A rare clean sweep away from home

Stats highlights from the third day of the Pallekele Test between Sri Lanka and India

Bharath Seervi14-Aug-20171 – This is the first time India have whitewashed an away series of three or more Tests. Overall, this is the fifth time India have whitewashed a Test series of three or more matches.2 – Number of times Sri Lanka have been whitewashed at home in a series of three or more matches: by Australia in 2003-04 and by India in this series. Overall, this is the sixth time they have been whitewashed in a series of three or more Tests.35.98 – The difference between India’s batting and bowling averages in this series, which is their second-biggest in any series of three or more Tests. The biggest difference also came against Sri Lanka, 44.43, in 1986. India’s batting average in this series was 60.90 and bowling average 24.92.3 – Bigger innings victories for India than this one, by an innings and 171 runs. In away Tests, this is their second-largest innings win. For Sri Lanka, this is their fifth-biggest innings defeat and second-biggest at home.26 – Average of India’s spin bowlers in this series, compared to Sri Lanka’s 67.38. India’s spinners struck roughly once every 49 balls whereas Sri Lanka spinners required around 102 balls per wicket. India’s fast bowlers averaged 24.35 whereas the home side’s quicks averaged 53.84.

Pace and spin for both teams in this series

PaceSpinTeamWktsAveSRWktsAveSRIndia2024.3545.03526.0048.6Sri Lanka1353.8474.61867.38101.63 – Number of first-innings leads of over 300 runs for India in this series – their most in any series. They had got two such leads against Sri Lanka at home in 2009-10 and in the West Indies last year. India’s first-innings leads in this series: 309, 439 and 352.487 – India’s lowest score in a completed innings in this series – the highest lowest innings total for India in any series of three or more Tests. Sri Lanka’s highest total of the series was 386.5 – Number of India players to scored centuries in this series – Shikhar Dhawan, Cheteshwar Pujara, Virat Kohli, Ajinkya Rahane and Hardik Pandya – the joint-most in an away Test series of any number of matches for India. In all ten players made 50-plus scores, which is the joint second-most in any Test series.

Van Meekeren's redemption, and Oman's fire

ESPNcricinfo’s correspondents travelling around India for the World T20 pick their best moments from the first round of the tournament

