Rashid vows to carry on for another year

LAHORE, March 20: Pakistan captain Rashid Latif vowed on Thursday he would play cricket for one more year. Rashid said that he accepted the offer of captaincy as a challenge while talking to reporters at Gaddafi Stadium.”Yes, the rebuilding of the Pakistan team is a challenge for me. And the task is possible and not impossible,” he said.The 34-year-old wicket-keeper/batsman admitted that though the axing of seniors players was a hard decision yet it was taken in the best interest of Pakistan cricket.”The senior players are talented and they had done good work for Pakistan team. But now it is time to test fresh blood,” he said.Rashid emphasised his prime mission was only to serve the nation and during his captaincy he would try to prepare a strong team and a wicket-keeper which could be either Kamran Akmal or any one else.He said he had opted for retirement after the World Cup but the new responsibility given to him forced him to change his decision.Rashid was all praise for Rana Naveed-ul-Hasan, whome he termed as a good all-rounder and who deserved a place in the team much earlier.He called Taufiq Umar the best find of the year and added left-hander opener should have played in all matches of the World Cup.To a question, Rashid said that Razzaq was included as there was no substitute of him at the No 6 spot when the playing eleven was discussed with the selection committee.

Bicknell ton sets up easy win for Notts

Darren Bicknell’s sixth NCL century set the platform for Notts to claim their first home victory over Northants in six meetings.The visitors were set a revised D/L total of 281 from 42 overs which was further reduced later another stoppage. Without ever threatening to get close to their target they were restricted to 185 all out and remain deep in relegation territory.The winning margin for the Outlaws was 82 runs (under D/L), giving them their first win in five matches and lifting them up to fourth in the table.After a tea interval of high farce – when the Steelbacks’ target was amended several times – the visitors began their reply with Mike Hussey and Matt Cassar occupying the crease. Dangerman Hussey was quickly removed, snicking Greg Smith to Greg Blewett at first slip.Two more wickets fell cheaply as the innings failed to gather any early momentum. Russell Warren and Tony Penberthy were both caught behind by Chris Read to give wickets to Nadeem Malik and former Northants player Richard Logan.Graeme Swann got off the mark with an all-run four – John Morris doing the chasing to the longest boundary – but didn’t add to it before playing around a straight one from Malik.Alec Swann committed cricketing suicide by trying to pinch a quick single to Blewett at mid-wicket but was still a yard short as Pietersen took the return and whipped off the bails.With the game well out of their reach Northants opted for batting practice but Kevin Innes couldn’t hang around for long before being bowled on the back foot by Pietersen.Cassar, who had opened on his first appearance of the season, batted patiently to record a half-century (104mins 70 balls 5x4s) but it didn’t arrive until the 29th over.He added eight more before losing his leg stump in Logan’s first over from the Radcliffe Road End. A smart piece of work from Chris Read ran out Paul Taylor to reduce the total to a hopeless 143-8.Thirty more runs were added before rain, in the 35th over, again interrupted play. After the briefest of intermissions the players were sent back out with Northants requiring a further 94 runs from 2.2 overs with just two wickets in hand!Michael Strong went immediately upon the re-start and then there was an historic moment as Paul Johnson picked up his first wicket in 20 years of one-day matches for Notts when he bowled Jason Brown. David Ripley remained not out on 40.Earlier, a heavy shower had curtailed the Outlaws innings with 16 deliveries still to be bowled. The home side had crashed 28 boundaries and six sixes in amassing 267-6 with skipper Darren Bicknell hitting 115 and sharing in a stand of 166 with Greg Blewett, who made 71.

Titans cruise to victory in rain-hit game

ScorecardA collective bowling effort followed by a brace of half-centuries from Heino Kuhn and Graeme van Buuren set up Titans’ seven-wicket win in a rain-hit game against Dolphins in Centurion.Chasing a D/L target of 174 in 37 overs, Titans lost their openers early and were struggling at 19 for 2 in 4.5 overs. Kuhn and van Buuren turned the innings around with a 137-run stand for the third wicket in 19.5 overs. Kuhn remained unbeaten on 63 off 68 balls after van Buuren had been dismissed for 84 off 71 and Titans achieved the target in 27.1 overs, with 59 balls to spare.That Titans had such a manageable target to chase was down to their bowlers, who had dismissed Dolphins for 171 in 32.2 overs. Having been put in to bat, Dolphins got off to a quick start, with Cameron Delport smacking 21 off 15 balls before being dismissed by Albie Morkel. They were 63 for 2 at the end of 10 overs and 88 for 3 when rain interrupted the game after 17.1 overs.The match was then reduced to a 37-over fixture and Dolphins collapsed shortly after the resumption. They slipped from 130 for 3 in 25 overs to 141 for 7 in 28.2, and were eventually bowled out for 171. Opener Vaughn van Jaarsveld top scored with 66 for Dolphins, while Henry Davids’ 3 for 30 were the best figures for Titans.

