Dravid: KL Rahul 'very keen' on giving wicketkeeping a go

“He has kept really well in one-day cricket. So just a question of transferring that into red-ball cricket,” says the head coach

ESPNcricinfo staff24-Dec-20232:05

Can India conquer the final frontier?

KL Rahul has started only one first-class match as the designated wicketkeeper, but that doesn’t seem like it will hold India back from playing him as a wicketkeeper in the two-Test series in South Africa. Two days before the first Test in Centurion, coach Rahul Dravid spoke at length about the challenge for Rahul but also the opportunities it opens up for both Rahul, who will be making a Test comeback, and India.”I see it as an exciting challenge and an opportunity for him to certainly do something different,” Dravid said. “With Ishan [Kishan] not being available, the opportunity came up. We have a couple of keepers we can choose from. Rahul is certainly one. We have had this discussion with him, we’ve discussed this with him. You know, he is very confident, he is very keen on giving it a go. We do understand that it’s probably something he has not done as often. He has been doing it regularly in 50-overs cricket. So that’s certainly tough, you know, to play 50 overs and then bat as well in a full day. That can take a lot out of your body.”So he has prepared well, I must say, over the last five, six months. He has done a lot of keeping, even though it’s in the white-ball format. But this will be a new and exciting challenge for him as well. I guess one of the things here is that if anything there is not going to be that much of spin bowling. Probably more pace bowling here than there is spin, so it will ease him into that role a little bit if anything.Related

  • India look to conquer final frontier as South Africa wait at Fortress Centurion

  • Rahul's chance to master two formats at the same time

  • India's thorny Centurion questions: Rahul vs Bharat, Thakur vs Ashwin

“It’s something that we will see how it goes and how it pans out, but it’s really nice to have someone like him and the options that he provides us. Just having his ability with the bat would be something that would be really useful. And let’s see how he goes with the gloves. I mean, he has kept really well in one-day cricket. So just a question of now transferring that into red-ball cricket for longer.”The window has opened up for Rahul, who scored a century as an opener on India’s last tour of South Africa, in the absence of the injured Rishabh Pant, who scored one in the middle order himself. India are conscious their keeper contribute with the bat.”For us, the big challenge is if we can really put some runs on the board and score those critical, extra 60-70 runs that gives you a great chance. If I go back to the last series that I was here, the one thing we did here [in the first Test] really well was we had a really good first innings. We had a really good first day and got to 327 in the first innings. If you can put up those kinds of scores on challenging wickets, you put yourself ahead in a Test match. But in the next two Test matches, I just felt in our third innings, we could not score those 50, 60 extra runs. You know, we just felt short and they bowled well.”Since the last trip, India have seen the introduction of more attacking batters. Dravid said they weren’t asking the young batters to alter the game but to be aware of match situations.”We encourage the players to play the way they feel most comfortable in,” Dravid said. “In the end, you are judged by the results you produce. The guys know that, they understand that. We want to encourage them to play in the way that they play, but also keeping in view the conditions and keeping certain sort of tactical things that you have to be aware of when you play in South Africa. The nature of the ball and how that behaves over the course of 80 overs and the kind of shots you can play may be in the early part of innings vis-a-vis what you might be able to do later on.”I think there’s a balance between finding that, just having the cricket smarts and to read a game and to understand the situation and play according to the situation. But of course, allowing yourself to express yourself. So certainly, we’ve got guys who do play their shots and we are not going to hold them back, and we are going to allow them to express themselves, and hopefully they’ll make some smart decisions when the situation arrives.”

The Rondo: Who won the new MLS archive drop, do newer franchises deserve retro jerseys, and is the Seattle Sounders' orca badge among the coolest kits ever seen?

GOAL US writers debate the release of MLS third kits, with a fine array of new retro shirts to choose from across the league

Kits are a tough thing to get right. Everyone has an opinion, and it's tricky to find the right target demographic. Do you feed the loyal fans? Do you try to branch out, get random people around the world to wear your colors – even if they've never watched a minute of your team, you know, play football? Or do you just say "forget it" and make something that looks really cool?

With the new MLS Archive collection, MLS have tried to do a bit of all of the above. And in rare fashion, it works. The league have released 10 new retro-ish jerseys, all of which pay homage to the weird and wonderful history of American soccer. Some of them, such as Dallas Burn, D.C. United and Colorado Rapids, pay tribute to the early days of MLS. Some, like Seattle Sounders, Minnesota United and Charlotte FC are a little more recent.

Who nailed it with the kits? Who left a bit to be desired? And just how cool is it to have an orca as your badge?

GOAL US writers debate the fine array of new MLS kits in a fashion-forward edition of… The Rondo.

  • Major League Soccer

    Which new MLS kit is the winner?

