Sibley, Alsop lead strong England day

Dominic Sibley led England’s excellent progress on the opening day of the second Youth Test with South Africa. Sibley fell one short of a century but guided his side into a strong position.

ESPNcricinfo staff07-Aug-2014
ScorecardDominic Sibley hit the headlines at the end of last season•PA PhotosDominic Sibley led England’s excellent progress on the opening day of the second Youth Test with South Africa. Sibley fell one short of a century but guided his side into a strong position.Sibley hit the headlines at the end of last season when he became the youngest player to score a double century in the County Championship and here gave England an excellent start after they had been sent into bat at Wantage Road.He fell for 99 to Sibonelo Makhanya, who also had Will Rhodes caught behind late in the day to just take the gloss off what had been a strong first day for the hosts.Rhodes’ partnership with Tom Alsop looked to be taking England to the close but Rhodes fell for 32 after a stand of 58.But the main partnership of the day was between Sibley and Alsop who added 140 for the second wicket. Hampshire’s Alsop closed unbeaten on 72.

Chucking is technical fault, not crime – Dravid

Rahul Dravid believes bowlers who have been banned for suspect bowling actions are suffering from kinks, which once corrected should allow him to reintegrate with the game

Amol Karhadkar12-Sep-2014’Would love to work with young cricketers’ – Dravid

Rahul Dravid has reiterated that he would like to coach young cricketers at some point in his life, but added this is not the right time for him to be interested in taking over as India coach. Asked if he sees himself as a future India coach or he is happy with his role as a television commentator, Dravid said: “I think there is a time and place for everything. I have enjoyed the media side of what I have done. I don’t think it’s easy. I have enjoyed the mentorship thing that I do with Rajasthan Royals for two months. It just fits into where my life is at the moment. That’s just an honest answer, having two young kids. It’s just a question of balancing how your life is. But yeah, I would love at some stage to work with young cricketers. Whether that’s with the Indian coach, I don’t know. It could be as a coach of a Ranji team at some stage.”

Rahul Dravid believes bowlers who have been banned for suspect bowling actions are suffering from kinks, which once corrected should allow them to reintegrate with international cricket. He added that he would always give a bowler the benefit of the doubt before he passes a judgment on his action.”Personally I don’t think we should see chucking as a crime as such. It is just a technical fault that people have. So if you have a technical fault in the action, you correct that and come back. When you overstep the line, nobody says you are cheating. You say, okay, come back behind the line. And here we are saying, come back within 15 degrees [of elbow flexion] and play the game,” Dravid said in an interaction with the audience after delivering the annual Dilip Sardesai Memorial Lecture.In the past few months, several bowlers have been called up for tests by the ICC and subsequently banned if they failed to demonstrate a legal bowling action. The most notable examples have been Sri Lanka offspinner Sachithra Senanayke and his Pakistan counterpart Saeed Ajmal, arguably the best spinner in the world at the moment.”I think the ICC has a rule in place,” Dravid said. “They reviewed a lot of the old footage and they found out that the elbow bent to about 15 degrees was pretty normal and that is what everyone was doing. Glenn McGrath had a slight bend in his elbow up to 15 degrees. I am not suggesting that Glenn McGrath was chucking. They have a system in place and what I am glad about is that they are really enforcing it strictly.”They are reviewing people, they are getting people caught. I give them the benefit of the doubt. I always give the bowler the benefit of the doubt. Murali went through every test possible at that time so you have to give him the benefit of doubt. What the ICC is doing now is they are being vigilant. What they are saying is that if once you are cleared in 2009, you can’t [not] be checked again. You have got to keep monitoring, watching it closely and they see bowlers developing new types of deliveries, then why not go into the lab and have it checked.”The discussion then veered to the health of the three formats of cricket and Dravid said ODIs were being put under pressure by “meaningless games””I think one-day cricket is seriously struggling,” he said. “I definitely think that one-day cricket without a context is struggling. When you think of one-day cricket from a point of view of Champions Trophy and the World Cup, it is relevant. But I think all the other one-day cricket should be given towards playing the Champions Trophy and the World Cup. And then you’ve got Test cricket and you’ve got the T20 format of the game. Meaningless one-day games and too many one-day games can actually be a problem and it is something that can be cut off. You should play lesser one-day cricket and play more tournaments. So Champions Trophy and World Cup, I would go for it, definitely.”Questions were also raised regarding young Indian cricketers’ seriousness towards playing Tests after the team’s meek surrender in the recent tour of England. Dravid, however, backed the next generation, saying he never got a sense of them not being serious about Tests during his week-long stint as a consultant with the Indian team ahead of the five-Test series.”When people say that some of our boys don’t care about Test cricket, that’s completely wrong. Because all they are asking me is, ‘how did you do well?’. They are not worried about a T20 game coming up. They are only interested in knowing how did we do well in England, how did we do well in Australia. Virat Kohli is asking those questions all the time. I don’t think it is that they don’t care. They care deeply but they were found out against a really good bowling attack on a difficult wicket. And they were not good enough in those particular Test matches. But I think they do care [about Tests] and they ask those questions.”

