Pant to make red-ball comeback with Duleep Trophy; Shami not picked

Rishabh Pant is set to make his comeback in red-ball cricket with the 2024-25 Duleep Trophy, as the Ajit Agarkar-led selection committee picked the squads for the first round of the tournament. This is the first time Pant will play first-class cricket since his car accident in December 2022.Mohammed Shami, however, isn’t part of any of the four squads. He is nearing full fitness and has begun bowling full tilt as he targets a comeback during the two-Test home series against Bangladesh from September 19. Shami is expected to continue training under the NCA’s watch in Bengaluru.Shreyas Iyer and Ishan Kishan, who had lost their central contracts for not prioritising domestic cricket last season, are also back in the first-class fold along with a host of other top players, including KL Rahul, Suryakumar Yadav, Shubman Gill and Kuldeep Yadav.Related

  • Duleep Trophy first round: illness rules Siraj and Malik out; Jadeja withdrawn

  • 'Excited for red-ball fun', Suryakumar wants to 'earn the Test spot again'

  • Ranji Trophy in two phases: a welcome experiment or harsh momentum breaker?

  • Sai Sudharsan returns to Surrey for two County Championship games

  • Rahul, Pant, Suryakumar, Gill set to play Duleep Trophy

As reported by ESPNcricinfo, Test captain Rohit Sharma, Virat Kohli, R Ashwin and Jasprit Bumrah have been given an extended break ahead of India’s home season.Fast bowler Prasidh Krishna, whose most recent competitive game was in January 2024, is also set to make a comeback after a lengthy injury layoff. He is in the final stages of rehab for a quadriceps tendon injury, for which he underwent surgery in February. Prasidh will miss the Maharaja T20 Trophy, Karnataka’s domestic T20 competition, to complete his recovery ahead of the first round of the Duleep Trophy matches played simultaneously in Anantapur and Bengaluru from September 5.Top-order batter Tilak Varma, who suffered a wrist injury towards the end of IPL 2024, was also picked for the Duleep Trophy. He wasn’t picked in India’s squad that played five T20Is in Zimbabwe in July because of the injury.The selection panel has rewarded domestic form, an example of which is the inclusion of Mumbai allrounder Musheer Khan. The 19-year-old had a breakout year in which he was part of India’s Under-19 World Cup squad as well as Mumbai’s victorious Ranji Trophy campaign.Musheer, who struck a double-hundred in the Ranji Trophy quarter-final and a match-winning hundred in the final, will play alongside his older brother and India batter Sarfaraz Khan, one of the several contenders for a place in India’s Test middle order.Allrounder Nitish Kumar Reddy has been included subject to fitness. He is recovering from a sports hernia surgery in June, after being withdrawn from India’s T20I squad to Zimbabwe. Some notable names not to make the cut were Rinku Singh, Sanju Samson and Shams Mulani. It is not yet known whether any of them would come in as replacements for the Test players who will leave after the first round.Originally a zonal competition featuring teams from six zones – North, South, East, West, Central and North-East – Duleep Trophy will have only four teams this time, named Team A, Team B, Team C and Team D. The players who will be picked for the Bangladesh series will be replaced in the Duleep Trophy.

Duleep Trophy 2024-25 squads (first round)

Team A: Shubman Gill (capt), Mayank Agarwal, Riyan Parag, Dhruv Jurel (wk), KL Rahul, Tilak Varma, Shivam Dube, Tanush Kotian, Kuldeep Yadav, Akash Deep, Prasidh Krishna, Khaleel Ahmed, Avesh Khan, Vidwath Kaverappa, Kumar Kushagra, Shaswat Rawat.Team B: Abhimanyu Easwaran (capt), Yashasvi Jaiswal, Sarfaraz Khan, Rishabh Pant (wk), Musheer Khan, Nitish Kumar Reddy (subject to fitness), Washington Sundar, Ravindra Jadeja, Mohd Siraj, Yash Dayal, Mukesh Kumar, Rahul Chahar, R Sai Kishore, Mohit Awasthi, N Jagadeesan (wk)Team C: Ruturaj Gaikwad (capt), Sai Sudharsan, Rajat Patidar, Abishek Porel (wk), Suryakumar Yadav, B Indrajith, Hrithik Shokeen, Manav Suthar, Umran Malik, Vyshak Vijaykumar, Anshul Khamboj, Himanshu Chauhan, Mayank Markande, Aryan Juyal (wk), Sandeep WarrierTeam D: Shreyas Iyer (capt), Atharva Taide, Yash Dubey, Devdutt Padikkal, Ishan Kishan (wk), Ricky Bhui, Saransh Jain, Axar Patel, Arshdeep Singh, Aditya Thakare, Harshit Rana, Tushar Deshpande, Akash Sengupta, KS Bharat (wk), Saurabh Kumar

Wow: Arsenal prepare £40m+ bid to hijack Chelsea move for "fantastic" star

Arsenal are ready to spend big this summer and could now gain the upper hand on Chelsea in pursuit of a talented star plying his trade at the Club World Cup, according to a report.

Arsenal ready to make statement signings

The Gunners hope to establish themselves as a frontrunner in the race for the Premier League title and Mikel Arteta is set to be backed this window as high-profile targets are identified at the Emirates Stadium.

In an honest assessment of his former side’s hunt for a striker, Arsenal icon Theo Walcott has pointed out that the club need to pursue someone in Liam Delap’s mould as they search for a new source of goals.

Benjamin Sesko and Viktor Gyokeres are Arsenal’s two main striking targets, and the latter has given his priority to Arteta’s side following an excellent campaign at Sporting.

That development comes in spite of interest from Manchester United, which will undoubtedly provoke optimism among a support desperate to see the final piece of the jigsaw added over the coming months.

Arsenal approach £170k-per-week forward with Berta ready to pay £53m

The Gunners are making “real moves” for him.

3

By
Emilio Galantini

Jun 14, 2025

However, it has to be taken into account that signing a forward isn’t the only requirement to exceed their rivals’ points tally next season; you also need an effective foil to maximise attacking output across the board.

