Maiden century is just the starter as Maia Bouchier whets England's appetite

Maia Bouchier put her hand to her mouth but she couldn’t conceal the broad, relieved grin for long.Bouchier had reached 92 when she was adjudged not out lbw after attempting to pull a Jess Kerr delivery which struck her low on the back pad, and New Zealand’s bid to overturn the decision was denied on umpire’s call. A maiden century was still on the menu.The moment was a precursor – an amuse-bouche, if you will – to a tense passage of play in which Bouchier, who had been in the 90s twice before at international level and never scored a century in professional ranks, set about reaching the milestone with the help of a cool-headed Nat Sciver-Brunt.”You’ve just got to take those as they come and I was just super happy it was umpire’s call,” Bouchier said after her Player-of-the-Match performance in an eight-wicket win for England in the second ODI at Worcester, which put the hosts 2-0 up in the three-match series.”They call them the nervous nineties for a reason. I try not to think too far ahead and it was nice to have Nat come in and be that calm voice. At the start of the game she did our little speech in our huddle and she just said. ‘one ball at a time’. That’s exactly what she said to me when I was on 96 and she just said, ‘keep thinking one ball at a time, watch and react’. My heart rate was going through the roof, but she really calmed me down, so that was pretty good.”England needed eight more to overhaul the target when Bouchier had her stroke of luck, having bowled New Zealand out for a mere 141 thanks to Sophie Ecclestone’s 5 for 25.Bouchier sent the next ball skywards and it dropped short of long-off as she and Sciver-Brunt scampered two, then two singles took her past her previous best, 95 scored in the third ODI against Sri Lanka last September.Danni Wyatt, padded up outside the dressing-room ready to come in next, could barely watch, holding her breath behind cupped hands as the tension rose. Would Bouchier run out of runs to get? It was possible after Ecclestone’s outstanding performance with the ball.Sciver-Brunt lightened the mood somewhat as she blocked the remaining four balls of Molly Penfold’s over to great cheers from the crowd, including a full toss which she prodded to mid-on where Sophie Devine even tried to lure an attempted run by taking a step back. But the England batters were having none of it and Sciver-Brunt succeeded in handing Bouchier the strike, facing Jess Kerr with four more runs needed to win.Related

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Bouchier tucked Kerr’s first delivery to backward square leg and ran two more. Then, after a dot ball pushed towards point, Bouchier struck the next into space through midwicket and took off for the two runs she needed to reach her ton and seal the win for England inside 25 overs.”I didn’t really know what Nat was thinking in terms of just getting the runs for the team, but when she started blocking a full-toss, I kind of knew and it was great that she was there at the end with me,” Bouchier said. “It was an unspoken communication that we both agreed on.”It was on England’s successful tour of New Zealand earlier this year that Bouchier established herself at the top of the order, particularly in their five T20Is, where she had scores of 43 not out, 12, 71, 91 and 6 as England claimed the series 4-1.In last Wednesday’s first ODI, which England won by nine wickets in Durham, Bouchier scored 67 in a 137-run stand with Tammy Beaumont, who was not out 76.In Worcester, Bouchier took charge, particularly after Beaumont was run out for 28, having shared a 73-run opening stand with Bouchier.Bouchier was on 42 at that point and peeled off five fours in the space of eight balls following Beaumont’s dismissal, four of them off one Devine over. She struck 17 boundaries in all and faced 88 balls for her 100 not out.”I’ve just started to trust myself more and I’ve got a lot more confidence in the way I play and not forcing it really,” she said. “That’s a big thing for me. I time the ball quite well and that’s one of my big strengths, so using those as much as I can.”

'He timed it beautifully and got his match-up' – Williamson and Powell laud Rutherford

Williamson suggests it may not be the end of the road yet for NZ’s golden generation

Deivarayan Muthu13-Jun-20242:43

Ganga: ‘Not surprising that Rutherford delivered with a half-century’

Sherfane Rutherford’s unbeaten 68 off 39 balls on a two-paced Trinidad pitch proved the difference between West Indies and New Zealand at the Brian Lara Cricket Academy. This was the assessment of both captains Rovman Powell and Kane Williamson after West Indies successfully defended 149 to progress to the Super Eight.Rutherford came into bat when West Indies were 22 for 4 inside the powerplay. It was only the second time that he was facing a ball in the powerplay, in 15 T20Is. He responded with a career-best effort that not only repaired the collapse but also put West Indies in a position of strength.”We told the guys that somebody has to play a blinder,” Powell said after the match. “It wasn’t going to be an easy wicket because of the inclement weather. We always believe that individual brilliance in T20 cricket is needed some time and Sherfane’s innings was a fantastic knock. It gave us confidence and at the halfway mark, we believed [we could win].”After working his way to 31 off 27 balls, Rutherford took Daryl Mitchell for a trio of sixes in the 19th over, which cost New Zealand 19 runs. Then, in the final over, he aced his match-up against left-arm fingerspinner Mitchell Santner, dispatching him for two fours and six.Related

