All posts by h716a5.icu

Seventh ball the charm for Anderson

ESPNcricinfo presents the plays of the day from the third ODI

Andrew McGlashan at Old Trafford28-May-2014Extra ball of the dayThe wide call against James Anderson off what would have been the final ball of his second over was borderline, but it proved perfect for England. With the seventh delivery, Anderson nipped one back off the seam to take Tillakaratne Dilshan’s inside edge through to Jos Buttler. The man who had held Sri Lanka together in Durham was out early.Good news of the dayForecasts are to be taken with a pinch of salt, but the one for Manchester on Wednesday looked bad enough to presume chances of play would be slim. It rained heavily overnight and into the morning and the covers were still on shortly before the 1.30pm scheduled toss time. But a few moments later it was confirmed play would begin only 20 minutes late – a credit to the Old Trafford drainage and groundstaff. It still required a multiple layers, a thermos and, for the players, some hand-warmers but at least there was a game to watch.Field setting of the day”Be more aggressive,” has been the call to Alastair Cook from various quarters. Well, here he had an opportunity to show he does have it in him to seize the moment. Sri Lanka were three down and Dinesh Chandimal was walking to the crease. Immediately, Cook signalled for a helmet for a short leg and by the time Chandimal took guard there were also three slips poised. With the ball zipping around and Sri Lanka in trouble it was not the most taxing decision for Cook, but it was still encouraging to see.Frame-it moment of the dayEngland’s fielding has been inconsistent to say the least of late. Catches have gone down and run outs missed. When Anderson missed the chance to run out Mahela Jayawardene it revived the notion that England do not hit the stumps very often, although it is one of cricket’s weaknesses that readily available statistics on such incidents are not easily available. Anyhow, later in the innings Ravi Bopara showed that it can be done when he swooped from mid-on and hit the one-and-a-half stumps he had to aim at to find Ashan Priyanjan comfortably short.

The diggers' doctor

One of few non-cricketers to share a bond with Sir Don Bradman was a South Australian doctor, Donald Beard

Ashley Mallett12-Jul-2014At the launch of at Adelaide Oval, Bradman mentioned there were only two people in his lifetime of cricket that he knew who had taken more wickets than had made runs.One of them was an Englishman, the other was Don Beard. Apart from Bradman, who led the 1948 Australian team to England, there were a number of on the marquee that evening, including the left arm fast-medium bowler Ernie Toshack and leg-spinner Doug Ring.Sir Donald had agreed to a launch of on the condition that the lion’s share of proceeds for the evening went to the Crippled Children’s Association, a charity for which both Sir Donald and Lady Bradman were great supporters. Don Beard will never forget what happened that night.”Early on at the dinner Ernie Toshack rushed up to me and said, ‘come quick Doc, Doug’s gone!'””I ran up to the table and sure enough there’s Doug lying on the ground. He had no pulse. I felt his heart, he had no heart beat. He was unconscious, not breathing. So he’d obviously had a cardiac arrest (heart attack). I started to give him mouth-to-mouth resuscitation and as I was pumping his heart I said, ‘quick, I want someone to come here and pump his chest while I’m breathing him.'”A newspaper reporter volunteered (it happened to be the celebrated columnist Des Colquhoun) and I said, ‘I want you to give him four to one.’ (Four pumps of the chest to one breathing). We kept going. After about 10 or 15 minutes as I was breathing into him I felt the slight resistance. Up until that point there was no resistance at all.”And I called out, ‘we’ve got him, we’ve got him!’ And at that moment Doug brought up the contents of his dinner, because I’d been filling his chest with air, but a lot of it was also going down into the stomach. He vomited straight into my face… and then all down my dinner suit.””Fortunately it was early in the dinner and he’d only had a white wine, he hadn’t had any red. He came good; I found a pulse.”I called out to Johnny Selth (the SACA caterer), ‘get an ambulance, we’ve got to get Doug to hospital.’ Now the table was over towards the edge of the marquee. They brought the ambulance to the back of the marquee. We lifted the flap, and smuggled Doug out, under the flap of the marquee and into the ambulance and off to hospital.”Geoff Jones, senior journalist with knew a front-page story when he saw one. So there on the front page of on Tuesday, October 6, 1987 appeared Jones’ story under the banner: Winning Team Helps Doug Beat the odds – Geoff Jones On The Spot:

Former Australian Test cricketer Doug Ring had odds of 250-1 stacked against his life at Adelaide Oval last night. And he beat them, thanks to a winning, if not unusual team. Mr Ring, 68, had collapsed with cardiac arrest during the gala banquet to launch . He made a good recovery overnight and today was out of intensive care and resting comfortably in a ward at Royal Adelaide Hospital. But it was a very different story last night when he started to feel ill in the brief interval between the speeches by Australian Rugby Union coach Alan Jones and the Prime Minister, Mr Hawke. And that’s when the winning team stepped in. The line-up read: Adelaide surgeon, deputy chairman of the Road Safety Advisory Council and former Sturt fast bowler, Dr Donald Beard; columnist Des Colquhoun; Adelaide stockbroker Bill Whiting; sports commentator Ken Cunningham and Adelaide Oval caterer John Selth. Dr Beard agreed to speak to me about the incident only on the condition that I highlight the need to learn mouth-to-mouth resuscitation.”Doug had lapsed into semi-consciousness and then stopped breathing altogether. I think he stopped breathing for about two minutes. I was conscious of someone standing behind me and I just shouted, ‘whoever you are start pumping his chest.’ After it was all over I realised it was Des Colquhoun. Well done, Des. (MC) Ken (Cunningham) did a wonderful job calming everyone down and continuing on with the show. And while all this was going on John Selth had quickly got an ambulance and alerted the hospital.”Were you the only doctor present?”I think so.”Would you agree that only one person in 250 knows how to administer mouth-to-mouth?”That would be about right. It is simple and easy to learn and there are courses readily available. Two that come to mind are conducted at the Modbury Hospital by Dr Robert Edwards and by St John Ambulance.”Two things stand out about last night. Bill Whiting’s quick recognition of the extent of Doug’s illness and his immediate reaction and the fact that there was someone there who knew how to give mouth-to-mouth.”First aid and mouth-to-mouth should be a prerequisite to gaining a driver’s licence.”The Road Safety Advisory Council has already recommended this to the State Government and at our last meeting we discussed it again and decided to make a further recommendation. It would save many lives.”I’m not finished with coincidences yet.While this drama was being played out at Adelaide Oval last night, at nearby Channel Seven, St John Ambulance were releasing a feature film, “You’ve Probably Saved His Life”, featuring Judy Morris and Ivar Kants, which concentrates entirely on mouth-to-mouth. (Geoff Jones, The News, October 6, 1987 Page 1)