    Tom Hindle: Seattle Sounders, and it's not remotely close. Guys, they have an orca badge. What more could you possibly want? Shoutout to Colorado, though, for making a green kit that works.

    Jacob Schneider: It's gotta be either San Jose or Minnesota. The Loons' ode to the Minnesota Kicks really is beautiful, and there's something fun about the typeface they chose. It looks great, fits as streetwear and represents the history of the state. SJ, meanwhile, is one for the sickos. It has 1990s Clash all over it. It's a stupendous shirt. But its a jersey meant to be worn on the pitch – it's tough to envision it as streetwear.

    Alex Labidou: This is easy, the Colorado Rapids brought back their beloved green kits from their inaugural season and gave them some swag for 2025. The old kit was clunky, but the new one is a winner. Plus, they arguably had the best kit trailer as well. No need for debate here.

    Ryan Tolmich: It has to be the one with a damn whale on it. Shoutout to the Sounders for going the right amount of crazy, from the design to the orca vibes with the badge. To be fair, all of these kits are hits and all of them are pretty fun. But the Sounders stand out just because they took things just a step further.

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    Which kit was the most disappointing?

    TH: Ryan Tolmich is gonna hate this, but the Charlotte one just does not work. It's a glorified Sweden kit. Snooze.

    JS: New England. There's something about it that just doesn't work the way you'd hoped. It's still a gorgeous shirt, but it doesn't sit right. The design is a great effort, but in comparison to the rest of the Archive Collection, it falls short.

    AL: Columbus are usually among the leaders when it comes to kit releases, which makes their third kit release this year disappointing. If it this kit seems familiar, it should – a slightly upgraded version of their 2013 away kit. Charlotte would be the second worst – the color scheme seems very Sounders inaugural season. And heritage kits for a team that's four years old seems weird.

    RT: It's a very, very classy kit, so no knock on it. But the Rapids kit could have been a little bit more … wild? Search "Colorado Caribous" for some inspiration. But even so, this is one of the more casually wearable kits of the bunch. That's what they were going for, so that's fine. But there were also some bits of chaos that could have been added.

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    Is this collection better than last year's vintage release?

    TH: Yes, because it actually seems vintage! With Colorado, D.C., New England, Dallas, Columbus and San Jose, they tapped into some MLS heritage. The new(er) ones are good too. Stronger overall than last year, and the collection checks the "vintage" box more. Nicely done, MLS. Not wearing branded Gazelles, though, for what it's worth.

    JS: Absolutely – and it actually has teams representing the heritage of the game. Each club was deserving of a shirt, and each kit pays tribute to the fans, players and all involved who laid the groundwork for establishing the professional game. This is really some of the league's best work with adidas.

    AL: Slightly better, just because the field is stronger. You've got FC Dallas and San Jose Earthquakes with some really strong kits, and while the Minnesota kit might not be for everyone, there's no denying it's better than a lot of last year's kits. That said, the Timbers, Inter Miami, and KC Wizards kits from 2024 still pull at the heartstrings.

    RT: Last year's collection was good, but this release is great. Overall, these kits are strongly tied to history, but they also have a better balance of "wearable" and "Oh my goodness that's chaotic – but in a fun way." This was a good step forward for MLS and adidas, who continue to capture the weird and wild culture of American soccer – which doesn't always have to be as prim and proper as counterparts elsewhere in the world.

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    Who has the best kits in MLS?

    TH: Seattle! LAFC and Portland both have some absolute beauties, and the Red Bulls have really upped it this year – even if they share a lot of similarities with RB Salzburg and RB Leipzig. But the Sounders take the cake, by some distance. Once again: THE ORCA BADGE. This will annoy 50 percent of the GOAL US writing staff, but I cannot stand the Minnesota "starry night" thing. It's naff.

    JS: In terms of a three-kit collection, it's the Sounders. It's just beyond delightful. Each jersey is nearly perfect. Their Salish Sea Kit is one of the best designs in the world right now, and their Archive orca kit is a thing of beauty. Then, their Anniversary kit is a real stunner, too, as it shows off their trademark Rave Green exceptionally.

    AL: Minnesota starry night kit might have been released last season, but they still rock it this year, and the club's overall collection, including its new release, gives it a slight edge.

    RT: It isn't always easy designing around their colors but, the Sounders don't miss. They did things a bit differently with their home and away kits this season, and then dropped the hammer with their orca kit here. Overall, a good year for the Sounders and a bad year for Sounders' fans' wallets as they look to keep up with these kit releases.

