Fab Four now on two legs – Root and Williamson firm, Kohli and Smith wobbly

While Joe Root and Kane Williamson have been in splendid form, the stats for the two others – Virat Kohli and Steven Smith – have dipped significantly

S Rajesh03-Sep-20241:35

Root stands tall after twin tons

Through much of second part of the 2010s, Test-match batting was dominated by the Fab Four, and with good reason: they all reached great heights in the period between 2014-19, averaging over 50. In fact, they all had a four or five-year period when they maintained an average of over 57 in more than 40 Tests.Five years later, the picture looks quite different. While Kane Williamson and Joe Root have been in sparkling form – underscored most recently by Root’s splendid twin-hundreds against Sri Lanka at Lord’s – Smith and Kohli have struggled to replicate those golden years. In fact, Root scored as many Test hundreds at Lord’s last week as Kohli has in the entire period from 2020 to 2024.Here’s a look at all the key numbers on the Fab Four which illustrate just how varied their returns have been in the last five years.All about the averagesLet’s start with the period between 2014 and 2019. The only batter who could stay with them in this period was David Warner. Smith had an incredible 24 hundreds from 56 Tests, while Williamson and Kohli both averaged fewer than three Tests per century. Root wasn’t as sharp, but still averaged over 50, and there was a clear five-run gap between Root and the next-best.

Since 2020, though, plenty has changed. While Williamson and Root have maintained, or even improved upon, their high standards, Smith has come back to earth from his stratospheric levels, and Kohli has had a terrible slump: among the 24 batters who have scored at least 1600 Test runs since the start of 2020, only Zak Crawley has a lower average than Kohli’s 33.59. Williamson, on the other hand, averages more than twice as much as Kohli does in this period.

All of this has adversely affected the career averages of Kohli and Smith. From a high of 55.10 after his 81st Test, against South Africa in October 2019, Kohli’s average has dropped to 49.15 – he is the only one among the four to average under 50 – while Smith has fallen from a lofty 64.81 after his 67th Test in September 2019, to a still-impressive-but-much-lower 56.97 after 109 matches. None of that has affected Root, though, whose career average has been moving in the opposite direction: from 47.35 in November 2019, it has gone up by more than three points to 50.93. That’s similar to the upward curve for Williamson – from 51.44 at the end of 2019, to 54.98 now.

A good indicator of form and consistency is the moving average, when the blocks used are reasonably small. The graph below plots averages for each of these four batters in overlapping eight-Test blocks (Tests 1-8, 2-9, 3-10 etc) – this would typically cover a period of a few months to a year (though with the lopsided schedules, the range could wary vastly for different players). Root’s average in most recent eight Tests is 75.73, Williamson’s is 73.54, Kohli’s 55.15 and Smith’s 37.69.Kohli’s hundreds in Ahmedabad and Port of Spain in 2023 has lifted his moving average recently, but before that there was a period of 21 consecutive plot points when his moving average was under 35; that refers to the period between October 2019 and June 2023, when he averaged 30.97 across 28 Tests, with the eight-Test low point coming in 2022-23, when he averaged 20.61 across 14 innings.

In stark contrast, in the last five years Root’s moving average has not gone under 40 across more than three consecutive plot points. He averaged more than 50 across 17 successive plots, in a 24-Test period in 2020-2022 when he averaged 52.31. Similarly, in Williamson’s last 20 moving averages – which includes 27 Tests, going back to August 2019 – only once has the number dipped below 50.The comparison with team-matesBetween 2014 and 2019, each of the Fab Four towered above the other players in their teams. Warner’s 50.94 was a super-impressive average, but even that was dwarfed by Smith’s 72.02. With a 2500-run cut-off, the next best for New Zealand after Williamson’s 61.95 was Ross Taylor at 45.39; Kohli’s 58.71 was followed by Cheteshwar Pujara’s 45.10, while Root’s 50.82 was well clear of Alastair Cook’s 42.68.Overall in this period, all four batters averaged significantly higher than their other team-mates in the top order (Nos 1-7). Smith was in a league of his own even in this elite group, averaging 33.34 runs more than his top-order team-mates in the innings in which he batted. Williamson, Kohli and Root had impressive numbers too, averaging between 18 to 24 runs more than their top-order team-mates. In terms of rank, these differences were the top four among all batters who played at least 50 innings in this period.ESPNcricinfo LtdSince 2020, though, that difference has nosedived for Kohli and Smith. The contrast is especially stark for Kohli – from 19.87, the gap has dropped to a mere 2.68, which essentially means he is only marginally better than the average Indian top-seven batter in this period. It’s true that runs were generally hard to come by for most Indian top-order batters in this period – the average for the other batters dropped from 38.84 to 30.91, a fall of 20.4% – but the fall was far steeper for Kohli, whose average fell by almost 43%.Similarly, the numbers for Smith have fallen dramatically too, from a lofty 72 to 45, even as the other Australian batters have more-or-less maintained their numbers. Williamson and Root, on the other hand, have improved on their 2014-19 stats, illustrating quite clearly how the Fab Four has now been split right down the middle. The ranks tell the story: Williamson and Root rank one and two, while Smith has dropped to 20, and Kohli to 26, among batters who have played at least 30 innings since 2020.The percentage contribution to team runs tells the same story: from the highs of more than 16.5%, it has come down to under 13% for both Smith and Kohli.ESPNcricinfo LtdThe century countThe most striking aspect of the graphic below is the way Root has caught up with, and gone past, the other three batters over the last four years. At the end of 2020, Root had 10 fewer hundreds than Kohli, and nine fewer than Smith. Since then, Kohli has added only two centuries to his count, and Smith six, while Root has added a whopping 17 in these last few years.

