All posts by h716a5.icu

IPL final to stay in Bangalore

The IPL final on June 1 will stay in Bangalore as scheduled after the BCCI declined the Mumbai Cricket Association’s request to reinstate the match at the Wankhede Stadium

Amol Karhadkar18-May-2014The IPL final on June 1 will stay in Bangalore as scheduled after the BCCI declined the Mumbai Cricket Association’s request to reinstate the match at the Wankhede Stadium. The IPL governing council had declined the request following a meeting on Saturday night.”The governing council considered the MCA’s request but decided to stick to the original decision to move the final from Mumbai to Bangalore,” BCCI secretary Sanjay Patel told ESPNcricinfo.MCA joint secretary Nitin Dalal expressed disappointment over the decision. “So far, the MCA hasn’t been informed anything officially. But if they (BCCI) have made the decision (to stick to Bangalore), then it’s absolutely disappointing both for the MCA and more importantly for the cricket fans of Mumbai. The MCA had assured the IPL of making all the necessary arrangements well in time for the final.”The drama started a day after the IPL governing council moved the final from the Wankhede Stadium to the Chinnaswamy Stadium in Bangalore, thus breaking the tradition of letting the home ground of previous year’s champion team host the final. The decision sparked protests the MCA, with its president Sharad Pawar asking for reasons for the switch. Two days after the IPL chairman Ranjib Biswal responded, the MCA managing committee decided to accept all the “conditions” put forth by the IPL in a bid to regain the final.Interestingly, Biswal said he had never put any riders for the final to be shifted back to Mumbai. The MCA managing committee, it is understood, interpreted Biswal’s reply as if its content had referred to conditions. The MCA therefore formally requested the IPL to reinstate the final to Wankhede since it had formally agreed to all the conditions it believed had been put in place by the IPL chairman.

Hurricanes target semi-final spot

A win in their last league game will put Hobart Hurricanes in the semi-final but they will need to be cautious against Barbados Tridents who will be eager to get their first win on board

The Preview by Rachna Shetty27-Sep-2014Match factsSunday, September 28, 2014
Start time 1600 local (1030 GMT)The Barbados Tridents bowling attack will have to step up their game to make up for Jeevan Mendis’ absence•BCCIBig pictureAfter a middling loss to Kings XI Punjab, two successive wins have taken Hobart Hurricanes closer to a knock-out spot. The wins have also showed contrasting facets of the side. The first win, fashioned by a staggering knock, was followed by a calmer, calculated demolition of Northern Knights that, along with depth in batting and bowling resources, saw Hurricanes use the conditions intelligently.That nous will be needed when they take on Barbados Tridents in their last league match on Sunday. A win will put them in the semi-final but a loss would leave them dependent on other results. It will also boost Tridents chances of a semi-final place as the CPL 2014 champions have one extra league game than the other four teams and victories in their last two games would bring Tridents to eight points, leaving the last semi-final spot dependent on net run rate.Unlike Hyderabad [Hurricanes’ last venue], dew is unlikely to play a big factor given the start time of the match and the pitch has offered some support to the spinners. In their few games so far, Hurricanes have appeared to struggle against slower pace and they could be challenged by Tridents’ bowlers like Jeevan Mendis and Ashley Nurse. In fact, the Tridents spin attack in the last two games has largely held the bowling together, even as the seamers have struggled and it will be crucial for them to keep up the performance, even in the absence of Mendis, who has returned to play for Sri Lanka in the Asian Games. The scores of 170+ belie the fact that the Tridents batting has been propped by individual performances instead of collective ones, a shortcoming they need to address urgently.Form guideBarbados Tridents LLWWW (completed matches only, most recent first)
Hobart Hurricanes WWLLWWatch out forThe performances of their spin bowlers has been one of the positives for Tridents in an otherwise shaky campaign. Jeevan Mendis has been at the forefront of the spin attack, with six wickets in two games so far at a neat 5.62. However, with the spinner leaving for his Sri Lanka commitments, the Tridents seamers will need to step up their games.Before the match against Northern Knights, Shoaib Malik had scored 97 runs in 11 games for Hobart Hurricanes at a strike rate of 103.19. Against Knights, Malik was the driving force of the 100-run stand with Blizzard and showed deft footwork during his innings. His return to form is important for Hurricanes as they look for stability in their middle order.Stats and trivia Two of the Tridents frontline seamers – Ravi Rampaul and Jason Holder – have economy rates of 10.57 and 12 respectively after two games. Tim Paine needs 65 runs to reach 1000 T20 runs Between them, Jonathan Carter and Dilshan Munaweera have scored more than 60% of the Tridents’ runs in the tournament so far. Quotes”We have got a few of us who have played for CSK before and we have little bit of experience in these conditions. We do our best to make sure we pass it on to everyone else.”

