PowerPlay

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Strauss shows his diplomatic skills over Twitter

Andrew Strauss has always given the impression that if cricket had not intervened, he could already have forged a successful career in the diplomatic service. His discretion was to the fore as he considered theTwitter imbroglio involving Kevin Pietersen that has imposed itself upon England’s plans for the second Test against West Indies.

Not for the first time, Pietersen is established as the rascal in the England set-up, his dismissive tweet about the Sky TV commentator, Nick Knight, viewed as improper conduct worthy of an undisclosed fine thought to be £3,000 ($4,700) and no doubt a private rebuke. His sin, for those who have been concerned over the past day or two by weightier matters, went thus: “Can somebody PLEASE tell me how Nick Knight has worked his way into the commentary box for Home Tests?? RIDICULOUS!!”

Knight is an inoffensive chap. But he is an inoffensive chap with a modest Test record who when Pietersen’s one-day form was at its lowest, questioned his right to a place in the team. Pietersen respects stardom and celebrity and seems oblivious to the fact that Knight was one of the most effective England one-day players of his time. It is curious how long this has rankled.

Strauss’ reflection on the balance between free speech and corporate responsibility will surprise those who still live under the illusion that our national sportsmen and women are untamed spirits, determined on the field and off to accept no limits, live life to the full, soar to the heavens, or whatever latest catchphrase their kit companies come up with.

“That is the way of the world,” Strauss said of Pietersen’s fine. “If you sign an England contract you can have opinions on things but you can’t say them publicly.”

Having laid down the boundaries, he defended them: “There are good reasons for that. Any employer would expect their employees to be aware of sensitive issues for their employer and that is the way it is.”

Anybody who has worked close to the England set-up is aware how extreme that sensitivity can be. It takes a player of considerable character to refuse to become as anodyne as the ECB prefers, indeed trains, them to become: mouthing platitudes, sticking to set formulae, officially encouraged to drain the life from their own personalities. Strauss can speak intelligently within strict limits, so it suits him; Graeme Swann has a maverick’s ability to sail close to the edge; others are noticeably suppressed by their upbringing.

Pietersen attempted to recover lost ground as the Trent Bridge Test approached, referring to Knight’s fellow Sky commentators, Michael Atherton, Nasser Hussain, Ian Botham, David Gower and David Lloyd as “legends,” at every opportunity. Or, to adopt KP’s tweeting style, “LEGEEENDS!!!” might be more appropriate. The implication was clear: if the ECB had accused him of attacking Sky TV, the host broadcaster, it was simply not the case; it was far more personal than that.

Pietersen assumed that Twitter gave him a convenient vehicle for retaliation in an intrinsically personal capacity, only to find like many before him that the corporate world is now so aware of social network sites these days that, if you are in a certain kind of job, you are no longer as free as you think you are. The illusion exists that you are sharing personal thoughts with your followers, but in actuality you are tweeting into a world awash with rules and regulations. The validity of the argument that you represent your employer at all times is a legal debate that runs far wider than England cricket.

One of the more intriguing aspects of this foolish affair is that Strauss repeatedly referred to the fact it was the ECB board, chaired by Giles Clarke, that decided action was necessary. They had any number of codes to consider: the ICC code of conduct, England contracts, informal dressing room codes on Twitter, agreements with broadcasters, all of them precluding free expression to some degree.

But it is quite possible that no one on the ECB board is on Twitter. Clarke should be, because it could be enormous fun, but that is another point entirely. The board has therefore passed judgement on Pietersen’s use of a social media platform that it does not fully understand. It has gained popularity as a looser form of communication, which seeks to capture a current, often transitory mood. Only by using Twitter, and appreciating its boundaries, can you intelligently judge whether these boundaries have been crossed.

“It is obviously a difficult one,” Strauss said. “Twitter is a great way for individuals to express opinions on things and to garner positive publicity for the game of cricket. That’s where it can be really helpful.

