Ashton Agar and Ish Sodhi move up in T20I bowlers' rankings

Tim Southee the only quick in the top ten, which is dominated by spinners

ESPNcricinfo staff10-Mar-2021Ashton Agar and Ish Sodhi have both moved up in the latest T20I rankings for bowlers following impressive hauls in the recent five-match series between New Zealand and Australia, which New Zealand won 3-2. While left-arm spinner Agar rose four places to be ranked No. 4, legspinner Sodhi entered the top ten by climbing three spots to No. 8.The table is still headed by Rashid Khan, with Tabraiz Shamsi and Mujeeb Ur Rahman completing the top three.Related

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Sodhi was the leading wicket-taker in the series with 13 strikes – at an average of 12.07 – including a career-best 4 for 28 in the first T20I in Christchurch.Agar, meanwhile, was just behind Sodhi in the wicket-takers’ list, with eight strikes. His wickets came at an economy rate of 6.88 and featured a match-winning 6 for 30 in the third T20I in Wellington. Agar’s haul also bettered his own record for the best T20I figures by an Australian bowler.The T20I bowling rankings continued to be dominated by spinners, with Sodhi’s team-mate Tim Southee the solitary pacer to sit inside the top ten. Also up there are Mitchell Santner, who took six wickets against Australia at 16.16, and Adam Zampa, who got four wickets. They are at No. 7 and No. 6 respectively.

Virat Kohli rises to No. 4 in T20I rankings for batsmen

In ODIs, Jonny Bairstow and Matt Henry entered the top ten among batsmen and bowlers respectively

ESPNcricinfo staff24-Mar-2021Virat Kohli has moved up to No. 4 in the latest T20I rankings for batsmen following his unbeaten 80 in the final T20I against England in Ahmedabad, which helped India clinch the five-match series 3-2.Kohli went past KL Rahul, and now has 762 rating points. Rahul, who had a horror run with the bat with scores of 1, 0, 0 and 14 in the series, has slipped to No. 5.Despite England losing the series, Dawid Malan, who scored a 46-ball 68 in the last game, continued to top the table with 892 rating points. Aaron Finch (No. 2, 830 points) and Babar Azam (No. 3, 801 points) are the others in the top five.In the ODI rankings, Jonny Bairstow climbed four places after his blazing 66-ball 94 in the first ODI against India in Pune. He is now in the seventh spot with 775 rating points.Kohli continued to occupy the No. 1 spot among ODI batsmen, with Azam and Rohit Sharma battling for the second position. With 837 rating points, Azam is No. 2, and Sharma, with one point fewer, is at No. 3.Among bowlers, Adil Rashid gained one spot to be at No. 4 in T20Is, where South Africa’s Tabraiz Shamsi is at the pole position, with a lead of 14 points over No. 2 Rashid Khan.New Zealand seamer Matt Henry is now ranked eighth among ODI bowlers, having gained three places since the last update, while Trent Boult continued to head the list.

Lachlan Stevens steps down as Melbourne Renegades and Victoria coach

“I’m proud to have been involved in both the women’s and men’s programs…it has been a fantastic experience and opportunity.”

ESPNcricinfo staff24-Mar-2021Lachlan Stevens will step down as the Melbourne Renegades WBBL and Victoria women’s coach at the end of the season with the WNCL final against Queensland his final match.Stevens has been in the joint role for one season having taken over from Tim Coyle (WBBL) and David Hemp (Victoria). He is returning to his native Queensland for personal reasons.Stevens has held numerous roles in Victoria cricket and has also been part of three Sheffield Shield titles, a domestic one-day title and the Renegades’ 2018-19 BBL title.”I’d like to thank everyone at Cricket Victoria and the Melbourne Renegades – the players, my fellow coaches, support staff – everyone who has made this such an enjoyable place to do what we do,” Stevens said. “I’m proud to have been involved in both the women’s and men’s programs – from the inception of WBBL through to Shield titles with the men’s team. It has been a fantastic experience and opportunity.”Cricket Victoria general manager Shaun Graf said: “Lachlan’s transition between our programs over the last five years is testament to his ability to build great relationships and get the best out of cricketers – regardless of what stage they are at in their careers.”He’s a coach of outstanding character, a terrific mentor and a great exponent of skill acquisition for young cricketers.”Melbourne Renegades general manager David Lever lauded Stevens’ role amid the increasing professionalism of the women’s game. “He’s taken first time professional cricketers and guided them all the way through to the national team. Lachlan has led with integrity, empathy and grace mixed with immense tactical and technical cricketing knowledge.”Cricket Victoria and the Melbourne Renegades will commence the process for securing a new head coach shortly.