In fact, since the start of 2021, Root has scored as many hundreds (17) as the three others put together. Williamson has been prolific in this period too with nine hundreds, but has played only 18 Tests compared to Root’s 48. So, if we pair them up, Root and Williamson have scored 26 hundreds from 121 innings, while Smith and Kohli have eight from 104.

It helps, of course, that England have played many more Tests in this period – 48 since 2020, compared to 35 by India, 34 by Australia and just 25 by New Zealand. To Root’s credit, he has gone ahead and fully capitalised on those opportunities.The series toppersOut of the 18 series that Smith played between 2014 and 2019, he was the top run-getter from either team seven times, which is one such instance every two-and-half series. Kohli achieved it five times in as many series. Since 2020, there has only been one such instance for either of them from the 22 series they have played, when Smith scored 231 runs in a three-Test home series against South Africa in 2021-22. Kohli hasn’t top-scored once in 11 series in this period.Meanwhile, Williamson and Root have gone from strength to strength with four top aggregates in 12 and 15 series. Root is likely to add a fifth in a week’s time, given the mountain of runs he has scored in two Tests against Sri Lanka.ESPNcricinfo LtdTackling pace and spinIn the 2014-19 period, all four batters had excellent numbers against both pace and spin. In fact, apart from Root’s average of 47.48 against pace, they all averaged more than 50 against both fast bowlers and spinners. The standout numbers were Smith’s average against pace (82.15), Williamson’s against spin (86.1) and Kohli’s against spin (77.03).Since 2020, though, Smith’s average against pace has fallen to 40.41 – less than half of what it was in the earlier period – while Kohli has averaged in the mid-30s against both. Williamson, on the other hand, has averaged more than 60 against both pace and spin.

All these numbers indicate that the grouping of four is now down to two, based on stats over the last five years. Kohli’s Test form has fallen away dramatically – though he has shown signs of revival with a couple of centuries last year – while Smith is no longer the run-machine he was in his pomp. Root, meanwhile, has rediscovered the form and hunger which had deserted him through the late 2010s, and Williamson has made excellent use of limited opportunities. But for Smith and Kohli, a high-profile Australia-India Test series later this year might not be a bad place for them to prove that they still belong in that elite league that they were a part of for much of the 2010s.

The wolves of ball street: a Hundred saga

Watch the ECB’s plans for the tournament slowly unfold on Shark Tank – with real sharks

Alan Gardner17-Oct-2024So how is the ECB’s sale of equity in the Hundred going? Is everyone diving into a swimming pool full of money, a la Scrooge McDuck? Not quite.Last month it was suggested that the process could drag on for “another year”, with the board looking for the “right partners” – which sounds a bit like a school of clown fish looking for the “right” deep sea predator to buddy up with in pursuit of long-term shareholder value. Sure enough, one of the ECB’s initial suitors, Lalit Modi, then bared his teeth, calling the proposals “overambitious”, “disconnected from reality”, and likening it to a Ponzi scheme. That swimming pool of money is beginning to look more like a shark tank.Should we have seen this coming? Anyone who’s watched will know that not finance bros are solid, upstanding types. And if your plan is to suck up to various IPL owners and hope to siphon off the benefits without being trampled over roughshod by the forces of market capitalism, well, good luck with that. The Hundred already finds itself bobbing vulnerably in a sea of T20 leagues that are not the IPL. With friends like Modi and Co, who needs enemies?Related

Equity sale in the Hundred could be delayed beyond 2025 – Vikram Banerjee

PCB restructures selection committee by picking Aleem Dar, Aaqib, Azhar

Pakistan drop Shaheen, Naseem alongside Babar for next two Tests

Steven Smith's Test opening stint over with middle-order return for India

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Steven Smith just loves batting. He doesn’t want to sit around in the change room waiting for someone else to get out before he can have a go. He wants to be out there from ball one, fidgeting his way through a whole day’s play before sitting awake all night and replaying it in his head, complete with leaves and swooshing sounds. He wants to do a job for his team, bravely putting a hand up in the wake of David Warner’s retirement to go up the order and fill a hole… Sorry, what’s that? Open the batting against Jasprit Bumrah and Mohammad Siraj on a flyer in Perth? You know, it nice to have a little bit of rest before going out. We don’t want to weaken a strength. Cam Green’s injured, is he? Well, maybe that No. 4 spot is quite comfortable after all… [continued until the end of net practice in four hours’ time].

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Standards in a once-proud cricketing nation have clearly slipped. How else to explain the PCB’s reaction to Pakistan’s unprecedented humiliation in the first Test against England? Sure, there was the whimsical move to add Aleem Dar to the selection panel – as if presuming decisions made by umpires still go unquestioned – and 26 different appointments over three years in that department suggests the incompetency pathway is well established. Dropping Babar Azam, Shaheen Afridi and Naseem Shah was ballsy; so too picking three spinners, none of whom has played a first-class match since January. But where were the dramatic and heedless mid-series interventions from unaccountable suits? Where was the threat to sack the captain, or the destabilising public comments about the coach, who’s only been in the job a few months? Did anyone even consider parachuting a nephew of a board member into the squad? Come on, guys. These are the basics.Harry Brook stops for a bit of cricket between rounds of golf•Getty Images

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England’s success in Pakistan has provided further proof of the merits of their Bazball philosophy – not least the commitment to treating cricket as something they do between rounds of golf. And they continue to break new ground in this regard. Whereas it was once enough to view a four-day finish as the perfect opportunity to squeeze in 18 holes, in Multan they turned up without their fast-bowling consultant, James Anderson, from the start, as he had a prior appointment with the Alfred Dunhill Links. He eventually arrived on day two of the first Test, which England went on to win by an innings – so clearly all is cushty. Now it must be only a matter of time before this privilege is extended to the players, with long, hot days in the field broken up by a little fourballs or some time on the putting greens to keep them fresh.

