Wasim Khan appointed ICC General Manager of Cricket

Former PCB CEO succeeds Geoff Allardice, who held the post for eight years, before being appointed full-time ICC CEO

ESPNcricinfo staff22-Apr-2022Former PCB chief executive Wasim Khan has been appointed ICC’s General Manager of cricket. He is slated to start his new role next month, as he takes over from Geoff Allardice, who vacated the position last November.”I am honoured to be joining the ICC, I can’t wait to get started and work in partnership with our Members to strengthen and grow our sport,” Wasim was quoted in a press release by ICC. “I’m particularly excited by the ICC’s commitment to the growth of the women’s game, and I look forward to playing my part in really accelerating that growth over the next decade.”Related

  • Wasim Khan steps down as PCB CEO

  • ICC appoints Geoff Allardice full-time CEO

A left-hand batter in his playing days, Wasim played 58 first-class matches and 30 List A matches for Warwickshire, Sussex and Derbyshire. However, he is known more for his administrative roles, having served as the CEO of Cricket Foundation, Leicestershire County Cricket Club, and Chance to Shine in the past, apart from leading the PCB.Wasim was awarded an MBE, a British honour conferred upon a person for a particular achievement in their line of work, in 2013.Welcoming Wasim to the role, Allardice said: “I am delighted to welcome Wasim to the ICC. He brings an in-depth knowledge of our sport and its stakeholders, and his first-hand experience of the international cricket landscape will be of enormous benefit as we implement the ICC global growth strategy and move forward into a new events cycle.”Wasim was appointed CEO of PCB in 2019 but stepped down from the role in September 2021, four months before the end of his contract. He joins ICC after Allardice held the post for eight years before being appointed full-time ICC CEO.

Steven Smith's elbow problem clouds T20 World Cup and Ashes build-up

The selectors also decided it was better for Cameron Green to remain at home to prepare for next season

ESPNcricinfo staff17-Jun-2021Australia will again have uncertainty over Steven Smith’s elbow heading into a major tournament after he was ruled out of the tours to West Indies and Bangladesh.Smith has suffered a recurrence of the problem he had earlier this year and kept him out of action for a period in February and March before he went to the IPL.He returned to action briefly for New South Wales in late March before heading to India and the issue has now flared up again after his stint with Delhi Capitals where he played six matches before the tournament was suspended.It is the same elbow that required surgery in early 2019 while Smith was still serving his ban from international cricket and briefly raised doubts as to whether he would be fit for that year’s one-day World Cup.There are still four months before the T20 World Cup but although a timeline for Smith’s recovery has yet to be mapped out having him fit for the twin tilts at the global title then the Ashes is the priority.Related

  • Steven Smith 'building up nicely' in cautious rehab from elbow injury

  • Nick Hockley: 'We won't rest until we are truly representative of the community we serve'

  • Aaron Finch: IPL return 'hard to justify' for Australia players missing tours

  • Paine: Smith given captaincy too young but I'd support him getting the job again

  • Warner, Cummins and Maxwell among six to opt out of WI and Bangladesh tours

“Unfortunately I can’t tell you how long or how serious it is but it’s something he’s had before and definitely flared up again in the IPL,” national selector Trevor Hohns said. “How long it will take to get it completely right I can’t tell you at the moment, I’ve had no further advice on that, but the main thing is for Steven from our view is to make sure he is fit for the T20 World Cup and of course the Ashes.”Smith would likely bat at No. 3 in the T20I side – although that can be flexible depending on the game situation – and is locked in at No. 4 in the Test team.Another player being managed with an eye on the home summer is allrounder Cameron Green who was added to the large preliminary white-ball squad before it was decided he would not make the trip.He will instead start pre-season with Western Australia with an eye to having a strong lead-in to Test against Afghanistan then the Ashes in the Sheffield Shield, something that those Test players involved in the T20 World Cup won’t be able to do as they quarantine for two weeks after the tournament before going straight into the Afghanistan game in Hobart in late November.Green played all four Tests against India last season where he impressed with the bat, hitting 84 in the second innings at the SCG, but was unable to pick up a wicket. He struggled to have an impact with the ball throughout the summer as he made his way back from a stress fracture of the bat but, barring a major downturn early next season, appears set to take the No. 6 spot again.”At the moment we thought best to leave him here and prepare for the upcoming summer,” Hohns said. “We regard him as a very important component of our Test side who we’ll select in our Ashes squad. He can have a nice winter off, start training and building himself especially for our red-ball cricket.”

Dominant England seek series knockout

After three matches of the series there has only been one outright result so Sri Lanka are clinging on but need an improved show

The Preview by Andrew Miller28-Jun-2016

Match facts

June 29, 2016
Start time 1300 local (1200 GMT)