Joe Root endures, Marnus Labuschagne does not, in Welsh Ashes prologue

Wickets tumble at Cardiff, as debutant wicketkeeper plays role in key scalp

David Hopps14-May-2021Yorkshire 69 for 4 (Root 34*, Bess 16*) trail Glamorgan 149 (Brook 3-13, Patterson 3-27) by 80 runs Anybody who googled “Harry Duke” on May 14, 2021 would have found Prince Harry expounding on his newly-held belief in genetic pain. Search the scorecard and there was not a run, catch or stumping to be seen. It is fair to remark that Yorkshire’s debutant wicketkeeper has yet to capture the public eye.But Harry Duke – that’s the teenage wicketkeeper from Wakefield and not the man sixth in line for the throne – can claim nevertheless to have made an immediate impact on his first day in the job, by playing a small but important role at the start of the Ashes phoney war.”The battle that will decide the Ashes: Root v Labuschagne” was how one national newspaper billed Yorkshire’s visit to Glamorgan. Only Joe Root has made more Test runs than Marnus Labuschagne since he played in his first Ashes Test as a concussion replacement for Steve Smith at Lord’s nearly two years ago. If Ashes series can ever be determined by a single match-up, it’s a fair enough theory.Labuschagne only managed 10 from 18 balls for Glamorgan before he fell lbw to Ben Coad, displaying his frustration at his error with an incredulous shake of the head and a route march to short leg and back. But that error might not have happened had Duke not dared to stand up to the stumps to Coad, force Labuschagne to abandon his method of batting well outside his crease, and contributed to the malfunction.Jonny Tattersall, who had been dropped to give Duke his chance, also stands up at times to Coad, who clocks around 80mph. But this was the first morning of a debut on a devilishly difficult pitch which offered the bowlers swing, seam and some uneven bounce. This was a 19-year-old on debut. This was a world-class batsman who might just nick one that would be easier to take standing back than standing up.Related

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His boldness brought to mind the pre-match comments by Martyn Moxon, Yorkshire’s director of cricket, when he reflected on the fact that the match would be televised. “Harry is a real competitor, a real scrapper and a battler, and he’ll thrive on that. He’s the kind of character who will relish the stage.”No need to fret unduly then, about the damage that could be caused by giving Duke an unexpected headline then, even in Yorkshire where “too much too soon” was once the catchphrase of every club chairman in the county.Labuschagne is having a lean time in this challenging English Spring. He has talked about the need to adjust his technique again for county pitches after becoming a little square-on to find more run-scoring opportunities against an India attack that bowled straight to him. His anxiety was perhaps illustrated before he had scored when he was sent back after Dom Bess had pulled off a fine stop at cover and would have been run out by a direct hit.Jimmy Anderson, who also dismissed him cheaply for Lancashire last week on their first-ever meeting, pointedly said with the Ashes in mind that it was “nice to get the first blow in” and then probably messed with Labuschagne’s mind even more by adding: “It’s like when you see a girl at a club and you try to play it cool; you want her to be impressed.”Joe Root endured in tough conditions•Getty Images

