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[VIDEOS] Tom Hartley - the unlikely hero!

MenInG

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We can discuss his exploits in the first Test vs England but here are some stats about this guy to look at

PBp5fHE.png


Now lets talk Hartley - the new England spinning hope.
 
Hartley: I'm over the moon

England's spinner Tom Hartley (7-62) on TNT Sports:

"It's unbelievable. It's not going to sink in for a while I think. I'm over the moon to be honest.

"I think my family will be sat round the TV watching. After the first ball I was thinking, this is hard work. It didn't spin as much as we thought. Testament to the coaches and Stokes, they really got around me and I lost no confidence and I was able to come out and do my best.

"In that dressing room even if we had a good day or a bad day, it's the same vibe in there. It's fantastic. They're always ultra-positive and it's one of the best dressing rooms I've been in."

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Tom Hartley becomes the first England spinner since Jim Laker to take 7 wickets on debut.
 
After Tom Hartley's (7/62) match-winning spell against India in 1st Test, Captain Ben Stokes shared his thoughts in the post-match press conference regarding him:

“Tom came into the squad for the first time, he’s heard a lot had a lot of confidence. I was willing to give him a long spell regardless of what happened. Whether that was the reason he got seven wickets and won us the game, who knows?”
 
Brilliant performance.

It's even more special than Panesar (Mumbai 2012) and O'Keefe (Pune 2017) , when you consider the match situation and also the wicket, which wasn't exactly a raging turner like the above two
 
Never heard of him but what a player has he turned out to be for team England. Simply brilliant!
 
What a way to answer them, what a player he has turned out to be!

BCCI philosophy: We sabotage the visiting teams (somehow) and they crumble afterwards.

This time they messed with a Pakistani descent player (re: the visa excuses), hence the humiliation was on the cards and quite sweet as well!
 
What a way to answer them, what a player he has turned out to be!

BCCI philosophy: We sabotage the visiting teams (somehow) and they crumble afterwards.

This time they messed with a Pakistani descent player (re: the visa excuses), hence the humiliation was on the cards and quite sweet as well!

Oh dear... Pakistanis and their desperation to make any Indian defeat all about them just because their actual team gets massacred everytime by the Indian team..

Sad really..
 
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Fantastic bowling by him. I liked that he slowed his pace to get more purchase. What a debut!
 
For Lancashire he's not seen as a regular in the four day team.

Remember Root took a fiver on the last tour of India in the space of five overs. So enhancing anyone on them turners has to be cautioned
 
For Lancashire he's not seen as a regular in the four day team.

Remember Root took a fiver on the last tour of India in the space of five overs. So enhancing anyone on them turners has to be cautioned
True, that's why you judge them not based on one match but 10-15 matches. But he bowled well here.
 
Read on social that the umpires in County Cricket wore something called iHawk technology which England's management used to assess their domestic spinners.

They found Tom Hartley was similar to an Axar Patel in the way he bowled and would be suited to Indian conditions.

Somehow I don't think our QEA Trophy umpires wear anything useful underneath their topis.
 
Spinner Tom Hartley hopes to have "respect on my name" after bowling England to an incredible victory in the first Test against India in Hyderabad.

Left-armer Hartley, 24, had his first delivery in Test cricket belted for six by India opener Yashasvi Jaiswal.

But Hartley's 7-62, the best haul by an England spinner on debut since 1933, inspired their 28-run win on day four.

"I felt ready for it," Hartley told BBC Sport. "I know my ability on spinning wickets. I knew I could do well."

Lancashire's Hartley was a left-field call-up for the tour of India, having previously played only 20 first-class matches.

England believed he had the attributes to be successful on Indian pitches, especially given his height.

He was presented his cap by former England and Lancashire opener Michael Atherton before play in Hyderabad.

Hartley made 23 with the bat on the first day, including hitting a six, but was then punished by Jaiswal in leaking 63 runs from nine overs in his first spell with the ball.