Sutherland questions IPL's future

James Sutherland: “As I understand it, the franchisees are starting to ask questions already” © Getty Images
 

In an action-packed first week of the Indian Premier League most of the reaction has been positive, but James Sutherland, the Cricket Australia chief executive, has spoken out about the problems already facing the competition. Sutherland, who remains unconvinced that Twenty20 is good for the game, has questioned the sustainability of the lucrative six-week tournament.”It’s all very well to have a whole lot of hype around a competition,” Sutherland told . “In order for it to be sustainable it needs to have its own virtual cycle that keeps all the parties happy.”It’s nice to pay the players well and get big money from television rights and sponsorships, but ultimately you’ve got to provide a return for the owners or in this case the franchises. As I understand it, the franchisees are starting to ask questions already.”Sutherland said a lot of tickets to games had been given away and there were also other promotional costs. “It’s going to be a long six weeks for the franchisees if they struggle to sell tickets,” he said. “I think in Hyderabad for the first game they only had a third of the ground full.”Sutherland said the IPL “would have to be” under financial pressure. “You look at the number [cost] for the franchises, somewhere between $70 million and $100 million and they pay the players on top of that,” he said. “Explain it to me how they get their return.”Australia’s international contingent at the event will head back to Brisbane next week for a pre-series camp for the West Indies tour. The players are due to arrive in Queensland on May 4 and will spend almost a week fine-tuning, although no practice matches have been scheduled by the coach Tim Nielsen.The chances of Australia’s one-day players appearing in next year’s version of the IPL are virtually non-existent as the postponed trip to Pakistan will be held at the same time. “There’s absolutely no possibility of a window that compromises the Future Tours Programme and our international commitment,” Sutherland said.”It’s just simply there was no other window, no alternative. We had long and challenging meetings with Pakistan trying to get them to understand we’ve got a very busy schedule coming up and the only window available to us was the ones that we announced.”

Penney has thoughts of coming back to Sri Lanka

Trevor Penney: ‘Tom Moody and I worked with every individual as much as anyone’ © Getty Images

Trevor Penney has left Sri Lanka for now but has plans to come back sometime in the future. Two months after Tom Moody quit as coach, Zimbabwean-born Penney, who was brought in by Moody as assistant coach in 2005, is following him to play a similar role as assistant with Australian state side Western Australia.”I am looking forward to going and getting another experience in Australia with different type of coaching and different players,” Penney said. “Then certainly down the track I would love to get back into international cricket with Sri Lanka especially. That’s certainly something on my mind,” said 39-year-old Penney who retired from first-class cricket at the end of 2005 to join his former county team-mate Moody.What has drawn Penney, a former Warwickshire player for 17 years, towards Sri Lanka is the general improvement the national team has made under him and Moody and the number of friends he has made in that time.”They are a talented bunch of cricketers and Sri Lanka is a great place, much better than I expected it was going to be. There were a lot of victories but the most important thing to me was the improvement of the players, seeing the middle- to late-order batting well in one-day cricket. When I first came they weren’t doing well. That’s a real plus for me and the improvement in the fielding standards.”Paying tribute to both Moody and Penney, Mahela Jayawardene said: “The things that Tom and Trevor brought into the game were brilliant. We saw different aspects where we could improve on, especially in the fielding and in areas where we could definitely improve like the middle- and lower-order batting where we worked with sweeps, reverse-sweeps, the strong areas they could hit. Because of them, all that has been part of our improvement.”

They are a talented bunch of cricketers and Sri Lanka is a great place, much better than I expected than it was going to be. There were a lot of victories but the most important thing to me was the improvement on players, seeing the middle- to late-order batting well in one-day cricket.

