Ranji Trophy final: Disciplined MP keep Mumbai in check

Ranji Trophy final: Disciplined MP keep Mumbai in check

From a position of 120 for 1, a four-man Madhya Pradesh attack reduced Mumbai to 228 for 5 on the first day of the Ranji Trophy final. Having lost the toss, MP would have probably taken a stumps score of 248 for 5 at the start of the day. Having played an extra batsman who can bowl some spin, and left out pacer Puneet Datey, the couple of frontline MP pacers and spinners persevered throughout a somewhat tricky day for batting, their discipline making it tougher to score for Mumbai.
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Well into the third session, the skies remained heavily overcast, the old ball moved around a bit even after 60 overs. The spinners also found some turn and bounce on what appears to be essentially a dry surface, with rough areas already starting to develop from the bowlers’ follow-throughs.
On a day on which there wasn’t a runaway standout performer on either side, Yashasvi Jaiswal scored a chunk of Mumbai’s runs, falling 22 short of what would have been a fourth successive first-class century. His captain Prithvi Shaw rode his luck at the other end in an opening stand of 87 that created a decent base for Mumbai, from which they had some cushion to reduce the impact of the setbacks that were to come later.
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MP tried to surprise Mumbai as they opened the bowling with left-arm spinner Kumar Kartikeya. He found a bit of extra bite from a slightly damp morning surface. Jaiswal went through a couple of nervy moments; he tried a slog-sweep and missed, tried to give Kartikeya the charge and was fortunate that his sliced mishit cleared deep mid-on and sailed just over the boundary.
While Jaiswal played a tight game overall, Shaw led an utterly charmed life. A sharp Kartikeya drifter burst in to take an inside edge that popped above forward short leg’s reach. The luckless seamer Gaurav Yadav, deceptively nippy off the surface, went past Shaw’s edge five times in an over without reward. He got a couple to cut back in alarmingly and a couple more to nibble away outside off. In between, Shaw also threw his bat after a wide one.

Shaw still managed to last 79 deliveries, and if he stays in the middle for that long, he does make a contribution. He was bowled for 47, missing a full, straight ball angled into him, his attempted straight drive finding thin air comfortably outside the line of the Anubhav Agarwal delivery.
After this breakthrough, whenever Mumbai began to build a partnership, MP would strike. The next four stands were 33, 27, 38 and 43, all promising more, and all cut short by a combination of MP’s persistence and soft dismissals.
Bowlers stick to their jobs
Armaan Jaffer does not have the consistently effortless finesse of his uncle, but does have a hint of that elegance when he whips through midwicket. But there was nothing elegant about how he pushed at Kartikeya with hard hands and the ball carried all the way to midwicket.
Suved Parkar came in and got another start but off-spinner Saransh Jain’s delivery stopped on him; he had already set himself up on the back foot to whip it hard and ended up lobbing it to midwicket.
Jain bowled beautifully through the day, tossing it up high, varying his pace, inviting the drive outside off with only mid-off and sweeper in, and extracting bounce. He could probably have been a little fuller, the length with which he dismissed Hardik Tamore.
It was a pitch where many edges did not carry to the cordon. Two fell short of the wicketkeeper and first slip off Tamore alone, the hesitant ’keeper-batsman enjoying several slices of fortune. When an edge did carry, Tamore was put down at second slip, a sharp, low chance albeit.

