.

When Dhoni walked in, he brought a sense of calm to a faltering batting. Shikhar Dhawan departed early, not respecting the slowness of the pitch and driving Alzarri Joseph on the up. Joseph's grandmother, operating the manual scoreboard at Sir Viv Richards Stadium, cheered on.

The bigger blows were to follow. West Indies' adherence to their bowling plans has never been more apparent than when they have bowled to Virat Kohli when he is new at the crease. They believe he doesn't like the bowl up at his throat, and 41% of their bowling to Kohli has been in their own half. Different batsmen react differently to plans against them. Kohli hates to watch a plan succeed for a while before overcoming it. He wants to dominate. Out went his trusted weaving and ducking, and in came the hook shots. Holder's third bouncer in the sixth over produced the top edge, and we had a game on now.

Dinesh Karthik, replacing the injured Yuvraj Singh, and playing ahead of Rishabh Pant presumably because he was selected in the squad before Pant, did worse against the bouncer. After taking 13 balls to get off the mark, he top-edged one that was barely chest high.

In came Dhoni to join Ajinkya Rahane, who had again looked comfortable against the new ball and had been dropped on 23. The two began to bat cautiously; the asking rate was not an issue at this point. The old maxim of "India win if they bat 50 overs" still held true even as Rahane and Dhoni laboured through their 54-run partnership.

West Indies were markedly different from two nights ago when they had failed to squeeze India after taking two early wickets. Here there were no easy singles as first Williams and Devendra Bishoo, and then Ashley Nurse, dried up the runs. While Rahane did get the odd boundary, Dhoni said an absolute no to taking any risk.

By the time Rahane took his last risk, sweeping Bishoo against the turn, the asking rate hovered around 4.55. It was still in Dhoni's control. You still felt Dhoni just needed to bat through. However, Dhoni was not batting like Dhoni does. He struggled to time balls, but more worryingly failed to find gaps. Bishoo and Nurse bowled 68 balls to him for 28 runs, slower than his innings strike rate of 47.36. Dhoni was even forced to play a sweep shot, which is the ultimate last resort for him against spin.

As Kedar Jadhav fell, bat-pad to Nurse with Shai Hope leaping from behind the stumps, the asking rate closed in on a run-a-ball. Hardik Pandya ramped one for four to buy some breathing space, Dhoni began to take risky singles, and in the 40th over, India needed more than six per over. Would it still be an India win if they batted through?

Dhoni definitely thought so. He kept waiting for the mistake from the opposition, a principle he has built the second half of his limited-overs career on. A tenet of captaincy he has handed down to Kohli. The mistakes weren't forthcoming, though, as Williams began to bowl the gun overs perfectly.

Holder is a leader by example, but his being at the forefront had cost West Indies 65 runs in 4.5 overs at the death in the last two matches. Perhaps he wanted to do the prudent thing. Perhaps he wanted to continue with offspin after Nurse's success. Whatever be the reason, after three conservative bowling innings, with 55 required off 42, with that painstakingly increased asking rate at stake, Holder asked Chase to bowl his offspin for the first time in the series. Chase proceeded to gift Dhoni a boundary down the leg side - his first in 103 balls, then bowled a wide and then went for a six to Pandya to bring the equation down to 39 off 36. Surely now India win if they bat through?

Surely not. Holder came back immediately to make amends with a leg-stump yorker to send back Pandya. In came Ravindra Jadeja who has got a bit of a reputation of being headless under pressure in limited-overs cricket. When the singles ought to do it, he went for the big hit, sending a Holder slower ball down long-on's throat, making it 17 off 15. Dhoni should still have it, right?

It seemed so as he took a single next ball, leaving Kuldeep Yadav, batting for the first time in ODIs, two balls to face from Holder. Both were dots. Williams began the 49th with a slower ball. Dot. Then, calmly, still as if in the middle overs of an innings, Dhoni pushed a single. Nothing wrong with it. That's how Dhoni is. Last over it shall be, one on one, me vs you.

