Lahiru Thirimanne goes through fielding drills, Galle, August 4, 2014
Ahead of 1st Test Against Pakistan.
Identical captains at opposite ends
As Angelo Mathews and Misbah-ul-Haq look across their battlements in Sri Lanka, they may meet each other's gaze, and know they are a lot alike.
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Monday, August 4, 2014
Identical captains at opposite ends
 As Angelo Mathews and Misbah-ul-Haq look 
across their battlements in Sri Lanka, they may meet each other's gaze, 
and know they are a lot alike
Sometimes in the cosmic journey, life contrives for kindred souls to 
cross paths: two people who may be separated geographically, ethnically,
 economically, even politically, but who are one at the most elemental, 
human level.
As Angelo Mathews and Misbah-ul-Haq look across their battlements in Sri Lanka, they may meet each other's gaze, and know they are a lot alike.
The last time
 the two met in Tests, they could not have had more disparate days. 
Defending a 1-0 series lead, Mathews embraced an extreme form of 
conservatism and his team drowned in it on the final day in Sharjah. 
With no choice but to launch an unrelenting attack, Misbah kept his side
 in the match long enough, until after a whirl of bludgeoned drives and 
reverse-sweeps from way outside leg stump, he hit the winning run to 
complete a frenetic victory. 
Pakistan have been dormant in Tests since that day, but Mathews has had a
 busy six months, in which both he and his leadership have grown up, and
 grown old - grown a little more like Misbah. Now, when Mathews speaks 
or acts, he is defined by a sense of unshakeable calm. A lot has 
happened to him in the recent past, with a series win in England and 
loss at home against South Africa, but a short time after coming off the
 field, Mathews was no more delighted at Headingley than he was 
distraught at the SSC. Misbah is past 40 now. Though at times he still 
bats like he is 25, there is a timeless stoicism to everything in his 
every move. His words are delivered in grey baritone.
Neither captain is an exemplary tactician, but both are natural leaders 
in other ways. Misbah's batting average is almost 28 runs better when he
 is captain. In 11 Tests at the helm, Mathews has statistically been 
more than twice as good as he was before. They have each inherited a 
legacy of instability, with captains coming, going and occasionally 
coming again in the few years before they each took the helm. But since 
Misbah has had the reins, Pakistan's road has been less rocky. Sri Lanka
 had been energetic and instinctive under Mahela Jayawardene, but since 
Mathews has helmed them, his iron resolve has seeped into his team's 
cricket as well.
There is no doubt who is the more talented cricketer. Misbah is 
routinely secure and imposing when he wishes to be. But in 2014, Mathews
 has been a complete batsman, on every kind of surface, in any 
situation. They both make dour beginnings; that first impulse is always 
"safety first". But they are also equipped with the skill, and the will 
to quickly gather pace. For Misbah, the big blows often come suddenly, 
on the leg side, in the arc between wide long-on and square leg. 
Mathews, increasingly, just clobbers them where he likes.
Neither are ungainly batsmen, but no one could ever mistake them for 
artists either. They are too sensible to fuss with aesthetics. Both hail
 from cricket cultures that celebrate flamboyance - more true for 
Misbah, perhaps, than for Mathews - but they leave the pretty stuff to 
their team-mates and take the utilitarian road themselves. Misbah is 
wise enough to know aggression is critical to the cricket some batsmen 
play, but Mathews is still learning that others cannot absorb pressure 
as passively as he can. "We threw away our wickets" is a common 
complaint. Rarely is Mathews among the "we" in that sentence. So many 
times he has been like the band that plays a sombre tune while the ship 
sinks in a panic around him. No one knows that feeling better than 
Misbah.
There is also no doubt who has the tougher assignment. Eighteen months 
into his captaincy, Mathews has seen the entire spectrum of 
administrative bungling, from two contracts standoffs to seniors' 
tussles with the made-men at Maitland Place. But beyond the spectre of 
match-fixing that Misbah has worked to leave behind, the board he 
reports to is in so much disarray, SLC seems like a Sunday afternoon 
book club in comparison. Every person Misbah meets could be PCB chairman
 in 20 minutes' time. Or the next Test-match opener.  
Grim-faced and unflappable, it is also sometimes easy to cast Misbah as a
 sort of tragic hero. He is all the more likeable because of it. If the 
young players in Sri Lanka's middle order continue to show they are poor
 replacements for the seniors about to bow out of the game, Mathews may 
well become a tragic hero himself, in years to come. He is perhaps the 
luckier of the two because if he carries himself with the grace and 
dignity Misbah manages, he is not likely to be accused of being too 
square, as Misbah often is.  
Their teams arrive in Galle, evenly matched and familiar with each 
other's talents and points of weakness. Steady, courageous and possessed
 of a slow-burning charisma, the cricket Mathews and Misbah play over 
the next few weeks will be intriguing, not just for choices they make, 
but for the moves they elicit from one another.
Andrew Fidel Fernando is ESPNcricinfo's Sri Lanka correspondent. @andrewffernando
Thursday, May 22, 2014
Only the start of the short stuff
11:55 PM
  
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Related Links 
 Report : All-round Jordan brings a smile back to England News : Mathews wary of England, conditions Features : SL future glows brighter in victory 
Matches:  
  England v Sri Lanka at The Oval
  
Series/Tournaments:  
  Sri Lanka tour of England and Ireland
  | |||
 Sri Lanka's bowlers had propelled their 
World T20 campaign, often bailing out lacklustre batting displays, but 
when the bowlers had a bad evening in London, the batsmen could not 
reciprocate
When Graham Ford departed from his role with Sri Lanka, and Paul 
Farbrace arrived in late January, both coaches issued identical 
appraisals of the team's chances in the two upcoming global tournaments.
 
