All posts by csb10.top

xxxx

Inzamam-ul-Haq: ‘It’s for me and the four or five other senior players to take on the onus’ © Getty Images

On whether it is fair to label his team the weaker side
[We are] not the weaker team, but the balance tilts in favour of India when it comes to experience.On his responsibilities as captain and the ensuing pressure
As a captain it is obvious that I have a lot of responsibility considering that I don’t have many experienced players at my disposal. So, it’s for me and the four or five other senior players to take on the onus and help the team.On the Mohali pitch
It is a good wicket for Test matches and will last the five days. The fast bowlers will get the maximum purchase but the hard surface will also be good for the batsmen to get the runs. We will concentrate more on the fast bowlers as every morning they will get more swing. The first two days are important for the seamers, but if the batsmen work hard it shouldn’t be a problem to get runs.On the toss being crucial
The toss will be important on this wicket and winning it will help your decision-making.On whether they will be able to take revenge for the series loss to India at home in 2004
In sport there is nothing called `revenge’. We will make sure to win the series. We know that we aren’t the favourites, but my young team is capable of winning the series.On Danish Kaneria
Danish Kaneria has been our most succesful bowler in the last one or two years. After the first day the wicket will help the spinners and Danish could be dangerous. He is the kind of the bowler who – based on how he performs – could win the matches on his own.On whether Shahid Afridi will play
Shahid Afridi could figure in our calculations as he performed really well in the Australian tour during the VB series. But we are yet to pick up the team.On whether his troublesome back will allow him to play all three Tests
Yes, I had this back problem during the Australian tour but I played the ODIs there and I’ve been practising without any trouble, so I should last the entire series.On the impact Bob Woolmer has made as a coach
He is doing a lot of new things, but the main thing is he is more friendly with the guys. He is just been with us for a short time, so if he is given more time it will be really good for Pakistan.

MacGill continues his SCG affair

Stuart MacGill: ‘What a fantastic place to bowl’ © Getty Images

The Gabba is traditionally bowler-friendly but Stuart MacGill is hoping for a rare Test away from Sydney after collecting nine wickets against the World XI. MacGill has become an SCG regular during his stop-start 34-Test career and is desperate for work against the West Indies next month.Brisbane is Shane Warne’s favourite pitch in Australia and MacGill, who finished off the World XI with 5 for 43, also enjoys the bouncy surface. “What a fantastic place to bowl,” he said, talking up his chances of playing in the three-Test series. “The question is not whether it’s a favourite ground of mine but how the balance of the team works out. That’s a question that won’t be answered by me because I think the answer is very clear.”MacGill mooted the idea of picking a 13-man squad so he could travel with the team and offer further options after they opted for a two-man pace attack backed up by MacGill, Warne and the allrounder Shane Watson in this game. Warne and MacGill combined for 15 wickets – MacGill earned match figures of 9 for 82 – and again showed they could work as an intimidating partnership.Selected for only four Tests since Warne returned from his drugs ban in February 2004, MacGill said being a regular member of the team was “easier” than an on-call role for special occasions. “Getting the general feel of the series is pretty important but I’m very comfortable with any role that comes my way,” he said. “It does make your job a little bit more difficult when you do come in cold, but I’d be stupid to make any song and dance about getting picked once a year.”Ricky Ponting said despite a second-innings collapse of 9 for 47 he was happy with the make-up of the current squad and did not expect any changes for Brisbane. “I don’t have any concerns [with the middle order] at all,” he said. “We’ve got the right players there, players who have performed over a period of time, and it would be pretty harsh to judge them on one Test here.”The only sour note for Australia involved Simon Katich who has suffered a low grade fracture to the little finger on his left hand. He was struck by a powerful pull from Andrew Flintoff in the over before lunch. After immediately leaving the field he went for a precautionary scan, which revealed the damage.Katich, who suffered a poor match with the bat making 0 and 2, will have his fitness reviewed during the week. New South Wales, his state team, have their first Pura Cup match of the season, against South Australia, starting at the SCG on October 25.

