Powerplay podcast: Asia Cup ambitions for Esha Oza and UAE

All about the growth of women’s cricket in the United Arab Emirates

ESPNcricinfo staff17-Jul-2024On this week’s ESPNcricinfo Powerplay, captain Esha Oza and coach Ahmed Raza speak about UAE’s Asia Cup campaign, their T20 World Cup Qualifying near miss and the growth of women’s cricket in their country. Plus, Valkerie Baynes and Firdose Moonda discuss New Zealand’s tour of England, and look back at South Africa’s disappointing end to their T20I series against India.

Switch Hit: Deja vu all over again?

As England stare down the barrel of another failed World Cup defence, Alan Gardner is joined on the pod by Matt Roller in Trinidad to assess their prospects

ESPNcricinfo staff10-Jun-2024After a heavy defeat to Australia in Barbados, coupled with Scotland breezing past Oman in Antigua, England’s latest World Cup defence is threatening to go awry. They need big wins from their remaining two games to get their net run rate back in shape, and even that may not be enough. On Switch Hit, Alan Gardner is joined by Matt Roller, fresh off the plane in Trinidad, to examine the state of play for Jos Buttler’s side. What’s gone wrong so far and can they put it right? And would Scotland going through in their place be such a bad thing? With upsets aplenty this expanded T20 World Cup is already looking like one to remember. Although perhaps not for England fans…

Ellyse Perry: 'If you worry too much about any other team, you're only reacting then'

The senior allrounder on how Australia are preparing for the T20 World Cup, focusing more internally than on the chasing pack

Valkerie Baynes01-Oct-2024It’s the US$2.34 million question: who can end Australia’s dominance of the Women’s T20 World Cup? But Ellyse Perry, who has played in all of them and is therefore preparing to make her ninth appearance at the tournament, believes the competition has always been wide open and that might just be the key to Australia’s success.”Particularly the T20 World Cups, I don’t think they’re ever not open,” Perry told ESPNcricinfo. “It’s such a fickle format and the way that the games fall is really unpredictable a lot of the time.”I just think that every team is playing more consistently now, so you’ve got to be in the right place at the right time sometimes and we’ve been fortunate that that’s gone our way a lot in the past, but I think, like any other tournament, it’s wide open at the start.”Related

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Australia have long played like champions, winning six of the eight Women’s T20 World Cups to have been staged so far, including the past three in succession and three more on the trot from 2010 to 2014.But, by Perry’s account, they have also prepared like champions, focusing more internally than on the chasing pack.”Most of it has really just been focused around what we can control as a group, where we can spend time and effort improving and the best things that as a collective we can lean into to make sure that we’re in the best possible position,” she said.”I don’t think you can really worry too much about any other team or what they’re doing. You’re only reacting then, as opposed to trying to just find the best space and opportunities that exist for the team.”

It’s a great challenge for everyone and I think as a group we’ve had a little bit of change over the last couple of years, so the chance to go out there and test the work that we’ve been doing is really coolEllyse Perry

Without the retired Meg Lanning, Australia are now led by the experienced Alyssa Healy. And, while they appear to have moved on from influential spinner Jess Jonassen since Sophie Molineux’s recovery from injury, they have also introduced some fresh faces with the likes of allrounder Annabel Sutherland and top-order batter Phoebe Litchfield.Australia have looked more beatable in the format since their 2023 World Cup triumph than they have in a long while, however, beaten by England 2-1 in the T20 leg of last year’s Ashes series and losing match each to West Indies and South Africa at home. They won their most recent series, hosting New Zealand, 3-0 but twice suffered batting collapses and were bowled out for only the second time since early 2020.Ellyse Perry has been part of six Women’s T20 World Cup wins with Australia•Getty Images”It’s going to be really tough and really competitive if international competition’s anything to go by,” Perry said. “In the last 12 months it’s just been some great cricket played by lots of different countries and obviously in different conditions as well and teams are going to have to adapt really quickly.”So it’s a great challenge for everyone and I think as a group we’ve had a little bit of change over the last couple of years, so the chance to go out there and test the work that we’ve been doing is really cool.”Despite Perry’s experience in the tournament and her standing in the game – she was recently named No.1 in ESPNcricinfo’s top 25 players of the 21st Century – the T20 World Cup retains a sense of unfinished business for her. Her highest score of 42 came in 2016, when Australia lost their crown to West Indies, and her impact was limited from down the order in 2018 and 2023, while her home campaign in 2020 was curtailed by injury.”I really, really enjoyed the opportunity more than anything” – Perry on her time at the Hundred•ECB/Getty ImagesBut she was speaking on her way to the airport in August, travelling home from the Hundred, where she scored 203 runs at an average of 29.00 and strike rate of 125.30 and took eight wickets for Birmingham Phoenix. That was after topping the run charts at the WPL with 347 at 69.40 and 125.72. She was also in the top-five batters at the most recent edition of the WBBL with 496 runs at 45.09 and 131.56.It is in the franchise leagues that Perry, now 33, has enjoyed a resurgence in her short-form game, new learnings keeping things fresh for a player who made her debut aged just 16.”I really, really enjoyed the opportunity more than anything,” Perry said of her time at the Hundred. “A chance to be a part of a different competition with some fresh faces that I hadn’t played with before was just really enjoyable. From that perspective I’m just incredibly grateful for the chance to be a part of it and certainly learned a lot along the way too.”Every time you get some exposure and opportunity to play really high-level cricket, it’s just great. You try things that you’re working on or just batting with different people or being out in the middle with different people, you always pick up new things.

