'We thought we'd broken their back'

Rod Marsh has shed new light on Australia’s failed Ashes campaign by admitting they felt they had the series won after a vast victory over England in the second Test at Lord’s.Following a heavy opening defeat in Cardiff, the Australians regathered to more than double the margin in the second match with a 405-run thrashing, and celebrated their first victory at Lord’s since 2005 with plenty of gusto. But the series ledger was merely 1-1, and after their batting was obliterated on seaming pitches at Edgbaston and Trent Bridge, the heavily favoured visitors finished empty handed.Speaking as part of a panel discussion following his delivery of the 2015 MCC Spirit of Cricket Cowdrey Lecture, Marsh was asked by Mark Nicholas whether complacency had crept into Australia’s defence of the Ashes urn won so convincingly at home two years before.”When we left Lord’s I thought ‘we will win the Ashes’ because we’d played that badly at Cardiff, we played that well here, then we were just going to win,” Marsh said. “If that’s complacency, then yes we were complacent. But I think we all thought we’d broken their back at Lord’s with such an emphatic victory. Geez we were wrong. We were that wrong!”Marsh’s admission is sure to leave plenty wondering how the series was allowed to unravel, when Australia had gone 14 years without winning the Ashes in England. Fellow selector Darren Lehmann has publicly conceded that the selectors made several errors over the series, including the dropping of Mitchell Marsh for his brother Shaun on the opening morning of the pivotal Trent Bridge Test.There has also been heated debate over the delayed selection of Peter Siddle, who looked comfortably Australia’s most dangerous bowler on seaming pitches when belatedly chosen for the dead Oval Test, while critiques of the tourists’ batsmanship in the prevailing conditions have largely concluded that greater grit had to be shown.In contrast to Marsh, England’s captain Alastair Cook said his side knew from the moment they defeated Australia in the first Test that they were capable of winning the Ashes. It was a belief that did not waver even after the Lord’s drubbing, for they had seen how Michael Clarke’s team could struggle in even moderately helpful conditions for James Anderson and Stuart Broad.”Australia came as firm favourites, but as a player and as a team you need to have a bit of substance in your belief,” Cook said as part of the same panel. “You turn up to Cardiff and you look at the Australians and like we always do we probably build up the opposition in our own minds a bit. “Australia beat West Indies more convincingly than we did, they had an outstanding run of games. In my mind I thought we could win if we played to our absolute potential.”When we left Cardiff we knew these guys were beatable, and that was the big difference. We’d done it once, it was just whether we could do it consistently. But I know we could win the Ashes because we’d just beaten them, and we could put Australia under pressure in our conditions.”Everyone looked at each other at the end of that game, we had a few drinks in the dressing room at Cardiff, and that was the most important message I could get across to the guys. We’ve proven we can do it once, if you can do it once you can do it three times. They clearly ignored everything I said and we got hammered at Lord’s three days later, but at the end of the summer we proved it.”

Shaheen Shah Afridi removed from attack for dangerous bowling on BBL debut

Shaheen Shah Afridi, on his BBL debut, was removed from the attack for dangerous bowling in the match between Brisbane Heat and Melbourne Renegades in Geelong.In the 18th over of Renegades’ innings, after Heat elected to field, Afridi bowled two waist-high full tosses – one each to Tim Seifert and Ollie Peake – and he was forced out of the attack.After being told he could no longer bowl, Afridi sported a wry grin as Heat captain Nathan McSweeney had to bowl the final two deliveries to complete the over.It meant Afridi finished with the rough figures of 0-43 off 2.4 overs, including three no-balls and two wides, in a tough BBL initiation. Entering the game amid much fanfare, with Pakistan team-mate Mohammad Rizwan also making his BBL debut for Renegades, he had started well with three dot balls in the second over.But things went downhill after that as he missed his lengths and was not brought back on until the 13th over when Renegades took the power surge. Afridi conceded 19 runs in the over before the horrors of the 18th over, where he ultimately leaked 15 runs, including three no-balls.Renegades finished with a massive 212 for 5 with Seifert smashing 102 off 56 balls and Peake clubbing 57 off 29. Rizwan, batting at No. 3, made just 4 from ten before holing out to left-arm spinner Paddy Dooley.

