Australia take charge through twin hundreds

ESPNcricinfo staff16-Jul-2015Ricky Ponting rings the five-minute bell•Getty ImagesDavid Warner started aggressively before falling in the 30s…•AFP… he holed out in Moeen Ali’s first over•Getty ImagesChris Rogers made watchful progress on his Middlesex home ground•Associated Press… while Steven Smith produced his usual flamboyant strokeplay•Getty ImagesRogers brought up his eighth fifty-plus score in nine Test innings…•Getty Images…as Smith also ticked to a fifty after twice falling having done the hard work in Cardiff•Getty ImagesBen Stokes saw a chance go down when Ian Bell could not cling onto an edge off Smith at slip…•Getty Images…a blemish in the field for England after their impressive work in the first Test•Getty ImagesSmith was first to reach three figures – his 10th hundred in Tests•AFPRogers was not far behind when he punched down the ground•Getty Images

Jagmohan Dalmiya's journey with Indian cricket

A timeline of Jagmohan Dalmiya’s 36-year voyage with Indian and international cricket and his contributions to the game

ESPNcricinfo staff21-Sep-20151979: Jagmohan Dalmiya joins the Cricket Association of Bengal (CAB). 1987: Along with then BCCI president NKP Salve and IS Bindra, Dalmiya is instrumental in bringing the World Cup to India and Pakistan.1993: The rights for Indian cricket’s home matches are sold to a private TV channel for the first time, with Dalmiya as BCCI secretary. After a long-standing dispute between the BCCI and state broadcaster , the rights to televised cricket in India were formalised as a commodity owned by the BCCI, which could be sold to the highest bidder after a landmark Supreme Court ruling in 1995. 1997: Dalmiya is unanimously elected ICC president after a successful 1996 World Cup and holds the office till 2000. 2001: Dalmiya is elected BCCI president for the first time.July 2004: Dalmiya also takes over as president of Asian Cricket Council from BCB president Mohammad Ali Asghar. September 2004: Dalmiya’s casting vote helps his candidate Ranbir Singh Mahendra get elected as BCCI president. December 2005: Dalmiya’s power within the BCCI is challenged – Sharad Pawar defeats Mahendra in the presidential election.March 2006: To take matters further an FIR is filed against Dalmiya a few months later, alleging misappropriation of funds during the 1996 World Cup. July 2006: Dalmiya bounces back, wins CAB elections after the BCCI had banned him from attending board meetings. December 2006 : With the forces against him gathering momentum and power, BCCI expels Dalmiya on charges of embezzling funds from the 1996 World Cup and he is forced to step down as CAB chief.July 2007: The Calcutta High Court stays the BCCI’s expulsion of Dalmiya and says he is free to contest the soon-to-be-held CAB elections. Soon after the decision, Dalmiya files a perjury case against the BCCI before the court.March 2008: Dalmiya is arrested by the Economic Offences Wing (EOW) of the Mumbai Police for alleged embezzlement of funds, and is granted bail immediately. July 2008: Dalmiya is back at the helm of the CAB, defeating the incumbent Prasun Mukherjee. “Cricket in the state needs me, that’s why I’m back,” Dalmiya says.September 2010: BCCI decides to withdraw the civil suit it had filed against Dalmiya relating to embezzlement of funds from the 1996 World Cup, and also the expulsion notice it had imposed on him in 2006. June 2013: N Srinivasan offers to temporarily step aside as BCCI president to facilitate investigations in the IPL corruption and spot-fixing scandal. The board turns to Dalmiya to run its affairs in the interim. March 2015: With the courts ruling out the possibility of Srinivasan contesting BCCI elections, Dalmiya is elected board president 11 years after he first held the post. September 17, 2015: Dalmiya is admitted to a hospital in Kolkata after suffering a heart attack, and undergoes an angiogram. September 20, 2015: Dalmiya dies aged 75.

How safe are modern cricket helmets?

