Harry Brook topples Shahid Afridi’s long-standing Test record

NOTTINGHAM: England’s rising batter Harry Brook moved ahead of former Pakistan captain Shahid Afridi in the list of batters with the highest strike rate in Test cricket.

Brook, 25, since making his Test debut for England in 2022, has become an instrumental member of the team. Furthermore, England’s new era of aggressive cricket in the longest format, often called BazBall, seemed to have suited the young right-handed batter the most.

The middle-order batter, who put England into a commanding position in the second Test against West Indies with a well-crafted century in the second innings, has been in red-hot form.

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Brook had five consecutive half-centuries to his name prior to his match-defining ton in England’s 241-run victory over West Indies.

He scored 109 off 132 deliveries with the help of 13 boundaries as England set West Indies a daunting target.

Meanwhile, Harry Brook, who conceded the lowest number of deliveries to breach the 1000-run barrier in Test cricket, also has the highest strike rate in the format, marginally ahead of legendary Pakistan all-rounder Shahid Afridi.

Batters with highest strike-rate in Tests (Minimum 1000 runs)

Harry Brook (ENG): 90.70
Shahid Afridi (PAK): 86.97
Ben Duckett (ENG): 85.53
Tim Southee (NZ): 82.95
Virender Sehwag (IND): 82.23
Adam Gilchrist (AUS): 81.95

All in all, Brook has accumulated 1376 runs for England in 14 Tests at an astounding average of 62.54 and a strike rate of 90.70.

Notably, Harry Brook’s average of 62.54 is the second-highest in the history of the format, trailing only behind Australia legend Donald Bradman, who concluded his career with a batting average of 99.94.

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Brook steers England to strong position in second West Indies Test

Harry Brook’s unbeaten fifty guided England into a strong position at stumps on the third day of the second Test against the West Indies at Trent Bridge.

England were 248-3 in their second innings at Saturday’s close, already a lead of 207 runs.

Harry Brook was 71 not out and star batsman Joe Root unbeaten on 37, with the Yorkshire duo having shared an unbroken stand of 108 in 23.4 overs.

England had been in control against a wayward West Indies attack as Ben Duckett made 76, his second dashing fifty of the match, and Ollie Pope added 51 to his first-innings 121.

But a change of ball led to a change of luck for the West Indies, with paceman Alzarri Joseph removing both batsmen as England’s 127-1 was soon transformed into 140-3.

Root and Brook, however, restored England’s grip on the match as they scored briskly against a tiring West Indies pace attack, with a third-day pitch still providing an excellent surface for batting.

England opened their second innings 41 runs behind after being frustrated by an aggressive last-wicket stand of 71 between Joshua Da Silva (82 not out) and Shamar Joseph (33) that took the West Indies to 457.

It was the first time the West Indies had made 450 in a Test innings for nearly a decade.

Zak Crawley, dismissed for a duck in England’s first innings, was then unluckily run out for three after Jayden Seales deflected a Duckett drive onto the stumps at the bowler’s end.

But Pope underlined England’s determination to wrestle back the momentum with three fours off successive Seales deliveries.

Left-hander Duckett was also in fine touch, sweeping off-spinner Kevin Sinclair for three fours in a row on his way to a 55-ball 50.

But the first delivery following the change of ball ended a second-wicket partnership of 119 when Pope edged an Alzarri Joseph delivery low to Sinclair in the gully. The bowler’s excellent inswinging yorker then had Duckett lbw.

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But Harry Brook counter-attacked by advancing down the pitch to drive towering all-rounder Jason Holder for four.

Brook then completed the third fifty of the innings by stylishly check-driving Alzarri Joseph to the long-off rope for a fifth four in 62 balls faced.

Even so, the West Indies could take heart from a batting performance all the more creditable given they had been dismissed for just 121 and 136 during an innings and 114-run defeat by England at Lord’s.

That left them 1-0 down in this three-match series.

West Indies resumed on 351-5, 65 runs behind, after Kavem Hodge (120) and Alick Athanaze (82) shared a stand of 175 that revived them from 84-3.

England, in their first home Test since 2012 without retired duo James Anderson or Stuart Broad — who between them took 1,308 Test wickets — had struggled on Friday.

But an overcast Saturday morning promised to aid England’s pacemen, armed with the new ball, as Jason Holder (23 not out) and Da Silva (32 not out) looked to narrow the deficit.

Chris Woakes removed Holder and then dismissed Alzarri Joseph and Seales with successive deliveries before Shamar Joseph survived the hat-trick ball, with the Warwickshire seamer taking 4-84 in his 50th Test.

Da Silva, however, completed an 87-ball 50 in spectacular style when he launched fast bowler Mark Wood high over extra-cover for six.

And the wicketkeeper then took West Indies past 400 with an extravagant uppercut six off Wood.