The amount of women that are getting opportunities to play cricket as a career and hopefully inspire a new generation of cricketers, not just young girls but young boys, is quite phenomenal reallyEllyse Perry

“We all feel really passionately about the countries that we’re from, but at the same time I think there’s a lot more to it than that and just the chance to share different bonds with different people across the course of your career is a real privilege and you can make lifelong friends out of that.”Friends will become rivals again when the tournament begins in the UAE on October 3 with that US$2.34 million winners’ cheque on the line, Australia will be opening their campaign against Sri Lanka in Sharjah on October 5. It is the first time women will receive equal prize money to the men at an ICC event, which forms part of an ever-changing landscape in the game, which Perry couldn’t have imagined when she started out.”It was probably hard to imagine,” Perry said. “It just kept evolving at such an amazing pace and yeah, it’s probably a good thing that I couldn’t imagine that either because it doesn’t limit the possibility of what’s the potential for the next five or 10 years.”To be a part of it has been amazing and also just really cool to see the amount of women that are getting opportunities to play cricket as a career and hopefully inspire a new generation of cricketers, not just young girls but young boys, is quite phenomenal really.”

Rabada – the most lethal bowler in the 300-wicket club

Rabada became the 39th bowler to enter the 300-wicket club in Tests and quite fittingly, his strike rate is 39.2, the best among all bowlers who have achieved this milestone

ESPNcricinfo stats team21-Oct-202411,817 – Deliveries taken by Kagiso Rabada to get to 300 Test wickets, the fewest by any bowler. He is the only bowler to reach the landmark in under 12,000 deliveries, and is 785 balls quicker than the next best, Waqar Younis.39.2 – Rabada’s strike rate, at the end of Bangladesh’s first innings of the ongoing Test in Mirpur. It’s easily the best among the 39 bowlers who have taken 300-plus Test wickets. Dale Steyn is next with a strike rate of 42.3.

Rabada’s strike rate is also the best among the 33 bowlers who have taken 100-plus wickets since his Test debut in November 2015. Next-best is Jasprit Bumrah’s strike rate of 44.ESPNcricinfo Ltd10 – Series of at least two Tests for Rabada, where he has taken 10 or more wickets at a strike rate of under 40. Given that he has played a total of 24 such series, that’s a percentage of 41.67. Among 178 bowlers who have played at least 10 series of two or more Tests where they’ve either bowled at least 50 overs or taken 10 wickets, there’s no bowler who has a higher percentage of achieving sub-40 strike rates with the ball. Bumrah is in second place with five such series out of 13.

10.05 – Rabada’s bowling average against the lower order (Nos. 8-11) in Tests, which is the best among the 31 bowlers with at least 30 such wickets in the last 10 years. His strike rate of 17.54 balls per wicket is also the best. In terms of averages, Bumrah’s 11.35 is the second-best.
Against the top seven batters, Rabada averages 27.17, which ranks seventh out of 42 bowlers who have taken at least 60 such wickets in the last 10 years. The bowlers ahead of him in this list are Kyle Jamieson, Bumrah, James Anderson, Vernon Philander, Pat Cummins and Morne Morkel.

37.43 – Rabada’s strike rate against right-handers – he has 201 such dismissals, at an average of 18.85. Against left-handers the stats are a little more modest – 101 wickets at an average of 25.63, and a strike rate of 44.28.

100 – Wickets for Rabada in his last 20 Tests, at an average of 19.09 and a strike rate of 34.2. He had a lean two-year spell before that, when he averaged more than 33 at a strike rate of 58 in 10 Tests, but since June 2021, Rabada has hit top form once again.

Who should DC and GT use right-to-match options for?

Will Delhi Capitals look to bring back former captain Rishabh Pant? And is Mohammed Shami the obvious choice for Gujarat Titans?

Dustin Silgardo19-Nov-2024What is the right-to-match (RTM) rule?
Ahead of the IPL 2025 auction, each team was allowed to retain up to six players, with a maximum of five capped players and a maximum of two uncapped Indian players.For the eight teams that did not use all of their six retentions, they can now use right-to-match options on players from their 2024 squads to fill up the remaining slots. The limits of five capped and two uncapped players still apply, so teams that have retained five capped players can use their RTM option on only one uncapped Indian player. And if a team has retained two uncapped players, they can use their RTM options on only capped players. If a team uses a RTM option on one of their former players at the auction, the last bidder will be allowed to raise the bid one final time, and the choice of whether to continue with the right-to-match option and match the bid then lies with the team using the RTM option.
Delhi Capitals
Players retained: Axar Patel, Kuldeep Yadav, Tristan Stubbs, Abhishek Porel

