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Joshi, Bahutule share honours

Prashant Joshi and Sairaj Bahutule shared the honours on the secondday of the West Zone Ranji Trophy league match between Mumbai andSaurashtra at Gandhidham on Saturday. While the Saurashtra openerscored a patient 113, the Mumbai leg spinner finished with six wicketsfor 104 runs from 50 overs.Joshi, who had sustained the Saurashtra innings on the opening daywith an unbeaten 84 out of a total of 158 for three, was leg before toBahutule. He occupied the crease for 500 minutes, faced 391 balls andhit 15 fours. He was fourth out at 233 in the 122nd over.The other overnight batsman Birju Pathak scored 47 in a stay of fourhours. He faced 174 balls and hit four of them to the ropes. He wasalso leg before to Bahutule. Valuable knocks by late order batsmenRakesh Dhuru (30), Niraj Odedara (23) and Kamal Chavada (26) pushedthe score along, which was also inflated by 47 extras. Saurashtraultimately totalled 354 which was compiled off 162.3 overs and aftereleven hours occupation of the crease.Mumbai openers Vinayak Mane (14) and Wasim Jaffar (46) battedconfidently till stumps as the visitors were 63 for no loss off 16overs. Jaffar, much the dominant partner, has so far faced 41 ballsand hit seven of them to the fence.

Gloucestershire make painstaking progress

Gloucestershire remedied some of their early-season batting problems with a determined approach that enabled them to share the first-day honours at Edgbaston.Having collected just two batting points in their first four games, Gloucestershire doubled their total but they needed 104 overs to get to 250.They were kept in check by a tight Warwickshire attack on a decent batting pitch and were indebted to three half-century partnerships for holding things together.Kim Barnett and Dominic Hewson put on 80 for the first wicket before they both fell to Vasbert Drakes in an over in which the paceman took three wickets.Skipper Mark Alleyne and Chris Taylor then added 98 in 45 painstaking overs to rebuild the innings and, after they went in quick succession, it was left to Tim Hancock and Reggie Williams to regroup with an unbroken seventh-wicket stand worth 61.Alleyne’s 53 was his highest score of the season and Taylor’s 44 his best of the summer but both fell when Warwickshire bowled off-spinner Neil Smith and Mark Wagh in tandem.Taylor was leg before working Wagh’s fourth ball to leg and Alleyne, who struck five fours and faced 147 balls, then pushed Smith to slip.Jeremy Snape also perished to Smith when he carved him to point but Hancock and Williams nudged Gloucestershire closer to 300 in an innings for the first time this season as they closed on 261 for six.Earlier Drakes flattened Kim Barnett’s middle stump as the former England batsman pushed forward and was bowled through the gate, Hewson edged low to second slip where David Hemp held the catch and Matt Windows went lbw working to leg as he shuffled in front of his stumps.

Gilchrist to lead as Waugh rests

NORTHAMPTON – Adam Gilchrist will lead Australia in the one-day cricket match against Northamptonshire tomorrow while Steve Waugh takes a rest.Steve and Mark Waugh, Wade Seccombe and Shane Warne have been omitted as Australia continues its policy of rotating players.Fast bowler Nathan Bracken has been named in the XI despite having a minor shoulder strain.The match, starting at 8pm (AEST), is the last for Australia before back-to-back internationals against Pakistan and England in the tri-series tournament at Cardiff on the weekend.The team is: Adam Gilchrist (c), Matthew Hayden, Ricky Ponting, Michael Bevan, Damien Martyn, Andrew Symonds, Ian Harvey, Damien Fleming, Glenn McGrath, Jason Gillespie, Nathan Bracken (12th man to be added).

Alleyne leads from the front against dispirited Derbyshire

Mark Alleyne’s rich vein of form continued with his second century in successive matches to put Gloucestershire into a strong position at the end of the first day at Derby.The Gloucestershire captain added an unbeaten 114 to the 132 he made against Durham at Gloucester and with Kim Barnett, Chris Taylor and Jeremy Snape helping themselves to half-centuries, the visitors ended on 374-4.It added up to another dispiriting day for Derbyshire who took only one wicket between lunch and the close.Tim Munton bowled an impressive 10 over spell in the morning but Gloucestershire’s batsmen encountered few problems on a slow pitch which is expected to take turn later in the game.Barnett got Gloucestershire moving with some typically flashing strokes on his return to the county he left in 1998.His 73 included 10 fours, two of them all run and he looked set for a century until he played around a ball from Paul Aldred.Munton had snared Dominic Hewson and Matt Windows cheaply but Taylor and Alleyne added 147 in 48 overs before Taylor, who took a six and two fours from a Paul Aldred over, was lbw to the pace bowler for 83.Alleyne went to his century, his 21st in first-class cricket, from 202 balls and had shared an unbroken stand of 103 with Snape when the close signalled an end to Derbyshire’s torment.