In-form Clarke inspires Warwickshire

With talk rampant about whether Warwickshire can emulate the class of 1994 and win the treble, the first day at Lord’s perfectly encapsulated the qualities that have got the club this far

Tim Wigmore at Lord's31-Aug-2014
ScorecardRikki Clarke ended unbeaten and put Warwickshire in a strong position•PA PhotosWith talk rampant about whether Warwickshire can emulate the class of 1994 and win the treble, the first day at Lord’s perfectly encapsulated the qualities that have got the club this far. Deprived of their premier batsman, their wicketkeeper and three of their most potent bowlers, Warwickshire yet again benefitted from the depth of their squad.Once again Rikki Clarke was to the fore. Despite missing over a month of the season through a broken finger, he is quietly mounting a formidable case to be Warwickshire’s player of the season. Blistering contributions with the bat underpinned the triumph in the T20 Blast; a Man-of-the-Match display at Chelmsford on Thursday lifted Warwickshire to the semi-finals of the Royal London Cup.In the County Championship, Clarke acts as a high-quality insurance policy for Warwickshire. With pace and bounce, he has opened the bowling when injuries and England call-ups have necessitated it. And, just as when Warwickshire won the Championship two years ago, he has perfected the art of crisis management with the bat.Pyrotechnics are Clarke’s specialty in pyjamas: his power and reach, from his 6ft 4in frame, are well suited to clearing the boundary. With Warwickshire precariously placed at 158 for 5 after Jonathan Trott’s dismissal, Clarke showed a solid defence as, unobtrusively, he took 93 balls to reach his fifth Championship half-century of the year. But, as the shadows lengthened at Lord’s, so Clarke spied a chance to counterattack.Clarke and the returning Keith Barker added an unbroken 133 runs at 4.20 an over. Crunching drives through the covers and marmalising anything short, Clarke scored at a-run-a-ball in the evening to close within sight of his first hundred of the season. It is not a prospect that daunts him. “Not after 14 years in the game,” he laughed. “You just sort of get used to it.”And so Middlesex were left to reflect on missed opportunities yet again. After winning four of their first six Championship games, their season has disintegrated. They have not added to their tally of wins in whites, making relegation a protruding possibility, while their form in the T20 and 50-over competitions was abject.This day provided a snapshot of the reasons why. Their decision to insert Warwickshire was a questionable one, perhaps betraying a desire to ease themselves into their return to the Championship: Middlesex last donned their whites on July 22. Warwickshire later confirmed that they would have batted first had they won the toss.”We looked at the wicket and thought it looked a pretty decent wicket, the sun was out and a lot of people say you look up here at Lord’s,” Clarke said. “It nipped around for most of the day. Towards the back end of the day it flattened out a bit and it was quite easy really, easy paced. When you are put into bat to be in the situation we are now we are delighted.”Such contentment looked unlikely earlier in the day. There is nothing demonstrative about Neil Dexter’s bowling: he swings the ball at a similar pace to Paul Collingwood, bowling a relentless wicket-to-wicket line. He performed with skill and control, bowling both openers with deliveries that moved late and yorked the batsmen before snaring Trott lbw playing across the line.Tim Murtagh was similarly admirable. Yet such parsimony proved elusive for the rest of the attack. Toby Roland-Jones bowled six no-balls, and was particularly wayward at the start of the day while James Harris, recalled from his loan spell at Glamorgan because of injury to Tom Helm, took his average in six Championship games for Middlesex above 50.Harris is a bowler who could do with some luck, but he suffered when substitute fielder Ollie Rayner spilled Keith Barker at slip on 30, just after the second new ball had been taken. It could be a decisive moment in this game and beyond: Warwickshire look well poised to secure full batting points.They were also grateful to Trott. After an inauspicious start – he scored four from his first 41 balls, while playing and missing on several occasions – he struck seven fours in his last 25 balls. Like the rest of Warwickshire’s top six, he reached double figures without going on to get 50. But Clarke and Barker were in no mood to squander their starts.

