
Azhar Mahmood named new Pakistan red-ball head coach
Karachi, June 30 (UNI) Pakistan have announced former all-rounder Azhar Mahmood as their new acting red-ball head coach.
Azhar steps into the new role following a long stint as bowling coach and assistant head coach of Pakistan's men's side and will serve in this position until the conclusion of his current contract.
Pakistan are confident Azhar can thrive in the role given his expertise as a player and coach prior.
"A seasoned cricketing mind, Azhar Mahmood steps into the role with an impressive portfolio of experience," Pakistan said via a release.
"Having served as the assistant head coach of the national side, Azhar has long been a pivotal part
of the team's strategic core. His deep knowledge of the game, combined with hands-on international exposure and proven success in the English county circuit, make him exceptionally well-suited for this position.
"His red-ball pedigree is underscored by two County Championship titles—an achievement that speaks volumes about his leadership, tactical acumen and unwavering commitment to excellence.
"The PCB is confident that under Azhar's guidance, the red-ball squad will continue to grow in strength, discipline and performance on the global stage."
Former fast bowler and 1992 ICC Men's Cricket World Cup winner Aaqib Javed had been fulfilling
the role as red-ball coach following the departure of Australian Jason Gillespie towards the end of
last year.
Mahmood's first task will be readying the side for their upcoming assignment for the new ICC World Test Championship cycle, which is scheduled to be when South Africa visit Pakistan for a two-match series later this year.
UNI BM
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


NDTV
2 hours ago
- NDTV
Vaibhav Suryavanshi Scores 45 As India U19 Lose To England U19, Series Level At 1-1
Riding on captain Thomas Rew's brilliant century, England scraped through with a narrow one-wicket win over India in the second Youth ODI to level the five-match series 1-1 in Northampton on Monday. India, who had won the first match by six wickets at Hove on June 27, posted 290 in 49 overs after being asked to bat. England then chased down the target with three balls to spare, reaching 291 for 9 in 49.3 overs. Medium pacer RS Ambrish took four wickets for 80 runs from his 10 overs to raise hopes of an Indian victory but the last English pair of Sebastian Morgan (20 not out) and Alex French (3 not out) survived the final two overs to give their side a win in a see-saw battle. The home side made a shaky start in their run chase with opener BJ Dawkins (7) back in the dressing room in the second over at team score of just seven. They slumped to 46 for 2 and then to 47 for 3 in the 12th over with Ambrish taking the wickets of Ben Mayes (27) and Isaac Mohammed (11) in quick succession. But Rew (131 off 89 balls) and Rocky Flintoff (39) resurrected the England innings with a 123-run stand for the fourth wicket before the latter got out off Kanishk Chouhan in the 33rd over. Rew, who hit 16 fours and six sixes in his masterly innings, fell in the 40th over off the bowling of Henil Patel and that led to a batting collapse as England were reduced to 254 for 8 by the 46th over. England needed 20 runs from three overs and 12 from two but they had just two wickets in hand. Alex Green (12) fell in the first ball of the penultimate over, the third victim for Ambrish, and England needed seven runs from the final over with the last pair at the crease. England eventually crossed the line with Morgan hitting a four off the third ball of the final over bowled by Yudhajit Guha. Earlier, asked to bat first, opener Vaibhav Suryavanshi (45), Vihaan Malhotra (49), Rahul Kumar (47), Kanishk Chouhan (45) and Abhigyan Kundu (32) made useful contribution to take India to 290 from 49 overs. This was after opener and captain Ayush Mhatre was dismissed for a duck off the first ball of the innings. However, India recovered from that jolt with the other top and middle-order batters coming good. Suryavanshi was among the runs for the second time as he had also made 48 in India's comprehensive win in the first match. For England, AM French was the pick of the bowlers with figures of 4/71 from his 10 overs while Jack Home (3/63) and Alex Green (3/50) were among the wickets. The home side conceded 32 extras, including 26 wides. Brief scores: India U-19: 290 all out in 49 overs (Vaibhav Suryavanshi 45, Vihaan Malhotra 49, Rahul Kumar 47, Kanishk Chouhan 45; AM French 4/71, Jack Home 3/63, Alex Green 3/50). England U-19: 291 for 9 in 49.3 overs (Thomas Rew 131, Rocky Flintoff 39; RS Ambrish 4/80).