Purse remaining: INR 73 crore
Right-to-match options: 2The big question for DC ahead of the auction is whether they will use a right-to-match option on former captain Rishabh Pant. While DC did not retain Pant, there is talk that they still want him at the franchise. DC can use both their right-to-match options on capped players, so they could also target Khaleel Ahmed, Jake Fraser-McGurk, Mukesh Kumar, Anrich Nortje, Mitchell Marsh or Harry Brook.Khaleel spent three years at DC and consistently provided powerplay wickets. That he is an Indian left-arm seamer also makes him someone worth using a right-to-match option on. While Mukesh is not the most spectacular T20 bowler, his death-bowling numbers over two seasons with DC have been fair. His name only comes up in Set 16, though, so DC may not have a right-to-match option remaining then. Nortje was one of DC’s retentions in 2022 after two strong seasons with them, but he had a shocker in 2024. He has regained some form since but is still a risky pick.Among the batters, Fraser-McGurk, who is in Set 3, is the name that stands out after his eye-catching first season. His international form since then, though, has been underwhelming. With Australian coaches at two other franchises, the bidding for Fraser-McGurk might go quite high, which will make the right-to-match option handy. Marsh and Brook have both failed to impress in the IPL but are proven internationals.If DC somehow reach the latter stages of the auction with a right-to-match option still in hand, they may look at 24-year-old uncapped seamer Rasikh Salam Dar, who had an impressive debut season in 2024. He is in Set 11.BCCIGujarat Titans
Players retained: Shubman Gill, Rashid Khan, Sai Sudharsan, Rahul Tewatia, Shahrukh Khan

Purse remaining: INR 69 crore
Right-to-match options: 1 (capped)Will Gujarat Titans use their lone right-to-match option on Mohammed Shami? He was the Purple Cap winner in 2023 and played a crucial role in GT’s run to the final in both 2022 and 2023 before missing the 2024 season with injury. Injuries and age are the main concerns surrounding Shami. He played his first competitive match since 2023 just ahead of the auction and took seven wickets across two innings for Bengal against Madhya Pradesh in a first-class game. That show of fitness could be the deciding factor in GT going for him.If GT don’t use the right-to-match option on Shami, the other options are David Miller, who is in Set 2, and Noor Ahmad, who is in Set 7. Miller, 34, had a disappointing 2024 season but was in fine form during the recent Caribbean Premier League. Noor, meanwhile, topped the wicket charts in the CPL and at 19, might be seen as an investment for the future.

Tilak Varma is India's Swiss Army knife T20 batter

He has the ability to bat at any tempo and he showed an ability to overcome difficult batting conditions

Deivarayan Muthu26-Jan-20252:01

Tilak Varma’s finishing reminds Manjrekar of MS Dhoni

An Indian No.3 picks up Jofra Archer over long leg for six in T20I cricket. One of the fastest bowlers in the world is left stunned. The shot leaves jaws on the floor.It happened in 2021 in Ahmedabad. History repeated itself four years later in Chennai. Except the No.3 wasn’t Suryakumar Yadav this time. Tilak Varma did SKY things – like owning the spaces behind square – and added his own touch.The odds were stacked against Tilak: Archer and company clocked speeds north of 150kph, Adil Rashid was getting the ball to rip, wickets kept tumbling around him and the Chepauk pitch was not conductive to strokeplay. This unbeaten 72 off 55 balls was a coming of age innings. India’s regular No.3 in T20Is and captain Suryakumar was so impressed that he bowed down to Tilak after he nervelessly finished a chase of 166 with four balls to spare. Tilak also bowed down to Suryakumar before they exchanged hugs, with the Chepauk crowd cheering on India’s No.3s.The mood at the start of the chase was very different. Archer and Wood had ripped out Abhishek Sharma and Sanju Samson with 148kph rockets. Everyone held their breath when a similar rapid delivery from Wood beat Tilak on the hook and whooshed past his head. Everyone except Tilak. He still kept throwing punches. With the black-soil Chepauk track playing true to its nature and slowing down, he understood that he had to maximise the powerplay.Tilak Varma and Suryakumar Yadav bow down to each other after India’s thrilling win•BCCITilak manufactured swinging room, exposed his stumps, and violently cracked Archer over point for four to start the fifth over. Then, when Archer slanted into into his pads next ball, he unleashed that pick-up shot over long leg for six. Two balls later, when Archer aimed for Tilak’s head, he spliced him over the keeper’s head for six more in a thrilling sequence. In all, Tilak took Archer for 30 off nine balls – no other batter has scored more runs off Archer in a T20 innings. In the end, Archer was left nursing his worst T20 figures: 4-0-60-1.Related

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“If you see I want to target [England’s] best bowlers,” Tilak said at his post-match press conference. ‘If you take on their best bowlers, other bowlers will be under pressure. So, [even] when the wickets are falling, I want to take their best bowler. It’s easier for the [batter] at the other end also. So I backed myself and I took chances against him. And also whatever shots I have scored for Archer, I have worked in the nets. Mentally I was ready for that. So, it has given me a good result.”Tilak’s ultra-aggression would’ve even made England coach Brendon McCullum proud, but he was prepared to dial it down after India suffered a middle-order slide. With the surface also offering more grip and turn to the spinners in the second innings, Tilak sat back and saw off Rashid, England’s lone specialist spinner.In Rashid’s last over, Tilak farmed the strike and dealt with the first five balls before leaving the No. 9, Arshdeep Singh, just the bare minimum to do. Though Arshdeep holed out the next ball, Tilak stayed cool, farmed the strike again and got the job done along with No.10 Ravi Bishnoi.2:56

