Vaughan and Warne play to type

Shane Warne: an emotional day © Getty Images

They say the way a man plays cricket reveals character and if the Old Trafford press conference is anything to go by they are right. The performances of Shane Warne and Michael Vaughan in the pavilion library pretty well matched what we had seen on the field earlier.Warne came into the library and bewitched many of his audience. He began with the one that looked straightforward but kicked in an unexpected direction. Was taking his 600th Test wicket as good as he imagined? “Yeah. I think it’s hard to wrap your head round your achievements until you actually finish playing. Terry Jenner [Warne’s mentor] came out when I got 300 wickets and said I had a chance to get 600. I said: ‘Has he been drinking all day? He probably had been as well.'”Then the regulation legbreak. “It was a shame I couldn’t get 603 or 604. I thought England played extremely well. I don’t like using clichés. I like to make up my own but I’ll bowl worse and get four or five wickets. We dropped too many catches.”Next Warne was faced with a tricky proposition, Kevin Pietersen in fine form perhaps. What was with the wristband, the one he kissed on reaching 600? “Ermm. The wristband’s a pretty emotional one. When Simone and the three children went home Brooke my eldest daughter gave me it and said ‘you’ve got to be strong daddy’. It just says ‘Strength’ on it and she wears one and the other kids wear one. I spoke to the three kids this morning and Brooke said I like your white wristband daddy, and I said if it happens today then it’s for you. So that’s what that it’s about.”Next up a not-so-well-disguised swipe at Leeds. “I’ve got a special relationship with the Old Trafford crowd,” he enthused. “I bowled my first ball here against England and tried to work out what Ashes cricket really meant. I don’t know about them alternating the Tests between here and Leeds. The wicket here is a lot better than Leeds – that’s a dodgy wicket. You’ve got a fantastic flat pitch here that’s got something in it for everyone. I’m very surprised there’s not a Test match here every year.”But you don’t get to 600 Test wickets without being able to look after your own interests and Warne, having pleased his audience, ended with a plug. “As I’ve said in my columns for The Times, I think England have got match-winners for the first time.”Before Warne came the man who had spent most of the day padding him away, Michael Vaughan. Vaughan had got to his hundred without chancing his arm and he wasn’t about to get reckless in the press conference. “Obviously I’m very delighted with the first day’s play. I always talk of the first day against Australia as very important. You have to make sure you’re in the game and I think we are in the game.” So far so defensive.On Ian Bell: “He showed today he’s got the temperament to succeed at the top. To get 59 not out under that kind of gas, I think he was stuck on 18 for a number of balls against McGrath and Warne, two of the greats of the game, and for him to come through should do his confidence the world of good.”What were you saying to him? “Not a great deal,” said Vaughan with his trademark faraway smile. Next he opened out slightly about Warne: “He’s a true great. He can stop there now. He’s got his 600 and that’s about enough.”On his 166: “I can only control what I can do and that’s what I tried to do. Really play on instinct and go out and enjoy my batting. That’s what I tried all day and fortunately it paid off. I’ve said all along that the four innings I’ve had leading in to this game I felt three of them were good balls. I always believe a run of low scores has got to end somewhere. I tried to enjoy my batting and play on instinct.”But he certainly wasn’t speaking on instinct. “We’re delighted to be 341 for 5. Yes we lost two late wickets but if you look at the day it could have been a lot worse. With an Alec Stewart-like: “If we can get it reverse-swinging again then we can put their batsman under a lot of pressure,” he was off, smiling in that far-off way of his, and comprehensively outpointed by Warne. But matches are not won in press conferences, as Vaughan well knows.

Five-wicket Franklin frazzles England

New Zealand 103 for 3 (Fleming 31, Harmison 3-38) beat England 101 (Franklin 5-42) by seven wickets
Scorecard