Penney said that he was really moved by the way the team responded when he took over from Moody for the series against Bangladesh. “It could have been the assistant coach taking over and the guys could have not responded, but they responded just like they have in the last two years. I am really pleased about that. It means a lot to me. It means the guys respected me and I’ve come in and done exactly what they have been doing.”I just carried on what we were doing for the Bangladesh series. Up to the World Cup the guys have got to this work ethic and good team spirit. Working with them has been an absolute pleasure. The guys know what they’ve got to do and you just got to maintain their high standards and make sure practice is competitive. They love that. I just maintained that and kept it going,” he said. Needless to say Sri Lanka overpowered Bangladesh with 3-0 sweeps in the Tests and the one-day internationals.But more than the victories, Sri Lanka benefited immensely from the coaching of Moody and Penney in the individual development of the players. A good example was how fast bowler Chaminda Vaas was transformed into an allrounder by improving on his batting.”Since I came here I’ve said to Vaas I couldn’t believe how he had wasted his Test career as a batsman. He could have batted at six really. But in those old days when you first started, the bowlers never got a bat in the nets. Luckily we had a coach and an assistant coach who could spend time with Vaasy and just gave him the belief that he is a fantastic player. I didn’t have to do too much technically I just gave him the belief.”Tom and I worked with every individual as much as anyone. Certainly in fielding there are a number of players particularly [Tillakaratne] Dilshan. I really enjoyed working with Sanath [Jayasuriya], giving him belief, Mahela, Sanga [ Kumar Sangakkara] – it has been a treat to coach these guys. If you do want to give them another shot or say ‘let’s expand your game’ they could do it like that because they’ve got the talent,” Penney said.Sri Lanka were fortunate that Moody and Penney blended perfectly. “Tom brought this strict discipline, like you’ve got to pass fitness tests etc. That’s worked really well. It’s come through the age groups. There’s so much talent coming through Sri Lanka. At the moment the Under-19s, the academy, and the A squad, all have got good coaches now. You can see their rewards.”Also departing from the Sri Lanka team is CJ Clarke, the trainer. “We never had long term injuries,” Jayawardene said. “All our main guys played together for a long period of time due to the excellent support we received from the back-room staff.”Moody, Penney, and Clarke are leaving behind a legacy which their successors will have to live up to if Sri Lanka are to continue with their climb to be the top cricketing nation.

Asif, Malik and Younis doubtful for second Test

Younis Khan, who has torn a ligament in his knee, will continue with treatment and is unlikely to play the second Test at Old Trafford on July 27 © Getty Images

Pakistan went into the opening Test here at Lord’s without three of their key players and it remains uncertain whether the injured trio would be fit in time for the second match at Old Trafford later this month.A Pakistan team official told that Younis Khan, the vice-captain and middle-order batsman, Shoaib Malik, the allrounder and Mohammad Asif, the medium pacer, were left out of the playing XI at the last minute because of fitness problems.Zaheer Abbas, the team manager, said the management was hoping to field Younis Khan in the opening Test but since he still complained of a painful knee and it was decided to replace him with Faisal Iqbal, the talented middle-order batsman.”Younis has been getting treatment for his knee problem for the last few days and we were all hoping he would be fit to play at Lordís,” said Zaheer. “But unfortunately, he was still in pain last night and we had no choice but to leave him out.”He added that Younis, who had torn a ligament under his knee, would continue to get treatment for the injury. It was still too early to say that whether he would get fit in time for the second Test scheduled to get underway from July 27.”Such injuries can be a bit tricky,” Zaheer continued. “But we are all hoping that Younis would be fine before the second Test.”He said Shoaib Malik was also struggling to recover from an elbow problem in time for the Old Trafford outing.Shoaib, who scored a superb century in a warm-up game earlier this month, has been batting in the nets but was left out because he is having problems in throwing the ball.Zaheer informed that he has talked to Malik about his injury, adding that the bowler is not sure how long will it take for him to get match fit.However, Asif, ruled out of the opening Test because of a tennis elbow, is hopeful of passing a fitness test before the team’s departure to Manchester.Zaheer stated that Asif has been recovering fast and has a good chance of becoming available for selection for the second Test.

