When Shabnim met Shoaib

“It’s a fantastic achievement because in her sphere of the sport she’s done something no-one else has.” – Brett Schultz on Shabnim Ismail’s record-breaking delivery.

Telford Vice / Cape Town

THE difference between the fastest balls bowled by men and women is, almost, a six-lined racerunner. A what? A small striped lizard common to the southern US and Mexico that boasts a top speed of 28.97 kilometres an hour.

Shabnim Ismail bowled a delivery to Meg Lanning in a WPL game in Delhi on Tuesday that the broadcasters’ speed gun clocked at 132.1 kilometres an hour — the fastest ball sent down by a woman since pace has been measured. But it was a long way off cricket’s quickest recorded delivery, the 161.3 km/h screamer sent by Shoaib Akhtar to Nick Knight in a 2003 World Cup match at Newlands.

That makes Ismail’s record ball 29.2 km/h slower than Shoaib’s. Or 0.23 km/h behind the six-lined racerunner’s highest documented speed. Did that mean Ismail’s effort should be regarded as inferior?

“It’s a fantastic achievement because in her sphere of the sport she’s done something no-one else has,” Brett Schultz told Cricbuzz. Then he launched into pithy rubbishing of such juxtapositional whataboutery: “It’s similar to when people try to compare players from different eras. The greats are the greats, but you can’t compare the greats of different eras.

“People say bowlers were quicker back in the day, but they play a different game now. Just look at the bats — the quicker the ball comes the quicker it goes. I used to run in and try to bowl fast, faster and fastest. Now they’ve got about 17 different deliveries that they bowl.

“Purists will see it differently, because purists are old and archaic. But the game is old and archaic. There are a lot more people watching cricket now because it’s not a purist’s game anymore. So you’ve got to look across parallels. If you’re going to compare the fastest deliveries by male and female bowlers you’re not using the right comparisons.”

By another measure genuine fast bowlers aren’t easily parsed, regardless of their gender, size, and era. Schultz stands 1.89 metres tall, weighed around 100 kilogrammes during his playing days, and let loose left-arm and lusty from under an unruly blond mop. Ismail, all 1.65 metres and 60 kilogrammes of her, roars in beneath a bobbing dark ponytail and unleashes using her right arm. If Ismail is a six-lined racerunner Schultz is a swamp alligator. 

The relevant common factor is in the eyes of the batters facing them. Like they used to when Schultz bowled, Ismail makes them look as if they have an urgent need to be somewhere, anywhere, other than at the crease. It’s not so much about comparing bowlers like Schultz and Ismail as it is about seeing the points of commonality that connect them in cricket, even if in nothing else.

Schultz played nine Tests from November 1992 to October 1997, taking 37 wickets at 20.24. He was particularly lethal during South Africa’s first series in Sri Lanka in August and September 1993, when he claimed 20 at 16.30 in the three matches. Injuries stunted what might have been a career as illustrious as Ismail’s. She is South Africa’s leading all-time wicket-taker in both white-ball formats. Overall she is second only to Jhulan Goswami in ODIs and fifth in T20Is.

How quick was Schultz? “I don’t remember there being speed guns when I played, but people say I bowled at 156 [km/h], or whatever. I can’t say that with any certainty. The only thing I can say is that, whatever speed I bowled at, it certainly buggered up my body. I’ve had knee replacements, stiff shoulders …”

Did he not wonder whether he would hurt himself? “No. That was the point — it was flat-out Schultz, not brakes Bezuidenhout. That was my mentality, even in the nets. Being in the nets with me was like playing in a match. That’s why I didn’t last. That and weighing between 98 and 102 kilogrammes, and bowling with a big catapult leap. And having a captain like Kepler [Wessels] bowling me for 37 overs in an innings [36.5, in fact, in Colombo’s heat and humidity]. But I still have good memories.”

Ismail, who is as verbally punchy as Schultz, particularly on the subject of her own bowling, will also leave the game with a wealth of warm recollections. Some will feature fear in opponents’ eyes, because the threat of extreme pace is as frightening, or more, than pace itself.

Certainly, Knight looked disconcerted while Shoaib tore towards him cradling the record-wrecking ball that day in Cape Town more than 21 years ago. But the left-hander dealt adeptly with a delivery that pitched on leg stump on a probing length. The ball would have cleared middle stump had Knight not risen onto his toes to nudge it off his hip towards square leg. He played the stroke as comfortably as he might have to a ball bowled by a Sunday afternoon trundler on the Essex ovals of his youth.

