All posts by csb10.top

Strikers clamber out of a hole

Johannesburg October 23) – The Highveld Strikers dug themselves out ofa very deep hole to force a draw with Griqualand West on the final day oftheir four-day Supersport Series match at the Wanderers on Monday.Set a target of 427 declared, the Strikers were bowled out for 184 in their first innings, highlighted only by the 94 from Sven Koenig.But a far better batting display in the follow-on enabled the home team to snatch the draw.Koenig got the innings off to a solid start with his 108. But it was a few niggling partnerships lower down the batting order that really stumped Griquas.Nic Pothas combined with Geoffrey Toyana in a sixth-wicket stand that yelded 50 runs.Ottis Gibson and Solly Ndima weighed in with a valuable 53-run partnership for the eighth wicket as the Strikers began building a lead.And literally the last straw for Martyn Gidley’s Griquas was the Strikers’ last wicket stand of 43 by Mulligan George and David Terbrugge.That partnership helped the Strikers to a lead of 141 runs and with 17 overs left for the day.It set up what would have been an exciting chase by Griquas, but Gidley declined the offer.The Griquas skipper made the questionable decision not to chase, settling on the draw with a surprised Striker’s captain Clive Eksteen.”I was surprised that they didn’t want to have a go of it because I didn’t see us bowling them out in 17 overs. Generally, you would want to see positive cricket. But they obviously felt they weren’t up to the challenge,” Eksteen said.But Gidley defended his decision.”The guys were really tired and it would’ve been a tough ask against their bowling attack and on a pitch that was getting more variable.”But it was a fantastic effort by the team. It would’ve been nice to win. There is the thought that perhaps this was our best chance of an away win, and it’s fair to ask why we didn’t chase. But I really think it would’ve been difficult against their bowling attack,” he said.For Eksteen, there was probably some sense of a let-off.”Our discipline was really poor at the start of this match. We bowled poorly in the first innings and that put us under pressure. But it was a case of rectifying that, and it was good to see the guys fight their way back into this game.”

Strauss withdrawn from Championship action

Andrew Strauss will not return to action for Middlesex this week after he and the ECB decided on further rest following the series against South Africa.When the ECB announced player availability last week Strauss was set to play the Championship match against Worcestershire at New Road, which starts on Tuesday, following a short family holiday after the end of the Test summer. Middlesex have their final first-class match against Lancashire, at Lord’s, next week.Strauss had a poor series with the bat, scoring just 107 runs six innings, and also had to contend with the situation surrounding Kevin Pietersen and his omission from the final Test at Lord’s.Strauss and Pietersen, who will be in action for Surrey against Somerset this week, are due to meet shortly in the first stages of talks to try and resolve the situation which has led to major doubts as to whether Pietersen will be able to continue his international career.Following the 2-0 loss against South Africa, which led to England losing the No. 1 Test ranking, Strauss said he wanted time to think over the future and talk with Andy Flower, the team director, but remained confident he would continue to lead the team. 10.00am August 28: This article was amended to correct the location of Middlesex’s match against Lancashire

Nazir helps Nagenahira to second win

Scorecard and ball-by-ball detailsThisara Perera clobbered 72 off 33 balls and yet ended up on the losing side•Ron Gaunt/SPORTZPICS/SLPL

