Cricket
Sri Lanka’s Upul Tharanga retires from international cricket

Former batsman ends his career with the fifth-most centuries for Sri Lanka in one-day cricket
Sri Lankan batsman Upul Tharanga has announced his retirement from international cricket at the age of 36.
Having made his debut in August 2005, Tharanga last turned out for Sri Lanka in an ODI in South Africa in March 2019. He played his final T20I in March the previous year and his last Test in August 2017.
Over the course of his career, Tharanga has captained Sri Lanka’s limited-overs sides several times, first taking up the role in November 2016 in an ODI series against Zimbabwe. Months later he would also take over the reigns of the T20I side for a tour of Australia. Unfortunately for Tharanga, his captaincy coincided with a lean period in Sri Lankan cricket, and he suffered the ignominy of captaining his side to three 5-0 whitewashes in 2017.
Tharanga’s failed captaincy stint somewhat soured what had been an overall impressive period with the national side. While his Test and T20I careers underwhelmed, his ODI record is among the best in Sri Lanka’s history. His 15 one-day hundreds are the fifth-most by a Sri Lankan batsman, while his performances in the 2011 World Cup played a major role in the run to the final. Opening the batting, his 395 runs in the tournament came at 56.42 and included two centuries.
Fans will also remember fondly his role in setting a then-world record for an opening partnership, plundering 286 runs off just 201 deliveries alongside side Sanath Jayasuriya against England at Leeds in 2006.
Tharanga finishes his career having played 31 Tests, 235 ODIs and 26 T20Is. His 1754 Test runs came at an average of 31.89 and included three centuries and eight fifties. It was in limited overs cricket though that Tharanga came into his own, scoring 6951 runs at 33.74 in ODIs, inclusive of 15 centuries and 37 fifties. While he had shown flourishes in the domestic T20 circuit, that form never really carried into his brief T20I career, in which he averaged 16.28.
“As the good old saying goes ‘all good things must come to an end’, I believe it is time for me to bid farewell to my International Cricket Career after over 15 years of giving the game my all,” Tharanga said in a statement.
“I leave behind a road traveled with fond memories and great friendships. I am thankful to Sri Lanka Cricket for always having faith and the trust vested in me. I am grateful to the many cricket loving fans, friends and my family for standing by me during my highest of highs and even at my lowest points in my career. Your well-wishes and messages of encouragement was easily the drive behind my ambition. For that I thank you all, and I wish you well.
“I would like to wish Sri Lanka Cricket all the very best for the future and I am hopeful that the team will bounce back strong soon.”
Sri Lanka Cricket, in media release, paid tribute to Tharanga’s “tremendous service” to the team.
“Upul Tharanga has done a tremendous service as a player to Sri Lanka Cricket during his long career and has been an integral part of the National Team during its many achievements,” Sri Lanka Cricket CEO Ashley De Silva said.
Cricket
New Zealand vs Australia, 4th T20I, 2020-21

