Masood wants turning pitches in Pakistan domestic cricket to give batters 'exposure'

“We should appreciate the players for throwing themselves in the den without being exposed to these conditions,” Pakistan’s Test captain said

Danyal Rasool27-Jan-2025Pakistan captain Shan Masood said he expected the team to continue their recent experiment of heavily turning tracks at home, and that they would be replicated across domestic cricket as well. After falling to a 120-run defeat at home against West Indies that levelled the series 1-1 and confirmed Pakistan’s position at the bottom of the current World Test Championship cycle, Masood maintained there were “encouraging signs” that Pakistan would seek to build on.”Domestic cricket will be played like this,” he said. “We’ve already talked about this. The more we’ll play the better we’ll get at it. We’ve shown encouraging signs. After the four matches, we’ve won three in these conditions. We dominated the first hour of the first day which could have swung the match in our favour. It’s just about winning those key moments and ensuring we’re consistent with these conditions domestically and internationally.”Since Pakistan lost the first Test against England on a flat wicket in Multan, they have reverted to producing tracks that break up and spin from the first day, rendering fast bowling almost redundant. The last four home Tests have seen Pakistan take 80 wickets, with just one falling to a seam bowler. Fingerspinners Sajid Khan and Noman Ali have dominated the bowling attack, taking 70 of the 80 wickets, and frequently opening the bowling attack in each innings. It has turned around Pakistan’s straggling home form, allowing them to beat England 2-1 at home and easing to a victory in the first Test against West Indies. This Test, however, the visiting spinners turned the script around on them, with left-arm spinner Jomel Warrican of West Indies walking away with both the Player-of-the-Match and Series awards.Related

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“It’s a game of all stakeholders. We should appreciate the players for throwing themselves in the den without being exposed to these conditions. We know we haven’t played domestic cricket in these conditions. In some ways, it’s a kind of bravery to expose ourselves to these conditions. We practiced, but this is new for us. But we need to replicate this in domestic cricket, give our batters exposure so we play in these conditions and get runs in them. In the fourth innings, anything over 150 is a competitive score, where spinners will always have the edge.”An unavoidable outcome of such surfaces is the outsized role the toss plays. All four times, the side winning the toss has batted first, walking away with victory three times. While Pakistan were able to flip that script against England in the series-decider, West Indies’ win once more demonstrated the way these pitches can slant a game in favour of the side bowling last.Mohammad Rizwan was bowled by Jomel Warrican, who took the match and series honours•AFP/Getty Images

However, it didn’t appear that way when Pakistan bowled in the first hour, having reduced West Indies to 54 for 8, and letting that situation slip through their fingers frustrated Masood most of all. “We didn’t get the result we wanted. The positive thing was when you field first and you know the fourth innings will be difficult. So you try to restrict the opposition in the first innings. We bowled brilliantly for the first eight wickets. But we’ve talked about the first innings batting and bowling combining to do well, so you have the advantage in the third and fourth innings. If you look at our batting and bowling, and the mistakes we made collectively, that was a crucial time because their last two wickets cost us dear.”Then, with the bat, we went from 119 for 4 to 154 all out. When these collapses happen and the other side puts on partnerships, they can set you back. If we’d got them out early and got a 100-run lead, the Test match would be completely different. With Test matches on these pitches, you can’t wait to make a move, because things are decided on day one, and that is where you can win or lose matches.”This is the end of a cycle, an unhappy one for Pakistan, and for its leader. Pakistan have lost nine of their last 12 matches, all five away from home and four of seven at home. Despite starting off with a crushing away win in Sri Lanka, they have finished bottom of the WTC table, and do not play another Test for nearly nine months.Masood acknowledged Pakistan had fallen short of expectations, but did not believe the side required a complete overhaul, pointing out fine margins made the difference in this Test, and could be worked on.”The tail not getting wickets is an area of concern, and we need to finish off sides quicker,” Masood said, echoing his frustrations in South Africa, where the last two wickets adding too many runs cost them dear in the first Test at Centurion. “Against Australia, who have the best tail in the world, we got them out cheaply, but not here, or against Bangladesh or South Africa.”Batters have been proactive, but we need more contributions. You may not get hundreds here but 30s and 40s contribute to the winning conditions. Kraigg Brathwaite was an ideal example. He took the game on. One batter will need to step up in these conditions especially when the ball is new.”It’s not about holding someone responsible. This isn’t an accountability bureau. This is a team effort. Our mistake as a team was the first two innings. That was what set us back, and gave the opposition a degree of freedom. If we had a 100-run lead, I do not think they’d have been able to play in the way they did. We need to understand the direction of matches will be decided very quickly, as early as day one.”