“Thommo said, ‘If Bradman’s batting, I’m bowling.’ They went from the nets together, arm in arm. Thommo was proud of the fact that he was the last man to bowl against Bradman”Don Beard remembers events from the rest day of a Test match at Adelaide Oval

Dr Beard was delighted over the team working brilliantly to help save Doug Ring’s life. Ring lived another 14 years. Cricket and caring for the injured and the sick was intricately weaved into the pattern of an amazing tapestry that details his life journey. While the doctor fought to save Doug Ring’s life, Sir Donald Bradman was sitting at a table at the other side of the marquee, and, like most people at the launch, was enjoying the speeches, oblivious to the real-life drama being played out little more than the lengths of a cricket pitch under the same roof of the marquee.Once when playing for Sturt at Hawthorn Oval, Don [Beard] was padded up ready to go into bat as the number eleven, “the hope of the side”, when a cry rang out from the bowling club next door. A man had collapsed on the bowling green. Don, still wearing his batting pads, raced to the man’s aid. He cleared the little fence next to the pavilion and set about reviving the man, who, like Ring, had suffered a cardiac arrest.”I think it was one of the Walshe brothers, a licensee of the Oriental Hotel. I got to work on him, but I soon realised as soon as I stopped breathing into him, he stopped, so I hadn’t got him going 100 per cent, so I went in the hospital with him in the ambulance. I delivered him to the RAH alive, but unfortunately a week later he had another cardiac arrest and that time they couldn’t save him. I raced back to Hawthorn Oval and they were just coming off the field and I called out, ‘I’m back, I’m back!”Too late,’ they said. ‘That was the ninth wicket that fell, and the game is finished and you’ve lost’ “Don [Beard] said Bradman would get excited about such things as a chance to win the B grade golf championship at Kooyonga.”One Sunday morning I called on him and asked about his golf. He replied, ‘I looked at the Sunday Mail to see the results because I won the championship, but I forgot to put in my card, so I lost.’ Such was the man who in England had his name in foot-high capitals on the newspaper hoardings, but here he was searching for his name among the results of a B grade golf championship printed in tiny figures in the Sunday newspaper.He would talk about his accomplishments in squash. In 1938 Bradman won the SA squash championship by beating Don Talbot, a Davis Cup tennis champion. World champion billiards player Walter Lindrum enjoyed many a visit to the Bradman home in Holden Street, Kensington Park, to partake of a glass of sherry with him and then the two would play a keen game of billiards.”I once had a meal in London with Joe Davis, the world-famous snooker player,” Dr Beard said, “and Davis confessed that he only took up snooker ‘because I could never beat Lindrum at billiards.'”As Don [Beard] got to know Bradman better, they went to one another’s homes for dinner. At other times they met up for a small and very private gathering of mutual friends.There was, of course, the famous occasion when Bradman agreed to have a hit in the Beard family backyard pitch, facing the Doc’s two sons, Matthew and Alastair, and Jeff Thomson, Australia’s fearsome opening bowler, arguably the fastest bowler to draw breath, on the rest day of a Test match against India at the Adelaide Oval.”Thommo said, ‘If Bradman’s batting, I’m bowling.’ They went from the nets together, arm in arm. Thommo was proud of the fact that he was the last man to bowl against Bradman. Indian spinner Bishen Bedi was late and missed it all.”Another time Don and Margaret prepared for a guest list of twenty people.”I went next door to borrow some chairs,” he recalled, “And my next-door neighbour said, ‘You can have these chairs Don, but don’t let Dennis Lillee sit in one.'”I think Mrs Brumitt didn’t like Dennis, or she didn’t like the fact that he was so fast and often hit the opposition batsmen.”That particular party went down a treat, but for the peculiar behaviour of one of the guests, the eccentric Alan Knott, England’s brilliant wicket-keeper.”Knott picked on every course on the menu. ‘What’s in this?’ he asked Margaret, who had carefully prepared the meal. ‘What is this? Did you cook it properly?'”It was extraordinary stuff and the gathering was made even more uncomfortable when Knott, in between courses, got down on the polished floor in the dining room, and proceeded to exercise – push-ups, sit-ups you name it. Eventually Knott had so embarrassed our English guests they left taking Knott with them.”Dennis Lillee was a great guest, so too Len Pascoe. Next day after Len dined with us, Margaret took delivery of a lovely bunch of flowers from the big fast bowler. I think that was the only time she ever received flowers from a cricketer who shared a meal with us.”Bradman: the toast of many a get-together•AFPWhile Don says he was blessed by the wonderful dinners and chance to get to know a wide diversity of people, there were times when the odd guest over-stepped the mark. Once Frances Edmonds, author of , and wife of Phil Edmonds, the England left-arm spinner, took exception to Phil talking to one of the guests, the wife of a Supreme Court judge, both good friends of the Beard family.Mrs Edmonds apparently thought her husband was doing a line with the lady. Suddenly, out of the blue, from across the room, she threw her glass full of champagne at him. Phil ducked in nonchalant fashion, the missile missing his head by inches, then shattering against the wall, champagne spilling onto the carpet. He carried on as though his wife’s tantrums were an everyday event and she left the house immediately.Thankfully such incidents were all too rare. Once a visiting surgeon from Edinburgh said to Don [Beard], after their subject of conversation turned to the exploits of Don Bradman, “‘Oh, Don, if I could just get to see Bradman from a distance, at the end of the street, anywhere, I could go back to the UK and tell my friends that I saw him.'”Typically Don Beard went the extra mile for a friend. He arranged for his friend to come to dinner and he sat him right next to Sir Donald.As the years wore on Don and Sir Donald met frequently and the conversation sometimes turned to health issues. And Bradman made what people today might consider an amazing confession. At the age of 18, Don Bradman, the brilliant emerging champion batsman, had six teeth extracted.And he told his friend of his ordeal in part of a letter he wrote him dated February 28, 1986:

The dentist who started all my trouble was Mick Bardsley, brother of Warren. I went to him for treatment and he said I had Pyorrhoea and must lose one of my double back teeth.Always trusting my medical advisors I said ‘okay, take it out.’ But before I left the chair he had removed six, three on each side. I was then boarding with Frank Cush. I went home but Mrs Cush was out, so laid down with a bowl beside me and when Mrs Cush returned the bowl had so much blood in it that she became alarmed and rang the doctor. He came round and plugged my gums to arrest the bleeding.That was on a Friday evening and the doctor said he didn’t think I should play in the grade match due to start the next day. However, I was captain, didn’t want to let the side down, so I disregarded his advice. So I played. Won the toss and sent the opposition in because I felt weak and not up to batting.For the same reason I put myself at first slip. Much to the annoyance of the crowd, who knew I was the best cover fieldsman and wasn’t any good in the slips. You guessed it. I put down two catches in the first 10 minutes. But worse was to follow.We bowled them out by 4.30pm and we had to bat. I dropped myself down the batting order, hoping our early batsmen would stay in. But they didn’t. By ten to six we had lost eight wickets and I could not any longer refuse to bat. So I walked out to be roundly hooted by the spectators (the only time I can remember) who knew nothing of the drama being enacted behind the scenes.By stumps we were still eight wickets down and about 40 runs behind, with Frank Ward my not out partner. The following Saturday I had recovered. Frank and I put up a record 9th wicket partnership, my share 116 not out, then bowled Marrickville out again and won by an innings. I went from villain to a hero.

Interesting that the young Bradman’s dentist. Mick Bardsley was a right-handed batsman who played 11 first-class matches for NSW, hitting a highest score of 87 and averaging 31. His more famous brother, opening batsman Warren Bardsley played 41 Test matches, hitting a highest score of 193 not out and finishing with an average of 40.47. Frank Ward was a St George teammate of Bradman’s in Sydney and in the 1935-36 season Ward joined Bradman in the South Australian team.Ward, a leg-spinner, was controversially selected ahead of Clarrie Grimmett for Australia’s tour of England in 1938. Dr Beard spoke of how abdominal pain was often associated with the teeth: “In those days whenever people had abdominal pain or tonsillitis they often believed that the pain emanated from an infection of the teeth or the gums. People in the 1920s and beyond had what is called a ‘clearance’. They had all their teeth out to avoid infection, to prevent the onset of peritonitis. Some young people had a ‘clearance’ as a 21st birthday celebration. If that didn’t work the adenoids and then the appendix were removed.”Don Bradman was a man like no-one else. I think he was great. He wouldn’t have got where he did without the support and love of Lady Bradman. She was a wonderful woman.”It is said that Lady Bradman’s influence brought about their only son, John, to change his name back from “Bradsen” to Bradman. Initially there were those who thought it strange that if John Bradman was going to change his surname by deed poll, he would not make the new name so much like the surname he inherited.”It was a strange thing, to make the name Bradsen. Sort of half a change,” Don [Beard] said. “Sir Donald talked a good deal about it. He was disappointed that John changed the name, but he said he completely understood why he had felt the need to do so.”Don Bradman was very much a prisoner of fame and anyone with the name Bradman was going to be under the spotlight, purely by association.The above is excerpted from by Ashley Mallett, published by Wakefield Press, Adelaide

Triumph of England's cartoon super heroes

Joe Root and Jos Buttler, 23 and 24 respectively, are cartoon superheroes in a time when England are desperate to sketch out a more exciting template for their limited-overs game