Big Picture

So now it’s official. Break out the Brexit gags and wallow in whatever the Icelandic is for schadenfreude. England really, really, really doesn’t want to be involved with Europe in any way, shape or form.What a time to be alive. Happily, for those of an escapist bent, the nation’s cricketers have rarely had much need to engage with the continent – save for their biennial ICC-tournament humiliations at the hands of the Netherlands and Ireland, of course. But, when it comes to being upstaged by plucky islanders who thrive on their underdog status, well, they more or less wrote the book.From Sri Lanka’s maiden Test victory over England, way back in 1992-93, via Murali’s magic at The Oval in 1998, and a brace of infamous World Cup drubbings in 1996 and 2011, England’s cricketers have been taught the hard way never to make assumptions about their pre-eminence.Sure enough, the trend continues in 2016. Despite a record-shattering victory in the second ODI at Edgbaston, a combination of an off-the-boil first outing at Trent Bridge and the onset of bad weather in Bristol mean that England are just 1-0 up with two to play as they prepare for the fourth match of the series at The Oval. Realistically, it is hard to see any way back for a Sri Lanka side that has lacked impetus with the bat and penetration with the ball, and yet we were making similar claims ahead of their fightback at Lord’s in the third Test earlier this month – and that didn’t quite follow the presumed script.That said, it will take quite a collapse in resolve from England to squander their hard-earned lead. Despite the early loss of Alex Hales in their run-chase at Bristol, that target of 249 ought still to have been hunted down with ease, following a middling batting display that relied too heavily on two senior batsmen nursing injury concerns – Angelo Mathews and Dinesh Chandimal – and seemed almost a throwback to England’s own one-day batting tactics of the early- to mid-2000s, as they nudged ineffectual singles and preserved wickets for a late onslaught that never entirely materialised.There are still several untested elements to England’s line-up – rain, coupled with that ten-wicket win in the second match, means that only Hales and Jason Roy have had any meaningful time in the middle since the lacklustre display at Trent Bridge that left them scrambling a last-ball six for the tie. But with the ball, the addition of Chris Jordan’s death-bowling prowess added an extra layer of impenetrability to a varied and incisive attack, in which Adil Rashid’s legspin has been particularly hard to collar.If the rain stays away, and there’s no absolute guarantee of that, then England can expect to wrap up the series under the Oval floodlights tomorrow evening, and raise the spirits of the nation, once and for all. But there have been a lot of assumptions flying around the country in recent days, and not very many of them have come to fruition.Chris Jordan was an effective inclusion at the expense of Moeen Ali•Getty Images

Form guide

England WTLLL (last five completed matches, most recent first)
Sri Lanka LTWWL

In the spotlight

Joe Root, who swept the board in England’s player of the year awards last month, barely put a bat out of place in a stellar 12 months, up to and including the World T20 in India. But since the English summer got underway, he has not enjoyed the most fruitful of homecomings. There’s not been much evidence that he is out of form as such – a well-crafted 80 in the second Test suggested otherwise – but he hasn’t spent quite enough time at the crease to be sure. Four single-figure scores and a rain-aborted 11 not out at Bristol complete his season’s efforts. He’ll want to reassure himself, if no-one else, that he has not mislaid his touch.If Kusal Mendis, at the age of 21, stores away the memories of this maiden tour of England and cultivates them for future payback, then Sri Lanka are bound to be well served by a rising star whom Kumar Sangakkara, no less, has earmarked for great things. He’s managed three fifties on the tour so far, one in the Headingley Test, another against Ireland, and the third – 53 at Bristol on Sunday – which helped restore Sri Lanka’s impetus after the early loss of both openers. There is plenty on which he can improve – in particular he was troubled by Liam Plunkett’s lift and bounce and eventually caught on the hook – but his willingness to front up has not gone unnoticed in adversity.

Teams news

Moeen Ali was rested in Bristol to make way for Jordan’s return, an understandable rejig given his slight drop-off in form, allied to the fact that Rashid has added impressive control to his ever-improving command of variation. The resulting five-man attack offers pleasing variety to cover for the ongoing absence of Ben Stokes and deserves another outing, although the unsettled weather may influence the final selection. There’s little point in fiddling with the batting, seeing as the middle order has had a solitary airing all series.England (probable) 1 Alex Hales, 2 Jason Roy, 3 Joe Root, 4 Eoin Morgan (capt), 5 Jonny Bairstow, 6 Jos Buttler (wk), 7 Chris Woakes, 8 David Willey, 9 Chris Jordan, 10 Liam Plunkett, 11 Adil RashidSri Lanka’s patched-up batsmen were a qualified success at Bristol – they managed to put runs on the board, even if their mobility limited their reliability between the wickets, and both Mathews and Chandimal have been passed fit. Dasun Shanaka replaced Suraj Randiv for their last outing and, despite being the most culpable of Sri Lanka’s mis-callers, he is set for another outing. Farveez Maharoof continues to be available despite a damaged finger.Sri Lanka (possible) 1 Kusal Perera, 2 Danushka Gunathilaka, 3 Kusal Mendis, 4 Dinesh Chandimal (wk), 5 Angelo Mathews (capt), 6 Upul Tharanga, 7 Seekkuge Prasanna, 8 Dasun Shanaka, 9 Farveez Maharoof, 10 Nuwan Pradeep, 11 Suranga Lakmal

Pitch and conditions

There’s rain on the radar for Wednesday afternoon, which doesn’t bode well given how torrential it has been lately when the heavens have opened. Despite being a floodlit game, play has to get underway at 1pm due to local restrictions on late-night revelry, which means – seeing as we are only a week past the longest day of the year – the match is likely to finish in manageable twilight anyway. The pitch itself has got a bit more grass on than expected, according to Eoin Morgan.