“But obviously we have conditions of employment that don’t allow us to talk about everything. We can’t criticise the ICC, we can’t criticise umpires, and in this case the board obviously wasn’t happy with Kevin’s comments about our broadcaster. That is their right as a board and so Kevin has received a fine because of that.

“You can understand that the board is concerned with making sure that their sponsors and broadcasters are looked after. It was a tough one. There were shades of grey. But the truth is that the board were unhappy with it and that is the situation.

“We also have our own informal code of conduct with regard to Twitter and generally it has worked very well. You are going to get the odd occasion when somebody oversteps the mark and somebody says, ‘Sorry mate, that’s outside the boundaries,’ and you are going to have to pay a price for us.”

Pietersen was part of the group that accepted such guidelines, but then so was Stuart Broad when he called cricket writers during a recent Lancashire-Nottinghamshire match liars, jobsworths and muppets. He was not fined and few seriously thought he should be because such tension between the media and those they write about has occured since the first newspaper rolled off the press. In the blogging era, the readers pile in, too. For Pietersen, though, the rules seem tighter. Ever since he lost the England captaincy he has become to the authorities the individual who occasionally needs taming.

For Strauss, it is just another situation to manage, one that he does not really care about. He does not tweet. “I am just too boring,” he said. “I can’t think of anything interesting to say. It wouldn’t be useful to me.”

David Hopps is the UK editor of ESPNcricinfo

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Six Indian IPL players to watch out for

If you wanted to use the word-association game to profile the IPL you would probably get “hectic”, “spectacle”, “in-the-news” (even if that isn’t strictly one word). To think longer would be to become analytical, which isn’t the objective. First thoughts are the key here and these are not bad for a young, ambitious, in-your-face league that enthralls, sometimes alienates, and which no one can ignore.

In the end the IPL has to be a cricket tournament. If IPL 15 and IPL 25, or for that matter IPL 50, have to exist, they have to be constructed on a strong cricket base. The great leagues of the world have their share of drama and scandal around them, but they are remembered by the quality of the action they produce. Tabloid reporters swarm around but the serious writers find them worthwhile too; irrelevant starlets seek to worm their way in but the superstars play on the field too.

The cricket was very good this year; it began acquiring a rhythm of its own. But it must necessarily be seen as a distinct entity, not as - depending on which way you look at it - a glamorous or scheming cousin of the traditional game. It will be a challenge for the IPL to keep an increasing tribe of wannabes at arm’s length and prevent them from hijacking the image of a sporting contest.

The IPL also needs to be an indicator of India’s cricketing depth, for it allows many young players, some completely unknown, to play on the big stage. The Ranji Trophy should do that too, but it doesn’t pit a young man against an international star; it cannot throw up comparisons, contrasts.

So who caught the eye in this year’s IPL? There are four young men among the top 20 batsmen (as at the time of writing) who we should be talking a bit more about. At No. 3 is Shikhar Dhawan, who has promised much over the years but has rarely embraced consistency - the quality that separates the best from those who occasionally flash by. But he is a powerful batsman and if he can just be a bit more involved in the deep, he can become a far better fielder.

If you pick horses for courses, and in Twenty20 you must, he has to be in a shortlist. As indeed should Ajinkya Rahane, who is No. 4. For two or three years there was a feeling that he wasn’t cut out for instant cricket, but he has adapted brilliantly, and if anything, needs to be careful not to allow this style to infect his chances in the longer versions, which he seems more naturally cut out for. For Rahane managing different formats will be a challenge, but it is one only the best are entitled to have.

Ambati Rayudu was down at No. 20, possibly because of his batting position, but he enhanced his reputation. For some reason Indian cricket doesn’t seem too inclined to embrace him, but surely a place should have been found for him on the India A tour to the West Indies.

If Rayudu’s time has to be now, there is another whose time may well come if he continues his impressive progress. Like Rahane, who got a whole tournament to play in with the Rajasthan Royals, Mandeep Singhbenefited from being in a team with fewer stars. He is another one the selectors should be taking note of.