Tilak: I was only thinking of batting till the end

“I know I can play both types [of innings],” Tilak said. “I can hit with a good strike rate and also at 6 or 7 [runs per over], I can bat at a higher strike rate. That is what I have discussed with Gautam [Gambhir] sir in the last match. He said that you can play with a good strike rate over 10 [an over] also and below 10 [an over] also. When team requires, you should be flexible and I got the chance to prove it in this game.”I said that I will be playing till the end. And that is what Gautam sir also said during the drinks break. He said that it is a time that you can show the people that you can play both the innings. So, I said that whatever happens I will be staying till the end and I want to finish the game.”Tilak shifted up the gears and did finish the chase in grand style with a drilled four through the covers off a slower variation from Jamie Overton. Coming off back-to-back T20I hundreds on fairly flat pitches in South Africa, this innings, in tougher conditions to see off a chase that required thought and nuance, showed that Tilak might be a Swiss army knife of a batter. Versatile, adaptable and powerful.With Tilak also acing the No.3 role – he has scores of 72*, 120*, 107* in his last three innings there – he gives India the option of maintaining a left-right combination, if Abhishek falls early, and holding Suryakumar back. And if India can’t find room for Washington Sundar once the first-choice players return from injury, Tilak can pitch in with his occasional offspin and fill that hole as well.Tilak is only 22, but he’s already opened up endless possibilities for India in T20Is

Six of the best from Smith's ODI career

As Steven Smith brings the curtain down on his ODI career, here’s a look at some of his standout innings

Andrew McGlashan05-Mar-2025

101 vs Pakistan, Sharjah, 2014

This is probably not an innings that will leap into the memory of many, but it was a very significant moment in Steven Smith’s career. It was his first ODI hundred (and, in fact, in List A cricket as well) having not passed fifty in 27 innings to this point as he was shuffled around the middle order. Smith had moved to No. 3 a few weeks previously in Zimbabwe when Michael Clarke had suffered a hamstring injury and in this innings came in to bat in just the second ball of the match. He went on to bat through 44 overs, compiling 101 off 118 balls with just 36 of them coming in boundaries. “An important phase in the life and times of Steven Smith began on this balmy evening in Sharjah,” noted.Related

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65 vs Pakistan, Adelaide, 2015

The World Cup quarter-final was remembered for Shane Watson vs Wahab Riaz, but at the other end it was as though Smith was playing a different game. “In terms of fluency, watching Smith and Watson batting together was like seeing Winston Churchill trying to converse with Manuel from Fawlty Towers,” was how ESPNcricinfo reported the partnership of 89 which put Australia on course for victory. Somewhat surprisingly it was Smith who fell, lbw to Ehsan Adil, for 65 off 69 balls.

105 vs India, Sydney, 2015

The best players perform when it really matters, and following the Pakistan encounter, Smith was without doubt the central figure in propelling Australia into the final with a masterful 105 off 93 balls, capping a season where he had tormented India across Tests and ODIs. His footwork stood out while 77 of his 105 runs came through the leg side. A few days later he would hit the winning runs at the MCG.Steven Smith lit up the SCG twice in three days in late 2020•Getty Images

164 vs New Zealand, Sydney, 2016

This would remain the highest score of Smith’s ODI career as he dominated New Zealand with 164 off 157 balls. There was a steady progression to his landmarks: a half-century from 70 balls, another 50 to reach the century and then just 28 to bring up 150. The innings came in a year that brought him 1154 ODI runs at 50.17. He had been given a life on 13 when BJ Watling dropped a tough chance down the leg side and would turn an uncertain 92 for 4 into an imposing 324 for 8. To cap Smith’s day, he took an astonishing catch to remove Watling – one he would recall as the best of his career.

105 and 104 vs India, Sydney, 2020

We are coupling these innings together given they came in the space of three days and, remarkably, both off 62 deliveries as India’s attack were put through the sword early in the Covid summer of 2020-21. Smith had been searching for his hands, and found them in no uncertain terms. However, in the first of the centuries he was saved by millimeters on 15 when an lbw against Ravindra Jadeja was overturned. A few overs later, he took three boundaries in four balls off Jadeja to supercharge his innings. Across the two knocks, Smith flayed 209 off 130 balls as Australia amassed 374 for 6 and 389 for 4. To add to the astonishing nature of the back-to-back hundreds, Smith had been in doubt for the second match just hours before it started with a bout of vertigo.

Ben Cutting will always have Chinnaswamy 2016

He made just 21 appearances in the IPL but, in one of those, he was the player that got Sunrisers Hyderabad their first and only IPL title

Matt Roller22-May-20255:23

There are messages on social media saying, can you make yourself available for the IPL for whoever is facing RCB?’

