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Ireland hit by penalty points

Anthony Ireland, the former Zimbabwe quick bowler who is now at Gloucestershire, has been handed three penalty points under the ECB’s discipline code.He was removed from the attack for sending down an accidental high fill toss against Somerset in the Friends Provident Trophy on May 11. The incident happened at the start of Ireland’s seventh over, which was then completed by Thomas Stayt.Ireland was reported by umpires Nigel Llong and Barrie Leadbeater for a level two breach and the penalty points will remain on his record for two years.

Colombo, Sharjah to stage Aussie Tests

Pakistan has agreed to play its home Test series against Australia this October at two neutral venues. The first Test will be played in Colombo while the remaining two will be played in Sharjah.The decision was taken Thursday after the Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) received the support of the national players, the Cricketers Benefit Fund Series (CBFS) and Board of Control for Cricket in Sri Lanka (BCCSL).Bangladesh was ruled out as one of the possible venues at the request of the Pakistan players who argued that they would feel more at ease playing in Sharjah which they consider as their second home.The Australian Cricket Board (ACB) had given a free hand to pick the venues between Oct 1 and 29 for any number of Tests or One-day Internationals. The Australians were scheduled to tour Pakistan but cancelled the trip citing players security. However, the PCB preferred Tests over a proposed tri-nation one-day series also involving Zimbabwe besides the two teams. The argument given was that Pakistan cannot ignore five-day cricket.The CBFS had offered to host a triangular one-day series under lights that would have helped the PCB generate more revenue than the Test series through television rights and sponsorships. The Sharjah officials had also advised the PCB that the temperature would range between 35 and 40 degrees Celsius and the humidity would be more than 90 per cent in October. However, the PCB is believed to have succumbed to TransWorld International (TWI)’s pressure who have the television rights with their contract expiring in March 2003.The TWI pressurised the PCB because according to the contract they have signed, they don’t have the tournament rights. And had the PCB decided to go ahead with the tri-nation series and that too in Sharjah, it would have been in a position to negotiate with various broadcasters, including Ten Sports who are likely to get the contract for next five years.

Akram to miss Test series against Australia

COLOMBO – Uncertainty continues to surround Pakistan’s preparation forthe upcoming cricket Test series against Australia, which starts herenext month.Veteran leftarm pace bowler Wasim Akram confirmed to AAP today that hewould “definitely” miss the Test series, which will be played in Colomboand Sharjah, while opening batsman Saeed Anwar said he was still makingup his mind about his availability.And Pakistan Cricket Board chairman Lieutenant General Tauqir Zia saidon Monday that former skipper and wicketkeeper Moin Khan had beenrecalled to a squad of 22 “probables” for the Test series, primarilybecause current keeper Rashid Latif wanted a break from internationalcricket.But Pakistan skipper Waqar Younis said today Latif was tired but happyto carry on. He said there would be more certainty when the Test teamwas named at the weekend.”We’re doing well with Rashid Latif.”I don’t think he needs a rest – he says he’s fine.”He’s probably a little tired but that’s the life of a professionalcricketer.”Waqar said Akram’s decision not to play was not unexpected as he hadmissed the past five Pakistan Test matches and his last match was backin January.”In the last year or so he’s more or less not playing Test matches,”Waqar said of his long-time new ball partner.”He’s played enough and he just wants to have a rest to concentrate onthe one-dayers.”Of course it’s a disappointment not to have someone like him in thesquad but that’s just the way it is.”He said Anwar’s position was less clear.”I’ve been hearing that he’s going to finish but he hasn’t said anythingdirectly to me.”He’s working hard, he’s training and he’s started to look better withthe bat.”

Agarkar replaces Srinath in one-day squad

The Indian selectors announced a 15-man squad for the five-match one-day series against the West Indies, with one-day specialists such as Yuvraj Singh and Ajit Agarkar coming in as expected.Yuvraj Singh and Mohammad Kaif, the two batting stars of the India ‘A’ tour to South Africa, were not included in the ‘A’ side’s tour to Sri Lanka because they were expected to be selected for the one-day series in the Caribbean.Their India ‘A’ teammate, Murali Kartik, also earns a recall to the squad. Kartik replaces Anil Kumble, who flew out of Antigua after having his lower jaw broken by a Mervyn Dillon bouncer. Kartik is currently in Sri Lanka with the India ‘A’ side, and his place in that tour will be taken by Sarandeep Singh.Agarkar replaces Javagal Srinath, the Indian pace spearhead requesting to be rested for the one-day series following the hectic five-Test schedule. Along with Srinath, Test inclusions Shiv Sunder Das, Deep Dasgupta, Sanjay Bangar and Wasim Jaffer will also be taking the flight back to India.Squad: Sourav Ganguly (captain), Rahul Dravid, Sachin Tendulkar, VVS Laxman, Ajit Agarkar, Zaheer Khan, Ashish Nehra, Tinu Yohannan, Ajay Ratra (wicket-keeper), Harbhajan Singh, Murali Kartik, Dinesh Mongia, Yuvraj Singh, Mohammad Kaif, Virender Sehwag

