'People need to believe in Bangladesh'

Khaled Mahmud played a key role in Bangladesh’s ascent to the highest level. Now, a decade on, he’s looking to help his side take the ever-elusive next step

Andrew Miller09-Mar-2010Khaled Mahmud looks no different now, overseeing Bangladesh training ahead of the second ODI in Dhaka, to how he did throughout his international career. Short and squat, and possessed of a physique that is undeniably “cuddly”, Mahmud became a byword for underachievement in his six years at the top. At one stage he boasted a Test bowling average of 406 and a Test batting mark of 11.25, the worst combined figures for an allrounder in Test history, and his final appearance as his country’s captain, against England in 2003, was drowned out by a cacophony of boos.And yet, in the same instance, Mahmud is an untouchable hero to his people, a player who epitomises the paradox of Bangladesh cricket. Eleven years ago in Northampton, his wobbly seamers claimed 3 for 31 to follow up a hard-hitting 27, as Pakistan were sensationally toppled at the 1999 World Cup – a result that led directly to Bangladesh’s elevation to full Test status. And two years before that, he also played his part in the ICC Trophy victory over Kenya in Malaysia, a triumph that transformed the standing of the sport in his country, with upwards of 100,000 people mobbing the team on its return to Dhaka Airport.”Other players may get the same experience in their careers, or maybe not, but in those two years we saw without any doubt the people’s love for the game,” Mahmud told Cricinfo. “When the prime minister received us in the old airport in 1997, I’d never seen a gathering like it. It was fabulous. Our car moved at 5kph from the new airport to the old. After those two moments, cricket really took off. It was a real change in our game and our history.”Except, of course, it was not. The real change has yet to arrive, more than a decade on from the two matches that promised such a bright future for the country. A succession of captains and coaches, including Jamie Siddons and his predecessor, Dav Whatmore, have repeatedly appealed for their “inexperienced” charges to be given time to prove themselves, and yet in 64 Test encounters since November 2000, Bangladesh have lost 55, including 33 by an innings, and won a measly three – all against weak opponents: Zimbabwe and a strike-hit West Indies. How much longer can the excuse be expected to wash?Mahmud, however, is living proof of the distance that his sport has travelled in the past decade, and as Bangladesh embark on an era of apparent consolidation, the knowledge that he has gleaned starts to take on an added importance. After all, the one thing he has in abundance is experience – experience of exquisite highs, deep and depressing lows, and all the maddening expectations that get piled onto the shoulders of the lucky few who are chosen to represent their success-starved country. And as he stands at the back of the nets, watching the class of 2010 go through their paces, he is better placed than most to judge just how far the country has come.”This team, they are mentally tough, even though they are kids,” said Mahmud. “They don’t get bothered by what people say, in the way that we often did. They know what will happen if they don’t perform, and if they fail they feel the shame for themselves, but they don’t react that much. Our media has changed too. In the early days if you did something wrong it was big news, and it was all over the papers straightaway. Now things are much more healthy, and the crowds have changed as well. They now understand that international cricket is not that easy for the boys.”I was 26 when we won the ICC Trophy, and 30 when we played our first Test,” he added. “Media expectation was very high, but it was tough for us, because our structure was not up to standard. Our wickets were slow and low, so we weren’t prepared for proper fast bowling. We didn’t have a physio, so for small injuries we had to wait for weeks to make sure they had healed. And when we brought in Robert Hunt from Australia for the 1999 World Cup, it was the first time we had had a proper trainer.”Half of our lives for three or four years were spent at training camps at the BKSB [Bangladesh Institute of Sport], when we would get maybe one day a week to see our families, and though we tried our best and bonded well, our infrastructure simply wasn’t up to standard. It stopped us every time. On an early tour of USA and Canada, our daily allowance was $5 a day with no match fees, and even buying proper Kookaburra balls for practice was expensive.”Money is not so much of a problem anymore, with lucrative endorsements topping up the fees of the country’s elite players, while the game at grassroots level has significantly improved since Mahmud was accidentally discovered during a park tournament at the age of 12. Cricket has long since ousted football as the No. 1 sport in Bangladesh, so there is a much greater pool of talent from which to choose, while the gradual development of regional and age-group levels has taken the game beyond its traditional hub in Dhaka.

“It’s now 20 years that I’ve been in the Bangladesh national set-up, and it’s not just my bread and butter, it’s my love. I am always proud to say I’m a Bangladeshi player, but the board needs to believe in us more”

