Ranking Four Best Landing Spots for Cody Bellinger in Free Agency

After landing in the Bronx via a trade by the Cubs last winter, Cody Bellinger could be on the move for the second offseason in a row after he turned down a $25 million option from the Yankees to pursue a better deal. He should have a number of suitors.

In 2025, Bellinger slashed .272/.334/.489, with 29 home runs, 98 RBIs, and 13 stolen bases. He had a solid wRC+ of 125 and produced 4.9 fWAR. It was arguably his best season since he was named NL MVP in 2019 as a member of the Dodgers.

Somehow, Bellinger is only 30 years old. He’s a two-time All-Star, has a World Series ring, is a good defender at all three outfield positions, and can play first base. Few players have the defensive versatility he boasts, while also providing pop at the plate.

Bellinger should receive a decent-sized contract this winter, and the following four teams could give it to him. For this exercise, we've ranked them from the weakest fit to the strongest, but all four teams are reasonable possibilities for the veteran free agent.

New York Mets

The Mets need to add to their offense and find another reliable outfielder. Bellinger fits perfectly. As noted, he provides solid defense at all three outfield spots and can play first if needed. New York’s center fielders ranked 27th in OPS (.598) during the 2025 season while slashing .210/.284/.314. An upgrade is sorely needed.

Additionally, Pete Alonso’s knockdown, drag-out free agency saga last season could have left some bruises and might lead both parties to walk away this winter. If that happens, the Mets will need to find a power bat. Bellinger has a career 144 wRC+ at Citi Field and would have no problem fitting in.

New York Yankees

Bellinger obviously fits back with the Yankees, but only if they aren’t totally sold on going full-time with youngsters Jasson Dominguez and Spencer Jones. Bellinger and Trent Grisham are free agents, as is Paul Goldschmidt. That’s 73 home runs New York has to replace. Bellinger was second on the team in WAR this season (5.1), and he at Yankee Stadium. In 80 home games in 2025, Bellinger slashed .302/.365/.544 with 18 home runs, 55 RBIs, and a wRC+ of 151. The Yankees know what he can do, and he might be a safer bet than going elsewhere in free agency.

Seattle Mariners

With Josh Naylor and Eugenio Suarez both off to free agency, the Mariners need to solidify their corner infield spots. Bellinger could step right in at first base and give Seattle a left-handed bat with some thump. He could also move to the outfield, as Seattle’s right fielders ranked 28th in OPS (.618) this season, slashing an anemic .222/.281/.337. Bellinger would be an immediate upgrade.

In 11 career games at T-Mobile Park, he is slashing .333/400/.600, with three home runs and a wRC+ of 173. The Mariners came painfully close to reaching their first World Series. If they want to get over the hump in 2026, they’re going to need to spend.

Cleveland Guardians

If Cleveland follows through with trading Steven Kwan, the team’s need for outfield help will be even more dire. Chase DeLauter made his debut in the postseason and should help things, but adding a veteran bat like Bellinger’s would give the lineup a boost. It’s worth noting, he has an .831 career OPS at Progressive Field, with a wRC+ of 109.

Guardians center fielders ranked dead last in OPS this season (.574), and slashed .199/.256/.318, and Bellinger is more than capable of improving on that.

Akram's yorkers, Hegg's hits, and Chapple's 6 for 18

This week, we relive the glorious one-day triumphs of Lancashire in the 1990s

Andrew McGlashan27-Apr-2020What We’re WatchingWasim Akram too quick
Wasim Akram forged one of the great overseas careers with Lancashire. In the 1990 Benson & Hedges Cup final at Lord’s, he produced a blistering new-ball spell that put the county on course for a comfortable victory against Worcestershire.Akram had already played his part with the bat as he clubbed 28 off 21 balls in a strong performance from Lancashire’s lower order (that was a feature of their side, as you will see). Akram was usually held back from the new ball – Lancashire’s one-day bowling options were tremendously deep – and on this day he came on as first change behind Paul Allott and Phillip DeFreitas.He found the outside edge of Tim Curtis and then set about roughing up a young Graeme Hick, who soon edged to Warren Hegg as Lancashire took hold of the match. “Akram has looked likely to take a wicket with every ball,” said commentator Jack Bannister.Surrey’s epic meltdown
One of the most extraordinary collapses in one-day cricket. In the 1993 Benson & Hedges Cup first-round match at The Oval, Surrey were 212 for 1 chasing 237, needing 25 from 35 balls. Graham Thorpe had a century to his name and Alec Stewart was on 95 when Peter Martin nipped one back into off stump. Surely just a blip on the way to victory?Then Akram was brought back, strangling Monte Lynch down the leg side and removing Thorpe, well caught at midwicket by Ian Austin, in the 51st over. Such was the pressure built by Akram, Martin and Austin that the runs required soon overtook the balls remaining as Surrey’s middle order froze like rabbits in headlights although, in their defence, Akram and Austin produced a masterclass of yorker bowling. By the time the final over began, Surrey needed 14 with Waqar Younis (this was a golden era of the overseas player) and Martin Bicknell at the crease, but they couldn’t really get close.Akram with the bat, this time
Hick’s century had led Worcestershire to a very competitive 261 for 5 in their 1995 Benson & Hedges Cup semi-final and Lancashire’s chase was in the mire at 169 for 7 as Hick added two wickets for good measure. Lancashire, though, were far from finished despite needing 71 off eight overs.Akram, with some help from Warren Hegg, took 19 off the 48th over to spark the chase into life. Akram swung his way to a 41-ball half-century as the nerves started to show in the Worcestershire team. There then follows one of the many lovely pieces of commentary from Richie Benaud’s career:

“A slight change of tactics, perhaps, now they’ve realised they only need fractionally better than a run-a-ball. May be that fewer risks will be taken…”

Next ball: Hegg drives Phil Newport inside out over extra cover.

“You can forget what I said there, pay absolutely no attention to it, and thank heavens Warren Hegg didn’t hear it.”