Alan Gardner03-Dec-2014When a team has begun to find winning the hardest of acts to pull off, it is inevitable that they discover fresh ways to lose. Until the last five overs of their chase, the likelihood of an England victory was bound up with matters far more complex than the required run rate. It did not seem so much a question of confidence, nerve or skill, rather the need to break down something that was beginning to feel like cultural resistance. They had to beat Sri Lanka, themselves and the family tree.For most teams, in the modern day, this might have been a garden-variety run chase. England needed to score at almost seven runs an over but, with the game reduced to 35 overs a side by rain, that was not such a taxing demand in favourable batting conditions. Alastair Cook said afterwards they “probably should have” achieved victory with two or three wickets down. At 152 for 5, it seemed likelier that they would not make it at all.That England managed it was down to two of the new batch, a pair of young men shouldering the responsibility demanded of them. Joe Root and Jos Buttler, 23 and 24 respectively, are cartoon superheroes in a time when England are desperate to sketch out a more exciting template for their limited-overs game. This was a scenario that demanded something outlandish, a boys-own tale of derring do. Root and Buttler delivered.Jos Buttler (left) and Joe Root finally lifted England’s spirits•Getty ImagesWhile Buttler, all preternatural calm and Popeye forearms, took the Man of the Match award after a series of punishing boundaries took England to the brink and a rare feeling of comfort, it was Root who hit the winning runs and Root who was the central figure in the passage of play that swung the matchIn the 31st over, the scurrying Yorkshireman played Jerry to Dhammika Prasad’s Tom, impudently crouching to flick an 85mph attempted yorker for six. Had he missed, it would have removed leg stump. Next delivery, he stepped away to try and carve over the off side and picked out cover. But everyone knows who wins in this particular game of cat and mouse. Replays showed that Prasad had overstepped and before the official call had been made by the TV umpire, Root was creeping back to the middle having watched his good fortune on the big screen.Prasad had gone full pelt at England but after chasing Root along the ground piano, through the hall and under the kitchen table, he was about to have the back door slammed shut on his tail. Scowling and distracted, his next three balls were crashed for four by Buttler and England finally believed, the weight of their recent dismal run floating off like a cartoon anvil turning out to be a balloon.England had initially set off in pursuit of a revised target with a confidence that belied their crock form. That was largely down to Moeen Ali, whose regal timing once again allowed him to hold court during an 84-run opening stand with Cook. Moeen reached his half-century from 29 balls, marginally slower than his previous two efforts on tour but still raucous enough to have Sri Lanka waste their review in attempting to silence him. An awful mix-up with Alex Hales, back in the side in place of Ian Bell at No. 3, saw him off instead and hinted at England retreading the route of farce.The failures of Ravi Bopara, promoted up the order, and Eoin Morgan, whose woes continued with a score of 1, meant England’s seniors had again clocked off with the job unfinished. But Root accumulated diligently, hitting just four boundaries, and Buttler backed his ability by absorbing 14 balls for his first 8 runs before unleashing to finish with 55 off 37. With five overs to go, the asking rate was ten an over. The most impressive thing about them was that they kept it that simple.”I don’t think we played our best today – but to get over the line, after not doing that in the first two, will give the lads a lot of confidence,” Cook said. “I think a side full of confidence, and winning a lot, would probably have found it a bit easier than we did.”You probably saw a side not used to winning on this tour. But that doesn’t take anything away from the way Jos and Rooty played from 150 for 5. The way they responded was fantastic. For ‘Jose’ to get himself in, it takes a lot of bravery to do that, because the rate was going up and up. But when you can hit the ball like that, and when you’re in, even 10 an over… we scored the last 50 of four overs, when we needed it off five.”England had arrived in this remote part of the island looking for a set of directions. The local lore suggests strange things can happen here and this was a game of oscillating fortunes and near misses. The tourists’ most outré decision involved bringing in Hales but not playing him as an opener; fortunately his running out of Moeen was not the defining contribution of the match and the pair may yet find themselves walking out together if Cook is banned for a slow over rate.Ben Stokes, another of three changes, fared even worse. Stokes has so far bowled six overs for 64 in his two appearances and currently looks like being more dangerous in the locker room than out on the pitch. England’s bowling effort was a curate’s egg, again liberally seasoned with wides. But the team showed impressive character throughout, most vitally expressed by the two men in the middle at the end. One KAPOW! does not make a series win but England are back in the frame.

Hard not to be able to jump in – Donald

A dozen years have passed since Allan Donald played international cricket in a career that ended at the 2003 World Cup, and the fire for the biggest stage has not dimmed

Firdose Moonda in Hamilton13-Feb-2015When a South African bowler veers down the wrong line, misses his length, oversteps or even fumbles in the field, he does not only have his own team-mates to answer to but someone far more expectant: his coach Allan Donald. From his vantage point on the boundary, Donald has been known to pace, pout, praise and and almost play the game himself. Almost.”It’s dangerous territory for me. I am a passionate guy. It’s very evident when a player has mad a mistake and I want to get involved but the captain might have a plan so I tend to pull myself in when I see things unfolding,” Donald said ahead of South Africa’s World Cup opener against Zimbabwe in Hamilton. “That’s why I sit in what we call the pit – the dugout. It’s the only place that stops me from being on the field.”A dozen years have passed since Donald played international cricket in a career that ended at the 2003 World Cup, and the fire for the biggest stage has not dimmed. “I am very excited. The nerves will never go away but the excitement of it – to get the feel of the oval and the net, when you are able to close the game out when you are bowling to a guy like AB de Villiers and the pressure on, that’s what I love. I’m looking forward to seeing what skill will be provided at this World Cup.”As someone who has been involved in five of the six World Cups since South Africa’s readmission, Donald has seen first-hand how things have changed from one tournament to the other and he believes the progress has been for the better.  “It’s been more than 20 years since I played in the World Cup here and the growth of the one day game has been massive. It has become so fast and so much more skillful. We’ve seen the game go through the roof in terms of skill and execution under pressure,” he said.At the 1992 World Cup, Donald was South Africa’s highest wicket-taker and sixth overall in conditions which changed from pacy to placid between Australia and New Zealand. Totals were much lower than they are now – there was only one match with scores over 300 – and the playing field was more level between batsmen and bowlers, who Donald explained have had to learn to be more courageous.”Where one-day cricket is now compared to where it’s been is a different ballgame. You expect a lot of runs and you expect some brave cricket, especially with the ball,” he said. “It’s going to come down to that when you’re under the pump.” Bowlers are expected to be in that position throughout the event.Got to find a way of taking wickets – Donald•Associated PressDonald identified the smaller grounds and good pitches as the two challenges facing every attack and came up with some solutions of his own. “The wickets are going to be pure wickets; very good wickets so wickets in the Powerplay will be a massive factor for everyone. That ball has got to swing, we’ve got to find a way to get that ball reversing. That’s crucial for us,” Donald said.With two new balls that will be more difficult than it was before but South Africa have one of the best executioners of reverse swing in Dale Steyn, who will also be a key protagonist in Donald’s other plan.”Against West Indies, we realised we have to stay aggressive through the innings and be unpredictable at the end of the innings,” Donald said.South Africa’s death bowling has been inconsistent. They roped in the services of former international Charl Langeveldt to try and change that but he does not have a designated yorker-bowler to train, although Kyle Abbott has volunteered himself. But because Donald does not even believe toe-crushers are the best balls to do the job and would instead like to see bowlers dishing up what they feel most confident delivering, be it a slower-ball bouncer or Test-match length outside off, confusion can sometimes creep into the South African strategy.They still have some time to sort out exactly what they hope to do even though their tournament starts on Sunday. For Donald, the World Cup is not about domination from day one, especially not this one. “It’s a very open World Cup,” he said. “You look around and you see the talent and the teams who are out here and you know you cannot take any team lightly. That’s just the pressure of the World Cup. You’ve got to find the right time to peak and find the right balance.”

