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Bouncy pitch awaits India at WACA

The WACA curator feels the pitch is getting back to its fast and bouncy ways and expects this track to behave similarly to the one in the Ashes last season

Sidharth Monga at the WACA09-Jan-2012If India are to make a comeback in the series, they will have to do it the hard way. The WACA curator feels the pitch is getting back its original – famously quick and bouncy – characteristics, and expects this track to behave similar to the one used in the Ashes last season, when Australia played four quicks and won the Test inside four days.Australia have lost James Pattinson to injury but have the services of Ryan Harris and Mitchell Starc should they want to go in with four fast bowlers for the third Test, starting on Friday the 13th. Starc made a case for himself with figures of 3 for 17 in a rain-curtailed BBL game on Sunday night in Sydney.”We are hoping it will certainly be like last year,” Cameron Sutherland, the curator, said. “It [playing four fast bowlers] won’t be the wrong decision if the preparation goes as it is expected to.”The proper preparation will begin on Tuesday. Right now the pitch is hard to tell from the outfield. Sutherland is happy with what is underneath. “It is pretty hard underneath,” he said. “We have already done a lot of work just getting the grass where we want, coverage-wise. The actual rolling starts tomorrow.”In the BBL game at the WACA on Sunday night, Perth Scorchers scored 184 and won by 42. Expect batting in the Test to be tougher, though. India won the last Test they played here, but this is expected to be a different surface altogether. “We’re expecting more pace and bounce than the last time,” Sutherland said. “Good cricket wicket last time, but we hope to have maybe an extra 20% pace and bounce.”That won’t be music to India’s ears, beleaguered as they are by six straight losses away from home. “That’s what we are aiming for. We are in a better place now than when India came here the last time,” Sutherland said. “We have redeveloped the whole wicket block over the last four years, and we are starting to get some really good results.”We have changed our soil type, tried to align it to the traditional WACA characteristics. Probably more so pre-1980s, and it has taken a fair while to achieve that. We have also changed the grass type and how we prepare the wicket. We have tinkered with the whole model basically, and come up with something we think is pretty close to the mark.”Sutherland’s dream pitch is a kiss-off, where the ball just kisses the surface and bounces off. He says they are getting close to it. “We weren’t getting any cracking,” he said of the days when Perth lost its bounce, relatively speaking. “We were getting some hardness, but not really hard. We weren’t getting grass recovery, which made it hard to get a surface where we could get some nice kiss-off, where the ball hits and carries through. We are pretty close to achieving that now. Mostly that comes from the soil. It’s a combination with the grass as well. One allows the other to work in harmony. So we are pretty close to where we want to be.”However, Michael Hussey, a Western Australian himself, is not getting carried away with the pitch. “I hope it’s a nice, fast bouncy pitch,” he said. “We play those conditions very well. It is very different to what the Indian players are used to from their home country. But having said that, they’ve got unbelievably experienced players who have been in Australia before, performed well in Australia before, so I expect them to adapt to the conditions pretty quickly.”

Captain Bailey defends his T20 record

George Bailey has conceded he will only win respect as Australia’s new Twenty20 captain if he scores runs himself, regardless of how the side performs