Akram was bowled with 24 still needed, but Lancashire’s lower order was able to finish the job as Hegg and Gary Yates kept their cool.Glen Chapple and his team-mates celebrate dismissing Essex for 57 and winning the 1996 NatWest Trophy•Clive Mason/Getty ImagesA final-over Roses thriller
Like the season before against Worcestershire, in 1996, Lancashire pulled a chase out of the fire. And this time it was against their biggest rivals, Yorkshire, in a gripping contest spread over two days because of rain that went to the last ball.Michael Bevan and Richard Blakey had led a Yorkshire recovery with an unbroken stand of 167 and when Lancashire fell to 97 for 5 then 174 for 7, victory was a long shot. However, Hegg unfurled a brilliant 81 off 62 balls (it would remain his highest one-day score) to bring Lancashire to within touching distance when he was bowled with 11 needed.Yates, who had played a vital supporting hand, was run out by a brilliant throw from Anthony McGrath and it came to eight needed off the final over, bowled by Craig White, with Glen Chapple and Martin at the crease. Chapple drove a boundary first ball, but White got his yorkers in to leave Martin on strike with two needed off the last delivery. It was a pretty good ball from White, a wide yorker, but Martin managed to drive it through point to send the home fans into ecstasy.Chapple’s demolition job
The NatWest Trophy, a 60-over one-day tournament, often finished with bowler-dominated matches at Lord’s in mid-September – the 1996 final between Lancashire and Essex fit into that bracket. Lancashire labored to 186 all out, anchored by John Crawley’s 66, but it would prove more than enough as Martin and Chapple devastated the Essex line-up.Chapple’s 6 for 18 is what the final is remembered for, but it was Martin’s exemplary new-ball spell that set the tone as he removed Paul Grayson, Nasser Hussain (brilliantly caught by Hegg) and Paul Pritchard with a series of wicked legcutters. However, the ball of the day did belong to Chapple when he zipped an unplayable delivery past Robert Rollins. When Jason Gallian struck with his first ball, pinning Graham Gooch lbw, Essex were 33 for 7. A short while later they were 57 all out and Lancashire had completed the one-day double.For more such curated YouTube playlists, click here.

'You always got the feeling MS Dhoni was one step ahead of everyone else'

Michael Hussey, who has played with and against MS Dhoni and also coached him at Chennai Super Kings, talks about the man and leader behind the scenes

Interview by Divij Gala15-Aug-202011:03

Mike Hussey: MS Dhoni often said that he who panics last wins the game

Among all the cricketers you have played with or against, or captains you’ve played under, what’s unique about MS Dhoni?
I’ll have to say probably how calm he is, particularly in a place like India, where it can get very crazy with the fans, media, the cricketers. Normally, the captains I have come up against have been very… not aggressive, that’s not the right word, but they are vocal and they lead by example. They stress the importance of certain things, whereas MS is very calm and chilled out. He has the great ability to take the pressure off players, particularly young Indian players. Quite often he just impresses on them to relax and go out and play the game – some days you win, some days you lose. It was very different playing under him from anything I had experienced before in Australia.Did he never lose his calm in the middle?
I think I’ve only seen him lose his temper once in all the times I’ve been around Chennai Super Kings. There are times when he gets frustrated, of course. Everyone does when the team is not winning, but MS is not a reactive person. He always looks at the bigger picture. He won’t make changes just for the sake of making changes or after a couple of losses. He knows things balance out in the long run. It was a strength of his leadership and it certainly gave a lot of faith, trust and backing to the players.Him losing his temper – was that the game against Rajasthan Royals this year where he walked onto the pitch to argue with the umpires?
The funny thing was that even after the [Royals] game, he was quite chill and calm about it. He even had a joke about it. It was so out of character. We couldn’t even believe it, sitting on the side.No, there was a game two years before, when he wasn’t scoring runs, the team wasn’t playing really well, and he wasn’t happy with the level of effort the guys were putting in on the field. He certainly let us all know we needed to lift our effort. Not so much worrying about the result but the effort we were putting on the ground.

“After every IPL game there would be one or two guys from the opposition wanting to come in and talk to him about their performance and what they could do to improve. He was very giving of his time”

Was the calm always a part of his leadership from the beginning? Or did that evolve as he got older?
I think it was always there. I’m talking about the time I was playing for Australia against him. You always got the feeling that he was one step ahead – whether he was or wasn’t was another thing, but you got the feeling he was.He tried some things that were a bit unconventional where we all felt: why is he doing this? And more often than not it would work and you’d think, ‘Well, that was unbelievable foresight to do that.’He has said he doesn’t believe in data and stats, so when you say he gets things, where do you think he got that from?
I think he is a very observant person, very intelligent, very perceptive of what’s happening in the game. He reads the game extremely well, and he is his own man as well. If he makes a decision, it will take a lot to change his mind. You will have to be someone who he really respects and trusts for you to change his mind. But it’s incredible how many times you think: what is he thinking here? Did he come back and acknowledge that something he tried didn’t work?
That’s the other thing that stands out about MS. He is a very humble person. He doesn’t big-note himself at all. He is not arrogant, and that is one of the things I really admired about him – the way he handled success as well as failure. He was a very consistent person. He wasn’t too high when things were going well, he wasn’t too low when things weren’t going well. He always treated everyone equally. If there was someone perceived to be important in the room, he wouldn’t treat them any different than the cleaner coming in at the end of the day.”Whenever we played India and Dhoni was still there, no score was safe because he had this amazing power to hit any bowler out of the ground at the end of the innings”•Getty Images Was he any different before a big game or a final?
No, he was basically exactly the same person whether it was the final or any other game. So much so that I felt that he was too relaxed sometimes (laughs). Even while sitting on the sidelines during the finals, he would just sort of sit there and soak in the game, and you would think: does this guy have any emotions?I remember before one big game against RCB at Chennai, the crowd was rocking and we had the little huddle before we went out to play. MS pulled the team in and said, “Right guys, big game today against RCB, but the fair-play award is really important to me. We’ve got to make sure we play the game in the right spirit so that we get full points on the fair play.” I remember looking at him like: Are you serious? This is a massive game and we have to win it. But he was very big on playing with the right spirit and he wanted us to be known as a team that was very good with results but also a team that was very fair. What did he usually say in his pre-game talk to the team?
He wasn’t big on meetings at all, so we didn’t have a lot of preparation meetings and things like that. There will be a couple of minutes literally as the team walked onto the field. He basically gave a little bit of direction but it was more about taking the pressure off the players. I remember a chat before a game and it was, “Guys, just go out there and play tonight. Just smile at the crowd. Some days you win and some days you lose. Just try and execute the skills the best you possibly can.” You could almost see the tension coming out of certain players. You could see their shoulders relax, knowing he would back them to execute their skills.How could you convince Dhoni about something he didn’t believe in?
I do remember one occasion. This was my first year as a coach at CSK and we were coming up against Sunrisers Hyderabad in a Qualifier. Our analyst found this great photo of Rashid Khan, who obviously is a great bowler. It was a split-screen and he said that when Rashid Khan runs in with his fingers like this, he is going to bowl a legspinner, and when he runs in with his fingers like this, he is going to bowl his googly. I’m sitting on this information and thinking about what to do. Do I send it out to the batsmen on the night before a big game or do I let it be?I sent out the information but I said in the message that you may want to use this or not. Do with it what you want. I didn’t really get a message back from MS, which I rarely did anyway, but he went out to bat and he was playing Rashid Khan.Sure enough, we are under pressure, losing wickets. The run rate was getting away from us. He went for a cover drive, wrong’un straight back through the gate and clean bowled. He walked off the ground and came straight up to me and said: “I’ll bat my own way, thanks.”