15-Mar-2016Sidharth Monga: Unchecked tempers and clenched fists
Sultan Ahmed is 38. Amir Ali is 37. They play cricket together, not for their country of birth, but for a country they migrated to for a livelihood. In their first match on the world stage, they come together at 137 for 6 in a chase of 155 against Ireland. Amir has done all the hard work, reviving Oman from 90 for 5. He is on 27 off 13, and the equation has now come down to 16 runs off nine balls. Sultan is on strike, facing Boyd Rankin, who has got a wicket earlier in the over. He misses the ball and starts running. Amir runs too, but then realises Niall O’Brien has been quick and alert behind the wicket. Sultan is run out, and he lashes out at the man who has kept Oman alive.This kind of emotion is rare to see in elite sport; there is disappointment, despair and frustration taken out at one’s own team-mate. Fortunately for Oman, Max Sorensen bowls an ordinary over, and the two men bask in the glory next to each other at the post-match presentation and the press conference. When they are walking off, I remind Sultan – in front of Amir – how he had absolutely lost it after that run-out. They can now say it was done in the heat of the moment, and that the plan was to run if he missed and bring the settled batsman back on strike. And though Sultan was livid then, he now recognises that Amir did the smart thing by not risking his own wicket.In their next game, against Bangladesh, Oman show that they are not the side to keep their emotions in check. There is gesticulation at every error in the field, and there are a few. There are those little clenched fists at every boundary in the home stretch of the chase; and there is flamboyance with their celebrations. It was a short ride, but they took you along on it.Melinda Farrell: Van Meekeren’s spotlight
It’s finger-numbingly cold in the shadows of the Himalayas as Paul van Meekeren waits at third man. The 23-year-old Netherlands seamer is nervous. It’s his first appearance at a world tournament. It’s the fifth ball of the match and Bangladesh opener Soumya Sarkar charges down the wicket for a good old slog only to find a thick edge.The ball arcs towards van Meekeran through the sparse atmosphere. He’s sure he has this. A metre inside the boundary, hands above head, the ball hits his fingers. And spits straight through them. Dropped. In a match where everything is on the line.Three overs later, Peter Borren throws van Meekeren the ball. As he walks back to his mark, the nerves quieten. He’s a bowler. This is why he’s here. He’s going to enjoy this moment. Sarkar gets into his crouch and waits.Van Meekeren practises on artificial mats, but here, his tall, gangly form gallops in on grass. He somehow extracts bounce on a pitch that looks like concrete but plays like cardboard. Sarkar is taken by surprise as he flays at the ball and edges to the keeper. Van Meekeren has a wicket with his first ball on the world stage.Redemption begets confidence; the early mistake is forgotten and he is in this match now, hungry. He will bowl 35 more deliveries in this competition. He will take five more wickets and concede just 31 runs. But it wouldn’t be enough.Then, he’d pack his bags and go home to wait four more years for another chance, his moment in the sun as fleeting as glimpses of the Himalayan peaks as the clouds close in.Cartoonish physique aside, Mohammad Shahzad is a seriously good batsman•Chris WhiteoakKarthik Krishnaswamy: Shahzad’s rampage
Mohammad Shahzad is in red-hot form, but he is looking a little edgy in this winner-takes-all clash, and chops Wellington Masakadza’s left-arm spin straight to the point fielder three times in the first over. Something has to give. Tendai Chatara digs one in short, and is forced to flinch before he can even start his follow-through. Behind him, the umpire ducks. Shahzad has just swatted the ball back down the ground, meatily, like a down-the-line tennis forehand.It’s hard to believe Afghanistan left Shahzad out of their squad for the 2015 World Cup. It might be okay, though still debatable, for a top-ranked team with plenty of bench strength to leave out a skillful player for supposedly not conforming to fitness standards. It’s an entirely different matter when a chronically inconsistent batting side leaves out its best batsman on those tenuous grounds. It’s easy to chuckle at Shahzad’s cartoonish physique, but he’s a seriously good cricketer: he averages over 50 in first-class cricket, over 35 in ODIs, and over 30 in T20Is.Shahzad is a laid-back character, but the power in his shots might well stem from anger at that snub. Chatara bowls two more short balls. The first one is wide of off stump, and it rockets to the point boundary before anyone can blink. The other is rising towards his head, but he steps across it, swivels, and hooks – in utterly textbook fashion – to the fine-leg boundary. Chatara is forced to bowl a little fuller, and Shahzad is waiting for it. Third man is up in the circle, and he opens his bat face, finishing with the back of his bat pointing down the pitch, to dab it to the fielder’s left and pick up his fourth boundary of the over.Jarrod Kimber: Cricket’s global avatar
Tanwir Afzal is not a household name. Or face. Or even someone who people even casually recognise. He is Hong Kong’s captain and tossed the coin for the first game. India newspapers at the time were suggesting the tournament started in seven days’ time. Even the TV commentators have, at times, suggested the real tournament starts later on. But the ICC has decided that these qualifiers are part of the tournament; even if it is just a face-saving excercise, that is the official stance. So think of how far cricket has come. On the opening day of this tournament, our second biggest in cricket, when Afzal chose to open the bowling, it was a Hong Kong bowler who opened the tournament. We were told for years that the world did not like cricket, that it was our little game, and that it would always stay that way. No matter our age, none of us when we were young would think a Hong Kong bowler would be the first player we would see at a tournament this big. If we have come this far, how far can we go?