Roy Torrens, former Ireland player and team manager, dies aged 72

Torrens played 30 times for his country and was team manager during Ireland’s 2007 World Cup run

ESPNcricinfo staff23-Jan-2021Roy Torrens, the former Ireland player and team manager, has died aged 72. Torrens played 30 times for his country between 1966 and 1984, and was team manager during Ireland’s famous run to the Super Eights stage of the 2007 World Cup.A brisk medium-pace bowler who took 77 wickets in Ireland green at an average of 25.66, Torrens’ best performance came against Scotland in 1974, when he claimed figures of 7 for 40. He was also good enough with the bat to thrash 177 in an hour in a club game.After retiring, he served as a selector and president of the Irish Cricket Union (the forerunner to Cricket Ireland), before becoming Ireland men’s manager in 2004.”I am greatly saddened to learn of the loss of our great friend, Roy Torrens,” Ross McCollum, chair of Cricket Ireland, said. “Roy was a truly remarkable character, an immense presence in Irish cricket, and a truly great friend – not just personally, but to many people within and outside the cricket family.

“He was a player, a team manager, a president and – most importantly – an inspiration to all he met.”It goes without saying, but we will miss him greatly and our hearts go out to Joan, the family and his friends at this time.”During Torrens’ time as manager, a position he held until 2012, Ireland developed the most-successful side in their history. As well as overcoming Pakistan and Bangladesh at the 2007 World Cup, they qualified for World T20s in 2009, 2010 and 2012, while famously beating England at the 2011 World Cup.In 2009, Torren was awarded an OBE for his services to cricket.

IPL 2020, Match Highlights – Chennai Super Kings vs Mumbai Indians

ESPNcricinfo’s updates from the 41st game of IPL 2020

Matt Roller23-Oct-2020

Haryana seamers limit Saurashtra, Pujara scores 35

A round-up of the Group B matches from the opening day of the Ranji Trophy season