Classy Obanda seals series for Kenya

ScorecardA fine 85 from Alex Obanda, playing in only his second one-dayer, led Kenya to a thumping win over Canada in the second and final ODI at Nairobi. Chasing a modest 190, Kenya rollicked to victory with more than six overs to spare.It was not all plain sailing though. In cool conditions and under cloudy skies, Kenya’s top-order struggled with the early loss of Maurice Ouma and Nehemiah Odhiambo. David Obuya (34 from 51) helped put on 41 with Obanda, crunching five fours, before he fell attempting his sixth slog and was caught at deep midwicket off Qaiser Ali.All the while, Obanda showed a calmness belying his years – he turns 20 in December – and stroked 15 fours in his 103-ball 85. He was particularly savage through his favoured cover region but also slogged the spinners over midwicket and hit cleanly over the top. It was his maiden ODI fifty and he looked set to register a hundred before he propped forward to Jason Patraj and was stumped. Collins Obuya was on hand to see Kenya home with a powerful 44.The ease with which Kenya’s batsman reached their target owed much to the discipline of their bowlers. Thomas Odoyo and Peter Ongondo bowled tidy opening spells, but it was the introduction of the spinners – Odhiambo and Steve Tikolo – which unsettled Canada’s top-order. Mohammad Iqbal was stumped for 30, Ashif Mulla trapped in front for 1 before Sunil Dhaniram was neatly held by Tony Suji at mid-on. Trevin Bastiampillai anchored innings with a defiant 49 – with seven fours and huge a six over long-on – but his was a lone cause.Canada’s final match of their tour, the second Intercontinental Cup match against Namibia in Windhoek, gets underway on Thursday.

Johnson flies to Melbourne for Pura Cup match

Mitchell Johnson will not be carrying the drinks for Australia © Getty Images

Mitchell Johnson has made a last-minute trip to Melbourne to play in Queensland’s Pura Cup match against Victoria after being named Australia’s 12th man for the first Test at the Gabba. Johnson will get some valuable first-class bowling time in the four-day game starting at the MCG on Friday.Queensland will be without Matthew Hayden and the now-injured Shane Watson, both of whom were members of Australia’s original 13-man Test squad. Craig Philipson, who is coming off 73 from 74 balls in Queensland’s Ford Ranger Cup game against Western Australia on Friday, has come in to the line-up.Ashley Noffke and the fast bowler Chris Swan, who took five wickets in his Pura Cup debut last month, have also been included in the squad. Noffke has not played a Pura Cup game this season after hurting his back on the eve of the Bulls’ first match against Tasmania.The injury crisis in Victoria’s fast-bowling stocks has been eased slightly with Shane Harwood to return from a side strain. Harwood has replaced Mick Lewis in the squad after Lewis injured his hip while bowling in Victoria’s draw with Tasmania last week.Harwood hurt his side in the Bushrangers’ season-opening clash with Western Australia last month and joined his fellow fast bowlers Allan Wise, Dirk Nannes, Rob Cassell and Peter Siddle on the casualty list. Victoria have also brought in the uncapped left-hand batsman Robert Quiney to replace Shane Warne, who is in Brisbane with the Australia team.The Victoria captain Cameron White said his team had moved on since their previous encounter with the Bulls, in last season’s Pura Cup final when Queensland declared at 6 for 900 and won by an innings and 354 runs. Both teams have one win from their first three games in 2006-07. “This is a new season, a different ground and a fresh opportunity for us,” White said. “Our batting has been going well and hopefully Shane’s inclusion will give us more firepower given Mick was forced to sit out most of the Tassie game with injury.”Victoria Pura Cup squad Nick Jewell, Lloyd Mash, Brad Hodge, David Hussey, Robert Quiney, Cameron White (capt), Andrew McDonald, Jon Moss, Adam Crosthwaite (wk), Clinton McKay, Shane Harwood, Gerard Denton.Queensland Pura Cup squad Jimmy Maher (capt), Lachlan Stevens, Martin Love, Clinton Perren, Andrew Symonds, Craig Philipson, James Hopes, Chris Hartley (wk), Andy Bichel, Mitchell Johnson, Daniel Doran, Ashley Noffke, Chris Swan.Queensland FR Cup squad Jimmy Maher (capt), James Hopes, Clinton Perren, Andrew Symonds, Craig Philipson, Michael Buchanan, Chris Hartley (wk), Andy Bichel, Chris Simpson, Ashley Noffke, Scott Brant, Chris Swan.