With that in mind, Arsenal now have a winger on their radar that they could steal from under the nose of rivals Chelsea, according to reports.

Arsenal prepare bid to sign Borussia Dortmund star Jamie Gittens

According to reports in Spain, Arsenal are preparing a bid to sign Borussia Dortmund winger Jamie Gittens, and he is viewed internally as someone who would fit their philosophy to develop talent over the long-term.

Borussia Dortmund's Jamie Bynoe-Gittensin action with Lille's Bafode Diakite

Berta and company are ready to put forward an offer that could amount to roughly £42.5 million, while Chelsea have also been heavily linked with Gittens and came close to signing him before the Club World Cup registration window closed. There have even been claims the Blues still want him and could make a new bid in days.

Jamie Gittens in 2024/25 – Bundesliga (FBRef)

Shot-creating actions

73

Goals-creating actions

10

Progressive carries per 90

5.53

Touches in opposition penalty area per 90

5.53

Successful take-ons per 90

3.57

Labelled “fantastic” by Nuri Sahin, the England Under-21 international registered 12 goals and five assists as Borussia Dortmund left it late to secure Champions League qualification.

Bukayo Saka’s injury issues throughout the campaign demonstrated that additional depth is needed for the Gunners to juggle domestic and European endeavours. Taking that into consideration, what better way for Arsenal to secure another talented outlet out wide than to beat Chelsea to Gittens’ signature.

Wiaan Mulder shines as Leicestershire hold nerve at Chester-le-Street

Undulating match falls Leicestershire’s way after Durham recover from 19 for 3 in the chase

ECB Reporters Network12-Jun-2024

Two run outs killed Durham’s chase•Getty Images

A brilliant Leicestershire bowling performance, led by South African all-rounder Wiaan Mulder’s 2 for 19, underpinned a come-from-behind 10-run win over Durham as they defended 141 in a thrilling Vitality Blast clash dominated by the bowlers at Seat Unique Riverside.The Foxes were under pressure at the halfway point having posted 140 for eight, including Rishi Patel’s opening 48 off 44 balls and 3 for 20 from England Test quick Matthew Potts.Despite sluggish conditions, Durham would still have been confident of victory. But it wasn’t to be. Mulder’s seam accounted for two early wickets as they slipped to 19 for 3 and failed to recover, falling short of chasing 17 off the last over.Ashton Turner hit 49 for Durham, who finished on 130 for 8, added to Graham Clark’s 53 not out off 56. But Josh Hull’s final over sealed Leicestershire’s third win and consigned Durham to a third defeat. Both have played five.Inserted, Leicestershire started brightly, led by opener Patel, who posted his second successive 48.Left-arm spinner Callum Parkinson had Sol Budinger caught behind – 10 for one after five balls – but Patel and Rehan Ahmed (20) played with intent. One Ahmed ramped boundary over the keeper off Jonathan Bushnell’s seam was particularly memorable.Even when Ahmed fell run out at the striker’s end by Nathan Sowter’s throw from mid-on, the Foxes were encouragingly placed at 53 for 2 after seven overs with Patel set.But spin and pace off, including seamer Ben Raine with two wickets, put the squeeze on expertly – and boundaries were limited.Patel hit Sowter’s leg-spin for six over long-on but was bowled next ball aiming to slog-sweep the same bowler – 90 for 3 in the 13th. The good work of spinners Sowter and Parkinson, who struck once apiece, opened the door for the seamers to burst through.Raine (2 for 28) and Potts claimed all of their wickets in the latter stages of the innings as the Foxes fell from 95 for 3 in the 14th over to 128 for 8 in the 19th.Raine removed overseas duo Mulder and captain Peter Handscomb, lbw and bowled – the latter for 26, and has now taken seven wickets in his last two Blast appearances. Potts had Louis Kimber caught and bowled Ben Cox and Lewis Goldsworthy.But wickets continued to fall to keep this game in the balance, with Durham slipping to 19 for 3 in the fifth over.After towering quick Hull had Alex Lees brilliantly caught behind by a diving Cox, Mulder’s seam had compatriot David Bedingham caught at mid-on and Ollie Robinson trapped lbw with successive deliveries.However, that was when Turner intervened, with the help of fourth-wicket partner Clark, who played wingman in an 85 partnership. Turner slog-swept spinners Goldsworthy and Ahmed for two big sixes over midwicket.Durham were back in control but not home and hosed, especially when Turner was run out at 104 for 4 in the 16th. Raine and Paul Coughlin holed out off Ben Mike and Goldsworthy, and things turned quickly.Bushnell was run out and Potts bowled in a fabulous penultimate over from seamer Scott Currie, which only cost three. That left excellent Hull – 1 for 16 from his four overs – with plenty of breathing space.And despite Clark reaching his fifty, he was unable to find the boundary at the end. It proved costly.Durham bowled well, but Leicestershire were even better.

109-cap international once worth £100m is now open to joining Liverpool

Liverpool will soon look to build on winning the Premier League title and new reports have now offered encouragement to the Reds in their hunt to sign a world-renowned star.

Liverpool held by Arsenal after conceding two-goal lead

In their first home match since becoming champions, Liverpool were held by Arsenal in a 2-2 draw despite opening up a comfortable advantage courtesy of Cody Gakpo and Luis Diaz. Gabriel Martinelli and Mikel Merino hit back for the visitors to steal a point, but the main talking point was supporters’ mixed reaction to Trent Alexander-Arnold’s appearance from the bench.

Liverpool – Trent Alexander-Arnold

Coming off the back of his decision to leave his boyhood club on a free transfer, there are plenty of fans who made their frustration known despite the backdrop of a brilliant season for all involved at Liverpool. Arne Slot will be keen to banish any negativity present at Anfield, which is likely to disappear promptly in the summer once high-profile targets become public knowledge.

Real Madrid superstar Rodrygo could join the Reds to add a layer of elite quality on the right flank, illustrating a marker of FSG’s ambition to keep the club at the summit of English football for time to come.

