Painting Corners: Best MLB Prop Bets Today (Kyle Schwarber and Andrew Heaney in plus-money)

Let’s head into the weekend with a couple of attractive plus-money player props from DraftKings Sportsbook. 

Best MLB Prop Bets TodayAndrew Heaney under 4.5 K (+120) Kyle Schwarber over 1.5 total bases (+105)Andrew Heaney under 4.5 K (+120) 

This will be the third time Andrew Heaney has seen the Astros this season. He struck out two in his first meeting and just one in his second and in those games, the Astros were still playing Jose Abreu. 

Yes, Heaney has had two good starts in a row, but Houston is especially dominant vs. left-handed pitching.  As a team, the Astros have the league’s lowest K-rate vs. southpaws at just 17%. Specifically, both Altuve and Alvarez have great career numbers vs. Heaney.  In 41 career at-bats, Altuve is hitting .317 with only five strikeouts vs. Heaney.  In 18 career at-bats, Alvarez is hitting .444 with a home run,  two extra-base hits, and four strikeouts.   Alvarez is expected to be back tonight. 

Heaney’s 44.7% fly ball rate and bottom 32nd percentile hard-hit rate allowed could get him into trouble quickly vs. a Houston team hitting well right now.   Even though Heaney is striking batters out at a rate of more than nine per nine this season, I’ll take the chance he doesn’t make it far enough into this game to get to five. 

Kyle Schwarber over 1.5 total bases (+105)

Schwarber has been punishing lefties this season with a .338 batting average and eight home runs. I’ll take plus money for him to tally a couple vs. Hogan Harris whose xERA is 5.57 according to statcast and whose hard-hit rate is on the bottom 33% of the league.  Bryce Harper and Alec Bohm also are in a good spot tonight at home. 

Phillies Jhoan Durán Carted Off the Field With Foot Injury During Non-Save Situation

The Philadelphia Phillies may have lost their new closer. Jhoan Durán was hit in the foot with a line drive on Friday night in a non-save situation against the Washington Nationals.

Durán entered the game with Philadelphia up 6-2 in the 9th inning. The first and only batter he faced, Paul DeJung hit a ball right back to the mound. It bounced off the pitcher's foot and went into foul territory. Durán gave chase, but came up limping and eventually stopped.

He appeared unable to put weight on his right leg and had to leave the field in the bullpen cart.

Philadelphia acquired Durán from the Minnesota Twins at the trade deadline. Durán went 6–4 with a 2.01 ERA, 1.18 WHIP, and 53 strikeouts in 49 1/3 innings in Minnesota this season. Coming into Friday he had appeared in four games for Philadelphia and earned saves in all four appearances while giving up just one hit.

UPDATE: Durán and the Phillies got good news as initial x-rays were negative.

Deion Sanders Heaps Praise on Shohei Ohtani After NLCS Game 4 Performance

In Oct. 1992, Deion Sanders had an iron grip on the sports world. That month, the Braves outfielder played eight games in the National League Championship Series and World Series while also playing two games at cornerback for the Falcons.

This is to say: the Colorado football coach knows Major League Baseball playoff uniqueness when he sees it—and he sees it in Dodgers designated hitter and pitcher Shohei Ohtani, who delivered one of the great sports feats of this century in Game 4 of the NLCS Friday.

“I’ve seen some wonderful things that have transpired in sports. It’s hard for me to say (it's the greatest performance ever in any sport), but that is unbelievable," Sanders said via Pat Graham of the AP. “He’s doing something that’s unfathomable.”

In Los Angeles's 5–1 win over the Brewers on Friday, Ohtani smashed three home runs while striking out 10 batters as a pitcher.

Sanders, for his part, slashed .400/.455/.500 with one run batted in in the '92 playoffs, while adding a reception and five decent kick returns on the gridiron that month (no matter: he'd finish the year as an All-Pro anyway).