Nevertheless, when it comes to the top level, there remains a mental hurdle that the country seems incapable of overcoming, as demonstrated by the recent 3-0 whitewashing in the ODI series against England. Despite spirited individual performances in all three contests, the collective gameplan collapsed when put under pressure. The reason, in Mahmud’s opinion, lies in the team’s failure to identify a core of senior players and stick with them until they were battle-hardened.”There’s no way to teach a game sense without experience in the side,” he said. “These guys have played more in the past three years than I played in 12, which is a good sign, but their age is still a big factor, because they haven’t got any seniors to teach them the ropes. They haven’t learned what to do in a particular match situation, how to react quickly, what to do in the crunch times. A few of the players have found some level of consistency, but you still find them failing for maybe three or four matches after one big score.”The eternal boy wonder, Mohammad Ashraful, is the closest thing to an omnipresent player, having featured in 53 of his country’s 64 Tests to date, but for all manner of reasons, he stands out as an anomaly – Bangladesh’s flickering beacon of promise, if you like. The next most-capped member of the current set-up is the wicketkeeper, Mushfiqur Rahim, who made his debut as a 16-year-old at Lord’s in 2005, and has featured in 19 Tests since then. Somewhere between those two figures there is a yawning gulf of experience, and one that Mahmud believes could and should have been filled by the boys he played alongside at the tail-end of his own career.When England last toured Bangladesh in 2003, Rajin Saleh, Alok Kapali and Enamul Haque jnr were all still teenagers. All things being equal, those three ought to be approaching their prime right now – not least Rajin, who captained his country during the 2004 Champions Trophy and was talked up by the former coach, Dav Whatmore, as the most dedicated professional in his set-up. Instead, they have barely featured under the new regime of Siddons, whose focus has been every bit as youth-orientated as that of his predecessor.”Players like Rajin, Alok, even Hannan Sarkar, they were really raw talents, and they played but never settled,” said Mahmud. “None of them played for a long time, and why was that? Something is wrong, definitely. What are our foreign coaches doing to them? I was old when I started, I couldn’t take the changes they were imposing, and I couldn’t sustain my place, fair enough. But these are raw talents, so why couldn’t they come up to the mark? It’s a big question for us. These guys should be in the team right now. Instead they have been lost.”Since joining the Bangladesh set-up in October 2007, Siddons has been credited with instilling greater discipline to his squad, and when naturally free-flowing players such as Tamim Iqbal talk of adhering to “team rules” in the wake of a century as excellent as the one he scored against England in Dhaka last week, you know he’s making some progress. But Mahmud believes that the true extent of Siddons’ influence will only be judged in hindsight.”Jamie has been here for two-and-a-half years, and he is doing a fantastic job. But he’ll probably only be here for another year, maybe two, and after he has left, we need to see whether the players like Tamim, Shakib and Mushfiqur are all still around when he goes. He’s had them from the beginning, he’s helped them through their problems with techniques and the ups and downs of international cricket, but it’s important as a professional coach, and as a batting specialist, that he leaves us with five or six successes.”Mahmud is living proof of the distance that cricket in Bangladesh has travelled in the past decade•Farjana K Godhuly/AFPAs and when that time comes, Mahmud believes he is ready to step into the role . In September 2009, he stepped up to become Siddons’ official deputy, having achieved a Grade 3 coaching certificate from Cricket Australia, and while he is not angling to instigate a coup, he believes that the time is fast approaching when the Bangladeshi style – for better or for worse – needs to be allowed to re-emerge from the rigid structures that Whatmore and Siddons have put in place in recent times.”I feel very lucky and happy to have this new position as assistant coach, but people need to believe in us,” he said. “It’s now 20 years that I’ve been in the Bangladesh national set-up, and it’s not just my bread and butter, it’s my love. I am always proud to say I’m a Bangladeshi player, but the board needs to believe in us more, and as a local guy, I believe they would give me support.”From my childhood I’ve always loved coaching,” he said. “I talk a lot, and I love to help. People come from different places, and a lot of them are kids who are afraid to talk, so they don’t get the best benefits from the clubs. I’m not saying we don’t need help from outside – we need specialists, we need everything – but I believe I can make the changes because I know the attitude of our players. I can understand their feelings, which foreign coaches rarely understand.”I feel like I’m a parent of the team,” he added. “A lot of the boys have a lot of things to say, but they would never tell it to the coach, because they might think he would get upset if they said that. They come to me instead, because I’ve known a lot of these boys from childhood, and I know what their motives are. I can see it in their faces when they are confident, when they are not, and what they are thinking.”The bottom line, as far as Mahmud is concerned, is that Bangladesh has to be accepted for what it is, not what it should be. The chaos, the culture, the desperate political problems – none of these can be overcome with a purely textbook approach to the country’s cricket development, not least because it requires a personal touch to coax the best out of the often shy young men who enter the national set-up.”I’ve always believed that you cannot coach a boy, you have to motivate them and support them in what they are doing, that’s the main thing,” said Mahmud. “This is our culture and our system, and we cannot change it. We have to be like Australia or India, who develop their own cultures, and produce players in their own image.”Skill-wise we have a lot of good players, but strength-wise we cannot perform at highest level for long enough, because our everyday routine is not great. Whenever a boy comes to the national team, we have to look after him and tell him what to eat and when to sleep and when to go to the gym, whereas an Aussie boy will get that straight away.”Mahmud should know. He was that boy not so long ago.

Fab day for the fans

The final was a big test considering the tournament and the crowd, and there wasn’t a doubt that Pakistan’s raucous fans would ensure their chants were heard