Samuels creams 257 in mammoth Windies total

Scorecard

Marlon Samuels flayed the Queensland attack, smashing 257 off 304 balls © Getty Images

Marlon Samuels pounded the Queensland attack, scoring a colossal 257 to give the West Indians a gigantic 289-run lead at the Allan Border Field in Brisbane. Queensland lost Matthew Hayden in their second innings as they ended the third day on 1 for 52.Samuels, who went past Martin Love’s 250 for the highest score at the ground, hammered 34 fours and eight sixes as the West Indians piled up 612 in just 143.1 overs. He built useful partnerships with Shivnarine Chanderpaul and Dwane Bravo to take the total past 350. Chris Simpson then struck two quick blows for Queensland, removing Bravo and Denesh Ramdin, while Mitchell Johnson sent Brian Lara – batting as low as No. 8 – packing for just 1.At 7 for 384 Queensland had an opportunity to skittle the tail out cheaply and restrict the deficit. But Samuels found willing partners in Tino Best and Daren Powell who did their utmost to frustrate Queensland.Samuels and Best added 72 runs for the eighth wicket, and after Best departed for a defiant 23, Samuels took centre stage. The ninth-wicket partnership added 156, of which Powell made a quick 34 with five fours and a six. Samuels finally got out after playing a dominant role in a string of partnerships, and with Wavell Hinds injured, the West Indians closed their innings on 612, giving Queensland a tough 13 overs to play before close.

