'Decision to join ICL was a no-brainer' – Kasprowicz

Michael Kasprowicz doesn’t think a lack of commitment is going to be an issue when he plays in the ICL © Getty Images
 

Retired Australian stars such as Michael Kasprowicz, Damien Martyn and Jason Gillespie were named in the squads announced by the unofficial Indian Cricket League for its Grand Championships. The event which starts on March 9 features eight teams – including one consisting entirely of Pakistan players – up from the six in the inaugural Twenty20 tournament held last December in Panchkula.Kasprowicz called time on his first-class career last month, finishing with a record 501 wickets for Queensland. “The decision to join ICL was actually a no-brainer. I have played 19 years of first-class cricket for Queensland, have had my time at the top with Australia and have also played county cricket,” he told Cricinfo. “It would be a great opportunity for me to live in India and play here. I love coming to India, I love the passion, hospitality and the people here. My best days of international career were here.”Asked whether he would able to give his 100% commitment while playing a Twenty20 league, he said, “It’s about personal pride. You can’t relax while playing and I have always played my cricket hard.”He also questioned the rationale behind banning players who have joined the ICL. “It can only be good for Indian cricket,” he said. “So many domestic players get a chance to play with the players from around the world and the quality can only go up. It’s sad that the players are being banned.”The other big-name signings for the ICL include New Zealand pair Shane Bond and Lou Vincent, Justin Kemp, Heath Streak, Russel Arnold and Wavell Hinds.Squads for Grand championships
Ahmedabad Rockets Damien Martyn (capt), Murray Goodwin, Heath Streak, Wavell Hinds, Jason Gillespie, Abhishek Tamrakar, Anshu Jain, Baburao Yadav, P Bhima Rao, Parviz Aziz, Rakesh Patel, Pallav Vora, Reetinder Sodhi, Sachin Dholpure, KM Sanjeev, Sridharan Sriram, Sumit Kalia
Chandigarh Lions Chris Cairns (capt), Mathew Elliot, Lou Vincent, Andrew Hall, Daryl Tuffey, Amit Uniyal, Bipul Sharma, Chetan Sharma, Dinesh Mongia, Gaurav Gupta, Harpreet Singh, Ishan Malhotra, Karanveer Singh, Love Ablish, Manish Sharma, Rajesh Sharma, Sarabjeet Singh, Tejinder Pal Singh
Chennai Superstars Stuart Law (capt), Ian Harvey, Russel Arnold, Shabbir Ahmed, Adam Parore, Michael Bevan, G Vignesh, Hemang Badani, Hemanth Kumar, J Hariesh, P Vivek, R Jesuraj, R Sathish, Syed Mohammed, Dakshinamoorthy Kumaran, Thirunavukarasu Kumaran, V Devendran, Vasanth Saravanan
Delhi Giants Marvan Atapattu (capt), Avishka Gunawardene, Nic Pothas, Dale Benkenstein, Shane Bond, Abbas Ali, Abhinav Bali, Abhishek Sharma, Abid Nabi, Ali Murtaza, Dhruv Mahajan, Dishant Yagnik, JP Yadav, Mohnish Mishra, Raghav Sachdev, Shalabh Srivastava, Taduri Prakash Sudhindra, Ali Hamid Zaidi
Hyderabad Heroes Chris Harris (capt), Nicky Boje, Justin Kemp, Abdul Razzaq, Jimmy Maher, Alfred Absolem, Ambati Rayudu, Anirudh Singh, Ibrahim Khaleel, Inder Shekar Reddy, Kaushik Reddy, Pagadala Niranjan, Shashank Nag, Stuart Binny, Syed Sahabuddin, Vinay Kumar, Zakaria Zuffri
Kolkata Tigers Craig McMillan (capt), Lance Klusener, Upul Chandana, Nantie Hayward, Andre Adams, Abhishek Jhunjhunwala, Abu Nechim, Deep Dasgupta, Mihir Diwakar, Pritam Das, Rajiv Kumar, Rohan Gavaskar, Sayed Akhlakh Ahmed, Shiv Sagar Singh, Subhomoy Das, Sujay Tarafdar
Lahore Badshahs Inzamam-ul-Haq (capt), Azhar Mahmood, Taufeeq Umar, Imran Farhat, Mushtaq Ahmed, Saqlain Mushtaq, Rana Naved-ul-Hasan, Shahid Nazir, Hasan Raza, Naveed Latif, Humayun Farhat, Imran Nazir, Mohammad Sami, Arshad Khan, Riaz Afridi
Mumbai Champs Brian Lara (capt), Nathan Astle, Johan Van der Wath, Tino Best, Michael Kasprowicz, Anupam Sanklecha, Avinash Yadav, Dheeraj Jadhav, Kiran Powar, Nikhil Mandale, Pushkaraj Joshi, Ranjit Khirid, Robin Morris, Shreyas Khanolkar, Shridhar Iyer, Subhojit Paul, Suyash Burkul, Raviraj Patil

