logo
I owe it to myself to have a few more good performances

I owe it to myself to have a few more good performances

Crawley has long divided opinion as he possesses an underwhelming average of 31.4 from 58 Tests, with several dramatic fallow periods, but he has been backed to the hilt by Ben Stokes and Brendon McCullum.
The patience has occasionally been rewarded and was on day two of the fourth Rothesay Test against India, where Crawley and Ben Duckett put on a buccaneering 166 in 32 overs at Emirates Old Trafford.
After helping England close on 225 for two in response to India's 358 all out, Crawley, who was dismissed for 84 at a ground where he made 189 in the 2023 Ashes, said: 'I have high standards for myself and I work very hard on my game.
'I always want more from myself and I've certainly wanted more for myself than I've got in the last year or so. That's just an internal thing, I don't feel that pressure from anyone else.
'I just feel like I owe it to myself to have a few more good performances. Days like this make the practice and the tougher times worth it a bit more.
'I certainly feel at my best when my body is relaxed. I managed to do that quite well here.
'I wanted more runs but I feel like I worked hard and earned those runs. I don't think I've ever got out in my life and not been annoyed and I was certainly annoyed (after getting out).'
Crawley and Duckett, who was also unable to get to a hundred after nicking off on 94, put England in the box seat just over a week on from being front and centre of a time-wasting row at Lord's.
A brilliant day for England! 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿
We trail by just 1️⃣3️⃣3️⃣ runs with 8️⃣ wickets in hand.
Roll on tomorrow 💪 pic.twitter.com/6Sloskgfxa
— England Cricket (@englandcricket) July 24, 2025
India captain Shubman Gill accused England of contravening the 'spirit of the game', insisting England's openers arrived to the crease 90 seconds late in a testy seven-minute passage at the end of day three that hung over the rest of the third Test.
But Crawley said: 'I sit in my spot until the umpires go out, I saw them go out and I walked out. I wasn't aware we were 90 seconds late. I didn't think too much about that at the time or even now.
'I've always enjoyed that part of cricket, especially when you're batting where it's two against 11 and they're desperate to get you out and chirping you.
'Most of the time I probably let it slide but most of the time, I feel like it's a good chance to put it back on them. At Lord's, I loved that little passage. No one stepped over the line, it was just competitive cricket, I really enjoyed it.'
Ben Stokes claimed his first Test five-wicket haul since September 2017 to restrict India, who were remarkably able to call upon Rishabh Pant despite him suffering a serious injury to his right foot.
Less than 24 hours after retiring hurt on 37 and being taken off the field on a golf buggy, Pant resumed his innings although substitute fielder Dhruv Jurel is taking on wicketkeeper duties for the rest of the Test.
Amid a suspected broken metatarsal – India have not publicly confirmed the severity of his injury – Pant limped every time he moved forward before being bowled for 54 by Jofra Archer, who claimed three for 73.
India all-rounder Shardul Thakur said: 'We have seen him doing a lot of amazing things. And this was just another amazing thing that he did for the team.
'His pain bearing capacity is very high. If he is in pain, it is a big injury.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Stokes joins Superchargers as mentor
Stokes joins Superchargers as mentor

BBC News

time41 minutes ago

  • BBC News

Stokes joins Superchargers as mentor

England Test captain Ben Stokes has joined Northern Superchargers in The Hundred as a who played five games for Superchargers in 2021 and 2024, will join the men's team for the duration of this year's was announced in February that the all-rounder would miss the 100-ball competition this summer to manage his fitness before the Ashes in Australia this sustained a shoulder injury that ruled him out of the fifth Test between England and India, Stokes would not have been fit to play in any the 34-year-old will still hope to make an impact by providing his expertise as he joins head coach Andrew Flintoff's backroom staff at the Superchargers.

