'Adaptable' Munro sets sights on World Cup slot

Having missed out on New Zealand’s run to the 2015 final, Colin Munro is determined to cement his place for 2019

Deivarayan Muthu30-Oct-2018When Grant Elliott was playing a blinder against South Africa to launch New Zealand into the 2015 World Cup final, Colin Munro, who had missed out on a place in the national squad, was shellacking a record 23 sixes while scoring 281 from 167 balls for Auckland against Central Districts in the four-day Plunket Shield.Having given up red-ball cricket earlier this year – despite averaging 51.58 – and established himself as a white-ball specialist, Munro has now set his sights on nailing down his spot for the 2019 World Cup.”I first need to cement my spot in the World Cup team,” Munro tells ESPNcricinfo. “There are some big games coming up for me and the team leading into that World Cup. Just want to put my best foot forward. If I’m there, I obviously want to go all the way. That means I’ve to go out there and play differently on certain days, and be a dasher at the top on others; I’m pretty happy to be adaptable.”Munro is no longer that one-trick pony who smashes the new ball and throws his wicket away after a start. He showed signs of adaptability during his title-winning stints with Trinbago Knight Riders in the Caribbean Premier League (CPL) and Balkh Legends in the inaugural Afghanistan Premier League (APL).On a slow, cracked pitch in Basseterre, Munro watched Chris Lynn and Sunil Narine fall inside five overs against St Kitts & Nevis Patriots. He sized up the conditions with his mentor Brendon McCullum and worked his way to a 41-ball fifty – his slowest in T20 cricket. He then cracked 26 off his last nine balls, setting the scene for Dwayne Bravo’s late burst, and TKR’s fourth successive victory. Munro finished with an unbeaten 76 off 50 balls at a control factor of 80% on a tricky surface.

“You can’t blame the New Zealand Test team at the moment; the boys are going well. Credit to them, but now I’m a white-ball specialist and just going to focus on the World Cup.”

Munro made an unbeaten half-century in the final too, helping TKR become the first back-to-back champions in the CPL. He cleverly saw off Sohail Tanvir and spinners Chris Green and Imran Tahir before laying into the floaty medium-pace of Rayad Emrit, whom he took for 36 off 10 balls. This mix of brain and brawn has unlocked another dimension in his white-ball game.”In about 50-60% of the games in the CPL, I had to tone myself down and play myself in,” Munro says. “There was one of those games where I got 76 not out and got TKR over the line. To be able to finish the game and be there at the end is very pleasing. Numerous times with about 10-15 runs to get, I have given my wicket away before.”It’s all about adapting to the conditions. Sometimes back home [in New Zealand] and also in Australia, you get really true and flat wickets, where you could go out and smash it from ball one, but during the CPL the wickets were different. So, you have to give yourself more time – five or ten balls to get in – and it’s the same in the Afghanistan Premier League. I’m just trying to give myself the best opportunity to score big runs rather than going out and getting a nice little 30 or 50 in 20 balls. Just trying to convert those fifties into bigger scores.”Like his batting, Munro’s bowling has evolved as well. He wasn’t needed to bowl at the CPL or APL, but he did introduce his knuckleball to the world during the India tour last year and pitched in with some useful wickets for Hampshire in the Vitality Blast 2018.”My bowling is also coming along nicely,” he says. “I’m not bowling that much in these leagues, but internationally I’ve been bowling a fair bit now. Hopefully, I can start bowling more in leagues and become the guy who can bowl two or three overs. I have developed the knuckleball. I don’t bowl fast. So, it’s easier for me to deceive the batsman with a slower knuckleball or a cutter with little change in my action. Bowling it a few ks slower or making the batsman think the pitch is a bit two-paced could bring a wicket.”ESPNcricinfo LtdAlthough Munro has become a sought-after white-ball player, oppositions have identified his weakness against wristspin. In the past two years in T20 cricket, he has managed only 253 off 211 balls at a strike-rate of 119.9 against wristspinners while being dismissed 12 times. Munro attributes this to not having faced many such bowlers back home in New Zealand.”When the ball is turning both ways, it’s especially difficult to read,” he says. “You come up against left-arm wristspinners, guys with funny actions, and so it’s something you have to train a lot against. Back home, we aren’t blessed with too many legspinners. We have Ish Sodhi and [Todd] Astle and [Tarun] Nethula but nobody else [of that quality] you could train against and work on it. The wickets in New Zealand don’t really turn as well. In T20s, it is really tough because you can’t defend and play them out. You have to keep scoring. You need to find a way and there will be times when you will get out against them.”But, Munro has trained with Shadab Khan at TKR, Mujeeb Ur Rahman at Hampshire and Qais Ahmad at Balkh Legends. Have these stints boosted his confidence against wristspin?”Just a fair bit,” Munro says. “But a lot of these guys play international cricket and don’t give too much away, which is fair enough, but there are times when I come up against Ish [Sodhi] at the nets and try to read him. For me, it’s about the lack of enough confrontation, I might not be watching the wrist the whole way. I believe I pick it okay when I’m watching the wrist. And on surfaces like Sharjah, some spin more than the others and you can get yourself into trouble that way.”Munro also concedes he would have liked to have made more than a solitary Test appearance – which came against South Africa in Port Elizabeth in 2013 – but being perennially ignored for the Test side prompted him to ditch red-ball cricket.”Putting red-ball cricket on the backseat was a very tough decision,” Munro says. “I did really enjoy playing it with the Auckland boys, but for me I did not get the reward: playing Test cricket for New Zealand. I just didn’t see myself slogging for another couple of years and playing four-day cricket for Auckland. So, it’s tough. The reward is to be playing Test cricket.”But, I was told by a few people that the way I play first-class cricket with the aggressive nature of mine I might not be successful in Test cricket – which I don’t see it as one of the reasons. You can see guys coming out and being aggressive in Test cricket and finding success. The other day Prithvi Shaw hit a run-a-ball hundred on debut.”You can’t blame the New Zealand Test team at the moment; the boys are going well. Credit to them, but now I’m a white-ball specialist and just going to focus on the World Cup.”His mentor McCullum set the 2015 World Cup on fire with his electric hitting and fielding. Does Munro see himself bringing a similar X-factor to New Zealand in England next year?”Don’t know about it for now,” he says, “but I’ve got a big summer ahead of me. If I’m there in the squad, I’ll do everything in my power to be adaptable for New Zealand – whether they want me to be the dasher at the top or a guy who could bat a long period of time. Looking forward to it.”