Ismail’s delivery to Lanning elicited the kind of electrifying appeal that has become part of the enthralling package the South African offers all who watch her play. The ball, which easily beat the flicking Australian, was speared into the pads and looked to be heading down leg wide of the stumps. Even so, Ismail spun around, thrust her arms upward into a vicious V, and bellowed.

Because that’s what fast bowlers do, whether they’re called Shoaib, Schultz or Shabnim. Because, as Shoaib himself is reputed to have said, pace is pace, yaar. We know it when we see it, and we don’t need a speed gun to tell us the comet has come. We need only eyes, and not to blink.

Cricbuzz

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Only Aussie giants stand in South Africa’s way

“It’s something we never thought would happen in our country — people standing in queues to buy tickets for a women’s cricket match.” – Suné Luus

Telford Vice / Cape Town

IT isn’t often that bits of paper stuck to windows are worth quoting, but these are extraordinary times. “Sold out,” read the signs on the ticket booths at Newlands on Saturday afternoon — more than 24 hours before South Africa will take on Australia in the women’s T20 World Cup final.

Cape Town isn’t a metropolis like Mumbai or London, where there’s a good chance more people than are needed to fill the ground are going about their business in the surrounding streets on any given match day. It also isn’t Melbourne, which although it has a population comparable to Cape Town’s also has the MCG, with its exponentially bigger capacity than Newlands, which suffers from the added disadvantage of being hemmed in by concrete neighbours on all sides. Unless you live or work nearby, getting there is difficult.

But Saturday morning produced queues outside Newlands, that snaked many metres down the pavement to the end of the block, of aspirant spectators for Sunday’s showdown. If you know South Africans and their idea of sport worth paying money to watch, especially here in the leafy, genteel heart of the patriarchy, you know they wouldn’t ordinarily spend a weekend morning waiting patiently in the summer sun trying to buy access to a game unless it is to be played by men.

The lines wouldn’t have formed had South Africa not earned an unlikely but deserved victory over England in their semi-final at the same ground on Friday. That made Suné Luus’ team the first senior side from her country, men or women, to reach a World Cup final in any format.

Like making it to Newlands, getting to the decider hasn’t been simple for the South Africans. They shambled to two defeats in their four group games, putting in performances that would have buried them had they played like that in one more match. Mostly, their batters couldn’t match their bowlers. On Friday, bat met ball on something like equal terms and the result was astounding. Having scored a decent 164/4 — comfortably their highest total in their last seven T20Is in which they have batted first — South Africa took all eight England wickets to fall for 100 runs and won by six runs.   

Their opponents on Sunday couldn’t have taken a more different route to the final. Australia were on auto-pilot throughout the group stage, where they never looked like losing. Only in their semi were they stretched. They made a serious 172/4, which India came within five runs of overhauling.

The wider narrative tells a similar story. Before Friday, South Africa had known the disappointment of five failed white-ball semifinals. There have been 19 women’s global tournaments and the Aussies have been to the final in 12 of them. Or maybe 13: there was no final in the first two ODI World Cups, in 1973 and 1978, which were decided on points. But England and Australia were the only unbeaten teams going into the last match in 1978. So it is considered a de facto final. Of those 13 tournaments, Australia have won 12. If David versus Goliath needs a reboot to bring it up to speed with an age in which women are taken more seriously in every sphere of life — and the gods know it does — this match fits the template.

The key contest looks likely to be Australia’s batters against South Africa’s pace bowlers, but the way the home side’s batters dealt with England’s crack attack says that theory could be in for a shake-up. Suddenly Tazmin Brits is five runs ahead of Alyssa Healy as the tournament’s highest remaining run-scorer, albeit from one fewer innings. But Ash Gardner is the leading wicket-taker left in the competition and no-one has a better economy rate than Grace Harris. 

Only the stupid money would not be on Australia to clinch another title. They have too many threats in too many places, who have delivered accordingly, not to be outright favourites. Thing is, much the same could have been said about England before the semi-final. They encountered a South Africa team who had finally got over themselves well enough to play properly.