“It’s one of those things where if you know, you know,” says Ben Cutting, with the smile of a man who is a relative unknown at home but a cult hero for millions overseas. For all his success in domestic cricket, and his eight caps for Australia, Cutting knows that his cricketing career will be remembered for one night: May 29, 2016.It was the night that he silenced the Chinnaswamy Stadium, and brought Sunrisers Hyderabad their first – and still only – IPL title with one of the great all-round performances: 39 not out off 15 balls with the bat, then two vital wickets with the ball. “The time has flown,” he says. “Even at the time, I realised that was probably going to be the highlight of my career.”It was also the night that he ensured Royal Challengers Bengaluru, the IPL’s perennial underachievers, remained trophy-less. “For some reason, this year, social media has blown up far more,” Cutting says. “I think because the longer the years drag on and RCB still haven’t won, the more important that [night] becomes for the Hyderabadis.”That Cutting even played in the final was something of a surprise: he had made a solitary appearance across his first three IPL seasons, and Sunrisers coach Tom Moody made clear early on that he was back-up for Moises Henriques in 2016. It took quiet seasons under two international captains – Kane Williamson and Eoin Morgan – for him to win a chance in the middle order.Related

Cutting sends one flying over the roof

The Chinnaswamy becomes Cutting's slogging canvas

“I got my first [2016] opportunity in Mohali against Kings XI Punjab and performed well there: I finished the game with the bat with Yuvraj Singh,” Cutting recalls. “Unfortunately I got quite sick after that, so I missed two games. But as soon as I was well again, they got me back into the side and I obviously finished the season strongly with bat and ball.”After two knockout wins, Cutting arrived in Bengaluru feeling invincible. “I rocked up that night to Chinnaswamy on the team bus and I was so relaxed – which I really shouldn’t have been, looking back, given the stage that was set. Deep down, I knew that if I got an opportunity, I could hit the ball out of the park there… My mindset was 100% the catalyst for results.”Cutting’s 39 not out was his highest score of the 2016 season in the four matches he played•BCCICutting walked out to bat at 147 for 4 after 16 overs; after Yuvraj picked out extra cover and a mix-up with Naman Ojha, that was 158 for 6 seven balls later. But he single-handedly took Sunrisers to 208 by taking down his compatriot Shane Watson at the death, including one 117-metre six that cleared the roof of the stand at deep midwicket.”I knew that he was bowling close to 140 [kph] and some quick bowling like that on that sort of wicket was going to suit my game to a tee,” Cutting says. “I just wish it wasn’t against Watto! I love the bloke. He was a hero of mine coming through the ranks. I still feel guilty about seeing it unfold like that against someone that I looked up to – and still do – as a hero on the field.”I also knew that if I got in, the wicket was so true and the boundary is small enough that if I got enough of the cricket ball, it was going to travel. Chinnaswamy, especially that year, was very similar to the faster, bouncier wickets here in Australia – like the Gabba, like Perth – where ball comes onto bat, and the ball can fly. In most games, 200 wasn’t enough there.”It looked like it would not be enough that night, either: RCB were 112 for 0 after ten overs, with Virat Kohli playing second fiddle to Chris Gayle. But Cutting led the fightback with the ball: using the variations he had developed on the sidelines, he had Kohli dropped at short third, then had Gayle caught in the same spot off the following ball.Cutting picked up the two crucial wickets of Chris Gayle and KL Rahul•AFP”An over earlier, I’d missed my yorker and disappeared out of the park – as everyone did that night – so I started going wide and slow, on the wide line,” Cutting says. “It’s done to death now – everyone does it – but back in 2016, it wasn’t really a done thing. I’d played a lot against Gayle, and I knew if I could hang it out wide to him, he’d still try to drag me leg-side.”I had to set him up for that by bowling on-pace, and that night was probably one of the quicker games I bowled in: looking back at the gun, it was around 145 [kph]. It makes that change-up a lot more effective, particularly if you can get it right out wide and make them reach for it. David Warner [Sunrisers’ captain] was really good at giving freedom back to the bowler.”Cutting returned to bowl KL Rahul with an offcutter in his final over, finishing with 2 for 35 from his four overs as RCB’s chase fell apart. “One of the young fellas was running drinks with about an over to go and said, ‘If we win this, you’re going to be Man of the Match. It hadn’t crossed my mind until then, and it probably didn’t really sink in until after the game.”He still has his player-of-the-match trophy at home in Queensland, but another souvenir never left the ground. “I grabbed a stump, pulled it out of the ground, ran straight off the field and put it in my kitbag,” Cutting recalls. “Then I was straight back out there celebrating… When I got back to my bag, the IPL staff had gone through it and rifled it!”Sunrisers’ celebrations started in the changing rooms and continued deep into the night at the ITC hotel. “Looking back, I just wish I’d had more photos during the celebrations with the trophy,” Cutting says. “I’ve got one blurry one of myself and [assistant coach] Murali [Muthiah Muralidaran], but I really wish that I would’ve had more with that special trophy.”Despite Cutting’s performance, he found himself back on the bench for most of the following year. Across eight IPL seasons for five franchises, he made only 21 appearances in total. “I was never the first-string player, so my mindset was to cover every base for that one game that may or may not come, and make sure that I’m ready for it. That’s exactly how it played out [in 2016].”Shane Watson came in for the most punishment, Cutting taking him for 33 of his 39 runs•BCCICutting is now in the final stages of his playing career, rendered unable to bowl by a series of serious spinal injuries, and most recently spotted in the International Masters League. He is transitioning into a second career in real estate, and the name of the business he runs – Golconda Property Group – is a nod to an ancient fort on the outskirts of Hyderabad.”There’s certainly many people in Australia that I come across every week that will say something [about the name],” Cutting says. “I’ve got a development site nearby: the same bus driver drives past every day – I think he’s from Hyderabad – and always says g’day. For the general public, it’s just one of those things. It comes with the job, I guess, of playing freelance and being overseas.”The IPL dominates for two months in India, but time zones mean that it hardly makes a splash in Australia: on the east coast, 7.30pm IST fixtures start at midnight. “Those that follow cricket know full well what the IPL is all about,” Cutting says. “For everyone else, it’s life as usual because it’s footy season here: there’s three codes [AFL, rugby league and rugby union] to compete with.”Cutting himself will never forget that night in Bengaluru – not least with daily reminders on social media. “If I load up my private messages on Instagram now, there’ll be 150 every day saying, ‘Can you make yourself available for the IPL as a replacement player?’ for any team that’s coming up against RCB,” he says, laughing.”What was achieved that night… It’s essentially one of the biggest sporting events in the world. To play for Australia was always a lifetime goal of mine, and I’m still disappointed I didn’t get to play Test cricket. But that IPL final, for me, still ranks higher than everything else.”