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“The margins in the match are fine and in conditions like that, two or three balls where the match-up suits, that can be the difference, Williamson said at his post-match press conference. We saw a fantastic knock from Rutherford and he certainly timed it beautifully and got his match-up. I think at the end of the day, that was the difference.”Rutherford was part of the Kolkata Knight Riders side that had won IPL 2024, but he didn’t get a game in India. Despite the lack of game time in the IPL, West Indies’ team management picked him ahead of Shimron Hetmyer, who was a more regular presence for Rajasthan Royals. Rutherford hit the ground running with an unbeaten 47 off 18 balls in the warm-up game, albeit against an undermanned Australia side, in Port-of-Spain. He repaid the faith with a more impactful knock against an experienced New Zealand attack that saw the reunion of Tim Southee with Trent Boult. According to ESPNcricinfo’s Smart Stats, which are designed to bring out the true value of individual performances in T20 cricket, Rutherford’s 68 was worth nearly 100.

“I was in the IPL for two months, so you know I was preparing [there] even though I wasn’t playing,” Rutherford said. “I did a lot of work and planning. Keeping it simple and backing myself – that was the key.”I was just telling myself to take it deep. Me and [Daren] Sammy had a talk and he said: ‘try and take it deep’. The deeper I went, I started feeling momentum and I thought I could always make up in the end.”Williamson: Not the end of an era for NZ’s golden generationIt was that kind of day for Kane Williamson and New Zealand again•ICC/Getty Images

Having started the tournament with back-to-back defeats, New Zealand are already in danger of an early exit. Mathematically, they still have a chance to qualify for the Super Eight, but they will need several things to go in their favour. While Williamson bemoaned New Zealand’s inability to adapt quickly to the Caribbean conditions, he played down suggestions that it is the end of an era for New Zealand’s golden generation.”They’re still guys that will be here for some time,” Williamson said. “I think if we just look at the two matches to start off… no doubt disappointing. You come to a world event, you want to start well and to be honest, we need to be better in these conditions specifically. We know that it’s going to be a real scrap and it’s not going to be easy. But if you win some small moments, match-ups go your way and that can be a defining element to your whole tournament, really, and it hasn’t happened for us, which is frustrating.”After a rust-ridden opening outing against Afghanistan at the Providence, New Zealand brought back Southee, James Neesham and Rachin Ravindra, and did make early inroads. But bowling out all of his frontline quicks and Neesham in 18 overs meant Williamson had to turn to the part-time medium pace of Mitchell and the left-arm spin of Santner at the very end.Williamson said that frontloading his fast bowlers was a gamble worth taking, considering the bowler-friendly conditions, which offered variable bounce throughout the evening.”We knew that we needed to get Rutherford out and I think the batting depth of the West Indies side really shone through and it was beneficial for them certainly today on that surface,” Williamson said. “You know it’s going to be scrappy and you know that three balls here or three balls there can really put the score above par and that’s what they were able to do. So, for us to try and take that wicket and try to have the opportunity to restrict them to the 120 region, I think was worth doing and that didn’t quite pay off.”I think whatever overs that we did bowl were going to be targetted and that’s the margins you deal with in T20 cricket nowadays with teams that’re batting deeper and you’re always playing that game of cat and mouse.”

Mega upgrade on Trossard: Arsenal hold talks to sign "world-class" winger

Arsenal may have saved themselves from a potential embarrassment on Sunday afternoon, but that does not change the fact that this summer has to be a monumental one.

Mikel Arteta told us it would be early last month, and while the arrival of Martin Zubimendi is certainly exciting, the area that needs reinforcing more than anywhere else is the attack.

Moreover, while the team’s need for a new striker – or two – is undeniable, a dynamic, direct, and dangerous left-winger is arguably just as crucial to support Bukayo Saka’s efforts on the other flank.

Arsenal manager MikelArtetalooks dejected after the match

The good news is that the board seem to agree, as recent reports have linked the club with one of the most exciting wingers in world football, someone who’d be a massive upgrade on Leandro Trossard.

Arsenal's winger search

Given Arsenal’s lack of threat off the left this season, the last few weeks have seen several top-quality wingers, such as Rafael Leao and Daizen Maeda, linked with the club.

Transfer Focus

Mega money deals, controversial moves and big-name flops. This is the home of transfer news and opinion across Football FanCast.

The former could reportedly be available for around £85m, and while that is a considerable sum of money, his tally of 12 goals and 13 assists in 48 games this season suggests he’d be worth it.

Maeda, on the other hand, could be the Gunners for just £25m, which might be a steal considering he’s scored 33 goals and provided 12 assists in just 49 games this season.

Daizen Maeda

However, Andrea Berta and Co might be after someone slightly cheaper than the AC Milan star but with more experience in a top-five league than the Celtic ace, which is where Nico Williams comes into play.

According to a recent report from journalist Graeme Bailey, Arsenal is one of several teams incredibly interested in the Spanish superstar.