Coach looks to Johnson

Mitchell Johnson was an important part of Australia’s 2-0 win against Sri Lanka and the coach Tim Nielsen believes he could be again for the four-match India series © Getty Images

Australia’s coach Tim Nielsen believes Mitchell Johnson might be the man who can unnerve India’s strong batting line-up if he is picked for the Boxing Day Test. Johnson was impressive in his first two Tests against Sri Lanka last month but the re-emergence of Shaun Tait has left him uncertain of a place for the Melbourne match.However, Johnson has an excellent record against India in one-day internationals with 19 wickets at an average of 16 and he was the leading wicket-taker for either side in the recent ODI series in India. Nielsen said that would work in his favour when the selectors decided on their final 11 for Boxing Day.”He’s had really good success,” Nielsen said. “He’s knocked over their top order consistently over the last couple of years. When the selectors sit down and have a look at the best mix for a team against India I’m sure the fact Mitchell’s knocked over the likes of Tendulkar and Ganguly and Dravid consistently over the last couple of years will be a big tick in his box.”Tait was still recovering from elbow surgery when Australia played Sri Lanka, leaving Johnson as the obvious candidate to back up Brett Lee and Stuart Clark in the pace attack. But Johnson was left out of the ODIs against New Zealand as Australia wanted to give Tait some match time and Tait’s success meant Johnson was suddenly being mentioned as a possible 12th man for Boxing Day.”He’s been so good in the Test match arena especially,” Nielsen said. “The biggest challenge for him is not to think ‘what do I have to change to get back in’ it’s just to understand that 12 doesn’t fit into 11 [for the ODIs].”Australia have not decided whether to experiment with a four-man pace attack in Melbourne as the MCG pitch remains a mystery. Rain has bucketed down in Melbourne over the past few days, meaning the centre-wicket area is still under cover.

Boycott suggests four-day floodlit Tests

‘People today have jobs and they don’t want a Test match to last five days’ © Getty Images

Geoff Boycott has urged the game’s administrators to consider revamping Test cricket to make it more appealing to a modern audience.He said that crowds at recent Tests in Australia, India and South Africa had shown that in most countries the public no longer bought into the traditional five-day format.”I think the national boards of all the countries should take responsibility,” Boycott told Cricinfo. “The pace of life has changed. [Years ago] an India-Pakistan Test would be sold out twice over and you wouldn’t be able to get a seat. But people today have jobs and they don’t want a Test match to last five days.”I would recommend four-day Tests. I would try to increase the over-rate, because people want to pack more into life, and I would play day-night Tests. Kerry Packer tried it in 1977-78 and ’78-79. He had a few Tests that were played at night and they got good crowds. I think it is time the administrators did something about this.”India is one of the places to try it because their board is forward-looking. It can do whatever it wants: it is wealthy and powerful and it can get crowds in at night.”In the second season of World Series Cricket the Supertests were played over four days starting at 2.30pm and continuing until 10.30pm with shortened intervals. The total playing time was 30 hours – the same as in a normal Test – and the matches were played under lights. They were popular and attracted much higher audiences than the traditional daytime games.

Pakistan will be safe for Australia – Imran

Shoaib Malik: “It would be bad for the game and for the people in Pakistan if they did not come.” © Getty Images
 

Imran Khan believes Australia should go ahead with their scheduled tour of Pakistan this year despite the unrest in the country after the assassination of the former prime minister Benazir Bhutto. Imran, an opposition politician in Pakistan, said Cricket Australia and its players should not be influenced by images of street violence after Bhutto’s death and he did not expect the unrest to last too long.”I don’t think the cricketers are under any threat at all,” Imran told the Melbourne radio station . “Obviously it looks much worse from there than it is living in Pakistan. This is not going to last two months to when the Australians appear. In the context of cricket, there will be nothing to worry about if the tour is in March. I don’t think the Australians should have any worries.”Imran’s comments came as Shoaib Malik, the Pakistan captain, offered to take calls from any Australian players who had concerns over their security if the tour went ahead. Andrew Symonds said on the weekend that he would be willing to pull out of the trip if he was not satisfied his safety could be guaranteed.”I would like to speak to them personally and tell them that we will have good security for them in Pakistan,” Malik told the . “India have come here and there was a lot of talk then, but in the end there was no problem. It will be the same for Australia.”I do not want to comment about the politics. I am a sportsman and not very good about talking about politics. But I would like to say that with what is happening in my country, it is getting under control, and it will get better. There is still more than two months. It would be bad for the game and for the people in Pakistan if they did not come.”Cricket Australia is still planning to send a security delegation to Pakistan in February to assess the situation and determine whether the team can visit as planned. But the date of the Pakistan election – and whether it proceeds as scheduled on January 8 – is looming as a critical issue in whether Australia will deem conditions safe for the security delegation to make its trip.Nasim Ashraf, the Pakistan Cricket Board chairman, has again said there would be no repeat of 2002-03, when Pakistan’s home Tests against Australia were relocated to Sri Lanka and Sharjah. “Playing at a neutral venue is not an option with us,” Ashraf told , “because it’s not only cricket, it’s a matter of the development of the game and the fans’ interest so we are confident that Australia will not deprive our fans.”