“MS is very calm and chilled out – just let the guys play. He has the great ability to take the pressure off players, particularly young Indian players”

In the middle of a huge game, I was a little bit worried to hear that, but to talk to him afterwards was very good. He said: “No, the information was correct but I hadn’t had a chance to practise it, so if we have that time again, definitely give me the information. I saw him running in with the fingers like this, so I didn’t even bother watching the ball after that, but if I had a chance to practise it in the nets, knowing that I still need to watch the ball out of the hand and play accordingly, then I would have been okay.”When he comes in to bat, he loves to take his time in the middle, just to knock it around and get himself in. We’d often encourage him to back himself a bit more, go a bit hard a bit earlier. He wants to do that, but because he is so set in the way he wants to play the game and he wants to take that responsibility of being there till the end and finish the game off, he won’t allow himself to just sort of free up and play. That’s just how he is.Towards the end of his career, did all the talk about how he took too much time to get settled in, or that his hitting powers were on the wane get to him?
Not really, no, and certainly we didn’t discuss it. Because in the last couple of years in the IPL, he has probably been almost at his best. The criticism has come more from when he has played for India in one-day internationals, where he probably has got more time.How did you view him as an opposition player, and how did that change after getting to know him more intimately?
I just couldn’t believe how calm and relaxed and chilled out he was. I thought as an international player, there’s always a level of anxiety and stress, particularly in a place like India, where it’s just cricket-mad. But honestly I felt as though the game wasn’t even that important to him at certain stages. He didn’t seem to care too much at all. It was like: let’s just go and play this game. We love it and that’s why we play the game. He never really seemed to put a lot of pressure on himself. I couldn’t understand that until I played with him in the same dressing room. That’s actually how he lived his life and how he put everything in perspective.”He was a very consistent person. He wasn’t too high when things were going well, he wasn’t too low when things weren’t going well”•AFPDo you think he actually didn’t quite care enough about winning or losing?
Yeah, it’s a difficult one. I actually think, internally he definitely did care an incredible amount, but externally, maybe it was just a façade. I don’t know. You would have to ask MS that. But the way he handles the pressure, the stress, the anxiety of being a top international player, especially someone so famous in India where you can’t leave the hotel without getting mobbed by thousands – just to be able to take that in your stride is pretty phenomenal. It seemed like even if Dhoni didn’t have the best team, he got players to perform better for him. Things that numbers and data can’t really explain. What do you think that was down to?
A number of things. I think he has a fair understanding of how a winning team works and how to put together a winning team. Part of that is that he shows enormous faith and gives enormous backing to the players. Even if you have had a number of innings when you haven’t performed, he would still keep picking you and showing that faith in you. That gives you enormous faith in yourself. You believe that you want to go out there and play for him because you know he’s backing you so much.The other side of it is that he is very observant of players. He knows how to pick a really good player. It may partly be down to the character and then he identifies a very good player very quickly and brings him into his family. And once you are part of the family then, well, you are part of the family. How much cricket did he talk off the field?
A fair bit, but not day in, day out. His room was open almost 24 hours a day. You see players sharing some food or sitting around, having a chat. The game was always on TV. He loved to watch the game. There would be little things he would pick up that others wouldn’t see, and that’s the sort of thing he would talk about. Very perceptive in how he watched the game and spoke about it. Did he predict things sitting in the dugout? Or was he the guy who would say, this is what they should do and this is what they have?
Not really. Out in the middle, he would. I remember batting with him quite a few times, and I’m sort of a panicky person in the middle. MS has got so much power, he doesn’t have to panic at the end, I guess. He would quite often say that he who panics last will win the game.He was very perceptive in the way he knows that this bowler will bowl at this time, and he’d say: “Don’t worry about him, I’ll be able to take him on as he doesn’t know where to bowl to me. You can take this guy, you can hit him here.” He basically had it all mapped out.

“I remember a chat before a game and Dhoni said, ‘Guys, just go out there and play tonight. Just smile at the crowd. Some days you win and some days you lose. Just try and execute the skills the best you possibly can'”