The pretty boy who turned hatchet man

Neil Wagner has cast himself in the role of a relentless slugger of a fast bowler, and it has paid off for him in spades

Sidharth Monga16-Nov-2016Test cricket is a complex sport, perhaps one of the most complicated ones out there, but at its heart a lot of it revolves around the top of off stump. Any bowler – quick, slow, right-arm, left-arm – looks to end up at the top of off, asking a batsman to watch for the outside edge, while also protecting the stumps. The sheer physicality of fast bowling means a quick usually bowls spells that are around five overs long. Some of the best bowlers in the history of the game have been those who quickly figure out which length and line on a certain pitch will help them end up in the general area of top of off to about a set of stumps wide.The more satisfactory spells of play in Test cricket are produced when a bowler gets that radar right and a watchful batsman looks to negate it: leaving balls outside the line of his right eye – left in the case of a left-hand batsman – and punishing the bowler when he falters in length or line, all the time waiting for him to tire physically or mentally or both. A small error from a bowler produces runs, something similar from the batsman can result in a wicket. Reverse swing, magic balls, unbelievable shots enrich the sport, but a large part of it is about this examination around top of off.For one fast bowler going around today, the top of off is the top of the batsman’s shoulder. A batsman can wear all the armour he wants but he will keep getting bounced; this is not about hurting him, this is about getting him to play a shot he can’t control. This bowler’s short leg and deep square leg can be slightly in front of the crease, affording him two other fielders behind square on the leg side. The bouncers are almost always between the chest and the head. The shots the batsman is left with – the hook, the ramp and the upper cut – are fraught with risk.Then you think in terms of how many accurate quick bouncers a guy can bowl. Surely he will tire? Surely he will lose pace? Surely there will be bad balls? Neil Wagner, though, keeps coming, ball after ball, bouncer after bouncer, with intensity, turning the tables, asking the batsman how much patience and agility he has to keep avoiding the various bouncers, because hooking or ramping them with the fields he has is difficult. And he doesn’t stop at five-over spells.”For me, I pride myself in being someone who can do it ten overs on the trot,” Wagner says. “I love bowling. Hopefully I stay fit and strong and my body allows me to do that. I have been doing it for a long period of time in my career, and I can keep going and keep continuing to do it.”

“I had to learn how to bowl into the wind, do the hard yards, bowl heavy into the wicket. And love that job”

What if a batsman keeps ducking? “I have got to keep bowling it,” Wagner says. “That’s the toughest thing. That’s when the test of patience comes in. That’s why it is called Test cricket. The longer you can do it for, the harder it becomes for a batsman to keep ducking. Somewhere they have to play a shot or try to play a shot.”

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Pitches in New Zealand don’t deteriorate. They just keep getting better and better to bat on with early moisture going out. A Christchurch Test, against England in 2002, sums up conditions in New Zealand. England were bowled out for 228 in the first innings, but ended up setting New Zealand 550 to win, which they threatened to achieve, thanks to Nathan Astle’s 222 off 168 balls on a final-day pitch.Twelve years later, on a similar flat track in Auckland, India were gunning down the 407-run target after having scored just 202 in the first innings. Shikhar Dhawan and Virat Kohli were chasing it almost like in an ODI. With India 218 for 2 in 60 overs and with Dhawan past a hundred and Kohli 50, New Zealand’s only chance was the second new ball. Sixty runs had come from the last ten overs, 23 off the last two. There was a good chance there might not be enough left to defend when the new ball arrived.The ball went to Wagner. It was his job to keep the scoring down and keep New Zealand in with a chance. He had gone for only 29 in 13 overs till then. That had been his job. To bowl heavy and dry outside off and try to frustrate the batsmen so that Trent Boult and Tim Southee could feed off it.When Kohli cover-drove the first ball of Wagner’s new spell, the 61st over, for four, Wagner went into his zone (“When the wicket is flat or the ball is not swinging or the batters are in and feeling comfortable”), almost an altered state of mind because what followed was not sane. In the spell of ten overs, he screamed into a heavy wind, bowled 18 bouncers, took the wickets of Kohli and Dhawan with two of them, conceded 26 runs, and gave the big boys vulnerable new batsmen against the new ball. The new Kookaburra swung for about ten overs, in which Southee and Boult took three wickets, but New Zealand still had MS Dhoni to contend with.Shikhar Dhawan gloves a short ball from Wagner, Auckland 2013-14•Associated PressAgain they went to Wagner, who ripped out two wickets with no assistance from the pitch. On a weekday when the Indian supporters outnumbered fans of the host team, Wagner charged in tirelessly and produced four wickets out of nowhere in a sport that is heavily reliant on the surface, the overheads, or the uneven weight distribution on the ball. On a flat pitch on a sunny day with no reverse swing, Wagner willed New Zealand to win a Test amid boos every time he ended up next to the batsman in his follow-through after bowling a bouncer. “To see the way he looks back at me or if he is comfortable or not. And just to obviously have a bit of presence. Have them know I am there and I am going to come hard again.”When the ESPNcricinfo Awards were conceptualised in 2007, they were a unique concept in a sport dominated by aggregate numbers. These identified not the best batsman or bowler over the year but the single best individual performances. Wagner’s Auckland effort made it to the longlist of 22 but didn’t feature in the 12 nominees for the 2014 Test bowling award.It perhaps sums up Wagner. He is somebody who bowls into the wind, when the ball is not new and when the pitch is not doing anything. He keeps the runs down so that the wicket-takers can strike. He is the dirty-pitch bowler who loses out to Doug Bracewell or the other exciting younger talent when New Zealand play on a greentop. His contribution reflects in the figures of others, and he gets to play when there is no assistance for the bowlers.

