All posts by csb10.top

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.

Australia canter to 9-wicket win in first Test

Australia eased to a nine-wicket win shortly before tea on the fourth day of the first Test at Georgetown. An assured 78 not out from Justin Langer guided them home, but it was a devastating spell of 4 for 3 in 26 balls from Jason Gillespie which ensured the West Indies fightback ended overnight. The last five West Indian wickets fell for 17 runs inside three-quarters of an hour of the start and that was that.West Indies began play needing to bat into the afternoon to post a target likely to test Australia on a pitch which was true, if prone to the occasional low bounce. A decent crowd had come hoping for another day of watching Australia frustrated. What they got was Gillespie at his snarling best.With the sixth ball of the day Gillespie jagged one back into Vasbert Drakes, keeping low and trapping him on the backfoot – for once the lbw decision was straightforward. Drakes had not added to his overnight 14 (382 for 6).With the third ball of his next over to Merv Dillon, Gillespie again got one to cut back in, again the bounce was low, and again the verdict was leg-before. Dillon had made 0, and a hobbling Ridley Jacobs limped out to join a similarly restricted Shivnarine Chanderpaul (384 for 7).Much depended on this pair, and briefly they threatened to reprise their first-innings heroics. Then Chanderpaul’s limited movement cost him dear as he nicked Gillespie to wicketkeeper Adam Gilchrist for 31 and the end was near (391 for 8).Jacobs (11) opted to try and hit his way out of trouble, lofting Stuart MacGill over long-on for six, but the next ball, an inside edge, flew to short leg where Darren Lehmann held the catch (397 for 9).Gillespie ended the proceedings with his third leg-before of the morning, Jermaine Lawson (0) was creasebound to a ball slanting back in at him. Gillespie had his five-for, and in 41 minutes the West Indian dream had been dashed.Langer and Matthew Hayden started slowly and shakily, but their rustiness was not probed as once again the West Indies bowlers lacked any real bite. Whereas Langer found his touch, unleashing several brutal drives, Hayden struggled, looking a shadow of the batsman who dominated bowlers the world over in 2002. After labouring to 11 off 67 balls he finally cast off his shackles with two fours off one Lawson over, but his relief was short-lived. In Lawson’s next over he top-edged an attempted pull and spooned a catch to square leg (77 for 1). Hayden’s 19 was painful viewing.But with Langer easing into something close to top gear, and Ricky Ponting finding his touch from the off, Australia strolled to victory with a calm assuredness that not even a brief light shower shortly after lunch could upset.

ECB ex-chief to open IW cricket academy

Lord MacLaurin, the past chairman of the England & Wales Cricket Board, will open the Isle of Wight’s state-of-the-art indoor cricket academy overlooking Ventnor’s unique "superbowl" at Steephill on Friday July 25 2003.The £1.1m project, financed from the Sport England Lottery Fund, IW Partnership, IW Council and many local supporters, has provided the Island with a three-lane Academy, incorporating video playback facilities for coaching, changing and social facilities. One lane has a spin surface, with two for seam bowling.The indoor academy will be available to visiting SPL3 club for pre-match practice from 12 noon on match days, without charge. Visiting clubs with an ECB qualified, and insured, coach are welcome to use the bowling machine, and video cameras. But indoor sports shoes must be used in the academy.The entrance to Steephill is still via the Ventnor Botanic Garden, with the Academy and changing rooms at car park level. There is a spectacular view of the pitch from the changing rooms and players’ balcony, with external stairs from the balcony down to pitch level.Separate changing facilities are available for umpires and the whole facility has been designed to give access for cricketers with disabilities.Ventnor wish to thank all visiting teams for their patience and forbearance last season. They look forward to being able to offer hospitality this season to players and supporters in their ‘state of the art’ licensed bar.