Ockbrook in quarter-final after thrilling win

Graham Lloyd’s century for Bootle proved to be in vain© Getty Images

The wet weather certainly hasn’t dampened the spirits of the sides hoping to progress in this year’s Cockspur Cup, the England & Wales Cricket Board’s premier club knockout competition, with Ockbrook & Washbrook, Barnt Green and Doncaster Town all through to the quarter-finals after winning their matches last Sunday.Waltham gave their quarter-final hopes a boost by comprehensively defeating Saffron Walden, the champions in 2002, in an all-Essex encounter. They restricted Walden to 111 for 9 in 45 overs, with Ata-ur-Rehman, who played 13 Tests and 30 one-dayers for Pakistan, taking 4 for 17 in nine overs. Waltham completed an emphatic victory in just 20.4 overs, with Arshad Ali making 82 in 72 balls. They will now play Teddington for a spot in the quarter-final against either Taunton or Kibworth.Robbie Hodges helped Finchley to 250 for 5 against Hampstead, making 84. He was well supported by Keerthi Ranasinghe, a former Sri Lankan international one-day player, who smashed 76 from only 50 balls. Faced with such an imposing total, Hampstead fell well short, and were bowled out for 193. Mark Harvey, Hampstead’s captain, was the only major contributor, scoring 70. Finchley will play Havant this Sunday, and should they win that game, an away quarter-final game at High Wycombe will follow.Following their demolition of the Vauxhall Mallards, Barnt Green, from Birmingham, dismissed Ormskirk for a paltry 83. Richard Illingworth, the former Worcestershire and England slow left-armer, sent down his nine overs for a miserly 10 runs, and took three wickets. He was ably supported by Gavin Haynes, another former Worcestershire man, who picked up 2 for 15. Barnt Green will be sure of a tougher challenge in their quarter-final game against Doncaster Town, who thrashed Barrow by 180 runs.Batting first, Doncaster made 243 all out in 44.5 overs, with Simon Widdup and Andrew Renison both scoring half-centuries. Paul Stokoe then took 4 for 18 in seven overs as Barrow were bowled out for just 63 in 25.1 overs.Ockbrook & Washbrook, a Derby side, beat Bootle, from Liverpool, in a thrilling encounter at home. Ockbrook made a formidable total of 267 for 8 in 45 overs, built around a solid 83 by John Owen, the former Lancashire batsman, and a spectacular 41 off 17 balls by Ian Darlington.Graham Lloyd, the son of David, the England-coach-turned-commentator, stroked a masterly 103 for Bootle, holding the batting together after they had collapsed to 123 for 6. He added 102 with Ian Cockbain for the seventh wicket, and Bootle went into the last five overs needing 43 to win with three wickets in hand. They lost two more wickets in the next three overs, but in the penultimate over of the match Charlie Lamb clubbed Lian Wharton for four sixes to keep Bootle in the game. However, he was bowled swinging at the first ball of the last over, bowled by Charlie Windmill, handing victory, as well as a place in the quarter-finals, to Ockbrook.The draw for the Cockspur Cup quarter-finals is as follows:
Grange or South Northumberland v Ockbrook & Washbrook
Barnt Green v Doncaster Town
High Wycombe v Havant or Finchley
Kibworth or Taunton v Waltham or Teddington

Baptiste considering legal action

Eldine Baptiste, the former West Indian allrounder, is considering legal action against customs officials after being held on false drug charges. Baptiste was accused of smuggling cocaine in a golf ball by officers at London’s Gatwick Airport, and held at the Wandsworth Prison for three days. Detailed forensic tests on the ball revealed no trace of cocaine, and Baptiste was released and the charges dropped.Though glad that the matter was cleared, Baptiste was shocked at the treatment meted out to him. “I know mistakes can be made, but the way I was treated was inhuman,” Baptiste told AFP. “I don’t mean I was knocked about by customs officers, but to be thrown into a prison cell and given a prison number was shocking.”We are all human and we should be treated that way. I love England. I have lived here for 20 years and I still love the place but these people must not treat people in this way. The apology is nice, but the way I was treated is very poor. I had not been found guilty of anything but I was treated like a criminal.”It is in the hands of my solicitor now and I will be guided by him but legal action is a possibility.”Baptiste was travelling with his five-year-old son from Antigua, where he had been watching the fourth Test between West Indies Australia, to South Africa. Baptiste’s arrest meant that his son had to complete the journey on his own.

England announce Winter Tour Squads

England today named a 16-man Test squad to tour India and New Zealand thiswinter, a 16-man One-Day squad to tour Zimbabwe this autumn and the inaugural National Academy Squad.Nasser Hussain will captain the Test squad which includes two uncapped players, the Essex wicket-keeper, James Foster, and the Yorkshire off-spinner, Richard Dawson. There is also a recall to the senior squad for Lancashire wicket-keeper Warren Hegg.Foster is also included in the Zimbabwe ODI squad together with two othernewcomers, James Kirtley of Sussex and Jeremy Snape of Gloucestershire.Announcing the squad, Chairman of Selectors, David Graveney said: “The retirement of Michael Atherton and Alec Stewart and Darren Gough’s decisionto make themselves unavailable for selection for part of the winter programme will create opportunities for other players to establish themselves within the Test side this winter.”James Foster peformed well on the ‘A’ side’s tour of the Caribbean last winter and is an outstanding prospect who is also being fast-tracked by Essex to be a viable wicket-keeper batsman at the highest level.”Ashley Giles has been included in the Test squad subject to him satisfying the selectors of his fitness ahead of the tour departure and he will be one of three spinners together with Robert Croft and Richard Dawson.”Richard Dawson has played a key role in Yorkshire’s Championship winning side this summer and we are excited by his potential.”As in the previous winter, the selectors have named a Test squad to cover both tours, but we will review the selection at the end of the India Test series and may make alterations to the squad to account for the different conditions we will face in New Zealand.”With regard to the Zimbabwe ODI series, the selectors intend to use this squad to explore various options. There are a number of senior players who have been omitted but they will remain part of the thinking for the next World Cup. The selectors will then review the performance of the Zimbabwe ODI squad before naming the party to go to India/New Zealand.”In picking the National Academy Squad, the selectors, together with HughMorris, chose a group of players that we believe will be very quickly pushing for places in the international set-up. This is an exciting opportunity for all concerned and there will be many benefits from attending the Academy and working with people of the calibre of Rod Marsh.”England Test Squad to tour India and New Zealand – 2001-2