All-round Peshawar Panthers clinch T20 title

Peshawar Panthers put in a fine all-round showing to defeat Lahore Lions by seven wickets in the final of the Haier T20 Cup

ESPNcricinfo staff28-Sep-2014
Scorecard and ball-by-ball detailsThe victorious Peshawar Panthers side with the trophy•PCBPeshawar Panthers put in a fine all-round showing to defeat Lahore Lions by seven wickets in the final of the Haier T20 Cup. Panthers finish the tournament unbeaten.Lions had the advantage of winning the toss, and decided to bat. However, their batsmen didn’t justify the decision, with most of them struggling for momentum. They went at over a run-a-ball in only one of their six Powerplay overs to start with, and that set the pace for the innings. Kamran Akmal struggled in particular, managing only 4 off 10 before edging behind. He and the other opener, Abid Ali, were dismissed off successive deliveries, by left-arm pacer Taj Wali.By the halfway stage of their innings, Lions had only got to 55. That they got past the 130-run mark was mainly down to a brisk half-century from No. 3 Imam-ul-Haq. He ended not out on 52 off 41, with six fours, but a lack of support from the other end meant Lions could only manage a below-par 133 for 9.Panthers’ innings was more a team affair, with all of the top order contributing cameos to get the team home with four balls to spare. While No. 3 Iftikhar Ahmed top scored with 50 not out, it was the openers – Rafatullah Mohmand and Israrullah – who had ensured any hopes Lions had of sneaking back into the game were well and truly snuffed out with an explosive start to the chase.The pair added 43 runs in four overs, hitting ten boundaries between them. By the end of their Powerplay, Panthers needed just 77 more at 5.50 an over, and so it was a canter.

Junaid suffers injury setback

Pakistan fast bowler Junaid Khan has been dealt another big setback after being diagnosed with a Grade-3 osteochondral fracture in his knee which will keep him sidelined from cricket for a while

