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Monday, December 31, 2007

West Indies seal a historic victory

Few gave West Indies any chance of breaking their downhill slide when they started the three-Test series in South Africa, but it has taken them just four days to turn things around in a quite spectacular manner. Thirty-one months after they last won a Test match, West Indies demolished South Africa by 128 runs, and inside four days, to take a 1-0 lead in the series. It provided a glorious finish to their year, and a glorious start to Chris Gayle's tenure as captain.

West Indies dominated large parts of the Test, but it seemed they had given South Africa a sniff when they collapsed on the third evening. They managed just 175 in their second innings, but their fast bowlers turned in another awesome display to ensure that 389 was more than enough runs to defend.

For South Africa, it was a shock defeat, their first at home to West Indies. For the second time in the match, the top order collapsed without a trace - the first four wickets went down with just 45 on the board. Jacques Kallis revived the run-chase with a flawless 85 and added 112 with AB de Villiers to give them a chance, but once he was at the receiving end of an unfortunate decision, the result was never in doubt.

Source : http://content-ind.cricinfo.com

Vettori and BcCullum thrash Bangladesh

The last day of the year was a memorable one for Daniel Vettori, who won another toss, grabbed five easy wickets to become New Zealand's highest limited-overs wicket-taker, and basked in his first series victory since taking over the captaincy after the World Cup.

Rain was expected but the weather held up in sunny Queenstown, New Zealand's "Vegas by the Lake", and Vettori played all his cards right to spin Bangladesh out for just 93, a total overhauled by Brendon McCullum's murderous 29-ball 80 before the local caterers burned lunch. Against the backdrop of the scenic Remarkables hill range, Bangladesh were simply annihilated, a 3-0 sweep was completed, and the hosts went into the New Year in a festive mood ahead of a busy season.

Before this game Mohammad Ashraful, Bangladesh's captain, demanded his side improve from an "unacceptable" performance in the second match, but it appeared no one was listening. Vettori's good luck at the toss continued and he had little hesitation in giving his bowlers a crack at a struggling Bangladeshi top order, whose penchant for driving on the up had them in knots. They got away with it in Napier, to an extent, but struggled in seam-friendly conditions where the ball didn't come onto the ball all that easily.

Kyle Mills' good series continued as he bowled Junaid Siddique in the third over, going for an expansive drive and inside-edging back onto his stumps. Mills and every seamer included bowled accurately and asked plenty of questions of the batsmen. Michael Mason, sporting a bit of hair dye in his first game since the World Cup, picked up an out-of-sorts Tamim Iqbal in his second over, the 16th. Struggling to time the ball off the square, Tamim saw some width and poked at it, but was smartly snapped at slip by Scott Styris, diving to his left. His laborious 13 from 56 deliveries summed up Bangladesh's predicament.

Source : http://content-ind.cricinfo.com

Kaneria irks selectors after skipping game

Pakistan leg-spinner Danish Kaneria's decision of skipping domestic cricket, on advice of coach Geoff Lawson, has not gone down well with the national selectors.

Kaneria told the selectors that Lawson had instructed him to take complete rest after the Indian tour.

"Danish has told us about Lawson's instructions although we would have liked to see him play in domestic cricket before the Zimbabwe series.

"But we will find out from the team coach the reasoning behind his instructions to the leg-spinner," a selector said.

Sources say apart from irritating the selectors, Kaneria has also irked his domestic team, Habib Bank.

"Abdul Raquib (head of the Habib Bank team) himself is a former first class spinner and he was also not happy with Danish's decision," one source said, adding that "they have found his replacement."

Habib bank are playing a crucial match to qualify for the Quaid-e-Azam Trophy final. However, all domestic matches have been suspended following the assassination of former prime minister Benazir Bhutto.

"The feeling is that the more Danish plays, better it is for him as he needs to work on his bowling," the source said.

Pakistan's next international assignment is against Zimbabwe in a five-match One-Day series, beginning later next month.

New Zealand's stern no to ICL rebels

New Zealand has asked its selectors not to consider Indian Cricket League-aligned players while picking the national team for future assignments.

The decision by the New Zealand Cricket (NZC) put paid to the hopes of Chris Cairns, Nathan Astle, Chris Harris, Craig McMillan, Hamish Marshall and Darryl Tuffey to play either in national or A teams.

"We have a preference that our selectors take into consideration the fact that that these guys have been playing in an unsanctioned competition, an event that isn't in the best interests of New Zealand or world cricket, and that we'd rather that they didn't play," said NZC chief executive Justin Vaughan.

"I don't think we can say that they're ineligible for selection. We'd prefer to say that the selectors will be encouraged to consider other players," he was quoted as saying by the Sunday Star Times.

While NZC fell short of announcing a ban on the 'rebel' players, it has been decided that the cricketers would not be allowed to hold contracts with the State Championship teams and their participation would be limited to playing for match payments on a game-by-game basis.

These Test cricketers played for the rebel ICL Twenty20 championship in Panchkula, Haryana, despite opposition from the International Cricket Council and its affiliates.

Of the 'rebel' players, Cairns, Harris, McMillan and Astle have announced their retirement from international cricket while Tuffey, and Marshall are likely lose out the chance to play for their country again.

Vaughan would soon convey the Board's decision to BCCI vice president Lalit Modi and the NZC official said, "There's an understanding that we don't support the ICL and that we don't want to give them unnecessary traction."

BCCI had earlier resented the inclusion of Tuffey in an Auckland XI that played the Bangladesh tourists, saying the selection of an ICL-aligned player undermined the agreement.

Source : http://www.cricketnext.com/

I'm not Bhajji's bunny, thunders Ponting


Ricky Ponting may have fallen to the belligerent off-spinner six times in seven Tests but the Australian captain asserted he is not Harbhajan Singh's bunny and is itching to settle scores in the next Test in Sydney.

Ponting, who fell to the spinner in the second innings of the Boxing Day Test in Melbourne, called it just an aberration and gave ample hint that he would do everything to set records right.

"We've got a good little battle on our hands," Ponting said.

"I'm actually looking forward to Sydney now, especially after he said some of the stuff he has about getting me out. He must have a pretty short memory," he was quoted as saying by The Australian.

For the record, Harbhajan removed Ponting on all five occasions in the 2001 series, which included three ducks.

Though Ponting was by and large unperturbed in the next two series, in India and Australia, Harbhajan once again threatens to be his bugbear when the offie scalped him in the second innings at the MCG.

Ponting admitted Harbhajan has had the better of their exchanges in Test cricket but stressed he had paid the bowler back in One-Dayers.

Source : http://www.cricketnext.com/

Team upset with Yuvraj's attitude: report

As if Yuvraj Singh's failure with the bat in the first Test against Australia was not bad enough, the left-hander's attitude has now become an issue with the Indian team management.

"Yes, there's a problem with Yuvraj's attitude. We will have to have a one-on-one with him in Sydney," Lalchand Rajput, assistant coach of the team, was quoted as saying by The Age.

The daily claimed Yuvraj's attitude during the Boxing Day Test "infuriated members of the Indian side."

It also went on to say that the left-hander's "air of indifference", coupled with his failure with the bat at MCG, might cost him his place in the side, paving the way for either Virender Sehwag or Dinesh Karthik to open the innings.

Yuvraj scored 0 and 5 in the match and it was to accommodate him that the team think-tank had decided to open with Rahul Dravid, a move that came a cropper as Australia romped to a 337-run win to take 1-0 lead in the four-match series.