Leicestershire set Surrey formidable target

Ben Smith smashed his second century of the season and his best score for two years as Leicestershire set Surrey a formidable victory target of 536 runs in the CricInfo Championship clash at Grace Road.Home captain Vince Wells finally called a halt to his side’s second innings run feast with the total at 472 for eight, leaving Surrey to face seven overs before the close.And, predictably, after a day in the field in the sauna-like conditions, the visitors lost a wicket with Nadeem Shahid edging Devon Malcolm low to third slip Trevor Ward with the score at 20. By the close Surrey were 28 for one, still needing another 508 runs for an unlikely win.With two days remaining the home side are firmly in the driving seat and, weather permitting, are hot favourites to clinch victory.It was certainly a stark contrast to the first day when 20 wickets fell, and Leicestershire’s performance second time round merely emphasised the fact that the pitch was blameless.Smith was the cornerstone of their efforts with a magnificent 179 off 281 balls with 21 fours before driving a catch to cover off the bowling of Adam Hollioake. Along the way Smith shared a third-wicket stand of 167 with Daniel Marsh and then put on 108 with Neil Burns for the seventh wicket.Marsh hammered 82 off 126 balls, the sixth time he has gone past 50 this summer, while wicket-keeper Burns was unbeaten on 66, his best Championship score of the season.Surrey were handicapped by the fact that leg spinner Ian Salisbury was off the field all day with a foot injury. This put a heavy workload on Saqlain Mushtaq but he responded with a marathon unbroken spell of 47.2 overs, bowling throughout the day until the declaration came. He finished with figures of five for 172 – and then came in as night-watchman when Shahid was out.

Australia name unchanged team for Third Test

Australia, requiring only a draw in the Third Test at Trent Bridge to retain the Ashes, have named an unchanged side to that which has beaten England in the first two Tests this summer.The announcement, which will surprise no one, means that Justin Langer misses out once more, as in-form Damien Martyn continues in the middle order.The settled side the Aussies have been able to field is in stark contrast to the chopping and changing forced upon England, who must win at Trent Bridge to have any chance of wresting the Ashes away from the rampant Australians.With their first choice middle order batsmen, Nasser Hussain, Graham Thorpe and Michael Vaughan all out, the urn is very much odds-on to be in the continued possession of the tourists come Monday evening.Captain Steve Waugh, however, is taking nothing for granted, pointing out that his team are always focused on the next Test Match: “It is really important to treat every Test Match as a special event, because it is.”The pitch looks pretty good. There is a good covering of grass, and it will not be an easy decision to make if we win the toss.”He also highlighted the return to form of Brett Lee and Shane Warne, both of whom have been taking wickets recently. Coupled with Glenn McGrath and Jason Gillespie, the ‘Dream Team’ will be looking to once more give England’s batsmen nightmares.Australian Team: M Slater, M Hayden, R Ponting, M Waugh, S Waugh (capt), D Martyn, A Gilchrist, S Warne, B Lee, J Gillespie, G McGrath.

Glamorgan hold nerve to win relegation dogfight

Glamorgan beat Surrey by three wickets in a CricInfo Championship Division One relegation nail-biter at The Oval today.Seemingly coasting at 163-3, chasing 200 for victory, Martin Bicknell (5-48 and 11-117 in the match, the fourth time he has taken 10 wickets in a game) took four wickets in seven balls before 19-year-old Mark Wallace saw the Welshmen home safely after tea.Surrey had lost their last three wickets for 12-runs in 47-balls in the morning, failing to set the 240 target that Surrey captain Bicknell had been looking for.Steve Watkin (4-28) and Simon Jones (3-36) returned season’s best figures, giving Glamorgan two and-a-half sessions to score 200. At lunch on 62-2 the match was evenly poised, with both Jimmy Maher and Matthew Maynard gone.However, a 70 ball, first 50 of the season, from opener Ian Thomas and a composed 51 from Mike Powell left Glamorgan just 37-runs from victory when Bicknell began a third spell.Smarting from the belief that he has “no chance” of an England recall after eight years in the international wilderness, Bicknell found pace and bounce in a four-wicket burst immediately prior to tea. Adrian Dale (15), Robert Croft (a second pair in three games), Powell and Darren Thomas were dismissed in his devastating spell.Dale and Powell edged seaming deliveries – both caught by ‘keeper Alec Stewart. Croft was lbw half-forward and Thomas fended a bouncer to Ben Hollioake, who caught a good one in the gully.But after tea former England U19 ‘keeper, Wallace, calmly saw his side home to a second CricInfo Championship win of the season.This leaves them just 12 points behind Surrey in the relegation dogfight.Meanwhile, Surrey all-rounder Gary Butcher’s county future is unclear as he is finding being dropped to accommodate returning Test players “hard to take.”