Root’s judicious unbeaten 34, by contrast, was comfortably the outstanding innings on a taxing batting day in which 14 wickets fell, so enabling the game to stay “live” after the loss of the first day to rain. Yorkshire are still 80 behind on first innings with six wickets left, aware that the world could collapse around their ears at any moment. Kent were dismissed for 72 in the last match on this ground and conditions can’t have been much different.Glamorgan were 82 for 7 immediately after lunch, total calamity prevented by David Lloyd and Billy Root, backed up by some tasty late-order flourishes. Lloyd, advanced up the order to opener this season, still drove freely during his 31, and survived missed slip catches by Root, at fourth, and Brook, at third, in reaching 10. Root’s was difficult; Brook’s was simpler, but the England captain (uncommonly) was to his right as well as the ball and these things can have an effect.This was the day that Billy Root was awarded his county cap, a nice touch with Joe available for the brotherly fist bump after the ceremony at the tea interval. He has developed into a decent county player in his own right and, after he reached 23, it took a smart catch in his follow-through by Brook to remove him off a leading edge.Brook, Yorkshire’s fifth seamer, collected 3 for 15 with his medium-paced inswing, Chris Cooke and Dan Douthwaite also falling lbw. Whenever Yorkshire’s attack lost its discipline the skipper, Steven Patterson, restored it. There were three wickets for him, too. Lloyd inadvisably left one which came back to hit his off stump and though the in-form Kiran Carlson got off the mark with his signature square drive, he then edged one that bounced a bit to first slip.Yorkshire subsided to 36 for 4 in return, three of them to Michael Neser, whose presence enhances Glamorgan’s already competitive edge. Lyth’s dismissal owed everything to a springing catch at square leg by Carlson, Ballance cut to third man in somewhat giveaway fashion and Neser no doubt observed Brook’s pronounced, unbalanced trigger movement across his stumps and thought “I’ll have a bit of that”.The day on ended with both commentators, Robert Croft and Eddie Bevan, covering an entire over in Welsh. At the end of the over the umpires decided enough was enough and called off play early. The two incidents were not thought to be connected.

Hannah Jones' Thunder steal two-wicket win despite Eve Jones 100* for Sparks

Spinner takes three-for as visitors get over the line despite collapse

ECB Reporters' Network12-Jun-2021Thunder 205 for 8 (Lamb 39, Davis 3-42) beat Central Sparks 203 (E Jones 100*, H Jones 3-33)Central Sparks suffered their first defeat in the Rachael Heyhoe Flint Trophy despite an unbeaten century from captain Eve Jones as North West Thunder edged home by two wickets at New Road.The Sparks totalled 203 all out on a used pitch after recovering from 17 for 3 thanks to a superb effort from Eve Jones who withstood an excellent three-wicket spell from spinner Hannah Jones.Thunder looked to be coasting to victory after openers Emma Lamb and Georgie Boyce put on 73.Sarah Glenn, allowed to play after her release from the England squad, and fellow spinner Georgia Davis turned the game back in the Sparks favour with combined figures of 5 for 74 from their 20 overs. But the Thunder lower order did enough to see their side over the finishing line with two overs to spare – their second win of the campaign.The Sparks were put in and opener Milly Home, on 1, failed to make her ground after Eve Jones played Piepa Cleary to mid-on and set off for a single.Poppy Davies was lbw to Laura Jackson for a first-ball duck, and Gwen Davies played the same bowler into the covers, set of for a single but hesitated and was run out by Cleary’s throw to Jackson for nought.Eve Jones and Steph Butler added 62 until the latter on 25 went down the wicket to Hannah Jones and was stumped. Clare Boycott helped put on a further 37 before being caught and bowled on 17 by Hannah Jones, who dismissed Glenn for a duck when she pulled a delivery to midwicket.The spin of Hannah Jones (10-1-33-3) and Alex Hartley (10-2-26-0) kept a tight grip on proceedings through the middle part of the innings.Eve Jones completed a 106-ball half century and Issy Wong, with 18, was a valuable ally in a half-century stand until she sliced Jackson to short third man.Eve Jones accelerated despite Ria Fackrell and Georgia Davis falling cheaply but the last batter in Liz Russell was at the crease when she reached three figures. Her second 50 runs came off only 42 balls and she hit one six and 14 fours and carried her bat after Russell was run out.Thunder openers Boyce and Lamb laid a solid platform but the wickets started to tumble against Glenn and Davis. Boyce pushed forward and was bowled by Glenn and Lamb went for a reverse-sweep against Davis and suffered the same fate.Cleary lofted Glenn straight to mid-off and Davis had Natalie Brown lbw and Rebecca Duckworth stumped in successive overs. Glenn and Davis finished with figures of 10-2-32-2 and 10-1-43-3 respectively.When they came out of the attack the game was evenly poised at 131 for 5 and a sixth wicket quickly fell when Fackrell had Ellie Threlkeld lbw. Laura Marshall and Jackson added 39 before the latter on 30 went lbw to Russell at 178 for 7 and Marshall, with 32, was bowled by Wong with three needed.

