'That was out of this world!!!!!'

Reactions to South Africa’s stunning chase of 372 against Australia at Kingsmead

ESPNcricinfo staff06-Oct-2016

England's zombie World Cup history

What turned them from the bright-eyed World Cup finalists of 1992 to the dead men stumbling about in 2015? A new book attempts to find answers

Alan Gardner25-Sep-2016Peter Moores may not have wanted to look at the data later but his apocryphal utterance after England’s shambolic exit from the 2015 World Cup has, in the finest cricket tradition, taken on a life of its own. Like Steve Waugh’s “You’ve just dropped the World Cup, mate” or Brian Johnston’s “The bowler’s Holding, the batsman’s Willey”, Moores supposedly needing a numerical breakdown of how England dropped their bundle against Bangladesh looks set to enter the canon.It has been debunked before, and the authors of , a dissection of England’s failings at the last six World Cups, readily explain the “crackly radio line” that led to Moores being misquoted by the BBC in their prologue to the book. A prologue entitled “We’ll have to look at the data.” In a book named after the length of England’s disastrous campaign (28 days) and, yes, the D-A-T-A. Moores seems a very forgiving man but he is not going to hear the end of this one.He is just one of many former England players and coaches that Peter Miller and Dave Tickner (who you might know better as @TheCricketGeek and @tickerscricket) spoke to in putting together , which features another infamously iconic moment from England’s white-ball history on the cover: Nasser Hussain raising three fingers at the Lord’s media centre. The book title is based on a film about a rage-inducing virus that turns people into zombies; no further explanation needed.But what caused the contagion? What turned England from the bright-eyed World Cup finalists of 1992 to the dead-men-stumbling who were knocked out in the first group stage when the tournament returned to Australia and New Zealand 23 years later? The most recent edition was so bad that Miller and Tickner liken it to “a Greatest Hits compilation, and there is definitely a lost consonant there somewhere”.There is quite a back catalogue to get through and the formula chosen is straightforward: visit each debacle in turn and talk to those involved. The initial fall was swift. Four years on from a strong side, led by Graham Gooch, being beaten by Imran Khan’s “cornered tigers”, England belatedly discovered the world was playing a different game – literally, in some cases, with England’s home ODIs still taking place in daylight with white clothes, a red ball and different fielding restrictions to those in other parts of the world.Preparation was also an issue (and was to become a theme). The 1996 World Cup was played in India, Pakistan and Sri Lanka – so naturally England had not been to the subcontinent for three years previously. While Sri Lanka, the eventual winners, were tearing up the place with Sanath Jayasuriya and Romesh Kaluwitharana at the top of the order, England’s nod to innovation was to open (in three of their six games) with Neil Smith, the Warwickshire offspinner and occasional pinch-hitter best remembered for a cheeky on-pitch vomit, who had played a grand total of two ODIs going into the tournament.This was all before you bring the coach, Raymond Illingworth, and his eccentricities into the equation. “I think we probably made the most of what we had,” begins Illingworth in a rambling, reflective quote, during which he says he had “played a lot more one-day cricket” than the captain, Michael Atherton, criticises Atherton’s field placings and the bowlers bowling short and then concludes: “We could have made better use of what we had.”England making poor use of what little they had was the recurring problem, and most supporters will be familiar with the zesty collection of cock-ups that follows. The experiment with Adam Hollioake as a specialist one-day captain (appointed after five games, led England to victory in Sharjah, reign over inside a year) provided a brief glimpse of how things might have been, before the ECB went back to picking Test-shaped players to fill ODI-shaped holes – notably replacing Nick Knight with Hussain as opener (a role he had never performed before) on the eve of the 1999 World Cup.Pitch PublishingEngland, the hosts, were of course eliminated before the official World Cup song was even released (a song, incidentally, that Dave Stewart quietly repurposed for the Jackie Chan film a few years later). As Miller and Tickner put it: “They had not only reverted to type, they had become more English than ever. It was verging on self-parody.”No one, inevitably, looks back on any of England’s limited-overs floundering during the 1990s and 2000s with much fondness. Unfortunately, while the pathology was consistent and the diagnoses fairly unanimous (England didn’t accord one-day cricket the same status as Tests, and were therefore doomed to repeat the same mistakes), that means there is not too much fresh light to shed. Andrew Strauss admits to errors in selection going into the 2011 World Cup, when England suddenly replaced Steven Davies with Matt Prior – “that sent shockwaves through the team” – and then subsequently took a punt on an untried Kevin Pietersen as opener, but such revelations don’t quite qualify as English cricket’s version of .Strauss may, however, have helped concoct the antidote, with his insistence since taking over as England’s director of cricket on treating the white-ball formats seriously. That has underpinned their startling renaissance since the Alpha-and-Omega failure last year. Moores gamely suggests the scale of that humiliation was the “best thing that happened” and seems to include his own removal from the coaching job among reasons to be optimistic. Whether the serum has a lasting effect, we are yet to find out; if not, expect to be an even angrier sequel.28 Days’ Data
Peter Miller and Dave Tickner
Pitch Publishing
352 pages, £9.99

Cook finally quashes security questions?

