
Woakes past his sell by date and Crawley cant get any better: Boycott
Woakes, the senior-most English bowler in the line-up with an experience of 59 Tests, bowled 82 overs across two games and picked up only three wickets for 290 runs. In three innings that he batted, he tallied 50 runs with a top score of 38.
"It is counter productive to keep the same guys in the team when they are past their sell-by date or not doing enough," Boycott wrote in his column for British daily 'The Telegraph'.
"Look at Chris Woakes. His pace is dropping as you would expect as a seamer gets older. He has never been a wicket-taker abroad, where his record is poor. He is good - or has been good - on English pitches, and his batting has been handy at times as a safety valve when others have failed," Boycott wrote.
He also criticised the team management's aim to get runs from Woakes, whose primary skill is not batting. The series is currently tied after England won the opener and went down by 336 runs in the second game.
"His job should not be to shore up bad batting. Batsmen are there to score runs and bowlers need to take wickets."
Boycott said Woakes is nowhere close to James Anderson, who was an artist when it came to his craft.
"Woakes has been a good cricketer but not a master craftsman like James Anderson, who took buckets full of wickets home and away consistently. Woakes also has a poor record in Australia that is highly unlikely to change at the age of 36," he said.
In case of Crawley, Boycott was as severe as former England skipper Michael Vaughan by stating that the lanky right-hander can't get any better. Crawley has one half century in four innings against India so far.
"I don't think he can change or get better. Batting is in the head and the brain dictates how you approach batting: what shots you attempt, what balls you leave. His faults in technique and thinking are ingrained," Boycott observed.
"A leopard doesn't change his spots, or maybe Zak does not want to change. He should be approaching his best years but in 56 Tests he has learned nothing. One sparkling innings and numerous failures, with an average of 31, is not good enough."

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


India Today
32 minutes ago
- India Today
Wimbledon: Alcaraz dominates Norrie, Fritz knocks out Khachanov to advance to semis
Carlos Alcaraz and Taylor Fritz sealed their spots in the semi-finals of Wimbledon 2025, following their commanding wins on Tuesday, July 8. While Fritz faced a bit of a challenge by Karen Khachanov, Cameron Norrie was no match for Alcaraz, as the two-time defending champion stamped his authority over the British didn't even let Norrie breathe as he earned two break points quite early in the first set courtesy of a double fault from the 2022 Wimbledon semi-finalist. The crowd was firmly behind the local lad, but he failed to channel their support in his game. He was completely dominated by Alcaraz, who sealed the first set in 28 minutes without breaking a 2025 Day 9 Updates Norrie put up some fight in the subsequent sets backed by the local crowd but was no match to Alcaraz, who was clinical as ever at the Centre court. The Spaniard earned 13 aces and five break points in a scintillating display of Tennis. He eventually sealed a comfortable 6-2, 6-3, 6-3 straight set victory, registering his 23rd consecutive win at 22-year-old also reached his eighth Grand Slam semi-final as he eyes a hat-trick of titles. Meanwhile, on Court 1 Taylor Fritz qualified for his maiden Wimbledon semi-finals after a topsy-turvy four-setter victory against Karen Khachanov. The American sealed the first two sets rather comfortably before Kachanov staged a brilliant comeback by winning eight out of the next nine fights hard in last 2 setsThe Russian took the third set 6-1 before Fritz found his mojo back in the fourth set and eventually emerged victorious in the tie breaker, sealing a 6-3, 6-4, 1-6, 7-6(4) win. Following his win, the American admitted that he didn't expect the game to change drastically and had to fight hard in the fourth set to regain control."I've never really had the match change like that so drastically where I felt so in control, playing great, serving great. I didn't feel like my serve was in danger, I felt like I was putting a lot of pressure on his serve. I felt like I couldn't miss and then, out of nowhere, I just started making a ton of mistakes. So I really just had to fight to get that break back in the fourth and kind of just get the match back to neutral,' said Fritz during his on-court after having a contrasting path into the quarterfinals, Alcaraz and Fritz are set to fight for a place in the final as they lock horns in the semi-final on Friday, July 11.- EndsMust Watch


