Dhoni backs 'superb' Gambhir for more

With Gautam Gambhir in good nick, it may be a while before Virender Sehwag gets a game © AFP

Gautam Gambhir’s good recent form and the fact that he hadn’t been persisted with recently helped him win a spot ahead of his Delhi team-mate Virender Sehwag, Mahendra Singh Dhoni revealed at the end of the game.Dhoni had said on Sunday that the duo were competing for one berth and justified his decision to go with Gambhir, who repaid the faith with a valuable 44. “He has done consistently well at this level,” Dhoni said. “He has been unfortunate in the past as some others have been given preference over him. [His longest run] in the team was only six matches in a row and he was Man of the Match in quite a few games.”Dhoni also suggested that Gambhir would be persisted with for a few more games. “I wanted to give him a few more matches before resting him and giving opportunities to others. And the way he played today he deserves his place in the side. He batted quite superbly.”It means Sehwag, who replaced Rahul Dravid in the squad, might have to wait a while before his comeback. There was some speculation about Sehwag missing the game in the wake of his father’s death but Dhoni had said he was in “good nick and hitting the ball well”.Dhoni’s promotion to No. 4, ahead of Yuvraj Singh, was also not in keeping with the script. He’s batted in that position on just eight earlier occasions, the last being the Chandigarh game against Australia. He entered at a tricky 96 for 2 and left after an assured half-century, with only 15 needed for victory. “I am flexible about it,” Dhoni said when asked if it was a sign of things to come. “I’ve said in the past that I need someone to fit in my place at No. 6 or 7. Today we needed a left and right-hand combination. Afridi was bowling offbreaks to left-handers, and legbreaks to the right-handers. That encouraged me to promote myself.”Dhoni wanted his side to look at each game as a one-match series, maintaining the same intensity throughout. “Starting the series with a win will help the team. It helps the team’s confidence, and the momentum goes your way. But we have to keep things right in the coming matches as well. It is not just about doing things right in one match. We have to do it throughout the series.”While Dhoni said 280 would have been a “winning score” his counterpart, Shoaib Malik, didn’t think Pakistan were a few runs short. “I think 230-240 was a good target. It was defendable. The difference was that we dropped catches. If we had taken them, the result would have been totally different. Fielding let us down.”He was talking about the two chances that Gambhir offered, off successive Shoaib Akhtar deliveries when he was on 7 and 11. Both were identical chances with the ball deflecting off the edge and flying between the wicketkeeper and Younis Khan at first slip. Instead of targeting his bowlers, Malik stressed on the fielding concerns instead. “We gauged the pitch and picked our best bowling attack. A fit Shoaib is an asset. He is our best option and is currently bowling quick and running in quick. I can’t blame my spinners also. Especially when our fielding didn’t back it up.”

Hughes and Katich put Blues on top

New South Wales 281 & 5 for 352 (Hughes 116, Katich 92, Clarke 64) lead Victoria 216 by 417 runs
Scorecard and ball-by-ball details

Phillip Hughes scored his maiden first-class century to put New South Wales well on top © Getty Images
 

Phillip Hughes and Simon Katich both entered the record-books as they guided New South Wales to an almost unbeatable position on the third day of the Pura Cup final in Sydney. Hughes underlined his potential as a future Test player with 116 before Katich and Michael Clarke combined to all but bat Victoria out of the match.The Bushrangers began the day hoping to dismiss the Blues and pursue a target of under 300; they finished facing a 400-plus chase on a pitch that will assist Stuart MacGill. New South Wales ended the day at 5 for 352 with Dominic Thornely on 19 and Beau Casson on 12. As has been the case all summer, one of the key architects of their success was Katich, who made 92 and became the all-time highest run scorer in a Pura Cup season.Katich passed Michael Bevan’s record of 1464 set at Tasmania in 2004-05 and he received a standing ovation from the SCG crowd when he achieved the milestone with a single turned behind square leg off Bryce McGain. Katich ended up with 1506 runs at 94.12, although he was denied a sixth century when he was run out attempting a quick single at the call of his partner Clarke.The other important contribution came from Hughes, the most inexperienced man in a New South Wales side overflowing with international expertise. At 19, Hughes became the youngest player to score a century in a Pura Cup final, beating the previous most junior centurion, Martin Love, who was nearly 21 when he achieved the feat in 1994-95.Although Victoria picked up a few late wickets with the new ball – they grabbed 3 for 22 in four overs – they looked destined to finish the season with only a Twenty20 title having reached the deciders in all three competitions. Their problem was a lack of wickets in the first session. McGain and the part-time offspinner Brad Hodge both looked dangerous and McGain was extracting big turn out of the footmarks but despite some nervy moments Hughes survived, first with Phil Jaques and then with Katich.Runs came quickly in the morning as Victoria strained for wickets and Hughes was lucky to escape when he edged Dirk Nannes just over the slips for a boundary when he was on 14. The stroke was sandwiched between two poor Nannes full tosses that Hughes also put away for fours, and that gave the batsman confidence. He drove Peter Siddle’s half-volleys effectively and brought up his half-century from only 39 deliveries with a cover-driven four off McGain.