Brydon Coverdale30-Jan-2012George Bailey has conceded he will only win respect as Australia’s new Twenty20 captain if he scores runs himself, regardless of how the side performs. Bailey’s highest score in the shortest format is 60 and he has made only one T20 half-century in the past three seasons, but he said batting at No.5 opportunities were often limited and his record “stands up against anyone”.Bailey will make his T20 international debut on Wednesday against India in Sydney, and he will do it as captain after Australia’s selectors axed Cameron White from the T20 leadership. A successful state captain with Tasmania, Bailey, 29, is seen by John Inverarity’s panel as the man who has the best chance of steering Australia to success in the ICC World Twenty20 in September.However, he will need to ensure he doesn’t succumb to the same fate as Michael Clarke, who was viewed as a tactically shrewd T20 captain but whose own batting skills were not suited to the game. Bailey is a more powerful striker than Clarke and has a T20 strike-rate of 132, but it remains to be seen whether he can turn himself from a good domestic batsman into an international one.”You are captain but first and foremost you’re in there to perform,” Bailey told ESPNcricinfo. “That dictates a hell of a lot of the respect that you have. Part of my performance will be my captaincy but the majority of it will be with the bat. I have to perform. I certainly would have liked a few more runs in the Big Bash but since Twenty20 started being played I certainly think my record stands up against anyone, particularly for someone who has batted for the majority in that middle order.”Bailey scored 114 runs at an average of 19 for the Melbourne Stars in the Big Bash League, where he was captained by White, the man he has succeeded as national skipper. But as a man who often bats in the lower middle order, Bailey believes his average is less relevant than it would be in one-day or first-class cricket, because his opportunities are fewer.He is part of a squad that Australia’s selectors hope can form the core of the side that will challenge for the World T20 title in Sri Lanka later this year, and Inverarity has spoken of the importance of building a group that works well together. Bailey echoed those thoughts and said it was vital the squad was well-balanced.”I think there are a lot of facets of Twenty20 cricket that we’re still working out how we measure whether someone has been successful,” Bailey said. “Part of naming a squad and starting to work out who’s going to fit into the jigsaw puzzle of September is exactly that, what will be a group that harmonises well together.”You could pick the top six or seven run scorers from the Big Bash and the top five leading wicket takers, but in terms of getting a team together it’s about melding all those skills of being able to score quickly and being able to score consistently, keeping runs down and taking wickets and putting all of those things together into a team.”We’re getting closer and closer and we have more data on T20 cricket but certainly batting in the middle order it’s always going to be a challenge, compared to a Test cricketer where you get to the end of your career and you say well you averaged this and it gives you some indication. I think in T20 you look at whether people are contributing in partnerships, or what stage they come in, or when they hit their boundaries and their sixes, to be an effective cricketer.”Some Australian fans might judge whether Bailey is an effective cricket based on his first two T20 outings this week, if they have not already seen him play. While the pressure of performing as the national captain cannot completely be avoided, Bailey is confident that he shut out any such distractions against India on Wednesday and Friday.”It’s not something I’ll be feeling in the group,” he said. “Cricketers are aware that we play in a performance-based game and the pressure sometimes of what other people are thinking, that’s often built up in the media. Once you’re out there performing, you’re just out there doing your job to the best of your ability.”

Deccan Chargers sign Kenya's Mishra as "Indian"

Deccan Chargers have signed five Indian uncapped cricketers for the 2012 IPL, one of whom isTanmay Mishra, who is currently playing for Kenya

Dustin Silgardo18-Feb-2012Deccan Chargers have signed five Indian uncapped cricketers for the 2012 IPL, one of whom is Tanmay Mishra, who plays for Kenya. Mishra, who was born in Mumbai, has never played a first-class or List A game for any Indian side; but a spokesperson for Chargers explained that since he holds an Indian passport*, Mishra is eligible to be bought as an Indian uncapped player.This also means Mishra will not have to be counted among the four foreign players each franchise is allowed to play in an IPL game.Chargers have also signed Uttar Pradesh batsman Tanmay Srivastava, who was part of the now dissolved Kochi Tuskers Kerala last year, Orissa batsman Biplab Samantray, Madhya Pradesh medium-pacer TP Sudhindra and 21-year-old Hyderabad opening batsman Akshath Reddy.Mishra, a 25-year-old middle-order batsman, was one of the few bright spots for Kenya during the 2011 World Cup; he scored two half-centuries, including an innings of 72 against Australia in Bangalore. On the day Chargers announced they had signed him, Mishra scored 70 not out in Kenya’s win against Ireland in a World Cricket League Championship in Mombasa.Reddy and Sudhindra have both earned IPL contracts on the back of impressive Ranji seasons. Sudhindra was the leading wicket-taker in the Elite division with 40 wickets at an average of 18.70. Reddy, in his second season, scored 524 runs at an average of 65.50, with three centuries.Samantray scored his maiden first-class century in the 2011-12 Ranji season, an innings of 171 against Uttar Pradesh, while Srivastava, at just 22 years old, has already played 45 first-class matches and 26 List A matches, and has six centuries in each format. He played seven matches for Kings XI Punjab spread across the 2008 and 2009 editions of the IPL, but did not have much chance to contribute with the bat.* February 18, 2012 18:16 GMT: This article said Tanmay Mishra held dual citizenship of India and Kenya. This has been corrected.

