Shahzad thumps Afghanistan to four-wicket win

ESPNcricinfo staff29-Dec-2015Craig Ervine got quickly into action, employing deft sweeps and reverse sweeps to earn his runs•Chris WhiteoakThe returning Hamilton Masakadza added 98 for the third wicket with Ervine, thereby setting a strong platform for a competitive total•Chris WhiteoakThe bowlers, however, kept chipping away at the wickets towards the end•Chris WhiteoakErvine holed out to long-off for 73, helping Zimbabwe post a total of 253 after 81 runs were plundered off the last 10 overs•Chris WhiteoakAfghanistan’s openers added 82 solid runs before Sikandar Raza broke through•Chris WhiteoakMohammad Shahzad found runs with some muscular strokes, including a six to bring up his fifty•Chris WhiteoakHowever, just as it appeared like Afghanistan would cruise to the target, they slipped from 169 for 1 to 186 for 5•Chris WhiteoakShahzad, who was stuck in the 90s for almost eight overs, finally got to his fourth ODI century•Chris WhiteoakElton Chigumbura’s multiple strikes continued to infuse belief into Zimbabwe, who fought valiantly but it was a task too far•Chris WhiteoakShahzad finished on 131* – the highest score by an Afghanistan batsman in ODIs – as the target of 254 was achieved with four wickets and 14 balls to spare•Chris Whiteoak

Dhawan's doggedness better than numbers suggest

After scoring a pair in Mohali, Shikhar Dhawan has tightened his game and backed his defence, but the challenge to convert the disciplined efforts into big innings still remains

Sidharth Monga in Delhi05-Dec-20151:41

Manjrekar: Defending not Dhawan’s strength

Of the nine series that Shikhar Dhawan has played he has gone without at least a half-century in four. Two of those four series have been of three Tests and longer. Add to it the tour of Australia, where he was dropped for the last Test despite one fifty. It is fair to say he has not come close to replicating the kind of touch he displayed in his debut Test or close to the team’s expectations of running away with a game, but at times – including this series – he has played better than what his numbers suggest. It is funny how it is the exact opposite of his ODI performances, where he has had more than a fair share of reprieves when he scores centuries.Flamboyant Dhawan might be reputed to be, but it has actually been good to watch him fight hard, after the poor shots in Mohali, for an average of 25 in a series where the overall average of the top-seven batsmen has been 22.17. He has faced 58 balls per dismissal when the average for the top seven has been 52. It is one thing for the management to say “that’s the way he plays” after he got out for a pair twice chasing wide deliveries in Mohali, but it is quite another for the batsman who feels he owes runs to his team.Dhawan has accordingly tightened his game since that Mohali Test. In Bangalore, he weathered the early storm but it rained when it was time for him to capitalise. In Nagpur, he batted 68 minutes and two hours for his 12 and 39, but he fell to the pitch in the first innings – half-volley stopping at him and popping for a return catch – and a freak catch by the wicketkeeper off a well-timed reverse sweep in the second.In this Test, Dhawan hardly made mistakes against some of the best bowling India faced in the match: from Morne Morkel and Kyle Abbott. He faced 89 balls from them, scored just 29 runs, but made wrong choices – the prod outside off – only on four occasions. He left them alone 33 times, didn’t follow them with the hands when the ball seamed away, and the only times he was troubled was when the ball was banged in and came off at an awkward pace, defeating his shots down the leg side.Contrary to perception, it is remarkable for Shikhar Dhawan to buckle down and play for so long on difficult pitches•BCCIThe problematic push with a slightly or completely open face, away from the body, came only after Dhawan had settled down. The first time he played that shot, Dhawan had already played 47 balls, and timed Morkel superbly for a four past point. It wasn’t like he was missing out on scoring opportunities because of his circumspection, but he rarely got bad balls when he batted. He drove only the really full balls, and showed exemplary discipline in both innings. He did play some part in making sure those who scored runs for India in this Test faced tired bowlers bowling with an older ball.Contrary to the perception, it is remarkable for a man who at least on paper is given the license to play the way he plays to actually buckle down for so long on difficult pitches. In a series where batsmen have been contributing to their own downfall because of the pitches that have played havoc with their minds, Dhawan has actually backed his defence and leaves after the Mohali shocker. He made them bowl two really good balls to get him out here. In the first innings, Dane Piedt followed up a big offbreak with one that didn’t turn, and in the second Morkel bowled a searing yorker to take out the base of the leg stump.In that he looked for runs every time there was a small error in line, this was an improvement on his second-innings effort in Galle, where he might have lost out on scoring opportunities while he just left and left and left in that failed Indian chase. He scored 28 off 83 balls there and spin got him. That Dhawan has fought on for long periods of time, curbing his natural instinct, for five innings in recent times without a fifty is bound to confound him and the team management. There will be questions asked of his game, especially with semi-defensive fields restricting his scoring areas to singles. Against Australia on debut, Dhawan was up against a side desperate to cancel the series deficit, so every time he hit a gap he got four for it. Now teams have wizened to him.The challenge for Dhawan now is to find those singles, which he does really well in ODIs. The runs are what will count in the end. The fact that he played some part in making sure Virat Kohli, who scored four centuries in Australia, almost always came in to bat when the Kookaburra had lost its shine will lose out to the runs in the longer run. Why, even in Australia he ended up getting dropped.Dhawan is one of the more fascinating batsmen going around today. At times he scored hundreds without looking pretty. At times he hardly scores while looking a million dollars. He can sandwich an ordinary ODI series between Test hundreds. He can start scratchily and turn an innings around with one shot. His biggest challenge, though, is to convert these dogged disciplined efforts into big innings. That he has applied himself so well in a tough series for batsmen might have earned him some time.