Jain kept trying to lure Tamore into the cover drive, but in trying to be extra watchful after the drop, Tamore pushed inside the line of a full ball that didn’t turn much and edged to slip.
All along, MP kept tweaking the field. There was an in-out one for Kartikeya to Jaiswal, with three deep leg-side men and three close-in catchers. Seeing the ball was not coming on, they employed a couple of short midwickets and short covers each at different times. To Sarfaraz Khan, they had Jain bowling straighter with a 6-3 onside field.
Sarfaraz had walked out to a raucous reception from the couple of hundred fans, with shouts of ‘Sarfaraz best hai’ and ‘vada pav’ ringing around an otherwise empty M. Chinnaswamy Stadium. But contrary to his free-hitting reputation, and as he often does in this format, he barely took risks. Boasting a strike rate in the early 70s in first-class cricket, he downed the shutter for the day, moving to 40 off 125 balls. He did try a couple of hard sweeps, which is a natural shot for him, but found the field.
There was at least one good leg-before shout against every Mumbai batsman, but none of them went in MP’s favour. And in the absence of the Decision Review System (DRS) for an occasion as important as the biggest match of the domestic calendar, they had no recourse.
Nevertheless, Agarwal and Yadav continued to run in with energy late into the day for a collective 36 overs. With the second new ball only two overs old, both will hope they get more of a go with it on the second morning than they did with the first cherry.
Brief scores: Mumbai 248/5 (Jaiswal 78, Shaw 47) vs Madhya Pradesh

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Mithali Raj announced retirement from International cricket

Mithali Raj announced retirement from International cricket

On the day one of the greatest cricketers, Mithali Raj, announced her retirement, her father Dorai Raj was a touch worried about what she would do with the newfound free time.
“She goes to the ground daily to train. Suddenly after retirement, she won’t be able to just sit at home. She has been playing cricket for 23 years. I hope her experience and services are used to take women’s cricket to the next level,” the senior Raj said on Wednesday.
Raj, who has worn many hats – coach, guide, sounding board, mentor – knows his daughter well enough to predict twiddling thumbs will leave the now-retired Mithali restless.
Just hours before the Indian women’s team was named for the T20I and ODI tour of Sri Lanka, Mithali announced her decision to hang up her boots via a statement on Twitter.Best of Express PremiumIs the box office failure of ‘Samrat Prithviraj’ a rejection of Bollywood...PremiumUPSC Key-June 8, 2022: How relevant ‘Agneepath’ or ‘Pub...PremiumIn a first, Orissa HC assesses its own performance, lists challengesPremiumA BPO, discounted Air India tickets & unpaid dues: ‘Racket’ unravelle...Premium
“I set out as a little girl on the journey to wear the India blues as representing your country is the highest honour. The journey was full of highs and some lows,” Mithali wrote. “Each event taught me something unique and the last 23 years have been the most fulfilling, challenging & enjoyable years of my life. Like all journeys, this one too must come to an end. Today is the day I retire from all forms of International Cricket.”
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In her retirement statement, Mithali did talk about wanting to remain connected with the game.
“I would love to stay involved in the game and contribute to the growth of Women’s Cricket in India and world over.”

What form that will take is unknown currently, but Dorai Raj believes his daughter would be as good an administrator as she was a cricketer.
Mithali’s tally of 7,805 runs from 232 ODIs is the highest in the 50-over women’s game. The next best is former England skipper Charlotte Edwards with 5,992. In all, the long-serving India captain scored 10,868 runs, also a women’s cricket record. Her 214 against England at Taunton in 2002 remains the second-highest score in women’s Test matches.
She got off to a flying start on ODI debut with an unbeaten 114 against Ireland and has been the bulwark of the team for 23 years, despite living with bad knees. In 2009, the injury got so bad that there was a question mark over her future. Yet, Mithali, 39 now, endured the pain and played in six 50-over World Cups, leading the country to two finals, in 2005 and 2017.
Mithali Raj. (File)
Her second final as captain ended in heartbreak as the team lost by 9 runs against England but the close finish at Lord’s had everyone talking about women’s cricket and created a buzz around the team.
Textbook batting
In the women’s game, Mithali remains as big an icon as any. Her copybook strokes and watertight batting technique made her a graceful batter. Her footwork was exquisite, her ability to anchor the innings a special trait.
One of the first people Mithali discussed her retirement plans with was RSR Murthy, her long-time coach. He had opined during last Wednesday’s meeting at his home in Hyderabad that Mithali should continue playing for ‘some more time’. But she was convinced this was the right time, the coach said.
“I told her: ‘why not play a series at home and retire?’ But she wanted to make a decision before the Sri Lanka tour. She made the decision today. The next 50-over World Cup is a few years away, so she was convinced this was the time to retire and let youngsters take over,” Murthy, a head coach with South-Central Railway, said.
Mithali Raj retires.
Mithali’s retirement didn’t come as a surprise. There were calls for her to step aside after India didn’t qualify for the semifinals of the World Cup earlier this year. She had made up her mind that the 2022 World Cup would be her last. “It’s been 21 years of international cricket and I know 2022 is my swansong, the World Cup,” she had said last year.
The final phase of her career was controversial due to the fallout with coach Ramesh Powar during the 2018 T20 World Cup in the West Indies. She was not picked in the Playing XI for the semifinal against England, a game India lost. Her last innings for India was a 68 off 84 balls with eight fours against South Africa at the 50-over World Cup.