In fact, he goes a step further, revealing that the North Londoners are ‘at the front of the queue’ for the dynamic winger, and that Berta and Co have already held talks with his camp.

If Arsenal successfully convince the 22-year-old to join them this summer, they’ll have to pay his £48m release clause to get the deal done, but even so, he’d be more than worth it and a significant upgrade on Trossard.

How Williams compares to Trossard

If Arsenal get their way and bring Williams to the Emirates in the coming weeks and months, he’d likely only join with the promise of regular game time, which in turn would put him up against Trossard, but who comes out on top?

Well, when it comes to their raw output, it’s the Spaniard who emerges victorious.

For example, in just 44 appearances, totalling 3050 minutes, the Pamplona-born star has scored 11 goals and provided seven assists, which comes out to an average of a goal involvement every 2.44 games, or every 169.44 minutes.

In contrast, the Belgian international has scored ten goals and provided nine assists in 54 appearances this season, which comes out to an average of a goal involvement every 2.84 games, or every 175.78 minutes.

What about when we take a look under the hood, then? Which winger has the more impressive underlying numbers?

Non-Penalty G+As

0.49

0.49

Progressive Passes

3.14

3.80

Progressive Passes Received

11.3

7.57

Progressive Carries

5.69

2.81

Shots

2.67

2.62

Shots on Target

1.12

0.84

Passing Accuracy

70.2%

74.8%

Key Passes

2.08

1.39

Shot-Creating Actions

5.34

3.28

Goal-Creating Actions

0.63

0.44

Successful Take-Ons

3.36

1.25

Ball Recoveries

4.28

3.45

Aerial Duels Won

0.44

0.29

Unsurprisingly, this is another comparison in which the “world-class” Bilbao star, as dubbed by journalist Zach Lowy, comes out on top and quite comfortably at that.

For example, he does better in most relevant metrics, including, but not limited to, progressive carries, shots and shots on target, shot and goal-creating actions, successful take-ons, key passes, ball recoveries, aerial duels won and more, all per 90.

Athletic Bilbao'sNicoWilliamscelebrates scoring their third goal

Ultimately, while Trossard could still be a valuable squad player, Williams is the far superior winger in practically every facet, and he’s eight years younger. Therefore, Arsenal should be doing all they can to sign the Spaniard this summer.

Shades of Aubameyang: Arsenal lead race to sign "mind-blowing" goal machine

The prolific marksman could be the difference-maker for Arsenal next season.

ByJack Salveson Holmes May 12, 2025

He'd be perfect under Iraola: Spurs line up move for "unplayable" £40m star

Despite coming off a sensational result in the Europa League, Tottenham Hotspur returned to their lacklustre form at home to Nottingham Forest on Monday night.

It was their 18th defeat in the Premier League and leaves them just a point above West Ham United in 17th place, so it’s not much of a surprise to see stories about Ange Postecoglou’s future returning.

One of the names most heavily touted to replace him at the end of the season is Bournemouth boss Andoni Iraola, who has managed to lead the Cherries up to eighth place, partly thanks to their brilliant attack.

On top of being linked with a new manager, the North Londoners have also been linked with a plethora of exciting players, including one who’d be perfect under Iraola, were he to get the job.

Tottenham want to sign Premier League attacker

With how terribly this season has gone for Spurs, it’s unsurprising that they have been linked with so many players in recent weeks, such as Matheus Cunha.

Transfer Focus

Mega money deals, controversial moves and big-name flops. This is the home of transfer news and opinion across Football FanCast.

The North Londoners are reportedly willing to pay up to £75m to land the Brazilian star ahead of the other interested parties, and while that’s an enormous sum of money, it might be worth it, as he’s managed to amass a tally of 16 goals and four assists in 31 games this year, despite playing for a bottom half side.

A slightly cheaper target the club have supposedly been looking at has been Tyler Dibling.

TylerDiblingcelebrates scoring their first goal with Yukinari Sugawara

The Southampton gem could be available for around £35m in the summer, and while he likely wouldn’t make an instant impact on the first team, he would be yet another tremendously exciting youngster on the club’s books.

However, if instant impact is what the fans are after, then the links to Marcus Rashford should excite them.

According to a recent report from Football Transfers, Spurs have now rekindled their interest in Premier League star Marcus Rashford, who has found some form of late on loan with Aston Villa.

The report claims that the 62-capped Englishman ‘is expected to leave Manchester United during the upcoming summer transfer window’ and that should the Villans decide against paying £40m to sign him, the North Londoners will step in.

It could be a complicated transfer to get over the line, but given his immense quality, it’s worth fighting for, especially as he could be incredible under Iraola.

Why Rashford would be a great signing for Spurs

So, the first thing to say is that, regardless of who is in the hot seat next season, Rashford would be a good addition to Spurs’ squad, and the last few months have shown that.

For example, since moving to Villa, the Manchester-born monster has been electric, scoring four goals and providing six assists in 17 appearances, totalling just 940 minutes.