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When Wagner was just out of school, back in Pretoria, where he was born, he took up volunteer duties in a Centurion Test. He also got to field as a substitute and bowl in the nets. Shaun Pollock remembers him as a line-and-length swing bowler.

“McCullum is that sort of friend, that sort of captain, that sort of bloke that you feel you want to break the wall down for”

“Going to New Zealand, wickets became a lot flatter and slower,” Wagner says. “Obviously wind became a factor.”You bowl in a lot of strong winds. I had to try and look at different ways of making it to the team because we had quality swing bowlers in the team, like Tim, Trent, high-class swing bowlers. I wanted to bring something different to the team, in some different sort of way.”At that time I had to learn how to bowl into the wind, do the hard yards, bowl heavy into the wicket. And love that job. With that started learning new skills. Started becoming a bowler who tries to be aggressive and bowl a few short balls and hit the wicket hard and not afraid to change something up to try and buy a wicket. Or create something.”And I pride myself in when it is tough and if conditions are hard, I want to stand up and make the difference. It doesn’t always happen, it is cricket, but on the day when it does come off, it feels great. Be as aggressive as I can be.”It is clear Wagner looks forward to things other bowlers dread: flat pitch, no overheads, semi-new ball. That is when you enter his playground. It’s not pretty. It doesn’t follow the rhythms of Test cricket. The seam doesn’t come out right. The fields look strange at times. He bowls from extreme angles. He doesn’t move the ball. He should be easy to see off but he isn’t. He messes with your footwork. And if you are looking to see him off, he just keeps coming at you for ten-over spells. He is just an annoying bowler to face, the chaotic Mick Foley in a world of more technical wrestlers.It doesn’t come easy. “A lot of fitness and gym work,” Wagner says. “Thanks to our trainer, Chris Donaldson. He has put a lot of hard work in it. You have to be fit and strong to look after your body.An import into New Zealand from South Africa, Wagner is now a treasured member of his new team•Getty Images”I love bowling. I have got a massive love for cricket. For me to get the opportunity to play for New Zealand, to represent New Zealand, is a big honour. I play with a lot of passion. I love playing for the Fern. And for my team-mates. Love having that opportunity when times are tough and you have to stand up and create something special and do something for the team. Love that sort of moments.”Of course it doesn’t always come off – else, his average would be 15 as opposed to 29.63. There are days when it does, like when he took five Australian wickets with bouncers in Christchurch. Only one of them was edged. So persistent and annoying had Wagner been that the Australia batsmen were forced to play shots that had a high probability of going to the fielders on the full. Even if you hit down on head-high bouncers, it is a long way down.This was Brendon McCullum’s last Test, the man instrumental in making Wagner the bowler he became.”Brendon was outstanding,” Wagner says. “He is such a smart cricket brain. Such a good head to read the game and see something before it sort of happened or unfolded. He was really good in giving you confidence. To do a certain role or certain plan and go with it. With those plans that came out, he asked me to do that job.”Earlier in my career I struggled to adapt to certain conditions, certain wickets, or certain roles that I had to play. Trying to swing the ball and it wasn’t swinging. And when it wasn’t swinging, searching for swing and losing your shape. And your seam position. And then you end up forcing the ball, trying to bowl too quick, you miss your length. Became a thing when you put yourself under pressure early in the game, you felt like you had to play catch-up cricket.”You don’t want to let your team-mates down, so you try too hard. It was a hard time. When you don’t have control over the ball. And then I had to really work hard on my wrist position. I had to bring something different to my game, and that was the bouncer. I had to bring something different to be able to question the batsmen’s footwork.”

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Wagner is not an unskilled henchman; his skill is different. When he got Dhawan and Dhoni out in Auckland, he went round the wicket to create an extreme angle. For Dhawan a throat-high bouncer arrived from his blind spot outside leg and made him fend. To Dhoni, Wagner went the widest any man has ever gone without bowling a no-ball. Wagner’s foot landed inside the return crease, but the little toe was probably a fraction over. Dhoni had to play at the ball.