A blistering 85-run opening stand between Imran Nazir and Ahmed Shehzad and a cool finish from Angelo Mathews trumped perhaps the innings of the tournament so far, from Thisara Perera, as Nagenahira Nagas overhauled Kandurata Warriors’ 159 for 7 in the final over. Nazir blasted five sixes and four fours in his half-century, and left his side needing just 75 from 68 at his dismissal – a task Mathews ensured never got out of hand.Fleet of foot was the key to Nazir’s success, as he routinely skipped down the track to change the lengths of both the spinners and the quick men, as well as backing away in his crease on occasion to line up the extra cover fence. Sohail Tanvir’s second over cost 20, as both Nazir and Shehzad took full toll of some hittable lengths, before the next over, from Perera, disappeared for 15 to get Nagenahira well ahead of the required rate.Kaushal Lokuarachchi beat Nazir in the flight in consecutive deliveries when the batsman was on 41, only for the wicketkeeper Kaushal Silva to fluff both straightforward stumping attempts, losing sight of the ball as it passed between bat and pad. Shehzad had been dropped on the boundary earlier too, and the mistakes continued to stack up for Kandurata, who bled at least 15 more runs through misfields alone, leaving aside the runs they might have saved had those chances been taken. When Mathews arrived at 110 for 2 from 12.3 overs, he showed off his improving knack for finishing innings by calmly taking his side over the line to make it two wins from two.In the Kandurata innings, Perera arrived at the crease with his side stagnating at 61 for 4 from 10.5 overs, and though he took seven balls to get going in earnest, when the explosion came, it was dramatic and effective. A towering six over midwicket, followed by a scorching boundary to the same area set the tone for his assault; the Nagenahira bowlers would continue to offer him length throughout the innings, and he rarely missed an opportunity to pepper his favourite midwicket boundary. Amid the heaves to cow corner there were clobbered fours down the ground and to third man as well, but few balls cramped him for space or posed a genuine threat to his technique. When he fell at 149 for 6, he had contributed 72 of the 88 runs scored during his stay. In the end, Kandurata’s total wasn’t enough to challenge their opponents.

'I didn't go out and get drunk' – Jesse Ryder

Jesse Ryder, the New Zealand batsman, has said he felt like he was “hung out to dry” in the aftermath of the incident at the Napier hotel during the ODIs against South Africa earlier this year. Ryder said he had not done anything wrong and the whole episode, which in his opinion was blown out of proportion, diminished his love for cricket.”I think what happened in that South African series really did burn me out – the whole going out and wrecking team protocol thing,” Ryder told . “In my opinion, I didn’t do anything wrong whatsoever. I wasn’t even injured and it all just escalated into something that it shouldn’t have. I felt like I was hung out to dry. I knew I was going to take the full force of it too because that’s just the way it goes really.”Following the defeat in the Napier ODI in February, Ryder and Doug Bracewell went out to a hotel and were subsequently involved in an argument with a patron. New Zealand Cricket said the players had broken team protocol and compromised their preparation for the third one-dayer. They were dropped from the squad.”Other guys would argue that I shouldn’t have put myself in that position but I didn’t see anything wrong with what I was doing,” Ryder said. “I didn’t go out and get drunk. The only reason it escalated was because two guys at the pub were giving us s*** and I told them to f*** off. All of a sudden, New Zealand Cricket was getting calls to say that we were in a fight and that was just bollocks.”Ryder revealed that he went on an alcohol binge after he left the team and returned to Wellington. “I think throughout that last month after I left the Black Caps [New Zealand team], the drinking got real bad and I would start getting on the p*** on a Friday night and I’d still be going on Sunday. I was just hammering it and it did get to a point where I think I needed to hit rock bottom to see how bad things actually were.”Since then, Ryder said he was taking an indefinite break from cricket but played the IPL with a support structure in place. He and the New Zealand board agreed he wouldn’t get a central contract as well until he was ready.”After that low period, I finally managed to really pull my head in and get my s*** together, and I’m 102 or 103 days sober now,” Ryder said. “I’m also probably in the best head-space I’ve been in for a long time. In the end, everything’s probably going to work out for the best. I think I’m a completely different person now than I was six months ago. I’m sharper, fitter and on to it.”Ryder said getting through the IPL without an incident was a challenge he was pleased to have overcome. And though he has been sober previously and then fallen off the wagon, he said this time was different. “I think the whole reason for that is, for the first time, this is my call to stop the drinking. This time it’s not about having everyone else push me into it. In the past, I’ve just been frustrated the whole time, you know? But this time, it was my call. It’s all on me. I want to do this for myself.”With Ryder not being considered for selection by New Zealand for the moment, he has got involved in other activities, boxing for instance. On July 5, Ryder will fight New Zealand radio host Mark Watson. He isn’t missing cricket yet.”I’ve had a whole lot of other things to focus on and, if anything, it’s probably been a real breath of fresh air,” Ryder said. “I’m so excited about this winter. I’m going to be able to go snowboarding for the first time. It’s something I’ve always wanted to do but because I’ve always been contracted I haven’t been allowed to go out and do that sort of stuff. I’ve got a lot of fitness goals and stuff away from cricket that I want to achieve too.”While he does not have a timeframe for a possible return to competitive cricket for or in New Zealand, Ryder said he still had goals in the game that he wanted to achieve. “I’ll definitely love cricket again. I think this little break will do me wonders. If I continue the way I’m going, I’ll come back as a better player and a better person. I want to be one of the best batsmen that New Zealand has seen, really.”A whole lot of stuff that I’m doing now is basically done with the intention of proving a point to a lot of people who have bagged me or said I couldn’t do something. I want to get in there and shut them all up.”

