Sri Lanka's tour game scrapped due to flight problems

Sri Lanka will have no practice game ahead of the second Test in Port of Spain from April 3 after the cancellation of their scheduled fixture against West Indies A in Tobago. The match was to be a three-day affair, starting on March 29, but the West Indies board said “flight problems” had led to it being scrapped. The visitors will instead practice in the nets at Tobago’s Shaw Park.Sri Lanka lead the two-match series 1-0 after securing their first Test win in the West Indies at the Providence Stadium in Guyana on Wednesday. It has been a disrupted trip for Sri Lanka after heavy rain led to the tourists’ opening practice game, against a Guyana President’s Select XI, being shifted from Bourda to the Providence Stadium.

West Indies and Pakistan start with wins

John Campbell on his way to 112 © Cricinfo
 

As the group stages of the Under-15 Challenge got underway, West Indies, who had been beaten in the knockout final on Thursday, beat Bangladesh by 37 runs in Trinidad. In overcast conditions where the ball moved considerably, West Indies recovered from a shaky start to make 237, John Campbell anchoring the innings with 112. Bangladesh struggled despite a battling 80 from Ahamedul Kabir.Ireland had no problems in beating a poor Kenya side by seven wickets as once again the Kenyan batting proved feeble. A score of 110 was never remotely challenging.

Pakistan enjoyed easy pickings when they batted against Netherlands, running up 332 for 5 with Muhammad Naeem making 90 and Mohammad Babar, Ahsan Ali and Zafar Gohar chipping in with fifties. Netherlands were blown away for 102 to give Pakistan a massive 230-run win.The two outsiders produced the closest game as Malaysia edged out ICC Americas by two wickets. Abhijit Joshi led the way for ICC Americas with 64 but there were no other significant contributions as they made 156. Malaysia squeezed home with 20 balls in hand.

Vengsarkar takes over as NCA director

The BCCI has appointed former India captain Dilip Vengsarkar as the director of the National Cricket Academy in Bangalore. Shashank Manohar, the BCCI president, confirmed that Vengsarkar would hold his position in an honorary capacity.Vengsarkar, who is the vice-president of the Mumbai Cricket Association, said he accepted the offer readily, but conceded the job posed a challenging task. He said his priority was to revitalise the NCA, which he felt had become “defunct” and needed to be put back on the tracks.”Over the years it [NCA] has been the supply line for Indian international cricket,” Vengsarkar said. “It is challenging to spot and groom talent from all over India. There is a huge amount of talent in India, but it has to be groomed and nurtured and the NCA can play an important role in that process.”Vengsarkar was of the view that the NCA had become stale over the last few years. “For the last four to five years, it is as good as defunct. And it had no direction. So I will have to focus on the restructuring and make sure that Indian cricket can get good cricketers and we can have a good bench strength.”Vengsarkar will take over from Brijesh Patel, who reportedly had to step down from his position owing to the conflict-of-interest guidelines introduced by Manohar. Patel started his second stint as NCA director last year after the conclusion of the IPL, having served in the same position between 2001 and 2004. Patel is the secretary of the Karnataka State Cricket Association as well as being the director of cricket operations at the Royal Challengers Bangalore franchise, positions he has stressed as being honorary.Immediately upon taking over as the BCCI president, Manohar had mentioned that revamping the NCA was part of his immediate goals. “The board would also look into the starting of National Cricket Academy (NCA) again, whose activities are not up to the mark as of date,” Manohar had said. “And we would see to it that the NCA functions round the year so that cricketing talent is developed in this country. Today we are short of the second line. There are no spinners in this country. So it is also our duty to see to it that we have an available lot as a replacement for the current players.”Scouting and grooming talent has been part of Vengsarkar’s strengths in the past. He was the head of the BCCI’s talent and research development wing a decade ago, and then served as the chairman of the national selection committee, positions he believes will help him in his new job. Vengsarkar said he was yet to chalk out a plan, but would present his vision to the NCA board during the first week of December.The NCA board, a BCCI sub-committee, is headed by veteran administrator Niranjan Shan along with Vengsarkar and former India Test opener Chetan Chauhans. The other members on the board are Amitabh Choudhary (BCCI joint secretary), Subir Ganguly (East zone), Prashant Vaidya (Central), Sanjay Desai (South) and Vishal Marwah (North).