SL to tour Bangladesh for two WTC matches in March

The teams will also play a three-match ODI series from March 13, as well as T20Is

Mohammad Isam02-Feb-2024Bangladesh will play two World Test Championship (WTC) matches against Sri Lanka in Sylhet and Chattogram in March. It will be the first time since they started playing at the Shere Bangla National Stadium in Dhaka, that Bangladesh won’t play at that ground in a Test series, as the venue will be busy hosting the Australian women’s side at the end of March.Sri Lanka will arrive in Dhaka on March 1, the same day as the BPL final, at the Shere Bangla National Stadium. They will play three T20Is in Sylhet on March 4, 6 and 9. The first two matches are scheduled to start from 6:00pm local time, while the third game is from 3:00pm.The teams will then move to Chattogram to play the three-match ODI series, on March 13, 15 and 18. The first two ODIs are day-night games, while the third ODI starts at 10:00am, the earliest start in an ODI in Bangladesh in the last 11 years.The two teams will return to Sylhet for the first Test from March 22, and then head back to Chattogram for the second Test from March 30.The tour will take place during the month of Ramadan when Muslims fast from the early hours till dusk. Last year too, Bangladesh played three T20Is and a Test against Ireland during Ramadan.

Man Utd considering charging fans £4k for right to buy a season ticket as part of controversial plans for new £2bn stadium

Manchester United are reportedly considering following a controversial model that would see fans charged £4,000 for the right to buy a season ticket.

  • Red Devils have plans for new ground drawn up
  • Capacity will hit 100,000
  • Various ticket pricing plans being considered
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  • WHAT HAPPENED?

    The Red Devils have unveiled plans for a spectacular new stadium that co-owner and INEOS chief Sir Jim Ractliffe wants to see become ‘Wembley of the North’. Said venue will cost upwards of £2 billion ($2.7bn) to construct.

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  • THE BIGGER PICTURE

    United are seeking government funding to help with the build, but are also looking to generate their own funds. One idea said to have been floated, as reported by the , involves charging fans a ‘Personal Seat Licence’ that gives them the chance to buy a 30-year season ticket at further considerable cost.

  • DID YOU KNOW?

    That system is commonplace in American sport, with NFL franchise the San Francisco 49ers – whose ownership group calls the shots at Leeds – charging up to £60,00 for a PSL. The LA Rams – who are run by Arsenal supremo Stan Kroenke – reportedly had PSL options for £166,000 after constructing their SoFi Stadium home, while the Dallas Cowboys can demand £110,000.

    Barcelona and Real Madrid have used similar approaches within their respective stadium upgrades, raising “tens of millions by selling seat licenses in the VIP areas to high net worth individuals”.

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    TELL ME MORE

    According to the Mail, the PSL system is “one of a number of proposals presented to fans by US-based consultants CSL International”. No decisions have been made as yet, with more fan consultation set to take place.

A shot in the arm

Sunday’s win for Sri Lanka came too late for this series but a turnaround was utterly essential before December’s Test series

Sri Lanka view by Charlie Austin06-Nov-2005


The move to No. 5 has worked for Marvan Atapattu, lending stability to the middle order and paving the way for aggression at the top
© Getty Images

Sri Lanka breathed a huge sigh of relief on Sunday night. The ignominy of a seven-match whitewash, which loomed so ominously after their series-losing defeat in Pune, was avoided and India’s momentum finally checked. It came too late for this series but a turnaround was utterly essential before December’s Test series.Crucially, after a hapless two weeks since their arrival, Sri Lanka were finally the lucky recipients of some good fortune. Marvan Atapattu won an important toss, ensuring India’s bowlers would have to contend with heavy dew in the evening. It helped too that India were in charitable mood, unbelievably resting Sachin Tendulkar, Harbhajan Singh and Irfan Pathan.Sri Lanka arrived in India as the in-form team and the No 2 team in the world, but after Pune and four heavy defeats confidence was haemorrhaging. India’s swashbuckling, high-intensity cricket had left them shocked, perplexed and edgy. India, though, mindful of the need to manage their players carefully during a long season, provided them with a window of opportunity to lift themselves off the floor.Especially pleasing for Sri Lanka was the clinical manner in which Tillakaratne Dilshan and Russel Arnold finished off the match. When Mahela Jayawardene, guilty of not backing up properly, was run out at 155 for 5, Sri Lanka looked poised to squander another winning opportunity. But the conditions were ideal for batting with the ball skidding on to the bat and India’s spinners unable to grip a slippery seam. Arnold, wearing his normal poker face, manoeuvred the ball expertly into the gaps while Dilshan, bristling with energy, cracked the ball around freely for his match-winning 81 from 63 balls.Dilshan is hugely talented but has been a frustrating serial underachiever in one-day internationals, averaging a poor 24.51 from 64 matches before this game. He does occupy a particularly difficult position in the batting order, languishing at No 5 and No 6, but such a meagre return for such obvious talent is unacceptable for a team with world-champion aspirations. Hopefully, two fifties thus far in the series will help speed-up the transition from a player of promise to a reliable performer.Farveez Maharoof’s starring role as Super Sub could also prove important. His bowling had been carted in the first four games and his confidence severely dented. To his huge credit he has showed great heart throughout and his game has not been derailed by the ferocity of India’s strokeplayers. Fast bowling allrounders are a precious breed and Sri Lanka desperately need him to gradually mature into a pivotal player. Today he showed the necessary fight to learn in the harshest of classrooms, his 4 for 20 preventing India from scoring 300 plus.Sri Lanka will now look forward to the sixth ODI with fresh optimism, believing that they are slowly rediscovering their form and therefore capable of overcoming a reinvigorated and youthful Indian team. However, one victory does not solve all their problems. India have graphically exposed problems within the team that need to be urgently addressed over the coming months.The most pressing issue concerns Sanath Jayasuriya’s role within the team. While he remains an immensely valuable player and a potentially crucial cog during Sri Lanka’s 2007 World Cup campaign, it is becoming increasingly obvious that his peak has passed as an opening batsman and that he could add greater value to the team as a vastly experienced allrounder batting at No 6 or No 7.The entire top order needs to be reassessed with a view to increasing the responsibilities of Kumar Sangakkara and Jayawardene in the top four. These two are now Sri Lanka’s impact players; the batsmen who can make best use of the extended fielding restrictions during the Power Play experiment and go on to score large match-winning hundreds. Jayasuriya’s demotion also provides Upul Tharanga, an exciting talent, a chance to bed down at the top of the order.Atapattu’s position at No 5 has worked well so far in this series and it is an experiment worth continuing with, filling the middle order with a player of greater experience who can tick the innings along during the middle overs. The time may have also come for Dilshan to be given the No 4 position to make better use of his aggressive and extremely dangerous strokeplay.This is the time to build for the 2007 World Cup and in the great scheme of things a series loss against India is not important if the team grows and develops from the experience. There is no need for knee-jerk over-reaction and serious bloodletting, as proposed by some in recent days, but there is an urgent need for some careful consideration of how to best utilise the batting resources at Sri Lanka’s disposal.

