Super Fours to be decided on final day in Oxford

The Super Fours champions of 2003 will be decided on Saturday 21st June when the four teams meet at The Parks and Radley College, Oxford.Super Fours is the domestic competition for elite women cricketers, now in its second year, aimed to bridge the gap between domestic and international women’s cricket.Currently topping the Super Fours table by just one point are The Super Strikers, captained by England batsman, Claire Taylor (Berkshire). They will face The V Team at Radley College, who have yet to win a match in the competition.Title contenders The Knight Riders, skippered by England’s leading run-scorer Charlotte Edwards (Kent), will face The Braves who won the title in 2002 and are led by England Captain, Clare Connor (Sussex).With bonus points awarded for attacking run-scoring and economical bowling, the Knight Riders could still steal the title if they win and individuals perform at their best.Both matches start at 12 noon.Berkshire and England bowler Isa Guha (The Braves) has the most wickets in the competition, leading the table with 14. She is closely followed by England team-mates Lucy Pearson (Knight Riders/Staffordshire), Laura Spragg (Super Strikers / Yorkshire) and Clare Connor who all have 13.England all-rounder Laura Newton (Lancs) is leading the batting averages with 85 for The Super Strikers; with Edwards on 82 and Taylor 57.5 completing the top three.This final round of matches provides England selectors with their last opportunity to see those players in England contention face each-other.Full tables and statistics can be found at www.super4s.play-cricket.com

Mashonaland win one-day series after Flower centuries

Any team containing both Flowers is virtually unbeatable in Zimbabwean cricket, certainly over the long haul. Midlands, if they had ever forgotten it, found out again to their cost at Kwekwe Sports Club, where they lost to Mashonaland, by eight wickets and with almost five overs to spare, after running up a total of over 300.Craig Wishart, with 121, led the way when Midlands batted first, finally turning useful small innings into something substantial. He received good support from the top order, with Terry Duffin scoring 28, Travis Friend 49 and Doug Marillier 18. After his departure Sean Ervine hit a lightning unbeaten fifty, scoring 54 off just 28 balls, and the final total was an imposing 306 for five.Grant Flower alone of the regular bowlers conceded less than five an over, but Mashonaland were handicapped by the loss of captain Brian Murphy, able to bowl only one over before injuring his hand.Midlands began their fielding spell well, dismissing both Mashonaland openers for just 31. But a match is never won until both Flowers had been dismissed, and Midlands were unable to remove either. Both hit unbeaten centuries, at better than a run a ball, and tore the bowling attack to ribbons in an unbroken partnership of 279. So dominant were they that they still had 28 balls to spare when the winning runs were scored.With Manicaland losing in Bulawayo, Mashonaland were crowned the inaugural Faithwear One-Day Series champions, winning five of their matches, against three each by Matabeleland and Manicaland.

Defeat no cause for pessimism – Irani

Ronnie Irani was keen to accentuate the positives after England’s six-wicket defeat to a Sir Donald Bradman XI at Bowral today.Needing 280 to win, the home side were led to the target by the former Australia batsman Mark Waugh, who made an unbeaten century as England were beaten with 21 balls to spare.England’s innings was built around a maiden international hundred from Owais Shah and a rapid 53 from Adam Hollioake, which boosted the innings in its latter stages.Irani, who was leading England for the first time, said: “The honour was great and more than anything I believe we have got some talent in the one-day set-up.Adam Hollioake has come in there and I thought he did extremely well, he’snot been with us all winter but it didn’t show.”It’s a small ground but the way he hit the ball cannot be taken away from him, he got the runs on the board. Owais Shah did well and it’s all about character at this level. And if you were picking on character then Adam Hollioake and these guys would be in your side.”That’s how I looked at it today, it was disappointing in that it was anotherEngland loss at this stage but there are a few guys back in Sydney who turnedthe Aussies over in the Test match and you have to look at the positives alittle. But I am not kidding myself, the result is disappointing.”Bradman XI captain Mark Waugh said his team had half an eye on the deteriorating weather in the early stages of the chase.”It looked very dark out the back so we wanted to make sure we had the rightscore at 25 overs,” said Waugh. “After that it was back to normal cricket and some fun.”(Bowral) has got a special feeling about it. Don Bradman played his cricket here and so there is that tradition about it and it’s a great little ground. I would love to see New South Wales play some ING Cup games here. It’s actually got that English village cricket theme about it.”