“Can they just hand (Ohtani) the MVP during the game?" Sanders asked, echoing many viewers Friday. The fourth for the future Hall of Famer doesn't seem far away.

'It's not about learning to defend or attack, it's about knowing when to defend or attack'

Afghanistan’s coach, Lance Klusener, talks about the approach he takes with the side

Interview by Deivarayan Muthu25-Mar-2020After working with Zimbabwe, South Africa, and then in stints in the IPL (Mumbai Indians), BPL (Rajshahi Kings) and with Brampton Wolves (Global T20 Canada), Lance Klusener took charge of Afghanistan as head coach last September. Speaking from his home in Durban, the former South Africa allrounder tells us about the road forward, looks ahead to the T20 World Cup, and talks about his approach to coaching.Afghanistan haven’t lost a T20I series since 2017, and a few months ago they toppled a full-strength West Indies side. How do you rate their progress in the year of the T20 World Cup?
It’s [T20 cricket] the focus for us. We are trying to play as much T20 as possible – there’s an Asia Cup, a World Cup, and another T20 World Cup after that. We have a very good attack that includes guys who are playing [domestic T20 leagues] around the world. Our challenge is to score enough runs. Rashid Khan, Mujeeb ur Rahman, Mohammad Nabi, Qais Ahmad – is this the best T20I spin attack going around?
Yeah, clearly – just with the variations. It is still a young team but they’re getting a lot of experience playing around the world. So that’s good for us. With Afghanistan not playing too much domestic cricket, it’s a good sign.

“At the end of the day, only the player can do it. I can’t pull him out of bed and make him do all the work. That’s my challenge to the Afghanistan players”

Mohammad Shahzad is still suspended, but teenager Rahmanullah Gurbaz has fit into the set-up nicely and seems to have a variety of shots in his repertoire.
Gurbaz has had a lot on his shoulders and he has been brilliant. Stepping into the shoes of somebody like Shahzad, he has kept wicket and has responded brilliantly. There are not many players out there that work harder than him. So he’s got a bright future and the talent is there, and going forward he’s somebody with the potential to light up the white-ball scene.ALSO READ: Rahmanullah Gurbaz is dreaming of bigger thingsWe just need to be careful that we don’t get too ahead of ourselves. [He needs to] keep the feet on the ground and continue sticking to the basics and win games for Afghanistan. I still think he needs to do that more consistently. He needs to bat deeper and be not out at the end, not just light up the Powerplays. We need to grow his game a lot, but there are ingredients out there for something special for sure.The batting line-up is packed with talent, but recently HD Ackerman, the batting coach, said that they need to pace the innings better and work on the running between the wickets. Do you agree?
We want to be a bit more energetic [between the wickets]. We are among the best in terms of boundary-hitting percentage, but if you look at the stats, our dot-ball percentage is high. So that’s something we have chatted about and we’re making an effort to get better at that. At that level it’s about small changes that can make a big difference.We need to play more cricket and against the top-ranked sides, but the fixtures are set so very far apart. Afghanistan have only themselves to blame because they’ve developed into a good team way too quickly for the fixtures to accommodate them. We will get there, so exciting times ahead.”Gurbaz needs to do win games more consistently. He needs to bat deeper and be not out at the end, not just light up the Powerplays”•Getty ImagesAfghanistan don’t have a designated white-ball finisher yet. Have you identified somebody for the role that you owned during your playing career for South Africa?
We will play differently with a different game plan. Yes, we don’t have an out and out finisher, but we have power upfront. Given the opportunity and platform, there’s no reason why a guy like Najib [Zadran], [Mohammad] Nabi, Rashid [Khan] can’t step up and do that. We need to give them the platform, and that’s the challenge. It’s about learning to chase targets down.How has Naveen-ul-Haq’s recent rise and Shapoor Zadran’s return helped balance an attack that is usually packed with spin?
Yeah, the competition between the seamers is there. Shapoor put up his hand and he has a lot going for him. I always look at an all-round package that can contribute in all departments with fielding and bowling too. He bowls from a nice height and he has got about 80 white-ball appearances for Afghanistan. It’s nice to have that experience, but the youngsters are pushing hard – and he knows that too – and hopefully he can get the job done when it counts.ALSO READ: Naveen-ul-Haq hopes to start a pace-bowling revolution in AfghanistanHow vital was the 2-1 series victory over the T20 World Cup defending champions West Indies recently?
It just shows you how much talent is there. If we can just be a little more consistent and be a bit better at small things… A guy like Naveen [ul-Haq] has wonderful talent. We just need to keep our feet on the ground. He has played just six [five] T20Is and his numbers are flattering so far. He has some good variations and decent pace, but same as Gurbaz, time will tell. It’s about playing against strong oppositions. With respect to Ireland and Zimbabwe, for Afghanistan’s growth we need to play against bowlers that are consistently bowling at 140. Manning up to pace like that is going to be the real challenge for the batsmen; we don’t get much opportunity to play against such oppositions.