'I've never seen myself as anybody famous'

Dale Steyn on relationships, his beard, how growing up in the bush shaped him, and what attracted him to fast bowling

Interview by Arun Venugopal22-Apr-201518:26

Dale Steyn: “I come across as quite aggressive and quite in people’s faces and everything like that, but I know where to draw the line”

You have this obsessive love for fast bowling. Is it just adrenaline, or something deeper, more spiritual?
Everybody has adrenaline. I don’t know what it is about fast bowling. I guess it’s the ability to do something that nobody else can really do. Not a lot of people can run in and bowl really fast, you know. So that’s a nice thing, knowing that you are part of a small percentage of people in the world who are able to do that, and that’s a great feeling.And when you are able to do it, that’s something you can’t discuss with many people, because of the small percentage of people that can do it, if you understand what I am saying. So that’s difficult to express how you really feel. It’s better when you start talking to other bowlers because they start to mention things and you are like, “Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah.” It is like a small fraternity, I guess. Probably the same thing like Olympic sprinters or anybody that’s really good at certain things they do. But in this case it’s a really small breed. Anybody who bowls over 145 and can do that consistently.How much has growing up in the South African bush shaped the way you are?
That has everything to do with who I am, and who I am is part of the way I play my cricket. I come across as quite aggressive and quite in people’s faces and everything like that, but I know where to draw the line. And that was purely from the background where I grew up in, a very humble background. My family all live in the bush, still stay there in Phalaborwa. It’s a small town, but is very much in the bush.

“Nowadays I’m more appreciative of nature rather than being a game-hunter. I don’t particularly like it anymore”

Doesn’t your family partake of the lifestyle you have now?
No, my dad has never been to India. I think he has only been overseas once before. I think it’s different to India. I don’t know, maybe it’s different to the world, but they have never really been approached by anybody, so it’s not even like a conscious effort.You have spoken of your maternal grandfather being a great influence on you, and that he gives you the best advice. What’s it that you talk about?
He just keeps me grounded. We get along very well. We got along really well when I was a kid because we enjoyed the same things. We enjoyed the bush, fishing, our hunting trips. Nowadays I’m more appreciative of nature rather than being a game-hunter. I don’t particularly like it anymore. So we shared a lot of common interests. And sport was one thing that he was really good at when he was younger, and loves massively. Everybody in my family loves sport. We kind of clicked on that level.And he was always great at giving advice. He gave my dad and my mom advice, and because of that, I felt it was necessary to get his advice. And then [you are] getting to a point when you are an adult and discuss things rather than just take advice. Then you are able to have a nice discussion and a good chat about certain things and throw ideas around life and decisions and all that kind of stuff. So it’s nice to hear his perspective.Despite wanting to stay grounded, there must have been times when the fame and riches must have gone to your head? How did you manage to snap out of it?
No, it never gets to the head, man. Because I have never seen myself as anybody like that. Never ever seen myself as anybody that’s famous, and I’m only human, man. I’m no different to you, no different to the person that’s feeding peanuts to somebody with a spoon []. This is just what I do. I mean it’s really fortunate that I’m really good at it, but it doesn’t make me any better of a human being over anybody else.”My beard is very overrated”•Associated PressYou have been in a long-standing relationship…
No, I haven’t. I in a long-standing relationship. Not everything is true on Google ().With the kind of career you have, how challenging is it to nurture relationships?
I think it’s really difficult for women to be involved with sportsmen that travel, or men to be involved with men or women, whoever it may be. I am not worried about that sexist thing.It’s really tough. You’re spending a big chunk of your life away from home, never quite sure whether you’re coming or going.I’m also somebody that’s quite free-spirited. I never really know what the schedule is. Somebody says to me, “What are you doing in June?” I am like, “I don’t know. I’ll have to look.” Or, “Let’s book a holiday in October.” But it’s only January. “Dude, I can’t. I don’t know where I am going to be in October. I might be at the Champions League, I might not.”Well, this is the problem, you see. It makes it very difficult for somebody that’s with you because it’s difficult for them to plan their lives. I think it’s important that if you are in a relationship with someone that you are both not on the same road. Your roads run next to each other and they are going in the same direction, but they might look like little things in the way, obstacles that [make you] kind of break away from each other.But at the end of the day, as long as you guys get back on a similar kind of track, you are running parallel to each other. That’s the main thing in a relationship. So she is able to do her thing at any time and come back. I am able to do my thing and get back on track again. I think it’s really important to be able to do that. It’s very difficult though if you’re both together on the same track, because somebody is going to sacrifice their life for somebody else. I have been fortunate enough to have had relationships where we were able to do that.