"They have a terrific opportunity to win the World T20 in Bangladesh," 
Ford said, "there's no doubt about that." But both men were a little 
less hopeful about the World Cup. "We're not quite there yet," Farbrace 
had said. "There are some key things to develop, and the England series 
should give us a fair indication where we are at as a side."
As Sri Lanka faltered for the first time in 11 ODIs, at The Oval, many 
of their shortcomings on quicker, bouncier conditions were made plain. 
Sri Lanka's bowlers had propelled their World T20 campaign, often 
bailing out lacklustre batting displays, but when the bowlers had a bad 
evening in London, the batsmen could not reciprocate. 
Lahiru Thirimanne got
 late-swinging delivery early in his innings, but several other batsmen 
failed to account for the bounce and movement typical in England, and 
surely forthcoming in Australia and New Zealand as well. 
Tillakaratne Dilshan
 failed to put away short balls at his body, early in the innings, 
piling pressure on himself to explode, as the run rate climbed. He is 
often a consummate player of the pull - a stroke he executes with 
typical homespun swagger - but has recently struggled with it on faster 
surfaces. In the end, it would be a slash through the offside that undid
 him, as he underestimated the bounce Chris Jordan's hit-the-deck pace 
would achieve. 
Before Dilshan departed, a leaden-footed Kumar Sangakkara had played 
Harry Gurney on, when the bowler nipped one back. It is unlike 
Sangakkara to have footwork out of order, but Sri Lanka could do 
themselves much good if they arrive at the Tests on the back of a big 
ODI series win. If the visitors are to keep England's spirits low, even 
uncharacteristic mistakes may have to be omitted by the senior players, 
who have considerable experience in similar conditions. 
Dinesh Chandimal was
 targeted with the short ball in the T20 match as well, and here 
departed to it, heaving forcefully at Jordan, to offer thin top-edge to 
the keeper. The previous ball had been a bouncer, which Chandimal had 
hooked at and missed - further suggestion that England will persist with
 this plan to him. 
He has flourished in England before, but this uncertainty against the 
short ball was unearthed by Pakistan in the Test series in January, when
 Junaid Khan had him caught at fine leg in successive innings. 
Interestingly, Farbrace, then about to take Sri Lanka's reins, had been 
in the stands on the second occasion. However England came by their mode
 of attack, it is out in the open now. Chandimal was already under 
significant scrutiny when he arrived in this series, and will now be 
watched even closer, while Ashan Priyanjan awaits his turn in the middle
 order. 
The requirement was too steep even for Angelo Mathews, who lately has 
grown as a finisher. Perhaps more intent at the top of the innings would
 have eased the middle-order's burden, and to that end, Kusal Perera
 may be reconsidered for the coming matches. Kusal has been notoriously 
inconsistent, but few young Sri Lanka batsmen sustain excellence in the 
first years of their careers. What is more, when he delivers a good 
knocks, he leaves the side well in control of the innings. 
If he is to come in at opener, he will displace Thirimanne, but perhaps 
that creates an opportunity of its own. Sri Lanka's batting concentrates
 its experience in the top four, but if Sangakkara and Mahela 
Jayawardene were to move down to Nos. 4 and 5 respectively, Thirimanne 
could remain in the top three where he prefers, and the unit becomes 
more balanced overall. Jayawardene has long been the most versatile ODI 
batsman Sri Lanka have, and a lower position may free him to play the 
finishing innings he has often provided. Sangakkara, meanwhile, has now 
acquired the aptitude for sustained aggression that might make him a 
good No.4. 
The bowlers' quality and track record suggests they will recover quickly
 from a poor outing. But if Sri Lanka's tour, and their World Cup 
preparations, are to go to plan, the batsmen would do well to give their
 team-mates more cover than they did on Thursday.
Andrew Fidel Fernando is ESPNcricinfo's Sri Lanka correspondent. @andrewffernando
© ESPN Sports Media Ltd.
Monday, May 19, 2014
England ready to repay fans - Morgan
11:21 PM
  
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The last time England were at The Oval it concluded with some of the 
players urinating on the pitch during their late-night celebrations of 
the Ashes series victory. Even if it was a 'lads' moment in the 
afterglow of success, and they were perhaps unlucky to be caught in the 
act, that is not the point: it was crass and disrespectful.
They are now back in south London to begin their new home season. The 
team did what they had to do in Scotland - show willing and avoid defeat
 - and now the summer begins in earnest with a T20 against world 
champions Sri Lanka before five one-day internationals and two Tests 
ahead of the visit of India.
The players will walk out in front of a packed 24,500 at The Oval. 
Surrey have reported a weekend rush for the final batch of tickets, 
perhaps a combination of the warm weather (which, as if on cue, is not 
set to last) and the start of the T20 Blast to whet the appetite for the
 format. However, London venues rarely struggle to fill up to the 
rafters for England matches so the ECB - and this case its public face, 
the team - would be foolish to rest on their laurels and believe the 
punters will continue to turn up regardless.
Eoin Morgan,
 leading England for the T20 in the absence of the injured Stuart Broad,
 was aware how lucky the team was to have loyal support but acknowledged
 that they needed to be given something in return.
"We have always had great support, even when we travel around the world 
and the arenas are not full, and every time we come home it has always 
been to a packed stadium," he said. "That's great, it shows how much we 
cherish the game
"Having heard it will be a sell-out, there's always great support here 
from the English fans and it's great to see it's no different this 
summer. To repay a little bit of what happened in the winter, a win 
would go a long way tomorrow and start off our season properly."
In the bigger picture there is little riding on the game, especially as 
England have declined the opportunity to throw caution to the wind and 
play a young side with an eye on the next World T20, staged in India, 
during 2016. Recalling Michael Carberry, however deserving, is not a 
revolution. 
Still, it is a match against the team who recently walked away with the 
world title during which England were the only team they were beaten by,
 courtesy of Alex Hales' unbeaten 116 - although Sri Lanka do not 
appeared overly perturbed by that reversal given how the tournament 
panned out for them. "We had a tough match against them, but it is in 
the past now," Lasith Malinga said. "It feels good to be world 
champions."
The opposition will have a notably different look this time, Sri Lanka 
having lost the retired Mahela Jayawardene and Kumar Sangakkara while 
Rangana Herath is rested, but victory would still be a good marker to 
lay down.
"There's huge confidence to take from the game we played in the group 
stages of the World Cup," Morgan said. "They're a notable T20 team; they
 have great variations. We've seen and played against the majority of 
their side and to turn them over in the World Cup was a great effort. If
 we can put in a similar performance tomorrow that will go a long way."
With that aim in mind, England have been trying to gain an extra 
advantage by tapping up the inside knowledge of Paul Farbrace who, until
 a few weeks, was Sri Lanka's coach. While the visitors have continued 
to toe the line that his move to the opposition makes little difference 
-Malinga said it was just down to the players to perform in the middle -
 England have certainly been making use of the information available.
"He has been key in our preparation," Morgan said. "He knows their guys 
inside out, as he should do, and his knowledge and applying our skills 
in countering things they do has been really good. He has gone through 
the majority of their players and probably given us a bit more 
background than we would be able to access, which is brilliant."
However, even if Farbrace's dossier on the Sri Lankans helps England 
secure a victory, the only reason one of the players will be caught 
short this time will be going for a quick single.
World champion test for England
11:17 PM
  