Stats and trivia

  • England have some happy memories of their last ODI against Sri Lanka at The Oval, two years ago this week. They won a rain-dented contest by 81 runs on Duckworth-Lewis, with Root, Jordan and Jos Buttler all making important cameos.
  • However, it is a measure of the subsequent upheaval in both squads that just seven players out of the 22 on parade survive to this day. Morgan, who made 3, is the other England player to endure the post-World Cup fall-out, while Mathews, Chandimal and Suranga Lakmal remain for Sri Lanka.
  • The Bristol wash-out means that England now lead by 14 points to 4 in the inaugural Super Series, which they wrapped up with victory at Edgbaston.

Quotes

“The first game was a kick up the backside, more than anything, so bouncing back from that at Edgbaston I thought was brilliant, then backing that up with our bowling performance at Bristol was also very good.”
“There are still two ODI games left, we still want to win those games. It’s 1-0 so if we can do that, we’ll win the series. Everyone is looking forward and trying 200% at practice but we need to improve.”

It appears that Upul Tharanga’s maths has a sunnier outlook than the British economy.

Geelong to host Australia-Sri Lanka T20I

Australia will host Sri Lanka in a Twenty20 international at Geelong’s Kardinia Park in February, after the ground was confirmed as the 11th venue in Australia currently accredited to host international cricket

Brydon Coverdale08-Aug-2016Australia will host Sri Lanka in a Twenty20 international at Geelong’s Kardinia Park in February, after the ground was confirmed as the 11th venue in Australia currently accredited to host international cricket.Geelong, Melbourne and Adelaide have been named as the venues for three T20Is between Australia and Sri Lanka, to be held from February 17 to 22. The fixtures will all be played as double-headers, with the men’s games preceded by women’s T20Is between Australia and New Zealand.The decision to take international cricket involving Australia beyond the state and territory capitals is almost unprecedented. Test matches against Sri Lanka and Bangladesh in Cairns during the southern winters of 2003 and 2004 are the only other occasions when Australia have played official international matches outside the capital cities.Regional venues were used for some neutral games during the 1992 World Cup, while Launceston, Devonport and Townsville have also hosted official international matches that did not involve Australia. Kardinia Park – known as Simonds Stadium for sponsorship reasons – will be the 21st ground in Australia to host international men’s cricket.Kardinia Park had a taste of elite cricket last summer when the Melbourne Stars and Melbourne Renegades played a warm-up match there ahead of the BBL campaign. That game was followed a week later by West Indies playing a two-day practice match there against a Victoria XI ahead of the Boxing Day Test at the MCG.In order to meet ICC standards for the size of international venues, the pitch orientation at Kardinia Park has been altered to slightly off the square, for the traditional configuration at the ground meant some boundaries were too short. Cricket Australia’s chief executive officer James Sutherland said given the ground met requirements, he was pleased to take international cricket to Geelong.”We’re committed to taking the game to as many parts of the country as possible and we continue to work with regional areas around Australia on how we can make this happen,” Sutherland said. “Geelong proved its capability to host cricket last summer with a successful BBL exhibition match between the Melbourne Stars and Melbourne Renegades attracting more than 10,000 people.”We’re really looking forward to the people of the Geelong region and beyond packing out the stadium and supporting the women’s and men’s national sides.”Despite the off-field facilities at Kardinia Park being of high quality and the dimensions meeting international standards, the prospects of the venue being used as a second first-class ground for Victoria appear limited. Tony Dodemaide, the Cricket Victoria CEO, said the cost of installing drop-in pitches and preparing the multi-sport ground (home of AFL team the Geelong Cats) for cricket was more feasible for international games.As preparation for the T20I series, Sri Lanka will play the annual Prime Minister’s XI match as a T20 game on February 15 at Manuka Oval in Canberra.Cricket Australia has also announced that an agreement has been reached for Adelaide Oval to host an international cricket fixture on Australia Day every summer for the next five years. For some years the tradition was to hold a match in Adelaide on January 26, but in recent summers such a fixture had not always eventuated.”We’ve been working closely with the South Australian Government and SACA to secure marquee matches in the state long term and we’d like to thank both parties for their support,” Sutherland said. “We’re pleased to be able to announce today that Adelaide Oval will host an International Australia Day cricket fixture for the next five years.”

'Just not fearing them' – Zak Crawley's plan to succeed against Australia quicks

England batter believes that some of his team-mates haven’t been in the right “headspace” to get the runs expected of them

Andrew McGlashan02-Jan-2022Zak Crawley has conceded that some of England’s batters may have been overawed in the Ashes series but believes the last two Tests could start a rebuilding process.England were blown away for 185 and 68 in the Melbourne Test as the Ashes were lost inside 12 days. They have not passed 300 in the series so far, are yet to score a century, and in 2021 the side equalled their record of 54 ducks in a calendar year.Related