ESPNcricinfo staff28-Oct-2014Pakistan fast bowler Junaid Khan has been dealt another setback after being diagnosed with a “Grade-3 osteochondral” fracture in his knee which will keep him sidelined from cricket for a while. Junaid had already been ruled out of the ongoing series against Australia after twisting his knee during a practice session in Sharjah before the three-match ODI series.While Pakistan’s other injured seamer, Wahab Riaz, has started to recover from a cartilage injury, it is uncertain if he will make the squad for the upcoming series against New Zealand in the UAE. Junaid and Wahab have both been undergoing rehabilitation at the National Cricket Academy under the supervision of Dr Sohail Saleem, general manager, sports medicine, PCB.”A recently-performed MRI in a local hospital in Lahore revealed a Grade-3 osteochondral fracture along the anterior surface of the medial femoral condyle with underlying bone edema,” Dr. Saleem said of Junaid’s injury. “Junaid Khan is undergoing a conservative management plan for his injury. Apart from consultation with a local orthopedic surgeon in Pakistan, Junaid’s reports are also being seen by orthopedic surgeons abroad. His final course of action will be decided in couple of days.”Wahab sustained his injury while bowling in the second ODI against Australia, and was subsequently pulled out of the match. He was then sent back home for instant medical attention, where he was informed that he had “significant osteochondral defects in the lateral tibial condyle”, as well as damage to the cartilage under the knee cap. There was also suspicion of a tear to the anterior horn of the outer knee cartilage.”After examination and investigation that lasted four days from October 15 to 19, with the decision in favour of conservative management, Wahab’s rehabilitation at the National Cricket Academy commenced on October 20,” Saleem said. “His daily routine consists of knee-specific exercises, generalised fitness training, pool work-outs, physiotherapy sessions, bowling and batting sessions. He did start batting last week on Friday and by the end of Monday’s proceedings, he must have completed three batting sessions under supervision of Mohtashim Rasheed.”On Monday, he did his first shadow-bowling session with Mohammad Akram and bowled 24 pain-free balls. His work on the physio’s table consists of manual therapy techniques to achieve the desired fitness results before the beginning of the New Zealand series. I am pretty much satisfied with the progress he is making.”Pakistan have already named their squad for the second Test against Australia in Abu Dhabi, opting for Rahat Ali, Mohammad Talha and Ehsan Adil in place of their two injured quicks.

Haddin to step up for Clarke

Brad Haddin is to be anointed as Australia’s short-term Test captain to cover for Michael Clarke, who may be compelled to sacrifice his availability for the entire India series in order to help the national team’s medical staff find a solution to hamstrin

Daniel Brettig16-Nov-2014Brad Haddin is to be anointed as Australia’s short-term Test captain to cover for Michael Clarke, who may be compelled to sacrifice his availability for the entire India series in order to help the national team’s medical staff find a solution to hamstring problems ahead of next year’s World Cup and Ashes campaigns.The team performance manager Pat Howard was frank in his view that the India Tests may be too soon given Clarke’s recent history, and will recommend Haddin’s endorsement by the Cricket Australia board in that event. An AC joint injury suffered in the UAE kept Haddin out of the ODI series against South Africa but he is set to play for New South Wales in the next Sheffield Shield round.”This is a board matter but I will be applying to the board for Brad Haddin to be the captain of Australia. Nice and simple,” Howard told . “Brad has been very good in this process of supporting his captain so we’re not looking for a succession planning captain at this time. We are looking for a person that is ready to go now. We’ve got a lot of other people who in the future might put their hands up but we’ve got a very clear framework of what we’re going with.”Howard also stated that Clarke might even need to undergo surgery, after scans of his most recent hamstring ailment – the third in six weeks – returned inconclusive results. “We are putting the World Cup and Ashes right up there and if he’s right for the Indian Test series so be it,” he said. “But we’ve seen him rushed back and what we’d hate is for him to play a Test or two and then break down.”Everything is on the table at this point. We saw Nathan Coulter-Nile go through hamstring surgery and come back in eight weeks, so obviously that is one possibility, yes. But we are actually going through having a look at all processes at the moment, and making sure we get player buy-in. It’s important that Michael as the patient believes he is assessing all possible options.”I have talked about the priorities and what they are. Sometimes you have got to take a little bit of a long term and a medium term picture. If we do this well, we can get extra years out of Michael who is a world class player, rather than thinking in days and tournaments. We have an opportunity to really get the best out of the last couple of years of his career.”Clarke’s repeated hamstring trouble is related to his degenerative back condition and seems also to be linked to the effects of long haul travel. After electing to play despite a hamstring strain in Zimbabwe, which was then aggravated enough to rule him out of the limited overs matches in the UAE, Clarke looked ginger at times during the Pakistan Tests. He will now have to wait on the advice of the team physio Alex Kountouris and doctor Peter Brukner before progressing further.”Getting to the World Cup is important and how we get through this progress and rehab program will be important first,” Howard said. “Anything past that we will assess how his body has come through that period and it will be a consultative process. ‘Mate, what can your body handle?’ If it can handle everything and we’ve done it really well, keep going, if it can’t we assess that at that time.”Players react differently to different things. We follow best practice. I’m very happy with that and we are searching even further and wider now to look at different ways to challenge our thinking. That’s why it’s going to take a little bit of time to make sure the rehab program is [right]. We probably find something a little bit different and give it a go.”