Aaron Finch proud of the way his team adapted to conditions after watching the first innings
New Zealand coach Gary Stead has criticised his team’s approach with the bat in the fourth T20I, saying the batsmen did not “fire a shot” at Australia early in the run chase on what was a challenging surface.
Stead acknowledged the game swung significantly Australia’s way when Aaron Finch took 26 off the last over from Kyle Jamieson, but felt New Zealand were timid with their response – they were 25 for 1 after the powerplay and then collapsed to 82 for 9 before some late hitting from Jamieson pushed them to three figures.
The surface changed considerably from the first match – this was the fourth game on the surface in three days with the women’s series also taking place – which “surprised” Stead but he said the batsmen had been too slow to adjust.
“The disappointing thing for me is I’m not sure we fired a shot at them tonight. When Kyle came in and played the way he did, it was too late then, the game was gone, so we need to think how we do that a little earlier,” he said. “In those situations, when it is tough, that was a very good score they had, then you have to try and get ahead of the run rate if you can and that provides a little more opportunity for the middle order to work out the way they need to play it.
“It’s that intent to hit boundaries, get on the front foot, even just running between wickets and things like that and I thought we took a step backwards from where we had been earlier in the series. There are things we can do better.”
Spinners were effective throughout the game with Mitchell Santner setting the tone, and Stead said that Kane Williamson had considered using himself or Glenn Phillips but did not feel the match-ups were right with Finch still at the crease.
Finch had the advantage of viewing conditions at very close quarters for 20 overs and was quick to hand Ashton Agar the first over of New Zealand’s chase with the left-arm spinner bowling three in the powerplay.
“It was one of those days where we got a lot of information out of the way New Zealand bowled and we adapted beautifully,” he said. “Ashton Agar was outstanding and all the bowlers were really good.”
Finch was often starved of the strike but made the decision reasonably early that he would try and take the innings as deep as possible. “We always knew two new batters on a surface like that was going to be really challenging, especially towards the back end when you expect guys to blast them, it’s going to be tough on that kind of surface.”
After a poor performance in Christchurch and a narrow loss in Dunedin, Australia now have the chance to clinch the series before quickly packing their kit bags and jumping on a chartered flight back across the Tasman on Sunday evening.
“The fact we were 2-0 down and back to 2-2, really proud of the way we’ve fought,” Finch said. “It’s not the first time we’ve done it, either. It’s a really good character test at the best of time because the ebbs and flows are so big.”
Andrew McGlashan is a deputy editor at ESPNcricinfo
Cricket
India vs England, 4th Test, Ahmedabad, 2nd day – As it happened | Cricket

Welcome to day two of our live report of the fourth India-England Test from Ahmedabad. Join us for updates, analysis and colour. You can find our traditional ball-by-ball commentary here
*Most recent entry will appear at the top, please refresh your page for the latest updates. All times are local
India 294 for 7 (Pant 101, Sundar 60*, Anderson 3-40) lead England 205 by 89 runs
A day of two halves in Ahmedabad saw India seize control of the fourth Test, as an innings of two halves from Rishabh Pant cut England down to size. Pant’s maiden hundred on home soil was a masterpiece of adapting his game to the demands of conditions and match situation, and by the time he had flamed out, English hopes of hanging in the game had largely gone up in smoke.
Seeking the sort of first-innings runs that would define the contest, India had stuttered and stumbled to 146 for 6 during the afternoon session, as England succeeded in their attempts to control the run rate while making regular incisions. Ben Stokes, who hurled himself through 20 overs in the day for the wickets of Virat Kohli and Rohit Sharma, and James Anderson set the tone from the outset as Joe Root shuffled his hand adroitly in defence of his side’s mediocre efforts with the bat.
But the struggles of Dom Bess left England’s four-man attack stretched, as a century stand between Pant and Washington Sundar wrested back control. Initially, runs came in circumspect fashion as India sought to rebuild, and had Bess been granted an lbw decision when Pant had 35 – Nitin Menon’s call was upheld by the narrowest of margins on DRS – things could have taken a wholly different course. As it was, Pant took the game into his own hands.
A watchful half-century from 82 balls provided the kindling for Pant to ignite against a toiling opposition late in the day. Sparks flew and runs flowed, England’s plans to bowl dry blown clean out of the water on a parched late Gujarati afternoon, as Pant raced on to his hundred in the space of another 33 deliveries. He fell moments later, but Sundar carried on the good work to the close to leave India in sight of 300 and a potentially decisive lead.
4.55pm: Bess’ drought continues
It’s not been Dom Bess’ day, and he still can’t buy a wicket for love nor money. He thought he had trapped Sundar lbw, but Ultra-Edge revealed a thick spike on review and the on-field decision was overturned. His struggles will doubtless be a talking point overnight after a difficult return to the side. 141 runs and just one wicket in the final session, and that chink of light for England has quickly turned back into darkness.
4.35pm: Washington marches on
He was slipstreaming Pant for much of the afternoon, but this has been a fine knock from Washington Sundar, too. Anyone who took notice of his Test debut in Australia earlier this year would know he can bat; but his second Test fifty, reached via a brace of back-foot off-side carves that have been a feature of his innings, has further bolstered India’s position in this Test. Stokes is back as Root shuffles his options but England look to be running on empty.
4.21pm: Anderson strikes back
India were 80/4 when Pant walked in. Now they lead by 54 runs!
Rishabh Pant plays a Test innings of the highest quality and he gets a standing ovation from the Ahmedabad crowd #INDvENG
— ESPNcricinfo (@ESPNcricinfo) March 5, 2021
And like a typhoon sweeping through, almost as soon as the winds have whipped up then they are gone! Anderson scrags the young punk, though it was more a case of living and dying by the sword: Pant swung hard but picked out midwicket on the pull, Root holding on to a stinger to end a 113-run stand. But Pant takes the ovation as he walks off, he has forged a position of some strength for his side.
4.15pm: Pant soars!