Yuvraj was also fortunate to escape a fine from Match Referee Mike Procter for lingering at the crease after Billy Bowden had adjudged him caught behind lark for a first-innings duck.

The 26-year-old again stood his ground after Brad Hogg trapped him leg-before for five in the second innings. He later attended a hearing but was declared not guilty of breach of ICC conduct.

Source : http://www.cricketnext.com/

Sunday, December 23, 2007

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Friday, December 14, 2007

New Zealand face their pace demons

If the first 25 overs of this Chappell-Hadlee Series are any indication, then Australia have a fight on their hands if they are to wrest the trophy from New Zealand. Daniel Vettori's bold decision to face their pace demons paid off with Brendon McCullum and Jamie How setting a firm platform of 3 for 123 after the early loss of Lou Vincent.

But then came two wickets, How and Scott Styris as Shaun Tait, in his first international at his home ground, began to unsettle them. They now have some rebuilding work to do and will rely on McCullum to lead them further.

The visitors admitted before the match that pace has been a weakness, but McCullum stood up to everything that Australia - in the mighty form of Brett Lee, Shaun Tait and Nathan Bracken - could throw at him, and then some, using the pace of a quick pitch well to launch a sturdy assault. He offered a series of terrific drives and cuts square of the wicket, the highlight so far a flat six over point off Lee.

Tait also got the treatment in his first international match at home, with one over disappearing for three cover-driven fours, although in his second spell - McCullum by now on 67 - he did prompt a chancy inside-edge into space and he eventually struck to remove How and then Styris, both edging.

McCullum, who headed into this match on the back of a quality 88 against the Chairman's XI and a tidy series in South Africa, had to weather an early barrage in which he was cut him in half more times than a busy magician's assistant. Then it was his turn to do the cutting and he had scored the bulk of the runs as the fifty partnership came up off as many balls between him and the more circumspect How.

Sunday, December 2, 2007

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Saturday, December 1, 2007

Don't change Test format - Waugh

Steve Waugh has rejected the call from Geoff Boycott to cut Tests to four days and says the format should not be tinkered with. Boycott suggested the alterations because "the pace of life has changed", but Waugh said people enjoyed watching a contest evolve over five days.

"It's like a game of chess, it's a great game of tactics, it's a battle mentally as well, so to cut it short would be to change the game of Test cricket," he said in the Australian. "And that's the essence of cricket: Test cricket."

Waugh said players were judged on how they performed in the longer form. "So let's not tinker with that, you can tinker with the other forms of the game, but Test cricket should stay the way it is," he said. "If someone can win a Test match in three days then that provides entertainment, but some of the best games I played went right down to the wire in five days and there wasn't a result."

Richie Benaud, who was with Waugh at the SCG to unveil a painting of the best New South Wales team, said there was no reason to change. "As soon as you push Test cricket to one side and concentrate only on limited-overs cricket, then people will get jack of it very quickly," he said.

Waugh said it was important in the current climate to encourage the "culture of Test cricket". "There's a real danger of Test cricket not having many spectators watching it," he said. "Australians are lucky, they've got a very successful side and I think success brings in the spectators.

"In some of the subcontinent countries they're really focused on one-day cricket. Let's get back to focusing on Test cricket, to tell people great stories about Test cricket, to get families to go and watch the game again because it has such a great history and tradition."

Waugh expected there would be large crowds during India's four-Test series, which begins in Melbourne on Boxing Day. "It will be a good contest, they've got a very experienced side and they'll take it to Australia a bit," he said. "As Sreesanth has shown, they're not going to back down, so they're going to be aggressive, which is good. Australia responds to that type of cricket and plays really well. Australia want sides to challenge and India have the capability of doing that."

How and McCullum power New Zealand win

New Zealand, led by scintillating half-centuries from Brendon McCullum and Jamie How, dismantled South Africa with clinical efficiency and brought the one-day series alive with a seven-wicket victory in the second one-dayer at St George's Park. The target of 210 was seen as fairly competitive under lights but McCullum and How tackled it with a level of confidence rarely seen from New Zealand in this series.

There was a refreshing consistency with which New Zealand dominated the game for most parts. The 89-run rescue act for the sixth wicket between Shaun Pollock and Mark Boucher was the only lengthy passage of play dominated by South Africa - who had won eight of the last ten day-night games here - but the momentum was with New Zealand from the second ball of the match.

Lou Vincent's run-out got the chase off to a rocky start but that brought McCullum and How together. McCullum was in imperious touch against Nel in particular and dented his confidence in one over. Nel pitched up outside off, McCullum lofted through the line and deposited the ball straight back over his head for the first six of the innings. The next ball was heaved over point before How got into the act with a streaky inside edge past short fine leg, but the intent with which the pair picked up 16 in that single over sent out a statement that New Zealand weren't going to be trampled upon again.

Both showed a fondness for horizontal bat shots - some met with thin air, some off the toe edge while some rocketed off the meat of the bat. The confidence in the strokeplay rubbed off on the running between the wickets as the pair rotated the strike judiciously. The fielding was sharp, characteristic of the South Africans, but not sharp enough. The number of direct hits didn't deter How or McCullum from applying further pressure on the infielders. Gaps were bisected with precision and there wasn't much Graeme Smith could do to plug them.

The ploy of bowling slower balls, adopted by Charl Langeveldt, had the right intention - to confuse the batsmen - but not the desired effect. The ball often landed short of a good length, allowing the batsmen time to plan their strokes. The partnership looked ominous for South Africa and the bounce and sideways movement in the evening was barely seen under lights. As the pair stretched the stand to 150, the shoulders drooped and South Africa ran out of ideas, with the chase progressing at the rate of knots.

Despite the running, it was ironical that two of the three dismissals came by way of run-outs. Dale Steyn, on the field as a substitute, set a fine example with a flat throw from deep extra cover to send back McCullum for 81 and How was trapped playing across the line to Langeveldt for 76. But it was a little too late for inspiration as Scott Styris and Ross Taylor played neat cameos and reached the target with 68 balls to spare.

New Zealand's batsmen were simply carrying on the team's effort in the field. South Africa's top order wilted under the pressure created at the start by an incisive opening burst from Kyle Mills, backed by restrictive spells from the two-pronged spin attack of Daniel Vettori and Jeetan Patel.

The catching and anticipation was sharp and agile, and New Zealand, sensing an opportunity to make further inroads, threw themselves in the field, plugging the gaps in the first Powerplay. At 20 for 3, the pressure began to tell, particularly on Jacques Kallis, who was uncharacteristically scratchy in a situation tailor-made for him. Attempts at shuffling across the stumps to unsettle the bowler's rhythm were met with little or no success and the fielders patrolling the inner circle were kept busy each time Kallis attempted something different.

JP Duminy, who promised plenty with a couple of smooth drives on the front foot, fell to an untimely slog off Patel. And as the usually festive crowd turned quiet, New Zealand celebrated Kallis' wicket as well.

The rebuilding act by Boucher and Pollock wasn't electrifying but effective as they rotated the strike against Patel and Vettori. The first ten overs of the stand had little in runs value -only 26 came off it - but the passage of play after the drinks interval followed a slightly different script. Pollock was fed with three gifts in succession by Gillespie - scooping two over backward point and dispatching the third back past the bowler - and suddenly the next ten overs yielded 58.