“You can be a competitive cricketer at level. It is not all about talent, it is not all about ability”

“It’s tough [to go round the wicket],” Wagner says. “Obviously different to your natural over-the-wicket angle. Your body moves in different lines and different angles. I was told by Allan Donald as a young kid growing up that you are always going to have pain as a fast bowler, you are always going to have something that is sore, some sort of niggle. You are never going to play a 100% and feel a 100%. You know you have to bite through your teeth, and make sure you keep fighting.”I think it’s something I have trained a lot. I did it in T20 and one-day cricket as well. Try and vary the crease where I come from, where I bowl from. I do try and come very wide.”I did watch one thing as a kid growing up – how bowlers use the crease. Looking at Makhaya Ntini, who came very wide on the crease and used the angles. I tried in training to go as wide as I could on that crease. Trying to know where the crease is when I am bowling. Something I really worked hard on and trained, and try to make sure you don’t bowl no-balls.”There is, in Wagner’s case, as is often required of fast bowlers, a keen eye and a sharp brain. Once during a Dunedin Test, again on a flat pitch on fourth day, he had Angelo Mathews on the hop with a 70-over-old ball. It was the final day, and New Zealand needed to get past Mathews. Wagner noticed Mathews was moving across to get inside the line of the short balls and bunting them into the leg side. So this time the sucker ball was not a wide length one but a searing full ball at the base of the leg stump. Mathews gone, the big boys again cleaned up the rest with the new ball.

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Wagner and Mitchell McClenaghan are similar bowlers in a way. McClenaghan is used to shake things up with his uncomfortable lengths in ODIs when the pitches flatten out. He had to become that bowler because he couldn’t get a place as a swing bowler ahead of Boult and Southee. Wagner performs that role in Tests.McClenaghan says his motivation has always been to prove people wrong because he had been knocked down at many levels. Never selected for age-group teams, released from first-class sides, never felt valued. He wanted to prove everybody wrong.Mike Hesson was the one who brought Wagner over to New Zealand during his time as the coach of Otago•Getty Images”I wouldn’t say I wanted to prove people wrong,” Wagner says. “I wanted to show people that anything is possible. You might not be the highest skilled cricketer or the most talented cricketer, but if you keep working hard and put a lot of heart and effort to it and put your mind to it and play with passion, you can go that extra step. You can be a competitive cricketer at level. It is not all about talent, it is not all about ability.”As a schoolkid in Pretoria – he went to the same school as Faf du Plessis, a friend, and AB de Villiers – Wagner had two problems. He wanted to play at the highest level, and he couldn’t even get into the Titans squad because it meant going past Dale Steyn, Andre Nel, the Morkel brothers and Alfonso Thomas. So he left Pretoria, and South Africa, for England, where he happened to be spotted by Mike Hesson, then the Otago coach.”I wanted to make my family and my wife and my friends proud and myself proud, and I wanted to see what I could do,” Wagner says. “It wasn’t the easiest thing, to pack your bags up and say goodbye to your parents and see them once a year. As a young kid, taking all this stuff and leaving with no money in your bank…”Hesson remembers the conversation when he asked Wagner if he would be interested to play for Otago. Hesson says not once did Wagner ask how much he would be paid.”Money is not a question for me,” Wagner says. “It is nothing.”I have a lot of passion for the game. Obviously you have got to put a roof over your head and look after yourself and your career, but for me it was all about getting an opportunity to play international cricket. It wasn’t anything to do with anything else. It was just that I had the aspiration to play at the highest level. I would do whatever it took at that time to do it.”I had a high passion for New Zealand at that time – New Zealand sport and especially New Zealand rugby. When he [Hesson] asked me to come to New Zealand, the easiest answer was to say yes and go and try to further my cricket career. I have never looked back since.”

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If he does look back, Wagner will find an impatient young man, dismissed as a “pretty boy” by some of his team-mates in Pretoria, who left the country complaining about the quotas. He will look back at a 22-year-old with no money landing up in a house he shared with strangers in Dunedin. Adjusting to the cold. Missing his brothers’ weddings – the brothers who made him bowl for hours on end in the backyard. Missing his best friends’ weddings. A 22-year-old not liked that much in his new team because in his first season it became “all about Neil”, according to Hesson, after Wagner led the wickets chart for Otago. Perhaps now he is better placed to appreciate the merits of positive reinforcement than as a 22-year-old who wanted just one thing: international cricket.

“I was told by Allan Donald as a young kid growing up that you are always going to have pain as a fast bowler”

Wagner had people back home to prove wrong. He had a new country and new teams that he needed to be accepted in. Even as a New Zealand player, once, the story goes, he was asked to move out of the frame for a picture at an awards function because three “originals” wanted to be photographed together. That after he had served four years before becoming eligible to play for New Zealand. After the second year, Hesson says Wagner started to work really hard. Before he qualified for New Zealand selection, five wickets in an over in a first-class match in 2011 made sure everyone knew about him.A “pretty boy” in a new land, seeking acceptance, having turned his life upside down, it is no surprise Wagner was prepared to do anything to be able to play cricket at the highest level. “Vaggner” had now become Wagner.Now he is anything but a pretty boy of pace bowling. He doesn’t bowl magic balls. He doesn’t swing it around corners. He doesn’t often send stumps cartwheeling; sometimes he can go entire spells without intending to hit them. He just keeps running, chest jutting out, ball after ball, basking in being an uncomfortable presence. Yet, having taken 99 wickets in 25 Tests, he is set to become the second fastest New Zealand bowler to 100 Test wickets. The great Richard Hadlee got there in 25. Wagner will be one of only 14 men to take 100 wickets for New Zealand.”Never in my wildest dream [thought of 100 wickets],” Wagner says. “Tim and Trent are high-class bowlers. I just love watching them bowl. They have got phenomenal skill. Skill I wish I had. When I bowl, what I do is just to do whatever the team requires on that day. Every wicket I can take, if it is one or ten or five, for my team to contribute in some sort of way, I am happy to do it. Even if I don’t take a wicket on the day, if I can create the pressure and not go for runs, do something for whoever it is at the other side, if I can play a part in them taking a wicket, I am more than happy.”