Rishabh Pant © BCCI
Goes to his hundred with a slog-swept six! A touch of the Sehwags, a hint of the Gilchristian, but you suspect Rishabh Pant is a complete one-off. Having anchored the innings for an 82-ball half-century, he’s only needed another 33 to get his century. Incendiary batting and it has turned the heat up on England, to the delight of a vocal crowd at Motera.
4.05pm: New ball, same Pant

Rishabh Pant and Washington Sundar share a light moment in the middle © BCCI
England take the second new ball, the venerable James Anderson trooping to the top of his mark. Anderson smiles about as often as Morissey in at a meat market, and standing in the mid-afternoon heat, you can imagine he’s had his fill of hard yakka. But the hard, new sphere in his hands could unlock the game for England again, so in he runs, lands the ball on a ‘kerchief outside off… and here comes Rishabh Pant, destroyer of worlds, slapping his first delivery on the up through mid-off. Next ball, he’s crouching and flat-batting a cut for four more. Anderson has only conceded 19 runs from his previous 102 balls, now Pant is tucking in. A zippy bouncer sits him back, but the momentum has shifted in this innings.
Next over he whips Stokes to the right of midwicket, before Washington Sundar throws the bat for a couple more boundaries. Then comes the coup de grace, a reverse-scooped four over the cordon to bring up the hundred stand for India’s seventh wicket! The impudence of youth, and Anderson actually allows himself a wry semi-smile now. What can you do?
3.42pm: India in front
Under Pressure 7th wicket stands for India in the last few years
Pant/Sundar* Today
Thakur/Sundar Gabba 2021
Ashwin/Pujara Adelaide 2018
B Kumar/Rahane Joburg 2018
Jadeja/Saha – Dharamsala 2017
Pujara/Saha-Ranchi 2017#INDvENG #lowerorderconributions— Gaurav Sundararaman (@gaurav_sundar) March 5, 2021
Speaking of England beginning to flag, Pant senses the moment and decides to buckle his swash against Stokes, before the arrival of the new nut. First he slashes a fat top edge over the cordon, then wallops a pull in front of deep midwicket, to draw the scores level. A couple more poked through the covers takes India into a first-innings lead, and Stokes looks spent, losing the ball in his delivery stride, then delivering a beamer to Sundar. Wheels ever-so-slightly coming off.
3.35pm: Stretched

James Anderson and Ben Stokes chat in the middle © BCCI
England have turned back to Ben Stokes, with the new ball five overs away. The longer this partnership stretches on, the more it puts into focus the struggles of Dom Bess, as well as the decision to go in with only two other frontline bowlers. James Anderson will be readying himself for another burst, and given Stokes’ mentality, he could just bowl on through. But with India approaching a lead, and still four wickets standing, for the first time today the tourists are looking a bit flat.
3.15pm: Pant salute
Skips out and nudges through mid-on, that’s a half-century for Rishabh Pant – from 82 balls, his second-slowest in Tests (after a certain knock at the Gabba). The Ahmedabad crowd get their gratification, after Rohit missed out on his landmark earlier in the day, as India continue to steadily erode the deficit through this seventh-wicket pair.
A calmness and maturity about Pant’s batting today. Very impressive. A huge hour of the game coming up…#INDvENG
— Ian Bell (@Ian_Bell) March 5, 2021
3pm: Narrowing the gap