Kohli, Yuvraj help India to comfortable win

ESPNcricinfo staff01-Mar-2016Jasprit Bumrah struck in the next over to dismiss Shehan Jayasuriya for 3…•Associated Press… And Sri Lanka suffered another blow when Tillakaratne Dilshan fell for 18•AFPHardik Pandya, who had dismissed Dilshan, took another key wicket, by dismissing Angelo Mathews•AFPChamara Kapugedera then stitched a crucial 43-run, fifth-wicket partnership with Milinda Siriwardana•AFPKapugedera’s 32-ball 30 pushed Sri Lanka above 100 and some late hits down the order helped them post a total of 138 for 9•AFPNuwan Kulasekara provided the early breakthrough by having Shikhar Dhawan caught behind for 1•Associated PressIn his next over, Kulasekara removed Rohit Sharma to give Sri Lanka more than a glimmer of hope•Associated PressHowever, Virat Kohli and Suresh Raina turned the contest in India’s favour with a 54-run stand•Associated PressYuvraj Singh contributed with a quickfire 35, before he and Pandya fell with the finish line in sight•AFPKohli finished with an unbeaten 56 to guide India to the final, and also picked up his second consecutive Man-of-the-Match award•AFP

Rohit puts emphatic stamp on chase for Mumbai bounce-back

Five moments where Mumbai Indians won, and could have lost, the match to Kolkata Knight Riders

Nagraj Gollapudi in Kolkata13-Apr-20161:41

‘Rohit’s confidence settled me down’ – Buttler

Mitch PerfectAndre Russell had already hit four thundering sixes and was batting on 36 from 16 deliveries. Kolkata Knight Riders were 163 for 2 after 17 overs and were confidently marching towards the second 200-plus score on consecutive days in the IPL. Mumbai Indians captain Rohit Sharma decided to bring in his best bowler on the day, left-arm quick Mitchell McClenaghan, who at that stage had figures of 3-0-18-1.Against Russell, McClenaghan did not change his plan which he had executed so well earlier: bowling quick and on the off stump he pitched short, allowing no room for the Jamaican to free his arms. Attempting to smash the second ball over point Russell managed to only smash a bottom edge into stumps. Although Gambhir hit a four later in the over, the Knight Riders’ captain was tired and the momentum was back in Mumbai’s favour as Hardik Pandya and Jasprit Bumrah reined in the hosts’ run rate further in the following two overs, conceding just 17 off the final 12 balls, to keep the Knight Riders 13 short of the 200-run plateau.Parthiv’s blunder blemishes bold startThere is no point starting slow if you are chasing a target in the vicinity of 200. Mumbai’s plan became evident straightaway as their opening pair of Rohit and Parthiv Patel smashed at least one boundary in each of the first six overs. Mumbai had dashed to 53 for 0 at 5.4 overs. On the fifth ball of the over, Parthiv stepped out and pushed Australian chinaman bowler Brad Hogg towards the leg side and set off for a single.Rohit had second thoughts and quickly raised his bat and hand asking Parthiv to stop. By now Parthiv was halfway down the pitch and almost a bat’s length away from shaking Rohit’s hand. Meanwhile, Hogg charged hard on his follow through, intercepted the ball and threw it to Robin Uthappa who knocked the bails off swiftly.Pandya’s follyOnly the previous over, Pandya had charged Kuldeep Yadav, Knight Riders’ other left-arm wrist spinner, and was lucky not to be stumped after the ball raced down the leg side for five wides. Not only was Gambhir shaking his head at his bowler’s mistake, but even his counterpart, Rohit was visibly unhappy.It was possible to see Rohit telling Pandya to play to the merit of the ball and not try anything bold. Did Pandya heed the unsolicited advice? Next over, first ball from Piyush Chawla, Pandya attempts to clear the leg spinner standing in his crease, loses the grip on the bat and ends up playing a one-handed stroke which is easily picked at long-off. Mumbai 87 for 2, Rohit shakes his head.Mitch’s second rescue actMcClenaghan had already hit two sixes in a row in the 11th over from Chawla to turn the momentum firmly back in Mumbai’s favour immediately after Pandya’s wicket. Kuldeep had gone for 20 runs in his first two overs and was now brought back on to start his third.As he lined up to deliver the first ball, McClenaghan moved wide to his left exposing all his stumps. Unimpressed Kuldeep stopped mid-stride. McClenaghan then moved down the leg side to make room as Kuldeep floated one into the batsman’s legs, but the New Zealander slugged it deep into the stands for a six.Rohit’s Eden affair still going strongRohit has an average of 167.50 and a strikerate of 155.09 in five innings with Mumbai against the Knight Riders at Eden Gardens, where some of the best moments of his career have taken place. After Gambhir had shepherded the Knight Riders to a stiff target, Mumbai and Rohit needed to adopt a similar template.They had one foot inside the victory door at the halfway stage with Rohit going strong on 45 off 31 balls. Rohit negated the ultra-charged Hogg using his feet and high calibre of stroke play. He dominated John Hastings early on with his artistic driving skills. And like Gambhir earlier, every available single was duly taken and at times converted into two.Rohit saved his best for the final assault in the 19th when a visibly shaken Russell, who had been battered for four and two sixes off consecutive balls by Jos Buttler in the 16th, charged in for the penultimate over. Russell was hit for four effortless fours by Rohit and could do nothing but hold his head in his hands after the masterclass.

Zimbabwe slide yet again

ESPNcricinfo staff28-Jul-2016Masakadza shepherded Chamu Chibhabha through testing spells from New Zealand’s pace attack but Zimbabwe imploded before lunch, going from 35 for 1 to 36 for 4•AFPNeil Wagner then ripped through the line-up, claiming three wickets in an over soon after lunch to leave Zimbabwe reeling at 72 for 8•AFPThe visitors, however, were kept at bay by a stubborn knock from debutant Prince Masvaure•AFPDonald Tiripano supported Masvaure and the pair added 85 for the ninth wicket to lead Zimbabwe to a relatively respectable total of 164. New Zealand were 32 for 0 at stumps•AFP

Bangladesh stick to spin plot – and make history

Bangladesh’s decision to play England on turning pitches had backfired in Chittagong but they went for broke in Mirpur and the result was a historic Test win