Simon Katich made 92 and finished with a record 1506 runs for the Pura Cup season © Getty Images
 

The rate slowed after Jaques departed lbw for 23 to a vicious McGain legbreak that zipped out of the rough and stayed so low it struck the batsman’s ankle. Their 75-run opening stand had already frustrated Victoria, and the 145-run partnership between Hughes and Katich that followed was even more irritating for the visitors.Hughes eased his rate but not his concentration, reaching triple-figures for the first time in only seven first-class games. His hundred came from 153 deliveries and he fought off McGain, who finished with 1 for 72 and was disappointed not to make more of the SCG pitch. It was Victoria’s secondary legspinner, Cameron White, who finally removed Hughes for 116. An attempted slog-sweep was top-edged to point, where McGain took the chance but must have been annoyed after Hughes struck him for six with a similar stroke two overs earlier.Katich was typically obdurate and only hit five fours, instead working the ball to all parts of the ground. He said before the match he had not even thought about breaking Bevan’s record and was solely focused on securing the title for his state; there might turn out to be a strong correlation in the two aims. His century did not eventuate as Andrew McDonald at cover threw down the stumps at the striker’s end to find Katich well short.Clarke, seemingly reacting to his costly call, vented his frustration in the next over with three boundaries off Siddle, including a perfectly clean aerial drive over the bowler’s head. Siddle’s revenge came quickly, however, when Clarke was caught behind for 64 backing away and attempting a cut. Brad Haddin followed when he too tried to slog Siddle and played on, but the lead was already approaching 400.Victoria believed they had a chance to win if they could dismiss New South Wales before the close of the third day, which they failed to achieve. Over the past few years they have been better than most teams at chasing huge targets, however with two days to play on a wearing SCG pitch against a Test-quality attack, it will take a miraculous effort for the Bushrangers to stop the Blues securing the last Pura Cup before the competition changes its name.

Kumble questions Australia's spirit

Ricky Ponting reacted angrily when questions were raised over his appeal for a catch while fielding in close, when replays seemed to show it touching the grass when he landed © Getty Images
 

