Tag: Trent Boult

  • ‘Ruining the game’: Fears for Test cricket’s future

    ‘Ruining the game’: Fears for Test cricket’s future

    With the Ashes just weeks away, cricket has reached a crossroads. DANIEL CHERNY speaks to stars of yesteryear and today to ascertain what they make of the shifting landscape.

    When Jofra Archer was ruled out of the English home summer during the week, there was a palpable sense of disappointment from many cricket purists who bemoaned the fact that the men’s Ashes series would be robbed of one of its top drawcards and destructive players.

    But the bigger concern for those who love Test cricket, including former Australian captain Border, is whether Archer and many others will be lost to the format altogether within the next few years.

    A Daily Mail report earlier this month that the Indian Premier League’s Mumbai Indians were preparing to offer Archer a multimillion-dollar offer to play year-round for the franchise and its various global offshoots was just the latest in a series of landmark moments in which cricket’s traditional power structure has been turned on its head.

    The news about England pace ace Archer had followed comments from Rajasthan Royals owner Manoj Badale on the BBC, calling for Test cricket to become a once-a-year “Wimbledon” style event played around the Twenty20 calendar. IPL franchises, owning and operating clubs in multiple leagues around the world, won’t stop at Archer. They are keen to buy the rights to top international players, meaning cricketers would need permission from their clubs to play international cricket, rather than the other way round, as has long been the case.

    That Saudi Arabia is also exploring pumping its deep reserves of cash into the IPL only adds to the sense the upcoming Ashes will be played in a very different cricket world to that when Australia is next due to tour England in a duel for the urn in 2027.

    In some respects the phenomenon is not new. The West Indies have for many years been denied the services of some of their top players who had preferred to take their talent to the short-form circuit. South Africa has also felt the crunch, while New Zealand – reigning World Test champions for another few weeks – last year ceded star paceman Trent Boult to the riches of the travelling circus.

    For the legendary Border, one of Australian sport’s most revered figures and widely respected in the cricket world, alarm bells about the game’s future are ringing loudly.

    “If you want to ruin the game, let me know now,” Border says bluntly.

    “I am a bit concerned. That’s where the Indian cricket board, the BCCI, have a huge role to play. Do they want to be in total control of everything and play two or three IPL seasons per year? That’s where it starts and finishes, the money.

    “All the games can survive, but you’ve got to take a little bit of greed out of it. These guys have bought franchises for hundreds of millions of dollars, and they want a return on their investment.

    “But half these guys are billionaires, how much money do you want for the sake of ruining the game? Because that’s how I think it will be. I know I’m a traditionalist. For me 20-over cricket is good in short bursts. What we’re at now is saturation point.”

    While Australia’s top players have thus far kept signing central Cricket Australia contracts, they are aware the game is changing rapidly, and that the year-round IPL offers, even if only informally, are already coming.

    Mitchell Starc has for several years placed family time and national duties ahead of possible millions in the IPL. He told CODE Sports this week that he had been close to signing up for the league this year but wanted to ensure he was in the best possible shape for the Ashes, where he could quite conceivably be in and out of the team anyway.

    Starc said at pre-Ashes training camp that if he had been sounded out by IPL clubs for year-round services, his agent hadn’t yet told him about it. But the left-arm speedster, who has 306 Test wickets to his name, is not naive enough to think that some of his teammates won’t soon take the money.

    “It’s an interesting crossroads,” Starc says.

    “We’ve seen guys get approached. There’s going to be noise there, because teams are acquiring other franchises like Mumbai and KKR (Kolkata Knight Riders).

    “Whether it goes down a path like football, where there’s international periods, or you’re asking Mumbai whether you can use Jofra for an Ashes series. I’d like to think kids coming through still aspire to play Test cricket.

    “There’s gonna be a group of players that want to chase the money and make quick money as good franchise players. There’s nothing wrong with that. It’s certainly not for me to say what’s right or wrong. For me I’ve always loved playing Test cricket.”

    One only has to look at the fact that Australia will not play a single tour match in England this year to know that T20 is in many respects already winning the day. The WTC final between Australia and India, and then the Ashes, are being jammed into a two-month window to fit around the IPL and a World Cup later this year.