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There were strong “stop, he’s already dead” vibes around India’s recent hosting of Test and T20I tours by Bangladesh. As if losing the Kanpur Test in about 12 minutes of actual cricket either side of a monsoon wasn’t painful enough, Bangladesh were then put through the meatgrinder to the tune of 297 in the final T20I. In that Hyderabad game, according to ESPNcricinfo’s Forecaster, India’s chances of winning passed 90% inside the first batting powerplay, and hovered at 98% and above from the tenth over onwards. In a world where the BCCI gets almost 40% of the ICC’s revenue distribution because, well, it says so, this is probably the sort of contest we deserve.

Stats – Abhishek blazes India's second-fastest T20I century

The opener broke a host of records as India smashed their way to 247 in Mumbai, setting up their second-biggest win by runs in men’s T20Is

Sampath Bandarupalli02-Feb-2025135 – Abhishek Sharma’s score against England on Sunday. It is the highest individual score for India in men’s T20Is, going past Shubman Gill’s 126* against New Zealand in 2023.Abhishek’s 135 is also the second-highest score by any batter against England, behind Aaron Finch’s 156 in 2013.13 – Sixes hit by Abhishek during his knock are the most for India in an innings in men’s T20Is. Rohit hit 10 against Sri Lanka in 2017, as did Sanju Samson and Tilak Varma against South Africa in 2024.37 – Balls that Abhishek needed to complete his hundred, the second-fastest for India, behind Rohit Sharma’s 35-ball effort against Sri Lanka in 2017. The 37-ball ton by Abhishek is also the eighth-fastest in men’s T20Is.ESPNcricinfo Ltd17 – Balls needed for Abhishek to bring up his fifty, also the second-fastest for India, behind Yuvraj Singh’s 12-ball fifty against England in 2007.150 – The number of runs India won by on Sunday – their second biggest margin by runs in men’s T20Is, behind the 168-run win against New Zealand in 2023.The 150-run margin is by far the biggest defeat by runs for England in the format. Their previous biggest was 90 runs, also against India in 2012 and South Africa in 2022.8 – Instances of India winning a men’s T20I by a margin of 100-plus runs, the joint-most such wins for any team, alongside Japan.

10.3 Overs India took to bowl England out in the fifth T20I, the shortest all-out innings for England in men’s T20Is. Their previous shortest was 14.4 overs, also against India in 2012.The 10.3 overs by England is also the second shortest all-out innings in men’s T20Is for a Full Member, behind the 9.3 overs by Bangladesh against New Zealand in 2021.95 for 1 – India’s total at the end of the powerplay. It is the highest they have ever made in that phase in men’s T20Is, bettering the 82 runs they scored against Scotland in 2021. It is also the sixth-highest total in the first six overs in men’s T20Is, where ball-by-ball data is available.India’s team hundred came in 6.3 overs on Sunday, the quickest for them in men’s T20Is. The previous fastest was off 7.1 overs against Bangladesh in last year’s T20I in Hyderabad.247 for 9 – India’s total at the Wankhede is the second-highest by any team against England in men’s T20Is, a run behind the 248 for 6 posted by Australia in Southampton in 2013. England bowlers were hit for 19 sixes on Sunday, the most they have conceded in a men’s T20I.England took one of their worst beatings at the hands of Abhishek and Co•Getty Images10.1 overs – Point when Abhishek brought up his century, the second-earliest anyone has completed the milestone in the men’s T20Is (where ball-by-ball data is available). The earliest is in 8.6 overs by Sahil Chauhan for Estonia against Cyprus in 2024.2 – Number of players in men’s T20Is, who reached their fifty faster than Abhishek, who reached his milestone in 4.2 overs. Evin Lewis against Bangladesh in 2018 and Quinton de Kock against West Indies in 2023 reached their fifties in 4.1 overs (where ball-by-ball data is available).Abhishek scored 58 runs by the end of the powerplay, the most by any batter for India in a men’s T20Is.16.04 – Run rate during the 115-run partnership between Abhishek and Tilak, which came off 7.1 overs. It is the highest for any 100-plus runs partnership for India in men’s T20Is. The previous highest was 15.45 by Shubman Gill and Hardik Pandya, who added 103 off 6.4 overs against New Zealand in 2023.6 – T20 hundreds for Abhishek, including the two in T20Is. Abhishek and Gill are the only batters with six hundreds in T20s before turning 25. Two of Abhishek’s six tons have come in less than 40 balls, as he scored a 28-ball century in December last year.Urvil Patel is the other batter with multiple hundreds in less than 40 balls in T20s, with centuries off 28 and 36 balls respectively during the recent Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy (where data is available).Varun Chakravarthy raked in the wickets, again•AFP/Getty Images14 – Wickets for Varun Chakravarthy across the five matches against England – the most for India in a bilateral series in men’s T20Is, bettering his tally of 12 wickets against South Africa last year.Varun’s 14 wickets are also the joint-second most by any bowler in a bilateral series in men’s T20I, behind Jason Holder’s 15 against England in 2022.97 – England’s total in the fifth T20I at the Wankhede. It is the third-lowest all-out total in men’s T20Is with an individual fifty. Bahrain’s 89 against Uganda in 2024 and Sweden’s 93 against Germany in 2022 are the lower totals.Eight England batters got out for a single-digit score, the most for them in a men’s T20I.