Mohammad Isam in Mirpur30-Oct-2016Nearly half an hour after Bangladesh had achieved their greatest triumph in Test cricket, the atmosphere outside the home dressing room was festive. The floodlight towers were telling other parts of Dhaka that Mirpur was the place to be.A few minutes after the prize giving ceremony, some of the players headed out in their full whites.”Are you going out for another game?” someone asked Tamim Iqbal jokingly.”Nah, we are going to take the team photograph, but you guys stick around,” he said, and jogged away.Bhulu, known as the tea man to the stars, accosted Kamrul Islam Rabbi and told him a few secrets. Taijul Islam found an old acquaintance in the media. Imrul Kayes was gleaming, pleased about his contribution. Shakib was singular, seeing something on his phone. Unapproachable.BCB officials were also having a big laugh, slapping each other on the back. Not many were around, especially president Nazmul Hassan who is abroad. The groundsmen, nearly always the heroes who make play possible in the toughest conditions in Mirpur, had been handed their winning bonuses, a custom in Bangladesh grounds, and were also hanging around.Smiles all around. Some laughed loudly while others bravely asked some of the players for a selfie or two. Inside the dressing room, there was loud singing and celebration. They also cut a cake to celebrate Courtney Walsh’s birthday, perhaps keeping it in refrigeration for the end of the day.Mirpur, the middle-class hotbed, has become the place to be. You could sense that this had been a special day in their history – and on the team’s home ground, where they have had so many memories.It was difficult to forget the 2012 wins over India, Sri Lanka and West Indies or the whitewashing of New Zealand in 2010 and later in 2013. Some big nights, one dramatic day in 2014, but none as astonishing as Sunday, October 30, 2016.Mushfiqur Rahim and Imrul Kayes claim a stump after Bangladesh’s victory•Associated PressUntil the tea interval on the third day, things were not really going Bangladesh’s way. They had muddled up their batting plans before England ran off to a fine start. It prompted the coach Chandika Hathurusingha to give a team talk during the interval.”I have to use the words carefully because I wasn’t happy,” said Hathurusingha. “We didn’t do what we planned to do. So I actually had to talk to them in the tea break. I cannot tell you what I told them. I just reminded them what we were supposed to do. Some big players have to step up.”Mehedi Hasan and Shakib responded superbly, picking up the ten England wickets in the next 22.2 overs.Mushfiqur Rahim said that it becomes easier for a captain when both young and experienced players step up in tight situations.”It is a very big achievement in Bangladesh’s Test cricket history. It came against a very good England side but there will be a time when we will win a series 2-0 against any big team.”This is a start. It feels great that the younger players are also contributing. We have a number of performers in the team, which is always great for a captain,” he said.Mushfiqur said that the three-day finish was expected in some regard, because that was how Bangladesh had planned to tackle England in this Test series – with crumbling wickets that would aid their spinners, and they responded superbly. Mehedi took 19 wickets while Shakib and Taijul Islam took 11 and seven respectively.”From the time we knew England were coming, we planned to make wickets that last three to four days. The sort of wicket that would help our spinners and trouble the English batsmen. We played well in Chittagong but I was surprised that it lasted five days.”Here our bowlers executed our plans and the batsmen did well too, which made this win possible. We wanted to create this situation from where we could press towards a win. We are feeling really well,” he said.Bangladesh’s biggest stride in this Test series was perhaps their changed attitude towards play on pitches that offered more to the bowlers, who would ultimately have to take 20 wickets in a Test match to give them more chance of a win. Previously, the focus was mostly on giving batsmen slow featherbeds so that they could at least draw a game or two. It was appropriate in certain cases but they squandered opportunities of winning Tests.This time the change in attitude in the Test set-up grew from their giant leap in ODIs at home, as they won six ODI series from November 2014 till October this year.”At least we tried something different. But these changes don’t really happen overnight. We felt that we had enough resources in our bowling attack against any batting line-up.”We executed our plans. Credit goes to Shakib, Miraz and Taijul. It was tough to get wickets in these pitches since they couldn’t just turn up and get them. I hope you will see more such wickets in the future,” said Mushfiqur.He also credited Tamim Iqbal for his contribution with the bat in the series. Tamim finished as top scorer with 231 runs that included the only century of the two Tests and a fifty in trying conditions.”Runs are important in these wickets. Tamim was outstanding, especially in the first innings in Chittagong. I think that 78 was greater than his double-century. He utilized his good form, which is a really good sign.”It was a learning curve for our batsmen, because we never played against such a strong team on such wickets. We have to handle it better in the future, and we will improve,” he said.