Clarke casts further doubt over Narine's Test chances

Michael Clarke has cast further doubt over the young West Indian spinner Sunil Narine’s availability to play in the forthcoming Test series against Australia due to contractual obligations to the IPL

Daniel Brettig25-Mar-2012As he ponders an offer to take part in the IPL for the first time, Michael Clarke has cast further doubt over the young West Indian spinner Sunil Narine’s availability to play in the forthcoming Test series against Australia due to contractual obligations to the Indian Twenty20 tournament.The West Indies coach Ottis Gibson has already expressed doubts about his ability to choose Narine for the Tests, which overlap with the first half of the fifth edition of the IPL, given that he is not contracted to the West Indies board and is therefore likely to depart for Kolkata for the entirety of the event.Australia’s batsmen have struggled mightily against Narine’s accurate off breaks and variations, delivered in a flat style ideally suited to the slow, low pitches of the Caribbean. However, Clarke said he was not expecting Narine to figure in the Test series, and had not committed much thought to the prospect of playing against him.”I don’t think he’s playing the Test series,” Clarke said prior to his departure for the West Indies. “I think he’s playing in the IPL the last I heard. I heard the West Indies were going to release him to play the full time in the IPL but I’ve watched him on TV through this series and I’ve seen a little bit of him in the past.”He’s bowled very well. He’s got really good control and he can not only spin his offspinner but the ball the other way so I guess that’s the hardest thing about playing spin, being able to pick him. Once you pick him you still have to play (the ball) and on the wickets so far it’s been quite tough.”If he does take part in the Test series I’m sure we’ll all have a real good look at him.”Narine’s case is the latest instance of the WICB losing the battle to retain its best players for international duty in the face of T20 counter-offers. The most prominent casualty of the struggle has been Chris Gayle, but Narine’s loss would be almost as significant given such a promising start to his time in Caribbean colours.By contrast, Clarke has held back from taking part in the IPL since its inception so he could concentrate on his Australian duties, a commitment he was rewarded for when he attained the captaincy left vacant by Ricky Ponting. However Clarke had noted as early as 2010 that the 2012 IPL may have been an option for him, and while he stopped short of stating his intentions, there was an acknowledgement of negotiations between the Pune Warriors and Clarke’s manager James Erskine.Pune’s captain Sourav Ganguly had caused a stir by stating at a Kolkata promotional function that “we’re on the verge of signing Clarke”, in a deal that would have him fly to India for the closing phase of the tournament following the conclusion of the Tests against the West Indies.”That opportunity has been presented,” Clarke said. “We will continue to talk about it and make a decision in due course. Right now my priority is to make sure I get back and make sure we continue our success in the Test format.”

'I have never stopped trying'

The text of Rahul Dravid’s statement at his farewell press conference in Bangalore on March 9

