'We won that last hour' – Crawley hails England's 'perfect' end to the day in Brisbane

Australia’s Mitchell Starc, meanwhile, lamented the state of the old pink ball and his team-mates’ lack of situational awareness

Matt Roller04-Dec-2025

Jofra Archer played a valuable hand batting at No. 11 for only the second time in Test cricket•Darrian Traynor/CA/Cricket Australia/Getty Images

England believe that the chaotic final half-hour at the Gabba swung the opening day of the second Ashes Test in their favour, after Joe Root and Jofra Archer’s unbroken tenth-wicket stand of 61 took them to 325 for 9 under lights.At the scheduled 9pm close, England were 269 for 9 after 68 overs, with Root unbeaten on 111. It was a remarkably similar situation to the opening day of the 2023 series between these teams in Edgbaston, when Ben Stokes declared with Root on 118 to give England four overs to bowl at Australia before the close.The added element of the pink ball – and the opportunity to bowl at Australia under floodlights – strengthened the case for a declaration, prompting David Warner on Fox commentary to say he was “absolutely baffled” that Stokes had not pulled the plug on England’s innings.Related

  • Root ton, Starc six as England reach 325 for 9 on opening day in Brisbane

  • Crawley settles the nerves as he bounces back from Perth pair

  • Starc on left-arm wickets record: Wasim still the GOAT

Steven Smith, who had floated the prospect of opening the batting with two nightwatchers in such a scenario, was at pains to slow the game down as much as possible, and Root remonstrated with umpire Sharfuddoula at Australia’s apparent time-wasting when Travis Head got padded up to spend a single ball under the helmet at short leg.But Root and Archer seized the opportunity to tee off, adding 56 runs in the final six overs of the day in a partnership that Zak Crawley said had changed the mood of the day for England’s players, who watched on from the viewing gallery outside the away dressing room. “We definitely won that last hour,” Crawley said. “We’re positive going into tomorrow.”Joe Root and Jofra Archer added an unbeaten 61 off 44 balls before stumps•Darrian Traynor/Getty Images

Archer, batting at No. 11 for only the second time in Test cricket, started the carnage by charging Scott Boland and swiping him over square leg for the first six of the day off the first ball of an over that cost 19 runs. He then swung Mitchell Starc’s full toss over the sprawling Brendan Doggett at long-on, and Root reverse-scooped Boland over deep third in the following over.By stumps, Archer had registered a new Test best of 32 not out, while Root reached 135 overnight. Their stand was England’s first half-century partnership for the tenth wicket since Jonny Bairstow and James Anderson added 66 in the drawn Old Trafford Test in the 2023 Ashes, and their first in Australia since Norman Cowans and Derek Pringle in 1982.Starc, whose six wickets had put Australia firmly on top, was exasperated not only with the state of the old pink ball, but with his team-mates’ lack of situational awareness. “If you have a look at that ball, it’s basically bowling with a tennis ball,” he told SEN radio. “They chanced their arm, there were a few that dropped short. I think there’s a little bit of tactical nous in there as well.

“Hopefully, we take that tenth one early tomorrow and get batting with the sun out. We saw that it [the ball] didn’t do a whole lot, and day two is generally a good day to bat on. If we can get stuck into batting early tomorrow when there’s sun on the wicket – and their balls go soft as well – it could be a good day’s cricket.”Crawley, who had briefly changed back into his whites in anticipation of fielding, said that the situation had been “perfect” for England. “There was no talk of a declaration,” he said. “We were just saying, ‘Go really hard,’ and it was a win-win: if it comes off, then we’ll get 50 runs like we did, or if you got out, then we could have a crack at them under lights.”They’re valuable runs and it would’ve worked out either way… We were pretty happy with [being bowled out for] 260 and having an hour at them at that point, to be honest. We were quite optimistic about that last hour, and then it turned out we batted for all of it. It felt like it was a great chance for us either way – with bat or ball – to seize that last hour.”Australia only bowled 74 overs out of the scheduled 90 on the first day, which Simon Katich described as “an absolute joke”. They risk being docked World Test Championship points if they fail to bowl England out inside 80 overs. “The over rates are what they are,” Starc said. “If we keep taking the wickets, they won’t worry about it.”

Kyle Schwarber Made Intriguing Comments About Reds Ahead of Free Agency

Kyle Schwarber is currently set to become one of the top free agents available this offseason. Schwarber, who is entering the final months of his four-year deal with the Phillies, made his third All-Star Game and leads the National League in both home runs and RBIs this season.

If Schwarber doesn't re-sign with the Phillies and instead enters free agency, could he join his hometown team, the Reds? Schwarber grew up within an hour drive of Cincinnati and rooted for the team as a kid.