Sangakkara and Thirimanne bury England

01-Mar-2015Angelo Mathews applied the brakes on the innings when he dismissed Moeen Ali for 15 in the 10th over•Associated PressThree overs later, Gary Ballance popped a return catch to Tillakaratne Dilshan and England were 71 for 2•Associated PressBell tried to break the shackles, but chopped Suranga Lakmal back on to the stumps for 49•Getty ImagesJoe Root, though, rebuilt the innings, before picking away the big hits•AFPHe added 98 for the fifth wicket with an equally busy partner in James Taylor•Getty ImagesJoe Root, who was dropped by Mahela Jayawardene on 2, went on to become the youngest England centurion in World Cups•Getty ImagesEngland were dealt a double blow when Root and Taylor departed in successive overs, but Jos Buttler took the total 309•AFPSri Lanka’s chase had a solid platform with Tillakaratne Dilshan and Lahiru Thirimanne putting on a 100-run opening partnership•Getty ImagesDilshan lobbed Moeen Ali to short midwicket in the 19th over, but it hardly slowed Sri Lanka’s charge•Getty ImagesThirimanne, who was reprieved by Root on 3, brought up his fourth century•AFPSangakkara sped to his own ton off 70 balls – his fastest – bettering his 73-ball effort against Bangladesh in his previous ODI•Getty ImagesThey reeled off 212 in 28. 2 overs as Sri Lanka recorded their second 300-plus chase in World Cups•Getty ImagesWith three losses from four games, England have plenty to ponder.•Getty Images

Anderson's grimace, Pietersen's fumble

Plays of the day from the fourth day of the second Test between New Zealand and England in Wellington

Andrew McGlashan in Wellington17-Mar-2013Grimace of the dayEngland’s quick bowlers showed the strain on the fourth morning, none more so than James Anderson who had needed treatment the previous day for a stiff back. He did not take much part in the warm-ups before play and, straight after his first delivery, showed his discomfort as he walked back to the mark. His movement started to look a little better the more he bowled and the wicket of Peter Fulton improved his mood – for a short time.Fumble of the dayWhen a batsman is on a pair it is important to keep him sweating as long as possible. For Ross Taylor it was even worse. He was on a king pair. He safely negotiated his first ball, but that first run of the match would still have been playing on his mind. It wouldn’t have escaped Anderson’s notice, either, so when Taylor defended a delivery solidly towards mid-on, it was no surprise that the fast bowler was far from amused by Kevin Pietersen’s rather limp attempt to get behind the ball which bobbled under him and allowed Taylor to open his account.Shot of the dayMonty Panesar was causing some problems from the footmarks, getting the occasional delivery to turn and bounce. Kane Williamson, though, played him confidently by getting well forward to defend and thrust his pad at ones pitching outside leg stump. Neither did he miss the chance to score. When Panesar dragged one a touch short Williamson waited a fraction longer and whipped it through midwicket at the top of the bounce. Classy.False hope of the dayThe rain held off until lunch and, very kindly, was clearing just as the interval was ending. Play was due to resume at 1.30pm but, as so often, during that period when the ground was ready and everyone was waiting the clouds built up again behind the pavilion. Then, right on cue, just as the umpires Rod Tucker and Asad Rauf emerged onto the field the rain started to fall again and the players headed back into the dressing rooms. It happened again, shortly after tea, when the stumps were back in. It was one of those days.