As gear manufacturers strive to provide the best protection for players, their challenge is to strike the right balance between safety and comfort

Sharda Ugra and Nagraj Gollapudi11-Jan-2016Like wicketkeepers, no one notices helmets until they fail to do what they are supposed to do – absorb the impact of a 140kph cricket ball and prevent grievous hurt to either batsmen or close-in fielders.Until the demise of Phillip Hughes, the modern helmet was considered adequate protection for a batsman’s head, with the only doubt being about the strength of the titanium grille, meant to act as a visor for the batsman.In August 2013, Joe Root needed four stitches after he top-edged a ball from Josh Hazlewood into his face, where it stuck between the grille and his cheekbone.In July 2014, Craig Kieswetter broke his nose and fractured the part of the cheekbone that formed one of his eye sockets, while batting in a county match. A month later Stuart Broad too top-edged a ball from Varun Aaron onto his nose, and admitted to having nightmares about it later.The Hughes tragedy led to a sudden urgency regarding questions about the range of protection that the helmet offers. However, it was an injury to New South Wales batsman Ben Rohrer, three weeks before Hughes was hit, that set the alarm bells ringing in the headquarters of helmet manufacturers Masuri in the UK. The company’s CEO, Sam Miller, told ESPNcricinfo that following the Rohrer incident the team had a “brief discussion internally that we should be doing something for the region of the helmet. It is not something we had thought about before.”The stem guard, which offers protection to the back of the head, became a necessity in the wake of Phillip Hughes’ death•Getty ImagesRohrer was to suffer from post-concussion syndrome for months afterwards, with Masuri making minor alterations to the helmet, “extending the coverage of the grille to the back of the ear and extending the coverage of the back of the helmet, but only slightly”. He said, “at that stage no one in the world understood just how dangerous being hit in that part of the neck was. We didn’t understand how tragic the consequences could be.”Hughes’ death sent a shock wave through cricket, instantly bringing into focus the most fragile part of the body, which stood exposed, despite modern helmets. Miller said, “The moment that happened, there needed to be a solution.” The design for the new stem guard, shielding the back of the head, took eight weeks. There were 23 different versions, with the intention of creating something that absorbed impact and fit all head shapes and sizes. Inside four months, John Mooney, the Ireland allrounder, had designed an extended grille for the back of his head and called it a “gorget”.The helmet in cricket is a piece of equipment that requires particular attention to ergonomics, given the amount of time it needs to sit comfortably on a player’s head. The closest sport to cricket that uses helmets, Miller points out, is baseball. But the face guard and helmet in baseball stays on for 20 seconds at a time, so while the materials used in baseball protection may be useful to study, cricket’s requirements are different. The weight of the helmet varies between 750grams and 1 kilogram. Masuri’s heaviest helmet is just over a kilo – usually batsmen can only tell the difference in the weight in their hand, rather than when they wear it, due to the strength of the neck. Unlike the usage in baseball, “you have a player batting for four hours, so you need his helmet to be comfortable. It only comes off between overs.” The best helmets must find the balance between safety and comfort.In 2013, the ICC set out a new safety standard for helmet manufacturers in the international game because they were seeing far too much grille damage. The new requirement stated that the grille should be able to stop the impact of a ball released at speeds of 80mph (around 130kph). Angus Porter, CEO of the Professional Cricketers’ Association, was part of the “working group” collective between ICC and ECB to improve standards for headgear and helmets that arrived at the new standards. The 80mph/130kph mark, he said, “was 20kph less than the desired one” but was put in place to “represent a benchmark we felt all manufacturers should be able to meet”. The group’s expectation was that manufacturers would try to gain competitive advantage by producing helmets that could withstand balls bowled at higher speeds.Miller says that ideally Masuri “would love to be saying we can stop balls at 90mph (144kph)” but admitted that it was a stretch. “I think it was a good job by the ICC in releasing that standard. It has made professional cricket a lot safer,” he says, pointing out that there hasn’t been a facial injury over the last six months in first-class cricket in England, where the new, compliant helmets are prevalent.The Ben Rohrer incident in 2014 was the eye-opener that led Masuri to reassess the safety of its helmets•Getty Images and Cricket AustraliaPorter and the ECB are currently working in conjunction with Loughborough University to test current helmet designs at higher ball speeds. In establishing the new standard, conventional testing procedures had to be altered to depart from the old standard of the “drop test”, which essentially tested the structural integrity of the helmet’s shell to see if it dissipated the impact of the blow. This was later seen as inadequate because there had been a clutch of injuries caused by the ball hitting the grille. The grille needed to be put under examination to see what ball speeds it could handle.This is the first time, after the new ICC standards, that both the shell of the helmet and the grille attached to it have been tested together, Miller says. “So there was no test to test the helmet as a unit and this is what the latest testing does,” Miller says. “If your fixings were no good between the grille and the shell, it would open up and the ball would come straight in.”The new test involves a calibrated air cannon firing a ball at a helmet at a specific speed – in this case 69mph (an 80mph delivery in real time, taking into account the deceleration of the ball after pitching). The ball was fired point blank onto five “impact” points on a helmet, placed on a “head-form dummy”. Three of these points lie between the peak and grille and two are on the grille. “The key is [that] on impact the ball and grille cannot come into contact with the head form,” Miller says. “Considering head shapes are different, it does not necessarily mean the grille will never touch anyone’s face, but it certainly helps stopping major injuries [to the face].”To push the testing speeds up by 10mph into the red zone of 90mph is a very long haul, however – because at that speed, the balance between safety and comfort becomes a beast of a problem. The materials of the helmet must absorb what Miller calls the “deformation” of the helmet when it is hit by the ball – the dent it makes on impact – and settle back into place once the ball has rebounded. “The 10mph gap sounds no big deal, but at those paces it adds a lot of force.”The fixing between the grille and the shell has to be firm enough to prevent the ball from sneaking in through a gap•AFPThe amount of deformation is dependent on the material of the shell and how far it can be “pushed”. Miller says increasing of safety will demand compromising on comfort, making helmets “at this stage undesirable to wear”.Masuri sources materials from companies dealing with automotive materials, such as Perrite and DuPont. What helmet manufacturers don’t want is for players to not wear helmets because they are too heavy or obstruct their view. “So it is a real balancing act between improving safety and making a product that is practical to use.” The next step, Miller says, will be to “gradually increase the safety of the product up to a pace where no matter who is bowling, the batsman can count on being safe”. The stem guard, made of a material called “impact-modified TPU” (thermoplastic polyurethane, a rubbery plastic) is being put into commercial use for the first time. It is a clip-on attachment to the side of the grille. Tests on the stem guard found it to have an impact absorption three times more than the current rules required.The ICC’s new helmet regulations will now require helmet manufacturers all over the world to offer players the highest standards of security. Porter says that helmets complying to new standards, available as from July 2014 onwards, have had players “all anxious”, wanting to ensure that they were being supplied with the safest headgear available. What the Hughes tragedy did was bring home the worst kind of reminder to his peers, helping them recognise that “there is a threat about a career-ending injury and they should take it seriously”.

