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Tag: ashes

  • Why the future of Australian cricket is finally poised to become its present

    It’s easy to forget just how young Phoebe Litchfield still is.

    Having only turned 22 in April this year, the punchy, breathtakingly talented top order batter has been the future of Australian cricket since before the Covid pandemic.

    In mid-2019, prior to even making her state debut, the then 16-year-old Litchfield was a sensation in Australian cricketing circles after footage of her batting in the NSW nets went viral on social media.

    Six months later, she played a match winning knock for the Governor General’s XI against India, and only days after that, was lining up alongside Ricky Ponting, Alex Blackwell and Brian Lara for the Bushfire Cricket Bash.

    The hype surrounding Litchfield was reaching the kind of fever pitch reserved for only the most exciting of cricketing prodigies.

    However, a pandemic interrupted two years plus the continued dominance of a stacked Australian batting line-up meant Litchfield had to wait until late 2022 for her international debut.

    Since then, her still obviously generational talent has threatened and simmered, but it has also sputtered at times, with glorious centuries against India and Ireland being tempered by quiet Ashes and T20 World Cup campaigns.

    Litchfield is yet to fully announce herself on the international stage. (Getty Images: Pankaj Nangia)

    Now, on the eve of her first ODI World Cup, Litchfield finds herself flirting with career-best form, having just topped the run-scoring charts in England’s showpiece domestic short-form tournament, the Hundred.

    With the baby-faced, pre-pandemic Litchfield now confined to the realms of sporting prodigies past, and with many of her world beating batting teammates well into the twilight of their careers, Australia’s cricketing future has never been better placed to become its present.

    Australia chasing history after an up and down 12 months

    There are few feats that have eluded the modern Australian women’s cricket team, but winning consecutive ODI World Cups is one of them. Not since 1988 has a nation gone back-to-back in the tournament, with the green and gold claiming every second instalment since then.

    That’s a hoodoo that the 2022 winner will be looking to shake in the tournament to be played in India and Sri Lanka over the next month.

    Australian cricket players hug each other after the women's ODI World Cup final against England.

    Australia defeated England in the final of the 2022 ODI World Cup. (Getty: Hannah Peters)

    Australia will begin its campaign as favourite, but perhaps without quite the same aura of invincibility it brought to the tournament three years ago, after a meek exit in last year’s T20 World Cup.

    Despite winning all four of their group matches, it was a tournament to forget for many of the Australians, including Litchfield. Batting in the middle order and starved of significant strike, she was only able to manage a top score of 18 from five knocks.

    For this modern Australian team, the semifinal loss to South Africa was an unacceptable failure, but one that was avenged in the most comprehensive of fashions with an Ashes whitewash at the start of this year.

    Against an England side that wilted horribly, all-rounder Ash Gardner and leg-spinner Alana King both had coming of age series for Australia, while Annabel Sutherland continued to shine as Ellyse Perry’s heir apparent.

    A team of cricketers, wearing whites, celebrates victory in with a trophy.

    Australia completed the first ever multi-format Women’s Ashes whitewash earlier this year. (Getty Images via Speed Media/Icon Sportswire: Santanu Banik)

    However, Litchfield was once again underwhelming. She failed to reach 50 in seven attempts in the multi format series, with her highest white ball score being a stodgy and at times excruciating 50 ball 29 in the second ODI.

    In a series so lopsided, that lean run was of little consequence. But in the upcoming World Cup, which has been touted to be the “the strongest ever” by captain Alyssa Healy, Australia may well require more from Litchfield.

    Litchfield finds her best form in enemy territory

    So, Litchfield’s excellent recently completed English summer serves as a timely reminder of the player she still promises to become.

    Not only was she the Hundred’s player of the tournament and highest scorer, but she compiled her 292 runs at a strike-rate of 157.83 — the third best of any batter in the tournament.

    However, translating form across formats and oceans is never a sure thing.

    The spin friendly decks of India and Sri Lanka will provide an entirely different challenge to the one she rose to in England, while the 50 over game is worlds away from the Frankenstein’s monster of a format she played there.

    ODI cricket has a unique, increasingly archaic rhythm, and Litchfield has at times struggled to play her shots to it, oscillating between awkwardly repressing her attacking instincts and living by them too fiercely.

    But her form in Australia’s World Cup warm-up matches has been promising. 

    She hit 88 against India and then 71 against England, with both knocks hinting at a more balanced and composed Litchfield.

    Phoebe Litchfield plays a shot against India.