'Sometimes we're too harsh on our bowlers' – Kohli

Virat Kohli began the task of captaining India full time by throwing his weight behind his bowlers, saying the batsmen need to share some of the blame for India’s failures

Sidharth Monga in Sydney05-Jan-20154:17

‘Will always try to take advice from Dhoni’ – Kohli

This series began with Virat Kohli as India’s temporary captain and will end with his being India’s permanent captain. Ravi Shastri has been around throughout. Aggression has thus been the buzzword. Those who are expecting a magic wand to wave over and transform India will do well to be reminded the bowlers remain the same. The same men who have failed to sustain pressure for MS Dhoni. It’s an attack where the loose ball is never too far away. The real test for an India captain is to provide new results with the same attack. Kohli began the task by throwing his weight behind the bowlers, saying the batsmen need to share some of the blame.”Consistency is something we have to improve on,” Kohli said. “Sometimes we are too harsh on our bowlers. There have been times in England as well where the batting has failed, and in this sport you need a lot of honesty. We should stand up and say that we didn’t do our job properly. Sometimes we are too harsh on our bowlers.”When our bowlers get hit it is always about bad bowling, when their bowlers are hit it was good batting. I don’t understand where the problem lies. Sometimes they might have bowled not up to the mark, but our bowlers are always under the scanner. Let’s not be too critical of them. They are young. What I saw in MCG was a good sign of what you need in Test cricket – when you are tired, bowl a tight spell, that’s what the best teams in the world do. Coming back into the game at important moments. The first spells have been good, and when they improve their second and third spells can change the game. You will see different results.”Kohli’s assessment of the bowlers is not too different from the start of the series, when he sounded extremely excited about the presence of three 140-plus bowlers. “Still think that if you have three bowlers who can bowl 140-plus that is a positive,” Kohli said. “At the end of the day it is about bowling in the right areas in those important situations, that’s where your composure comes in the second or third spells. The guys know that, we just need to give them that breathing space in Test cricket because once you get a combination right and when you get the guys on the same page it is a very delightful journey that you enjoy winning situations/moments.”The guys are pretty close to that, to see that happen sooner than later, and in this game we don’t need to do much different than bowl consistently in the right areas. The fact that they have improved in the MCG Test, especially in the second innings when they were tired, shows that this can be done. So it is just about locking that in their brains and doing it every time the team needs them to do it.”Kohli said he has reflected on the Adelaide Test, and has learnt the lessons he needs to learn. “There were quite a few things from Adelaide that I sat down and analysed which can be improved upon,” Kohli said. “I have thought about them in the past few days, that what are the things that I can correct from Adelaide, the mistakes I have made in that game. Hopefully I’ll get those right and try to make the right decisions in every situation out there in the middle.”Plus, I don’t think there needs to be a major change. The message was plain and simple in Adelaide: go out there, back yourself, express yourself, play positively and play to win. So, there’s nothing special I need to say again to the boys because everyone is on the same page and you have seen it with the way we have played in this series. We have always looked to be positive. What we could have done better is win those important moments and that’s something I think we need to improve as a Test team. Once you get that composure right in those difficult situations, where the Test matches are won or lost in an hour or about 40 minutes, you will see a very different Test team and different results as well.”Kohli might not want to change things too much, but things are changing fast. This could also be the last Test as India coach for Duncan Fletcher, whose contract comes up for review at the end of the World Cup. Like the erring bowlers, Fletcher, too, experienced Kohli’s support. He even suggested it might be down to Flethcer if he wants to continue or not. “He has done a very good job with all the young players in the team,” Kohli said. “The players who have played in the past, the senior players, won’t require as much help as compared to the youngsters. With the youngsters he has been really good with the technical part of the game and improving small little things in our games.”It makes a big difference when we go out there to play in international cricket, especially because of the kind of experience he has had with a lot of teams. I have personally certainly enjoyed him being coach and all the youngsters and all the players that have played under him have also enjoyed because you get a lot of input. But at the end of the day it’s an individual’s call [to continue or not]. What I want and what other players want [doesn’t matter], at the end of the day what matters is his personal decision. We just have to wait and watch what happens at that point of time, but I have really enjoyed playing under Duncan Fletcher.”