Fleming declares to give NZ some bowling practice

New Zealand’s bowlers will have a valuable two-hour stint following captain Stephen Fleming’s declaration at tea on the final day of their tour match against the Queensland Academy of Sport at the Allan Border Field in Brisbane.Fleming called a halt to New Zealand’s innings straight after wicketkeeper Adam Parore brought up his century with a boundary.The Black Caps finished at six for 296, Parore unbeaten on 100.Earlier, Parore and Fleming put together a 158-run partnership to rescue the side after it teetered at 5-110.The unlikely winning target for the QAS is 327.

India and England prepare for ODI action at Eden Gardens

Never expect the expected in India. As the one-day international series gets under way in front of some 100,000 people in Eden Gardens, Kolkata, tomorrow, there is no knowing how it will turn out.Even the Indian captain, Sourav Ganguly has said that England will be faced with “an astonishing experience” once they enter the field or, as it will seem to the tourists, the bear-pit of Eden Gardens. The noise, the atmosphere, is like nothing to be encountered anywhere in the rest of the cricketing world.Ganguly, who will be playing in front of his home, adoring crowd, believes that it is impossible to prepare for such an experience.”You won’t be able to hear yourself think because the crowd is so loud. It is something they will never have experienced before.”It becomes a bit of a problem captaining in one of these games because the other players cannot hear you. You have to rely on hand signals, and it’s the same when you’re batting.”Ganguly has been under pressure himself because of a lack of runs and criticism of his captaincy as India struggled to hold onto their lead in the last two Tests of the recently-concluded series. But one-day cricket is a different matter and he is expected to be back at the top of the order to open the innings with Sachin Tendulkar.”I will open with Sachin as usual,” he said. “We have been together for six years, and I think our style of batting means we complement each other.”Sachin is a class act. I sometimes just enjoy being down the other end and watching him bat and I think we rotate the strike very well.”Meanwhile, Ganguly’s opposite number, Nasser Hussain, sees the game and the series as part of the continuing build-up to, eventually, the World Cup in South Africa in 2003. Like a football manager who is keen to play down his side’s chances he says, “We will only learn from the experience. This is why we play the game, big games like this, and we’re all lookingforward to it immensely.”I’d rather be playing in front of a big crowd like this than in front of one man and a dog on a Monday in Chelmsford. Those with strong characters can come through tomorrow and show people that this is what they play the game for.”You have to use it as a positive and the Indian crowd during the Test series were very appreciative of good cricket. They are a knowledgeable crowd and they enjoy their cricket and we have no problems with it.Hussain, born in India himself, is not adverse at putting some pressure back on the home side in the war of words that always precede encounters like these. “There is also a lot of pressure on the Indian team. They have a few young players coming in, they are expecting to win this game in front of a big crowd and we’ve got to make sure we put them under the cosh in front of their home crowd.”The England camp admits that it is struggling to match other countries when it comes to experience of one-day international cricket. There are only four players in this squad who have played in excess of 50 such matches – Hussain himself, Darren Gough, Nick Knight and Graham Thorpe. This is an opportunity to test out not only the techniques of some of the younger players, but also their temperament.”This side is not playing catch-up, this side is starting on its road,” explained Hussain. “It’s got some very young players and it has opportunities that maybe previous sides haven’t had and it’s up to them to take those opportunities.”By that I mean not only learning from your victories but learning from your defeats, learning from the opposition, learning about pressure situations and learning about playing under lights.”I fully believe this side will do well like we did in the Test matches, but that will come from heart and ticker tomorrow night. In a pressure situation with a lot of people watching it will be all about what they have inwardly rather than how many games and what talent they have.”Before they can bother about the mental and cricketing preparation, England have some last-minute physical matters to consider. Marcus Trescothick in particular suffered during yesterday’s warm-up game with a ‘flu-like virus, and Paul Collingwood is another who is not exactly in prime health after going down with a stomach bug.Both, however, were able to train under the Eden Gardens lights in the final practice session and England will probably be prepared to go into the game with some players who might not be 100 per cent fit, but fit enough.It is one of those things that happens in this part of the world, even with modern medical science on hand. It could well be that Trescothick and Collingwood wake up feeling great – and four other members of the team are struck down.Rather than never expecting the expected, perhaps everyone should expect the unexpected. How, for instance, could anyone have forecast that there would be an attempt by a local to prevent the match taking place at all?Kolkata resident, Mr. Subhas Dutta, made a plea in the High Court to the effect that to play under floodlights was a “malicious waste of electricity” while West Bengal suffers with an energy crisis. But the application for an injunction was thrown out. Thankfully – especially for Mr. Dutta, one suspects, in this cricket-crazy city – the game is on.