Marcus Trescothick traipses off after being bowled for 14© Getty Images

England picked up their dismal one-day form from where they had left off against West Indies at Trent Bridge, as New Zealand completed a thumping seven-wicket victory with exactly half the day’s allotted overs left unused. Under overcast skies and on a seamer-friendly pitch, New Zealand’s hero was their exciting left-armer James Franklin, who tore through a woeful batting line-up to finish with the magnificent figures of 5 for 42. Although Steve Harmison replied in kind in front of his home crowd, New Zealand needed just 17.2 overs to complete their victory target of 102.Franklin, who began the season playing club cricket in Lancashire, was one of the stars of New Zealand’s third-Test defeat at Trent Bridge earlier this month. Once again he bowled with pace, control and late movement from his tricky left-arm line, as Stephen Fleming’s decision to bowl first was instantly vindicated. For the second match running, Marcus Trescothick and Michael Vaughan were unable to provide their side with the necessary platform, and given the paucity of England’s middle-order resources, another embarrassment was on the cards long before it became a reality.Franklin might have struck with his very first delivery, as Vaughan jabbed down late on an inducker and squeezed it away to the fine-leg boundary for four. Instead, it was the steady seam of Jacob Oram who made the first incision, as Trescothick galumphed down the track and aimed an ugly heave across the line (24 for 1). Trescothick had started with intent, with three bullish boundaries to launch his innings, but over-confidence soon got the better of him.It did for Vaughan as well. He unfurled a glorious cover-drive as Franklin overpitched, but three balls later, he was bowled all-ends-up by one that nipped back through the gate (30 for 2). On Sunday, Geraint Jones’s promotion to No. 3 was a qualified success, but this time he under-edged an attempted square cut and was bowled for 5. Seven runs later, the local boy Collingwood was gone as well. He swished at Franklin as if he was expecting another inducker, but instead the ball held its line and the stand-in wicketkeeper, Gareth Hopkins, completed his first catch in New Zealand colours.Not even a much-needed drinks break could stop the rot. From the first ball after the resumption, Andrew Strauss (8) top-edged a well-directed bouncer from Franklin and Oram completed an excellent low catch at fine leg (51 for 5). Though Ian Blackwell and Anthony McGrath each slashed a four through backward point to keep the runs dribbling, Franklin was on a roll, and Fleming was only too willing to ride with him.Blackwell was trapped plumb lbw by Franklin’s first delivery of his tenth over, before Ashley Giles – back in the side at the expense of Rikki Clarke – was sent on his way for a first-ball duck by a venomous off-stump delivery that took the edge and whistled through to Hopkins. Darren Gough survived the hat-trick ball – just – and saw out the over, but he couldn’t keep Chris Cairns out of the limelight for long, and soon drove a thick edge to Fleming at slip (76 for 8).McGrath, who is getting used to being on a hiding to nothing, was then adjudged caught-behind as he tried to cut an Oram inducker, and at 78 for 9, England were staring at a new record low in one-day cricket, with their 86 against Australia at Old Trafford in 2001 under embarrassing threat. James Anderson and Steve Harmison did their level best to salvage the situation, with a spirited last-wicket stand, and Harmison produced the loudest cheer of the day when he was clumsily dropped by Fleming at slip. But although the last pair inched England into three figures, Daniel Vettori wrapped up proceedings as Anderson attempted a slog-sweep out of the rough.

The scoreboard says it all© Getty Images

In reply, New Zealand rattled along at six runs an over as Vaughan committed his team to all-out attack. Harmison grabbed three wickets in seven balls in the middle of a hostile spell, but New Zealand already had 48 on the board when he made his first breakthrough. By then the back of the run-chase had already been broken.With a valuable bonus point available for a swift finish, Fleming had launched the innings with aplomb, twice tickling Harmison for four behind square and driving Gough through the covers two overs in succession, on his way to 31 from 34 balls. He was eventually caught by Gough at third man, as he attempted to uppercut a Harmison bouncer.Nathan Astle had been served notice of Harmison’s intent with a stinging bouncer that cracked into the peak of his helmet, although Anderson obligingly provided him with a brace of four-balls to ease the pressure. Harmison, though, was not to be denied, trapping Astle lbw for 15 as he padded up on off stump. Hamish Marshall then flapped his ninth delivery to Giles at leg gully, but then Craig McMillan and Scott Styris eased New Zealand to victory.Astonishingly, England have not won a one-day international batting first since their Anderson-inspired victory over Pakistan at the 2003 World Cup. On this evidence, it is will be quite some time before they rectify that statistic.

Sandeep Patil takes charge of India A

Sandeep Patil, Kenya’s former coach, was today given charge of the India A team amid speculation he will eventually take over the senior team from John Wright.Patil, who opted to leave Kenya after masterminding their surpriserun into the semi-finals during the World Cup, will manage India A on asix-week tour of England starting next month.Patil, 47, was a member of India’s World Cup-winning squad in 1983 andhas already had a stint as the national coach when he was in charge for a few months in 1996 before being dumped. However, his new role with India A only five weeks after quitting his job with Kenya is thought to be the first step towards becoming the senior coach after Wright’s contract ends next March.Patil said he was not surprised at being rehabilitated in India so soonafter leaving Kenya. “I was in regular touch with Indian Cricket Board President, Jagmohan Dalmiya, and had conveyed to him my intention to work with the Indian players.” He added: “I would have been happy even if I had been given charge of the under-19 team."Patil then played down speculation of replacing Wright as national coach: “I am not looking at the senior job yet. Besides, John has been doing a wonderful job with the national team and I would love to interact with him.” The India A team, who will play matches against English counties and one game against the touring South Africans during their tour, will be led by Shiv Sunder Das.