Nagraj Gollapudi at Lord's21-Jun-2009Cricket remains secondary in England except when it comes to The Ashes. In the years to come, though, the theory will be sternly tested. Cue the 2009 World Twenty20: the tournament went on for 16 days, spread over three venues across London and Nottingham, culminating in a final at Lord’s on Sunday attended by a sellout crowd. Surprisingly, even the old traditionalists, the MCC members who had ignored most of the event, decided to turn up in strong numbers today, flashing their bacon-and-eggs ties proudly.This was the first time two teams from the subcontinent clashed in the final of a big event at the world’s most famous ground. It was a big test given the tournament, and crowd, and having witnessed most of Pakistan’s games there was no doubt that their raucous supporters would make sure their chants of ‘Pakistan [long live Pakistan]” were heard as far as West Ham, Ilford and Southall if not Lahore, Karachi or Rawalpindi.Not sure if it was by coincidence or by design, the organisers decided to hold the final on the longest day of the year. England’s bright summer continued as Lord’s was basked in sunshine – cricket lovers didn’t need more motivation to turn up from early morning.Steve Elworthy, the tournament director, asked if he would have imagined the final to be such a raging success in the absence of India, said his team had promoted the event cleverly. “We went to Brick Lane on ‘Baisakhi [the harvest festival]’ and set up a tent to market the event to the Bangladesh fans. We tried to reach out as many areas with Asian ethnicity in England to educate the fans and attract them to the event.”Smart thinking, given the healthy crowds witnessed at The Oval and Trent Bridge.The English don’t warm up to sporting events like their arch-rivals Australia who, as South African cricket writer Neil Manthorp once said, would “turn out in thousands to witness even a cockroach race.” Football remains England’s No. 1 sport, followed by rugby and cricket. However, despite the threat from events like the Lions’ rugby tour, a Formula 1 race and the US Open golf, the World Twenty20 managed to garner some newsprint, in addition to the air time on radio and television.Even if the tickets were somewhat steep, priced at £50, £60 and £90, the fans did not mind spending the money. Apart from the final, some of the best games in the tournament were the warm-up clash between India and Pakistan at The Oval, the opening game between England and the Netherlands, attended by 1200 odd colourful Dutch fans dressed in traditional orange, the crunch India-England Super Eights game, and both the semi-finals.The most distinguishing feature about this tournament was the rich quality of cricket, a far cry from the hitting contest prevalent in both IPL seasons. Probably that prompted a member to say: “I’ve never been a fan of Twenty20 but this was something else.” There were thousands of more converts by the end of the event.A Sri Lankan family cancelled their barbecue to arrive for the final without any tickets. Little did they know to enter the home of cricket was as expensive as finding a seat at Centre Court on day one to watch Roger Federer. The cheapest bargain they found was £300 per ticket, a pound more than the price to watch Federer play tomorrow.

The most distinguishing feature about this tournament was the rich quality of cricket, a far cry from the hitting contest prevalent in both IPL seasons. Probably that prompted a member to say this: “I’ve never been a fan of Twenty20 but this was something else.” There were thousands of more converts by the end of the event.

Fans had booked ticket months in advance. “Ninety percent of the tickets for the final were booked six months ago,” Elworthy said. A Sri Lankan fan anticipated a final against India and had bought the ticket three months in advance. “I’m happy we are here but feel sad that India aren’t.”But if anyone was taking the mickey out of the India’s absence it was the boisterous Pakistan fans, who had invaded grounds in large numbers throughout the tournament. The Pakistani band ‘ age-old hit reverberated through the afternoon as Younis Khan’s men silenced Sri Lanka emphatically. “Dear India, you can hide your tears, you (are) pussycats. R (you are) no match for our ‘majestic lions'” read a banner in one of the stands. The banter was sporting and taken by the Indian fans in the right spirit. “I bought my ticket from an Indian,” was another poke at the former world champions.Twenty20 cricket’s biggest achievement has been to attract fans who had never ever seen or heard about the game. There were a bunch from Kosovo, supporting Pakistan even if they couldn’t tell Shahid Afridi from Umar Gul. Apparently a form of cricket is famous in Kosovo and is known as ‘guaxha’ (pronounced ‘goojah’).Would Lord’s witness the same sort of intense fervour once again in a month’s time when the second Test of the Ashes would be played here? “No, there will be nothing like that. As Australia run through our batting, the English fans will be drowning in tears,” said an ECB official.But today was all about celebrations and the chants like “” poured into the streets outside the Grace, North and East Gates outside Lord’s.

'Delightful' Chelsea and Australia star Sam Kerr defended by Australia Prime Minister after racially aggravated harassment charge

Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has labelled Sam Kerr a "delight" amid her being charged with racially aggravated harassment.

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  • Kerr could face criminal trial next year
  • Charged with racially harassing a cop
  • Aussie PM labels her a 'delight'
  • Getty

    WHAT HAPPENED?

    The Chelsea star pleaded not guilty this week after being charged with"using insulting, threatening or abusive statements that caused alarm or distress" to a police officer in January 2023. While the 30-year-old's lawyers are trying to have the charge, which stemmed from an alleged dispute over a taxi fare, thrown out of court – Mr Albanese has come to her defence. Although he would not comment on the case, he lauded the Australian international for her "proud" representation of her country after meeting the striker at King Charles' coronation last year.

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    WHAT THE AUSTRALIAN PRIME MINISTER SAID

    He said on Wednesday: "I don't comment on legal matters before Australian courts, let alone other ones. I will say this about my contact with Sam Kerr, she was our flag bearer at the coronation. My contact with her was exemplary. She did Australia proud at that time and I think that my contact with her has been nothing but delightful."

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    THE BIGGER PICTURE

    Kerr's legal team will return to court on April 26 with the aim of avoiding the criminal trial that is set for next February. They have claimed an "abuse of process" in the prosecution's case, given that it took 13 months for this to come to court. If Kerr's appeal is unsuccessful and then is found guilty, the public order act she has been charged with carries a prison sentence of up to two years and/or a substantial fine.

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  • WHAT NEXT?

    Blues forward Kerr, who is currently sidelined with an anterior cruciate ligament problem that will rule her out until next season, will wait to see what result comes from the legal process.