Mayank Agarwal and Naman Ojha had their moments. Agarwal is a clean hitter but I suspect he needs another dimension to his game; Ojha seems a fair contender to the likes of Dinesh Karthik and Robin Uthappa for the second wicketkeeper’s slot for the World T20. I wish we could have seen more of Wriddhiman Saha. It might be in his interests to be loaned to another team, for young talent must play (talking of which, it is a good idea to introduce the concept of “loaning” in the IPL).

Umesh Yadav looked very impressive because he has pace, but to me there were two other bowlers who demanded attention. Parvinder Awana who, by some power, known or otherwise, has to be on that A tour. It would be criminal to deny him that experience and the opportunity to showcase himself. And the ever-smilingL Balaji has showed that if the selectors are willing to pick horses for courses for the World T20 in Sri Lanka, he must be in.

Left-arm spinners flooded the IPL. Either there has been a bumper harvest or a new hypothesis around them. And either as a consequence, or for a deeper reason hitherto unexplored, they cannibalised the offspinner, who is only rarely sighted these days.

The overall fielding standard among Indian cricketers in the IPL was a little disheartening. With the likes of Kieron Pollard, Faf du Plessis and Dwayne Bravo showing the way, I would like to believe more young people would be drawn to this still under-regarded aspect in Indian cricket.

And so to my one wish for IPL 6. That it stays on the back page.

Harsha Bhogle commentates on the IPL and other cricket, and is a television presenter and writer.

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We haven’t been converting starts - Dhoni

MS Dhoni speaks to the press end of the second Test in Sydney (03:24)

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Why are India so bad?

The Chucks wonder whether India’s rise to World No. 1 was just a myth created by the BCCI, and Sachin Tendulkar gets some advice from the fans (08:05)

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‘India have no cause to complain about conditions’

Harsha Bhogle joins Anthony Howard from Sydney to discuss India’s progress, or lack of it, on their tour of Australia (03:53)

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Dhoni behind bowlers’ problems

Michael Clarke and Ricky Ponting have taken the game beyond India’s reach, and once again MS Dhoni has hindered his bowlers rather than helping them, says Ian Chappell after the second day’s play at the SCG (04:59)

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India’s batting woes abroad continue

For the 71 minutes that Sachin Tendulkar was at the crease this afternoon it felt like India had gone back to the dark ages: the master on a plain of his own, and the rest doing poor impersonations of Test batsmen. Australia looked like they were bowling with their great men again. The ball was wobbling a bit in the air, zagging off the seam, and the wicketkeeper was gathering most deliveries with his gloves pointing towards the sky. It felt very 1999, or 1992.

And then it got even worse for India. Tendulkar attempted a cover drive and sliced the ball to gully. Including their first-innings collapse, India had lost 14 wickets for 132 runs. They were up against an Australian attack with a combined match experience of 53 Tests and a total wicket-tally of less than 200. One of their new-ball bowlers was playing his third Test, his partner was coming back from injury, and two of the three fast bowlers might not have been playing the Test had Ryan Harris and Pat Cummins been available for selection.

So then, there was the truth. The world’s most prolific, most experienced and most feted batting line-up had been rolled over twice by Australia’s second-choice pace attack. They may not be second-choice bowlers for much longer, though, for they were marvellous. Only the sight of the tailenders got them to aim at the throat; otherwise, their devotion to the fundamentals of bowling was magnificently steadfast.

Throughout the Test, they kept their pace up and bowled excellent lines, but the most remarkable aspect of their bowling was the length they maintained. They had heeded the advice of their bowling coach Craig McDermott - who, incredible as it may sound, bowled to Tendulkar in 1992 - to keep the ball up.