"There's so many different aspects that go into free agency, everything like that," Schwarber said on Monday before the Phillies defeated the Reds 4–1. "Especially where you're playing at now and you feel like you wanna just keep winning with the group here. There's unknowns, there's a business, and whatever happens happens, but if you asked the childhood Kyle that, yeah, you know, why wouldn't you want to play for your hometown team."

Schwarber's future after this season appears to be up in the air, but it looks like he hasn't ruled out joining the Reds if he doesn't return to Philly. Schwarber did notably offer some positive thoughts on the team the Reds have been building.

"I think they're young," Schwarber said. "I know that they made some moves at the deadline. Made some trades for some pieces that will be here for a while. I think that there's a lot of things Cincinnati should be happy about. I think the future here will be bright for them. … I think there are a lot of things that are looking up here in Cincinnati."

Phillies managing partner John Middleton did express last month that they want to retain Schwarber. Staying in Philadelphia would make sense for Schwarber, who has helped the Phillies make three consecutive postseason appearances since joining the team in 2022. The Phillies lead the National League East by 5.5 games, and are in the thick of World Series contention.

If returning to Philadelphia doesn't work out though, joining a rising Reds team seems like a good option for Schwarber.

فيديو | بمشاركة ميسي.. إنتر ميامي يكتسح نيويورك سيتي بخماسية ويتأهل إلى نهائي الدوري الأمريكي

خاض فريق إنتر ميامي، بقيادة النجم ليونيل ميسي، مباراته في إطار منافسات بطولة الدوري الأمريكي نسخة 2025، في الساعات الأولى من صباح يوم الأحد، وذلك ضد نظيره فريق نيويورك سيتي.

واستضاف ملعب “لوكهارت” مباراة فريقي إنتر ميامي ونيويورك سيتي، في نهائي مرحلة البلاي أوف للقسم الشرقي، حيث حققت كتيبة خافيير ماسكيرانو فوزًا بخمسة أهداف مقابل هدف.

وتمكن إنتر ميامي من تسجيل الهدف الأول، في الدقيقة 14 من عمر الشوط الأول من المباراة، عن طريق اللاعب تاديو أليندي، الذي عاد لتسجيل الهدف الثاني في الدقيقة 23 بعد تمريرة من جوردي ألبا.

وقلّص نيويورك سيتي الفارق بعدما سجل هدفًا في الدقيقة 37 عن طريق جاستن هاك، ولكن إنتر ميامي سجل الثالث في الدقيقة 67 عن طريق ماتيو سيلفيتي بعد أسيست من ليونيل ميسي.

وفي الدقيقة 83 سجل تيلاسكو هدف إنتر ميامي الرابع، في حين سجل أليندي الهدف الثالث له، هاتريك، والخامس لفريقه في الدقيقة 89.

بتلك النتيجة، تأهل إنتر ميامي إلى نهائي بطولة الدوري الأمريكي نسخة 2025 حيث سيلتقي مع الفائز من نهائي مرحلة البلاي أوف للقسم الغربي، الذي سيجمع بين فريقي سان دييجو وفانكوفر وايت كابس، التي ستُقام بعد قليل.

وستُقام مباراة نهائي بطولة الدوري الأمريكي لذلك الموسم مساء يوم السبت المقبل، 6 ديسمبر.

Mets Announcer Roasted Team’s First Baseman After His Embarrassing Mistake

The New York Mets lost at home to the Cleveland Guardians, 7-6, on Monday night and now sit 1.5 games back of the Philadelphia Phillies in the NL East.

The Mets had Mark Vientos at first base against the Guardians, which was just the second time this season he has played that position. He was immediately tested in the first inning when Cleveland's Angel Martines hit a lazy foul pop up between home and first.

This looked like it should have been an easy out but Vientos overran it and could only watch as the ball fell to the ground behind him.

Mets announcer Ron Darling didn't hold back, saying: "I don't know what to say. I mean, c'mon. It's a pop up. Let's go!"

Here's how that played out:

That mistake didn't end up costing the Mets, as Martinez ended up fouling out to the catcher but it was a tough look for Vientos. And it's safe to say Darling wasn't too impressed by it.

Náutico x Sport: onde assistir, horário e escalações da final do Campeonato Pernambucano

MatériaMais Notícias

Náutico e Sport se enfrentam pelo jogo de ida da final do Campeonato Pernambucano, neste sábado (30), às 16h30h (de Brasília), no Estádio dos Aflitos. O jogo terá transmissão da Globo.

continua após a publicidadeRelacionadasPalmeirasRelembre todas as finais disputadas pelo Palmeiras no Allianz ParquePalmeiras29/03/2024BotafogoBotafogo define favorito e está próximo de contratar técnico portuguêsBotafogo29/03/2024Campeonato PaulistaPalmeiras ou Santos? Torcidas do Corinthians e São Paulo ‘escolhem’ lado na final do PaulistãoCampeonato Paulista29/03/2024

➡️ Siga o Lance! no WhatsApp e acompanhe em tempo real as principais notícias do esporte

Confira abaixo todas as informações que você precisa saber sobre o confronto (onde assistir, horário, escalações e local).