Unlucky Herath, and proactive groundstaff

Younis battles humidity, Mathews follows Aamer, Herath loses an appeal – all part of the action from the second day in Galle

Sidharth Monga in Galle05-Jul-2009It’s humid, yeah
Just take a look at how Younis Khan ran to realise how sapping the conditions were. Whenever at the non-striker’s end, he would take his helmet off, throw the gloves inside, and carry them like a bucket running. Just as well, then that he didn’t have to do much running, as he edged Angelo Mathews when he was just 25.Dance of the debutants
What’s with the debutants and this Galle Test? Even Kumar Sangakkara, who made his debut at the same venue, suggested before the match it was a great place play your first Test. After Mohammad Aamer yesterday, Mathews too did a first-over trick, taking out Younis with the first ball he bowled.Conspiring against Herath?
Apart from the many debutants, Rangana Herath was making a comeback to international cricket, having been flown in hours before the match, from England. And then they made him field for 47 overs before having a bowl. Going by the maxim ‘it is never too late to start’, Herath produced a bat-pad from Mohammad Yousuf, but Daryl Harper missed it. Such is the lot of an ageing left-arm spinner.Forewarned and forearmed
The groundsmen in Sri Lanka are one of the more proactive lots. As soon as the sea turns grey, they get hold of the covers, ready to charge onto the field. On the first day of the match, they created a false scare by covering the whole ground up during the tea break. Only to take the covers off after the break. They went for it again today before it really rained. Thanks to their effort no damage was done to the ground and the match could resume as soon as the cloud passed over.Wicketkeeper’s curse
After Kamran Akmal’s fumbles yesterday, Tillakaratne Dilshan, keeping wicket so that Sri Lanka could accommodate Angelo Mathews, had a mixed bag as well. Some of his takes were outstanding. They appeared so for two reasons: because he was a split-second late in moving, he would be far from the ball, but his hand-eye coordination meant he made athletic dives. But apart from a few other unclean collections, he did okay and didn’t drop any edges.

Crafty Yasir returns to Sri Lanka hoping to rediscover the glory days

After a turbulent 12 months, can he produce the magic that once made him so instrumental in Pakistan’s Test domination?

Danyal Rasool15-Jul-2022There was a time when it felt like Pakistan Test cricket subsisted largely on series against Sri Lanka.Between 2009 and 2015, there were no fewer than seven Test series between the two sides, with Pakistan visiting Sri Lanka four times in six years to play 11 Tests. Only one player from each side is still part of the squad that began that cycle in 2009. For Sri Lanka, it’s the relatively ever-present Angelo Mathews, and for Pakistan, whatever the opposite of that is in Fawad Alam. While Fawad’s redemptive narrative arc has already been exhausted, it is another Pakistan player who might be looking to script his own over the next fortnight. He played just the final of those quickfire series in Sri Lanka, but the impact he would make provided Pakistan with a template for short-term Test domination.Yasir Shah had only made his Test debut following Saeed Ajmal’s bowling-action issues, and this excitable, gregarious legspinner was only seven months into his international career. Sure, the run-up needed sorting, an aspect none other than Shane Warne helped him fine-tune, and he needed to bowl slower to allow natural drift and spin to have its maximum impact, but there was something here to work with. Even so, having him shoulder the responsibility of matching Sri Lanka on their own turf in a spin-bowling shoot-out seemed excessive. For all of Ajmal’s brilliance, there was a reason Pakistan had ended up on the wrong side of the previous three Test series results in the island nation.Related

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What Yasir achieved was nothing short of historic. With seven, six and five-wicket innings hauls in each Test respectively, he would top the wickets charts with 24. Dhammika Prasad was a distant second with 14, and no other spinner managed double digits. Of the 52 Sri Lankan wickets to fall, nearly half came off Yasir’s bowling. Pakistan would go on to seal a first series win in Sri Lanka since 2006, and in the sub-continent at least, Misbah-ul-Haq’s Pakistan had the player to build the Test side around.It wasn’t just Asia either. In London the following year, Yasir would take apart England with impressive hauls at Lord’s and The Oval, deploying the one that went straight on with just as much venom as the one that spun prodigiously. Pakistan rose to the top of the Test rankings off the back of that; a year later it would be West Indies in their own backyard who bore the brunt of this cricketer at the top of his game, cleaning up Shannon Gabriel with his last ball of the series to give Pakistan their only Test series win in the Caribbean. How indeed did he do that?Part of the answer lies in faith and timing. Yasir was at his best when Pakistan had worked out how to go about making the UAE, their adopted home, a fortress, and his game style was perfect for it. In Misbah as captain, he was blessed with a leader who could perhaps watch his beard grow in real-time without losing patience. As a man who only became captain when he was on the verge of quitting the game at 36, he was an ardent believer in good things coming to those who waited. And so Yasir, a rhythm bowler par excellence, operated from one end to devastating effect, handing out the UAE drubbings like they were going out of style. He became the quickest man to 200 Test wickets in another epic series against New Zealand, when, for a surreal week or so, a Dunedin-born Australian legspinner who played in the years between the two World Wars called Clarrie Grimmett became something of a household name in Pakistan.All this, remember, had happened over the span of barely four years, and just as quickly as it occurred, the unravelling began. Misbah, Yasir’s strongest backer, had stepped away from the game, and Pakistan now had a no-nonsense fitness enthusiast in Mickey Arthur as coach. Yasir was the first man he cited as an example of laxity in this department in the Pakistan side. Besides, consecutive series in South Africa and Australia followed. He was especially ordinary, and missed games in both series. In fact, in the Southern Hemisphere, Yasir’s 20 wickets have come at 87 apiece at an economy rate of 4.37.Yasir Shah’s numbers haven’t been particularly impressive since Pakistan moved back home from the UAE•Associated PressMost of all, however – and this must be a particularly bittersweet one to acknowledge – Pakistan finally moved back home from the UAE, both his kingdom and his comfort blanket. In Pakistan, pace bowlers are at the top of the food chain, with wickets tailored to their desires. Azhar Ali, then Pakistan’s captain, euphemistically referred to his “changing role” in the side, but few were in any doubt as to what that meant.The fast bowlers did indeed take over, and Yasir dropped off. His average in Pakistan was 36.50; in the UAE, he had taken wickets at 24.56 apiece. The fitness issues began to pile up, as well as a criminal probe in Pakistan that at the time saw him become a person of interest for the police. The charges against Yasir were later dropped, though.Pakistan thought they had spin talent coming through the Quaid-e-Azam trophy, with Sajid Khan and Nauman Ali topping the domestic bowling charts last year, and gently, Yasir was phased out. But despite an encouraging spin-dominated series win in Bangladesh, Pakistan were reminded of what they missed in an insipid, uninspiring series for its spinners against Australia. Seven years after that Sri Lanka series, the challenge ahead of Pakistan loomed large, and in punting for Yasir, the visitors have gone to the well once more, praying it hasn’t completely run dry.Seven years on, age isn’t on his side, and neither, tragically, is Warne, one of Yasir’s most generous supporters. Sri Lanka have younger, hungrier spinners, who are also in better form, having cleaned up Australia last week. But this is, therapeutically, what Yasir perhaps needs most. It was the place where he proved his doubters wrong, his answer so resoundingly emphatic they wouldn’t utter a peep for years to come. Now, they swarm once more in Sri Lanka, a country that has, over the past few weeks, shown limitless generosity in their love of this game. It might have one last gift for Yasir in store.