Afghan women have few rights under Taliban rule, but does sanctioning the men's cricket team help them?

Unlike in apartheid South Africa, sanctions will very likely do little for the cause of Afghan women

Andrew Fidel Fernando20-Feb-2025In Afghanistan, women are being erased by design. They have been cast out of schools, out of universities, medical colleges, public places of work, and sports fields.That the Taliban, which took Kabul in August 2021, is as brutally repressive a government as exists at present is well known. And yet so many edicts issued by the Taliban’s “Propagation of Virtue and Prevention of Vice Ministry” feel like fresh calamities for the rights and well-being of resident Afghan women. Laws active since the middle of last year prescribe that “whenever an adult woman leaves her home out of necessity, she is obliged to conceal her voice, face, and body”. When education is denied, when women cannot be visible in public, when so much as raising your voice outdoors is unlawful, do even stray animals have greater agency?It is against this horrifying political backdrop that cricket is about to host another major tournament in which the Afghanistan men’s team will compete. This is awkward for a sport that purports to enshrine gender equality, but which does not wish to abandon one of its shiniest 21st century success stories. On the one hand, the ICC has its stated goal of growing the women’s game. On the other, Afghanistan’s men are almost certainly the greatest ever cricket side from a nation not formerly colonised by the British. One of the great critiques of cricket is that it is inaccessible for people who were not introduced to it early. Here was evidence of it exploding into popularity in a place that had been largely oblivious to it as recently as two generations ago.Related

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It follows that the status quo is beset by pretense. Before each match at an ICC event, Afghanistan’s male players line up before the tricolour flag of the Islamic Republic of Afghanistan, which was overthrown in 2021, and show respect to a now-defunct national anthem while at home music is banned in public, and instruments are burned for causing “moral corruption”.Meanwhile, the latest from the ICC is that it remains “committed to leveraging [its] influence constructively to support the Afghanistan Cricket Board (ACB), in fostering cricket development and ensuring playing opportunities for both men and women in Afghanistan”, according to a Reuters report. In truth, there currently exists no realistic pathway to setting down the most rudimentary cricket programme for women. Even in the days of the Islamic Republic of Afghanistan (under the Taliban it is called the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan) such programmes were shackled, largely by custom and culture. Any advances made back then have since been emphatically reversed. What is the liberty to play sport when set against foundational rights such as the right to freedom of speech, the right to movement, and the right to education? What real “influence” does the ICC believe it can wield upon a totalitarian state?Knitted into the ICC’s contradictions on this issue is the further pretense that it is an apolitical organisation – one that does not even allow international cricketers to wear emblems showing solidarity with peoples whom those players believe to be oppressed. Usman Khawaja and Moeen Ali have found this out in the past 12 years, over their support of Palestinians. In reality, pursuing a professional career in cricket as a woman is an intensely political act in too much of the cricketing world, far beyond Afghanistan. Parents, teachers, clerics, community leaders, and often politicians themselves, frequently impose restrictions on girls taking to sport.

