KwaZulu-Natal again thwarted by rain

PointsTable
Scorecard
After their match was washed out in East London earlier in the week, Natal managed only nine overs at the crease when rain chased the players off the field, leaving the frustrated Natal and Boland teams watching from the pavilion.
Scorecard
Free State got their innings off to a flyer with the opening pair of Morne van Wyk and Jonathan Beukes putting on 99 for the first wicket. Boeta Dippenaar then showed that he has not lost any of his form with 76 off 65 balls. However, the run out of Ryan McLaren by Ashwell Prince started a collapse leaving Free State on 232 for 8 at the end of the 45 overs.The Western Province top order proved to be far too strong with Graeme Smith undefeated on 114 and ably assisted by Neil Johnson, who scored 42. Only Gary Kirsten failed, caught behind off the first ball he faced. Cliff Deacon, the Free State left-arm fast bowler, was the most successful, picking up all the wickets for a career-best 4 for 39.
Scorecard
Two 50-run partnerships between the hard-hitting Dumisa Makalima and Robin Peterson, and then Arno Jacobs and Wade Wingfield, set the tone for Eastern Province’s 250 for 7. Jacobs, in particular, showed scant respect for his old team-mates, scoring 62 off just 44 balls.North West, thanks to 55 from Grant Rowley, made steady progress, but were always behind the run rate and eventually fell short by 39 runs. James Louw, nominated as Man of the Match, finished with 3 for 31.

Collingwood the hero as England take 43-run win in Napier

Hard work developing his bowling action worked for Durham county all-rounder Paul Collingwood last night when he skittled Lou Vincent, Chris Cairns, Chris Harris and Andre Adams to help England to a deserved 43-run win over New Zealand at Napier.The win kept the National Bank One-Day International Series alive and was a reminder to the New Zealanders that, despite all the work they have put into advancing their game this year, they can still be undone by neglect of the basics of the game, especially partnership building.Collingwood had a previous best of one for 31 in his 16 ODIs and he had only three wickets at a cost of 101 runs apiece before last night’s effort.He finished with four for 38, the result of his finding the McLean Park environment and the settling dew suitable for his swing bowling.England were defending a score of 244/5, another score in the 240s that has dominated much of New Zealand’s one-day summer.But there were no heroics to get the CLEAR Black Caps out of this muddle.England built their total around the batting of Nick Knight. His 80 was a classic foundation-type innings which could only be faulted for the fact that he got out in the 43rd over when the chance was there to bat all the way through and make an even bigger total. He did take a blow to the face when pinned by a ball from fast bowler Ian Butler to sustain a cut that needed three stitches.As it was, part of the slack was taken up by Graham Thorpe who plundered with some success and brought up a half century off 48 balls. He produced some hard hit shots in the latter part of his innings and was only out to a fine leaping catch on the boundary’s edge by Nathan Astle.England had built their innings cautiously after getting to 71/1 in 13 overs, the same score as at the 15-over mark due to two maidens bowled when the players returned from the first of two rain breaks.But tight bowling, especially from fast-medium merchant Daryl Tuffey, whose 10 overs cost only 39 runs, and Harris, who took one for 29, kept the lid on any scoring outbreaks from the tourists.They kept their wickets too, although Marcus Trescothick departed for 41, off 50 balls, when hitting a ball from Cairns straight to Harris, while Nasser Hussain, the England captain, got it all wrong when trying to sweep Harris and was bowled around his legs for 24.New Zealand’s chase was not helped by quite possibly the umpiring blunder of the series to date when Brent Bowden gave Astle out for a catch that even had Hussain smirking at the after-match press conference and mentioning that Astle might do his pants up tighter next time. Television replays showed that Astle’s bat was nowhere near the ball.Chris Nevin scored 21 off 19 but New Zealand were 31/2 in the sixth and while Craig McMillan attempted to help Stephen Fleming recover the situation he set the trend for the big hitters in the New Zealand innings when his first real effort to get onto a ball went straight to hand rather than to free country.Similar fates befell Cairns and Adams who both departed to catches deep in the outfield.Lou Vincent did help Fleming add 58 for the fourth wicket before he was Collingwood’s first victim, caught by Craig White in the gully when he had scored 29.The run rate requirement was mounting against the New Zealanders at this time and the pressure was on the batsmen coming in.Fleming stood firm in an innings of 76 not out scored off 112 balls. There were some moments of outstanding strokeplay but there were other moments when he struggled.The score was his second highest of the summer and his best since he scored 85 against South Africa in Hobart in the VB Series.But Fleming needed much more scoring assistance than was forthcoming from his side and it would not surprise if New Zealand decided to bolster their batting in Auckland by bringing Brendon McCullum back into the side.Whatever happens, Napier will be remembered as a happy hunting ground for England on this leg of their tour and perhaps the first step towards achieving a victory in the series.Fleming has said New Zealand know what they have to do, and Hussain has said he expects New Zealand to come charging back at them.Fighting talk from both camps, and that could yet be the requirement that produces the thriller this series could do with.