My job is to get the best out of national players. I won’t be remembered for scouting in the leagues. I will be remembered for the games that I help Afghanistan win

Were you able to address their concerns in the camp you had in Dubai earlier this year?
Yeah, we tried to create match simulations and tried to face what we might get in T20 cricket. But then again, you can’t beat game time. We need to try to get as many games as we can before those big comps [Asia Cup and T20 World Cup].You’ve worked with international sides and have also worked in different capacities in T20 leagues. How do you think you have evolved as a coach?
The most important thing is reading what you’ve got in front of you and understanding every team is different – different strengths and weaknesses. You get four or five years when you can develop a team, so you have to work with what you have got and develop that as best as you can.It has been nice working with the best talent in the world and that’s what excites me as a coach. You have to be realistic with what you can achieve and how you go about it.Franchise T20 coaching can be difficult – you get players who come in and go, and you might sometimes have to change [your coaching style] to accommodate the players that come and go. It can be challenging, but if the communication is decent and if you have mature players – sometimes the coach needs to move that around, with players leaving a comp or even being injured.You were big on game time as a player and used to hit several hundred balls at practice sessions. Have you managed to incorporate that kind of training into the Afghanistan set-up too?
Yes, we do. You can only get so much done and always remember that a lot of that quality work is done on our own. You can’t just wait for coaches and associations to organise camps and spoon-feed you. Many players go away and bowl at targets when they’re necessarily in international set-ups. It’s part of the learning and we challenge the boys to also go away and do the hard work on their own.”The most important thing is reading what you’ve got in front of you and understanding every team is different, with different strengths and weaknesses”•Getty ImagesDolphins’ Khaya Zondo singled you out as a key figure in his resurgence after he was dropped. How important is man-management and communication with players?
At the end of the day, only the player can do it. Maybe he can benefit from my knowledge and my experience, but at the end of the day I can’t pull him out of the bed and make him do all the work. A guy like Khaya, he took it on board and he did what he needed to do. That has to come from within. The passion is always there and it’s available and if you want to achieve something better, you need to be open to change. That’s my challenge to the Afghanistan players. You can average 25 or 30, but maybe you can average 40-plus if you learn a new shot or have a different approach.Have you had time to watch domestic cricket and the Shpageeza League and scout new talent?
That talent is there. There are scouts and selectors who are hands-on, and they’ll feed the best players to the national team. We have quite a few camps and stuff, and that gives us the opportunity to look at those players. However, my job is to get the best out of national players. I won’t be remembered for scouting these leagues. I will be remembered for the games that I help Afghanistan win.ALSO READ: ‘I wanted to be there at the end. That was my drug’Gulbadin Naib captained Afghanistan in the 50-over World Cup, Rashid Khan took over from him before passing the reins to Asghar Afghan again. Have the switches in captaincy affected the team’s plans?
Now, it’s [Afghan as captain] set in stone for the T20 World Cup. It’s never healthy for any environment for too much change in leadership positions because it takes time for everyone to figure out how a captain functions. And what one captain requires from you with respect to another can be different. So it’s important that there’s consistency there. It wasn’t great to see changes in leadership positions prior to the [2019] World Cup. They didn’t win a game there.Afghanistan A recently travelled to Bangladesh. Has there been talk about getting more A games into the schedule?
It’s important, but ultimately the real benefits are going to come when Afghanistan has a solid domestic league – a league where the boys learn their cricket. You look around at the best teams in the world right now – Australia, India, England – and look at their domestic structures. How good it is there that reflects directly in their national team. What Afghanistan has achieved and the talent that’s there from a limited domestic scene is phenomenal. The challenge to grow the game on the domestic scene is always going to be there.It’s not just about learning to defend or attack, those guys can all do that. It’s about reading the game and knowing when to defend or attack. That’s the difference.