✅ FICHA TÉCNICA
NÁUTICO X SPORT
CAMPEONATO PERNAMBUCANO – IDA (FINAL)
Data e horário: sábado, 30 de março de 2024, às 16h30h (de Brasília);
Local: Estádio dos Aflitos, em Recife (PE);
Onde assistir: Globo;
Árbitro: Diego Fernando Silva de Lima;
Assistentes: Clóvis do Amaram e José Romão;
VAR: Gilberto Castro Júnior.

⚽PROVÁVEIS ESCALAÇÕES
NÁUTICO (Técnico: Allan Aal)
Vagner, Arnaldo, Rafael Vaz, Guilherme Matos e Diego Matos; Sousa, Marco Antônio e Patrick Allan; Luiz Paulo, Kauan Maranhão e Cléo Silva.

continua após a publicidade

SPORT (Técnico: Mariano Soso)
Caíque França; Pedro Lima, Rafael Thyere, Luciano Castan e Felipinho; Felipe, Fabricio Domínguez e Lucas Lima; Barletta, Romarinho e Gustavo Coutinho.

Tudo sobre

Futebol NacionalNáuticoSport

Lauren Bell – the footballer who chose fast bowling

Playing for England wasn’t always a goal but she soon realised “pace, swing and bounce” were her true calling

S Sudarshanan09-Oct-2025For Lauren Bell, cricket just happened. Naturally athletic and competitive, she dabbled in multiple sports for the fun of it while growing up. A lot of football and a little bit of cricket. Playing for England wasn’t always a goal. It just happened.”If you asked probably like 7-8-year-old Lauren, she would be in a full football kit running around with the shin pads on,” Bell tells ESPNcricinfo in Guwahati. “My grandad always brought us Manchester United kits and I was always in the garden doing football. Like kids spend their time doing different things, what I found fun was playing sports.”Bell played for Reading FC from when she was eight. She also played cricket at the time, and her parents took her to training for both sports. It was in 2017, after the second edition of the Kia Super League (KSL), that Southern Vipers offered 16-year-old Bell a contract for their winter training programme and to then play for them in the summer. Training was on Saturday mornings, the same time as her football games.”My parents were like, you need to choose because we can’t physically get to these two places,” Bell says. “That was when I made the decision that I’ll follow cricket. I haven’t played football since, which is a bit sad, but I’ve not really looked back since then.”Related

  • Sciver-Brunt ton, Ecclestone four-for help England brush aside Sri Lanka

  • Sri Lanka focus on the present as England challenge looms

  • Unbeaten England prepare for Sri Lanka spin test

  • Beaumont: England ready for hard graft in Colombo

  • Young ones to watch: Kranti Goud, Georgia Voll and Lauren Bell prepare to light up World Cup

Bell is about six feet tall, nicknamed ‘The Shard’. She bowls at good pace and has a mean inswinger. However, she used to lose her footing and fall to her left during her bowling action, which gave her a bit of back pain. Last year, she worked hard to remodel her action, and she can now swing the ball both ways.”I don’t think I was really aware that being this tall is a massive advantage for me,” Bell says. “When I was a kid, I was so much taller than everyone. So obviously as a fast bowler, that’s going to bring its advantages. But I never thought, ‘oh, I’m tall, I’m going to do this’. It just all fell into place.”As I became a professional, I actually started to learn my craft. Before then, you worked on your talent and you’ve already been coached, but you don’t learn about the intricacies of fast bowling and bowling action. Only since I’ve started learning about my skill set and I guess the intricacies of my action, have I learned that obviously my height and the balance I can get in the extra bounce and how I play differently to other seamers. It’s obviously a big advantage for me or it makes me different to other girls and fast bowlers in the game.”Once she understood the advantage her height gave her, she worked hard on improving her speed and controlling swing.”I take the new ball and swinging the ball is a big skill of mine and one of my biggest advantages,” Bell says. “My coaches and I always talk about the three massive things – pace, bounce and movement. If you’ve got them, then you’re going to be a really hard bowler to face. With my height, I can get bounce and if I keep working on my strength, I can increase my pace. I’ve got the ability to swing the ball and hopefully I’ll keep progressing to moving the ball both ways. Swing, pace and bounce is probably where I’m most threatening.”Lauren Bell: ‘Swing, pace and bounce is probably where I’m most threatening’•Getty ImagesIt is not just her bowling that differentiates Bell from most other cricketers. She likes to make a statement with her hairstyle, which has inspired many young players to wear their hair in plaits like she does, and wants to see women cricketers embrace their “girly” side.”I’ve always liked doing my hair,” Bell says. “I remember vividly when I first played with plaits in my hair. I played in a [T20] World Cup with plaits and then played in the Hundred in England and I was meeting these girls and they were obviously there for the cricket. But so many of them had matching hair, like they had their hair in plaits. I was meeting the mums, who were like, ‘I have to do this hairstyle for my daughter every day now’. Stuff like that is part of the reason that I love playing and having the platform to inspire these young girls.”I want cricket to be seen as cool and mainstream, and you can be girly and do your hair and wear whatever you like and play cricket. You don’t have to be like a certain type of personnel. When I was growing up, it was like a boy sport, which has changed over time. This is one thing that I’m passionate about and I care about, and doesn’t affect my cricket in any way. If anything, it reaches an audience that someone else might not reach.”Bell is a graduate in sociology and criminology. She completed her degree before her England debut but worked on her dissertation while being involved in the Women’s Ashes and the 2022 ODI World Cup as a standby.”When I was at school, my parents were really keen for me to go to Bradfield College and do really well at my A levels and study really hard,” she says. “I always wanted to do whatever my sister did and she went to uni, so that was always going to happen. My A levels were good and then I went to Loughborough.”I chose Loughborough with the cricket in mind as well because it made training easier. But when I started at Loughborough, I wasn’t a professional cricketer. I wanted to just study something I enjoyed. I didn’t know what I wanted to do, but after uni, if I wasn’t a cricketer, I just wanted to study something that I thought I enjoyed.”