Fewer touches than Alisson: Slot must axe 5/10 Liverpool dud after Arsenal

Arne Slot must drop this Liverpool dud who was worse than Conor Bradley against Arsenal.

3 ByDan Emery May 11, 2025

Lyon’s Malick Fofana may arrive at Liverpool to replace Luis Diaz, offering another inkling regarding the type of profile Slot wants as part of his project once the window opens. Next term, the Reds’ divisional rivals are likely to be stronger and in a better position to compete for the Premier League crown, meaning statement additions are necessary to add shine to a squad bristling with talent.

This is something they could now achieve if all goes to plan, per recent developments.

Kevin De Bruyne tempted by Liverpool move amid conflicting reports

According to reports in Italy via Sport Witness, Kevin De Bruyne is seriously considering a proposal from Liverpool and could be tempted by the prospect of one more season in the Premier League before moving to the MLS or Saudi Arabia.

It is important to point out that there have been conflicting stories surrounding the Manchester City icon – claims of a Liverpool offer being made for the 109-cap Belgian star have previously been circulated. On the other hand, Fabrizio Romano has said that Liverpool are not in talks to sign De Bruyne.

Either way, the 33-year-old is possibly the most lucrative free agent on the market this summer after deciding to leave the Etihad Stadium – City were placing a £100m price tag on him last year amid interest from the Middle East.

Kevin De Bruyne’s incredible time at Manchester City

Appearances

419

Goals

108

Assists

177

In a transitional season for the Citizens, De Bruyne has struck six times and delivered eight assists. Those may not be groundbreaking numbers, but the fact he has created 55 chances in the Premier League is enough to showcase his appeal.

Despite the rivalry that exists between Liverpool and Manchester City, Slot could pull off one of the most-talked about signings over recent years if the man in question’s willingness to move to Anfield is indeed legitimate.

Everton make contact over summer deal for "brilliant" £120k-p/w Man Utd ace

Everton are close to beginning their new era at Bramley Moore Dock and could now move a step closer to completing a free transfer for an established Premier League defender, per reports.

Everton enjoying a peaceful end to Goodison Park era

Safety was the desired result when David Moyes took over at Goodison Park, and it is fair to say the former West Ham United boss has passed his remit with flying colours since returning to Merseyside.

A run of only four losses in 15 matches across all competitions have pulled the Toffees well clear of the drop zone, with their Premier League status secure after a raft of impressive results despite a clear lack of squad depth.

Everton manager David Moyes andBetoafter the match

Incredibly, Goodison Park will host just two more Everton matches before being consigned to history as the Blues move across town, which could pave the way for some exciting additions to enter the fold if the Friedkin Group flex their financial muscle this summer.

Nantes winger Moses Simon could be one of first arrivals of the new era for a fee in the region of £12.8 million, offering a potential solution should Jack Harrison return to Leeds United. Sunderland sensation Chris Rigg is also on Everton’s radar, illustrating the calibre of reinforcement the Toffees have in mind to kickstart a new dawn under Moyes.

Shades of Cahill: Everton chasing PL "revelation" to upgrade on Doucoure

David Moyes is looking to strengthen his Everton team in the transfer market this summer.

ByAngus Sinclair Apr 24, 2025

Following years in the doldrums, the Blues finally appear to be on the up and have aspirations of progression once they arrive at Bramley Moore, but PSR regulations may limit their scope to spend at a lavish rate. Free transfers may be an intelligent way to attract quality while keeping the books in check, so it won’t some as a surprise to hear that Everton could utilise this mode of transfer action.

Everton make contact over Victor Lindelof move

According to CaughtOffside, Everton have made contact over a move for Manchester United star Victor Lindelof in an attempt to fend off competition from several other clubs for his signature. Fulham, Wolverhampton Wanderers and West Ham United have also registered their interest, while Inter Milan, Juventus and Benfica are lingering in the distance.

Victor Lindelof’s Manchester United record

Appearances

277

Goals

4

Assists

7

Trophies

1 EFL Cup, 1 FA Cup

After falling down the pecking order at Old Trafford, £120,000 per week earner Lindelof is set for a new challenge in the prime of his career and has no shortage of offers in his hunt for a new club. His availability on a free transfer combined with experience of the English top-flight is a lucrative commodity for sides to consider heading into next season.

Everton have several players set to see their deals expire on Merseyside and may have a void to fill in the heart of defence, making Lindelof an inexpensive solution providing they can meet his wage demands in negotiations.

James Rew: 'I like to make it really hard for the opposition to get me out'

Somerset wicketkeeper-batter is tipped for Test career and already has impressive body of work to call on

Matt Roller11-Dec-2025It is an inescapable fact that England defeats in Australia tend to prompt significant turnover. Just ask Rory Burns, Haseeb Hameed and Dawid Malan: having started the 2021-22 series as England’s top three in Brisbane, all three players were dropped for the subsequent tour to West Indies, and none of them has played another Test match since.It is too soon to say for sure if the 2025-26 series will go the same way but at 2-0 down after six days’ cricket, the early signs are not promising. A fourth successive heavy defeat in Australia would doubtless prompt change and, in Zak Crawley and Ollie Pope, England are carrying two top-order batters who would be unlikely to survive an overhaul. Jacob Bethell is the next man in line, but close behind him is a player with a far more substantial body of work.At 21, James Rew has already scored 11 first-class hundreds – 11 more than Bethell, his former England Under-19 team-mate – and has long been seen as a future international player. He also holds the unique distinction of scoring the winning run for an English team against an Australian one on this Ashes tour, making 92 not out against the Prime Minister’s XI in Canberra last week.Related