ESPNcricinfo staff09-Mar-2012’My approach to cricket has been reasonably simple: it was about giving everything to the team, it was about playing with dignity and it was about upholding the spirit of the game’•AFPI would like to announce my retirement from international and domestic first-class cricket. It is 16 years since I played my first Test match for India and today I feel it is time to move on. Once I was like every other boy in India, with a dream of playing for my country. Yet I could never have imagined a journey so long and so fulfilling.No dream is ever chased alone. As I look back, I have many people to thank for teaching me and believing in me. My junior coaches in Bangalore and at various junior national camps inculcated in me a powerful love of the game, which has always stayed with me. My coaches at the international level have added to my craft and helped shape my personality. The physios and trainers worked hard to keep me fit – not an easy job – and allowed me to play late into my 30s.The selectors, who rarely receive any credit in India, occasionally had more confidence in me than I had in myself and I am grateful for that. The various captains I played under offered me guidance and inspired me.The media has been kind to me and I have respect for their craft.The KSCA and BCCI have provided me a platform and the facilities to play the game.Most of all I have to thank the teams I played with. I was lucky in my early years to play for a Karnataka team that was trying to forge itself into a strong side and they were years of fun and learning. In the Indian team, I was fortunate to be part of a wonderful era when India played some of its finest cricket at home and abroad. Many of my teammates have become legends, not just in India but in the wider cricketing world. I admired them, learnt from them and I leave the game with wonderful memories and strong friendships. It is a great gift to have.A career in sport is almost impossible to manage without the support, and guidance, and reassurance of family and friends. During tough times, and there always are, this is whom we go to. I found strength and encouragement from my parents and brother and they created around me a positive environment which was essential to my success.My wife, Vijeeta, has been a remarkable partner in my journey. She has made sacrifices in her own career and has almost been a single parent as she brought up our children alone as I travelled abroad to play. Whenever challenges appeared, she was always there, as sounding board, as ally and as guide. Being away from my family became harder and harder through the years and I look forward now to spending time at home and doing the simple things, like just taking my sons to school.Finally I would like to thank the Indian cricket fan, both here and across the world. The game is lucky to have you and I have been lucky to play before you. To represent India, and thus to represent you, has been a privilege and one which I have always taken seriously. My approach to cricket has been reasonably simple: it was about giving everything to the team, it was about playing with dignity and it was about upholding the spirit of the game. I hope I have done some of that. I have failed at times, but I have never stopped trying. It is why I leave with sadness but also with pride.

Bangladesh to tour Pakistan at month end

International cricket is set to return to Pakistan after three years, with Bangladesh formally confirming to the PCB that they will play one ODI and one Twenty20 International there later this mont

Umar Farooq15-Apr-2012International cricket is set to return to Pakistan after three years, with Bangladesh formally confirming to the PCB that they will play one ODI and one Twenty20 International there later this month. There has been no cricket between two Full Member nations in Pakistan since the attack on the Sri Lanka team in March 2009.The ODI is scheduled for April 29 and the T20I for April 30. Both matches will be played at the Gaddafi Stadium in Lahore.”The public of Pakistan have been deprived of cricket and we felt that we needed to support them,” BCB president Mustafa Kamal said. “The reception we received when we toured Lahore and Karachi on our security visit was overwhelming.”Zaka Ashraf, the PCB chairman, thanked the BCB and the Bangladesh government