It is one of the simplest principles of quick bowling. The full ball creates the opportunity for three of the most common forms of dismissal: caught, bowled and leg before. The word hostility is attached to the short ball but, though they bowled full, there was no let up in aggression from the Australia bowlers in this Test. It was just that they targeted the stumps more than the body. It resonated in the scorecard: India batsmen were bowled seven times, and, if you include the time he was bowled off a Peter Siddle no-ball, Rahul Dravid alone was bowled three times.

James Pattinson was named Man of the Match but it must have been a marginal selection: there was not a lot to choose between all three. Ben Hilfenhaus got seven wickets, as many as he had managed the whole summer last year, and Siddle and Pattinson got six each. Hilfenhaus has returned with an extra yard of pace, and his swing intact. Pattinson has it all: pace, swing and seam. But it is Siddle who looks the most improved bowler.

As in the case of England’s Stuart Broad, Siddle is no longer the enforcer charged with bowling the heavy ball. His menace now comes from bowling full and fast, and he has added a touch of swing to his bowling. Tendulkar looked the best batsman in the match and Siddle dismissed him in both innings, once shaping the ball in and once moving it out. In both cases Tendulkar had been drawn in to the drive by the length.

Both teams came in to this series facing questions. Though they won, Australia have not found all the answers. Their top order remains a worry. Shaun Marsh failed twice, while Michael Clarke and David Warner had a start each but failed to press on. Michael Hussey, though, found his feet again, when it was most direly needed. The biggest positive was the sight of a familiar man steadying both innings. Ricky Ponting is unlikely to recapture the majesty of his youth, but in a bowlers’ Test his half-centuries could easily have won him the Man-of-the-Match award. He can now go through the rest of the series without being hounded by calls for his head.

At the start of the Test, the big questions facing India pertained to their bowlers. There were fitness concerns about Zaheer Khan and Ishant Sharma, and Umesh Yadav and R Aswhin were both inexperienced. As they have done many times in the past - the summer’s England tour was an exception - the bowlers exceeded expectations. However, alarmingly, it seems the poor batting performance in England was hardly an aberration.

In fact, it was merely confirmation of a pattern. Since they posted 364 in challenging conditions in Cape Town in the first Test of the year, only once have India managed to go past 300 in 16 innings away from home - and that includes six innings against West Indies. Neither of their openers has scored a hundred this year - in Gautam Gambhir’s case the drought stretches back two years. Only two of their batsmen have managed to score a hundred away from home and only Dravid has managed more than one.

Some of the weaknesses in the Indian batting were glaringly apparent in Melbourne. Gambhir poked at balls he should have comfortably left alone and his long run of failures must now count as a serious worry. His uncertainty outside the off stump has always been noticeable, but the best feature of his game, his mental strength, seems to have deserted him. He now deals with the new ball with jabs and prods, and while he may get away with a few on low pitches in India, in Australia the edges are certain to carry to the cordon.

There is nothing unusual about Virender Sehwag collaborating in his own dismissals, and he is certain to go flashing at the first hint of width in Sydney. But that he averages 29.53 this year, and came in to this series with scores of 13, 11, 0, 0, 8 and 33 in away matches points to a batsman with the security of runs. His 67 in the first innings here featured some blazing shots, but also two clear chances and a near miss.

It has been three years since Sourav Ganguly vacated the No. 6 spot amid clamour for young blood, but that position is far from taken. Yuvraj Singh and Suresh Raina have both been tried and abandoned, and Virat Kohli finds himself facing the heat now. He was unsettled by the short ball in the West Indies, and found his defensive technique exposed in the both the innings at the MCG. He is likely to keep his place for the next Test, but just.

For the first time since 1977, India started this tour with genuine prospects of winning their first-ever Test series in Australia. The fourth day began with the rare opportunity of starting an away series with a win. In the first session, they enacted a familiar routine by failing to knock over the tailenders. The last two Australian wickets extended the target by 74 runs to ensure India began the chase as underdogs. But the most damning fact of the day was that with 30 runs, Ashwin was the second-highest scorer for India in their second innings.