    David Warner, fighting for his spot in the team, effectively warmed up for his English assignment with two months trying to bash the ball round in India. Not that long ago people would have been aghast at such a preparation, now it is just standard fare.

    Todd Murphy, 22, is just a baby in international cricket terms, having made his debut in India earlier this year. The off-spinner values his baggy green, but is hopeful he can have the best of both worlds in the long-run.

    “I think it’s unrealistic to say that T20 cricket looks like it’s not going to take over,” Murphy says.

    “I think it’s going to be enticing for people with the money that’s gone into the T20 format, and I think you’re going to see more and more guys go down that path for sure, because it’s so hard to say no to.”

    Murphy’s teammate and mentor Nathan Lyon still values Test cricket as No.1.

    “The way I see it is, yes there’s going to be contracts with big dollars alongside your name to go play the circuit and all that stuff but in my eyes Test cricket is the pinnacle, it always will be the pinnacle,” Lyon says.

    “You may be able to hide a little bit in the shorter formats.

    “If you show any weakness towards a short ball, you can’t hide in Test cricket.”

    Australian Test wicketkeeper Alex Carey is optimistic that CA – which recently increased its pool of central contracts – will be able to hold the raiders at bay.

    “I still feel like the guys that I’m playing with, they’re solely focused on winning Test cricket for Australia, whenever the opportunity comes up,” Carey says.

    “I feel like our cricket here in Australia is in a really strong position to retain our players.

    “I don’t fear for our players being contracted all-year round by franchises. But I feel like there’ll be opportunities for guys to go out and earn big when the time’s right.”

    While CA’s recent pay deal led to an uptick in overall Big Bash League salaries, BBL pay days are still only a fraction of what is available in India. A T20 World Cup in the middle of next year has been mooted in cricket circles as a potential jump point for the likes of Warner and white-ball specialists Marcus Stoinis, Glenn Maxwell, Adam Zampa to jump full-time onto the franchise circuit.

    The little urn is up for grabs this year, but the big earn might not be far away either.

    Daniel ChernyStaff writer

    Daniel Cherny is a Melbourne sportswriter, focusing on AFL and cricket. Having started his career at Back Page Lead, Daniel spent eight years at The Age, during which time he covered Australian Test cricket tours of Bangladesh and the UAE, as well as the 2016 Rio Olympics. He has been recognised for both his AFL and cricket writing, including winning the Clinton Grybas Rising Star Award at the 2019 Australian Football Media Association Awards. He is also a compulsive Simpsons quoter.

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  • New Zealand Cricket CEO has his say on Trent Boult’s chances of playing the 2023 ODI World Cup in India

    New Zealand Cricket CEO has his say on Trent Boult’s chances of playing the 2023 ODI World Cup in India

    Outgoing New Zealand Cricket (NZC) CEO David White has revealed that he expects left-arm pacer Trent Boult to be part of the Blackcaps squad for the ODI World Cup in India. Boult had given up his national contract in August last year to spend more time with his family and continue playing franchise cricket. However, he has not played for New Zealand since the T20 World Cup in October-November, as the team prioritizes centrally-contracted players.

    White clarified that priority is given to centrally-contracted players in the New Zealand team, and that was the case during the summer. However, he mentioned that NZC is having “very positive conversations” with Boult and he would be surprised if the bowler isn’t representing New Zealand in the World Cup.

    “We have made it very clear that priority is given to centrally-contracted players,” White was quoted as saying to New Zealand radio station Newstalk ZB.

    “That was the case during the summer. It is very important for the integrity of the competition and of the contracting model that we give priority to our centrally-contracted players.

    “In saying that, we’ve had a lot of conversations with Trent over the last few weeks and months. I’d be very surprised if he wasn’t representing New Zealand in the World Cup, and we’re having very positive conversations with him.”

    Despite Boult’s preference for franchise cricket, White believes that the majority of cricketers still consider playing for their country the pinnacle of their career. He is not concerned about players going into leagues towards the end of their career and states that cricket is being bankrolled primarily by India, which has huge resources and revenue, making it good for cricket.

    “I think that the players still say that Test cricket and representing their country is still the pinnacle. The majority of the players, that is certainly the case.

    “It would be fair to say that a lot of the players that are going into leagues are former (internationals), or (are) towards the end of their career. So I am not so concerned about that.