Anil Kumble has accused Australia of not playing in the spirit of the game in a heated finish to a Test that continued the ill-feeling between the teams. After a match filled with controversy it was revealed the BCCI would request Steve Bucknor, the “incompetent” official, be replaced for the third Test in Perth while Kumble will review the pre-series catching agreement he had with Ricky Ponting, who aggressively defended his integrity.”Only one team was playing with the spirit of the game, that’s all I can say,” Kumble said after a day that included a horrible decision for Rahul Dravid and a claimed low, slip catch by Michael Clarke against Sourav Ganguly. The dismissal was sealed when Ponting told the umpire Mark Benson it was out, although television replays were, as usual, not conclusive.”We’d like to play hard on the field and expect that from Australia as well,” Kumble said. “I’ve played my cricket very sincerely and honestly, that’s the approach my team takes, and we expect that from Australia as well. Sometimes it happens that in the heat of the moment you take those chances and then probably don’t say anything on that. It’s a part of the game.”Australia’s sprint to victory with seven balls to spare was also overshadowed by the charges of racism tabled against Harbhajan Singh, a complaint which was raised on the field by Ponting, and an India team official was angry at the treatment towards the side during the 122-run defeat. India suffered heavily due to the poor umpiring and Chetan Chauhan, the India manager, believed they would not have lost if they had received 50% of the contentious calls.”The way the umpiring was, the team is agitated and upset,” he said. “A lot of decisions have gone against us. Of course a few went against the Australians also.”The crucial rulings involved Bucknor and Andrew Symonds, who was given not-out to a loud edge when he was 31 – he made 162 – and today he dismissed Dravid caught-behind when the ball flicked the batsman’s pad. “Had some of the decisions, I would say 50% of them, were received in our favour, the result would have been different,” Chauhan said. “It really affected us. We’re not saying this because we have lost the game. It was for everybody to see.”Bucknor and Mark Benson both had matches to forget and Bucknor is due to stand in Perth from January 16. However, Chauhan said the BCCI was lodging “a strong protest” with the ICC “so that some of the incompetent umpires do not umpire in the rest of the series”.The Indians were not the only ones fuming. Ponting reacted angrily when asked about his appeal for a catch against Mahendra Singh Dhoni that was ruled not out because the batsman did not hit it. The ball ballooned away from Ponting at silly point and he dived to make an athletic take, which sparked loud appeals, but replays seemed to show it touching the grass.”There’s no way I grounded that ball. If you’re actually questioning my integrity in the game, then you shouldn’t be standing there,” Ponting told an Indian journalist. “What I did in the first innings, doesn’t that explain the way I play the game?” Ponting told the umpires he had not accepted an edge cleanly despite the appeals from the players around him.”I’m saying I’m 100% sure I would have caught that catch off Dhoni,” Ponting said. “As it turned out it was given not out anyway, am I right or wrong?”Adam Gilchrist also took aim at criticism of Australia’s delay in closing their second innings today, shouting “How about that declaration, Tony Greig” while Ponting was conducting a radio interview. The Indian media also made an official complaint to the BCCI about what a journalist called the “humiliating” treatment from Ponting during an abbreviated press conference before he attended the hearing involving Harbhajan.Ponting believed there was nothing wrong with Australia’s on-field conduct during the match. “I have absolutely no doubt about this match being played in the right spirit,” he said. “There’s been one little issue that’s come out of the game, otherwise the spirit between both teams in both Tests has been excellent.” In Sydney Kumble and India disagreed.

Australia alter summer schedule to satisfy India

The MCG will be used to open the four-match series against India © Getty Images

Cricket Australia has been forced to change the recent tradition of staging the concluding Tests of its major series in Melbourne and Sydney following negotiations with the India board. The 2007-08 season will take on a different feel after India, who are due to play Pakistan in November, insisted the first match of the four-Test contest would take place in Melbourne on Boxing Day. It will be followed by the New Year fixture in Sydney and games in Adelaide and Perth to decide the Border-Gavaskar Trophy.The large-scale reordering means the annual one-day tri-series, which usually starts in January, will begin in February and finish in March. Sri Lanka will open the Australian summer with two Tests in Brisbane and Hobart in November and return for the one-day tournament with the hosts and India. New Zealand will visit for three Chappell-Hadlee Series fixtures and a Twenty20 in December.”Our competitors’ global commitments create challenges for scheduling,” Michael Brown, Cricket Australia’s operations manager, said. Australia face a hectic program over the next 18 months, starting with the Twenty20 world championship in South Africa in September, a possible one-day tour of Zimbabwe and a limited-overs series in India. They are also expected to play 20 Tests in 2008.Australia will stage two Twenty20 matches next season, with games against New Zealand in Perth and India at the MCG. Canberra will host its first ODI since 1992 when India and Sri Lanka play there during the CB Series as part of Cricket Australia’s expansion program.Hobart will get two international games – a Test and an ODI – while the Northern Territory is covered by the five Australia-New Zealand women’s matches for the Rose Bowl in July. Tickets for all of Australia’s international matches are expected to go on sale in July.2007-08 Australian itinerary
Australia v Sri Lanka
1st Test, Brisbane, November 8-12
2nd Test, Hobart, November 16-20
Chappell-Hadlee Series
1st ODI, Adelaide, December 14
2nd ODI, Sydney, December 16
3rd ODI, Hobart, December 20
Australia v India
1st Test, Melbourne, December 26-30
2nd Test, Sydney, January 2-6
3rd Test, Perth, January 16-20
4th Test, Adelaide, January 24-28
Twenty20
Australia v New Zealand, Perth, December 11
Australia v India, Melbourne, February 1
CB Series
Australia, Sri Lanka, India
February 3-March 7