India A book place in final against India Seniors

After the blitz of Virender Sehwag on the second day of the Challenger Trophy, everything that followed was doomed to being termed ordinary. The clash between India A and India B certainly did not boast the same star studded cast and somewhat unsurprisingly did not serve up the same exciting fare. India B justified their name as such and failed to qualify for the final of this tournament, losing to India A by 59 runs in the final league encounter.On winning the toss and sticking India A in to bat at the M Chinnaswamy Stadium in Bangalore, India B skipper Anil Kumble must have felt a tinge of disappointment as the opposition got off to a sedate yet very stable start. Sangram Singh, bowled off a no-ball and dropped once, went on to make 40 before the first wicket fell with 63 runs on the board. Connor Williams, the other opener looked happy just staying at the wicket and grafted, as is his wont. The left hander looked in no hurry at all and took more than his fair share of time to get his eye in.VVS Laxman, of whom a big score has been expected for a while, played a sizzling cameo, striking the ball cleanly and yet failed to make the most of a good batting wicket. After hitting four boundaries in the course of his 28 Laxman played down the wrong line to his opposite number Kumble and was clean bowled.With Rohan Gavaskar, who failed in the first game he played in this series, Williams continued to push the score on. In the 33rd over of the innings, Williams finally made a mistake, falling to the part time off-spin of Hrishikesh Kanitkar. Williams’ 73 (91 balls, 7 fours, 1 six) provided the India A team with a strong base to build on.And build they did in the form of Gavaskar and Yuvraj Singh. The two left-handers played briskly, hitting the ball over the infield with great regularity. Yuvraj Singh in particular was effective, getting good power behind his strokes. Both of them however fell before reaching their respective half centuries. Gavaskar made 45 while Yuvraj Singh fell 2 short of 50.Personal landmarks might have been missed, but the pair had played their parts admirably in the middle order. India A were able to post a healthy 289/7 in their allotted 50 overs.What made the India B chase specially fraught with danger was the fact that they had to make the required runs in 40 overs or less to take an extra bonus point and qualify for the final. In their anxiety to score at a fast pace the India B team lost opener Sridharan Sriram (2) in just the first over of the day when Ajit Agarkar had the left-hander caught behind. Dinesh Mongia, centurion in the last game, followed soon after, being needlessly run out. At 12/2 India B hard the worst possible start to their essay.Mohammad Kaif, who has impressed in this tournament played a spirited knock in the middle order but he must have known in the back of his mind that the game was over before he walked out to bat. Flicking and pulling with great comfort Kaif worked his way to 69 before he played one shot too many and became Sarandeep Singh’s first victim.Kaif certainly wasn’t Sarandeep’s last scalp. Perhaps spurred on by Harbhajan Singh’s lacklustre performance in the Challenger Trophy, Sarandeep tossed the ball up, gave it a good tweak and invited batsmen to go after him. In the circumstances they had no choice but to go for it and perish in the process.Kanitkar, a permanent fixture in all representative and selection matches, fell for 47 (63 balls, 3 fours). Vijay Bharadwaj, attempting to serve the selectors a reminder of his abilities showed good spirit, tonking 43 off just 28 balls but could not outwit Sarandeep Singh. Arjun Yadav (2) and Devendra Bundela (3) both rated as good prospects for the one-day game failed, completing Sarandeep Singh’s five-wicket bag. The young offie is now almost a certainty for the one-dayers against England, with a timely 5/57. What’s more, if his last over had not been thrashed for 13 by the lusty hitting of Ashish Nehra, his figures would have been far more respectable!Nehra provided some good comic relief, swatting the ball around for 23 at the end.By this stage, with the score on 191/7, India B were out of it. Ajit Agarkar (3/55) cleaned things up with some good straight fast bowling, putting an End to the India B innings on 230.India A, with this performance book themselves a spot in the final against India Seniors, to be played on Sunday.