1. Nasser Hussain (Captain) Essex 28.3.682. Usman Afzaal Nottinghamshire 9.6.773. Mark Butcher Surrey 23.8.724. Andrew Caddick Somerset 21.11.685. Robert Croft Glamorgan 25.5.706. Richard Dawson Yorkshire 4.8.807. James Foster Essex 15.4.808. Ashley Giles Warwickshire 19.3.739. Warren Hegg Lancashire 23.2.6810. Matthew Hoggard Yorkshire 31.12.7611. James Ormond Leicestershire 20.8.7712. Mark Ramprakash Surrey 5.9.6913. Graham Thorpe Surrey 1.8.6914. Marcus Trescothick Somerset 25.12.7515. Michael Vaughan Yorkshire 29.10.7416. Craig White Yorkshire 16.12.69

Coach – Duncan FletcherAssistant Coach – TBCOperations Manager – Phil NealePhysiotherapist – Dean ConwayPhysiologist – Nigel StockillMedia Relations Manager (David Clarke/Andrew Walpole)Scorer – Malcolm Ashton

England ODI Squad to tour Zimbabwe 2001

1. Nasser Hussain (Captain) Essex 28.3.682. Paul Collingwood Durham 26.5.763. Andrew Flintoff Lancashire 6.12.774. James Foster Essex 15.4.805. Paul Grayson Essex 31.3.716. Matthew Hoggard Yorkshire 31.12.767. Ben Hollioake Surrey 11.11.778. James Kirtley Sussex 10.1.759. Nick Knight Warwickshire 28.11.6910. James Ormond Leicestershire 20.8.7711. Mark Ramprakash Surrey 5.9.6912. Owais Shah Middlesex 22.10.7813. Ryan Sidebottom Yorkshire 15.1.7814. Jeremy Snape Gloucestershire 27.4.7315. Marcus Trescothick Somerset 25.12.7516. Craig White Yorkshire 16.12.69

Coach – Duncan FletcherAssistant Coach – Tim BoonOperations Manager – Phil NealePhysiotherapist – Dean ConwayPhysiologist – Nigel StockillMedia Relations Manager – Andrew Walpole

National Academy Squad – Winter 2001-2

1. Ian Bell Warwickshire 11.4.822. Stephen Harmison Durham 23.10.783. Simon Jones Glamorgan 25.12.784. Derek Kenway Hampshire 12.6.785. Robert Key Kent 12.5.796. Steven Kirby Yorkshire 4.10.777. Nicky Peng Durham 18.9.828. Chris Schofield Lancashire 6.10.789. Andrew Strauss Middlesex 2.3.7710. Graeme Swann Northamptonshire 24.3.7911. Chris Tremlett Hampshire 2.9.8112. Alex Tudor Surrey 23.10.7713. Mark Wallace Glamorgan 19.11.8114. Mark Wagh Warwickshire 20.10.7615. Matthew Wood Yorkshire 6.4.77

In-form Bairstow seals Yorkshire win

ScorecardJonny Baistow passed 50 for the ninth time in 12 Championship innings this season•Getty Images