    Litchfield was brilliant against India in September. (Getty Images: Ravi Kumar/Hindustan Times)

    She scored at more than a run a ball in both games and, against England, did so while most of her teammates tried and failed to keep pace.

    Speaking after the match against India, Litchfield said she was very aware of the importance of acclimatising to the 50 over format.

    “My brain was probably going a bit quicker than it needed to,” Litchfield said.

    “50 over cricket is a long game…so I’ve just got to find the balance.”

    This World Cup is a transitional tournament for Australia.

    White the current team has already successfully evolved from the wildly successful side of the 2010s and early 2020s, its spine and identity remains tied to it.

    All time greats Healy and Perry, now 35 and 34 respectively, are both unlikely to feature at another ODI World Cup.

    Having played international cricket since the early 2010s, they are some of the final vestiges of the Australian team of 10 years ago, and do not only offer the current side runs and quality, but mythos and aura as well.

    Australia’s generation next has all the ability to build a similar legacy — Sutherland and Gardner are already world beaters, while the likes of King and Georgia Voll are clearly special talents.

    But it is the true international arrival of Litchfield that would, above all else, signal that the future of Australian cricket has really arrived.

    ABC Sport will broadcast live radio coverage of every match of the ICC ODI Women’s World Cup. Australia starts its campaign tonight against New Zealand at 7:30pm (AEST).

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  • Scatter My Ashes on Billy Joel’s Welcome Mat: Music Fans Choose Music-Related Eternal Resting Places

    You’re alive and reading this right now (thanks, btw), but one day you’ll be dead, despite your best efforts (sorry). Maybe by that time, in the very distant future, you’ll have lived an impossibly fulfilled life to its biggest and best extremes, amazing experiences in a playground of a world made just for your adventurous exploration, alongside family and friends you loved and treasured and the feeling being mutual. “Everything was beautiful and nothing hurt,” as it’s been put.

    And, of course, you got to listen to all of the music you wanted, right to the final note, your beautiful, pain-free life’s soundtrack. As essential as your experiences and loved ones are, you never underestimate how music somehow makes everything even better. When you’re in an urn and it’s time to have your remains spread in the exact right place, somewhere symbolic and worthy of all the glory of your thought-having, air-breathing, music-listening days, might you choose a spot associated with that music? And which music-cetric place would you choose?

    A little background — this story borrows heavily from one first presented in a different fashion by Pablo Torre Finds Out, a magnificent sports and pop culture podcast. If you haven’t tuned in, follow any of these links to the evocative, inspired stories presented episode after episode by one of journalism’s great interviewers. The show’s host, Pablo Torre, recently examined a growing death trend, one which sees folks dispatching the ashes of their loved ones at football fields, hockey arenas, baseball diamonds, golf courses and other sports venues – usually without permission – to fulfill the dying wishes of their beloved, departed sports fanatic.

    Surely, this could be (or already is?) a music trend, too. After all, the first dance at your wedding, the tune you dialed up to quell your nerves in the delivery room or the bangers you want played at your wake are at least as important as that time your favorite sportsball team won the championship.

    For my part, I’m going with Billy Joel’s front doorstep. For the longest time, I’ve been keeping the faith thanks to the Piano Man’s music, as has been detailed here in the Houston Press time and time again. I can’t think of a better way to explain how “I’ve Loved These Days” (a Joel deep cut) than being poured tastefully around the shrubbery and on the welcome mat at his home.

    What about you, alive and well, reader? Is it Abbey Road? Coachella? Graceland? Or something closer to home like Numbers, the parking lot that used to be Fitzgerald’s or The Astrodome (yeah, it’s still there, the last time we checked). We asked a few music fans we know where they’d want their ashes scattered, to mix into the soil and drift with the wind and forever be one with a music place dear to them. Here’s what we heard:

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    Jason Esparza (L) and friend, Scott Doyle

    Photo by Jesse Sendejas Jr.

    Going Up the Country with Jason Esparza

    Jason Esparza owns Hell N High Water Productions and has done professional video production, live concert filming and webcasting of some of your favorite music acts, including festival headliners like Pearl Jam and closer-to-home heroes like Robert Earl Keen. Esparza teamed with the late Kinky Friedman for the music series Texas Roadhouse Live and is a frequent contributor to nugs.net. Besides having a keen (no pun intended) eye for shooting concert footage and an ear for great songs, he’s a huge music fan, one who’s taken cues from his own musical heroes to write his own songs, a new endeavor for him.

