ICC appoints five regional umpires' performance managers

John Holder is the regional umpires’ performance manager for the Americas and Europe © Getty Images
 

The ICC have appointed five regional umpires’ performance managers – John Holder, Arani Jayaprakash, Peter Manuel, Ian Robinson and Bob Stratford – to coach, mentor and assist the umpires as they work towards improving standards on the field.Holder, a former English umpire, will work with umpires in the Americas and Europe. Jayaprakash, an Indian umpire who retired during the Indian Premier League, was appointed for Asia, including Bangladesh and India, while Manuel, a former Sri Lankan umpire, was appointed to Pakistan and Sri Lanka. Robinson, a Zimbabwean umpire, is Africa’s performance manager while Bob Stratford, the umpire coach for Cricket Australia, has been appointed to the Pacific region including Australia and New Zealand.They will work towards the development of umpiring in their regions and will provide individual support programmes that assist international officials in the various aspects of umpiring.”This is more good news for the game as it will provide expert support to umpires around the world,” David Richardson, ICC general manager – cricket, said. “I am delighted with these appointments. The five regional umpires’ managers all have first-hand experience with the trials, challenges and rewards of umpiring at a high level. They all have credibility and respect in the cricket world and they know the issues that face umpires these days. I have no doubt these appointments will be good for the umpires and the game.”This move is part of the ICC’s commitment to ensuring that the standard of international cricket umpiring remains high and continues to improve as we seek to get the most out of our best officials.”The five appointments come after the ICC made former Natal and Middlesex fast bowler Vince van der Bijl the ICC umpires’ and referees’ manager in May.

Hampshire Under 19s travel in Championship quarter-final

Hampshire’s Young Cricketers are through to the quarter-finals of the ECB Under-19 County Championship.They will play Herefordshire at Long Marston, Hertfordshire next Tuesday and Wednesday.Hereford swept through their West Midlands group, winning all their matches.The other quarter-finals are: Essex v Cambridgeshire, Somerset v Staffordshire, Lancashire v Devon.

Bethan and Kevin Shine celebrate the birth of their new son Thomas

Somerset coach Kevin Shine was noticeably absent from the County Ground today where his side gave a strong batting display against Hampshire, the county where he started his first class career.Kevin was missing because he was at home with his wife Bethan celebrating the birth of their second son Thomas, who was born at 2 am this morning and weighed in at 7lbs 8ozs.Everyone at Somerset County Cricket Club is delighted with the news and send their very warmest congratulations and best wishes to Bethan and Kevin and all the family.

Ground scarcity in Dhaka

Test venues and practice grounds are scarce in Bangladesh. Due to venue scarcity this baby Test nation might have to face lots of unwelcoming situations in near future. BKSP (Bangladesh Sports Training Institute) seems to be the sole option left for the Bangladeshi cricketers to carry on practice sessions in needful hours. This is the only place where they can make a real cricket campaign.A Test playing squad can’t go along with a static situation – they have to be dynamic all through the year, as cricket is no longer a season-based game. The players here (From all ranks) hardly get any opportunity to evaluate their performance after they are done with a series. Why is the situation like that? Because they aren’t getting the facilities they need to go through post-match champing (Which is vital) owing to field scarcity.Surprisingly true that Bangladesh hasn’t fixed up any ground for cricket only. The renowned BNS, which saw seven Tests staged there (All before 1971) before Bangladesh had entered the longer version, is still allotted for both cricket and football. The government is yet to make a decision on it – whether it would be a completely cricket stadium or a football one. The ground condition, after the football league is over, turn out to be horrendous. The ground is made doable for cricket again (For an upcoming series or league), but it costs a lot of money each year. An unaffordable wastage for a poor country like Bangladesh no doubt!The so-called stadiums, Dhanmondi and BUET, are no better than schoolyards. They are deprived of gallery, pavilion and other very essential services needed to run regular cricket.The only exception could be Fotullah Cricket Stadium, which is ten miles away from Dhaka. It is still under construction (Only 20% work has been done), but has valid possibilities to turn up as a furnished cricket venue. BCB should be more concerned over it. Fotullah offers ample space and another cricket academy can be built there. If they can do that some pressures would be off from BKSP.