Somerset best placed to make the cut

The semi-final scenarios for group B

S Rajesh03-Oct-2011Royal Challengers Bangalore haven’t won a single game so far, but two big wins might yet give them a shot at the semi-finals•Associated PressWarriors
They’re currently sitting on top of the group with four points, but whether they make the next stage or not depends largely on what they do in their final game, against Somerset on Wednesday.If they win, they’re through. If they lose, it could get complicated: they’ll have to hope that South Australia lose to Royal Challengers in the last match; else Somerset and South Australia will both have more points and will qualify. Even if South Australia lose to Royal Challengers, Warriors will have to ensure they don’t lose to Somerset by a margin that will pull their net run rate below that of Kolkata Knight Riders, who have four points and a NRR of +0.306. Warriors are currently on +0.592, but they don’t have much room to manoeuvre: if they’re chasing 140 against Somerset and lose by eight or more runs, their NRR will slip below that of Knight Riders.The weather in Bangalore has had most teams fretting, but the one side which will welcome rain is Warriors. One point in the last game will leave them with five, which means Somerset will be the only side that could go past them. South Australia could reach five points as well, but their NRR is languishing at -0.775: they’ll have to beat Royal Challengers by at least 67 runs (if they bat first and score 160) to go past Warriors’ NRR.Kolkata Knight Riders
Kolkata have played all their matches and their fate rests entirely on the hands of the other teams (and the weather). If all three matches produce decisive results, Knight Riders’ best chance is this: Somerset lose both their matches, while Royal Challengers win theirs. In such a scenario, Warriors will move to the top of the table, with Knight Riders and Royal Challengers tied in second place on four points. If Royal Challengers don’t win by huge margins, Knight Riders will stay ahead on NRR.Knight Riders will also go through if Somerset beat Warriors by a margin that is enough to pull the Warriors’ NRR below that of Knight Riders (see the write-up for Warriors above). In this case, South Australia will have to lose to Royal Challengers so that they stay on three points.Somerset
Somerset are the only unbeaten team in the tournament so far, and with three points from two games, they have an excellent chance of making it to the next stage. One win in their next two games will almost certainly get them through. Even if they beat Royal Challengers and lose to Warriors, and if South Australia win their last game, Somerset and South Australia will be level on points, with Somerset currently far ahead on NRR.South Australia
With three points in three games and a terrible NRR, South Australia’s equation is fairly simple: they must win to give themselves any chance of making the semi-finals. Even if they win, they’ll have to hope other results go their way. If Warriors beat Somerset, who in turn beat Royal Challengers, then South Australia will most likely miss the cut even if they win their last game.Royal Challengers Bangalore
They’re the only team not to have won a match in the tournament so far, but if they win their last two matches, Royal Challengers may yet have a chance of qualification. To do so, they’ll have to go past the NRR of Warriors or Knight Riders (depending on the result of the Somerset v Warriors game). Royal Challengers’ NRR is currently -0.648, but if, for instance, they score 140 in their last two matches and win them by 25 runs, they’ll sneak ahead of Knight Riders’ NRR.However, if either of their two games is washed out, then Royal Challengers’ Champions League campaign will end before the semi-finals.

Consistently inconsistent

England regained some pride under new captain Kevin Pietersen at The Oval, but the damage was done in the middle two Tests as the series was wrestled away

Andrew Miller12-Aug-2008

Sixty and out: Alastair Cook’s final run tally was impressive, but he didn’t produce the much-needed century
© Getty Images

Andrew Strauss – 4For the second season running, Strauss has been left struggling to secure his winter tour place, and despite the eventual ease of his matchwinning half-century at The Oval, the doubts have not been allayed. In his last series against South Africa, in 2004-05, he anchored himself on the back foot, and cut and drove his way to 656 runs in an incredible series-winning performance. Four years on, he’s mustered barely a third of that tally, having time and again threatened to come forward in a show of intent, only to be cramped for room from around the wicket in particular. Missing out on the England captaincy has undoubtedly upset his equilibrium, and if changes to the batting are to be made for India, Strauss is once again a leading candidate for the chop.Alastair Cook – 6(0)“Pretty sixties” have been the single biggest symptom of England’s recent batting woes, and no-one has epitomised that trait more acutely than Cook. Since the sixth of his Test centuries, at Galle in December, Cook has been dismissed between 60 and 67 on five occasions in 10 Tests – three times in this series alone, and ten times in total in his 34-match career. Consecutive scores of 60, 18, 60, 76, 9, 39 and 67 have been the very epitome of insubstantial consistency, and while others have been more culpable, Cook must carry his share of the blame for the collapses that wrecked England’s series prospects.Michael Vaughan – 2His lowest ebb. England’s most successful Test captain deserved a more fitting denouement, but in the end his atrocious form dictated the terms of his departure. Had England somehow turned the Edgbaston Test in their favour, he would have survived until The Oval, but after one match of the KP era, Vaughan already seems like a fond but distant memory. England’s balance seems transformed by the five-bowler option, but a squad place in India is not out of question if he can finish his county season on a high.