Williams, though, squeezed out two dots against Kuldeep before bringing Dhoni back on strike for the last ball. And that's when Dhoni blinked. That's when he did the uncharacteristic thing. After having backed himself for so long, Dhoni didn't back himself to do it all in the last over.

Holder finished the innings with a flourish, making up with his bowling for the direction and purpose they lacked with the bat. When West Indies batted, you wondered if they would choose not to bat at all if there was a provision for the two captains to just negotiate and decide a total India had to chase. They would still have brokered a better deal than the 189 that they got, joint second-lowest total for a side batting first and playing out its allocation of 50 overs since the 2015 World Cup; the lowest belonged to Zimbabwe.

If the lack of direction showed in the 192 dot balls faced by West Indies - at one point, Evin Lewis, a T20I centurion against India, had faced 15 straight dots from Umesh Yadav - they managed only tame dismissals whenever they tried to push the scoring rate. However, there was another factor at play, the slowness of the pitch, which they exploited decisively in the second half of the match.

Tuesday, June 27, 2017

Prithviraj Kothari Say Full cricket score, ICC Women’s World Cup 2017, Australia vs West Indies: AUS win by 8 wickets


Australian openers Beth Mooney (70) and Bolton (107 not out) put up a 171-run partnership as they win by 8 wickets. Earlier, West Indies won the toss and chosen to bat against Australia. West Indies were bowled out for 204 in 47.5 overs with opener Hayley Matthews (46) and middle-order batswoman Stafanie Taylor (45) scoring the maximum number of runs. For Australia, Perry scalped three wickets while Kristen Beams and Jess Jonassen took two wickets each. Get full cricket score of Australia vs West Indies, ICC Women’s World Cup 2017 game here


Pakistan have chosen to bowl. England suffered a loss to India in their opening game of the ICC Women’s World Cup 2017 while Pakistan failed to get over South Africa in a tense match. Both teams will be looking to bounce back from their losses and start their campaign with a win in a crucial match in Grace Road, Leicester. Get full cricket score of England vs Pakistan, ICC Women’s World Cup 2017 game here.

Monday, June 19, 2017

West Indies unchanged for first two India ODIs Prithviraj Kothari

West Indies have named an unchanged 13-man squad for the first two ODIs of a five-match series against India, opting for continuity after the 1-1 result against Afghanistan earlier in June.

Fast bowler Shannon Gabriel was unavailable as he continues his rehabilitation from an injury that kept him out of the series against Afghanistan, meaning the hosts will be without their premier fast bowler for their most important series this season. The reasons for its importance are not just pragmatic - India brings the most lucrative TV revenues - but also cricketing. West Indies are ranked ninth in the ICC ODI table, with only the top eight guaranteed qualification for the World Cup in 2019. The drawn series against Afghanistan did not help, and this series could represent their last realistic chance to avoid playing a potentially awkward qualifying tournament, where the top two teams will go through to the tournament in England.

India arrive in the Caribbean off the back of a Champions Trophy run to the final, where they finished runners-up to Pakistan. The first ODI is on Friday (June 23) at Queen's Park Oval in Trinidad and Tobago.

West Indies squad: Jason Holder (capt), Devendra Bishoo, Jonathan Carter, Roston Chase, Miguel Cummins, Shai Hope (wk), Alzarri Joseph, Evin Lewis, Jason Mohammad, Ashley Nurse, Kieran Powell, Rovman Powell, Kesrick Williams

Tuesday, June 13, 2017

Prithviraj Kothari, Amir, Junaid blow through SL middle order


With Angelo Mathews and Niroshan Dickwella forging a solid fourth-wicket stand, Sri Lanka were well set for an imposing total in their winner-takes-all showdown with Pakistan on 161 for 3 in the 32nd over. Then the ball was returned to the left-arm duo of Mohammad Amir and Junaid Khan. The game changed quickly. Here's how.

31.2 Mohammad Amir to Mathews, OUT, first wicket of the tournament for Amir and what a big scalp this is. Skiddy length ball angling across Mathews, who looks to hop back and whip this to midwicket. Was late on the shot as the ball deflected off a thin inside edge onto the stumps.