Strauss calls the tune at the Rose Bowl

Opening batsman Andrew Strauss led a spirited Middlesex revival at the Rose Bowl with his third century of the season.Strauss followed his defiant half-century made in the first innings with an equally obdurate 100 not out to leave the match, vital to both sides, finely balanced at the end of the second day.Middlesex, 90 behind on first innings, ended at 232 for five which gives them a lead of 142 with two days remaining.After 17 wickets had fallen on the first day, Hampshire resumed at 99 for seven in reply to the Middlesex first innings of 101 and in Adrian Aymes and Shaun Udal they found two batsmen ready to build a decisive advantage.Aymes and Udal put on 102 for the eighth wicket, Udal first to his fluent half-century but Aymes just as important in a less ostentatious way.Udal made 62 with ten fours before he was superbly caught down the leg side sweeping Phil Tufnell by Stephen Fleming running round from first slip.Aymes was 57 not out when Hampshire were finally prised out for 191, leaving Middlesex the task of batting far better in their second innings than they had done in the first.Strauss was dropped in the slips by Kenway at 14 but from 58 for two and still in arrears, Fleming joined Strauss in a stand of 127 for the third wicket.Suddenly Hampshire lost their poise and purpose in the field with Strauss reaching his 1,000 for the season one over before Fleming.Then spinner Shaun Udal came into the attack and again the complexion of the match changed.In swift succession Udal removed Fleming, lbw on the back foot, Ed Joyce in his next over not offering a shot and then Paul Weekes caught at the wicket off his gloves.Strauss reached his century in the last over of the day and Middlesex will need him at his best on the third day if they are to leave their promotion rivals a difficult target in the fourth innings.

Paul Wiseman back in frame, replaces Vettori

Paul Wiseman has come in from the cold.He has been named as Daniel Vettori’s replacement on the tour of Australia and will leave Christchurch tomorrow to join the team.Wiseman, who injured an ankle and returned home from New Zealand’s tour of South Africa was dropped by the national selectors after the first Test loss to Pakistan in Auckland.He had played against Zimbabwe in the Boxing Day Test as the No 1 spin option and sent down 54 overs in Zimbabwe’s first innings for a return of none for 131. He took one for 15 in the second innings.Then in the Pakistan Test he none for 35 and one for 107.He was replaced by Grant Bradburn for the remaining Tests of the series. While Bradburn fared little better, taking one for 124 in the second Test and not being required to bowl in New Zealand’s third Test victory.However, Wiseman also found himself left out of the end of season tour to Sharjah and the mid-year tour to Sri Lanka as Bradburn was preferred.But Wiseman’s experience was the key factor in his call-up and if able to get into form, and selection contention for the first Test, he is capable of making a significant contribution to New Zealand’s tour aspirations.New Zealand selection chairman Sir Richard Hadlee said today: “Paul Wiseman has played Test cricket and that experience counted heavily in his favour. Paul has also shown, in the past, that he is capable of taking wickets at this level.”His inclusion in the squad will, no doubt, create competition with Glen Sulzberger for a Test place,” Hadlee said.

Sports Minister plans to stamp down on corruption

Newly appointed Sri Lankan Sports Minister, Mangala Samaraweera, whoreplaced Laksman Kiriella on Friday after a cabinet reshuffle, has vowed tocome down hard on endemic corruption within national sports bodies, the mosthigh profile of which is the Board of Control for Cricket in Sri Lanka(BCCSL).Speaking at his first public appearance, the closing ceremony of the 27thNational Sports Festival at the Welagedara Stadium, Kurunegala, on Saturday,the minister declared: “I will not allow the businessmen to misuse money.”He warned officials that he would not hesitate to “punish” any guiltyoffenders.During the course of his speech he pledged greater support for out-stationareas, commenting that: “One has to invest money on rural sports developmentto produce more Sanath Jayasuriya’s.”In March this year the previous minister decided to dissolve the cricketboard and launched an ongoing inquiry into claims of financialmismanagement. The accusations centered on tenders by and payments for theconstructors responsible for constructing a five million dollarinternational stadium in Dambulla. No substantive evidence, however, has yetbeen revealed and no charges have been made.Since the dissolution, the board’s affairs have been managed by an InterimCommittee, headed by Vijaya Malalsekera, who is close to the PresidentChandrika Bandaranaike Kumaratunga. The Sports Minister also had met the officials of the Interim Committee on Saturday.