    We posed our weird question to Esparza over tasty beers at Equal Parts Brewing recently and he didn’t flinch. First, he told his actual plan, which is to have his remains scattered in a natural setting which we’re not at liberty to disclose. Let’s just say it has trees, lots of tall, old ones. Then Esparza addressed our hypothetical.

    “You know, when I was growing up, I always thought that I was gonna have my ashes spread out over Woodstock,” which seemed on brand for Esparza, who is too young to be a true hippie but does love The Grateful Dead and lots of jam bands. “That place is still there, you know, it’s still living. I always wanted that.”

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    Brittany Hernandez (L) at work

    Photo by ClearShudder Photography, courtesy of Brittany Hernandez

    Brittany Hernandez: Die With a Smile

    The header introducing our friend Brittany Hernandez is more than just a nod to the latest Lady Gaga hit (one of Hernandez’s favorite artists), it’s also our hope for everyone, especially our fellow music lovers. Hernandez is owner of and stylist at Friendswood-based Transparent Beauty. We asked what role music plays on the day-to-day for her, her fellow stylists and their customers.

    “Music is huge in my workday. In my suite, it sets the mood, keeps the energy flowing and helps clients feel comfortable and relaxed,” she said. “It’s part of the rhythm of the day and makes even the busiest schedule feel more fun.”

    Hernandez said she has a wide taste in music and is “especially drawn to pop, R&B and country. Some of my favorite artists include Lady Gaga, Sabrina Claudio, Ella Langley, WizTheMc & Bees & Honey. My first concert was NSYNC when I was 12 years old, but my favorite live show so far has to be Florence and the Machine. It was such an unforgettable experience.”

    Hernandez is a pro so she knows about beauty, not just its outward representation but how it is manifest in and around us. Her response to our odd query was truly a thing of beauty.

    “For me, it would be the Cynthia Woods Mitchell Pavilion,” she said of The Woodlands-based concert amphitheater. “Music has always been a big part of my happiest memories, so it feels fitting to choose a place where people come together to celebrate music, life and connection. It would be like leaving a part of myself in the middle of the joy I always felt there.”

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    Rad Rich

    Photo by Jesse Sendejas Jr.

    Rad Rich Chooses The Axiom over The Mausoleum

    Rad Rich is a Houston music journalist, radio personality and local icon whose roots with all things music in this city are deep. Thankfully, Rich has shared that love of music – particularly punk, hip hop and underground – with locals on KPFT’s Rock N Soul Revue for years. Besides his knowledge of Houston’s music scene (get just a small glimpse in this David Ensminger article from the Houston Press archive), he’s a consummate story teller, generous with the details we crave.

    For instance, his knowledge of the background of his final resting place in our weird little game, The Axiom.

    “The Axiom used to be Cabaret Voltaire,” Rich told us. Some folks know that but it takes a real Houston music fan, one of his legendary status, to know the deeper background. He said before it became the Axiom, the place was Cabaret Voltaire 3.

    “There was Cabaret Voltaire 1, which was on Almeda and Alabama, which was an old mortuary,” he said. “Then there was Cabaret Voltaire 2, which was on Chenevert Street, which is now a Mexican restaurant.”

    He’d choose Cabaret Voltaire 3, a.k.a. The Axiom, among all the Cabaret Voltaires as a place to scatter his remains. Right there in the East End of downtown on McKinney and Live Oak.

    “A lot of people, when they pass by there, they’ve got so many memories, being there, hanging out on that corner, things that happened, the bands that played there. From Bad Religion to NOFX, you just go down the list of rock and metal bands – Sepultura played there – all these bands that became huge played there.”

    When asked how many shows he saw at Axion/Cabaret Voltaire, he said “every show” and we believed him. The building is old and has a storied history as detailed by him (“It used to be a little whorehouse”) and this comprehensive 2012 Houston Press music article by Chris Gray. As final resting places go, it’s surely an interesting spot, especially if one believes in ghosts, the kind Rich was summoning when we chatted at – where else – a local live show, at Bad Astronaut, featuring Bad Brains’ H.R.

    Elliot Lozier and The Eternal Shriek

    Elliot Lozier is in several bands (full disclosure, including two with the author’s own kids) but he’s probably best known as the front person for Doom Scroll, a Colorado-based folk punk act. While that group is surging, having played Riot Fest last season and soon headed to Australia for a month long-tour, he’s keeping busy by releasing solo work as Pesky Self.

    Lozier’s songs take an undaunted look at death, one of folk punk’s touchstone subjects. Check out the little ditty he wrote for Doom Scroll titled “Felled Spirits” and the chorus, “Death is waiting there to reclaim us allllll,” will be stuck in your head for days. He seemed a natural to take on our slightly morbid question.