McCullum goes berserk

Plays of the day from the first ODI between New Zealand and Sri Lanka in Christchurch

Vishal Dikshit26-Dec-2015The bat swingFour days after announcing his international retirement, Brendon McCullum was sending the ball over boundary ropes as if nothing had changed in his career. In the seventh over of the chase, Sri Lanka captain Angelo Mathews brought himself on as his side had already conceded 52 runs. Nothing changed then either as his first ball went sailing over the midwicket boundary, thanks to a pull from McCullum. But when he tried it again next ball, the ball went over the covers after taking an edge because the bat too went flying out of the batsman’s hands and went behind square. Mathews would have hoped at least that would change something as McCullum went off strike, only to return for the last two balls and clobber two more fours.The nervy debutDebutant Henry Nicholls would want to remember his first ODI for scoring a quick and unbeaten 23 off 21 balls that also included the winning runs on his home ground. Much before that, though, he had already been part of the highlights package twice. Just after Sri Lanka lost their first wicket, Nicholls, stationed at midwicket, got into the action early when Tillakaratne Dilshan pulled a ball from outside off to produce a top edge. Nicholls got under it and put his hands around the ball using the unorthodox crocodile method of catching. However, when he was offered another chance, by Milinda Siriwardana in the 15th over, Nicholls ran to his right from deep square leg and put in the slide early, used a more orthodox catching style. but put it down.The ignored boundaryEarly in the match the spectators got to see a fluid Dilshan drive that went through the covers and an adrenaline-filled McCullum who chased the ball all the way till the boundary, but in vain. When he put in the slide, he ended up pushing the Toblerone-shaped boundary cushions back a fair bit. In a hurry or carelessly, McCullum ran back to his position after picking up the ball and the cushions now had a massive curve. No other player or groundsman or official fixed it and they remained as it is for most of the next over, in which Adam Milne drew all the attention for bowling near the 150-mark.Flame throwers halt playMatches are often interrupted by the weather, sight-screen problems, streakers, injuries, balls being lost, and many other reasons. When Sri Lanka were approaching the 100-run mark with six wickets down in the 27th over, on-strike batsman Siriwardana reported an issue with something that was close to the sight screen – flame throwers. Probably installed for use during the T20s played at the Hagley Oval, the flame throwers were reflecting light to disturb the batsman. They held up play for nearly ten minutes before the issue was resolved and play resumed.