New Zealand Academy take command

New Zealand Academy had the better of the exchanges on the opening dayof their Buchi Babu pre-quarterfinal against Tamil Nadu Districts atthe MA Chidambaram Stadium in Chennai today. After inserting theDistricts side and rolling them over for 159 inside 78 overs, the NZAside had progressed to 34/1 at stumps.Left arm spinner Bruce Martin and leg spinner Aaron Redmond did mostof the damage with three wickets apiece. For Districts the firstwicket association of 40 between KN Riaz (24) and V Gautham (28)remained the most productive and after NZA captain, Jacob Oramdismissed the former in the 17th over of the innings, the last ninewickets tumbled for 119. P Muthupandian was the top scorer with 30 (66balls, 1 four).For the visitors, their only international bowler Andrew Penn, wasalso the only one of six bowlers used who went wicketless. SeamerDevendra Kumar despatched opener JAH Marshall for seven in the seventhover of NZA’s reply but Michael Papps (13) and Jarrod Englefield (12)ferried the visitors safely through to stumps.

Sunderland handed Danny Batth boost

A major update has emerged regarding the fitness of Sunderland defender Danny Batth…

What’s the latest?

Alex Neil has revealed that the centre-back is closing in on a return to action as he continues to deal with an ankle injury which has plagued him since he made the switch to Wearside in January.

Batth has not played for Sunderland since 22 February against Cheltenham and has only played four games since joining from Stoke in mid-season.

Neil told The Chronicle: “He’s been on the grass, he’s been doing running and he’s been in better nick. He’s not far away now. He’s not trained with us specifically but he’s been doing his own work in terms of changing direction and all that stuff.”

Delight

Neil will surely be delighted that Batth is close to making his comeback, as having him available will be a big boost to Sunderland’s squad heading into the final months of the season.

His debut against Portsmouth offered plenty of promising signs. As per SofaScore, the 31-year-old won nine of his 14 duels whilst making five clearances, one block, one tackle and one interception as the Black Cats won the match 1-0. He helped his side to keep a clean sheet with his impressive defending, and his form in the Championship suggests that there is more to come from him.

In the first half of the campaign in the second tier, he averaged an excellent SofaScore rating of 7.10 for Stoke as he won 68% of his duels and made 2.6 tackles and interceptions per game. This shows that he can excel in a higher division as he consistently delivered top-class performances for the Potters, which is why Neil will surely be keen to have him available for selection.

If Sunderland can get Batth back to his best, the statistics suggest that,he can have a huge impact at the Stadium of Light in the business end of the campaign. The Black Cats are fighting it out to land a play-off spot, and having another defender who can reliably perform to a high standard can only be a good thing for the club.

FootballFanCast General Stay ahead in the world of football analysis, commentary, and fan insights with FootballFancast. FootballFanCast General Stay ahead in the world of football analysis, commentary, and fan insights with FootballFancast.


By subscribing, you agree to receive newsletter and marketing emails, and accept Valnet’s Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. You can unsubscribe anytime.

Therefore, Neil will be buzzing that the 31-year-old is not far away from being back in full training. It will then be down to Batth to get himself back to 100% and show that he can be a rock in defence for the club in League One, just as he was in the Championship earlier this term.

AND in other news, Possession lost 225 times: “Anonymous” Sunderland liability who’s lost 76 duels has been a letdown…

England fight but face battle to survive

England 351 and 48 for 0 (Vaughan 28*, Cook 13*) trail Sri Lanka 548 for 9 dec (M Jayawardene 195, Vandort 138, P Jayawardene 79, Sidebottom 3-100, Harmison 3-111) by 149 runs
Scorecard
How they were out