“When I am off the field, I am the calm, very quiet kind of easy-sailing ocean, and then when I am on a hot streak with a cricket ball, I can be the most disastrous waters you have ever been in”

How do you cope with loneliness on tour?
Fortunately now, I have gotten to a point where I have visited India so many times. I have been around the world. I have been to every country that cricket has to offer. So now I’m getting tired of going home and telling people about it, like, “Oh, you should have seen me when I was in the Caribbean. How cool it was!”, or, “When I was in India…” like that.What I have decided now is that when I am going to these tours I’ll bring people over. So I have had family come to India before. My ex-girlfriend used to travel a lot with me. At the moment I have got my partner who’s with me. And one of my best friends is here too, so the two of them keep themselves occupied when I’m busy at training or on the cricket field. I am late for this [interview] because we were all just surfing. It’s better for me now to have these people come and experience what I get to experience all the time rather than me going back, sitting around at the dinner table and telling them. And they just kind of wave it off because they might never do it. So that’s how I get to relax as well.Tell us about your interest in photography and the course you took last year.
I took a main course last year, finished that and looking to up that again. I didn’t bring my camera this time to India, because I knew I had people coming over, so they were going to consume most of my time. Some guys often bring a PlayStation or a guitar or something. I try [to play the guitar], but I am not as good as I would hope to be. It’s just something that keeps you busy. It’s really cool if you are going to live by yourself.”It’s a nice thing knowing that you are part of a small percentage of people in the world who are able to bowl really fast”•Getty ImagesYou have championed causes like water conservation. How active are you when it comes to such causes?
It’s extremely difficult to be active in this stuff if you are not at home. It’s hard enough to try and see my family. So I do what I can, when I can. Fortunately we have got this beautiful thing called Twitter, and it can create massive awareness because I have got a decent following – over a million followers – and Instagram, too. I have got quite some followers, so I have got a group of people I can get the word out to. And that’s my way of contributing. So if I can’t go to a function somewhere or if I can’t go and do a talk somewhere, I can still get the word out to people who themselves couldn’t get there.What are the best cricketing conversations you have had?
There’s been many, man. The best ones are after wins and after losses. Around fires, drunk, or in the jacuzzi, drunk, at three in the morning. I don’t know, man. It can happen anywhere. You can be sitting down at lunch time, and it breaks out into good cricket conversation. It’s not like they are things that I remember, like a hole-in-one on a golf course or something. More like getting a par on a golf course. They happen all the time. There is nothing that really stands out for me.What’s the most misunderstood part about a fast bowler?
I think the most misunderstood part is that economy rates are not what they used to be anymore. So I think we need to shy away from comparing current players bowling on small grounds with big bats with field restrictions to bowlers that bowled in the past, those who could bowl ten overs and go for 20. And that was like standard.Sometimes now guys are used for specific roles. They bowl in the beginning, they bowl in the Powerplay and they bowl in the death overs. There is never really a chance for them to bowl in a period where they can attack and take wickets. They always are bowling almost to defend runs, which is not fair on the figures side of things.What is the most overrated thing about you?
My beard. It’s very overrated.Are you conscious of your vein-bulging celebrations?
I have heard about it. I have never seen it. I am sure people say it looks worse in real life, so when you watch it on TV it’s not that bad. In real life, it’s probably way worse.”It’s really fortunate that I’m really good at what I do, but it doesn’t make me any better of a human being over anybody else”•Getty ImagesWould you ever write a tell-all autobiography? What would it be called?
Would I? Well, I wouldn’t tell you if I was going to do that now, would I? ()When was the last time you felt manipulated?
Every day. It happens every day.What’s the best and worst sledge you have dished out?
There are so many. The worst one I have ever done is the best one that has ever happened to me. I swore at a guy when I was in high school, and I was playing in a cricket team that had a lot of senior guys in it. Some of the guys were even 20 years older than me, and when I got him out I swore at him, said something really ugly. I was young, I was 16 or 17, and my team-mates walked up to me and then walked away from me. I felt really small. I felt embarrassed and shy. I think it was the best lesson to learn. You had to make that mistake to realise that it’s not the way to do something, so that’s the worst one I have ever done. And the best thing, because I learnt I didn’t have to do that to get into a player’s face. That was a good lesson learnt.Why do you describe yourself as an ocean?
I think the ocean is amazing. It can be flat and still and very quiet and calm, and then in the worst seas it can be scary, and it’s got that ability to change very quickly. It’s also got the ability to offer you a lot of things in life. You can fish and eat. It’s got that ability to take that away from you very quickly.I feel like that’s what I have. When I am off the field, I am the calm, very quiet kind of easy-sailing ocean, and then when I am on a hot streak with a cricket ball, I can be the most disastrous waters you have ever been in.

All-round AB floors UAE

ESPNcricinfo staff12-Mar-2015Quinton de Kock’s nervous innings was brought to an end by Amjad Javed•Getty ImagesDavid Miller put on 108 runs with AB de Villiers for the fourth wicket but fell one short of his fifty•Associated PressDe Villiers struck six fours and four sixes for his 82-ball 99 to take South Africa past 250•Getty ImagesKamran Shazad got de Villiers out for his first 99 in ODIs, leaving South Africa at 257 for 5•ICCFarhaan Behardien led the late surge for South Africa and his 31-ball 64 took the total to 341•ICCUAE batsmen were peppered with short-pitched bowling and found themselves on 45 for 3, after early blows from Morne Morkel•Associated PressSwapnil Patil and Shaiman Anwar put on 63 for the fourth wicket, Patil with 57 was UAE’s top-scorer•Getty ImagesDe Villiers also turned his arm over and picked up two wickets in his three overs for 15 runs•AFPUAE’s chase folded for 195 as Vernon Philander and Dale Steyn cleaned up the tail, giving South Africa a 146-run win•Getty Images

Mumbai's drops, and Simmons' stunner

Plays of the day from the match between Mumbai Indians and Royal Challengers Bangalore at the Wankhede Stadium

