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Virat Kohli implored all IPL players to respect the bio-bubble protocols, saying they are privileged to play the IPL amid a pandemic.

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India and Royal Challengers Bangalore captain Virat Kohli understands "the privilege" of being able to play cricket in the middle of a raging pandemic and he wants all IPL participants to respect the tournament's bio-secure bubble.

Speaking on RCB's Youtube show 'Bold Diaries', the 31-year-old swashbuckler said he didn't exactly miss the game during the COVID-forced lockdown, which brought sporting action to a halt.

Virat Kohli during a training session for RCB. Image: Twitter/ @imVKohli

"Maybe because I was going on day and night for the last 10 years...It was a revelation for me in the sense that my focus was not solely on missing the game all the time," Kohli said.

Now that he is gearing up to be back in action with the IPL, starting 19 September in the UAE, Kohli said the BCCI's Standard Operating Procedure and the bio-bubble restrictions should be non-negotiable for all participants.

"We are all here to play cricket...The bio-bubble needs to be respected at all times for the tournament to happen eventually. We are not here to have fun and roam around and you know say that 'I want to hang out in Dubai'," Kohli asserted.

"That is not the time we are living in. Accept the phase that we are going through and understand the privilege that we have, just to be a part of the IPL. Everyone should accept that and not behave in a manner which situation doesn't require them to," he said.

Speaking about coming back to the game after five months, Kohli said it didn't take much time for him to find his groove.

"A couple of months back you couldn't imagine that you will have IPL firstly...When we had our practice session yesterday, I realised how long it has been. When I was heading to the practice session, I felt nervous," he conceded.

"I felt a bit jittery but things were okay. I didn't miss the game as much as I thought I might...just carrying on with life was also important," he said.

Kohli credited the side's support staff, led by Team Director Mike Hesson, for making everyone understand what's at stake and at the same time, not put them under pressure.

"Culture will not change for any individual preferences," he said.

On the tournament being played without in-stadia fans because of the bio-bubble restrictions, Kohli said it would be strange at first but eventually players will adapt to the feeling.

"I would not say it won't be difficult, strange. The echo of bat hitting the ball, I haven't experienced it for the last 10 years. The Ranji Trophy was the last time. But we have done this at some stage of our lives," he said referring to the domestic games which are played in near-empty venues.

"The crowd factor will definitely play a part but the instincts will kick in and it will diminish quite quickly."

Also, the instinctive celebrations on the field will also be restricted due to health-safety protocols. Kohli reiterated that everyone has no choice but to adapt.

"It has to be a balance. You cannot go berserk. We can't be like kids being sent to a park," he quipped.

The star cricketer, who will welcome his first child in January with actor wife Anushka Sharma, said he has been over the moon ever since he got to know about it.

"It is an incredible feeling. It puts things in perspective for you. It is difficult to describe how you feel," he said.
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ICC referee Javagal Srinath said batsmen should not invoke Spirit Of Cricket if they leave the crease at non-striker's end before a ball is bowled.

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Chennai Super Kings on Tuesday welcomed two of their key overseas recruits Faf du Plessis and Lungi Ngidi who arrived in the UAE from South Africa.

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If a batsman at the non-striker's end is leaving the crease before the bowler has released the ball, he is not following the spirit of the game and should not seek empathy if he is run out, reckons ICC match referee and former India pacer Javagal Srinath.

India off-spinner R Ashwin courted controversy when he ran out Jos Buttler during last year's IPL as the England batsman backed up too far. The act triggered the age-old debate on the bowler's conduct in such dismissals.
Srinath does not feel that the bowler is wrong if he runs out a batsman in this fashion.

"The bowler is focusing on the batsman. For the batsman (at the non-striker's end) to stick to his crease till the ball is released is no big deal, because he's not batting, nor is he thinking of anything else." Srinath told Ashwin on his Youtube show 'DRS With Ash'.

File photo of Javagal Srinath. AFP

Delhi Capitals head coach Ricky Ponting feels that the bowler violates the spirit of the game by this dismissa and he would not allow Ashwin to do it. Ashwin, who captained Kings XI Punjab last year, will play for Delhi Capitals in this year's IPL, scheduled to be held in UAE from 19 September.

"So the batsman shouldn't leave the crease and the bowler should focus on just bowling and the batsman he's going to bowl to. If the batsman is taking undue advantage, and if he's involved in a run out, I am fine. I am perfectly okay with that," Srinath said.

India's former pace mainstay said the rules state that the onus is on the batsman to stay inside the crease till the ball has been released.

"Don't look for any empathy. Don't invoke the spirit of the game. The spirit of the game is with the runner. He cannot move out of the crease. If he is doing it, he's not invoking the spirit of the game itself. I would believe that the batsman should stick to the crease."

The former bowler said if the runner is leaving the crease he is taking undue advantage and it can have an impact on the outcome of a close game in an unfair manner.

"Even if the batsman has inadvertently left the crease, and it happens to be the last ball of the match where there's a run-out (chance) with the batsman in by an inch, but he has already taken three foot forward before the ball has been delivered, the result is unfair.

"One of the teams will probably pay for it. I would like to see a balance here."

Srinath said he would want the batsman to stay, be more careful. Look into the arm of the bowler and let himself go only after the ball is released.

"It cannot be that he's gaining four to five feet advantage every ball. In T20, every ball matters. How many games go to the last ball?" he asked.

Ashwin has backed his decision and also found support from Delhi Capitals co-owner Parth Jindal.



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Royal Challengers Bangalore (RCB) has named Australian leg-spinner Adam Zampa as a replacement for his compatriot Kane Richardson, who pulled out of the IPL starting 19 September in the UAE.

Richardson opted out of the tournament to be with his wife for the birth of his first child.

"We're thrilled to welcome Adam Zampa in RCB colours. He replaces Kane Richardson. Let's #PlayBold Adam Zampa." RCB tweeted on Monday night.

"The RCB family is excited for Kane and his wife who are expecting the birth of their first child and respect his decision to pull out of the tournament," it added.

Zampa joins the likes of Yuzvendra Chahal, Washington Sundar, Moeen Ali and Pawan Negi, strengthening the team's spin attack.

"We are disappointed to not have Kane's skills with us this IPL, as he was certainly on top of his game," RCB team director Mike Hesson said.

"However, once we found out Kane and Nyki's baby was due during the IPL, it's an exciting time, and we were fully supportive of Kane wanting to be at the birth of their first child.

Hesson felt Zampa also gives the side "extra options if conditions suit spin as expected during the tournament."

This will be Zampa's second stint in the IPL as he earlier played for the Rising Pune Supergiant.

The 28-year-old went unsold at the auction last year while Richardson was bought for Rs 4 crore by RCB.

Both Richardson and Zampa are currently in the England as part of Australia's squad for the white-ball tour.

The two teams are slated to play three T20Is and as many ODIs between 4-16 September.

The 13th edition of IPL was shifted out of India due to the COVID-19 pandemic.



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RCB announced on Twitter that Kane Richardson and his wife are expecting the birth of their first child due to which the Australian has pulled out of the tournament.

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After 13 personnel of the Chennai Super Kings (CSK), including two players, have tested COVID-19 positive, the Board for Control of Cricket in India has decided to rework the IPL schedule.

According to a report by The Times of India, Royal Challengers Bangalore (RCB) are expected take on Mumbai Indians (MI) in the debut match of IPL 2020 that will be played on 19 September in the UAE.

