Connect with us

Sports

KJP’s bargaining powers further diminish

Published

on

by Rex Clementine

As Sri Lanka were crashing to another heavy defeat in Cardiff, former England coach David Lloyd reminded us some harsh truths. He said that Sri Lanka probably needed an Arjuna Ranatunga to get under the skin of England. Arjuna had many ways to skin a cat. He would walk those singles, arrive late for the toss, target opposition’s best bowler 24 hours before the contest by calling him overrated. Then he would purposely forget his opposite number’s name, calling Alec Stewart by the name of Michael Atherton, just to remind the England captain that he was there by default than merit.

Bumble saw it all during his tenure as England’s coach. Sri Lanka recorded their maiden Test win in British soil when he was the coach in 1988.

Sri Lanka under Kusal Janith Perera aren’t showing any such bold tactics. They are playing limited overs cricket like what England used to do in 1990s. On Thursday in Cardiff, Sri Lanka failed to score a boundary during the six overs of Power Play!

Cardiff is a beautify city. It’s a two and half hour train ride from London. There are busses from the station to the ground, but if you are ever going there walk from the station to the Sophia Gardens. It’s a ten minute walk passing the monstrous rugby stadium and the 11th century Cardiff Castle. Along the road you find many pubs and restaurants until you reach River Taff. Partying in Cardiff, the capital of Wales continues well beyond 2 am. Pity the Sri Lankan players, their bio-secure bubble life means that they can have no outside interaction as they are restricted to the hotel, team bus and ground.

There was a famous bread and breakfast place on Cathedral Road, right behind the ground that Sri Lankan reporters frequent. The first time we were there, the waiter asked us what we would like to eat. All of us were unanimous that we wanted ‘English breakfast’ and told the waiter so. His name was Gruffydd, he banged the  table and told us that in Wales what you get is the ‘Welsh breakfast and not English breakfast.’ Welsh or English it is the same; bacon egg and sausages. But Welsh think they are being constantly undermined by the English. They are damn good at many things and Welsh – English rivalry in sports, particularly in rugby, is legendary. 

Coming back to cricket, if you take the 2015 ICC Cricket World Cup, England was a team that failed to qualify for the quarter-finals. They had no clue how to play limited overs cricket. In that competition, in the clash against Sri Lanka, they set a target of 310, which Sri Lanka reached with nine wickets and several deliveries to spare. Yet, four years on, they are World Champions in the 50 over format and ranked number one in the T-20 segment.

While they have done something right in the shorter formats of the game, we Sri Lankans have gone on the reverse gear. The composition of England side in 2015 and now hasn’t changed much. Morgan was captain and Moeen, Root, Buttler and Woakes were all part of the side. England are at the moment playing an aggressive brand of cricket while Sri Lanka are struggling to hit find the ropes even during Power Play when fielding restrictions are on. That was the biggest insult to our cricket in a long time.

Captain Kusal Janith Perera cracked under pressure. He loves when width is on offer and when England rarely offered a chance for him to free his arms, he ran out of ideas. Had he only shown the aggression that he showed during the contracts negotiations, Sri Lanka could have bowed out with their heads held high. But this was such a one-sided affair in Cardiff and the series was handed to the hosts without a contest. 

There’s a dead rubber on Saturday at Rose Bowl followed by three ODIs. Fans are burning the midnight oil with the hope that their team will turn things around but the ‘fearless cricket’ that KJP promised us is nowhere to be seen.  

The players have made a hue and cry before going on the tour refusing to sign central contracts. Performances such as these are not giving them a voice to negotiate or bargain against the performance based contracts that have been offered.

KJP has been entrusted with a young team with the hope that he will be able to build up for the future after four years of struggle. He will have lot of backing if he helps the team win again and put them on the right track. His voices will be then heard but not when the team has been ridiculed for not being able to find the boundary during the Power Play.

 

 



Latest News

King and Campbell give West Indies century opening stand after New Zealand declare on 575

Published

on

By

Brandon King drives down the ground on his way to a quick half-century [Cricinfo]

Devon Conway brought up a double-century and pushed New Zealand into such a strong position in Mount Maunganui that they actually got carried away with it.

With their fifth-highest Test total at home – 575 for 8 declared – on their back, Jacob Duffy, Zak Foulkes and Michael Rae ran in expecting wickets to tumble. They bowled far too full and were taken for far too many and, as a result, both teams have now wasted the new ball on a green pitch.