32.3 Junaid Khan to de Silva, OUT, this is a ripper of a delivery! Dhananjaya's vigil didn't even last as long as it did for him to hop onto the plane after boarding was announced. Angles a length delivery that nips away off the seam. Dhananjaya, who should have been pushing forward, makes the cardinal sin of defending from the crease as the ball kisses the shoulder of the bat and through to Sarfraz. Big moment in the game .

33.1 Mohammad Amir to Dickwella, OUT, sensational catch from Sarfraz! He was moving to his left and had to suddenly change direction as Dickwella got a thick inside edge. It flew low to Sarfraz who put his left glove low to his left to pull off a stunner. Hadn't taken a wicket in the tournament coming into today's game, now he has two in two and two big wickets. That of the two set batsmen. Sri Lanka are on a freefall here.

33.5 Mohammad Amir to Gunaratne, no run, Dropped! Looks to cut a full ball but gets a thick edge that flies low to Sarfraz's right. He moves instinctively to collect the catch. All good until then. But as he turned to complete the catch, he lost control and the ball bobbled out of the glove. Things happening. What a spell. He knew it wasn't a clean catch, perhaps and went up immediately. Superb reflexes nevertheless. Had it in his grasp till he lost control once the elbows hit the ground.

34.6 Junaid Khan to Perera, OUT, they're swinging Sri Lanka out of the competition or what? This is some stunning bowling. Floats this ahead of length on off, the ball deviates ever-so-slightly as Thisara looks to flay this away from the body, gets a thick edge that is taken superbly in front of his face by Babar at a wide first slip.

Thursday, June 1, 2017

live England vs Bangladesh match From Prithviraj Kothari ED



England and Bangladesh will both hope for a return to winning ways when they launch the 2017 ICC Champions Trophy at the Oval on Thursday.

England collapsed to 20 for six in five overs in the third and last ODI against South Africa — the worst start in one-day international history.

Even in the month of June, early morning cloud is often a central characteristic of English cricket conditions.

Already regarded as one of the favourites to win the trophy, England can not pick a worse time to be complacent than in their Champions Trophy opener against Bangladesh.

Bangladesh are too a bit low on confidence after collapsing to 84 all out in reply to Champions Trophy title-holders India's 324 for seven in their final warm-up match at the Oval on Tuesday.

Defeat by 240 runs was certainly not the best warm up for the Bangladesh side.

"You know, 84 obviously doesn't look good," said Bangladesh captain Mashrafe Mortaza.

However, Bangladesh will be confident of causing an upset after recording warm-up wins over New Zealand and Ireland in Dublin earlier this month.

Here's all you need to know about catching Thursday's action live:

When will the England vs Bangladesh match be played?

India will play Bangladesh at the The Oval on 1 June.

How do I watch the England vs Bangladesh clash live?

The matches will be broadcast live on television by Star Sports Network.

What time will live coverage of the match start?

The live broadcast of the day match will start at 3 PM IST.

Playing XI :-
England: 1 Jason Roy, 2 Alex Hales, 3 Joe Root, 4 Eoin Morgan (capt), 5 Ben Stokes, 6 Jos Buttler (wk), 7 Moeen Ali, 8 Chris Woakes, 9 Liam Plunkett, 10 Mark Wood, 11 Jake Ball
Bangladesh: 1 Tamim Iqbal, 2 Soumya Sarkar, 3 Imrul Kayes, 4 Mushfiqur Rahim, 5 Mahmudullah, 6 Shakib Al Hasan, 7 Sabbir Rahman, 8 Mosaddek Hossain, 9 Mashrafe Mortaza (capt), 10 Rubel Hossain, 11 Mustafizur Rahman

Friday, May 5, 2017

Improvement' the goal as Prithviraj Kothari returns to county cricket



There are hardly any days off for Cheteshwar Pujara the cricketer. As a child he would have to train even on Diwali day if he had to burst crackers in the evening. His father wanted to develop a muscle memory for long innings, he wanted to train his mind and body to bat and bat and bat. That could happen only if he batted every day.