  • Rehan, Cox and Fisher in England Lions squad for Australia

  • Kellaway enhances his credentials with top score for Prime Minister's XI

  • Bethell misses out as Rew 92* leads England to victory

  • 'Gutted' Wood out of the remainder of the Ashes, Fisher named replacement

Rew was dismissed cheaply in both innings of England Lions’ heavy defeat against Australia A at the weekend but has already come close to playing Test cricket. He was called up to England’s squad to face Zimbabwe in May, and ran the drinks as 12th man on the second day of the first Test in Perth last month.”It does feel good to be around that group,” Rew tells ESPNcricinfo. “It’s obviously an incredible group, a really nice bunch of lads, and they’re all very welcoming… If there is ever an opportunity, I’d love to be able to play Test cricket for England.”To be honest, I don’t see that happening anytime soon, so I’m just trying to go about my own game as well as I can, and just keep trying to get better day to day. If anything ever does come about in the future, I’ll try to take the opportunity.”By his own admission, Rew is something of a throwback: alongside citing fellow King’s College Taunton alumnus and Somerset academy graduate Jos Buttler as one of his idols, he mentions the name of Alastair Cook. He travels to Dubai this week to play for Sharjah Warriorz in the ILT20 after England opted against keeping him on as Ashes cover but, unusually for a young English batter, has only played seven T20s.

“While keeping, No. 4 is a pretty good spot; higher than that with the gloves could be quite challenging. But if I don’t keep, I would happily move up. If I do end up having to open the batting at some point, I’d try to do as best I can”

“I’d say I build an innings pretty well,” Rew says. “That’s probably the thing that I think is my strength: once I get in, trying to make it really hard for them to get me out. I’m not necessarily as destructive as a lot of modern-day players, but I like to try to keep the scoreboard moving along and just make it really hard for the opposition to get me out once I’m in.”His strike rate has gradually increased in first-class cricket since his breakthrough season in 2023, though without him making a conscious change. “Some of that might be just me getting slightly better as a player, being able to score off more balls,” Rew suggests. “I feel like I can up the tempo if I need to, and it helps when Somerset are in good positions in games.”Rew was promoted from No. 6 to No. 4 this season and was Somerset’s leading run-scorer, all while keeping wicket. “I enjoyed it a lot,” he says. “I feel like at No. 4, you can get in earlier in the game, so you can have more impact as to where the game goes.”He believes that he could yet move further up the order, though likely as a specialist batter. “While keeping, No. 4 is a pretty good spot; higher than that with the gloves could be quite challenging. But if I don’t keep, I would happily move up if it fits with the Somerset line-up… If I do end up having to open the batting at some point, I’d try to do as best I can.”James and younger brother Thomas were both on the England Lions tour•Getty ImagesIt is a move that could be prompted by the emergence of his younger brother, Thomas, who has kept wicket for the Lions throughout their Australia tour and turned 18 during the PM’s XI fixture. “We had a couple of beers after the game,” James says. “It was nice to be with him for his 18th and be able to celebrate a little bit… We’re obviously here together and it’s really, really surreal.”Thomas was picked ahead of James – who is in his third consecutive winter with the Lions – at the start of the Australia tour, prompting reports that he had been told to work on his fitness. “I saw that, and that’s the first I’d ever heard of it,” he insists. “That’s not the reason Fred [Lions coach Andrew Flintoff] gave me, so I have no idea where that came from.”We’ve worked hard as a group on gym and running and just trying to all be prepared for Test cricket, if it does happen to any of us. That’s Fred’s goal for us: to be fit as a unit for international cricket, and obviously playing in Australia with the heat. We’ve all worked hard on our physical abilities… I was just preparing in the nets, and managed to get a couple of runs in Canberra.”Rew worked closely with the former South Africa batter Neil McKenzie throughout the tour, with a focus on countering extra bounce: “I’ve worked on a couple of things with my set-up position, trying to be more on top of the ball when it’s bouncing more – setting up for a back-of-a-length ball, rather than in England where you have to watch your front shin every ball.”It is a change that should serve Rew well for the demands of Test cricket as and when his opportunity arises – and with the way that England’s tour appears to be heading, that may be sooner rather than later.

Finding Shamar Joseph: 'The impact he's had is unreal'

Former West Indies selector Roland Butcher was part of the panel who plucked out the young quick bowler

Andrew McGlashan02-Feb-2024One of the first people involved in West Indies cricket to set eyes on Shamar Joseph has recalled the excitement at seeing him bowl.Roland Butcher, who played international cricket for England, was a West Indies selector until earlier this year and was present at various stages through Joseph’s rapid rise which made global headlines with his 7 for 68 at the Gabba to bowl West Indies to a famous eight-run win despite an injured toe.It was last year at the Sir Vivian Richards Stadium in Antigua that Butcher was convinced they had found a special talent. He quickly took his thoughts back to fellow selector Desmond Haynes and the wheels were set in motion.Related

Baracara's speed demon: the Shamar Joseph story

Ball-by-ball: Shamar Joseph rips through Australia at the Gabba

A fairy-tale day in the life of Shamar Joseph

'He's created a good headache' – Sammy puts Joseph in T20 World Cup frame

“I immediately saw this guy bowling and thought, wow, this guy has got talent,” Butcher told ESPNcricinfo. “Went back to the hotel and sat down with Desmond and said, I saw a boy today who I believe is what we’ve been looking for. He’s the real material as a fast bowler.”Joseph took a five-wicket haul in his second first-class match and then earned a place on the A tour to South Africa where he claimed 12 wickets in two games. But even before then, Butcher had his eyes on the Australia tour.”What I saw was a guy with great athletic ability,” he said. “He’s not a big lad, but he’s strong and extremely fit. You could see that in him then, and once he started playing for Guyana, you saw the easy run up and the pace and the areas that he bowled. He’s not a guy who is all over the place. He bowls good areas but at serious pace.”It surprised us all that he’s done it so quickly but we always believed he had the talent. We took a chance, a calculated risk. I believed Australia was the perfect place for him to play because the pitches obviously favour fast bowling but you still need to know how to bowl there.