Prasanna Jayawardene extended England’s toil with 79 © Getty Images

It wasn’t the most attractive day of Test cricket, but Sri Lanka’s batsmen put them in a dominating position on the fourth day at Colombo with a 197-run lead over a weary England, grinding their noses into the ground. As ever, Muttiah Muralitharan looms large but England’s openers took them to a position of relative comfort, racing to 48 before bad light curtailed the day’s play.It was another torrid, wearying day for England’s bowlers who battled in intense heat to pick up 5 for 169 before Mahela Jayawardene, the Sri Lanka captain, finally ended their misery with a declaration 30 minutes after tea. The ease with which Prasanna Jayawardene, the wicketkeeper, batted with his No.10, Dilhara Fernando, belied the consistent allround effort England’s bowlers showed – in particular Steve Harmison, who improved upon his encouraging display yesterday with a determined and disciplined performance on a lifeless pitch.It was he who gave England early hope of restricting Sri Lanka’s lead, too, removing Jehan Mubarak with a nasty lifter. Stuart Broad, England’s 6ft 7in debutant, also stuck to his task and was rewarded with his maiden Test wicket when Chaminda Vaas – no rabbit with the bat at No.8 – was too late on a pull, gloving a bouncer to Ian Bell at slip. It was just reward for Broad for what has been a daunting introduction to Test cricket.Jayawardene lacked the fluency and elegance he showed yesterday, and threw away his wicket with an ugly slog off Monty Panesar, top-edging a simple catch to Paul Collingwood at second slip. It was the first and last sign of any form of urgency from a Sri Lanka batsman who, from then on, blocked their way to the declaration, grinding England’s noses and spirits into the ground.Panesar hasn’t bowled with his magical, tantalising flight during this series but was much improved today and, after dismissing Jayawardene, bowled with greater control, trapping Lasith Malinga in front to briefly give hope to England of limiting Sri Lanka’s lead to under 100. However, with one Jayawardene dismissed, England were at the mercy of another, the wicketkeeper who was ably assisted by Dilhara Fernando. The pair put on a determined and turgid ninth-wicket stand of 98, just when England felt they had broken the back of Sri Lanka’s innings.It was grizzly cricket but hugely effective for Sri Lanka, as England’s shoulders dropped. Fernando, with a beaming smile and equally enthusiastic defensive technique, rode his luck against Kevin Pietersen, smacking a straight drive to bring up Sri Lanka’s 500 and the pair’s fifty partnership.Jayawardene might not share his captain’s elegance or range of strokes, but there was no denying his application. He rode the bounce of Harmison’s shorter deliveries and used his feet well to Panesar, flicking him through midwicket before slamming one over mid-off. His second Test fifty came from 109 balls.England didn’t enjoy much luck, however. Fernando back-cut Pietersen for four before he was rapped on the back leg, seemingly plump in front. And, off the next ball, Prior should have stumped him but the ball somehow lodged itself between his pad and leg. As tea approached, Sri Lanka’s lead went past 150, and England were on their knees.The declaration finally came when Jayawardene edged Harmison behind for 79, causing the bowler to roar his delight, justifiably, too, as he bowled with impressive energy and discipline for a man returning from injury. Nevertheless, Sri Lanka’s lead reached 197 and England had an hour of Chaminda Vaas and Muralitharan in which to survive.Impressively – particularly on a day in which the run-rate barely lifted above three per over – Cook and Vaughan were immediately into their stride, cracking 48 from 13 overs. Cook picked off two classy fours, showing impressive timing, while Vaughan continued his fine form, driving with aplomb to reach 28 by stumps.The pitch remains flat and true, and hasn’t cracked up nearly as much as England feared. But Muralitharan remains the big threat, and England have a big fight on their hands.

Pakistan plan dope tests for players

In the wake of the scandal surrounding Shoaib Akhtar and Mohammad Asif Pakistan are planning to drug-test all their players © Getty Images

Pakistan are planning to conduct dope tests on all 30 members of their provisional World Cup squad.The news is not unexpected, after the recent furore surrounding their two fast bowlers, Mohammad Asif and Shoaib Akhtar, who were originally banned from cricket after testing positive for nandrolone, but had their sentences overturned on appeal.According to The Dawn newspaper, the Pakistan Cricket Board has instructed its medical panel to obtain relevant kits from the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) accredited laboratory in Malaysia.A PCB official said: “Instructions have been issued to the medical panel doctors to prepare for the tests which will be carried out before the World Cup because we don’t want to take any chances before such a major tournament.”Pakistan must submit their final 15-man squad on February 13, but it would only be possible for the tests to be carried out after the team finishes its current tour of South Africa.”But we will get the results before the team leaves for the (World Cup) tournament,” the official continued.”We want to take precautionary measures ourselves and also reaffirm our commitment to a zero-tolerance policy towards any kind of drugs in sports.”The paper also speculates that the PCB might send officials to South Africa to conduct Tests on Akhtar and Asif, due to concerns that nandrolone might remain in their bodies by the time the World Cup is played and they could be targeted for random tests in the tournament by the International Cricket Council (ICC) and WADA agents.