ESPNcricinfo staff06-Oct-2017Cheteshwar Pujara contributed only 35 while Robin Uthappa, in his first match for Saurashtra, was dismissed for 7 as Haryana’s seamers dominated in Lahli. Fifties from Prerak Mankad and Sheldon Jackson helped Saurashtra recover to 271 for 7.Ashish Hooda was the most successful seamer for Haryana with 4 for 59, which included the wickets of Pujara and Uthappa. His strikes in the middle overs left Saurashtra at 104 for 4, after they were 76 for 1 at one stage. Jackson contributed 51 off 59 balls and his wicket left Saurashtra at 150 for 5, but Mankad combined with Chirag Jani (45) to add another 105 runs for the sixth wicket to help Saurashtra fight back. While Mankad was dismissed for a 115-ball 68, Jani fell on the last ball of the day for 45. Five Saurashtra batsmen scored more than 35, but none of them could convert their starts into bigger innings.Robin Bist anchored Rajasthan’s batting on the opening day of theGroup B match against Jammu & Kashmir in Jaipur with his 13th first-class hundred. He was assisted by fifties from opener Amitkumar Gautam and Ashok Menaria, who scored 51 and 69 respectively. Bist remained unbeaten on 105, smashing 17 fours on the day, at a strike rate of a little under 50.Bist came in to bat at the fall of Dishant Yagnik’s wicket in the 14th over and went on to add 73 runs for the second wicket with Gautam. The duo batted out more than 30 overs before Gautam was bowled by pacer Mohammed Mudhasir soon after reaching his fifty. Menaria then joined Bist to add a further 137 runs for the third wicket to set the side on track for a big first-innings total.Towards the end of the day, however, offspinner and J&K captain Parvez Rasool bowled Menaria for 69, and then held on to a catch to dismiss Mahipal Lomror, helping J&K finish the day with four wickets. Mudhasir had returns of 3 for 66 in his 25 overs.Allrounder Jalaj Saxena led Kerala’s charge against Jharkhand in Thiruvananthapuram, with his 13th first-class five-for to leave the visitors at a weak 200 for 9.Jharkhand opted to bat but their opener Babul Kumar was out for a duck in the day’s third over before Saxena’s left-arm spin cut through Jharkhand’s top order, taking three wickets in a nine-over period to leave Jharkhand at 48 for 4. Saurabh Tiwary (22) then added 52 runs for the fifth wicket with Ishan Kishan before ending up as Saxena’s fourth victim of the day, ensuring that Saxena had accounted for four of Jharkhand’s top five batsmen. Kaushal Singh (24) and Ashish Kumar (25) resisted briefly but Saxena removed both batsmen after they got useful starts.Sandeep Warrier and left-arm spinners Karaparambil Monish and Akshay Chandran shared the other three wickets.

'2010 series a lesson of what not to do' – McCullum

New Zealand captain Brendon McCullum has admitted that the 2010 series defeat against Bangladesh was damaging to the players, and he sees this tour as a chance to set things right

Mohammad Isam in Chittagong08-Oct-2013New Zealand captain Brendon McCullum has admitted that the 2010 series defeat against Bangladesh was damaging and hurtful to the players and country. However, he sees this tour as a chance to set things right, and is looking for wins across all three formats.In that five-match ODI series in Dhaka three years ago, Bangladesh crushed the visitors 4-0, with Shakib Al Hasan leading the way with several match-winning performances.”The 2010 series was a good lesson of what not to do,” McCullum said. “We were ill-prepared leading up to that series. It still hurts. It was a damaging tour for many people. It hurt a lot of people’s career, and hurt our country as well.”The big challenge for us is to ensure we get the results which is obviously a series win across all three formats of the game. That’s the expectation of us, and we are better prepared for it.”Immediately after the loss in Bangladesh, New Zealand didn’t win a match in India out of eight games. They however did bounce back to make it to the 2011 World Cup semi-final, won a Test match in Australia and registered an ODI series win over South Africa in South Africa.But there were scars, as there have been changes in captaincy from Daniel Vettori to Ross Taylor and now McCullum. Coaches too have changed, with Mike Hesson now in charge.McCullum however has a few tricks up his sleeve ahead of this tour. Legspinner Ish Sodhi is highly rated in New Zealand, and has a big chance of making his Test debut.”He [Sodhi] has a big opportunity to make his debut. The conditions over here will suit spin bowlers, and his ability to bowl the variations will bring him in the reckoning,” McCullum said. “As Dan Vettori said, he is an incredible talent. He’s a rough diamond at this point in time. If he does get the nod, we want to let him express himself. I want to protect him by giving the right fields and encourage him.”McCullum is also mulling over whether it should be Dean Brownlie or Corey Anderson in the line-up, with the latter possessing a variation in his left-arm seam that could come in handy against Bangladesh’s batsmen. “If we do decide on an allrounder, he needs to bat in the top six. Corey’s performance has banged on the door. We have to work out between him and Dean, who we require in that middle-order, and who’s going to be most effective against the Bangladesh spin bowlers.”But McCullum also admitted that as far as some of the Bangladesh players are concerned, there are gaps in information in the New Zealand ranks. They’ve not faced the likes of Sohag Gazi, Anamul Haque and Robiul Islam, who have been impressive in their early foray in international cricket.”There are a few surprises [in the Bangladesh team]. It’s hard to get footage of these guys, but you get an idea of what they bowl and bat like. Few of us have played against these guys and talked to guys back home who have been involved in tournaments here. We are not 100% clear on them, but we are a fair way there.”