  • Buttler holds on to Test ambitions despite disappointment

  • Chappell: England's home strength is under threat

Crawley was thrust into the side for the Boxing Day Test at the expense of Rory Burns, having barely batted since the end of the English season because of the disrupted preparations in Australia. He made 12 and 5, taking his Test record for the year to 173 runs at 10.81, and termed the second evening against Mitchell Starc and Pat Cummins as the toughest period he had ever faced.”Just not fearing them,” Crawley said when asked about how England could counter Australia’s attack. “I feel like quite a few of us on our first Ashes tour maybe we were a bit wary of them when there’s no need to be.”It’s a great place to bat even though they are great bowlers, some of them are the best in the world, but when you get in as Rooty [Joe Root] and [Dawid] Malan have shown, they look very comfortable at times. I’m certainly going to do that this game, [play with a] bit more confidence, because I know full well that I can score a hundred here this week.”Overall in his first-class career Crawley, who made his mark with 267 against Pakistan in 2020, has five centuries from 66 matches and an average of 30.91. Graham Thorpe, England’s assistant coach who is filling in for Chris Silverwood this week because of the head coach’s Covid-19-related isolation, spoke last week about the gap between county and Test cricket and that England’s batting had been exposed on this tour.”Everyone has seen the talent that our batters have shown over the last few years,” Crawley said. “We’ve all got the talent to score big runs in Test cricket, you just have to get in the right headspace to perform like that. Feel like that’s where we’ve gone slightly wrong, haven’t been in the right headspace, but physically and talent-wise there’s no question that we can score big hundreds over here.”Crawley admitted he had not had a good year in 2021 but argued there were some extenuating circumstances and also walked away from his Melbourne examination with a positive reflection.”That evening with the crowd, it didn’t go my way but I look back on that with quite a few fond memories,” he said. “Special to be a part of. Fair play, they bowled well, but hopefully I can have a good week this week.”I haven’t played my best cricket. I actually feel in a really good place with my batting. Those stats [averaging 10] are misleading sometimes. I’ve never experienced anything like playing in India, if I scored 10 it felt like a good score, then I didn’t feel in great touch in summer and all of a sudden you are averaging 10.”I’m hoping it will be a slightly flatter wicket here [Sydney, for the fourth Test], it usually is, [Melbourne] offered quite a bit. I learned that there were certain balls I could leave where in England you have to play and I’ll try and do that better this week. It’s great chance to start again and build up the side into a better place.”

Cricket Australia bans Russell's black bat

Andre Russell’s jet-black bat has been banned by Cricket Australia after discovering that the bat left visible marks on the ball

ESPNcricinfo staff21-Dec-2016Cricket Australia has banned Andre Russell’s black bat from the Big Bash League, having previously approved its use during the Sydney Thunder’s first match of the tournament.Russell used the black bat on Tuesday as the Thunder lost to the Sydney Sixers. Cricket Australia said at the time that players could use a coloured bat subject to CA approval – provided it was either black or the same colour as the team’s uniform – and that Russell’s bat had been approved ahead of the BBL.However, CA has now withdrawn its approval after discovering that the bat left visible marks on the ball.”The match officials provided feedback to Cricket Australia that the bat used by Andre left black marks on the match ball,” Anthony Everard, the head of the BBL, said. “As a result, we have decided to withdraw our approval for Andre to use the bat that was used last night as the colour solution used by the manufacturer was discolouring the ball.”Should Andre, or any other BBL or WBBL player for that matter, wish to use a bat with a different colouring solution to the one used last night that doesn’t result in the discolouration of the match ball, they will be permitted to do so subject to Cricket Australia being satisfied that the bat won’t compromise the integrity of the game, which we believe discolouring the match ball does.”Chris Gayle had used a gold coloured bat in last year’s BBL, produced by the same bat manufacturers, Spartan.A MCC spokesman confirmed that the relevant Law is 6.6(d) which states: “The surface of the blade may be treated with non-solid materials to improve resistance to moisture penetration and/or mask natural blemishes in the appearance of the wood. Save for the purpose of giving a homogeneous appearance by masking natural blemishes, such treatment must not materially alter the colour of the blade.”Cricket Australia are empowered to introduce playing regulations to overwrite this, although they seem merely to have given approval in an individual circumstance, now withdrawn. The ECB banned Ashar Zaidi from using a bat adorned in rudimentary fashion with spray paint in the NatWest Blast last season because it flouted their own regulations which disallow colouring below the top nine inches of the blade.Ashar Zaidi’s version of the black bat was also outlawed by the ECB•Getty Images

List of players sold and unsold at IPL auction 2017

Which team bought which player? How the 2017 IPL auction panned out

ESPNcricinfo staff20-Feb-20171:38

Sixty-six players sold in 2017 auction

Sold players

INR 1 crore = INR 100 lakh = INR 10000000 = USD 149254 approx
INR 1 lakh = INR 100 thousand = INR 100000 = USD 1493 approxEoin Morgan (Base price INR 2 crore) – Sold to Kings XI Punjab for INR 2 crorePawan Negi (Base price INR 30 lakhs) – Sold to Royal Challengers Bangalore for INR 1 croreAngelo Mathews (Base price INR 2 crore) – Sold to
Delhi Daredevils for INR 2 crore

Ben Stokes (Base price INR 2 crore) – Sold to Rising Pune Supergiants for INR 14.5 crore

Corey Anderson (Base price INR 1 crore) – Sold to Delhi Daredevils for INR 1 croreNicholas Pooran (Base price INR 30 lakh) – Sold to Mumbai Indians for INR 30 lakh

Kagiso Rabada (Base price INR 1 crore) – Sold to Delhi Daredevils for INR 5 crore

Trent Boult (Base price INR 1.5 crore) – Sold to Kolkata Knight Riders for INR 5 crore

