Mookie Betts Perfectly Understands Opposing Teams' Shohei Ohtani Strategy

After watching him clobber two home runs in Game 1 and deliver an RBI single earlier in Game 2, the Cincinnati Reds were done pitching to Shohei Ohtani. So, when the reigning National League MVP stepped to the plate in the bottom of the seventh inning with a runner on second base and one out on Wednesday night, the Reds opted to intentionally walk him.

Can you blame them?

But the decision didn't pay off, as the next batter, Mookie Betts, hit an RBI double to extend the Dodgers' lead to 8-2. And even though Betts helped orchestrate the decision's backfire, he told reporters after the game that he doesn't blame teams for not wanting to pitch to Ohtani.

"Nothing," Betts said when asked what goes through his mind when he's intentionally walked. "I wouldn't let Shohei swing either. I mean, I understand. I expect the Phillies to do it. I expect [it to happen] for the rest of the postseason. I undertstand. I understand Shohei. I understand the situation of the game. And so I just gotta be ready to do my thing."

And ready he was, as Betts' RBI double proved to be valuable insurance when the Reds would bring the tying run to the plate with the bases loaded in the top of the eighth inning, a jam the Dodgers bullpen navigated out of.

And as for intentionally walking Ohtani to pitch to Betts, it may be a short-lived strategy with the latter heating up at the dish. Betts collected six hits and three RBI in the Dodgers' sweep of the Reds.

Game 1 of the National League Division Series against the Phillies begins on Saturday.

مدرب فلسطين: نلعب كأس العرب من أجل القضية.. ويرد بغضب على صحفي تونسي

تحدث إيهاب أبو جزر، المدير الفني لمنتخب فلسطين، خلال المؤتمر الصحفي قبل مواجهة السعودية، مشيرًا إلى التحديات التي تواجه فريقه في الدور ربع النهائي من بطولة كأس العرب 2025.

ويواجه منتخب فلسطين نظيره السعودي في الساعة السابعة والنصف مساء غدٍ الخميس على ملعب “لوسيل”، ضمن منافسات الدور ربع النهائي من البطولة.

وقال أبو جزر في تصريحاته: “المنتخب السعودي كبير، يضم عناصر مميزة، والتدوير بين اللاعبين حق أصيل للجهاز الفني، وهو يعتمد رؤيته في اختيار التشكيلة بالطريقة التي يراها مناسبة”.

وأضاف: “بالنسبة لنا، اللاعبون الـ23 الموجودون في المنتخب السعودي متميزون، ولم يصلوا إلى هذه المرحلة عبثًا، نحن نتعامل مع المباراة كمباراة تأهل، ونركز جيدًا، وبالمناسبة، هذا الاحتفال كان يتم بعد كل مباراة، أما في اليوم التالي فنركز في التدريب والمباراة المقبلة”.

وشدد: “كل لاعب يعرف دوره، ويعي سبب وجوده في قطر والمشاركة في كأس العرب، هذه البطولة بالنسبة لنا نافذة نعبر من خلالها عن هويتنا وقضيتنا وآلامنا وجراحنا وكل ما يحدث في فلسطين، لذلك، كل مباراة هي فرصة لتمثيل فلسطين وإبقاء اسمها حاضرًا، وهذا هو هدفنا الأساسي”.

طالع أيضًا | “قهرنا المستحيل”.. أول تعليق من حامد حمدان بعد تأهل فلسطين لربع نهائي كأس العرب

وتابع: “كل المباريات مهمة بالنسبة لنا، لقد خضنا مباريات قوية جدًا، البداية كانت ضد المنتخب القطري صاحب الأرض والجمهور والتاريخ الكبير، وبطل آسيا، ثم المنتخب التونسي، الذي تأهل لكأس العالم، وهو من أقوى المنتخبات الأفريقية والعالمية، وبالفعل، السيناريوهات مثل التقدم على قطر 1-0 في آخر 30 ثانية كانت لحظات فرح كبيرة للاعبين والجهاز الفني”.

وأكد: “ومباراة المنتخب التونسي كانت مليئة بالتحديات، حيث كنا متأخرين ثم عدنا وأحرزنا الفوز، لذلك هدف التعادل كان له فرحة مختلفة، من لعب وعمل في أوقات حاسمة يعرف قيمة هذه الفرحة”.