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Wagner is a more rounded bowler now. He spent a year at Lancashire – breaking the record for the best debut there – working on his swing, bowling alongside James Anderson at times. He has worked hard on his wrist position.Although he is not necessarily assured of a place in the 1st XI, he doesn’t now always need a flat pitch to be playing. Every now and then he comes up against South Africa, and is told by Steyn that he is not courageous enough because he scores 31 off 30 batting at No. 10, as opposed to hanging around for 80 balls to see Kane Williamson through to a hundred.Fast bowling is not a natural act; human bodies were not meant to do it. I ask Wagner if he considers himself an unfriendly, unpleasant presence on the field. “I have played against some of my best friends in cricket games,” he says. “That’s the biggest battles, against your best friends. As soon as you walk over the boundary rope, it is a battlefield. You representing your team and your country against the opposition. I play as hard as I can.”In this faux war, his general gave Wagner the biggest endorsement. “He epitomised everything we want to be known for as a team,” McCullum said after the Auckland win against India. “He did it in a crunch moment as well. How aggressive he is, how hostile he is when he has got ball in hand, and how big his heart is as well. He bowled ten overs into the wind late on day four, which is no easy feat, and it allowed Tim and Trent to have some decent downtime leading into that new ball. He has bowled like that for us now for 12-18 months, and he hasn’t always got the rewards. It was just nice today for a guy like that to get the rewards as well, and the accolades that follow.’I read these words out to Wagner. “I get a bit of goosebumps when someone like that says something like this about you,” he says. “He is that sort of friend, that sort of captain, that sort of bloke that you feel you want to break the wall down for.”Continents away from home, Wagner now has a team he can break the wall down for.

Tahir's celebration stats

Plays of the day from the third ODI between South Africa and New Zealand in Durban

Firdose Moonda26-Aug-2015Going, going, gone
Rilee Rossouw could have been out when he got a leading edge off Ben Wheeler that lobbed towards Doug Bracewell at point and went over his head. Rossouw saw the opportunity to run two but could have been out again when the same fielder chased the ball and threw it in for Luke Ronchi to break the stumps. Replays showed the bail had not dislodged by the time Rossouw ran his bat in. Rossouw’s luck ran out three balls later when Wheeler drew the edge and Tom Latham took a good, low catch to ensure it was third time unlucky for Rossouw.Another one bites the dust
If this series was decided on the number of dropped catches, it could be too tight to call after New Zealand put down a few more. One was aerial, when Doug Bracewell spilled the chance off Morne van Wyk’s top edge but Latham’s was the most dramatic. He was stationed at slip – New Zealand had one in the 45th over and with good reason – when David Wiese pushed loosely at a Bracewell delivery and sent a thick edge his way. Latham moved to his right and had both hands ready to grab the ball but could not hold on as he tumbled over, leaving Bracewell with both ends of a missed chance in the same innings.Almost run out
Wiese had barely made an impact on the series and when he got fingertips to the ball that he deflected onto the stumps at the non-striker’s end, he could have thought that might have changed. Latham, who was backing up, was the man Wiese thought he had run out but replays showed that the batsman was well aware of where he was standing and had got back in time. Latham could have been run out again at the end of that over, when Kane Williamson pushed him for two runs even though they were chancing an arm. A direct hit would have seen Latham run out but the stumps weren’t hit.Actually run out
The fielding wasn’t all miss and no hit and David Miller provided the best of the action when he pulled a one-handed flick from square leg that found the stumps and sent Latham on his way. Latham was looking for two runs after working a Wiese offcutter to the leg side but Miller was too quick for him and in one motion pounced on the ball, underarmed it to the striker’s end and found Latham short of his ground by a couple of centimetres. Celebration stats
We’ve all been wondering what the science behind Imran Tahir’s over-the-top wicket-taking celebrations is and now we know: after dismissing Williamson with a googly, Tahir took off at a sprint for 150 metres towards the boundary, in which he reached a top speed of 26 kilometres per hour, before grabbing and kissing his badge. None of his teammates could catch him but at least the tracking technology explains why.

Honest Kohli, Smith's effortless punch

Plays of the day for the match between Royal Challengers Bangalore and Chennai Super Kings in Bangalore

Kanishkaa Balachandran24-May-2014The confusion
Ashish Nehra fired the first ball of the final over down the leg side to Kohli, who made room but decided against playing a shot. The umpire immediately signalled wide but Kohli was honest enough to admit that the ball had brushed his pad. The square-leg umpire too gestured that the wide call was incorrect but the original decision stood. Nehra wasn’t sure himself what was going on and batsman and bowler exchanged smiles.The end of the drought
Earlier this season, Mohit Sharma wore the purple cap briefly as the leading wicket-taker in the competition, but suddenly, the wickets had dried up. He had gone wicketless in his last three games, not bowling his full quota in any of them. He ended the wicket drought at the Chinnaswamy Stadium, though he owed it to the batsman for gifting his wicket. Bowling round the wicket, he bowled a length ball and angled it in towards the left-handed Vijay Zol. Zol swung too early and missed the ball completely, losing his middle stump. Mohit was finally back among the wickets but his celebration was muted.The boundary save
The IPL has seen some breathtaking catches at the edge of the boundary rope and some exemplary saves too. Kohli slogged Ravindra Jadeja down to deep midwicket and a boundary looked certain. However, David Hussey sprinted quickly to his left and held out his left hand and caught the ball at it bounced over him. The momentum took him towards the rope but he quickly released the ball inside the boundary to save two runs. For a natural right-hander (he bowls offspin), he showed his skills with his left hand too.The punch
Dwayne Smith is known for his quick bat speed that has sent the ball rocketing over the ropes in a matter of seconds. He smashed five boundaries in his 34 but the one that stood out was not his solitary six, but his first four. It was a length ball from Ravi Rampaul that wasn’t exactly a driving length, but Smith merely stood at the crease and drilled it down the ground wide of mid-off. It looked like a defensive push but before Rampaul could turn around, the ball was already near the rope. The shot had bat speed, timing and placement and minimal follow-through.