Chanderpaul leads West Indies rearguard

Scorecard and ball-by-ball commentaryEven when he was given out lbw to Tim Bresnan, Shivnarine Chanderpaul survived, thanks to the DRS•Getty Images

It is perhaps no surprise that Shivnarine Chanderpaul inhabits his own little world. It must be much safer there. When he made his Test debut 18 years ago, West Indies were No. 1 in the world. Now Test match victories are a rarity and the sound of Caribbean cricket is a prolonged lamentation for what has gone before.West Indies, trailing by 155 runs on first innings, and already widely dismissed as no-hopers after the first two days of a three-match series, lost three top-order wickets for no runs in nine balls on the verge of tea and until Chanderpaul put up unyielding resistance with an unbeaten 34 in two-and-a-half hours (that he made so many was due to a late flurry) there was a possibility that they could lose in three days. Instead, they trail by 35 runs with six wickets remaining and have the right to a measure of respect.Chanderpaul was intent upon batting time. He blocked a lot and left a lot. His leave is an interesting phenomenon because as he comes out of his square-on stance, his right shoulder hurtles towards the ball at roughly the same time his arms withdraw the bat in the opposite direction. Do not attempt this at home unless you have a Level 4 coaching certificate and medical insurance.He shows colossal commitment to the cause; he just shows it in his own, sometimes contrary, way. He had six from 53 balls when a mistimed pull against Stuart Broad gave the crowd meagre sustenance; 13 from 71 when he managed his first boundary, an offside push against James Anderson which he just happened to time down the hill. There were dots in the scorebook and dots before the eyes. England imagined that Tim Bresnan had him lbw on 22 from 84 balls but lost a review as umpire Marais Erasmus’ assessment that the ball was leg side was supported by Hawk Eye. They have bowled wide at him and stalemate has ensued.England’s pace attack had begun by firing in more short balls than has become their habit and it paid dividends. Adrian Barath fell to a top-of-off delivery from Bresnan, who found slight movement to have him caught at the wicket, Kieron Powell to a sucker punch as Andrew Strauss pushed Ian Bell back to deep square and Powell obligingly hooked Stuart Broad into his hands.Then Darren Bravo was involved in his second run-out incident of the match, only this time, unlike the first innings when Chanderpaul pulled rank, Bravo did the same to Kirk Edwards. Bravo squirted Bresnan in front of square on the off side then belatedly turned down the run with Edwards halfway down the pitch, whereupon Jonny Bairstow ran him out with a direct hit.There was also reward for Graeme Swann’s offspin, a beautifully disguised arm ball that Bravo, in an aberration, allowed to drift down the slope into his off stump.England, after sedately taking control on the second day, had to work much harder to extend their advantage as they were dismissed 45 minutes into the afternoon session, losing their last seven wickets for 132 runs. Strauss had accepted a wonderful opportunity on Friday to restate the impregnability of his position as England captain, on the Lord’s ground he loves so much. He added only a single to his overnight 121 before West Indies’ captain Darren Sammy successfully turned to DRS to win a wicket for Kemar Roach. Hot Spot showed a faint inside edge as well as contact with his trousers after the ball had nipped back. Strauss must have been grateful that he had played the bulk of his innings the previous day.Ian Bell, another England batsman seeking to recover from a tormented winter, played resourcefully in more demanding circumstances before he was last out for 61, hooking Shannon Gabriel to deep square. His ninth-wicket stand of 55 in seven overs with the ebullient Swann was a useful bonus for England and, in West Indies’ terms, wasted much of their good work.A West Indies bowling attack that had failed to swing or seam the ball the previous day was a different proposition. Fidel Edwards swung the ball most noticeably and there was a bit off seam about too, with Gabriel picking up his first three Test wickets. The cloud cover was similar and so were the lengths West Indies bowled, the technique they displayed and their purpose. It could only be the ball.Such are the glorious random aspects of cricket. Weather, pitches and even cricket balls can change from day to day. In some sports, and some parts of the world, the lack of uniformity would be viewed as a weakness; in Test cricket it is rightly seen as a strength. But it must have been galling for West Indies.Bairstow, who had stifled an occasional yawn on the balcony the previous day as he watched England make guarded progress, was presented with a more onerous batting debut than he might have expected. He took his first ball in Test cricket, from Roach, on the chest – a badge of honour in no time – but looked settled for a debutant and unveiled three fine boundaries – two leg-side clips and a cover drive – before Roach brought one back to have him lbw.England were anxious to push on positively with rain forecast later in the game. But Matt Prior whipped across one to give Gabriel his first Test wicket and, in the following over, Bresnan fell for nought, dangling his bat at a delivery from Sammy that seamed away.England reached lunch at 341 for 7 and Stuart Broad faced only one delivery afterwards as Edwards skimmed his off bail. Swann fell as did Prior, bowled by Gabriel as he aimed through midwicket, but not before he had exacted some damage, making 30 from 25 balls as he feasted on several wide, fullish deliveries. He had been welcomed with a stomach-high beamer from Edwards, accidental, but worthy nevertheless of a formal first warning by the umpires for intimidatory bowling.