for their support for the tour.The ICC, though, was more guarded in its response, saying it had asked the the PCB for a security plan, following which its Anti-Corruption and Security Unit would commission a localised risk assessment to determine the safety of its officials and staff; only after that would it decide on deploying its officials.Last month, the ICC had introduced a “special dispensation” to be made only in “exceptional circumstances” in order to ensure that bilateral series take place even if the ruling body has determined it “unsafe” to appoint its officials for such series. This would allow such series to be manned by “non-neutral match officials”, a departure from the ICC’s Standard Playing Conditions, pending permission from its executive board.Bangladesh was due for a full tour of Pakistan in 2012 under the ICC’s Future Tours Programme. The PCB also said the remaining matches of the tour will be played at dates mutually agreed between the two Boards at venues including Bangladesh.There had been several itineraries proposed for the tour, including a three-match ODI series and a series of two ODIs and one Twenty20 international. Karachi and Rawalpindi were the other possible venues but ESPNcricinfo understands they were dropped on security grounds.Sunday’s announcement follows lengthy negotiations between the two boards over the terms of the tour, and at times it looked as though the tour would be a non-starter. A nine-member delegation, headed by Kamal and including security officials from that country, visited Pakistan in March for a demonstration of the security plan for the proposed series. The plan was well received, it is believed, but confirmation of the series was delayed. One reason, according to the BCB, was that it was waiting for a government advisory; another possible reason was the ICC’s special dispensation plan, which possibly implied that the venue was not safe for neutral officials.Jalal Yunus, the BCB’s media committee chairman, said Kamal had taken charge of the matter and handled it personally. “We haven’t talked about it since Zaka Ashraf came and discussed the matter officially, so it has been 2-3 months,” he said. “The BCB president must have known the government stance and that’s why he has confirmed. He has handled it personally from the beginning.”The tour will come a little more than three years after masked terrorists attacked the Sri Lanka team bus and a van carrying ICC officials to Gaddafi Stadium in Lahore, on what would have been the third day of the second Test of that tour. Six Sri Lankan cricketers were injured in the attack, and six security personnel and two civilians were killed.Since then, Pakistan have hosted “home series” in UAE and other neutral venues. They played New Zealand in New Zealand (2009-10), England and Australia in England (2010). UAE has been their favoured home base, having hosted South Africa, Sri Lanka and England.The announcement of a resumption of international cricket in Pakistan is a fitting reward for both the spirited performance of the national team in the recent past and also to the patience and passion of the country’s cricket fans. It is often said, rightly so, that international cricket needs a strong Pakistan, and while this is often in the context of its on-field prowess, it is also about the state of cricket in that country. Sunday’s news will redress to some extent that situation, even if it is only two matches in the shorter formats.Heartening though the news is, it must be hoped that the decision has been taken by both sides with security and the safety of all concerned – players, officials, spectators – as the top priority. Sport is a proven healer in troubled times but at no time can it be pursued at the cost of basic safety. It can be said that two matches in two days is too short a time to judge a nation’s preparedness to host full-fledged international cricket but, by staging the matches at location, it is perhaps sufficient to test the waters. It is also hoped the ICC will lend its support, though it may say that it does not have any official role to play in the staging of a series. If Pakistan is to get back on track and re-join the cricket family, it needs every other member of that family to extend its hand – as the youngest, Bangladesh, has done.
Jayaditya GuptaEdited by Nikita Bastian