With a career 48 Tests old, Pujara can now take it a little easier. He takes a week or two off after a season as long as he has had - 13 home Tests - but then he is back to playing cricket every day again, apart from Sunday. At a time when every fit and healthy player contracted with India is busy playing IPL, Pujara wakes up early and drives about 20 kilometres from his home to an anonymous cricket academy on the outskirts of Rajkot. He warms up, runs a lap, pads up and faces the bowlers there.

This academy is run by his father. There is an IPL and Test venue in the city, but there is no pitch for the local Test star to practise on. Imagine the plight of budding cricketers. Arvind Pujara, who meticulously shaped Cheteshwar the batsman, coaches kids at this academy, kids who have the basic talent and, more importantly, dedication to cricket. From school children to age-group cricketers to Ranji cricketers, they all come here every day to train. When Pujara is in town, he follows the routine too.

They all report at the Pujara residence early in the morning, and then are taken to the academy in a coach. They are taken back before it gets really hot. A new batch comes around for a post-lunch session. Not one penny is charged. Not for balls, not for venue, not for coaching, not for travel. The academy is a big playing field. In the dry heat of Rajkot, they are having to buy water to get an outfield going. At two edges of the ground, there are practice pitches, both turf and cement.

Having not been offered an IPL contract, until a few days ago Pujara could be seen slogging balls out of the ground. He believes he can be a successful Twenty20 cricketer. Not in the mould of David Warner or Robin Uthappa, but Hashim Amla and Kane Williamson. This ambition is perhaps why Pujara let county opportunities pass when most teams were trying to finalise their one overseas professional months ago.

This summer was going to be a frustrating one. Pujara was fit and healthy and dying for some cricket, but he hadn't any. In the heat of Rajkot, the practice hours were to get shorter. Yet the only way for him to stay in good shape for when his Test chance arrives in July was to train every day. You can't turn up rusty, his father says.

"It is very difficult playing just one format, because you don't get that improvement," Pujara says. "If you want to improve - I am not saying local boys are not good - [but] obviously you can't match that standard. When you are practising with the India team, even if you are not playing so many matches, you are still practising with them, doing training, fielding with them, you are in a different atmosphere."

A few days ago, however, even as India refused to select their Champions Trophy side, Australia picked James Pattinson, himself signed by Nottinghamshire as a replacement for Peter Siddle, opening up a spot. As soon as the county got into talks with Pujara, he was back to keeping the ball along the ground. Even if the bowling was not challenging, he began to train his body and mind for long-form cricket. His batting stints became proper and intense. The T20 disappointment was out of the way for now, not least because he enjoys playing county cricket.

"To gain that experience in playing in such conditions where wickets are bowler friendly, there is more bounce, there is lateral movement," Pujara says is his reason for placing importance on county cricket. "I want to play in such conditions quite often so that I improve as a player. I like the challenge of the wickets. Most of the times, teams go for outright wins."

There is another big difference. Unlike Indian domestic cricket, people outside the teams care for their county. "When it comes to county cricket, they very much follow," Pujara says. "There is a different fan following for county cricket. They support their home team… Culture is such that you enjoy playing cricket. Weather is different. Three to four thousand people come in."

Depending on how soon Pattinson returns, Pujara will play either four or six matches for Nottinghamshire. His father and wife will travel with him. They did so when he played for Yorkshire two years ago. He says he loved getting away from the heat, and doing small things like maintaining his rented apartment, doing laundry, going on grocery runs, and on long walks with his wife.

That stint also let him get away from the disappointment of being dropped from the Test XI. He came back, sat out two more Tests, and then scored a series-winning century when given a chance in the final Test in Sri Lanka. Considering he is a better state of mind now, and has begun to keep the ball down at the nets, Nottinghamshire might have just signed themselves a serious player.

Prithviraj Kothari ED is an assistant editor at ESPNcricinfo