Tymal Mills (Base price INR 50 lakhs) – Sold to Royal Challengers Bangalore for INR 12 crore

Pat Cummins (Base price INR 2 crore) – Sold to Delhi Daredevils for INR 4.5 crore

Mitchell Johnson (Base price INR 2 crore) – Sold to Mumbai Indians for INR 2 croreAnkit Bawne (Base price INR 10 lakh) – Sold to Delhi Daredevils for INR 10 lakhTanmay Agarwal (Base price INR 10 lakh) – Sold to Sunrisers Hyderabad for INR 10 lakhMohammad Nabi (Base price INR 30 lakh) – Sold to Sunrisers Hyderabad for 30 lakhK Gowtham (Base price INR 10 lakh) – Sold to Mumbai Indians for INR 2 croreRahul Tewatia (Base price INR 10 lakh) – Sold to Kings XI Punjab for INR 25 lakhAditya Tare (Base price INR 20 lakh) – Sold to Delhi Daredevils for INR 25 lakhEklavya Dwivedi (Base price INR 30 lakh) – Sold to Sunrisers Hyderabad for INR 75 lakhAniket Choudhary (Base price INR 10 lakh) – Sold to Royal Challengers Bangalore for INR 2 croreT Natarajan (Base price INR 10 lakh) – Sold to Kings XI Punjab for INR 3 croreNathu Singh (Base price INR 30 lakh) – Sold to Gujarat Lions for INR 50 lakhBasil Thampi (Base price INR 10 lakh) – Sold to Gujarat Lions for INR 85 lakhM Ashwin (Base price INR 10 lakh) – Sold to Delhi Daredevils for INR 1 croreTejas Baroka (Base price INR 10 lakh) – Sold to Gujarat Lions for INR 10 lakh

Rashid Khan (Base price INR 50 lakh) – Sold to Sunrisers Hyderabad for INR 4 crore

Pravin Tambe (Base price INR 10 lakh) – Sold to Sunrisers Hyderabad for INR 10 lakh

Chris Woakes (Base price INR 2 crore) – Sold to Kolkata Knight Riders for INR 4.2 crore

Karn Sharma (Base price INR 30 lakh) – Sold to Mumbai Indians for INR 3.2 croreRishi Dhawan (Base price INR 30 lakh) – Sold to Kolkata Knight Riders for INR 55 lakhMatt Henry (Base price INR 50 lakh) – Sold to Kings XI Punjab for INR 50 lakhJaydev Unadkat (Base price INR 30 lakh) – Sold to Rising Pune Supergiants for INR 30 lakhVarun Aaron (Base price INR 30 lakh) – Sold to Kings XI Punjab for INR 2.8 croreManpreet Gony (Base price INR 30 lakh) – Sold to Gujarat Lions for INR 60 lakhMartin Guptill (Base price INR 50 lakh) – Sold to Kings XI Punjab for INR 50 lakh (second round)Jason Roy (Base price INR 1 crore) – Sold to Gujarat Lions for INR 1 crore (second round)Saurabh Tiwary (Base price INR 30 lakh) – Sold to Mumbai Indians for INR 30 lakh (second round)Chris Jordan (Base price INR 50 lakh) – Sold to Sunrisers Hyderabad for INR 50 lakh (second round)Nathan Coulter-Nile (Base price INR 100 lakh) – Sold to Kolkata Knight Riders for INR 3.5 crore (second round)Praveen Dubey (Base price INR 10 lakh) – Sold to Royal Challengers Bangalore for INR 10 lakh (second round)Navdeep Saini (Base price INR 10 lakh) – Sold to Delhi Daredevils for INR 10 lakh (second round)Ben Laughlin (Base price INR 30 lakh) – Sold to Sunrisers Hyderabad for INR 30 lakh (second round)Billy Stanlake (Base price INR 30 lakh) – Sold to Royal Challengers Bangalore for INR 30 lakh (second round)Mohammed Siraj (Base price INR 20 lakh) – Sold to Sunrisers Hyderabad for INR 2.6 croreRahul Chahar (Base price INR 10 lakh) – Sold to Rising Pune Supergiants for INR 10 lakhSaurabh Kumar (Base price INR 10 lakh) – Sold to Rising Pune Supergiants for INR 10 lakhAsela Gunaratne (Base price INR 30 lakh) – Sold to Mumbai Indians for INR 30 lakhDaniel Christian (Base price INR 1 crore) – Sold to Rising Pune Supergiants for INR 1 croreRovman Powell (Base price INR 30 lakhs) – Sold to Kolkata Knight Riders for INR 30 lakhsDarren Sammy (Base price INR 30 lakh) – Sold to Kings XI Punjab for INR 30 lakhMunaf Patel (Base price INR 30 lakh) – Sold to Gujarat Lions for INR 30 lakhRinku Singh (Base price INR 10 lakh) – Sold to Kings XI Punjab for INR 10 lakhShashank Singh (Base price INR 10 lakh) – Sold to Delhi Daredevils for INR 10 lakhMilind Tandon (Base price INR 10 lakh) – Sold to Rising Pune Supergiants for INR 10 lakhKulwant Khejroliya (Base price INR 10 lakh) – Sold to Mumbai Indians for INR 10 lakhChirag Suri (Base price INR 10 lakh) – Sold to Gujarat Lions for INR 10 lakhR Sanjay Yadav (Base price INR 10 lakh) – Sold to Kolkata Knight Riders for INR 10 lakhShelley Shaurya (Base price INR 10 lakh) – Sold to Gujarat Lions for INR 10 lakhShubham Agarwal (Base price INR 10 lakh) – Sold to Gujarat Lions for INR 10 lakhIshank Jaggi (Base price INR 10 lakh) – Sold to Kolkata Knight Riders for INR 10 lakhRahul Tripathi (Base price INR 10 lakh) – Sold to Rising Pune Supergiants for INR 10 lakhPratham Singh (Base price INR 10 lakh) – Sold to Gujarat Lions for INR 10 lakhAkshdeep Nath (Base price INR 10 lakh) – Sold to Gujarat Lions for INR 10 lakh (third round)Lockie Ferguson (Base price INR 50 lakh) – Sold to Rising Pune Supergiants for INR 50 lakh (third round)Manoj Tiwary (Base price INR 50 lakh) – Sold to Rising Pune Supergiants for INR 50 lakh (third round)Darren Bravo (Base price INR 50 lakh) – Sold to Kolkata Knight Riders for INR 50 lakh (third round)Sayan Ghosh (Base price INR 10 lakh) – Sold to Kolkata Knight Riders for INR 10 lakh (third round)