Jimmy Adams set to make Hampshire first-class debut at Hove

Hampshire’s James Adams is set to make his first-class debut in the vital relegation scrap against neighbours Sussex at Hove tommorrow. They also welcome back Nic Pothas and Alan Mullally both who have been sidelined due to injury recently.Adams who made his first-class debut earlier this season for British Universities v Sri Lankans will hope to bring the form that has seen him score an abundance of runs for the 2ndXI.Hampshire 12: Jason Laney, Neil Johnson, James Adams, Robin Smith (captain), John Francis, Will Kendall, Nic Pothas (wicket-keeper), Dimitri Mascarenhas, Shaun Udal, Alan Mullally, James Tomlinson, James Hamblin.

Railways push Ranji Trophy out of Baroda's reach

With each addition to the runs column of the scoreboard, with each walk back to his mark by a Baroda bowler, with each passing minute, Baroda’s players must have been aware that, on the third day of their Ranji Trophy final against Railways, the title was slipping ever so surely out of their grasp.Railways needed one significant batting effort on Friday; they got two. Raja Ali, playing, as the commentators strove to point out more times than needed, after the recent tragic death of a brother, made 66 valuable runs and stitched the Railways innings together. Lower down the order, Murali Kartik, perhaps wishing to make doubly sure of that Man of the Match award, hit 69 , taking his side to an impregnable position.Amit Pagnis, making 39 at the top of the order, was the first casualty for the home side, a delivery from Rakesh Patel doing just enough to catch the edge and plop into Nayan Mongia’s gloves inches off the ground. Tejinder Pal Singh took 93 deliveries to score 27 before he was run out needlessly, Valmik Buch rocketing the throw in for Mongia to whip off the bails.Yere Goud and Raja Ali then put together a 56-run partnership for the fourth wicket, both playing the ball on its merit and rotating the strike well. Goud struck three fours in his 81-ball 24, a sedate knock that did its job of settling the innings rather than being remarkable for any fancy stroke-play.Goud fell on 155, and Abhay Sharma and Shreyas Khanolkar, the next two batsmen, could not contribute much. When Raja Ali finally fell for a well-compiled 66 off 116 balls (10×4, 1×4), Baroda must have fancied their chances of wrapping up the innings and attempting the challenging target.At 229/9, however, Kartik and Harvinder Singh came together and posted the biggest partnership of the innings. Seventy-seven runs flowed for the 10th wicket as Baroda’s bowlers, toiling under punishing conditions, proved ineffective against some well-judged batting.Almost 25 overs after the pair came together, Atul Bedade finally had Kartik stumped to get his first wicket of the innings. Both batsmen had become less aggressive towards the close of play, no doubt aiming to bat more on the fourth day. With Mongia effecting a fine stumping, Railways’ second innings finally came to an end on 306.Kartik top-scored in the innings, making 69 off 125 balls with seven fours. Harvinder Singh scored an accomplished 34 off 77 balls with four fours, belying his status of a number 11 batsman. For Baroda, Shekhar Joshi and Tushar Arothe picked three wickets each, but they brought little cheer on a dismal day.Play for the day ended with the fall of Kartik’s wicket, Baroda thus being set a mammoth target of 391 to win this Ranji Trophy. Technically, this match is not over yet, and the fat lady may yet dust off her vocal cords and sing a different tune.But with the first-innings lead in the bag in case Baroda manage to draw the match, and a massive run-buffer behind them to bowl their opponents out over two days on a turning pitch, few will blame the Railways players for popping some champagne corks tonight.