It was good exposure for youngsters: Chauhan

Indian cricket team manager Chetan Chauhan feels the Zimbabwe tour hadbeen a very good learning experience for some of the young playersdespite the team’s failure to win either the Test series or thetriangular one-day tournament.India had to be content with a 1-1 draw in the two-Test series withZimbabwe and lost to West Indies in the final of the triangular oneday tournament after winning all their league matches quitecomprehensively. However, Chauhan said it was not a disappointing tourand the team was looking at the positive aspects of it."We drew the Test series one all and then in the one dayers, we wonthe league matches quite comfortably, but went down fighting to theWest Indians in the final,” Chauhan told reporters after the team’sarrival here from Zimbabwe early on Monday morning.”I personally feel this tour has done lot of good for youngsters likeopening batsmen Shiv Sundar Das, who won the man of the series in theTest matches, medium pacers Ashish Nehra, Harvinder Singh, DebashishMohanty, all-rounder Reetinder Singh Sodhi and wicketkeeper SamirDighe,” Chauhan said.”Unfortunately, we had one bad day and the West Indians grabbed theopportunity fully and I would like to give credit to the West Indianbatsmen for the way they played and also to the Indians for the waythey fought till the end, losing by just 16 runs,” he said.Asked if the Indians were over-confident after recording easy wins inthe league matches, Chauhan said, “Not at all. In fact, we discussedat length the strategy for the final. But I can only say that the WestIndies batsmen applied themselves very well and did not allow us tomake early breakthroughs like we did in the league stages. They playedgood cricket on that particular day and scored 291 which I thought wasa bit too much in the end for us though our players fought well tillthe end,” he said.Chauhan admitted that reports of drug abuse had upset the players butsaid it did not affect their performance.”Some players whose name figured in the article were very upset.However, I spoke to them and they seemed to be alright. It is a commonpractice for the players to take energisers in public view and theseenergisers are supplied by the host nations,” he added.

Gough prepares for Essex debut

Frizzell County Championship Division One


Following his return from the Caribbean, James Anderson has been named in a 14-man Lancashire squad, which also includes a proud new father, Peter Martin, who missed this week’s stalemate against Middlesex. For Worcestershire, Gareth Batty is back in the reckoning, along with Andy Bichel, who takes over from Mark Harrity. All eyes, however, will be on Graeme Hick, after his blistering double-century against the New Zealanders.
Gloucestershire will be hoping the rains do not follow them westwards after the final three days of their match against Kent this week were completely washed out. Matt Windows may return to their eleven after missing that game with a groin strain, while Shabbir Ahmed makes his home debut. Northants have named an unchanged side, after pushing Sussex to the brink on Monday.
Surrey desperately need a boost after a beleaguered start to the season, so they will be expecting big things from Mark Butcher and Graham Thorpe, England’s batting heroes of the Caribbean tour. Mind you, those two didn’t manage a run between them, when these two teams met in the National League on Saturday, and nor did Rikki Clarke, who is also expected to play. Alex Tudor will play for the 2nd XI, as he continues his rehabiliation from a back injury.

Frizzell County Championship Division Two

Darren Gough will make his eagerly-anticipated debut for Essex, as they travel to Cardiff to play Glamorgan. Ronnie Irani and Paul Grayson are both still recovering from knee injuries, so Andy Flower will continue to stand in as captain. Glamorgan are expected to field an unchanged side, although Dean Cosker has been added to the squad.
Leicestershire’s offspinner Jeremy Snape will start his first Championship match of the year, and will bat at No. 6 in place of the out-of-form Darren Stevens. Mark Cleary has a slight back problem and needs a late fitness test before making his debut. For Nottinghamshire, Chris Read is back from England duty and takes over from David Alleyne behind the stumps.
Shoaib Akhtar will be looking to start afresh after a month of controversy, as he and Paul Collingwood make their first appearances of the season for Durham. Graeme Onions and Liam Plunkett are out of the squad with leg injuries, although Durham’s problems are nothing like as chronic as Somerset’s. Their captain, Michael Burns, has a hamstring injury; John Francis has concussion; Ian Blackwell has a back problem, and Aaron Laraman a side strain.Yorkshire v Hampshire at Headingley
High-flying Hampshire must face up to the temporary absence of their inspirational captain, Shane Warne. He is on international duty, so Will Kendall takes charge with Billy Taylor stepping up to the squad. Matthew Hoggard is back in action for Yorkshire, but Darren Lehmann is also preparing for Zimbabwe. Phil Jaques, however, has been signed as an 11th hour replacement. Michael Clarke remains available to Hampshire until the one-day series begins.

Other matches

Cambridge UCCE v Middlesex at Fenner’s
Sussex v Loughborough UCCE at Hove