Stats: MS Dhoni, the most successful wicketkeeper-batsman to captain in ODIs

We look all the standout numbers from his international career as captain, batter, wicketkeeper, and…wait for it…bowler

Gaurav Sundararaman and Shiva Jayaraman15-Aug-2020ESPNcricinfo Ltd Dhoni the batsman 50.57 Dhoni’s average in ODIs. Only Virat Kohli has a better average among those who have scored 10000 runs or more in ODI cricket. In fact, only Dhoni and Kohli average above 50. Sachin Tendulkar is placed third, with an average of 44.83. 47 Instances of Dhoni remaining unbeaten in successful chases in ODIs. No other batsman comes close. Jonty Rhodes is second, with 33 such not-outs. Incidentally, India have lost only two matches when Dhoni was not out in a chase: against Pakistan in Kolkata in 2013, and against England at the 2019 World Cup. 9 Instances in which Dhoni completed a successful ODI chase with a six. No other player has achieved this feat more times than him. 229 Sixes hit by Dhoni in ODIs. Only Rohit Sharma has hit more sixes for India than Dhoni, who is placed fifth on the all-time list for most sixes by any player. 7 Centuries scored by Dhoni at No. 5 five or lower – joint-highest for any team along with Yuvraj Singh and Jos Buttler. Two of his best hundreds in ODIs came early in his career while batting at No. 3 when he scored 183* and 148 against Sri Lanka and Pakistan respectively.ESPNcricinfo Ltd Dhoni the captain 3 ICC tournaments won by India under Dhoni; it is the most by an India captain. Only Ricky Ponting has won more ICC titles as captain than Dhoni. 332 Most matches as captain in international cricket. Dhoni led India in 200 ODIs, 72 T20Is, and 60 Tests. He also has the second-most wins in limited-overs international games – 151 – behind only Ponting’s 172. 53.55 Average for Dhoni as a batsman while captaining in ODIs. Only Kohli has a higher average among batsmen to score more than 5000 ODI runs. In terms of runs alone, only Ponting fared better as captain. 2 Losses for MS Dhoni in ODI World Cup matches as captain. Only Ponting and Clive Lloyd have a better win-loss ratio than Dhoni. His record in ODI World Cups was almost impeccable, with his two losses coming against South Africa (in the league stage of the 2011 World Cup) and Australia (in the semi-final of the 2015 World Cup). His record in the T20 World Cups, however, was modest, with 20 wins and 11 losses.ESPNcricinfo Ltd Dhoni the wicketkeeper 444 Dismissals by Dhoni in ODIs – third-most in the format. However, his 123 stumpings are the most by any wicketkeeper. No other keeper has 100 stumpings. His 91 dismissals in T20Is, including 34 stumpings are also the highest for any cricketer in the format. 6641 Runs scored as captain-wicketkeeper in ODIs. No other batsman has scored as many runs while leading their team and donning the gloves. Dhoni was India’s captain and gloveman in 200 matches. Apart from him, no other keeper has led his country in more than 46 games. In terms of runs scored as a captain-keeper, Kumar Sangakkara is a distant second with 1756 runs from 45 matches.ESPNcricinfo Ltd Dhoni the bowler Lest you forgot, Dhoni has bowled, too. He has one ODI wicket against his name – that of Travis Dowlin from the match against West Indies in 2009.