West Indies were flying – 88 in 15 overs – with 13 fours coming in that time. That’s not including ten wides. Brandon King and Johm Campbell did not bat like they had been weighed down by 155 overs in the field or the 500-plus deficit. They focused on playing late, playing straight and were still alert enough to punish an overly enthusiastic New Zealand attack.

West Indies go into the third day still trailing by 465 but in games like these you can’t look at the scoreboard too much. You just put your head down and keep going. That’s what King and Campbell did to produce their first century partnership as an opening pair, and only the sixth in the last 11 years for West Indies. King even had time to bring up a fifty, his second in Test cricket.

Such treats were on offer on day one too, only New Zealand were at the other end now. Twenty-four hours has produced a sea change with the visitors also finding their discipline with the ball.

Justin Greaves set up Kane Williamson beautifully to dismiss one of the best batters in the world for just 31 and Roston Chase bowled 25 overs unchanged from morning drinks to cover for the loss of Kemar Roach to a hamstring injury. Shai Hope is of more pertinent concern because he spent the entire day at the hotel unwell and might not be allowed to bat at his usual No. 4 spot.

Ojay Shields and Tagenarine Chanderpaul were carrying niggles as well so when Greaves had to step away for a bit in the second session, West Indies had no subs left and had to rope in local Tauranga boy, 19-year-old Sebastian Heath, who is also registered with the Denmark cricket team, to field for them.

Given all these handicaps, the seven wickets West Indies took on Friday, the composure that followed with the bat, and the fact that they have all their run-scoring resources in hand for when the pitch flattens out were unlikely but hard-earned outcomes.

Greaves may just have heralded that with his extraction of Williamson, where he beat the outside edge several times, the batter struggling to come to terms with the pace of his own home ground. With the pressure sufficiently built, Greaves dangled the bait wide outside off stump and Williamson couldn’t resist having a go. He threw his head back – but dared not look back – when he heard the nick go through to the keeper. This was what was missing from West Indies on day one when Conway and Tom Latham cruised to 323 for 0. The ability to hold a line and length and build up to a wicket.

West Indies allowed only one man to score more than fifty runs on the second day – Rachin Ravindra making 72 not out. It was a much more appropriate outcome given the conditions. Balls on a good length continued to misbehave. Jayden Seales hitting more or less that area against Conway, batting on a double-century, had the batter recoiling as one kicked up alarmingly.

The opening batter’s wicket – for 227 – was the result of another ball nipping in and keeping low to trap him lbw. There is still help for the bowlers out there, just that their margin of error is small. When they focus outside the 6m length, the pitch speeding up has made hitting through the line easy.

Conway was tiring at the end of his 508-minute innings. West Indies’ bowlers were right there with him. Seales had roused himself to go one-on-one against Daryl Mitchell. He was emotional enough to curse so loud it was caught on the stump mic when Greaves put down a straightforward catch off Mitchell at second slip in the 127th over. He has six wickets at an average of 50.33 on this tour. He’s bowled better than that.

Day three will bring different challenges. Chase’s offbreaks were already getting grip and turn and bounce. Ajaz Patel will have a lot to say and this match remains interestingly poised, not to mention one of a kind – the first in New Zealand history to include two century opening stands in the first innings.

Brief scores: [Day 2 Stumps]
West Indies 110 for 0 in 23 overs (Brandon King 55*, John Campbell 45*) trail New Zealand 575 for 8 dec in 155 overs (Devon Conway 227, Tom Latham 137, Rachin Ravindra 72*; Jayden Seales 2-100, Anderson Phillip 2-154,  Justin Greaves 2-83) by 465 runs

[Cricinfo]

Continue Reading

Latest News

Head’s hometown century floors England after brief hopes of fightback

Published

on

By

Another day, another Ashes century for Travis Head [Cricinfo]

At times during the first half of the third day at Adelaide Oval, England threatened to keep their Ashes hopes alive, but on his home ground Travis Head’s second century of the series as an opening batter carried Australia to a 356-run lead which will surely be turned into a 3-0 Ashes retention at some point over the weekend.

For Head, who was dropped on 99 by Harry Brook at gully, it was the continuation of a magnificent run in Adelaide which has brought four of his 11 Test centuries, all of them coming in his last six innings at the ground. This one could also have gone a long way towards cementing him as an opener following his hasty promotion in Perth and the blazing hundred which followed. Overall it was Head’s fourth hundred against England and by the close his career-best 175, which also came in Adelaide, was looming into view.