“I want cricket to be seen as cool and mainstream, and you can be girly and do your hair and wear whatever you like and play cricket.”Lauren Bell

With Covid-19 impacting cricket in 2020 and 2021, her first two years at university were relatively easier, in that she did not have to juggle cricket and course work. But her third year was a challenge, when she was picked for England A’s tour of Australia just before the Women’s Ashes.”It was hard, especially on tour when you’re touring such amazing countries like New Zealand and you have a dissertation to write. It’s tricky to turn down the social part and the exploring. It was the first time I’d been to Australia and New Zealand. So you want to obviously see it, but I also knew that I needed to get this dissertation written and I needed to study and keep up with my lectures. Because of Covid, everything was online and I managed to get through. I had a lot of support and few extensions on deadlines. I’m glad I did it and graduated, but it was tricky.”Since her debut in July 2022, no England fast bowler has taken more wickets in women’s ODIs than Bell’s 40. Kate Cross was close with 39 but she was left out of the World Cup squad, elevating Bell as the leader of the pace attack. In England’s first two games at the 2025 World Cup, Bell took 1 for 24 in four overs against South Africa and 1 for 28 in seven overs against Bangladesh, on slightly sticky surfaces in Guwahati.”It is responsibility; it’s how I really thrive,” she says. “When Heather [Knight] was captain and now Nat [Sciver-Brunt] is the captain, I think the more responsibility I’m given and the more clarity I have on the importance of my role, the more I thrive. I really enjoy taking those opportunities, being the bowler to make an impact or leading the seam attack. It gets the best out of me. I really enjoy it and every time I get a chance to do it, it’s great.”As England travel to Colombo to play Sri Lanka on what could be a slow surface, the once-football-crazy Bell will have another opportunity to show off her new-ball skills. England will hope that just happens.

England confront the Gabba's realities with Ashes hopes in the balance

Can England’s gamblers shelve their instincts to survive the cut and thrust of crucial pink-ball contest?