Powerplay: More than just a match for Afghanistan Women's XI

A set of exiled players come together to face a Cricket Without Borders side in Melbourne on Thursday

ESPNcricinfo staff29-Jan-20251:55

Afghanistan women take ‘huge step’ in cricket journey

As Afghanistan’s exiled players prepare to take on Cricket Without Borders in Melbourne, Firdose Moonda and Valkerie Baynes look at what the match means for their hopes of representing their country in future and highlighting the plight of women and girls there on this episode of the Powerplay podcast.

Most expensive IPL spells – Shami stops one short of Archer

He fell short of the most expensive figures – by Jofra Archer earlier this season – by just one run

ESPNcricinfo staff12-Apr-20251:31

Jaffer: ‘Shami struggles when he doesn’t nail his yorkers’

Mohammed Shami of Sunrisers Hyderabad (SRH) missed returning the most expensive IPL figures – bowled by Jofra Archer earlier this season – by just one run, when he leaked 75 runs against Punjab Kings (PBKS) in Hyderabad on Saturday. Here are some of the most expensive spells in IPL history:

Mohammed Shami 0 for 75 vs PBKS, IPL 2025

Shami might be among the best new-ball bowlers in India but the Hyderabad track and PBKS batters are sparing nobody. Prabhsimran Singh spoiled Shami’s day from his first over itself by carting him for three consecutive fours. Priyansh Arya, the other PBKS opener, went a step further by starting the third over with back-to-back sixes followed by a four and ended the over by dispatching a full toss over midwicket for six more. Shami then gave away 11 in his third over and would have been hopeful of conceding fewer in the 20th over when SRH were fighting back in the death overs. But Marcus Stoinis dashed those hopes by smoking four sixes on the leg side to end the innings and gave Shami forgettable figures.

Jofra Archer 0 for 76 vs SRH, 2025

Having entered the last auction as a last-minute addition after some back and forth with the ECB and a paycut in his central contact with them, Archer had the most inauspicious start to a new IPL season with his old side Rajasthan Royals (RR). He came on as first change after SRH had already racked up 55 in four overs and he was taken apart immediately by Travis Head for a 23-run over, which also included a wide. Head’s dismissal didn’t change Archer’s fortunes, though, as Ishan Kishan, Nitish Kumar Reddy and Heinrich Klaasen carted him around for six more fours and three sixes to make him top this list.

Mohit Sharma 0 for 73 vs DC, 2024

Mohit Sharma was introduced in the 12th over of the Delhi Capitals (DC) innings in this game from 2024. Rishabh Pant welcomed him with a boundary and continued his assault in the subsequent overs. When Mohit returned to bowl the final over of the innings, Pant unleashed a flurry of sixes. He smashed the GT bowler for 6, 4, 6, 6 and 6, resulting in the most expensive spell in IPL history at the time.

Basil Thampi 0 for 70 vs RCB, 2018

A brutal night in Bengaluru saw SRH’s Basil Thampi have a torrid time in 2018. When Moeen Ali welcomed him into the attack with back-to-back sixes, it set the tone for the Royal Challengers Bengaluru (RCB) batting unit to pile on the runs. AB de Villiers, Colin de Grandhomme and Sarfaraz Khan joined in, hitting Thampi for five fours and six sixes, resulting in a forgettable day.2:03

Hayden on Archer: ‘Not sure I’ve seen a poorer IPL bowling performance’

Yash Dayal 0 for 69 vs KKR, 2023

Rinku Singh stunned everyone by smashing five sixes in the final over to pull off an astonishing heist against Gujarat Titans (GT). And it was GT’s Dayal who bore the brunt. Dayal was tasked with defending 29 runs in the last over, with his figures already 0 for 38. However, he couldn’t find an answer to Rinku’s barrage of sixes, ending with 0 for 69.

Luke Wood 1 for 68 vs Delhi Capitals, 2024

Gerald Coetzee had a stomach bug, and his replacement Luke Wood probably felt a bit queasy himself after his first three balls went for 14 thanks to the baseball-style hitting of Jake Fraser-McGurk. After conceding just eight in the second over, Wood was taken for two sixes by Shai Hope in his third. In his fourth, Tristan Stubbs decided Wood had been hit in front of the wicket enough and hit four consecutive boundaries with scoops and reverse-scoops. The over ended up going for 26.

Reece Topley 1 for 68 vs SRH, 2024

RCB were hammered for the highest team total in IPL history at the Chinnaswamy Stadium, and it was Reece Topley who felt the heat the most. Despite taking the wicket of Abhishek Sharma, Topley’s figures were 1 for 43 after three overs. His final over turned into a nightmare when Abdul Samad hit 4, 4, 6, 6 and 4, helping SRH surpass the record team total of 263 runs.

Can KKR find a way out of their middle-order mess?