Reyna, Dest & the USMNT players who are in the Champions League last 16

A number of United States national team internationals are dotted throughout the biggest clubs in Europe in the knockout stage

The Champions League 2020-21 knockout stage has arrived and there are a number of intriguing match-ups as Europe's elite battle it out for supremacy.

Littered among some of the top teams are a selection of U.S. national team stars, with a number of players notably competing across the Bundesliga, La Liga and the Premier League.

Goal takes a look at the USMNT players who are involved in the Champions League last 16 this season.

GettyTyler Adams | RB Leipzig

Tyler Adams made his first-ever Champions League start for RB Leipzig in disappointing circumstances as the Bundesliga side suffered a 2-0 first-leg defeat against Liverpool in the last 16. The midfielder's experience of the competition prior to that point included substitute appearances against the likes of Manchester United and Paris Saint-Germain in the group stage.

AdvertisementGettyKonrad de la Fuente | Barcelona

A regular for Barcelona's youth and B teams, Konrad de la Fuente has featured in the Champions League twice this season, coming on as a substitute in victories over Dynamo Kiev and Ferencvaros. The teenage forward is still on the periphery of the first team at Camp Nou, but will be eager to make a mark at the club in the coming months.

GettySergino Dest | Barcelona

Netherlands-born Sergino Dest shone for Ajax in the Champions League in 2019-20 and has been a firm fixture for Barcelona in the 2020-21 edition of the competition. A flying wing-back, Dest scored for the Catalan giants in their 4-0 victory over Dynamo Kiev last November.

The 20-year-old started Barca's chastening 4-1 defeat in the first leg of the last 16 tie against Paris Saint-Germain, but endured a difficult evening as Kylian Mbappe and Co. ran riot. One moment of the game, when Gerard Pique could be heard reminding Dest that Mbappe was right-footed, was a reminder that the right-back still has plenty to learn and he will be keen to improve in the second leg. 

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Getty ImagesWeston McKennie | Juventus

Since making the switch to Juventus from Schalke, Weston McKennie has been impressive and he will be keen to play a part in the last 16 of the Champions League as the Bianconeri take on Porto. McKennie featured prominently enough for Juve in the group stage and even bagged a goal in December's 3-0 win over Barcelona.

ICC mull quicker reintegration of banned players

An amended ICC anti-corruption code, set to be implemented from June, is likely to facilitate a quicker return to international cricket for players serving long-term bans

ESPNcricinfo staff21-Mar-2014An amended ICC anti-corruption code, set to be implemented from June, is likely to facilitate a quicker return to international cricket for players serving long-term bans. The idea behind the move is to help the player get ready to play competitive cricket as soon as the ban period is over rather than wait for the ban to end before he can start training.”There are some amendments being considered to the anti-corruption code and one of those amendments deals with how we reintegrate banned players back into cricket,” Dave Richardson, the ICC chief executive, told a selection of media during an informal gathering in Mirpur on Friday. “So if someone is banned for five years, can he come and play domestic cricket or club cricket a little bit earlier? So that when his five-year ban internationally expires, he can resume his career. So the revised code will deal with that, but it’s not dealing specifically with an individual case. This will be a principle that will be applied to all people who may be banned, now or in the future.”This development will come as good news for the Pakistan trio of Mohammad Amir, Salman Butt and Mohammad Asif, who were found guilty of spot-fixing during the Lord’s Test of Pakistan’s 2010 tour of England by an ICC tribunal. The three players were slapped bans by the tribunal: Butt got 10 years, Asif seven and Amir received a five-year ban from playing all forms of cricket.Amir, who was 18 at the time, had pleaded not guilty in front of the tribunal but later confessed his guilt during a separate criminal hearing in London’s Crown Court. Although Amir’s ban comes to an end on September 2, 2015, the PCB has been trying hard to convince the ICC to allow him to ease his way back into cricket, starting by allowing him to train at the PCB facilities.That proposal was put in front of the five-member sub-committee appointed by the ICC at its annual conference in London in 2013. The committee was meant to review and recommend amendments to the ICC’ anti-corruption code, which was applied by the tribunal while banning the trio.