Mehedi's teenage five-for, and Batty's time gap

Also: maximum DRS reviews in an innings, and the fastest ODI century by a keeper

Steven Lynch25-Oct-2016There were ten DRS reviews in England’s first innings at Chittagong – this must have been a record?! asked Derek Giles from England
The remarkable run of reviews – most of them seemingly involving Moeen Ali – during England’s first innings against Bangladesh in Chittagong last week did indeed constitute a new record for Tests. The previous mark seems to be eight, in Sri Lanka’s first innings of 388 against Pakistan in Dubai in 2013-14. India’s S Ravi, the hard-pressed third official in the Chittagong Test, was one of the on-field umpires in Dubai.Was Mehedi Hasan the youngest bowler to take five wickets in an innings on Test debut? asked Feroze Hossain from Bangladesh
Bangladesh’s precocious new offspinner Mehedi Hasan was five days short of his 19th birthday when he took five wickets on the first day of his Test debut, against England in Chittagong last week. He ended up next day with 6 for 80. Three younger bowlers have taken debut five-fors. Shahid Nazir was 18 years and 319 days old when he claimed 5 for 53 for Pakistan against Zimbabwe in Sheikhupura in 1996-97, while another Pakistan cricketer, Shahid Afridi, was 18 years and 236 days when he took 5 for 52 in his first Test, against Australia in Karachi in 1998-99. But the youngest debutant of all to do it was Australian Pat Cummins, aged 18 years and 196 days when he took 6 for 79 against South Africa in Johannesburg in 2011-12 – in what, sadly, remains his only Test to date, because of various injuries.The youngest bowler to take a five-for in any Test was Nasim-ul-Ghani, who was only 16 when he took 5 for 116 for Pakistan against West Indies in Georgetown in 1957-58 – that was his fourth Test, having made his debut earlier in the series. A slow left-armer, Nasim added 6 for 67 in the fifth Test in Port-of-Spain. Another Pakistani, Mohammad Amir, was only 17 when he took 5 for 79 against Australia in Melbourne in 2009-10, in his seventh Test. In all, 12 bowlers have taken Test five-fors when younger than Mehedi. The only other Bangladeshi to do it was Enamul Haque junior, against Zimbabwe in 2004-05, not long after his 18th birthday.A record ten decisions were reviewed in England’s first innings in Chittagong•AFPThe BBC’s Test Match Special statistician Andrew Samson revealed that the only spinner to take more wickets than Mehedi on his first day of Test cricket was Alf Valentine, the West Indian slow left-armer, who took the first eight to fall on his debut against England at Old Trafford in 1950. The only other one to take five was slow left-armer Albert Rose-Innes, in South Africa’s inaugural Test, against England in Port Elizabeth in 1888-89.Gareth Batty broke the record for the longest gap between Test appearances, but who holds the same record in ODIs and Twenty20s? asked Savo Ceprnich from South Africa
England played 142 Tests between Gareth Batty’s seventh Test – against Bangladesh in Chester-le-Street in June 2005 – and his eighth, after his recall for the first match of the current series, in Chittagong. That broke the previous record for matches missed, 114 by Martin Bicknell for England between 1993 and 2003.The equivalent record for one-day internationals is a dizzying 271 matches missed, by New Zealand’s Jeff Wilson between 1992-93 and 2004-05. “Goldie” Wilson had a pretty good excuse: he was carving out a very successful rugby career with the New Zealand All Blacks during most of that time. Floyd Reifer missed 254 West Indies ODIs between 1998-99 and his recall in 2009, as captain during a contracts dispute. The record for T20 internationals is currently held by England’s Liam Plunkett, who missed 74 between June 2006 and November 2015. He was run close earlier this year by Farveez Maharoof, who was recalled by Sri Lanka in July after missing 72 T20 internationals.Batty’s time gap between Test appearances – 11 years and 137 days – was noteworthy, but not a record: he’s only 17th on that particular list. John Traicos went 22 years and 222 days between Test appearances (for South Africa in 1969-70 and Zimbabwe in 1992-93), while England batsman George Gunn played no Tests for almost 18 years between 1911-12 and 1929-30, when he was 50.Rudi Koertzen (left) has stood in 331 internationals as an umpire. Aleem Dar (right) is on 328 currently•Getty ImagesGareth Batty opened the bowling in both innings of his comeback Test at Chittagong. Who was the last England spinner to do this? asked Kamran Muhammad from Pakistan
This is, as you suspect, quite rare – although Mehedi Hasan also did it for Bangladesh in Chittagong – and the last England slow bowler to do it before Batty is hardly a household name. It was the Nottinghamshire offspinner Sam Staples, in the last of his three Test appearances, against South Africa in Durban in 1927-28. He took 3 for 96 and 1 for 30 as South Africa won the match and squared the series 2-2. The list of those to have done it includes Kumar Dharmasena, one of the umpires in Chittagong, who took the new ball in both innings for Sri Lanka against Australia in Galle in March 2004. He wasn’t very successful (2 for 52 and 0 for 100), and it turned out to be the last of his 31 Test matches as a player.Which current umpire has stood in the most internationals? asked Rajan Gokhale from India
The only current umpire to have stood in more than 100 Tests is Aleem Dar, with 105; overall, he is behind only Steve Bucknor (128 between 1989 and 2009) and Rudi Koertzen (108 between 1992 and 2010). There’s a long gap to the next member of the current elite umpires’ panel, Ian Gould, who has stood in 53 Tests so far, although Billy Bowden, who stood in a Test in 2015, has done 84 in all. Koertzen stood in a record 209 one-day internationals, while Bowden umpired his 200th earlier this year; Aleem Dar is currently on 182, but he does lead the way for T20Is with 41. Overall, Dar has umpired 328 international matches in all three formats, and is set to overtake Koertzen’s grand total of 331 soon. Bucknor (309) and Bowden (308) come next.What’s the fastest hundred by a wicketkeeper in one-day internationals? asked Ajay Avachare from India
The fastest hundred in all one-day internationals was smashed in just 31 balls by AB de Villiers for South Africa against West Indies in Johannesburg in January, 2015 – and, in addition to captaining, AB also kept wickets in that game. The record he broke, as far as wicketkeepers are concerned, was set by another South African in September, 2006: Mark Boucher sprinted to three figures in only 44 balls against Zimbabwe in Potchefstroom. Boucher remains fourth on the overall list, behind only de Villiers, Corey Anderson (36 balls) and Shahid Afridi (37).Post your questions in the comments below

<i>Who's</i> the opener?

After Melbourne Renegades used Sunil Narine as an opener, we look at other surprises at the top of the order in T20s

ESPNcricinfo staff01-Jan-2017Sreesanth: Andhra v Kerala, Inter-state Twenty20 tournament 2007, Score: 19(21)•Associated PressYasir Shah: Chittagong Vikings v Dhaka Dynamites, BPL 2015, Score: 10(9). Next match as opener: 8 (18)•Getty ImagesNeil Wagner: Auckland v Otago, HRV Cup 2011-12, Score: 4(5)•Getty ImagesR Ashwin: Kolkata Knight Riders v Chennai Super Kings, IPL 2013, Score: 11(13)•BCCI

Javed Miandad and Pakistan's quest for <i>izzat</I>

Pakistan’s greatest batsman turns 60 today. This book extract examines his need to be respected but also to always be the victim

Osman Samiuddin12-Jun-2017To begin with, here is an anecdote and an image of Javed Miandad.In his first series away from home, in 1976-77 in Australia, the fashion amongst senior players was to carry smart leather briefcases with them. Inside, usually, were documents indicating their flourishing status; county contracts, travel papers, sponsorship deals. Impressed, young Miandad soon acquired himself a briefcase, strutting around with it everywhere. He had, however, nothing to carry in it.An equally junior teammate, puzzled, asked him: ‘Javed, what are you doing with a briefcase? You don’t have any contract, or sponsorship!”See here, I have a copy of the Quran in it,’ Miandad replied.’And doesn’t it look good?’There are countless Miandad tales, but this one feels particularly revealing: that need, faintly obsessive, to be loved and respected, and to impress and be considered equal. But at the same time, there is a belief, as natural as childbirth, that he is good enough to belong in the very highest company. Asked whether he was at all overawed when first selected for Pakistan – back in 1975 for the World Cup – to walk into a dressing room of such stars, he was bemused. ‘Why would I be overawed?’Then, in early 1993, he leaves a scene on the mind, a scene that is difficult to forget. We are in Hamilton and Pakistan, under Miandad’s leadership, are soon to pull off a memorable triumph, one that beautifully captures the spirit of a side capable of conceiving victory from thin air. New Zealand are just recovering from early jitters in chasing a measly 127 for victory in a one-off Test. They are 61 for 3 and Andrew Jones and Adam Parore have put on 29 difficult and necessary runs. Waqar Younis is building up some pace and finding some late, inward curve with the old ball. Jones manages to dig one such yorker from outside off, the ball squirting off an inside edge to square leg, where Miandad is stationed. No run is on, but Jones takes a couple of steps out as a matter of course; the non-striker Parore, out of reflex or courtesy perhaps, responds with a couple of his own. Miandad picks up the ball and shapes his body to throw at the non-striker’s end, forcing Parore to scamper back, not unlike a common burglar on meeting a flashlight. Without changing direction though, without so much as a glance to locate his bearings, Miandad instead hurls the ball at the striker’s end. Everyone is caught pants down, hands in cookie jars. Wicketkeeper Rashid Latif is not even close to collecting the throw, as post-delivery decorum requires. Even the cameraman square on the boundary on the off side is momentarily caught off-guard, panning instinctively to the non-striker’s, before jerking back to Jones’s end. The throw misses the stumps by centimetres. Jones doesn’t catch on till very late, a man unaware that he is dodging a bullet first, but hurrying his bat down later.An attempted no-look direct-hit run-out; it is an act of genius, dimmed none by the fact that he misses.It is Miandad more than any innings or shot: ever alive to opportunity, always ahead of the game, prodigiously gifted and with an instinct sharpened by a permanent sense of desperation which produces just the right response to any situation.