Asif will fight to clear name – lawyer

Mohammad Asif, one of three Pakistan players jailed for spot-fixing, will be released from Canterbury Prison early on Thursday after completing half of his one-year sentence, his has lawyer said.Asif, 29, was handed a jail sentence at Southwark Crown Court in London in November last year, along with team-mates Salman Butt and Mohammad Amir, after being found guilty of conspiracy to cheat and conspiracy to accept corrupt payments over deliberate no-balls bowled during the Lord’s Test between Pakistan and England in August 2010.”Asif’s release is a matter of few hours and I look forward to meeting him and helping him in his legal fight to restore [the] reputation he once had,” Asif’s lawyer Ravi Sukul told Pakistani TV channel Geo.Asif and Butt denied the charges against them in court while Amir, who was released in February after serving half of a six-month sentence, pleaded guilty. Asif received a seven-year ban (with two years suspended) from playing cricket by the ICC in February 2011. Butt, who is currently serving a 30-month jail sentence, was banned for ten years (with five suspended), while Amir got five years.Mazhar Majeed, the agent who was accused of setting up the deal that was uncovered by a newspaper sting operation, was imprisoned for 32 months.Sukul added that Asif could stay in England while he explores the possibility of launching an appeal. “I have a strong belief that if certain procedures had been applied in Asif’s benefit at his trial, they could have persuaded the jury to come to a different conclusion,” Sukul said.Asif has previously indicated that he will appeal the ICC ban to the Court of Arbitration for Sport. His appeal against his prison term was rejected last November by the Lord Chief Justice.

Clash of the heavyweights

Match facts

Monday, April 16, Mumbai
Start time 2000 (1430 GMT)Lasith Malinga’s face-off with Daredevils’ batting would set the tone for the high profile clash in Mumbai•AFP