Washington Sundar rocks back to cut © BCCI
England go back to Jack Leach in search of control after Bess’ four-over spell costs 19. In a low-scoring game, it can take just a partnership or two to tip the scales one way or another – Pant and Sundar have now added more than 30 together, bringing first-innings parity within sight for India.
2.45pm: Pant’s on fire (or going nicely, at least)
This could be a pivotal hour or so, with India aiming to whittle down that lead with wickets in hand. They won’t mind seeing Dom Bess resume his spell after tea, even more so when he starts with a full toss that Washington Sundar carts through midwicket for four. He’s then slapped hard for four more by Rishabh Pant after dropping short, as ten runs come off the over. Pant might have been a tad lucky to survive a tight lbw before the break, but you can be sure he’ll be keen to cash in.
Meanwhile, here’s the tea discussion from our experts on Match Day.
2.15pm: Tea

Rishabh Pant employs the sweep © BCCI
India 153 for 6 (Pant 36*, Sundar 1*) trail England 205 by 52 runs
England chipped out two more wickets during the afternoon session, including the key scalp of Rohit Sharma, as they kept alive hopes of parlaying an unexpected first-innings lead in Ahmedabad. With Rishabh Pant reining himself him to score an unbeaten 36 from 62, India went to tea precariously poised six down.
Rohit and Pant had eased along to a 41-run stand after lunch when Ben Stokes struck as the drinks break approached. Rohit fell one run short of his third 50-plus score of the series, lbw to a nip-backer that went with umpire’s call on DRS. Jack Leach then had R Ashwin caught at short midwicket, and England’s afternoon could have been even better if Nitin Menon had raised his finger to a Dom Bess appeal against Pant that was deemed to be clipping the bails in the last over before the interval.
2.05pm: Stoking the flames

© ESPNcricinfo Ltd
He has now been given a breather, but Stokes has really pulled a shift as England’s second seamer in this match. This is the most number of overs he has bowled in an innings since the 2020 New Year’s Test in Cape Town – when he helped batter down the door on the final evening at Newlands. He had only delivered 15 overs in the series to this point, but has sent down 17 over the course of days one and two in Ahmedabad, claiming the wickets of Virat Kohli and Rohit Sharma while going at less than two an over. Whether it’s Chattogram, Colombo or Headingley, he does like to get his hands dirty with the ball.
1.55pm: Another one gone

England had their share of support at Motera © BCCI
Ashwin survived a peppering from Stokes, but he isn’t able to hang around for long as England bag their sixth wicket. Jack Leach gets his second of the day, well held at short midwicket as Ashwin attempted to work to leg. Still a bit of batting to come in the shape of Washington Sundar and Axar Patel, but a lot on Pant’s shoulders now, as India seek to better England’s 205.
1.45pm: Ding! Ding!
Jack Leach Rishabh Pant https://t.co/QzjBfWfJck #INDvENG pic.twitter.com/f6DPfJvmmA
— ESPNcricinfo (@ESPNcricinfo) March 5, 2021
1.35pm: Ashwin survives
Having sung his praises, umpire Menon has now got one wrong, R Ashwin successfully reviewing after a Stokes bumper flicked his shoulder on the way through. The next ball was edged through the cordon for four. Getting lively out there!
1.08pm: Hitman shot down!