Stephen Cook has now struck the most hundreds by a South African this year. It’s time to stop asking how Cook scores his runs, and acknowledge that he does

Firdose Moonda in Port Elizabeth28-Dec-2016Stephen Cook started 2016 with a century on Test debut in Centurion and ended it with one at St George’s Park. This year has been the time of his cricketing life; the year he cemented his spot in the Test side.Forget about his unorthodox approach to scoring runs. Forget that he flaps outside the off stump, curtain-in-the-wind style. Forget how many times the ball flies off the edge as a result. Forget how agricultural his sweep can be and that he often overbalances when playing the stroke.It might be a good counter-offer to ask you to remember that his driving, especially off the back foot, can be sublime. But if you’re honest, that’s not what you’re going to take away from this innings, is it? You’re going to remember how Cook battled through the boredom of facing an attack that was not really interested in taking wickets and a clock that seemed to have stopped. The second session was three hours and ten minutes in total, interrupted by a 20 minute shower, but it felt a lot longer.There was no real intent in Sri Lanka’s approach, as though they had resigned themselves to chasing a mammoth target and were getting on with helping the hosts set what they wanted. Their line was either outside off or on the pads, they left large gaps in the field and provided enough loose deliveries for South Africa to put away.Play meandered aimlessly and batsmen could easily have lost concentration and given it away. Dean Elgar did, but only after he had shared in a second successive century opening stand with Cook. Elgar will be furious for not converting either of the fifties he has scored in this match; Cook would have known he could not afford to make the same mistake.Even though he has scored three hundreds and two fifties in seven Tests and averages more than any of his team-mates, Cook has been the critics’ prime candidate to get the cut when AB de Villiers returns to fitness. Faf du Plessis is secure. Between JP Duminy and Temba Bavuma, there are glimpses of form. No one has dared to suggest Hashim Amla could be on the wane, not properly anyway. So that leaves one of the openers and since Elgar has been there longer, Cook has come under fire. Unfairly. This innings should have doused those flames, if not completely put them out.No other South African batsman has scored more hundreds than Stephen Cook this year•Getty ImagesCook’s most convincing period came when Amla, the man that could be considered a candidate in the when-de Villiers-returns era, was at the other end. Amla vacillated between being tentative early and taking on the bowling to force his way back into form but Cook, apart from the chance he gave to gully off the outside edge, was the stable hand. Cook was particularly impressive in his strike rotation and his urgency to keep things moving. The Cook-Amla partnership came at a rate of 5.57.Amla benefitted from it too and looked better than he has done in the last four matches. A slight shift to his stance, with Amla taking guard on off stump rather than middle and off, has allowed him to be in better positions to play his shots. The cover drives he rolled out were as good as any he’s treated spectators to over the years, but until he crosses a milestone, concerns over his form will remain.In the same way, it’s starting to feel as though no matter what Cook does he will always be playing for his place to some extent. Cook’s age – he is 34 – and his technique fuel that argument but it’s time to acknowledge that it’s not about how Cook does it, but that he does it. He has done it for a decade-and-a-half, racked up over 12,000 first-class runs and 40 centuries, including one at every ground in South Africa except Pietermaritzburg Oval. His franchise, Lions, are playing against Dolphins at that venue on January 19, three days after the final Test against Sri Lanka.Don’t for a moment think Cook will want to rest from that game. It would give him the chance to kick off 2017 as perfectly as he ended 2016 and having seen what a good start can do for him, it’s something he won’t want to miss out on.

Rishabh Pant hits 48-ball hundred

The Delhi batsman has been in terrific form this season – scoring a lot of runs at a rapid strike rate

Bharath Seervi08-Nov-201648 Balls taken by Rishabh Pant to reach his century in the second innings against Jharkhand – one of the fastest hundreds by an Indian batsman in domestic first-class cricket. Two batsmen have scored a century off 56 balls: Rajesh Borah in 1987-88 and VB Chandrasekhar in 1988-89.21 Sixes hit by Pant in the match – eight in the first innings and 13 in the second. Only one player has hit more sixes in a first-class match – 23 by Colin Munro in the Plunket Shield in 2014-15; he hit all those in a single innings. The previous record by an Indian player was 15 sixes by Yusuf Pathan in the Duleep Trophy final in 2009-10. Pant has hit 44 sixes this season, the most by a distance.113.01 Pant’s strike rate this season, the best among batsmen who have faced 100 or more balls. He had a strike rate of over 100 in six out of seven innings this season, and the only innings in which he did not do so was his triple-century – 308 off 326 balls.799 Runs by Pant so far this season – the most by any batsman. No one else has more than 700. Pant’s current average this season is 114.14. He has made four centuries in seven innings, also the most in this edition.238 Previous highest score by a Jharkhand batsman in Ranji Trophy, by Saurabh Tiwary in 2013-14. Ishan Kishan’s 273 against Delhi in this round is now the highest for Jharkhand. His score is also the fourth highest score by a wicketkeeper in Ranji Trophy history. The 14 sixes hit by him are the joint-most by any batsman in a Ranji Trophy innings. Sakthi Singh also had hit 14 sixes for Himachal Pradesh in 1990-91.7 Ducks in Chattisgarh’s second innings,the joint-most in a Ranji Trophy innings. The previous instance in which a team had seven ducks in a Ranji Trophy innings was Andhra against Punjab in 2003-04. Chhattisgarh’s innings was the fifth Ranji Trophy innings to have as many ducks. They collapsed from 148 for 3 to 162 all out and lost by eight wickets against Goa.6/27 Siddarth Kaul’s figures against Uttar Pradesh – his first-class best. His previous best was 6 for 57 against Bengal earlier in the season. He is the only bowler to take two six-fors in this season so far and, with 27 wickets, is second-highest wicket-taker behind Pankaj Singh (28).2 Five-fors for Krishnamoorthy Vignesh, who made his Ranji Trophy debut in this season. No other Tamil Nadu bowler has taken even a single five-for in five matches so far. He took 5 for 23 in the first innings against Baroda in this round. He now has 21 wickets in four matches at average of 13.85. His bowling average is the best among all bowlers to take more than 15 wickets in this season.672 Yuvraj’s aggregate in this Ranji Trophy – his highest in any edition of the tournament. His previous best was 671 in 2001-02 in 12 innings. He has scored 672 runs in eight innings this season with two centuries and is the second-highest run-getter after Pant.