England Lions on back foot in Brisbane despite Ben McKinney's 94

Durham opener stars on second day of tour game but CAXI openers made inroads in chase

ECB Reporters Network15-Jan-2025Cricket Australia XI 176 (Hearne 106, Cook 4-15) and 97 for 1 (Ward 39*, MacMillan 11*) need another 164 runs to beat England Lions 223 (Davies 54, Gannon 5-27) and 213 (McKinney 94) Durham’s Ben McKinney fell just short of a century for England Lions, as a Cricket Australia XI took control of their four-day encounter at the Ian Healy Oval in Brisbane.On a day when wickets continued to tumble, with 12 falling in all, the 20-year-old McKinney stood tallest to strike a composed 94 as the Lions were bowled out for 213 in their second innings.The home side reached 97 for one at the close, needing another 164 runs on day three to seal victory. Tim Ward was unbeaten at the close on 39 from 80 balls, having added 77 for the first wicket with Jayden Goodwin.Sonny Baker had earlier wrapped up the CAXI first innings without addition to their overnight 176. He dismissed centurion Lachlan Hearne with his first ball of the day to finish with four for 43, as the Lions took a 47-run lead. Sam Cook, who ran through the top-order yesterday, finished with four for 15.A youthful Lions batting line-up, featuring nine players aged 22 or under, were then unable to fully capitalise on their advantage aside from former Under-19s captain McKinney.The left-handed opener reached his half-century with a textbook cover drive to the rope but had been left with the tail when he pulled Gabe Bell and was caught on the boundary just short of his century. Last man Cook made a handy 23 from 19 balls as he and Baker added 28 for the last wicket. The CAXI wickets were shared around, with Bell and Charlie Anderson claiming three apiece.Bashir claimed the only wicket of the home side’s chase when Goodwin, son of former Zimbabwe and Sussex batter Murray, was trapped lbw on the back foot by Bashir for 35. Raf MacMillan was 11 not out at the close.

Relief for Ben Foakes after timely ton reassures him of Test worth

England wicketkeeper admits he is still learning to pace innings batting at No. 7

Vithushan Ehantharajah26-Aug-2022Ben Foakes admits fitting into this new England men’s Test side can be a struggle but hopes Test century number two is a sign he is going about it the right way.Foakes finished unbeaten on 113 on day two against South Africa at Old Trafford, as the hosts declared on 415 for 9 to establish a first-innings lead of 264. While it was by no means the kind of aggressive innings we have become used to under Ben Stokes and Brendon McCullum, the Surrey wicketkeeper reaching three figures from 206 deliveries, it was a vital contribution when England needed it most.It was an especially helpful knock alongside Stokes, who scored 103, as the pair put on 173 for the sixth wicket. Having come in on 147 for 5, still trailing the Proteas by four, the absorption of pressure and the subsequent accumulation of runs, which sped up when Foakes was batting with the tail, was a nod to a lot of introspection and hard work paying dividends for the 29-year-old.His first century came in his first innings in this format, back in November 2018 in Sri Lanka. Since then, he has established himself as a reliable No. 5 for Surrey: seven of his now 13 first-class hundreds have come for the county – he began his career at Essex, for whom he has three – at an average of 43. While he struggled at first to truly get to grips with batting lower for England, and adopting an altogether different mindset, this was a sizeable step in the right direction.”It’s a different role, at Surrey I just bat five and just play,” Foakes said. “When you get on quite challenging wickets batting at seven, obviously there’s a good chance you lose wickets quickly and you have to play a different way. I think for me it’s learning how to do that as well as I can. Just because it’s not my natural game. Finding a way to be able to, quite early on in my innings, put pressure back on the bowler rather than just batting.Related