That means the often “unplayable” 27-year-old, as dubbed by analyst Raj Chohan, is currently averaging a goal involvement every 1.7 games or every 94 minutes, which is the sort of output the Lilywhites could really do with.

Rashford’s Villa form

Appearances

17

Starts

10

Minutes

940′

Goals

4

Assists

6

Goal Involvements per Match

0.58

Minutes per Goal Involvement

94′

All Stats via Transfermarkt

However, there is every chance that, under Iraola, he could be even better.

Now, this is obviously all theoretical at this point, but we know from this season that, when he has a summer to prepare his players, the Spaniard can extract some seriously impressive attacking numbers out of his frontline players.

For example, Justin Kluivert has produced 21 goal involvements compared to 11 last year, Antoine Semenyo has produced 16 compared to 11 and even Dango Ouattara has managed 13 compared to just three last year.

So, if he’s been able to improve those players that much within the space of just a season, imagine what he’d be able to do with a player as talented as Rashford.

Bournemouth attackers since 23/24

24/25

Kluivert

Semenyo

Ouattara

Appearances

34

37

35

Minutes

2297′

3182′

2121′

Goals

13

10

9

Assists

8

6

4

Goal Involvements per Match

0.61

0.43

0.37

Minutes per Goal Involvement

109.38′

198.87′

163.15

23/24

Kluivert

Semenyo

Ouattara

Appearances

36

36

32

Minutes

2093′

2307′

1383′

Goals

9

8

1

Assists

2

3

2

Goal Involvements per Match

0.30

0.30

0.09

Minutes per Goal Involvement

190.27′

209.72

461′

All Stats via Transfermarkt

Ultimately, while this might be a complicated transfer to get over the line, Spurs should do all they can to get it done, especially if they hire Iraola.

Their new Lucas Moura: Ange has struck gold on "generational" Spurs talent

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ByJack Salveson Holmes Apr 23, 2025

From wanting it, to not: the curious case of Steven Smith's opening career

There is also the intriguing question of what would have happened if the selectors had said no from the start

Alex Malcolm16-Oct-20241:36

What’s the logic of moving Smith back down the order?

George Bailey was very careful with his words when he revealed that Steven Smith would no longer be opening the batting in Australia’s Test team.”Steve had expressed a desire to move back down from that opening position,” Australia’s chair of selectors said on Monday before stating that captain Pat Cummins and coach Andrew McDonald had confirmed that Smith would be moving. Bailey was explicit too in noting that he, despite being the chair, did not decide the order.Smith’s dalliance with opening in Test cricket has been mostly criticised and there are a lot of people who believe it never should have happened.Related

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And that is a thread worth pulling on. What if it never did happen?The intriguing part is not the question of who would have opened instead of Smith, which is fascinating but now a moot point. The intriguing part is what would have happened to Smith if the selectors had said no to his request to open the batting.This is where Bailey’s words are instructive. It has been lost somewhat that Smith drove the move. He requested to open the batting initially. He put it on the public agenda. The captain and coach both expressed their preference that Smith stay in No. 4 in the immediate days after Smith flagged his interest. Only after he confirmed his seriousness in undertaking the challenge did the team hierarchy conclude that it was worth doing to accommodate the selection of Cameron Green at No. 4 without forcing someone else to open against their wishes.There will be plenty of people who will say the decision-makers abdicated their responsibilities in that moment and that they should have told Smith it was a bad idea that wasn’t going to be entertained.That criticism is not unreasonable. Selectors, coaches and captains must make tough decisions and have tough conversations. But every decision has consequences and opportunity cost.Steven Smith wasn’t alone in find things tricky at the top•Getty ImagesSmith was hinting he was growing weary of the monotony of batting at No. 4. He has conquered every challenge there is in that role. His returns had been diminishing, albeit receding from a ridiculously high watermark. He had averaged 42.22 in the calendar year of 2023, and just 38.80 with a highest score of 50 in six innings against Pakistan prior to his move to the top of the order.It would take a brave and stubborn leader to hear one of Australia’s greatest ever Test batters request a fresh challenge and then flat out reject it when it was going to solve a selection headache.How would Smith have felt about that? There will be plenty who will argue that players should play the role they’re given rather than dictate terms. But if anyone has earned the right to at least request such a move, it is Smith.And given that he has been less than enthusiastic about shifting from No. 3 to No. 4 in Australia’s ODI team in recent times against his preference, the consequences of denying him the chance to open the batting in the Test team are worth considering. It is also worth noting his returns at No. 4 in the ODI side since the shift have been below his career record, coincidentally or otherwise.Had he remained at No. 4 in the Test side against West Indies and New Zealand there aren’t any guarantees he would have performed any differently than he did opening the batting. Would Australia have won in Brisbane had he been batting at No. 4, given he made an exceptional 91 not out in the chase as an opener? Would he have made a match-winning 174 not out at the Basin Reserve, as Green did? Could he have averaged more than 28.50? Those questions will never be answered. The added strands to Smith staying at No. 4, like how a different opener would have gone and what would have happened to Green, are also unanswerable.At least with Smith opening, he got a taste of what the alternate universe looks like and can potentially return to No. 4 with renewed vigour against India. Had he remained there, he may instead be feeling like Bill Murray’s character in Groundhog Day heading into this summer.That said, was the move as much of a failure as it has been made out to be?Smith’s average of 28.50 at the top across eight innings in those two Test series was not as bad as it appears on paper. His 91 not out was the highest score by any opener in the four Tests, with only three half-century scores registered by all the openers who played. Usman Khawaja averaged 32.42 in the same four games. Tom Latham averaged 31 in the two Tests in New Zealand but had two single figure scores in Wellington. Will Young, Kraigg Brathwaite and Tagenarine Chanderpaul all averaged single figures.There will be plenty of focus on whether Steven Smith can rekindle his best form against India•Cricket Australia/Getty ImagesMarnus Labuschagne averaged 16.85 at No. 3 in those same four Tests, with a score of 90, while Kane Williamson averaged 19.25 at No. 3 in New Zealand with a half-century. The conditions were difficult.Smith’s returns were also on par with the career averages of the three main contenders to now take the role in Marcus Harris, Cameron Bancroft and Matt Renshaw, while David Warner averaged 30.12 across the final two years of his career.Beyond the numbers though, Smith’s initial move to open followed by his request to move back will have unintended consequences despite Green’s injury paving the way for an easy transition.The first of those falls on the team leadership when or if one of Harris, Bancroft or Renshaw gets the nod. All will feel pressure to prove themselves on Test match return in any case, but a nagging sense that they weren’t the first-choice option could be an added burden.A bolt from the blue like Sam Konstas would provide another twist. That would provide a clean, uncomplicated end to a slightly messy 11 months and signal a fresh start although depending on when Green is available again for Test cricket, another debate is on the cards.It will probably end up as a footnote on a storied career, but Smith’s time as a Test opener was a fascinating chapter.