Ben Stokes celebrates after trapping Rohit Sharma © BCCI
Fifty up for Rohit Sharma, from 144 balls. Third time he’s done so in the series – and each one in the first innings of low-scoring Tests Stokes has done it again, ripping out the big wicket of Rohit! I won’t pretend I hadn’t been writing about how he was the man keeping England at bay, “mixing stalwart defence with only the occasional flourish”; but after a double change in the bowling, Root and Stokes replacing Bess (8-0-30-0) and Anderson, Rohit got stuck on 49 and then pinned at the end of the over, a marginal call as Stokes brought one back in, umpire’s call on line and impact… but Nitin Menon raised his shooter skyward, and India are five down, still 84 runs adrift.
12.40pm: Making the Bess of it
Time to hear from our England correspondent, George Dobell, on how the tourists might approach the afternoon session, and in particular the question of managing Dom Bess…
England have a balancing act here, with control the priority for their four-man attack (five if you include Joe Root). Which brings us to Bess. How should Root be using him today?
He had a major decision to make at lunch. He could either persist with two of the three bowlers who did so well in the morning and risk bowling them into the ground, he could bring himself on or he could give Bess a chance to get into the game. I think he’s made the right decision in bowling Bess. That’s because, if he doesn’t bowl him now, he risks damaging his confidence even further. And you would think he is going to have to bowl a fair bit later in the match. Basically, having picked him, they have to make it work. And the best way to make it work is for him to settle into the game with a spell now. He has a left-hander to target and some help from the surface. It has to be now.
We’ve already seen stray full tosses and signs that India will look to attack him. Are England going to just have to suck that up for a bit?
Well, it’s come to something when you have to ask that about a Test bowler. And a Test offspinner at that. It does remind me a bit of the Ian Salisbury situation. But I’m not sure Bess has the potential upside of a leggie like Salisbury. Really, you need your offspinner to provide control. Not be a risk. As to how India play him… do they need to attack him? If he bowls a four-ball every over, they just need to bat in as risk-free a way as they can and they will pick up runs without drama. I’d think that was the way to go. Looking further ahead… the next few days define Bess’ immediate future as a Test player. Right now, it feels as if he has quite a lot to do to prove himself at this level. But he’s probably going to be bowling in the fourth innings yet and could still bowl England to a memorable victory. So yes, a lot to unfold in the next couple of days.

James Anderson has a word of advice for Ben Stokes © BCCI
It’s simply the Bess situation England find themselves in (honk!) – but at least the control and consistency, from Anderson and Stokes in particular, have given Root some breathing room
Yes, they’ve bowled England back into the match. And this is not Bess’ fault: he’s been massively over-promoted to fill the chasm that exists in English cricket where a bunch of spinners should be. Just consider this one stat: Bess averages 47 – yes, 47 – in the Second XI Championship. He’s pretty much never been first choice for his county and he is being asked to learn his trade in a huge series against the best team in the world. So yes, he’s really struggling. But an awful lot has been asked of him. Too much, in my view.
12.15pm: We go again
Hold on to your titfers, Rishabh Pant is out in the middle. England have resumed with Dom Bess and Anderson bowling in tandem, looking to maintain the squeeze they applied in the field this morning. Though between the habitual, seat-of-the-Pant(s) approach of India’s No. 6, and Bess’ proclivity for drag downs and full tosses, austerity may be hard to maintain.
Jimmy’s figures: 13-10-7-2. Rude. #INDvENG
— Adam Collins (@collinsadam) March 5, 2021
11.30am: Lunch

Rohit Sharma eyes the sweep © BCCI
India 80 for 4 (Rohit 32*) trail England 205 by 125 runs
Three wickets fell during an attritional morning session as India sought the kind of first-innings runs that would define the contest in this fourth Test. Successes for Jack Leach, Ben Stokes and James Anderson – who removed Ajinkya Rahane with the last ball before lunch – buoyed England as they battled to stay in the game.
For the third Test in a row, Rohit Sharma led the way with the bat for the home side, taking a more circumspect approach to be unbeaten on 32 from 106 balls. Virat Kohli made his second duck of the series, bounced out by Stokes, and England could take heart from the way they controlled the run rate – only 56 runs came in 25.5 overs – and then produced vital incisions as the session wore on.
After a tight opening from Anderson and Stokes, Leach separated India’s second-wicket pair, sliding a straight delivery into Cheteshwar Pujara’s pad fractionally before his bat came through to defend. Kohli was then surprised by a Stokes effort ball to feather an edge, and although Rahane counterattacked effectively, he steered to second slip with the interval looming.
11.20am: Rohit the key man (again)
An intriguing battle is taking shape, with Rohit Sharma tempering his game and Ajinkya Rahane looking to break England’s hold with some calculated aggression. Here’s Karthik Krishnaswamy on the challenge for batting so far this morning:
“I think this pitch is a bit two-paced, so Rohit has not been able to drive through the line so easily. Before this innings, he had a strike rate of 80-something against the fast bowlers in this series. Here he’s not been able to play that sort of game. Even the bouncer that hit his head stopped on him, and he was early on the hook. Even that last ball from Leach that Rahane tried to drive.
“The question is how long England can keep Bess out of the attack. And what happens when he comes on. It feels like India might try to go after him, and that could go both ways.”
Sure enough, Dom Bess’ introduction sees Rohit bring out the slog-sweep – although he doesn’t quite get it all the way, landing between two fielders on the leg-side boundary.
“So far this game has been a little like Bangalore 2017. India got bowled out cheaply on day one, with Nathan Lyon taking an 8-fer, then came back with a bowling performance that was similar to how England have bowled so far.”
11am: Kohli catches cold