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“When I bat at five hundreds are definitely something I think about, but at seven I think more about just trying to contribute because obviously you’re not going to get as many opportunities to get a hundred. If I can get 40 with the tail and dominate that partnership, that’s my job. Getting a big partnership here and getting a century definitely gives me some confidence going forward.”There was palpable relief at getting another significant score on the board 14 Tests and four years later, not just with the celebration of fist pumps to himself before receiving a warm embrace from his partner at the time, Ollie Robinson, and the appreciation of a packed out Emirates Old Trafford.Since his debut, Foakes was either thrust in and out on a whim or missed out through injury, as happened at the start of 2021 when he tore his hamstring. Then, during the Headingley Test against New Zealand earlier this summer, a bout of Covid-19 ruled him out of the second-half of the match and the next Test against India. Twin failures at Lord’s (6 and 0) heaped more misery on him, but he has come out the other side in impressive fashion. An average of 26.91 coming into this match has already improved to 31.82 thanks to the red ink.”I just felt awful in that game [Headingley],” he said. “Getting the opportunity of being number one and then pretty soon after getting something like that is very frustrating, I’ve had a bit of stuff going on since I first played but I’m used to little setbacks like that”To be honest, in my first 10 games I was kind of looking and thinking ‘jeez how hard is Test cricket’. The West Indies tour [in 2019], the wickets out there – and then I came in for those three in India [last year] and it was obviously crazy to bat on and I guess this is a different role as well.”I think it’s just that I’ve been a little bit out of touch,” he said of his performance at Lord’s last week. “I haven’t been lining it up as well as I’d like in the last couple of Championship games and then in the first one at Lord’s. So for me it was just working out how to do that better. That’s what I worked on between these two games. And I felt like I did line it up better and play better.”Because it’s not my natural game, it’s just trying to work out how to play best. And I think sometimes I haven’t got the balance right because I’m not an explosive batter. If I’m trying to get the score up I can start pushing at the ball and things like that and playing at balls I shouldn’t be. It’s been really clear, obviously practising in a different way for that role, but also being really clear when I am just going to bat or when I have to push the button… how I’m going to do it. Don’t just throw my bat outside off stump. I’m happy to get out if I’m doing this or this, but not just giving it away.”

Sam Hain's 130 leads Warwickshire resistance against relentless Lancashire

Danny Lamb, George Balderson share six wickets as Will Williams impresses on debut

ECB Reporters Network12-Jun-2022Warwickshire 292 (Hain 130, D Lamb 3-43, Balderson 3-68) vs Lancashire Sam Hain’s high-class century kept Warwickshire afloat as Lancashire’s bowlers impressed on the opening day of their LV=Insurance County Championship tussle at Edgbaston.The home side was all out for 292 just before the close with Hain the last to fall for 130. The accomplished knock continued the 26-year-old’s excellent red-ball form, his last four championship innings having brought 449 runs for twice out.After choosing to bat, Warwickshire leaned heavily on Hain as other batters got in but then found ways of getting out against a Red Rose attack which persevered well on a good batting pitch.

Hain found some support from the middle order, adding 65 with Will Rhodes and 67 with Michael Burgess, but Lancashire’s bowlers – with Kiwi seamer Will Williams impressing on his debut – kept taking wickets at important times.Williams closed with 24-11-42-2 and the pressure he built, contributed to wickets taken by his colleagues, notably Danny Lamb and George Balderson.Warwickshire lost two early wickets against a well-directed new ball attack in which Williams conceded just three singles in his first seven overs. That pressure led to errors: Alex Davies tried to pull a good-length ball from Tom Bailey and spliced to short extra cover, and Rob Yates chopped an attempted drive at Balderson on to his stumps. Balderson also dismissed Dom Sibley who edged an away-swinger to wicketkeeper Dane Vilas.Related