Will Jacks hits the right notes to highlight Jason Roy's funk

Roy’s latest failure heightens scrutiny with T20 World Cup selection looming

Vithushan Ehantharajah07-Aug-2022Jason Roy wasn’t laughing this time. The humour he found in edging his first ball of this season’s Hundred to short third on Thursday, was absent after he timed a flick straight to short fine leg.A golden duck against London Spirit was followed by 10 against Welsh Fire. A limited-overs home summer of just 197 runs across 11 ODI and T20I innings was supposedly going to be fixed by a clean run of games for Oval Invincibles. Two games in, the only difference in the Hundred seems to be Roy’s travails are being brought to a wider audience.The fury across his face, the bat toss in the air when he probably wanted to hammer-throw it into the River Taff, was understandable, and not just because this was another failure to add to the list. He’d looked pretty good – as pretty good as you can look scoring a run-a-ball 10. A boundary through midwicket, timed rather than thrashed, suggested a reclamation of touch. As is the way when you’re down on your luck, the best connection he made was when he worked George Scrimshaw around the corner to David Payne, who didn’t have to move an inch.Related

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The good news for Roy was his team won. Convincingly, in fact: by 39 runs after Invincibles closed out an attempted chase of a 159 target that Fire were never really going to get. The bad news – rather, the more damning news – was the architect of Invincibles’ 158 for 5 was his opening partner and Surrey team-mate, Will Jacks.With 81 off 45 – the joint-second highest score in the men’s Hundred to date – Jacks batted from ball one to 99, only missing out on lasting the course with an unselfish attempt to find the fence. Invincibles skipper Sam Billings labelled it a “coming-of-age” performance from a player who has long been touted for international honours. What was unavoidable was the contrast between two players doing the same role but with very different results.Neither side really knew what to make of the pitch, which explained why Josh Cobb opted to bowl first upon winning the toss. “We’re going to look to use that first up and know what we’ve got to get second half,” Welsh Fire’s captain had explained before a ball had been bowled. After the 25-ball powerplay, with just 30 runs scored by Oval Invincibles for the loss of two wickets, it looked a smart play given the tackiness of the surface.Unfortunately, they didn’t account for Jacks – or rather, the maturity displayed by the 23-year-old. The nuggets that’ll do the rounds on social media were more or less contained within the final 20 balls of that first innings: 63 scored, 39 of them from the 12 Jacks faced, with three of his four sixes among them. But the longer-term benefits to the experience of this match-winning knock was contained in his opening 28 deliveries. Jacks had just 33 by then, Invincibles 81 for 3 from 70.1:32

Can Roy bounce back in the Hundred?

Now comfortable with lining up balls stopping in the pitch when pace was taken off, the first delivery of the next set delivered by Scrimshaw was waited on then slapped over wide long-on. “You’ve got to be patient,” Jacks explained at the innings break. “Takes your ones – it’s something in the past I probably wouldn’t have done, so I’m happy today that I’ve taken it deep.”He went further after Invincibles confirmed their first win of the campaign: “We were aiming for 140, but we figured out it wasn’t the easiest wicket to get under the ball. When it got dug in, it was skidding through a little bit low.”The problem for Roy is just how sought-after the opening spots are in any team. It is, after all, the best place to bat in white-ball cricket given the opportunity to exploit the powerplay, and occupying that prime real estate puts a target on your back. Especially when you’ve not been paying the rent. And the trouble is exacerbated by the fact there are plenty influenced by Roy, like Jacks, steadily banking the kind of numbers that suggest he could be bought out down the line, instead of selling up on his terms.If there is one consolation it is that Roy has not tried to take the easy route. His appreciation of the attacking intent required is in keeping with one conditioned by a position that offers no shade to slink into for a breather. The nature of opening is to be out there, exposed, embracing risk. And it is an exposure you have to want, which is perhaps why the role requires the most ego. Because even when things aren’t going well, you’ve still got to walk out exuding that same cavalier spirit. The moment you go into your shell is the moment you’ve lost it.For the longest time, Roy was one of the best around at doing both: either scoring runs (and quickly) or looking like the opposition got off lightly after wearing a few blows. He was, especially during 2018 and 2019, the manifestation of the role’s machismo: big chest, big forearms, big scores.Will Jacks cuts through backward point•Getty ImagesThat being said, there is more consideration to how Roy is trying to emerge from this funk. Having worked through the stages of bad form in his own mind – primarily anger and acceptance – he has been honing in on specific problem areas with Invincibles batting coach Vikram Solanki. While those around Roy come together to defend him with talk of how it is “a matter of time” until the floodgates open, the man himself is putting the work in to make that so.”He’s the kind of player you really do just stick with. Because when it does click – wow,” Billings effused. “Him and Jacks at the top of the order, that’s as good an opening partnership, in my opinion, in the tournament.”Billings is probably onto something there, even if he also speaks as a friend, and there is an unshakeable feeling, in part because of his body of work, that Roy will come good and prove his captain right. There are better decks to come, starting with a return to The Kia Oval on Thursday against Northern Superchargers. And it was only about eight weeks ago Roy struck ODI century No. 10 against the Netherlands in Amsterdam.Nevertheless, here in Cardiff, there was a creeping sense of a shift worth registering – perhaps not in the immediacy given Roy is only 32, but certainly down the line. To watch Invincibles’ openers was to see two players on opposite sides of professional sport’s Ferris wheel: one looking forward with the highest height to come, the other fighting against the idea that the peak might be behind him.