Big picture

Two of the most power-packed IPL sides, Mumbai Indians and Delhi Daredevils, take on each other on Monday at the Wankhede Stadium after having had relatively long breaks, by IPL standards, of five and four days respectively. Mumbai Indians and Daredevils have had decent starts to the season. The Daredevils crushed defending champions Chennai Super Kings with nearly seven overs to spare in their previous game. Mumbai Indians overcame a stiff challenge from Owais Shah to beat Rajasthan Royals in front of a packed Wankhede.The good news for the home side is that Sachin Tendulkar batted against a few throwdowns yesterday. Tendulkar has not played a game since injuring his finger in Mumbai Indians’ season opener against Super Kings. Will they rush him into the playing XI? Richard Levi, the Mumbai Indians opener, said that they would take a call on Tendulkar tomorrow.Tendulkar’s replacements at the top of the order have struggled to provide starts but the heavyweight middle order and a world-class bowling attack have not let that come in the way of posting three wins from four games.Daredevils look a completely different side with the availability of Mahela Jayawardene, Kevin Pietersen and now, Ross Taylor, who has declared himself “95% fit”. Daredevils will have to figure out how to play all three overseas batsmen, though. Leaving out Roelof van der Merwe weakens the spin-bowling department, an area in which Daredevils are already short.

Players to watch

Lasith Malinga wrecked Daredevils for just 95 last season in Delhi. Malinga had figures of 3.4-1-13-5, and his maiden over was to Virender Sehwag, of all batsmen. It was Malinga who turned Mumbai Indians’ previous game against Royals, bowling the rampaging Shah with a yorker.Fresh from a match-winning 151 in England’s second Test against Sri Lanka in Colombo, Kevin Pietersen smashed an unbeaten 42 from 26 deliveries against Super Kings. The IPL may not be a big draw in England; Pietersen is here to enjoy himself, though.

2011 head-to-head

Mumbai Indians beat Daredevils in both meetings last year. Malinga was all over them in Delhi, and an all-round performance proved too much for the visitors in Mumbai.

Stats and trivia

  • Daredevils’ 98-run loss to Mumbai Indians in 2010 was their second-largest in terms of runs, and the fourth-largest in the history of the IPL
  • Malinga’s economy-rate of 4.54 is the best so far this season (minimum five overs bowled)

    Quotes

    “If the communication is good, doesn’t matter, whoever you are batting with is alright.”

Nicola Browne back in international fold

Nicola Browne, the New Zealand bowler, has decided to return to international cricket despite announcing her retirement seven months ago. She discovered she was suffering with celiac disease, changed her diet and is now hungry to play for New Zealand once more.Browne, 28 from Waikato, felt “the flame inside her had been extinguished” when retiring in August 2011. The news came as something of a shock after rising to sixth on the world bowling rankings and being named Player of the Tournament at the 2010 Women’s World Twenty20.”I wasn’t tracking where I should have been,” Browne said. “I was plagued with health problems and just couldn’t get my energy levels right.” She thought her health problems stemmed from Temporomandibular joint disorder and reached a low point after the Christchurch earthquake of February 2011, prompting her departure from the game.But a joint disorder proved not to be the problem. Browne changed doctors and was found to be suffering with celiac disease – where gluten in the body damaged the lining of the small intestine causing fatigue.A simple change of diet did the trick. “I had more energy that I could ever remember having,” Browne said. “It was like I had been living my life at only 70%.” Pasta and pizza went off the menu as part of her new gluten-free regime that provided new-found energy and a reignited passion for cricket.Browne returned to action with seven wickets at 16.85 for Northern Districts and now has her sights on an international recall and becoming a professional. “I’ve found myself,” she said. “And I’ve found the energy to go and achieve beyond where I reached before, and bring others along for the journey.”