Wagner brings NZ back after Burns, Smith tons

ESPNcricinfo staff21-Feb-2016A patient Joe Burns kept Australia ticking and brought up his fifty•Getty ImagesBurns and Steven Smith ensured that the hosts couldn’t cash in on the early blow, and took Australia to 151 for 2 at lunch•Marty Melville/AFP/Getty ImagesBurns reached his third Test hundred, and his first overseas, in the post-lunch session•Getty ImagesSmith brought up his fifty at the other end, as Australia marched towards a wicketless session•Marty Melville/AFP/Getty ImagesIn last over of the session, Smith was hit on the helmet by a Neil Wagner bouncer. After receiving medical attention he continued to bat and helped his side reach 241 for 2 at tea•Getty ImagesSoon after play resumed for the final session, Smith got to his 14th Test hundred•AFPSmith and Burns took their stand past 250, and just as it seemed that they would take Australia to stumps…•Getty Images… Neil Wagner removed both batsmen in successive overs. The visitors ended the day at 363 for 4, with Adam Voges and Nathan Lyon at the crease•Getty Images

'A true inspiration in women's cricket'

Former England team-mates led with tributes on Twitter for the retiring Charlotte Edwards

ESPNcricinfo staff11-May-2016

Moeen at No. 7, and England's fastest innings against Pakistan

Stats highlights from the 4th Test at the Oval, where England’s lower middle-order came to rescue with yet another fine performance.

Shiva Jayaraman11-Aug-20161938 The last time before Moeen Ali that a batsman made a hundred at The Oval batting at No. 7, when Joe Hardstaff (jnr) made 169 not out in the 1938 Ashes. Ali’s was just the fourth hundred by a No. 7 batsman in Tests at the Oval.71.00 Ali’s batting average in this series – the highest for any batsman with an aggregate of 200-plus runs, when batting at No. 7 or lower in a series. The previous highest was Ian Botham’s average of 70.66 in the 1978 series against Pakistan. Botham made 212 runs from three innings in that series.6 Centuries by England’s No. 6 and No. 7 in Tests this year – the most by a team in a calendar year, including two from Ali, including today. Bairstow has made three hundreds while Ben Stokes hit a mammoth 258 batting at No. 6 in Cape Town in January this year. England’s No. 6 and No. 7 have made 1828 runs at an average of 76.16, including an innings of 7 by Steve Finn against Sri Lanka at Lord’s earlier this year.97.16 Ali’s batting average at No. 7 in Tests – the highest by far for any batsman with at least 500 runs in that position – he has made 583 runs with three hundreds and two fifties at No.7. It is also the highest he averages in any batting position. Elsewhere in the order, Moeen averages 23.97, with 839 runs from 39 innings.5/68 Sohail Khan’s bowling figures in this innings – his best in Tests and only his second five-for in Tests. Khan has taken 12 wickets in his last three innings at an average of 22.91. In his first four innings in Tests, he had taken just one wicket for 245 runs.4.27 England’s scoring rate in their first innings – their highest in a total of 300 or more runs against Pakistan in Tests. This is also the seventh-highest run-rate in an innings of 300 or more runs in Tests against Pakistan.1213 Runs scored by England’s sixth-wicket stand in Tests this year – already the second highest by that wicket for any team in a calendar year. West Indies’ sixth wicket made 1223 runs in 1984 at an average of 67.94 with five century stands and four fifty stands. Including the 93-run stand between Jonny Bairstow and Moeen Ali in this innings, England have had nine fifty-plus stands in just 15 innings for the sixth wicket this year.879 Runs by Jonny Bairstow batting at No. 6 or lower in Tests this year – already the fourth-highest by any batsman in a calendar year when batting at No. 6 or lower. The 55 in this innings was Bairstow’s sixth fifty-plus score in 14 innings, including three hundreds this year. He averages 79.90 in 2016.5.57 Scoring rate of the partnership between Ali and Chris Woakes – the third highest in any stand of 50 or more runs for England in Tests against Pakistan. The 105-run unbeaten stand between Alastair Cook and Joe Root in England’s second innings at Old Trafford tops this list at a scoring rate of 7.41.51 Wickets taken by Wahab Riaz in Tests. James Vince’s wicket was his 50th. He becomes the fifth Pakistan left-arm pacer to take 50 or more wickets in this format. Wahab though, averages the worst among them having conceded 34.92 run per wicket.