"I was so nervous that first day. I was so happy to bring a few runs to the team, hit a six, tick a few things off," said Hartley.

"Then it was frustration that I was the bowler getting picked on, I was thinking if this was going to be the story for the whole series.

"I've been hit for a lot of sixes in my career, so I don't let these things get on top of me. The background I've had is to not let yourself get down. I just want to be a fighter and throw some punches back."

Hartley recovered on the second day to claim two wickets and continued to contribute with the bat in England's second innings, making another 34 as the tourists fought back to set India 231 to win.

Hartley then claimed the first seven-wicket haul on debut since the great Jim Laker in 1948 and took the final one to fall as England sealed victory in the extra half-hour at the end of the fourth day.

"To come out in the fourth innings and do what I did, hopefully they can put a bit more respect on my name and go forward from there," said Hartley.

The defeat was just a fourth in 47 home Tests for India and England now have the opportunity to go 2-0 up in the five-match series in the second Test in Vishakhapatnam, starting on Friday.

And Hartley feels prepared to play an enhanced role in the remainder of the series.

"Coming out here, I was just looking to get a game or a couple of games," he said. "I might now have a big role, but I'm more than ready for that. I want more of it."

Coach Brendon McCullum said Hartley's selection was "horses for courses", and that England backed their judgement.

"He was fantastic," McCullum told SENZ. "Sometimes you have to be a little bit brave with selection and if you like a character and their skillset and think it is going to be suited to conditions then it is kind of an educated punt.

"When we picked Tom people raised their eyebrows a little bit, but let's not forget Nathan Lyon had only played a handful of first-class games and averaged 40-odd when he got picked by Australia and he's gone on to have a fabulous career."

Uncapped off-spinner Shoaib Bashir has now joined the England squad after experiencing a delay receiving a visa.

McCullum said Bashir is in the "calculations" for the second Test, with the New Zealander even hinting England could play all four of their frontline spinners at some point in the series.

"If the wickets continue to spin as much as we saw in the first Test, we won't be afraid to play all spinners or a balance of what we've got," he said.

Source: BBC
 
Read on social that the umpires in County Cricket wore something called iHawk technology which England's management used to assess their domestic spinners.

They found Tom Hartley was similar to an Axar Patel in the way he bowled and would be suited to Indian conditions.

Somehow I don't think our QEA Trophy umpires wear anything useful underneath their topis.
Our domestic cricket looks like a picture out of the 80s quality wise.

Forget about iHawk, if we can telecast our domestic matches in more than 144p that in itself will be a massive achievement.
 
He is bang average. Still a nothing bowler. Indian batsmen were pathetic. I have seen nothing special from him. He will be one among the countless average spinners who destroyed India before.

If Hartley can repeat his performance over the entire 5 test series, then all credit to him.
 
After this tour when England go back to only picking one spinner, Hartley could easily displace Leach who has been extremely average with the ball for a while now, as well as being very injury prone and having seemingly lost his knack of producing useful cameos with the bat.
 
Hartley bowled pretty well but that pitch was also supporting spinners, India's spinner failed to make a mark on that pitch but hartley took the advantage and thrashed the batting line-up of India.1 match i not enough to judge him, let him play all the remaining matches and then let's see if he can repeat the same again.
 
Hartley had a remarkable seven-wicket haul in the second innings of the opening Test against India and finished with nine wickets in the match, helping pull off a 28-run win in Hyderabad.

The 24-year-old left-arm spinner is in 63rd position with 332 rating points, the best by any England bowler after his debut Test since left-arm seam bowler John Lever achieved 393 points with a 10-wicket match haul against India in Delhi in December 1976.

ICC​
 
After this tour when England go back to only picking one spinner, Hartley could easily displace Leach who has been extremely average with the ball for a while now, as well as being very injury prone and having seemingly lost his knack of producing useful cameos with the bat.
Hartley has also proven his ability with the bat which proves he is an ideal no.8 that eng need if woakes decides to retire.