Hain and Rhodes dug in to added 65 in 21 overs before Williams bagged a deserved first wicket when a perfect outswinger took a thin edge from Rhodes.When Matt Lamb was bowled through a drive by his namesake Danny, Warwickshire were 142 for 5, but Hain and Burgess responded with the most fluent batting of the day. Burgess advanced to 41 before lifting a short ball from spinner Matt Parkinson to extra cover.Hain reached his 14th first class century with successive fours off Parkinson but continued to lose partners as Danny Briggs fell lbw to Lamb and Henry Brookes edged Williams to second slip.Liam Norwell, back in the side after injury, reached 1,000 first-class runs when he clouted Williams for four to get off the mark, but was then bowled by Lamb and Lancashire’s satisfying day concluded in the final over when Hain edged Balderson into the cordon.

Marizanne Kapp: This win an indication that 'this team is going to get stronger and better'

She’s a “bit annoyed” with herself because she didn’t stay till the end to finish off things, but heaped praise on her side after beating England

Firdose Moonda14-Mar-2022After a maiden career five-for and a game-changing cameo innings, the first word that passed Marizanne Kapp’s lips is not what you might expect. “Sorry,” she told Trisha Chetty when Hawkeye confirmed the Anya Shrubsole ball she missed would have gone on to hit the stumps. “I knew I was supposed to be there at the end.”Kapp took South Africa ten runs away from a third successive victory at the tournament, and the first over England at the tournament since 2000, having played a key role in ensuring they would only have to face a gettable 236.She took wickets at the top and bottom of England’s line-up, effected a run-out that changed the trajectory of their innings and could have viewed her performance as the perfect game until she was dismissed with the result still in the balance.Related

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Though South Africa have not lost a game while chasing since the start of 2020 – having won 12 out of 14 – with the lower order in operation against the team that narrowly beat them in the 2017 World Cup semi-final, Kapp had reason to believe she should have finished things.”I was a bit annoyed with myself,” she said. “I knew I should have finished that game. I put a lot of pressure on the two batters in the middle.”But she had faith they would get South Africa over the line and she told them so. “I told Trisha, ‘If I am out now [when the review was happening], you take charge; you take the lead. We only need a run a ball and I back the both of you’,” Kapp said afterwards. “I said the same thing to Shabnim [Ismail]: ‘Just watch the ball and don’t be scared’.”Ismail hit the first ball she faced for four to cut through the tension, and went on to rotate strike with Chetty to secure the win. Like their previous two matches, it wasn’t South Africa’s most convincing performance, but it showed that they can play under pressure. For Kapp, it demonstrated how they have developed over the last few years.”I’ve just reached a point in my career where now I know what I am capable of, and I just have to back myself,” Kapp said•AFP/Getty Images

“In the past, those close games were the ones we lost,” Kapp said. “In the first two games, we probably didn’t play the cricket we can and want to play, and even today, we scrapped the runs together and managed to get over the line. We know the heartbreak we had in the previous World Cup and we have different plans. Hopefully after today, this team is just going to get stronger and better. I feel like we are moving in the right direction and we will probably peak at the right time.”Kapp’s career is following a similar arc. After 13 years and 121 matches, she finally took five wickets in an innings and has adapted to her role as a pinch-hitter at No. 6 to allay fears of South Africa’s tail being too long. She also has more belief in herself than she did before, which comes from a combination of experience and consistent performance.”I’ve played over 200 games [in all formats] for South Africa, so I should be confident in my abilities,” she added. “But being with this team, being able to represent my country in so many games, I’ve just reached a point in my career where now I know what I am capable of, and I just have to back myself. If I do that, I usually perform well.”She is also carrying some extra responsibility now. In the absence of regular captain Dane van Niekerk, who is also Kapp’s wife, South Africa’s senior players had to step up to create match-winning moments of their own.”A lot of our performances over the past year or year-and-a-half are because of Dane. She carries this team,” Kapp said. “It’s so sad that she is not here to enjoy this with us. She leaves a massive void. Not only skill-wise, but just to have her around the group.”van Niekerk is still involved, albeit indirectly, and tweeted up a storm during the match. She called Kapp’s performance “world-class”, and the match against England “what World Cups are all about,” and Kapp had something to say to her in return: “I know she is our biggest supporter. I know she is back home cheering for us and this win was for her.”