Chandimal relieved of T20I captaincy

Sri Lanka’s selectors have relieved Dinesh Chandimal of the Twenty20 captaincy, and the ODI vice-captaincy, appointing Lasith Malinga and Lahiru Thirimanne in those roles, ahead of Sri Lanka’s tour of Ireland and England

Andrew Fidel Fernando23-Apr-2014Sri Lanka’s selectors have relieved Dinesh Chandimal of all his leadership positions, appointing Lasith Malinga as the T20I captain and Lahiru Thirimanne as vice-captain across all formats untill March 2015.Chandimal had had a poor run in limited-overs cricket, particularly in Asian conditions, but had maintained a good record in Tests, averaging 63.75 in 10 innings, since being named vice-captain in February last year. His across-the-board demotion, however, is a strong indication the selectors feel Chandimal must devote himself solely to improving his batting.Though his on-field leadership had reaped positive results, Chandimal has shown little batting promise in T20 cricket, in which he averages 13.30 after 20 innings. He had initially impressed in the ODI team, but his returns even in that format have subsided after he had been named vice-captain. Since Februrary 2013, Chandimal has averaged 25.55, with a strike rate of 72, largely batting from lower in the order than he prefers.Chandimal had chosen to leave himself out of the XI for the semi-final and final of the recent World T20, leaving Malinga to lead the team to victory, and had been replaced in the XI by Thirimanne, who struck an important 44 in the semi-final.The selectors had made Chandimal the youngest Sri Lanka captain in any format, at 23, following largely impressive returns in Australia in January last year. Chief selector Sanath Jayasuriya had said at the time that Sri Lanka sought to develop a young leadership core, in preparation for the looming retirements of former captains Mahela Jayawardene, Kumar Sangakkara and Tillakaratne Dilshan. Jayawardene and Sangakkara had in any case indicated they would not accept leadership roles in the twilight of their careers.Thirimanne has impressed with the bat in recent months, picking up a Player-of-the-Tournament award for top-scoring at the Asia Cup. His tournament aggregate of 279 included a century in the final. Averaging 49 from 14 innings in the top three, he has been a more reliable ODI selection than Chandimal, particularly in the past year.Sri Lanka embark on a full away tour of England next month, before full home tours against South Africa and Pakistan follow in July and August. They have six Tests, eleven ODIs and at least two T20 internationals scheduled for the next four months.

Hussey won't play Shield for WA

Michael Hussey, the former Australia batsman, will not play for Western Australia for the second half of the Sheffield Shield season

ESPNcricinfo staff10-Feb-2014Michael Hussey, the former Australia batsman, will not play for Western Australia for the second half of the Sheffield Shield season. Hussey met with WA coach Justin Langer and it was mutually agreed that his limited availability this season would not be in the best interests of the team.”Mike and I had a good chat this morning and, in the end, we agreed it wouldn’t be in the best interests of the team, or himself, to return to the Warriors for the remainder of this season,” Langer said. “Mike and I have been friends for a long time and he’s always been a person who gives 100 per cent to everything he does.”He is an iconic player and I would love to have Mike Hussey play for the Warriors, but he has made it clear that his heart isn’t 100 per cent in returning to Shield cricket. On the back of his retirement from international cricket last season, I respect his decision.”Hussey said: “On reflection, I know in my heart that as much as I would like to play Sheffield Shield cricket for Western Australia, it would not be fair on the team and I believe it is time for the younger players to step up and grab their opportunities with both hands.”After retiring from Test cricket last summer, Hussey was not retained on Western Warriors’ list of contracted players for 2013-14. In January, Hussey had expressed his desire to play Shield cricket for WA but Langer had said any decisions would have to wait until the end of the BBL. Hussey had played only T20 cricket since the end of the 2012-13 domestic season in Australia and raised eyebrows by moving to represent the Sydney Thunder, rather than the Perth Scorchers, in the third BBL.Western Australia are currently third in the Shield table, with four games left to play.