09:32
It’s now 12 innings and almost 18 months since Kohli’s last Test hundred – in fact, it’s currently a long wait across all formats – and the India captain may not get another chance in this series. As my stats-corps colleague Gaurav Sundararaman points out, this is only the second time Kohl has made two ducks in a series – and we all know how difficult the 2014 tour of England was for him. Our Mute Me panel discussed his current output before the Test, with Dustin Silgardo almost getting through his 60 seconds intact (and after Nitin Menon’s contribution this morning, props also to Gaurav for mentioning the standard of on-field umpiring).
By the way, I may have been muted, but my pre-series prediction is looking pretty safe now, eh?
10.40am: The sound of silence…

Virat Kohli walks back without scoring © BCCI
Now Stokes has bounced out Kohli for his second duck of the series! Up goes Virender Sharma’s finger, and although Kohli glares suspiciously at the pitch, he doesn’t linger long over thoughts of a review… Huge moment. After their tight start, England have gone bang-bang. Are you watching Australia?!
10.25am: Leach makes one stick!

Jack Leach celebrates the wicket of Cheteshwar Pujara © BCCI
England get their reward just before the hour mark. Having shackled the scoring, Jack Leach then dispatched Pujara for the fourth time in the series – courtesy of an eagle-eyed bit of umpiring from Nitin Menon. Just 16 runs had come in 12 overs of watchful batting, and Leach then settled nicely into a groove: the wicket-taking ball was flighted enough to draw Pujara forward and then skipped on to hit pad fractionally ahead of defensive bat prod. Pujara immediately reviewed but DRS couldn’t save him from what Menon already knew. Sadly for Che Pu, the crowd won’t mind, because his wicket brings VIrat Kohli to the crease.
Leach V Pujara
89 balls, 61 runs, 4 wickets, 15 ave
Pujara v SLA before this series
1862 balls, 804 runs, 5 wickets, 160.80 ave
— Jarrod Kimber (@ajarrodkimber) March 5, 2021
10.20am: Steady start

Rohit Sharma defends watchfully © BCCI
Jack Leach into the attack for the first time today, from the Reliance End, and he’s found some turn and a nice line to the two right-handers – both of whom he’s had success against this series. Pujara got away with a genuine edge from the final ball of the over, the ball flicking the tips of Ben Foakes’ gloves on its way through and diverting down, just short of Stokes at slip.
There’s been a change of ends for Stokes, too, after Anderson delivered a searching spell of 5-3-3-0. Rohit, in contrast to his approach this series, has buckled down with the intention of seeing out the newish-ball threat, currently 19 off 74 balls.
James Anderson’s spell this morning:
21
— Alan Gardner (@alanroderick) March 5, 2021
9.55am: Motera running
Rohit and Cheteshwar Pujara, India’s second-wicket pair, have made a wary start so far, with just four runs coming from the opening five overs – although Stokes then serves up back-to-back full tosses to Rohit, who slugs the second of them for a boundary. There’s been good pace and carry for the seamers, but nothing untoward from the surface.
Anyway, while we get settled in, why not have a gander at what George Dobell thoughts on England’s first-innings batting effort:
Whatever the rights and wrongs of the pitches in the previous couple of Tests – really, let’s not get bogged down with that here – there could be no reasonable complaints about this surface. Indeed, offering something to bowlers of all types and a fair opportunity to score for batsmen, you might well argue it has been an excellent pitch to this point. And if a team wins the toss on such a surface, they surely need to be compiling a first-innings total in excess of 300 and batting into the second day.
9.35am: Let’s get it on
What happens to Axar Patel when Ravindra Jadeja returns? Is this a good pitch?@SanjayManjrekar and @Ian_Bell answer your #AskMatchDay questions #INDvENG pic.twitter.com/ZBl5Eb9V8o
— ESPNcricinfo (@ESPNcricinfo) March 5, 2021
England start up with James Anderson, beginning a new spell from the Adani Pavilion End, and Ben Stokes. Anderson has conceded his first runs, but also rapped Rohit Sharma on the pads a couple of times. Time to find out which side of bed this Motera deck has woken up on…
9.15am: Morning call