Boundaries came at both ends, Shamar Joseph pulling fast bowler Gus Atkinson — fresh from 12 wickets on debut at Lord’s — for six to level the scores.

Two balls later Atkinson again dropped short as Shamar Joseph hoisted him for another six that knocked tiles off the roof of the Larwood and Voce Tavern.

England captain Ben Stokes turned to Root to break the stand but Da Silva clubbed the part-time spinner for three fours and a six off successive balls.

Wood eventually had Shamar Joseph chipping to mid-on, his only wicket of an innings where he topped 97 mph (156 kmh) and beat the outside edge.

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England star Harry Brook pulls out of Big Bash League

Hard-hitting England batter Harry Brook on Thursday pulled out of playing in the Big Bash League (BBL) this season with the Melbourne Stars due to workload concerns.

Brook signed on for the Twenty20 tournament in September and was set to join the Stars for seven games after England’s tour of the West Indies in December.

“Naturally we’re disappointed that Harry [Brook] has withdrawn from the BBL, but we understand his decision with his increased workload,” Stars general manager Blair Crouch said in a statement.

“Given Harry was set to miss the opening 3 matches, the club had already signed a replacement player for that period.

“Currently the coaching staff and list management team are discussing options for the remainder of the tournament and we look forward to announcing those signings once they have been finalised.”

“We obviously rate Harry extremely highly and we would have loved to have seen him at the MCG alongside Glenn Maxwell and Marcus Stoinis this summer.”

Harry Brook’s withdrawal comes just three weeks before the 13th BBL season starts, with the Stars facing Brisbane Heat at the Gabba first up.

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Zak Crawley to lead England in ODI series against Ireland

LONDON: England and Wales Cricket Board (ECB) on Wednesday, unveiled a 13-member squad, led by Zak Crawley, for the three-match home ODI series against Ireland, scheduled to commence on September 20.

Zak Crawley will lead England for the first time while his Test opening partner Ben Duckett named as his deputy for the three-match series.

Notably, Crawley has thus far represented England in only three ODIs, all of which came in England’s Covid-hit home ODI series against Pakistan in 2021.

Duckett, on the other hand, made his ODI debut in 2016 against Bangladesh, when he scored two fifties in the three-match series.

The left-handed opener then made his return in the three-match away series against South Africa earlier this year, after a seven-year absence from the format.

Duckett, however, failed to make his ODI return memorable as he could manage a top score of 20 in the series.

England squad includes three uncapped players, Warwickshire batter Sam Hain, Surrey wicketkeeper-batter Jamie Smith and Derbyshire paceman George Scrimshaw.

England’s 13-member squad for the Ireland ODIs also marked the return of Harry Brook, who was omitted when England announced their preliminary 15-man squad for the 50-over tournament in India which starts next month.

But teams do not have to confirm their squads until September 28.

The 24-year-old Harry Brook was initially edged out by 2019 World Cup final hero Ben Stokes’s decision to reverse his retirement from one-day internationals.

But a hundred for Northern Superchargers in his next innings in The Hundred, followed by contributions of 43 not out and 67 in T20 international wins against New Zealand reignited the debate about Harry Brook’s World Cup place.

England squad for Ireland ODIs: Zak Crawley (c), Ben Duckett (vc), Rehan Ahmed, Harry Brook, Brydon Carse, Sam Hain, Will Jacks, Craig Overton, Matthew Potts, Phil Salt, George Scrimshaw, Jamie Smith, Luke Wood.

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England coach Mott hints Harry Brook’s inclusion in World Cup 2023 squad

England white-ball coach Matthew Mott has suggested rising star Harry Brook could yet feature at the World Cup 2023, saying the defending champions’ final squad is “still open for debate”.

Harry Brook was omitted when England announced their preliminary 15-man squad for the 50-over tournament in India which starts next month.

But teams do not have to confirm their squads until September 28.

The 24-year-old Harry Brook was initially edged out by 2019 World Cup final hero Ben Stokes’s decision to reverse his retirement from one-day internationals.

But a hundred for Northern Superchargers in his next innings in The Hundred, followed by contributions of 43 not out and 67 in T20 international wins against New Zealand reignited the debate about Harry Brook’s World Cup place.

Dawid Malan appears to be the specialist batsman most likely to make way, although England could leave out all-rounder Liam Livingstone or drop a seam bowler to accommodate Brook.

“He is one of a number of players who has an opportunity to put their hand up,” Mott told the BBC.

“What I would say about Harry is that what you want to see from players when they miss out on a squad, is you want them to come out and slam that door down.

“And I thought at the start of this series, and with his hundred in the Hundred, he made a real statement…

“It is still open for debate and there will be plenty of good cricket played in the next month so we’ll see what that squad ends up looking like…

“It’s just an incredibly hard side to select and to squeeze 15 players into it.”