Soft at the top: Ian Bell started well with 199, but he couldn’t live up to those standards in tougher conditions
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Ian Bell – 6His 199 at Lord’s hinted that maturity had finally been reached, but the ease with which South Africa secured their momentum-shifting draw in that match revealed Bell’s innings for what it really was: another flat-track cash-in from a player who has few equals when it comes to turning on the style, but whose substance remains sadly lacking. He was largely anonymous as England slipped to defeat at Headingley and Edgbaston, and his post-Lord’s average of 22.17 spelt out his shortcomings. His promotion to No. 3 will be the making or breaking of him.Kevin Pietersen – 9An imperious performance that lived up to the hype, not only of taking on his former countrymen, but of taking over the England captaincy. As the man himself admitted, “things can only get worse”, but he’s entitled to revel in this honeymoon period. An emotional hundred at Lord’s, a counterpunching 94 at Edgbaston (for which he was unfairly pilloried for his dismissal) and a fantastic platform-laying 100 at The Oval have carried him clear as the leading run-scorer in the series, and quashed all lingering issues about his allegiance. As a leader, his players have responded to his style, and for the moment the future seems bright.Paul Collingwood – 6Axed for Headingley and recalled one match later because of the apparent impact his absence had had on the dressing-room, Collingwood rose above the spuriousness of that particular argument with a career-saving century of unequivocal bravery. His third-day performance could even have saved the series, such was the momentum he provided for England going into the fourth and final day, but it wasn’t to be. Nevertheless, having managed 96 runs in his first 10 first-class innings of the season, he added nearly 200 more in his next two visits to the crease, to re-establish his credentials as one of his country’s doughtiest fighters.Andrew Flintoff – 7His furious onslaught on the second evening at Edgbaston will live long in the memory, but there wasn’t a whole lot else to report from a comeback that was a triumph only insofar as he got through it without further injury alarms. A brutal workload was piled onto his shoulders as the series ebbed away, and his pace and accuracy deserved better rewards than nine wickets at 36.44. Yet, as two five-wicket hauls in 70 Tests would demonstrate, Flintoff has never been a man to rip through the opposition. His batting had its moments, but he’s a long way short of his best in that department.

Plenty to come: Runs came easier than wickets for Stuart Broad, but there is plenty of time on his side
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Tim Ambrose – 3
Over-exposed as a No. 6 batsman, under-productive at No. 8. An international career that began six months ago in Hamilton now looks set for a lengthy hiatus, after a ten-match stint in which Ambrose has been competent without looking outstanding. His batting had shown promise against the lesser lights of New Zealand, but 97 runs in six innings does not bode well for his Ashes prospects next summer. Twice at Edgbaston, he looked set to produce the rearguard that England desperately needed from him, but in the first innings in particular – bowled limply off the inside-edge by Jacques Kallis – he came up short. His keeping hasn’t been a desperate failure, but his body language has betrayed a man whose self-belief is on the wane.Stuart Broad – 6A mixed series finished on a positive note with his career-best figures of 3 for 44 in South Africa’s second innings at The Oval. A hugely promising cricketer, but right now he is not quite a strike bowler and, despite a majestic 76 at Headingley, not quite the batsman whose technique has drawn lofty comparisons to Garry Sobers. Nevertheless, England’s rejigged formation should suit his development perfectly. As England’s fourth seamer and a specialist No. 8, he is effectively the team’s apprentice in both roles – and judging by his progress so far this year, he will continue to learn voraciously.Ryan Sidebottom – 4A disappointment. Never fully fit after an intense year as England’s spearhead, and in hindsight he should never have played in the series decider at Edgbaston. His pace was down from Lord’s onwards, and so too was the late dipping swing that caused New Zealand’s batsmen such nightmares in the early part of the year. Guaranteed a tour place, but will need to shake off the niggles if he is to become, once again, the first name on the team sheet.Monty Panesar – 5Picked up 13 wickets at a relatively healthy average of 31.69, but was disappointingly one-dimensional at the crucial moments of the series. He’ll never develop a doosra, but the absence of an arm-ball is a crime against his vocation – consequently Smith devoured him during his Edgbaston epic, reading him instantly on length, and playing him with the spin off front foot and back alike. His wild appealing is getting beyond a gimmick as well. He’s going to make enemies of the umpires soon, and that’s not something that any spin bowler can afford.