Friends reunited on opposite sides

Neil Wagner found the going tough bowling to his old schoolmates on day one at St George’s

Firdose Moonda at St George's Park11-Jan-2013A funny thing happened when Neil Wagner was reunited with his schoolmate Faf du Plessis. He overheard a little something that made him raise an eyebrow.”I walked past Faf and he said to Hashim, ‘should I rub my arm or something, maybe show that I was a little hurt’ and I thought, ‘hang on, did he hit it’,” Wagner said. Du Plessis had just had an appeal for caught behind off Trent Boult turned down and New Zealand’s think tank were considering a review.”I thought maybe we should have gone upstairs when I heard that,” Wagner said. “Then I asked Faf if he hit it and he said no so the right decision was made in the end.” Hotspot replays showed that du Plessis had gloved the ball and would have been out on 42 had New Zealand referred the decision. When Wagner found out that was the case, he laughed it off as part of the game.Today, Wagner discovered a few other things that come with playing international cricket against friends. “I always felt we were having a battle out there,” he said. Wagner bowled to two former school friends, AB de Villiers and du Plessis who went to the Afrikaanse Hoër Seunskool with him and being on the opposite side was as hostile as he expected it would be.De Villiers took 21 runs off the 23 balls he faced from Wagner, du Plessis 15 from 14. For both, a priority was not to fall victim to somebody that they used to know. “I told myself to just stick to the basics more than ever because I couldn’t get out to him,” de Villiers said. “I knew if I did it would be all over Facebook and Twitter and will probably go back to the school too.”Wagner was equally determined to make an impact. “I tried every ball to get AB out. He is a great bloke and a good friend and I love playing against him but I never want to give him anything,” he said. “He got the better of me today, I think. To get his wicket would have been awesome.”Only as notable as getting du Plessis out perhaps, but Wagner did not manage that either. “There was an edge that Faf got off me, which went between slips and gully and he looked at me afterwards and he just apologised,” Wagner said. “I tried to bump him in the next ball and he hit me for four again. He is a top player and you can’t afford to give him any bad balls.”Wagner is not the only one who has nice things to say about the opposition. De Villiers is pleasantly surprised by the progress Wagner has made in the years since they left Affies. “He was two years younger me so I didn’t see that much of him but I thought he was alright then, maybe not at that level yet,” de Villiers said. “I never thought he would go that far but I missed the last two years of school where he developed a lot and I am very proud of him now.”That’s where the friendliness ends. Affies is known for producing uncompromising sportspeople and both de Villiers and Wagner brought out their fighting talk. De Villiers warned that South Africa will look to bat big and possibly, only once. “If we go 500 plus, New Zealand will have the follow-on and all sorts of things to think about,” he said.Wagner is hoping for is a strong comeback from New Zealand in the morning session to ensure they don’t let the match slip too far away. “If we let it go tomorrow, that’s when a strong team like South Africa will capitalise. We let it slip a little bit towards the end today. Against a good side, you’ve got to be patient and create a lot more opportunities.”

Burn, burn, burn

A Melbourne kid turns up at the Adelaide Oval to see what the fuss is all about

Scott Lennard04-Dec-2010Choice of game
While many kids in Australia go to the Gold Coast upon finishing high school exams, myself and two other cricket-loving friends thought a much better celebration would be to travel to Adelaide for the second Ashes Test.Key performer

James Anderson. His cracking opening spell set the scene for the whole day. Sharp and consistent, he will possibly be the X factor for England in this series.Adelaide v Melbourne
Thankfully the adventure of a new city, stadium and atmosphere distracted us from what was a woeful day of cricket for Australia. Our 3 for 2 was the worst start to an Australian Test in at least 25 years and having witnessing my first diamond duck, we quickly began comparing the Adelaide Oval to our beloved MCG. Eventually we concluded the Adelaide Oval was near-perfect for Test cricket, if not for the overwhelmingly inappropriate hot dog prices!The small size means as a spectator you are right in with the action, and shouts, songs and jeers can be heard from any place in the Oval, which makes a big change from the 100,000 strong MCG.We were divided in our opinion about the classic Adelaide Oval scoreboard. It was beautiful, quaint and very easy to read, but lacked some modern statistical measures like how many overs each bowler had bowled. And we could not for the life of us work out what the “B” column stood for.Accessories
With the full bearing of 32 degrees of Adelaide heat, sunscreen was a must. But one regret was not bringing enough water and being left with a choice between the infamous Adelaide tap water and overpriced soft drink.Face-off I relished
Warm weather was painful (provide some shade Adelaide!), but as Michael Hussey and Shane Watson and Brad Haddin got back on their feet, the Test began looking like lasting more then three days, providing some relief to what had been a shocking morning for the Aussies. The fall of Hussey on 93 and the burst of wickets that followed reignited the fantastic Barmy Arm who made up at least half of the General Reserve. They began singing and could be heard all around the small Oval.Shot of the day
The most entertaining moment of the match was the acceleration of Haddin once Hussey fell, climaxing in a flukey edge for six which landed very close to our seats!Wow moment
England’s three-man run-out of Xavier Doherty. Amazing fielding from a massively improved England side: well done, Poms, on that one.Not-so-wow moment
Ryan Harris wasted four minutes of everyone’s time by referring his LBW decision, which was so plumb even Haddin seemed to urge him to walk.Players to watch out for
Marcus North is surely playing his last game in the baggy green after yet gaian failing to stand up when Australia needed him.
Meanwhile Michael Hussey is not only denying his critics blood but is placing himself in the prime position for the captaincy should Australia lose the Ashes.Marks out of 10

6. A great ground for Test cricket but not the best day of cricket from Australia’s point of view, nor the most exciting. But as an experience – 8. I highly recommend watching cricket at different stadiums; the different atmosphere will enrich your cricketing experience. It has certainly enhanced my understanding of the game!