Rapid Rabada gives SA attack relentless edge

South Africa were without the injured Morne Morkel, but hardly missed him, as Dale Steyn, Vernon Philander and Kagiso Rabada gave New Zealand’s batsmen zero breathing room on a spicy Centurion deck

Firdose Moonda in Centurion29-Aug-2016

It’s going to get tougher to bat – Steyn

Dale Steyn warned New Zealand that they have a tough task ahead in trying to save the Test as conditions worsen for batting. Although the groundsman did not expect the pitch to deteriorate, some inconsistent bounce is assisting the seamers and will continue to do so.
“It looked pretty hectic when we were batting,” Steyn said. “The cracks will widen as the day goes on tomorrow.”
He confirmed that South Africa were not looking at an overnight declaration despite their significant lead because they want to shut New Zealand out completely. “We want to give ourselves enough time to bowl them out but we also know the longer we hang out there, the more difficult it will be to bat. There’s no point of declaring them overnight and giving them a bit of a sniff.”
Just in case New Zealand though they may get away with a South African attack who could take victory for granted, Steyn dismissed that thought by emphasising how he is yet to get back to his best. “Twenty overs does not put you in a position to say I am back. You learn how to start playing the game again and I am getting there. There’s been some reward but nowhere near what I am capable of.”

Of the things running through Neil Wagner’s mind when he walked out to bat with New Zealand on 169 for 8, 127 of them would have been about his own bowling. That’s how many short balls he sent down in the 39 overs he bowled in the first innings, and he knew they would be avenged.The 128th thought would have been that he at least did not have to deal with Morne Morkel as well.Dale Steyn and Vernon Philander were back in South Africa’s attack, but instead of Morkel, who is nursing a back injury, they had Kagiso Rabada as the third prong. As a trio, they offer swing, seam, pace, bounce and all-round relentlessness, which could end up working Morkel out of the mix altogether.Between Steyn and Philander, they found exactly the right lines and lengths to create confusion in the New Zealand’s batsmen’s minds. They dropped the ball outside off and then made it swerve away enough to flirt with the edge, or find it. It’s like ringing a doorbell and then running away. Every time, the person inside will open the door just in case it’s not a prank.Even if New Zealand had got used to the trick, they had to cope with the home invasion. Rabada is more than the perfect first change, he is almost like a third opening bowler because he does things with the same intensity. He reaches speeds of 150kph regularly, bends his back to get extra bounce, and he varies his lengths to prevent anyone from settling.”It so nice to be back in this space,” Steyn said, after the three quicks had shared nine wickets to bowl New Zealand out for 214. “Vernon is a phenomenal bowler. He has kept it so tight. To bowl with him, you feel free because you can do whatever you want and he is going to tick over at two runs an over. And then KG, he’s bowling 150, he is hitting the deck and getting wickets. it’s a great partnership at the moment.”So much so that the spinner, Dane Piedt, had almost been an afterthought, bowling only seven overs in New Zealand’s innings.Once Morkel returns to fitness, South Africa could seriously consider a four-pronged pace attack in seamer-friendly conditions. It would be tough on Dane Piedt, who is fast developing into the kind of support spinner that South Africa like having around, but they have alternatives. JP Duminy and Dean Elgar could do holding jobs with the only concern around that selection being what impact it would have on transformation targets.Exactly what these are has not been made public and Russell Domingo had said before the series that he had not received any instructions, but it is understood that CSA have agreed to field six players of colour with at least two black Africans. That number will be calculated over the course of a season, which means there may be times where they can change their dynamics to suit the situation.On lively surfaces, South Africa will be formidable if their strike force includes all four of Steyn, Philander, Rabada and Morkel, and it looks increasingly likely that Morkel will play second fiddle to Rabada, especially if the evidence of the third day’s play is anything to go on.Rabada’s most aggressive spell came against Wagner, who would have known he had it coming, particularly since he has been the source of much needle so far. This was Wagner’s homecoming and he wanted to make an impact. He hit Hashim Amla and JP Duminy with short balls and got one to whizz past Temba Bavuma’s ears, but that was nothing on what he did to Rabada, whom he bounced nine times.Although he did not cause any harm, he had breached the unwritten code enough times to know what was coming. He just did not know how much of it he would have to take.Would it be gentle to start with, good length on off stump? Would it be the quicker one that hurried him off his feet and forced him to play? Or would Rabada try to do some real damage immediately?It was a bouncer, pitching on middle and leg, and climbing towards Wagner’s head. His helmet jittered. Wagner did not.Rabada turned around, expressionless, and did it again. Faster, but not as furious. Wagner could watch it down the leg side and calm down. Until Rabada turned around and slipped in something different but just as dangerous.Faster still, at 149kph, full and tempting. Wagner met it on the full and bottom-edged. Hashim Amla claimed the catch at first slip. It turned out to be a bump ball. Rabada, once again, turned around, expressionless.Four more bouncers had Wagner hopping before Rabada made contact again. This time on the shoulder. Rabada thought he had found bat or at least glove. He was animated, he appealed, and when he was denied he asked for a review. The first replay showed that in his efforts to unsettle Wagner, Rabada had overstepped. It became moot point that the ball clipped the edge of the bat before hitting Wagner’s shoulder. As soon as Rabada saw he had not got the desired result, he fixed his expression and hurtled in again.The next ball was a yorker, which Wagner again turned into a full toss and punched down the ground. His punishment was over.Steyn bowled the next over, and peppered Wagner again. This time he took the bouncers on, and took 18 off the over. The South African camp was unimpressed, and felt he may have been better served grinding it out in support of Kane Williamson, who was scoring a battling half-century at the other end. “He came out and backed away,” Steyn said. “If he wanted to be more courageous and brave, he would have been 30 off 90 and watched his captain get a hundred rather than take it on.”Wagner may want to keep that in mind when he bats again. Then, he may also have to face some spin, with Steyn expecting Piedt to come into the game far more. “The spinner will have to come into play and hopefully as the game goes on, there will be a little more for him,” he said.There will definitely be more for Wagner. What started as a little pre-match hype about his return to his home ground has turned into some needle over the pronunciation of his Afrikaans surname and, by extension, of everything he does on the field. “Things got a little bit heated and a few words were said,” Doug Bracewell said. “It’s always going to happen.”There will also definitely be more for South Africa’s new look attack, with or without Morkel.