The late fireworks were reserved for Nel. He picked on Mills, one of New Zealand's least-effective bowlers at the death, slashing past gully, smoking one over square leg, and then following it up with a six over deep cover. Nel finished the innings in style with a six off Gillespie, giving South Africa hope. However, there weren't too many smiles in the South African camp after that.

Sri Lanka bat as Bopara debuts

Sri Lanka have had time to regroup after their problems in Australia, while England have acclimatised to the energy-sapping conditions which will test them in three weeks. Now the two teams can face-off in an eagerly anticipated contest, at the picturesque Asgiriya Stadium in Kandy, as they both try to lay a sustained claim to being the best of the rest in Test cricket.

The home side struck the first significant blow when Mahela Jayawardene called correctly at the toss, and had decided to bat almost before the two captains shook hands. Michael Vaughan played it typically cool - "If you look at the stats sides have done well bowling first" - but admitted he would have "loved" to have batted first.

Four years ago England clung on for a draw on this ground with Vaughan, one of their two survivors from the game alongside Paul Collingwood, making a 333-ball 105 over the final two days. Sri Lanka have five players from that game, including Chaminda Vaas who plays his 100th Test after being dropped at Hobart against Australia, and Muttiah Muralitharan who is on the brink of Shane Warne's record on his home ground. The locals are certainly confident; the posters are already up and the fireworks primed for when the milestone is passed.

Sri Lanka's side is as expected with Dilhara Fernando retaining his spot ahead of the legspinner Malinga Bandara. The pitch is dry, but not so much as to warrant two specialist spinners. However, with Sanath Jayasuriya's underrated left-arm darts to call upon Jayawardene has extra options should the surface start to break up later in the game.

England's team was shrouded in secrecy during the build-up, but the final decision revealed a debut for Ravi Bopara at No. 6 - ahead of the unlucky Owais Shah - and the safety-first option of James Anderson to complete the fast-bowling trio alongside Ryan Sidebottom and Matthew Hoggard. Steve Harmison steamed in during the final net sessions, but it wasn't enough to allay fears that he could go AWOL at the crunch moment.

This series should be a compelling battle between two well-matched sides, but with three Tests it's vital to make the early running. The forays on this opening morning could set the tone for the next few weeks.

Sri Lanka 1 Sanath Jayasuriya, 2 Michael Vandort, 3 Kumar Sangakkara, 4 Mahela Jayawardene (capt), 5 Chamara Silva, 6 Jehan Mubarak, 7 Prasanna Jayawardene (wk), 8 Chaminda Vaas, 9 Dilhara Fernando, 10 Lasith Malinga, 11 Muttiah Muralitharan

England 1 Alastair Cook, 2 Michael Vaughan (capt), 3 Ian Bell, 4 Kevin Pietersen, 5 Paul Collingwood, 6 Ravi Bopara, 7 Matt Prior (wk), 8 Ryan Sidebottom, 9 Matthew Hoggard, 10 Monty Panesar, 11 James Anderson

Ganguly and Laxman steer India towards massive total

India lost Wasim Jaffer soon after he reached his second Test double-hundred, but continued merrily along their run-making ways on the second morning of the second Test at Eden Gardens.

Pakistan's bowlers recovered from their first-day mauling to exert a bare semblance of control over the first hour, with Sohail Tanvir bowling a tight spell. But India were the horse that had long since bolted and with the Prince of Eden Gardens, Sourav Ganguly hovering ominously in front of Pakistan's happiness, unbeaten on 62, and VVS Laxman in typically dreamy touch, the second hour was a more accurate indicator of the pain headed Pakistan's way. India will lunch contentedly on 449 for 4.

For the sake of contest, it helped that Shoaib Akhtar and Mohammad Sami had another night to recover from the illnesses that had so visibly ailed them on day one. Sami had been a hardy competitor yesterday in any case, but Shoaib in particular looked better, changing his pace well and running in with a little more purpose. Still, as Jaffer flashed him through square and then edged to third man in the second over of the day to reach his landmark - off only 260 balls - trouble loomed.

The introduction of Tanvir delayed it: as yesterday, he struck with his first ball, gaining from Jaffer a thin edge. And until the drinks break, he bowled a fine, probing spell. Laxman jabbed nervously outside off and Ganguly struggled to decipher the same angle and movement into him. It wasn't to last though, as a morning drink perked the pair up. Laxman eased Tanvir past mid-off soon after and then collected a brace of boundaries from Shoaib's next over.

Ganguly wasn't one to miss out. He had easily weathered an early morning short-ball barrage and now an opportunity for a rare score on home turf - he had only one fifty here before this - presented itself gift-wrapped. The grass around covers and gully was duly scorched during a Tanvir over in which Laxman also caressed a pair of boundaries, forcing even the sphinx-like Tanvir to vent. And with a flick to fine leg the next over, up came Ganguly's fifty to predictably rapturous applause.

Thereafter, the pair were set and a fourth successive fifty partnership of the innings a formality. Laxman whipped Danish Kaneria unperturbed through midwicket and Ganguly drove him past mid-off and just like that, as early as the second morning, the Test was effectively out of Pakistan's hands.

Friday, November 30, 2007

Oram boost for New Zealand in must-win game

South Africa will look to continue their successful run against New Zealand with a win in the second ODI in Port Elizabeth. The hosts almost faltered during their run-chase in the first ODI in Durban but a win on Friday will give them an unassailable 2-0 lead in the three-match series.

Going by current form, South Africa are clear favourites and this is even without considering their record in day-night encounters at St. George's Park - eights win out of ten ODIs, with one no result.

The hosts will be boosted by the return of Herschelle Gibbs, who had missed the Twenty20 international and the first ODI with a knee injury. Gibbs' standby Morne van Wyk has been released from the squad to play for the Eagles in the SuperSport series.

The other dilemma facing the South African selectors surrounds their pace attack. New Zealand's batsmen were blown away by Dale Steyn during the two-Test series, and his inclusion in the playing XI could dent the tourists' confidence ahead of a must-win game.

Smith's opposition counterpart Daniel Vettori must be wondering what his team needs to do to beat this South African side. New Zealand's main worry through the Tests was the form of their batsmen, but after the Durban ODI, the team would be concerned over its bowling options as well, besides their poor catching, which Vettori highlighted as the main reason for the last-ball loss at Kingsmead.

Kyle Mills' 5 for 25 in Durban would have done Shane Bond proud but New Zealand could have done with some firepower at the other end - Mark Gillespie, Chris Martin, Scott Styris and Vettori conceded 220 runs and picked up three wickets.

Allrounder Jacob Oram will be a handy addition to the bowling department. Oram suffered a hamstring strain in the first Test, and Vettori indicated the team would play six bowlers.

"Jacob's probably the most important member of our team purely from the roles he fills, batting at number six and able to bowl 10 overs," Vettori told SuperCricket. "It's a luxury not many teams have and having him back means I can take six bowlers and we get a nice balance when he's playing."

Delhi Jets field in ICL opener


About 15 years ago Kiran Powar was a bigger name in Mumbai cricket than his brother Ramesh. A left-hand batsman with a wide array of strokes, Kiran struggled to break into a powerful Mumbai batting order and switched allegiance to other states. He spent a number of seasons in Assam and Goa, during which time he made many long journeys by bus, and often, considering hotels were too much of a luxury, even spent nights in one. Frequently, with reimbursement hard to come by, he paid his own travel expenses. He even wasn't compensated when he was hospitalised once.