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Match facts
Tuesday, May 20, 2014
Start time 6pm local (1700 GMT)
Start time 6pm local (1700 GMT)
Big Picture
England's season began amid showers and sunshine in Aberdeen but the 
first serious test of their summer comes at The Oval. Having reversed 
the usual schedule for sides touring in May and June, they will begin 
engagements against Sri Lanka with a one-off T20 international, ahead of
 ODI and Test series, as the Peter Moores regime opens for a second run 
in front of a home audience. 
For quite different, though not entirely unrelated, reasons these are 
two teams in flux. When England beat Sri Lanka in Chittagong almost two 
months ago, they inflicted what was to be the only defeat of Paul 
Farbrace's brief time in charge. England trailed out of Bangladesh a 
week later having been humbled by the Dutch, while Sri Lanka went on to 
win the World T20; Ashley Giles subsequently lost his job as 
limited-overs coach and Farbrace was headhunted to be Moores' assistant 
in the new set-up.
Sri Lanka may have been entitled to a sense of dudgeon over Farbrace's 
defection to the opposition but, on the surface at least, relations 
remain cordial. Marvan Atapattu has stepped up as interim head coach and
 his immediate issue is how to fill a couple of rather large holes in 
the T20 batting order, following the triumphant retirements of Mahela 
Jayawardene and Kumar Sangakarra. He will officially be working with a 
new captain, too, after Lasith Malinga was promoted from the locum role he fulfilled when Dinesh Chandimal decided to drop himself at the World T20.
The identity of England's leader has also changed, although in this case
 due to Stuart Broad rehabilitating a long-term knee injury. Eoin Morgan takes charge of a squad that has been tweaked rather than overhauled - despite returns for Michael Carberry
 and Ian Bell, England's T20 thinking remains much the same - but fresh 
impressions can still be made on the new coaching staff. Although that 
does not mean a reprieve for Jade Dernbach.
While Sri Lanka, who gave Sussex an almighty thrashing in their final 
warm-up game, are ranked the world's No. 2 T20 side, England have 
slumped to a lowly eighth. Moores got off to a winning start against 
Scotland ten days ago but, even without the additional motivation, Sri 
Lanka will not arrive in south London bearing gifts.
Form guide
(completed matches, most recent first)
England LLWLW
Sri Lanka WWWLW
Sri Lanka WWWLW
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 | |||
In the spotlight
With most of the playing personnel familiar, the focus instead will be on the coaching set-up and, perhaps, England's new team ethic.
 Moores, Alastair Cook and now Morgan have talked of reconnecting with 
the fans, while there has seemingly been an increased openness with the 
media. Public displays of togetherness can be no bad thing but some 
might argue that creating a culture of winning is an even higher 
priority after England's grim winter.
He may not be remembered as the captain that led Sri Lanka to World T20 glory but Dinesh Chandimal
 arguably did something even more remarkable in leaving himself out for 
the good of the team. With Sangakkara's departure, Chandimal takes up an
 equally weighty mantle as wicketkeeper-batsman. His promise is 
undoubted and a settled role could help him bring his T20 international 
average of 13.30 closer to his 28.96 overall.
Team news
Michael Lumb and Dernbach were the main casualties of England's World 
T20 failure, with Carberry in line for an international debut in the 
shortest format and Harry Gurney bringing a left-arm dimension to 
England's attack. Bell could come into the shake-up for a top-three spot
 but Moeen Ali and Joe Root both offer bowling options. Morgan has 
batted more often at No. 4 in recent times but has a better record at 
five. 
England (probable): 1 Alex Hales, 2 Michael Carberry, 3 Moeen 
Ali, 4 Joe Root, 5 Eoin Morgan (capt), 6 Jos Buttler (wk), 7 Ravi 
Bopara, 8 Tim Bresnan, 9 Chris Jordan, 10 James Tredwell, 11 Harry 
Gurney
Sri Lanka rested Kusal Perera, Angelo Mathews and Nuwan Kulasekara in 
Hove but all three should come back into the side, which will be missing
 at least three players from their World T20 final win six weeks ago - 
alongside the retirements of Sangakkara and Jayawardene, Rangana Herath 
is being saved for the Test series. Kithuruwan Vithanage clattered 52 
off 24 balls against Sussex, which may have edged him ahead of Ashan 
Priyanajan for a T20 debut.
Sri Lanka (probable): 1 Kusal Perera, 2 Tillakaratne Dilshan, 3 
Lahiru Thirimanne, 4 Dinesh Chandimal (wk), 5 Angelo Mathews, 6 
Kithuruwan Vithanage, 7 Thisara Perera, 8 Nuwan Kulasekara, 10 Sachithra
 Senanayake, 9 Ajantha Mendis, 11 Lasith Malinga
Pitch and conditions
The T20 international between England and New Zealand at The Oval last 
year served up nearly 400 runs and another surface conducive to batting 
is likely. However, the prospect of showers interrupting the evening may
 temper expectations of a repeat.
Stats and trivia
-  England's victory World T20 over Sri Lanka was their highest 
successful chase and saw Alex Hales score the first T20 hundred by an 
Englishman
-  Sri Lanka have won both of their previous T20s against England in England
- Tillakaratne Dilshan can take advantage of Jayawardene's retirement to overtake him in the leading run-scorers list - he needs 42 to move into second behind Brendon McCullum
Quotes
"There's a huge opportunity tomorrow for individuals right down, batting and bowling, as well as collectively as a unit."
Eoin Morgan expresses the sense of possibility that currently pervades around England
Eoin Morgan expresses the sense of possibility that currently pervades around England
"We had a tough match against England in the World Cup. But the past is past."
Lasith Malinga was not captain for the defeat in Chittagong but he has not forgotten a painful night
Lasith Malinga was not captain for the defeat in Chittagong but he has not forgotten a painful night
Alan Gardner is an assistant editor at ESPNcricinfo. @alanroderick
© ESPN Sports Media Ltd.
Hathurusingha named Bangladesh coach
11:15 PM
  
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Related Links 
 News : BCB in talks with Chandika Hathurusingha News : Jurgensen resigns as Bangladesh coach Features : New coach and board must adjust and adapt 
Players/Officials:  
  Chandika Hathurusingha
 |   Mario Villavarayan
  
Teams:  
  Bangladesh
 |   Sri Lanka
  | |||
The BCB has appointed Chandika Hathurusingha,
 the former Sri Lanka batsman, as Bangladesh's head coach for a two-year
 period. He has left his position as the assistant coach of New South 
Wales and coach of Sydney Thunder, and is expected to arrive in Dhaka on
 June 10. This will be his first stint as head coach of an international
 side.
"The two-year agreement has been finalised with Chandika Hathurusingha,"
 BCB president Nazmul Hassan told reporters. "Although the agreement 
begins on July 1 this year, since we are playing against India next 
month, we are hoping he will arrive by June 10.
"We had a few alternatives apart from Chandika Hathurusingha. The first 
reason to choose him is his knowledge of subcontinental conditions. Plus
 he has worked in Australia and with the World Cup coming up, this is a 
good combination for us. Hathurusingha is among high-profile coaches 
from around the world, as far as I am concerned."
He has had experience at the helm of both New South Wales, in the latter
 half of the 2012-13 season, and Sydney Thunder. New South Wales won the
 Sheffield Shield in March, their first domestic title since 2008. His 
tactical acumen was highly acclaimed during his tenure as shadow coach 
with the Sri Lankan team but a disciplinary issue had terminated his association with the side in 2010.
Hathurusingha replaces Shane Jurgensen who resigned
 as Bangladesh coach in April after completing 14 months of his two-year
 stint. A five-member special committee was put in charge to find new 
coaches to replace Jurgensen, trainer David Dwyer, batting and fielding 
coach Corey Richards and Richard McInnes, the head coach of the National
 Cricket Academy.
Dwyer has been replaced by Mario Villavarayan
 as the new strength and conditioning coach, although BCB is still in 
discussion with candidates for the role of fast bowling coach. 
During the press conference, Hassan was asked about Chaminda Vaas as the
 potential bowling coach while ESPNcricinfo has learned that Champaka 
Ramanayake is also being approached by the BCB. Ramanayake used to be 
Bangladesh's bowling coach between 2008 and 2011. It was also understood
 that another former fast bowler is being approached for a short-term 
role.
"We have appointed Mario Villavarayan as the strength and conditioning 
coach, also for two years. He will join us by the fifth or sixth of 
June. We are also looking for specialist coaches, especially fast 
bowling, spin and fielding. 
"We are trying to [appoint someone soon], but I don't think we will get 
everyone before the India series. We are communicating with them, 
because not all of them are full-time coaches, so we are trying to work 
out a time slot. We haven't gone too far in this regard, so we don't 
want to talk much about it," said Hassan.
Regarding Vaas, he said, "His [Vaas'] name is also there in the list for fast bowling coach. But we are talking elsewhere too."
Hathurusingha had expressed interest towards a role with Sri Lanka, who 
are also looking for a new head coach after Paul Farbrace agreed to 
become England's assistant coach.
Mohammad Isam is ESPNcricinfo's Bangladesh correspondent. @isam84
© ESPN Sports Media Ltd.
Crunch game for Royal Challengers, Sunrisers
11:13 PM
  