    “The really positive thing about cricket compared to a lot of other sports is that it’s being bankrolled primarily by India, which is now the most populated country in the world. There are huge resources and a lot of revenue, which is good for cricket,” the former New Zealand cricketer added.

    White also mentioned that it is important for NZC to ensure that they stay relevant to influence the international game at the ICC level and compete at the highest level.

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  • [Watch] Trent Boult’s twin strike sends back Prithvi Shaw and Manish Pandey for ducks off consecutive deliveries in IPL 2023

    [Watch] Trent Boult’s twin strike sends back Prithvi Shaw and Manish Pandey for ducks off consecutive deliveries in IPL 2023

    Trent Boult once again shone for the Rajasthan Royals (RR) against Delhi Capitals (DC) in the ongoing IPL 2023 at the Barsapara Cricket Stadium in Guwahati on Saturday, April 8.

    The left-arm pacer put the Capitals on the backfoot with back-to-back wickets – Impact player Prithvi Shaw and DC debutant Manish Pandey for ducks – in his very first over of DC’s chase.

    Boult first bowled a fuller length delivery to get rid of Shaw, caught out by wicketkeeper Sanju Samson, who pulled off a stunning catch behind the stumps.

    The ace pacer then sent back Manish Pandey, who was absolutely plumb in front of the stumps, lbw out off the very next delivery during his double-wicket maiden.

    Scroll below to watch Trent Boult’s double strike:

    For the uninitiated, RR retained Boult for Rs 8 crore. The New Zealand pacer scalped 16 wickets in as many games at an economy rate of 7.94 last year, as RR finished as runners-up in IPL 2022. Overall, the speedster has scalped 94 wickets in 81 games, barring the ongoing match against DC.

    The 33-year-old previously scalped two wickets against Sunrisers Hyderabad, which RR won by 72 runs this season. He, however, failed to take a single wicket versus the Punjab Kings as RR fell short by five runs.

    Trent Boult recently bagged nine wickets in 10 games for MI Emirates in the International League T20. He will look to continue his exceptional form in the IPL.


    Jos Buttler and Yashasvi Jaiswal put on a show for RR before Trent Boult’s heroics

    Jos Buttler and Yashavi Jaiswal put on a show after the Delhi Capitals asked the Rajasthan Royals to bat first on Saturday. The in-form openers shared a 98-run partnership.

    Buttler smashed 79 runs off 51 balls, including six and 11 boundaries. Jaiswal, too, starred with the bat, scoring 60 runs off 31 deliveries, including a maximum and 11 fours. Shimron Hetmyer also shone with 39 off 21 balls, including four sixes and one four.

    For DC, Mukesh Kumar scalped two wickets, while Kuldeep Yadav and Rovman Powell bagged solitary wickets.

    In response, the Capitals are 42/3 after seven overs, with David Warner and Lalit Yadav at the crease.

    Follow RR vs DC live score updates here.

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    Edited by Sudeshna Banerjee




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  • Stokes’ England has echoes of ‘05 Aussie conquerors

    Stokes’ England has echoes of ‘05 Aussie conquerors

    The Ashes are on the horizon, Australia is looking shaky in India, and England is on the cusp of its longest winning streak in nearly two decades, writes MIKE ATHERTON.

    Word is, among those squad members with long enough memories – James Anderson and Stuart Broad, in other words – that this is considered to be England’s strongest crop of Test cricketers for more than a decade, since No 1 status was last reached in 2011. But, should victory come in Wellington this week, you’d have to go back even longer to find a winning streak to match.

    Ben Stokes’s team can win their seventh consecutive Test, something England have not achieved since 2004, when Michael Vaughan was fashioning a team that would eventually topple Australia the following year. With the Ashes on the horizon, and Australia looking a little shaky in India, that is an intriguing echo of the past.

    Vaughan’s run came between May and December 2004 and took in eight consecutive victories: three over New Zealand, four over West Indies and one in South Africa. There was a definite feeling then, as now, that something special was being concocted, based around the development of a group of fast bowlers under the most enterprising captain for a generation.