England U19s foiled in bid to level series

England’s hopes of squaring the Under-19 Test series against the West Indies foundered on a resilient fourth-wicket partnership and the inclement weather at Trent Bridge.The game was abandoned at tea on the fourth and final day with the tourists on 264-3, a lead of 60.When play began West Indies, at 45 for one, still needed another 159 to make England bat again.However, West Indies captain Brenton Parchment and Vishal Arjune batted superblyfor 50 minutes, adding another 57 runs before Arjune was lbw to James Anderson for 47 off 78 balls, with seven fours.Parchment fell for 57 to a wild stroke off England captain and off spinner James Treadwell to leave the tourists somewhat precariously placed on 130-3.But Tonito Willett and Omari Banks ensured that no more wickets fell as they put on an unbroken stand of 134. Willett hit 87, including 13 boundaries, while his partner made an even 50 with seven fours.But then the weather set in and the players failed to re-appear after tea. The third and final Test is at the Riverside on Tuesday week.

Saqlain and Bicknell strike back for Surrey against Somerset

Martin Bicknell and Saqlain Mushtaq provoked a Somerset collapse after the home side had reached 142-1, having won the toss on the opening day at Taunton.Four wickets fell for just 17 runs after tea, with Bicknell and Saqlain picking up two each, before Rob Turner and Ian Blackwell steadied things with a stand of 48 to help Somerset close on 207-6.After the morning session had been lost to steady rain, play finally got underway at 2.15pm, with 41 overs having been lost.Somerset were able to include Richard Johnson following his release from the England squad and had a further boost when skipper Jamie Cox won the toss and elected to bat.Cox and Matt Wood were soon making up for lost time as both found the boundary in the opening overs. Only Martin Bicknell of the Surrey bowlers caused any problems, going past the edge of Wood’s bat and seeing Cox kick the ball away from his stumps as it rolled towards them.It was Bicknell who made the breakthrough, yorking Wood, with the ball just flicking the bat before splaying the middle and off stumps. The 20-year-old batsman had made 24, with five fours, helping Cox put on 49.Cox and Mike Burns continued to punish anything loose. The Somerset captain brought up his half-century from 85 balls, with nine fours, and the partnership was worth 68 at tea as the home side reached 117-1 off 31 overs.But the rest of the day belonged largely to Surrey. Burns, on 38, was picked up off bat and pad to give Saqlain his first wicket and soon Peter Bowler doubled his tally by flicking a catch to mid-wicket.Cox had made 76 when carelessly cutting a short ball for Bicknell straight to Ben Hollioake at point, while Mark Lathwell drove all around a full-length ball from the paceman.Turner survived an appeal for a catch at third slip by Ian Ward offBicknell, with umpire Ray Julian ruling that the ball hadn’t carried, but fell for 29 to the last ball of the day, lbw to Ed Giddins.