India's MCG win: 'Resilience and character' shown by a 'special team'

Players, present and past, sent out congratulatory messages to Ajinkya Rahane’s team on social media

ESPNcricinfo staff29-Dec-2020

Azhar Ali and Mohammad Rizwan exemplify Pakistan's transformed outlook

They lost most of their top order cheaply, much like in the first Test, but this time they did not retreat into their cocoons

Danyal Rasool03-Jan-2021At Bay Oval last week, Pakistan spent 102 and 123 overs at the crease in their two innings. They barely lasted until the second new ball here in Christchurch, and yet this might just be Pakistan’s most satisfying day with the bat away from home for the best part of two years.New Zealand might have won the toss and chipped their way right down to the lower middle order as early as lunch, just as they did at Bay Oval. They may have struck with the new ball, removed the openers cheaply and effected a mini-collapse, as was the case in the first Test. And New Zealand’s big-name, in-form batsmen are yet to get their go on a surface that’s a bit more playful than the one in Mount Maunganui.Watch cricket on ESPN+

New Zealand vs Pakistan is available in the US on ESPN+. Subscribe to ESPN+ and tune in to the series

However, Pakistan’s contentment will stem not just from the reasonably competitive position they close the day out on, but from how effectively they executed a vastly different approach to the one they took last week. There appeared to be acceptance for the somewhat radical idea that time at the crease against New Zealand’s greatest-ever bowling attack – though they were without Neil Wagner here – invariably comes with a death sentence. Having come to terms with that, the visitors decided a slightly shorter life expectancy was a reasonable price to pay for more runs on the board.Committing to that approach in theory is one thing, but actually going out and doing it? Misbah-ul-Haq’s Pakistan have not developed a reputation of caution over abandon for nothing. Today, however, even when Tim Southee trapped Shan Masood in front early on – the doomed review providing an extremely brief stay of execution – Pakistan did not retreat to the comfort of their cocoons. A quicker pitch, where the ball came onto the bat much better than it did at Mount Maunganui, contributed to their scoring rate, but there was also more urgency and opportunism about Pakistan’s batting.Azhar Ali is a man whose need for runs was so exigent Pakistan took the captaincy off him while he continues that quest, and one not especially known for flamboyance. Up against a bowling attack in the form of their lives, though, Azhar resolved to keep an eye out for opportunities to keep the scoring rate ticking. It was an innings that personified modern, positive Test-match batting, with barely a false shot even as Pakistan began to push the run rate up to four an over post-lunch.The dangerously probing seaming deliveries that hovered around off stump still received the respect they deserved, but like a boxer looking to make every moment count, Azhar got in a jab of his own every time New Zealand dropped their guard. When they went full, according to ESPNcricinfo’s data, Azhar scored 17 off 20. The two full-tosses he was presented with were duly put away for fours. When the lines were straighter – on the stumps or straying down leg – he scored 40 off 60.And even when the hosts were on the money, as they were for much of the day, he took care to play behind the wicket with soft hands, which meant the ball didn’t carry to the slips, often finding a gap through which to run along into the vacant third-man area.Mohammad Rizwan has now made five successive half-centuries in Test cricket•AFP via Getty ImagesIt wasn’t just Azhar, of course, though his innings and the bold approach he brought to it was likely the difference between a sub-200 total and the 297 they ended up with. Mohammad Rizwan finds himself in the sort of purple patch that comes around once a career if you’re lucky enough, so why wouldn’t you look to ride your luck in it? He wasn’t in the business of respecting length deliveries in the corridor outside off (20 off 19) or fuller ones on the same line (11 off 9). Granted, not all those runs came the precise way Rizwan had been intending, but having begun when Pakistan were stuttering at 83 for 4, his counter-punching knock tempered the spring in New Zealand’s step after lunch.It is time, too, to pay Rizwan his dues now. Never mind fighting off competition for the wicketkeeping gloves, the 28-year-old is at present the best batsman in the side on form. His 71-ball 61 was his fifth successive half-century, and sixth overall; all of them have come in either Australia, England or New Zealand. Moreover, each of the five half-centuries has come when his side has sorely required it, with Pakistan 120 for 5, 75 for 5, 52 for 5, 75 for 4 and now 83 for 4 when he walked in. All this, remember, from someone viewed more as a lower-order contributor than a specialist batsman.In the middle session, when New Zealand, spearheaded by an at times unplayable Kyle Jamieson, were at their most menacing, the visitors scored 130 at nearly four-and-a-half runs an over, and lost just the one wicket in that time. Rizwan set the tone by smashing Trent Boult for 14 in an over, with an additional four leg byes adding to the left-arm quick’s frustrations. When Azhar finally nicked off to Matt Henry – Wagner’s replacement bowled well enough to deserve more than the one scalp – he was seven runs from a hundred in the 63rd over of the innings. At Bay Oval, Pakistan’s score in the first innings at the same stage was 89 for 6.For a Test side further along in its development than Pakistan, adapting from an approach that didn’t work might simply be seen as routine tinkering. But in Pakistan, such shifts can be seismic.New Zealand perhaps still went in at stumps slightly the happier side, but for the tragics who stayed up through the night in Pakistan fearing another 20th-century tribute act, the outbreak of progressive modernity will have been as welcome as it was unexpected.