Jonny Bairstow celebrated his Ashes call-up with a dashing innings that helped propel Yorkshire to a seven-wicket victory over Worcestershire on the final day of their Championship match at Scarborough.It was the first time since 1998 that Yorkshire had won five consecutive matches in a season in the competition and it further strengthened the title-holders’ position at the top of the table.Worcestershire made them fight every inch of the way for their success and for a while they were even able to contemplate victory themselves as the home side slumped to 44 for 3 in their chase towards a 157 target. But then Bairstow, in the best form of his career and brimming with confidence, strode to the crease and was soon delighting the 2000 crowd with shots to all parts of the North Marine Road ground.Bairstow battered an unbeaten 74 off 51 balls with nine fours and three sixes during an unbroken fourth-wicket stand of 113 in 17 overs with Alex Lees, who finished on 58 not out. The wicketkeeper-batsman has now thrashed 980 runs at an average of 108.88 in his 12 Championship knocks, with one double-century, four centuries and four half-centuries.”It was another great knock today from Jonny Bairstow and we all wish him well and hope he scores lots of runs for England,” Yorkshire’s coach, Jason Gillespie, said. “He is playing good cricket, the ball is in his court and I am delighted he has got his opportunity.”After Worcestershire had been bowled out for 306, the second highest second-innings score against Yorkshire this season, they soon claimed a wicket as Will Rhodes skied Saeed Ajmal’s second ball to deep mid-on where Jack Shantry held on to a well-judged catch.Yorkshire were 34 for 1 at lunch, Lees having driven Joe Leach for an early six, but soon after the interval they suffered a double setback, Jack Leaning being trapped lbw by Charlie Morris and captain Andrew Gale run out when sent back by Lees.With light rain falling for a short while, Bairstow went on the charge, driving Ajmal over long-on for six and being so eager to advance that he chased a delivery which slipped out of Morris’s hand and bounced several times wide on the off side before belting it through the covers for four.Bairstow walloped three fours off consecutive balls from Ajmal and successive boundaries against Shantry, bringing up his half-century from 39 balls with five fours and two sixes. Both Bairstow and Lees cleared the rope again as Lees completed his first 50 in 14 Championship innings, off 79 deliveries, and it was all over at 2.55pm with 47 overs to spare.Resuming on 221 for 6 in the morning, with a 71 lead, Worcestershire continued to take the fight to their opponents and Ross Whiteley moved his overnight 65 on to 101 before falling lbw to Ryan Sidebottom soon after the new ball had been taken. He had faced 139 balls and struck 14 fours and a six on his way to his best score for Worcestershire and his highest since a career-best 130 not out for Derbyshire against Kent in September 2011.Even with his departure to make it 280 for 9, Worcestershire were not entirely finished because Ajmal and Morris put on 26 for the last wicket. It meant that Yorkshire still had some work to do and there were anxious moments ahead until Bairstow and Lees got cracking.”Obviously I am very pleased to come away with full points but this was still not our best performance, I have to acknowledge that,” Gillespie said. “We had one big partnership in the first innings and a century stand in the second but we have still not nailed our partnerships.”I thought we were poor with the ball on the third day before just making our opponents follow-on and we have to focus on the process of how to get it right. We seem to drift sometimes when we take our foot off the gas.”It is a nice position to be in at the top of the table but there is still a lot of cricket to be played and we have six games remaining. We need to make sure we maintain our standards and respect the form we are in even though we are not at our best. The race for the Championship is not over yet and we can only control what we do and not what other teams do.”