Tait spearheads South Australia to victory

South Australia 254 and 6 for 289 dec beat Victoria 223 and 202 (Moss 50, Tait 4-34) by 118 runs
Scorecard

Paul Rofe traps David Hussey leg-before© Getty Images

A young South Australian side has upstaged the champions Victoria by grabbing an outright victory in the Pura Cup match at Adelaide. The emerging paceman Shaun Tait led South Australia, who included four debutants, with match figures of 9 for 73 as Victoria fell well short of their target of 321.Tait’s returns of 5 for 39 and 4 for 34 were more reminders to the national selectors, and earned him the Man of the Match award. “Whenever you throw the ball to him in times of need he delivers and that’s what you want from a premier fast bowler,” said SA’s captain Graham Manou.Victoria resumed at 1 for 7, but a spirited run-chase never looked likely – they were soon in deep trouble at 3 for 17. Some resistance in the middle order, helped by a swag of dropped catches, gave Victoria a chance before their captain Jonathan Moss (50) went after lunch.Paul Rofe picked up three wickets for the Redbacks while the debutant Dan Cullen collected two with his offspin. The win earned South Australia the David Hookes Memorial Trophy, which was established earlier this year as a tribute to the state’s former captain and Victoria’s coach.

Cairns and Styris keep New Zealand afloat

England 225 for 5 (Trescothick 63, Vaughan 61) trail New Zealand 384 (Fleming 117, Styris 108, Richardson 73) by 159 runs
Scorecard

Mark Butcher looks back anxiously as Scott Styris catches him at second slip© Getty Images

Chris Cairns produced a heroic bowling performance on his final Test appearance, to give New Zealand a slight edge at the close of the second day’s play at Trent Bridge. Cairns, who removed Andrew Strauss with his third delivery, and later returned to end bristling innings from Michael Vaughan and Andrew Flintoff, finished with 3 for 61 from 15 overs, after New Zealand’s injury jinx had deprived Stephen Fleming of two strike bowlers in Kyle Mills and Chris Martin.By the close Graham Thorpe was unbeaten on 30, with the nightwatchman Matthew Hoggard alongside him on 0, and England still trailed New Zealand’s below-par 384 by 159 runs – a total that owed much to Scott Styris’s classy 108, his fourth Test century. It all added up to a situation very similar to the one that England had faced (and surmounted) in the second Test at Headingley, but given the paucity of the Kiwis’ bowling options, it was dicier that they might have bargained for.England were possibly guilty of a touch of complacency, after the ease with which they had dispatched New Zealand’s last six wickets in the morning session-and-a-bit. But all such thoughts were dispelled when they were reduced to 18 for 2 in the seventh over, and then 140 for 4 in 30th, after Michael Vaughan and Marcus Trescothick had fallen in quick succession. Thorpe and Flintoff revived the innings by adding 81 for the fifth wicket, but Flintoff’s late dismissal put the match back in the balance.After two 150-run partnership in four innings, Trescothick and Strauss had become accustomed to setting out their stall for the long haul. But Strauss fell for a duck, nicking a thin edge through to Brendon McCullum off Chris Cairns, and when Mark Butcher continued his poor run of form by swishing James Franklin wildly to second slip, England were in a spot of bother.But you would not have known it while Trescothick and Vaughan were together. Vaughan, especially, has not looked in such good touch since his century against South Africa at Edgbaston last summer. His first shot of note was a screeching straight-drive, and he followed up by clipping Mills’s first ball in Test cricket for four. He did have a couple of moments of anxiety, however, when he was beaten twice in four balls by Styris, but he responded with an effortless swivel-pulled six off Franklin.At that stage Vaughan was motoring towards his 12th Test century, only for Cairns to produce one of his magical slower deliveries – an apparent half-tracker that kept deceitfully low and pinned him plumb lbw for 61. Trescothick responded with a thump through midwicket, but three overs later he too was gone – caught by Scott Styris at a floating fifth slip as he pushed firmly at Franklin.Flintoff and Thorpe set about rebuilding the innings, cautiously at first, but then with greater aplomb. Flintoff smeared a Cairns slower ball over long-on en route to his third half-century of the series, while Thorpe creamed a brace of drives to get his innings underway. But Cairns had the last say – after rain had forced a five-minute interruption, Flintoff reached his fifty with a steer through third man, but was trapped lbw for 54 with three overs remaining.Styris had earlier kept New Zealand’s first innings afloat with a wonderfully crafted century. Until today, it had been a disappointing tour for Styris – he had managed just 44 runs in his previous four Test innings, but made amends precisely when New Zealand most needed him. He brought up his hundred with a cool clip for four through midwicket, but celebrated with a grimace rather than a grin – he knew full well his team had squandered an opportunity to put the game beyond reach.