Lokuarachchi admits to not reporting approach

Sri Lanka batsman Kaushal Lokuarachchi had failed to report an approach made to him, Sri Lanka Cricket has said, but he had not been charged with any other corrupt activity

ESPNcricinfo staff28-Feb-2014Sri Lanka batsman Kaushal Lokuarachchi failed to report an approach made to him, Sri Lanka Cricket (SLC) has said, and had not been charged with any other corrupt activity. Lokuarachchi had rejected the approach, the board said in a statement.SLC was responding to various media reports linking Lokuarachchi to corruption in the Bangladesh Premier League, where he played for Dhaka Gladiators. The tribunal appointed to investigate corruption in the league recently released its findings, clearing all but one of the seven who had pleaded not guilty to different charges. Bangladesh batsman Mohammad Ashraful, former New Zealand batsman Lou Vincent had pleaded guilty to their respective offences.Shakil Kasem, a member of the tribunal, had named Lokuarachchi while speaking to AFP. “”Vincent, Lokuarachchi and Ashraful have already pleaded guilty,” Kasem had said. “We’re going to review their guilty pleas, deliberate on that and come up with sanctions within two weeks.”SLC said: ” … contrary to the several articles carried in the print and electronic media saying that Kaushal Lokuarachchi had pleaded guilty to match fixing, he was not charged for any corrupt activity and the only offence he had committed was a failure to report an approach made to him, which he had rejected. We would also like to confirm that he has cooperated with the ICC in the investigation and that he has not been sanctioned and the proceedings are continuing.”

'This win is a sign of the team's character' – Mills

Kyle Mills, the New Zealand acting captain, has said his team’s remarkable chase in Hambantota was a win borne of fight

Andrew Fidel Fernando13-Nov-2013Kyle Mills, the New Zealand acting captain, has said his team’s remarkable chase in Hambantota was a win borne of fight, and reserved special praise for the innings’ of protagonist Tom Latham and the furious finish provided by Nathan McCullum. Pursuing 198 in the rain-reduced 23-over chase, New Zealand claimed victory off the last ball, taking a 1-0 lead in the series, with one match to play.Both batsmen had revived the chase when Sri Lanka appeared to have the match in their pockets. Twenty-one-year-old Latham held one end firm as wickets tumbled at the other in the first half of New Zealand’s innings, before launching a frenetic attack on Sri Lanka during the middle overs, alongside Luke Ronchi. His 86 off 68 was his first fifty in 12 ODI innings.”In my mind this win is a sign of the character we have in this group,” Mills said. “We fought pretty hard in this game. Tom Latham played a great hand for us. For a guy so young, he played a very mature innings and never lost his head in any situation. The other guys chipped in – I thought what Colin Munro did brought a momentum shift even though he didn’t get a big score, Luke Ronchi played exceptionally well, and then to have Nathan to come out at the end and take the game by the scruff of the neck was huge for us.”McCullum’s hand in the victory was in many ways just as crucial as Latham’s contributions, and perhaps more dramatic. He arrived at the crease when Latham and Ronchi had fallen in quick succession, seemingly surrendering the result to Sri Lanka. McCullum first hit two fours in Lasith Malinga’s penultimate over, before providing the game’s most arresting sequence. Needing 17 to win from the last four balls, McCullum walloped Rangana Herath for a six, then a four, then two more sixes, to complete the win.”It was going to be a tough ask to hit 20 off the last over,” Mills said. “Nathan McCullum showed great intent as soon as he arrived at the wicket, and he has been hitting the ball reasonably well in the nets. He’s a guy who’s a bit of a scrapper and a fighter. If you want to put any guy in that situation, you probably want to put Nathan McCullum there. He played Malinga with nice intent, and I’m sure it was nice for him personally to have made such a remarkable contribution.”Ronchi and Latham had already been to Sri Lanka with the A team in the past two months, and had both also recently played in India and Bangladesh, on an extended tour of the subcontinent. Mills said their knowledge of local conditions and bowlers likely contributed to their 93-run match-turning stand. Luke Ronchi’s 49 was also his highest score for New Zealand, though he has hit an ODI fifty for Australia in the past.”It helped that they were on the pretty extensive A programme that New Zealand Cricket put in place. They had some time over here in Sri Lanka and got used to conditions. I think they had a lot of composure out there in the middle tonight. It was a tough situation for them and it was the partnership that won us the game. I’m also pleased for Luke that he got a score on the board.”Before this match Mills had expressed confidence in his team’s ability to chase tall scores, and though Sri Lanka set up an imposing total through Kumar Sangakkar and Tillakaratne Dilshan, Mills said the visitors felt comfortable with the score they were made to chase.”In the last T20 game we played, we chased a big total, and our batters were in a bit of form. The game before that we hit a big total – over 300 against Bangladesh, in an ODI. Observing the guys in the nets in the past few days, I knew there were quite a few guys who were in form and seeing the ball well. After a slow start we saw a bit of composure there from the group. It just goes to show that with the introduction of T20 cricket in the last few years, it gives batters the confidence to chase any total down.”