We knew his capabilities but don’t think we expected that sort of impact. How can you?Roland Butcher

“What you saw in Australia is what he did in that first game. The same lengths, movement, pace, everything you saw he did in the first game.”Butcher and Joseph had first crossed paths a couple of years earlier at a cricket clinic in Berbice, Guyana, when he and Andy Roberts had been invited to visit by the local board.”We had a long conversation. I saw him and realised he had talent,” Butcher recalled. “We spoke about it, I said listen, you have a lot of talent and I believe if you get serious about the game I know what could happen.”Then during the Super50 last year in Trinidad he came and sat down and said do you remember when you spoke with me about taking the game seriously. Then he said, six to eight months later he decided to take it serious.”Shamar Joseph sustained his pace throughout his matchwinning spell•Cricket Australia/Getty ImagesAlthough Butcher’s contract as a selector has ended, the pair kept in regular contact during the Australia tour with Butcher passing on advice about bowling in the conditions.”He’s not a bang it into the pitch bowler,” he said. “We talked about not getting carried away with the bounce and bowling a fuller length and about being quicker through the air.”They were all attributes on display at the Gabba where he continually challenged the defence of the Australia batters and was still getting movement with the pink ball as it grew older. His stamina, too, stood out as he touched 150kph deep into the matchwinning spell.”We knew his capabilities but don’t think we expected that sort of impact. How can you? The impact he’s had is unreal,” Butcher said. “What he has achieved is unbelievable. From his background, what he had to do…he’s one of the most natural athletes I’ve seen for a long time.”You have to remember where he came from. You must have real love for the game and serious desire to play in a place where there’s hardly any cricket, hardly any facilities, a very difficult place to get to. The support he got from within his village, he must have had huge desire to be a cricketer.”The story has already shifted to what happens next for Joseph. He has T20 league deals (an ILT20 stint has been curtailed by the toe injury) but has committed to always being available for West Indies. Their next Test series is against England in July.”I talk to him about things happening quickly, the type of people he needs around him to handle this kind of thing,” Butcher said. “That will be key now in terms of him getting good advice. He’s got a strong family background, so I have no doubts he won’t get carried away. He’s the catalyst for dragging that young team forward.”

Bazball and the allure of the Edgbaston Test that awaits India

Between the two teams, England have changed a lot more since the fourth Test last year, and India will recognise the giddiness around that

Osman Samiuddin29-Jun-2022If the Indian captain had gone down with Covid a week before a Test last summer in England, imagine the calamity. He didn’t, but an outbreak among the support staff caused enough panic for the BCCI to have the Test called off.A lot of it was to do with where the world was with the pandemic. The UK was leading a new, post-vaccine laissez-faire response by easing restrictions throughout society, but sport hadn’t caught up. Players were still in bubbles; they underwent regular PCR tests; close contacts were still being identified and told to isolate; travel was a nightmare.But some of it would also have been because the captain last summer was Virat Kohli. And such is the frenzy that accompanies Kohli, it’s quite possible that if only he had gotten Covid and no one else, the Old Trafford Test might have been cancelled anyway.Related

  • Jasprit Bumrah unfazed as he prepares to take on India captaincy his own way

  • Dravid says India undaunted by Bazball from resurgent England

  • England vs India – the decider of a series from a different era

  • WTC points table update: Is the Edgbaston Test a must-win for India?

  • Four selection puzzles for India at Edgbaston

It’s a measure of how much has changed that Rohit Sharma got Covid this week and there’s no question of the Test being in danger: the only question is who replaces him, if he doesn’t recover in time. We’ve just seen the end of a series where a number of New Zealand players or staff got Covid, the England wicketkeeper got it during a Test and nobody really cared. Last summer was a different world, though it also doesn’t feel that long ago; one side effect of Covid, regardless of whether you’ve had it or not, is a distorted sense of time.Also, this is Rohit. Great batter, fine captain but not that stratosphere. He doesn’t hold the fate of entire ecosystems in his hands. He does not appear on Forbes rich lists. He is not hanging with the LeBrons, the CR7s or the Messis on a global sporting icon list. In fact, one of the most interesting things about Rohit’s appointment is that for the first time in well over a decade, an Indian captain is not obviously the biggest, most significant figure in the sport.No team is really built in the image of one man alone, but that this was in some way, until very recently, Kohli’s India is difficult to argue against. Now? There is a new coach to consider as well, a man who, albeit in a diametrically opposite way to Ravi Shastri, brings serious presence.Ordinarily, this would all be considered serious change. And it is, except it doesn’t come across that way. If Shastri brought the yang to Kohli’s yang then, instinctively, Rahul Dravid brings the yin to Rohit’s yin: two men attuned to the details and not just a big picture. Shastri, meanwhile, will end the series as a blustering, cheerleading commentator, having begun it as a blustering, cheerleading coach.1:45

Who opens and captains if Rohit Sharma can’t play at Edgbaston?