File image of Royal Challengers Bangalore. Photo by: Prashant Bhoot /SPORTZPICS for BCCI

The curtain raiser match of IPL season 13 was to be played between CSK and MI.

The report quoted people tracking development saying, "It could possibly be Royal Challengers Bangalore (RCB) because in the first match, you'll need star players on the field. If MS Dhoni is missing, then it has to be Virat Kohli."

The captain of RCB is Virat Kohli, while the skipper of Mumbai Indians is Rohit Sharma.

However, there is no confirmation yet whether CSK will or will not play the debut match of the league this season, the council has to be prepared for a switch.

The remaining franchises also said that they have not heard anything from the BCCI-IPL since the time they landed in Dubai.

According to reports, one of the players of CSK who have tested positive for the deadly virus is India medium pacer Deepak Chahar. The other player is rumoured to be Ruturaj Gaikwad.

On 29 August the BCCI in their official statement uploaded on the IPL website said all 13 affected personnel of CSK as well as their closed contacts are asymptomatic and have been isolated from other team members.

It added that they are being monitored by the IPL Medical Team.

Meanwhile, CSK vice-captain Suresh Raina has returned to India and will miss the entire IPL 2020 tournament. He will not be playing the season due to "personal reasons."



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Australia fast bowler Josh Hazlewood said on Monday he was a "bit concerned" by a coronavirus outbreak at his Indian Premier League (IPL) franchise but insisted he was fully focused on the national side's white-ball tour of England.

Hazlewood is a member of the Australia squad who are set to face 50-over world champions England in three Twenty20 and three one-day internationals from 4-16 September.

Following his Australia stint, the 29-year-old Hazlewood is set to head to the United Arab Emirates, where this year's edition of the IPL is being staged because of COVID-19, and play for the Chennai Super Kings led by MS Dhoni.

But IPL officials have reported that 13 Super Kings personnel, including two players, tested positive for coronavirus during tests administered from 20-28 August and have been isolated.

"The franchise, we have a group WhatsApp, with all the information that comes through, it's, obviously, a little bit of a concern, yeah," Hazlewood told reporters in a conference call from Australia's training base in Southampton on Monday.

"You ideally would have no cases.

"They are, obviously, in quarantine now and I think they finish up over the next few days. All my focus is, obviously, on this tournament at the moment. Once that IPL becomes closer, we will think more about that."

The Australia squad is currently in a bio-secure bubble at Southampton, the venue for a T20 series that starts on Friday before they travel to Manchester for the one-dayers.

Several international sides have already toured England this season, with Hazlewood saying: "They have, obviously, had West Indies, Pakistan, and England through already, ironed out a few kinks, I suspect. We are probably spending more time with each other than we would normally, which is a good thing."

Hazlewood has played 51 Tests and 48 ODIS but appeared in just seven Twenty20 internationals, the last against India at Mohali in 2016.

Nevertheless, Hazlewood, who took 1-33 in seven overs during an intra-squad warm-up match at Southampton on Sunday as a Pat Cummins XI defeated an Aaron Finch XI, still harbours hope of breaking into the Twenty20 team ahead of next year's T20 World Cup in India.

"I am pretty aware of where I sit roughly," he said. "The team keeps winning and the guys are going well, especially the bowling unit."

England beat Australia in the semi-finals of last year's World Cup before defeating New Zealand in a thrilling final at Lord's.

They remain a formidable white-ball side as they showed when, with captain Eoin Morgan top-scoring with 66, they chased down a stiff target of 196 to beat Pakistan by five wickets in the second T20 international at Old Trafford on Sunday.

England could include the likes of Joe Root and Jos Buttler when they name their squad for the Australia series, having previously kept their Test and limited-overs squads in separate 'bubbles' this season.

"They had a good chase against Pakistan, so they know their roles and their white-ball team is as good as ever," Hazlewood said.

Asked who had stood out for him lately, Hazlewood pinpointed two batsmen: "It's probably a few of the new guys who I haven't seen a great deal of: Tommy Banton, Dawid Malan. I've seen him but he's in the runs again.

"Eoin Morgan runs a really good ship in the white-ball stuff.

"It is a tough gig...England are flying at the moment. It's always tough here but we expect to win every game we play."



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Shoaib Akhtar didn't mince words in calling out Pakistan skipper Babar Azam's insecurity as captain.

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Jasprit Bumrah recalled his hat-trick against the West Indies, on August 31, one year ago.

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Quite like England's Jofra Archer, Kuldeep Yadav, India's spin bowler with loads of variations, also has the ability to predict future events, with his second ODI hat-trick being one of them. That is what the India spinner says.

Kuldeep is the only bowler from the country to have taken two ODI hat-tricks. He took his first hat-trick against Australia at the Eden Gardens in Kolkata in 2017, and two years later, repeated the feat against the West Indies.

"For the second hat-trick, you might not believe me, but I had told my mom that day that I would take a hat-trick.

Kuldeep Yadav celebrates his second hat trick, against West Indies. Sportzpics

"A lot of times, what I said turned out true. I guess it was just a random moment when we were batting against the Windies that I just realised I would take a hat-trick.

"Things panned out just the way I had planned," Kuldeep was quoted as saying by IPL franchise Kolkata Knight Riders.

Besides his fast bowling, Archer's prophecies have also earned him some following in recent years.

Going back to his first hat-trick, Kuldeep said Mahendra Singh Dhoni helped him when he sought the veteran's advice for the third ball.

"I got my first wicket of Matthew Wade and then in the next ball, I plucked Ashton Agar. For the third ball, I asked Mahi bhai what to bowl.

"When you have so many variations, you get confused. He just let me do whatever I felt was right but suggested that I kept it to the stumps," Kuldeep said.

"I spoke to Virat bhai and asked him if I could bowl from the other end. He said once Chahal's spell was over, I could bowl from that end. I struck a very good rhythm and started bowling in the spot."

The 25-year, who has flummoxed the best of batsmen with his accuracy and variations, added, "I kept a slip and gully in place. Luckily I bowled a good ball and got the edge.

"Getting a hat-trick at Eden Garden, that too in the first year of international cricket, is a big thing and this was one of the biggest moments of my life."

Talking about his expectations from the IPL, starting 19 September in the UAE, Kuldeep said that KKR can win the title with the right combinations.

"I had a strong feeling last year that we would win. Even in 2018, we were playing great cricket and I was sure we would win the title," said the Indian bowler.

"I remember the match we lost against Sunrisers Hyderabad (in Qualifier 2). I was out of the ground because my spell was over. They were on 125 and I thought they would not go beyond 145. But Rashid Khan came into the middle and changed the game.

"We were just one step away from entering the final. It was a heart-breaking moment when we lost the match. If we can strike a good combination, we can certainly win it this year."



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Australia fast bowler Josh Hazlewood said he was a "bit concerned" by a coronavirus outbreak at his Indian Premier League franchise but insisted he was fully focused on the national side's white-ball tour of England.

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It was always going to be a challenge to hold a sporting tournament amid the coronavirus pandemic. The much-awaited Indian Premier League (IPL) 2020 was indefinitely suspended few days before the original scheduled date of 29 March.

The pandemic continues to wreak havoc and a large number of activities are still halted but few sports have resumed. It began in May with German Bundesliga restarting followed by other European football leagues. Formula 1 season is also underway along with the NBA and MLB - to name a few.

Cricket got back in July with England facing the West Indies in a three-match Test series. A bio-secure environment, with strict health protocols, was created for the series. Since then, England have also played against Ireland and Pakistan.