Jain bowls Tripura to historic win

ScorecardVineet Jain and Timir Chanda grabbed two wickets apiece to bowl out Himachal Pradesh for 156 to register a historic first win for Tripura in the Plate encounter at Agartala. This win ends a drought of 21 years; Tripura played their first Ranji game in the 1985-86 season. Jain removed Rajeev Nayyar, the overnight batsman, in the third over of the day before Chanda got rid of the next two batsmen. Appropriately, the final historic blow involved the two Tripura heroes of the game. Jain, who finished with a seven-wicket haul, combined with Rajib Dutta, who had earlier made a valiant 71 to set up a big target, to remove Rajinder Thakur and usher in their first victory.

Rahman and Rasel win it for Bangladesh A

ScorecardBangladesh A recovered from a precarious position to post a competitive total and overhual Zimbabwe A in the second one-dayer at Queens Sports Club in Bulawayo. Shamsur Rahman and Syed Rasel pulled their team out of a hole at 71 for 6, helping them to 202. Rahman scored 59, while Rasel had 41 to his name. The next-highest scorer was Shahadat Hossain with 26.The start of Zimbabwe A’s reply was just as unsure as Bangladesh A’s had been, as they reeled to 65 for 5, but fighting knocks by the lower order brought them close to Bangladesh’s total. And the ultimate margin of defeat was only 34 – which would have been a lot less had they not bowled 27 extras.

Miller returns and Staunton to make debut for Redbacks

The South Australian Cricket Association (SACA) today announced the 12-man teams who will play Queensland in next week’s ING Cup and Pura Cup games.Redbacks all-rounder Mick Miller has been named in both sides and returns from a shoulder injury which kept him out of the State side for about four weeks.Southern Districts fast-medium bowler Andrew Staunton has been selected in the 12-man team for the Pura Cup match, and if selected in the final 11, will make his first-class debut.Staunton this year moved to Adelaide from Sydney to further his cricket career and made his debut for the South Australian second XI during last month’s Cricket Australia Cup match against the ACT.Also returning in the Pura Cup side for the Redbacks is Bradman Medallist Ryan Harris, who will play his first game for the Redbacks this season. The Northern Districts bowling all-rounder took 5 for 46 in that same Cricket Australia Cup game, which was his first State-level game back after recovering from a chronic groin strain.Staunton and Harris come into the side to replace Paul Rofe and Shaun Tait who will make their debut for Australia A when they take on India in Bellerive from December 19.The Redbacks ING Cup side is:

Greg Blewett (c)Mark Higgs
Mark ClearyBen Johnson
Mark CosgroveGraham Manou
John DavisonMick Miller
Shane DeitzPaul Rofe
Andy FlowerShaun Tait
The Pura Cup side is:
Greg Blewett (c)Andy Flower
Mark ClearyRyan Harris
Mark CosgroveMark Higgs
John DavisonGraham Manou
Shane DeitzMick Miller
David FitzgeraldAndrew Staunton
The ING Cup game takes place on December 17, with the Pura Cup game from December 19 to 22 on the GABBA ground in Brisbane.