Your contribution to Indian Cricket has been phenomenal. Congratulations @M_Raj03 on an amazing career. You leave behind a rich legacy.
We wish you all the very best for your second innings 🙌🙌 pic.twitter.com/0R66EcM0gT
— BCCI (@BCCI) June 8, 2022
Reluctant cricketer
For someone who had to be pulled out of bed and dragged to the cricket academy after her father, a sergeant in the Indian Air Force, felt she was getting lazy, Mithali has done well for herself. As a 10-year-old, she would join her father and older brother Mithun when they rode to the St John’s Cricket Academy grounds in Secunderabad at 4 am.
To kill boredom, Mithali would pick a bat at the academy and engage in half-hearted batting drills. Former First-Class cricketer Jyothi Prasad spotted that Mithali was a natural and referred her to the late Sampath Kumar, a coach who groomed two women’s teams in Secunderabad.
“I was forced into something I didn’t like,” Mithali had told this paper.
Back then, Mithali had different dreams. She wanted to be a Bharatnatyam dancer. “I was good at dance. It was my interest. Cricket was something which I was pushed into,” she had said.

Once she got into cricket, Mithali had her work cut out. The coach was a hard taskmaster. “In the night, he used to make me run, round after round. Also, he wanted me at the ground well before sunrise. His idea was that when the sun comes up, you should be ready for batting.
“When the bowlers come in, you can bat immediately and get extra time in the nets. I used to bat for two hours at a stretch. After practice, I would have breakfast at the ground and change at the ground for school. My dad used to drop me to school,” Mithali had said.
Mithali RajMithali Raj Mithali Raj in action. (FILE)
Like most women cricketers, Mithali also grew up facing boys in the nets. When she slacked during a catching session, the cricket ball was replaced with a stone. If one of her hands turned blue, it was tied up behind her back and Mithali had to complete the catching drills with the other.
“With a stone, you naturally use soft hands to catch it. At that time, I was angry with the coach. But today when he is not around, I know that if I have played through pain, it was only because of him. I have had a recurring knee injury since 2005. My knees used to swell up like potatoes.”
Just before the 2009 ODI World Cup, Mithali was on the verge of calling it quits. Her knees were getting worse. But she soldiered on.

Cricket is a dream and when I started off my career I had no idea that women’s cricket existed but the only name ever told or heard was yours @M_Raj03 Di. You sewed the seed for all the young girls to take up this sport and dream big. Wish you the best in life. pic.twitter.com/pWZ9UHcKN3
— Harmanpreet Kaur (@ImHarmanpreet) June 8, 2022
In Australia, things went better than expected for Mithali. She made a lot of runs and the team finished third. “It was a turning point. People actually saw what women’s cricket was about. The matches were telecast live for the first time. There was recognition for the players and the sport. Personal satisfaction of playing the game was there but at the same time you want people to acknowledge you at some point.
“And that happened during the 2009 World Cup. I thought to myself that when things have started to look up, why should I quit. Moreover, for the first time, I had started liking the game, enjoying playing cricket because there was recognition.”
The dream of winning a World Cup remains unfulfilled as Mithali walks away from the game. But being an icon for over two decades, inspiring a generation of women to take up the sport and helping increase the visibility of women’s cricket are invaluable contributions.

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