What's wrong with India's one-day team

Sanjay Manjrekar and Dileep Premachandran dissect India’s ODI slump

31-Oct-2006Dileep Premachandran – India must get their ingredients right
Audio – ‘Its time to hold individuals accountable’ – Sanjay Manjrekar
A report card – Catching the shortbus
A statistical analysis – A batting debacle

Smoke and Hays

Mark Haysman stressfractured his back at 19 to end his Aussie Rules career, joined a bank for four years and came back to senses, and there was cricket to fall seamlessly back on

Robert Houwing06-Sep-2006


Mike Haysman
© TWC (SA)

He’s based in the “Big Smoke” and there’s fire in his broadcasting belly. He loves South Africa and sports a blond mop more striking than Spook Hanley’s. Only he’s from Adelaide – not the Eastern Cape one, eitherIt might have been left to someone other than Michael Donald Haysman to become arguably South Africa’s most prolific and recognisable English-language television cricket commentator and studio anchor.’Haysie’, you see, almost went the orthodox family route and made a career of banking back in South Australia. “My dad was a bank manager. My mother was in the bank. My eldest sister, Sue, was in the bank. My younger sister, Beth, was in the bank. One of my sisters’ husbands was in the bank. It was a banking disaster, really. I was in the bank, too, for about four years … then I came to my senses,” says the now 45-year-old.Haysman was a budding Aussie Rules player, into the career-options bargain: “It was my first sporting love; I was probably more talented as a footballer. Then I got a stress fracture of the back, aged about 19, and that put paid to that.”But there was cricket to fall seamlessly back on. “I got a scholarship, one awarded regularly in those days to the four most talented young players in Australia; they got an opportunity to sample county cricket. It was myself, Merv Hughes, Robbie Kerr … um, um … I’ll think of the other. Anyway, it looked a slightly more exciting prospect than banking, so off I went [to Leicestershire – ed].”For all his ‘Rules’ prowess, Haysman’s cricketing aptitude had already been evident for many years: “I remember being absolutely distraught, at 12, missing out on the South Australian primary schools team, so I must have been going pretty okay at the game even at that stage.”He was playing Grade cricket in Adelaide by 16, and three years later had advanced to 12th man for South Australia in a one-day game after a double hundred in Colts cricket. “I was lucky enough to be a member of a club the two Chappells were at – and I was coached by Ian and Greg’s father.”Haysman went on to make his Sheffield Shield debut against Queensland in the 1982-83 summer; the gap was created by David Hookes being called up to the national side and the replacement cashed in with 126 to announce himself loudly on the first-class stage. “The South Australia team I came into was remarkable … Rick Darling, Wayne Phillips, John Inverarity, Peter Sleep, Joel Garner, Rodney Hogg, Glenn Bishop, Andrew Hilditch … all very decent names, international names. I had five years with them before I came on the rebel visit to South Africa.”He didn’t know it in the mid-1980s, but a collection of influences on these shores – in no particular order cricketing, commercial, media and affairs of the heart – would lead to Haysman never returning permanently to his Aussie roots after the rebel venture.Today, he travels the world from his Sandton home as a SuperSport television commentator (most commonly to places where the Proteas are to do battle) and, even if his rat-a-tat-tat relish in the ‘booth’ is apparently an acquired cup of rooibos to some, he is rightly lauded in his role as an inquiring host of the consistently topical, refreshingly non-fawning weekly studio show Extra Cover.South Africa, though, cannot take the credit for getting his broadcasting juices flowing: “I first harboured thoughts of it when I was about 10 … maybe 12. I remember specifically sitting at my grandma’s place one day watching the Channel 9 presentation of a game and thinking it was something I’d like to do one day. I got my gap when Australia toured here in 1994 and my knowledge of the Aussie team was called upon; I got a call out of the blue from the SABC and had to go to Bloemfontein for a domestic one-day game as a trial run of sorts. It worked out nicely and I had three years with the SABC before moving over to SuperSport.”I wasn’t the pioneer of Extra Cover but was very involved in the early days, with the production company, Trademark, and almost 460 shows later we have pretty much the same team … I came up with the name, of which I’m quite proud, and was co-anchor for the first year with Darren Scott. He was terrific in his encouragement and advice, kind of getting me on track from my ‘nowhere’ position in broadcasting, really.”It ought to be apparent to most people that Haysman puts genuine energy into the show – including in the lead-up to its airing every Tuesday. “I consider myself one of the luckiest people around; that what I do for a living, commentating and studio presenting, is a hobby – something I don’t consider work. It’s a privilege, so I make it my duty to do those jobs the best I possibly can.”You’ve simply got to keep your finger on the pulse; I’ll spend two or three hours a day just researching things, and I do articles for the SuperSport Zone, too. Extra Cover alone requires a lot of planning, just to get the right mix on a 60-minute show. I make sure I capture ‘stings’ for the show – amusing or controversial moments – like Andrew Hall’s peculiar wide this morning (we are talking during the SA v NZ Wanderers Test – ed) that nearly broke his own toe … 10.44am, fifth of the fifth; there, that’s in the bag. Then I’ll sit down on Monday morning and edit it.”