Hamstring concern for Mitchell Marsh

Mitchell Marsh has added to Australia’s injury concerns after leaving the field with soreness in his right hamstring on the first day of the second Test against India

Brydon Coverdale at the Gabba17-Dec-2014Mitchell Marsh has added to Australia’s injury concerns after leaving the field with soreness in his right hamstring on the first day of the second Test against India at the Gabba. Marsh pulled up gingerly after delivering the final ball of his first over after lunch, and his sixth of the innings, and immediately left the field to be assessed by the Cricket Australia medical staff.Australia entered the Test without their captain Michael Clarke, who has had surgery on his right hamstring, and fast bowler Ryan Harris, who has a slight quadriceps strain. Marsh had been Australia’s only wicket-taker in the opening session, finally claiming his first Test wicket in his fourth match when his short ball was slashed behind by Shikhar Dhawan.Marsh has a history of hamstring issues. In October, he was ruled out of Australia’s limited-overs matches against Pakistan in the UAE after hurting his left hamstring, the same hamstring that had been operated on two years earlier. However, he recovered in time to make his Test debut in the first Test in Dubai later that month.In 2013 he picked up a hamstring injury during the Australia A tour of South Africa in July-August and aggravated it during Champions League training with the Perth Scorchers in September.The previous year he tore his hamstring tendons off the bone while diving to make his ground while batting in a one-day game for Western Australia.

Miller, Duminy madness sinks spirited Zimbabwe

David Miller and JP Duminy lifted South Africa from 83 for 4 to 339 for 4 with a world-record fifth-wicket partnership, which proved too much despite Zimbabwe’s batsmen rallying impressively