04:43
Hello and welcome back to the action. India did a sterling job with the ball on day one – even if England’s rummage down the back of the sofa did bring them 200 for the first time in a while – and can take purposeful strides towards the WTC final with a solid showing from their batsmen. The tourists are in need of a cascade of wickets, but probably won’t get quite so much help from the pitch. Either way, let’s hope it’s a good, honest scrap between professionals who care about the sport they love. Shall we?
Alan Gardner is a deputy editor at ESPNcricinfo. @alanroderick
©
ESPN Sports Media Ltd.
Cricket
IPL 2021 – New Zealand

Mike Hesson has backed his IPL team’s million-dollar recruit after the quick proved expensive in the T20Is against Australia
Mike Hesson, the director of cricket operations at the Royal Challengers Bangalore, has backed the team’s INR 15 crore recruit Kyle Jamieson despite the fast-bowling allrounder having a forgettable T20I series against Australia.
In the first four T20Is of the series, Jamieson has conceded 175 runs in 15 overs – economy rate of 11.66 – for just one wicket. But Hesson, talking to Sky Sports NZ after the third match – said that Jamieson shouldn’t be judged on his recent outings.
“He’s struggled, probably for the first time in international cricket really, which I don’t think is a bad thing,” Hesson said in a conversation with Ian Smith. “He’s battled to find his lengths, which when you’re put under pressure, that can happen. And pressure not only from the opposition but also the weight of expectations. For Kyle, I don’t think it’s a bad thing.
“He’s a smart enough cricketer, surrounded by good people, and he’ll come out of the other side. When you look at a player, you don’t look at a player just over a very short period of time. You look at the characteristics that he’s got. He’s got some good fighting qualities. He struggled, he didn’t find his lengths, he looked like he lost his run-up. We know he’s a very good player and although we would like him to be performing better, we’re not too worried just yet.”
The tall right-arm quick had received the second-highest bid at last month’s IPL auction, going at over US$ 2.5 million following a three-way bidding war between the Royal Challengers, the Punjab Kings and the Delhi Capitals.
Hesson, the former New Zealand coach, placed the first bid on Jamieson for INR 75 lakh, but alternating bids between the Royal Challengers and the Capitals pushed his price to INR 9 crore. After that, the Kings – who had the biggest purse at the latest auctions – showed interest in Jamieson, which lifted his price to INR 15 crore. He was snapped up by the Royal Challengers in the end. Later, in a video shared by the Royal Challengers on their social media feed, where the think tank was seen discussing their choices before auction day, Hesson was clear in his interest in Jamieson.
Hesson has spent large portions of 2021 in India. Having arrived in the country before the IPL auction in Chennai, he has stayed back, shifting base to Bengaluru thereafter, where the franchise is beginning a camp soon. He has also been following the Vijay Hazare Trophy matches, India’s premier domestic 50-over competition, some matches of which have been staged in the city.
“I’ve been watching domestic cricket for the last week, one-day cricket in Bangalore,” Hesson said. “A lot of our players have been playing there, and we start a camp in two days’ time with six or seven guys who aren’t involved with India or international cricket. We’d like to get the squad together in the early twenties of March when the final IPL dates get settled. There’ll likely be a five-seven-day quarantine period that people will have to go through, and then the tournament is set to start early to mid-April.”
Sreshth Shah is a sub-editor at ESPNcricinfo
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