The thumping heartbeat of their IPL 2024 triumph is flatlining, and the numbers don’t look pretty

Sreshth Shah25-Apr-20252:33

Cricinformed: KKR’s middle-order muddle

There’s a fine line between being inconsistent and being completely out of sync, and right now, Kolkata Knight Riders’ (KKR) middle order is in danger of crossing it. The thumping heartbeat of KKR’s batting in IPL 2024 is flatlining this season. KKR’s inability to find any fluency through the middle overs has mirrored their broader batting slump this season. Their capitulation in Mullanpur — where they failed to chase a modest 112 against Punjab Kings (PBKS) – felt like a breaking point. A limp performance against Gujarat Titans (GT) on Monday only deepened the malaise.What’s most concerning is that the personnel hasn’t changed much – the output certainly has. Among all teams in IPL 2025, KKR’s middle order (positions 4 to 8) has the lowest collective average (20.00), and KKR’s average through the middle overs (7th-16th) this season (17.4) is also the worst in the league.Still, it would be unfair to pin the blame solely on the middle order. Their success last year was built on strong foundations laid by the openers. In IPL 2024, the Phil Salt-Sunil Narine combo had the third-highest aggregate among opening pairs, and averaged 46.58. Salt has moved to Royal Challengers Bengaluru this season, and Quinton de Kock has struggled to replicate his success alongside Narine: their average opening stand this year is 18.16. KKR dropped de Kock in their last match against GT, only for his replacement Rahmanullah Gurbaz to begin his season with a first-over dismissal.It’s no surprise, then, that KKR have the worst powerplay dot-ball percentage of all teams in IPL 2025 (49.82).It’s a domino effect: the same middle order that once thrived on momentum now finds itself forced into damage control. Other teams with struggling middle orders such as Lucknow Super Giants (average of 22.24 from Nos. 4 to 8) and PBKS (25.47) have top-order runs to fall back on, which has kept them in contention for the playoffs.Following the defeat to GT, KKR captain Ajinkya Rahane pointed to the need for batters to be “brave” with their intent despite the form slump. Ahead of Saturday’s home game against PBKS, Moeen Ali echoed that sentiment, but framed it differently. According to Moeen, the key lies in a shift in mindset, with the batters needing to almost trick themselves into confidence.Andre Russell has scored just 55 runs in six innings this season, at an average of 9.16•AFP/Getty Images”It’s about having the mindset where you kind of fool yourself into thinking you’re playing well and just go all out,” Moeen told reporters. “We need to go out there, express ourselves, and just have a bit more fun. Sometimes from the outside, it seems the pressure is too much on players, but it’s about taking that off and showing your skills.”Moeen remains optimistic about the line-up’s potential. “The real strength is we have guys who can go ultra-aggressive like Sunil Narine, and also classical players like Ajinkya, who’s in red-hot form. Angkrish [Raghuvanshi] is doing brilliantly, and then there’s Venky [Venkatesh Iyer], Rinku, myself, Russell. Everything is there. We genuinely have one of the stronger batting line-ups in the competition. Some players like Angkrish and Ajinkya have done well, but as a unit, we haven’t clicked. It’s just a matter of turning it around.”It won’t be easy, though. Bravo admitted, after the 39-run defeat against GT, that the KKR batters were just “out of confidence.” And KKR also have scars from their previous capitulation to 95 all out against PBKS. Three of Yuzvendra Chahal’s five best IPL performances have come against KKR, all since IPL 2022, and Venkatesh has been out three times in 18 balls against Marco Jansen.But PBKS have one weakness – powerplay bowling, with only 11 wickets in eight games – and KKR will hope to exploit it come Saturday. A strong start could fix a lot of their problems, and they only need to look at Royal Challengers Bengaluru (RCB) last season and Mumbai Indians on numerous occasions to know that comebacks are possible even when all looks lost. However, time is running out, and with KKR needing to win five of their last six games to make a strong case for the playoffs, it’s now or never for the defending champions.

'Pressure? Handled; History? Made' – Reactions to India's win at Edgbaston

How the cricketing world responded to India’s 336-run win against England in the second Test

ESPNcricinfo staff06-Jul-2025

Shubman Gill picks up a souvenir after the win•Getty Images

Shubman Gill, Akash Deep and Mohammed Siraj stole the headlines as India won their first Test in Edgbaston with a 336-run victory — their biggest away victory by runs. Gill registered scores of 269 and 161, while Akash Deep became only the second Indian bowler to return a 10-wicket haul in England. Siraj also played his part, with figures of 6 for 70 in England’s first innings. Cricketers, both current and retired, took to social media to congratulate India on a famous triumph.

A lime innings from the of the moment!
Congratulations, @ShubmanGill, on powering India to a brilliant Test victory! @RishabhPant17, @klrahul, and @imjadeja batted very well, especially in the 2nd innings.