IPL 2020 is now slated for 19 September in UAE, with the final to be played on 10 November. The whole tournament will be played away from home due to growing number of COVID-19 cases in India. Initial hiccups were always expected. Rajasthan Royals' (RR) fielding coach Dishant Yagnik  was the first positive case among the IPL contingents. He tested positive before leaving for the UAE.

The much worrying news came on 29 August when news agency PTI reported that 13 people from Chennai Super Kings (CSK), including India and India A cricketers, have tested positive.

In a statement, BCCI said, "13 personnel have tested positive of which 2 are players. All the affected personnel as well as their close contacts are asymptomatic and have been isolated from other team members. They are being monitored by the IPL Medical Team."

The positive cases have, reportedly, not led to any imminent threat to the league but it has raised a lot questions over the health protocols. We take a look at the Standard Operating Procedure (SOP) that has been devised by BCCI to safely conduct the IPL.

What protocols have to be followed before entering IPL bubble in the UAE?

The IPL franchises were required to follow an extensive exercise before entering the 'bio-bubble' in the UAE. According to PTI, franchises were asked to access medical and travel history of all players and support staff since 1 March. All players and support staff were asked to undergo two COVID-19 PCR tests before assembling in an Indian city to depart for the Middle East. Only after testing negative on both tests were IPL contingent members allowed to travel.

On arrival in the UAE, players and support staff were again tested on day 1, 3 and 6 during their mandatory six-day quarantine. Only after testing negative on these three tests were players and officials allowed to leave their hotel facilities. The same rules apply for overseas players and support staff members.

The breach of any bio-secure environment protocols by players and team support staff will be punishable under the IPL code of conduct.

What will happen to the positive personnel?

According to the SOP, those testing positive will be quarantined. BCCI has said in its release that positive personnel and their close contacts have been isolated from other members. The COVID-19 positive players and support staff will have to undergo 14-days quarantine and clear two tests before becoming eligible for the tournament.

The same procedure was followed by RR's Yagnik, who is now in UAE after testing negative for coronavirus.

What are plans for teams' stay and food arrangements?

The SOPs requires IPL teams to stay in different hotels and team members can only start meeting each other after producing three negative tests, however, they have to follow social distancing norms and wear masks. Teams are asked to order food in individual rooms and avoid using dining rooms.

The family members of players and support staff can join them in bio-bubble after taking as many tests as everyone but they won't be allowed to travel on the team bus and can't leave the bubble.

The IPL bio-bubble compromises of hotels, training grounds, stadiums, and transport. The IPL contingent members are not allowed to get out of this bubble till the time they are participating in the T20 league.

What are the protocols related to training and matches?

The players and support staff would continue to get tested every fifth day during the tournament.

IPL 2020 would be played without fans due to the pandemic and the match venues will only have essential staff apart from players and team management. The teams have been asked to use stands as dressing rooms as it would allow them to maintain social distancing.

Teams have also been asked to install Scalene Hypercharge Corona Canon (Shycocan), a device that is supposed to neutralise 99.9 per cent of the coronavirus that might be floating in the air in closed spaces.

Medical team members, including physios and masseurs, have to wear PPE kits if they need to get in physical contact with a player (massages, injuries etc). The players and match officials have been asked to shower in the hotel after a match.

The SOPs also include ICC recommendations which mean a saliva ban to shine the ball.



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Jonty Rhodes wants senior players to lead the way and show energy in the field so the it is easier for younger players to follow in the right direction.

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Shahid Afridi said Pakistan should have played Wahab Riaz in the second T20I against England "considering his experience in the T20 format."

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According to a PTI report, Suresh Raina's stint with Chennai Super Kings seems to be jeopardy even next year as the franchise might part ways.

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Pakistan skipper Babar Azam has become the joint-fastest cricketer to complete 1,500 runs in T20Is along with India skipper Virat Kohli and Australia limited-overs captain Aaron Finch.

He achieved the feat at Old Trafford on Sunday, even though Pakistan suffered a five-wicket loss to England in the second T20I in Manchester.

Azam, who just needed 29 runs to reach the 1,500-mark, managed the feat in his 39th innings, the same as Kohli and Finch. He scored 56 runs off 44 balls and struck seven boundaries in the process.

The 25-year-old also reached the summit of batting averages in the shortest format of the game. Azam overtook Kohli's mark of 50.80 to get a T20I average of 50.90, which is the highest among any player.

Kohli, however, has played more than double the number of matches as compared to Azam. The India skipper has played 82 matches while Azam has played 40.

The match saw England skipper Eoin Morgan score a half-century as they beat Pakistan by five wickets. Pakistan scored 195 for four in the match but England won with five balls to spare.

Recently former Pakistan skipper Ramiz Raja stated that Babar Azam needs to learn to become a match-winner from India captain Virat Kohli. Raja said that the Pakistan batting line-up needs Azam to score massively and he should now earn the tag of a match-winner.



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Kolkata Knight Riders (KKR) batsman Nitish Rana said he is an admirer of former India skipper Sourav Ganguly from his childhood days even before picking up the sport.

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Saqlain Mushtaq recalled his roots as he played cricket on the streets where he first got hooked to the game.

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James Neesham was prompt in silencing a Pakistani fan who claimed that IPL gave him more money so he didn't play the Pakistan Super League.

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Editor's note: Professional sport is as much a scientific pursuit as it is a recreational wonder. What appears routinely mundane is a result of the hours spent honing the craft and deciphering the body mechanics till it becomes a monotonous muscle memory. In Firstpost Masterclass, our latest weekly series, we look at precisely these aspects that make sport a far more intriguing act than we know.

When Twenty20 cricket came into existence, people were worried about the survival of spinners. But over the years, they have not only survived but also bossed the format.

Currently, a staggering nine of the top 10 bowlers in ICC's Men's T20 rankings are spinners. While seven spinners occupy the top 10 list in Women's T20s. There are a number of intriguing aspects to spin bowling in T20s. To understand them, Firstpost caught up with New Zealand spinner Ish Sodhi in our latest episode of Firstpost Masterclass.

In his seven-year career, Sodhi has so far had reasonable success and impressive numbers in T20s with 170 wickets from 152 matches at an average of 24.30, a strike rate of 18.6 and economy rate of 7.83.

Ish Sodhi in action in 2019 IPL. Sportzpics

He's had varied experience playing in some of the biggest leagues like the IPL, Caribbean Premier League and Big Bash League. And as he gets set to don a new hat, that of spin consultant and operations executive at Rajasthan Royals this season, we try to pick his brain on the art of spin bowling in T20s.

How did you start off with cricket?

When I was nine, we had been in New Zealand for 5 years and my cousins were coming to NZ because their family wanted to settle here as well. They came and stayed with us and I had never really known what cricket was, which is kind of really weird because I come from a really strong Indian Punjabi background. So it's kind of bizarre that I wasn't exposed to it earlier. My cousin came over from Punjab and he said he really wanted to play cricket and join a cricket club and he couldn't speak English very well. And, fortunately, I could speak Punjabi and English.

So I joined this cricket club with him as his translator. All things happen for a reason because I would have never thought or decided on joining cricket unless my mum asked me to be a translator. Man! I am really glad that happened because it's such a wonderful game to be part of. It's not until you are locked down for six months and don't have a chance to play cricket or have a chance to be in a team environment that you realise how great this game is. I look back at that moment when I joined that cricket club, at the time I didn't realise it, but it was going to be the start of a really special journey for me.