****

Javed Miandad’s Karachi home is little different to the others that surround it in Defence Housing Authority, the city’s richest postal code if there was a tradition of postal codes.

“‘People talk about using computers to improve play. I used to analyze, I didn’t leave any shot, I used to improvise. If any cricketer wants to become better, your computer should be your brain”

Architecturally, the bungalows may differ, but in feel – the high gates, the space, that heavy sense of potentially ill-gotten wealth hidden within, the slow, enduring luxury of it – they’re actually all the same. Miandad’s driveway is ludicrously stuffed with cars.He hasn’t aged. There are no wrinkles, and he appears slimmer now than he ever was. His eyes are genuinely beautiful, a light, translucent brown, at odds with the rest of his visage. In them is mischief but mostly – and surprisingly perhaps – a kind of blunted innocence. More than anything, they betray his central, enduring youth.Today**, he wears a cream shalwar-kameez and, with a brick in his hand pretending to be a mobile phone, and his arms hanging a little away from his sides like there might be a pair of invisible fire extinguishers lodged in his armpits, looks like a bit of a , a feudal lord.At the centre of Miandad is the quest for izzat, an amalgamation of honour, respect and repute. It is a central plank on which the subcontinent and Islamic world operate, more so than many parts of the world. In Pakistan, izzat crops up everywhere, like those casual bystanders who emerge at a road accident or street-side scrap, in almost any debate, in any public conversation.The entire afternoon with Miandad is heavy with this theme; he uses the word itself over twenty times, mostly when you least expect it. For example, Pakistan’s win in Bangalore in 1987, a fabled Test which sealed Pakistan’s first series win in India. Miandad scored no great runs through the series, but one contribution was vital. He is widely considered the tactical spur of Imran Khan’s sides, the man who gave detail to Imran’s broad principles. From him would come a tweak in the field here, a bowling change there, a selection gambit. In Bangalore, as deputy to Imran, he convinced him to pick left-arm spinner Iqbal Qasim ahead of the leggie Abdul Qadir. The latter had been easily repelled over four Tests but he was Imran’s blue-eyed boy. Eventually Imran relented; those who know Miandad know well that the trick is not to get him to talk, but to get him to stop talking. Qasim played, took nine wickets and won the game. Having told the story, Miandad takes a sudden detour. ‘I never paid any attention to all this because I used to believe you do stuff on the ground and that is it. Once you stop doing it nobody will ask about you. This is my imaan (faith), that when Allah gives you izzat, it means you have done good things. And if any guy has respect, then it is your farz (duty) to give him respect also, because that is like giving Allah izzat. Who has given me izzat? Allah. So if you doubt me, you doubt Allah.’For a certain kind of believer, the circular logic is difficult to break. It is the way with Miandad, especially when he uses his favourite bit of logic in any cricket argument: who else, he often asks, could know more than him about cricket here, for who else has played as many Tests as he has for Pakistan? It is precisely the kind of logic that sounds better coming from someone else, even if it may be true, and it is precisely this kind of logic, unfortunately for him, that has led to his various fallouts, as player, captain, coach and administrator, with other players, captains, coaches and administrators.Still, he wants to make sure that izzat is understood, and excited with his own reasoning, he continues, insisting the following is quoted. ‘When you make someone a Lord or Sir in Western countries, everyone respects them. Here, every Muslim name has been given respect. If you say Lord or Sir, why do you say it, why do you respect? Whoever has been put on that level has been done so here by Allah, even if he is poor. Allah has given him respect and so it is our duty to respect. How can we be successful if we cannot give respect to others?”This,’ he concludes, ‘is my belief.’Miandad celebrates winning the Austral-Asia Cup in Sharjah in 1990 with Imran Khan and other team-mates•Getty ImagesCaptaincy talk starts, which in Pakistan is heavily about izzat in any case. He had a troubled grasp of it, even if nobody has led Pakistan to more Test victories* with fourteen, he is equal to Imran in lesser Tests and usually without Imran in his side, who played in only thirteen of the thirty-four Tests Miandad captained). Only Imran, in fact, has led in more Tests. For a long time he was the youngest captain Pakistan had, appointed when only twenty-two, in 1980.He was soon gone in 1982, a clutch of senior players unhappy with him. Four more stints came over the next decade, whenever Imran was absent and he stepped aside each time Imran came back. ‘This is bigness, humanitarianism, that I have played under you and I don’t want you to play under me,’ he says.Finally, on Imran’s retirement in 1992 he became the rightful full-time appointee. And despite winning series in England and New Zealand, less than a year later, he was out again, this time for good. The first rebellion didn’t bother him; he was, he says, keener to just play at the time. This second time remains without closure. Senior players at the time agitated against him, putting their guns on the shoulder of the board head, a chief justice of the Supreme Court, Nasim Hasan Shah.Still, he is one of the templates when it comes to the kind of men who have had success in handling Pakistan. Miandad – and his spiritual predecessor Mushtaq Mohammad – were polar opposites of Kardar and Imran, the other kinds who have had success.Though he was cheerful and smiled a lot, Mushtaq changed Pakistan, making them more ballsy and bastardly, giving them more or less their modern popular avatar. Not only did they win more Tests, or play more attractive cricket, they stood up and confidently strutted across the fields of cricket, undimmed by their country’s past or their skin colour.Miandad took the spirit of Mushtaq’s basic philosophy and expanded upon it. Tactically, he was sharp, but his sides didn’t just refuse to turn the other cheek; they slapped you first and pretended to be the victim. And this is the key for Miandad, motivated, as Gideon Haigh so astutely noted, through the power of grievance. The sense of victimhood – a strong strain right through the narrative of Pakistan – is particularly virulent in Miandad. Despite his status, his achievements, despite all that has come to him, Miandad remains, in his head, a victim of injustice, regional bias, jealousy, pettiness, perhaps any and all of the above.As captain, he harnessed this adroitly, probably never better than when leading his side against England, the old, white colonial master against whom it was just too easy to play the aggrieved. Most notably he did it in 1992, when all of England seemed geared against him and his men. The press hounded them, calling his side cheats; English umpires were perennially suspicious and easily riled; most of the opposing sides hated them. And yet, without Imran, Miandad pulled off what remains one of Pakistan’s most notable Test triumphs.He had the common touch that Kardar and Imran lacked. He was one of the boys. He was, and still is, bhai, not ‘skipper’ as the other two were. Mushtaq stood up to the board, for himself but by fortunate extension for the players, in the seminal pay dispute of the mid-1970s. He was, his players remember, an energetic communicator in stark contrast to his predecessors Intikhab Alam and Majid Khan.