Andrew Fidel Fernando10-May-2015The suppressed rage
Mitchell McClenaghan has spent much of the past year in a New Zealand side whose athleticism verges on the super human. The drop in fielding standards at the Mumbai Indians was clearly difficult for him to take, especially when the errors came off his own bowling. He fumed when on the second ball of his second over, Lasith Malinga let the ball go through him at fine leg to concede a boundary, but Rohit Sharma’s drop off Chris Gayle two balls later was ineptness that seemed to tear at the fabric of McClenaghan’s soul. Upon seeing Rohit spill the high chance, somewhat comically, McClenaghan sank to one knee in silence, no words coming from his mouth, just a pained hollowness in his expression suggesting he had been deeply traumatised.The spray
No emotions were suppressed next ball, though. Gayle and Virat Kohli crossed during Rohit’s drop, and when Harbhajan Singh spilt a straightforward chance off Kohli in the slips, McClenaghan snapped completely. Hands turned upwards in desperation, McClenaghan ran forward in his follow-through, then broke into a stream of screamed expletives at Harjbhajan, the highlight of which was the string of saliva that flew clean out of his mouth, landing at least two feet in front of him.The catch
McClenaghan might be forgiven for thinking his team-mates were playing a prank on him because, immediately after that over of shambolic fielding concluded, Llendl Simmons pulled off one of the catches of the season to send Gayle packing. The batsman got an outside edge to a Lasith Malinga slower ball, and Simmons threw himself high and to his left, reaching out in a full stretch to complete the catch with both hands in mid-air.The shot
AB de Villiers had begun his innings with five dot balls against Malinga, but was in full flow when the bowler came back to deliver the penultimate over. Malinga had had his yorkers humming nicely in the last few matches, yet when he delivered a ball that would have struck de Villiers on the toe, the batsman still found a way to get it away for four. On one knee to play the sweep, de Villiers got bat to ball centimetres before it hit the turf and sent it screaming behind square leg, proving that in this kind of touch, almost nothing can be done to keep de Villiers quiet.

The stop-start story of Abbott's Test career

A strong performance followed by time outside the XI has been a recurrent theme in Kyle Abbott’s Test career so far. And it looks unlikely to change in the near future

Firdose Moonda in Delhi05-Dec-20151:38

‘They want to drag it out’ – Abbott

Hurry up, Kyle.It’s February 2013 and Jacques Kallis has tweaked a calf muscle in the nets is probably not going to be able to play the third Test against Pakistan. You might have to debut but don’t be overwhelmed. Just listen to your coach Lance Klusener and keep it tight please.Oh, you’ve taken seven wickets on debut. That’s great.Now wait.

****

Hurry up, Kyle.Longer India bat, happier we are – Abbott

The only people who do not seem in any real hurry are the Indian batsmen, who are are content to bat time out of the game and themselves into form. They may even bat so much that South Africa could entertain thoughts of a draw.
“The longer they bat, the happier we are because it’s more overs out of the game. I thought they would have had a crack at us tonight actually,” Kyle Abbott said. “But obviously not, they want to drag it out.”
South Africa were on the verge of hitting the fast-forward button themselves with two wickets in two balls this morning but then Virat Kohli and Ajinkya Rahane took any thoughts of unlikely win away.
“Even though we had them four down, they still had a lead of 260. If we’d maybe had rattled one or two more… maybe 350 was in our mind. We threw everything at them but it probably wasn’t reversing as much today as it was before,” Abbott said.
“The pitch has got a bit slower and there maybe a bit of fatigue setting in; we’ve been in the field for quite a long time so maybe we haven’t been as tight as we would like to have be. They only had a strike rate of about 40. When there is not much happening and they are not taking too many risks, it gets harder. They played within themselves and quite sheltered. They made it harder for us. Even when we did tempt them, they either left it or that patted it back but its Test cricket and we are testing our skills and our patience.”

It’s March 2014 and Wayne Parnell has suffered a groin injury midway through the second Test against Australia in Port Elizabeth. South Africa managed to draw level anyway and now want to fling as much firepower as they can at the opposition to try and win the series. You’ve just taken 12 for 125 in a domestic match so you’re the fireball.Oh, you’ve kept it tighter than any other seamer. That’s great.Now wait.

****

Hurry up, Kyle.It’s December 2014 and time to wipe the floor with probably the weakest line-up in the modern game, West Indies. Don’t be upset if Dale Steyn and Vernon Philander leave just the one wicket for you. Just keep it tight, remember?Oh, you ended with another decent performance. That’s great.Now wait.

****

Hurry up, Kyle.It’s November 2015, Philander has tumbled in training and his ankle does not look good. Forget brushing your teeth, just get on the next flight to Johannesburg, and the next one to Dubai and the next one to Bangalore. Whatever you leave behind, make sure it’s not your bowling boots.Sleep if you must, shine those pearly whites somewhere along the way and make sure you’re ready to bowl even if you step off the plane ten minutes before the first ball. You will play. You have to because Steyn will also miss the match with a groin strain.Oh, the rain is spoiling everything. That’s not great.Now wait.

****

Hurry up, Kyle.It’s December 2015 and the series against India is gone. Steyn is still injured, the spinners have suffocated South Africa’s run-scorers and stubbed out much of their spirit but there is something to salvage. Conditions are not going to be as skewed in their favour and off the abrasive surface or in the smoggy atmosphere, you may find some movement.You found it to beat M Vijay’s bat. The first time he didn’t touch it, the second time he did, but then you overstepped, the third time the ball went just over the stumps and the fourth time he inside-edged onto his pads. You showed him that on a strip with variable bounce, he needed to be more sure of his footwork. It turned out Cheteshwar Pujara wasn’t looking. You managed to get the ball to sneak through the bat-pad gap and take out his off stump.Then you found some reverse swing. You managed to move the ball in to the right-hand batsmen and forced them to play. The first time Rohit Sharma blocked, the second time he blocked, the third time he let it go, the fourth time it found the edge but Hashim Amla dropped it. In the end, Wriddhiman Saha was the victim, when a ball moved into him just a touch and he played on.You frustrated India with a consistent line and you asked questions of them with your lengths. You kept it full, you bent your back, you had another catch dropped and two more taken. You ended the Indian innings.Oh, and you became just the second seam bowler since 1987 to take five wickets at this venue. What did such a performance mean to you?”I think I will take a lot of confidence from this. There was a perception that maybe I can only bowl in South Africa where there is a bit of nip but I have shown that if the ball is reversing, I have ability to take wickets. So I will use is as motivation.”That’s great.Now wait.But, not too long.