From here it would take a remarkable batting turnaround for India to keep the series alive. The New Year could not come any sooner.

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How will India improve?

India’s batsmen never get going at the G while Australia’s three man bowling attack are on fire. Brad Haddin fast pressers, and the weird Sachin song (06:21)

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Dhoni’s conservative approach a problem - Chappell

India would be disappointed with their batting, and even though Australia might have issues to sort out with their own batting they are starting to put together a decent pace attack (06:20)

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Just the way Sehwag bats - Jarrod Kimber

An Indian journalist said that Sehwag was arrogant for chasing wide ones before lunch. It seemed ridiculous.

When Brad Haddin, after playing a big shot, says it’s just the way he bats, it’s a hard pill to swallow, considering his ever-diminishing batting average, currently at 36. When Sehwag says it’s just the way he bats, even if by that he meant naked with only a helmet of whipped cream on his head, his way of batting means an average of 52.

So the fact that he waved (and by waved I mean practically threw himself off his feet) in the last over before lunch, that is just the way he plays. There aren’t many pauses when Sehwag bats; he’s more MTV than Jim Jarmusch. 

But there was one when Nathan Lyon bowled to Rahul Dravid. 

As far as prey goes, a person who was an unknown groundsman 12 months ago is the sort Sehwag would swat away with his tail rather than eat. Lyon is clearly misnamed when in any sentence with Sehwag. Luckily for Lyon, in his first three overs, Sehwag only came on strike for two balls. Lyon was allowed to start against the equally skilled, but less homicidal, Dravid. Bowling to Dravid is not easy. His footwork against spinners is so precise it’s almost scalpel-like. But he lets you breathe a while longer. 
At the start of Lyon’s fourth over he was facing Sehwag, and even though that’s backwards in traditional cricket terms, that is what it was. The first ball Sehwag easily cut away to point. Two runs. It was about as soft as Sehwag was going to get on Lyon. 

Next ball, Sehwag got a little more elaborate and twirled through a cover drive. Two. It wasn’t middled but it was one of the few boundaries free to him. Michael Clarke was protecting his young spinner with a long-on, deep midwicket and deep backward square, all locked up. 

The next ball wasn’t elaborate; it was brutal. Four runs. It was the sort of drive Sehwag plays when he has had to watch his team-mate place the ball instead of outright smacking it. Also, he picked long-off, because, like with the ball before, he was thinking about his batting. He’s not a slogger; he’s a batsman in a hurry. Sometimes in a massive hurry. 

On Lyon’s fourth ball Sehwag came after him again. Four. It was hit with more vicious power and was straighter than the previous shot. He had started at point, moved to cover, gone to mid-off and was now straight. 

Sehwag’s bottom hand was drooling over Lyon. 

The next ball was never going to be pretty. 

Sehwag launched at Lyon like a vicious predator down the wicket. But Lyon has guile and character, so he deceived Sehwag for a moment. Most batsmen would have pushed or dropped their hands at the ball. Sehwag did what can only be called a Dhoni, and his right hand whipped the ball flat and hard, straight to the long-on fielder. It was ugly, and unnecessary, but you had to like the way he went for it, even if it wasn’t smart. David Warner tried to get under it, but either dropped a tough chance or was just beaten by the turf. 

Either way, it was only one run. And Lyon was now bowling to Dravid. 

Five consecutive balls from Lyon had gone for 13 runs and had him very nearly out. The next over would be epic. Man v beast. The destroyer v the green-thumbed spinner. Sehwag and the fresh meat he desperately wanted to taste again. 

Lyon’s next over was actually a maiden, which means to all cricket fans that Dravid was facing. By the time Lyon bowled another over, more than an hour later, Sehwag had lost his much more evenly balanced battle with James Pattinson. 

It was, of course, still the red-mist lust for a boundary that did him in. Maybe it makes him arrogant or selfish, but I think it makes him Sehwag, and I doubt I’ll ever get sick of just the way he bats.