Michael Holding 'doesn't know anything that's going on' – Jofra Archer on England's racism stance

Fast bowler welcomes clampdown on online abuse but says more needs to be done

George Dobell14-Sep-20201:48

Holding: Sportspersons have the platform to make a difference

Jofra Archer has claimed Michael Holding “doesn’t know anything that is going on behind the scenes” after he criticised England and Australia for failing to take a knee during their limited-overs series.Holding, the former West Indies fast bowler, has been a vocal advocate of the Black Lives Matter movement in recent months. As well as providing impassioned testimony of his experiences on Sky and with ESPNcricinfo, he welcomed the decision of the England, West Indies and Ireland teams to register their respect for the movement by taking a knee ahead of their Test and ODI fixtures earlier this season.But he described the failure of Pakistan, Australia and England to do so ahead of their recent matches as “lame” and suggested individual players could unilaterally make the gesture if they wanted to “send a signal” to show they “accept things need to change”.But Archer, England’s Barbados-born fast bowler, has insisted nobody involved within the England set-up has “forgotten” about the movement and claimed progress is being made “in the background”.”I’m pretty sure Michael Holding doesn’t know anything that is going on behind the scenes,” Archer said. “I don’t think he has spoken to [ECB chief executive] Tom Harrison.”I’ve spoken to Tom and we have stuff running in the background. We’ve not forgotten. No-one here has forgotten about Black Lives Matter.Jofra Archer, back in the light blue of England’s ODI team•Getty Images

“I think that is a bit harsh for him to say that. I think it is a bit harsh for Mikey to not do some research before criticising.”The “background” measures referred to by Archer include the ECB setting up an Inclusion and Diversity taskforce, a commitment to increasing the representation of non-white individuals in leadership roles, a game-wide anti-discrimination charter and a bursary scheme for young black coaches, with a focus on “leadership, education and opportunity”. There will also be a further drive to reintroduce cricket in primary schools, with a focus on ethnically diverse areas.But Holding, responding to Archer’s comments, told ESPNcricinfo there should be no conflict between taking action in the background and continuing to make a gesture in public.”Taking a knee does not prevent other action from taking place,” Holding said. “Those who take a knee are not substituting the gesture for other positive action.ALSO READ: Holding on Black Lives Matter – England excuses are ‘lame’“Nobody should have a problem with it. It is a worldwide recognition of calling attention to racial prejudice and injustice.”Meanwhile, Archer welcomed the crackdown by social media companies upon those making racial abuse online. But he did suggest legislation “might have to go a bit further” given that he continues to receive abuse on a regular basis.”I think a lot of stuff is being put into place now,” he said. “People can be prosecuted a bit easier, but I think it might have to go a bit further because some people still aren’t worried about what can happen to them.”I had one the other day; the guy blamed it on being drunk. My mum would always say ‘you can’t think for people’. As long as there is social media and the person doesn’t have to confront you it will still go on.”I feel the love from fans, too. But there’s still a small percentage, you know? I may be doing well but I saw one lady comment on my [gold] chains. Chains have nothing to do with cricket. If she knew me she would know I’ve worn chains from the time I was 14 or 15 years old. You can’t make everyone happy, but the majority of people in England are happy and that makes me happy.”All we can do is try to act accordingly, report it and do what’s best. At the end of the day I think I’m strong enough to deal with it, but what happens when they start targeting someone who isn’t as mentally strong and it starts affecting them? We’ve got to try and stamp it out as much as possible now.”

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