Why England v India was the best series I have ever covered
Why England v India was the best series I have ever covered

Times

time2 hours ago

  • Times

Why England v India was the best series I have ever covered

I have been covering and writing about cricket for 12 years. I've watched Ashes battles, home World Cup wins for both the men's and women's teams, entertaining T20 finals days, dramatic County Championship title wins and more rain delays than I can count — but this Test series between England and India has been the best. Perhaps there is an element of recency bias, but I cannot recall a Test series that has given so much on every day: so many talking points, so much drama and tension, such displays of human endurance and resilience. The players were all in, and so were the fans. One of my roles during a Test is writing our daily live file. It means I'm there, really there — glued to the cricket, yes, but also tuned into the rhythm of the ground. The role demands not just covering the wickets and the runs, but adding colour and texture; the things you wouldn't get from watching the television or listening to the radio. What the vibe inside the ground is, what the players are doing in the nets before the gates open, what the chat in the press box is, what's happening on the concourse, what everyone is having for lunch, whether there are any celebrities in the ground, what we're being told about injuries — as well as monitoring several weather apps and rain radars. I try to let readers feel the match; all of it, not just what's happening on the 22 yards of cut grass. Barely a session went by when I wasn't delving into statistics while also keeping an eye on the players' body language and the expressions, shouts and screams of the spectators. Every day, in every ground, there was a full house. Speaking of spectators, one of the many wonderful things about a series against India is the dedication and passion of their supporters. They turn out in huge numbers — more than for any other opposition, even Australia — and always add to the electric atmosphere. I'll let you into a secret: sometimes the press conferences at the end of a day's play can be a bit dull, with no one saying very much at all, but that wasn't the case in this series. Every day something had happened that we needed to ask about, with both sides continuing the contest from the field into their press conference words. None of it nasty — all of it adding to the entertainment and the intense competition. In among the needle and the drama, there were individual performances that will be etched in the memory; Joe Root moving second on the all-time list of Test runscorers, the brilliant batting and captaincy by Shubman Gill, and the return of Jofra Archer, with his wicket of Yashasvi Jaiswal causing Lord's to erupt. And then there was that incredibly dramatic final Test at the Oval. After the fourth day finished on a knife edge thanks to a random shower, I sent my editor a text message, saying: 'Cricket is both the most incredible and stupidest sport ever invented'. That evening we sensed the ending might be special, but not as special as it turned out to be. There were 56 minutes and every ball was an event. I typed every delivery up for the live file — not something I would normally do — but this warranted it. Never have I been so glad I was taught to touch type. Finding the adjectives to convey the drama on the pitch, and the emotion of seeing a one-armed Chris Woakes walking out to bat, was something of a challenge. Some days in this job you worry there won't be enough to write about. That was never the case in this series and now, a couple of days after the end, as I reflect on the 25 days of cricket, more things keep coming back to me. At Headingley, I saw a fan dressed as a traffic cone doing karaoke with an India flag tied around his shoulders. At Edgbaston, I watched a steward help two youngsters get nearer the players for an autograph. At Lord's, I wandered around the concourse at lunchtime on the fourth day and listened to a fierce debate between a group of friends about whether Zak Crawley's time-wasting tactics on the third evening were legitimate. At the Oval, I stood up, along with 25,000 other people, to applaud Woakes walking to the crease and fell in love with Mohammed Siraj — a player who came into the series as Jasprit Bumrah's understudy and ended it as India's hero. I'm not usually overly sentimental or emotional about the cricket I am covering. It is better, in this job, to try to stay calm and objective, but this series brought smiles, a fair few swear words, and a reminder of how privileged I am to be there for these moments. The summer of 2019, with a home World Cup win at Lord's and that incredible Ashes innings by Ben Stokes at Headingley, had been the best summer of my career to date, but now this one, 2025, is right up there alongside it. I'll cover more series, I'll write more live files, but it's going to take something special to top the past six weeks.

David Warner opens up on THAT explosive Ashes Test at Lord's in 2023, his relationship with his old nemesis Stuart Broad and clarifies what he meant about Joe Root's 'surfboards'
David Warner opens up on THAT explosive Ashes Test at Lord's in 2023, his relationship with his old nemesis Stuart Broad and clarifies what he meant about Joe Root's 'surfboards'

Daily Mail​

time8 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

David Warner opens up on THAT explosive Ashes Test at Lord's in 2023, his relationship with his old nemesis Stuart Broad and clarifies what he meant about Joe Root's 'surfboards'