Rain denies Compton historic May mark

Nick Compton was stranded 50 runs short of 1,000 in first-class cricket before the end of May as poor weather affected Somerset’s first innings

Jon Culley at New Road31-May-2012
ScorecardNick Compton was thwarted by the rain in his attempts to reach 1,000 runs in first-class cricket by the end of May•PA PhotosIf a feat is achieved only nine times in 117 years, it is usually because it has a high degree of difficulty. It should come as no real surprise, then, that Nick Compton fell short in his bid to join the company of WG Grace, Don Bradman, Wally Hammond, Bill Edrich, Tom Hayward, Charlie Hallows, Glenn Turner and Graeme Hick in scoring 1,000 first-class runs before the end of May.The 28-year-old Somerset batsman, who needed to score 59 runs by close of play, was thwarted by the weather, in the end, stuck on 950. Worcestershire’s collapse to 340 all out from 270 for 3 overnight allowed Somerset to begin their first innings immediately after lunch.An early wicket ushered Compton to the crease within 24 minutes, in his usual position at No. 3 in the order, but he had been there only half an hour when umpires Martin Bodenham and Trevor Jesty took the players off for rain. They never came back. Thus Somerset will resume at the start of day three on 27 for 2, having also lost Arul Suppiah, who pulled a ball from Richard Jones straight to the fielder at square leg.Despite a fine performance from Peter Trego, who clipped Worcestershire’s wings by taking 5 for 75 from 37 overs as the temporary leader of Somerset’s youthful attack, the visitors have much ground to make up in response to a Worcestershire innings that may have crumbled at the end but had substance at its base in the form of a beautifully composed century from Vikram Solanki.Play was called off at 5.30pm. Compton, watched by his parents, Richard and Glynis, who are on a holiday in England from their home in South Africa, had faced 22 balls and scored nine runs, four of which came from a nicely executed cover drive off David Lucas.”It is all a bit of an anticlimax,” he said afterwards. “I must be honest there have been a few sleepless nights thinking about the possibility of getting those thousand runs. The more articles you read, the more you think about those illustrious cricketing names that have achieved it, you start to pinch yourself and start to think ‘wow, it would be really great if I could be one of them’.”But I’ve only got myself to blame, really. I had an opportunity in the last game against Durham, when I got to 60-odd on a good wicket, with Ian Blackwell bowling and the field well spread out, but started to get complacent and ahead of myself and ended up hitting a short ball straight to midwicket, which is very unlike me.”It was there for the taking, really. I’ve been unlucky with the rain here today but in England you can never take the weather for granted. I did make quite a few visits to the umpires’ room this afternoon, I must admit, wondering if we could get out there again but, as ever England has let me down with the weather.”I would have liked us to have batted first yesterday, of course. I was a bit nervous and wanted to have a bat. But the bigger picture is that there is a game to win and these records can get in the way in some ways.”I’m disappointed for my parents. They had not come over here specifically for this but I don’t see them very often and it would have been great to have done it with them here.”Rain, of course, is an occupational hazard for any cricketer in any season and is another reason why 1,000 in May has such rarity value.Bradman did it twice, on the second occasion, extraordinarily, in only seven innings on the 1938 Australian tour, which he began by scoring 258 at Worcester. But the names that underline the scale of the challenge are those that the achievement eluded: Jack Hobbs, Herbert Sutcliffe and Frank Woolley to name but three whose career aggregates each exceeded 50,000.Nick’s grandfather, the peerless Denis, could not do it, even in the summer of 1947, at the end of which he had amassed an astonishing 3,816 runs in first-class games. And no one has managed it since Hick in 1988.The new Compton has honed himself as a gritty, unshowy accumulator in complete contrast to the flamboyant, attacking style that identified the “Brylcreem Boy”, Denis, in his pomp, but it is a method that has served him handsomely this season, and the possibility that he would add his own line to the Compton legend has been discussed on an almost daily basis since the third week in April.By then he had already scored 685 from only six innings, including two double-hundreds, eclipsing Hick’s April record of 410. But he has lately faltered a little, relatively speaking. His last six innings have included three more half-centuries but in total only 256 more runs. The visit of struggling Durham to batsman-friendly Taunton last week – during the first hot spell of the summer, moreover – seemed to offer the perfect opportunity, but he was out for 64 and 8. His 13th innings, here at New Road, was certainly unlucky.There have been suggestions, because the English domestic season now starts so early, that the achievement would be devalued but it is an argument that is easily dismantled by the history of the record.While Hammond, for example, did not face a ball before May 7, he still took 13 innings to reach 1,000, the same number as was required by Hayward, only one of them in April. Edrich, who began on April 30, passed the milestone in his 15th visit to the crease. Glenn Turner, who launched the 1973 New Zealand tour of England by becoming the seventh name on the list, needed 18.It could even be argued that, faced with such an early start, with pitches damp and heavily favouring medium pace bowlers, the accomplishment is of greater value. This season, in particular, seems to have brought more complaints than ever from disgruntled batsmen frustrated by the vagaries of underprepared green seamers.Compton is not the first contender to fall short in recent seasons. Two years ago, Yorkshire’s Adam Lyth went into the Roses match at Headingley on May 29 needed 147 from two potential opportunities. In a rain-affected match, however, he was restricted to one innings, in which he was out for a second-ball duck.Last season, Compton’s Somerset captain, Marcus Trescothick, was particularly unlucky. The former England opener began the last match of his quest needing an unlikely 362 runs against Yorkshire at Taunton and finished it, agonisingly, a mere 22 short.He made 189 in the first innings and 151 not out in the second as Somerset chased 228 to win, denied only because the target was reached and the match ended.On a more positive note, Compton admitted that with the weight of the record now off his back he could focus more on his greater goal of playing Test cricket.”As time has gone on the anxiety has built up and it is a relief to be able to move on now,” he said. “The record was not something I was aware of at the start of the season and I suppose I should pat myself on the back for getting so close.”But scoring a thousand runs was never the big goal for me. Ever since I have been very small the goal has been to be a Test batsman and I have worked very hard over the winter to challenge myself in tough conditions and learn how to get through at the top of the innings.”The hunger and desire I have had, thinking I could be among those great names, has been the same hunger and desire that has got me to where I am. The mental application I have worked on has enabled me to be ruthless where in the past, having got to a hundred, I might have thought I had enough runs and it wouldn’t matter if I was out.”That work does not stop now and if I can be the next cab off the rank and maybe get a winter tour place that would be fantastic.”