India Gazette
2 hours ago
- India Gazette
Wait for Jofra Archer continues as England announce unchanged playing XI for second Test against India
Birmingham [UK], June 30 (ANI): England named an unchanged XI for the second Test against India, slated to kick off on Wednesday at Edgbaston for the Anderson-Tendulkar Trophy. The Three Lions roared in the opener and raced to a 1-0 lead in the five-match series after gunning down a record-shattering 371-run target in the first Test at Headingley, their second-highest successful chase in the format. For the second Test, tearaway Jofra Archer was included in the initial 14-player squad, raising hopes of his return to the format for the first time in more than four years. However, the 30-year-old missed the training session due to a family emergency, according to Sky Sports. England called up Archer for a red-ball contest for the first time since February 2021 after being named in the squad for the contest in Birmingham. His inclusion comes in the aftermath of his recent return to first-class action in the County Championship for the first time in more than four years. England men's director of cricket, Rob Key, had hinted at the prospect of Archer taking his run-up to make early inroads in the second Test. However, the Ben Stokes-led side will be Archer-less as they look to take a firm grip on the series. Apart from Archer, Jacob Bethell continues to sit on the sidelines patiently waiting for an opportunity to come his way. Ollie Pope's blistering 106 and Zak Crawley's composed 65 have made it hard for the youngster to make his way back into the XI. England's most experienced speedster in the current setup, Chris Woakes, had unstinting praise in store for Archer, who forced his way back into the Test fold after overcoming a period that has been plagued with injuries ahead of the second Test against India at Edgbaston. Woakes hailed Archer for the journey he made to earn a call-up back into the side and told reporters in a press conference on Monday, 'Brilliant for Joff, brilliant for us as a team. Obviously, it's a big boost to have him back. When Joff's around, he adds a lot to the group. Not just as a player but as a person, as a character. He's obviously had a tough journey over the last few years with his injuries.' 'I think it's credit to him, the hard work that he's put in, to be able to be back in this position now. To be able to hopefully play Test cricket again. But yeah, as I said, more delight for him than us, really, because I know how hard it is to go through long spells of injuries,' he added. England playing XI for second Test against India: Zak Crawley, Ben Duckett, Ollie Pope, Joe Root, Harry Brook, Ben Stokes (c), Jamie Smith (wk), Chris Woakes, Brydon Carse, Josh Tongue, Shoaib Bashir. (ANI)


The Hindu
2 hours ago
- The Hindu
Where is the sword-swishing, humming Jadeja?
Ravindra Jadeja's left-arm spin was put to an arduous test at Leeds. The final evaluation for his match figures of 47-5-172-1: room for improvement. The Headingley pitch got drier as the first England-India Test progressed, and the stage was set for Jadeja to utilise the rough outside the left-hander's off-stump. The last day's play, however, did not pan out as expected. Southpaw Ben Duckett (149, 170b) reversed the narrative Indian fans had hoped for by playing the reverse-sweep to perfection against Jadeja, and made sure England chased down the 371-run target without much fuss. Reverse sweep, under normal circumstances, is not a percentage shot on a wearing day-five pitch. The marauding English batters don't go by conventional wisdom, though. Just the prospect of Duckett unleashing his beloved weapon got Jadeja to err in line and length. It's another matter that Duckett brought out the audacious shot even when Jadeja found the rough. Duckett scored 36 runs in 16 balls (both innings) through reverse sweeps against Jadeja, and never once did the ball go in the air uncontrolled. Jadeja will have to come up with some answers to reverse this trend against the English opener. 'I could not believe how poorly he bowled, really. I'd likened it to owning a hammer but punching nails in with your fist instead – not landing the ball in the rough at all until, basically, it was too late. That was extraordinary,' Mark Butcher said on the Wisden Cricket Weekly Podcast. 'You talk about experience, and he has all the experience in the world. Somehow, it didn't seem to click to him or Rishabh Pant, the 'keeper, that it might be a good idea not to keep missing the rough all day to the left-handers,' he added. Under scrutiny It is not often that a tweaker's returns come under such scrutiny after a red-ball game in The Old Blighty — a land where swing rules over spin. There was enough help for Jadeja to work with in Headingley, but he could not deliver the desired results; hence, the finger-pointing at the finger-spinner. England is in the middle of an uncharacteristically hot summer. The tracks will stay dry (for English standards), and Jadeja will have to step up his game in the forthcoming Tests. 