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Match facts
Tuesday, May 20, 2014
Start time 1600 local (1030 GMT)
Start time 1600 local (1030 GMT)
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Big picture
With another 10-odd games left in the league stages of the IPL, Kolkata 
Knight Riders have their noses ahead by a proverbial inch but Royal 
Challengers Bangalore and Sunrisers Hyderabad are also in with a chance 
of finishing in the top four, although the latter will need a little 
help from the other teams. 
With five wins from 11 games, Royal Challengers need to win all their 
remaining matches and hope that Sunrisers can beat Knight Riders in 
their next match to smoothen the route to the playoffs. For Sunrisers, a
 loss to Royal Challengers will draw the curtains on their chances of a 
playoff spot. If Sunrisers win, they need to keep that form going for 
the rest of their games and hope for other teams to fail in order to 
boost their chances. 
The teams come to this contest on the back of contrasting form. Revived 
by Yuvraj Singh's form and AB de Villiers' knack for match-turning 
innings, Royal Challengers have turned a floundering campaign around 
with wins over Delhi Daredevils and Chennai Super Kings. The form of 
Sunrisers, on the other hand, seems to have tapered off with three 
successive losses. Unlike last season, where they had the art of 
defending small totals down pat, and had a strong home record, they have
 been pegged back this season by an indifferent bowling attack and a 
misfiring top order and, much like Delhi Daredevils, have failed to 
utilise the home advantage.
Form guide
Sunrisers Hyderabad: LLLWW (completed games only, most recent first)
Royal Challengers Bangalore: WWLLL
Royal Challengers Bangalore: WWLLL
Where they stand
Sunrisers Hyderabad: Sixth with four wins from 11 games
Royal Challengers Bangalore: Fifth with five wins from 11 games
Royal Challengers Bangalore: Fifth with five wins from 11 games
Previous encounter
An astounding onslaught from AB de Villiers downed Sunrisers Hyderabad
 the last time the two teams met in Bangalore. A fifty from David Warner
 had guided Sunrisers to 161 and Bangalore were floundering at 95 for 5 
in the 15th over before de Villiers' 89 off 41 took them home in the 
last over. De Villiers struck six sixes and took 24 runs off Dale Steyn 
in the penultimate over. 
Watch out for
After an unbeaten fifty at the start of the tournament, Parthiv Patel's
 form has taken a dip. As the one steady opening batsman, Parthiv's busy
 style was expected to work as a foil for the more flamboyant Chris 
Gayle. The pair, however, have an average of 22 and just one fifty-plus 
stand. While Yuvraj Singh and AB de Villiers look to be carrying the 
team through, a strong opening partnership would help lift the team 
through the next few games. 
Tuesday's game will also be a clash of captains, and the challenge before Darren Sammy
 is altogether tougher.  He has been appointed captain for the rest of 
the season with the team barely hanging on to their chances of 
qualification. He is captain of a side he hasn't played for regularly 
this season, his own form has been a worry and outside of the IPL his 
cricketing career is going through an upheaval. Yet a captaincy change 
can sometimes also inspire a side, as was the case with Mumbai Indians 
and Sunrisers themselves, last year. 
Stats and trivia
- Royal Challengers have won two of their three matches against Sunrisers so far. The only loss came in a Super Over in IPL 2013
- Royal Challengers have hit 76 sixes in IPL 2014, of which 48 have come off the bats of Yuvraj Singh and AB de Villiers.
- Shikhar Dhawan and Aaron Finch are the best batting pair [in terms of runs scored] for Sunrisers this season. Together, they have scored 285 runs at an average of 25.9
- Amit Mishra has conceded 21 sixes in this IPL and is joint leader on the list of bowlers to concede most sixes in one season of the IPL. The other bowler at the top is Piyush Chawla, who had given away 21 sixes in the first season
Quotes
"With guys like Yuvraj it's just about reminding them what they are 
capable of. And that doesn't have to happen in the nets. That can be 
over a coffee or taking a walk."
Trent Woodhill, the Royal Challengers batting coach, on how players like Yuvraj Singh find their way back to form
Trent Woodhill, the Royal Challengers batting coach, on how players like Yuvraj Singh find their way back to form
"If we do consider playing him, it would mean we would be playing with 
three specialist spinners, and we have to have the right conditions to 
consider that combination."
Tom Moody, the Sunrisers coach, on the team's plans around Parvez Rasool
Tom Moody, the Sunrisers coach, on the team's plans around Parvez Rasool
Vohra, Akshar deliver for Kings XI
11:10 PM
  
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 Kings XI Punjab 165 for 6 (Akshar 42*, Vohra 42, Tahir 3-22) beat Delhi Daredevils 164 for 7 (Karthik 69, Pietersen 49) by four wickets
Scorecard and ball-by-ball details
Scorecard and ball-by-ball details
An impetuous shot by Kings XI captain George Bailey - caught in the deep
 in the penultimate over - gave Daredevils a sniff and it came down to 
nine needed off in the 20th. Akshar Patel, the unlikely hero with the 
bat for Kings XI, was well set on 41 off 34 balls when Rishi Dhawan 
joined him. The pair ensured there were no dot balls in the final over 
from Wayne Parnell to pile on the pressure, and with four needed off 
three Dhawan pulled to the deep midwicket boundary to seal the win.
The Kings XI's openers Virender Sehwag and Manan Vohra blazed 67 off 6.2
 overs, with Vohra the more dominant partner. Vohra's sixes down the 
ground stood out, particularly the back-foot punch off Mohammad Shami 
that sailed over deep cover. But in trying to attack Imran Tahir, he 
found M Vijay at long-off and went for 42 off 19 balls.
It was one of those rare days on which both Glenn Maxwell and David 
Miller failed. They also fell trying to attack the spinners - Maxwell 
off Tahir and Miller off JP Duminy. Kings XI were 95 for 4 off in overs 
but they had a contingency in the event of a Miller-Maxwell no-show. 
Bailey promoted Akshar over himself and it paid off.
Akshar ensured he never got bogged down, looking for singles and keeping
 the required rate within manageable levels. Having moved to 18 off 19 
balls, he had a productive over against Parnell, fetching three 
boundaries though he was lucky when an inswinging yorker deflected off 
his pad to third man. It was a close lbw shout but eventually given as 
runs. A six off  Jaydev Unadkat brought the equation to 11 off 12 and 
the capacity crowd at the Kotla had to see the home team slump to a 
seventh straight defeat.
After being put in, Kevin Pietersen and Dinesh Karthik were commanding 
during their stand of 71 for the second wicket. Karthik was not afraid 
to play audacious shots off the seamers, such as his sweep off Sandeep 
Sharma that went flat over deep square leg. Pietersen took 18 off an 
over from Hendricks, and by the end of ten overs Daredevils were 84 for 
1.
Just when his first fifty of the season was there for the taking, 
Pietersen fell to his old nemesis - the left-arm spinner. Batting on 49,
 he played down the wrong line to one that ripped off the pitch from 
Akshar and beat the bat. Karthik meanwhile was dominant against the 
spinners, lofting exquisitely down the ground. 
Daredevils took 30 off overs 15 and 16 but it started going downhill 
with a spurt of wickets. Their best finishers, Duminy and Kedar Jadhav 
failed and the responsibility fell on Karthik for late acceleration. 
When Karthik departed for 69 - caught at deep square leg - his was the 
fourth wicket to go down in the space of nine balls. Daredevils managed 
only 20 off the last three overs and it cost them.
Friday, May 16, 2014
Sri Lankans start to hit their stride
8:36 PM
  