The Report by Alagappan Muthu15-Feb-2015
Scorecard and ball-by-ball detailsA decade. That’s how long it’s been since Zimbabwe had South Africa four down with the team’s hundred still a way away. Opportunity beckoned, but David Miller and JP Duminy heard the call louder. Their counterattacking centuries reinforced the skill that runs down this mighty batting line-up, as a score of 83 for 4 grew into 339 for 4 and the world record for the fifth-wicket partnership was updated to 256 off 178.Perhaps Zimbabwe took heart from that. Perhaps the team talk was if their opposition could do that with a poor start, what might happen if the top order stood up to be counted. Chamu Chibhabha, back after nearly two years in ODI exile, and Hamilton Masakadza, playing his first World Cup in a 13-year career, decided to test the theory. A refreshing partnership began, but it could only extend to 105, and the ones that followed were cut short before they could pry the match from South Africa’s hands as they won by 62 runs.Zimbabwe lost it when their bowlers lost it in the final overs. The result was a numbing mix of sixes off over-pitched balls, sixes off full tosses and sixes off short balls. The wresting of momentum appeared very stark as the fielders began giving up on chasing the ball once it cleared the infield. And those were the lucky ones for Zimbabwe. Miller tonked one that soared over the square-leg boundary and may well had disrupted the traffic outside the ground. Solomon Mire was the bowler and this was how that over, the 48th of the innings, went: 6 4 4 6 4 6 – that’s more than South Africa made in the first 10 overs.Zimbabwe bowled 23 overs for under six. Eight was the most they had given away until the 37th cost 10. After that, there was a batch of fours between the 45th and 48th that bled 80. While batting, they had been ahead of South Africa’s 262 at the end of the 46th over. The question of ‘what if’ must be haunting them.Miller and Duminy, meanwhile, would be sighing in relief. Their firepower should be celebrated and their patience in constructing a suitable launchpad should not be overlooked. There were 69 balls without a boundary in the middle overs before the tap was turned to full. They blunted some balls that held onto a slow pitch, pinched singles off others to push the run rate higher, and eventually ended up with a score that was nearly a hundred runs more than what they had hoped for.Duminy was injured when South Africa were knocked out 4-1 in Australia during the lead-up to the World Cup, and today was a measure of how much he contributes to balancing this team. He matched Miller shot for shot in the final overs, might have been better than his partner at exploiting gaps along the ground, and was building himself a useful reputation as the man South Africa like to have in the latter stages of the innings. He was 29 off 37, with one lone four after 30 overs. He finished 115 off 100, and improved his boundary count by 11.A couple of other vital cogs for South Africa did not have the best day. Dale Steyn’s sting was reduced on a sluggish pitch and Masakadza felt good enough to race down the track and hammer a six to long-off to reach his fifty. Morne Morkel’s short balls came in with a ‘tuck in’ label so much that Mire blasted one of them powerfully and broke a tree branch behind the midwicket boundary. These are bowlers that intimidate with reputation. Judging by their figures at the end of the day – Steyn 1 for 64 off nine overs and Morkel 2 for 49 in 8.2 – Zimbabwe weren’t quite so daunted. They were, however, less successful against Vernon Philander’s metronomic discipline and Imran Tahir’s quick legbreaks and sharp-turning googlies, which produced three wickets for only 36 runs.It hadn’t been that long ago that the Zimbabwe flag was aloft, along with a blur of hands. Those that weren’t waving like they just didn’t care, clapped up an infections beat. The only thing more impressive than the fans’ moves was how an earnest set of bowlers defied the norm to have the South African top order stuttering.AB de Villiers was uncertain. Although it wasn’t with bat in hand. A dry pitch left him with doubts over what he would do had he won the toss. Those may have evolved into concern as he watched Zimbabwe exploiting that to get rid of South Africa’s openers.Second slip became short cover in the third over and the eager-to-drive Quinton de Kock fell into the trap in the next one from Tendai Chatara. Hashim Amla’s inside edge conspired against him, the stumps were broken and Tinashe Panyangara had slipped in his follow-through. That did not stop him from celebrating dismissing a batsman who has amassed 413 runs in his last four matches with a nifty little offcutter – he did so by flopping about like a fish out of water with a giant grin on his face.It was matched by Craig Ervine as he de Villiers-ed de Villiers in the 21st over with a hokey-pokey catch. His smile appeared first, the ball settled in his open palms much later, the fans kept dancing and the dream seemed to be turning to reality. Zimbabwe had only ever won two matches against South Africa – one of them in the 1999 World Cup – and historic territory appeared near. But then they were forced to accept a serious flaw in their combination – the lack of a strike bowler in the death.

English cricket 'losing touch'

If it was not already abundantly clear that cricket in England has endured a difficult 18 months, then the publication of the 2015 this week hammers the point home with a resounding thud