وأضاف: “لقد لعبنا بشرف وانتماء ووفاء، ونحن نعلم أننا نمثل شعبًا يستحق الفرحة، كل مباراة خضناها كانت لها قصة وهدف محدد، والحمد لله، غدًا سنلعب مباراة أخرى سيكون لها أثر إيجابي كبير على الرياضة الفلسطينية”.

وعند سؤال أحد الصحفيين التونسيين وتلميحه بأن منتخب فلسطين تخاذل أمام سوريا، رد أبو جزر بشكل حاسم: “بصراحة، الإصرار على نفس السؤال وكأن الهدف إثارة الجدل في الشارع، نحن قدمنا الإجابة التي نؤمن بها، ولسنا مضطرين للرد على كل أسئلة الجماهير”.

Mariners Fans Were Irate After Rockies Intentionally Walk Cal Raleigh

Cal Raleigh is on the brink of greatness, but the Rockies aren't interested in helping him achieve it.

Raleigh hit his 60th home run of the season on Wednesday night, and now just needs two more to tie Aaron Judge for the American League record. He came up to the plate in a big spot during the Mariners' clash against Colorado on Thursday, but the Rockies chose to give him first base without even pitching to him, rather than risk letting him go yard.

Fans at Seattle's T-Mobile Park were fuming with the cowardly decision from the Rockies, and they let the team hear it as Raleigh took first base. Boos were cascading across the stadium from disgruntled fans who felt robbed of their chance to witness a piece of history.

Raleigh didn't look too thrilled either, remaining straight faced as he walked to first base.

Colorado was already trailing 5–0 at the time, and they weren't willing to let Raleigh make it an 8–0 game with one thunderous swing of the bat.

If the superstar catcher isn't able to leave the yard on Thursday, he'll only have three more chances to catch Judge's home run record. Seattle is hosting the Dodgers for a season-concluding three-game series starting on Friday.

Giants Rookie Outfielder Has a Really Intense Celebration You Shouldn’t Try at Home

Meet Drew Gilbert. The Giants rookie outfielder has hit .242 with four home runs and an .757 OPS since he was called up a month ago. He also likes to get choked in the dugout, which he has apparently talked teammate Matt Chapman into doing multiple times since he joined the team.

During San Francisco's win over the Diamondbacks on Monday the broadcast ran a montage of Gilbert's antics from the game. They included getting choked by Chapman, slapping things and shaking uncontrollably.

Earlier this month teammate Willy Adames said that Gilbert comes in each day like he "has new batteries," is hilarious and brought energy to the club that the Giants needed. Gilbert was traded to the Giants organization in late July as part of the trade that sent Tyler Rogers to the Mets and he quickly made his MLB debut and an impression.

The official MLB X account also posted a montage of Gilbert doing things like getting choked last week.

The Giants have won 12 of their last 15 games and are now just three games out of the final Wild Card spot. Ironically, they'll need the Mets to choke to sneak into the postseason.

'I am black, that's my skin. But I play cricket because I love it' – Bavuma on transformation talk

Temba Bavuma admits recent discussions about his place in the side have weighed heavily on him