Today Powar enjoys the comfort of the Taj hotel in Chandigarh. He shares the same dressing room as Brian Lara and Nathan Astle. When I speak to him, he's having lunch with Vikram Solanki, Johan van der Wath and Danny Redrup, a South African physio who is "showing me the sort of fitness a cricketer needs". For the first time in Powar's life he has a sense of security. "Tell me one reason why I shouldn't join the ICL" he challenges.

Powar's isn't an isolated case. The general mood among the Indian domestic players who have joined the ICL is one of disgruntlement. "Until today none of us had an option," says a player who was picked for India a couple of years ago. "Now we have someone to take care of us. Wait for some time and players will just rush in."

The BCCI's apathy is a sore point. A domestic veteran talks about a prominent state association. "They made a big din about introducing central contracts for players," he says. "Finally, we said, we've got some security. And they give us an annual contract of Rs 25,000 [US$ 500 approximately]. Is that any sort of money for a year?"

Even more frustrating has been the handling of injuries. Shalabh Srivatsava, an Under-19 star who went on to do well consistently for Uttar Pradesh, travelled to South Africa for an expensive surgery. He is still waiting to be reimbursed. Rakesh Patel, the Baroda fast bowler who was selected for the Indian one-day side recently, underwent a similar fate. "The biggest problem is we can't play when we're injured," says Powar. "It means no reimbursement and no match fees. How do you survive?"

Redrup chips in: "This is exactly how rugby used to be conducted in South Africa during the amateur days. But things changed with professionalism."

The situation with the coaching staff who have signed up with the ICL isn't too different. Erapalli Prasanna, the former India offspinner, who was with the BCCI's ill-fated spin wing had had enough of being ignored. "By sending me to Nagpur and to Kolkata for short periods, the NCA [National Cricket Academy] sent a clear message that I was not required. The other signal I got was that the BCCI wanted to get rid of me. The spin wing is finished."

Sandeep Patil, who is currently coaching the Mumbai Champs, echoes those views. ""I waited for the BCCI to give me a suitable job to serve Indian cricket. Twice I had written to the BCCI president, Sharad Pawar, expressing my interest to be a coach of the India A side. I was assured a two-year contract, but after waiting for almost one and a half years, nothing came of it."

Mohammad Yousuf to face arbitration hearing

Mohammad Yousuf, the Pakistan batsman who recently pulled out of the Indian Cricket League (ICL), is set to face an arbitration hearing in Mumbai on December 15. Yousuf had signed with the ICL in the wake of his omission from Pakistan's squad for the ICC World Twenty20 before cancelling his contract after talks with the Pakistan board.

Yousuf then signed a national contract as well as signing up to play in the India Premier League (IPL), a recognised league that is run by four different national boards and is approved by the ICC.

The organisers of the ICL insist he can't join the rival league (IPL). "It's an open and shut case as far as we're concerned," said Ashish Kaul, the executive vice-president of the Essel Group who are organisng the tournament, told Cricinfo. "The contract clearly says he can't play in any other professional league."

Meanwhile the Pakistan board, who convinced Yousuf to cancel his contract, have assured their full support. "We will fully defend Yousuf, if he is taken to court using all legal means," said Nasim Ashraf, the chairman of the PCB.

Besides Yousuf, all of the ICL's other Pakistani recruits have decided to honour their commitments with the league. The most prominent among them is the now retired Inzamam-ul-Haq, who despite having signed on with the ICL, was given an opportunity to make his exit from international cricket in the second Test against South Africa. The others in the ICL mix are Abdur Razzaq, Azhar Mahmood, Taufeeq Umar, Imran Farhat, and Shabbir Ahmed.

Vaughan keeps his cards close

England's team selection remains a closely guarded secret ahead of the first Test at Kandy, as Michael Vaughan weighs up his options on a wicket that, with 24 hours to go until the start of the match, already looks barer and drier than either of the captains had envisaged. Although Vaughan said that he was pretty clear in his own mind as to what the final composition would be, he refused to rule out any options, not even the inclusion of a second spinner in Graeme Swann.

"It's been a difficult decision," said Vaughan. "We came to the ground yesterday to see a wicket that's very green, and we've come to the ground today and found it's changed a fair bit. We've had a couple of long meetings about the final eleven, which proves we've got players in the squad who are pushing for places. It's been a hard decision but we're clearer about it now."

Kandy has long been earmarked as England's best opportunity for a victory in this series, given the cooler hilly conditions and the propensity for swing and seam, and Vaughan insisted that England were committed to selecting a side that would give them the best chance of taking 20 wickets in the match. On the subject of Swann's inclusion, he offered an enigmatic "maybe", and made light of the fact that he barely featured in England's two warm-ups.

"I think you can make too much of the warm-ups," said Vaughan. "A lot of the guys have just been on the one-day [tour], and so we all feel mentally ready and in good touch. It's just a matter of trying to groove those skills and make sure our mentality is right for Test match cricket. We need to work on our plans and strategies against all their unorthodox players."

The one man who does seem likely to sit out, despite another whole-hearted net session, is Steve Harmison, whose prospects have been in jeopardy ever since he suffered a back spasm during England's warm-up in Colombo last week. "He's available, and he bowled a hell of a lot yesterday," said Vaughan. "But it would be a slight risk as we saw him walk off having bowled ten or eleven overs in the last game.

"I think the pitch offered a bit more for the quicks yesterday," said Vaughan, as he added a further reason for Harmison's probable omission. "If you bowl well on any wicket, as a good seam bowler you can get something out of it. But I think looking at that pitch you're going to have to have all your skills available, and be very controlled. I guess that's one of the reasons why we've come to the eleven we have."

James Anderson, who was again lively in practice, has pushed his way up the pecking order since recovering from a bruised left ankle, and is the favourite to join Matthew Hoggard, Ryan Sidebottom and Monty Panesar in a four-man attack. There is a chance of a fifth bowling option if Ravi Bopara is handed a chance to make his debut at No. 6, but England seem wary of his inexperience in a top-order that - given the weakness of the lower order - simply has to fire first-time.

Zimbabwe strike after scoring 274

Fluent half-centuries by Chamu Chibhabha and Stuart Matsikenyeri, coupled with plenty of useful contributions down the order, lifted Zimbabwe to a challenging 274 for 8 in the first ODI of the five-match series at the Harare Sports Club.

Chris Gayle won the toss and put Zimbabwe in to bat in conditions that should have been favourable for fast bowling - the pitch had some moisture and offered seam movement and bounce. However, most of the bowlers struggled with their direction, spraying it wide of the stumps and often erring in length as well. Brendan Taylor started the onslaught with a 30-ball 27 and Matsikenyeri took charge at the death, smashing the bowlers to all parts as 81 runs came off the last nine overs.

The platform for that late charge was laid by a 90-run fourth-wicket partnership between Chibhabha and Hamilton Masakadza. Taylor's early blows ensured Zimbabwe had early runs on the board but his run-out, courtesy a direct hit from Shivnarine Chanderpaul, and the cheap dismissals of Vusi Sibanda and Tatenda Taibu saw Zimbabwe slump to 78 for 3.

Chibhabha rescued the innings with some sensible batting, knocking the ball into the gaps and crashing fours through cover and point whenever offered the width. Masakadza was a fine support act till he played across the line off Gayle and was trapped in front. Chibhabha had fallen attempting the sweep in Gayle's previous over but the presence of two new batsmen towards the end of the innings did little to halt the momentum, as Matsikenyeri and Chigumbura turned it on in style.