But so bleak is Afghanistan’s rights situation, it is also possible to sympathise with the unprincipled pragmatism of the ICC. What is their alternative? Does the ICC ban the Afghanistan men’s side, who have proved that on purely cricketing terms they deserve their place in the highest reaches of limited-overs cricket? If Afghanistan’s men were not so good, the ICC would have greater opportunity to quietly sequester them away. But the likes of Rashid Khan keep piling up top-quality wickets, and the likes of Rahmanullah Gurbaz keep crashing scintillating runs. Their contributions and those of others have helped transform the team into an increasingly consistent side.These two, plus Mohammad Nabi, have also publicly spoken out against the Taliban’s moves to deny Afghan women education, particularly in the field of maternal medicine (one of the Taliban’s 2024 edicts was to ban women from studying even midwifery). “The Quran highlights the importance of learning and acknowledges the equal spiritual worth of both genders,” Rashid wrote on social media in December. But it has also been noted that many of Afghanistan’s top male cricketers only occasionally stray into the realm of politics, and live largely comfortable lives outside the country, along with much of their immediate families.Calls to ban the men’s team outright since the Taliban takeover in 2021 are unsurprising. Sanctions have long been an instrument of the Western global order, and there have been instances in which forced isolation has mounted meaningful pressure on repressive governments – apartheid South Africa being the most obvious study.Things had looked up for sports for women in Afghanistan around the time the Taliban was overthrown at the start of the 21st century. In 2010, school girls in Kabul play the game•Shah Marai/AFP/Getty ImagesSome Afghan women have spoken out in favour of a blanket ban. “They are the Taliban team for me, not the Afghan team,” said Marzieh Hamidi, the taekwondo champion who was Afghanistan’s flagbearer at the Tokyo Olympics, and who currently resides in France. Zahra Joya, a UK-based Afghan journalist wrote for the this month that “Afghanistan’s cricket team is doing a great job at sportswashing the Taliban’s dark record, especially when you consider that they are representing a country where women are denied access to not just cricket but any kind of sport.” That these are merely the views of Afghan women embedded in western nations is the laziest accusation to throw – we know desperately little about how resident Afghan women feel precisely because they are forbidden to speak. It is possible domiciled Afghans also resent their male cricketers presenting a sanitised vision of their nation to the world, when women there cannot legally set foot outside their homes without an accompanying man.Cricket Australia has, essentially, embraced a version of sanctions. Their men’s team will not play bilateral cricket against Afghanistan, which has caused consternation within the ACB and among Afghanistan’s male national cricketers. But even here, there are contradictions. Australia been playing Afghanistan in global tournaments, and will do so again in the Champions Trophy, on February 28 in Lahore. If their boycott is founded on principle, that principle does not extend to situations in which tournament points are on the line.It is also true that Australia has done more than most for Afghan’s women cricketers, whatever the complicity of their government and allies such as the US and UK in creating the conditions that allowed the Taliban takeover. The story of the manic rescue of these women and many of their family members as the Republic collapsed, was told by Mel Jones and others to Firdose Moonda and Valkerie Baynes on the Powerplay podcast on ESPNcricinfo. Since these Afghan women’s settling in Australia, CA has funded an Afghanistan Women’s XI – basically a team in exile – who on January 30 played a Cricket Without Borders team, as a potential first step towards more cricket. These are symbolic fixtures, largely aimed at drawing attention to the desperate plight of Afghan women, and these women deserve every cent of investment and attention they receive. But does this awareness campaign – and that is essentially what it is – work anywhere near as well in a world in which Afghanistan’s men are also not allowed to play? If all Afghanistan teams were banned from global competition, what likelihood that the nation slips even further from the international consciousness?Female fans wait to greet the men’s team in Kabul after their qualification for the 2015 World Cup•Noorullah Shirzada/AFP/Getty ImagesAnd how would an all-out ban work to improve the choices available to Afghan women? Early this year, more than 160 British MPs signed a letter that urged the England men’s team to boycott their Champions Trophy match against Afghanistan on February 26. But what political mechanism would such a move hope to trigger? This brand of blunt-force sanction hopes primarily to disgruntle the people of the country in question, who would then need to exert pressure on their government.But the regime in Afghanistan is not even a nominal democracy. It has no aspirations to be one. South Africa’s apartheid government, by comparison, put far greater stock in partaking in a “respected” global order. South Africa’s had been a white administration that craved acceptance in the West, and people of colour within South Africa had essentially leveraged this craving to win rights and self-determination for themselves, with the assistance of foreign allies. Organisations like the South African Council on Sports (SACOS), that were headed by oppressed peoples, were instrumental in that fight, and informed the wider campaign for justice.Afghanistan’s situation is quite different. Could the banning of the men’s team ever seriously prompt the Taliban to rethink its policies towards women? This regime runs a viciously patriarchal fundamentalist theocracy. There is no significant feedback loop between public displeasure and transformation of policy. For the most extremist wings of the Taliban, which are especially influential at present, cricket is an enterprise in which Afghan men with contoured beards or clean-shaven faces, engage in sport publicly and celebrate victories by dancing or singing along to music, those images consumed by an Afghan public watching television or via the internet (the internet is censored but available in many parts of the country). For the worst extremists, cricket is the gnat on the rump of a fundamentalist political project, which could – and perhaps should – be swatted away. The fallout may not be painless. But it is unlikely to lead to significant challenge to their power.Afghan taekwondo athlete Marzieh Hamidi is among those who support a ban on the national men’s cricket team•Joel Saget/AFP/Getty ImagesIn fact, for the most conservative Taliban forces, further isolation may be interpreted as greater evidence of their own exceptionalism. For many regular Afghans, meanwhile, the exploits of the men’s cricket team offer a singular glimpse into a regular life as understood by the majority of the planet’s free peoples. In South Africa, the political consensus appears to be that a ban on the Afghan men’s side may, in fact, worsen life for Afghan women.While it may seem reasonable to place greater pressure on the prominent Afghan male cricketers to speak on behalf of women’s rights, it should also be clocked that between 21st century wars in Iraq, Afghanistan, Sri Lanka, and domestic situations in India, Pakistan, and Bangladesh, there are allegations of human rights violations against various governments that have not required the input of male cricketers elsewhere.If we are to measure their actions against those of their male peers, it is important to see the Afghan men’s cricketers’ victimhood here too. Their popularity and wealth will buy them some influence, but less than it would in most countries. Though they are on billboards and in advertisements in Afghanistan, they have no meaningful rights as citizens, nor access to a judicial or political framework through which they may respond, or seek redress, even for themselves. Many Sri Lankan cricketers, for example, supported the mass protests that evicted the Rajapaksa family. Afghanistan’s cricketers must weigh any challenges to the Taliban’s power against the threat of family – or extended family – being potentially hounded down.The exiled Afghanistan players pray together before their match in Melbourne•Martin Keep/AFP/Getty ImagesTo suggest that the ICC suddenly grows a conscience on this issue is fanciful. The ICC is little more than a large events-management company at present, as noted by others. It is only barely keeping a grip on its position as the sport’s pinnacle body, while major economic winds continue to transform the game. It has long been primarily a profit-seeking entity. It is not a body upon which morality much acts.And though the ICC has a monopoly on global cricket administration, it is important that the game realises the ICC is not cricket’s only force. There is all manner of media, many flavours of fans, many means of fighting back. Asymmetric warfare can often be effective against deeply embedded power structures. As long-term rights activists will attest, the trick is to stay in that fight.Blanket sanctions may be counterproductive, but what cricket cannot not allow, is the forgetting. Afghanistan have carved joyous arcs through the last two World Cups, prompting mass celebrations at home. But look through those images, and there is not a woman in sight. For every Afghan boy that picks up a cricket ball and dreams those glorious childhood dreams of emulating sporting heroes on the biggest stage, there are little girls who want the same for themselves, but will struggle to ever see the inside of a classroom.