How did you take up leg-spin?

I was 12 when I went to a cricket academy where Dipak Patel was the head coach. And he just asked one day, 'Is there anyone here who is a spin bowler'? I just wanted to impress him because I knew that he was a spin bowler so I put my hand up. Had never bowled spin in my life. And he put me in a net by myself and said, right, show me what you've got. And naturally, I just bowled leg-spin. And from that day I fell in love with it and decided to research guys like Shane Warne and then I found Anil Kumble. Fortunately, I grew up in an era where we had Youtube so could learn a lot from them.

We will see you in a new role and interesting role as spin bowling consultant and operations executive for Rajasthan Royals this season. What does your role involve?

It's a brand new role that's been created. Exactly what it entails will probably become apparent once the IPL starts but initially the main role that I have is as a spin bowling consultant. I worked a lot especially in the second year I played for RR. I played only two games in the season but I worked a lot with the young spinners off the park trying to impart some of my experience and knowledge. Although I am only 27, still quite a young spinner, I've been playing T20 cricket since 2012-13, so it's quite a bit of time and hopefully, some of the experience that I have passed on to the younger spinners during that campaign I suppose may have helped them in some way or another. And RR saw it fit that there was an opportunity for me to take on the role if I wasn't picked up in the auction. And so it was something that I took on and something that I will really enjoy doing.

When T20s came into existence, people were worried about the survival of spinners but they have bossed the T20s. What's the reason spinners have had so much success in the format?

I listen to quite a few old leg spinners from the 1990s and 2000s, that's kind of when I was growing up. The guys like Shane Warne, Stuart MacGill, Anil Kumble, those were probably three best spinners of that era. The Australian leg spinners used to say the hardest thing in Test cricket was trying to make the batsman play a shot. But every time they did make them play a shot there was a chance of getting a wicket. I think if you use that same skill in T20 cricket, the batsman is playing a shot every ball so if you are bowling your best deliveries as a leg spinner, spinning the ball hard, spinning it both ways, and if the batsman is trying to take you on then the margin for error can be a lot higher, that is a big reason why spinners have had great success in T20 cricket. Because you have to attack all the time and if the spinner is accurate enough and the pitch is offering spin, it's actually quite difficult to do.

"I listen to quite a few old leg spinners from the 90s and 2000s, that's kind of when I was growing up. The guys like Shane Warne, Stuart MacGill, Anil Kumble, those were probably three best spinners of that era." Sportzpics

What qualities and mindset do a good spin bowler need in T20s?

It comes down to preparation, knowing your opponent, pitch conditions but the main thing is you have to have a huge amount of resilience. If I could go back in a time machine and tell a 17-year-old of myself it would be: In T20 cricket always be resilient, never give up. If you get hit for a six, you can still get a wicket and make a contribution to your team. Even guys like Imran Tahir who is one of the greatest T20 bowlers of all time still playing at 41-42 and still doing really well, he always says to us and the young leg spinners: Never give up, always be resilient, if the batsman hits you for a six, you can get him out next ball. And that's a really strong quality to have as any bowler but more so as a spinner because you can't bowl a bouncer, you can't use intimidation in that regard, so you have to use it in a different way.

Is a holding role more effective than an attacking one?

Personally, I like the idea of getting as many wickets as possible before the last 5-6 overs. If you have a team four, five or maybe six down before 16 overs, in those last four overs, your seam bowlers are bowling to No 7, 8, 9 who haven't been in for a long time. And maybe then they can control the death a little bit better than, for example, if you are bowling to a batsman who is 60 not out off 40 deliveries and then they can start to accelerate as they are seeing the pitch well.

But in recent times, it's probably become apparent that dot balls get wickets as well. So, one type of bowler is the one looking to be aggressive and willing to go for runs to get wickets. And another type is the one who bowls 5-6 runs an over and through that pressure, the team gets wickets at the other end or they might get wickets because of that pressure as well. Both of those two types of roles: holding and attacking are still trying to achieve the same thing, which is to get wickets, but it's just how many runs are you willing to gamble to get those wickets. That comes down to the individual.

Does the mindset - whether to attack or defend - vary with pitches?

Definitely. I was having this conversation earlier today with a friend. We play T20 cricket in New Zealand most of the time and we were talking about the difference between red-ball cricket and T20s and we definitely find that the length you have to bowl is different in places like NZ or the UK, or the pace is different than you perhaps might bowl in India or in the Caribbean because the pitches allow for little bit more spin at times and the wickets are slower.

Definitely in NZ, bowling back of a length is important because you probably won't get too much spin out of the wicket. So you have to be really smart with your lengths and that perhaps isn't quite as an attacking role as what you would play in the subcontinent or the Caribbean because you are trying to hit the stumps most of the time and use the spin. It definitely does vary.

How important should be the emphasis on spinning the ball?

Again, I was having that conversation today as well, it's funny you are asking these questions. It's important. Even when you are trying to bowl that back of a length, it's important that you spin the ball hard into the surface. That's something that guys like Santner, Sunil Narine, these finger spinners are really good at because they can fire the ball into a hard length with revs on the ball and that's why they are so effective. You've got to put revs on the ball unless you've got incredible control of your length, otherwise putting revs on the ball gives you a little bit more margin for error.

Ish Sodhi giving it a rip in the nets. AFP

You spoke about bowling in different countries, can you delve into the key to spin bowling in England, New Zealand or Australia where the ball doesn't turn much?

Through my experiences having played a lot with Santner who has a really great understanding of spin bowling, we generally find that in New Zealand, Australia and perhaps England as well, overspin is the key. To get right over the ball, that's generally when you can get most spin out of the surfaces. I don't know if it's because they are hard or maybe they are quite bouncy so that you can use that bounce from the overspin.

But we've always found that when you bowl overspin, you can get something out of the wicket. If you bowl sidespin it generally goes straight. But then the ironic thing is we sometimes go to India and play and you have to be adaptable and bowl sidespin because sometimes on those wickets, sidespin turns a little bit more. If you look at guys like Ravi Jadeja, he is incredible in Test cricket in India because he bowls fast side-spinners sometimes 95-96 kmph, so while we don't want to go away from the strengths, we want to learn to be able to do both. But I guess because we have grown up in NZ, bowling overspin has been the key for us to get something out of the surface.

So, where have you enjoyed bowling the most in T20s?

There are two places. One has definitely got to be India. The atmosphere is just really enjoyable and obviously sometimes the wickets can suit spin bowling which is nice. Growing up in NZ if you get a wicket that spins it's really enjoyable to bowl on. The other one is Australia which is really good because the boundaries are really big so at times you've got a little bit more margin for error to flight the ball slightly more and be a bit more aggressive. But I do love playing in NZ as well because it's such a big challenge. We play at Eden Park sometimes and the boundary over your head is 45 metres so you have to be really conscious every ball. But if you do a really good job and contribute to your team, it's really satisfying.

What's an ideal delivery in T20 cricket?

Five-metre length. If you can nail a five-metre length, spin the ball either way off the off stump, that's the ideal way to go about it. That's kind of what I will aspire to do now moving forward and just try to keep the stumps in play.

How does the perfect length to bowl in T20s change in comparison to Tests and ODIs?