Pakistan pick Manzoor, Raees for WT20

Pakistan have picked four uncapped players in the T20I format – batsmen Khurram Manzoor and Babar Azam, fast bowler Rumman Raees, and allrounder Mohammad Nawaz – in their squad for the World T20 in India in March and April. Fast bowler Mohammad Irfan also returned to the squad after missing the recent T20 internationals in New Zealand.They left out opener Ahmed Shehzad from the squad that toured New Zealand in January, along with batsmen Shoaib Maqsood and Saad Nasim, wicketkeeper-batsman Mohammad Rizwan, allrounder Aamer Yamin and fast bowler Umar Gul.Pakistan was supposed to announce their squad by February 8 but delayed doing so because the selectors were unsure about the opening slot. Shehzad’s poor recent form meant his exclusion was inevitable, but the main debate centered around Manzoor. ESPNcricinfo understands that the head coach Waqar Younis has serious concerns over Manzoor’s selection, and that the PCB chairman Shaharyar Khan has been unhappy with the chief selector Haroon Rasheed and has sounded out at least one former cricketer to take his place.The other contenders for the opening slot were Sharjeel Khan and Kamran Akmal but the selectors, after the input of captain Shahid Afridi, preferred Manzoor.Manzoor, who has played 16 Test matches and seven ODIs, has not played for Pakistan in any format since August 2014. His last selection to Pakistan’s limited-overs teams came more than six years ago, in 2009 against Sri Lanka. He scored 309 runs at 28.09 in the domestic T20 competition last year and was not selected by any of the five teams in the ongoing Pakistan Super League. His selection remains the most contentious among the 15-man World T20 squad. The same squad will play in the Asia Cup as well.”While picking the squad, the team management and skipper were consulted by the selectors, and all concerned gave their consent in this regard,” chief selector Rasheed said in a statement. “The T20 team has been selected keeping in mind the conditions during Asia Cup and World T20 and the recent performances of some players in domestic and A team tours. The team is a fine blend of experience and youth and the selectors believe that team will do well in both tournaments.”Pakistan’s bowling unit includes Mohammad Amir, Wahab Riaz and Anwar Ali while Gul, who failed to impress the selectors on his latest comeback from injury, has been dropped. The selectors, however, brought back Mohammad Irfan, whose inclusion gives the attack a more threatening look. Backing them up is the 24-year-old Raees, who has been among the most economical bowlers in the PSL so far.Pakistan didn’t name a specialist spinner but banked on allrounders Afridi, Shoaib Malik, Imad Wasim and new face Mohammad Nawaz – a left-arm spinner and a full-time batsman.Nawaz, who picked up 10 wickets in the Under-19 World Cup in 2012 in Australia, has been a standout player with both bat and ball in the PSL, where he is currently the top wicket-taker.Squad Shahid Afridi (capt), Mohammad Hafeez, Shoaib Malik, Umar Akmal, Sarfraz Ahmed, Babar Azam, Iftikhar Ahmed, Imad Wasim, Anwar Ali, Mohammad Irfan, Wahab Riaz, Mohammad Amir, Mohammad Nawaz, Khurram Manzoor, Rumman Raees