To Miandad, getting runs was the only point. Whether it came on tough pitches or flat ones, against weak attacks or strong, at 35 for 2 or 270 for 2, didn’t really matter so much. In every shot he played, the drive to score was evident

But if Mushtaq and Miandad were easier to relate to, they were also – particularly in Miandad’s case – easy to rub up the wrong way. Miandad was not as well-grooved with difficult personalities as Mushtaq; so the moody Abdul Qadir, under Miandad, was always a problem. Statistically at least, he got more out of Qadir than did the leg-spinner’s patron extraordinaire Imran. But Miandad never understood and didn’t have time for Qadir’s temperament. And it cannot be doubted that Miandad’s teams were forever wrapped in an unhidden coat of tension. There was a sense that but for a win here or there, it would all uncoil itself into wild disparate threads of a mass revolt, or some on-field scrap, of which there were more than a few. It was perhaps a reflection of some of the frictions within him; the extraordinary ability, the petty-minded envy of Imran and his Oxbridge upbringing, a considerable ego, an overwhelming competitive fierceness, an overworked brain, the sense of victimization and martyrdom.But wins were the key. Mushtaq was Pakistan’s first winning captain and Miandad delivered as many as Imran, the most by any Pakistan captain.

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Miandad is a true cricket tragic. The game is what his life has revolved around since he was a child. It is why he cannot ever walk away; after retiring in 1996, he has coached the national side three times. Until very recently he was an administrator with the board, though not, sadly, a particularly relevant one.Like many Karachi-ites, Miandad is also a muhajir, those Muslims who moved from India to Pakistan after Partition.Miandad’s family is from Gujarat in India, where his father Miandad Noor Mohammad worked in the police department, posted near Ahmedabad and Baroda. Miandad senior also had a love for sport and cricket in particular, overseeing sports clubs in Palanpur for the nawab. When the family moved to Karachi, he got a job at the city’s Cotton Exchange but more importantly, began working for the city’s cricket association. Both parents naturally were keen for their seven children to study, but sport, Miandad senior explained to his wife, was also a good way of keeping them out of the troubles a big city keeps within it.Miandad junior plunged in, trailing father around his cricket duties, growing up around Karachi’s Test stars. Naturally, when Tests were staged at the National Stadium – Karachi Cricket Association organized them in those days of provincial autonomy in cricket – Miandad junior would volunteer and help out. He played school cricket during the week and on weekends would go to Muslim Gymkhana, where his father was also involved, and offer to field all day in a game of old fogies just to be on the field. He’d get Rs 50 for it. He inhaled with all his might the city’s cricket culture, as you might the world on a bright, clear day. He never exhaled.The Miandad currency was to become runs, simply runs and nothing else. Aesthetics never came into it. He possessed a fine late cut, almost always well placed. He was a master against most kinds of spin and of both the conventional and reverse sweep. He regularly went inside out, through extra cover, a risky, difficult and well-rewarded stroke. He had a particularly annoying leg glance as well, annoying because the bowler didn’t need to err too straight to be deflected very fine.Dennis Lillee was slammed for his on-field fracas with Miandad, but many felt that Miandad had goaded and provoked him into the altercation•Sydney Morning HeraldBut nothing made him as much as the singles he nudged or doubles he created, to square leg, to the covers, to third man, to mid-on. To Miandad, getting runs was the only point. Whether it came on tough pitches or flat ones, against weak attacks or strong, at 35 for 2 or 270 for 2, didn’t really matter so much; runs scored were runs scored and points proven. In every shot he played, the drive to score was evident.He was gifted, of course, and Abdul Hafeez Kardar probably undersold him when he called the child prodigy the ‘find of the decade’ in 1975. But without the drive, Miandad would not be the greatest batsman Pakistan has produced, arguably its smartest and one of its most influential cricketers.The drive was most evident when questions were asked of him. In the middle of a rare lean patch between 1985 and 1987, when he had gone sixteen Tests without a hundred and his record away from home was under scrutiny, he arrived at the Oval and made 260. It was his first hundred in England and the most appropriate response, for to do it in England earned you the maximum respect. It gave, he wrote later in his autobiography, his ‘international standing’ a great boost. That Gary Sobers touched upon the innings in his autobiography only made it sweeter for Miandad. It was respect from one of the game’s true legends.It remained a recurrent theme throughout his career. When he was first removed from captaincy in 1982, his response was to average 60 for the next three years and twenty-five Tests, until he was made captain again in early 1985. By 1988, Imran suspected, with some justification, Miandad couldn’t stand the heat of the West Indies: he averaged just 27 in eight Tests against them until then, with no hundreds. Allegedly, he told him so in private. Miandad replied with not one, but two consecutive hundreds in one of the era’s great Test series, in the West Indies, just to prove that he could.Imran was a regular, unwitting motivator. When he declared with Miandad on 280 in Hyderabad against India, depriving him of a legitimate shot at Sobers’s 365, Miandad took it as an insult, to be subsequently redressed. He made four of his six double centuries after that one, mostly big ones, each time using the injustice of that declaration to pursue the record with greater zeal. Miandad suggests that Imran was behind his initial axing from the 1992 World Cup squad, for a combination of injury, poor form and a refusal to move down or above from number four in the batting order. Newspapers were sniping at him, suggesting he was finished. By now, having known him for sixteen years, they should’ve known better. He was called up once Pakistan struggled in their warm-up games in Australia. Eventually, he was to return with trophy in hand and comfortably the side’s top-scorer – the tournament’s second-highest – with five fifties. The last two came in the semi-final and final and the unbeaten 57 in the former was a work of grand, unfolding calculus. It remains overshadowed by Inzamam-ul-Haq’s 60, a wonderful, slow-motion explosion announcing his talent. But Miandad was the glue through that chase, making sure he hung around unnoticed for over two hours, dealing in his currency of picking runs, holding together Pakistan as they crawled, panicked, soared and trembled, right until they got home.