CCA and others extend best wishes to Team Canada

The President, members of the Board of the CCA, volunteers and supporters extend greetings and best wishes to Team Canada in their games at the CWC 2003. May you all realize your personal best performances as representatives of not only Canada but all of the Americas.This is a once in a lifetime opportunity for a fortunate minority of players. Your commitment and dedication and that of your families are truly appreciated. Your presence and performances must allow greater support for cricket development in Canada and in the whole Americas.We trust that every effort will be made to ensure our strongest entrant in the 2007 World Cup in the West Indies, our sole Full Member in the Americas.We shall be looking forward to your success as a team and as individualsWe have also received greetings and best wishes from Reginald Pearman, President of the Bermuda Cricket Board of Control and from all of its members.He wished Canada good luck in the CWC 2003 and as a representative of the Cricket Council of the Americas.Numerous others have wished the team good luck via the CCA web site, and we’ve also recieved this via Ray Ramrattan in Manitoba.Hello from Sydney, Australia,and just a quick e-mail to wish your Canadian team the best of luck in the World Cup in South Africa. I hope that they play well and enjoy the experience andhave a win or two along the way. Hopefully, the team will do well and promote the game of cricket in Canada. You have a beautiful country with great people, and I look forward to seeing the team in action over the next month or so.Best wishes,Peter Buscall