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.”

TT Battle: Karlan Grant vs Steve Mounie

That has been the Terriers’ main downfall, hasn’t it? Accompany a lack of defensive stability across the course of the season has been a lack of a regular goalscoring output, which is key as to they find themselves slumped at the bottom of the Premier League.

Huddersfield Town have scored just 18 goals this season in the League, with their joint top scorer being Karlan Grant, a January transfer window signing.

Following Grant’s brace at the weekend, it seems certain he will be Jan Siewert’s first-choice striker for their remaining seven games of the season, but we can still discuss the impact that the main two options offer…

Steve Mounie

Football Soccer – Premier League – Crystal Palace vs Huddersfield Town – London, Britain – August 12, 2017 Huddersfield Town’s Steve Mounie celebrates scoring their second goal REUTERS/Tolga Akmen EDITORIAL USE ONLY. No use with unauthorized audio, video, data, fixture lists, club/league logos or “live” services. Online in-match use limited to 45 images, no video emulation. No use in betting, games or single club/league/player publications. Please contact your account representative for furth

Mounie has just two League goals and three assists in 26 League games this season. A woeful return.

The 24-year-old’s all-round game has been poor this season as although he has had a lack of service, he has certainly struggled to bring teammates into play and be clinical in front of goal, which is what his play-style is based around.

Grade: D-

Karlan Grant

After scoring 14 goals and providing five assists for Charlton in the first half of this campaign, Grant signed for Town in late January and since his arrival, he has looked bright in his six appearances so far.

The 21-year-old offers a completely different outlet to Mounie and one that is more efficient too, given his three goals in a Huddersfield shirt already. He makes lots of runs in-behind the opponent’s backline, gets involved in the build-up play often and has a relentless work-rate – all of these traits will serve him well with Town in the future.

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Grade: B+

TT VERDICT

Provided he is fit, Grant must be Siewert’s only striking option for the latter stage of the season. With fate all but sealed, it provides a good opportunity for Grant to develop chemistry between his teammates and continue to prosper in West Yorkshire, which will only better Town’s chances of making it back to the Premier League at the first time of asking.

'Didn't dream of a start like this' – Rabada

Eddie Leie had the best returns by a South African on T20 debut. Kagiso Rabada finished with the best figures by anyone on ODI debut. It’s no wonder, then, that Hashim Amla could joke about the possibility of another fresh face to field on Sunday.”With two debutants doing so well, I think we should fly someone in tomorrow to play on Sunday, so they can also do well,” Amla said, quickly clarifying that he was only having a laugh.South Africa do not have any other uncapped players in the limited-overs’ squad and no obviously promising ones bubbling under, but the youngsters they do have are coming through and doing so well. Apart from Leie and Rabada, Rilee Rossouw is making good after his dodgy start of four ducks in six innings in ODIs and South Africa will have some new players in the Test squad. Simon Harmer and Stiaan van Zyl both impressed on debut and Temba Bavuma and Reeza Hendricks will want to carve a niche for themselves.To all of them, Amla has a simple message. “From the team’s perspective, we don’t have great expectations. We want guys to do well and perform at their best,” he said. And if the results are great, as they have been so far, that’s an added bonus.That’s something Rabada already knows. In little over a year, he has gone from being an Under-19 World Cup winner to an international headliner, but he is not overwhelmed. “Everything has been coming my way but I have just kept it simple, made sure I am ready to play, make sure I live the life an athlete is supposed to live – to a certain extent,” he said. “I didn’t dream of a start like this.”Now that it’s happened, Amla expects Rabada to understand that it won’t happen every time. “It’s not rocket science. When you have expectation like that – you can’t take six wickets every game,” Amla said. “One thing that works in his favour, he works extremely hard and comes from a grounded background and understands you can go from hero to zero in one game. Sunday is another game. The way we look at it is that he has had a great game today. We know the person that he is, it’s not like he is going to rest and say I will live off my six wickets for the rest of my life.”And Rabada has already showed his captain that he knows that. “Every time you represent your country, you have the responsibility to make sure you fulfill your role. Every game, I am going to make sure I am ready and if I play, I am going to try to do well.”But for tonight, Rabada can enjoy his success and he will. The wicket he took the most pleasure in was the first – Tamim Iqbal – because “I thought that was a pretty good ball.” And the hat-trick. “That was a fluke. I went for a yorker and missed it by miles.” Not a bad miss at all.