Nerves of steel and a heart of flint

The life and times of controversial umpire Darrell Hair

Gideon Haigh28-Sep-2006


Darrell Hair: plunging the cricket world into dismay
© Getty Images

Jack Fingleton once jested that Test cricket umpires were the world’s most powerful individuals, able with the motion of a finger to send one nation into ecstasy, and pitch another into mourning. It is a job for nerves of steel and a heart of flint – and, whatever else may be said about him, Darrell Hair has both.The shambling, ursine Hair, from Orange in New South Wales, rose faster through umpiring than through playing ranks. He plateaued as a pace bowler at grade level, and was given the first of his 76 Test appointments at Adelaide in January 1992 three years after his initial appearance in the Sheffield Shield. Hair struck observers at once with his no-nonsense demeanour and cast-iron certainties – in an era, moreover, where the cumulative effects of television, the introduction of the third umpire, and the ICC referee were making umpiring calls look like mere bases for negotiation.Hair’s physique these days has a touch of Warwick Armstrong; so, increasingly, does his insouciance. Just as well: at one time or another, he has aroused the indignation of almost every cricket nation. South Africans sang a song exhorting him to “put your finger elsewhere” after his decisions in the Adelaide Test of January 1994. Englishmen were dumbfounded a year later by his refusal to involve the third umpire in a run-out involving Mark Taylor at Sydney. The replays showed that it was out.The Indians took such exception to his decision-making when they played New South Wales in Sydney in December 1999 that Sourav Ganguly stood mid-pitch ostentatiously watching replays on the big screen; Ganguly, Venkatesh Prasad, and Javagal Srinath were reported for dissent to the team management ,which declined to act. Hair even tackled West Indian supporters who stormed onto the ground at Antigua when Brian Lara passed the Test record score the first time. “Darrell Hair was flapping because the crowd were running all over the pitch,” recalls Mike Atherton in Opening Up. “He grabbed the spectator nearest to him by the scruff of the neck and gave him a roasting.”Hair’s rigid, perhaps puritan, stance on Law 24 also alienated the Sri Lankans, for his public proscription of Muttiah Muralitharan in the Boxing Day Test of 1995; had the Zimbabweans puzzled by his calling Grant Flower in September 2000; and the Pakistanis aggrieved even before the Oval Test by his querying the actions of Shoaib Akhtar in November 1999 and Shabbir Ahmed in January 2004. “You’re messing with my career, Darrell,” complained Mark Ramprakash after Hair had given him out caught at the wicket at Lord’s eight years ago.The burden of potentially having done so, however, does not worry Hair. He has become, in fact, rather more an umpires’ umpire than a players’ umpire, supported by his brethren, if not by the administrators. “Darrell’s opportunities for umpiring on the international circuit have been severely restricted – and his earning capacity reduced,” wrote David Shepherd in his autobiography Shep. “To me, he’s a strong, courageous and very good international umpire.”As evinced by his own autobiography Decision Maker, Hair is not just strong on the field; he also knows no inhibition where his public criticisms are concerned. Not only did he criticise Muralitharan for a “diabolical action”, but also the Sri Lankan team for being “determined to isolate and intimidate me”, and the ICC and the Australian Cricket Board for not standing four-square behind him.He further irked his employers when he challenged members of the Pakistan team management, before the CUB Series in January 2000, to stand behind imputations of racism made against Australian officials. Squeezed out from the inaugural Elite umpiring panel in 2002, he was nonetheless squeezed back in when the panel was expanded the following year.In the wake of incidents at the Oval, Hair signified a new approach by offering to resign in return for a severance payment. Its outcome was no more satisfactory, and in some respects less: the ICC piously released the contents of his emails. In fact, they revealed nothing except that Hair does feel the public odium, and that the modern umpire is a man under pressures unimaginable a generation ago.One of the most memorable episodes in Hair’s career was umpiring in Dickie Bird’s final Test, at Lord’s in July 1996, with its lavish displays of public and professional affection. In the age of umpiring “entertainers” like Bird and Billy Bowden, Hair’s manner of officiating can look old-fashioned. He isn’t pally with players. He has no endearing mannerisms, like Srinivas Venkataraghavan’s chain-flush out or Steve Bucknor’s nod. But he has taken Fingleton’s jest a little further, for with a gesture of his hands he was able to plunge the cricket world into dismay.
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'Like Super Bowls every day' – USWNT icon Carli Lloyd predicts transformative impact of consecutive FIFA tournaments in the U.S.

The two-time FIFA World Cup winner shared her excitement about the U.S. hosting Club World Cup, World Cup in consecutive summers

World Cup in 2026 like Super Bowls every dayReflects on inspiration from 1999 Women's World CupAmerican interest in soccer reaches unprecedented levels
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Two-time FIFA Women's World Cup champion and Olympic gold medalist Carli Lloyd spoke about the significant impact she anticipates as the U.S. hosts both the 2025 FIFA Club World Cup and 2026 FIFA World Cup in back-to-back summers.