Both started by placing the ball away from fielders and running hard between the wickets. Gayle had conceded only 17 in his first four overs, but his last two went for 19, as each batsman clouted a six on the leg side.

There was no respite from the fast bowlers either, as Taylor repeatedly strayed down the leg side, allowing Matsikenyeri to strike successive fours in the 47th over. A stunning hit between his legs to the fine-leg boundary brought him his seventh ODI half-century, and though he fell soon after, he had done enough to ensure Zimbabwe had a challenging total on the board.

Majestic Jaffer puts India in command

Wasim Jaffer's bat sparkled brightest on a day of total dominance for India's batsmen, as they ground Pakistan into the Kolkata dust on the opening day of the second Test at Eden Gardens. Jaffer was undefeated on 192 when bad light ended play six overs early, but his fifth hundred was his most joyous yet. With support from Rahul Dravid and Sachin Tendulkar, he took India to 352 for 3.

For an ailing Pakistan, without their injured captain Shoaib Malik and hampered by a seriously unwell Shoaib Akhtar, it was, by some distance, one of their most dispiriting days in recent memory. Kamran Akmal led the way in the field with an untidy, fumble-ridden performance that included another dropped catch as their chances of winning this series ebbed away under a barrage of boundaries.

But their woes should not take away from a day that was lit up by the beauty of Jaffer. He is compact even on his worse days, and has real grace in his shots, but rarely has he put it all together at such pace. His back-foot punches through covers, the pulls and clips are well-appreciated, but rarely have they come in such quick succession, in such sustained bursts of boundary-hitting. If ever a batsman was in the zone, it was Jaffer at Eden Gardens on Friday.

He was gold from the very start, the early loss of his opening partner as much an inconvenience as a fly is to an elephant. No particular area of the ground was favoured over others and no particular shot over another: pulls, drives, punches, cut and clips were all played with that seductive upright elegance, elbows high, bat straight.

But if he favoured one bowler over another, it was probably Sohail Tanvir, to whom he showed no mercy. Having driven him arrow-straight early in the piece, he struck him for four fours in an over a little before lunch. Later in the afternoon, as India raced to their 200, he hit him for a hat-trick of fours. As the day neared its end, Jaffer continued doing so, mostly through the leg side as Tanvir's inexperience came out of the closet.

He was no less imposing, or elegant, against the legspin of Danish Kaneria, never more so than in the day's 49th over. In it, he reached his hundred with a push through the covers, before celebrating by clipping him twice in a row through midwicket for four.

So commanding did the shy-looking Jaffer become that his support - Dravid and Tendulkar - were mostly overshadowed in stands of 134 and 175 respectively. Dravid was more than willing to go unnoticed, putting together a studied fifty. He was brisk enough to begin, particularly against Kaneria, as he got caught in Jaffer's slipstream. But just as he was bedding himself in post-lunch, Billy Doctrove sent him back for a phantom edge: replays couldn't tell whether Akmal's take was worse or Doctrove's decision.

Wednesday, November 28, 2007

England secure warm-up win

Kevin Pietersen produced his first half-century of the tour and Alastair Cook continued his recent good form, as England wrapped up a morale-boosting victory over the Sri Lanka Board President's XI at Colombo. The pair combined in a third-wicket stand of 55, making 59 and 58 respectively, before Owais Shah and Matt Prior sealed the victory with a flurry of boundaries shortly after tea.

After their first-innings aberration, in which they lost three top-order wickets in six overs, England's batsmen seemed keen to make amends. Michael Vaughan, who fell for a duck first time around, made a brisk and stylish start, cracking four fours in his 32-ball 28, as England added 50 for the first wicket in only ten overs.

But Vaughan then suffered a lapse in concentration when the part-time medium-pacer Jehan Mubarak entered the attack - he steered his first delivery to Tillakaratne Dilshan in the gully. Ian Bell followed soon afterwards, completing a poor match by scooping Dilshan to deep mid-on for 6, and at 74 for 2 England were in danger of squandering a good start.

Cook, however, remained composed and was joined in the middle by Pietersen, who was unbeaten on 10 from 22 balls at lunch. After the interval, he began to find his timing and moments after Cook had brought up his half-century from 96 balls, Pietersen went down on one knee to reverse-sweep Dilshan for six.

Cook fell lbw to Mubarak as he missed a sweep for the second time in the match, and Pietersen didn't last much longer. He reached for a cut off Chamara Kapugedera and snicked a thin under-edge through to the keeper. That left Bopara and Shah in tandem, and each man produced some polished strokeplay - including a straight six for Bopara off Mubarak - as they attempted to force their way into the Test reckoning.

BCCI zeroes in on Gary Kirsten for coach

Gary Kirsten, the former South African opener, is the surprise front-runner to be India's next coach. While the Indian board said Kirsten was interviewed by the coach selection committee on Monday and a formal announcement on the new coach would be made in a week's time, senior officials were saying off the record that the appointment was a formality.

"It has been finalised," a senior board official told Cricinfo. "We just need some time to complete the formalities."

Kirsten told Cricinfo the matter was still at the discussion phase and he was yet to receive a formal contract. "But things should get sorted out relatively quickly either way."

One of the issues to be resolved, he said, was when he would be able to take charge. "Probably early next year. We are actually negotiating if I can join sometime during the Australia series."

There was some speculation that he would join the team for the Bangalore Test against Pakistan next week but he ruled that out. "That won't be possible," he said. "I have some long-standing commitments in South Africa that I need to honour. So, it's the question of when I'm going to begin at the moment"

Another key issue, Kirsten said, was his family's opinion. "The most important thing is family. As we are aware in international cricketing world you spend a lot of time away from home; I've got two young kids and it's a question of seeing them enough and to do the job the properly. That'll be the biggest issue and if we can get around that we can certainly move forward in the discussions. I've had a chat with with my wife already and we will take stock when I get back tomorrow, look at it from all avenues."

He said he was encouraged by the fact that the board took the initiative to approach him. "The most important thing was they approached me," Kirsten said. "I didn't approach them, so I suppose from that point of view one can be encouraged that they felt that there's something I could offer this team. And that gives me a tremendous sense of confidence to know that I've been backed to that amount or level."

Monday, November 26, 2007

All-round India seal six-wicket win

It was fitting that Shoaib Akhtar caused one final dent in India's run down the home stretch but it was equally apt that VVS Laxman was at the crease when the winning runs were knocked off and India took a 1-0 lead in this three-Test series. Sachin Tendulkar was unbeaten on a half-century and India chased down a target they had never managed before at the Feroz Shah Kotla with six wickets to spare.

When Akhtar bounced Sourav Ganguly and the ball got big on the pull shot, resulting in a swirling top-edge to fine leg, Pakistan supporters would have got a whiff of the unlikely. A wicket had fallen, Ganguly on 48, with 22 still needed for victory. But there would be no more heroics as Tendulkar took the lead and knocked off the required runs with a minimum of fuss.

In some ways it was ironic that Laxman was at crease when victory was sealed, for the lead-up to this Test match was full of questions over what the composition of the Indian team, especially the middle order, should be. Amid overwhelming calls to include the in-form Yuvraj Singh, Laxman came under pressure for his spot, as he often does. But he delivered in the first innings with a classy unbeaten 76, when it mattered the most, setting up an India win.

Equally, it was fitting that Anil Kumble, who picked up seven wickets in his first match as captain, walked away with the Man-of-the-Match award. When he was named Test captain, ahead of Mahendra Singh Dhoni, who already had the job for the one-dayers, there was some concern about the Indian selectors looking back rather than forward. But Kumble proved that captaincy would rest lightly on his broad shoulders and did not let it affect his performance.