In T20 cricket if you look now, batsmen see the ball full. I learnt the concept in England because the coaches used to call it a step hit length. If the batsman can step and hit the ball over your head or over the leg side then it’s generally a little bit too full. You want to be slightly back so if they are trying to step hit you there's a chance the ball might spin and they might not be close enough to it and may get a top edge or something like that. In T20 cricket, a back foot defence might be a really good length that you are bowling, but in Test cricket, you want to encourage the batsman to drive just to be able to bring some dismissals in play. That's the main difference, you just don't want to be too full in T20 cricket. Now-a-days, if you overpitch, it feels like 8 out of 10 deliveries are going for six. It's really important to be conscious of your length, bring it back but still spin it really really hard.

In the ODIs, because you are trying to be slightly more aggressive, you can vary your lengths a little bit more. If you are going for 7 an over, that's not a biggie, it's not a big deal if you are getting 2 or 3 wickets. One of the best exploiters of 50-over cricket at the moment is Adil Rashid. England go out there and try to score 320-330 every time and he just tries to get wickets through the middle for his team and does a phenomenal job. And sometimes he might get 3/70 and he's played the best match-winning role. In early 2000s, it was normal for spinners to go for 35-40 runs in their 10-over spell, get one wicket and it might look good but it's not going to make as much of an impact as perhaps 3/70 will make for a team now-a-days.

I was having a discussion with my CPL teammate Sohail Tanvir about the four fielders outside the ring and he said that back in the day, batsmen used to look to see off the ball in the first 10 overs, then consolidate from 10-40 overs and look to accelerate in the last 10. Whereas now, where there are just four fielders out between 10-40 overs, it seems to be the time when the batsmen are trying to get really aggressive and capitalise on the extra fielder being up in the ring.

That's a really unique skill for a bowler to be able to exploit because the batsmen have slightly more advantage with the extra fielder in and they are always going to come after you. As a spinner, in the middle phase, I am willing to go at 6.7 or 7 an over as long as I am getting 2-3 wickets so that the batsman isn't on 70 not-out in the last 10 overs. The death bowlers in my team have new batsmen to bowl to and that's a really important role for a spinner to play for the team at the moment.

Since you are tall, naturally you like to use that advantage and bowl a bit back, isn't it?

Definitely. Especially because if I go too full, it's coming from such a height that it does go too full and sometimes can be a bit loopy, so I have to bowl hard into the surface as opposed to guys who can bowl flat and skiddy. It's important for me, especially in conditions where it’s not suiting spin bowlers, to be slightly back of a length. And that is something which I and Santner speak about quite a lot.

You spoke about Adil Rashid in ODIs. Who according to you is the best spinner in T20s?

Oh, it's got to be Rashid Khan, isn't it? Khan, Imran Tahir, those two are phenomenal. I and Fawad Ahmed call Imran Tahir the president and Rashid Khan Prime Minister... That's probably because of the age difference. But looking at the T20 cricket in the world, I love watching them bowl the most. I haven't seen their stats but I am sure they will be right up there with the best in the world.

What makes Tahir and Rashid so successful in this format?

They are two very different bowlers. Rashid can bowl 90 to a 100 kmph and spin the ball both the ways all out of the back of his hand which is very difficult to pick and he's always got the stumps in play. Very accurate, same as Imran Tahir. Immy just bowls phenomenal changes of pace. He bowls really quick ones out of the front of the hand, bowls the odd slower ones, and always seems to drop it on a really good length and has one of the biggest googlies in the world. So two completely different bowlers and both are very successful. For young kids watching these guys do it differently but still having a similar kind of success is a cool thing.

"Rashid Khan and Imran Tahir are two very different bowlers. Rashid can bowl 90 to a 100 kmph and spin the ball both the ways all out of the back of his hand which is very difficult to pick and he's always got the stumps in play. Very accurate, same as Imran Tahir. Immy just bowls phenomenal changes of pace." Sportzpics

 

How do you build a T20 over?

In the past, the batsmen probably wanted to get a boundary off the first ball or second ball of the over to try and put pressure on you. So there has to be a little bit of respect of that fact if you are playing on a good surface, and perhaps getting him off the strike for one isn't the worst option. Then, you might look to attack them in the middle of the over and hopefully they are in a mode of trying to rotate the strike, you might get a dot ball or a wicket. And say you haven't got a wicket and bowled five balls for six runs then the last ball of the over you don't want to gamble and try to get a wicket and get hit for a boundary. You want to maybe get a dot ball or even a single to pass the ball onto the next bowler and hopefully keep the pressure on for them to try and get a wicket.

If you have been hit for three sixes in a row, how do you recover?

There've definitely been times in my career when I've been hit for three sixes in a row (smiles). And definitely stood at the top of my mark and thought, ‘oh, what if I get hit for a fourth one’? But it's important to stand at the top of your mark after that's happened, forget that it's happened and try to focus on the next delivery. It's really important to have that clarity because especially in T20 cricket you could get hit for three sixes and in the next over you could get a wicket or next ball you can get a wicket and help change the momentum of the game for your team.

You always have to remember that you are always in the game. Because there is a lot of time in T20 cricket now, back in the day we used to say it's a really quick game but you can come back from an over that goes for runs. However, it's important as well that if your first two or three balls go for 12 or 13, then last 3 balls you are really conscious that the over only ends up going for 17. That's actually a win because the last three balls have only gone for 3-4 runs as supposed to if you let it get ahead of you and the next three balls go for another 12 runs and it's a big over of 24 and now the momentum is with the batting side.

Suppose the over doesn't end well and you are hit for another two boundaries or sixes. How do you recover in the next over if your captain does hand you the ball again?

Generally, if the captain hands you the ball again especially being an aggressive leg-spin bowler, he wants a wicket from you. He wants you to get a wicket because the batsman might be on 60 not out, if you get him out then brilliant because it might bring the new batsman in and he goes for a few dot balls. So you've got to remember that you're always in the game and it's important to remember that you are playing a team game. It sometimes gets so easy to get caught up in your own personal game and role. But you are playing a role that's eventually going to contribute to a result for your team. And it's really important to keep that in mind. That helps you construct your next over a lot better than if you are just worried about getting hit for more runs.

How much thinking goes into outclassing a batsman as compared to waiting for them to make a mistake?

Most of the batsmen that we play against in T20 cricket are very very high quality and world-class. They've got shots all over the ground. So, potentially waiting for them to make a mistake asking them tough questions is probably the best option. As long as they are trying to hit you off the best delivery that can you bowl, it's a really good option. Before the match, you might sit down and look at some video and figure out what the right line and length is to bowl to a certain batsman but other than that if you commit to that plan and they still get you for runs, you can still walk away and be pretty happy with your performance.

As a bowler, what kind of dismissal you are looking for in T20s?

It depends on where I am playing. If it's a low slow wicket then I am always looking for an LBW or bowled and if it's a place like NZ, then perhaps I am looking to bowl a length where they try to hit me for a six and the ball goes straight up and they get caught. Or I might be trying to bowl at the wide lines so that they can't reach it and might try to go across the line and it goes straight up. It does change but definitely in the subcontinent on the slower wickets, LBW and bowled hitting the top of the stumps.

How important is using the crease for a bowler in T20s?

It's probably something I would like to do more of. In red-ball cricket, we do it quite a lot because we've got a lot of time to think about the way we are trying to dismiss the batsman, using different types of variations. But a guy like Mitchell Santener does it really well. I've seen Imran Tahir do it really well. Ravi Jadeja does it phenomenally well. Perhaps the more people that I've seen do it are finger spinners, I don't know if that's because they don't have a Doosra or some of them don't have the Carrom ball so they might need other variations to help them be effective. Yeah, but it's definitely something I would like to do more of.