This will be the first time the U.S. has hosted FIFA tournaments in back-to-back years, and Lloyd says the reverberations will be tremendous. She said the events will transform the sport's standing within American culture.

“Well, first of all, it’s a beautiful game and I’m a bit biased in saying that America’s one of the greatest places to be,” Lloyd told FIFA's official website. “So I think these next two summers, I don’t think that we all realize the effects that the Club World Cup and the World Cup is going to bring to not only America but all across the globe."

“Look at the NFL and the Super Bowl – the World Cup in '26 is going to be like Super Bowls every day. So it’s going to be amazing, and as FIFA puts on all of these amazing tournaments, they’re gonna do a phenomenal job these next few summers as well."

AdvertisementWHAT CARLI LLOYD SAID

Lloyd noted that there are more people in America watching soccer than ever.

“I think here in America, there are a lot more people watching games, there are a lot more games that are on television from leagues all across the world, and you got more people tuning in," she said. "And I think that this is just going to inspire so many young kids to want to play soccer here in America. You look at the '94 men’s World Cup that was here, so many people were inspired."

The 1999 Women's World Cup, held in the U.S., had a similar impact for Lloyd.

“Myself watching the ’99 Women’s World Cup played here on American soil," she recalled, "I sat in the stands saying to myself ‘I wanted to represent my country playing in World Cup and Olympics. So it’s just a pivotal time in America for soccer and for so many, it’s just going to be phenomenal, these next few summers are going to be like nothing we’ve ever seen before.”

THE BIGGER PICTURE

These tournaments arrive as the country seems primed for a significant leap forward in soccer culture, potentially creating a perfect storm of interest, investment, and infrastructure development that could permanently elevate the sport's status nationwide.

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Getty Images SportWHAT’S NEXT?

The expanded 32-team FIFA Club World Cup will take place in the U.S. from June 15 to July 13, featuring champions from all six continental confederations. The following summer, the United States will host the 2026 FIFA World Cup alongside Canada and Mexico.

Alexander Isak or bust! Liverpool make key transfer decision as Reds zone in on wantaway Newcastle striker

Liverpool have made Alexander Isak their clear transfer priority this summer, with talks confirming they will not pursue both the Newcastle striker and Paris Saint-Germain’s Bradley Barcola. While the Reds admire the Frenchman, all focus remains on the Swede, who has told Newcastle he no longer wants to play for them. Liverpool’s £110 million ($149m) bid was rejected last week, but the saga is far from over.

  • Liverpool prioritise Newcastle striker Isak
  • Reds reject chance to pursue PSG's Barcola
  • Newcastle insist striker is not for sale
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  • WHAT HAPPENED?

    As per , Liverpool have decided that Isak is their top transfer target and are not actively pursuing Barcola despite internal discussions. The Reds admire the PSG winger but view the Swedish striker as the key player to lead their attack. Negotiations are going to remain focused solely on the Newcastle man until the end.

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    THE BIGGER PICTURE

    Liverpool have already spent heavily this summer and will not chase multiple blockbuster signings at this stage. Their priority is securing Isak, who has made himself unavailable to Newcastle amid growing uncertainty as he pushes the Magpies to sell him. The Tyneside club, however, insist their star striker is not for sale.

  • DID YOU KNOW?

    Sources suggest Isak has told Newcastle he does not wish to play for them again. Meanwhile, Liverpool’s £110m offer was rejected, but they remain confident the striker’s desire to leave could force progress. Meanwhile, no formal talks have taken place for Barcola, with the winger only viewed as a secondary option if their move for Isak hits a complete and final roadblock.

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    WHAT NEXT FOR LIVERPOOL?

    The Premier League champions must now wait for Newcastle’s decision, with the saga hinging on whether the Magpies eventually soften their stance. Isak remains determined to push for a move to Anfield, and Arne Slot's side are prepared to hold firm until late in the window if required.

Man City star rejects 'laughable' transfer rumours after Pep Guardiola exit hint

A Manchester City star has hit out at the "laughable" speculation over his future despite manager Pep Guardiola hinting player exits may happen.

Guardiola hints at player exitsMan City star wants to stayRejects "laughable" rumoursFollow GOAL on WhatsApp! 🟢📱WHAT HAPPENED?

Earlier this summer, manager Guardiola suggested some players will leave the club ahead of the new season.

He said: “I would love to have the players that we have right now all season. I love it. I don’t have any complaint about the players, how they behave. The problem is that they will be unhappy during the season. They will be sad. They will be disappointed. I don’t want that. For me it’s not a problem, I have more selection but I don’t like to have six or seven players or five players at home just in case there’s no injuries. I don’t want a big squad for them, not for me, for them. So that’s why we have to see what happens."

Now, centre-back John Stones has dismissed rumours that he may be leaving the Etihad in the coming weeks.

AdvertisementGetty Images SportWHAT STONES SAID

He said, via Hayters: "I get told this, I don’t see a thing. It’s laughable to me but I understand why people do it, and there’s nothing to comment on. I love it here, nothing’s happening. I’m here to fight and play, and hopefully win some trophies."

THE BIGGER PICTURE

Stones has had an injury-hit couple of seasons, with the 31-year-old not featuring for City since February. However, he is back fit and raring to go for the new campaign. 

"I’m good. Back to full fitness, feel great. I have been for a few months now, so I’m feeling good," he added.

However, the England international is in the last year of his contract so this could be his last season at the club.

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AFPWHAT NEXT?

Stones, who has been at City since signing from Everton in 2016, will hope to play a prominent role in the club's upcoming season. It remains to be seen if he will be a starter or a bench player and if he is able to earn a contract extension.

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