Pakistan, meanwhile, have a Test full of missed opportunities to look back at before the second Test begins in Kolkata on November 30. At crucial points in the match they failed to drive their advantage home, and paid the price. The bowling attack, when the chips were down, lacked penetration, barring Shoaib, who bowled with customary pace and hostility. The absence of Mohammad Asif definitely hurt Pakistan, for even chasing 203 on a less-than-perfect batting strip would have been a task had he been around.

Nel clinches thriller

Scorecard and ball-by-ball details
How they were out




Not even New Zealand's best performance of their arduous tour of South Africa could earn them their first win against the national team. After dominating periods of the first one-dayer at Durban, and with 27 needed from the last three overs, their nerves and lack of confidence came back to haunt them as Andre Nel creamed two fours in the last over to take South Africa home off the final ball.

With three overs to go, the match was New Zealand's for the taking, and on came Mark Gillespie - who until then had showed reasonable control. Whether it was his choice or that of his captain, Daniel Vettori, the decision to bowl around the wicket to Mark Boucher, then on 24, was flawed and spoke volumes of New Zealand's lack of belief. A clip through midwicket for two; a nudge for a single and a full toss on his legs was dispatched to fine leg for four. New Zealand's slim advantage was lost, and the match was slipping away.

Johan Botha came and went in a hurry leaving South Africa to score 11 from the last over. With players turning greener by the over, it was somewhat uncomfortable to see the grinning, beaming beanpole of Nel march to the crease at such a pivotal moment. He whooshed at thin air for the first ball of the final over before scything the second over backward point's head, putting Boucher back on strike. But he could only pick up an inside edge leaving the fate of South Africa in Nel's large paws.

The pressure didn't show. An attempted yorker from Gillespie was fizzed through extra cover with such force that no one, bar the dancing fans, moved a muscle. It was admittedly a poor ball, but the placement and power - not to mention audacity - were in absolute synchrony. Five needed from two balls, then, but Gillespie offered him a full toss which Nel, with even less elegance but equal amounts of gusto, hammered through the same extra-cover region. A frantic run off the final delivery avoided the tie, and South Africa were home by two wickets.

On the face of things, New Zealand had stolen defeat from the snapping jaws of victory, but there were plenty of encouraging signs in both innings to give hope that, in the remaining two one-dayers, they might break their duck. Kyle Mills bowled quite superbly, picking up 5 for 25 from 10 accurate overs. With overhead conditions worsening, it was tailor-made for Mills - on a pitch offering the taller bowlers plenty of bounce too - and in the first 10 overs he was close to being unplayable. Even Jacques Kallis struggled to fend off his booming lifters, though only he - in his current form - could have edged the cracking delivery Mills dismissed him with.

Mills apart, the rest were a mishmash of hopefuls as Chris Martin had another off-day and Gillespie struggled with nerves. They were taken apart by two fine knocks: one by JP Duminy, South Africa's emerging No. 5 and the other by AB de Villiers, who made 87. The one area of concern for South Africa is that both players fell when nicely settled - a matter of less relevance against a fading New Zealand side, but certainly one they need to address if they're to challenge Australia regularly.

The positive for the visitors was their top order finally fired, with Jamie How, Brendon McCullum and Scott Styris making significant contributions. New Zealand's batsmen haven't managed a century on the tour - Vettori coming closest with 99 in a tour game - but How's 124-ball 90, though a tad slow by ODI standards, was the innings they needed to reach a respectable score.


Ganguly and Laxman silence the doubters

An hour after Sachin Tendulkar slapped one past point to sew up the Kotla Test, Yuvraj Singh walked out to the middle. Hardly anyone was left in the stands and only a few cameramen and officials watched his stint. Facing a group of net bowlers, one of whom tried his best to imitate Shoaib Akhtar, he went about pounding the netting. The fury in some of those shots was indicative of how hard he's knocking on the doors of selection.

By just being around, he's keeping an entire batting line-up, a selection committee, and a media contingent on its toes. His name has come up in four of the six press conferences here. Before the game he was being talked about as a replacement for VVS Laxman, now he's being linked to Dinesh Karthik. Often he's also giving Sourav Ganguly a run. At the danger of giving him too much credit, he's obliquely contributing towards a consistent batting effort, match after match.

Ganguly and Laxman, though, must be a bit confused. One has reinvented himself over the last year and the other played his part in a quiet, efficient manner. Both have come through high-pressure situations, dealing with it in an assured manner. Ganguly has silenced those who doubted his ability against pace and Laxman has done the same against swing. Both have eked out runs with the tail, both have kept out the second new ball and both have, crucially, played out important final sessions. Ganguly has four fifties and a hundred in his last eight Tests; Laxman five fifties and a hundred in his last ten.

The Kotla Test was a case in point. If Laxman blunted the Shoaib threat in the first innings, Ganguly did the same in the second. If Laxman appeared far more comfortable than any batsman in the first dig, Ganguly occupied that slot in the second. Both walked in amid a collapse and, in contrasting styles, calmed the nerves. Both didn't hesitate to play their shots. They made some important contributions on the field too: Laxman plucking a sensational catch to break Pakistan's dangerous opening partnership and Ganguly having one of his best Tests with the ball.

Before the game, Kumble made it clear that Laxman would play. At the end of it, having seen his decision justified, he didn't understand the fuss. "I think Laxman's knock was very crucial considering the circumstances. He's a fantastic player and his partnership with Dhoni was very critical for us. I don't know why there is always a sword hanging over his head. It's only a perception from those not within the dressing room. We [the team] know what quality he brings in and his role in the team is very crucial."

Sunday, November 25, 2007

South Africa primed for more success

Although New Zealand put up more of a fight in the Twenty20 on Friday night at the Wanderers, they are still trying to find their first victory of the tour against a strong South African side. The final chance for some success begins on Sunday with the first of three one-day internationals in Durban.

In their first ODI since the World Cup semi-final in April they are going to have to find some backbone to test South Africa, who recently registered a 3-2 series win in Pakistan. Despite pushing South Africa until the penultimate ball in Johannesburg - a significant improvement from the two hopeless drubbings in the Tests - for a large part of the match New Zealand were still a distant second best. The batting once again struggled to hold its own even though the home side rested Makhaya Ntini and Andre Nel.

It would help New Zealand's cause to have the services of Jacob Oram, who missed the second Test and Twenty20 with a hamstring problem. His presence in the middle order would increase the scoring potential and offer Daniel Vettori an important option with the ball. Sources from inside New Zealand's camp said Oram was still not fully fit and may not be ready.

Chris Martin, however, is expected to return after a stomach virus - his energy is returning - and along with Kyle Mills, who made a useful start in the Twenty20, the bowling stocks aren't shaping up too badly.

Jeetan Patel's impressive spell on Friday will make it tempting for New Zealand to play two spinners even though Kingsmead often favours the quick bowlers. But the match is a day game so conditions should remain similar throughout with neither side having to contend with batting under the floodlights.

If Ntini and Nel return for South Africa it will be a challenge fitting in all the in-form bowlers. Shaun Pollock showed he can still bring plenty to the side with three wickets in the Twenty20 while Dale Steyn is due a one-day run and Albie Morkel is a useful all-round option. However, Mickey Arthur would rest a little easier if the top-order batting showed more consistency and captain Graeme Smith's form improved.