Unsold players

Faiz Fazal (Base price INR 30 lakhs)Alex Hales (Base price INR 100 lakhs)Ross Taylor (Base price INR 50 lakhs)Irfan Pathan (Base price INR 50 lakhs)Sean Abbott (Base price INR 30 lakhs)Ben Dunk (Base price INR 30 lakhs)Jonny Bairstow (Base price INR 1.5 crores)Andre Fletcher (Base price INR 30 lakhs)Johnson Charles (Base price INR 30 lakhs)Dinesh Chandimal (Base price INR 50 lakhs)Kyle Abbott (Base price INR 1.5 crores)Ishant Sharma (Base price INR 2 crores)Lakshan Sandakan (Base price INR 30 lakhs)Ish Sodhi (Base price INR 30 lakhs)Brad Hogg (Base price INR 50 lakhs)Pragyan Ojha (Base price INR 30 lakhs)Imran Tahir (Base price INR 50 lakhs)Umang Sharma (Base price INR 10 lakhs)Prithvi Shaw (Base price INR 10 lakhs)Unmukt Chand (Base price INR 30 lakhs)Asghar Stanikzai (Base price INR 20 lakhs)Mahipal Lomror (Base price INR 10 lakhs)Shivam Dubey (Base price INR 10 lakhs)Manan Sharma (Base price INR 10 lakhs)Rush Kalaria (Base price INR 10 lakhs)Priyank Kirit Panchal (Base price INR 10 lakhs)Vishnu Vinod (Base price INR 10 lakhs)Shreevats Goswami (Base price INR 10 lakhs)Mohammad Shahzad (Base price INR 50 lakhs)Mohit Ahlawat (Base price INR 10 lakhs)Manvinder Bisla (Base price INR 10 lakhs)Abu Nechim (Base price INR 10 lakhs)Umar Nazir Mir (Base price INR 10 lakhs)Pawan Suyal (Base price INR 10 lakhs)Mayank Dagar (Base price INR 10 lakhs)Sarabjit Ladda (Base price INR 10 lakhs)Mitchell Swepson (Base price INR 30 lakhs)Akshay Wakhare (Base price INR 10 lakhs)Cheteshwar Pujara (Base price INR 50 lakhs)Abhinav Mukund (Base price INR 30 lakhs)Michael Klinger (Base price INR 50 lakhs)S Badrinath (Base price INR 30 lakhs)Marlon Samuels (Base price INR 100 lakhs)Evin Lewis (Base price INR 50 lakhs)Nic Maddinson (Base price INR 50 lakhs)Parvez Rasool (Base price INR 30 lakhs)Jason Holder (Base price INR 1.5 crores)David Wiese (Base price INR 30 lakhs)Thisara Perera (Base price INR 50 lakhs)Farhaan Behardien (Base price INR 30 lakhs)Anamul Haque (Base price INR 30 lakhs)Shane Dowrich (Base price INR 30 lakhs)Kusal Perera (Base price INR 50 lakhs)Niroshan Dickwella (Base price INR 30 lakhs)Brad Haddin (Base price INR 1.5 crores)Glenn Phillips (Base price INR 10 lakhs)RP Singh (Base price INR 30 lakhs)Pankaj Singh (Base price INR 30 lakhs)Fawad Ahmed (Base price INR 30 lakhs)Michael Beer (Base price INR 30 lakhs)Akila Dananjaya (Base price INR 30 lakhs)Nathan Lyon (Base price INR 1.5 crores)Rahul Sharma (Base price INR 30 lakhs)Himanshu Rana (Base price INR 10 lakhs)Apoorv Wankhade (Base price INR 10 lakhs)Akash Bhandari (Base price INR 10 lakhs)Akhil Herwadkar (Base price INR 10 lakhs)Pankaj Jaiswal (Base price INR 10 lakhs)Dishant Yagnik (Base price INR 20 lakhs)Rishi Arothe (Base price INR 10 lakhs)Ronsford Beaton (Base price INR 20 lakhs)Kanishk Seth (Base price INR 10 lakhs)Joe Burns (Base price INR 30 lakhs)Colin Munro (Base price INR 50 lakhs)James Neesham (Base price INR 50 lakhs)Wayne Parnell (Base price INR 50 lakhs)Mitchell Santner (Base price INR 50 lakhs)Harpreet Singh (Base price INR 20 lakhs)Colin de Grandhomme (Base price INR 30 lakhs)Andile Phehlukwayo (Base price INR 100 lakhs)Dwaine Pretorius (Base price INR 30 lakhs)Ben Wheeler (Base price INR 30 lakhs)Kesrick Williams (Base price INR 30 lakhs)Tejendra Singh (Base price 10 lakhs)Virat Singh (Base price INR 10 lakhs)Manjeet Singh (Base price INR 10 lakhs)Mehedi Hasan Miraz (Base price INR 30 lakhs)Mahmudullah (Base price INR 30 lakhs)Sabbir Rahman (Base price INR 30 lakhs)B Indrajith (Base price INR 10 lakhs)Amit Verma (Base price INR 10 lakhs)Himmat Singh (Base price INR 10 lakhs)Ashton Turner (Base price INR 20 lakhs)Chaitanya Bishnoi (Base price INR 10 lakhs)