Tudor to miss first Test against India

Alex Tudor has been ruled out of next week’s first Test between England and India at Lord’s. Tudor, who was Man of the Match in the last Test against SriLanka a month ago, was reassessed today and it was revealed that he will be out for at least two more weeks with tendonitis.The squad for Lord’s will be announced tomorrow morning, after postponement from yesterday because of numerous injury concerns. Marcus Trescothick (fractured thumb) and Andrew Caddick (side strain) have already been ruled out.Doubts remain as to whether Darren Gough can stand up to the rigours of a five-day Test, given that he has yet to play anything more than one-day cricket this summer. He is in the Yorkshire side for the Roses match which started at Headingley this morning, his first Championship appearance for Yorkshire this season.Surrey’s Mark Butcher is also involved in Championship action, for the first time since he underwent surgery on his knee a month ago.

Bhatti becomes new ICA chief

Muhammad Ishaq Bhatti of Rizvi Group Thursday swept to victory to become the new president of the Islamabad Cricket Association (ICA) in elections held at the KRL Ground.According to unofficial results, Bhatti polled 20 votes to beat his presidential rival Khawaja Muhammad Mustafa by five votes.Irfan Manzur, also of Rizvi Group, was elected the secretary after a 19-14 win against Muhammad Yousuf while Hasan Asghar claimed the treasurer’s slot with a 21-14 victory against Hanif Sajid.The results of the elections, which were fair and peaceful, were not officially declared after the Lahore High Court (Rawalpindi Bench) on a writ filed by Muhammad Yousuf had directed the Pakistan Cricket Board to withhold the results.Yousuf in his writ had prayed that the elections should not be allowed to go ahead and that the Ministry of Sports be directed to hold the polls.The elections were conducted by the PCB election committee comprising Brig (Retd) Khawaja Muhammad Nasir, Brig (Retd) Iqbal Awan and the Board’s legal consultant Shahzad Farooq.The committee had earlier conducted scrutiny of the clubs following which 36 clubs were granted the right to vote and in Thursday’s elections only National club abstained from voting.The clubs that exercised their right to vote were I-9, King’s Gymkhana, Federal Gymkhana, Nurpur, Imran Memorial, Diamond, Asif Memorial, Muslim, Classic, Azam, All-Youngsters, Mehran, Al- Muslim, Young Capital, Youngsters, Majid Memorial, Hasan Memorial, Al-Fateh, Millat, XI Star, Punjab, Rawal Town, Evan, Islamabad Hawks, Essco, Prince, Najam Memorial, CRA (Community Centre), Shalimar, Shaheen, Ismail, Islamabad Gymkhana, Potohar Gymkhana, Services and Lucky Star.Meanwhile, a beaming Bhatti said that his first priority would be to establish a stadium of international standard in Islamabad. “I’ll leave no stone unturned to raise money for the project,” the new president told Dawn.He said that victimisation of players would now end and everyone would be given a fair chance to prove himself. “To promote cricket here, we have to move ahead hand-in-hand with our rivals.”Cricket in Islamabad is currently being run by an ad hoc committee headed by Mansoor Ahmed. The body will continue to look after the affairs in the region until the matter is settled by the court.

North Zone lift Vizzy Trophy

As expected, North Zone completed the formalities to win the Vizzy Trophyby virtue of their massive first innings lead over West Zone on the fourth and final day of the match in Nagothane in Raigarh district on Friday.North Zone had virtually clinched the title by taking a massive first innings lead of 355 runs. Resuming their second innings at 129 for three, they declared their second innings closed at 293 for seven. Middle order batsmen Sidharth Verma (105 not out off 174 balls with eleven fours and two sixes) and SachinChaudhary (75 off 98 balls with eleven fours) were the main run getters. Left arm spinner Rajesh Bambri took five for 85 while medium pacer Sameer Naik got two for 49.West Zone, who were set the impossible task of scoring 649 runs in 240 minutes, were 173 for six off 49 overs when the match was called off. Kulvindar Bagga top scored with 83 runs off 114 balls including eleven fours and a six.