How Zimbabwe prospered by practising less, not more

“I think energy on the field is more important than a few balls in the nets,” says head coach Dave Houghton

Danyal Rasool21-Oct-20222:23

Takeaways: Two-time champions WI bow out; Zimbabwe back among big boys

Zimbabwe qualified for this T20 World Cup in July, but for the past three months, coach Dave Houghton has given short shrift to the idea that they qualified for anything at all. For him, qualification meant getting through to where he feels Zimbabwe belong, in the Super 12s. He wasn’t too keen on going to Australia only to come back after playing three games.The self-serving approach might be to overplay the achievement of getting to the main round, burnishing his credentials as a coach, but at every opportunity, Houghton has chosen to underplay it. “I did say to the guys when we left home, it’s nice we qualified to get here, but that’s not our main objective,” he said after Zimbabwe’s beat Scotland to make the Super 12s. “Our main objective is to get through and then cause as much damage in the next stage as we can.Related

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“Obviously we’re over the moon. When I took over in June or so for the qualifiers in Bulawayo, the biggest and main objective was to get here. We got ahead and won five of those games, and they were as pressurised as any game because each game was like a cup final. So we had some sort of experience of playing a game with as much on it as this one is like today.”Zimbabwe had left themselves with no room for error after a disappointing batting performance saw them slump to defeat against West Indies. In that game, Houghton’s preference for ultra-aggression had perhaps played a part in the defeat, with Zimbabwe going after a quality West Indian bowling attack even when the required rate meant they could have adopted a more sedate approach. A predisposition for caution in this crunch game might only have been natural, but Houghton has drilled his side too well to let them fall back into those old habits.”Going into today’s game, I wanted us to play the same way,” he said. “I’m excited by the fact our players will continue to do it. Win or lose in a cut-throat game like today, we could be going home at 6 tomorrow morning, or staying in the hotel overnight and preparing for the next round.”It was a tough game, and our guys are happy to keep playing that way, and I want us to keep playing that way. It’s the only way we’ll improve.”There has been a sea change in results and the morale in the Zimbabwean camp since Houghton took over about four months ago. But Houghton doesn’t believe himself to be a tactical mastermind who overhauled the way Zimbabwe played cricket, somewhat quaintly admitting he “doesn’t really know the answer to what he’s brought to the team”.”The only thing I’ve done to the guys is saying ‘you have the freedom to play, and there will be no repercussions if you make mistakes’. One other thing I’ve done is changed our practising schedules. The Zimbabwean guys have worked really hard to get techniques to compete at this level, but they’ll over-practise. If I leave them to their own devices, they’ll practice from 8am to 4pm every day of the week. The problem with that is that by day two, the practising becomes mundane and boring and nobody is actually going forward.”So I’ve really cut back on our practices. Our practices are a bit shorter and with a bit more quality, and there are days where I won’t let them practise at all because I think energy on the field is more important than a few balls in the nets.”