Firdose Moonda at Newlands04-Feb-2020Temba Bavuma has acknowledged that constantly being viewed through the prism of his skin colour has weighed on him and asked for South Africa’s transformation process to be credited for its positives if it is going to be criticised for failures. Speaking for the first time since his recall to the national team last month, Bavuma said playing in the ODI team made him feel “like a kid with no burden out there” after he dominated the country’s cricket conversation even though he was absent for most of the Test series.”It has been hard,” he said. “It’s not so much the dropping part, all players get dropped, everyone goes through slumps of not scoring well. The awkwardness and uncomfortability from my side is when you are thrown into talks of transformation.”Yes, I am black, that’s my skin. But I play cricket because I love it. I’d like to think the reason I am in the team is because of performances I have put forward in my franchise side, and also for the national team, whenever I have been able to. The discomfort was there, having to navigate myself around all those types of talks. Players get dropped, I am not the last guy to get dropped. That’s something we’ve come to accept.”ALSO READ: De Kock lays down marker after Shamsi lifts SABavuma, who has been a regular in South Africa’s Test team for the last four years, was injured for the opening match against England on Boxing Day. He recovered in time for the New Year’s Test but was left out of the side on form, having only scored one century in his career, in 2016. At the time, Bavuma was told to work his way back through “weight of runs”, under the guidance of new batting consultant Jacques Kallis.”Jacques has been hands-on with most of the batters,” Bavuma said. “He has been very open to sharing his knowledge and his expertise in batting. It’s been a breath of fresh air working with him. Technically, there’s no-one who knows better than him. It’s been wonderful working with him.”At the same time, Bavuma also took the opportunity to reassess his own game. “The time away from the team has given me time to reflect and realign with my goals and to find the strength and courage to keep chugging along and keep enjoying the game,” he said.Within two weeks, he answered the call for runs with a career-best 180 in a first-class fixture for the Lions. That allowed him to force his way into XI for the Test series finale. He was also named in the one-day squad and is expected to be part of the T20 outfit. He remains the only black African batsmen in South Africa’s set-up, which is why his Test snub sparked controversy.On social media, Bavuma found himself caught in a race storm, with some arguing that he was only part of South Africa’s plans because of the existence of the transformation target (the national team is required to field six players of colour, including at least two black Africans, on average over the course of a season) and others believing he was being discriminated against because of his race. He rejected both arguments and called for a fair judgement of the ideology of transformation.Temba Bavuma fell lbw for 98•Gallo Images/Getty Images”The one thing that irks me is when you are seen through the eyes of transformation,” he said. “When you do well, transformation is not spoken about but when you do badly, transformation is thrown at the top of the agenda. I have a serious problem with that. We’ve got to be able to take the good with the bad. If transformation is bad when black African players are not doing well, then when we are doing well, let’s also recognise transformation for what it’s done.”In the Newlands ODI, for example, South Africa could field a team with seven players of colour, of which four (Bavuma, Andile Phehlukwayo, Lutho Sipamla and Lungi Ngidi) were black African, and that did not come at the expense of quality. The margin of victory, a healthy seven-wicket win, proves that a representative side and a winning side are not mutually exclusive. Bavuma called the win “massive for the team” and instrumental for himself.”It was just good to be on the field,” he said. “It’s a different format and a different kind of pressure. I felt like I was a kid with no burden out there.”But South Africa had a huge task – to pull off the highest successful chase at Newlands – and Bavuma’s 98 in a 173-run second-wicket stand with Quinton de Kock, who scored 107, took them there. But he knows one performance is not enough to keep him in the picture and is willing to work hard to stay there. “I don’t think I have nailed my spot in the side. This was just my third game and I am just happy to be on the field,” Bavuma said. “I don’t know what’s going to happen after this series or next week. It’s just to enjoy the little moments I have.”

Which players would make it to a current World Test XI?

Who do you pick from among the stellar middle-order players going around? Our in-house selection panel tackles that and other thorny questions

Sreshth Shah03-May-202027:19

Which players would make it to a current World Test XI?

In the first instalment of , a new series where we ask our writers to pick all-star teams based on certain criteria, we selected the best XI from among all the Asian World Cup-winning sides. In episode two, George Dobell, Osman Samiuddin and Andrew Fernando take up the unenviable task of selecting the best Test XI (along with a 12th man) from among the world’s current cricketers. Quite a few players were unanimous choices, but there was plenty of debate too. Watch how our selectors arrived at their picks in the video above.4:38

Don’t we have any top-drawer Test openers?