The greatest IPL performances, No. 8: Kieron Pollard's 60 not out vs the Chennai Super Kings

The Mumbai Indians needed a competitive total against the tournament favourites in the 2013 final. One man stepped up

Shashank Kishore09-Apr-20214:10

Dinesh Karthik, Michael Hussey and Aditya Tare and on Pollard’s innings

We polled our staff for their picks of the top ten best batting, bowling and all-round performances in the IPL through its history. Here’s No. 8Mumbai Indians vs Chennai Super Kings, final, 2013The 2013 IPL final was the second to pit the Chennai Super Kings against the Mumbai Indians. In the 2010 title match, Mumbai made the bizarre decision to hold Kieron Pollard back even when they were five down, needing 69 off 31 balls. When he finally came out to bat and muscled the big hits, Mumbai were left to rue their error. The Super Kings went on to lift their maiden crown.They made it two in two the following year</a, and finished runners-up in 2012. It's fair to assume, at least by cricketing logic, that they were favourites in 2013, too – though they had their share of turmoil off the field.For Mumbai, it had been a season of contrasts. A struggling first half led to Ricky Ponting stepping down mid-season to hand over the captaincy to rookie Rohit Sharma. The gamble paid off and turned a season that had been in ruins into a near fairy tale.Polly, smash!•BCCIIn the final, Mumbai started poorly and slipped to 52 for 4 in the tenth over on a Kolkata deck that had been re-laid and on which the ball seamed around. Based on IPL history up until then, ESPNcricinfo's Smart Stats Forecaster, looking back retrospectively, pegged Mumbai's win percentage at 27.35 at that point.Pollard came in at six and started with an easily driven four. He and Ambati Rayudu went at a trot, though Pollard found the boundary or went over it every few balls. When Rayudu had his off stump uprooted by Dwayne Bravo in the 16th, Pollard buckled down and took the innings deep.Harbhajan Singh fell looking to have a go. Rishi Dhawan sacrificed his wicket trying to pinch a run and get Pollard back on strike. At the end of 18 overs, Mumbai were 129 for 6. Chris Morris delivered a superb penultimate over, conceding six.The numbers

250 Number of runs Pollard scored in the death overs in IPL 2013, off 149 balls faced; only Dhoni had more, with 286 off 141

3 Pollard finished as the third-highest run scorer for Mumbai, behind Rohit Sharma and Dinesh Karthik, his 420 runs in 18 innings struck at 149.46.