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Sri Lankans 301 for 7 (Mathews 51, Thirimanne 49, Chandimal 47*, Joseph 4-58) beat Kent 173 (Blake 60, Lakmal 3-16, Perera 3-33, Mendis 3-55) by 128 runs
Scorecard
Scorecard
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Related Links 
Matches:  
  Kent v Sri Lankans at Canterbury
  
Series/Tournaments:  
  Sri Lanka tour of England and Ireland
  | |||
Angelo Mathews hit fifty and Dinesh Chandimal
 an unbeaten 47 off 31 balls to set up a hefty thumping of Kent in Sri 
Lanka's second tour match in England. Having put out a strong side - 
only Lasith Malinga was rested - Sri Lanka gave a truer measure of 
themselves than in defeat to Essex on Tuesday, sweeping up a mixture of 
Kent first-teamers and irregulars for 173 on a cool, clear evening.
Suranga Lakmal immediately applied a tourniquet at the top of the 
innings, his opening spell of 4-1-10-2 providing both control and 
penetration. Alex Blake
 played neatly for his 60, which included reverse-sweeping Ajantha 
Mendis for four, but Thisara Perera plucked out key wickets during the 
middle overs and a long tail succumbed quickly. Without the likes of Rob
 Key, Darren Stevens and Brendan Nash, a Kent target in excess of 300 
proved steeper than the Dover cliffs.
A partnership of 84 between Lahiru Thirimanne and Mathews provided the 
ballast for Sri Lanka, after a sprightly but evanescent performance from
 the top order. Thirimanne's high front elbow was a feature of his 
strokeplay, his first and only boundary coming off his 63rd delivery, 
while Mathews showed greater muscularity in an innings replete with 
bottom-handed clubs to the rope.
Mathews struck the first sixes of the contest before spooning a full 
toss to mid-off but Chandimal and Perera skipped along in his footprints
 during a rapid 71-run stand from 48 balls. Chandimal might have been 
caught at deep midwicket attempting to go to his half-century from the 
penultimate delivery of the innings but Fabian Cowdrey had to throw the 
ball back in as he fell towards the boundary rope.
Robbie Joseph, the one-time England Lions bowler who returned to Kent at
 the start of the summer, claimed 4 for 58, while James Tredwell also 
put in the sort of dependable shift he is known for, ahead of his 
involvement in the limited-overs series against Sri Lanka. He dismissed 
Thirimanne with one that lured the batsman out to be stumped for 49, 
though his figures were slightly smudged when Chandimal lofted the 
fourth and fifth balls of his final over for four and six.
Kent lost Daniel Bell-Drummond and Cowdrey, grandson of Colin, with the 
score on 17, as they struggled to get going during the Powerplay. 
Blake's half-century, his third in the format and first since 2010, came
 at a run-a-ball and a stand of 68 with Sam Billings kept them afloat 
but, from 148 for 5, Kent lost their last five wickets for 25. Only the 
combined figures of spinners Mendis and Tillakaratne Dilshan - 3 for 92 
from 15 overs - would have given the tourists a moment's pause.
Sri Lanka were beaten in their first warm-up fixture, a soggy, 21-over 
affair in Chelmsford, but with the sun shining over hop country they 
found the St Lawrence ground to be a more welcoming venue. Kent's is 
probably the closest English ground to Colombo (though still 8,000km as 
the crow flies) and there were several Sri Lanka shirts on display in 
the crowd, as well as a flag being waved in the breeze on the Old Dover 
Road grass bank.
The vexed issue of Sri Lanka's junior-senior question will not be solved
 by one tour match but, after Dilshan, Kumar Sangakkara and Mahela 
Jayawardene fell for scores between 30 and 35, the contributions from 
Nos. 5, 6 and 7 will have encouraged Marvan Attapatu, the team's interim
 coach.
Sangakkara joined up with the Sri Lanka squad on Thursday, having missed
 the early part of the tour to play in two Championship matches for 
Durham, and reclaimed the wicketkeeping gloves off Chandimal (before 
swapping halfway through the innings). Following his 159 at Hove, he 
looked in good order until playing down the wrong line against Kent 
left-armer Adam Ball to have his stumps rattled.
After Sangakkara's dismissal, Sri Lanka appeared content to settle in, 
only for the longueurs to get the better of Jaywardene. Between the end 
of the 14th over and the beginning of the 36th only three boundaries 
were struck, before Mathews and Thirimanne, then Chandimal and Perera 
redoubled their efforts. The rate had dipped below five an over but 129 
runs flowed from the last 15 as a team that should be a contender at the
 2015 World Cup flashed their credentials. 
After Sri Lanka's well-oiled start on a decent pitch, 300 always looked 
in range. Dilshan could not be much more buccaneering if he batted with a
 parrot on one shoulder while wearing a tricorne hat. He cut, pulled and
 drove his way to 35 off 28 balls before Joseph, bowling with decent 
pace and hitting an awkward length in his first List A game since August
 2012, had him caught skying a piratical hack high to third man.
That was Joseph's second wicket, having removed Sri Lanka's other 
opener, Kusal Perera, with his first delivery, the batsman caught on the
 crease and fencing to slip. David Griffiths was not able to match 
Joseph's economy, however, as the tourists reached the end of the 
ten-over Powerplay on 64 for 2.
Charlie Hartley, Kent's 20-year-old debutant, came on for his first bowl
 against a pair with more than 25,000 ODI runs between them. Both 
Sangakkara and Jayawardene dismissed him for boundaries as the over 
leaked 10 runs but Hartley found better control after switching ends. 
Jayawardene became the third member of Sri Lanka's illustrious 
triumvirate to depart in the 30s when he miscued a lofted drive to 
mid-on to provide Hartley with his first senior wicket.
Alan Gardner is an assistant editor at ESPNcricinfo. @alanroderick
© ESPN Sports Media Ltd.
Mudgal to head investigation of IPL 'sealed envelope'
8:35 PM
  