The opener dilemma
Let’s face it. Very few compelling choices exist among openers successful in all conditions. Does Tamim Iqbal’s form in England earn him a place? Has Tom Latham proved his worth in Asia? Does Mayank Agarwal’s Test average of 57.29 make him an obvious choice? Who did our selectors eventually pick?Come down to the middle order and it’s the opposite. Smith, Kohli, Williamson, Labuschagne, Pujara, Azam and Co. You can pick only three. Who’d be a selector?3:28

A toss-up between two offspinners

Who will keep? Who will spin?
Two front-line contenders in the race for the wicketkeeper’s spot. Guess who they are, and who our panel picked. (They didn’t spend too long debating this one.)Two offies, a leggie, and a left-arm orthodox tweaker were the contenders for the spinner’s spot. One was swiftly discarded based on current form, but the other three offer such varied benefits that they needed to be weighed against each other. Ravindra Jadeja is the ideal allrounder, Nathan Lyon has been excellent on surfaces in Australia – where spin bowling has never been simple – but R Ashwin’s success in Asia cannot be ignored either. Can the experts fit more than one into this XI?6:44

Spoilt for choice with fast bowlers

Does Pat Cummins score over Jasprit Bumrah?
Is it fair to judge Bumrah – who plays most of his Tests in seam-friendly conditions while being rested in Asia, where fast bowling is toughest – on the same yardstick as other seamers? How strong a case do Kagiso Rabada and Trent Boult make? What about one of the other Indian seamers? Questions, questions. Dream Teams,

Craig Overton: 'I want to play for England as much as possible – not just the odd Test'

Somerset seamer attempting to add a yard of pace to further his Test case

Matt Roller15-Aug-2020At the end of last summer, Craig Overton spoke to Ed Smith, England’s national selector, and asked what he was doing wrong.Ever since he ran the drinks in an ODI series against New Zealand as a 21-year-old, Overton had been in and around England squads, Lions trips and pace-bowling programmes without ever quite nailing his place down. He finally made an international debut at Adelaide in 2017-18, claiming Steven Smith as his maiden Test wicket, but appearances remained fleeting.ALSO READ: Overton reminds England selectors of his talent for SomersetSo after being calling into the side for the fourth Ashes Test in Manchester last summer, before he was left out without a second thought in the fifth, Overton took matters into his own hands.”I’ve been involved a little bit, but it felt like I would play one match and then miss quite a few,” Overton says. “So I spoke to Ed after the Ashes, just to try and figure out ways of improving so that I can not only get in the side, but also stay there.”I want to be playing cricket for England as much as possible, not just the odd Test match, so it was a case of me trying to figure out what he believes I need to do to improve. He said they wanted me to bowl a little bit quicker without losing the accuracy that I have – that was the main thing.”I don’t think I’ll ever be a 90mph enforcer. If I bowl 81-82mph at the minute, it’s about trying to get to around 85-86mph and still have that level of control. If I can be in the mid-80s with the shape and control that I have, I’ll be in the game most of the time.”

That meant a winter of hard graft. After an ECB camp in Potchefstroom, Overton spent time at Somerset working with Jason Kerr and Stuart Barnes – head coach and bowling coach respectively – before linking up with Kerr again on the Lions tour to Australia. They have made two minor adjustments: trying to increase his speed in his run-up, and loading up slightly later.”I’ve not generally been rapid through the crease,” Overton says, “but I’m trying to up it a little bit and find the right balance. If you’re too quick, you can’t stay on your feet. I wear a GPS vest to measure my run-up speeds, and I know that if I’m around 22 km/h then I’m generally in a pretty good spot.”And then the way I load up – I just want it to be slightly later, rather than being early and long. It might sound complicated, but in practice they’re just minor tweaks.”The rewards have been evident this summer. After adding to that work in the England red-ball bubble during the West Indies series, Overton returned to Somerset last month and picked up 11 wickets at 11.00 in the first two rounds of the Bob Willis Trophy, with a 30-ball 53 thrown in last week for good measure.

“I’ve performed well enough [at Somerset] to get into the England side, and I didn’t really feel like too much needed to change”Craig Overton