Jennings takes military lessons into the middle

Keaton Jennings talks about how military training has helped his cricket, the influence of Alastair Cook, and leading the Lions side to Sri Lanka

David Hopps27-Jan-2017Since England were thumped 4-0 in the Test series in India, any mention of Alastair Cook has come with speculation that his captaincy of England might be about to come to an end. Next week; perhaps before the start of the English season; perhaps not for a long while yet? Perhaps not even Cook quite knows the answer.Captaincy fever has lingered for a month or more now like a winter virus you can’t quite shake off. Cook has met with Andrew Strauss, the one-time opening partner who will help him determine his fate, donned the farming wellies again and relished a return to family life. Lots of thinking; precious little revealing.With England’s next Test still more than five months away, for all the feverishness of the media, there is no need to rush. There is ample time to rest and reflect, to travel beyond the here and now – an overwhelming defeat in India – and gain a broader perspective about his career, his ambitions and his life. If he does continue, it surely should be with a minimal resolve to lead England into another Ashes series at the end of the year.Cook’s captaincy qualities are not always readily apparent from afar. He makes big runs but he mangles his words. He invites loyalty from his team but makes no tub-thumping speeches. He can barely change his field without a slight from a former England captain. He is England’s iceberg captain, with nine-tenths of his strength hidden from view.For Keaton Jennings, who has been fast-tracked into the England Lions captaincy in Sri Lanka next month, with two four-day matches and five 50-over matches to oversee, Cook’s worth could not be more evident. Nobody appreciates the value of a captain more keenly than a dressing-room newbie. Even the most self-possessed will feel some insecurity about their ability and their acceptance as they join a team in which roles are already known, friendships – and tensions – already formed.

“The last thing you want is a group of players not to respond well to you and you end up feeling more stressed out from it than enjoy it”Keaton Jennings on the challenge of captaincy

For Jennings, who made his Test bow in Mumbai in December, the memories are still fresh. He missed out to Haseeb Hameed when England’s original Test squad for India was chosen, but was hastily called up when Hameed broke a finger in Mohali. A maiden Test century in his first innings and a duck in his second meant he soon explored the fluctuating emotions of Test cricket life.Back in April in Durham, Jennings was a young county batsman trying to go up a level, determined to realign his career by bringing more contentment into an ordered and conscientious sporting lifestyle. By September he had seven Championship centuries, 1548 runs at 64.50, and even starred as Durham were beaten finalists in the NatWest Blast.He had not even met Cook before England’s tour of India. As a fellow left-hander of similar approach, a less giving captain might even have seen him as a rival, an upstart riding on the back of his first prolific county season.It was then, as far as Jennings is concerned, that Cook came into his own. “Cookie was brilliant for me: he was very welcoming, warm, friendly, I suppose caring, in terms of being very aware when I came into the tour of the need to make me feel part of the group immediately,” he says.Jennings on his England opening partner and captain, Cook: “He made a real impact on me and the way I viewed him as a person as well. He’s been incredible for me”•AFP”And his batting input was really good. To look at a guy who has achieved so much but still gave me so much is something to take note of – how within a tour you are still making time for others and put something back into the group.”In those two and a half weeks he made a real impact on me and the way I viewed him as a person as well. He’s been incredible for me. You see people in the media and think how they will be, and he was ten times better than that. He was brilliant.”When the Lions leave for Sri Lanka next month, Jennings has the opportunity to model his leadership style, partly at least, on Cook’s manner. It is politic, of course, to praise the captain in possession, but glibness is not part of Jennings’ make-up. At Durham and in England circles, his integrity wins many plaudits. In Cook, whatever people might say about his tactical approach, he has a good role model.Jennings’ elevation to the Lions captaincy is another stride forward in a career beginning to catch fire, an appointment more relevant than it appears. There might have been a time when picking a Lions captain might have just been a matter of bunging the job to the guy with a couple of Test caps, but no longer. Developing leadership skills is a priority for the England Lions coach, Andy Flower. Jennings, who has not skippered a side since school days in South Africa, has been appointed because of that leadership potential.”It’s my first proper taste of leadership within any professional environment for any sort of period of time,” he said. “But as Joe Root said recently, it’s one of those things you get thrown into. You find out how you do it and what makes you tick within the role. Hopefully the guys respond well to it. The last thing you want is a group of players not to respond well to you and you end up feeling more stressed out from it than enjoy it.”