USMNT striker Jordan Pefok suffers racial abuse on social media following Borussia Monchengladbach loss to Saarbrucken

Bundesliga side Gladbach announced that USMNT striker Jordan Pefok suffered online racial abuse after their loss to Saarbrucken Wednesday.

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  • Gladbach suffer shock cup loss to third-tier side
  • Pefok racially abused after game
  • German club condemn behaviour & stand by USMNT forward
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    WHAT HAPPENED?

    Third-tier side Saarbrucken knocked Gladbach and Pefok out of the DFB Pokal with a stoppage-time winner to advance to the semifinals of the tournament. After the thrilling match, however, Pefok was racially abused on social media platform Instagram.

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  • WHAT GLADBACH SAID

    In a statement posted on social media, the Bundesliga side stated that they "stand against all forms of racism" in support of the forward.

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    THE BIGGER PICTURE

    On his Instagram story, Pefok has posted over 15 times sharing messages of support he has received from players, fans and media personalities across the world's game. Ex-Union Berlin teammate Sheraldo Becker posted a message of support his way, as did Gladbach teammate Julian Weigl.

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  • WHAT NEXT FOR PEFOK AND GLADBACH

    Gladbach take on FC Heidenheim this weekend in Bundesliga action. Pefok and co. will look to end the week on a high note before the international break. The 27-year-old, however, will not feature with the USA after missing out on their 23-man Nations League roster.

Naseem Shah, the boy who will rule the world

Take a peek into the life of one of Pakistan’s most exciting fast bowlers

Shashank Kishore03-Sep-2022There is a boisterous energy Naseem Shah brings to everything he does on the cricket field. And he makes things happen. If his fiery lifters to Virat Kohli elicited a raised brow and a nod from the batter, his late seam movement back into KL Rahul to clang into his stumps triggered an Imran Tahir-like sprint of celebration. Even his handshake comes off with a sideways high-five vibe. It’s all or nothing.When Naseem is running in, everyone must stop what they are doing and watch. At training, and at press boxes. Even in the dining room, people put down their spoons and forks and watch him. On Sunday, he bowled Rahul first ball, and then welcomed Kohli with a sharp bouncer and a smile. Everyone’s eyes were on him. Even the private security guards whose job it is to survey the crowed for signs of trouble couldn’t help but steal a glance.Yet, for all that aggression, there’s a boyish charm to Naseem, in the way he just seems to enjoy everything about the game. Bowling is what he loves, though. Even at the end of a long two-hour session, if he still has the ball in hand, you know batters are going to be challenged, if not cop blows. It doesn’t even matter that they are all his team-mates.Related