A jam-packed Newlands will be willing them to do so one more time with feeling on Sunday. Men might form most of the crowd, as they have in the past. The difference this time is that they won’t only watch a cricket match, or even a cricket match played by women. They will attend history in the making, and they will hope as hard as they dare, from the bottom of their hoary, hairy hearts, that they are on the side of the team who write it.    

When: February 26, 2023; 3pm Local Time (1pm BST, 6.30pm IST)

Where: Newlands, Cape Town

What to expect: Another perfect day in Africa. And the same willing surface, though a touch weary, that served as the stage for both semifinals.

Team news:

South Africa: Woe betide anyone who tries to tamper with Friday’s XI.

Possible XI: Laura Wolvaardt, Tazmin Brits, Marizanne Kapp, Suné Luus (capt), Chloe Tryon, Anneke Bosch, Nadine de Klerk, Sinalo Jafta, Shabnim Ismail, Ayabonga Khaka, Nonkululeko Mlaba

Australia: The side who beat India in the semis — Australia’s only other game at Newlands during the tournament — will do nicely. 

Possible XI: Alyssa Healy, Beth Mooney, Meg Lanning (capt), Ashleigh Gardner, Grace Harris, Ellyse Perry, Tahlia McGrath, Georgia Wareham, Jess Jonassen, Megan Schutt, Darcie Brown

Did you know:

— South Africa have batted first in only two of their eight T20Is at Newlands, and won both of them.

— Meg Lanning used to have the nickname of Fui, a reference to former rugby league player Fuifui Moimoi. Why? Because Lanning’s second name is Moira …

What they said:

“That’s a feeling you can’t really put into words. It’s something we never thought would happen in our country — people standing in queues to buy tickets for a women’s cricket match. That’s when you know women’s sport is growing. I’m hoping that once this World Cup is finished and we play normal series and normal matches in South Africa the crowd won’t be any different.” — Suné Luus adds to her wishlist.

“We know we’re probably not going to be the team that everyone’s cheering for, but that’s fine. It’s going to be an incredible atmosphere and an incredible game at an amazing venue.” — Meg Lanning tries to let the Newlands crowd down gently.

Cricbuzz

Australia fly into T20 World Cup final on a wing and a runout

“The way I was batting, that was the only way for me to get out.” – Harmanpreet Kaur on her runout.

Telford Vice / Newlands

RARELY in the long and winding annals of bat-throwing has a specimen been hurled with as much vitriol as Harmanpreet Kaur unleashed at Newlands on Thursday. Her respiratory tract infection still stuck in her throat, her helmet ripped off her head, her eyes ablaze, she let fly with visceral anger.

Rather than a scene from a cricket match, it was straight out of a cage fight. Actually, it might have had her disqualified from a cage fight. Whatever else you do around this woman, do not get in her way.

The bat flew many metres into the outfield as if it had been spat out of Harmanpreet’s consciousness never to return, twisting and turning gracelessly through the afternoon air, then landing ugly, bouncing back up, and travelling further still towards the dark alley of shadow cast by the members’ pavilion, whose denizens would deplore such behaviour. Happily, hardly any of them were in attendance.

Don’t feel sorry for the bat. It was not an innocent. The damn fool thing had lodged itself in the pitch instead of gliding seamlessly across the turf and the crease, and causing Harmanpreet to be run out. It had earned its unscheduled journey to nowhere.

Yes, Harmanpreet should have angled her bat better to avoid her fate. Yes, players are taught to do what she failed to do when they are children learning the game. No, she didn’t deserve to be cast as the villain of her team coming closer than most to beating Australia in a T20 World Cup semifinal. She might disagree.

“If my bat didn’t get stuck I would’ve easily finished that run,” Harmanpreet said in the aftermath, stoney-faced and clearly still riled. “If I had stayed till the last moments we could have definitely finished the match one over earlier as we had the momentum. But even after that, Deepti [Sharma] was there, Richa [Ghosh] was there. I had the belief that they could do it, too, because Richa has also batted well in all the matches till now. But after I got out we played seven or eight dot balls in the middle and the match turned. Otherwise, we got a good momentum and the match was going well.”

In fact, India scored three runs off the next six deliveries after the runout. But she wasn’t wrong — that’s where the match was won and lost. Harmanpreet’s dismissal ended a stand of 35 off 26 with Ghosh, which followed her partnership of 69 off 41 with Jemima Rodrigues. When India’s captain took guard, at 28/3 in the fourth, her team needed 8.88 runs an over. When she was removed, they needed 40 off 32. The match was there for the winning. Until it wasn’t.