Goodbye, Stacky

Keith Stackpole often set the tone for Australia’s innings in the early 1970s, with his steely presence and bat that spoke volumes

Greg Chappell24-Apr-2025Australian cricket has farewelled one of its most combative and charismatic characters with the passing of Keith Stackpole on Tuesday. A fierce competitor, courageous opening batter, and fiercely loyal team-mate, Stackpole’s influence during a formative period in the game’s evolution was as significant as it was deeply felt by those fortunate enough to share a dressing room with him.Keith’s Test journey began in the middle order, but it was his shift to the top of the order that defined the cricketer – and the man – he would become. It wasn’t just a tactical move; it was transformational. His temperament was perfectly attuned to the demands of facing the new ball. He relished the responsibility, often setting the tone for Australia’s innings with a steely presence and a bat that spoke volumes.What truly set Keith apart was his fierce love of fast bowling. The quicker they came, the more alive he became. His cross-batted strokes – especially the pull and hook – were trademarks, and he never blinked at short-pitched hostility. But it wasn’t just about technique; it was his intent. Defeat stung him personally. He wore responsibility like a badge and took it upon himself to alter the course of matches.Related

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There’s a story, often retold, that speaks volumes about the man. It was Jamaica, 1973, just before the West Indies series. Word had spread about a young Jamaican quick, Uton Dowe – touted as the next Wes Hall. When news came through that Dowe would be rested for a warm-up match, most of the touring side breathed easier. Not Keith. He was genuinely furious – pacing the dressing room, lamenting the missed chance. He wanted to face Dowe, to test himself, to measure the mettle of this rising force.When the first Test came round and Dowe took the new ball to the roar of Kingston’s crowd, Keith was ready. The first ball was short; Stackpole sent it racing to the boundary. He went on to smack seven fours in a fiery innings of 44, dismantling the youngster’s confidence – and with it, his career. It was Stackpole in full: courageous, combative, and utterly unwilling to let reputations go unchallenged.As Ian Chappell’s vice-captain, Keith was steadfast. He gave unwavering support, both on and off the field, and the two forged a friendship that lasted decades. He would not abide criticism of his skipper and was a pillar of strength during Australia’s rise in the early 1970s.Of all his performances, his knock at The Oval in 1972 remains etched in memory. With the Ashes on the line and Australia needing 242 to draw the series, Keith launched into the English attack of John Snow, Geoff Arnold, Tony Greig and Derek Underwood. He belted a commanding 79 – bold, belligerent, and calming to those watching on. It helped secure a pivotal win and symbolised so much of what he brought to Australian cricket: nerve, heart, and a flair for the moment.To his beloved wife Pat and the entire Stackpole family: the thoughts and deepest sympathies of the cricketing community are with you. Keith Stackpole’s legacy won’t just live on in statistics or archives – it endures in the hearts of those who played with him, watched him, and knew what it meant to have “Stacky” at the top of the order.Vale, Stacky.

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