Scott Styris – a vital century, but he fell to Ashley Giles before lunch© Getty Images

Styris received scant support from his middle-order colleagues who, after weathering another mini-storm from Steve Harmison, allowed themselves to get carried away against the medium-pace of Martin Saggers. At Headingley, Saggers had struck with his first delivery of the match: here, he needed a solitary sighter before prising Jacob Oram from the crease. In truth, it was a wretched delivery – short, slow and on leg stump, but Oram’s eyes lit up and he top-edged a swipe to Strauss, and was already trudging back to the pavilion before the catch was completed.In his place came Cairns, who was given a rapturous reception by the Trent Bridge faithful, and a pretty friendly one from Saggers as well, who after four more unthreatening balls, was withdrawn from the attack to make way for Harmison. But the extra pace was just to Cairns’s liking, and he creamed two boundaries in Harmison’s first over – the first, on the up and outside off stump, whistled through the covers in an instant.So back came Saggers at the other end of the ground, and for the second time in the morning, he made an instant impression. Cairns had mowed his second ball over the covers for four, but his third was not quite there for the shot, and Thorpe had a nervy wait under a steepling drive, before clinging onto a vital catch (331 for 6).Styris eventually skewed a leading edge off Ashley Giles to the substitute fielder, Nottinghamshire’s Bilal Shafayat, in the covers, and the innings crumbled in just three overs after lunch. Matthew Hoggard took three attempts to cling onto a Brendon McCullum’s uppercut at third man, before finding Mills’s outside edge to bring up his 100th wicket in Tests. There was some doubt about whether the catch had carried to Geraint Jones, but four balls later Hoggard wrapped up the innings, courtesy of another juggling catch, this time by Vaughan at backward square leg.By tea, Martin had already limped out of the attack with a tight hamstring, and in the evening Mills joined him on the treatment table with a side strain. It was the last thing that New Zealand needed, but with Cairns desperate to impress on his final appearance, it has not cost them dear so far.

Hooper has a change of heart

Chairman of Selectors, Sir Vivian Richards has confirmed that former West Indies Captain, Carl Hooper told him today that he had reconsidered his decision to be available to play in the First Cable and Wireless Test against Australia and would therefore not play when the match bowls off on Thursday.Sir Vivian said that he had previously delayed announcement of the final squad for the First Cable and Wireless Test while he awaited a response from Hooper about his willingness to continue playing for West Indies and his availability. Hooper had responded that he would be willing to play in the team and would be available for the First Test. He was therefore named as a member of the squad.Sir Vivian said: "Even though I am surprised by Carl’s change of heart, I want to wish him well in whatever he decides to do from here on. While he has not indicated that he has retired I still want to thank him for his service to the team and West Indies cricket."

Anderson reflects on the Richard Johnson situation

The day after Richard Johnson was called up at short notice to the England squad as standby for the Third npower Test, before the final team was announced this morning, Somerset Chief Executive Peter Anderson told me “It’s wonderful news for Richard and an honour for the club to have three players in the England squad. Somerset wouldn’t want to stop anyone playing for their country.”He went on “but the question needs to be asked how it is possible for two bowlers called up to be injured in the preparation period.”Regarding Somerset missing a fast bowler for two sessions of play at Canterbury yesterday he said, “we didn’t receive a phone call to say that he was needed until about 11.30am, and we weren’t able to get Jamie Grove to Canterbury to replace him until ten minutes before the end of play.””Of course England comes first, but our bid to win the CricInfo Championship for the first time in our existence is equally important,” Mr Anderson continued.”One of the reasons Johnson came to Somerset was the high regard he had for our coach Kevin Shine, and the good wickets that we have here at Taunton, which provide a real test for a quick bowler.”Finally the Chief executive added, “we’ve got a professional staff, and as one door closes another one opens, and there is a chance now for one of the other bowlers. Jamie Grove has been disappointed this season and now he has got his chance.”

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