“It feels like it’s been quite a group effort with various different coaches involved, but there’s still loads to work on,” he says. “I know it’s not going to happen overnight for me. But I’m feeling a lot better, and in a position to keep bowling those more intense spells.”Before, I could bowl at sort of 80% [intensity] and feel like I’d done a decent job, but that’s not going to get me picked for England. I’ve got to be bowling those 100% spells all the time, running in and changing the game.”When I found out I could go back to play some county cricket it was quite nice, because I knew it would give me the opportunity to work on what we’d done in practice and put that into games, and see if it has done me any good. To play games has been massive.”There has been an additional concern for Overton this year, with his previous Somerset deal expiring at the end of the season. Despite widespread interest from around the grounds – and his twin brother Jamie deciding to leave the club for a new challenge at Surrey – he decided to stay put, signing a new three-year contract last week.”Obviously there was a lot of interest, which was really nice because it shows that you’re one of the better cricketers in the country,” he says. “But for me, it wasn’t about making a massive change, whereas Jamie potentially needed to have more opportunities than he was getting.”He felt he needed to make that change to show he wants to keep improving and have that chance to get into the England side. But I felt like I was in a good place at Somerset. I’ve performed well enough here to get into the England side, and I didn’t really feel like too much needed to change.”Overton has taken 11 wickets in two Bob Willis Trophy appearances•Getty ImagesOf course, it would be churlish to suggest that Overton’s form will fire him straight into the England side. All four of the seamers playing in the second Test against Pakistan bowl at similar speeds to him, with Jofra Archer and Mark Wood waiting in the wings and Ollie Robinson currently preferred as back-up.But there are reasons for him to be positive. He was awarded one of three ECB pace-bowling contracts earlier in the year, and his six wickets in the Lions’ victory over Australia A at the MCG in February may further his case for selection when the 2021-22 Ashes – the series that everyone involved in English cricket has targeted – comes around.”I felt like I did okay in Australia last time, but it’s generally quite a tough tour to go on,” Overton says. “The Lions tour this winter was a big learning opportunity for all of us, so to go over there and not lose a game was a massive confidence boost. Hopefully we can take that into that tour next winter, win some games and bring the Ashes back.”

What's the most wicketless overs bowled by spinners in a Test innings in Sri Lanka?

And when was the last time a Test featured two players over 38 years of age?

Steven Lynch26-Jan-2021Was England’s 64 overs in the second Test in Galle the most in an innings by spinners in any Test in Sri Lanka without taking a wicket? asked David Morrison from England

Quite surprisingly perhaps, the 64 overs by Jack Leach (38-5-119-0) and Dom Bess (26-2-76-0) in the first innings of the second Test in Galle comes in only third on that particular list. When Sri Lanka ran up 756 for 5 in Colombo in 2006 – the match in which Kumar Sangakkara and Mahela Jayawardene shared a Test-record partnership of 624 – South Africa’s spinners sent down 74 fruitless overs, most of them by slow left-armer Nicky Boje (65-5-221-0). And when Sri Lanka made 326 for 5 to beat Zimbabwe in Colombo in 1997-98, the visiting spinners – Paul Strang, Andy Whittall and Murray Goodwin – delivered 67.5 overs without taking a wicket.In all Tests, there have been three innings which included 93 wicketless overs by spinners, all by England: against Australia at Old Trafford in 1964 (Fred Titmus 44-14-100-0, John Mortimore 49-13-122-0), against West Indies in Kingston in 1973-74 (Pat Pocock 57-14-152-0, Derek Underwood 36-12-98-0; it’s possible that Tony Greig, who took 3 for 102, throttled back and bowled some spin here), and against Pakistan at The Oval in 1987 (John Emburey 61-10-143-0, Phil Edmonds 32-8-97-0).There were two 38-year-olds – Anderson and Perera – in the second Test at Galle. When was the last time a Test featured two players over 38? asked Ishan Ghose from India

You’re right that both Jimmy Anderson and Dilruwan Perera had celebrated their 38th birthdays before the recent second Test in Galle. It was the first Test match since May 2017 to feature two players over 38: playing what for both of them was their final Test, for Pakistan against West Indies in Dominica, Misbah-ul-Haq was 42 and Younis Khan 39 (Misbah was a fortnight short of his 43rd birthday).The record number of players aged 38 or more in a single match appears to be nine, which has happened twice in Ashes Tests: in Sydney in 1920-21 (Warwick Armstrong, Warren Bardsley and Hanson Carter for Australia, Johnny Douglas, Jack Hobbs, Harry Makepeace, Wilfred Rhodes, Bert Strudwick and Rockley Wilson for England), and at The Oval in 1926 (Hobbs, Rhodes, Strudwick and Frank Woolley for England, Bardsley. Herbie Collins, Charlie Macartney, Arthur Mailey and Arthur Richardson for Australia).Lahiru Thirimanne took five catches in England’s first innings at Galle. Was this a record? asked Ranjan de Silva from Sri Lanka