Dhoni or Ricky Ponting? You have played under both.
It’s hard to rank them one and two. They are definitely the best leaders I have played under. They are very different in a lot of ways but very similar in certain ways. They both have a great understanding of the game and they both read the game well. The way they back and trust players, you think that they are in your corners and they are fighting for you. The differences are that Ricky is a very competitive beast and he would go bull at the gate to win, win, win. He can get quite emotional at times as well, whereas MS is very calm – unemotional, really. Did Dhoni have a good sense of humour?
Yeah, quite quick-witted. Was he a prankster?
Not really a prankster. However the relationship he and Sakshi [his wife] have is quite hilarious. I love the banter between the two. Sakshi doesn’t put him on a pedestal. She is very happy to give it back as he gives it to her, and it’s all in good fun and good humour. They have a wonderful relationship. It’s fascinating to watch. Did youngsters in the squad warm up to him immediately?
Yeah, I think they were really intimidated to begin with, and very shy, but once they saw how he is around the team, how relaxed he is, then those barriers were broken down.After every IPL game there would be one or two guys from the opposition wanting to come in and talk to him about their performance and what they could do to improve. He was very giving of his time. He would always encourage the youngsters to sit and have a chat with him while he had his food or drink.”The relationship Dhoni and Sakshi [his wife] have is quite hilarious. I love the banter between the two”•AFP There is a lot of hostility between India and Australia in cricket. Did Dhoni naturally command the respect of even established internationals? Was he one of those captains who people would automatically warm up to?
Without a doubt. I think it was because of how perceptive he was on the field, the moves he made. It seemed like he was in control of the position. Whether he was or not, I don’t actually know, but he put out that impression that he was in control.The other side of it is that the other big Indian senior players seen from outside looked like they really respected Dhoni as well. Guys like Sachin [Tendulkar], [Rahul] Dravid, [VVS] Laxman, Zaheer Khan, Harbhajan Singh. They all seemed to hold him in high regard. Plus, of course, the results he was able to get as captain of the Indian team. Winning the T20 World Cup, the 50-over World Cup, getting the team to Test No. 1 in the world. The results commanded a lot of respect from the community as well. What do you think is the legacy he leaves behind?
I think he bucked the trend on how to lead teams. He did it his own way. He did it in a different way to other leaders in history – not just in cricket but even gladiator times, where the fiercest leaders were leading the way. You think of the emotional leaders who just rant and rave to lead by example. He has done it by just being so relaxed and calm. It’s refreshing that someone can have so much success doing it in a completely different way.Did he ever admit he got lucky at times?
Yeah, he was very honest and open that some days he would get lucky, other days he wasn’t. But that is him in a team. He is very humble doesn’t get too carried away. He knows you need some luck in this game sometimes.The other legacy he would leave is the way power-hitting came into vogue at the end of one-day and T20 games. If you got 250-280, that was pretty much a winning score. But whenever we played India and Dhoni was still there, no score was safe because he had this amazing power that he could hit any bowler out of the ground at the end of the innings. Other teams, seeing the success Dhoni had, started to develop players in the same mode. I think he was probably one of the first pioneers of power-hitting that came into the game.

New Zealand are monsters. Here's proof

Our correspondent goes behind the scenes to find dirt, and dirt he does find

Alan Gardner15-Jan-2021Just when we thought we were out, they pull us back in… The Light Roller wasn’t alone in wondering recently about the lack of chirpz in Australia-India encounters, and the current tour had certainly got off to an unpromising start amid debutants being welcomed with “Go well youngster” rather than a mouthful of gravel. Post-IPL bonhomie was being slathered thicker than sunscreen.Sure, Justin Langer briefly threatened to short circuit over India’s savvy use of the concussion-sub rule during a T20I in Canberra, but the spray aimed at match referee David Boon looked from afar barely more than his daughters are used to when playing UNO.Then we reached the final day in Sydney, with the Test series still on the line, and sure enough things started to get a little frisky. Out came the smack talk and the goading. The gabby greens had rediscovered their inner mongrel, and boy, was the little fella ready for a good long spell of yapping. India, backs against the wall, weren’t going to know what hit them in the face of a good old Aussie barrage led by enforcer-in-chief ()… Tim Paine?Related

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In the immortal words of these godless times: “What is this I don’t even”Honestly, it was better the other way. This is why nobody calls him Tim “Bring the” Paine. Not even ironically. The least likely heel turn in cricket history – particularly given the Australia captain’s track record on mental-disintegration tactics – was also one of the most short-lived, as Paine could afterwards barely contain his own embarrassment over what we might kindly term attempts at sledging R Ashwin.The karma police certainly weren’t impressed, issuing a dropped catch spot fine moments later. Presumably Cricket Australia also swiftly arranged for Paine to attend some sessions at the Ernie Jones Memorial Indoor Quipping School to rehabilitate his banter.Even the on-field skulduggery was tepid, betraying just how out of practice Australia have become. Rather in the manner of Captain Renault from , Langer declared himself shocked – shocked! – that Steve Smith was being accused of deliberately trying to scuff up Rishabh Pant’s guard. And to be honest, we hope this is genuine, because why would you go to the bother of trying to sabotage something most batsmen mark afresh every time they face up anyway?Let’s not get into Matthew Wade’s am-dram turn at short leg, which would have earned a rebuke for overacting from the director of . The only things less effective than these various schemes were Australia’s bowling and fielding, as they managed three wickets to go with four dropped catches on the final day.Clearly there is a lot of work to do in order to bring back the glory days. The Ashes are less than a year away, and at this rate, the entire Australian team will end up being out-sledged by James Anderson in their own backyard. That might be enough to make Langer kick over a bin not pick up the contents.

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Heart-warming news from New Zealand, where Kane Williamson’s side have provided conclusive proof that nice guys can finish first! (Although they get relegated to the support act in semi-humorous monthly cricket columns because, y’know, clicks. Sorry, Kane. You just can’t get the readership these days.)But don’t get it twisted – the world’s No. 1 Test side have that unmistakable bit of steel about them. In order to prove as much, the Light Roller has been travelling around the land of the long white cloud in a second-hand camper van to root out some of the hitherto unknown excesses engaged in by the squad after yet another politely insistent (emphasis on the polite) display of excellence against Pakistan.Kane Williamson: Returned home to life as a new father but forgot to buy formula on the way. Later fell asleep on the couch, thus welshing on nappy-changing duties.Ross Taylor: Reportedly once put recyclable material in with his regular trash. Has been approached for comment.Henry Nicholls: Gave a four-star rating to his Uber driver in Christchurch – despite the impeccable service – after being mistaken for former England wicketkeeper Geraint Jones.Kyle Jamieson: Inconvenienced a couple sat in the row behind him at an Auckland cinema. Witnesses said the skyscraping allrounder “could have slid down in his seat a bit further”, although conceded leg room was also at a premium.Tim Southee: Regularly drinks milk straight from the carton.Trent Boult: Used a family member’s login to watch on Disney+. Doesn’t intend to pay for a subscription.Neil Wagner: Much praised habit of running through brick walls for the cause has led to significant repair bill at his local gym.Rumours that New Zealand are no longer world cricket’s most-welcoming hosts and “frequently hand out brutal thrashings” to tourists are being looked into.