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Former High Court judge Mukul Mudgal, who led the preliminary inquiry 
into the alleged corruption in the IPL will head a panel given greater 
powers to investigate the contents of the sealed envelope provided to 
India's highest court. Mudgal's colleagues on the previous committee, L 
Nageswara Rao and Nilay Dutta, will also be part of the panel. In its 
order delivered on Friday, the Supreme Court asked the committee to 
submit its report in a sealed envelope by end of August. The next 
hearing of the case  will be "listed" in the first week of September. 
| The new Mudgal committee explained
 | 
The committee will be assisted by former senior Indian Police Service 
(IPS) officer BB Mishra. The committee will have all investigative 
powers, including search and seizure of relevant documents and recording
 evidence, but cannot carry out arrests. They will be provided with 
assistance from one senior police officer each from Mumbai, Chennai and 
Delhi, as the committee had requested. One former cricketer "of repute 
and integrity", as requested, will be chosen by the Mudgal committee in 
consultation with Mishra. The chairman and the members of the probe 
committee will be compensated with Rs 1 lakh per working day, and all 
other expenses will be borne by the BCCI. 
The choice of Mishra as head of the investigation team over the Mudgal 
panel's request for former CBI special director ML Sharma came about due
 to "objections made on the behalf of BCCI and N Srinivasan". Mishra is 
currently the deputy director general, Narcotics Control Bureau in New 
Delhi and is an IPS officer from the 1983 batch of the Assam-Meghalaya 
cadre. Mishra and the three police officers form the investigative team 
"at the disposal" of the Mudgal committee. They will "have the powers to
 investigate, require attendance of witnesses, the power to search and 
the power to seize... except the power to arrest and the source of these
 powers of investigation will be this order passed by the court".
The two-man bench of Justice Patnaik and Justice FM Ibrahim Kalifullah 
also ordered that "all concerned persons including the BCCI, Mr N 
Srinivasan and the cricket players" co-operate with the investigation. 
"In case of difficulty", the Mudgal committee can "apply" to the court 
for "necessary orders for the purpose of completing the investigation". 
  
The court has turned down BCCI's request to appoint a completely new 
panel following its contention that the Mudgal committee's findings were
 "erroneous". In the order, Justice AK Patnaik said, the allegations 
against the 13 persons, including Srinivasan, "should be investigated by
 the Justice Mudgal committee". The reason given was that "if a new 
Probe committee is entrusted to inquire into the allegations, there is a
 likelihood of the allegations being leaked to the public", saying that 
the leaking would "damage the reputation of the 13 persons beyond 
repair".
| 
 | |||
Sunil Gavaskar and Shivlal Yadav are to continue in their respective interim roles until any further orders. 
The BCCI counsel Radha Rangaswamy requested the court to pass its final 
decision by the first week of August, but the request was declined. The 
BCCI's annual general elections take place at the end of September while
 the next hearing in connection with IPL corruption. 
The court's view on Srinivasan's presence in ICC meetings and his 
assumption of his expected role as ICC chairman was not clear. It is 
understood that BCCI's counsel approached the bench after the order was 
read out, seeking permission for Srinivasan to attend ICC meetings and 
BCCI's next AGM, but the court said no further order was going to be 
passed. The petitioner Aditya Verma sees this as a restriction on 
Srinivasan's presence in the ICC, but the exact legal implications could
 not be determined. 
The case dates back to June 2013, when the Cricket Association of Bihar 
(CAB) secretary Verma raised charges of a conflict of interest in the 
BCCI's original two-member inquiry panel for the IPL corruption issue. A
 Bombay High Court ruling later termed the probe panel "illegal". The 
BCCI and the CAB filed petitions in the Supreme Court against this 
order, with the CAB contending that the Bombay High Court could have 
suggested a fresh mechanism to look into the corruption allegations.
The Supreme Court then appointed a three-member committee, headed by 
former High Court judge Mukul Mudgal and comprising additional solicitor
 general L Nageswara Rao and Nilay Dutta to conduct an independent 
inquiry into the allegations of corruption against Srinivasan's 
son-in-law Gurunath Meiyappan, India Cements, and Rajasthan Royals team 
owner Jaipur IPL Cricket Private Ltd, as well as with the larger mandate
 of allegations around betting and spot-fixing in IPL matches and the 
involvement of players.
© ESPN Sports Media Ltd.
SA's next captain not an automatic choice - Lorgat
8:34 PM
  
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"I would hope the selectors will not have an automatic choice. There is a
 process that needs to be followed," Lorgat, speaking at the Gauteng 
Cricket Board Awards on Thursday night, said. "There are several 
candidates so let's hope it is a tough choice."
South Africa's selection panel have already begun talks and will meet 
again before CSA's board meeting on June 3 to decide on their 
recommendation for the next Test captain. The person they choose will 
have to be ratified by the board before being officially announced. 
Apart from de Villiers and du Plessis, JP Duminy
 is has been mentioned as a possible choice, especially in light of his 
recent form, bigger role in the national team and years in the game.  
Duminy has been playing regularly in the Test team since March 2012 with
 his only absence enforced when he tore his Achilles' tendon in November
 that year in Australia. He was handed his place back as soon as he 
returned to full fitness. He has established his place in the 
middle-order where he plays a pivot role between the specialist batsmen 
and the lower order, shepherding the tail. He has also been given a job 
to do with the ball and his offspin has allowed South Africa the option 
of another bowler. 
As one of the more senior members of the side, Duminy is considered to 
be part of the core group that will lead the rebuilding phase following 
the twin retirements of Graeme Smith and Jacques Kallis last summer. 
That Duminy plays across all three formats makes him one of the 
constants in the South Africa XI. National coach Russell Domingo has 
often referred to Duminy as South Africa's "best T20 player," and he is 
currently the South African with the most runs in the IPL, and fifth on 
the overall standings. 
What may work against Duminy is that he has not captained previously but
 South Africa's administrators have shown that is not insurmountable 
hurdle. Smith only played eight Tests before being made national captain
 at age of 22 while de Villiers had not led at any level when he 
succeeded Smith as ODI and T20 skipper. What is more important, 
according to Moosajee, is that the person entrusted with the job is able
 to continue to apply the team culture South Africa have built over the 
last few years. 
"We are a diverse country with a diverse group of players and we have a 
melting pot of cultures in the dressing room. We have built our team 
environment around that, which has meant learning and respecting each 
other's backgrounds and using that to become a strong unit," Moosajee 
said. "We are fortunate that we've had inspirational leaders in the past
 and now we hope to have another one. We have four or five people that 
can fill the role." 
Both Lorgat and Moosajee cautioned against looking for another Smith, 
who led the team for nine years and played in it for over a decade. 
"Graeme was one of a kind - he was tough and he wore his heart on his 
sleeve," Moosajee said. For Lorgat, Smith's lengthy tenure has left 
South Africa with "a lot to build on but big shoes to fill."
Monday, May 12, 2014
Craig, Davidson added to Australia umpires panel
10:49 PM
  