Soft-outfield fiasco prevents play again

By Monday, when there was no cricket played again, eight of the 12 sessions had been lost to rain and a wet outfield at Kingsmead

ESPNcricinfo staff22-Aug-2016
Scorecard and ball-by-ball detailsBy Monday, when there was no cricket played again, eight of 12 sessions in the Kingsmead Test had been lost to rain and an outfield that had become quite soft underfoot. Conditions should brighten up for the final day of the first Test between South Africa and New Zealand, but considering the match is barely into its second innings, the likelihood of a result appears quite bleak.There has been no rain over the past 48 hours. But the damage caused by a substantial downpour after the second day’s play when a recently relaid outfield took on 65 mm of water could not be overcome. Considering it was winter in Durban, the prospect of the outfield drying out under the sun was also relatively low.The existing facilities at Kingsmead allow only the square to be covered in case of rain. When the umpires inspected the ground prior to the start of play – 10 am – on Monday, they found patches of the unprotected outfield still gave way to pressure sparking concern for the safety of the players.A second inspection was scheduled for 12 pm, the only outcome of which was the time of the next inspection at 2pm. The match officials conferred together again and called play off at 2.18 pm.Two days ago, when last there was cricket at Kingsmead, New Zealand were 15 for 2, with Kane Williamson and Ross Taylor at the crease, trailing South Africa’s 263 by 248 runs.

Moeen Ali stars with bat and ball as Worcestershire breeze to victory

Aggressive half-century sets tone for comfortable win

ECB Reporters' Network11-Jun-2021A blistering half-century and two wickets from Moeen Ali saw Worcestershire Rapids complete a 32-run victory over Northamptonshire Steelbacks at Wantage Road.The England allrounder, who also effected a run-out, joined forces with Brett D’Oliveira in a partnership of 94 to set Worcestershire up for a big total in this Vitality Blast clash. Although Northamptonshire’s bowlers pegged things back once Moeen holed out for 52 from 30 deliveries, Worcestershire’s 185 for 7 proved too many.The Steelbacks played aggressively from the outset but never regained the momentum once skipper Josh Cobb and Adam Rossington were parted in successive overs at the end of the Powerplay.Earlier tight work from Northamptonshire’s bowlers restricted Rapids to a lacklustre 36 for 1 in the first six overs. D’Oliveira broke the shackles with two maximums over long-on before Moeen got in on the action with the ninth and tenth overs leaking 37 runs.Moeen brought up his half-century with his fourth six when he swung Graeme White over square leg before he attempted one big shot too many. He and D’Oliveira had more than doubled the total in the Powerplay in just 29 deliveries.Cobb pegged back the scoring with two tight overs before Tom Taylor enticed D’Oliveira to edge a wide one behind for 43. Late hitting from Ross Whiteley and Ben Cox threatened to push Rapids towards 200, but Sanderson and Taylor finished with three wickets apiece to stem the flow.The Steelbacks reply got off to a bad start when Richard Levi fell to the first ball of the innings, offering a sharp chance to D’Oliveira at backward point. Two overs later Ricardo Vasconcelos fell to a stunning diving catch in the deep by Whiteley.Cobb was not going to die wondering and took four boundaries of Ben Dwarshuis’s second over and sliced Charlie Morris for a huge six over cover in the final over of the Powerplay. But his aggression came to an end next ball when he picked out the fielder at mid-on. Rossington was then bowled playing for spin to a straight ball from Ish Sodhi.The wickets continued to fall. South African allrounder Wayne Parnell attempted a big heave across the line to Moeen and was stumped. Rob Keogh fell to a diving catch in the deep by Dwarshuis off Moeen to leave the Steelbacks in further trouble at 95 for 6. Saif Zaib mounted some late resistance with a flurry of boundaries but was left with too much to do.