Washington Sundar, beating the big boys since sixth grade

To those who have seen the youngster from close quarters – like his sister and his childhood coach – his success at the Gabba was inevitable

Deivarayan Muthu17-Jan-2021Pat Cummins, the No.1-ranked Test bowler in the world, pings Test debutant Washington Sundar on his left shoulder. Washington doesn’t flinch at all. Cool as.Two balls later, Cummins bangs another short ball and pings Washington on his hip. Washington doesn’t flinch again. Cool as.Washington has seen – and overcome – more painful body blows. When he was about seven years old, he was struck flush on the helmet by a wild full-toss at the nets and suffered a deep cut that needed four stitches. Despite doctors and his family insisting on rest and recovery, Washington turned up for an inter-school game a couple of days later and batted lower down the order to score a match-winning thirty-something.Washington was a prodigy in the Tamil Nadu cricketing circles. His dad M Sundar, a former Tamil Nadu prospect, began training him with a tennis ball when he was in kindergarten. Sundar would later train Washington and his elder sister Shailaja at the Chepauk ‘B’ nets, with their cousin Avaikarasan also joining them.Related

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Washington played Under-16 cricket for the state when he was in sixth grade and by the time he was 13, he was playing first-division league cricket in Chennai facing boys twice his age. To put things in perspective: when Washington broke into the robust first-division Chennal league, S Sriram was still an active player there. Sriram is now with the Australia side as their spin-bowling coach.Oh and Washington was primarily an opening batsman back in the day. He wasn’t quite the opening bowler who would pin down batsmen in T20 cricket. He was more known for his organised technique, sound judgement outside off, and ability to handle pace. Washington re-emerged during his fifty on Test debut against arguably the best Test-bowling attack in the world right now.Washington Sundar was in kindergarten when his father began training him to play cricket•Getty Images”Playing against or with (older boys) like Sriram, Venugopal Rao and his brother Gnaneswara Rao in first-division cricket at such a young age was a learning curve for Washi and it shaped his career,” Shailaja tells ESPNcricinfo. “Having also played many fast bowlers at the MRF pace foundation, he has that game-sense to adapt to speed. Not many can adapt to it easily and that too on your debut as a youngster in Australia against a top-class attack. It’s a big thing.”Shailaja, a top-order batter herself, was particularly thrilled to see that “old Washi” on show at the Gabba.”If you ask me or others who have seen Washi grow up, he was an opener,” Shailaja says. “I’m more a fan of his batting than bowling. The Washi I saw today was more the Washi I know. When he was so young, his drives were so clean and graceful. All the others could see his batting talent today.”

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Around the time of his birthday on January 4, Sundar had a strong gut feeling about Washington making his Test debut in Australia. As it turned out, Washington replaced the injured R Ashwin in the series decider, following up his three-wicket haul with 62 off 144 balls.Once the Sundars came to know about Washington’s debut on the eve of the game, there was cause for more celebrations during the Pongal (harvest) festivities.Washington Sundar’s sister Shailaja says he is more batsman than bowler•AFP via Getty Images”My dad had a strong feeling that Washi will debut in Australia,” Shailaja recalls. “We woke up at 3.30am because we wanted to see Washi get his cap. (Very) special! Mom (Prema) did her special puja and to see him get (Steven) Smith was pleasing. Our dad has faced a lot of struggles to get here and whenever we saw Washi growing up, we always thought he will be a Test cricketer. The world is now witnessing it.”

****

Washington had no business playing this Test. He was originally picked as a net bowler for the Test leg of the tour to tune up the batsmen against Nathan Lyon. But, here he was pulling off a no-look slog-swept six against Lyon. Cool as.Washington’s job isn’t done yet and M Senthilnathan, who had identified Washington’s talent as a 13-year old at MRF, reckons that he could play a bigger role with the ball with his stump-to-stump lines if the Gabba pitch breaks up on Monday.”If the wicket is a little rough and if it assists the spinners, Washington Sundar will be difficult to bat against,” Senthilnathan says. “He will be somewhat like Jadeja; Jadeja is very difficult to bat against in a turning track. Washington won’t also give you time and will be exactly on the stumps. Imagine if on a turning track you don’t get bad balls or don’t get time to step out, how will you score runs?”

One man's legacy to Yorkshire and the game he loved beyond measure

Professional educator Peter Sutcliffe cleared a coaching path successors at the ECB have since smoothed and modified

Paul Edwards08-May-2021
There is more chance of Priti Patel appearing on than us seeing any cricket today. Yorkshire may be God’s own county but He has shown no favouritism towards His chosen people this morning regardless of how much brass they have in their building society accounts. (Suspicions are growing in Harrogate that the Almighty might be a bloody leftie.) The rain set in early and has displayed an adherence of which Emmott Robinson would have been proud. The umpires have announced an inspection for 11.00 and the only thing they can possibly be considering is whether the day’s play should be abandoned.If so, Messrs. Kettleborough and Hartley could spend their afternoon reading Yorkshire’s 2021 Yearbook. After all, they are both in it, as is every other cricketer who has represented the White Rose in a first-class game. The 123rd edition arrived in the Roy Kilner auditorium -why not press box? – yesterday and, as usual, it occupies a smaller area than its counterparts in other counties and is also much less glossy, but it contains far more pages. In other words it is a proper book and should Yorkshire think of changing the format the consequent uprising would make the Pilgrimage of Grace look like a philatelists’ outing.As ever, the Yearbook is a fine read, as much for its articles as its extraordinary quantity of statistics. The most sombre section is the obituaries which, this year, include my tribute to a Yorkshireman who never played a first-class game yet whose contribution to the game should be better known, particularly in a summer when “engagement” is a buzz-word and women’s cricket becomes stronger by the week. What follows is an edited and also augmented version of that obituary and another moment of quiet fame for Peter Sutcliffe:Related

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Peter Sutcliffe coaching on the outfield•Simon SutcliffeAnd that is where Peter Sutcliffe’s story ends and also where it continues. For unlike his father, Simon Sutcliffe became a professional county cricketer who represented Warwickshire for three years before moving into teaching while also coaching and playing the recreational game to a high level. In recent seasons, as Master-in-Charge of cricket at Merchant Taylors’ School, Crosby, he has played an important role in the development of Tom Hartley and George Lavelle, both of whom made their first-class debuts for Lancashire last summer.”Pass it on, boys. That’s the game I wanted you to learn,” says Hector in Alan Bennett’s play If one was not on the verge of tears by that stage of the play, one would be inclined to cheer. Hector’s words are a reminder that inheritance is about more than blood and money; it concerns choice, responsibility, guardianship. Peter Sutcliffe could never see the full results of his coaching or his initiatives, much less will he be able to follow the careers of Lavelle and Hartley. But if we value what we see, it is plainly right that we should preserve it for others to love as well. This is not the worst thing to remember on a wet May morning in Leeds as we prepare for a summer of change and, some might say, threat.