Colts CC continue unbeaten run with victory over Galle CC

Duckworth/Lewis was the decider at Colts cricket grounds today as the match between Colts CC and Galle CC ended with a victory for Colts after heavy rain play at 4.00 pm.Galle, chasing a victory target of 227 runs in 50 overs, were 86 for the loss of five wickets in the 29th over when the two umpires called off play due to rain and returned to the pavilion to inspect their Duckworth Lewis calculation tables.According to the Duckworth/Lewis system, Galle who had lost five wickets in 29 overs, needed to have scored over 133 runs to pull a win. They thus lost the match by 47 runs.Galle CC had no reason to be aggrieved as Colts looked to be certain of victory having polished off the Galle CC middle order. They started their run chase disastrously and, with the exception of opening batsman Dammika Sudarshana, who made 31 runs, none of the Galle batsmen settled at the crease.They struggled against a strong pace attack led by Eric Upashantha. He captured two wickets for 25 runs in seven overs, while Kaushalya Weeraratne finishedwith one for 11 in three overs.Earlier in the day Colts had elected to bat first but suffered an early shock when last weeks Centurion, Romesh Kaluwitharana, was run out in the first over even without facing a ball.Then Chaminda Mendis(47) and Jeevantha Kulatunga(25) laid the foundation for a big score, before Kulatunga was out in the 10th over with the total on 54. Sajith Fernando(29) joined Mendis and kept up the fast run rate as Colts reached the hundred mark in the 17th over.However, a superb spell of bowling by Saman Fonseka who captured four for 45 and Pasan Wanasinghe with three for 33, restricted Colts to 226 runs in 47.3 overs. Viraj Perera chipped in with two for 53.Ruchira Karunasena, who was responsible for the dismissal of Kaluwitharana, was brilliant in the field, taking three superb catches.

Read back for keeps

This time he is ready to hang on to the England gauntlets, writes Peter English in the July issue of Wisden Cricket Monthly


Chris Read: rated by Rodney Marsh as one of the best young players he has seen

Chris Read’s hands look small and delicate. When he sits he rests them on the table, one protecting the other. He knows safe hands are mandatory and is aware of the dangers of waiting for a chance, whether it is a caught-behind or a call from David Graveney. “It’s possible you won’t get an [England] opportunity for three or four years, so when you get one you’ve got to take it,” he says.Read has a beaming smile and since the start of the season there has been a lot to be happy about. Alec Stewart challenged the selectors to choose a young keeper for England’s ODIs and Read was suddenly in a two-man tussle with James Foster. Then the ECB Academy director Rod Marsh, who rates Read as one of the best young players he has seen, was named as the fourth England selector. “It goes without saying that it was good news,” Read says. “But it’s up to me to prove I’m good enough to be given a chance and to prove I can play at that level.”At the end of May Read’s smile briefly disappeared when he broke a thumb playing for Nottinghamshire in a National League game against Sussex at Horsham. International wicketkeeping dreams begin and end with shattered bones. Ian Healy has Ian Botham to thank for launching his record-breaking 119-Test career. Botham broke the finger of the Queensland incumbent Peter Anderson in 1987-88 and four first-class games later Healy was playing for Australia.Standing up to the medium-pacer Gareth Clough, Read was struck on his right thumb and suffered a hairline fracture, potentially a three-week injury. The selectors stuck to their guns and picked him in the one-day squad, with Foster on standby.Read knows about big breaks. He was picked on an England A tour before playing a first-class game and when he moved from Gloucestershire, where he was stuck behind Jack Russell, to Nottinghamshire, Wayne Noon was injured early in the season. Read stepped up, was picked for a second England A tour and in 1999 made his Test debut at 20.It is difficult to talk to Read without looking back. He sits in the Horsham pavilion looking out at a portable practice net six days before suffering the injury. No one stops for autographs and only his county coach Mick Newell interrupts to leave a map to the hotel and a key to lock up the dressing room. He is not Alec Stewart.Read has been forgotten for a long time but is honest about the past and realistic about the future. “Looking at my record, three Tests and five innings, to score 38 runs is not really good enough,” he says.The three Tests were against New Zealand but his eight dismissals on debut at Edgbaston were swiftly overshadowed by the footage of his embarrassing misjudgement of a Chris Cairns slower ball that bowled him at Lord’s.He still went to South Africa as cover for Stewart and was pleased with his returns in nine ODIs. “But I probably had my worst season after that. Since then I’ve been making improvements and my game has been on the up.”A winter at the Academy under Marsh put more polish on his glovework and after a National League century in the opening match against Northamptonshire he was under most microscopes as ODI replacements were canvassed following World Cup retirements. “Second time round it’s a lot easier because I’m three or four years wiser,” he says of the pressure. “The first time it was a bit of a shock and I wasn’t quite prepared. Now I have experience and know what to expect.”Marsh and Read clicked in Adelaide. Read was impressed by Marsh’s positive attitude and his work ethic. The feeling was mutual. “Rod said in his last season he didn’t miss a chance and that’s my aspiration,” he says. “I remember missing two chances last season. There was a catch against Gloucestershire, diving low to my right and I couldn’t get my hand underneath it, and I missed a stumping off MacGill that spun a mile.”Read’s spin is that he does not want to be pigeon-holed as a limited-overs player and his wicketkeeping voice, slightly squeaky but very clear, would suit the longer game if only to annoy the batsmen with his constant chatter. He believes England’s transition towards the 2007 World Cup is natural and it will be up to the new players to “get on with it and make the best of it”. “Knight, Caddick, Stewart, Hussain, they are big names,” he says, as if suddenly realising that they are all missing. “It gives guys opportunities. There are young guys all over the country who are desperate for a chance to perform.” He now has a second one.Click here to subscribe to Wisden Cricket Monthly