    It was the fast bowlers who were the focus of England’s build-up in Wellington. Anderson, it was revealed by the ICC, went back to the top of the Test rankings after his seven-wicket haul in Mount Maunganui, a remarkable achievement for a 40-year-old. He is the fifth oldest man to hold that mark – the ICC has worked the rankings retrospectively – and the oldest since Clarrie Grimmett, an Australia leg spinner, in 1936.

    Broad and Anderson shared 12 wickets in Mount Maunganui and would dearly love to play again at the ground where their partnership began 15 years and 1,009 wickets (in the matches they have played together) ago, but they were said to be a little stiff, while Ollie Robinson has suffered some shin soreness. All will be given maximum time to recover.

    The pitch was very green at its unveiling and conditions will be markedly different from Mount Maunganui, by dint of this being a day game with a red ball. England’s strategy in the pink-ball game was executed to perfection, twice engineering a situation in which they were bowling at dusk under lights, but there will be no such need to manipulate artificial conditions this time.

    Stokes was happy to be returning to a city where he spent two happy years of his childhood, in between Christchurch and the move to England, and where he continued to develop the cricket and rugby skills that enabled him to settle into life in the UK so readily. He confirmed yesterday (Wednesday) that he will be returning before the end of the Indian Premier League, to play in the four-day Test against Ireland before the Ashes.

    He was also happy to concede that, after four consecutive wins over New Zealand, his team have the psychological edge. Indeed no team have yet coped with the full-frontal barrage of aggressive cricket championed by this new England. Should teams get sucked in and try to slug it out, blow for blow, or should they stick to their knitting? No one has found a coherent response.

    “We’re very clear about what we’re going to do,” Stokes said. “We’ve just got an understanding within our group at the moment, so it’s good to know that the teams playing against us are having to react to what we’re doing. And I feel if that’s the case, then if you’re not winning the game, you’re winning in that moment.”

    Of course it was not long ago in Australia that he was on the wrong side of that equation. “Good point,” Stokes said. “We have been on that side of the fence before, where you’re scratching your head and you start changing plans every 45 minutes or so, because things haven’t worked. The one thing that is good for us at the moment is the clarity in which we operate. I would rather teams are reacting to us than the other way around.”

    Since New Zealand’s ascent to world Test champions, these two teams have travelled in very different directions. While England are looking for their seventh consecutive win, New Zealand’s past seven matches have produced five defeats and two draws. They are missing players such as BJ Watling, Colin de Grandhomme, Ross Taylor (retired), Trent Boult (opted out of a national contract) and Kyle Jamieson (injured and undergoing a spinal fusion this week).

    They have a new captain trying to find his way, an old captain – Kane Williamson – who was airbrushed from the opening Test with two low scores, and out-of-form players such as Henry Nicholls, who averages 22 in the past two years. That said, New Zealand’s record at the Basin Reserve is excellent, having won three of their past five Tests here by an innings and another by ten wickets.

    Both sets of players made their way south to the windy city over the past two days, with two Black Caps, Blair Tickner and Will Young, released for a brief period to help the rescue efforts post-cyclone in their devastated Hawke’s Bay region, and Matt Henry added to the squad after the birth of his first child. England opted for optional practice sessions in between golf at Royal Wellington and the links of Paraparaumu.

    After the delights of Mount Maunganui, the Basin Reserve is another Test ground high on the list of special venues for England’s travelling supporters. Like all the best grounds, it is at the heart of a city, in this instance in the middle of a huge roundabout – a cutthrough on non-match days – and within walking distance for most Wellingtonians. It offers a combination of delightful viewing experiences: grassy banks for the picnic seekers, stands at one end and roomy surrounds, to allow spectators the ability to wander around.

    It is a ground dripping with history – this was the venue for New Zealand’s second Test, in 1930 – and quirky features. How many grounds have a bandstand? A flagstone commemorates the first Test, when Frank Woolley and KS Duleepsinhji played for England, during a winter in which two England teams were in operation simultaneously in New Zealand and the Caribbean.

    The first three days are sold out, which partly reflects a home season that has featured little international cricket and partly the attractiveness of England’s Test team. Tickets are affordable too, at dollars 70 (about pounds 35) for five days. It promises to be as far removed from the corporate, restricted feel of a day’s cricket in England as it is possible to be – putting the spectators first, for once.

    Originally published as Mike Atherton: Ben Stokes’ England has echoes of Michael Vaughan’s Ashes heroes

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