It would benefit England if Durham offered Jennings the captaincy in all competitions until the South Africa Test series began, but few would regard it as benefiting the side: professional clubs do not like to be regarded as a training ground

Jennings’ career encapsulates England’s problems. Players of the highest calibre often break into international cricket before they have gained captaincy experience with their county. He is committed to staying with Durham despite their enforced relegation from Division One of the Championship as penalty for a financial bailout, but a decision has yet to be taken on whether he will captain them in limited-overs formats.He could fulfil the role in 50-over cricket comfortably enough, now that the Royal London Cup has been moved to early season, but the NatWest Blast clashes with England’s Test series against South Africa. As Durham’s coach Jon Lewis weighs his options, Jennings’ experience with the Lions takes on deeper significance.”Nothing has been confirmed about white-ball captaincy at Durham,” he said. “There will be conversations we need to have at some stage. I just haven’t spent enough time in the north-east to sit down with Jon Lewis and discuss the vision for the club and the direction it wants to take in the next year or two. But it’s a changing room you want to be a part of, and that’s what made the call on my future so much harder. I am definitely part of that, and will try to lead the fightback next year.”It would benefit England if Durham offered Jennings the captaincy in all competitions until the South Africa Test series began, but few would regard it as benefiting the side: professional clubs do not like to be regarded as a training ground. Even with Paul Collingwood, a former England stalwart, still in charge at 40, and with no reason to be insecure about the authority and respect he commands, such munificence would be a major turn-up.That leaves Jennings to learn about leadership with a military flavour, a recourse that has always attracted Flower. Such methods have not always gained universal approval. Back in 2010, a pre-Ashes bonding trip to Bavaria, arranged by the ECB’s security expert Reg Dickason, a test of physical and mental strength that had teamwork at its core, saw James Anderson crack a rib in a boxing bout, and was described by Graeme Swann as the worst four days of his life.Keaton on his father Ray: “He’s brilliant the way he analyses me, the words he has to kick me up the butt to motivate me”•AFPGemma Morgan’s contribution over the past two years is arguably more appropriate, certainly more cerebral. Her task is to explain the qualities of leadership to cricketers who have often equated it to seniority or background. A former army captain who trained at the Royal Military Academy in Sandhurst, her stint in Kosovo left her suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder. She won England caps in lacrosse – she was once disciplined for being disruptive – took a sports science degree and is now a business consultant, specialising in nurturing young leaders.Methods used at Sandhurst, in which leadership is assessed by physical and mental challenges, practical tests and social interaction are now a common feature of life at the national performance centre in Loughborough, as she has become an integral part of England’s Under-19 and Lions set-up.From the moment that Cook’s captaincy came under question, Root was understandably assumed to be England’s captain-in-waiting, but he is in no rush to take the job – certainly in less of a rush than some of his advocates – and Swann is one former team-mate who worries that Root’s sparky, scampishly-rebellious nature might be undermined by the demands of captaincy.It would be intriguing to know Morgan’s assessment of that. Root remains Cook’s most natural successor, but if Cook remains in the England job throughout the Ashes, Root’s responsibilities in all three formats appear demanding enough and Jennings, still only two Tests into his career, goes from strength to strength as a batsman, the succession might no longer be so clear-cut.In the England tour party in Sri Lanka, it would be average to discover three or four players with strong leadership potential. Jennings, it can safely be assumed, heads the list.

“If I do play at Lord’s, I think I’m going to waste a ticket on him. I would love him to be there”Jennings wants his father to watch him play against South Africa

Morgan explained her approach in the , saying: “At Sandhurst I came to understand that it was not about me but about duty and service to others. Before they teach you any technical stuff, they underpin everything with values that are uncompromising. Integrity, for example. If you breach integrity you’re gone and you won’t be invited back. Once you’ve got these anchors in place, they add on the technical bits. In sport and business it is the other way around. In the army, they will not take a risk on character.”Jennings’ enthusiasm for this potential for growth was evident. “A lot of it has been based around the military, thinking of how they trust each other within a team, how they train each other, the lengths they go to – to trust, take responsibilities for their own actions and stay away from being a sheep.”It’s really interesting to see the military view of it, where the stakes essentially are life. If you drop a catch, it’s not life and death. You may risk a game.”They have a precision in their field, which is interesting. A lot of it is based around instruction – how precise you are within your own decision-making. We did a test down at Sandhurst with a bit of a scenario when the wind was blowing hard, and the sails were broken, and Gemma was trying to get guys to be more precise, more decisive in making decisions, trying to make the correct decisions more often and a little bit more quickly as well.”You take in the information you’ve got, try to assess, make the decision and then you review afterwards. We’ve been learning about structure within a decision-making process.”When you are under pressure, and the world is watching, Sky TV, a million people all over the world, and you have to make a decision that will impact the rest of the game: they are trying to prep you on things outside of cricket for that scenario.”Jennings’ upbringing ensures that such tests are no shock to him. His father and mentor, Ray Jennings, a former South Africa wicketkeeper and international coach, has instilled the discipline that made him such a ferocious character, except that it is revealed more softly in his son. “He’s brilliant the way he analyses me, the words he has to kick me up the butt to motivate me,” Jennings said.Jennings has committed to Durham next season despite their relegation. But will the county choose to make him the white-ball captain?•Getty ImagesHe was a former head boy, too, at King Edward VII school in Johannesburg, a close friend of Quinton de Kock, who remained loyal to South Africa while Jennings headed to England. They swapped messages on social media when Jennings won his first cap, in Mumbai.Once Jennings completes the Lions tour, and the North v South one-day series in Dubai that is meant to bring more context to the English counties’ 50-over cricket, he will spend a short period with his family in South Africa. There are nine Championship matches before the first Test against South Africa at Lord’s on July 6, and he is making no assumptions that he will be selected, but if he is, then he can anticipate a family celebration.He would prefer to open, but is sensible enough not to wish away a career as illustrious as Cook’s before its time. Hameed is a less rounded player so if all three played in the same side, the logic suggests that Jennings would have to bat at first drop.Ray – “Coach” as his son often calls him – deliberately stayed away from his Test debut in Mumbai because, as a former coach for Royal Challengers Bangalore in the IPL, he was concerned he would deflect some of the attention and make his debut all the more intense.”It was a selfless decision he made to not come to my debut in Mumbai, having invested so much as a father, a coach; to sit back and allow your kid to go into your world. He spent four years in India. I only realised the impact he had there when on the first night we had a function and for two hours I got grilled on him,” Jennings says.”That’s when I realised the love they have for him and why he didn’t come. If I hadn’t done well, it would have heightened the intensity on me. He took that pressure off me.”If I do play at Lord’s, I think I’m going to waste a ticket on him. I would love him to be there. If he doesn’t get on the plane, that’s his call. It’s any boy’s dream to have their loved ones there and hopefully achieve. A Test at Lord’s is a special day.”