Vithushan Ehantharajah03-Dec-20250:54

Clarke: Australia going to a venue where they play well

On Wednesday, at around 4pm Brisbane time, the Gabba was emptied by a fire alarm.Australia had already left following their final training session, and England were yet to arrive for their last practice under lights. The only evacuees were journalists and stadium staff.It felt like a moment for all to take stock. Because, in 24 hours’ time, this ground will be filled to the brim. And by the end of the first day-night session of the second Ashes Test, the state of the series could have already changed immeasurably.Pink-ball Test cricket tends to move quickly and undulate wildly. And for an England team who do both themselves, this may be a heady mix. A cocktail, no doubt, but will it prove to be a Negroni or a Molotov?The occasion has not been lost on the players, or indeed the state of Queensland. Police have been out and about pulling over helmet-less e-Scooter riders after Ben Stokes and a handful of England teammates were papped whizzing through Brisbane’s CBD without them. Stokes was even asked to apologise to Queenslanders for the crime in his press conference. He decided against it. As trivial an offence as it was, now is not the time to be sorry. No time for regrets.The reception England will receive tomorrow will be unlike any this team have heard before. Nearby pubs have primed themselves for an influx of punters priming themselves for a 2pm start. Not that the Gabba needs more of a run-up to dive into an Ashes Test. This is the most febrile of venues at the best of times when the English are in town, and they have the receipts to prove it.Stokes has insisted history holds no fear for them. But nor does it instinctively contain breadcrumbs to success, even if Australia’s sole pink-ball defeat came at this venue last year, against West Indies. “You don’t try and read into too much around what happened in a result the last time a team played there,” Stokes said, very much in business mode.The scrum before the storm: Ben Stokes speaks to the media at the Gabba•David Gray/AFP/Getty Images”We have grounds in England where you know you turn up there and have that extra boost of confidence because of, not necessarily your record there, but how the crowds are. We’ve got Edgbaston and Headingley – I feel like the Gabba is sort of like their Edgbaston or Headingley to Australia.”In truth, Birmingham and Leeds – for all their merits as home-Test strongholds – do not come close to Brisbane. The signage is everywhere, the sentiment skewed towards taking British pounds on their way to breaking English hearts. The air is thick enough to chew, the heat harsh enough to, well, ride an e-scooter without a helmet. The locals … well, England will get the full brunt of that over the coming days. You can understand why no England side has won here since 1986. The odds are in favour of an Australia triumph again, and a 2-0 scoreline will more or less confirm a fourth Ashes victory on home soil.To keep this alive, to make this all worthwhile, Stokes’ England – for all their parking of history – will have to at least mimic aspects of the last time England left this venue with their tails up.It might only have been a draw in 2010-11’s series opener. But the manner in which it was achieved was as bombastic as English cricket used to get. Facing a first innings deficit of 221, Andrew Strauss’s England side – arguably the greatest to win in Australia – put on 517 for 1 to kill the game but keep alive their Ashes hopes.They arrived on that final day at 310 for 1, leading by 89. But the most telling statistic was the crowd; a 42,000-seater with only 7,088 taken. Most of them were English. No fire alarm this time. The message was clear – Australia did not believe. If England did not already know they were onto something going into that final day, they did when they turned up and saw that lack of home faith.That may end up being the most telling marker over the coming days – local disinterest. Since 2022, Stokes has implored his players to err on the side of entertainment. Now, they must be no things to no men or women with Southern Crosses in their hearts.Related

  • Can England rise to pink-ball challenge in Brisbane?

  • Selection uncertainty or smokescreen? Focus on Cummins day before Gabba Test

  • Boland: 'I'm good enough to compete with anyone'

  • Switch Hit: Pink ball, Bazball, Gabba gamble

  • Ben Stokes primed for his most important assignment as England captain

There will be periods with the pink ball when they must hold firm, whether batting against the new ball, or under lights, or when bowling with the old ball, with the sun still out. They must shield from the danger, not run towards it. Should their opponents attack, they would do well not to respond with equal and opposite force, even if Sir Isaac Newton would not improve.How ironic it is that Bazball comes down to this. As close to a crapshoot you get in Test cricket, against a side whose pink-ball record suggests the dice are loaded in their favour. And one that, by and large, they will have to play safe. Their head coach Brendon McCullum often refers to himself as a gambler, one always willing to twist. Sticking might be the order of this Test. It might be the order of the series.As night fell on Wednesday, the whole team were out in the middle of the Gabba fielding under lights, getting used to the pink ball and taking in the scale of colosseum which could be the site of their rebirth in their series.Spirits are high, belief remains broadly undimmed despite the humiliating defeat in the first Test. As they walked off the field on Wednesday, they embraced their coaches, who were passing the time bowling to one another if they weren’t hitting catches.One by one they filed down the tunnel, taking in the boombox that, for the last few days, has been scoring all their preparation, as has been the case for the last three years. Tomorrow, they will be greeted by much harsher tones, and forced to confront the reality that this could be the start of the end of it all. Or it could be the start of another chance to keep this merry ride going one more time around the block.

راحة 48 ساعة للاعبي الزمالك بعد العودة من جنوب إفريقيا

عاد الفريق الأول لكرة القدم بنادي الزمالك إلى القاهرة بعد الانتهاء من مواجهته أمام كايزر تشيفز الجنوب إفريقي في إطار منافسات بطولة كأس الكونفدرالية الأفريقية.

وحسم التعادل الإيجابي بهدف لكل فريق نتيجة لقاء الزمالك وكايزر تشيفز، الذي أُقيم يوم السبت الماضي على ستاد بيتر موكابا ضمن الجولة الثانية من دور المجموعات.

ويقع الزمالك في مجموعة تضم كلًا من: كايزر تشيفز الجنوب إفريقي – المصري البورسعيدي – زيسكو يونايتد الزامبي.

