Pant reaches career-best seventh position in ICC Test rankings, Ashwin moves up to second | Cricket News – Times of India

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DUBAI: Following his breathtaking century in the fourth Test against England, young Indian wicketkeeper batsman Rishabh Pant on Wednesday achieved a career-best seventh position in the ICC Test rankings.
Pant has jumped seven places after smashing a match-winning 101 in the Ahmedabad Test, which India won by an innings and 25 runs to clinch the series 3-1.
The 23-year-old shares the seventh place in the batsmen rankings with compatriot Rohit Sharma, who moved up one spot, and Henry Nicholls of New Zealand.

Washington Sundar, who also played a crucial role in India’s passage to the final of the ICC World Test Championship, has gained 39 places and is in 62nd position, thanks to his 96 not out, but captain Virat Kohli and Cheteshwar Pujara had below-par series.
Kohli, who remains fifth, is at his lowest points tally since November 2017 while Pujara (13th) is under 700 rating points for the first time since September 2016.
Indian spin duo of Ravichandran Ashwin and Axar Patel, who ripped through the England innings time and again during the series, also made it memorable in the bowlers’ rankings.
Ashwin, the player of the series, has leapfrogged New Zealand’s Neil Wagner to the second position among bowlers, the first time since August 2017, after finishing with eight wickets in the match.

He is also ranked fourth among all-rounders, now ahead of Shakib Al Hasan.
Patel’s nine wickets have lifted him eight places to 30th with 552 rating points. Only two bowlers have achieved more points after their first three Tests – former India leg-spinner Narendra Hirwani (564) and Australia fast bowler Charlie Turner (553) who played in the 19th century.
For England, Dan Lawrence has moved up 47 places to 93rd among batsmen with scores of 46 and 50 and James Anderson has moved up two places to fourth position after his haul of three for 44 in Ahmedabad.

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59 wickets by two Indian spinners was reflection of how difficult it was: Silverwood | Cricket News – Times of India

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AHMEDABAD: England coach Chris Silverwood admitted that Ravichandran Ashwin and Axar Patel with a combined 59 wickets made the lives of England batsmen miserable as this 1-3 defeat will certainly “hurt” them for some time to come.
Having started off with a big win on a flat deck in Chennai, the visitors stumbled on the turners as Ashwin (32 wickets) and Axar (27 wickets) clinically decimated the English batsmen who were more troubled by the straighter deliveries.
“It’s (59 wickets from four matches) probably a true reflection as well. It was difficult. They made life very hard for us, hard to get first innings runs which is something that we obviously try and pride ourselves on and something we’re working hard towards that. But they made life very tough,” Silverwood told the British media during a virtual press meet.

Unlike a lot of former cricketer turned English pundits, who have panned the tracks, Silverwood said that it’s only fair to accept that they were completely outplayed in the last three Test matches.
“They outplayed us in their conditions. I’m going to give a lot of credit to the Indians. They came back hard after that first test. We expected them to but they came back very hard.”
This defeat will make the team stronger as they pause and reflect on their performance during the past one month.
“It’s going to hurt for a while. And obviously, probably reflecting some talking going on between the players and the various coaches, but hopefully we’ll pull the positives out of it and learn from it and that will make them stronger moving forward,” Silverwood said.
Looking ahead to the coveted Ashes in Australia later this year, Silverwood said the experience they would learn would help in the long run.
“When you start heading somewhere, there’s always gonna be a few bumps in the road. The experience they will gain from this will be really valuable down the line,” he said.
Asked how much damage would be realistically ahead of the Ashes, he said: “It will alter our outlook and what we’re trying to achieve now. It’ll just go down as an experience and help galvanise the side really. We’ve got some very fine young players in that side.
“None of us like losing a series like that, but I think we will reap rewards down the line of the experience. It’s a very difficult place to come and win. As we’ve seen time and time again history tells us up, not just for England but for other countries as well.”

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India vs England: Bio-bubbles assisted in team bonding, says R Ashwin | Cricket News – Times of India

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AHMEDABAD: Calling the last 18 months “hard” but “memorable,” off-spinner Ravichandran Ashwin said “staying constantly motivated during this time and keeping the mental spirits up” was the biggest challenge. The effort that culminated in a 3-1 series victory here on Saturday was a result of many factors coming together. Topmost among them all, said Ashwin, “was the team bonding that happened” because of the bio-bubbles that the players had found themselves locked in.
“I have not experienced anything like this in the last decade of cricket. Understanding of people and even the opportunity for someone to understand you as a person.

“Those things have been quite special. Some of those comebacks and some of those difficult situations that we faced (on the tour of Australia and in this series) has not come as a surprise. It got us together,” Ashwin added.