India’s approach was to take England out of this… pic.twitter.com/4REiYoY9uf

— Sachin Tendulkar (@sachin_rt) July 6, 2025

Winning a Test in England is about showing heart when it gets tough! No @Jaspritbumrah93, away from home, backs to the wall and still the boys found a way! #AkashDeep was fearless and unplayable and @ShubmanGill showed maturity beyond his years! That’s the kind of win you…

— Yuvraj Singh (@YUVSTRONG12) July 6, 2025

Well done, Team India on an exceptional victory! It was amazing to see the team's fighting spirit and resilience. Congratulations Shubman on an outstanding match with the bat and for leading the team with such poise. A great start to your captaincy. Also great effort from Shiraj… pic.twitter.com/ieDfVITLBH

— VVS Laxman (@VVSLaxman281) July 6, 2025

What a performance from shubman gill and his team.. with the bat and now with the ball..akasdeep and Siraj just brilliant .indian attack looking far superior than the English attack .. Akasdeep and Siraj are workhorses.india win without bumrah..Can’t be better result with the…

— Sourav Ganguly (@SGanguly99) July 6, 2025

Pressure? Handled. History? Made. pic.twitter.com/7qdDF1MT3w

— Kuldeep yadav (@imkuldeep18) July 6, 2025

Outstanding win in Birmingham. While this should be remembered as the Shubman Gill Test match for his incredible 430 runs, but the efforts from Siraj in the first innings and Akash Deep in both innings on a surface which didn’t have much for the bowlers was an outstanding effort.… pic.twitter.com/qwrdnjMcHl

— Virrender Sehwag (@virendersehwag) July 6, 2025

What a historic Test win by Team India!

Brilliantly led by @ShubmanGill and a phenomenal 6-wicket haul by #AkashDeep in the second innings.
And over 1000 runs in a single Test match, never been done before!
Pure dominance #INDvsENG

— Shikhar Dhawan (@SDhawan25) July 6, 2025

INDIA REGISTERED THEIR BIGGEST EVER TEST WIN AWAY FROM HOME UNDER @ShubmanGill @BCCI WELL PLAYED TEAM INDIA WELL BOWLED #AkashDeep pic.twitter.com/ITp4L6Oiw0

— Harbhajan Turbanator (@harbhajan_singh) July 6, 2025

England quicks await India acid test after two-year changing of the guard

The post-Broad and Anderson world gets real at The Oval this week, as a raw attack tries to close out the series

Vithushan Ehantharajah30-Jul-20252:41

Harmison: ‘There will be lot of bounce on this surface’

Wednesday was James Anderson’s 43rd birthday. Thursday, day one of the fifth Test against India, will be two years since Stuart Broad’s last day of Test cricket. And, over the next five days, England will take their most significant steps yet into that post-Anderson-Broad world.This will be the 17th match without either, but the first home series decider since that Broad farewell. England’s new-look, four-pronged, right-arm seam attack has been picked to deliver victory on a pitch with extra live grass but, with five days of low cloud forecast as well, there will be plenty opportunity for this attack to be judged by the standards of those bygone legends.What wistfulness there remains for England’s most prolific seamers – 1308 dismissals between them – is mitigated by Anderson’s ongoing summer with Lancashire and Broad’s musings on . The game has moved on. The country, too. But a necessary shuffling of England’s deck after a gruelling fourth Test has brought the ongoing job of replacing them on the field into focus.Related

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Jofra Archer (two Tests) and Brydon Carse (four) are having to rest because of their workloads. This highlights both this series’ condensed schedule and the durability of Anderson and Broad. It is a quality often lost amid the talk of their longevity.Anderson played all five matches in nine different series. Broad did the same in ten. Chris Woakes will do so for the first time this week at the age of 36.Woakes, however, is something of an anomaly. He’s the renaissance man of this attack, a player who wrote his worth in the shadows of Anderson and Broad for 11 years before being tasked with leading the attack out of it.May this be his last stop in the shepherding role? It is not beyond the realms of possibility that this will be Woakes’ 62nd and final cap, with an Ashes tour of Australia to follow. Arguably his biggest task has now arrived; he will need to dig even deeper after 167 overs across four Tests, and guide Josh Tongue, Gus Atkinson and Jamie Overton through to the other side. Starting with a first series victory over India since 2018.It has been a peculiar three weeks for that trio. Tongue was left out for Archer after two Tests. At the time, he was the leading wicket-taker in the series with 11 at 33.63.James Anderson and Stuart Broad inspect the ball during their final Test together in 2023•AFP/Getty ImagesAtkinson, added to the squad from the third Test, was not selected at either Lord’s or Old Trafford, and subsequently released to Surrey, who passed him on to their second team. Neither country nor county were willing to risk him this early, despite the fact he had been passed fully fit from a hamstring injury sustained during the one-off Test against Zimbabwe.Much like England, Surrey were also wary of adding too much risk to their attack against Yorkshire, given they were already playing Overton. In that instance, country and county had been in sync, an agreement from Surrey with England that Overton would get game-time having not been needed for the first two games.In a series of immense toil, both are fresh, while Tongue’s 81 overs constitute just 11% of the mammoth 691.2 overs that England’s quicks have sent down in the course of four Tests. And even Tongue has had a month off, barring 22 overs for Nottinghamshire last week.Their jobs, however, will be harder than those they are replacing, given Ben Stokes’ absence. England’s captain, the standout bowler of the series, was still wrestling with the decision not to play as early as the start of the team’s training session on Tuesday morning.Stokes’ grade three shoulder tear had ruled him out from bowling, but he was still on course to play as a batter until further medical advice and guidance from head coach Brendon McCullum ushered him towards a sensible decision. Even then, his biggest deliberation was the exact make-up of the seam attack that will attempt to make up the difference.”You go through so many different scenarios with potentials of the game,” Stokes said. “Turning up here and seeing the wicket, a lot greener and bit more live grass than the other wickets, we probably would have gone down the route of four seamers even if I played and couldn’t bowl.”The very fact that Tongue, Atkinson and Overton have been entrusted to punch this last ticket will give them some encouragement. As usual, when Ollie Pope deputises, Stokes will oversee everything off the field. But his faith in this trio, all of whom were handed debuts on his watch, will only go so far.It is worth stepping back and appreciating just how tricky it has been to navigate the land since Anderson’s and Broad’s retirements. Men’s managing director Rob Key was the key driver in assembling an array of quicks that could not just soften the blow from moving on from two legends, but ensure that England would never have to ask too much from their new batch. That aim, however, has proved nigh on impossible to deliver.Gus Atkinson will be part of England’s fast-bowling attack at the Oval•Getty ImagesInjuries to the likes of Mark Wood and Olly Stone – and Atkinson, for a bit – shallowed the pool. Others, like Matthew Potts, Sam Cook (who debuted against Zimbabwe) and Dillon Pennington (unused despite being part of the squad at the start of last season) are not trusted enough to be considered. Saqib Mahmood and Matt Fisher – ironically, the two drafted in for 2022’s tour of the West Indies when England tried to force Anderson and Broad out – are now further adrift.Then there are those given recognition, but nothing more for now. Josh Hull, handed a surprise debut in this corresponding fixture last summer, has showed signs of progression for Leicestershire without looking like being in contention any time soon. It remains too early for the young Hampshire duo of Sonny Baker and Eddie Jack, even if both have been pushed – the former handed a development contract after the Lions tour to Australia at the start of the year, the latter training with England ahead of the first Test after impressing for the England Lions. Even someone like 29-year-old Luke Wood, Lancashire’s left-arm quick, has been part of conversations without anything tangible, having piqued McCullum’s interest upon a return to the T20Is against West Indies.For now, it all rests on a trio coming in to the cauldron cold. Their experiences at international level will offer them a crutch – Atkinson’s record-breaking 2024, Tongue’s impressive start in 2023’s Ashes, and the management’s clear regard for Overton as a multi-format cricketer.But this is all very different. And by proxy, a chance to take more meaningful steps into the unknown.

