Full-time coach could be dropped

Record debts may force Cricket Scotland to shelve plans for having a full-time coach for the national team, according to . The debts, said to be in the region of £50,000, will be announced at the forthcoming AGM.Although the Scottish board will receive a grant from the Sportsscotland, the coaching position may still have to be scrapped. The news comes just weeks after Scotland thrashed Canada in the final of the ICC Intercontinental Cup.Over 20 applications have been received to take over from Tony Judd, who worked on a part-time basis and retires from the post at the end of the year. Omar Henry, South Africa’s convenor of selectors even expressed an interest. Whoever the coach turns out to be in 2005, their main task will be helping Scotland finish in the top five of the ICC Trophy, to be held next July in Ireland, in order to qualify for the 2007 World Cup.

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.

Third century for Rudolph as SA 'A' crush Kenya by 148 runs

Jacques Rudolph scored his third century in nine days as the South African A team romped to a 148-run victory over Kenya in a one-day match against Kenya at the Laudium Oval on Tuesday.The SA A team reached 274 for four in their 50 overs and theb bowled Kenya out for 126 in under 34 overs as Justin Kemp and Charl Langeveldt claimed five wickets apiece.Earlier in the day Rudolph, who made 109 for the Nicky Oppenheimer XI against India at Randjesfontein last Monday and 143 for the Titans against Free State in Bloemfontein on Tuesday, followed these scores with an unbeaten 134 against the Kenyans.Rudolph emerged as one of South Africa’s brightest young talents last summer and the rich vein of form he is presently mining must surely have marked him as a player with a bright international ahead of him.He may, however, have to wait his turn. The South African top three – Herschelle Gibbs, Gary Kirsten and Jacques Kallis – have been equally prolific in recent weeks, but if the 20-year-old Rudolph continues to accumulate runs in this fashion he could well force his way into the South African squad to tour Australia at the end of the year.Apart from Rudolph, Martin van Jaarsveld made 67 while Kemp bludgeoned 40 off 32 balls as the Kenyan attack took a pounding.The Kenyans were unable make any kind of fight of it with only Steve Tikolo offering meaningful resistance as he took 79 balls to make 59. Kemp started the rot with the wickets of Ravindu Shah and Kennedy Otieno and then Langeveldt joined in as the South African pair scythed through the batting.Kemp finished with five for 35 with Langeveldt taking five for 25.

Points shared as rain washes out play

Match abandoned
Scorecard A persistent drizzle in Durban resulted in India’s opening match of the ICC World Twenty20 being abandoned without a ball being bowled. Both India and Scotland got a point apiece, and it left India in a situation where they had to avoid a heavy defeat against Pakistan on Friday to make it through to the Super Eights. Scotland finished their engagements with a point after the 51-run defeat to Pakistan in their opening game.Ryan Watson won the toss and decided to send India in to bat at Kingsmead, but the rain came down again long before the players could take the field. For India, who have played just one Twenty20 game, it meant a day-long wait to give a largely new-look side a hit.Names synonymous with Indian cricket over the past decade and more – Sachin Tendulkar, Rahul Dravid and Sourav Ganguly – were missing, and for the prodigal sons like Virender Sehwag and Irfan Pathan, it was an opportunity to revive stalled careers. They’ll now be back in the fray for one of the tournament’s marquee clashes, against Pakistan – assuming the inclement weather makes way for some sunshine.

Rolton stars in bowl-out thriller

Australia 5 for 141 (Rolton 71*) tied with New Zealand 7 for 141 (Fahey 43, Rolls 41). Australia won the bowl-off 2-1
Scorecard

Julie Hayes, the hero of the bowl-off © Getty Images

Australia won a thrilling women’s Twenty20 international against New Zealand in a bowl-off after the match had finished in a tie.Karen Rolton was Australia’s hero with the bat, cracking 71 off 59 balls. With Australia needing three to win from the final delivery, she smacked the ball to deep midwicket but could only manage to run two.In the bowl-off, both sides missed with their first two attempts before Australia’s Sarah Andrews hit the stumps in the third round, only for Nicola Browne to level things up immediately. Julie Hayes, who took 2 for 19 during the New Zealand innings, secured Australia’s victory when she hit with the fifth and final ball.Twelve past Test players from Queensland were presented with baggy green caps during the day as part of Cricket Australia’s attempts to recognise all their male and female representatives. Five one-day internationals also received a commemorative lapel pin with their player number.Joyce Brewer, a 91-year-old who appeared in the first women’s Test in Brisbane in 1934, was honoured alongside players including Katherine Raymont, Julia Price and Joanne Broadbent.

Ganguly happy with bowlers' performance

Sourav Ganguly was pleased: with the team’s performance and his own © Getty Images

Sourav Ganguly, the Indian captain, has praised the bowlers, Irfan Pathan in particular, for an impressive performance that gave India victory by an innings and 90 runs against Zimbabwe in the first Test at Bulawayo.”We bowled well in the second innings. It is a good sign that Irfan [Pathan] got a few wickets with the new ball while they were playing our spinners well. Pathan clicked, Laxman was best, Dravid played well and Harbhajan’s performances were the main highlights to be noted here.” Ganguly was quoted as saying by PTI.”The pressure was always going to be there as I have not played well for the last 6-7 months, plus expectations were there from me,” Ganguly added when asked about his century under pressure.Tatenda Taibu, the Zimbabwe captain, commended his team’s performance in the first innings. “Our guys delivered better in the first innings but a score of 300 plus would have been better,” said Taibu. “It was a different story today. Our guys played spin well but the ball was swinging a lot and that did the damage to our side.”Irfan Pathan, the Man of the Match with nine wickets and a half century, was happy with his performance. “The ball was swinging well and I could get a few wickets. It seems it is going to be pretty well from here onwards,” said Pathan. “I’ve got some experience to swing the ball here. I was not bowling badly but a bit short, I realised that and changed it [the length] and got the wickets. It could have been a better performance as I am working hard. I am working hard on batting and will definitely improve.”