This series against England was a comeback of sorts too, with India having lost the first Test in Chennai and then taking away the next three matches from the visitors. “The way we wrested back the initiative in the second Test in Chennai,” he said, as a case in point, “is a result of what we’ve done over the last six months.” To stay in the moment, to try and play some brave cricket are standouts for the allrounder. “We found ourselves in some sticky situations in all these Tests and every time somebody has managed to stand up. That’s related to how we have managed to bond as a team.”

Ashwin calls the last few months one of the “happiest phases” of his career. “I am just going through it and enjoying it. And these bio-bubbles are also situations that I managed to enjoy. I never thought I would be able to spend so much time with every one of my teammates. For me to know some of these teammates — the way I do now — was not possible before the bio-bubbles (because of the time spent together). It is this joy that showed in our performances,” the cricketer said.

The way he’s going, Ashwin will soon surpass Harbhajan Singh’s Test tally, but the off-spinner says it’s not even crossed his mind.

01:38India crush England inside three days to clinch Test series 3-1, seal WTC final spot

India crush England inside three days to clinch Test series 3-1, seal WTC final spot

“He’s a fantastic bowler and I’ve learnt from him. I wasn’t even an off-spinner when Bhajjipa started playing. I was a batsman who bowled a bit of off-spin. I didn’t even imagine in 2001 that I would go on to become an off-spinner,” he said.

This win, in his view, is a testament to how good this Indian team is. “Only because we’re giving attention to people who’re talking about the pitch and making a mockery of it, that they’re getting encouraged to talk more. I would like to see one day where there is a lot of grass on the pitch somewhere else in the world and our Indian commentators (commentators of the game in general) talking about it, praising it and putting it on Instagram posts and people liking it. That is something I’d like to wait and watch,” Ashwin said.
Now that the Indian team has qualified for the World Test Championship (WTC) final, Ashwin believes this will be an opportunity for those who just play the red-ball format to win the ‘World Cup’ and know the feeling.



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Want to be best version of myself and leave my own legacy: Ashwin | Cricket News – Times of India

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AHMEDABAD: To become the best version of himself while learning something new everyday is Ravichandran Ashwin‘s endeavour as he aims to leave his lasting legacy in the pantheon of Indian cricket greats.
Ashwin has now won eight Man-of-the-Series awards in his 10-year career and is only eight wickets short of equalling Harbhajan Singh’s 417 Test wickets.
It could well happen in England this summer but he doesn’t want to entertain any such thoughts.

“Honestly, that’s not even crossed my mind and if you want me to put my thoughts on it. He is a fantastic bowler. There’s a lot that I have learnt from him. I wasn’t even an off-spinner when Bhajju paa started playing for the Indian team,” Ashwin’s respect for another practitioner of the same craft was there for all to see.

“He (Harbhajan) was also an inspiration because of the 2001 famous series (32 wickets in 3 Tests). I never imagined in 2001 that I will be an off-spinner, and I mean who would have imagined those things.

“I was fortunate to play alongside Bhajju paa when I came into the team and also play under Anil Bhai but I would now like to leave my own legacy,” Ashwin said.
Being a student of the game Ashwin wants to evolve as a cricketer and a person everyday.
“My growth as a cricketer is a direct synonym to the person I am. I want to keep evolving, keep learning and that’s my second nature, directly proportional to the kind of cricketer I am and whatever I do, the best that I can be.”

Ashwin’s apathy for all those pitch critics is well documented and he would love to see how the global media reacts when a green top is given to India when they go for a game outside the sub-continent.
“The series win is a testament to the fact that this is a really good Indian cricket team. That’s all I would like to say. Other day, I was listening to what Sunny bhai (Sunil Gavaskar) was saying, makes sense,” Ashwin said referring to Gavaskar’s statement about not giving too much credence to the British pundits, whose favourite day job had been criticising the Indian tracks.
“Only because we are giving attention to people who are making a mockery of it, we are encouraging them to do it non-stop,” he said.

He then sarcastically said that he would keenly watch how foreign media cover the criticism from Indian commentators about the pitches provided when India is on tour abroad.
“I would like to a pitch covered with grass somewhere else in the world and some of our Indian commentators, taking picture and putting an Instagram post and I will like to see how the global media takes notice and then we will know who’s at faulty end.”
Rohit Sharma during this series played some stellar knocks in his aggregate of 345 runs including the 161 that skipper Virat Kohli rated highly.

Asked if Rohit could be put in the same pedestal as Virender Sehwag, Ashwin felt that it’s a no-brainer.
“Obviously, when you put him on a pedestal with Sehwag and that’s the right place and that’s where he belongs,” Ashwin said.
“He (Rohit) has always been a special batsman. It’s not an evolution. It was a matter of time and nobody is surprised that Rohit Sharma is doing what he is doing. I just hope he goes on to win a World Cup for India,” said Ashwin.