Thoughts on the South Africa Test series

Andy Flower is a great cricketer. After his feats against the powerful South African bowling attack, this can be said without any doubt at all.He is not a batting genius in the mould of Sachin Tendulkar or Brian Lara. He is simply a very talented player who has made just about the most of his ability that any human being is capable of making. He is in the same mould as Steve Waugh, a batsman rightly respected and admired round the world for doing exactly the same. But Andy Flower, who has a higher batting average than Waugh and plays for a losing rather than a winning side, is still not a legend in the game worldwide, as he should be. Except to his fellow international cricketers, who voted him the International Player of the Year, even before the South African tour.Andy has now scored 4330 runs in his 54 Test matches at an average of 55.51; only Tendulkar, at 57.18, is higher among current players, and he has a better record in India than overseas. Andy has 11 Test centuries to his credit, and not a single one was easy. Perhaps it would be appropriate to list them, together with the circumstances in which they were made:1) 115 v India, at Delhi, 1992/93. Facing an Indian total of 536 for seven declared. Out of a total of 322; Grant Flower made 96 and nobody else much at all. Zimbabwe still lost by an innings.2) 156 v Pakistan, at Harare Sports Club, 1994/95. Went in with Zimbabwe 42 for three and the Pakistani bowlers moving the ball all over the place. Counter-attacked, shared a record partnership for brothers in Test cricket with Grant, who scored 201 not out – but it was Andy who seized the initiative from Pakistan and led to Zimbabwe’s first victory in Test cricket.3) 112 v England, at Queens Sports Club, 1996/97. In the first innings of the First Test, worked hard for his century to give Zimbabwe a total of 376. England just failed to win the only Test so far ever to end as a draw with scores level.4) 105 not out v Sri Lanka, at Colombo, 1997/98. No Test has such bitter memories for the players as this one, when television evidence shows that one umpiring decision after another went against Zimbabwe, allowing Sri Lanka to win by five wickets. Andy set up the position for what should have been a Zimbabwean win, with his century out of 299 in the second innings after a narrow first-innings lead of 26 and the match very much in the balance.5) 100 not out against Pakistan, at Queens Sports Club, 1997/98. Again the match was in the balance, as Zimbabwe had taken a first-innings lead of 65 but were staggering at 25 for four when Andy went in. Shared an unbroken partnership of 277 with Murray Goodwin (166 not out) that gave Zimbabwe the advantage, although Pakistan successfully fought out a draw.6) 129 against Sri Lanka, at Harare Sports Club, 1999/2000. Only Murray Goodwin and Guy Whittall gave him much support as his century in the second innings, after a first-innings deficit of 258, just failed to save Zimbabwe from defeat.7) 113 not out against West Indies, at Port-of-Spain, 1999/2000. The only batsmen on either side to pass 50 in the match on a difficult pitch, he scored his runs out of a total of 236, giving Zimbabwe a first-innings lead of 49. This should have led to victory, but the team crumbled under high pressure on a difficult pitch against Ambrose and Walsh in the second innings to be dismissed for 63.8) 183 not out against India, at Delhi, 2000/01. The first innings of the First Test, always critical, and his innings gave Zimbabwe a total of 422 before, in retrospect, a misguided declaration. Despite Andy’s 70 in the second innings, Zimbabwe lost.9) 232 not out against India, at Nagpur, 2000/01. Zimbabwe followed on early on the fourth day, 227 runs behind. Thanks to Andy, Zimbabwe saved the match.10) 142 against South Africa, at Harare Sports Club, 2000/01, in the first innings. Facing a South African total of 600 for three declared. Only Dion Ebrahim (71) of the leading batsmen gave him much support.11) 199 not out against South Africa, at Harare Sports Club, 2000/01, in the second innings. Only Hamilton Masakadza (85) of the others reached 20. This innings meant that Andy scored over half his team’s entire run total in the match and avoided an innings defeat, at least.All these centuries were also scored when keeping wicket, and three (numbers two, six and seven) when captain as well. As noted, all were scored in pressure situations with the match in the balance or Zimbabwe facing defeat. Surely no cricketer in the history of the game has for so long borne such a burden with such success as has Andy Flower.The commentators felt that his certainty of shot selection throughout the series was matchless. Rarely was he beaten; hardly ever did he play the wrong stroke. I would add to that his sheer mental strength. South Africa are fearsome opponents, second only to Australia, and at Harare they were in a position of strength and eager to rub it in. Andy yielded nothing. After ten hours keeping wicket, he spent almost 15 more at the batting crease, for hour after hour, never bogged down, never giving anything away.If Zimbabwe had even one more batsman with the mental strength of Andy Flower, we would have a much stronger team. Sometime in the near future, we hope to interview Andy and get him to share the secrets of his mental strength. He has spent endless hours perfecting his batting technique, with far more dedication than certain other players that could be named. He has also spent his life developing his mental strength. We need more players prepared to do this.THE NEXT ANDY FLOWER?