India Gazette
an hour ago
- India Gazette
Former spinner believes Jasprit Bumrah is
New Delhi [India], July 8 (ANI): Former England spinner Monty Panesar believes the 'world's best' Jasprit Bumrah 'must' return to India's final XI ahead of the crucial third Test at the expense of Prasidh Krishna against his former side at the 'Home of Cricket', Lord's. With a spirited performance, India restored parity in the five-match series at 1-1 by orchestrating its maiden Test win at Edgbaston, ending its decades-long victory hiatus. Even after being bereft of Bumrah's services, India left England gobsmacked, courtesy of blistering spells from Akash Deep and Mohammed Siraj. Panesar emphasised the gravity of India's famed 336-run triumph in Birmingham, especially in the absence of stalwarts Virat Kohli, Rohit Sharma and Ravichandran Ashwin. With the next Test less than 48 hours away, Panesar sees India as favourites to kick off the highly-anticipated affair 'really well.' 'Well, this was a historic win for India, and the way they outplayed England was unbelievable. No one could imagine India could perform this way, especially with no Virat Kohli, Rohit or Ashwin,' Panesar told ANI ahead of the third Test set to begin on Thursday. Bumrah returned to the format after sustaining an injury in Sydney during India's fifth Test against Australia. He dazzled in the first innings and scalped five wickets in 24.4 overs while giving away 83 runs. In the second innings, he lost his charm and went wicketless as India fell to a five-wicket defeat in Leeds. In the second Test, Bumrah was rested as a part of managing his workload, considering he was bound to play just three out of the five games in England. 'In the next Test match, Jasprit Bumrah must come into the team and maybe Krishna out because he has played two back-to-back Test matches, and he may need to rest. India is in ascendancy now. England have a lot to consider, and I think India are favourites to start the Test really well,' he concluded. In the second contest, India captain Shubman Gill took the onus of pushing India's score, especially after his side endured two collapses at the tail in Leeds. He played the captain's knock and shared records for fun en route to a swashbuckling 269(387). In his second turn, when a belligerent approach was the need of the hour, Gill tantalised England's inexperienced pace attack with 161(162), scoring almost at a strike rate of 100. On the bowling front, Akash kept England's top order silent in the first innings and returned with figures of 4/88. However, in the second innings, he upped the ante and left no stone unturned to reduce the English crowd to silence. He dealt heavy blows at crucial junctures and scalped priceless wickets of Joe Root, Ben Duckett, Jamie Smith and Harry Brook, derailing England's pursuit of a daunting 608-run target to finish with figures of 6/99. (ANI)


NDTV
2 hours ago
- NDTV
Carlos Alcaraz, Aryna Sabalenka Take Contrasting Routes Into Wimbledon Semi-Finals
Carlos Alcaraz swept into the Wimbledon semi-finals for a third successive year as the defending champion demolished Cameron Norrie, while world number one Aryna Sabalenka survived a major scare to reach the last four on Tuesday. Alcaraz needed just 99 minutes to win 6-2, 6-3, 6-3 in his most commanding performance in this year's tournament. The Spanish second seed dropped four sets in a series of scrappy displays during his run to the last eight. But Alcaraz was back to his imperious best in the quarter-finals, blasting 39 winners against the overwhelmed British world number 61, setting up a last-four clash with American fifth seed Taylor Fritz. Alcaraz is on a career-best 23-match winning run since losing to Holger Rune in the Barcelona final in April -- a superb streak which has brought him titles at the French Open, the Rome Masters and Monte Carlo. The Spaniard, who vanquished Novak Djokovic in the last two Wimbledon finals, has won 34 of his 37 Tour-level matches on grass, while his last defeat at the All England Club came against Jannik Sinner in the fourth round in 2022. "To be able to play another semi-final here at Wimbledon is super special," Alcaraz said. "It's going to be great. I'm really happy with the way I played against a really difficult player," Wimbledon's controversial line technology system malfunctioned again as Fritz beat Russian 17th seed Karen Khachanov 6-3, 6-4, 1-6, 7-6 (7/4) to reach his first Wimbledon semi-final. Swedish umpire Louise Azemar Engzell had to stop a point in the opening game of the fourth set on Court One when "fault" was incorrectly called after a Fritz forehand landed well inside the baseline. The call of "fault", rather than "out", and positioning of the ball suggested the system was still tracking Fritz's serve as opposed to a rally and the point had to be replayed. Tournament organisers were forced to apologise and make a change to the system to avoid further issues after a major error in Sonay Kartal's fourth-round defeat to Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova in the women's draw. - 'I need some time to cool down' - A fully automated system has replaced human line judges at Wimbledon for the first time this year, in line with the Australian Open and the US Open. Tournament organisers claimed the system had failed to reset because the ball from Fritz's first serve was still being retrieved when he started lining up his second. "The player's service motion began while the BBG (ball boy or girl) was still crossing the net and therefore the system didn't recognise the start of the point," an All England Club statement said. "As such the chair umpire instructed the point be replayed." Sabalenka fought back from the brink of a shock exit to reach the semi-finals with a gutsy 4-6, 6-2, 6-4 win against Germany's Laura Siegemund. She twice trailed by a break in the final set on Centre Court and was two games away from crashing out before staging a dramatic revival to win in two hours and 54 minutes of unrelenting tension. The 27-year-old top seed is through to the Wimbledon semi-finals for the third time after losing at that stage in 2021 and 2023. Beaten in the Australian and French Open finals this year after winning the US Open in 2024, Sabalenka remains on course to reach a fourth successive Grand Slam title match. Sabalenka remains the only one of the top six women's seeds still standing at the tournament after two weeks of shocks. "That was a real test. I need some time to cool down and recover after this," Sabalenka said. In the semi-finals, the Belarusian will face American 13th seed Amanda Anisimova, who defeated Russian world number 50 Pavlyuchenkova 6-1, 7-6 (11/9). Anisimova took an eight-month break from tennis in 2023 after suffering with depression brought on by the scrutiny and expectations that came from her run to the French Open semi-finals aged just 17. "It's been an extraordinary year for me. So many highs. It's been such a ride," she said.