طالع أيضًا | يانيك فيريرا يكشف كواليس مثيرة بشأن رحيله عن الزمالك: عرضت أموالًا على اللاعبين.. وتم طردي

وكانت البعثة قد مكثت في مطار جوهانسبرج ترانزيت لمدة 4 ساعات، بعد مغادرتها لمدينة بولوكواني، قبل أن تستقل طائرة العودة إلى مطار القاهرة الدولي.

ومن جانبه، قرر أحمد عبد الرؤوف، المدير الفني للفريق الأول بنادي الزمالك، منح اللاعبين راحة لمدة يومين بعد العودة إلى القاهرة، قبل استئناف برنامج الإعداد.

ومن المقرر أن يستأنف الفريق تدريباته يوم الخميس المُقبل على ملعب الكلية الحربية، استعدادًا لمواجهة كهرباء الإسماعيلية يوم 9 ديسمبر الجاري في بطولة كأس عاصمة مصر.

Grace Harris overpowers Bears as Surrey claim Women's Blast

Favourites prove too strong despite spinners giving Warwickshire hope

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Grace Harris made an unbeaten 63 off 33 balls•ECB via Getty Images

Grace Harris’s sparkling 63 not out from 33 balls led Surrey to a five-wicket win over the Bears as they became the inaugural Vitality Blast Women’s champions in front of their home fans at the Kia Oval.The Australian all-rounder grabbed hold of a final which needed a heroine, striking two sixes and seven fours to steer the home side to victory. Fittingly, Southwark-born Kira Chathli, who watched her heroes here as a child, made the winning hit with 20 balls to spare. Amu Surenkumar and Em Arlott took two wickets apiece.Earlier, The Bears struggled to build partnerships with player of the match from the semi-final Issy Wong top scoring with 31 and Laura Harris Sister of Grace a typically ferocious 25 from 11. Phoebe Franklin was the pick of the Surrey attack with 2-16, while two superb runouts helped to further restrict the Bears.Meg Austin caressed the first ball of the innings for four only for Alexa Stonehouse to bowl her with an in-swinger.Davina Perrin’s miserable day with the bat was completed when Capsey castled her for nought and it was hero of the eliminator Issy Wong who gave the powerplay momentum with four boundaries and a five from an overthrow.Stonehouse ended her fun with another ball that hit the stumps and Sterre Kalis was run out by a magnificent throw from the deep by Ryana MacDonald-Gay.Natasha Wraith played nicely for 23 but she and Surenkumar fell in the space of four balls, the latter to a lightning quick stumping by Kira Chathli off Franklin.Laura Harris, was dropped early on and went on the offensive, twice clearing the ropes. Three other boundaries took the Australian to 25, but going for another big hit off Dani Gregory she found the hands of Franklin in the deep.Franklin removed the dangerous Emily Arlott too, but Millie Taylor (20 not out) marshalled the tail, leaving Surrey 154 for the title.Surrey’s chase suffered an early setback when Danni Wyatt-Hodge, prolific in the competition, lost the chance to be leading run-scorer as she holed out in the deep.Skipper Bryony Smith swept and pulled strongly, but fell to the last ball of the powerplay from Surenkumar and when Wraith whipped off the bails to stump Capsey off Hannah Baker, Surrey were floundering at 42-3.Three Sophia Dunkley boundaries from Millie Taylor’s opening over raised hopes for the side playing on their home ground and the England international hit Baker back over her head for six in the next.That was as good as it got for Dunkley who overbalanced trying to hit Surenkumar over the top, Wraith’s fast hands doing the rest.Grace Harris though took up the baton to play the match-defining innings, driving fours cleanly through cover and mid-off.Emily Arlott was dispatched to the sightscreen for six and swept for four, but Paige Scholfield perished in the deep trying to imitate the shot to give the bears renewed hope.Harris though remained to reach 50 at a strike rate of 200, before clubbing Taylor into the seats at midwicket as Surrey scampered home.

From the Basin to the heights: A decade on from Brendon McCullum's 302

Team-mates BJ Watling and Jimmy Neesham recall their roles in a moment of NZ history

Vithushan Ehantharajah04-Dec-2024The Basin Reserve has a claim to being one of the best grounds in international cricket. But its immediate surroundings might be the most treacherous.Wellington’s topography, exacerbated by its famous earthquake of 1855, means vehicles basically sling-shot around the ground out of Sussex Street into Buckle Street, which wraps around its highest quarter. It is devilish to navigate both on wheels and foot, and at its most nefarious when the ground is closed to the public, as it was on Wednesday when England and New Zealand trained ahead of the second Test, which begins on Friday.But when the cricket is on, and that same public is enticed in while road users are discouraged, it is at its safest. On February 18, 2014, it was a haven.Related

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The foyer of the Cricket Wellington building at the entrance to the ground houses a basic collage of that day: wooden frame, photos, cutouts, captions and headlines like “The game that stopped a nation”. Fitting for day when the traffic was non-existent, but low-key for New Zealand’s first Test triple century – one that had spectators queueing right around the ground, dominating the roads outright.This year marks a decade since England’s Test head coach Brendon McCullum became the first Black Cap to breach three hundred. All of his numbers are remarkable in their own right; 302 runs off 559 balls, and 775 minutes spent at the crease. He arrived when New Zealand were 52 for 3 in their second innings, after India had posted 438 to take a 246-run lead. They would emerge 242 ahead, eventually into a draw for a memorable series victory (McCullum had helped win the first Test with 224). As captain, no less.