Mark Wood relishes England workload as new regime bears fitness fruits

Fast bowler still pushing the speed gun as careful management extends injury-free spell

Alan Gardner28-Jun-2021Mark Wood has had something of a reputation as a glass man during his six-year international career, such has been his fragility and susceptibility to injury – so it might be surprising to learn that, in the current era of rest and rotation, he is the England seamer with the most appearances to his name since the start of 2021.Even more so after Wood endured his frustrations with selection last year, playing just one Test during the summer and then being overlooked during the T20Is in South Africa. But since then, he has proved himself a man for all formats, featuring 12 times across Test, ODI and T20I cricket. Only Sam Curran, who classes as an allrounder, has played more games (13) and only James Anderson, a Test specialist, has bowled more overs (174.2 to Wood’s 155.5).Wood’s run includes playing back-to-back Tests in Sri Lanka and featuring in four T20Is out of five in India. He started the home summer with England by playing consecutive Tests against New Zealand at Lord’s and Edgbaston and featured in the opening two T20Is against Sri Lanka before being rested for the third. Throughout that time, not only has he remained fit, he has regularly posted speeds in the region of 93mph/150kph.Speaking ahead of the ODI series against Sri Lanka, which begins at Wood’s home ground of Chester-le-Street on Tuesday, he said that “good communication” with the England management and a more mature approach to dealing with the aches and pains of fast bowling was behind his increased durability.”Yeah, I feel good, I’ve strung a few games together, kept my pace up during the Tests and then into the T20s. I’ve backed up a lot of games now, the most since 2020-21 among the squad. If can contribute to winning games, that’s what it’s all about. That’s the bowler I want to be, if I’m taking wickets I want to take important wickets – that’s the key.Mark Wood cranks it up in the nets•Getty Images

“I just played back-to-back [Tests] versus New Zealand, played back-to-back in Sri Lanka. So to people who have doubted that, I have come a long way with the physical side of things. My routine, the strength coach, nutrition, bowling coach … I’m older and more mature now to say when my body isn’t quite feeling right, not just pushing through to play another game. Good communication has led us down this path where I have played back-to-back Test matches, back-to-back T20 – I was rested for the last one, not injured. If I can keep that going I’ll be happy.”Given there is a danger that Wood’s cutting edge might be blunted by overwork, three ODIs against Sri Lanka right on the outer orbit of the 2023 World Cup cycle might have represented a timely opportunity for a rest. Among England’s three out-and-out quick bowlers, he is currently the last man standing, with Jofra Archer in rehab after his latest round of elbow surgery and Olly Stone ruled out for the summer by a back stress fracture.But Wood, who has dealt with numerous injury setbacks including three major ankle operations, is keen to remain in harness – not least because of the pride he has at representing his country back in the north-east. “I have to contain myself a bit around the lads or they will take the Mickey out of me but I love coming back,” he said. With four wins and five defeats in the World Cup Super League so far, England could also do with the points.”I’ve missed so much cricket that playing any format for me is really special. As bowlers we’re rested and rotated to be fresh. But in this format we have to make sure we’re winning games, otherwise when it comes to that World Cup we could be in a tough group. Any game for England is important, I’m thankful that I’m involved in this squad. At the end of your career you don’t look at the games you were rested for, you look at the games you played.”I’m sure the other two lads will be back,” he said of England’s injured quicks. “I’ve been through a few problems myself and it’s never nice. I really feel for Stoney because during the [Edgbaston Test], he mentioned to me that his back was a little bit stiff and I didn’t think it was anything worse than just stiffness. To see he’s got a stress fracture again is really sad for him. Jofra has had his surgery and is coming back and I’m sure, the kind of guy he is, the determination he’s got – and he is a naturally fit guy anyway – he will be back with a bang.”Related

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There’s no doubt that Wood remains a glass-half-full kind of cricketer, and he was upbeat about the challenge of taking on Sri Lanka, despite the tourists’ insipid displays while going down 3-0 in the T20Is, and the fact they have lost the services of three senior players over a breach of Covid-19 protocols.”I have been surprised [by the T20I performances], they have some top players,” Wood said. “When I was growing up, they had some of the greatest names in the game. Maybe it is a side that is transitional a bit but they still have some very good players. They beat us in the World Cup recently in 2019. We were heavy favourites for that game and we lost so we can’t drop the ball here.”We pride ourselves on our performance so as long as we are doing our things right, keeping our intensity high, that’s what it’s all about.”