De Kock's Déjà vu

Plays of the day from the third ODI in Wellington where South Africa completed a big win against the hosts

Andrew McGlashan in Wellington25-Feb-2017The Déjà vuQuinton de Kock’s one-day series: Hamillton, caught midwicket 69; Christchurch, caught deep square-leg 57; Wellington, caught deep square-leg 68. Throw in the T20I, where he was also caught at deep square, and there’s a pattern emerging. You can’t knock his form – it’s five fifty-plus scores in a row in ODIs – but he has regularly shown in the past the hunger to convert into three-figure and he’s thrown away three opportunities in this series. Still, his opposite number Tom Latham, who care barely buy a run, would probably think it’s a minor problem.The nibbleColin de Grandhomme is a bit of a throwback to New Zealand of yesteryear, the medium-pacer who can land it on a length and wobble the ball. Yet while you had the stellar records of Tim Southee and Trent Boult, plus the pace of Lockie Ferguson, it was de Grandhomme who proved their most effective bowler. There was one delivery which stood out – and it didn’t take a wicket – when he squared up AB de Villiers with a delivery that jagged away off the seam, and then swung as it passed the bat. Too good for AB – that’s something.The two-card trickIt was a tricky comeback day for Ferguson. He bowled with eye-catching pace, regularly pushing 150kph, but conceded a hefty 71 runs. However, he did have his moments. The wicket he claimed came from a superb set-up against Dwaine Pretorius. Firstly he pushed the batsman back with a short ball then, with Pretorius camped deep in the crease, he speared a full length ball at off stump which held its line, beat the outside and nicked the woodwork. Ferguson is raw, but has something to work with.The lucky strikeIn the first two games of this series, Andile Phehlukwayo had made more of an impact with the bat than the ball. But he picked a pretty handy moment to open his wicket tally. He had replaced Kagiso Rabada, after a fine opening spell, as Kane Williamson and Ross Taylor were starting to form a partnership. Having built pressure with a nagging line and length – going for just four runs in 2.4 overs – he induced Williamson to play the ball into his stumps when trying to dab to third man.

On the dressing-room tour

These players have their kit bags constantly packed as they move from one IPL franchise to another