Koortzen stars in Griquas victory

Griqualand West opening batsman Pieter Koortzen walked away with theman-of-the-match prize after scoring an undefeated 107 in his team’s 66-runwin over the Highveld Strikers.It was Koortzen’s second century in as many innings in this competition,following on his 123 against North West seven days previously, and it cameoff 113 balls and included 12 fours.Koortzen and Loots Bosman set the tone with an opening stand of 169 thattormented the Strikers until the 24th over, when Bosman was bowled by CliveEksteen, the only visiting bowler to leave in one piece with figures of twofor 33 off his nine overs.Bosman crashed his imperious 89 off 78 balls with 10 fours and two sixes -one driven straight off Ottis Gibson, the other cut square off DavidTerbrugge.Both strokes were nothing short of breathtaking in their sheer audacity, andit will not help the restoration of the Gautengers’ sense of humour thatBosman hit them after he had been dropped on four by Andrew Hall in theslips off Gibson.If much of this sounds familiar, it could be because a similar whirlwindtore through Kimberley when North West came, saw and were conquered. BesidesKoortzen’s effort, Bosman scored 86 and Griquas totalled 318 for six.So no records were set against the Strikers, except that the 306 for fourwas Griquas’ highest total against the not so mellow yellows.The home side couldn’t get much wrong after the start given them by Koortzenand Bosman, but they suffered a significant wobble when, with Eksteenbowling immaculately, Bosman, Grant Elliott and Brett Tucker were sentpacking in the space of 18 balls.Only for Martin Gidley to join Koortzen at the crease and graft 69 runs off59 balls, hitting six fours and two sixes along the way, in a fourth-wicketstand of 111 that ended in the 43rd over when Gidley was bowled byTerbrugge.The Strikers’ reply had a tired look about it from the start, and their onlybatting of consequence was delivered by Nic Pothas and Zander de Bruyn, whoscored 71 and 72 respectively and shared a partnership of 88 for the fifthwicket.By then, however, the writing was on the wall in two-metre-high neonletters.

India A build on lead after Ojha five-for

ScorecardPeter Handscomb put on 154 runs for the fifth wicket with Marcus Stoinis•BCCI

Temporarily ditching his fast-mediums to try his hand at offspin, Gurinder Sandhu picked up two late wickets to stall India A after a positive beginning to their second innings. Having secured a 33-run first-innings lead thanks to a five-wicket haul from Pragyan Ojha, India A’s top three had extended it to 143 before Sandhu struck to remove Abhinav Mukund. He then removed Cheteshwar Pujara in his next over for the addition of seven more runs. Both wickets came through extraordinary bits of fielding.The first was almost entirely unintentional. Rocking back to a short ball from Sandhu, Mukund slapped it hard but straight towards Cameron Bancroft at silly point. The fielder crouched to evade the ball and ended up holding it aloft after discovering it had lodged itself between his stomach and forearm. In Sandhu’s next over, Pujara whipped him firmly into the leg side, only for Peter Handscomb to throw himself to his left and pluck the ball out two-handed, at full stretch. Pujara stood motionless for a couple of seconds, stunned, before trudging off to the dressing room. Karun Nair and Shreyas Iyer saw India A through to stumps, their lead 154 with seven wickets in hand.Until Sandhu’s reintroduction in unexpected guise, India A were having little difficulty in their second innings. The two teams’ first-innings run rates – India A scored their runs at 2.62 an over, and Australia A at 2.69 – had indicated the difficulty of run-scoring on this slow Chepauk pitch, but with a small lead and a day and a half left, India A began cautiously – going to tea at 20 for 0 after 10 overs – and batted with urgency thereafter.KL Rahul came down the track and launched Steve O’Keefe over long-off in the third over of the final session, before getting out to another aggressive shot, pulling Travis Head hard and flat but too close to deep square leg. The dismissal didn’t dissuade the new man Pujara from playing the pull at every opportunity, as he jumped deep in his crease whenever the spinners dropped marginally short and looked for opportunities to attack them off the back foot.Pujara’s strike rate was in the 70s at one point, but Australia A took Head out of the attack and rotated the seamers from one end, with O’Keefe extracting turn and bounce from the other – he produced an edge from Pujara, on 23, that went quickly to Usman Khawaja and eluded his grasp at first slip – to bring India’s scoring rate back to the mean. With the result of the match perhaps less of a priority than competitive match practice, India A will probably try and push on for quick runs before having two sessions to bowl at Australia A. Sandhu’s late strikes may even have given the visitors a sniff of bowling India A out.In the morning session, Peter Handscomb became the second batsman out in the 90s in this match, after he had extended his fifth-wicket stand with Marcus Stoinis from 110 to 154. Stoinis was the more aggressive of the two early on, drilling Pragyan Ojha to the right of mid-off in the second over of the morning and lifting him over mid-off for another boundary to bring up his fifty two overs later.Umesh Yadav, who was bowling to a 5-4 leg-side field at the other end, gave Stoinis a bit of width to chop him away to the backward point boundary, but tightened his line thereafter and sent down successive maidens. Soon after, Amit Mishra came back into the attack to replace Ojha.All nine wickets credited to India A’s bowlers came from balls bowled from the Pattabiraman Gate End. From that end, the spinners had more of rough to bowl at, outside the left-handers’ off stump, and Ojha had dismissed three of them on the second day. Mishra had looked less effective then, bowling from the Pavilion End and finding minimal purchase. The change of ends, allied to a loopier trajectory, brought him success in only his second over.Flight enticed Handscomb out of his crease, but unlike all his previous forays down the track, this one didn’t end in a pleasing flick or drive. This time Mishra achieved dip and turn to beat Handscomb’s edge as he jabbed uncertainly at the ball, and Naman Ojha completed an easy stumping. Mishra struck again four overs later, dropping a legbreak on a perfect length to bring Matthew Wade halfway forward and spinning it out of the rough to produce a a bat-pad catch to short leg.Stoinis saw Australia A through to lunch in Sean Abbott’s company, but fell soon after the interval, going after Ojha but failing to clear long-off, stationed a fair distance in front of the boundary. Ojha then slipped one past a hoick from Sandhu before Mishra got the last man Andrew Fekete, who was caught at slip while trying to cut one that hurried off the pitch.