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England batsmen are frankly not good enough in Indian conditions: Andrew Strauss | Cricket News – Times of India

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LONDON: Former captain Andrew Strauss believes England batsmen are just not good enough to tackle the spin-friendly Indian conditions after yet another flop show by the visitors in the first innings of the ongoing fourth Test in Ahmedabad.
England’s batsmen on Thursday produced a shoddy performance to surrender the momentum to India with Axar Patel and Ravichandran Ashwin calling the shots on the opening day of the Test here.

After five innings, England crossed the 200-run mark when the managed a total of 205 in 75.5 overs before being bowled out.
“Let’s not hide away from the truth. England’s batting quite frankly is not good enough in these conditions,” Strauss was quoted as saying by ‘Channel 4’.
“You can talk about the pitch and about the ball and about anything else, but you have to find a way to score first innings runs and they have got very few to play with.”
The 44-year-old Strauss, a former left-handed opener, feels England batsmen are losing the battle in their minds as they have been committing the same mistakes which they did in the previous two Test matches.
“It is scarcely believable,” he said.
“England are making the same mistakes they have made throughout the whole series. The non-turning ball has left them non-pulsed.”
England are trailing the four-match series 1-2.

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India vs England: Hosts ‘completely’ out skilled visitors, admits Vaughan | Cricket News – Times of India

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AHMEDABAD: While Michael Vaughan had criticised the pitch in the pink-ball game, the former England skipper admitted that India outplayed the visitors on the opening day of the fourth and final Test at the Narendra Modi Stadium on Thursday.
Spinners Axar Patel and Ravichandran Ashwin spun a web over visitors as England was bundled out for 205 in the first innings. Vaughan praised the hosts and slammed a very “average” batting by England in the first innings on day one of the final Test.
“India today with the ball showed why they are so good in these conditions … Pitch did very little for 60 overs and they completely out-skilled & out-thought England … !! High class … England with the Bat were very very average,” Vaughan tweeted.

In reply to England’s 205, Rohit Sharma and Cheteshwar Pujara showed great application as India ended the opening day of the fourth and final Test in the driver’s seat despite losing opener Shubman Gill in the third session.
After a disappointing show with the bat, England got off to a flying start with the ball as James Anderson struck with the third ball of the innings. The pace spearhead trapped Gill (0) in front of the stumps as India lost a wicket with no run on the board.
But Rohit and Pujara ensured that was the end of the visitors’ joy on the day as they played out the remaining 11.3 overs without losing any wicket.



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India vs England: Hardest series as batsman but Stokes ‘frustrated’ at throwing it away | Cricket News – Times of India

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AHMEDABAD: Ben Stokes couldn’t hide his “disappointment” at frittering away a good start as he had defended well for almost two and half hours during the “hardest conditions” that he has ever batted in his 70-odd Test matches.
Stokes scored 55 off 121 balls before a skidder from Washington Sundar trapped him leg before on the opening day of the final Test against India.
“I am more disappointed that I actually get myself in and get out. Fifty is not really a (score) that will win you a Test match,” Stokes told after day’s play.

“I was very disappointed to get on that wicket, start feeling comfortable and then get out in the way I did especially because I spent two and a half hours protecting myself from the ball that skids on and getting out to the ball that skids on. So, I was very frustrated with myself,” the all-rounder said.
The “frustration”is knowing which was the danger delivery and still getting out.

“Very frustrated. After spending two and half hours, you know, playing so well, trying to avoid getting out to a straight ball and I ended up getting out to (it), that is frustrating,” said the 29-year-old Christchurch-born left-handed batsman.”
Stokes was also disappointed with the team’s overall batting performance.
“I think we are disappointed with the batting. I think we are more than capable of scoring, so yeah frustrating but it was nice to get a wicket at the end of the day,” added he said referring to Shubman Gill‘s dismissal.

Stokes had no hesitation in admitting that these are the “hardest conditions” to bat on.
“Yeah, I have played 70 odd games now and I have told others in the team that this is the hardest conditions I have ever faced as a batsman and I have played all around the world.
“It is a case of finding it your own way. It is not about coming together as a group and saying this is what we need to do next. It is about how we can go away as individuals and when we come back here next time, have we progressed as an individual and a group of batsmen, because everyone plays in a different way.”

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In Pics: Axar Patel, R Ashwin spin England out for 205 in fourth Test

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Indian spinners Axar Patel and Ravichandran Ashwin took seven wickets between them as England were dismissed for 205 on the first day of the fourth and final Test on Thursday. (BCCI Photo)

Ravichandran Ashwin has made Stokes his bunny having dismissed the left-hander many times, and Stokes said that the India off-spinner was a fantastic bowler but refused to read too much into it.
“You come to India, you are going to face a lot of Ashwin. So he has got more chances of getting me out, but I don’t read into the fact that he has got me out that many times.