“My runout was a turning point. Otherwise we were in the game. Everything was going in our favour. It was a disappointment because the way I was batting, that was the only way for me to get out. The way I was meeting the ball, I knew how to take this innings to the end. From the Australian team’s body language, it looked like they had given up the match. But the moment I got out the momentum shifted.”

India finished five runs shy of overhauling Australia’s 172/4, but the truth of it was they had no right to run the perennial and defending champions that close. They had put in a shocking display in the field, leaking runs alarmingly and dropping three catches, and their bowling was scarcely better.

On top of that, the Indians weren’t sure their captain would be involved considering she had sought relief from her infection at a hospital on Wednesday. “Until the team meeting [on Thursday morning], we didn’t even know whether she would play,” Rodrigues said. “When I saw her dragging her bag I had just stepped out of my room, and I knew she was going to play. It’s not easy. Harry Di, from the time she’s come here, she’s been falling sick, she has injuries. And I’ve hardly seen her bat in the nets because something or the other was happening to her. Imagine the kind of thing she was going through, mentally. To come out there and play the way she did said so much about her mental strength and determination. She’s passionate about the sport and this team. And about winning.”

Instead Australia won their 10th consecutive completed women’s T20I, a stream of success that might have been 22 games long and stretched back more than 16 months had it not been for their loss to India in a super over in Mumbai in December last year.

Their bottomless batting produced stands of 52 off 45 between Alyssa Healy and Beth Mooney, 36 off 27 between Mooney and Meg Lanning, 53 off 36 between Lanning and Ash Gardner, and 24 off nine between Lanning and Ellyse Perry.

They spilled one catch, in the 13th when Healy lunged to where a slip might have been and dropped Harmanpreet off Darcie Brown, but otherwise handed down a fielding masterclass. The prime example was Perry, and the best of her sterling work came in the 19th over when Sneh Rana swept Jess Jonassen for what looked for all money like four. Only for Perry to swoop, dive, and flick the ball several metres back from whence it came, all in one magnificent motion, to limit the damage to two.

“We showed our class today in the field,” Gardner said. “We always speak about being the best fielding team in the world, and I think we really showed that. We took those pivotal moments when we needed to. Ellyse Perry was elite on the boundary, the blueprint for our side. Fielding could have been something that was the difference between us and them.”

But Australia weren’t at all assured of success when India reached a runrate of 9.30 midway through their innings — 1.30 better than was required, and with Rodrigues and Harmanpreet in full flow. It wasn’t so much that the Australians bowled badly, but that the Indians were batting with enterprise and intent.

“At the 10-over mark in India’s innings everyone had probably written us off,” Gardner said. “That shows our character and that’s why the best teams win from those positions. When our backs are against the wall we always try and find a way. Today we probably had no right to win at one point. They were cruising. And then we found a way to get some wickets.”

Champions do that. Great champions do it again and again and again. Australia, who have won this trophy five times in its seven previous editions and have reached the final seven times, are already in that category. They have earned a stab at being heralded as even greater champions.

Cricbuzz

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WPL auction ‘elephant in the room’ at T20 World Cup

“What’s the dynamic to make international cricket and domestic cricket thrive? That’s the sweet spot.” – Heather Knight

Telford Vice / Cape Town

IF some players seem preoccupied for the first few days of the women’s T20 World Cup, there will be a good reason why. As New Zealand’s Sophie Devine said in Cape Town on Saturday, “It’s the elephant in the room. It’s enormous.” 

The auction for the inaugural Women’s Premier League will be held in Mumbai on February 13, changing the lives of the game’s best players. “We talk about glass ceilings and I think the WPL is going to be the next stage,” Devine said. “I am really excited about it. As female cricketers, this is something we have never been through before.”

By the time the auction starts, the T20 World Cup will be five games old. South Africa and Sri Lanka will open the tournament at Newlands on February 11, followed the next day by England and West Indies and then Australia and New Zealand meeting in a double-header in Paarl. India, Pakistan, Bangladesh and the Lankans will be involved in another double-header at Newlands a day later.