Sir Donald used to scribble advice to me on bits of paper … I must have been delivered about a dozen of those tatty sheets. And I didn’t keep ’em! Silly …

It seems a pertinent time to ask Haysman about the degree of independence of SuperSport’s commentators, in the light of “sweetheart commentary” charges made recently in India by former England captain Mike Atherton. Atherton alleged that India’s cricket governing body, the BCCI, treated Nimbus, the production company to whom they sold the television rights for England’s visit, “like an in-house production company … Nimbus are petrified of upsetting their ’employer’ for fear of not getting any future rights, so any criticism (in commentary) of the BCCI is strictly frowned upon”.Haysman insists the situation locally remains a healthily autonomous one; no United Cricket Board interference. “We are at all times, in fact, encouraged to be honest and direct in our views. We are chosen as commentators for particular series because SuperSport see us as the right mix; different viewpoints are actively encouraged. I think if we’re not doing that we’re doing an injustice to the profession.”Mike Haysman earned his ticket to join Kim Hughes’s controversial touring side to South Africa partly on the strength of the “next Bradman” hype surrounding him – a compliment-cum-curse attached, it must be said, to several Australian batsmen both before and after Haysman. How comfortably did the tag sit with him? “You know, it’s quite an amazing thing, when I started playing with South Australia … to this day I kick myself that I didn’t keep these things: Sir Donald was on the SACA committee and for some reason he liked the way I played.”He used to scribble advice on little, scrappy bits of paper … ‘Mike, I think you should pick your bat up earlier’ or ‘don’t look to get forward as much as you do’. I guess I must have been delivered about a dozen of those tatty little sheets. And I didn’t keep ’em! Silly …” Haysman was in his mid-20s when he received the fateful – for various reasons, not least of which the influence it would have on where he would ultimately settle – invitation to come to South Africa with the ‘Australian XI’.”I’ll remember receiving that offer until the day I die. I was at a friend’s place; it was about 10 o’clock one night in Adelaide. There had been some media speculation I’d be invited, so when the call came from Dr Ali Bacher I was absolutely convinced it was one of my other mates taking the mickey – for solidly 10 minutes I told the real Dr Bacher in no uncertain terms where to get off!”It wasn’t until the pretty earnest ‘Michael, this really is Dr Ali Bacher here; please listen to me carefully’ that I twigged it was no hoax. I had to fly to Melbourne the following day to meet with attorneys.”There’s another odd little reason I remember that whole build-up period so well: just prior to being approached, while I was still on the staff at Leicestershire, we played at Lord’s and I was 12th man – I didn’t play too often because Andy Roberts was the other overseas pro on the books – and I ‘souvenired’, if that’s the right word, a Lord’s ashtray: it took pride of place in my Adelaide flat. I wasn’t a smoker … then.