“The guys have worked really hard to get techniques to compete at this level, but they’ll over-practise. If I leave them to their own devices, they’ll practice from 8am to 4pm every day of the week. So I’ve really cut back on our practices”

Houghton has also repeatedly offered a straight bat to any invitations to criticise the previous coach Lalchand Rajput or his setup, even if the difference since his arrival has been like chalk and cheese. But in his own taciturn way, he did offer suggestions as to why Zimbabwe found themselves in such a deep malaise earlier this year, hinting there were perhaps “too many repercussions, a bit of over-analysis and a bit of over-practising”. He also said that Zimbabwe didn’t really have too many team talks under him. It is something fast bowler Brad Evans also told ESPNcricinfo earlier, saying a meeting that lasted ten minutes under him would be considered unduly long.”I don’t think it was too difficult,” Houghton said. “Nobody wants to be unhappy. So to get them to go from unhappy to happy is not that difficult at all. Once they realised that I’m not going to be a person who’s going to be standing there pointing fingers and shouting at them all day, I think immediately there was a change in attitude.”The last time Houghton was Zimbabwe’s coach at a World Cup was at the ODI edition in 1999. On that occasion, too, Zimbabwe qualified for the second round and finished fifth, their best performance at a World Cup. It included wins against South Africa and India in the first round.It’s perhaps tempting to get carried away, but Houghton has the experience to understand the step-up in the quality his side is about to face. “I’m happy to talk about our ambitions, but I don’t want to be unrealistic,” he said. “Obviously everybody would sit here and say we want to win it. We want to cause some damage. If we could take home a couple of big scalps as well, that would be great.”Just as he is about to leave, though, there is a mischievous little glint in his eye and the shadow of a smile. “If we could get into the semi-finals, even better.”Houghton then gets up and makes his way out to join his players in the celebrations. He is a happy man in charge of a happy team. Despite Zimbabwe Cricket’s financial condition, you cannot put a price on that.

The flight of Radha Yadav

How the Indian slow left-armer overcame poverty and lack of opportunity to make it to the top rank of international T20I bowlers

Annesha Ghosh20-Feb-2020A photograph of Radha Yadav’s first cricketing accolade takes pride of place in the front room of her 225-square-foot home in Kandivali, Mumbai. The picture, sellotaped in places along the periphery, shows Yadav, who is India’s joint highest wicket-taker in T20Is since the start of 2019, flanked by her parents, holding a winners’ shield and trophy.”That is from my first inter-school tournament,” Yadav, a 19-year-old left-arm-spin-bowling allrounder, says on the phone from Australia, where she is set to play her second T20 World Cup. “I ran out Jemimah [Rodrigues] in the final. It’s a special keepsake, because both Jemi and I now play for India, but more so as it reminds me of the hardships my family has been through before cricket became our way out of it.”Yadav’s cricket journey proper started when Praful Naik, who would go on to be her first coach, spotted her playing tennis-ball cricket with boys in the compound of her apartment building.”Praful sir convinced my dad to let me train under him, for free,” Yadav says. “Papa agreed because only a few days earlier I had found out that the Shiv Seva Ground [in the neighbourhood] holds nets for girls. I realised girls too play cricket. I had pleaded with Papa to enrol me [in the set-up] there, but he said it was beyond his means.”Like millions of lower-middle-class migrants before him, Yadav’s father, Omprakash, moved to Mumbai from the north Indian state of Uttar Pradesh in pursuit of a better future. But with the ever-soaring cost of living in India’s financial hub, it became increasingly tough for him to make ends meet with the income he earned from selling milk from a makeshift stall on a footpath outside the family’s house in the suburb of Kandivali.

“When I saw Yadav at the Baroda nets for the first time, her body language and attitude brimmed with positivity”Geeta Gayakwad, chair of the Baroda women’s cricket selection panel