“It is what it is, someone is there to get you out and that is probably what I have got on that matter. He (Ashwin) is a fantastic bowler, obviously, but it is his job to get batsmen out,” he said to a query by PTI. There was a lot of debate surrounding the pitch that was used in the third test played here, which ended in two days, but according to Stokes the wicket for the current Test was much better than the previous game.
“Overall, it is a much better wicket than it was the last game played here, so yeah, we are just disappointed,” he noted.
India need to either draw or win the match to find a place in the World Test Championships final in June, while a win for England would revive some of the lost confidence after the thrashing inside two days in the third Test. The hosts are 2-1 up in the four-match series.

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India vs England: ‘Cricket fan’ Leach wants Test matches to last longer than two days | Cricket News – Times of India

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AHMEDABAD: Amid the debates over the nature of the pitch that was prepared for the pink-ball Test, England spinner Jack Leach asserted that he would have liked the third Test against India to go longer than two days.
The third Test match got over within two days after the visitors crumbled in front of the India spin duo of Ravichandran Ashwin and Axar Patel.
Leach said a Test match should last longer than two days but admitted that the hosts outplayed England on Ahmedabad wicket.
“I think that is right. One thing I will say as a cricket fan if I was watching a Test match, I would want it to go longer than two days, that is my only kind of viewing being a cricket fan…. Test match should go on longer than two days, whether that is to the pitch or skill, for me, I am fully concentrating how can I best do on every wicket I play on,” said Leach in a virtual press conference on Monday.
“They outbowled us on that wicket, Ashwin is a world-class bowler, Axar was very good on that wicket. All the talk has been in the media, in the dressing room, we just talk about getting better,” he added.
Though the hosts registered a comprehensive ten-wicket win, the match saw both India and England batsmen failing to shine and getting out to balls that did not turn and skidded through from the spinners.
England’s defeat in the pink-ball Test inside two days might have raised questions on the quality of the pitch at the Narendra Modi Stadium by former cricketers but Leach credited India spinners for outplaying the visiting side.
“I do not have too much to say about the pitch, we got outplayed in those conditions and for me, I am always looking to learn. That’s the great thing about our group, we are all in this mindset and we want to learn from what has been a couple of hard games and put in a good performance so yeah, it was tough, even being a spinner on that wicket comes with tough moments,” said Leach.
“Their spinners bowled really well, I do not think we should take anything away from them by saying bad things about the wicket, they played well and we need to learn from that,” he added.
Leach is now focusing on honing his skills and is not getting distracted by debates surrounding the pitch.
“I do not have any issues with the pitch from a playing point of view, I just want to make an impact in the game as much as possible,” said Leach
“There is a lot of talk on the outside and I am not wanting to get involved in that, that is a distraction to me, all I want to focus is on being the best I can be in any game I play for Somerset or England,” he added.
If India manages to win or draw the final Test against England, then the side would qualify for the finals of the World Test Championship (WTC) and the side would take on New Zealand in the summit clash. England is now out of the WTC final contention after losing the third Test against India.

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ICC Test Rankings: Rohit Sharma, Ravichandran Ashwin Gain Big After Motera Win

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ICC Test Rankings: Rohit Sharma, Ravichandran Ashwin Gain Big After Motera Win

Indian opener Rohit Sharma broke into top ten of the latest ICC Test rankings for batsman thanks to his superb century against England in Chennai.  While New Zealand’s Kane Williamson continues to top the list, Rohit’s compatriot and team captain Virat Kohli is at fifth position. Rohit’s sublime form made sure that he leapfrogs six places to move to eighth position, while Cheteshwar Pujara has slipped to tenth position.

Rahane’s Form And Sundar’s Utility in the XI – Two Concerns For India Ahead of the Last Test At Motera

Meanwhile Ravichandran Ashwin’s fine all-round performance made sure that he moves to number three in bowler’s rankings. He went onto take nine wickets in the second Test match in Chepauk and also scored a hundred. Australia’s Pat Cummins tops the list. Meanwhile a wicketless outing at Motera made sure Jasprit Bumrah slips a position and falls to ninth spot.

Better Batting Technique Could Have Saved England, Says Sunil Gavaskar

Meanwhile India off-spinner R Ashwin launched a scathing attack on critics of the Motera pitch where the third Test against England was played. The pitch was heavily criticised by many for offering a lot of turn and the match finished in less than two days. “I have a question back. What is a good cricket surface? The bowlers want to win the game. The batsman needs to bat well to get runs. No question about it. What makes a good surface? Who defines this? Seam on the first day and then bat well and then spin on the last two days,” Ashwin said during a virtual media interaction.

“Come on! Who makes all these rules, we need to get over it and not talk about whatever picture you want to paint. If you’re asking if it is a good Test surface, I don’t see any of the players coming from England having an issue with the surface.





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