India don’t do crisis or panic, now they merely move along unperturbed. KL Rahul, second-highest run-scorer in the series, is not here. No problem, here is Mayank Agarwal, who Rahul had replaced in the first place as opener at the start of this series last year after Agarwal sustained a concussion.Many countries might bungle transitions involving their second-most prolific Test fast bowler ever, when he is still only 33. Ishant Sharma might have played his last Test and nobody appears overly concerned, or sentimental. Why would they when Mohammed Siraj is already so well established? Or when next man in could be Prasidh Krishna: tall and gangly like Ishant but quicker and bouncier, averaging less than 17 in ODIs and less than 18 in first-class cricket? R Ashwin is arguably India’s greatest spinner but will probably not play this series. And India won’t lose it. Ashwin not playing would simply underline how little has changed for India. With Rohit leading (assuming he plays), India could field as many as eight from the XI that took the series lead at The Oval.But this Test isn’t really about India, which itself is an unusual position for India to be in. This is about England. Usually, England are just some shade of England: a great orthodox batter, a charismatic allrounder, a couple of grand old seamers and seven others. They win at home, but never dominate. They don’t win that much abroad. There is always angst, about some player, about techniques, about county cricket, about the health of Tests. Boring is not the right word for it. Familiar, oddly comforting, reassuringly there, might be.The best thing about this Test is that this is not usual England. This is not another shade, it’s already half a painting. England too have a different captain and coach since the last Test of this series. They will only play four from the XI that played at The Oval. That says that a lot has changed but it doesn’t even begin to capture a fraction of it – or the speed at which it has happened.Less than a month ago they were still that England. Now they are this England and even if we can get our heads around the Covid time warp, we might struggle to explain that three months ago, seven of this England side scored 324 runs across two innings in 154 overs. In doing so, they lost by 10 wickets.If they were simply waiting to be told that this is a way to play the game, then it’s a nice reminder that words retain power, that they are consequential, especially when coming from Brendon McCullum. But without Ben Stokes’ actions, they might still have meant a lot less. Stokes has been good as captain – a revelation, even, particularly with his handling of Jack Leach – but his two dismissals in Trent Bridge and Headingley now appear as the precise moments of revelation, when The Word became The Deed.It can easily be argued they were reckless dismissals: England were still 148 behind in Trent Bridge when he fell and he left them 55 for 5 at Headingley. They probably were. But they also epitomised precisely what, presumably, he and McCullum had been instructing England to do. Run into the fear, not away from it. And if the captain was doing it, there was no excuse for others not to.India could field as many as eight of their last Test XI that appeared in England last year•Getty ImagesThe most vivid illustration of this emboldened mood is Jonny Bairstow. Last summer, at The Oval, as he was bowled – a calling card that dismissal – by Jasprit Bumrah for a four-ball duck, it was possible to ask where his Test career was going. He was in his ninth year as a Test cricketer, with decent periods but he was averaging 23 in the three years until the end of that Test. Shunted around through the middle order in that time, half his Tests as wicketkeeper-batter, half as batter, he wasn’t this, he wasn’t that, so what was he?Batting is a feeling, Kumar Sangakkara said during a recent Sky Masterclass, inadvertently landing upon the truth of Bairstow in this last month. Bairstow already had two Test hundreds this year but his last three innings (369 runs, twice out, 293 balls, 46 fours and ten sixes) means even he might struggle to remember those two.He has best understood batting as a feeling, not chained by strictures of technique or batting order or situation or even format. “Sometimes your own thoughts sabotage your ability to see the ball,” McCullum said once, years ago, articulating a purity of state athletes strive for, only knowing that the more they strive, the further away it gets and that it is attained generally by accident, not design. Rarely can Bairstow’s place in the Test side have made more sense.Jonny Bairstow has turned Test batting on its head under Mccullum and Stokes•Stu Forster/Getty ImagesJonny solved, not even county cricket seems such an intractable problem. All it needs, it turns out, is for county cricketers to start playing like England’s Test cricketers. Not the scheduling, or the pitches, or the number of counties, or the quality of the ball: just a sprinkle of this ethos from up above. Trickle-down economics has never made this much sense (to be fair, it did happen with Eoin Morgan’s white-ball revolution, but that is a different beast).India will recognise some of this giddiness. They are much further down the arc of this seismic change. Typically, they traversed it in a more considered way, but it was no less radical. Kohli did change the way India approached games, and those fundamentals are firmly established by now. They bat as we have known Test batting this century (rather than this last month). Cheteshwar Pujara is not going to reverse scoop anyone, though Rishabh Pant is a born Baz-baller.Their eureka moment happened to their bowling – and hasn’t stopped happening (Hi Umran Malik); in having a battery of strong, quick and durable bowlers; in being more capable of attack than ever before; in picking five of them. That will be the half of this contest with all the sexy in it: England’s batting against India’s bowling (and I don’t think England will let Ravindra Jadeja bowl 30-11-50-2 like he did last time).There’s probably something to be said about the contrast in coaches though nothing beyond the superficial. Suffice to say, Dravid is fully aware of the sudden, whirlwind impact of Baz-ball: he was the captain caught in the headlights all those years ago of McCullum’s era-defining 158 in the IPL opener.There is probably also a little lament to be made: last year’s series never got the end that it deserved. And this Test won’t get the series it deserves.

'100 is a magical figure, but sometimes 100 is not enough'

Mayank Agarwal on how he he had to rework himself mentally in his relentless pursuit for big runs

Interview by Varun Shetty14-Feb-20203:23

‘I am very intense when it comes to cricket’

After his first home season with India and just over a year after making a dream start to his Test career, Mayank Agarwal talks about how he had to mentally rework himself in his relentless pursuit for big runs. In this interview from December 2019, he opens up on his intensity, about staying focused on the job, and how older players like Rahul Dravid and Vinay Kumar helped him identify vital touchpoints within his mental make-up.You have 11 hundreds in first-class cricket. Seven of those are scores of 150 or higher. What part of your game do you think has made you suited to make so many 150-plus scores?
Long hours of batting with RX [Murali, personal coach] and understanding the fact that 100 is a magical figure but sometimes 100 is not enough. More often than not, you have to go on to score bigger runs than that and have the hunger to continue to bat long. Setting targets for yourself where you are looking at sessions or situations [such that] in a four-day game, your team doesn’t have to bat twice. So things like that have really got the best out of me.ALSO READ: ‘ When you come back and play domestic cricket in India, it challenges you – Mayank AgarwalIt must help that you have a lot of run-scoring options, like your idol Virender Sehwag. But it seems like you are willing to put those shots away if needed. Are you now more patient?
It has more to do with understanding that there can only be one Virender Sehwag. Or that he’s a different player and has a different game, and I’m a different player and I’ll have a different game. A few things might be similar, but the fact that I have a better understanding of my game and knowing what I can do and what is working for me, I think that [helps].You made 1000 runs in November 2017, and the defining innings there was the triple-hundred against Maharashtra, which came after a string of poor scores. Were you nervous coming into that innings?
Yes. The previous game I’d got two zeroes. And I wasn’t sure, to be honest, if I was going to even be in the side, forget about playing the game. Somewhere, as a batsman, there was that fear of getting out. And when you hit rock bottom you realise there is nothing to lose. It cannot get worse than it already is.