Australia's World Cup conundrum: the search for a T20 finisher

The question of who fills the middle-order position(s) heading into the T20 World Cup remains unanswered

Andrew McGlashan02-Jul-2021The target is 185. Australia are 160 for 4 after 18 overs. Who do you want at No. 6 to finish that chase?As Aaron Finch’s side travels to the West Indies then onto Bangladesh for 10 T20Is the question of who fills the middle-order finisher position(s) heading into the T20 World Cup remains one of the key areas they need to answer.Once again this won’t be a full-strength Australia side with numerous withdrawals over bubble fatigue. The batting has been especially hit without David Warner, Steven Smith, Glenn Maxwell and Marcus Stoinis.However, uncertainty over middle-order batting positions (for the reference of this piece that will cover Nos 5-7) has not just crept up on Australia in recent months. It has been the area of the side that has proved the most difficult to settle upon.Related

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Whose turn is it next?
Since the 2016 T20 World Cup, where Australia did not get out of the group stage, they have used 25 players across those three middle-order slots. There will always be an element of batters moving through positions given the various scenarios created in T20 matches, but only Sri Lanka, with 30, have cycled through more options so far between World Cups.Stoinis, Alex Carey – who is no longer a starter in the XI – and Ashton Agar have had the most regular opportunties and while Stoinis’ numbers are decent it would be a leap to say the solution has been found.ESPNcricinfo LtdIt is the strike rate Australia have managed from those positions which highlights the issue. Since the last T20 World Cup the Nos 5-7 have struck at 118.53 putting them between Ireland and Bangladesh at the lower end of the table (with a cut-off of 20 matches). Hong Kong, Zimbabwe, UAE, Oman and PNG are the other teams below them.Another way to look at it is the balls-per-boundaries and per-six from that same group of middle order positions. Again, Australia do not stand up well. They are bottom on balls-per-boundary among the current top 10 teams of the rankings and only Bangladesh have a worse balls-per-six ratio.ESPNcricinfo LtdSquare pegs, round holes?
One of the issues for Australia’s selectors is that they have largely put players out of position for those middle-order roles. Most of them are top four batters in the BBL which is logical for those clubs who want the best out of those players but does not give them a proper chance to adjust to what is a very specialist and skilled role lower down. That was shown by Carey’s difficulties adapting down the order.”If you ask most batters around the world, batting later in the innings or it might not so it is a difficult role mentally to keep backing up.” Carey said from St Lucia. “It’s either hit or bust and we’ve seen around the world the best teams have probably got a hitter at the death. There’s probably only a handful of really good finishers around the world. It’s a specialist position and every team would love to have a powerhouse coming in late but you also rely on your top order to set you up and score the big runs.”It was a subject Dinesh Karthik, the India wicketkeeper-batter, recently discussed in an interview with ESPNcricinfo. He was referencing the India team, but the point he makes is relevant to Australia.Alex Carey has struggled to make an impact lower down the order•AFP via Getty Images”In the T20 format, it is a far more niche slot, something that you need to have done over and over again,” he said. “And that’s why you have the Pollards and the Russells or the Dhonis, who have done this over a period of time, who have helped play so many of these impact innings.”You don’t want to go to a World Cup with people who have batted in the top four consistently and throw them in at five, six, seven and expect them to do well.”The numbers from the last two seasons of the BBL would suggest that Mitchell Marsh is worth considering, with a high overall strike-rate and very strong numbers at the death, although at international level over the last two years he has struck at barely a run-a-ball.ESPNcricinfo LtdMaxwell, as ever, is an interesting debate. Such is the dynamism he brings as a batter in T20 that putting him below No. 4 can feel a waste, but in the last two years of BBL he has a strike-rate of 160 at No. 5.It is also worth remembering that as of last season the BBL had the Power Surge available after the 11th over of an innings that will impact the strike-rates of those involved. Although the Surge was widely accepted as the most successful of the innovations, one of the issues raised was that it is not a condition used at international level.Australia may look to Matthew Wade to bat down the order•Getty ImagesBalance of the side
In recent times, Australia have gone down the route of selecting five specialist bowlers – often including two spinners – which has put Agar at No. 7. When the team clicks, as it did during the 2019-20 home season, the middle order was barely needed – Carey, for example, did not get a bat during the six home games that summer – but Agar’s batting numbers at international level have suggested a lack of power ideally needed.There have been warning signs about the middle order: during the run of success they lost to South Africa in Port Elizabeth when they failed to chase 159 from 98 for 1 in the 13th over and last year contrived to lose against England in Southampton.Finch has indicated they will look to alter things in West Indies, but the other issue which impacts who fills the middle-order positions is what Australia do with their wicketkeeper. Since Carey was ditched at the end of the series against England last year, Matthew Wade has taken the gloves and most of the time opened the batting. However, that has been filling in for the absence of Warner; at the World Cup he will resume his partnership with Finch. Steven Smith then has to slot in at No. 3 followed most probably by Maxwell at No. 4. So, again, Australia look like needing their wicketkeeper to bat in the middle order.ESPNcricinfo LtdIt might be that Wade has to take one of those positions by default; Australia need someone behind the stumps and he is viewed as a versatile and selfless player (as demonstrated by opening the batting in the Tests against India). Though Wade has done it at times during his career, it would be another case of a player out of his natural position: 73 of his 121 T20 innings have been in the top three and he has batted at No. 4 or lower only three times in the last three years – all for Australia. It could be that a few options are cycled through during the matches against West Indies and Bangladesh.One name who isn’t in the squad but has been gaining traction is Josh Inglis of Perth Scorchers. He has had a lot of success at the top of the order, which is where he is currently batting for Leicestershire in the T20 Blast, but significantly has also adjusted to the middle order albeit still no lower than No. 4. He is, however, considered an excellent player of spin.Will Dan Christian be Australia’s unlikely savior?•Getty ImagesHiding in plain sight?Those of you who have reached this far may well be thinking of one name: Dan Christian. In the last few weeks he is suddenly back in the frame having not played for Australian in four years. With the withdrawals from the squad for West Indies and Bangladesh, Christian now has the chance to make a last-ditch bid for the World Cup squad.His credentials have been endorsed by his BBL coach Greg Shipperd who talked of his “fearless” approach. Crucially, too, he is a middle-order batter. And, even if three consecutive scores of 1 in the aborted IPL are perhaps a cautionary note, his recent BBL numbers are even more impressive than the table earlier in this piece which were pulled down by his 2019-20 campaign with the Renegades.”He’s got a unique skill set as a strong finisher through the middle and at the back-end with the bat,” Shipperd said.Even with the significant number of absentees it would be strange to recall a 38-year-old if he wasn’t a serious chance of being involved in the T20 World Cup. Before departing, Finch gave a strong indication Christian was at the forefront of their thoughts amid the rethink of the make-up of the team.”He’s someone who is so dynamic and we saw the impact he had especially towards the business end of the Big Bash last year, he came in and had a high strike-rate from ball one, he’s explosive with the bat, has tricks with the ball, he’s experienced, he doesn’t get fazed and he’s a brilliant fielder,” Finch said. “Dan’s a superb player and an unbelievable competitor.”Is he the man you want walking out with 25 to win in two overs? The next few months will tell us.