'Can't score double-centuries all the time' – Pujara

Cheteshwar Pujara got out for 73 when he was looking good for a lot more, but he isn’t too disappointed that he missed out on a hundred

Sidharth Monga in Adelaide11-Dec-20141:52

‘My dismissal was unlucky’ – Pujara

Between the end of the South Africa tour last year and this Adelaide Test, Cheteshwar Pujara had scored just one Test half-century in 14 innings. At a crucial time, at the start of the tour, he got off to a good start, but failed to live to his exceptional conversion rate, falling for 73. However, he is not letting it affect him too much.”At times I feel disappointed that I couldn’t capitalise and score a big one,” Pujara said. “But it’s a game of cricket. You can’t score double-centuries all the time. Obviously I want to score as many runs as possible, but you also have to respect the opposition. When I get out I try and analyse what went wrong, and try to come back strongly.”Not only Pujara, but M Vijay and Ajinkya Rahane also failed to convert starts into hundreds, but their captain Virat Kohli didn’t miss out. It was a gutsy innings. The first ball he faced hit him flush in the helmet, but Kohli waved away all the concern and help from his opposition and team-mates, and went on to score his seventh hundred. Pujara was at the non-striker’s end when Kohli was hit.”The first reaction, everyone went to Virat and asked him whether he was all right or not,” Pujara said of the incident. “Even when I went in, I asked if everything was fine. First he checked the helmet to see if there was any damage. There wasn’t. The helmet was fine. Even he was fine. Later on we discussed how the ball came, what could be done to such a ball and how he got hit. Overall, he batted really well, forgetting about that particular ball. It was fun to watch his innings.”Pujara said that their batting line-up is good, and they can pose Australia a threat. “What we discussed yesterday was to fight back,” Pujara said. “The score that they made, we discussed that we can definitely achieve this with the kind of batting line-up we have. That was the target, to score as many runs as them. We have a very good batting line-up, and it was about proving to ourselves that we can achieve this. We’re in a good position to do so.”Most of our batsmen have scored runs. We got a good start. We always had partnerships. That is a big positive for us. Overall, all the batsmen spent time at the crease and were looking very good. If you have a good start you can take many positives out of it. It’s about self-belief and the kind of self-belief we have now, after scoring these runs, we can take it into the next innings and next match.”

Clarke, Haddin tons put Australia in command

It has been a while since an Australian captain has looked as serene during an Ashes Test as Michael Clarke did at the Adelaide Oval. During a period of England domination, uncomprehending exasperation of Ricky Ponting has been followed by the lurking fea

The Report by David Hopps at Adelaide Oval06-Dec-2013
Scorecard and ball-by-ball details0:00

Polite Enquiries: The end for Flower?