What was the start of that innings like?
When I played that innings, I had let go of the fear of failure. I wasn’t scared of getting out. I said to myself that there was nothing worse that can happen from there on, because I’d hit rock bottom. And then I said, let me go out there, make a plan for myself and then keep going. Let me just get a start. If I can get a start, at least I’ll have something to build on.And Vinay Kumar [the Karnataka captain] had come and spoken to me before the game. He said, ‘If you get out early, there’s nothing you can do about it, you’ve got to start from scratch. But if you get a start, and get a decent score, make sure you make it big. You’ve had it hard, so don’t throw that thing away.’ So that’s when I thought to myself, I could take a cue from this. Just forget about scoring big, remove my thoughts from around any of that, and just focus to get that start. And once I got that start and I got set, then I said, now I’ve got an opportunity. Let me not throw it away. And then I just kept batting and batting.For about 12 hours. Was that the longest you’d played?
Yes. Probably the longest.ALSO READ: Mayank Agarwal betters Don BradmanDuring that innings did you learn about your game?
The first fifty or hundred was a lot of thoughts, a lot of fighting in the head. And I did play a lot more balls to get to that [score] than I normally do. It was more about first looking to get set. I wasn’t thinking of getting out, I wasn’t thinking of scoring runs, I was just looking to watch the ball and keep playing the ball.It didn’t matter if I got beaten or anything like that, because at that moment, just let me do the things in hand and let me get a start. Even though I reached a hundred, that thought ticked in my head of what Vinay Kumar said. And then when I built onto that, I said again, no, let me start from zero.And when I got to another milestone I said, let me start from zero again. Because I’ve had it hard, I’ve got two zeroes, it would be foolish of me to say now I’ve got something and just throw it away. Look to play sessions. Look to play till drinks, look to play an hour, and then start from zero again, so I could build from there. That was something I learnt about myself and my game from that innings. And I’ve kept that close to me.”When I got to 150 against Bangladesh, Virat said nothing short of 200 is gonna do”•BCCIWould you say that’s what has kept you making big scores, even at Test level?
Yes. Because as a cricketer I now understand that you’re not going to succeed always. You’re not always going to have a great series or a great year. It then becomes important that when you’re getting those runs and when you’re having a good season, you’ve got to make it big. Because you know, as a sportsman, that there will be a time where you go through a little lull. And if you have been true and you’ve worked hard and scored runs when things were going well, it can take the pressure off you. And also you’ll have a template to get back to scoring big. Are there any other innings from that phase you find memorable to date?
The game against Delhi. They had a great bowling attack. Scoring runs against them was good. But the real big challenge was when we played Railways in Delhi, at the Karnail Singh Stadium. We were 20 for 3 then and Manish [Pandey] and me stitched a big partnership. We took the team through and got a big score. Having confidence and having a template of how I was getting the runs helped there as well.And now it just seems like the captain can hold up two fingers and you’ll get a double-hundred.
() I don’t know. As I said, it’s a dream. You know it’s never going to happen like that. But yes, in Vizag [against South Africa] when I got a 150, Virat [Kohli] was there at the other end and he said, “Nothing short of a 200 will do. You’re batting well, make sure to not just score for yourself but for your team. The team needs to get a bigger score and it’s important for you to be there to help us get that score at a faster pace.”And even when I got a double-hundred against Bangladesh, that was the case. He said, “Nothing short of 200 is gonna do.” So when I got to 150, it was a reminder from his side that we have spoken about these things. Now you’ve got to go out there and execute because you’re batting well, you’re in the middle, team’s in a good position and the team requires you to take us through to more.

“When you hit rock bottom, you realise there is nothing to lose. It cannot get worse than it already is”

What’s a partnership in Tests so far that you remember fondly?
The partnership with [Cheteshwar] Pujara was a lot about grit, a lot about fighting when we played against Australia in Australia. The partnership with Rohit [Sharma] against South Africa, the first Test, was a lot about both of us opening for the first time in India. It was just about getting set, understanding home conditions, making use of home conditions and then when we got a big partnership, I think it was more like rediscovering what we can do. Because in the partnership Rohit and I were talking and I said, “I’ve never reverse-swept.” And he said, “Neither have I.” So it was discovering a few things. We weren’t doing anything risky, but those shots automatically started coming out.Have you ever been part of such a partnership before Test cricket, where you were discovering things about your game as you went along?
It was that partnership with [R] Samarth [the 304 not out] and with Manish against Railways. Sam [Samarth] was playing really well and fast. And it’s usually the other way round – I’m the one who’s getting quick runs and getting boundaries a lot more easily. He was talking me through that, said that it could come on a little slower, that you’ve got to have a little more patience. Because they were obviously bowling well and I wasn’t feeling at my best.ALSO READ: How Mayank Agarwal cracked the Test batting codeYou come across as someone who is very intense about his game. Is that accurate?
Yes. I am very intense when it comes to cricket. That’s something I didn’t really know about myself. I knew I used to play hard and think a lot, but I never really had that perspective about being an intense person on the field. And then having a full season with Rahul sir [Dravid], he brought that to me. He said, “Mayank, I think you’re a very intense guy. You practise a lot and you need to manage your mental energies.”That was the first time I actually thought about it from that perspective. And we had a great chat about managing mental energies, seeing how much I put into practice, the amount I actually need to put in practice, and also to not carry forward a lot of the practice sessions, say, to your hotel room. Or to not carry your match result into your practice session, or your next game. So just managing that and being smart about it.What exactly does it mean, to be managing mental energy?
It’s very easy for someone to carry what has happened in the previous two hours or in the previous game to the rest of the day, or to whatever is happening next. It’s very important to understand that that has gone and not stress about it and not take the negatives out of it, or if you’ve done well, not feel overly confident.”I knew I used to play hard and think a lot, but I never really had that perspective about being an intense person on the field”•Getty ImagesHow do you leave things behind?
My process would just be to read a book, keep myself engaged with something. Talk to family. And just think about a lot of things that have gone right, or a lot of good things that have happened. That keeps your mind very positive.Did you need to learn to switch off? And has it contributed to the long innings?
Yes, it does add up. [Dravid] said, “Okay, you’re playing a four-day game. You come and day in, day out, two days before the game, you’re practising so hard. You’re hitting so many balls. So you’ve essentially played two days even before the game has actually started.I would sit in the hotel room and think, oh, this is not going right, that is not going right. I need a lot of this, some of that, so on and so forth. Essentially I would have already played two days and then I play a four-day game. So I’m playing six, seven days without a break. Mentally switching off and learning that your break days have to be break days was key.The New Zealand tour is coming up. Is it something you have been thinking about?