Though it hurt, Yadav, 12 then, saw the merit in her father choosing two square meals a day – “and sometimes just one” – for their large family over spending money on his daughter’s cricket. “Papa’s decision didn’t make me stop loving cricket,” she says. “I just quit dreaming about training in whites like those [other] girls.”The Indian men’s 2011 ODI World Cup win at home inspired a generation of Indian kids to take up cricket. Yadav, whose house is a stone’s throw away from a gymkhana named after Sachin Tendulkar, was one of them.”Growing up, I never heard much about Mithu [Mithali Raj] or Jhulu [Jhulan Goswami] because mostly the men’s matches were on TV all the time,” she says. “But after India won the 2011 World Cup, it became a huge craze for me. I wanted to play in front of fans, at a stadium, so I started trying out everything: left-arm fast bowling, spin bowling, batting, and even wicketkeeping – just because [MS] Dhoni made it look so good.”At about this time, Naik’s arrival proved a godsend. Under his tutelage Radha’s talent and aspirations got direction. Soon enough she made the step up from tennis-ball cricket to the leather-ball version. Omprakash began to sell vegetables, and some grocery items, at his milk stall, hoping to spend the extra income on cricket equipment for his daughter.”It’s not just me or my wife – all her three older siblings have played a role in Radha’s growth,” says Omprakash, 55. “My older daughter, Sonee, used to be an even better cricketer than Radha, but she sacrificed her own career to help Radha make hers.”Yadav’s older sister, Sonee, who her father says was the better cricketer of the two siblings, with her parents at their grocery stall near their home in Mumbai•Annesha Ghosh/ESPNcricinfo LtdIn 2013, Naik had Yadav move from Anandibai Damodar Kale Vidyalaya, her first school, to Our Lady of Remedy High School, where he was the coach at the time. The decision paid dividends soon. Yadav, in her first tournament at any level, featured in Our Lady’s win over St Joseph’s Convent High School (Rodrigues’ team) in the final of the inter-school championship that year.”I was still not convinced that I should become a bowler,” Yadav remembers. “I used to bowling.” Naik and Kiran Kambli, another local coach, suggested she make left-arm spin her primary skill.A maiden call-up for the Mumbai Under-19s came in 2014-15. For that one season, Yadav and Rodrigues, who made their international debuts together on the 2018 tour of South Africa, played on the same team. Yadav then moved to playing for Baroda, where Naik shifted base in 2016.”It’s funny that Jemi and I used to dislike each other as kids,” says Yadav. “Now we are slightly more mature, so we have become good friends.” The two teen allrounders’ paths crossed again when Yadav, leading Baroda, made a hundred and a fifty in two matches against Mumbai at the 2016-17 BCCI inter-state U-19 tournament.”When I saw Yadav at the Baroda nets for the first time, her body language and attitude brimmed with positivity,” Geeta Gayakwad, the chairperson of the Baroda Cricket Association women’s selection committee, says. “She has always been an enterprising girl, so I gave her the responsibility to lead the U-19 side.”

I wanted to finish it off myself. Many a time earlier in domestic games I failed to do that, so I wanted to channel that disappointment into getting the job done this timeYadav on the final of the Women’s T20 Challenge in 2019

Under Yadav, West Zone became the 2016-17 BCCI U-19 inter-zonal champions, which earned her the captaincy of the Baroda U-23 side later in 2017, and of the Baroda senior side in 2018.”It was only when she started competing at a higher level,” says Gayakwad, “against the India players, say, at the Challenger Trophy, [that] her desire to be a better allrounder grew, as did her aggression, which is quite similar to her captain Harman’s.”At the Women’s T20 Challenge final in Jaipur last year, a sensational fifty by Harmanpreet Kaur ended with her being dismissed with her team, Supernovas, still needing seven runs from four balls.”I was actually happy that Harry got out,” Yadav says, chuckling. “Because I wanted to finish it off myself. Many times earlier in domestic games I failed to do that, so I wanted to channel that disappointment into getting the job done this time.”With nearly 14,000 spectators on the edge of their seats at the Sawai Mansingh Stadium, Yadav scored twos off three consecutive balls, and with the scores tied, sealed the chase with a four off the final ball. “It’s my favourite moment” she says. “Harry keeps telling me every now and then, ‘You walked onto the field that day as though as you had already done the job in your head.'”As with Kaur, Yadav’s aggression with the bat is rooted in method. “I visualise a lot,” she explains. “Say, I want to fly and take this blinder in a real match situation, make that difficult stop, bowl that wicket-taking delivery, and so on… when I am able to pull it off, my excitement comes out as aggression. When my form falls, I visualise even more to overcome self-doubts.””I visualise a lot. When my form falls, I visualise even more to overcome self-doubts”•Annesha Ghosh/ESPNcricinfo LtdWith the ball in hand, save for her first two international assignments – a bilateral series against South Africa away and a tri-series at home against Australia and England – Yadav has seldom looked ill at ease in her 32 T20Is. She achieved a career-best No. 2 T20I bowling ranking late last year and was one of three Indians on the ICC’s 2019 T20I Team of the Year.”The jump from domestic to international cricket felt like a storm,” Yadav says of those first two series. “I wasn’t a skillful bowler at the time and would try out too many variations.”Realising she needed to raise her game in all three disciplines, she worked on making her action “more compact”, increasing her upper-body strength, honing her catching and ground fielding, storing the “same type of deliveries in my muscle memory”, keeping things simple, and most importantly, believing in her strength: self-belief.”I consider myself a wicket-taking bowler. I can contain when needed, varying my pace and lengths,” she says, “but I back myself to go for wickets every time.” She has taken at least one wicket in each of 21 matches on the trot – second only to Australia quick bowler Megan Schutt (23 matches in a row).Yadav says that her three India head coaches in the two years since her debut – Tushar Arothe, Ramesh Powar, and now WV Raman – have helped give her perspective. “Raman sir, for example, says, ‘Learn to put all your successes and failures behind and focus on the future.'”