Nat Sciver fifty guides Rockets to win after bowlers snuff out Fire's innings

Graham, Johnson claim three wickets each as Fire are bundled out for 102

ECB Reporters Network06-Aug-2021Trent Rockets defeated Welsh Fire in Cardiff by four wickets with eight balls to spare thanks to an excellent fifty from Nat Sciver.The Rockets did a brilliant job at keeping the Fire’s batting under control with Heather Graham and Sammy-Jo Johnson claiming three wickets each as the hosts reached 102 all out from their 100 balls.Sciver made light work of the small target with a measured 54 from 40 balls that set up the win. The victory takes the Rockets to fourth in the Hundred table and within striking distance of a top-three spot and qualification for the knockout stages of the tournament.Having been put into bat, the Fire struggled to get going inside the Powerplay with Hayley Matthews struggling for timing for the first time in the tournament thus far. After 25 balls, the home team had reached 22 without loss and by the halfway stage of their innings they were 52 for 2 with Matthews on 13 from 25 balls.There was an acceleration from Matthews as she scored 15 runs in the next six balls she faced. It was exactly what the team needed but she couldn’t sustain that scoring rate, slicing a catch to Nancy Harman off the bowling of Graham.When Graham bowled Sarah Taylor two balls later the Fire had lost all the impetus that the flurry of Matthews boundaries had given them as they found themselves with two batters who had yet to face a ball in the middle.When Taylor fell the score was 76 for 4 from 63 balls. In the remaining 27 balls of their innings the Fire managed 26 runs for the loss of six wickets, finishing on 102 in a batting effort that included three run outs and three excellent stumpings by Rachel Priest.The Fire had a sub-par target to defend but they began well with the ball, with Johnson and Priest dismissed inside the first 15 balls. From there the Fire struggled to stay in the game as a 66-run partnership between Sciver and Katherine Brunt put the result beyond doubt.Brunt and Sciver were amongs four wickets to fall as the Rockets closed in on their target but despite this late flurry it was never enough to put their win in danger.

Tom Haines, Ben Brown score maiden List A centuries as Sussex beat Middlesex in thriller

Holden 94, Davies fifty help visitors to within three runs of victory at Hove

ECB Reporters Network12-Aug-2021Captain Tom Haines and Ben Brown scored maiden List A centuries as Sussex ended their Royal London Cup campaign by beating Middlesex by three runs in a thriller at Hove.Haines made 123 and Brown 105 as they shared a stand of 219 for the second wicket, the county’s fourth-highest partnership in one-day matches, out of a total of 333 for 4 after Haines had won the toss.With Travis Head and David Wiese adding 54 off 21 balls at the end, Sussex finished with their second-highest List A total in matches at Hove after plundering 130 off the last ten overs.Middlesex, who needed to win to have any chance of qualifying for the knockout stages, were in a decent position on 145 for 1 in the 28th over, but Sussex’s four slow bowlers maintained pressure and wickets began to fall, including opener Max Holden who top scored with 94.But left-hander Jack Davies made a rapid 51 off 37 balls and even when he departed in the 46th over Martin Andersson kept his side in the hunt. Middlesex took 23 off the penultimate over from Danny Ibrahim and when Andersson hit Wiese for six off the first ball of the final over they needed eight off five balls and were favourites.But Wiese held his nerve. He had Josh De Caires caught in the deep and conceded singles off the last three deliveries to see his side home. They swapped places with Middlesex to finish seventh in Group 2.Haines and Brown had earlier come together in the eighth over after Middlesex captain James Harris held a catch off his own bowling to dismiss Ali Orr for 13.It was the last success Middlesex enjoyed for 36 overs as Haines and Brown built their partnership in ideal batting conditions. The only chance either of them offered came when Haines was dropped on 117. He struck 11 fours and four sixes with only De Caires going for less than five runs an over.Haines made 123 from 131 deliveries before he was caught at deep mid-wicket off a mis-timed pull and Brown also departed to a standing ovation when he holed out to deep extra cover, his runs coming off 109 balls with eight fours. Head and Wiese then thrashed 54 from just 21 balls, 46 of which came in boundaries, Wiese making 33 off 11 and Head 46 from 20.Middlesex made a solid start with Holden sharing 65 with Steve Eskinazi (28) and 80 with Varun Chopra (45), but the required rate had climbed to nine an over by the time skipper Peter Handscomb was lbw sweeping James Coles for 16.Holden moved to 94 from 95 balls with 12 fours when Head took a sharp return catch to end a fine innings. The Australian off-spinner finished with 2 for 35 while Wiese and Will Beer also picked up two wickets.