However, for Smith the match is a notable landmark as he reaches 100 matches as South Africa captain, with 56 victories during his tenure. "It is something I am very proud of when I look back at it," he said. "I guess when most guys get to these landmarks, they say that they have withstood the test of time but I am only 26 and I am very proud of what I have achieved.

"When you look at that number of games, you realise how inexperienced I was as a player when I took over as captain. When I think of the responsibility I had to take on, the way I have developed and where I have got to, I am very happy with what I have achieved."

But he won't be dwelling on the landmark for too long as he aims to continue South Africa's impressive season with another piece of silverware before the second half of their summer begins and the visit of West Indies.

Karthik falls early as India chase 203

Live scorecard and ball-by-ball details
How they were out


India got off to a nervy start in pursuit of 203, reaching 3 for 1 at lunch on the fourth day after Pakistan's batting obligingly collapsed to leave the first Test tantalisingly poised. India's best run-chase at the Ferozshah Kotla was 190, against Zimbabwe in 2000, and this pitch while appearing benign was nevertheless posing problems for batsmen.

Dinesh Karthik found this out early enough, driving away from his body to a Shoaib Akhtar delivery that moved away just enough after being pitched on a good length. The thin edge was comfortably pouched by Kamran Akmal and Rahul Dravid was out in the middle with just 2 on the board, in the second over of the innings.

Dravid was up against the awkward angle of Sohail Tanvir and the raw pace of Shoaib earlier than he'd have liked, but he was up to seeing off the tricky passage of play that ushered in the lunch break. Wasim Jaffer too ensured that he was unbeaten, and India had put the smallest of dents in the target, still needing 200 to win.

Pakistan's batsmen had every chance of putting themselves in a genuinely strong position, but beginning with Akmal, they wasted the opportunity. Akmal chose to chase a wide one from Zaheer Khan, hitting it straight to Yuvraj Singh, temporarily fielding at point, at perfect catching height.

Tanvir, who is regarded to be something of a handy lower-order batsman, was cagey at the crease from the first ball he faced, playing and missing and even edging between the slip cordon and gully. Zaheer kept up a probing line and when he dropped one short, wide outside the off, Tanvir went for a pull shot that should never have been attempted and ballooned a catch to Harbhajan Singh at square leg.

Misbah-ul-Haq was entirely assured at the crease, playing Anil Kumble with confidence, but he just didn't get the support he needed at the other end. He too fell to recklessness once the new ball was taken, giving Sourav Ganguly the charge. Ganguly was good enough to shorten his length and the attempted heave over long-on was miscued and Karthik took a well-judged catch. With Misbah gone for 45, the end was near and Ganguly winkled out another wicket. Mohammad Sami, who had blocked so determinedly in the first innings, tried to slap Ganguly over midwicket and only managed a top-edge that Jaffer settled under.

Danish Kaneria was never going to pose a massive threat but he ran himself out in circumstances that summed up the Pakistan innings. He played the ball to point and set off down the pitch without much purpose. Sachin Tendulkar returned the ball to Mahendra Singh Dhoni, who, facing away from the stumps, bent over and flicked the ball onto the wickets, dislodging the bails and ending the Pakistan innings on 247. Pakistan's batsmen had played with no application whatsoever, and literally thrown away their wickets on the final morning, adding only 35 runs for the fall of the last five wickets.

Friday, November 23, 2007

England enjoy valuable work-out

Scorecard

England's batsmen enjoyed a serene afternoon of batting practice as their opening warm-up match against a Sri Lanka Board President's XI meandered to a predictable draw. Of the eight batsmen who made it to the crease, only Kevin Pietersen missed out on some valuable time in the middle. Nuwan Kulasekara surprised him with some unexpected bounce, and Chamara Kapugedera claimed a simple catch in the gully.

With just one more game to come before the first Test at Kandy, England's innings contained four retirements and just one other wicket, that of Michael Vaughan, who played across the line to a quicker delivery from the legspinner Malinga Bandara, and was given out lbw for 38. Up until that point, Vaughan had looked in fine touch, as he and Alastair Cook launched their new opening partnership with a 77-run stand for the first wicket.

In a possible sign of things to come, it was the younger man Cook who faced the first over from Nuwan Kulasekara - a significant development because, remarkably, neither he nor Vaughan, who was Marcus Trescothick's regular opening partner from 2002 to 2004, have ever taken first strike in a Test match.

Vaughan's last stint as an England opener came in a one-off scenario in Lahore in 2005-06, when Andrew Strauss flew home for paternity leave, and Cook made his debut in England's next Test at Nagpur three months later. The new circumstances didn't faze either player, however, and Vaughan looked especially fluent with seven fours coming from his favoured pulls and cover drives.

Cook eased to his fifty from 80 deliveries in a measured innings that included seven fours - the pick of which was a firm cover drive off Kulasekara. England went to lunch on 130 for 1, whereupon Cook became the first of England's retirees. Pietersen replaced him after the break, but had time to face just 14 deliveries before Kulasekara squared him up with the ball of the day.

Ian Bell, in his customary manner, took his time to assess the conditions, but once set he started to unfurl his full range of strokes including a sweetly struck six over long-off, off the bowling of the slow left-armer Rangana Herath. He made 49 from 98 balls before making way for Owais Shah, and 12 overs later, Paul Collingwood - who was dropped at gully on 26 - retired on 52 from 69 balls, having signalled his satisfaction by heaving Bandara for consecutive sixes over midwicket.

Shah and Ravi Bopara, two batsmen who are effectively competing for the same No. 6 position, then carried England to tea, although Shah was lucky not to be caught at deep midwicket as he clipped loosely at Herath. Thereafter the pair became somewhat entrenched as each strived not to be outdone by the other, and England's run-rate - though inconsequential - slowed appreciably.

Shah was eventually called back to the marquee having made 38 from 75 balls with three fours, and though the rains threatened after tea they held off for the first time in the match, which allowed Matt Prior to join Bopara and see England through to the close. All in all there was little to guage from the batting performance, but England will be all the better prepared after an arduous three days' work.


MacGill running out of time - physio

Stuart MacGill does not have time to significantly improve his fitness ahead of the Boxing Day Test and playing Pura Cup matches in the lead-up could make his knee injury worse, according to Australia's physio Alex Kountouris. The physio's advice came after Tim Nielsen, the coach, told MacGill his fitness would continue to be monitored, especially given Australia's hectic upcoming Test schedule.

Playing two Tests within two weeks hampered MacGill's recovery from knee surgery and he was also struggling with numbness in his hand against Sri Lanka in Hobart. Kountouris said MacGill was free to play for New South Wales in two Pura Cup matches before the India Test series but he would have trouble regaining his fitness in the next month.

"There's not enough time, really," Kountouris told the Herald Sun. "I have made him available to play in the Pura Cup, if he wants to, but that could actually be a limiting factor. It will be hard to improve his fitness during games."

MacGill, 36, had a lot of trouble landing his deliveries where he intended at Hobart, especially in the second innings, and he served up plenty of full tosses and short balls. On Wednesday he said he was undecided about how to approach the next month.

Pakistan fold up after Misbah run-out

Pakistan's lower-order defiance lasted nearly an hour into the second morning, before a truly bizarre dismissal triggered the slide to 231 all out. Misbah-ul-Haq and Mohammad Sami added 87 - a record ninth-wicket stand for Pakistan against India - before some alert fielding gave India the wicket that had eluded them on the first evening.