England women ease to seven-wicket win

England Women 184 for 3 (Taylor 94, Connor 53*) beat South Africa Women 182 for 7 (Birch 3-29) by seven wickets
ScorecardEngland’s women cemented their standing as one of the favourites to win this month’s World Cup, which gets underway on March 22, by easing to a seven-wicket victory in the first of two warm-up matches against the hosts, South Africa, at Manzil Park in Klerksdorp. Chasing a sub-par target of 183, England were carried to the brink of victory by Claire Taylor, who made 94, and their captain, Clare Connor, who sealed the match with an unbeaten 53.After winning the toss, Connor put her faith in her bowlers and chose to bowl first. They didn’t make immediate inroads into a dogged South African batting line-up, however, and it wasn’t until the 12th over that Daleen Terblanche was prised from the crease by England’s new fast-bowling find, Katherine Brunt. Brunt has one Test to her name, but has yet to play in a full one-day international.Terblanche made 4 from 32 balls, and that set the tone for a stodgy South African innings. Even their 15-year-old wondergirl, Johmari Logtenberg, was unable to up the tempo – her 25 came from 47 balls, and was ended when England’s spinner, Rosalie Birch, held onto the second of her two return catches.Birch was the pick of the English bowlers, taking 3 for 29 from her 10 overs, although Lucy Pearson, with 2 for 24, was every bit as much of a threat. At 127 for 7, England envisaged an even easier run-chase, but South Africa’s eighth-wicket pairing of Angelique Taai (22 not out) and Charlize van der Westhuizen (25 not out) batted sensibly in an unbeaten 55-run partnership.England’s reply started shakily, as Alicia Smith struck twice in her first four overs to remove Charlotte Edwards for 0 and Laura Newton for 8, but Connor and Taylor added 152 for the third wicket to break the back of the run-chase.

Multi-million Rand boost for South African cricket

Sahara Computers has injected 25 million Rand into South African cricket as sponsorship in exchange for the naming rights for three stadiums. The money will go towards the development of local cricket in three provincial cricket unions.The oldest cricket stadium in South Africa, at Port Elizabeth, will be known as Sahara Oval St Georges, the Newlands ground will be renamed Sahara Park Newlands, and Kingsmead becomes Sahara Stadium Kingsmead.Graeme Smith was in favour of the deal, and did not mind the name change. “The players realise how important money is to the game,” said Smith. “At the same time tradition is important and it is something I have been working hard on as far as the national side is concerned.”Cricketers who were playing 20 years ago could not have dreamed that they would be playing 20 overs-a-side cricket today and, if the future of Newlands is at stake in 20 years’ time, nobody is going to ask questions about where the money comes from.”Smith was supported by Raymond Uren, the president of Eastern Province Cricket Board, who welcomed the arrangement. “The Eastern Province Cricket Board will utilise the funds from this investment to upgrade existing facilities and to initiate further training programmes,” Uren said. “We believe this agreement will certainly provide an avenue for the further development of players, facilities and the sport in general.”Cassim Dockrat, the chief executive of Sahara Stadium Kingsmead, felt the name change would cause problems for traditionalists, “But the new name will add a new dimension to the stadium. We envisage a healthy relationship for the good of cricket.”Sahara Computers has no financial links with Sahara Group, which sponsors the Indian team.

'We have a bit of a stage-fright' – Lara

‘We didn’t bat smart. I thought after the start, if we could have got to even 225, it would have been a fighting total’ – Brian Lara © AFP

Brian Lara, captain of the West Indies team, admitted that it was a huge disappointment to come so close to defending the Champions Trophy and then stumble at the final hurdle. “It’s very disappointing to lose the final. We were quietly confident going into this match,” he said. “But I think we have a bit of a stage-fright when it comes to the big occasions.””We got off to a great start but unfortunately, we lost wickets in groups. We didn’t bat the way we wanted to, and there was another collapse, we have to accept it. We have been in two finals in the last two months, and in both matches, we didn’t even get to 150. We have to have a look at that and come up with a remedy. We didn’t give ourselves a chance today. We didn’t bat smart. I thought after the start, if we could have got to even 225, it would have been a fighting total. But we lost it with the bat.”At the same time, Lara refused to believe that it was pressure of playing against tougher opposition in crunch games that led to the collapses his side has suffered. “The collapses have nothing to do with pressure. It is a part of the game we have to eradicate, it has no bearing on who the opposition are,” he said. “Saying that, Australia played the better cricket today. They had their backs to the wall after the first eight-ten overs. They never say die, and they got right back into it. Australia have played so many finals recently that they know how to bounce back. They are very professional, and know how to win and get out of tough situations.”At the end of the day, though, there were many positives Lara could take out of the tournament, and with how West Indies finished up. “But not many people expected us to reach the final here, and we are glad we got this far,” he said. “We are an improving team, and now we need to build on this momentum.”Chris Gayle, player of the tournament for his 474 runs, accompanied Lara to the post-match press conference, and spoke of his dream run in the tournament. “This is a dream tournament for me,” he said. “I am glad I contributed a lot to the team, I have always wanted to contribute to the team’s cause. But I will not do anything different from here on. I want to keep my feet on the ground, be myself and don’t get over-excited. I will need to start from scratch the next time I go out to bat.”