ESPNcricinfo staff19-Mar-2017Parthiv Patel
Chennai Super Kings, Kochi Tuskers Kerala, Deccan Chargers, Sunrisers Hyderabad, Royal Challengers Bangalore, Mumbai Indians
In Chennai Super Kings’ first IPL season, Parthiv Patel was their third highest run-getter. But his stock declined steadily, and by 2010, he was struggling to get into the first XI. A release inevitably followed. He then got unlucky, as the next two franchises he played for, Kochi Tuskers Kerala and Deccan Chargers, were both terminated a year after he joined them. Chargers became Sunrisers Hyderabad, and Parthiv was part of their squad for a season before going into the big 2014 auction. Royal Challengers Bangalore bought him, but released him after a season. He has since become an important member of Mumbai Indians’ squad and is likely to be their first-choice wicketkeeper this season.Aaron Finch
Rajasthan Royals, Delhi Daredevils, Pune Warriors, Sunrisers Hyderabad, Mumbai Indians, Gujarat Lions
Aaron Finch was not bought at the 2010 auction, but brought into the Rajasthan Royals team just before the season began after Graeme Smith and Dimitri Mascarenhas were injured. He played just one game for Royals before going into the big 2011 auction, in which he was bought by Delhi Daredevils. He did not play much cricket for them either and had to wait till 2013 to make his mark, hitting 456 runs in a season for Pune Warriors. After Warriors was terminated, he spent a year each at Sunrisers and Mumbai, before being bought by Gujarat Lions in 2016. He was their second-highest run-getter last season and will play for them again this year.Thisara Perera
Chennai Super Kings, Kochi Tuskers Kerala, Mumbai Indians, Sunrisers Hyderabad, Kings XI Punjab, Pune Supergiants
Rather incredibly, Thisara Perera has played for six different IPL franchises, yet has played just 37 games, averaging just over six games per franchise. He has not lasted more than a season at any franchise, and 28 of those 37 games have come over two seasons. In 2013, he played 13 games for Sunrisers and then last season he played 12 games for Pune Supergiants. All his other teams barely got any cricket out of him. As if wanting to keep his record of never lasting more than a season with a franchise intact, Supergiants released him after last season. He was unsold at the 2017 auction.Dinesh Karthik is at Gujarat Lions after playing for four other franchises•AFPYuvraj Singh
Kings XI Punjab, Pune Warriors, Royal Challengers Bangalore, Delhi Daredevils, Sunrisers Hyderabad
Yuvraj Singh was the icon player for Kings XI Punjab in the IPL’s first season. But they chose not to retain any of their players before the 2011 auction. He was one of the most expensive players in the auction, going for $1.8 million (Rs11.78 crore) to Pune Warriors. In the 2014 auction, in which he was available due to Warriors being terminated, he went for even more, Rs 14 crore, to Royal Challengers Bangalore. He’s been released twice since, though, by Royal Challengers and then Delhi Daredevils, for whom he played the 2015 season after they bought him for Rs 16 crores, and now finds himself at Sunrisers Hyderabad, with whom he won his first IPL trophy, last season.Dinesh Karthik
Delhi Daredevils, Kings XI Punjab, Mumbai Indians, Royal Challengers Bangalore, Gujarat Lions
Delhi to Punjab to Mumbai, then back to Delhi, then on to Bengaluru and Gujarat – that’s been Dinesh Karthik’s journey as an IPL player. He has never excelled, causing teams to release him, but always done just enough to attract someone else’s attention and has never missed a season. Gujarat Lions have retained him for the 2017 season, but with a big auction expected after that, Karthik may add more teams to his resume before his career is done.Ashish Nehra
Mumbai Indians, Delhi Daredevils, Pune Warriors, Chennai Super Kings, Sunrisers Hyderabad
After just one season with Mumbai Indians, Ashish Nehra was transferred to his home state’s franchise, Delhi Daredevils. He became an important bowler in their squad, but Daredevils retained just Virender Sehwag ahead of the 2011 auction. Pune Warriors pounced and bought Nehra for $850,000 (Rs 5.56 crore), more than four times his base price. Daredevils got him back for the 2013 season, but then he was off to Chennai Super Kings, where impressive performances led to a recall to the India team after four years. Once Super Kings was suspended, he was bought by Sunrisers.Ashok Dinda
Kolkata Knight Riders, Delhi Daredevils, Pune Warriors, Royal Challengers Bangalore, Pune Supergiants
Ashok Dinda gained recognition with his performances during his three-year stint at Kolkata Knight Riders from 2008-2010, but has since not settled at a franchise. Daredevils kept him for just a season after buying him in the 2011 auction, Warriors had him for two and Royal Challengers played him just 11 times over two seasons. He returned to form last season, in which he took 11 wickets in nine games for Pune Supergiants, convincing them to retain him.RP Singh’s return to the IPL, as a Pune Supergiants player, was short-lived•BCCIPraveen Kumar
Royal Challengers Bangalore, Kings XI Punjab, Mumbai Indians, Sunrisers Hyderabad, Gujarat Lions

Praveen Kumar had two three-year stints, the first with Royal Challengers and the second with Kings XI, both relatively successful. But after that, he became a bit of a journeyman, spending just one year each at Mumbai Indians, who signed him up as a replacement, and Sunrisers. Last season, he played all of Gujarat Lions’ games and was retained.RP Singh
Deccan Chargers, Kochi Tuskers Kerala, Mumbai Indians, Royal Challengers Bangalore, Pune Supergiants

When Deccan Chargers won the IPL in 2009, RP Singh was the season’s leading wicket-taker, with 23 scalps. But after Chargers released all their players before the 2011 auction, he played for three franchises in three years, and despite taking 10 wickets or more every season, went unsold in the 2014 auction. He made a comeback when Supergiants bought him in 2016, but after playing just four games, he was released and went unsold again in the latest auction.Ravindra Jadeja
Rajasthan Royals, Kochi Tuskers Kerala, Chennai Super Kings, Gujarat Lions

Ravindra Jadeja was built up by Shane Warne, his Rajasthan Royals captain, as a rock star after impressive performances in the IPL’s first two seasons, but he disappointed Royals fans by breaking the rules and trying to negotiate a move to another franchise while still on contract with Royals. He was banned for one season and returned as a Kochi Tuskers Kerala player in 2011. That franchise only lasted a season, and Jadeja moved to Chennai Super Kings after its termination. Three seasons later, Super Kings was suspended and Jadeja was picked up by Gujarat Lions, for whom he will play the upcoming season.