The pressure on the players in those games promises to be an order of magnitude greater than anything they have yet faced. Will good performances by stars like Shabnim Ismail, Beth Mooney, Sophie Ecclestone, Amelia Kerr, Stafanie Taylor and Deepti Sharma enhance their chances of landing a lucrative deal? Might a first-ball duck or a match-losing over cause bidders to look elsewhere?

The Indians are caught between the rock of being confident that all of their players should get picked up, and the hard place of having to face geopolitical rivals Pakistan in their first match.

“Before [the auction], we have a very important game and we are just going to focus on that,” India captain Harmanpreet Kaur said. But she knew the auction was uppermost: “It’s a really big day for all of us because we have been waiting for years and years now. The next two or three months is very important for women’s cricket. We have seen how the WBBL and The Hundred help their countries to improve their cricket, and the same will take place for our country. It will be a great opportunity to improve cricket and grow the game. 

“But the World Cup is more important than anything else. An ICC event is always very important. Our focus is on the ICC trophy. These things will keep coming and as a player you know what’s important for you and how you need to keep your focus. We are all mature enough and know what is important for us.”

Australia captain Meg Lanning was also concerned with keeping her players’ eyes on the ball at the T20 World Cup: “We’re focusing on what we’re trying to do here, which is the most important thing. There’s no right or wrong way to go about it. Everyone will deal with it as they wish. We’ve spoken as a team about letting people deal with it how they feel is best. It’s about trying to embrace that and understand that it’s actually a really exciting time, and you don’t have a lot of control over it. We’ve just got to wait and see. We are trying to focus as much as we can on the cricket here and the rest will take care of itself.”

Heather Knight, England’s captain, is pursuing a masters degree in sports leadership and has written her dissertation on the rise of franchise leagues. She saw a steadily brightening future for women’s cricket: “Things are changing very fast. There are lots of franchise competitions popping up. The PSL is starting later, the WPL is kicking off and there’s going to be more and more franchise competitions starting and it’s going to create a really interesting dynamic. I think it’s absolutely brilliant for the game.

“The WPL is going to be a complete game-changer. The money that’s going to come in and the perceptions of the women’s game around the world … other boards will look at it and think I’ve got to catch up here. I really hope this accelerates the shift in a lot of countries.”

Knight hoped women’s cricket could show the game how to overcome some of the challenges being faced in the wake of the T20 explosion: “Franchise cricket and these tournaments are a really good thing, but what’s the dynamic to make international cricket and domestic cricket thrive? That’s the sweet spot. You’ve seen in the men’s game, it’s [franchises] have started to take over a little bit.

“I think in the women’s game you can have a really nice dynamic between the franchise leagues and international cricket. International cricket needs a bit of help to be able to do that but it’s a hugely exciting time. I am hugely excited for the future of the game and the opportunities that are developing not just for players. You see [former Australia top order batter] Rachel Haynes has been picked up as a [head] coach [by the WPL’s Gujarat Giants] and I think a lot of where the game has got to are those past players and how they’ve contributed to where the game is at.”

The unseemliness of people being reduced to commodities on an auction block was not lost on Devine: “On every scale, it’s going to be awkward. That’s the word we have spoken about. Some people are going to get picked up, some people won’t. You are going to get a value attached to what you are worth which, as human beings, it’s not the nicest, to be perfectly honest. But it’s also a job and it’s what we’ve put our names in for.”

Keeping the attention on the T20 World Cup with all that out of sight but definitely not out of mind will be tough, Devine said: “You’d be naive to think that it’s not going to be a distraction. It’s just how you handle it and the discussion each team and each player is going to have. It’s such an enormous step for women’s cricket. I am really looking forward to it but, also, there is a little bit of a World Cup going on at the same time. How we manage that is going to be up to each individual.”

For West Indies captain Hayley Matthews, the advent of the WPL was an indication that the public perception dial had shifted: “Women’s cricket is giving people a reason to want to watch. Before, you wanted people to support for the cause. Now you are 100% giving them a reason to support you.”

Of the 150 players at the T20 World Cup, as many as 45 could be signed by the five WPL teams: the 15 members of India’s squad and 30 from other full member countries. Each franchise will have USD1.46-million to spend. It’s a big moment for women’s cricket, but it demands context: an IPL franchise can lay out as much as USD11.5-million on playing personnel. That’s more than 10 times as much as a WPL outfit’s budget. Women have a way to go before they can claim equal citizenship in cricket.  

Cricbuzz 

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