“When the (rebel tour) call came from Dr Ali Bacher I was convinced it was one of my mates taking the mickey – for solidly 10 minutes I told the real Dr Bacher where to get off!”

“But when I got back from that meeting with lawyers, having signed the rebel deal and so on, I walked in and made myself a cup of coffee in the microwave; not something I would normally do. As I opened the microwave door I knocked that Lord’s ashtray into a thousand pieces on the floor … I thought it a prophetic sign, maybe, that I’d shunned [the cricketing establishment].”The still relatively youthful Haysman was probably the Australian cricketer with the most to lose from accepting the South African lucre. “Just prior to my being approached, the Ashes side was selected to go to England in ’85; I’d been tipped by the scribes to be the ‘young player’ in the party, if you like. But I was not named in that squad or even the Young Australia side, the U25s, to go to Zimbabwe, and I was pretty devastated. It was impossible not to feel snubbed by Australian cricket.”I will never deny that the South African money was an attraction – but then so was the very opportunity to pit my skills against the South African players of the time.”Did Haysman encounter much domestic ostracism for his decision to come?
“I arrived back at the sports shop I was working in after a supper break one night, and about 50 protesters were suddenly outside with placards, having a full go at me. In the end I lost that job … inevitable, I guess. I also had a guy walk up in Adelaide and spit on me; not enormously pleasant.”For all the diverse emotions generated by rebel tours, few could deny that the Kim Hughes-led Australian visits in successive summers provided some enthralling cricket at times; Haysman readily agrees. “South Africa certainly played better; we were outplayed in score-line terms but I think everyone who participated would concur that there was some genuinely intense cricket. You had some world-class fast bowlers at the time, obviously – Le Roux, Rice, Jefferies, a young McMillan – and when you threw in names like Pollock,
Cook and Fotheringham on the batting front … yes, it was serious cricket.”We were astounded that South Africa had so many allrounders. I remember the first day we arrived we went to the nets; we were going to play a Transvaal team first-up which included nine domestic internationals plus Kallicharran and Clarke. At those nets we saw a bloke smashing the ball all over the place: Kim Hughes walked up to one of the guys bowling to him, to inquire if it was one of the Transvaal top-order batsmen … but no, it was Neal Radford who’d be batting at 11!”Despite the strength of the South African side for the rebel matches, Haysman’s class and durability came to the fore; notably when the second National Panasonic ‘Test’ was staged at Newlands from 1-6 January 1987.On a typically plumb track at the time, South Africa rattled up a first-innings 493
and the Aussies eclipsed that total by three runs in the tame draw with John Dyson scoring 198 and Haysman 153 – “I managed to run out John, who was my room-mate, just short of his ‘double’, which made the room a bit silent for a couple of days.”Has he, post-unity, ever experienced hostility from former SA Cricket Board
personalities within the United Cricket Board over his rebel tour involvement
during apartheid? “Look, there was naïveté on our part during that time. I’m the first to admit that. When I first signed up I had to go to an atlas afterwards and look up South Africa on the map. We took the view that we were coming to play cricket … you look back on it, in its context, and realise there was certainly
naïveté about it. But I haven’t encountered any special [coldness] over it, no.”Haysman went back to Australia for a season after the rebel tours, but a more
long-term return to these shores was already increasingly likely: he had met Leanne Hosking, Miss South Africa 1983, a week into the first tour. They married and are still together.”It turned my life on its head, really. Having said that, I thoroughly enjoyed
myself in this country and do to this day. We did discuss, at one stage, the possibility of settling back in Australia but then I got involved in the business of indoor cricket here and things just mushroomed. I am blessed with enormous support from Leanne in my broadcasting career – I call her the perfumed steamroller …”


Haysman and his wife Leanne a few years ago
© TWC (SA)

Of course, Northerns had keenly hunted down Haysman’s domestic signature as the rebel ventures wound down, and he went on to spend several summers with this previously unfashionable, yet awakening, force at Centurion.”I really enjoyed my time with Northerns – except at the end, when circumstances took a turn for the worse and I retain to this day certain bitter and disappointing memories. A selection issue cropped up while I was captain and it ended in my being unceremoniously dumped over the stance I took; I felt let down by some senior people at the union.”For the bulk of my time there, though, I was among a magnificent group of guys. I’d gone there in the first place partly because of my relationship with Anton Ferreira who I’d met in county cricket while he was with Warwickshire … I also enjoyed people like Gerbrand Grobler, Lee Barnard, Fanie de Villiers, Tertius Bosch, Noel Day, Vernon du Preez, Mandy Yachad. We got close to
honours a few times; just no cigar, sadly. But we had fun times together, we really did.”And the music’s not nearly over, it seems, in terms of Mike Haysman’s overall
partiality toward this country …