Ireland A see off Denmark

Ireland A completed back-to-back wins over Denmark at Stormont, but it was anything but one-way traffic and Denmark finished with plenty to build on.On Saturday, Ireland did dominate, easing to a seven-wicket win with more than 20 overs in hand. Denmark’s batsmen all struggled in bowler-friendly conditions as they crawled to 126, and while Ireland lost wickets, they never looked likely to be in any serious trouble.On Sunday, Ireland were more fortunate and they needed a last-wicket stand of 41 to rescue them after they were reduced to 112 for 9, Thomas Hansen and Bishar Shah sharing eight wickets. In reply, Denmark recovered from 20 for 3 to 94 for 4 before their innings crumbled.

Ganguly sought Wright's apology – Shukla

Ganguly had to intervene in the Wright-Sehwag incident, says manager © Getty Images

A sobbing Virender Sehwag, an incensed Indian team and an angry Sourav Ganguly, the captain, demanding an apology from coach John Wright. This was the tense scene in the Indian dressing-room at The Oval in 2002 after Wright hd held Sehwag by the collar and “barked” at him for throwing away his wicket in a NatWest Trophy match against Sri Lanka in England.The former New Zealand skipper has gone public with this sensational incident in his just-published book and more details of what happened emerged today from the then manager of the Indian team Rajiv Shukla, now a senior office-bearer of the Indian board.Asked about Wright’s revelation, a reluctant Shukla told PTI that he had kept the incident under wraps all these years because what happens inside the dressing-room is not supposed to be divulged. However, this no longer applied as Wright had spilled the beans, he said.”We were sitting in the balcony outside the dressing room at The Oval. Sehwag had just got out and gone into the dressing-room. Suddenly an agitated captain Ganguly came out from the room and complained to me that the coach had slapped Sehwag who was sobbing,” Shukla recalled. “I rushed to the dressing-room and found that Sehwag was indeed sobbing. He told me that Wright had pushed him. I patted him and controlled him.”Shukla then went looking for the coach. “He was not in the dressing-room but after some effort I found him in a small room adjacent to it. He was all by himself, tensed up and smoking as he usually did whenever he was in tension,” he said.Shukla said he had told Wright that he should not have treated Sehwag in this manner and that the opening batsman was justifiably upset. “Wright immediately accepted his mistake. My own view is that the coach wanted Sehwag to score more runs and when the batsman had got out he could not control his anger because of which he had got hold of Sehwag’s collar and pushed him.”I knew that Wright had affection for Sehwag and had reacted to his getting out like a reacting to the failure of a disciple. He always used to urge Sehwag not to lift the ball because he often lost his wicket that way.”An angry Ganguly demanded that Wright should apologise to the entire team and this, says Shukla, put him in a difficult position. He immediately consulted Sachin Tendulkar and the team’s media manager Amrit Mathur. “The advice I got was that in case Wright apologised to the whole team, his authority will be eroded. I thought this was a valid point,” Shukla said.”I persuaded Sehwag not to seek an apology from the coach in front of the entire team. Wright was also persuaded to speak to Sehwag and assuage his feelings when the team returned to the hotel. Both agreed to this. Wright spoke to Sehwag and admitted his mistake.”A potentially explosive situation was thus resolved and did not become public despite so many Indian and British journalists orbiting the teams.

Injured Sami may miss second Test

Mohammad Sami has suffered a groin strain that is likely to keep him out of Pakistan’s second Test against Sri Lanka, beginning on October 28. The injury prevented him from taking the field on the fourth day of play in the ongoing first Test.”Sami has badly strained his inner groin muscle and he needs at least seven to eight days to fully recover,” said Haroon Rashid, Pakistan’s team manager. “Any decision on calling up a replacement for Sami would be taken after the first Test finishes.”

Scotland name squad

Bruce Patterson will be making his first appearance for three years© Getty Images

Bruce Patterson, 39, has been called up to play for Scotland in their Intercontinental Cup match against Holland at Mannofield, Aberdeen, starting on June 11.Patterson’s last international game was against Ireland in the home countries tournament in 2001. He is an opening batsman with three first-class hundreds to his name, and a wealth of experience.Stewart Bruce, the 34-year-old left-arm pace bowler, has also been named in the side. Bruce was forced to postpone his Scotland debut earlier this season, as he was serving in Iraq as an explosives expert. Majid Haq, the 20-year-old offspinner, is also in the squad for the Intercontinental Cup.Craig Wright, Scotland’s captain, told the : “All the players for the Intercontinental Cup have to be Scotland-qualified, so neither Sriram nor Arafat is eligible. Instead, we are fortunate to have both Bruce Patterson and Stewart Bruce, with whom we were greatly impressed during the winter, available for this game.”Scotland C Wright (capt), S Bruce, A Butt, C. English, M Haq, P. Hoffmann, S. Knox, B Patterson, C. Smith, I. Stanger, R. Watson, F. Watts.

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