    Not that it was easy, he said. First he considered the Polack Inn, a Wisconsin dive bar he unironically referred to as a “local haunt.”

    “I definitely don’t wanna stay there forever,” he laughed. “I also juggled with the Mishawaka Amphitheater but that’s only ‘cause that place is gorgeous and right on the Poudre River. Y’all should check out a show there sometime. It’s like mini-Red Rocks. A lot more intimate.

    “I’ve been mulling it over the last 24 hours and I think I would have my ashes spread at Seventh Circle Music Collective in Denver,” Lozier said. “It’s been a staple in the punk community for so long and it always feels like home when we play there. I’m not a huge fan of large venues, so when I play places that are more intimate and authentic like Seventh Circle, it feels like I’m more connected with the people there and experiencing a show together. Some amazing bands have played there over the years and I’m honored to be a in a couple of them. Seventh Circle will always hold a special place in my heart for the music community and I don’t think I’ll ever get sick of playing there.”

    Look for The Eternal Shriek, the debut album from Pesky Self, streaming everywhere Friday, September 5.

    Jesse Sendejas Jr.

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  • ‘I said I found it’: Mother finds missing bracelet with baby’s ashes in it

    ‘I said I found it’: Mother finds missing bracelet with baby’s ashes in it

    Mother finds missing bracelet with baby’s ashes in it



    GILMORE GIRLS. WE HAVE AN UPDATE TONIGHT ON THE DAVIDSON COUNTY WOMAN WHO LOST A PRECIOUS AND IRREPLACEABLE PIECE OF JEWELRY LAST WEEK. MORGAN CLODFELTER HAS FOUND THE BRACELET THAT CONTAINS HER BABY’S ASHES. SHE LOST IT ABOUT A WEEK AGO WHILE SHE WAS RUNNING ERRANDS IN AND AROUND CLEMMONS. HER FACEBOOK POST ANNOUNCING THAT SHE’D LOST IT WAS SHARED MORE THAN 38,000 TIMES. SHE TELLS WXII II THAT SHE AND HER HUSBAND TOOK THEIR WHOLE CAR APART TRYING TO FIND IT. BUT TODAY SHE DECIDED TO DO ONE FINAL CHECK. I TOOK APART ONE CAR SEAT THAT WASN’T THERE, AND I TOOK APART THE SECOND CARSEAT. AND RIGHT BEFORE I TOOK APART THAT SECOND CAR SEAT, I JUST STOPPED AND I SAID, GOD, JUST BRING IT TO ME. I NEED THE FACT I NEED THE PIECE OF MY BABY BACK. AND I TOOK APART THE SECOND CAR SEAT AND IT WAS LAYING THERE JUST AS IF IT HAD BEEN LAYING THERE. THE FIRST TIME WE TOOK IT APART. SO WHAT WAS IT LIKE WHEN YOU FINALLY FOUND IT? OH, MY GOSH. I TEARS. I WALKED IN AND MY GRANDPA LOOKED AT ME AND HE SAID, DID YOU FIND IT? AND I SAID, I FOUND IT. MORGAN SAYS SHE IS IN THE

    Mother finds missing bracelet with baby’s ashes in it

    A Davidson County woman whose terror shook people’s hearts finally got her happy ending.Morgan Clodfelter found the bracelet that contains her baby’s ashes in her car on Monday after going through one more final check.”I said God just bring it to me, I need this back. I need the piece of my baby back,” Clodfelter said. ” And I took apart the second car seat and it was laying there just as if it had been laying there the first time, we took it apart.”Clodfelter said she lost the bracelet a week ago while running errands in the Triad.Her Facebook post announcing that she’d lost it was shared more than 900 times.She tells WXII she and her husband took the whole car apart trying to find it. Clodfelter said she’s in the process of having the bracelet made into a ring instead.

    A Davidson County woman whose terror shook people’s hearts finally got her happy ending.

    Morgan Clodfelter found the bracelet that contains her baby’s ashes in her car on Monday after going through one more final check.

    “I said God just bring it to me, I need this back. I need the piece of my baby back,” Clodfelter said. ” And I took apart the second car seat and it was laying there just as if it had been laying there the first time, we took it apart.”

    Clodfelter said she lost the bracelet a week ago while running errands in the Triad.

    Her Facebook post announcing that she’d lost it was shared more than 900 times.

    She tells WXII she and her husband took the whole car apart trying to find it.

    Clodfelter said she’s in the process of having the bracelet made into a ring instead.

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