Boy to man: James Anderson continued his successful summer with impressive spells of quick, swing bowling
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James Anderson – 7Something approaching a breakthrough series. For years Anderson was the spare wheel in England’s pace attack – habitually ignored for months on end, and then overawed when called into the team for one-off appearances in venues as diverse as Johannesburg or Brisbane. Now, however, he’s a big gun in his own right, unfazed by the sight of Flintoff and Harmison on the same team-sheet. His burgeoning mastery of swing was epitomised by the in-out combination that suckered Smith for a duck at The Oval, and he has the confidence to keep Simon Jones at bay as the Ashes approaches. He has also developed a gutsy batting style – still no ducks in a five-year Test career, and a brilliantly brave 34 that gave England hope on the final morning at Headingley.Steve Harmison – 7If Harmison was an Olympic athlete, he might be mentioned in the same breath as Matthew Pinsent or Steve Redgrave. Nobody would care what he’d been up to for the past four years, just so long as he reached his peak in time for the biggest contest of all. And the omens for next summer, dare one say it, are good. Having worked his way through more than 500 county overs for Durham, Harmison’s rhythm has returned, and in his solitary outing of the series, he gave England the cutting edge that had been sorely missing all summer. The challenge now is to sustain that through an arduous winter itinerary. With expectations renewed, that might prove the toughest challenge so far.Darren Pattinson – 3Did he really play in this series? I’m not sure the man himself actually believes it either.

Ravindra 240 and Jamieson's burst make it NZ's day

Hosts take command of first Test with South Africa still trailing by 431 runs

Ashish Pant05-Feb-2024Coming into the Mount Maunganui Test, Rachin Ravindra had never batted in the top six in Test cricket and had all of 73 runs in six innings at 14.60. In just one innings here, the left-hander has more than tripled his numbers on both counts. Given the all-important No. 4 slot, Ravindra cashed in scoring a sparkling 240 to help New Zealand extend their dominance over South Africa on day two of the first Test.South Africa captain and debutant Neil Brand finished with figures of 6 for 119, but Ravindra’s double on the back of Kane Williamson’s 118 helped New Zealand amass 511 in their first innings. Kyle Jamieson struck twice as South Africa ended the second day 80 for 4 still trailing the hosts by a massive 431 runs.Resuming their day on 258 for 2, New Zealand lost Williamson early, but Ravindra continued from where he left on day one. With the second new ball just six overs old, South Africa surprisingly did not go with Tshepo Moreki first up on the second day, instead starting with allrounder Ruan de Swardt and Dane Paterson.Paterson got the wobble seam going his way and induced an edge off Ravindra’s blade with just his second ball but there was no third slip in place to take the catch. Williamson got his first boundary of the day with a thick edge past gully but failed to carry on. Looking to unsettle de Swardt’s consistent wicket-to-wicket lines, he eyed an uncharacteristic cross-batted hoick, but all he could manage was a top edge that ballooned straight up with Moreki taking the catch at mid-on. That ended a 232-run association between Williamson and Ravindra off 472 balls.Having been padded up for ages, Mitchell immediately got going with a full-blooded lofted drive past mid-on. Moreki didn’t have the same kind of nip that he found on day one and was pulled stylishly by Ravindra through midwicket. Duanne Olivier was handed similar treatment before two delicious straight drives helped Ravindra breach the 150 mark in Tests for the first time.Having played circumspect cricket for about four sessions, New Zealand notched up a gear after lunch. Ravindra got his second session underway with a delightful drive past mid-off off de Swardt while Mitchell pulled Dane Paterson with disdain through square leg.Mitchell lofted de Swardt for a straight six but fell soon after courtesy of a stunning caught and bowled by Neil Brand. Mitchell pummeled a tossed-up length ball back but Brand stuck out both hands to his left and plucked out a quite spectacular take much to the shock of Mitchell.Tom Blundell came in and struck a four but soon mistimed a heave to short midwicket who took a low catch. Meanwhile, it was a nervous wait for Ravindra on 199. With Blundell falling and Glenn Phillips not able to hand him back the strike, the youngster had to endure close to 20 minutes on the score and go through a drinks break as well.Kyle Jamieson took two wickets in his first spell•AFP/Getty Images