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Shawn Craig,
 the former Victoria batsman, has been promoted to Australia's National 
Umpire Panel and will officiate in state matches during the 2014-15 
season. Craig and former New South Wales grade cricketer Greg Davidson are the two new additions to the 12-man group, replacing Tony Ward and Ian Lock from last summer's panel.
The panel provides the umpires for all domestic cricket played in 
Australia and does not include those Australians on the ICC's Elite 
Panel of Umpires - Steve Davis, Bruce Oxenford, Paul Reiffel and Rod 
Tucker. Cricket Australia's senior manager of cricket operations, Sean 
Cary, said Craig and Davidson had earned their places on the panel 
through strong performances.
"Both Shawn and Greg have extensive involvement in cricket and long 
playing careers before progressing to umpiring," Cary said. "Their 
promotion is a reward for hard work and the critical role our state 
associations play in developing high-quality officials.
"Australia has a proud history of producing quality umpires who have 
gone on to international honours after coming through our state and 
development pathways. We believe there is significant potential in this 
group to continue that."
Craig, 40, played 20 first-class matches for Victoria from 1996 to 2001 
and was a first-grade cricketer for St Kilda until 2006-07. Davidson, 
43, played 21 seasons for Parramatta in Sydney's grade competition, 
before retiring after the 2007-08 season.
2014-15 National Umpire Panel Gerard Abood, Ashley Barrow, Shawn 
Craig, Greg Davidson, Simon Fry, Mike Graham-Smith, Geoff Joshua, Mick 
Martell, Damien Mealey, Sam Nogajski, John Ward, Paul Wilson.
© ESPN Sports Media Ltd.
Super Kings sign David Hussey as replacement
10:48 PM
  
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| 
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| 
Related Links 
 News : Injured Bravo to miss rest of IPL 
Players/Officials:  
  David Hussey
  
Series/Tournaments:  
  Indian T20 League
  | |||
Australian batsman David Hussey
 will replace Dwayne Bravo in Chennai Super Kings' squad for the rest of
 the 2014 IPL season. Super Kings announced it on their official Twitter
 account. They also retweeted Hussey saying, "Just recd some amazing 
news!!!!! Can't wait until tomorrow.... Get in there!!!!"  
The 36-year-old Hussey, who has played 69 ODIs and 39 T20s for 
Australia, has plenty of IPL experience, having featured in 23 matches 
for Kolkata Knight Riders and 36 matches for Kings XI Punjab in previous
 seasons. In all, he has scored 1206 runs at an average of 25.65 and a 
strike rate of 122.93, with four half-centuries. 
Bravo, the West Indies allrounder, was ruled out of the tournament after injuring his shoulder while fielding against Kings XI Punjab during Super Kings' first match in 2014.
© ESPN Sports Media Ltd.
Rejigged tour can help Sri Lanka
10:47 PM
  
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| 
 | |||
| 
Related Links 
 Preview : First audition for Atapattu News : Adapting to conditions key- Mathews News : Chris Adams to work with Sri Lanka News : Marvan Atapattu appointed Sri Lanka head coach News : SL in 'difficult place' after Farbrace exit 
Series/Tournaments:  
  Sri Lanka tour of England and Ireland
  | |||
Sri Lanka may have their best chance of winning a Test series in England
 for many years. A schedule more sympathetic to their needs, an 
opposition in transitional mode and confidence gained from success in 
Bangladesh has given Sri Lanka an optimism not always shared by some of 
their predecessors.
The English leg of their tour begins on Tuesday. Sri Lanka will take on 
an Essex side including Alastair Cook in a 50-over game in Chelmsford, 
with further warm-up matches scheduled against Kent and Sussex ahead of 
the international fixtures which start in a week. 
But while Sri Lanka's record in England is not encouraging - they have not won a Test in England since 2006
 and have never won a series of more than one match in the country - 
circumstances are a bit different this time. On both their 2006 and 2011
 tours Sri Lanka played the Test section of the tour ahead of the 
limited-overs section. 
This time, however, they will have had a far greater chance to 
acclimatise to conditions. They will have been in Ireland or England for
 more than a month before the first Test and will have the opportunity 
to play their stronger suit - the limited-overs games - ahead of the 
Test series.
They also find an opposition lacking some of the pillars of its success 
in recent years - the likes of Andy Flower, Graeme Swann, Kevin 
Pietersen and Jonathan Trott - and having just enjoyed a memorable 
double-success in Bangladesh, where they followed victory in the Asia 
Cup by winning the World T20.
"We have started training a bit earlier than usual because we know the English conditions are not going to be easy for us," Angelo Mathews,
 the Sri Lanka captain, said on Monday. "If we can adapt ourselves as 
soon as possible, I am pretty sure the team will come good. The 
conditions and the weather are the main challenge we face.
"We are not trying to be complacent against an England team having made 
all of those decisions. Yes, they might be missing star players like 
Kevin Pietersen, but they still have enough potential to beat any team 
on any day, especially playing under English conditions. They will be 
very hard to beat.
"You know what happened in Bangladesh: they beat us quite easily in the 
sub-continent conditions, so you cannot be complacent and just have to 
go hard at them."
"The confidence levels are very high," the coach, Marvan Atapattu agreed. "This team comes with confidence and success."
Certainly if the batsmen play as straight as the tour management did when deflecting questions about Paul Farbrace's
 departure, they should fare well. Mathews did not believe the 
suggestion that Farbrace, who resigned the Sri Lankan coaching role to 
take the assistant coach's job with England just weeks before the tour, 
had any team secrets to impart and dismissed the idea that any of his 
squad resented the decision.
"We respect his decision," Mathews said. "He is a good coach and was 
part of our success. He was with us for a short period of time, not a 
very long period of time, but in those few months, he was pretty good. 
Everyone has his own choices. He has made his choice and we wish him all
 the very best.
"When it comes to an international cricket team, there are no secrets. 
You have so many videos of all the players, of the support staff as 
well. We had guys like Ajantha Mendis and Lasith Malinga come into the 
team, but you cannot really hide them from playing international 
cricket.
"Everyone knows a little bit about the opposition, so I don't really think he has all the inside information."
But Sri Lanka hope that the appointment of Chris Adams,
 the former Surrey coach, might provide an insight into England's 
players and tactics. Adams joined up with the team on Monday and will 
spend the rest of the tour with them. Kumar Sangakkara will also join up
 with the squad on Wednesday or Thursday, having completed his short 
stint with Durham.
"Chris Adams is to give me the information I need to know, about venues 
and players, during this tour," Atapattu explained. "We will try to pick
 his brains to improve our game and lend our support to the players. 
Yes, we will try to get inside information from him."
Sri Lanka's record in English conditions probably still leaves them as 
underdogs going into the Test series. But Peter Moores and Co face a far
 from straightforward test at the start of England's new era.
Former shadow coach Hathurusingha open to SL role
10:46 PM
  
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| 
 | |||
| 
Related Links 
 News : Marvan Atapattu appointed Sri Lanka head coach News : Farbrace quits as Sri Lanka coach News : Sri Lankan shadow coach suspended 
Players/Officials:  
  Chandika Hathurusingha
  