Rains hamper Colombo ODI preparations

Persistent rains throughout the country are likely to hamper preparations for the second and third one-day internationals between Sri Lanka and New Zealand in Colombo. The Premadasa Stadium, which is scheduled to host the matches on November 4 and 6, has been under covers since Saturday and there is no hope of preparing the pitches for the games.”Half the ground is submerged under water due to the adjoining lake overflowing and the water on the ground is unlikely to subside till the lake waters recede,” a spokesman for Sri Lanka Cricket stated on Thursday. “It will be a difficult task to get the pitch and the ground ready for Sunday’s game. If the rains cease we might be able to prepare a pitch for the game on Tuesday.”Sri Lanka has been hit by unusual weather due to a tropical cyclonic storm ‘Neelam’ in the northern part of the country, which has resulted in strong winds and showers in other areas of the country. The first ODI of the five-match series in Pallekele was also abandoned without a ball being bowled.In November 2010, the tour to Sri Lanka by West Indies was hampered by bad weather with all three Tests ending in draws.

Katich steers Warriors to commanding position

PERTH, March 2 AAP – Neither severe flu nor South Australia’s bowling attack could dislodge Simon Katich as he steered Western Australia to 4-184 at tea on day one of the Pura Cup cricket match at the WACA.Test hopeful Katich, with just three first class matches to play before a side is picked for the Ashes tour in June, has made his way to an unbeaten 73 in tough 37C temperatures.His 90-run partnership with captain Tom Moody put the Warriors in a commanding position after the Redbacks had claimed two quick wickets in the opening overs after the lunch interval.Moody, playing his 300th first class match, smashed nine boundaries on his way to 55 off 67 balls before he was clean bowled by Mike Smith (1-27) to make the score 4-177.The home side won the toss and elected to bat after a prayer and a minute’s silence was offered in memory of Sir Donald Bradman, who passed away in his Adelaide home on Sunday at the age of 92.Openers Marcus North and Michael Hussey opened for WA on a grassy pitch that looks sure to crack as the game wears on with 35C plus days forecast for Perth.They both survived early chances before Hussey was caught for nine by Mike Smith in the gully off Mark Harrity (3-47).North, who was grassed by Redbacks captain Darren Lehmann while on three off the bowling of Brett Swain, added 63 with Katich before he became Harrity’s second victim, caught at slip by Greg Blewett for 35.That brought Murray Goodwin to the crease, but the former Zimbabwe batsman was again unable to carry his one-day form into the first class arena and was clean bowled for four, taking his average for the season to 13.4.

Media Release: India make three changes to the one-day squad

THE BOARD OF CONTROL FOR CRICKET IN INDIAFollowing players have been selected to represent India in the last two one-day internationals (Hyderabad and Guwahati) against the touring Zimbabwe team.Sourav Ganguly (Captain)
Rahul Dravid
VVS Laxman
Dinesh Mongia
Mohd Kaif
Yuvraj Singh
Sanjay Bangar
Harbhajan Singh
Murali Kartik
Zaheer Khan
Ajit Agarkar
Ajay Ratra
Vijay Bharadwaj
Tinu Yohannan
Note: Since Anil Kumble is having some sign of weakness on his shoulders and keeping in mind his recent surgery and rehabilitation programme, the selection committee has decided to give him rest and a chance to regain his strength.The selection committee has further decided to pick the Indian Team for the West Indies series after observing the performance in the last one-dayers. The team will be picked on 21 March in Mumbai.Niranjan R ShahHonorary Secretary, BCCI.

Amla, de Villiers ease SA home to level series

Scorecard and ball-by-ball detailsAB de Villiers made his highest score of the tour•PA Photos