Tactically, he was sharp, but his sides didn’t just refuse to turn the other cheek; they slapped you first and pretended to be the victim

It was among his finest innings, where no single shot mattered as much as the wholeness of what his brain was doing throughout, working out precisely what he needed to do, what other batsmen needed to do, and executing it. ‘I was like a computer, maashallah,’ he says. ‘People talk about using computers to improve play. I used to analyze, I didn’t leave any shot, I used to improvise. If any cricketer wants to become better, your computer should be your brain.’Who can blame him for the immodesty, especially when you can recall the 107 he made late in his career in 1993, in South Africa. One shot against Allan Donald captures the whirring of the machine in his head. Donald is running in, fearsome, in-form Donald, cold cream over the ridge of his nose and cheeks, perhaps the fastest bowler in the world that day and Miandad sneaks a peek towards a gap at point, actively turning his head round to spot it. Donald is two-thirds of the way through. The ball is full, on off and quick; Miandad melts away to leg, both knees bent, and squeezes the ball through precisely where he had been looking, for four.

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Miandad carries a sense of injustice beautifully. He lets it melt into his eternal quest for izzat, persecution driving the pursuit. There is truth in his being treated unfairly, as player, captain and coach, but how well he has played it up. It is so deeply ingrained that he saw no problem in once admitting that he was getting paid Rs 8,00,000 a month as a PCB director general for doing no work and was still, somehow, to be considered a victim. It hurt his izzat.Probably his greatest trick has been to transport upon an entire cricket culture this very trait, to harness victimhood to prosper. It is the way Pakistan plays now so that you almost know that when they are pushed furthest into a corner, they come out with the greatest force. It pushed Miandad as get; maybe one day a psychiatrist will surprise the hell out of us all and conclude that Miandad never fully believed in his own greatness. Within Pakistan, he says he doesn’t get enough, because of a background that wasn’t as comfortable or privileged as those who preceded him and surround him (he has married into one of the oldest and most successful business families in Pakistan). Outside, the very fact of his rise despite this may earn him greater respect.He wants desperately to be – and possibly believes he is – humble about it all, modest even, for humility and modesty are essential in acquiring izzat. But he can’t help himself for such is the force of his belief in his own capabilities, those very same that drove him as a batsman.But, as with Imran, there is a clear sense of Miandad in Pakistan cricket after him, perhaps even a more embedded one than Imran. Few people leave such an imprint on the culture around them so as to shape it. If like Imran, Pakistan learnt not to fear defeat and play an attacking game designed to win matches, then like Miandad, they talked back, taking an emboldened forward step when a meek backward shuffle would’ve been the norm.Imran, because of the world he came from, still represents the Pakistani cricketer of the 1950s and 1960s, the last of them in a sense. Most cricketers in Pakistan today are some of the many shades of Miandad. It isn’t difficult to imagine him, in another life, as a particularly successful trade union leader. Even if he was fully an urban construct, he was from the non-elite. He made it on his own, connection-less and through the local system. He complains now that modern cricketers are too pampered and entitled, not like he was: ‘The cricketer who is thirsty, he should go find the well and then he will become a player. When you get so many facilities, you take undue advantage and don’t improve.’ But it is a misplaced gripe, because more than ever, cricketers who make it big these days do so almost entirely on their own.And once they are there, they don’t feel as out of place.Miandad believed you didn’t have to be like – foreigners, the privileged – to be their equal and you could be yourself and be better; cricketers today arrive believing the same, and do not feel that they don’t belong. It is a fundamental and vital shift.*This is an edited excerpt from , published by HarperCollins India in 2014**Miandad was interviewed in 2010

How Tamil Nadu moulded a winning season

Tamil Nadu’s journey, from a conditioning camp in Chennai to the Deodhar Trophy, has always been about togetherness and creating a winning habit

Deivarayan Muthu24-Mar-2017Visakhapatnam, December 24, 2016. Tamil Nadu dismantle Karnataka inside two days to storm into the semi-final of the Ranji Trophy. It is Tamil Nadu’s first outright victory over their arch-rivals in the Ranji Trophy since 2003-04. Their coach Hrishikesh Kanitkar insists he will “smile” only when Tamil Nadu secure a title.Rajkot, January 5, 2017. Mumbai dash Tamil Nadu’s hopes in the semi-final and knock them out.Chennai, February 3, 2017. Tamil Nadu beat Kerala but fall short of topping the South Zone table – on net run rate – in the subsequent Inter-State T20 competition.Delhi, March 20, 2017. Tamil Nadu, perhaps, feel a sense of déjà vu after being dismissed for 217 in the final of the Vijay Hazare Trophy against Bengal. Their bowlers, though, will the team to the title, finally putting a smile on Kanitkar’s face.