Teams:  
  Sri Lanka
  | |||
New South Wales assistant coach Chandika Hathurusingha
 has said he is not averse to considering a position with Sri Lanka 
Cricket, if the board approaches him as it seeks a new head coach. 
Hathurusingha had forged a reputation for clear, incisive coaching and a
 firm, even-handed approach, during his time as a coach in Sri Lanka, 
but he had his SLC contract terminated in 2010 for disciplinary reasons.
Hathurusingha has also been highly regarded in Australia since 
re-launching his career there, most recently winning the Sheffield 
Shield with New South Wales this past season. He augments his state role
 by heading the Big Bash League's Sydney Thunder franchise. 
"I am thoroughly enjoying what I have here in Australia, but just like 
players want to play for their own country, coaches also would love to 
work with their own country," Hathurusingha said. "Working with Sri 
Lanka is something I would never say never to. I have played and worked 
with a lot of the players before, and I've kept in touch with them as 
well. I know what the set-up is like."
Sri Lanka have not been helmed by a local coach since Roy Dias ended his
 tenure in 1999, but in Hathurusingha's time as the shadow coach in the 
national side there had been a groundswell of support for him to become 
the next head coach. In the wake of that decision, then-captain Kumar 
Sangakkara had gone as far as effectively recommending Hathurusingha for
 the head coach position in an impassioned letter to SLC that implored 
the board to keep him on staff. Four years later, many in Sri Lanka's 
cricket establishment still believe he is among the finest candidates 
for the head coach role. 
Hathurusingha had not been formally approached by SLC, but suggested he 
had moved past the ill-feeling generated by his dismissal. 
"I don't think talking about what's happened in the past will benefit 
either SLC or myself. But the board knows better than anyone what I can 
do as a coach, because that's actually where I started," he said. "It's 
about starting a conversation, which is what usually happens when it 
comes to these kinds of things. If that happens, something might come 
out of it."
In his letter to the board in 2010, Sangakkara had said Hathurusingha's 
"technical and strategic knowledge was second to none of the foreign 
coaches I have worked with before" and that in the previous year, 
Hathurusingha had "out-worked, out-thought and out-shone the foreign 
coaching staff within the system".
Marvan Atapattu, who has been with the national team since 2011, appears
 to be the current frontrunner for the head coach job, after he was named interim coach
 for two major upcoming tours over the next three months. SLC is yet to 
announce that it will advertise the vacancy, like the board did when it 
was in the market for a coach last year. The board is on the look-out 
for a new coach following Paul Farbrace's resignation last month. 
A steady opening batsman in his playing days, Hathurusingha played 26 
Tests and was among Sri Lanka's most experienced domestic cricketers, in
 possession of 10,861 first-class runs and 425 wickets.
Andrew Fidel Fernando is ESPNcricinfo's Sri Lanka correspondent. @andrewffernando
© ESPN Sports Media Ltd.
Moeen's belief in his bowling
10:44 PM
  
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Moeen's overall first-class bowling average is 40.35 but over the last 
two seasons for Worcestershire he has taken 64 wickets at 32.56 and also
 claimed seven at 18 on the Lions tour of Sri Lanka earlier this year. 
His all-round skills have already propelling him into the one-day and 
Twenty20 set-up and Moeen is now confident enough in his bowling to see 
it as an equal part of his game.
"I think now I see myself as an allrounder," he told ESPNcricinfo's 
#politeenquiries show where he answered readers questions. "I got picked
 by England for my batting but I think got picked over guys who have 
done more than me in the last couple of years because of my bowling. The
 more years go on the better I'm getting with my bowling."
He puts his improvement down to the responsibility he has been given at 
Worcestershire where he is often the frontline spinner - although this 
season has been able to operate alongside his close friend Saeed Ajmal -
 which has allowed him to develop his art that includes the doosra even 
if that delivery has yet to be seen at international level.
"I've probably bowled a lot more than most offspinners in county cricket
 over the last two or three years. I bowl in all forms which is nice," 
Moeen said.
He continues to relish is work alongside Ajmal who is happy to pass on 
his knowledge of the doosra, but Moeen knows that understanding the 
mechanics behind it is different to making it a success on the pitch.
"That's one of my best moments," he said of his time with Ajmal. "He 
says he hasn't shown many people [the doorsa], but says it's not the 
showing that's the hard part but the work you have to do."
And Moeen is not just trying to make a successful career for himself, 
but also act as inspiration for other Asian cricketers in the UK to 
reach the professional level. It is a responsibility he is happy to 
embrace and hopes that more players will come through the system after 
seeing him wear an England shirt.
"Being an Asian cricketer myself, watching me play for England, I think 
inspires Asian players to want to play," he said. "I don't see it as a 
burden, I see it as a positive attitude. I feel it's my duty to do it, 
to represent Asians."
Despite not playing against Scotland in Aberdeen, Moeen is expected to 
be named in England's T20 and ODI squads which will be announced on 
Tuesday morning for the matches against Sri Lanka.
© ESPN Sports Media Ltd.
Rayudu, Simmons fifties in clinical Mumbai win
10:40 PM
  
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Mumbai Indians 160 for 3 (Rayudu 68, Simmons 68) beat Sunrisers Hyderabad 157 for 3 (Finch 68, Warner 55*) by seven wickets 
Scorecard and ball-by-ball details
Scorecard and ball-by-ball details
Lendl Simmons and Ambati Rayudu hit half-centuries to lead Mumbai 
Indians to an emphatic win over Sunrisers Hyderabad. The victory, Mumbai
 Indians' third in nine matches, kept the defending champions' campaign 
barely alive. Sunrisers Hyderabad were tied down after choosing to bat 
for all but the last two overs of their innings. David Warner helped his
 side take 33 off those two to push the total to 157, but it hardly 
mattered, as Simmons and Rayudu put on 130 runs for the second wicket in
 14.3 overs to haul Mumbai Indians home with eight balls to spare.
Mumbai Indians lost CM Gautam second ball of the second over to 
Bhuvneshwar Kumar, but Simmons and Rayudu kicked on after a sedate 
start. The release came when Irfan Pathan was brought on following a 
couple of tight overs each from Dale Steyn and Bhuvneshwar. Simmons, who
 had tried to slog Steyn without success, found Irfan's pace to his 
liking, and slammed him for a couple of sixes and a four. 
| 
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Rayudu welcomed Amit Mishra with a charge and a straight six, and Mumbai
 Indians weren't looking back, with the boundaries coming regularly. 
Simmons did not let the legspinners settle and swung Karn Sharma for a 
four and a six. Rayudu gave the same treatment to Irfan as the 
allrounder went for 29 in two overs. 
Shikhar Dhawan went back to Steyn in the 13th over but Mumbai Indians 
were approaching 100 by that time. Rayudu and Simmons took the fast 
bowler for a four each. Sunrisers had a chance in the next over but KL 
Rahul put down a top-edged skier off Simmons at deep midwicket with the 
batsman on 59 and the team score on 110. Simmons and Rayudu fell in 
successive overs for 68 each eventually but the game was almost over by 
then.
Dhawan felt Sunrisers were about 20 runs short on what he had called a 
good batting surface at the toss as he chose to bat. Dhawan himself 
scratched around for a while before being bowled by a full inswinger 
from Lasith Malinga. Rahul ran himself out going for a non-existent 
single but Aaron Finch had looked in nice touch all along. 
He drove Corey Anderson crisply down the ground for fours and went after
 Pragyan Ojha, lofting and driving the left-arm spinner repeatedly 
through the off side for boundaries. Warner joined Finch and hit the odd
 boundary as well but the pair was not able to dominate amid some tight 
bowling from Harbhajan Singh and Jasprit Bumrah.
Finch holed out off Malinga in the penultimate over for 68 off 62 but 
Warner stepped up and launched the fast bowler for a couple of sixes. He
 ended the innings with successive fours off Kieron Pollard to finish on
 55 off 31. Given Sunrisers' reputation of successfully defending 
moderate totals at their home ground, 157 did not appear to be an easy 
chase, but Rayudu and Simmons made it look so.
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