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Naseem plays with a smile; angry barbs aren’t his way. If you know his story, just 19 years’ worth, you would know why playing cricket means so much to him. He has seen poverty knock on his door. He has had to deal with the loss of a parent – his mother. He’s experienced challenges every step of the way. It has all been in search of a dream. A dream that may have once seemed as far from becoming a reality as his hometown in the Lower Dir in Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa is to Karachi or Islamabad. But not anymore.Naseem has overcome setbacks on the field too. Some serious, like multiple stress fractures on his back that has had him spend more time on hospital beds, looking at PET scans and reports, than the nets or at the ground. And others not quite so frightening, but worrying all the same, like his shoulder troubles earlier this year.In between, he has roughed up batting line-ups with swing, seam and raw pace. He is the youngest bowler ever to pick up a Test hat-trick. He has played in England, West Indies, Australia, New Zealand, Sri Lanka, and is now in the UAE for the Asia Cup. In a month’s time, he is likely to be on the flight to Australia, the country of his Test debut, for his maiden [T20] World Cup.Not bad, you’d think, for someone who didn’t have a pair of spikes till four years ago. He didn’t know what a leather ball was or what seam position meant. All he knew was bowling fast. No compromises.A 16-year old Naseem Shah takes off after picking up a Test hat-trick against Bangladesh in February 2020•Associated PressMudassar Nazar, the former Pakistan allrounder, remembers watching Naseem in his debut season, in 2018, and being spellbound. Mudassar was director of academies at the PCB and was in charge of honing the skills of young cricketers who had been handpicked to be part of the National Cricket Academy in Lahore.”In his maiden first-class season, I remember a game where Naseem was bowling to a tailender, a No. 11, I presume,” Mudassar recalled in a chat with ESPNcricinfo. “You could see the guy was scared of Naseem. He kept exposing all three stumps, it was basically an open invitation for Naseem to clean him up. But he kept bowling short, bowling bouncers at him. He was so aggressive that he wanted to knock him out. We had to sit him down and tell him this is not how you bowl; the prime objective is to get people out.”The NCA in Lahore shares a wall with the Abdul Qadir Academy, where Naseem began his formal training at 15. He had just moved into his uncle’s house in the city, from where he would cycle long distances to reach the academy. On his first day there, he was handed an old ball. Two overs later, Naseem made a beeline for the new ball, and he wasn’t to be denied. Clearly, he was special. Saud Khan, a man with an eye for talent and one of the coaches at the academy, was Naseem’s first instructor, and Sulaman Qadir, one of Abdul Qadir’s sons, his mentor.For six months, Naseem’s routine was something like this: cycle to training, bowl for four hours, cycle home, grab some food, then go back and do it all over again in the evening. It wasn’t for everyone. But for Naseem, it was all he wanted to do. Once word about him spread, he was immediately drafted into one of several age-group camps at the PCB Academy.This period coincided with Mudassar’s return to Pakistan from Dubai, where he had been in charge as head of cricket development at the ICC Academy. Mudassar, a veteran of 76 Tests and 122 ODIs, had been at the forefront of the academy’s development since its launch in 2009, but couldn’t refuse an offer when then PCB chairman Shaharyar Khan came calling.Naseem Shah got his first Pakistan cap from Waqar Younis in November 2019•Getty ImagesMudassar’s first task was to identify a pool of players at the Under-16 level to take part in PCB’s exchange programme with Cricket Australia in early 2017. Sure enough, Naseem figured in that list. It was Mudassar’s first proper sighting of the fast bowler, long before he played that first-class game where he roughed up tailenders with bouncers.”My first impression was the guy can bowl sharp, and that he was quick, but can get quicker,” Mudassar said. He continued after a long pause: “But he had a terrible bowling action that was putting a lot of strain on his back. Much of it came about because of non-stop cricket. He’d bowl at the NCA, then hop over to the academy next door and bowl there. And this took a toll on him without him realising it.”Towards the end of 2017, Naseem had his first stress fracture and it needed six-seven months of rehab. “He dealt with the news of his injury better than me, or better than many other kids would,” Mudassar said. “But that desperation to play was there. It was a stressful time, but he was so composed. Every morning, he’d come and say, ‘sir, ‘ [I want to play]. Our challenge as coaches was to control hm and tell him he needed to look after himself.”Mudassar has undertaken several courses about biomechanics and injury management over the years. His ability to explain a complex issue in layperson’s terms helps put things into perspective.”Naseem’s action is side-on, and his front arm kept falling away from his body instead of going across his body,” Mudassar said. “That would take the head position with it, and all his energy, instead of going straight down the pitch, would be going towards gully. This put immense stress on his back.”He would be so fond of bowling that you couldn’t keep him still. You have to do a certain number of repetitions to get a message from your brain to form your muscle memory. But because young players are so fond of playing, it’s easy to go back to old habits. We had to control Naseem for six months. And inch by inch, we worked on bringing his front arm across. Only once we were fully satisfied, he was able to do that, we let him play.”Mudassar Nazar played 76 Tests and 122 ODIs for Pakistan•Getty ImagesWithin two months of getting fit, Naseem was playing for Zarai Taraqiati Bank Limited in a Quaid-e-Azam Trophy game against Lahore Blues. Less than a year later, he was in Australia, making his Test debut. He was that good. He didn’t need to play Under-19 or ‘A’ team cricket. It was straight into the senior team.”The boy simply wanted to knock batters out with his aggression and pace, the main thing was to get him to understand how to bowl to every batter, how to bowl on different kinds of pitches and how to get people out,” Mudassar said. “He slowly started to play more matches. Which is why he was also in the scheme of things for the Under-19 World Cup in 2020. But you knew he was way ahead of his mates at that level.”Naseem made his Test debut in Brisbane, a week after he had received the news of his mother’s death. The fastest flight home was going to take 48 hours. He chose to stay on.Since his debut, Naseem has become a regular member of the Pakistan line-up, and although he only made his T20I debut a couple of days ago, he looks a shoo-in for the T20 World Cup squad. Especially now that it is clear he was only suffering from cramps when he went down, screaming in pain and clutching his leg, in the India game earlier this week.But, for all his gifts – his pace, his swing, his aggression – there are still things Naseem can get better at. “I don’t see him using the crease yet,” Mudassar said. “But as he bowls more, he’ll pick up the finer aspects. I’m keeping my fingers crossed that he stays fit. This boy, like his second name, Shah – which means emperor in Urdu – will rule the world.”

Temperatures rise as Asia's finest gear up for their biggest pre-World Cup test

The heat of the UAE has mirrored the intensity of the teams, who all have one eye on Australia in October-November

Shashank Kishore26-Aug-2022″If anyone asks how you are, the coach suggested we say, ‘well done’, because the weather here is like that.”Speaking ahead of the start of the Asia Cup, Bhanuka Rajapaksa made an entire room laugh by likening the experience of Dubai’s oppressive heat to that of meat on a grill. Daytime temperatures have touched 46 degrees Celsius, leaving teams needing to find a balance between going full-tilt and conserving energy.India have trained in the late evening, Sri Lanka have preferred the afternoon heat to acclimatise better, and Bangladesh have gone on into the middle of the night, while Pakistan and Afghanistan have mixed and matched. Hong Kong have already played a week’s cricket in the qualifiers in similar conditions across the border in Oman.Related