Andhra pound Hyderabad

Andhra skipper Amit Pathak won the toss and elected to bat in their lastSouth Zone Ranji Trophy match of the season against Hyderabad, at Kurnool.Andhra pounded the Hyderabad attack amassing 285 for three in 90 overs, onthe first day. Openers Amit Pathak (64) and LNP Reddy (37) shared a 102 runpartnership for the first wicket. Pathak played an aggressive inningsblasting eleven boundaries in his 98 ball innings. Former India spinnerVenkatpathy Raju broke their partnership when he removed Pathak. Four runslater, Raju dismissed Reddy with the score board reading 106 for two.With both openers back in the pavilion in quick succession, GN Srinivas (76not out) and Y Venugopal Rao (59) set out to build the innings. They shareda 102 run partnership for the third wicket. GN Srinavas displayed a perfectblend of calculated attack and defence in his unbeaten innings. He hitseven boundaries in his 187 ball innings.Andhra ended the day with GN Srinivas and I Srinivas (34) at the crease.Hyderabad have 22 points and are leading the points table from their fourmatches so far. Andhra are fifth with 14 points.

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.

Sarwan pleased with strong return

Ramnaresh Sarwan, the Player of the Series, averaged 77.75 in the two Tests © Getty Images
 

Ramnaresh Sarwan has made a convincing return to the West Indies side ten months after a shoulder injury forced him out of action. His second-innings century in Trinidad helped West Indies hold off a first-ever series defeat to Sri Lanka at home and won him the Player-of-the-Series award. Satisfied with his performance, Sarwan said the months spent outside the team had given him time to think of what he needed to do.”I’ve been out for 10 months, players tend to mature around 26-27 and then it carries on till they are 33-34 and I hope that is going to be the case for me,” Sarwan said. “I’ve certainly gained a lot of experience and I think I can use that.”West Indies were set to chase 253 by Sri Lanka and they lost only four wickets in knocking off the runs on day four. Sarwan added 157 with Shivnarine Chanderpaul and fell when West Indies needed only 23 more to win. “After we lost Marlon [Samuels] I knew I had to form a good partnership with Shiv [Chanderpaul]. The good thing was that Shiv was flowing and I didn’t have to do all the scoring, he was positive and that paid off for us.”I’ve been getting off to good starts in this series, I wanted to do the same, pick the bad balls and fortunately I was able to do that and go on and get the hundred.” Sarwan scored 311 at 77.75 in the two Tests.Chris Gayle, the West Indies captain, was pleased to have Sarwan back in the side. “Missing Sarwan really hurt us and it is good to have him back out there,” Gayle said. “He showed how important he is at No. 3. It is good to have him back, he looked the part and I have to give him credit. I hope he can build on this and capitalise on his good starts and get those hundreds – big hundreds.”

The power of youth

The winner
Graeme Smith
By the time Graeme Smith had announced his arrival as South Africa’s hugely impressive new captain, a very different face of youth had taken centre stage. Even now it is impossible to believe that Smith was just 22 years old when he cracked 621 runs in his first three innings of South Africa’s Test series in England. His unflinching approach to batting and captaincy earned him a vast army of admirers, and though England clawed to a 2-2 series draw at the final attempt, Smith was the unanimous choice as South Africa’s Man of the Series.The other nominees
James Anderson
Within two months of his debut, James Anderson was representing England at the World Cup. In an otherwise disappointing tournament for England, he picked up 10 wickets in five matches, including a never-to-be-forgotten matchwinning spell against Pakistan under the lights at Cape Town. From that moment on, Anderson was the hottest property in English cricket, with go-faster stripes in his hair and rockets on his boots. He picked up five wickets on his Test debut – at Lord’s, no less – and followed up with another one-day demolition of Pakistan, which included a wicket with his first ball and a hat-trick with his last three.Omari Banks
Spearheading the West Indian youth brigade is a young offspinner, Omari Banks. As a bowler, his figures are little to write home about: on debut against Australia, he was spanked for 204 runs in his only innings. But Banks has more than one string to his bow – quite apart from a fiercely competitive edge, the boy can bat. His willpower was plain for all to see on a tumultuous morning in Antigua in the final Test against the Aussies. West Indies had been set a world record 418 for victory. When Banks came to the crease at No. 8, they were still 130 runs adrift, and a humiliating whitewash was looming. But Banks cames to the rescue, first in support of Shivnarine Chanderpaul, then as an equal partner with the aggressive Vasbert Drakes. Together they knocked off the 46 runs required for victory, and Banks was feted in his native Anguilla with a motorcade around the island. If these men, and more, are anything to go by, cricket’s future is in extremely capable hands.