Mott was speaking following England’s six-wicket defeat by New Zealand in the fourth T20I at Trent Bridge, where the tourists reached a target of 176 to draw the series 2-2.

England next face New Zealand in four ODIs, starting in Cardiff on Friday.

Harry Brook is not in the squad for that series, but will likely feature in a three-match ODI series against Ireland, which would represent his last chance to impress before England fly to India.

“He may be in that Ireland squad so you can read into that,” Mott said. “It’s the media’s job to create speculation and it’s our job to put a lid on it and I think we are doing that. The players are coping with it really well.”

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WATCH: Harry Brook gets out in bizarre fashion in first Ashes Test

BIRMINGHAM: England’s batting prodigy Harry Brook had no luck in his favour as the right-handed succumbed to a bizarre dismissal on the opening day of the first Ashes Test.

The dismissal came in the 38th over when Nathan Lyon came to bowl for Australia with Harry Brook on strike. The young right-handed batter looked well set batting on 32.

Lyon bowled a shorter length, it spun sharply and bounced, hit the thigh pad and bounced high up in the air.

Australia’s wicketkeeper Alex Carey and other Australia close-in called for a catch with all of them leaving the sight of the ball.

But the ball after remaining in the air for a couple of seconds landed on Harry Brook’s back and deflected onto the stumps to complete a bizarre dismissal for him.

Bagging a bizarre dismissal, he smiled and walked back to the dugout in disgust.

Taking to Twitter, England Cricket also shared the footage of Harry Brook’s unlucky dismissal and called it a ‘Freak Dismissal’.

 

Notably, before the commencement of the Ashes, Harry Brook issued a warning to Nathan Lyon, stating that he is going to “take Nathan Lyon on”.

“if he bowls a good ball then I am going to respect it. But other than that, I’m going to try and take him on. He could get a lot of wickets, but hopefully, we are going to hit him for a lot of runs, said Brook in an ICC released statement.

“I would like to think I am a player who can find gaps and hit different gaps, I try and play all around the wicket. I will see whatever field he has; I am sure they will probably start from everybody up and we will go from there,” he added.

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Harry Brook ‘shuts down’ Indian trolls with maiden IPL century

KOLKATA: Young English batter Harry Brook shut down his Indian social media trolls by smashing his maiden Indian Premier League (IPL) century against home side Kolkata Knight Riders (KKR) on Friday.

Having managed to score just 29 in his first three IPL games, Brook was under immense criticism from the Indian fans, who questioned his ability as the right-handed batter was bought by Sunrisers Hyderabad for a mammoth amount.

Some Indian fans also mocked Pakistan bowlers for allowing Brook to score a century in the Pakistan Super League (PSL) season seven after his successive failures in the IPL but the Englishman had the last laugh as he silenced them for good.

At the post-match interview, Brook stated it was a wonderful night for him and that he was glad to see the team succeed in the end. He also expressed his joy at quieting the Indian supporters.

“Was a special night. Thankfully we got over the line as well. Got a little tense in the middle. A lot of people say that opening the batting in T20 is the best time to bat. I’m happy to bat anywhere. I’ve had a lot of success batting at five. Made my name there. My four Test hundreds will have to be over this one. The crowd was phenomenal tonight. I enjoyed it,” said Brook.

“I was putting pressure on myself a little bit. You go on social media and people are calling you rubbish. There’s a lot of Indian fans out there who’ll say well done tonight. But they were slagging me off a few days ago. Glad I could shut them up to be honest,” he concluded.

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Brook, Root centuries put England in charge of New Zealand Test

WELLINGTON: Red-hot Harry Brook made a majestic 184 not out to put England firmly in control against New Zealand in Wellington on Friday in the second Test.

Joe Root was unbeaten on a classy 101 as the tourists rampaged their way to 315-3 before rain ended the opening day of the series decider early.

Brook’s breathtaking display at the Basin Reserve made him the first player to score 800 or more runs in his first nine Test innings.

The 24-year-old came to the crease with England wobbling at 21-3 inside the first seven overs.

The hosts won the toss and elected to bowl on a green wicket.

That decision paid instant reward as New Zealand quickly dismissed England’s top order of Zak Crawley (two), Ben Duckett (nine) and Ollie Pope (10).

Matt Henry and skipper Tim Southee did the early damage for the hosts under expectedly blue skies.

Henry, back after missing the first Test with the birth of his child, forced Crawley into being caught behind as the opener’s sticky run continued.

All-rounder Michael Bracewell then made two superb catches in the slips to first dismiss Pope, then Duckett.

The dismissal of Duckett following Bracewell’s diving catch gave Southee a 700th international wicket in all formats, becoming the first New Zealander to reach the milestone.

However, it then became the Brook show as he took his Test  average to just over 100 in only his sixth match.

Brook was player of the match in the first Test with back-to-back half centuries to help England to a 267-run win.