Ravindra finally reached the milestone by cutting a short-of-a-length ball towards cover as he removed his helmet to soak up the applause. With the double-hundred checked, Ravindra and Phillips decided to go into overdrive adding a 82-run stand off just 71 balls for the sixth wicket.Ravindra notched up the highest score by a New Zealand batter for his maiden Test century when he went past Matthew Sinclair’s 214 but fell minutes before tea cleaned up by Brand for 240. South Africa struck four times in the session, but New Zealand had added 145 runs in 27 overs going at over five an over.New Zealand came looking for some quick runs in the final session and Matt Henry provided that by smashing one four and three sixes in his nine-ball 27. Brand, however, picked the last three wickets first going through Mitchell Santner’s defences and then taking out Henry and Tim Southee in one over to become the first South African spinner to bag a six-for on Test debut.In reply, the South African openers, Brand and Edward Moore, both on debut, held their own for nine overs and a bit. Moore got going with a fierce cut off Southee through point before repeating the shot for a similar result. Brand was more solid in defense getting right behind the line of the ball.Jamieson, however, came on and changed the face of the match. He first sent back Brand with a fuller delivery that threatened to come back in but held its line. Brand, unsure whether to play or leave the delivery fathered a tiny edge to the wicketkeeper. Two balls later debutant Raynard van Tonder was trapped right in front of the stumps by a Jamieson inswinger. Henry then got rid of Moore with a snorter that he could only glove to Conway who rushed in from cover-point to dive and complete a stunning catch as South Africa slipped to 30 for 3 after 15 overs.David Bedingham and Zubayr Hamza, however, took the attack to the opposition. Hamza first struck Henry for two successive fours before Bedingham cracked Southee for three fours in the next over. Bedingham was dropped by Henry at deep backward square leg but barring that looked largely untroubled. The duo added 44 off 53 balls for the fourth wicket before Hamza was castled by Santner.At the end of play on the second day, Bedingham had reached 29 off 39 balls with five fours to his name and had Keegan Peterson for company on 2.

Kylian Mbappe 'inspires respect' from teammates as Real Madrid and France star named 'natural' leader

Jules Kounde heaped praise on his national team captain Kylian Mbappe, stating that leadership is a quality that comes to the Real Madrid man naturally.

  • Kounde full of praise for Mbappe
  • Claims French team-mate 'inspires respect'
  • Hailed Madrid star's leadership traits
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  • WHAT HAPPENED?

    Mbappe has been hailed for his "natural" leadership qualities by his France team-mate and Clasico rival Kounde. The defender acknowledged the Real Madrid forward's humility as the captain of Les Bleus, stating that he's always present for his team-mates.

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    THE BIGGER PICTURE

    Mbappe was named France's full-time captain in March 2023, in light of Hugo Lloris' retirement from international football. In 2024, though, Mbappe was not selected for two consecutive international breaks, which gave rise to speculation that all was not well between Mbappe and the rest of the dressing room and coaching staff. However, those rumours were short-lived. Mbappe continues to be one of the pillars of the French side under Didier Deschamps as he eyes eight more goals to become France's all-time top scorer.

  • WHAT KOUNDE SAID

    Speaking at a press conference on Wednesday, Kounde said: "I've always found that he does it quite naturally. He's very present for his teammates, very open to discussion, he shares responsibilities. Because of the player he is, he inspires respect and recognition from his teammates. It's quite natural for him."

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    WHAT NEXT?

    The duo will be expected to start France's upcoming World Cup qualifiers. Deschamps' troops take on Ukraine on Friday, followed by an encounter against Iceland on September 10.

Lionesses star Jess Carter feared Lauren James would receive 'astronomical' abuse at Euro 2025

Jess Carter suffered online abuse at Euro 2025 and has revealed she worried Lauren James would be targeted if she failed from the spot at Euro 2025.

  • Lionesses win Euro 2025 in Switzerland
  • Carter suffered abuse during campaign
  • Worried team-mates would also be targeted
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  • WHAT HAPPENED?

    Carter admitted she was "super scared to play" for England at Euro 2025 after receiving vile abuse during the tournament. The Lionesses star has now revealed how she felt relieved to see some of her white team-mates join Lauren James in missing penalties against Sweden in England's quarter-final shoot-out win.

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    THE BIGGER PICTURE

    Carter says that she feared James would receive "astronomical" levels of abuse if she had been the only black player to miss. The defender also opened up on her experience in Switzerland and how the abuse she received affected her and her family.