Trevor Gripper: runs in Sri lanka

Runs in Sri Lanka? There weren’t many for Zimbabwe’s batsman recently, but it was a comparatively inexperienced batsman, Trevor Gripper, who scored the most (167 in six innings) and also recorded the team’s highest individual score of 83. This was after scoring his maiden Test century in Sri Lanka, so it was a great advance for him in his career. He talks to CricInfo about the tour.This was my first tour to the subcontinent. The wickets there are obviously a lot slower and lower than those in Zimbabwe, and they take a hell of a lot more turn! The Bangladesh pitches were pretty flat and plumb at the start of a match, but did take turn on the fourth and fifth days.The Sri Lanka pitches are a lot different; they take a lot more turn, even on the second and third days. Otherwise the conditions are very hot and humid. They suit Muralitharan very well, and as one of the umpires from England, David Shepherd, mentioned, he’s a magician.It was nice to get back into the Test team in Bangladesh, and obviously I want to consolidate a place in the opening spot. I think we’ve always had a problem with the opening position in Zimbabwe: guys are always in and out and it’s not an easy job. But hopefully I can get some consistent scores in and do some good.We needed at least one specialist spinner on tour, and I thought that was one area where we lacked. If we pick three seamers in the subcontinent and go into a match with only part-time spinners, including myself, Grant Flower and Douggie Marillier – although Douggie is a really good off-spinner – I think we’re going to struggle. I don’t know if Geoff Marsh tried to get them to send out any spinners for us, but I’m sure he would have done, being an experienced cricketer himself.In the First Test in Bangladesh we got off to a nervous start, but our middle and lower order consolidated and did some real good for us, which put us into a winning position. All credit goes to Heath Streak, Douggie Marillier, Craig Wishart and Travis Friend – especially Travis, who got 81. He batted brilliantly and showed us how to bat on those pitches. I think he’s got a great future in the game.Craig Wishart was one of our top scorers in Bangladesh, but in Sri Lanka, with the spinners and the way they turn the ball there, it’s not an easy thing. If you grow up with those kind of pitches, I think you’ll do a lot better playing spin. We haven’t grown up with that, but we learn – we’re always learning in this game. I think we can take a lot of positives out of that tour.Our bowlers bowled very well in that First Test, and Travis again got a five-fer. He bowled really well and so did Heath, who was unlucky, just taking two wickets. Henry Olonga also bowled very well to take three, but the match was rained off.Then in the Second Test my first Test century – I suppose it’s a dream everyone wants. When I started off the morning, it looked a very decent pitch. We weren’t sure how it would actually play, as we had heard it does a bit in the morning, so we were prepared to stick out the first hour.We actually lost the toss and were put in to bat. In the first hour it didn’t do a hell of a lot. They do have a good seam attack, with Mashrafe Mortaza quite a quick bowler who swings the ball late; he’s got a good future in the side. But the pitch proved really plumb and once you got through the new ball it was relatively easy to stay in, although it was harder to score because it was such a slow pitch. I thought we did really well to score over 500.I got to 50 before lunch – the first time in my career! – and was feeling quite confident playing the spinners. My attitude towards batting has changed a hell of a lot. I’ve put in a lot more work on my shot-making and, with the help of Geoff Marsh who I think is a really good coach, we can only go from strength to strength.After lunch I looked to consolidate and formed some good partnerships with Stuey Carlisle, Grant Flower and Andy Flower. I felt pretty determined to get that hundred. Craig Wishart also enjoyed his first Test century, after getting in the nineties a couple of times and then being unluckily run out.Then in the second innings I scored all 11 runs to win the Test match! I have to say that was almost as good as my century! That was the first Test match I’ve ever played in that we won, and it was another very good moment. After we lost Dion Ebrahim and Stu, that 11 runs seemed a long way away, but once we got them it was a great feeling.Dion batted really well in the one-dayers and got a hundred and an eighty. I got into that side; like I said, I’ve improved and I also want to consolidate my place in the one-day side. Obviously I’m still new to the one-day game, especially on the international arena, but I think I can play both forms of the game and I look forward to a future in it.We set a goal to win the one-day series three-nil, and we did. I think we batted generally well, and again Craig Wishart batted exceptionally well, getting most of our runs. Dion did really well, and got us a hundred in one match and eighty-odd in another. He looked in really good touch, but in Sri Lanka he struggled for runs. The seamers there are not easy to play, but they’re easier than the spinners on those pitches. Against the spin it’s not an easy task.Hamilton Masakadza came back into the team for the Tests in Sri Lanka and it was unlucky for Dion to lose his place. He showed good form in the one-dayers, but he played in a warm-up game and didn’t get any runs, and I think he got dropped for that.Hamilton coming back boosted our batting line-up a bit in terms of confidence, and Gavin Rennie as well. I think Muralitharan struggles a bit against left-handers and Gavin had a really good tour. Murali was the only one who did the real damage, getting 30 wickets in all three Tests. As I said, he’s like a magician and he’s going to win Sri Lanka a lot more games in the future.Hamilton handled the conditions pretty well; it was his first tour, like it was my first tour, and you have to have