NZ glean positives from Latham, Ronchi performances

Marks out of 10 for New Zealand, who had a few bright spots amid the 0-3 defeat to India

Sidharth Monga12-Oct-20163:09

Insights – Ross Taylor’s poor numbers against stronger teams

7

Tom Latham (194 runs at 32.33)One of the three batsmen to score a fifty or more in each of the Tests. Latham has little experience of playing in such heat and on such pitches, and he showed a lot of courage and determination to fight it out for long periods of time. Not for long enough as it turned out.Luke Ronchi (200 runs at 33.33)A bit of a surprise as he was not an established Test player coming into the series, but showed quickness of feet and eye to put India under pressure for brief periods of time. Got two rough lbw calls, but still would have liked to convert one of those contributions into a big one.Mitchell Santner (159 runs at 26.5, 10 wickets at 52.4)On his first Test tour to a country where he is expected to win his side matches, Santner did not quite answer that call but showed a lot of promise as an important player for the future. There was a lot of application in his batting and determination in his bowling. Could well end up as a genuine allrounder for all conditions.

5

Trent Boult (10 wickets at 33.3)With only one of the Tests played in conditions that kept him in the game, Boult did well to end up as the third-highest wicket-taker in the series. Never let up the intensity that New Zealand pride themselves on. Would have loved to run through the tail at least once.