Travis Dean joins rare club as he carries his bat a second time

James Pattinson had a good all-round day to give Victoria hope of pushing for victory

ESPNcricinfo staff22-Nov-2021Travis Dean became the third Victoria batter to twice carry their bat through a Sheffield Shield innings to earn his team a narrow first-innings lead at the SCG.James Pattinson then struck twice either side of a rain delay in the final session to leave the visitors with hope of pushing for victory on the final day if the weather allows.Playing his first game of the season, Dean faced 300 balls as he contributed more than half Victoria’s total. He had previously carried his bat against the same opposition at the MCG in the 2016-17 season.Matthew Elliott and Bill Lawry are the only others to have done so twice or more for Victoria in the 129-year history of the Shield.Dean was dropped at slip by Kurtis Patterson on 43 but that was his only error of the innings. He added 143 for the fourth wicket with Jonathan Merlo to turn the innings around from 3 for 2 on the first evening.The pair were close to seeing out the opening session before Merlo was trapped lbw by Moises Henriques and then Sam Harper was caught behind for a duck off Tanveer Sangha.At 5 for 145, New South Wales would have had hope of a lead themselves but Dean then added 111 in 27 overs with Pattinson who struck the ball cleanly. Sangha eventually broke through and the final five wickets fell for 15 with Hayden Kerr striking twice on his debut.Pattinson removed the in-form Daniel Hughes in the first over of New South Wales’ second innings when the opener drove loosely to slip. On resumption, Matthew Gilkes also edged into the cordon where Peter Handscomb took a sharp catch.

West Indies women 'relieved' to fly home after 11-day Oman quarantine

Head coach Walsh said the transition period in Oman was “mentally taxing” after the World Cup qualifier was called off

ESPNcricinfo staff10-Dec-2021The West Indies women have been cleared to fly home on Friday after an 11-day quarantine in Oman. The contingent was stranded in Oman since the ICC called off the women’s World Cup qualifier in Zimbabwe on November 27 after travel restrictions were imposed on large parts of southern Africa following the detection of the Omicron Covid-19 variant.Related

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“We are pleased to confirm that the West Indies Women’s squad will soon be making their way back home,” CWI CEO Johnny Grave said.”We want to thank them for their patience and understanding as we worked with our counterparts at the ICC and Oman Cricket to facilitate their return at the earliest opportunity. We want to express our appreciation to the ICC, Oman Cricket and our operations team, who have worked tirelessly to ensure everyone was comfortable and remained safe.”Head coach Courtney Walsh said that the team is “relieved” to head back home and be with their families before Christmas and that the transition period in Oman has been “mentally taxing” on the entire team, both for the players and management staff.”As a management group, we tried to ensure that the players remained in a positive frame of mind,” Walsh said in a statement. “Our strength and conditioning coach created a fitness challenge for all of us to participate in for the duration of the quarantine period, as it was something to take our minds off what was happening. I must say thanks to our Team Manager, the ICC and Oman Cricket, for all their logistical work, in ensuring we’re on our way home as quickly as possible.”The squad was flown to Oman via an ICC private charter, with a short stopover in Namibia, along with eight other international squads. Oman was used as a staging area for the West Indies contingent while they awaited an available route home.With the ODI World Cup set to take place next March and April, the qualifier cannot be held at a later date, and the ICC said that the three remaining spots will be decided according to the rankings. Following the termination of the qualifying event, Bangladesh, West Indies and Pakistan secured their places. Hosts New Zealand, Australia, England, South Africa and India have already qualified for the marquee event.