Consecutive washouts out at Edgbaston

For the first time since 1964 – at Lord’s against Australia – the first two days of an England home Test were washed out after the second day at Edgbaston went the same way as the first.

Andrew McGlashan08-Jun-2012For the first time since 1964 – at Lord’s against Australia – the first two days of an England home Test were washed out after the second day at Edgbaston went the same way as the first. Such had been the volume of rain in Birmingham that the umpires took the decision shortly after the scheduled lunch interval and no one was surprised.The forecast for the weekend is better – although showers remain likely – but the outfield has taken a battering over recent days and despite improved drainage there are a number of very soggy areas that will cause concern. With the series decided none of the players will want to take risks on a wet outfield.It was clear from well before the start time that play was unlikely and some England players did not bother rushing to the ground. A few used the indoor net facilities while Kevin Pietersen spent time signing autographs for those supporters who lingered through the dire conditions.It remains to be seen whether the shortened match increases the chances of England resting Stuart Broad alongside James Anderson which would mean places for Steven Finn and Graham Onions. However, the second washout gives Shivnarine Chanderpaul further time to rest the side injury that forced him to visit hospital on Thursday.

Vitori, Mawoyo star for Zimbabwe A

A five-wicket haul from Brian Vitori, followed by a half-century from Tino Mawoyo, helped Zimbabwe A consign Sri Lanka A to their second-straight defeat in as many games

ESPNcricinfo staff14-Jul-2012
ScorecardA five-wicket haul from Brian Vitori, followed by a half-century from Tino Mawoyo, helped Zimbabwe A consign Sri Lanka A to their second-straight defeat in as many games in the tri-series in Harare.Zimbabwe chose to bowl, and Vitori justified the decision right away, removing Kushal Perera for 2. In the 11th over, he claimed two in two balls, and Sri Lanka – who were already scoring at a far from threatening rate – hardly recovered. Vitori picked up the following two wickets as well, to complete a five-for. The other Zimbabwe bowlers all shared the wickets around, as Sri Lanka were bowled out in 45 overs for 160. Bhanuka Rajapaksa was the only batsman to make much of a difference for the visitors, with 57 from 67 balls.In the chase, Zimbabwe were in a bit of trouble after losing Chamu Chibhabha and Sikandar Raza cheaply, but a 94-run stand between Mawoyo and Stuart Matsikenyeri put them back on course. Though they had the game firmly in their grip, a mini-collapse, in which they lost 3 for 22, meant they couldn’t finish the game in 40 overs to claim a bonus point. The five-wicket win was achieved in 40.3 overs.Zimbabwe play South Africa at the same venue on Sunday.

McInnes' first assignment starts August 8

Richard McInnes’ first assignment as head coach of Bangladesh’s National Cricket Academy will be to oversee a week-long training camp starting August 8

Mohammad Isam04-Aug-2012Richard McInnes’ first assignment as head coach of Bangladesh’s National Cricket Academy will be to oversee a week-long training camp starting August 8. Ten cricketers have been selected to take part in the camp.Batsmen Fazle Mahmud, Tasamul Haque and Myshukur Rahman, allrounders Mahmudul Hasan and Sabbir Rahman, left-arm spinners Shaker Ahmed, Sanjamul Islam, Nazmul Islam, leg-spinner Tanveer Haider and seamer Kamrul Islam Rabbi are the available cricketers in the country since Bangladesh A and the Under-19s side are currently playing abroad.All ten selected cricketers were part of the Academy squad that toured South Africa last year under McInnes’ predecessor Ross Turner.”He [McInnes] will work with ten players of the Academy who are currently available for a week,” BCB’s game development manager Nazmul Abedin said. “Later when others from the A team and the Under-19 team arrive, whoever is selected will join the Academy squad.”The Academy’s first assignment of the year will be a four-day game against the touring West Indies High Performance team from September 16 to 19 in Khulna’s Sheikh Abu Naser Stadium. The visitors will also take on Bangladesh A in another four-day match, three one-day games and two Twenty20s thereafter.

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