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“Is it bad that I remember him getting dropped by Virat?” Jimmy Neesham recalls to ESPNcricinfo.On nine (from 32 deliveries), McCullum mis-timed a drive that was shelled by Virat Kohli at short mid-on. That would have made it 78 for 4, and an epic would have been terminated before conception. “And then I had the pads on for a day and a half.”Neesham, on debut, was carded at No. 8. And when Tom Latham and Corey Anderson fell either side of lunch, he was ready to go for his second innings. Then came an eight-and-a-half-hour wait as the next man in. For that, he has BJ Watling to thank.Watling, after a duck in the first innings, and 1 and 11 in the first Test, offered McCullum invaluable resistance. The pair shared 741 deliveries, eventually putting on 352. At the time it was a record for the sixth wicket.”The situation was really quite simple,” says Watling, with the matter-of-fact attitude that helps to explain how he was able to better it with a stand of 365 with Kane Williamson at the same ground a year later.”It was just a chance to dig in and ultimately see where that ends up. The fact that Baz kept going and going as well, you start to gain that confidence. You’re literally just going through each ball over time, each over, each session and seeing what unfolds.”When Watling arrived at the crease at 94 for 5 – India still 152 ahead – McCullum had already faced 72 deliveries for 19. He had also taken enough painkillers to down a rhino.McCullum greets fans at the Basin Reserve after his triple-century•AFPThe creaking back – it had been for some time – and a dodgy knee were now accompanied by a dicky left shoulder.”I think there might have been a hamstring strain, you know,” says Watling. “From Eden Park (first Test), chasing one of those balls to the boundary and flying over the rope, as Baz does. He certainly had a few niggles going on, but he certainly wasn’t one to make you terribly aware of it.”There was no tell of any impediment to McCullum. He ticked deliveries over, starting day three’s evening session on 44 from 138 deliveries. he was on 72 from 177 when the new ball arrived, and moved to his first hundred – sealed with a straight six off Ishant Sharma – just 20 deliveries later.The following day – New Zealand effectively resuming on 6 for 5 – McCullum and Watling kept at it, wearing maidens, striking the odd boundary, before somehow dealing in singles – and even the odd three. Watling eventually moved to his third Test century.”I made a slight adjustment for that Test match and bringing back a little pre-movement shuffle, to counter the bounce of Sharma,” he recalls. “I definitely wasn’t feeling comfortable.”But Baz’s nature is to play that attacking brand. He went up and down in tempo throughout. And the way he strikes it, the second new ball gets blunted, which allows us in 15 overs’ time to not having it swinging, bouncing or nipping as much. That makes my life easier.”If McCullum’s approach out in the middle belied the gravity and pressure of the situation, which he was slowly easing, so did the manner in which he carried himself at the intervals. In contrast to Watling.

“Coming in that day, everyone was there at 9am, lines out all around. I certainly haven’t seen that in my time. I’d hate to know the pressure Baz was under.”BJ Watling recalls the buzz around the Basin on the morning of the triple

“We’d come in at tea and lunch and, well, Baz ate a lot, but I certainly didn’t. I’d have a coffee and try and switch off before heading back out there. I’d have a little bit when keeping, but not much if I was going to be batting. Not great, I know – the nutritionist would have a heart attack.”One man who did not have that problem was Neesham: “I’ve never struggled eating. I think if you put me and BJ next to each other, you can probably guess which one doesn’t eat. I had a couple of ham-and-cheese toasties and whatnot up there.”Even though he hadn’t yet made it out to the middle, Neesham was still burning energy. “At the Basin, you have to go along underneath the stand and up through the staircase to the viewing area.”I’m trying to think how many times I must’ve made that walk, because you go downstairs to go to the toilet or whatever, and in sessions you go back down to the change-room and have tea or have lunch and go back up again. So I must’ve gone up and down those stairs about 15 times, with my pads on.”There was a fair bit of nervous energy as well. McCullum and Watling were easing Kiwi nerves with their stand, but Neesham remained on edge.”You don’t enjoy it when you’re next, and I don’t think there’s any batter in world cricket that would say that they enjoy being next in. I think it’s the worst situation in cricket. Imagine having that for a hundred (123) overs?!”Neesham’s anxiety has undimmed over time, it seems, especially when recalling the match situation when he arrived to the crease upon Watling’s dismissal for 124, after tea on day four.”We were about fifty or a hundred behind, so still a bit of work to do.” New Zealand were actually 200 in front. “Were we?” Yes. “Didn’t have any work to do then!”