Bjorn Fortuin, Delano Potgieter star as Lions claim title

Zubayr Hamza struck a sublime double-hundred against Dolphins, but it was not enough to secure the title for Cape Cobras

Liam Brickhill31-Jan-2019Results summary
The 4-Day Franchise Series ended in thrilling fashion, with Lions claiming the 2017-18 title on a nail-biting final evening in Potchefstroom. With five overs lost to rain on the final day of a game that Lions had to win, and Yaseen Vallie and Sinethemba Qeshile adding 85 for the fourth wicket, Warriors had almost reached safety before Nono Pongolo and Nandre Burger made inroads into their tail in the afternoon. There were just two wickets standing when the last hour was signalled at 5.15pm. Thomas Kaber held on, limpet-like, at one end, but when the new ball was taken after the 80th over, Lions broke through. Burger had Basheeru-Deen Walters caught behind, and in fading light Wihahn Lubbe then struck with his third ball, beating Sithembile Langa’s forward defence to spark wild celebrations.The eventual result would not have been possible without a record-breaking first-innings stand between Bjorn Fortuin and Delano Potgieter, who helped their side recover from a perilous 96 for 6. Fortuin’s 183 was his highest score in Franchise cricket – and just nine short of his best ever effort with the bat in all first-class cricket – while Potgieter’s 145 was the highest score of his career in just his 12th first-class game. Potgieter then took 4 for 81 to secure the first-innings lead, and Kagiso Rapulana’s 114 in the second dig allowed Lions to declare at 292 for 9. Warriors had almost reached a position of safety when, on the final day, they were only five down after 4pm. But then came Lions’ match-winning, title-sealing burst in the closing moments.That result meant that Zubayr Hamza’s magical double-hundred on the penultimate day of Cape Cobras’ game against Dolphins in Pietermaritzburg was not enough to secure the title for his team, who had led the points table for virtually the entire competition. Hamza’s 201 was his maiden double at franchise level and the second of his first-class career, and allowed Cobras to declare their innings at 523 for 7. On a flat pitch, Keshav Maharaj’s 2 for 217 were the best figures for Dolphins, but while the pitch might have been benign the weather was anything but, and overs were lost to bad light on every day of the game. The lost overs forced the game into a draw, with Dolphins’ top four all passing fifty before the captains shook hands midway through the final afternoon after bad light stopped play once again.In Benoni, Titans and Knights were finally put out of their misery early on the final day after their match was abandoned due to a wet outfield at Willowmoore Park. All three previous days were also affected for the same reason, with players on both sides left frustrated by the conditions underfoot in what was their last match of the first-class season.The final decision by umpires Abdoellah Steenkamp and Johan Cloete meant there was no cricket played at all after all three previous days had to be abandoned – the main problem area being the bowlers’ run-up. The shared points from the game meant the hosts and defending champions Titans, as well as the Knights, ended in the bottom three.On the national radar
Hamza’s double-hundred should be enough for him to be retained in South Africa’s squad for the upcoming Tests against Sri Lanka in February, while in the same game his team-mate Vernon Philander defied the placid batting conditions to take 4 for 46 in Dolphins’ first innings. At the other end of the spectrum, Maharaj bowled a whopping 56 overs for his two wickets and, given that he has also been left out of South Africa’s Test playing XI in a seam-heavy attack recently, Maharaj could do with a confidence boost.Confidence shouldn’t be a problem for Temba Bavuma, who registered scores of 22 and 48 in Lions’ victory, but more importantly captained the side to the 4-Day title.Top performers
Bjorn Fortuin has made more of a splash with his left-arm spin than his batting in domestic cricket of late, opening the bowling for Paarl Rocks during the Mzansi Super League, but his knock against Warriors turned the game around and he was rightfully named Player of the Match in their title-sealing 84-run win. He also ended the season with 23 first-class wickets at 22.78 to his name.Over the course of the season, however, Cobras captain Dane Piedt stood head and shoulders over the other bowlers across the franchises. He ended the season with 54 wickets at 27.74, 20 more scalps than second placed Dane Paterson.With the bat, Knights’ Keegan Petersen and Warriors’ Eddie Moore both passed 900 runs for the season to top the run charts.