South Africa levelled the one-day series with a resounding seven-wicket victory at Trent Bridge after England’s batting had subsided to a collection of poor strokes. The visitors wobbled briefly in their chase, but Hashim Amla and AB de Villiers put the quality of what had gone before in the shade with the classiest batting of the day in an unbroken stand of 169 for the fourth wicket.In keeping with the trend of the series it was not a gripping contest the match was completed well before the scheduled time. At least that meant the spectators did not have to sit through the autumnal chill. Day/night cricket is not made for an English September. The one period where the game did spark into life was the start of the chase when South Africa were reduced to 14 for 3, but it was a short-lived high point for England who were as poor as they were in Southampton. It must be hoped Andy Flower was not watching the TV on his rare day off.The performance will again raise questions about England’s ability to set defendable targets, where they appear significantly less comfortable than knowing what they have to chase. Only Ian Bell, who fell lbw to Robin Peterson when the left-arm spinner was smartly given the new ball, can be said to have not gifted his wicket away and 28 balls of the innings were unused when Jade Dernbach wafted at Wayne Parnell rather than at least trying to stick around with Chris Woakes who has significant pedigree as a batsman.With so few runs on the board England’s only chance was to run through South Africa and for a short while it looked possible. Graeme Smith flashed to second slip, where James Tredwell held the catch with a juggle, then James Anderson collected a brace in a superb display of pacey swing bowling.Faf du Plessis, who has had a lean series, was the latest option to be tried at No. 3 but edged a rising delivery to Craig Kieswetter then Dean Elgar was given a working over. Showing exemplary control of the ball, Anderson probed away at Elgar’s outside edge before the left hander could not resist pushing at one.Amla, though, was not being shifted and this time had not even been offered a life. He had to be on his guard against Anderson and Dernbach, but without Steven Finn, who picked up a back injury, England did not quite have the pace resources to maintain the pressure although Woakes did find Amla’s edge only for it fall well short of slip.De Villiers had not scored an international fifty on the tour but got himself going with a back-foot drove, then drilled Anderson through mid-on before back-to-back pulls off Dernbach. The introduction of spin brought aggression from Amla as he drove both Samit Patel and Tredwell for boundaries – the latter with an effortless loft over mid-off – and the match was back under South Africa’s control.Amla reached his latest half-century from 63 balls and de Villiers moved through the 40s with a string of trademark drives straight and through cover. As England’s intensity dropped runs came at a canter and, in the blink of an eye, Amla finished with 97 to his name. His tour-de-force shows no signs of halting as he ends the series with 335 runs – the next best was Bell with 181.This was just England’s second defeat of the year in 50-over cricket – and a drawn series against South Africa is no disgrace – but it will leave a bitter taste for Alastair Cook that it was handed away so easily on a plate. South Africa’s bowlers – seven of them were used as de Villiers juggled his options effectively – shared around the wicket-taking.The biggest bonus for them, especially in light of strengthening the batting, were the scalps taken by part-time spinners JP Duminy and Faf du Plessis. The stuffing was knocked out of the innings as England gifted away three wickets in six overs after Cook and Jonny Bairstow had started a recovery from 24 for 2 with one of the early losses that of the struggling Ravi Bopara for a second-ball duck. Bairstow, who had replaced the injured Jonathan Trott, could not have picked out deep square-leg with more precision when he flicked Morne Morkel off his pads straight to Justin Ontong.Then in the next over, Duminy’s first, Eoin Morgan tried to clear mid-on and offered a simple catch and England’s most dynamic one-day player had gone without scoring. Moments after the halfway mark of the innings it got worse for England when Cook, having reached a steady fifty from 69 balls, punched a low full toss back to du Plessis also in his first over to leave the home side tottering on 99 for 5.There was little option but to just try and bat out the innings, but each time a partnership was starting to form, a lose shot gave it away. Patel got into a tangle against a slower-ball bouncer from Dale Steyn – who bowled beautifully throughout – and gloved a catch to the keeper while Kieswetter, after showing promising signs, tried to clear the infield in the Powerplay but could only sky a catch to mid-off.The generous nature of the batting continued with Tredwell missing a charge at Peterson and Anderson trying to launch him down the ground first ball and did not get further than mid-off. It suggested that minds were not entirely focussed.However, there is no doubt who has the most frazzled mind of England’s batsmen right now. Bopara had been promoted to No. 3 in the absence of Trott and, after leaving his first delivery from Steyn, was drawn into pushing at his next and edging to de Villiers. It was a good delivery, moving away late from the right hander, but Bopara did not offer much footwork and it was a carbon copy of his previous two dismissals, meaning he ends the series with scores of 16, 0, 6 and 0. He, more than anyone, needs a change of fortunes in the Twenty20 series.

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