From youngest at Lord's to 100 Tests: Mushfiqur's 20-year, 6000-run legacy

Stats highlights from Mushfiqur’s Test career as he is set to become the first Bangladesh player to feature in 100 Tests

Shubh Agarwal18-Nov-2025Mushfiqur Rahim will become the first Bangladesh player to feature in 100 Tests when he takes the field in the second Test against Ireland in Mirpur. One of Bangladesh’s longest-serving cricketers, Mushfiqur made his Test debut in 2005, making him the youngest debutant at Lord’s – a record that still stands.Now, gearing up for his 100th Test, Mushfiqur is among the only three cricketers to have a 20-year-long Test career after making their debut in the 2000s, alongside James Anderson and Brendan Taylor.Taking on multiple roles in his marathon career, Mushfiqur captained 34 Tests and kept wickets in 55 of them but he would be mostly remembered as a run-aggregator, being the only Bangladesh batter to score over 6000 Test runs. Among the 18 Bangladesh batters to have scored over 1000 Test runs, Mushfiqur’s average of 38.02 is only second to Tamim Iqbal (38.89). His tally of 12 Test hundreds is also the second best for Bangladesh.

Mushfiqur’s emergence as a batter has been synonymous with Bangladesh’s rise into a more competitive Test-playing nation. He averaged only 28.85 in his first 30 Tests, managing one hundred and nine fifties. Bangladesh won only two of their 39 Tests in this period – both against a depleted West Indies’ side in the Caribbean in 2009.Since 2013, Mushfiqur has averaged 42.53 in 69 Tests, amassing 11 hundreds. In this period, Bangladesh have become a competitive team in Asia, with their win percentage going up to 26.25%. Mushfiqur is the only Bangladesh batter to average 40 plus with a minimum of 1000 runs in this span.ESPNcricinfo LtdThe year 2013 was the turning point in Mushfiqur’s career. It was the first calendar year in which he averaged 50-plus (54.45). He started that year scoring 200 against Sri Lanka in Galle, the first double hundred for a Bangladesh batter. His next double hundred – 219* against Zimbabwe in Mirpur in 2018 – is the highest individual score by a Bangladesh batter. It also made him the only Bangladesh batter and the only wicketkeeper-batter worldwide to score more than one Test double hundred.Two years later, he did it again in Mirpur – another double ton (203) against Zimbabwe -becoming just the third batter in Test history to score three or more double hundreds while batting at number five or lower.ESPNcricinfo LtdMushfiqur has seven Player-of-the-Match awards, the most for Bangladesh in Tests. Three of them have come away from home. Only Tamim Iqbal has more than one Player-of-the-Match award for Bangladesh in away Tests.Mushfiqur has been the backbone of Bangladesh’s fortunes in away matches. He averages more away (38.70) than at home (37.53). He has most runs (2748) and most hundreds (six) for Bangladesh away from home. His 191 in the first Test against Pakistan in 2024 is the highest score in a win for Bangladesh away from home.Mushfiqur featured in eight of Bangladesh’s first nine overseas Test victories. Only Muthiah Muralidaran has appeared in more such wins (10).

Mushfiqur has the highest balls/dismissal ratio for a Bangladesh batter – 78.6. Statistically, it makes him the toughest Bangladesh batter to dismiss. He is, therefore, also the perfect foil for big partnerships. Bangladesh have had six 250-plus stands and Mushfiqur has been a common link in five of them.He has Test hundreds in six nations, again the most for Bangladesh. He is also the only Bangladesh player to score a Test hundred in all four Asian countries where Test cricket has been played (excluding UAE).The first innings is where Mushfiqur scored 10 out of his 12 hundreds and averaged 45.77. Among the 21 Bangladesh batters who have scored more than 1000 runs in the first innings of Tests, no one averages above 40.