  • WHAT CARTER SAID

    Carter told ITN: "It's horrible to say but it's almost like a sigh of relief when other players that weren't black missed a penalty, because the racism that would have come with LJ [Lauren James] being the only one that missed would have been astronomical. It's not because we want them to fail – it's about knowing how it's going to be for us [black England players] if we miss."

    The Lionesses star also spoke about the impact: "It makes you feel really small. It makes you feel like you're not important, that you're not valuable. It makes you second guess everything that you do – it's not a nice place to be. It doesn't make me feel confident going back on to the pitch. My family was so devastated by it as well and so sad."

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    WHAT NEXT FOR THE LIONESSES?

    Wiegman's side are back in action in November when they play a friendly against China at Wembley.

'Wayne Rooney dropped him in the tunnel!' – England legend floored Turkey defender in infamous brawl as Emile Heskey reveals details of fight sparked by David Beckham penalty miss

Speaking on the third episode of the Best Mode On Podcast, the former Liverpool striker opens up on the heated 2003 clash between England and Turkey that led to chaos in the tunnel

Emile Heskey joins Adebayo Akinfenwa for episode three of the Beast Mode On Podcast, with the former Liverpool and England forward looking back at the infamous European Championship qualifier between the Three Lions and Turkey in 2003, that saw a huge bust-up in the tunnel at half-time.

Once Liverpool's record signing when he joined the Reds from Leicester City back in 2000 for £11 million, Heskey reveals how Manchester United legend Wayne Rooney brawled with ex-Aston Villa centre-back Alpay as the players left the pitch at the interval of the 0-0 draw that secured England's qualification to Euro 2004.

Scroll down to read more about what went down in the tunnel that night, with the full episode of the Best Mode On Podcast available now, via YouTube and Spotify.

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    'I SLAPPED HIM'

    With the score level going into half-time in Istanbul, and Turkey's players having earlier goaded David Beckham after he sent his 36th-minute penalty over the bar, Heskey recalls how tempers flared as the players headed to the dressing room: "We played Turkey in qualifying, Becks missed a penalty. We had a fight in the tunnel at half-time. 

    "We were walking through the tunnel and Alpay's coming through, and he's obviously being loud. I'm just walking straight through, quiet, towards the breakout area and Ashley Cole and [ex-Turkey international] Hassan Sas [are mouthing off to each other] and he (Sas)goes and  pits at him (Cole)in the face. So I slapped him and then everyone jumped in and we're literally fighting. And then we're hearing after that Rooney's having a fight with Alpay, he's just hit him and dropped him in the tunnel."

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    'R9 AT BARCA WAS ON FIRE'

    Heskey, who scored 60 goals during a four-year spell with Liverpool, also named Ronaldo as the best player he'd ever played against. He said: "He was a typical striker at the time we grew up – get the ball, turn and run. But no one did it with the flair that he did. And the ease he did it with, it was just ridiculous. That one season at Barcelona, even now we're still looking at that [in awe] and we try and replicate it and do certain things. So I would say R9, or Rivaldo, when he was at Barca he was on fire."

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    'LEEDS, ROMA, DORTMUND, SPURS…'

    It was during his time with Leicester that Heskey caught the eye of some of Europe's biggest clubs, the ex-England international scoring 39 Premier League goals with the Foxes before Liverpool made the move to take him to Anfield in 2000. On that decision, the 47-year-old recalls: "There was interest from the age of 16. There were bids in, Blackburn came in, that was when [Alan] Shearer was on fire. You get linked with clubs and by the time you come to the point where you're 22, it's a time where I'm looking at [leaving Leicester]. 

    "By the time I got to that stage I'd gone to three Cup finals in four years, won two of them. We'd finished top half of the table all of my seasons there. What's next? I could've stayed, and [then-Leicester manager] Martin O'Neill wasn't happy that I didn't stay. I knew that Liverpool were in for me and that was it really. I loved John Barnes. That man himself brought a lot of people over to Liverpool because of the way he played. I had [interest from] Leeds, Roma, Dortmund, Spurs, Aston Villa. But when I knew Liverpool were in for me that was it really."

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