"It's important for me especially in conditions where it’s not suiting spin bowlers to be slightly back of a length. And that is something which I and Santner speak about quite a lot." Sportzpics

How does it help? Can you delve deep into use of the crease?

If you are tight to the stumps and bowl the ball straight down the line, it will spin sharply so the batsman might miss the ball by a considerable margin. If it's turning so much and I decide to come from wide on the crease, and my angle comes in and then it turns the same amount, it doesn't look like it's turning as sharply so you might be able to get the edge because the angle is so much smaller as opposed to bowling straight down the line of the stumps and then it might spin too much that the batsman might miss the ball.  It's a nice delivery but the batsman is not out. So you might want to change the angle and make it such that the batsman's angle or the bat is exposed.

What's the key to bowling in Powerplay?

I haven't done a lot of powerplay bowling in my career. Most of the bowling I've done is after six overs. But the best powerplay bowlers that I've seen bowl, they bowl wicket to wicket, keep the stumps in play and ensure that they get hit on just one side of the wicket. So if they might have their fielders on the leg side they ensure that they don't give the batsmen much room or they might get their fielders on the off side and ensure that they don't give the batsmen any straight deliveries so that they can hit it over to the leg side.

The best leg spinner I've seen in the Powerplay is Samuel Badree. He was the best at doing it and was wicket to wicket, quite a skiddy bowler. I don't think he tried to spin the ball away too much. Most of the deliveries to a right-hand batsman were either big sliders out of the front of the hand hitting middle and leg stump or a googly that was pitching on middle and off stump and hitting the middle and leg stump. He was the best at exploiting that powerplay as a leg spinner. So yeah, stumps in play, wicket to wicket, back of a length.

Do you find the newer ball harder to bowl with or easier?

I really enjoyed bowling with the new ball. Definitely having the two fielders outside the ring as opposed to five was always going to pose a challenge. But there are a couple of times I did it, it was because the pitch was offering a little bit of spin and we used it as an aggressive option. I really enjoy being that aggressive bowler and the conditions were in my favour. I assume on a wicket that's a really good one (for batting), it definitely comes down to being a lot more courageous and defensive with your length. But it is definitely different if the wicket is offering something. Then you just bowl your best delivery, spin the ball both ways and try to get wickets - LBW and bowled.

What's the perfect pace to bowl in T20s?

It depends on the wicket. But if look at guys like Rashid Khan, he bowls at 90 to 100 kmph and if I try to do that, then perhaps I would go away from my own strengths. But when you look at guys like Yuzvendra Chahal, he has a very successful T20 record and sometimes bowls at 78-79 kmph. So, it depends on the conditions and it depends on you and what makes you the best you can bowl. But it's working it out on the day. For example, Santner sometimes speaks about the fact that the pitch is spinning a little bit when it's slower so I am going to change my pace a little bit but if it's spinning when I am quick then I will just keep bowling quick. And that's something you work out on the day as well.

"Even when you are trying to bowl that back of a length, it's important that you spin the ball hard into the surface. That's something that guys like Santner, Sunil Narine, these finger spinners are really good at because they can fire the ball into a hard length with revs on the ball and that's why they are so effective. " Sportzpics

How difficult is it to spin the ball with pace?

That's probably the thing that sets aside Rashid Khan from most bowlers. The fact that he can still spin the ball both ways at that 90-100 kmph pace and still get a degree of overspin. It is difficult, if it wasn't then you would have five or six Rashid Khan's in the world but there's only one. Sandeep Lamichhane also does it really well. I know Shreyas sometimes bowls 90kmph googlies in the IPL which is really difficult to do. It's definitely difficult but it can be done. It takes time to work on that and have the confidence to be able to do it under pressure. That is the thing that sets aside very high-quality spin bowlers from perhaps not so high-quality spinners.

"Rashid Khan is just the king of deception, isn't he? He's got great control of his variations so it might help him a lot. Whatever he does is working really well so it definitely helps him. " Sportzpics

How much of a role does the pitch play in deciding the speed to bowl through the air?

If it's a really flat pitch, then you've to change the pace. You can't become a one-pace bowler and get hit. If the pitch is spinning, most of the time you want to be slightly quicker. Try to make the batsman make a decision when it’s spinning at pace because it's often the hardest thing to do. But if it's really flat and you keep bowling that quick pace if it's not spinning that much then guys like Andre Russell would just eat you up.

How often should one use variations in T20s?

When I was younger, Brendon McCullum was my captain in ODI and Test cricket. And he gave me a piece of advice that probably works in T20 cricket as well. He said, if it's spinning, you don't need to use your variations as much but if it's not spinning, then perhaps you need to use your variations to try and make the batsman do something different. But a guy like Imran Tahir might bowl two three or four variations an over whereas someone like Rashid Khan might bowl a leg spinner and a googly and that's it. It varies for different bowlers but it is true if it's spinning a lot, you don't need to bowl a lot of variations but if it's not then probably you do.

Why are wrist spinners so successful in T20s?

Number one is because they spin the ball both ways. And it is because the batsmen are trying to play a shot every ball and they've got the opportunity to spin the ball away from both right and left-hand batsmen. So when you are trying to play a slog sweep and the ball is spinning away from you, that's a tough option and that's probably why they get a lot of wickets through that middle-overs phase.

How do you bowl to Russell or ABD given that they have this habit of hitting good balls for fours?

I suppose to guys like that, you have to be very very conscious of their strengths but then you also have to be really conscious of your own strengths and try to implement them as much as you can. And just like you said, sometimes they hit really good balls for a four, if they do that, you go back to the top of your mark and something tells you that you might have to do something different. But that's most of the time they are expecting you to do. So, if they do hit a really good ball for a four or six off your bowling, if you are in the best mindset, then you probably go and try to do it again. They might hit it for four or six the second time, they might do it a third time but maybe on the fourth one, you might get a wicket. The better the batsman, the simpler you have to keep it.

Some leggies switch to using their wrong’un as a stock ball against left-handers. Is that something you've considered?

Definitely. Often these days, left-handers are always expecting a googly from you early. I have bowled a lot of googlies to the lefties early on in my spells because I personally like the ball going away from the bat. That's my best attacking and defensive option. But it's important to have a mix of both because sometimes if you bowl you googly to lefties then the stumps aren't in play. Perhaps bowling your leg spinner on off stump might bring your stumps in play which can get you LBWs and bowleds. So it's important to use both. That's definitely something that Rashid Khan does really well. Sometimes the batsman goes for a cut shot with Rashid Khan, it spins back at him at pace, and the stumps come out of the ground. I love watching that any day.

What's your favourite form of dismissal in T20s?

Ah, it's going to be LBW and bowled. Perhaps you've done the batsman off the pitch, so you get that wicket. Often stumped is quite good as well when they charge down the wicket and it spins past them quite a lot, that's quite nice. Any wicket is good, man. But those three are probably the best dismissals.

Why do most spinners who are effective in T20 cricket don't replicate their success in Test cricket?

It does require different skills. It requires a huge amount of patience and accuracy. Look at guys like Nathan Lyon, Yasir Shah, these guys are phenomenal Test bowlers. They are really accurate and nail their stock delivery over and over again. If you play T20 cricket, over the years, if you just bowl the stock ball and nothing else then perhaps you might not be as successful as you can be. There has got to be a huge amount of admiration for all bowlers, batsmen and spinners that can be really successful in all three formats because now a days more than ever, with the change of field during fielding restrictions in ODI cricket, it does change the game a lot. And it varies a lot from format to format. Some players are very good at T20 cricket, some at Test cricket, some might be very skilful in one-day cricket but if you find guys that are really good at all three then it takes a lot of work and understanding of the game. Think of guys like Jadejas, Ashwins, your Yasir Shahs and all these great bowlers. There's a huge amount of respect for them to be able to do what they do.