Mankading just another mode of dismissal – Kartik

Former India spinner Murali Kartik has whole-heartedly backed the West Indies after their controversial win over Zimbabwe at the Under-19 World Cup on Tuesday. West Indies fast bowler Keemo Paul mankaded the last man Richard Ngarava with three runs needed off the final over to help his team through to the quarter-finals. The incident has led to fierce debate but Kartik, who has dismissed three batsmen in such a manner over his playing career, remains steadfast in his belief that a bowler is completely justified in effecting what is just another “mode of dismissal.”Among the arguments given by pundits who were critical of West Indies was that Paul had failed to warn Ngarava. But Kartik argued the rules do not demand that courtesy.”It is one of those things where people are once again going to bring up the spirit of cricket issue,” he told ESPNcricinfo. “It’s very simple; you are not allowed to steal anything in life so stealing anything whether an inch or a yard when it’s a crucial time, it’s not done. People are going to say he wasn’t warned, but the rule is very clear, you are not supposed to leave the popping crease before the bowler delivers the ball. There are different modes of dismissals and this is one of them and I don’t know why people create such a hue and cry about the spirit of cricket.”Most bowlers do warn a batsman before mankading him and Kartik used to do so at least thrice. However, he believes he had the time since he was playing a first-class cricket across four days. Here, West Indies were defending only a handful of runs with six balls left and needed the wicket to progress in a World Cup.”For me the situations were different, I was playing a four-day game,” Kartik said. “I had the time to warn, that was something that was happening for a very long time. I didn’t want to get that person out, I just wanted to warn him and if somebody doesn’t heed to the warnings after three times, then obviously there’s nothing left. Over here, there were just three runs required and the last man was in and they wanted to win the game, so it’s a different situation.”Zimbabwe’s players were visibly distraught after the match, with captain Brandon Mavuta repeatedly saying “No comment” in the post-match presentation ceremony. Their coach Stephen Mangongo was more vocal: “It is my honest and sincere opinion as a coach, who has been coaching this game for nearly two decades, that at youth cricket you want to teach them sportsmanship, you want to teach them to win with honour and valour. And I do not think that they’ve won with honour, by sneaking a run out in such a manner.”Kartik laughed off that view, saying the West Indies players should in fact be complimented for their game awareness in a high-pressure situation.”They are not kids, they are 19-year olds and many people have played for their countries at the age of 14 and 15.” he said. “When you get to that level, there’s no kid, everybody is treated at par, at the end of the day they are playing for their country. If the other team is trying to win by stealing, is that what you are trying to tell everyone that Zimbabwe were trying to win by gaining that extra yard.”I don’t know why people use the word “Mankad”, it should be on the name of the person who is trying to steal that extra advantage. The person who does it is always the one who is vilified but for me, I have always believed whether you steal a rupee or a million rupees, stealing is stealing. They were just trying to win the game. I am glad they know the rules, and somebody was aware enough to see that someone was trying to take unfair advantage in a tight situation.”TV commentator and former Zimbabwe bowler Mpumelelo Mbangwa, in his post-match analysis for the host broadcaster, said he would have wanted the on-field umpires to take charge of the situation and ask if the West Indies captain really wanted to go ahead with the appeal. Other critics have also argued that the intent of the batsman should have been taken into consideration before he was ruled out via a mankad. Was he willfully stepping outside his crease or was it simply the result of a natural urgency that comes with wanting to get the required runs in a tense situation? But Kartik did not entertain those views either and offered a few analogies to back his stance.”When a bowler misses the crease by a micrometer, isn’t it a no ball?” he said. “Or when a run out or a stumping is referred to the third umpire, the line belongs to the umpire, [and] whether you are a millimeter or a micrometer out, you are out.”Let me put another situation [across]. As a spinner, when I am bowling and someone is beaten in the air and he drags the foot by a micrometer, is the keeper going to ask him, ‘Can I stump you or not? Are you out? Are you trying to take a single?’ No, that’s not the case. So, I am really sorry, whether it’s a micrometer or an inch or a mile out, he’s out.”The spirit of cricket is a convenient bunker for people to hide behind. Everybody needs to look into themselves. How many times do people nick and not walk? How many times do people claim catches that aren’t catches and they know it? The situation was such, the kids were trying to win a game and anybody who flouts rules, obviously you have to pay a price.”

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