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In the end, nothing can really prepare you for the gust of hot air hitting your face while running in against the wind, as bowlers have found out frequently at training in the open setting of the ICC Academy grounds.India have given their fast bowlers shorter and sharper stints, a luxury Sri Lanka haven’t had since none of their frontline fast bowlers have played T20Is; they have had little choice but to go all-out. Pakistan have held back, seemingly mindful of the injuries that have hit their camp, choosing to instead use local net bowlers to test their batters.The local liaison team have been at their busiest, arranging for kilograms of ice to be made available, sometimes at short notice, to help players recover post-training. The change rooms offer the cushiest seats and the best air conditioning, but it’s the ice bath that the players have tended to make a beeline for.The teams have also been able to mingle among themselves, exchanging banter and laughs – a constant feature over the past three days. Babar Azam and Virat Kohli have exchanged pleasantries, KL Rahul and Shaheen Afridi have enquired about each other’s injuries, and Rajapaksa has caught up with his Punjab Kings team-mate Arshdeep Singh.Bangladesh and Afghanistan are slotted alongside Sri Lanka in the Asia Cup’s Group of Death•AFP/Getty ImagesBut the fun and games have all been restricted to the sidelines. In the middle, the intensity has been cranked up several notches. This is the last chance for some of these teams to test their big-match temperament under pressure before the World Cup in Australia in October-November.India are missing their pace spearhead Jasprit Bumrah, who is recovering from injury. This gives Arshdeep Singh and Avesh Khan an opportunity to vie for spots in the World Cup party. Pakistan will have to make do without Afridi, while Sri Lanka will want each of their uncapped fast bowlers to gain some exposure.Bangladesh’s challenge under a new coach and a returning Shakib Al Hasan, who takes over the captaincy, will be to return to winning ways in their least favourite format – they’ve lost 23 of their 35 T20Is since the start of 2021, and they’re coming off a series loss in Zimbabwe.While India and Pakistan may seemingly have it easy in Group A, with Hong Kong as the third team, they will be wary of taking them lightly. At the previous edition in 2018, Hong Kong came genuinely close to beating India. In Group B, one slip-up could be the difference between having potentially four more games to play and an early flight home for Sri Lanka, Bangladesh and Afghanistan.In many ways, the Asia Cup is a microcosm of the elite cricket world. The tournament changes its identity frequently, to suit the needs of the participating teams. It does much for the “smaller” nations of the Asian bloc – in terms of finances – without actually giving them adequate exposure.For example: between the previous edition in 2018 and this one, in 2022, Hong Kong have played a grand sum of zero matches against the Asian Full Members. Hong Kong, mind you, are among the ‘elite’ Associates. Oman, Kuwait, Singapore and even Nepal, who’ve had to grapple with multiple issues including an an ICC suspension, have it much worse. But this, perhaps, is a debate for another day.Will he quieten the debate around his form, or will he raise its volume?•Getty ImagesThe first four days on tour for all the teams have set the scene nicely. Sri Lanka open against Afghanistan on Saturday, and the hubbub will increase noticeably when India and Pakistan square off on Sunday. It could be the prelude to potentially two more meetings. At least the broadcasters and fans will hope so.The A-listers in Kohli and Babar have set tongues wagging without even facing a ball. They’re at opposite ends of the form spectrum, but anything they do – and don’t do – is amplified.For all the criticism over the lack of opportunities it provides the smaller teams, the Asia Cup has established itself as a tournament that gives viewers plenty. Games come thick and fast – perhaps not so ideal in searing August heat in the UAE – and high-octane content is guaranteed.Kohli could put an end to talk of bad form, or raise the volume of the debates. Shakib could make a statement on the field without worrying about who he shouldn’t be endorsing. Rashid Khan and Mujeeb Ur Rahman could boot Sri Lanka out of their own party – technically they’re still hosts, remember.The fringe players are all potentially one big performance away from putting themselves on the radar for World Cup selection. Imagine if Mohammad Hasnain, Afridi’s replacement, dismisses Rohit Sharma. Or if Arshdeep nails five yorkers in the final over to defend 10 runs. Or Rahmanullah Gurbaz brings his T10 magic to the 20-overs format.The cricket promises to be high-quality. Heat or no heat, the interest surrounding the competition has picked up significantly. Without bio-bubbles restricting their movements, the teams have mingled freely with teeming fans who’ve gathered outside their training venues. All of it feels so familiar, yet so different. The next two weeks could just be a teaser for the blockbuster that is to come two months down the line.

Jayawardene to captain MCC for T20s against Nepal and Netherlands

Three Scotland players – Dylan Budge, Alasdair Evans and Mark Watt – have also been included in the MCC squad for the triple-header at Lord’s on July 29

ESPNcricinfo staff20-Jun-2018Former Sri Lanka captain Mahela Jayawardene will lead the Marylebone Cricket Club (MCC), who will take on Nepal and Netherlands in a triangular T20 triple-header at Lord’s on July 29.Three Scotland players – batsman Dylan Budge, right-arm quick Alasdair Evans and left-arm spinner Mark Watt – who were all part of the country’s historic ODI win against England at Edinburgh on June 10 – and represented the MCC in two T20 matches against the Aboriginal XI earlier that week, have also been named in the MCC squad.Jayawardene, who appears twice on the Honours Board in the visitors’ dressing room at Lord’s for his centuries against England in 2002 and 2006, became an Honorary Life Member of the MCC in 2015. In 2017, he was signed by Lancashire as a non-overseas recruit for the T20 Blast, where he previously played for Sussex and Somerset.The triangular T20 tournament will mark Netherlands’ second visit to the venue in six years; the side last played there in the ECB’s 40-over competition, in 2012. The country’s most famous outing at Lord’s, however, came in the opening match of the 2009 World Twenty20, when they stunned hosts England by snaring a four-wicket victory.For Nepal, this will be a much-awaited return to Lord’s after their debut at the ground, in 2016, when they had defeated the MCC by 41 runs in a 50-over contest arranged to mark the 200-year relationship between Britain and Nepal.The remainder of the MCC squad will be announced in the coming weeks.

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