He continued the remarkable start to his England Test career with a magnificent unbeaten knock laced with 24 fours and give sixes. His 184 came off 169 balls.

Alongside former skipper Root, he helped steer England out of trouble to 101-3 at lunch.

There was no let-up in the afternoon as Brook added to his three previous centuries against Pakistan in December.

Root was more steady but no less decisive, slapping his 29th Test century but first in eight Tests.

England, who have won 10 of their last 11 Tests under the attacking cricket of coach Brendon McCullum, stuck with the same team that convincingly won the opening game.

New Zealand made two changes with Will Young and Henry replacing Scott Kuggeleijn and Blair Tickner.

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Attack-minded England take control of first Test in New Zealand

MOUNT MAUNGANUI: High-octane batting and a precocious day-one declaration put England in control of the first Test against New Zealand in Mount Maunganui on Thursday.

The Black Caps limped to 37-3 at stumps in the day-night Test at the Bay Oval, having been thrust on to the back foot by England’s swashbuckling 325-9 declared.

The tourists raced to their total in just 58.2 overs — boosted by blistering half-centuries to Ben Duckett and Harry Brook — as England opened the two-Test series with the sort of attacking approach, dubbed “Bazball”, that has carried them to nine wins from their past 10 Tests under coach Brendon McCullum.

England captain Ben Stokes instructed his lower-order batsmen to throw the bat before calling them in, leaving 18 overs to bowl at the Black Caps under lights with a new pink ball.

The ploy worked as Tom Latham, Kane Williamson and Henry Nicholls departed before reaching double figures.

Evergreen seamer James Anderson took 2-11, including the key wicket of Williamson following an lbw review.

Opener Devon Conway will resume on 18 and nightwatchmen Neil Wagner on four, with a deficit of 288 runs staring at them on Friday.

It was a grim response to an England innings that featured 48 fours and one towering six from Brook off the bowling of New Zealand captain Tim Southee, who was lashed for 2-71 from 13 overs.

New Zealand’s depleted attack fought back midway through the second session when Ollie Pope, Joe Root and Stokes fell in quick succession, allowing debut pace bowlers Blair Tickner (1-72) and Scott Kuggeleijn (2-80) to claim their maiden Test wickets.

However, momentum was snatched back by the in-form Brook, who accelerated to 89 off 81 balls, supported by 38 from Ben Foakes.

Playing just his fifth Test, the 23-year-old Yorkshireman Brook was poised to become only the second England batsman after Ken Barrington in the 1960s to hit centuries in four consecutive Tests.

However, he played on to Wagner (4-82), the veteran seamer benefiting from England’s wild approach to the end of their innings.

Like Brook, Duckett was a revelation during the 3-0 series win in Pakistan in December and he maintained his hot streak with a rapid-fire 84 off 68 balls.

The hard-hitting opener had a chance of scoring England’s fastest Test century — surpassing Gilbert Jessop’s 76-ball knock against Australia in 1902 — before he fell to Tickner late in the first session.

Southee, leading his country at home for the first time, asked England to bat with the hope of exploiting the pink ball’s swing on a green-tinged pitch that had been covered for days because of Cyclone Gabrielle.

The hosts’ best spell came when Pope departed for 42 and Root for 14 in the space of four balls, followed soon afterwards by Stokes.

Most of the wickets fell to aggressive shotmaking, including Root’s, whose attempt at a reverse lap off Wagner was steered straight into the slip cordon.

Preparations for both sides had been disrupted by the storms that hit New Zealand and triggered a national state of emergency on Tuesday, but Mount Maunganui avoided significant damage and play started on time.

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Brook, Gardner named ICC Player of the Month for December 2022

DUBAI: England’s young batter Harry Brook and top-ranked all-rounder in Women’s T20Is Ashleigh Gardner capped off a remarkable by claiming the ICC Men’s and Women’s Player of the Month Award for December 2022 respectively.

Young right-handed English batter Brook, who made an instant impact in the longest format of the game, got the reward for his consistent brilliance as he bagged the player of the month award for December 2022.

Brook accumulated 468 runs with the help of three centuries and a fifty in the away Test series against Pakistan which played a pivotal role in earning him the prestigious title and edge past Pakistan skipper Babar Azam and Australia’s Travis Head.

Meanwhile, Gardner beat the other two nominees – England’s youngster Charlie Dean and New Zealand batter Suzie Bates – to end the year 2022 on a higher note as she claimed the coveted player of the month award for December.

Gardner enjoyed a splendid individual T20I series against India, amid which she picked up the joint-most seven wickets and also accumulated 115 runs at an average of more than 50.

Her all-round performance against India, not only earned her the Player of the Series Award and propelled her to the heights of the Women’s T20I All-rounder rankings to overtake West Indies skipper Hayley Matthews but she has now named the player of the month by the ICC.

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