Roller mania

Zimbabwe v West Indies, 1st Test, Harare, 3rd DayThe first Test between Zimbabwe and West Indies at Harare Sports Club almost came to an untimely ending before the start of the third day’s play, thanks to a freakish incident that seriously damaged the pitch.Play was due to start at 9.30, half an hour early, to make up for time lost on the second day. All was normal as the time approached, with the ground staff rolling the pitch and the players practising on the outfield. Then Zimbabwe’s Trevor Gripper unleashed a well-timed drive that sent a practice ball scudding on to the pitch – right in the path of the roller.The operator had no time to stop, and a split second later the ball lay embedded in the pitch – short of a length to a left-hander at the City (southern) end of the ground. The dent was about an inch deep, and any ball pitched in it could fly anywhere, an obvious danger if bowled at speed.Fortunately the Royal Harare Golf Club adjoins the ground, and an urgent request was made to borrow an auger, with the idea of lifting out the damaged area and replacing it with a similar piece from just behind the stumps. After all, if entire pitches are transported these days, why not a small fraction of a pitch?Robin Brown, the HSC groundsman and a former Zimbabwe opener from the eighties, was in charge of operations. Wisely he wanted to be sure it would work before risking the operation on the troublesome area in mid-pitch, so he tried it first behind the stumps and then in the middle of the pitch, but at the side. After all, the pitch here was much harder and drier than anything likely to be found on the golf course.When this was successful, the final operation on the damaged portion of the pitch was made. With a bit of cleaning up, the area was invisible and appeared to be thoroughly firm. Gundappa Viswanath, the match referee, gave the go-ahead, and play finally started two hours late. If any ball was pitched on that particular spot during the day, it was not obvious.This was a successful venture into unknown territory, and the Zimbabwe Cricket Union sighed a huge sigh of relief – if the match had had to be abandoned, the financial loss would have been appalling. But what if it had not been successful? There is nothing in the laws of cricket that would cover such a situation. But would the ICC approve a common-sense approach, should a small area of a cricket pitch be damaged beyond repair?Flexibility and common sense. These were exceptional circumstances at Harare, which fortunately had a happy ending. But it would be a shame should a whole Test match be abandoned due to an irreparable mishap to a tiny area of the pitch. It would also be annoying if the match referee had to waste time in lengthy communication with ICC headquarters to get permission to work around a unique situation that was not covered by the laws.Let us hope flexibility and common sense may be given free rein in unusual circumstances. Viswanath showed he possesses these by altering the time of the lunch interval today, a sacrilege that was strictly forbidden at Zimbabwe’s Lord’s Test this year, when after a late start half an hour’s play was possible before the players had to troop off so as to take lunch at the appointed time. And the world did not cave in at Harare.

Inzamam still uncertain for VB Series

Inzamam is in a late race to prove his fitness for the VB Series© AFP

Inzamam-ul-Haq will take a late decision on whether to make himself available for the VB Series against Australia and West Indies. Inzamam missed the last two Tests against Australia because of back problems, but has responded well to treatment.”I will decide then but I am trying my level best to be fit,” he told the BBC website. “The muscular injury was hurting deep when I was bending to take stance or while I was running. Now the pain has eased out but I have to make the right calculation about my comeback because I can’t afford to blow away my chances of touring India in March.”Inzamam has come under fierce criticism from former Pakistan players for his side’s 3-0 defeat to Australia. He scored only one run in his two innings at Perth last month, and Imran Khan, who was the captain when Inzamam first entered international cricket, condemned his attitude.”I have the highest regard for him but I wish Imran had seen the medical reports,” Inzamam said, responding to the criticism. “We are more disappointed and sad than our supporters because we are not as bad as the results reflect. We improved gradually but we played against the best team in the world in their backyard.”But Inzamam reckoned that some pride could be won back in the VB Series: “The players have been working extremely hard as they know this may be their last chance to win back the confidence and trust of their supporters. If we are a good and talented team, we have to perform well in this tournament.”

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