IPL retention in numbers: Venkatesh Iyer's 40x pay hike; uncapped Umran Malik's big contract

All the interesting numbers from the IPL retentions on Williamson, Narine, Maxwell, and others

Nagraj Gollapudi01-Dec-20215:50

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14 – The amount (in INR crore) Sunrisers Hyderabad will pay for Kane Williamson is the highest-ever retention price for an overseas player. Williamson will now get nearly five times the money he got in the 2018 auction when Sunrisers bought him for INR 3 crore. He joined Sunrisers in 2015 and was paid INR 60 lakh for the first three seasons before he was bought back at the 2018 auction.29 – The percentage fall in Sunil Narine’s earnings compared to the price he was retained at for before the 2018 mega auction. In 2012, Kolkata Knight Riders picked the then unknown mystery spinner, who had impressed during the 2011 Champions League T20, for a whopping USD 700,000. Narine, who had played just three matches for West Indies at the time, had set himself a base price of USD 50,000. In 2014, Knight Riders retained him for INR 9.5 crore, and ahead of the 2018 mega auction, he negotiated a fee of INR 8.5 crore. However, as per the IPL retention slabs, since Narine was the first player Knight Riders have retained this time, their purse was deducted by INR 12.5 crore. This time Narine’s retention fee is INR 6 crore, a 29% dip in the retention price, the biggest for any player between the 2018 and 2021 mega auctions.ESPNcricinfo Ltd40 – Venkatesh Iyer’s IPL salary has shot up 40 times. In the 2021 auction, Knight Riders bought the allrounder for his base price of INR 20 lakh. On Tuesday, Iyer, who made his India debut in November, was retained by Knight Riders for INR 8 crore. Historically, the record in terms of exponential surge from base price to retention fee belongs to Hardik Pandya, who joined Mumbai Indians in 2015 as an uncapped player for the base price of INR 10 lakh but, in 2018, Mumbai retained him at 110 times his 2015 fee, spending INR 11 crore.ESPNcricinfo Ltd3 – The fewest IPL matches played by someone before he was retained. That honour belongs Umran Malik, who was retained by Sunrisers as an uncapped player for INR 4 crore. Malik was the second uncapped as well as Jammu & Kashmir player, alongside Abdul Samad, to be retained by Sunrisers. Close behind Malik is Iyer, who played just ten matches, in 2021 – his maiden IPL season, the same as Malik. Sanju Samson held that record previously, with Rajasthan Royals retaining him after he had featured in just 11 IPL matches. The same year, another uncapped Indian player, Manan Vohra, was retained by Kings XI Punjab (now Punjab Kings) after playing 12 matches.Glenn Maxwell’s price drop•ESPNcricinfo Ltd1 – In terms of the mega bucks he has earned at IPL auctions in the past, the INR 12 crore that Royal Challengers Bangalore paid Glenn Maxwell is not a head-spinning number. But it is, remarkably, the first time he has been retained by a franchise ahead of a mega auction in his IPL career spanning nine seasons spread across four franchises – starting with Delhi Capitals (then Delhi Daredevils), Mumbai Indians, Kings and now Royal Challengers.8 – According to IPL retention rules, if a franchise retains four players, a total of INR 42 crore will be deducted from the auction purse, even if the teams are paying the players less than that. Four out of the eight existing teams – Chennai Super Kings, Mumbai Indians, Capitals and Knight Riders – retained four players. Two of those – Super Kings and Mumbai – spent the entire 42 crore while Capitals spent 42.50 crore to retain their four players (if a team pays a player more than the retention slab, the higher amount of the two is deducted from the purse). In contrast, Knight Riders procured their four retentions for just INR 34 crore, which means they have saved INR 8 crore from their actual operations costs even if the auction purse is deducted by 42 crore.

England get rowdy in London Borough of Barbados

Visitors crash the party through dominant knocks from Joe Root and Dan Lawrence

Cameron Ponsonby16-Mar-2022As you get off the plane in Barbados and walk into arrivals, the first two posters you’re greeted with are of Garry Sobers and Rihanna. Cricket and entertainment. Sounds good.Today, with thousands of England fans in attendance, the two combined as Joe Root and Dan Lawrence’s dominant 164-run stand off 269 balls took over proceedings, much to the joy of those in attendance at the Kensington Oval in the London Borough of Barbados.”He’ll be delighted to be not out overnight following another good hundred last week,” Marcus Trescothick, England’s batting coach, said of Root’s unbeaten 119. “[For him] to do it all again he’ll be delighted. It’s a real pleasure to sit there and watch it unfold and see how he goes about it.Related