It has been a while since an Australian captain has looked as serene during an Ashes Test as Michael Clarke did at the Adelaide Oval.During a period of England domination, the uncomprehending exasperation of Ricky Ponting has been followed by Clarke’s lurking fear that his own Ashes story could be debilitated by injury.Yet here Clarke was, the second day into the second Test, continuing his love affair with this ground with an unflustered century which with every graceful moment stated his intent to become the Australian captain who regained the Ashes. The blissful manner in which he dealt with the England attack, with his vice-captain Brad Haddin offering sterling support, will only quicken the belief in Australia that the balance is shifting irrevocably in their favour.That sensation also resides in the figure of Mitchell Johnson, only more violently. Nothing England contrived came close to his immediate threat. He sand-blasted Alastair Cook aside with his 10th delivery, every ball above 148kph until the kill was applied, the ball searing past Cook’s outside edge to strike off stump.Michael Carberry and Joe Root stabilised England for the rest of the 20 overs they had to survive, but they were distinctly fortunate to survive some high jinks in the final over. Root’s eagerness to see out the day drew him into an inexcusable off-side single which would have run out Carberry had Chris Rogers hit the stumps. Then Australia opted not to review the final ball of the day when replays showed Carberry would have been out lbw. Root had reason to be as relieved as Carberry.Australia had hammered home their authority by the time they declared 10 overs into the final session. Clarke reached 148 in five and three quarter hours when he became the first Test victim for Ben Stokes, seeking to work him through square leg and chipping a gentle catch to short midwicket off a leading edge.Clarke’s stand with Haddin was worth 200 in 51 overs, a new record for the sixth wicket for any team in Adelaide. Haddin fell for 118 to Stuart Broad in the third over after tea, his fourth Test century reaffirming in aggressive fashion that he has turned the back-to-back Ashes series into one of the most productive periods in his Test career. England had designs upon dismissing Australia, 5 for 273 at the close of the first day, for around 350, only to become increasingly bereft as they gave up another 297 runs in 68 overs. England conceded 12 sixes, five to Haddin, a tally assisted by Adelaide’s short square boundaries.Australia’s total was their highest in Ashes cricket since they amassed 674 for 6 declared against England in Cardiff in 2009, a match in which England also combined the spin of Graeme Swann and Monty Panesar with little reward. England had fielded two spinners in Australia for the first time for 33 years, but the gamble demanded that they remained in touch in the first innings in the hope of dividends later in the game.By the time England followed up Clarke’s dismissal with more consolatory wickets, a victory to tie the series at 1-1 looked an increasingly unlikely proposition. Mitchell Johnson hoicked Swann’s offspin to mid-on and Stokes, occasionally revealing an ability to leave the right-hander off the pitch, had Peter Siddle caught at the wicket. But Ryan Harris deposited Swann for two successive slog sweeps into the members to keep Australian spirits high and after tea became the eighth Australian to pass 50 in a series that is not quite two Tests old. That statistic, above all, should trouble England.Michael Clarke brought up his sixth Test century at Adelaide at a higher average than even Don Bradman•PA PhotosClarke’s sixth Adelaide hundred in nine Tests, and his 26th of all, was his second in succession, following his century in Brisbane when Australia’s domination was assured. This one was a perfectly-constructed affair with the Test in the balance, made all the more noteworthy because of occasional suggestions that first his back and then his ankle were troubling him more than the England attack. When he was dismissed, his average in Adelaide Tests was 104.75, a standard that even The Don – Adelaide’s most revered figure – could not quite match.Virtually everything that could go wrong for England in the morning did as Clarke and Haddin batted through the morning session with commendable enterprise. Stokes missed out on a first Test wicket because of a no-ball and the list of half chances to elude England grew as they failed to press home their hard-won position of equality from the first day. They were in a rush to take wickets with the new ball 10 overs old at start of play, but their threat softened even before the Kookaburra ball did.England will reflect that the morning might have turned out differently. Clarke’s determination to dominate the left-arm spin of Panesar from the outset almost went awry as he skipped down the pitch to his first ball of the morning and spooned it over extra cover, marking his fifty with relief as the ball evaded Stokes. But by the time Panesar was withdrawn after four overs, the mood was set.England also had a glimmer of a chance to dismiss him when he was 91. Again Clarke’s foot movement was ambitious, this time to the offspin of Swann, and his glance thudded through the hands and into the ankle of Ian Bell at backward short leg. A tough catch missed, Bell, and the wicketkeeper Matt Prior, then failed to gather cleanly to pull off a run out as Clarke dived back into his crease and rose with the sense that fortune was favouring the brave.Haddin was an impressive accomplice, but he, too, had one or two moments which fell his way. James Anderson, with no swing to sustain him, looked listless, but when he produced a good bouncer to Haddin, on 30, the hook shot fell short of Panesar, who reacted cumbersomely at fine leg as the ball sailed out of the unfinished stand. It was barely a catch, although in keeping with the ground works, Panesar also seemed to be wearing concrete boots.Stokes imagined that his first Test wicket had come in his third over of the day when he produced an excellent delivery to have Haddin, on 51, caught at the wicket. He had already fielded congratulations from his team-mates for his first Test wicket when replays showed he had overstepped.Haddin could not resist a jokey congratulation to Stokes at the end of the over about his first Test wicket that wasn’t, and as Stokes’ manner suggested an appetite for continuing the conversation, the umpire Marais Erasmus intervened to calm the situation. As the afternoon wore on, the calm became increasingly hard for England to stomach; on a sunlit evening, as Johnson burned in, calm was something they could only dream of.

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