FAQs: The India-Pakistan final

What you need to know about what is set to be one of the most watched cricket matches of all time

ESPNcricinfo staff16-Jun-2017What’s the big deal about this final?
The India-Pakistan cricket rivalry is one of the most intense in all of sport. There is a history of conflict between the two countries, and the cricket rivalry, which stems from the political one, has its own eventful past. With cricket being the most popular sport in both nations, when India and Pakistan play each other in important games, the television audience is often close to one billion – 988 million viewers were estimated to have watched their clash in the 2011 World Cup semi-final.So what, where, and when is it?
India and Pakistan will meet in the final of the Champions Trophy, a major global cricket tournament, on Sunday, June 18. The match is being played at The Oval cricket ground in London and will begin at 10:30 local time (9:30 GMT, 15:00 Indian Standard Time and 15:30 Pakistan Standard Time).Is this a rare event?This is the first major final between India and Pakistan since 2007, when India beat Pakistan in the World T20 tournament. The hype around this game is also magnified by a paucity of matches between the two teams in the past 10 years, a result of political tensions.What is the origin of the India-Pakistan cricket rivalry?
Before 1947, the regions now known as India and Pakistan were both part of British India. When British rule in India ended, two separate countries – India and Pakistan – were created principally along religious lines, and many people were killed as millions moved home in an attempt to live in the country where they would be part of the religious majority. Since then, India and Pakistan have fought four official wars and have been involved in other conflicts.So the cricket rivalry is an extension of the political conflict?
While political tension was certainly the origin of the India-Pakistan cricket rivalry, it has, over the years, forged a history of its own. There have been several periods during which the teams have been evenly matched, leading to hard-fought matches, close series and exciting moments.What is the attitude of the fans towards each other?
While there are India and Pakistan fans who feel animosity towards the other team, there are many who have tremendous respect for the opposition. This is evidenced by the popularity of several Pakistan cricketers in India, and Indian cricketers in Pakistan. Some might even say that at times cricket has helped people from both countries transcend the political climate, communicate with each other, and appreciate the many cultural similarities they share. Cricket tournaments have sometimes been thought of as part of the attempts by the countries to make peace with each other.Part of the history of this rivalry are many tales of people treating those coming from across the border for a cricket series with warmth and hospitality, incidents of fans applauding opposition players at stadiums and of players making respectful gestures to their rivals. Recently, for example, when the famous Pakistan cricketer Shahid Afridi retired, the entire India team signed a T-shirt and sent it to him as a gift.In this decade, India have the edge in the rivalry•Getty ImagesWho has the upper hand historically?
While in recent times India have been the stronger team, historically Pakistan still have the edge. In one-day cricket, which is the format being played in the Champions Trophy, Pakistan have won 72 matches to India’s 52. In the late 1980s, Pakistan dominated India, and while the sides were more evenly matched in the 1990s and early 2000s, Pakistan still won more games. Since 2007, there has been a shift in momentum towards India.So who are the favourites for this game?
India start as favourites, because they have been one of the most successful teams over the past seven years in cricket. Pakistan were underdogs in this tournament and have surprised people by making the final. Also, India have a 13-2 record against Pakistan in global tournaments. They beat Pakistan by a big margin earlier in this Champions Trophy.Is the Champions Trophy an important tournament?
While the premier tournament in one-day cricket is the World Cup, the Champions Trophy is the second most prestigious because it features the top eight teams in the world. It is held every four years; this is the eighth edition.What is special about the venue for the final?
The Oval cricket ground is where the first Test match in England was played, in 1880. The final being in London also means that many Indians and Pakistanis who live there will attend the game.Who are the players to watch in the final?
Virat Kohli, the captain of India, is considered by most to be the best batsman in one-day cricket. He is also, arguably, the most famous cricketer in the world – he has 15.8 million followers on Twitter. Pakistan does not have many established stars, but there are exciting young talents. Hasan Ali, a 23-year-old fast bowler, has been one of the players of this tournament.

'Power-hitting at its very best'

Twitter reactions to a blistering century from David Warner

ESPNcricinfo staff30-Apr-2017David Warner scored the first hundred by a Sunrisers Hyderabad batsman•BCCI

De Kock goes top, Cook hits rock bottom

Marks out of ten for the South Africa squad that played the Test series against New Zealand

Firdose Moonda30-Mar-20179Quinton de Kock

Quinton de Kock completed his most successful period in international cricket this summer, scoring vital runs and establishing himself as indispensable to the South African side in all formats. His positive approach to batting did not change even when the pressure was on, and he continued to fulfil his potential to change the course of a match single-handedly and quickly. He saved face for South Africa twice, in Wellington and Hamilton, where he was carrying a finger-tendon injury that ruled him out of the IPL. He seemed destined for centuries on both occasions and although he didn’t get there, his runs added the most value to South Africa; no wonder he ends the season as their highest ranking Test batsman at No. 6. Also, de Kock’s glovework has reached a new dimension, as his one-handed grabs to dismiss Neil Broom in Wellington both times showed.Morne Morkel

After 14 months out of Test cricket with a career-threatening back injury, Morne Morkel made a stirring comeback and bowled with aggression and accuracy to lead South Africa’s attack. Morkel impressed with his natural ability to generate bounce, his pace – which remained consistently in the 140s – and his ability to adjust his lengths to the demands of New Zealand surfaces. He was able to get it a bit fuller than usual and proved particularly troublesome for Tom Latham, whom he dismissed three times in five innings.8Keshav Maharaj