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“To see him batting in the fashion he has, the mental discipline and approach he’s putting into his batting to come back and start fresh every time… it’s an honour to stand there and throw at him and then to sit back and watch him all day.”Trescothick was also glowing in his praise of Lawrence’s performance, who scored a career-best 91 before being at caught cover off what was scheduled to be the penultimate ball of the day’s play.”Absolutely,” Trescothick replied when asked whether England would be focusing on the positives from Lawrence’s innings rather than the pain of narrowly missing out on a maiden Test match hundred. “You always take the positives. And then we try to understand what happened there? Did anything change? Those are the sort of questions we’ll sit down and talk about.”But this was a party that West Indies allowed to happen. Root was caught behind off what seemed like an inside edge on 23, only for it not to be reviewed. He was dropped down the leg side by Josh Da Silva on 34. And on 87, he should’ve been run out by John Campbell. To make matters worse, Lawrence was also dropped on 72, as Alzarri Joseph let a head-high slip catch split his hands and run away to the boundary.As a result, having shared an awkward drink or two with England in a turgid first session and shared a pleasant dinner with them in the second, in the third, West Indies allowed Root and Lawrence to invite themselves back to theirs for afters and watched on as the two raided the drinks cabinet and fridge in equal measure.”Kraigg, you got anything I could eat? Starving.”The runs flowed on the pitch as quickly as the Banks lager and rum punch flowed off it. It was loud. Lawrence’s leg-side flicks were loud. Root’s pulls and reverse sweeps were loud. The England fans. Loud.For the most part, this wasn’t the stereotypical Barmy Army showing that consists solely of the continued dirge of just repeating “Barmy Army!” *dooph dooph* “Barmy Army!” *dooph dooph* – rather 8000 people spending their day with one foot in the land of Sobers and the other in the land of Rihanna, just as they were told to on arrival. It was a party.Of course, as the day came to a close, “Sweet Caroline” got one more play than would otherwise be deemed socially acceptable and the dooph dooph chants made their return. The sun going down at the end of a day at the cricket is like the moment on most evenings out where the lights go up and reveal the mass of destruction, sweat and alcohol that the darkness had previously hidden. If anything, this way around is better.The highlight of the day from an English perspective was the noise that greeted Root’s century as the Greenidge and Haynes Stand morphed into the Kop. The open-air nature of cricket grounds means it is not often you get that visceral echo that is so synonymous with football grounds, but here you did.”It was brilliant, wasn’t it?” Trescothick said. “A real English contingent throughout the island at the moment and great support throughout. We’re lucky that we get great support wherever we go and to see it here, it was pretty much a home game for us so it’s really nice to have.”The Brits were abroad. And they were rowdy. Both off the pitch and on.

Yastika Bhatia: 'I'm willing to sacrifice biryani to get better results out of my cricket'

The India batter on her love affair with butter chicken, discovering lasagna in Australia, and a secret Bhatia family recipe

Interview by Annesha Ghosh18-Mar-2022What is one meal you can eat day in and day out?
Butter chicken and roti. I eat it at home when my father makes it, and every time I go to a restaurant I straight away call for butter chicken if anyone else accompanying me orders non-veg.Is there anything you really love that you’ve added or removed from your diet to better fit your fitness regimen?
Chicken biryani. I it, but my nutritionist has asked me to cut out rice from my diet totally, explaining how it can affect my fitness and make me slow – with regards to injury too. So chicken biryani has had to go.How difficult was it to give that up?
It did break my heart when I was told I shouldn’t be having rice. But I was, and am, willing to make such sacrifices to get better results out of my cricket. But whenever I am allowed the freedom to have food of my choice, say, on a day off or some such, I make sure to have chicken biryani and butter chicken.What else has been hard to give up?
. I used to eat a lot of it growing up, but in the last seven years I’ve only had the home-made version of the street snack, and that too, rarely. In December last year, though, I had proper roadside after I scored a century for Baroda in the senior one-day domestic competition in Nagpur. It felt so good.What is your favourite pre- or post-workout snack?
I like to keep it light, so I usually go for [millet rotis]. After a workout I like having protein shakes or brown-rice cakes with peanut butter.Which of your team-mates is the best cook?
I am yet to taste anything made by my India team-mates, but I’ve heard Smriti Mandhana is quite good, so I’d like to try out some of what she makes. My Baroda team-mate Charmi Shah is decent at making Maggi and popcorn.What’s one thing you can cook for yourself really well?
I can make pizza. I remember making pizza at an Amul cooking contest once. On a regular basis, though, I think I’d be more comfortable making bread-omelette and [okra] – that’s a dish I love tucking into every now and then.What’s the one dish you would like to ace?
[spinach]. I can’t make it but my mother makes it very well. It would make for a very nice combination with , which I already know how to make, and roti.Who is the one team-mate who can eat whatever they want without it affecting their fitness?
Tanvir Shaikh from Baroda. She indulges in deserts often but she tops pretty much all the sprinting drills. We often ask her, [You eat everything, where does all of it go?] In the Indian team, I am a newbie, so I don’t have much of an idea, but I think Sneh Rana is similar [to Tanvir]. Her fitness is top- shelf. Her metabolism must be quite high, so cheat meals don’t appear to affect her much.Is there a snack you carry in your kit bag when you’re travelling or on tour?
Peanut butter – dark-chocolate flavour. I took a liking to peanut butter ever since I first had it during the home series for South Africa [in March last year], for which I was part of the Indian squad for the first time. I can’t do without peanut butter after a workout.Did you try any new food when you toured Australia?
We were served lasagna at the pink-ball Test [in Carrara]. I loved it. During the tour they would also serve rice, dal and chicken – tandoori or butter – for buffet, and we’d order roti separately along with . The food in Australia was very good.Which cricket venue you’ve played at has had the best food or catering?
We were in Ranchi for a domestic game, and I loved the food and catering in that stadium. I particularly liked the chicken.You’ve grown up, and live, in Baroda. What would you recommend to anyone visiting your home town?
Kathiyawadi cuisine is quite famous in Gujarat, especially the Kathiyawadi , which serve a wide variety of fare. Those are usually a bit more spicy than Gujarati . Baroda’s street food is quite popular as well, and people here are crazy about in particular. , , are some of the other dishes I’d recommend.What do meals look like during a regular week in the Bhatia household?
My mother is vegetarian, but my dad, [older] sister, and I eat non-veg, so the fare on weekdays is usually veg stuff, which either my mom or our cook takes care of. Anything non-vegetarian is typically reserved for Fridays and Sundays and is made by my father.What are the signature dishes in your family?
Home-style chicken and mutton are my papa’s signature dishes, but our household has one of its own, the Bhatia . It’s a gram-flour-and-yoghurt-based thin gravy, which most types of are, and we add a generous assortment of diced drumstick, potatoes, and okra in it. We treat all our guests to it and serve it with steamed rice and sometimes with .What food do you miss most when you’re on tour?
. It’s so simple to make and it reminds me of the simplicity of home. Though you get dal at restaurants or often at match venues in India and abroad, it’s never the same, and as simple, as .

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