The pair had frustrated India right through the final session on the opening day, and their vigil on the second morning wasn't only about dour defence either. Misbah guided a delivery from Munaf Patel down to the third-man boundary, and Sami followed suit in the next over bowled by Zaheer Khan.

With no breakthrough forthcoming after 40 minutes, Anil Kumble took the ball himself, and then opted for Sourav Ganguly at the other end. And it was off Ganguly's bowling that the partnership was finally broken. Misbah played one to point and set off. He seemed to have made his ground when Dinesh Karthik's throw came in. But rather than get his body in the way, Misbah chose airborne evasive action. When the third umpire handed down his decision, the crowd erupted.

It took Kumble just two balls to clean up Danish Kaneria, leaving India's vaunted batting line-up to chart their own course on a pitch that should be at its best for batting on the second day.


Tuesday, November 20, 2007

India may be tougher - Ponting

Ricky Ponting believes India will provide a stronger contest than Sri Lanka and has warned the new captain Anil Kumble to expect extra heat during the four-Test series. Due to a change in the traditional itinerary, Australia now have a five-week break before Boxing Day and Ponting hopes it won't disrupt the team's momentum.

"It's up to us to start the Melbourne Test the same way we started in Brisbane," Ponting said after the 96-run win over Sri Lanka in Hobart. "Hopefully we can get on top of them early and stay there for the rest of the summer. At the moment India are probably a slightly stronger side than Sri Lanka and last time India were here they played very well against us."

India start their three-match series against Pakistan on Thursday and Australia will be watching Kumble in his new role. "Kumble will be under pressure coming to Australia," Ponting said. "Anyone who captains India is always under a lot of pressure. A lot of very, very good players in the past haven't been able to cope with that.

"Sachin Tendulkar probably didn't ever really want to do it, I don't think. Rahul Dravid did it for a short period of time. When he resigned he said he just wasn't enjoying the role."

Ponting is already aiming for a strong opening when the teams meet in Melbourne. "If we play well and start the series well," he said, "generally we can put the captain under pressure."

Jayawardene: 'We had more to offer than this'

Sri Lanka captain Mahela Jayawardene expressed disappointment after his team lost both matches of the two-Test series against Australia.

"We had a bit more to offer than this as a team. We had a lot of talented guys in the group and unfortunately we couldn't get all that talent together in a couple of games. That was the most disappointing factor for us," Jayawardene said at the end of the second Test, which his team lost by 96 runs.

"I felt that we had a very good bowling attack but the way we played wasn't very consistent. We could not penetrate through the Australian top order which was very disappointing. The way we batted in the first innings of the two Test matches was also disappointing. That alone gave us a lot of problems in the whole series because we put ourselves under pressure.

"Especially against a side like Australia, you want to challenge yourself and see how far you've come and need to improve. But looking back at the series there are a lot of areas where we definitely need to improve. We have to sit down and talk about where we need to improve and show a lot of character to get back as a group.

"What we have to realise is that we played against the best team in the world right now and they were in form - all their top-order batsmen. We came across a very good side. We challenged ourselves and we tried a lot of things but the way we lost was the most disappointing factor. We just need to refocus and get ready for the three Tests against England."

Questioned whether there would be major changes in the team for the series against England, Jayawardene said: "You just can't chop and change players because they fail in a couple of games. That won't help us in the long run. We just have to make some sensible decisions when we go back home.

Indian board seeks to squeeze the selectors

The shadow-boxing between the Board of Control for Cricket in India and the national selectors has escalated with the Indian board issuing a seven-point diktat that seeks to curtail the jurisdiction of the selectors. While the move is widely seen to be aimed at reining in Dilip Vengsarkar, the chairman of the selectors, there are provisions, particularly the one banning selectors from accompanying the team on foreign tours, that have caused dismay among his colleagues.

The prime target of the directive, emailed to the national selectors last evening, is Vengsarkar, who had recently been asked to show cause after flouting an oral directive not to write in newspapers. A piece carrying his byline appeared in Sakal, a Marathi daily controlled, interestingly, by the brother of Sharad Pawar, the BCCI president, a couple of days after the gag order.

The written communication is unequivocal: "Selectors shall have no association with agents of players nor shall they participate in events organised by the players' agents or contribute articles etc. where such agents are involved. They shall also have no contact with organisations that have interest in the business of cricket in any form whatsoever." Vengsarkar is the only one of the five who has a syndicated column that appears in English through an agency.

Atapattu announces his retirement

Marvan Atapattu, one of Sri Lanka's finest batsmen, has finished his eventful tour of Australia by ending his international career. Atapattu announced his retirement in a letter to Duleep Mendis, the Sri Lanka Cricket chief executive, before lunch on the final day of the second Test in Hobart.

He was due to face a hearing on his return to Sri Lanka for his outburst during the opening match in Brisbane when he said the Sri Lankan selectors were "muppets headed by a joker". Despite the complaints about the administration, he retained the support of his team-mates and signed off with a satisfying 80 as he gave Sri Lanka a chance of saving the second Test.

The decision is not a surprise as there have been reports he will lead Delhi Jets in the Indian Cricket League and he is also considering playing for the St George club in Sydney grade cricket. He has had a difficult relationship with the selectors since coming back from a serious back injury and was picked for the World Cup but did not play a game. He then refused to join the squad when chosen for the Bangladesh Test series and joined the touring party to Australia only after government intervention.

Atapattu, who was Sri Lanka's most determined batsman during the series, praised his former national captains for their support and also recognised the help of his players during his time as captain. "Last but not least I thank the cricket-loving public of Sri Lanka and overseas for their continuous support during the best and worst times," he wrote to Mendis.

Australia win despite Sangakkara's 192

Scorecard and ball-by-ball details
How they were out

Kumar Sangakkara's 192 was the big difference between the scripts in Brisbane and Hobart but Sri Lanka were denied a fairytale ending as Brett Lee grabbed four wickets and Australia secured a 2-0 series victory with their 14th consecutive Test win. Despite a collapse early in the morning when Sri Lanka lost 5 for 25, Sangakkara gave Australia a few nervous moments with an audacious assault that only ended with an unfortunate umpiring call shortly before lunch.

It is hard to predict how close Sri Lanka would have come to the record 507 they needed to win had Sangakkara stayed at the crease, but the way he was playing he just might have got them home. He could have given up once Lee and Mitchell Johnson sparked the early crashes but instead Sangakkara simply altered his game plan and formed a 74-run stand with Lasith Malinga.

Sadly for the visitors Sangakkara was denied his third double-century for 2007 when he tried to hook Stuart Clark and the ball flew off his shoulder to Ricky Ponting at slip. Rudi Koertzen agreed with the Australians that there was some bat involved but Sangakkara, and the replays, knew that was not the case. It was a disappointing finish to a superb display from Sangakkara, who blasted 27 fours and one six in his remarkable innings.

Once he found himself with the tail, Sangakkara refused singles off the first few balls of overs and then when the field came in, he reverted to one-day mode with some clean strikes over the off side. There were a few streaky shots too - thick edges flew to vacant spaces and not everything came off the middle - but it was a courageous fightback from a Sri Lanka outfit that desperately needed some spark.

In the end his assault did not affect the outcome but it let him register the highest score by a Sri Lankan in Test in Australia, beating Aravanda de Silva's 167 in 1989-90, and the highest score in a Test at Bellerive, passing Michael Slater's 168 in 1993-94. It also gave Sangakkara 677 runs for the 2007 calendar year at a phenomenal average of 225.66.