'I am going to be critical of Jadeja. This was a final-day pitch with rough patches for him to exploit. And while there were a couple of chances, we have to expect more from someone of his experience. These weren't typical English conditions where the pitch offers nothing. I felt he didn't use the rough nearly enough — especially against Duckett,' Sanjay Manjrekar told JioHotstar after India's five-wicket loss. It was not as if Jadeja did not make any meaningful contributions towards India's cause. His 2.95 economy in the first innings was the best among Indian bowlers (a decent effort against the Bazballers). The lack of movement in the wickets column, though, took the sheen away. In the second essay, after Duckett's onslaught, Jadeja did come into his own against another southpaw, Ben Stokes. The English skipper, too, tried to employ the reverse sweep against the left-arm spinner. This time, however, Jadeja was in better rhythm. He induced eight false shots out of the 16 balls that Stokes tried to play the reverse sweep in the second innings. Jadeja got his man soon, with Stokes top-edging an attempted reverse sweep straight to India captain Shubman Gill. Jadeja's success, however, came after England had already breached the 300-run mark, and it proved too little too late. He did toil hard, but one would have counted on the No. 1 Test all-rounder to have a greater say in favourable conditions. 'Against Stokes, yes, he did make an effort. But it was only much later in Duckett's innings that Jadeja started using the rough properly. When you're dealing with experienced bowlers and seasoned batters, you expect a higher level of tactical awareness. Somewhere, I felt Jadeja was disappointing. The seamers had no help from the surface, but Jadeja at least had something in the pitch working in his favour,' Manjrekar added. Decline Jadeja's stats in Test cricket have taken a hit of late. The premier all-rounder has not crossed the 30-run mark in his last six innings, and his overall numbers, too, are on a decline. Since the start of the 2024 India-New Zealand series, Jadeja averages 23 with the bat and 35 with the ball (the exact opposite returns in the disciplines would have been near perfect). India's progress report in the seven matches that Jadeja played during the period: six losses and a draw. Jadeja's journey towards bucking this trend in the bowling front is not going to be easy on English shores, where he has not got it right with his left-arm spin. Jadeja has the second-worst average (48.07) and strike rate (102.80) as a bowler in England, only behind his numbers in New Zealand, where he averages 60.6 with a strike rate of 124.8. Edgbaston, the venue of the second Test, holds some fond memories for Jadeja. He had slammed a century — his first outside home — and helped India post a mammoth 416 in the first innings of the rescheduled fifth Test (2021-22 series). A victory, though, proved elusive for the visitor as England chased down 378 in the fourth innings (sounds familiar) to level the series 2-2. The all-rounder had gone wicketless in that Test and will be keen on starting his redemption arc by catching some edges in Edgbaston, the same ground where a 24-year-old Jadeja's all-round brilliance (33 n.o., two for 24) paved the way for India's 2013 Champions Trophy triumph. Experience and accountability A decade on, just like the volume of Jadeja's beard, his responsibilities, too, have gotten thicker. Though his athleticism in the field may not give it away, the 36-year-old is a veteran of 81 Tests. And experience does breed responsibility and accountability. 'I don't like to give myself any tag. Whatever the team needs, I try to perform accordingly. As an all-rounder, sometimes a situation will come where you need to score runs and either save or win the match for the team. In bowling, you are expected to give a breakthrough. I consider myself a team player. Whatever the team needs, I will try to do it,' Jadeja had said after the 2022 Edgbaston Test. Sir Jadeja brings out the sword once again ⚔️🔥 It's been a century of the highest order from #TeamIndia's star all-rounder 🤩💯 Tune in to Sony Six (ENG), Sony Ten 3 (HIN) & Sony Ten 4 (TAM/TEL) - ( — Sony Sports Network (@SonySportsNetwk) July 2, 2022 Losing the experience of 296 Test caps after the retirements of R. Ashwin (106 Tests), Rohit Sharma (67), and Virat Kohli (123) means that Jadeja dons the senior tag in the Indian team now and he will be expected to set the benchmark for his younger colleagues. Team in transition A team in transition yearns for its seasoned players to lead the way, and India can ill afford a misfiring Jadeja. The 36-year-old may have lost a few battles recently, and it has been a while since he brought out his iconic sword celebration after crossing a milestone. The onus is on him to show the world that the warrior within remains unbroken, and the sword is still sharp for future duels.