Sri Lanka seal series after nail-biting finale

Sri Lanka finally ended Kandy jinx on the final tension-strewn day of thesecond Janashakthi National Test when they defeated West Indies by 131 runsin the descending gloom to win this three-Test series.But, boy, was it a close run thing. West Indies came within 16 minutes ofsaving the game thanks to a stubborn 59 run seventh wicket stand between MarlonSamuels and Mervyn Dillon and despite an umpiring blunder that robbed themof batting super star Brian Lara.West Indies went into the final hour with four wickets intact. MuttiahMuralitharan, once again the hero and the man of the match for the fourthtest running, was sending down over after over, spinning the ball the squareon a worn fifth day pitch, as a ring of squawky jack-in-the-box fieldersclosed in around the bat.The light was deteriorating quickly and Sanath Jayasuriya was unable to usefast bowler Chaminda Vaas for fear that the umpires would reach for theirlight meters and offer the light.The crowd, which had built up steadily throughout the day, grew more excitedwith each passing over, cheering each appeal and hooting theirdisappointment whenever the umpire failed to raise his finger.Samuels and Dillon had batted for 59 minutes and Sri Lankan hopes of forcinga victory were slipping away. But 18 minutes into the last hour, Dillonplayed over the top of a full-length delivery from Muralitharan and wasbowled.Samuels and Dinanath Ramnarine kept Muralitharan at bay for 15 more minutes,during which time Samuels passed fifty for the first time in the series,following scores of 16, 2, and 0.But just after the umpires had checked their light meters, which were surelyhovering on the danger zone, Samuels was trapped lbw for 54 as he stretchedacross his stumps. At 5.41pm Pedro Collins was comprehensively bowled byanother booming off-break and then the final disasterColin Stuart, who was banned for bowling in the first innings after lettingloose two beamers, suffered an equally calamitous dismissal as hesuccessfully defended his second ball from Muralitharan. However, cruelly,the ball spun backwards and slowly trickled towards his stumps with justenough velocity to knock off both bails.Three wickets had fallen in 12 balls. The Sri Lankans were cock-a-hoop andthe crowd joyous. A pale-faced West Indian manager Ricky Skerrit could beseen with his head in his hands. They felt they had been robbed. Certainlyan injustice had been done.Lara had played expertly after the loss of both openers before lunch. He hadbatted for two and a quarter hours for his 45 before he was wrongly adjudgedto have been caught at short leg off left-arm spinner NiroshanBandaratillake two balls after tea.The ball had come off the full face of the bat into the hands HashanTillakaratne who completed a brilliant reflex catch. The Sri Lankan closefielders started celebrating immediately and umpire Gamin Silva upheld theappeal. Lara stood aghast. His arms lifted in astonishment and he lingeredat the crease, before slowly trudging back to the pavilion.Television replays clearly indicated that the ball had been hit into theground. The third umpire watched powerless in front of his monitor, able tointervene with on-field judgments only in the case of line decisions.Likewise the on-field umpires were handicapped by ICC regulations that onlyallow umpires to call for the third umpire to verify whether the catchitself was taken cleanly, not whether it was a bump ball.During all three previous innings in the series his dismissal had sparkeddramatic collapses. In Galle the last five wickets fell for 25 runs in thefirst innings and 13 in the second. Yesterday the lower order the last fiveproduced just 24 runs. This time they cobbled together 64 and showed greaterresistance, but it still swung the match towards Sri Lanka.The West Indies team were left fuming. They have had the bad breaksin this Test, from the time Stuart was barred from bowling, and they feelthey suffered in the field too, when a number of decisions were turned down.Coach Roger Harper, speaking straight after his sides 131 defeat, said: “Naturally we are very, very disappointed. Not only in losing but also in the manner in which we thought the game was taken away from us.”He added: “The dismissal of Brian Lara was clearly the pivotal moment. The outcome could have been totally different. I have no explanation for it. All I can say is that all the Sri Lankans in the match contributed to it.”On balance, however, the Lara dismissal apart and a gloved catch offJayasuriya that was not given, the umpiring was not poor. There were somemarginal decisions and mistakes, but not an unusually high number and they didnot all fall in Sri Lanka’s favour. Ultimately this game was lost because ofwoeful batting and some wonderfully skillful bowling from Muralitharan, whoonce again finished with ten wickets in the game.Earlier in the morning, Sri Lanka appeared mindful of criticism that theyhad not been more positive yesterday evening. They came out this morning,after a long team chat prior to the start of play, all guns blazing.Sangakkara displayed the team’s newfound urgency early on, as he danced downthe wicket to a bemused Dillon and aimed a back-wrenching swipe.Boundaries were hard to come by over the soft buffalo-grassed outfield, butSangakkara, on 10 overnight, swivel-pulled and slashed a further 35 runs in30 balls before he pulled straight into the hands of Ramnarine atmid-wicket.In the first ten overs Sangakkara and Atapattu added 63 runs, increasing SriLanka’s 225-run overnight lead to 288. A declaration appeared imminent, butJayasuriya erred on the side of caution.Hooper quickly dispensed with Pedro Collins, whose four overs cost 31 runs,and asked leg-spinner Dinanath Ramnarine to bowl into the rough outside theright-handers pads. The slips disappeared and boundaries became heavilypatrolled. The tactic slowed the run rate, as Ramnarine picked four wicketsin the next ten overs as Sri Lanka added only 33 more runs.Jayawardene briefly glistened before he skied a simple catch. Russel Arnold,fighting for his place in the side, scooped a catch to cover in the nextover.All the while, Atapattu had been steadily accumulating runs in hishigh-elbowed and stylish way. For a while it looked like the declaration wasbeing delayed to allow him to complete his ninth Test hundred. But when hewas stumped having hot-footed down the wicket to Ramnarine, Vaas appearedfrom the dressing room.Jayasuriya was concerned about the “Lara factor” and wanted to make sure therun-getting equation was loaded in Sri Lanka’s favour. However, soon afterthe dismissal of Vaas he was finally persuaded to call the innings to aclose and let Muralitharan loose.