Kapil named bowling coach for Pakistan tour camp


Kapil Dev will coach India’s bowlers at the preparation camp
&copyGetty Images

Kapil Dev has been named bowling coach for the Indian team’s preparation camp before the Pakistan tour.According to a report by the Press Trust of India, Jagmohan Dalmiya, the head of the Indian cricket board, announced that Kapil would coach the bowlers during the three-day camp in Kolkata from March 7 to 9, but would not accompany the team to Pakistan.A spate of injuries during the recent tour of Australia left India’s bowling attack bereft of experience, and Kapil’s experience of Pakistan’s conditions could assist the bowlers. Kapil has played 29 Tests against Pakistan and claimed 99 wickets at an average of 30.12, besides scoring 1054 runs at 27.02.

Kapali joins an eclectic club

It has been several months since Alok Kapali last hit the headlines for his bowling. These days, it is his combative middle-order batting that occasionally catches the eye, but back in July 2002, when he made his Test debut as an 18-year-old, his legspin was perceived to be his strongest suit. Sure enough he picked up two (albeit expensive) wickets in his first outing against Sri Lanka.But, in keeping with Bangladesh’s struggles, Kapali’s next scalp did not arrive for about a year – when Australia’s Justin Langer played all round a straight one at Darwin last month. Now, however, Kapali has doubled his tally and halved his average (from a Mike Athertonesque 209.33 to an Ian Salisburyish 104.67), all in the space of three deliveries.Kapali, who turns 20 on New Year’s Day, is the 31st cricketer to take a Test hat-trick, and, hardly surprisingly, the first from Bangladesh. His efforts may yet contribute to an historic maiden Test victory, but judging by their late collapse on the third day at Peshawar, he will have to impress with the bat as well. Still, he completed a memorable day by reaching the close unbeaten on 4, to give Bangladesh a vital 118-run lead with six wickets remaining.Bangladesh may not be too hot when it comes to team performances, but every once in a while they chalk up an unlikely individual achievement. Against India at Dhaka in November 2000, Aminul Islam became only the third batsman (after Australia’s Charles Bannerman and Zimbabwe’s Dave Houghton) to score a century in his country’s inaugural Test. And a year later, in Colombo, Mohammad Ashraful became the youngest player to score a century on his Test debut, at 17 years and 63 days old.In becoming his country’s first hat-trick bowler, Kapali has been propelled into an eclectic nine-man club, occupied by three alltime greats, two extremely-goods, and a handful of extras. The club’s inaugural member was Australia’s demon fast bowler, Fred Spofforth, who ripped through England’s batting at Melbourne in January 1879 with match figures of 13 for 110.Four years later, England replied through Willie Bates, a maverick Yorkshire allrounder who played all 15 of his Tests in Australia. On his day he was irresistible, and at Melbourne in January 1883, his slow roundarm spin collected 14 wickets in the match, including 7 for 28 in 26.2 overs in the first innings.England and Australia shared all 12 of the first hat-tricks in Test history, and it wasn’t until March 1959 that any other nation got a look-in. Appropriately, it was one of the greats who broke the stranglehold. Wes Hall had already marked his arrival as a Test cricketer with 41 wickets on his maiden tour for West Indies, an arduous trek across India and Pakistan in 1958-59. And in the eighth and final Test of that trip, he took his tally to 46 with a hat-trick against Pakistan at Lahore.South Africa were the next team to accomplish the feat, and against England at Lord’s to boot. But it was a bitter-sweet occasion for the bowler, Geoff Griffin. An accident at school had left him with a permanently kinked elbow, and he was no-balled no fewer than 11 times for throwing. It was his second and last Test, and he retired a fortnight after his 21st birthday.Only three men to date have achieved the feat on their Test debuts. The first was England’s Maurice Allom, in January 1930. The second was New Zealand’s offspinner Peter Petherick, who dismissed the Pakistan trio of Javed Miandad, Wasim Raja and Intikhab Alam at Lahore in October 1976. It merely delayed the inevitable, however, as Pakistan eventually won the match by six wickets. The third was Australia’s Damien Fleming, at Rawalpindi in 1994-95, whose victims included Salim Malik for a modest 237.Next to join the club were Pakistan. Wasim Akram had already picked up two one-day hat-tricks in quick succession in 1989-90. Now, nine years later, he repeated the feat in Test cricket as well. His first batch came against Sri Lanka, once again at Lahore, in the third match of the Asian Test Championship. One Test later, and in the final no less, he repeated the dose to send Sri Lanka crashing to an innings defeat.In the recent World Cup, Chaminda Vaas took a spectacular hat-trick from his first three balls against Bangladesh. But he was merely following the example of his team-mate Nuwan Zoysa, whose opening over in the Test against Zimbabwe at Harare in 1999-2000 was equally astonishing. Trevor Gripper was not the most illustrious of first victims, but his next two, Murray Goodwin and Neil Johnson, are among the best to have played for Zimbabwe. At 0 for 3, it was a long way back for Zimbabwe, and unsurprisingly, they fell to a seven-wicket defeat.The last, but most certainly not least of the countries to get off the mark was India – in the guise of Harbhajan Singh, in arguably the most astonishing victory in the history of Test cricket. India had been walloped by Australia in the opening Test of their 2000-01 home series, and when they were forced to follow on at Kolkata, the series looked dead in the water. But Harbhajan’s first-innings hat-trick, including the prime wickets of Ricky Ponting and Adam Gilchrist, provided the first inkling that this was a miracle in the making. Sure enough, VVS Laxman and Rahul Dravid put together their thrilling 376-run partnership, and Harbhajan sealed the victory with match figures of 13 for 196.As India proved then, miracles do happen. Alok Kapali will be praying for something similar tomorrow.