Win in Sri Lanka was a huge boost – Martyn

Damien Martyn celebrates an outstanding century in the Chennai Test against India© Getty Images

Let’s go back to the Test series in Sri Lanka. Scoring two centuries in three matches must have been heartening after a lean patch?
It wasn’t a lean patch, I just hadn’t made a hundred and that kept harping on me. So it was good to perform and see the team win the series. It was good playing the best bowler of spin [Muttiah Muralitharan], and it was a great team effort. Basically we used our feet well against him and the others and that paid off. That series has boosted our confidence and we know we are in for some tough conditions [in India].It has been more than a decade since your international debut. Can you talk about the various important phases in your career?
You change, your batting changes and your mindset changes. You feel much more comfortable at 32 than when you were 21 playing at this level; you are more experienced, you know how to prepare, how to go about your career. Your batting just evolves – it becomes tighter, you play the conditions better, you are just a smarter batsman. When you are young I don’t think you understand that at all.You are a stylish batsman, but not extravagant. How did you hone this fine art as you were growing up?
It’s just natural. All of us just bat in a different way and as a kid you bat in a certain way and bowl in a certain way, and you are stuck with that for the rest of your life. You hone the basic technique of getting the foot to the ball, playing with a straight bat and then your natural stuff comes in and from there you develop your own game.At heart are you an aggressive batsman?
All of us in Australian cricket want to be aggressive and score in a certain way, but it depends on conditions. I mean, like in India, it’s very hard to sometimes bat that way. It just depends on how the game goes, and you adjust accordingly.Which have been your best knocks?
My hundreds in Sri Lanka were one of the best because batting in those tough conditions and playing Murali is always hard.How do you handle the pressure when you go out to bat?
It is very hard to exactly talk about the mental process, but the most important one is stay out there as long as possible and put as much pressure on the opposition as possible.Who have been important people who have stayed by you all along?
Too many people, but my family is the biggest thing. They have always supported me from a young age, and whether I am making hundreds or not they always present.

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.

New Zealand 'A' succumb meekly to Railways spin

Following their marathon batting performance in the quarter-finalclash against MRF, New Zealand ‘A’ failed abysmally in their semifinal encounter against Indian Railways at the MA Chidambaram Stadiumin Chennai. On winning the toss and electing to bat, New Zealand ‘A’were shot out for 129 in 57 overs by the spin duo of Sanjay Satpathyand Murli Kartik. In response, Indian Railways are a healthy 114/4 andin sight of the crucial first innings lead.It was Mark Richardson, dismissed in the first over every timepreviously in this series who gave the innings a semblance ofrespectability. Carrying the bat with a patient 59, Richardson watchedin dismay as his partners all failed to reach double figures when theluncheon interval was taken. New Zealand ‘A’ were teetering at thebrink at 77/7. A late in the order ‘recovery’ from the last twobatsmen, Shane Bond (14) and Paul Wiseman (10) saw New Zealand ‘A’limp to 129 all out.The heroes on the day for Indian Railways were without a shadow ofdoubt their spinners. Former India left arm spinner Murali Kartikscalped 3/34 from 18 overs and knocked the top order out. Once heopened the flood gates, off spinner Sanjay Satpathy took over, gettingrid of the last six wickets. Satpathy’s 6/55 off 21 overs was easilythe highlight of the day.In response, Indian Railways lost three quick wickets and were in aspot of bother at 23/3. Murali Kartik however, underlined hisimportance to the Railways team, spanking an unbeaten 54 that included8 fours and 2 sixes. Yere Goud, unbeaten on 34 (97 balls, 6 fours)helped Railways get within striking distance of the New Zealand ‘A’first innings total.* CAB recover after early blowsHalf-centuries from three middle-order batsmen enabled CricketAssociation of Bengal (CAB) to post a healthy 273 for eightafter winning the toss and electing to bat against Jolly Roversat the end of day one of their three-day MRF Buchi Babusemi-final at the IIT-Chemplast grounds in Chennai on Friday.Saikat Mukherjee, Sanjib Sanyal and Utpal Chatterjee were the men whohelped CAB, 52 for four at one stage, to recover.Bengal had lost their captain and last match centurion Rohan Gavaskarfor no score at that stage. But first, Mukherjee and Sanyal, put on 104runs, the best partnership of the day. Then Chatterjee, more known forhis left-arm spin, played a patient knock of 57 not out to help CABreach a competitive score. Chatterjee’s ninth-wicket partnership withSaurashish Lahiri (21), which has already yielded 39 runs, was thenext best partnership.Mukherjee made an aggressive 66 off 76 balls with four fours whileSanyal made 59 off 120 balls. For Rovers, left-arm spinner R Ramkumar,who claimed three wickets each, was the most successful bowler.Opening bolwer L Balaji climed two wickets.When play resumes on Saturday, the first thing CAB will be hoping foris to see Chatterjee guiding them beyond the psychological 300-runmark.

No play on second day too

There was never any chance of play on the second day of the South Zoneunder-22 match between Kerala and Andhra at Kakinada on Friday.Cyclonic rains caused damage to the wicket and the outfield andumpires KG Lakshminarayan and S Balachandran, after severalinspections, called off play. Rain had ruled out play on the openingday on Thursday.

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