The July 2003 edition of Wisden Cricket Monthly is on sale at all good newsagents in the UK and Ireland, priced £3.40.

Sidebottom named Player of the Year

Top man: Ryan Sidebottom has had a memorable twelve months, topped off by being named Player of the Year © Getty Images
 

Twelve months ago Ryan Sidebottom was a one-cap wonder putting in the hard yards for Nottinghamshire on the county circuit. On Monday night at Lord’s he was named England’s Player of the Year and will start the first Test against New Zealand as the team’s premier strike bowler.Since his surprise recall against West Indies, at Headingley, he has taken 53 wickets in 12 Tests, including 24 against New Zealand in March. He claimed a 10-wicket haul and a hat-trick in Hamilton and his 7 for 47 in Napier, the best figures by an England bowler for four years, helped to set-up their come-from-behind series win. He had already been named one of Wisden’s Five Cricketers of the Year.His chance came due to an injury to Matthew Hoggard, who is now, partly because of Sidebottom’s excellence, battling to get is own place back in the team. Hoggard used to be the first bowler on the team-sheet, but that honour now goes to Sidebottom and he has confounded predictions by developing into an all-round wicket-taker regardless of conditions.”This time last year I was training with Nottinghamshire and just playing regular county cricket so it’s been a massive turnaround,” he said. “But I don’t want to get carried away with it and I’m relishing the chance to play at Lord’s again. The other 10 guys in the team have made me feel very welcome, which has allowed me to get on with my job. I suppose it goes out to all the players because one player doesn’t make a team.”Maybe one player doesn’t make a team, but much of the limited success England have had over the past year wouldn’t have happened without Sidebottom. New Zealand would have ended in defeat and even toppling West Indies last summer would have proved a harder task. Then there is his role in the one-day side, 20 wickets from 12 matches, including a Man-of-the-Series performance in Sri Lanka.Sidebottom is a laidback character off the field (bowling is different matter, just ask anyone who drops a catch) and insists the last year hasn’t changed him. After waiting so long for a second chance he isn’t taking anything for granted. “I don’t want to get too carried away because things can change quickly. It’s just a case of keeping doing the basics,” he said.”All the talk [when called up against West Indies] was that it would be one game, the horses for courses thing, but I sat down with my dad [Arnie, who also won one cap for England] and he said just go out and do your best, don’t look too far ahead. At Headingley I played as though it would be my last game and I’m not going to change. Each game I’ll enjoy it and give it my best.”Sidebottom has broken into the top 10 of the bowling rankings and received praise from Richard Hadlee, who said he was the main threat in the series ahead. “It’s a massive compliment coming from a great bowler,” said Sidebottom. “On the other hand I’m not taking much notice because they are a difficult team to beat.”We aren’t taking it lightly, especially myself because I’ve only played a few games. Of course I would like to carry on in the same form but it’s not going to be easy. As long as I’m consistent and getting wickets for my team-mates then that’s great.”The other major award handed out at Lord’s on Monday evening was the Women’s Player of the Year which went to Claire Taylor, while Outstanding Achievement awards were given to the men who scored a 100, claimed a five-wicket haul or held five catches in an innings.Two one-off presentations were also given to Ashley Giles and Marcus Trescothick in recognition of their England success over the years. Trescothick announced his retirement from international cricket in March and Giles is now on the England selection panel as well as Warwickshire’s coach.