Bopara starts with a bang

The county season and spluttered and shivered into life, but amongst the rain (and occasional snow) there has been some fascinating cricket. Cricinfo hands out its first batch of monthly awards to those who impressed during April

Andrew McGlashan05-May-2008

Strike man: Shane Bond made an immediate impact for Hampshire with seven wickets against Sussex
© Getty Images

Team of the month – Nottinghamshire
“Go and prove them wrong,” was basically Nottinghamshire coach Mick Newell’s message when people tipped his team to be relegation candidates the year after coming back up to Division One. His charges listened and romped to a 10-wicket victory in their opening Championship match against Kent, taking advantage of a small window in the wet weather as well. Darren Pattinson made an immediate mark with eight wickets on debut and, with an eye to much of the season, it was a victory achieved with Ryan Sidebottom and Stuart Broad. Throw in a comfortable win against Ireland in a potentially tricky Friends Provident outing and it’s been a decent start for Chris Read as captain.Batsman of the month – Ravi Bopara
Most young players go through a period where their temperament is tested and questions asked. Ravi Bopara suffered a tough winter; three consecutive ducks against Sri Lanka before being dropped during the one-day series against New Zealand. With Andrew Flintoff nearing a return the other allrounders will have to queue up and Bopara has put himself at the front of the line after a barnstorming start with Essex. He passed fifty in all his innings, making 150 and 137 in the Championship and 99 in the Friends Provident Trophy for good measure. Throw in a few wickets and he’s making a strong case to the England selectors.Innings of the month – Andrew Strauss 163 v Surrey, FP Trophy
The 177 Andrew Strauss made in Napier came in the nick of time to extend his Test career, but he began the season still needing runs to keep the critics quiet. Two relatively low scores in the opening Championship match – coupled with runs for Owais Shah, Bopara and Robert Key among others – reopened the debate. Strauss knew an opportunity when it presented itself, a flat pitch at The Oval and a short boundary. He proceeded to make his highest one-day score in a destructive display with 23 fours and four sixes off 130 balls. One-day form doesn’t always translate to the longer game, but Strauss’ game looked in good order.Bowler of the month – Matthew Hoggard
Another player to return from his winter duties with a point to prove after he was dropped following the Test defeat in Hamilton. Plenty of people, including the former England coach Duncan Fletcher, were saying he’d lost his nip, but instead of joining a public debate Hoggard just continued to ‘wang it down’. And with some effect. Against Hampshire he took 6 for 57 in the first innings with a typically probing spell of swing bowling in typical Headingley conditions. Two more scalps followed in the second innings before another useful run out against Nottinghamshire. Admitted he was “scared of the white ball” and won’t play much one-day cricket for Yorkshire, but he doesn’t appear finished with the red one.Bowling performance – Shane Bond, 7 for 66 v Sussex
After all the hype over Bond’s will-he, won’t-he move to Hampshire there was a sense of anticipation when it was finally confirmed he would take up his place. With most of the world’s leading bowlers employed in the IPL here was a chance to watch an outstanding performer. He didn’t disappoint against defending county champions Sussex at The Rose Bowl. He got on the scorecard early, with the wicket of Carl Hopkinson, but the real excitement came in his spell with the second new ball as he tore through the lower order and finished with career-best figures. You could hear the groans from New Zealand grow louder with every wicket.Youngster of the month – Chris Jordan
Picking young players to watch at the start of a season a notoriously difficult task, but there was a general consensus from all corners that Chris Jordan had something special. The early sightings of him supported those lofty expectations. He bowled briskly against Lancashire on a docile Oval surface then went up to Chester-le-Street where he clonked Neil Killeen on the head and mopped up the tail. As Jordan told Cricinfo, he hasn’t made up his mind whether his future lies with West Indies or England. “When the bridge comes for me to cross it, I will have to make the correct decision. I have to take things day by day.” Decision time may not be far away.Injury of the month – Simon Jones
If only this wasn’t so predictable. Simon Jones had done everything asked of him after moving from Glamorgan to Worcestershire over the winter. He was fit and came through pre-season unscathed. Finally, he returned to Championship action and at the end of the first day against Warwickshire had already claimed a wicket in a short burst. He will have slept well that night, and maybe too well. He woke with a cricked neck and wasn’t able to resume. The problem was put down to a blow he took from Neil Carter, causing a whiplash injury, but he even struggled after a cortisone injection. Surely, his luck must turn sometime.

Break a leg

The women have played eight World Cups so far and Cricinfo asked former and current players what their lasting memories from each tournaments was

07-Mar-2009

Bird: wouldn’t stand for physical violence
© Getty Images

1982, New Zealand
Gill McConway

I am struggling to remember stories from 27 years back, really.An interesting
feature of the 1982 World Cup was that Dickie Bird had been invited to umpire
throughout the tournament.It was so windy we had to play without bails, because even
the heavy ones wouldn’t stay on. Dickie’s first game was a warm-up, which a lot of
people had come to watch. There were lots of them pointing and saying, “That’s the
famous England umpire.”And then one of the big Australian girls from our
International XI, Rhonda Kendall, hammered the ball to the square-leg area. She hit
it so hard that Dickie, probably still jet-lagged, just dropped to the ground as it
smashed into his leg. I really felt for him.I noticed he stood a lot further back after that!

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