Matabeleland report

The selectors announced a virtually unchanged side for the match againstMashonaland, which will now be played over the weekend of 19 to 22 April due to the postponement of the Australian tour. 13 players have been named, with Mbangwa, now back from India, and Kenny returning and young Mupariwa moving to the Matabeleland Under 19 squad for the festival week in Harare.The side’s performance was measurably better in the match against theAcademy, more polished and professional and the team was probably unlucky not to come away with a victory. Although the performance was better there are still areas of concern, which when addressed correctly should bring better results. The correct balance of the side is still lacking and this leads to more pressure being put on certain players.Young Wisdom Siziba continues to impress as a batsman with excellentConcentration; his colleagues could learn from him and improve their batting skills. He is able to concentrate more on his batting ability without the worry of keeping wicket, another aspect of the game where he has potential, and this may prove fruitful in his future career.Debutant Stu Walker may be well satisfied with his debut, a good performance behind the stumps and a positive 44 in the second innings. Ewing continues to impress with bat and ball and again had a good match. Dabengwa, the ever-improving McKillop, Strydom – more with the bat than the ball – should all be satisfied with their contributions. Strydom, who has only just turned 18 and is showing his undoubted potential, threw away the chance of another century when playing a pull with his head in the air, to be comprehensively bowled, a stroke young players would have been castigated for.Of the remainder, Townshend, Mahachi and young Mupariwa had reasonable performances, but the continuing failures from Ryan King are of concern. He is a player with ability but maybe not the temperament to perform in the top echelons of cricket. Williams the captain is also short on runs and was unlucky to be run out when calling for a run which was on. He was run out when his partner, not wide awake to the situation, failed to respond.Norman Mukandiwa should relish the break of a few weeks to allow his niggling side injury to recover, as will Wisdom Siziba who has a badly bruised hand. The inclusion of both Mbangwa and Streak should see Matabeleland lift their game against Manicaland in Mutare on 5 to 8 April.

Butterworth destroys hapless Redbacks


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Luke Butterworth collected 5 for 29•Getty Images

Luke Butterworth ensured that South Australia’s miserable Sheffield Shield form continued at Adelaide Oval, where they collapsed to be 7 for 93 at stumps on the second day. It was an especially disappointing result for the Redbacks after Tasmania piled up 3 for 403 in their first innings, before declaring with Ricky Ponting within sight of a century, on 85, as rain affected the early part of the day.Gary Putland removed Alex Doolan for 149 and Tasmania added 49 to their overnight total before the declaration came. But the Redbacks immediately found the going tough when it was their turn to bat as Butterworth struck twice in the third over of the innings, getting rid of Phillip Hughes and Tom Cooper, before Sam Miller (23) and Callum Ferguson (48) rebuilt with a 65-run stand.However, they were the only two South Australians to reach double-figures by the close of play, as Butterworth and James Faulkner ran through the middle order. Butterworth finished with 5 for 29 and Faulkner had 2 for 10, and by stumps South Australia were staring at yet another potential defeat.