Pakistan board wary of another no-show by India

Worried that India’s tour of Pakistan, scheduled for February-March 2004, might not materialise, the Pakistan board has already started planning for an alternate series. According to a report in the News International, a Pakistan-based news website, the PCB is likely to wait till October before taking a decision on this issue.The Indian team was scheduled to play a Test series in Pakistan in April this year, but the tour was cancelled after the Indian government refused to sanction it. The report quoted a PCB source as saying that the Pakistan board was now preparing for precisely such an eventuality. “This time the PCB is making arrangements to avoid another cancelled tour and loss of revenues if the Indian government does not change its policy on cricketing ties with Pakistan.”By October the scenario would be clear if there are realistic chances of India coming to Pakistan. And if the chances are dim, then the Pakistan board will ask ICC to arrange for alternate teams to tour Pakistan in place of India or arrange for compensation.”The boards of both countries have expressed the desire to resume cricketing ties – the PCB had even suggested one one-day international in each country to break the ice – but the Indian government has steadfastly maintained that the two teams can play each other only in multi-lateral tournaments. The last time a bilateral series was played between the two teams was in 1998-99, when Pakistan toured India for a two-Test series. The two teams have since played ODIs in England, Australia, Sharjah, Dhaka and, most recently, in the World Cup in South Africa.However, three tournaments for the junior cricketers from India, Pakistan and Sri Lanka have been lined up, with each country hosting one tournament. The first of these will be held in Sri Lanka next month, while Pakistan get their turn in August. India will host the last tournament early next year. It is believed that these matches have been introduced to check the feasibility of resuming cricketing ties between the senior teams.

Katich helps NSW clinch a thriller

New South Wales 5 for 251 (Katich 92, Jacques 70) beat Victoria 5 for 245 (Moss 74, Hussey 67, Rummans 54*) by 5 wickets
Scorecard

David Hussey on his way to 67© Getty Images

Simon Katich led the way with a fine 92 as New South Wales scraped to a last-ball win in their match against Victoria and earned their first ING Cup points of the season.Needing 246 to win, NSW sufferred a mini-collapse once Katich fell as they lost three wickets for four runs late in the game. But Shawn Bradstreet smashed 26 from 17 and sealed the victory with a six off the final ball.Katich said he was under pressure to justify publicly expressing his frustration at being axed from the Test squad to play New Zealand. He was quoted by AAP as saying, “I was definitely nervous today because I knew a lot of people would be viewing to see how I went, particularly after what I said last week. But I was lucky to be able to back it up.”Earlier in the day, Victoria managed to reach 245 thanks to a good allround batting display. Matthew Elliott, Jonathan Moss, David Hussey and Graeme Rummans notched up half-centuries but Victoria couldn’t get the required acceleration late in the innings.

Somerset mourn the loss of Martin Nestor

Everybody at Somerset County Cricket Club is reeling at the news of the sudden death of Captain Martin Nestor O.B.E. at the age of 63.Captain Nestor was the first secretary of the Tony Coles Trust for Young Cricketers and was responsible for the successful establishment of the fund.Chief Executive Peter Anderson said: "We are all saddened by the news of Martin’s death. He was much loved within the club, and was a very stylish, responsible and respected man who will be a great loss to us all. Our thoughts are with his family at this sad time."Captain Nestor who died suddenly over the weekend in France where he had moved to recently with his wife after selling their house in North Curry, near Taunton. The funeral service will be held in Somerset.

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