Mushfiqur captained Bangladesh in 34 Tests and kept wickets in 55 Tests, both records for Bangladesh highlighting the weight of his workload. He combined both roles in 28 matches, the second-most in Test history after MS Dhoni’s 60.He averaged 37 as a wicketkeeper and an even better 39.38 when playing as a specialist batter. The added pressure of leadership never weighed him down either, as he averaged 41.44 with the bat as captain compared to 36.30 when not leading the side. With 3515 runs as wicketkeeper and over 113 dismissals (98 catches and 15 stumpings), he stands as one of Bangladesh’s most significant Test cricketers.

It is fitting that Mushfiqur will play his milestone Test at the Shere Bangla National Stadium, a venue where he has scored exactly 5000 runs – a record for most international runs at a single venue.

Unassuming Taijul wears the crown of the best Bangladesh bowler

Having played in the shadow of Shakib Al Hasan for a long time, he has now surpassed his hero’s wickets tally

Mohammad Isam22-Nov-2025To grasp Taijul Islam’s big moment, you have to get as close to the pitch as possible. You can’t sit in a cushy, soundproof press box to get a feeling of the height he has scaled. As a Bangladesh fan, the best you can do is witness the moment at the Shere Bangla National Stadium’s grandstand. A seat in the lower part of the grandstand could be useful, given how close it is to the action. It is a side view, though, so you might miss the nuances of Taijul’s bowling, but it is about moment.Bangladesh declared their second innings shortly after the lunch break on the fourth day in the Dhaka Test. Taijul broke Shakib Al Hasan’s record of most Test wickets for Bangladesh in the sixth over of Ireland’s chase. The Ireland captain Andy Balbirnie, trying to work the ball away towards square leg, was undone by a slightly quicker delivery. The huge appeal was followed by the raised finger, before Balbirnie called for the review.The small crowd cheered. Taijul ran a little bit with his clenched fist. Mushfiqur Rahim, the man of the moment in Dhaka, tried to pick him up to take the celebration to the next level. Taijul would have none of it, as he politely asked to be let down. After the TV umpire confirmed the three reds, Taijul calmly walked back to his mark. If you blinked, you would have missed his smile.Related

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In terms of Test wickets, Taijul has now surpassed the man who has practically built Bangladesh cricket. Shakib is someone he looked up to before he made his Test debut, and in whose shadow he became a top-class operator. If you peel back another layer, Taijul now rightfully wears the crown of the best Bangladesh bowler – the one that has come down from Mohammad Rafique, the first bowler to take 100 Test wickets for the country, and, of course, Shakib, the first to 200 Test wickets.According to Taijul, though, he never really targeted records but wanted to play for Bangladesh for a long time. He said that he understands what he needs to do at the highest level, although he doesn’t enjoy the “underrated” tag. “I always wanted to have a long career,” he said. “I never really thought that I would be on top of the wicket-takers’ list. You just don’t plan that way, especially when you are starting a Test career.”I think around the time [I got to 200 wickets], I probably had the consistency and experience to convince myself that I can serve Bangladesh cricket for a longer time. I think it was around this time that I considered that I might get a few more wickets. It is not about proving myself to anyone. I think performance is the most important aspect at the highest level. I am always tagged as an underrated bowler, but I think it’s only the media that considers me as underrated.”Seven of Taijul’s 17 five-fors have come in wins•Associated PressTaijul was Shakib’s understudy and played second fiddle to him for a long time. He wasn’t always an automatic choice outside the subcontinent. And if you consider his celebration on Saturday, he is an unassuming person who doesn’t have glamour or a glitzy social-media following.But he is reliable, and bowls tirelessly. He has made contributions, big and small and mostly impactful, in his 11 years at the highest level. Seven of his 17 five-wicket hauls and one of his two ten-wicket hauls have come in Bangladesh’s wins.His 10 for 184 in Bangladesh’s 150-run win against New Zealand in Sylhet in 2023 is probably his greatest moment. He took Kane Williamson’s wicket in both innings. When the chips were down, as was the case in Bangladesh’s first day-night Test in Kolkata in 2019, Taijul was the 12th man who had to step up as a batter as Nayeem Hasan’s concussion substitute. He took Ajinkya Rahane’s wicket and took a splendid catch of Virat Kohli. He batted bravely too.There were numerous times when Taijul stepped up when Bangladesh ran into trouble. Still, he is the one who has to prove his worth to the selectors often.Taijul took on the mantle of being the lead spinner in the attack in 2017, since Shakib became irregular in Tests. Ten of his 17 five-fors have come in the last five years, a period in which Bangladesh have increasingly played more Tests, and mostly without Shakib.”The national team is where you have to keep performing,” he said. “Look at Shakib – he was No. 1 in the world for a reason. He was always performing. That was his quality. We remember his suggestions. He would always share his experience with us.”Even in private conversations, Taijul doesn’t really stick out for his big proclamations. He will enjoy a quiet dinner with friends. His dry sense of humour will stick out from time to time. He will make his point, smile and enjoy the conversation. But at the same time, he is serving as a good example of hard work for the next generation. The good news is that finally, many are not only noticing him but also following him.

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