'Our death bowling needs to improve' – Clarke

Australia captain Michael Clarke believes Australia must improve their bowling at the death after another match slipped from their grasp in the dying stages. Sri Lanka needed 17 from the final two overs in Hobart but they made victory a certainty by taking 14 off the second-last over, bowled by Daniel Christian, who took a wicket but then conceded a four and a six from the next two balls.Things had also come unstuck for Australia in Adelaide, when India needed 13 off the last over and Clint McKay conceded the runs within four legal deliveries. And two days before that, at the WACA, they were lucky to escape with a win when Mitchell Starc conceded 12 from the first four balls of the 50th over, but fortunately for Australia, Angelo Mathews holed out next ball with six runs still needed.”Our death bowling needs to improve, that’s for sure,” Clarke said after the three-wicket loss in Hobart. “We’ve tried plenty of guys and we’ve got the right crew. We just have to execute better than we have throughout the whole series.”You’ve got to keep trying don’t you? You’ve got to try to give the guys out there confidence as well, and back them. I think Dan Christian getting Mathews out was a massive wicket for us. We’ve just got to keep working hard, keep practising in the nets, and then when we get our opportunity in the middle.”The Australians might regain Shane Watson for Sunday’s match against India in Sydney after he was eased back into the squad by being named 12th man for the Bellerive Oval match. But Clarke said that despite Watson’s ability to find a good yorker length, it would unrealistic to expect him to take on the role of bowling in the late stages of a match after a three-month injury lay-off.”It’s going to be hard for Watto to improve the death bowling – he hasn’t played much of late,” Clarke said. “I think it’s a big call on him to bring him straight on and expect him to hit his yorkers straight away or improve our death bowling. The guys in the team have to be able to do it, that’s for sure. We all need to get better at it. Hopefully Watto does play. He’s a big player for us.”Australia’s 6 for 280 looked like a winning total at the change of innings but Sri Lanka’s batsmen played well to keep the chase on track throughout the innings, and it was the biggest successful chase in an ODI at the venue. Clarke said their total was good, but on such a friendly batting surface they were always in danger, should Sri Lanka’s batsmen find their touch.”It was probably a par score,” he said. “The wicket was very good and if anything, with a bit of dew the ball might have skidded on a bit and made it easier to bat second. But you’d like to think you win the majority of your games making 280. We just didn’t execute our skills with the ball at the death. That probably let us down. We probably could have made a few more runs, we probably could have saved a few more in the field, and we’ve got to execute better than that to beat a very good one-day team.”Australia now sit second on the points table and can miss the finals if India have a good finish to the tournament. However, one more victory for Australia will be enough to guarantee them a place in the deciders.Edited by Kanishkaa Balachandran

The BCCI and Sahara joint media statement

Date: 16 February 2012Joint Media StatementBCCI and Sahara have had extensive discussions over the past few days and are happy to confirm the following:BCCI took note of the various requests of Sahara and has agreed to the following:1. To extend the trading window, which was due to close on Friday 17 February, until Wednesday 29 February 2012 to give Pune Warriors India the opportunity to have successful negotiations with other franchises as it looks to strengthen its squad.2. Re-activation of the Auction Purse of Pune Warriors India so that it can take a number of players, subject to the squad composition regulations.3. BCCI and Sahara agree to start the arbitration proceedings initiated by Sahara through appointment of an arbitrator to address Sahara’s claim for a reduction in franchise fee for 74 matches.4. BCCI does not have any issues with Sahara seeking a strategic partner in the Pune Warriors India franchise, subject to terms of the Franchise Agreement.5. In respect of their request to sign overseas players who were not included in the Auction Register, subject to the relevant player regulations, BCCI agrees to the request subject to the views of all other franchise6. Sahara has requested for one of the play off matches scheduled to be played in Bengaluru to be played in Pune. The right to host the Play Off matches is awarded to the finalists from previous edition, in this case Royal Challengers Bangalore. BCCI is in principle agreeable to host one of the Play Off in the new Pune stadium subject to the consent of RCB.7. Sahara has requested to furnish the Bank Guarantee against the Franchisee fee in two installments; BCCI will consider it at the next available opportunity.8. Notwithstanding the recent working committee decision rejecting 5 foreign players in the playing XI, in consideration of the exceptional circumstance and the non-availability of Mr. Yuvraj Singh, Sahara has offered to obtain the consent of all the franchises for the submission to the BCCI.BCCI, in line with its normal practice, will continue to engage with all franchises to find ways to enhance the competitiveness of the league and improve the fan experience.Sahara confirms that it will continue sponsorship of the Indian team. Sahara may want to exercise its right to assign the sponsorship as per the agreement.N. Srinivasan, President, BCCI
Subrata Roy Sahara, Managing Worker & Chairman, Sahara India Pariwar

Game
Register
Service
Bonus