Challenge in front of prospective ODI openers if Astle out

Nathan Astle’s prospective unavailability for the New Zealand team to return to Australia for next month’s tri-series with Australia and South Africa has thrown increased emphasis on domestic cricket games starting today.One round of State Championship games starts today and two rounds of the State Shield will be played before the touring side is announced on January 3.It was only last week that the naming of the side was delayed until then, but it proved a fortuitous move. Compounding the situation is the suspension of Dion Nash from all games until January 3. Before Astle’s news that would probably have been enough for the selectors to discount him, but now?January 3 is also the day Astle has a plaster cast removed from the hand on which he suffered a cracked bone when he was batting in the first Test against Bangladesh.Easily New Zealand’s best one-day batsman, Astle, if unavailable and the prospect is high, would leave a huge gap in the side with no obvious replacement.He has been such a commanding opening batsman that the selectors have spent the last two years trying to find him an opening partner. The question remains unresolved.Anyone able to provide consistent scoring in the three remaining games is likely to come into the picture.The obvious considerations have to be:Chris Nevin – the incumbent one-day opener after being selected in the non-touring team to Pakistan, but still to provide the selectors with the runs that would warrant his retention.Lou Vincent – showed in his debut Test in Perth that he has the class to succeed but has played his earlier ODIs in the middle-order.Mathew Sinclair – scored two centuries for New Zealand in Sri Lanka earlier in the year and looked to have resolved some batting issues, but has fallen into a scoring trough.A little more out of left field could be:Mark Richardson – has a love of a good battle, the less inhibiting field settings for ODIs and an attacking bent revealed in run chases during the recent Test series in Australia.Matt Horne – not a prolific performer in ODIs but offers experience and solidity at the top of the order and well capable of playing an anchor role.Right out of left field could be:Brendon McCullum – attack is McCullum’s second nature and he has already scored his maiden first-class century this summer and played some fine innings. If the World Cup is in the selectors’ minds, rather than the short term then McCullum, with runs under his belt in these three games, could be a suitable choice.Andrew Hore – the nearest thing in New Zealand cricket to a batsman in the Mark Greatbatch mould to take an attack apart. He is experienced enough to handle the pressure and could be an exciting sight on Australian pitches.Dion Nash – so technically correct, and in good batting touch with the hard competitive core so beloved of the selectors, as a short term fix he might enjoy the challenge of getting New Zealand off to a good start.There may be others who could also come into the frame: Aaron Barnes of Auckland, Richard Jones of Wellington or David Kelly of Central Districts.The chance is clearly there, who will respond?