****

Hurry up, Kyle.It’s the same match and South Africa’s batsmen are making the bowlers work much harder by ensuring they are back on the field less than 24 hours after they left it. You will have to try and do it all again, even though the ball is not moving and the batsmen are more assured. You will be tired. You may not have the success.Oh and the Indian captain wants to keep you out there to make his point that it is entirely possible to get runs in this series. That’s great but it means before you and your team-mates can go home…You have to wait.

****

Hurry up, Kyle.It’s still December 2015, and Philander has probably not recovered from his injury. Irrespective of whether Steyn has, the strangle by spin in India will mean South Africa want nothing more than the green, green grass of home. Your home, Kyle.Kingsmead will host the first Test against England, and South Africa could be tempted to go in with four pacers. If Philander is unavailable, both you and Kagiso Rabada could play.Oh, but they can’t go in with four pacers in every match. And when Philander recovers, he slots back in. And they don’t seem too keen to do without Rabada, who has leapfrogged all the competition.That’s great. For him. But where does that leave you, Kyle?”Your career is never a guarantee. It’s always something you are fighting for, constantly. Not just me but every other player. It’s a fight the whole time.”So all you can do is wait.

India players lend boost to Vijay Hazare Trophy

The likes of MS Dhoni, R Ashwin, Shikhar Dhawan, Ishant Sharma taking part in this year’s tournament will pull more eyeballs

Shashank Kishore09-Dec-2015When MS Dhoni last played for Jharkhand, he was less than three years into his international career. India had played a grand sum of one Twenty20 International and Greg Chappell had just resigned as coach following India’s dismal 2007 World Cup. The inaugural edition of the World T20 was five months away, and the IPL was still a year into the future.Dhoni was a carefree cricketer with long locks, brown streaks and a belligerent batting style that made him extremely popular. The ‘Captain Cool’ salutations were works of imagination, for the leadership mantle was firmly with Rahul Dravid. But two World titles, 90 Tests and a surprisingly early retirement from the longest format later, Dhoni is back to play for his state for at least the first half of the 2015-16 Vijay Hazare Trophy that begins across the country on Thursday.The way the teams stack up

Group A: Punjab, Mumbai, Tamil Nadu, Assam, Rajasthan, Services and Hyderabad
Group B: Karnataka, Railways, Gujarat, Jammu & Kashmir, Jharkhand, Kerala and Haryana
Group C: Odisha, Vidarbha, Delhi, Baroda, Andhra, Tripura and Maharashtra
Group D: Bengal, Goa, Himachal, Uttar Pradesh, Saurashtra, Madhya Pradesh

While he may be in his last lap as an international cricketer, Dhoni’s intent and attention to detail while training at the M Chinnaswamy Stadium in Bangalore were indication of his focus. He won’t lead Jharkhand – Varun Aaron has been named captain owing to his familiarity with the squad – but Dhoni’s presence, alongside a host of other India internationals in R Ashwin, Suresh Raina, Harbhajan Singh, Yuvraj Singh, Ishant Sharma, KL Rahul, Stuart Binny, Gautam Gambhir and Shikhar Dhawan among others will raise the profile of the tournament that has largely been an afterthought in India’s cricket calendar.BCCI’s flagship 50-over tournament which has often slotted in at the end of the domestic season has been advanced over the last two years to help the young aspirants pitch for higher honours. The timing is significant, more so this year, given India’s cricket calendar is brimming with limited-overs matches leading into the World T20 in March-April.India’s T20 batting needs a rejig and team director Ravi Shastri had hinted the door was open for anyone who made a strong case for themselves in the domestic one-day competitions. “It’s a work in progress. We have not played T20s. There’s a long way to go,” he had said in October. “(With) six months to go, form will be crucial. There’s a plenty of one-day cricket coming up – whole of December till January will be watched closely. We have some T20Is in Australia and then Sri Lanka are coming to India. There’s the Asia Cup. A lot of T20 cricket (is) being played. It’s a great opportunity to throw the hat into the ring, it could be young or old or anybody.”Among them will be Bengal’s Mohammed Shami. The 25-year old fast bowler has recovered from knee surgery and is set to play his first game of competitive cricket since the 2015 World Cup, when he was India’s second-highest wicket-taker. Suresh Raina, who had only one fifty in five ODIs against South Africa, went back to the Ranji Trophy and hit form. The Vijay Hazare Trophy is another opportunity for him to bid for a place when India tour Australia in January. Ravindra Jadeja’s return to form also means the allrounder’s spot becomes a three-way fight between him, Axar Patel and Binny.The tournament is also a platform for the fringe players to showcase their talent. Among them are Gurkeerat Singh, who was picked for the senior team after three half-centuries and a five-wicket haul for India A and a double-ton in the Ranji Trophy for Punjab, Shreyas Iyer, the highest run-getter in this year’s Ranji Trophy and Mayank Agarwal, who hammered 176 against South Africa A in August.Unlike previous editions, this is the first time the tournament will move out of its zonal qualification. The 27 sides have been divided into three groups of seven and one group of six, with the top two from each qualifying for the knockouts. This system allows teams to play each other irrespective of the zones they are from whereas in the past, teams were restricted to playing opponents from the same zone, leading to a touch of predictability.While many of India’s top players could make a quick exit should the series against Pakistan see light, the fact that the tournament has been penciled in to give more opportunities to youngsters signals sound intent. All eyes then will be on the selectors as teams will play across multiple venues in Bangalore, Rajkot, Hyderabad and Delhi to earn the right to be crowned as India’s best 50-overs side.

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