4

Kane Williamson (135 runs at 33.75)Came as arguably the best Test batsman going around, began brightly enough with a half-century in his first innings of the series, but fell all four times to R Ashwin when playing on the back foot. Missed the middle Test with illness. Couldn’t win a toss either.Neil Wagner (5 wickets at 39.2)Brought the hostility he is known for, took out Virat Kohli once and played a part in setting him up on another occasion, but again failed to run through the tail, which you expect of hostile bowlers. With little or no reverse swing happening, he became a bit of a one-trick pony.Jeetan Patel (6 wickets at 48.66)Coming back after he had almost given up on playing for New Zealand, Patel bowled better than the numbers suggest. He was close to the pace required on the Indian pitches, stayed accurate for long periods, and could have perhaps made a difference in Kanpur, the most helpful pitch for the spinners in this series. Scored a 47 too.Jimmy Neesham (71 runs at 35.5)These are not the conditions for Neesham’s bowling; that and his injury meant he played only one Test. In that Test, though, he showed his aggressive intent could have helped them with the bat, and he did not bowl untidily either.Matt Henry (6 wickets at 42.33)Bowled with pace, precision and spirit, and once again the numbers don’t tell the whole story. What the numbers do say is that on a green pitch, he and his two partner fast bowlers were stalled by India’s tail twice. There was enough to suggest, though, that he will push Tim Southee for a place in the New Zealand conditions even if the incumbent is fit.Tom Latham did well against India bowlers in spite of little experience in the conditions•BCCI

3.5

BJ Watling (111 runs at 22.2 and five dismissals)Always seemed to find himself in the middle just when the ball began reversing. Kept fighting with the bat, and no blemish behind the stumps.

3

Martin Guptill (159 runs at 26.5)Got out caught off his own boot, bowled off his elbow and run out by the bowler through a deflection onto the stumps at the non-striker’s end. Having said that, opening is one of the less difficult jobs in India and, as the aggressive batsman, he was expected to set the tone, which he managed to do only once in six efforts.Ish Sodhi (3 wickets at 49.66)On the most responsive of the pitches for spinners, failed to put enough pressure on India and also bowled a fair few loose balls, getting cut or pulled. Sodhi was consequently dropped for the second Test, and played no further part in the series.Mark Craig (2 wickets at 69.5)Showed better control than Sodhi, but less menace. Did not make a difference with the bat either as New Zealand lost five wickets for seven runs in the first innings of the series. Unfortunate injury meant he did not get a shot at redemption.Henry Nicholls (25 runs at 12.5)Got thrown into the deep end with Williamson injured in Kolkata. Showed application in the second innings but India’s bowlers proved to be too good.

1

Ross Taylor (89 runs at 14.83)Just couldn’t trust his defence after he was out lbw to a straighter one in his first innings of the series. Guilty of plonking the front foot across and getting caught in between, making him a proper candidate for lbws. Not known anyway for disciplined defence, he couldn’t bring his cavalier approach against such good bowling in these conditions. Thirty-two of the runs came in a devil-may-care hit-out in the final innings of the series when not much was left to lose.

Best match figures for Maharashtra, and Rohan Prem's prolific season

Bharath Seervi16-Nov-201614/94 Anupam Sanklecha’s figures against Vidarbha – the best ever for Maharashtra. He is the first bowler to take 14 wickets in a match for Maharashtra. The previous-best figures were Sayajirao Dhanawade’s 13 for 58 against United Provinces back in 1948-49. Sanklecha took 7 for 25 and 7 for 69 in the two innings.3925 Rohan Prem’s total runs for Kerala in first-class matches – the highest by any batsman for Kerala. He beat Sunil Oasis’ tally of 3906 in his knock of 70 in the second innings against Goa. He also completed 4000 runs in his first-class career, 83 of those being scored for South Zone in the Duleep Trophy.5 Consecutive fifty-plus scores for Rohan Prem this season, including 130 and 70 in this round. He had not scored a single fifty in nine successive innings prior to this sequence, and was averaging 14.55. He is the highest run-getter for Kerala this season with 525 runs. The next-highest is Bhavin Thakkar (339), who is 186 behind.59 Vidarbha’s total against Maharashtra – their fifth-lowest overall, and lowest since 57 in the first innings against Haryana in 2004-05. Their lowest is 40 against Rajasthan in 1977-78.233* Hanuma Vihari’s score against Tripura – the third-highest for Andhra in first-class matches. The top two are Srikar Bharat’s 308 in 2014-15 and Amit Patnaik’s 264 in 2000-01 – both against Goa. This was Vihari’s fourth double-century in first-class cricket, of which three were scored for Hyderabad. He joined Andhra this season and, with 556 runs in nine innings, is their leading run-scorer.115 Deepak Hooda’s average in this season – the best among all batsmen who have scored over 200 runs. He has scored 690 runs in eight innings with three centuries and a 98, which he scored in this round.

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