the right mind-set. You can’t think you’ll go out there and score a lot of runs quickly as you can do here in Zimbabwe on a flat pitch with a lot of bounce. Sri Lanka have a good seam attack in Zoysa and Vaas, before Muralitharan and the other spinners come on.I think Andy Flower, being the greatest batsman in Zimbabwe, has different pressures on him to other guys in the team, and I have no doubt that class is permanent and form is temporary. In his case, he’s the classiest player we’ve got and I have no doubt he will be back again scoring runs as soon as possible.We also had a few unlucky decisions go against us in all three Tests and we have to take that into account. When you have a limited resource of players such as we have, when you lose a couple of batsmen to unlucky decisions that can change a game. I think we all got some rough decisions there.I think Geoff Marsh is definitely going to take us places as a coach. He has good man-management and he knows a lot about the game.In the Second Test – well, I got a lot of twenties and thirties that I could have converted into fifties and hundreds, but again Muralitharan in the first two Tests got me out all four times. I would survive the first five overs against the seamers and then get out when Murali came on.He’s got it all as a bowler: he has his big turner, the off-spinner, and then the straight one and the one that goes the other way. I think all round the world batsmen battle to pick the one that goes the other way. When he’s bowling like that, pitching on a good length, if you nick it or get a `roughie’ you can only count yourself unlucky. But the fact remains that I have to turn those twenties and thirties into higher scores.Batting against Muralitharan, we looked to cover off stump and I personally looked to play the line of the ball instead of the turn, and if it was going to hit me outside the line obviously I can’t be given out. You just have to be patient with that one that goes the other way. I think in the last Test we showed patience against him, when the ball was turning a lot more than in the other Tests. I think that frustrated him, the fact that the ball was turning too much and he couldn’t control the turn.But I think he’s going to get 600 wickets fairly soon. In Sri Lanka especially he’s going to bowl almost half their overs in an innings, so I’d expect him to take that many five-fers and that many ten-fers in Test cricket.After losing the First Test, we had to try and devise a plan on how to win the Second Test, and I think in a sense we looked to score against Muralitharan instead of just biding our time. I personally looked to score off him and got out trying to do that. That’s the way cricket goes sometimes.It’s a tough tour to Sri Lanka, and I don’t think any side is going to go there and roll the Sri Lankans. They said it themselves: they are the best side in the world in their own conditions, and I don’t doubt that – with Muralitharan in the side! Without him, I think we’d at least have secured some draws, but without him in their side I think they would have prepared different tracks with perhaps a bit more grass to suit their seamers. They do have a world-class seam attack in Zoysa and Vaas, and I’m sure they’re going to do very well on overseas pitches, outside the subcontinent. Obviously with Muralitharan in your side you are going to prepare pitches for him! Pitches can win you Test matches.We had a great start at Galle. They won the toss and batted first, and got off to what they would have regarded as a shaky start. Then they consolidated with their lower order, Chandana getting 92, and got quite a decent first-innings score of over 400. In the first two days the bowling on that pitch went quite well, Douggie Marillier doing really well with four wickets.We got off to quite a solid start as well with our batting, and Stuey and I scored 153 for the first wicket. But again we have to turn them into hundreds, and big hundreds, especially on those pitches. Then we had a collapse and one of us had to bat through there. I’m not too sure how it came about that Stuey came to open with me, but that’s up to the management. He has opened before in Test matches, so it’s not a new thing for him.Again, the spinners did the damage. Like I said, Murali turned the ball a lot more in Galle than in other places, and in that Test he almost turned it too much; he wouldn’t get the lbw decisions and he was beating the bat two balls each over. So for him it was frustrating. And as the pitch grew worse and worse, they turned the ball even more and more. They got it right in our second innings and went right through us.For most of us, it was our first tour to the subcontinent and I think we can take a lot of positives in our batting. In our bowling, when we go to that part of the world I think reverse swing is a necessary weapon for our seamers. We need to master that; their seamers reverse-swing the ball more than we did and knew how to control it better.I think Sangakkara is one of their better batsmen; he’s got a good technique. Marvin Atapattu has a high average against us, another with a good technique, but he had a lean tour against us. Another guy who did really well against us is Samaraweera, a batsman who can also bowl off-spin. He got a lot of runs in the series.There’s always going to be a lot of verbal banter on the field – it happens in Test match cricket. Off the field we got on pretty well; I don’t think we have any problems with the Sri Lankans. But obviously with a few umpiring decisions that didn’t go our way we got a bit grumpy at times.I think our team gelled really well together. I think Geoff Marsh has brought in a lot of new ideas and as a team we are definitely getting it together.I can’t take anything for granted personally right now regarding my batting, but I can only take it tour by tour. About six months ago I thought I’d never play for Zimbabwe again, and when I came back from England I was in the side after four weeks. So you can never tell.

Game
Register
Service
Bonus