Kanitkar and Saxena dominate Mumbai again

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Hrishikesh Kanitkar scored his third centuries in the last three matches against Mumbai•Rajasthan Cricket Association

Hrishikesh Kanitkar and Vineet Saxena continued their domination of the most successful Ranji side, Mumbai, with centuries that took the defending champions Rajasthan to 269 for 2. Along the way Kanitkar also crossed 10,000 first-class runs, while Saxena went past his 5000th.Mumbai managed to get captain Kanitkar out before stumps, but their 220-run partnership made the Mumbai attack look weak, especially in the absence of Ajit Agarkar. With these centuries, the records of Kanitkar and Saxena in the last three matches against Mumbai became all the more daunting. As a Rajasthan player, Kanitkar has played three matches against Mumbai, and scored 113, 141 and 119 in this match. In the same matches, Saxena has piled on 143, 53 and 4, and 114 not out in this game.Mumbai tried seven bowlers, but only Kshemal Waingankar and Ankeet Chavan managed a wicket each.
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The resilient lower middle order of Bengal bailed them out against a Punjab attack that looked like pushing towards a second straight position of dominance. Led by Manpreet Gony and Sandeep Sharma, they had reduced Bengal to 118 for 5, but ran into Wriddhiman Saha and Laxmi Shukla, who added 124 for the sixth wicket.This was a third half-century in three innings this season for Saha, who finished unbeaten on 75. Shukla, who played his part with both bat and ball in the previous game, provided him able support, and Punjab had to wait for 36.2 overs for the sixth wicket. Debutant Arnab Nandi then added 33 with Saha to further frustrate, but parity was restored with Nandi’s wicket with the last ball of the 87th over.
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They were three bad-light interruptions in Hyderabad, the third one ending the day with only 54 overs bowled, but there was time enough for Hyderabad to get off to a usual ordinary start, and VVS Laxman to find a partner and put up a usual rearguard.Hyderabad lost their openers with only 22 runs on the board, but Laxman and the 19-year-old Hanuma Vihari then kept the MP attack at bay. Vihari finished the day five short of his personal best, and Laxman’s 70 even inculded a six. He hit only five sixes in Tests.
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In the Gujarat derby, Gujarat gained the upper hand against Saurashtra on a day in which the balance of power shifted more than once. Saurashtra took two early wickets to make it 62 for 2, but the Patels, Smit and Parthiv, both wicketkeepers too, scored aggressive fifties only for Ravindra Jadeja to dismiss them within three overs to put the game in balance again at 148 for 4.From there on then, youngsters Manprit Juneja and Bhargav Merai put Gujarat in ascendency with a partnership of 82. Merai, playing his second game, missed out on a maiden first-class fifty, but Juneja seemed on the way to what could be his second century in only his fourth match. Juneja also found support from No. 7 Rujul Bhatt, with whom he added an unbeaten 48 before stumps.

Naqvi's century boosts Islamabad

A chanceless knock of 108 by Test reject Ali Naqvi boosted Islamabad to 259 for seven on the first day of the Quaid-i-Azam Trophy match against Gujranwala at the KRL Stadium here on Sunday.Islamabad also secured the services of another Test discard Ijaz Ahmed Sr as well forcing their coach Irfan Bhatti to lead the side in this crucial match.Islamabad, who elected to bat after winning the toss, made a poorstart when Hakim Butt was trapped leg-before-wicket by left-arm pacerSarfraz Ahmed with no runs on the board.However, guest player Ali Naqvi, who had previously played for Karachi, set about repairing the damage in three useful partnerships with Bilal Asad (21), Iftikhar Hussain (29) and Ijaz Ahmed (21).Naqvi, who completed his half century before lunch off 88 balls witheight fours, reached his century off 166 balls in 209 minutes with 16boundaries.Ijaz Ahmed made a quiet return to active cricket when he scooped acatch to mid-off as he went for an ambitious drive against off-spinnerAtaullah Khan. He batted for 67 minutes and hit four fours in his 30-ball innings.Naqvi, who batted for 241 minutes and faced 191 balls, was dismissedto the very first ball after tea when he was bowled by medium-pacerIrfan Butt.