“Maybe these ups and downs were all meant to be part of Radha’s journey. Maybe she was destined to be emboldened by adversity”Yadav’s father, Omprakash

Some days, advice of that sort helps her gather her thoughts. On others, reflections on a past riddled with hardship act as a motivator.”The only thing I think of every time I leave for my tours is my Papa’s smile. He has hidden so much pain behind it all these years,” she says. “The only way I can honour his sacrifices is by trying to be the best allrounder I can be.”This year, Yadav was promoted to Grade B (Rs 30 lakhs; about US$ 42,000) in the BCCI central contracts structure. When she earned her first board contract, worth Rs 10 lakhs, last year, she bought her father a small grocery shop. More recently, she made the down payment on a three-bedroom apartment in Baroda, where the family will possibly move next year.Might Yadav have been a lesser cricketer had poverty not put a spoke in her wheels? Or might she have thrived had her family been prosperous enough to have afforded to put more resources into her cricket? “When she was born prematurely in the seventh month, the doctors had reservations if she would survive,” Omprakash says. “A few years later, when we wanted to enrol her in an English-medium school in Borivali [a neighbouring suburb], they rejected [our application] because my wife never went to school. Maybe these ups and downs were all meant to be part of Radha’s journey.”Maybe she was destined to be emboldened by adversity,” he says as he and his wife, Amravati, walk towards their shop, Radha Mini General Store.

Dodgers' Clayton Kershaw Unwittingly Participates in Funny Crowd Moment While on Mound

For what was apparently the second time in his career, Los Angeles Dodgers pitcher Clayton Kershaw on Friday inadvertently timed the wind-up of his pitch with a group of fans doing the wave in the stands … though it would probably be more apt to say the crowd timed move to Kershaw's—not the other way around.

During the Dodgers' 6-5 win over the Washington Nationals, cameras caught a rapt group of spectators beginning "the wave" as Kershaw extended his arms in the air on the mound, preparing for his pitch. As a result of their smart timing, it looked as though Kershaw himself was participating in the crowd work … and not just, y'know, doing his job.

Watch that funny moment below:

Better yet, this isn't the first time Kershaw was in sync with some eager fans. According to MLB, it happened in 2022, as well, when the Dodgers were playing the San Diego Padres.

But as fun as Friday's antics were, they definitely should not dwarf a much more impressive milestone upon which the left-hander is rapidly approaching: he is now just eight strikeouts away from becoming the 20th pitcher in MLB history to record 3,000 career K's. Going into Friday night's game, he was 12 away, but subtracted four from that total during the win.

The Dodgers win was the opener of a three-game series vs. the Nats. Washington will have the chance to even things up come Saturday night at 10:10 p.m. ET.

Wrigley Field Gives Fan Rousing Applause for Snagging Sal Frelick's Bat Stuck in Netting

A fan came to the rescue Thursday afternoon at Wrigley Field when Milwaukee Brewers outfielder Sal Frelick needed some assistance.

In the top of the sixth inning, Frelick swung hard at 1-0 offering from Chicago Cubs righthander Chris Flexen, and his bat soared into the netting behind home plate. A fan, sitting in the front row wearing khaki pants and a polo shirt, didn't waste a moment. He climbed onto the netting and quickly grabbed the bat.

The security team at Wrigley Field didn't like it. After the fan came down with the bat, Wrigley Field security spoke with him and appeared to plan to eject him from the game. But after a few minutes, the fan was allowed back into his seat, receiving a stirring applause from the other 41,077 fans in Chicago.

The fan didn't get to keep the bat, but according to Milwaukee Journal Sentinel's Curt Hogg, Frelick gave him a game-used bat signed with the message, "Nice climb."

The Cubs, who trailed 8-3 at the time of the fan's heroics in the netting, stormed back to make it a one-run game in the eight inning, but fell 8-7. The Cubs and Brewers are now separated by 5.5 games in the NL Central standings.

Sidra Amin reprimanded for breaching ICC code of conduct

Pakistan batter Sidra Amin has been reprimanded for breaching the ICC’s code of conduct during the match against India at the Women’s World Cup in Colombo on Sunday.A statement from the ICC said that Amin breached Article 2.2, which relates to “abuse of cricket equipment or clothing, ground equipment or fixtures and fittings during an International Match.” It was her first offence in a 24-month period and she was given one demerit point for a Level 1 breach.The incident occurred when Amin forcefully hit her bat onto the pitch after being dismissed in the 40th over. She admitted the offence and accepted the sanction proposed by match referee Shandre Fritz, so no formal hearing was needed.Related

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On-field umpires Lauren Agenbag and Nimali Perera, third umpire Kerrin Klaaste and fourth umpire Kim Cotton levelled the charge. Level 1 offences carry a minimum penalty of an official reprimand, a maximum penalty of 50% of a player’s match fee, and one or two demerit points.Pakistan lost the match against India after they were bowled out for 159, chasing 248. Amin top-scored for Pakistan with 81 off 106 balls but it wasn’t enough. Pakistan have now lost their first two games at this World Cup and face Australia next, on Wednesday.

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