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Moments after Tamil Nadu’s win, Kanitkar celebrated with fitness trainer Ramji Srinivasan. A journey that began with an intense pre-season conditioning camp in Dehradun in September last year culminated in a fitting reward.While Kanitkar said that the success was a “tap on the back” for the efforts of the players and the support staff throughout the season, he challenged Tamil Nadu to emulate Mumbai’s attitude and make winning a habit.”The Vijay Hazare Trophy win is a by-product of what we have done throughout the season,” Kanitkar told ESPNcricinfo. “It is a tap on the back and a validation that we are on the right track. But the long-term goal is we should see Mumbai’s record and keep getting better.”Tamil Nadu’s limited-overs captain Vijay Shankar echoed similar comments. “The Vijay Hazare win is something we can look back and always cherish,” Vijay said. “Winning a trophy is not easy and this is a milestone for every member in the squad and support staff. But we need to set this as a benchmark and keep improving.”That Tamil Nadu emerged triumphant despite the absence of Abhinav Mukund, M Vijay, R Ashwin, who were involved in the national set-up, and first-choice seamers T Natarajan and K Vignesh (who were both injured) pointed to a strong bench strength.Opener GS Raju and left-arm spinner R Sai Kishore – products of the TNPL – broke into the XI and impressed. Over the course of the season, the management ventured into tapping talent from the lower division of the TNCA league as well. TI Cycles allrounder Sanjay Yadav, having shown promise in the TNPL, made his debut for Tamil Nadu in the Inter-State T20s, and went onto bag an IPL deal with Kolkata Knight Riders.”Building a base is a conscious effort on our part and the selectors’ part,” Kanitkar said. “We don’t want to miss out on any talent. If somebody does well and plays well in lower division, he will get picked. The player should have the right attitude. Once that is there, the skill can always be improved. We want to have a pool so that we can pick players when and where we need them.”Another stand-out feature in Tamil Nadu’s rise this season has been their fielding. M Mohammed and Aswin Crist pulled off sharp catches to remove Baroda’s Krunal Pandya and Yusuf Pathan respectively in the Vijay Hazare semi-final. In the final, Vijay flew to his left from midwicket to send back Bengal wicketkeeper Shreevats Goswami. Kanitkar and Ramji put down the stark improvement in fielding to a 10-day fitness camp in Chennai prior to the tournament.”In the semi-final two of the best catches were taken by our opening bowlers. Vijay is a good fielder and I expect him to take such catches. Fielding is something we take a great pride in,” Kanitkar said. “These are the efforts that make people up sit up and take notice. A lot of credit has to go to Ramji who managed the boys in the fitness camp.”They simply went through the grind for those 10 days and embraced it,” Ramji said. “We have a two-year fitness programme in store for Tamil Nadu. My goal is to make these boys the fittest going around. These kids are responding very well. The camp was not just about strength training. You can’t go the gym every day, lift weights, and become a fit cricketer. We focussed on flexibility, hand-eye coordination, reaction timing, diving, sliding, high catches, cutting down angles, and most importantly direct throws. And the effort at training showed in the field.Dinesh Karthik led Tamil Nadu with the bat, including a match-winning hundred in the final of the Vijay Hazare Trophy•PTI “The players also took care of their diet and avoided all the junk food. Our masseur Avinash, the physio Thulasi Ram have done a great job too, keeping the boys fresh and fit.”Did the players get tired of the drills during the camp? “Fitness can be a bit monotonous and boring at times but we made it fun sessions,” Ramji said. “Points were given, points were deducted, and everybody enjoyed it. It is not like they do the same drills. Batsmen have different drills. You can’t have the same for a wicketkeeper. Similarly, the bowlers have specific exercises.”Crist who has sent down 405.4 overs – the most by a seamer in this Indian domestic season – came away with 35 wickets in the Ranji Trophy and a chart-topping 20 scalps in the domestic 50-over tournament.”To do well in four-day cricket and then one-day cricket is very difficult. He [Crist] has bowled a lot of overs for us and has stayed fit throughout the season,” Vijay said. “Bala [L Balaji, the bowling coach] has worked a lot with him. Bala asks him to keep hitting the stumps. ‘A batsman should be out bowled or lbw, you can’t beat him outside off and get him out,’ Bala tells all bowlers. I am really pleased Aswin is now going to Bangladesh for the ACC emerging players tournament in Bangladesh.”While Crist led the bowling, Dinesh Karthik – the only player in the squad to have played fifty or more List A games – led the way with the bat, amassing 607 runs, a tournament record.”To see him [Karthik] bat with consistency and bat through the innings is something we all should learn,” Vijay said. “When he is there, the opponents are always under pressure because he can change the game quickly. In the Baroda game, the runs were not coming, then me and him built a partnership and got the team through. Even when things are not going our way, Dinesh says: ‘Come on boys, we can do it’. He has pushed the boys to do more than what we have been doing.”The Vijay Hazare Trophy also handed Vijay an opportunity to test himself as a finisher. Vijay saw the side home in the semi-final with a measured half-century, having made cameos against Gujarat and Kerala in the group stage.”I found out something that works for me in this tournament. I finished some innings with two or three not outs,” Vijay said.” The Hyderabad T20 game [Tamil Nadu were bowled out for 93] was a big learning curve for us. We all threw our wickets away that game and in the end we lost out on net run rate in the Inter-State T20s. Then in the Vijay Hazare final it was not easy to defend 217, credit to the bowlers and fielders. It was a total team effort.”Vijay said that off-field activities during the long season brought the team closer and added spark to performances on the field. The players sat together, watching the English Premier League or movies. More recently, ahead of the Vijay Hazare Trophy final, they tried out the fire at Connaught Place.”This season involved a lot of travelling and we really bonded together and got to know each other better,” Vijay said. “There was nobody who was alone. It is always fun with these boys and we are one happy family.”Over the course of the season, several members earned higher honours. Mukund made the India Test XI, Vijay represented India A and struck a hundred against the visiting Bangladesh side, B Indrajith was called-up to the India A squad against the Australians, while his twin brother B Aparajith, and Crist were picked in the India squad for the upcoming ACC Emerging Cup in Bangladesh. Vignesh got a call-up to the Rest of India squad for the Irani Cup while Natarajan became the highest-paid uncapped Indian player at the IPL auction.”I spoke to the boys in Dehradun: for individuals to get opportunities, it is important for the team to do well,” Kanitkar said. “Mumbai play a lot of knockout games in the domestic season and that’s why many get picked for India after performing under pressure. So I told my players ‘if you all want to play higher cricket it is imperative to perform for the team’. One can’t hit 800 runs in a season and get picked for Tests if the team does not qualify for the knockouts. If you score big and make the knockouts, your name gets highlighted. If the team does well, you can reap the benefits. This is just the beginning. This team has a long way to go.”Tamil Nadu will now return to Visakhapatnam for the Deodhar Trophy, featuring India Blue, led by Harbhajan Singh, and India Red, led by Parthiv Patel. Will they cap the season with another trophy?

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