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And so we come to February 18, 2014. McCullum resumed on 281, and a ground that had been predominantly Indian on day three was now far more skewed towards the Black Caps.”The Basin is a beautiful place to play on a good day,” says Watling. “Coming in that day, everyone was there at 9am, lines out all around. I certainly haven’t seen that in my time. I’d hate to know the pressure Baz was under.”New Zealand’s previous highest Test score was an agonising 299 by Martin Crowe, against Sri Lanka at the same ground 23 years earlier, and Neesham, on 67 not out at the start of that final day, had gauged the interest overnight. “It had become an event in New Zealand. Baz getting to 300 had sort of gone beyond cricket.” Fans of all ages wanted to be a part of it. A 14-year-old Rachin Ravindra was one of the lucky school kids to make it through the turnstiles.By that morning, McCullum was exhausted. Even his kit was starting to wear out.”He had this dumb superstition that he wouldn’t change his grip while he was batting,” says Neesham. “So there’s holes in his grip where it’s split where his fingers are. And he is just taping up these holes, so his bat grip is just cooked. God knows why he didn’t change it.”His old man (Stuart) was in Wellington, too, so they were having a couple of beers each night after the day’s play. And he probably wasn’t getting as much REM sleep as he should have been.”BJ Watling’s third Test hundred, against India in Wellington, was the longest innings by a New Zealand wicketkeeper•Getty ImagesBy the time play had resumed, there were still people lining up along the road to get in. Many were still trying when, midway through the eighth over, McCullum edged Ishant just short of MS Dhoni.”The hush,” starts Neesham, “I still remember that. That was when people realised that he’s not definitely going to get there. It was a celebration of him, that day, of him getting to 300… and then people realised like ‘oh, he actually has to score the runs’.”He did, an over after Neesham reached his maiden Test century: “I could sit back and watch …”Zaheer Khan offered width, McCullum opened the face with a flourish for a 36th and final boundary, and up to 302 he went.McCullum jogged to the other end, raising his arms before taking his helmet off and saluting all corners. There was no real emotion, no tear in the eye. Not even from father Stu, even as he beamed with pride and applauded. He was out two balls later.”It was pretty cool,” says Neesham, 137 not out in the end, and with a front row seat to history. “Pretty cool for your first Test experience.”New Zealand declared on 680 for 8, leaving a nominal target of 435. India ended up hanging on, with Kohli nabbing a consolation century after being given not out on 15, despite an edge to the keeper that would have made it 31 for 3.”The home changing-rooms are really big and you’ve got your own space, and so a great place to sit down after a Test match and reflect,” says Watling. “And there’s a lot of history at the ground, too, and Baz was now part of it. But he didn’t make too much of a fuss about it to be honest. The team had beaten India in a Test series, and that was the biggest celebration in the sheds that night.”Also, I don’t think he could really register what he had just done.”

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Perhaps one of the most telling quotes in the immediate aftermath of McCullum’s 302 came from the man himself: “I feel a little bit embarrassed because I’m not anywhere near the calibre of players that those two in particular are.”Crowe and Stephen Fleming were, in McCullum’s eyes, the top two of New Zealand cricket. They were the ones who were truly worthy of such an honour.There is an element of self-recognition at play there, and foresight. McCullum remains a outlier in New Zealand sport. One of their own, yet belonging to everyone else – to India in perpetuity for his impact on the IPL, and now to England.”You certainly cherish those times with Baz, as a player,” Watling says. “And it looks like England are benefitting from that right now.”He is a maverick who grabbed headlines, yet is still regarded by many as the establishment, particularly after the captaincy farrago involving Ross Taylor in 2012. A certified renegade who now occupies a quiet hinterland in the sporting conscience.”It’s interesting,” says Neesham, when asked about McCullum and validation with his 302. “Is Jayson Tatum a better basketballer than Luka Doncic because he’s won a championship?”There’s talk of it in the current era. But in New Zealand cricket, there’s only a few guys that’ll carry a legacy post-playing. And Baz is one of them.”With time, humility dilutes and perspective improves. And it is not about McCullum needing to be great to have a triple-century. Quite the opposite.Of all the batting accolades he possesses, including the fastest Test century in his final match, this is the one that grants greatness. Breaking new ground for his country, showing the world he could produce something that echoed throughout history, and setting himself apart from those he deems more worthy.And for one day, bringing a country still split on his legend together on a roundabout in Wellington.

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