59 Number of sixes the Mumbai Indians had in the last five overs that season, the best among all sides and 18 more than the Super Kings’ 41

Pollard was up against his countryman Dwayne Bravo in the 20th, a master of the slower ball and a superb exponent of the wide yorker. Bravo took two wickets off the first three balls of the last over, keeping Pollard off strike. On the fourth ball, Pollard took a risk and ran, though the ball had reached slip straight off a half-volley.The first of the final two balls was a low full toss and Pollard flicked it for a straight six. Then came a slower ball, pitched on a length, which he dismissed over long-on for six more. Mumbai’s win percentage jumped from 27.35 to 41.34. The real worth of Pollard’s 60 runs off 32 was pegged as being equivalent to 87.75 runs by Smart Stats.Mumbai went on to lift their first title, to set the tone for the kind of dominance that no other team has quite been able to compete with yet in the IPL. Pollard showed what Mumbai may have missed out on on that night in 2010, when these two teams first squared off in what has since become the biggest IPL rivalry of them all.The Greatest IPL performances 2008-2020

Stats – James Anderson's 454-ball wait against Virat Kohli comes to an end

All the stats from the second day’s play of the first England-India Test in Nottingham

Sampath Bandarupalli05-Aug-202137.3 Overs batted by Rohit Sharma and KL Rahul, the most by an opening pair for India in Tests outside Asia since 2008. Four of India’s top five longest opening partnerships outside Asia in this period came in 2021.97 Opening stand between Sharma and Rahul, the second-highest opening partnership for India in Test matches in England since 1980. Only Wasim Jaffer and Dinesh Karthik pair had a higher partnership, 147 in 2007, also in Nottingham.Sharma and Rahul’s partnership is the highest for the first wicket by a visiting pair in England since Dimuth Karunaratne and Kaushal Silva’s 108-run stand in 2016 at Lord’s.It is also the second-highest opening stand in Tests by any team in the last five English seasons. Rory Burns and Dom Sibley’s 114 against West Indies in Manchester is the highest in this period.ESPNcricinfo Ltd454 Balls faced by Virat Kohli against James Anderson between his last two dismissals against the veteran pacer in Test cricket. The last time Kohli got out to Anderson before his golden duck in Nottingham was during the 2014 Manchester Test. Anderson has dismissed Kohli on six occasions in Test cricket so far, including twice for a duck.22 Balls faced by India’s No. 3 (Cheteshwar Pujara), No. 4 (Kohli) and No. 5 (Ajinkya Rahane) collectively in the first innings. Only twice did India’s No. 3, 4 and 5 faced fewer balls in a Test innings since 2000. Pujara, Kohli and Rahane lasted only eight balls in the second innings of the 2018 Melbourne Test while Rahul Dravid, Sachin Tendulkar and Sourav Ganguly collectively faced only 14 balls in the first innings of the 2008 Galle Test.9 Ducks, including three on the first ball, for Kohli as a Tests captain, the most by an Indian captain in this format. Four of Kohli’s nine ducks as Test skipper came while playing against England, including three in 2021.

Marcus Stoinis' 'scar tissue' helps transformation look real

He has taken on a new role at this World Cup and been a vital part of Australia’s success