is sitting on one of the iconic white benches outside the Lord's pavilion. It is the media day for his Hundred team, London Spirit, and the near-deserted Home of Cricket is a scene of calm - a stark contrast to the chaos of his last visit here. That was in July 2023, when Warner played for Australia in the infamous second Ashes Test, a match remembered less for the result than for one explosive incident. Alex Carey's controversial stumping of Jonny Bairstow on the final day sparked unprecedented uproar at Lord's, with furious MCC members confronting Australia players in the Long Room, and Warner himself having to be held back by security. 'For me, it was laughable,' reflects Warner, sitting with Mail Sport just in front of the spot where that ugly altercation unfolded. 'I just found it funny how people behaved. I've got no bad memories of it - just some people who wanted to react the way they did.' Three months from now, England players can expect a similarly hostile reception from the Australian public when they go Down Under for the return Ashes series. This time, though, pantomime villain Warner will not be at the centre of the action but commentating on it for Fox Sports, having retired from international cricket last year. 'You always want to be a part of it, but I just don't think I can get on the field again and be out there for five days,' admits the 38-year-old, dressed in London Spirit's black and blue colours. 'Now that I've had some time off from it, it's not something that I want to do.' Also commentating in Australia – but in the Channel Seven booth - is Warner's nemesis Stuart Broad, who dismissed him a remarkable 17 times in the Ashes. 'He will add a lot of value to that - he has great insight and great knowledge from a bowling perspective, especially in Australia,' admits Warner. 'My relationship is good with him. We always had a great battle on the field, but off the field, we have all got families and everything now, so it's all sweet.' Try salty. As recently as last weekend, Broad took to social media to hit back at his old Ashes rival following disparaging comments he made about Joe Root in a BBC interview. Warner said of Test cricket's second-highest run-scorer: 'Hazlewood tends to have his number quite a lot. He will have to take the surfboard off his front leg.' To which Broad responded on X: 'Just for clarity, Hazlewood has got Rooty lbw in Test cricket three times.' Warner, however, is in no mood to backtrack on his comments. When asked by Mail Sport if he really does believe Root is an lbw candidate in Australia, he replies: 'Yeah, massively. That's where we always targeted him. 'The other thing is, Joe might try and walk in the line of it. But I think in Australia if you tend to do that, then you bring in the outside edge. The way that he brings down his bat playing on Australian wickets, it can bring him undone and I've seen it in the past. 'I think he will have nightmares before he gets over here about Josh Hazlewood. A bit like me and Broady. 'Joe is a hell of a cricket player, look at the runs he has scored, the second leading run-scorer in the world. But I'm sure he'd like to score a hundred in Australia. It's one that has alluded him. I think that will be on his mind, so we will have to wait and see.' Warner has a similar warning to England's other centurion from their agonising six-run defeat to India at the Oval, Harry Brook. And he agrees with his former team-mate Steve Smith, who told Mail Sport last week that England's ultra-aggressive Bazball batting will not work Down Under. 'If England want to take that approach in Australia, they are going to have to expect a deep third man, a deep backward point, two men out square on the leg side, and then you can play your shots,' says Warner. 'There are going to be a lot of chances and Australia will have to take them. In Australia, there is not one place where you can drive on the up and play shots willy nilly. Especially in the last two years, the wickets have been very conducive. 'If they start bowling the bumper barrage, like they have done in the past few years, there are going to be no real answers. 'Guys like Brooky can come out and play the way he wants, but he is going to have to start practising more on the short ball because I think that's what he is going to get.' And it is not just England's batting that Warner thinks could be found wanting in Australia. 'You have to take 20 wickets,' he says. 'You are going to struggle if Australia puts 500-plus on the board. It's always hard to come back from. 'How is Australia's top order looking at the moment as well? That's another question. But it will be hard for you guys to take wickets. 'If they've got guys who can keep zeroing in on that top of off, England can do well, but they will have to try and get Steve Smith in as early as possible.' No wonder, then, that Warner is predicting a comfortable series win for his country, who have not lost a home series – or even a Test - against England since 2010-11. 'There will be a washout or a draw somewhere,' he says. 'I'd like it to be 4-0, but it's probably going to be 3-1 to Australia.' While Warner will not be taking on the old enemy himself this winter, he will get the chance to face some familiar foes in the Hundred. That includes Jimmy Anderson, who is making his debut in the competition for Manchester Originals at the grand old age of 43. 'It's exciting,' says Warner. 'The game owes us nothing and we owe it a lot, so it's great to see him back playing and giving back to the sport. A lot of youngsters can learn from him as well. I will try my best to score some runs off him.' Warner scored just nine on his Hundred debut on Tuesday night, as London Spirit were thrashed by champions Oval Invincibles in their competition opener. He will next come up against Smith's Welsh Fire on Saturday in Cardiff, where he is braced to receive some stick from the crowd. 'It doesn't bother me how people react,' he adds. 'The crowd are going to like you or dislike you. But I am just here to do my job - that's to try and score runs and help the team get the win.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store