Those five slip catches by Lahiru Thirimanne in England’s first innings of the second Test in Galle equalled the Test record. This was the 13th such instance, but Thirimanne was the first to do it for Sri Lanka, and the first to take them all off the same bowler (Lasith Embuldeniya).The first man to take five in a Test innings was Australia’s Vic Richardson – the grandfather of the Chappell brothers – against South Africa in Durban in 1935-36. That wasn’t equalled until 1976-77, when Yajurvindra Singh marked his debut for India with five catches against England in Bangalore (now Bengaluru); since then it has become relatively common.Shane Watson and Simon Katich’s dismissal in Melbourne in 2009 was the fourth and latest instance of both openers in a Test falling in their nineties•Getty ImagesI noticed that both Pakistan’s openers in the notorious Oval Test of 2006 were dismissed in the nineties. How often has this happened in Tests? asked Jamie Powell from England

In that match at The Oval in 2006 – which Pakistan forfeited after being accused of ball-tampering – Mohammad Hafeez made 95 and Imran Farhat 91 in their first innings of 504. That was the third instance of both openers being dismissed in the nineties in a Test, and there has been one more since.It happened first in Lahore in 1978-79, when Sunil Gavaskar made 97 and Chetan Chauhan 93 against Pakistan. Two more Indians – VVS Laxman (95) and Navjot Singh Sidhu (97) – repeated the feat against Australia in Kolkata in 1997-98. And finally, in the Boxing Day Test against Pakistan in Melbourne in 2009-10, Shane Watson (93) and Simon Katich (98) both fell just short of hundreds for Australia.Who had scored the most runs after 93, 100 and 150 Test matches? asked Muhammad Kamran from Pakistan

The first part of this question is remarkably specific! I wondered if it was to see whether Garry Sobers, who played 93 Tests in all, was top of the list – but actually his 8032 runs places him fifth, admittedly not far behind the others. Top after 93 matches is Kumar Sangakkara, who had 8244 runs at that point of his career. Also ahead of Sobers are Matthew Hayden (8139 runs), Younis Khan (8078) and Virender Sehwag (8054). On recent form, Steve Smith looks likely to smash this record: he currently has 7540 runs from 77 matches.For 100 Tests, Sangakkara (8651 runs) drops behind Brian Lara, who had 8916 runs by the end of his 100th match. Younis had 8640 runs and Hayden 8508, with Rahul Dravid between them on 8553.When we get to 150 Tests, it should be borne in mind that only nine players have won this many caps. The most runs at this point is 12,320 by Ricky Ponting, ahead of Jacques Kallis (12,260), Dravid (12,063), Sachin Tendulkar (11,877), Alastair Cook (11,712), Shivnarine Chanderpaul (10,963), Allan Border (10,876), Steve Waugh (9631)… and Jimmy Anderson (1181).Use our feedback form, or the Ask Steven Facebook page to ask your stats and trivia questions

This Australia-India series might hinge on who makes the better selection decisions

Australia will never have a better chance to trial Will Pucovski, and the absence of Virat Kohli after the first Test makes room for a talented Indian batsman to step up