Perhaps Hamilton Masakadza will be our next Andy Flower. Hamilton again frustrated the opposition in his second and third Test matches, scoring 85 in Harare and a vital 42 not out to help save the match in Bulawayo.The Bulawayo match was a particular test of his temperament, as Claude Henderson was bowling dangerously well on a crumbling pitch and Zimbabwe were suddenly facing the possibility of defeat without being mentally prepared for it. Hamilton was visibly edgy at first, but he toughed it out. When he hit Henderson for a six and a four in an over, taking Zimbabwe to four runs of parity with South Africa with 20 minutes left for play, the tourists knew they could not win and called the match off.Hamilton has played very significantly in each of his three Tests to date, although only in the second innings so far. He is a more accomplished player at 18 than Andy Flower was; Andy did not even make the full Zimbabwean side until he was 20, when he was still very limited in attack but with a strong defence.Next year, though, Hamilton plans to go to university, and is hoping for Cape Town. He believes he can handle both a full university course and his cricket career for Zimbabwe, but he will certainly be tested. So far he has shown great mental strength, and it is to be hoped he will manage to combine his two `careers’ for as long as is necessary and become our next world-class batsman.ZIMBABWE BOWLING
I have never seen our bowling, which hardly constituted an `attack’, look more helpless than on the first day of the series in Harare. Openers Herschelle Gibbs and Gary Kirsten were away at a rate of knots, scoring at a run a ball and taking only 50 and 53 balls respectively to reach their fifties. South Africa looked in midafternoon as if they were going to score 500 runs in the day, but with one-speed Kallis batting at only four an over they slowed down in the final session, being content with `only’ 414 for one.It should have been two, as Kallis snicked a catch to the keeper when on 22, but it went undetected by the umpire. But a slaughter was always likely for Zimbabwe’s feeble bowling. True, the bowling was seriously weakened by injuries, with Andy Blignaut, Bryan Strang and Brighton Watambwa all missing the series. But we should have adequate reserves, certainly bowlers who can at least bowl accurately.The accuracy of Bryan Strang was sorely missed. The selectors did not look around for another bowler who could be relied on to keep a brake on the scoring, and so there was nobody able to put the slightest pressure on the batsmen, who had to do nothing more than wait for the loose balls, delivered regularly, and climb in. They need have looked no further than the commentary box. Pommie Mbangwa, a forgotten man these days it seems, had to sit upstairs and comment on the play when he could have done the job far better. Gary Brent is another of lesser pace but greater accuracy than those on display.Sadly, it must be admitted that Heath Streak on current form is no longer a great bowler, although still the best paceman we have. He took no wickets in the series, but hopefully this will bring home to him the need to pay extra attention to that side of his game. He has rarely bowled his best since taking over the captaincy. His batting has flourished with the responsibility, although not in this series, but his bowling has declined.He is not hitting the gloves as hard, his line strays too often and he is not moving the ball as dangerously as he used to. At 27 and fast-medium rather than genuinely fast, he should be in his prime. Whatever the problem is, Zimbabwe needs him to sort it out, even if it means resigning the captaincy.His captaincy too appeared limited, as he showed few ideas of how to winkle out the South African batsmen. On a turning pitch in Bulawayo, with Paul Strang injured, he might for example have tried leg-spinner Masakadza, or even Alistair Campbell. Anything for a change, as the established bowlers were getting nowhere. It was disappointing, and it hurts to say so of one of Zimbabwe’s greatest players, but we know he can do far better.Finally, a word of praise for the new Harare Sports Club ground curator, Dirk Moore-Gordon, who has come over to headquarters from the Academy ground at Country Club. During the past two seasons the Harare Sports Club pitch earned a notorious reputation for surfaces over-friendly to pace bowlers, which so often played into the hands of Zimbabwe’s opponents – especially when they won the toss and put us in, as invariably happened. It was a very good pitch for the South African Test, and hopefully it will force our bowlers to improve their game if they want to take wickets on it.WHY AUSTRALIA ARE BETTER THAN SOUTH AFRICA
Australia and South Africa are the two strongest teams in world cricket at the moment, with Australia slightly ahead. The Bulawayo Test, I believe, shows why South Africa are still a little behind their great rivals.After the loss of the second day’s play, South Africa seemed to be satisfied with the prospect of a draw. Although it was never easy to score runs on a pitch that was benign, but a little too slow and dry, they made no real effort to chase the Zimbabwe total of 419 in quick time. They batted on until tea on the final day, when they declared with a lead of exactly 100.One session was hardly enough to bowl Zimbabwe out a second time – although with some of our batting collapses nothing was impossible. But, with the ball turning sharply, South Africa suddenly scented possible victory. They crowded the batsmen, applied the pressure and the game came alive again. In the end the determination of Andy Flower and Hamilton Masakadza saw Zimbabwe through.Australia would have played it differently. After the close of the Zimbabwean innings, they would have been hell-bent on victory. They would not have pottered around as Kallis and his companions did at less than three runs an over. They would have gone for the runs, possibly even declared behind, and got Zimbabwe in to bat again certainly before lunch on the final day – even if they did not have Shane Warne in their team.South Africa do not have that same intense hunger for and determination to win that Australia have, and that is why Australia remain the top team. South Africa are extremely good, there is no doubt of that, but the Australians have that extra commitment to victory that has made them top and will probably keep them there for some time to come.

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