Seldom is South Africa’s highest wicket-taker in a series a spinner, which made Keshav Maharaj an unlikely hero. Being a self-confessed “bowler of minimal variation”, Maharaj’s success was built on discipline, clever creation of angles at the crease and tirelessly keeping up one end – twice for entire sessions – to allow the three seamers to rotate from the other. He took back-to-back five-fors in Dunedin and Wellington – the first South African spinner to do that since Paul Adams – where he was able to sustain and benefit from the the pressure created by the seamers. He was particularly successful against Jeet Raval, whom he dismissed three times in the first three innings.7Faf du Plessis

A seemingly quiet but ultimately hugely successful series for Faf du Plessis, who led the way in terms of consistency with three fifties. His first in Dunedin was vital to getting South Africa out of a near-crisis at 22 for 3, while his second could well have dictated the course of the match had rain not washed out the fifth day. In Hamilton, he was also a source of steadiness after some early wobbles and was gearing up for the ultimate blockathon on the final day, but did not get the chance to show it off. Du Plessis will be the first to admit his lack of conversion was part of the problem in the top six but he has also grown as a leader. He managed his attack well, took some excellent catches – such as the one to dismiss James Neesham in Wellington – and conducted himself with the right mix of passion and humility to ensure the series was played in good spirit.Temba Bavuma

Having come into this series under pressure, Temba Bavuma proved that worth cannot always be measured in numbers. He provided runs when South Africa needed them most in the first two Tests. He shared in a 104-run fifth-wicket stand with Dean Elgar in Dunedin to build from 22 for 3 and then partnered Quinton de Kock in a match-wining stand of 160 for the seventh wicket in Wellington. Although he will be disappointed not to have added to his single century in Test cricket so far, he has definitely done enough to keep his middle-order spot even if AB de Villiers returns from a Test hiatus.6.5Vernon Philander

The wickets column suggests this was an under-par performance from Philander, but he bowled with quality and created pressure. New Zealand were wary of his ability on pitches which offered the quicks help, and took grass off as a result. Philander beat the bat too many times to count and had the lowest economy rate in the South African attack, conceding 2.33 runs an over. Russell Domingo hailed him as the bowler South Africa missed most when he was injured because of his ability to dry up an end.6Dean Elgar

As someone who has based his batting on hard graft, Dean Elgar relished the challenge of a defiant Dunedin strip, which lacked pace and bounce and made run-scoring a grind. He rescued South Africa twice, from 22 for 3 in the first innings and 39 for 2 in the second, and scored a hundred and a fifty in that match. But only 36 runs came in the next four innings so Elgar did not manage to achieve South Africa’s aim that a batsman who gets one century in a series should double-up. Nonetheless, he underlined his role as the senior opener.Kagiso Rabada

The effects of a long season seemed to take its toll on Kagiso Rabada, who stepped out of the limelight in this series. After opening the bowling in Dunedin, he was moved to first-change for the next two matches and appeared to take to it well, claiming the prized scalp of Kane Williamson and setting up Neil Broom to fall for a duck on debut in the first innings in Wellington, but then his performances seemed to stagnate. Rabada bowled at good pace across the three Tests, used his short ball to good effect and picked up four wickets in Hamilton, where his stamina was truly tested. South Africa were in the field for 162 overs and the quicks had to return for sixth and seventh spells, a situation Rabada has seldom been in, but he did not fade.5Hashim Amla

Although better than the Australia series in which he failed to get a fifty, Hashim Amla did not look entirely convincing in this series. He got better as it went on, scoring his only fifty in Hamilton, where South Africa found themselves 5 for 2. Problems with his footwork, his fishing outside off and even his concentration might lead to whispers about whether he is on the wane but South Africa still rely on his seniority too much to entertain that possibility.3JP Duminy

Patience must be running out with JP Duminy’s inconsistency, especially as he now occupies the crucial No. 4 spot in the line-up. Old problems against the short ball re-emerged as he was bounced out in Dunedin and Hamilton, and he also displayed poor shot selection (Wellington, first innings) and judgement (Hamilton, second innings). Only one of Duminy’s scores was over 20 and, although he contributed four wickets in Wellington to unexpectedly express credientials as an allrounder again, his lack of runs must be a big concern. Duminy is feeling the heat and pulled out of the IPL to give himself a mental refresher ahead of South Africa’s tour to England. Unless he contributes in a big way there, his days in Test cricket could be numbered.2Theunis de Bruyn

Brought in to open the batting in the final Test, Theunis de Bruyn had a forgettable start to his international career. He was dismissed for a third-ball duck in the first innings in Hamilton, playing away from his body, and was the involved in a messy run-out in the second, when he was slow to respond to Hashim Amla’s request for a quick single and collided with his senior while ball-watching. Amla made his ground and de Bruyn had to be sacrificed. Still, we are sure to see more of him in the future.0Stephen Cook

Another poor start to an away tour cost Stephen Cook his place in his the starting XI in the final Test. Cook looked shaky outside the off stump and fell to an inswinger from Trent Boult twice in Dunedin and the away-swing of Tim Southee twice in Wellington. With South Africa’s top six struggling, someone had to make way. With no first-class cricket between now and South Africa’s next Test assignment in England, Cook’s future is uncertain.

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