Ian Chappell22-Nov-2020This summer’s chaotic, pandemic-plagued Australian cricket schedule may just benefit India in their quest to repeat last tour’s series victory.India’s enforced period of lockdown – with training allowed – will provide the team more time to acclimatise in Australian conditions than the rushed pre-Test schedule that touring teams normally experience.The extra training period during lockdown gives the bowlers ample opportunity to work out what length is applicable in Australia, and for the batsmen to become accustomed to the unusually steep bounce. A lot of touring batsmen have trouble in scoring sufficient runs off the back foot in Australia. It is not enough to just survive against short-pitched bowling in Australia, you also have to be able to score off those deliveries. Until a batsman proves he can make runs regularly against that style of attack, he will continue to be peppered with short stuff.ALSO READ: Three young cricketers I’d like to watch in the 2020-21 Australia v India seriesBeing on the receiving end of a concerted short-pitched attack can rattle a player and cause his footwork to become uncertain. On the other hand, if he adequately copes with the onslaught, the bowlers then have to resort to a more full-length mode of attack and this can lead to greater scoring opportunities.This battle of wills was best summed up by former England fast bowler John Snow who enjoyed a very successful tour of Australia in 1970-71. When asked to explain the bouncer, Snow replied, “It’s a short and emphatic examination paper that you put to the batsman.”Mind you, if the Indian selectors have done their job properly, the batsmen currently enduring the Sydney lockdown training will become re-acquainted with the requirements needed on bouncy pitches rather than being confused by the experience.Speaking of confusion, I was flummoxed by the Australian coach’s summation of the choice between incumbent Joe Burns and rising star Will Pucovski for the job of David Warner’s opening partner. Justin Langer said, “When guys have done a really good job for us – like in this case that Joe [Burns] and Davey [Warner] did for us last summer – those sorts of partnerships are really important, so we should never underestimate that.”In response I’d say that equally, you shouldn’t overestimate the value of the partnership. Burns’ contributions last summer equated to an aggregate of 256 runs at an average of 32 with two half-centuries. That is the performance of a below-average Test player.ALSO READ: Justin Langer hints that Joe Burns will retain opening spot ahead of Will PucovskiIf no one else is vying for the position then Burns retains his place. However, Pucovski has been banging on the door for a while now – something Langer craves. Pucovski has taken a sledgehammer to the entryway by making six centuries at Shield level, three of them doubles; two of those double-hundreds came this season. He has well and truly proved he is good enough at that level, so it’s time to see if he can succeed in the Test arena.If the selectors are worried about his mental health, which has been a problem so far in his short career, then now is the right time to see if he has overcome those issues in the pressure cooker of international competition. He’ll never have a better chance to prove himself, with his confidence at an all-time high after back-to-back double-centuries.If Pucovski is chosen and succeeds, he’ll form with Marnus Labuschagne, and perhaps Cameron Green, the backbone of Australia’s batting when Warner and Steve Smith move on. Travis Head would be another candidate if he produces the right form to retain his place.India also face a selection dilemma when skipper Virat Kohli departs for home for the birth of his first child following the opening Test. This creates both a big hole in the Indian batting order and an opportunity for one of their talented young players to make a name for himself.What was already shaping up as an exciting tussle now has the added stimulus of crucial selection decisions. The result could well come down to who is the bravest set of selectors.

Stats – Joe Root racks up the milestones, and England's run-rate in Sri Lanka

Root becomes the only England captain to score more than one double-century in away Tests

S Rajesh16-Jan-20211 – England batsman who has reached 8000 Test runs in fewer innings than Joe Root’s 178: Kevin Pietersen got there in 176. Four other England batsmen reached the mark in fewer than 200 innings. In all, 19 batsmen have made it to 8000 runs in fewer than 178 innings, of which Kumar Sangakkara’s 152 is the lowest.7 – England batsmen with 8000-plus Test runs. Among these players, Root’s average of 49.09 is the best, while Alec Stewart’s 39.54 is the lowest.ESPNcricinfo Ltd5 – Double-centuries by England batsmen in Asia. Root’s 228 is the second-highest among them, after Alastair Cook’s 263 against Pakistan in Abu Dhabi in 2015. Mike Gatting and Graeme Fowler scored their double-hundreds in the same innings, against India in Chennai in 1985.4 – England captains who have scored double-hundreds in an away Test (including neutral venues); the others are Cook, Len Hutton and Ted Dexter. Root is the only England captain to achieve it twice: he also scored 226 against New Zealand in Hamilton in 2019. Among all captains, only Graeme Smith (four) and Stephen Fleming (three) have more than two double-hundreds as captain in away Tests.3.65 – England’s run-rate in their last seven innings in Sri Lanka, since the start of the 2018 series. Their run-rate in the first innings here was 3.59. Before 2018, their scoring rate here was 2.58.7 – Instances of Sri Lanka conceding a first-innings lead of more than 250 in a home Test. They have lost each of the six previous matches. The last time they batted first in a home Test and fell behind more than 250 was way back in 2000, against Pakistan also in Galle. Three of the seven instances were in one series, against India in 2017; each time India batted first and piled up huge totals.

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