Deivarayan Muthu13-Nov-2021Marcus Stoinis’ massive biceps, broad chest and muscular physique in general remind you of the Incredible Hulk, the Marvel superhero. Stoinis himself thinks he looks like the Hulk when he flexes his biceps and chest in celebration after taking a wicket. However, Stoinis the batter – more precisely the finisher – had more looked like Bruce Banner since his breakout unbeaten 146, in only his second ODI innings against New Zealand at Eden Park in 2017.During that match Stoinis had stepped into bat at 54 for 5 in Australia’s pursuit of 287. He watched them slide further to 67 for 6 and would have single-handedly pulled off a coup if not for Kane Williamson swooping in from silly mid-on and running out No. 11 Josh Hazlewood for a duck. In an exhibition of explosive power-hitting, Stoinis blitzed 48 in a 54-run last-wicket stand, with Hazlewood contributing .It seemed like Australia had finally found their next big finisher. Stoinis could have become that finisher at various points – most notably Sydney 2018, and Nagpur 2019. However, he couldn’t quite get the job done.The 2019 ODI World Cup didn’t go according to his plan either. He feared that his tournament was over after a side strain ruled him out of Australia’s first two matches. He managed to return to action but scrounged only 87 runs in seven innings, with the injury also hampering his bowling. Stoinis was dropped from the T20I side after the 50-over World Cup, but he forced his way back in August 2020 after enjoying a prolific run with the Melbourne Stars at the BBL – although at the top of the order.Related

Stoinis: 'Over the next three years I want to be the best finisher in the world'

Wade: Stoinis' innings the turning point

Old Scarborough friends Mitchell and Stoinis to take field as international foes

Had the T20 World Cup gone ahead as scheduled last year, Stoinis might not have even made the cut. A year on, Stoinis has helped take Australia’s men’s team to within one step of winning their first-ever T20 world title.The role of a finisher is arguably the toughest in T20 cricket and Stoinis has given himself a chance to succeed by failing multiple times.”You definitely do draw on your past experiences,” Stoinis said the day after the Pakistan semi-final. “Something that’s probably lucky looking back is I’ve played a lot of cricket, I’ve played a lot of T20 cricket and I’ve sort of built that scar tissue. I’ve failed in situations and I’ve been told I can’t finish a game; we’ve heard all these sort of things before.”I think you need to go through all sort of stuff and build that scar tissue, go and stand in the middle in a pressure situation. It doesn’t mean it’s always going to work, but I think I’ve definitely noticed the way that I do think through that situation has grown over the past couple of years.”Marcus Stoinis and Matthew Wade’s joy knows no bounds•Getty ImagesStoinis’ stint with Delhi Capitals as their finisher under coach Ricky Ponting has certainly contributed to his growth. At the death in IPL 2020 in the UAE, he struck at 10.21 an over that season, putting himself in the company of the likes of Kieron Pollard, AB de Villiers, Eoin Morgan and Ravindra Jadeja.Stoinis then injured his hamstring in the UAE leg of IPL 2021 and played just two matches. Another injury, another doomed World Cup for Stoinis? He didn’t let history repeat itself, completing three chases in three attempts. The only other time he batted in the tournament, he bagged a duck after Australia had opted to bat against England.When Stoinis reunited with his former Victoria team-mate Matthew Wade in the semi-final against Pakistan on Thursday, Australia still needed 81 off 46 balls. Stoinis changed the game when he clattered his Stars team-mate Haris Rauf for 13 in the 17th over. When Rauf dug one into the pitch, Stoinis rose tall and smote it over the midwicket boundary with the stillest of heads and smoothest of bat-swings. Next ball Rauf marginally missed his yorker and Stoinis held his shape again to belt it down the ground for four.The twin blows set the scene for Wade’s takedown of Hasan Ali and Shaheen Shah Afridi as Australia pulled off a stunning win. According to Wade, Stoinis’ unbeaten 40 off 31 balls was the critical performance in the second semi-final.”It was pretty much just working with Wadey,” Stoinis recalled. “We were talking through one short boundary and one longer boundary. Certain bowlers he thought he could target, certain ones that I could target. And then in between, there’s the chaos that’s going on in your own head (laughs). So, just trying to stay calm and trying to keep each other calm. You are talking through your plans and making sure you’re really clear on what you want to do.”For years, Stoinis has only provided glimpses of the Incredible Hulk persona at the top level. If his recent finishing acts in the T20 World Cup are anything to go by, the transformation could be complete.

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