Australia cruise to victory on Smith ton

Steven Smith’s eighth ODI century helped Australia to a comfortable seven-wicket win over Pakistan in the third match at the WACA

The Report by Brydon Coverdale19-Jan-2017
Scorecard and ball-by-ball detailsSteven Smith’s eighth ODI century ensured an Australia victory•Getty Images

“We’ve traditionally chased pretty well here at the WACA,” Steven Smith said after sending Pakistan in to bat. Perhaps what he meant was that chases pretty well at the WACA. Last summer, Smith plundered 149 as Australia hunted down a target of 310 against India, winning in the last over. This time it was easier – Australia passed Pakistan’s 263 with five overs left – but again a Smith hundred got them there.Smith finished unbeaten on 108, his eighth ODI century, as Australia took a 2-1 lead in the series. There were important contributions from a range of sources – Peter Handscomb struck 82 on debut, Josh Hazlewood took 3 for 32 from his 10 overs, and Travis Head took two wickets and then hit the winning runs – but Smith was the architect of the victory. Pakistani sloppiness was another major factor in the result.Twice before he had passed 10 runs, Handscomb was the recipient of good fortune. First he was caught at slip, and reprieved by a late call of a Junaid Khan no-ball, and then he was dropped at point – Junaid had overstepped again, in any case. But for the first of the no-balls, Australia could have been 3 for 46 in the 11th over; the third wicket did not truly fall until Australia had 228 on the board, and the job was almost done.Early wickets gave Pakistan hope. Australia’s openers both fell within the first 10 overs, Usman Khawaja caught behind for 9 off Mohammad Amir, who found some swing with the new ball, and David Warner caught behind off Junaid for 35. But after Handscomb’s let-offs, the wind went out of Pakistan’s sails, and a 183-run partnership between Smith and Handscomb set the tone for the chase.Handscomb milked singles and struck six fours, though three of those were genuine edges past or over the wicketkeeper, and finished with the third-highest score by an Australian on ODI debut. Only Phillip Hughes (112 against Sri Lanka in 2013) and Phil Jaques (94 against South Africa in 2006) had scored more in their first one-day international for Australia. Eventually his luck ran out and he was caught behind trying to hook Hasan Ali.Head struck an unbeaten 23, including the winning boundary, and Australia wrapping up the win with seven wickets in hand meant Glenn Maxwell neither batted nor bowled in the match. As has been the case throughout this series, Head was the only spinner Australia used, while also batting ahead of Maxwell. It is a strange scenario that Maxwell finds himself in, but for Australia a win is a win, regardless of who contributes.Here, the major contributor was Smith, who looked far more fluent than Handscomb, and reached his century from 97 balls, finishing with 11 fours and a six. Along the way, Smith became the fastest Australian to the milestone of 3000 runs in ODIs, getting there in his 79th innings – one quicker than both Michael Bevan and George Bailey.But it was the final ten overs of Pakistan’s innings that really turned this match. Sharjeel Khan had given them a platform with 50 at better than a run a ball, and Babar Azam built it up further with a half-century of his own, yet Pakistan were unable to make the 300-plus total that would really have challenged Australia. From 4 for 213 after 40 overs, they should at least have got close.Instead, Azam and Umar Akmal both fell to Josh Hazlewood, who in the absence of the resting Mitchell Starc was outstanding and finished with 3 for 32 from his 10 overs, and Pakistan’s momentum evaporated. The final five overs brought Pakistan only 21 runs, and just a single boundary. Pakistan had struggled to 7 for 263, a total that looked only just competitive.The innings started briskly for Pakistan when Sharjeel plundered 20 runs off the fourth over, bowled by the raw fast bowler Billy Stanlake. A six was pulled imperiously over midwicket and was followed by three consecutive fours, which left Stanlake with 2-0-27-0 in his second ODI. But Hazlewood struck with the very next delivery when he trapped Mohammad Hafeez lbw for 4.Sharjeel again picked off three consecutive boundaries later in his innings, this time off Head, but next ball chopped on for 50 from 47 deliveries to give Head the first of his two wickets. Asad Shafiq also fell to Head on 5 when he advanced and sent a thick edge to short third man, but Azam then found a willing ally and put on 63 with Shoaib Malik for the fourth wicket.But on 39, Malik became the first international wicket for Stanlake when he edged behind, and Azam was joined by his cousin, Akmal. They combined for a 60-run stand that should have been terminated earlier, when Akmal danced down the pitch to Head and missed an agricultural heave, but Wade failed to glove the ball and missed a straightforward stumping.Azam was the key for Pakistan. Although he struck only four fours and one six in his 84, he gave Pakistan something to work with, and in fact scored more in this innings along than he did in the entire Test series against Australia. Along the way, Azam also joined Viv Richards, Kevin Pietersen, Jonathan Trott and Quinton de Kock in reaching 1000 ODI runs in 21 innings, the all-time record.But Pakistan needed him to turn it into a century. Instead, Azam pulled Hazlewood and was brilliantly caught at deep midwicket by a diving Handscomb, and in Hazlewood’s next over Akmal gloved a bouncer through to Matthew Wade for 39. Another stunning catch in the next over, this time Head running with the flight of the ball at mid-off, robbed Pakistan of Imad Wasim for 9.With the late wickets went Pakistan’s hopes of a total anywhere near 300 – and that was what they needed. Australia cruised to their target with 30 balls to spare, and took a 2-1 lead in the five-match campaign. It will take some sort of effort for Pakistan to win the series from here.