Teddy Griffith elected president of West Indies board

Teddy Griffith, a retired banker from Barbados, has been elected president of the West Indies Cricket Board (WICB). At a meeting at the Jolly Beach Resort in Antigua, Griffith outgunned Clarvis Joseph by nine votes to four.Griffith replaced Wesley Hall, the West Indian fast-bowling legend, who stepped down from the post due to ill health. Griffith, who played cricket for Barbados and Jamaica, is a former vice-president of the board. He famously resigned from that post two years ago, along with then president Pat Rousseau, after their decision to sack Ricky Skerritt as the national team’s manager was overturned by the board’s directors.Griffith has also served as chairman of the WICB marketing committee, and will now have to plunge into the task of organising the 2007 World Cup, which will be held in the West Indies. Countries have until January 31, 2004, to submit their applications to host matches.Interestingly, when it was announced that Hall would step down it was widely expected that Chetram Singh, a bookmaker from Guyana, would take over the job. But Singh was told that he would not be allowed to attend ICC meetings and, thus, had to step aside.

Philipson named for Pura Cup

Promising batsman Craig Philipson has continued his rapid rise in theXXXX Queensland Bulls ranks with selection today for next week’s PuraCup match against the Tasmanian Tigers in Hobart.Philipson, who will play his first match for Queensland tomorrow in theING Cup day/nighter against NSW at Sydney’s Telstra Stadium, will makehis first class debut for the Bulls if he takes the field against theTigers next week.The 21-year-old right-hander replaces the injured Lee Carseldine (back)in the Bulls line-up. The only other change sees pace bowler DamienMacKenzie, who was 12th man in this week’s Pura Cup match in Perth,omitted from the twelve.The Bulls will travel to Hobart on Monday, departing on Qantas FlightQF525 and arriving in Hobart on QF1713 at 5.20pm.The Tigers are second on the Pura Cup ladder on 20 points with the Bullsin third spot on 16 points.XXXX Queensland Bulls v Tasmanian Tigers, Pura Cup, Hobart, Wed Jan 21 -Sat Jun 24:
Jimmy Maher (c), Clinton Perren, Martin Love, Stuart Law, CraigPhilipson, James Hopes, Wade Seccombe, Ashley Noffke, Nathan Hauritz,Michael Kasprowicz, Joe Dawes, Chris Simpson. (12th man to be named).

Das to lead India A in England

SS Das has been chosen as captain of the India A team for their forthcoming tour of England. Hemang Badani – who scored a heroic century against Mumbai in the Ranji Trophy final – will be the vice-captain, while Sandeep Patil will accompany the team as coach.The line-up includes plenty of players who performed well in the domestic season. Wasim Jaffer, who scored two half-centuries in the final, gets another chance to prove himself in seaming conditions after a disappointing tour of England with the senior team last year. Apart from Das and Jaffer, the team includes two more openers – Gautam Gambhir from Delhi and Satyajit Parab from Baroda.Sridharan Sriram, who averaged 58 in the Ranji Trophy in 2002-03, was rewarded with a ticket to the squad, as were Ambati Rayudu and Rohan Gavaskar. VVS Laxman, who had captained the A team to the West Indies, wasn’t considered as he had made himself unavailable for selection.Most of the bowlers who went to the West Indies for the A tour retained their places – Avishkar Salvi, L Balaji, Murali Kartik and Amit Mishra were all included in the line-up. Tinu Yohannan and Rakesh Patel missed out, though, and were replaced by seamers Amit Bhandari and Irfan Pathan (jr).The squad will undergo an 18-day training session at the National Cricket Academy (NCA) in Bangalore, where John Wright, coach of the Indian team, will assist them. The tour starts with a one-day match against British Universities on June 25. Also on the itinerary is a three-day match against the South African national team, who will be touring England for a five-Test series.Squad
SS Das (capt), Wasim Jaffer, Gautam Gambhir, Satyajit Parab, Hemang Badani, Sridharan Sriram, Ambati Rayudu, Rohan Gavaskar, Vijay Bharadwaj, Parthiv Patel (wk), L Balaji, Avishkar Salvi, Amit Bhandari, Irfan Pathan (jr), Murali Kartik, Amit Mishra.

Game
Register
Service
Bonus