Yes, but I made sure it’s under control and not only thinking about it or stressing about it or planning about. So yes, a little thinking. I have watched the games England and New Zealand played and just had a little bit of an idea about what can come when India goes to New Zealand, but [without] getting overly engrossed – understand the challenges and tweak whatever needs tweaking.What are some things you have noted?
Obviously their fast bowling attack and how they operate. Looked into what are the things they do with the new ball, how they come back in the second spell, and how they bowl with the old ball, things like that.You haven’t got a first-class century overseas in something like 18 innings. Is that something you’ve identified and want to check off?
I want to focus more on the process. If I can follow the things that are working for me and do that overseas, why will it not work for me there as well?

From elbow injury to epic comeback: Gaikwad's masterclass in patience and power

Returning for the first time since he suffered an injury in the IPL, Gaikwad scored 184 off just 206 on the opening day of the Duleep semi-final

Ashish Pant04-Sep-2025It’s been close to five months since an elbow injury at the IPL 2025 kept Ruturaj Gaikwad away from top-flight cricket. He had a stint at the pre-season Buchi Babu tournament but playing a first-class game – a Duleep Trophy semi-final, no less – after a substantial gap, he would have liked to ease into the red-ball grind.Instead, Gaikwad found himself walking in at 10 for 2, only 19 balls into the semi-final. West Zone lost both openers under cloudy skies and the Central Zone bowlers Khaleel Ahmed and Deepak Chahar extracted plenty of movement. Gaikwad had seen Yashasvi Jaiswal trapped lbw to a Khaleel nip-backer and Harvik Desai caught at first slip, courtesy of a Chahar outswinger.Gaikwad knew counterattacking could be catastrophic, so he took the defensive route. He was beaten multiple times and had a couple of lbw shouts turned down. But he remained unmoved. As the weather cleared up and the sun started beating down, the surface at Ground B of BCCI’s Centre of Excellence played fewer tricks. By this time, Gaikwad had also started moving better. He was leaving the ball well, getting the long defensive strides in.Once Khaleel and Chahar finished their first spells, Gaikwad became proactive against the spinners and the third fast bowler, Yash Thakur. He guided offspinner Saransh Jain’s first ball past slip and then swept him to the left of deep square leg. In Jain’s next over, he struck him for two successive fours, and in no time caught up with his partner Aaryan Desai.Even when Aaryan fell, Gaikwad continued to shift gears, reaching his half-century before lunch, taking West Zone to safety.”I thought it was a good challenge to be part of,” Gaikwad said on countering the fast bowlers. “They were three really good fast bowlers with great skill set and to be able to face them, to be able to score runs against them would be a great challenge. That is what I thought and obviously, I stuck to it and [I am] really happy that it came off.”Ruturaj Gaikwad paced his innings well in his first first-class match of the season•PTI With the conditions for batting improving after lunch, Gaikwad opened up his shoulders even as West Zone lost Shreyas Iyer and Shams Mulani cheaply. A hallmark of Gaikwad’s knock was his foot movement against the spinners. On multiple occasions, he threw them off their lengths by going down the track and driving through covers and then going right back and guiding them late past slip.It didn’t take Gaikwad long to record his eighth first-class century, getting there with a push to mid-off off Harsh Dubey. And once he got to the landmark, he notched up a gear, particularly against the quicks. In the first over after tea, Gaikwad hit three fours off Thakur, which included two crisp straight drives. Soon after, he went after his Chennai Super Kings (CSK) team-mate, Khaleel. Taking advantage of Khaleel’s around-the-wicket angle, he first thrashed him for two consecutive fours, one through cover and the other through deep third. Then there was a delightful square cut followed by an upper-cut that went for six before he ended the over with an imperious cover drive.Gaikwad’s century was a masterclass on how to pace an innings. He took 72 balls to reach his fifty, 59 to go from 51 to 100, and just 47 balls to move from 101 to 150. By the time Gaikwad fell for 184 off 206 balls, beaten in flight by Jain and stumped, he had put West Zone in a position of strength.Despite playing first-class cricket after a gap, Gaikwad said that he didn’t have any pre-conceived goal in mind at the start of his innings: “It was just about following the process, whatever it is. Red ball needs a lot of patience, lot of process to be followed and it was just about getting into that rhythm. And I did it for almost a month and a half, and obviously, Buchi Babu as well and then it happened here as well.”

“It was a very fluke injury [in the IPL] and nothing anyone could do about it. I just had a good family time, enjoyed my time at home, and then obviously [now I am] trying to get into the rhythm, get into the routines, do the small things.”Ruturaj Gaikwad

Gaikwad fractured his elbow after being struck by a Tushar Deshpande delivery during IPL 2025. As a result, he missed a chunk of the IPL and India A’s tour to England in May-June. He later also pulled out of a County deal with Yorkshire due to a “personal issue at home”.The 28-year-old agreed that it wasn’t ideal sitting on the sidelines, but said there was a silver lining with him getting to spend more time with family and time to prepare for the domestic season.”There are some things which you cannot really control, and I think it was a very fluke injury and nothing anyone could do about it,” Gaikwad said. “I just had a good family time, enjoyed my time at home, and then obviously [now I am] trying to get into the rhythm, get into the routines, do the small things. I really loved the process throughout the time I was at home and then coming here as well [for rehab].”I got good time to prepare, especially after not playing the India A series. And then after coming back, I decided to work on red ball, give it some time and obviously still working on it. Still there is a long way to go.”

Game
Register
Service
Bonus