England have always preferred bowlers who could bat, this puts Leach's place in jeopardy.
 
Hartley has ticked the wickets column in the 2nd Test match against India as well. He took 1 wicket in the 1st innings and now has 3 in the 2nd innings. Good start to his international career.
 
Hartley outside of India will struggle. Indian wickets are a dream for anyone who could turn their arm over.

Hartley is not considered a automatic pick for Lancashires four day side.
 
Hartley outside of India will struggle. Indian wickets are a dream for anyone who could turn their arm over.

Hartley is not considered a automatic pick for Lancashires four day side.

None of that really matters for now though does it? We have a series on now.
 
He has been England's best spinner in this series.

England's Test spin attack is looking good for the next few years --> Hartley, Bashir, Rehan, and Leach.
 

Tom Hartley to focus on batting to avoid being frozen out at Lancashire​


Tom Hartley has been a breakout success for England this winter with the ball but the slow left-armer intends to focus on his batting to avoid being frozen out at Lancashire.

Despite just 20 first-class appearances behind him and a modest record, Hartley fully vindicated his left-field selection for the tour of India by spinning England to a famous win in Hyderabad, while he tops the wicket-taking charts with 20 dismissals at an average of 33.45 after four Tests.

Hartley is gaining increasingly in confidence but he could be marginalised in the County Championship after Lancashire pulled off a coup by snapping up Australia off-spinner Nathan Lyon for the summer.

Rather than fret about his place, Hartley sees the upshot of the Red Rose signing a bowler with 527 Test wickets and will take steps to try to prevent the pair from being in direct competition with each other.

“I’m really trying to work on my batting and become more of that all-rounder role which makes me a lot easier to pick,” Hartley said. “Playing alongside (Lyon) would be fantastic.

“I hope he’s going to be fantastic for me and be a real game-changer. He’s going to be great to learn off. He’s probably going to be fed up of me by September. Hopefully we can get on really well.

“The type of bowler he is is something I’m trying to work on. The way he operates in Australia on pretty flat wickets, there are times when English wickets are pretty similar.”

England head coach Brendon McCullum said last week it would be “slightly mad” if Hartley and Shoaib Bashir were overlooked by their counties having established themselves as Test cricketers on this trip.

While Hartley could be behind Lyon in the pecking order and Bashir set to play second fiddle to Jack Leach at Somerset, one solution would be to send the pair on loan to other counties.

“I think it’s a bit early for that,” Hartley said. “I’ll do whatever’s best for Lancashire and the team.”

Hartley will instead concentrate on pumping up a respectable first-class batting average of 26.19. He has demonstrated his character in recent weeks by taking the attack to Ravichandran Ashwin, thumping India’s premier spinner for four sixes in the series.

While there may still be more to work on before he can consider himself a fully-fledged all-rounder, Hartley is determined to show he can bring value with both bat and ball.

“I’ve made big strides in these last two years with my batting but I still feel there are gaps there and that (improving) only really comes with time at the crease,” Hartley said.

“I think I get a bit carried away trying to hit sixes and fours. Sometimes I’ve just got to relax myself, take my time to get in and just have a bit more patience.”

His adventurous approach to batting has been encouraged by McCullum and captain Ben Stokes, with Hartley bumped up to eighth in Ranchi after three Tests at number nine in the order.

“They’re over the moon whenever I hit a six, that’s what I get cheered for,” Hartley said. “Coming back in the dressing room, that’s what they talk to me about. It just encourages me to play more of them.”

India are 3-1 up in the series heading into the final Test in Dharamsala, starting on Thursday and cooler conditions in the area could lead to England choosing an extra seamer and potentially discarding either Hartley or off-spinner Shoaib Bashir.

Irrespective of whether he features this week, Hartley believes all avenues are now open to him after previously drifting towards limited-overs opportunities before England came calling.

“The way it was going, I was naturally trailing down that white-ball route,” Hartley added. “But that’s just because there was more opportunities for me that way.

 
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