Alan Gardner08-Apr-2015If it was not already abundantly clear that cricket in England has endured a difficult 18 months, then the publication of the 2015 this week hammers the point home with a resounding thud. Its editor, Lawrence Booth, has characterised the past year as one in which the game “repeatedly lost touch” and criticises the ECB for a litany of failings, from overseeing the decline of the England team, to mismanaging the sacking of Kevin Pietersen and failing to effectively promote the sport to a new generation.The greatest fear, voiced in a section about the fall in participation figures at recreational level, is that 10 years after the 2005 Ashes became a national fixation “cricket is loitering at the edges of the conversation”. To use the phrase coined at the beginning of last year as the ECB dug its trenches in the Pietersen stand-off – one which has still not been resolved – it seems rather more people are currently “outside cricket” than is good for the health of the game.Change is already afoot, with Colin Graves set to take office as ECB chairman and a new chief executive, Tom Harrison, working on a wide-ranging review. They will find their mandate strengthened by Booth’s assessments – is a weighty tome, more than 150 years old, and its “Notes by the editor” carry a similar level of authority.Wisden 2015•John Wisden & Co”In 2014 English cricket repeatedly lost touch – not just with things it wished had never happened, but with the basic idea that the national team belongs to us all,” Booth writes.”A few wins might have deflected attention from a charge sheet that would include the mishandling of the Kevin Pietersen affair, worrying Test attendances outside London, a head-in-the-sand attitude to the one-day team, and – not yet a decade after the 2005 Ashes had presented English cricket with a golden chance to attract a new generation to the sport – a fall in the number of recreational players.”But the wins were too few. Starting with the drubbing in Australia, England lost nine full series out of 11 across the formats in 2014, to say nothing of their defeat by the Netherlands at the World Twenty20. In all, they lost 28 games. Only once had this been surpassed in a calendar year by one of the eight major teams – the dysfunctional 2010 Pakistanis.”Despite that record of failure, only one member of the hierarchy lost their job – and the removal of Alastair Cook from the one-day captaincy was another ECB clanger, described by Booth as “the correct decision, but several months too late”. Of those charged with reviving England after the 2013-14 whitewash in Australia, he is equally scathing.”The power brokers indulged in mutual backslapping. National selector James Whitaker had called Cook ‘our exceptional leader’; Paul Downton, the ECB’s new managing director, hailed Peter Moores as the ‘outstanding coach of his generation’; chairman Giles Clarke trumpeted Downton as a ‘man of great judgment’. It was a nexus of self-preservation – yet, as the wagons circled, the wheels kept threatening to come off.”This was never more apparent than with Pietersen, whose PR team ran rings around the ECB in a dance that is yet to reach its conclusion; Graves has hinted at a way back and Pietersen will play county cricket for Surrey to try and force his case. If that promises to further prolong the “fiasco”, at least it is a more transparent position than the clandestine manoeuvring of the last year.Booth writes: “Their comments on the fallout with Pietersen should have been clear and concise: if you’re widely regarded as a pain, it helps if you’re scoring lots more runs than anyone else. Instead, England botched the PR battle. They hinted that some darker truth about his behaviour would emerge once a confidentiality agreement expired in October. Yet the lull merely prolonged the fiasco. And, when the dirt failed to materialise, the ECB looked rudderless.”Anger at the state of the English game is preferable to indifference, however, and the ECB’s own figures for 2014, which calculated the loss of more than 50,000 recreational cricketers, were cause for widespread alarm. With England and the county game behind a TV paywall, Booth, for the second running, has called for the ECB and Sky to arrange for some games to be broadcast free-to-air – a move that has been proposed with increasingly regularity a decade after cricket’s glorious last hurrah on terrestrial television.Five Cricketers of the Year

Moeen Ali

Gary Ballance

Adam Lyth

Angelo Mathews

Jeetan Patel

“The fall in numbers did not nullify the ECB’s claim that their deal with Sky had brought more money into the sport, nor the work that money has enabled the board to do, especially in women’s and disability cricket. But the maths queried the claim’s relevance,” Booth writes.”The hubbub around the Big Bash at the start of 2015, broadcast in Australia on free-to-air television, was a reminder of a basic truth. Give people the chance to tune into live cricket, and it has a fighting chance of entering the national debate. Ten years on from the greatest Test series of the lot – broadcast to all by Channel 4 – cricket is loitering at the edges of the conversation. If you can remember the celebrations in Trafalgar Square, be sure to tell your grandchildren.”This year’s Almanack features Moeen Ali, one if its five Cricketers of the Year, on the front cover. His success prompts Booth to observe that more should be done to bring through Britain’s Asian players: “It is perverse to be so reliant on (white) southern Africans and smash-and-grab raids across the Irish Sea, and so ignore the more natural solution on our doorstep.”On a more positive note, there is also room for a leading cricketer award in the women’s game. Australia’s Meg Lanning is the inaugural winner, while Kumar Sangakkara picks up the now-established men’s award for a second time.

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