Initially, at least, the wheels did not come off for England as they had threatened to do on the second day at 168 for 8. But any hopes of the type of run chase that has characterized the Bazball era appeared forlorn during a desperate final session that saw Australia pile up 152 in 35 overs as Head combined with fellow South Australian Alex Carey in an unbroken 122-run stand.

That Australia only led on 85 after the first innings was down to a resilient 106-run stand between Ben Stokes and Jofra Archer as England showed impressive character during the first session, and for a time it was far from a foregone conclusion that Australia would dominate.

Having been forced to take the second new ball to wrap up England’s innings, where Stokes threatened to play one of his game-changing innings before falling to Mitchell Starc for the 12th time in Tests, Australia then lost Jake Weatherald before lunch. He was lbw to Brydon Carse, who produced his best spell since the first day in Perth either side of the break, although Weatherald would have been saved with a review as the ball pitched outside leg.

But after Josh Tongue removed an out-of-sorts Marnus Labuschagne England were unable to apply any pressure on Head and Usman Khawaja as the pair added 86 in 113 balls. Though Khawaja and Cameron Green fell in quick succession any sense of vulnerability soon vanished as Head and Carey set about their partnership. Carey continued his outstanding match with a half-century to follow the first-innings hundred.

Brief scores:
Australia 371 and 271 for 4 (Travis Head 142*, Alex Carey 52*; Josh Tongue 2-59) lead England 286 (Ben Stokes 83, Jofra Archer 51, Scott Boland 3-45, Pat Cummins 3-69, Nathan Lyon 2-70) by 356 runs

[Cricinfo]

Continue Reading

Foreign News

Ex-Nascar driver and his family among seven killed in US plane crash

Published

on

By

[pic BBC]

A former Nascar driver and his family were among the seven people killed in a plane crash at a regional airport in North Carolina, the car-racing organisation has said.

A highway patrol spokesman said people on the ground confirmed that Greg Biffle was among those who boarded the plane.

The Cessna C550 crashed while landing at Statesville Regional Airport around 10:20 local time (15:20GMT), officials investigating the incident told reporters.

“Greg was more than a champion driver, he was a beloved member of the NASCAR community, a fierce competitor, and a friend to so many,” Nascar said in a statement where it confirmed Biffle had died along with his wife, daughter, son, and three others.

WSOC via AP This screengrab made from video provided by WSOC shows firefighting crews responding to a reported plane crash at a regional airport in Statesville, N.C., erupting in a large fire, Thursday, Dec. 18, 2025.

“His passion for racing, his integrity, and his commitment to fans and fellow competitors alike made a lasting impact on the sport,” the company added.

Beyond the racetrack, Biffle was remembered for helping in North Carolina in the aftermath of last year’s Hurricane Helene, when he used his personal helicopter to rescue stranded residents and deliver supplies.

Tributes to the former racer poured in on Thursday.

“Heartbreaking news out of Statesville,” North Carolina Governor Josh Stein posted on X. “Beyond his success as a NASCAR driver, Greg Biffle lived a life of courage and compassion and stepped up for western North Carolina after Hurricane Helene.”

Motorsport YouTuber Garrett Mitchell wrote on Facebook that Biffle and his family were on their way to spend the afternoon with him.

“Unfortunately, I can confirm Greg Biffle, his wife Cristina, daughter Emma, and son Ryder were on that plane… because they were on their way to spend the afternoon with us,” he wrote on Facebook. “We are devastated. I’m so sorry to share this.”

Statesville Airport Director John Ferguson described the aircraft as a corporate jet and said it was already engulfed in flames when he arrived on the scene.

The Cessna C550 aircraft is owned by a private company associated with Biffle, CBS, the BBC’s US partner, reported.

The jet took off around 10:06 local time and was in the air briefly before it crashed on the east end of the runway.

Authorities are investigating the cause of the crash.

Statesville Airport will remain closed until further notice as crews clear debris off the runway, Mr Ferguson told reporters.

Officials did not provide any information about deaths or people aboard the aircraft during their first media conference.

The National Transportation Safety Board, which is leading the investigation has sent in a team to investigate the fatal crash.

The Statesville Regional Airport (KSVH) is owned by the City of Statesville, which is about 45 minutes north of Charlotte.

It also provides aviation facilities for Fortune 500 companies and several Nascar racing teams.

[BBC]

Continue Reading

Trending