A positive spin

John Ward talked to Geoff Marsh at the end of Zimbabwe’s tour of EnglandPart of the job of a national coach today is what is now known in political circles as spin. They are required to put on a brave face after the greatest of catastrophes and sound positive no matter what anger or despair may be churning inside them.But Zimbabwe’s coach Geoff Marsh sounded genuinely positive at the end of Zimbabwe’s second official tour of England, although the results on paper looked like an unrelieved catalogue of woe, broken only by that unexpected victory over England in the first match of the NatWest Series.His first comment was on how much the players, mostly young and cringingly inexperienced, enjoyed the tour. “We’ve been hurt by our losses, but we’ve sat down and discussed them and areas where we can improve. The pleasing thing for me is that the players got up every day and they went to training with smiles on their faces, wanting to learn and wanting to become better cricketers.”No doubt Marsh would like to comment, but cannot, on the selection policy that sent so many youngsters on tour while leaving behind more experienced players like batsmen Craig Wishart, Gavin Rennie and Trevor Gripper. All three have had their chances in the past, enjoyed some success, but been dropped for long spells after a few low patches. They were not given long runs in the side or enjoyed the confidence in and, some would say, indulgence shown to the likes of Alistair Campbell in the past or Dion Ebrahim in the present. But their extra experience would have helped the woefully fragile batting, especially when Stuart Carlisle’s injury forced him out of the NatWest Series and Mark Vermeulen was sent home for disciplinary reasons – both big blows, says Marsh.”Looking back on it, the players we had here were young and just didn’t stand up to replacing them,” he explained. “With hindsight, those players were really missed in the one-day series.”When asked about the players who made particularly pleasing progress on the tour, it is perhaps significant that Marsh mentioned two senior players rather than the promising but unfulfilled youngsters. “Heath Streak has had an outstanding tour,” he said. “He captained the side very well and he has led from the front with his performances. I think Stuart Carlisle’s performances in all the lead-up games were excellent, although unfortunately he got injured before the one-day series.”Marsh, like Duncan Fletcher, prefers to work quietly behind the scenes and is not given to giving headline-making statements. Earlier this week, though, he did criticise the poor quality of many of the pitches his team had had to play on during the tour. He said, quite correctly, that so many bowler-friendly pitches were unsatisfactory for the development of young English bowlers, as they would not be forced to learn the skills required to succeed on less responsive surfaces. He was probably thinking as much of the damage done to his inexperienced batting line-up on such pitches when most of them have still not perfected their techniques on good batting pitches. In such conditions Zimbabwe could be competitive, but their collapses on seamer-friendly pitches did no good to themselves, their opponents (who were thus scarcely stretched), the spectators, or the game’s financiers.”Lord’s was a really tough Test match,” recalled Marsh. “The ball swung and it was a perfect Bob-Massie, swing-bowling day, and we struggled there. But in general I think the most pleasing thing was the spirit of the side. They set themselves a goal to be a unit, and they really stuck together and worked together. They were a very inexperienced side – but they not inexperienced now, and it’s been a good occasion for them. Now it’s up to them to go back and do well in the Logan Cup, and look forward to facing Australia. We’ll go there with a better side, but it will be a tough tour.”Marsh is pleased to see that several A tours have been lined up, as he feels this is a vital stage in the development of the young players. Zimbabwe A will tour Namibia in August, host Sri Lanka A in January and February, and then tour India later that month.There is certainly raw potential among the young Zimbabwean players, especially the allrounders, and, all things being equal, in three or four years time Zimbabwe should again be able to give the senior Test nations a good run for their money in both forms of the game. But the most crucial factor is the state of their native land. Unless the situation there is resolved speedily, yet more talented cricketers will be on their way out.

Full moon forces schedule change in Sri Lanka

It’s a case of full moon stops play in Sri Lanka where a recent government decree has banned the playing of sports on Poya Day holidays (full moon days).The decree has forced the return of the once coveted "rest day" during Test matches which were abandoned with the international cricket calendar becoming ever more congested.The Sri Lanka cricket board has been forced to reschedule Zimbabwe’s Test programme after the current LG Abans triangular series to avoid play on the 30 December, the Poya Day.New schedule:21-23 December – Three-day practice match Zimbabwe vs. Sri Lanka `A’ at P. Saravanamuttu Stadium in Colombo27 December – 1 January – First Test Match Sri Lanka vs. Zimbabwe at Sinhalese Sports Club in Colombo (Rest day on 30 December)4th-8th January – Second Test Match Sri Lanka vs. Zimbabwe at Asgiriya International Cricket Stadium in Kandy12th-16th January – Third Test Match Sri Lanka vs. Zimbabwe at Galle International Cricket Stadium17th January – Zimbabwe Departure

Vaughan plays the waiting game

It is touch and go whether Michael Vaughan will be available for the Fifth Test against Australia at The Oval next week.Vaughan has not played in the Ashes series following a knee operation earlier this summer and has reported that it is sore following his return to first-class cricket with Yorkshire.He has been playing in the CricInfo Championship game against Leicestershire, in which he has scored 82 and 47. But in Yorkshire’s second innings he was hit on the knee which was operated on.He will not play in tomorrow’s Norwich Union League match at Grace Road and will rest for a couple of days before telling the England management of his prospects for the final Test.Vaughan said: “I’m very sore from the first two days of Championship cricket.I’m struggling to sprint between the wickets. This might be a natural reactionto first-class cricket.”I will decide shortly what I will do about the England situation. I’ll waitto see how it responds to treatment.”Vaughan has not played for England since making his maiden Test hundred against Pakistan at Old Trafford at the start of June.

Game
Register
Service
Bonus