"If I could go back in a time machine and tell a 17-year-old of myself it would be: In T20 cricket always be resilient, never give up, if you get hit for a six, you can still get a wicket and make a contribution to your team. " AFP

How much research goes into what variation is used against what batsman vs how much is instinct?

We are really fortunate in this era to have a lot of video footage so you might be able to discover trends with certain batsmen over time and then the match-ups can become a little bit clearer. But then when you are out on the field and you sense the batsman is coming after you feel like you might have to bowl a variation then it comes down to instinct. There has to be a mix of both, you can't just be a robot and kind of think of what you are going to do to someone because they might come at you and completely change your plan and that's definitely happened to me in the past like we spoke about earlier with AB de Villiers. The pitch was spinning and I felt like I was going to try and make him keep playing a drive down the ground or something but because it was spinning so prodigiously, he started sweeping and reverse sweeping and then my plans went out of the window so perhaps I felt like I had to bowl a little bit fuller because maybe I should get under the bat while he is sweeping and that's where instinct came into it. But also I probably bought into what he was trying to do to me and that's what makes great players great.

What's your favourite wicket so far in T20s?

It's got to be Virat Kohli. One of the best players of our generation. If you can get him out, it goes a long way in contributing to your team. The time that I got him out, in the T20 World Cup, was a really satisfying wicket for me because that meant that we had them five down. And we could go into the death phase bowling more to the tail-enders than we had to bowl to him.

Ish Sodhi (C) celebrating the wicket of Virat Kohli in 2016 World T20. AFP

It was just my first delivery. I tried to bowl the biggest leg spinner I could. I bowled it outside the off stump, he went for a cover drive and nicked it (to the keeper). It doesn't always happen like that because he could have easily missed that ball but thankfully he nicked it first up.

Now-a-days bowlers look to bowl quicker through the air. Is there still a place for traditional giving-it-air spin bowling?

Yeah definitely. Chahal does it and that's what makes him so effective because he's got great control of his pace and he can bowl slow, drift it and spin it. He might bowl a slow and wide one. Santner does the same, sometimes he bowls balls at 75 kmph wide so that the batsman can’t get any pace on the delivery. Kuldeep Yadav does it really well. There's definitely a place for change of pace, especially on good wickets. If you look at Chahal, he’s bowled most of his career at Bangalore and for the majority of his career, it's always been a very batsman-friendly wicket. And he always had the courage to toss the ball up continuously and get lots of wickets and be a really successful bowler for that RCB team. It definitely shows there is a lot of place for it especially if you can do it as well as he does.

You spoke about Chinnaswamy stadium and earlier you had spoken about Eden Park stadium, so how much does the size of the ground play into a bowler's mind before a match?

It's definitely something you have to consider. Because batsmen might play slightly differently on a very small ground than on a big ground so you might take that into consideration in your preparation. The first few times you play on a small ground it's a daunting task but once you have the experience and you've played on it a quite a few times and you may have had a bit of success on it, you realise how to bowl on certain grounds then it becomes a little bit easier and it just something that you have to factor into your preparation.

Yuzvendra Chahal flighting it for RCB. Sportzpics

 

What next for Ish Sodhi now? How are you looking at the next five years?

In five years’ time I will be 32, so still a reasonably young leg spinner when it comes down to some of the guys I am playing in this Caribbean Premier League. Fawad Ahmed is here, he's about 39-40, I've got Imran Tahir who is 42 and then you've got Pravin Tambe who's come over here who is actually 48 years old. Considering that being 27 years old and having played as much as I have, I’m still a very young leg spinner compared to a lot of the guys here.

I would like to keep continuing to grow, improve. I would love to continue to play as much as I can for NZ and contribute to some wins. The next goal for me is the 2023 World Cup in India. I would love to be able to play a role for NZ and there's obviously a few T20 World Cups leading into that. These are definitely the things that I would target.

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Chennai Super Kings (CSK) all-rounder Shane Watson posted a message for teammate Suresh Raina on Instagram after Raina left UAE to return to India. The cricketer will be unavailable for the remainder of the Indian Premier League (IPL) 2020.

Watson shared his video message with a caption, "Thinking of you Suresh." He went on to add that Raina and his family are in his thoughts and that he will be dearly missed in the team.

File image of Suresh Raina (L) and Shane Watson. Sportzpics

"You have always been the heartbeat of the team so we will be doing everything we can to make you proud," Watson wrote.

In the video message, Watson called Raina star of the IPL.

"You are such a star of IPL. But, most importantly, is your well-being and hope you are going okay,” the former Australia all-rounder added.

Apart from wishing his teammate, Watson also addressed the coronavirus cases that have struck the CSK camp. He said that it has been an interesting time to be in lockdown for an extra seven days but that is the ever-changing world everyone is living in.

He added that they will have to do possibly everything they can to stay safe and limit the spread of COVID-19 throughout the IPL tournament, “because it is the best T20 tournament in the world.”

“All players, all fans, want it to go ahead. I’ll do whatever we have to do to make sure that IPL goes ahead,” Watson said.

Watson vowed he will do his best to make IPL 2020 a success and bring back the smile on the faces of fans and players.

As per a statement from KS Viswanathan, the CEO of the franchise, Raina will not play the league this season due to personal reasons.

Last week, multiple members of CSK contingent tested positive for COVID-19, forcing the IPL franchise to extend its quarantine period in Dubai. The development has forced the Mahendra Singh Dhoni-led squad to be in quarantine till 1 September.

The 13th edition of IPL will be played in the United Arab Emirates (UAE) across three venues, Abu Dhabi, Dubai and Sharjah. The tournament will commence on 19 September.



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CPL 2020: Nicholas Pooran scored 100 not out off just 45 balls as Guyana Amazon Warriors defeated St Kitts and Nevis Patriots by seven wickets.

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Star batsman AB de Villiers had a net with Royal Challengers Bangalore (RCB) in Dubai ahead of the 13th season of Indian Premier League.

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Chennai Super Kings owner N Srinivasan has said that Suresh Raina's exit will not impact the team's campaign in IPL 2020, adding that the left-handed batsman will 'certainly realise what he is missing'.

"The season has not begun yet and Raina will certainly realise what he is missing and certainly all the money he is going to lose," said CSK's boss in an interview to Outlook.

"My thinking is that if you are reluctant or not happy, go back. I don't force anyone to do anything ... sometimes success gets into your head," Srinivasan added.

Raina had returned to India on 29 August from UAE, citing personal reasons. CSK, on twitter, had also announced that he will miss the whole tournament and that the franchise was with Raina 'during this time'. However, the reasons have not been revealed either by franchise or the cricketer himself so far.


It was speculated earlier that Raina may have left for India after learning about the murder of his uncle in Pathankot in Punjab. Now, after Srinivasan's statements, a different story seems to be coming out.

Raina was retained in 2018 by CSK for Rs 11 crore and has been with the team as vice-captain since the inaugural edition of the tournament in 2008, barring two years (2016 and 2017) due to suspension of the franchise following the spot-fixing scandal.

Not to forget, CSK are already feeling the heat in UAE with 13 members in their contingent testing positive for COVID-19, including two players. With Raina heading back, the team has to revamp their plans quickly before the tournament kicks off.

Srinivasan, however, believes there are able replacements in the team for Raina, one of them being Ruturaj Gaikwad. He said, "He is an outstanding batsman and will get a chance now. Ruturaj can become the star of the show, who knows?"

The former BCCI president also said that players testing positive is not a huge concern for the team as captain MS Dhoni is in control of the situation.



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The sticky wicket was a "great challenge" but South African star AB de Villiers left the ground after his first net session in ages a satisfied man, having got what he had wanted ahead of the IPL.

The 36-year-old, who turns out for Royal Challengers Bangalore in the T20 league, resumed training after a five-month long coronavirus-induced break for the sport and said the first sessions were pretty good as he stuck to the basics.

File image of AB de Villiers. Sportzpics

File image of AB de Villiers. Sportzpics

"It was very good, enjoyable to be out there, the wicket was a bit sticky so it was a great challenge, actually if I could have it my way, I would have wanted my first net session to go like this only after a long time," De Villiers said in a video posted on RCB's official Twitter handle.

The IPL will be held across three venues in the UAE from 19 September to 10 November.

"I kept my basics in place, watched the ball carefully, I played some nice shots in the end and it was enjoyable," added de Villiers, who also donned the keeping gloves during the session.

De Villiers was in quarantine for six days after arriving in the UAE and hit the nets after clearing three COVID-19 tests. The session was also attended by Umesh Yadav, Parthiv Patel and Gurkeerat Singh among others.

The team had hit the nets for the first time on Saturday after successfully ending its quarantine period.

Strength and conditioning coach Shanker Basu said: "There are three things we have to be mindful. One the players are coming after a long time and they will be ready to jump and go gung ho and it is our job to pull them back a little.

"Number two, there is oppressive heat and that can be a telling thing, most importantly we need to find the right balance in the gym. From now onwards, it should just aid the skill part."

RCB captain Virat Kohli, South African pace legend Dale Steyn, the spin trio of Yuzvendra Chahal, Washington Sundar and Shahbaz Nadeem were among the players who had attended the first net session.

"(It went) much better than expected, to be honest. I was pretty scared. I hadn't picked up a bat for five months, but yeah it came out better than I thought, to be honest," Kohli had said.

The 13th IPL was moved out of India due to the rising COVID-19 cases in the country.

RCB have never won the IPL though they have finished runners-up thrice, most recently in 2016.



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CEO KS Viswanathan had said that Suresh Raina returned to India due to "personal reasons" but a report has claimed that he was unhappy with the hotel room he was given.

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Manchester: England captain Eoin Morgan led from the front as the hosts beat Pakistan by five wickets to win the second Twenty20 international at Old Trafford on Sunday.

Morgan came in on a hat-trick after leg-spinner Shadab Khan had reduced the home side, who were chasing a stiff victory target of 196, to 66-2.

But the Irishman and fellow left-hander Dawid Malan (54 not out) took the game away from tourists with a third-wicket stand of 112.

Victory, achieved with five balls to spare, saw the 50-over world champions go 1-0 up in a three-match series following Friday's rain-marred no result in Manchester.

The travelling side's cause was not helped when experienced left-arm quick Mohammad Amir limped off after bowling just two overs with what appeared to be a hamstring injury.

England skipper Eoin Morgan struck a 33-ball 66, sharing a 112-run stand with Dawid Malan. AP

Jonny Bairstow and Tom Banton made a sound start to England's chase.

But a partnership of 66 ended when Bairstow, on 44, miscued a sweep off leg-spinner Shadab Khan to short fine leg.

Next ball, with the batsmen having crossed, Banton — fresh from making 71, his maiden fifty at this level, was lbw for 20 after missing a sweep.

Morgan survived the hat-trick delivery but could have been lbw for a second-ball duck to Shadab, who finished with fine figures of 3-34 from his maximum four overs.

But a tight umpire's call verdict following Martin Saggers' original not out decision, went in the batsman's favour.

Morgan cut Iftikhar Ahmed over long-off for an audacious six before late-cutting the spinner for four.

His fourth six, off left-arm fast bowler Shaheen Afridi, saw Morgan to a 27-ball fifty that also included three fours.

By the time he holed out off paceman Haris Rauf, England needed under a run-a-ball to win.

Malan might have missed this match had not England been fielding separate red and white-ball squads in a coronavirus-affected season, with batsmen such as Test captain Joe Root and Jos Buttler omitted from this series.

But his 35-ball half-century was his seventh score of fifty or more in just 12 Twenty20 internationals and Malan finished the match when he cut Afridi for four.

Earlier, Pakistan made 195-4 featuring fine fifties from veteran batsman Mohammad Hafeez (69) and skipper Babar Azam (56).

Leg-spinner Adil Rashid took 2-32 from his maximum four overs but the rest of England's attack lacked penetration, with seamer Tom Curran conceding 46 runs ± including 23 off one over.

Babar, the world's top-ranked Twenty20 batsman, pulled the first ball of the match, from fast bowler Saqib Mahmood, for four.

He went to fifty with a superb extra-cover drive off Rashid — his seventh four in 37 balls.

But Rashid had his revenge when Babar miscued a pull to deep midwicket.

Hafeez kept the runs coming, with a scooped four off Mahmood seeing him to a 26-ball fifty before the 39-year-old was dismissed off the penultimate ball of the innings.

This series, which in common with all international cricket in England this season is being played behind closed doors due to COVID-19, concludes at Old Trafford on Tuesday.



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England captain Eoin Morgan led from the front as the hosts beat Pakistan by five wickets to win the second Twenty20 international at Old Trafford on Sunday.

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VVS Laxman visited the Sharjah Cricket Stadium ahead of IPL 2020 and recalled Sachin Tendulkar's "special 100s."

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Suresh Raina recalled the time when his father was not making enough to get him into a cricket academy, and how fortunes changed for them.

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1st T20I report: Tom Banton's explosive 71 off 42 balls proved to be in vain for England as the first Twenty20 international against Pakistan was abandoned as a no result because of rain in Manchester on Friday.

The opener smashed four fours and five sixes in an entertaining knock featuring lusty hitting and unorthodox scoops, helping England score 131-6 in 16.1 overs before it started to rain at Old Trafford.

Pakistan never got to bat in what would have ended up being an unsatisfactory five-over match, with the groundstaff unable to get the wet outfield in a fit state to play.

Pakistan skipper Babar Azam and his England counterpart Eoin Morgan pose with the T20I series trophy. Twitter @TheRealPCB

Pakistan skipper Babar Azam and his England counterpart Eoin Morgan pose with the T20I series trophy. Twitter @TheRealPCB

England will be concerned that Banton's departure sparked the loss of four wickets for 14 runs in 19 balls before the stoppage.

Before that, opener Jonny Bairstow was out for 2 and Dawid Malan made a run-a-ball 23 after Pakistan won the toss and decided to field first under floodlights below gloomy skies.

England had scored just 34-1 after six overs, the team's lowest powerplay total since the 2016 World Twenty20 final.

Imad Wasim (2-31) and Shadab Khan (2-33) were Pakistan's best bowlers in Manchester, where there were no spectators because of coronavirus restrictions.

The other matches in the series are on Sunday and Tuesday. England won a rain-affected test series 1-0.

With inputs from AP



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Delhi Capitals hit the training ground for the first time on Saturday, August 29 ahead of IPL 2020.

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