Sharjah Diary: Sri Lanka romp home with the golden ARY Cup

SHARJAH – Managing only one win in their four league matches, Sri Lanka had to come up with something special to stop Pakistan’s winning spree and they certainly did! Taking full advantage of odds-on favourite Pakistan’s fielding lapses to first post 297, the highest target of the event — to the great chagrin of a majority of the 24,000 strong capacity crowd — the Lankans then blew away the might of the Pakistan batting for only 220 in 41.4 overs to deservingly walk away with the ARY Gold Cup. This was their second successive trophy in this desert emirate, as the Lankans had overcome India in the final of the Sharjah Cup here last October.Chasing has never really been Pakistan’s forte, but the way they went about the business of making 297 was really shocking. There was little method in their madness. And to give credit where it is due, the Lankans stuck to the job of inflicting regular blows quite professionally, bringing off some spectacular catches to make Pakistan disintegrate, to 108 for six before the first 15 overs had been seen off. This is where the difference lay: the Lankans had held onto the chances that came their way as if their life depended on it while the Pakistanis squandered theirs, and that contributed to their fall.And surprisingly it was Pakistan’s fielding which had contributed to their golden streak – four out of four wins in the league matches. But, call it a case of nerves or the law of averages catching up with them, the Pakistanis really never managed to sustain the pressure, both while fielding and batting. And that is why, despite having their moments, they still could not manage to come out on top.In this tournament, Anwar has been amongst the runs save once, and then it didn’t matter for Pakistan was chasing only 127 and Inzamam was on song. In the final too, he top scored with 62, consuming a mere 64 deliveries, seven fours and a six his main scoring shots. But it was more or less a lone hand, and was never going to be enough. Long before he was out, the match had really slipped out of Pakistan’s grasp. His wicket, however, provided Sanath Jayasuriya with double celebration: this was his 200th wicket in One-day Internationals in his 235th match, and it had seen off whatever little semblance of a chance Pakistan may have had of making a comeback. The asking rate being about six runs an over from the outset, Pakistan was off to a really disastrous start, losing both openers Imran Nazir and Shahid Afridi in the second over. Humayun Farhat was promoted in the order and he made a quicksilver 39 (34 balls, 4 fours, 1 six), in a courageous little cameo. With Anwar stroking the ball as sweetly as he does at the other end, the charge was taken to the Lankans, and they seemed a bit shaken. Pakistan run-rate was consistently hovering around nine by the ninth over.The Lankan skipper made an inspired bowling change, bringing on his best pacer Chaminda Vaas, who had gone for a few runs in his first three-over spell, from the far end. He took three wickets in his next three overs to break the back of Pakistan’s batting – Humayun, Inzamam-ul-Haq and Younis Khan, all falling to good catches. Dilhara Fernando added to their woes by accounting for Abdur Razzaq, and at 108 for six, Pakistan had no hope of getting anywhere near the target.From here on, Anwar and Shoaib Malik tried to play on, to salvage some pride by avoiding total capitulation with not even a far-fetched ambition of victory. And once Anwar was snapped up, Malik and Waqar merely prolonged the agony. Ironically, the batting of these tailenders displayed, and amply so, that there neither were there any demons in the wicket nor was the bowling was of such quality to have overwhelmed them. Had Pakistan’s upper order shown the patience, they may really have made a fight of it.The Lankan innings:
The Lankans had come into this match determined to make amends, and amends they made by posting a massive 297, but their cause was aided a great deal by some really sloppy fielding, specially in the air, as four catches were floored and a stumping chance went abegging. Yet Pakistan had done a good job of containing Sri Lanka in the beginning, the first eight overs yielding only 20 for the loss of Romesh Kaluwitharana, run out by Malik. Then Jayasuriya, who had hung in there in an uncharacteristically sedate mood, latched onto Waqar Younis, driving him for a six over the cover boundary.With that shot Jayasuriya broke his shackles, and now there was no stopping him. Unleashing a string of aggressive strokes (four off Sami at gully off a cut, two back to back sixes off Razzaq at long-off and straight over the sight screen), Jayasuriya provided momentum to the innings before Sami and Saqlain stopped the free flow of runs. Jayasuriya reached his 50 but before that ‘keeper Humayun Farhat dropped him on 49. The Lankan captain’s 50 came off 72 deliveries, with the help of three sixes and two fours. Once past 50, he seemed to be well on his way to his second hundred when he perished trying to sweep off-spinner Shoaib Malik once too often. Atapattu, who had till then batted well within himself, in a stand of 114 with Jayasuriya, got down to building another partnership with Mahela Jaywardene, who not in the best of forms tried to improvise. This improvisation may have cost him his wicket, when he had barely made five, had substitute Yasir Arafat not put down a sitter. In the next over, Atappatu got to his 50 (88 balls, 2 fours) but he would not have, if Inzamam had not dropped another sitter.Three chances already grassed, the Lankans came into their own, with Jaywardene going after Shoaib Malik and Shahid Afridi, hitting them for boundaries at will. Atappattu too joined him in this run spree. Such was the domination of the bat over ball in the last 15 overs that the Lankans nearly doubled their score – taking it from 149 for two at the 35th over to 297 in the 50th.By the time Atapattu was run out, off a Saeed Anwar throw from the deep, the stand for the fourth wicket had already put on 111 runs, and at 3-233 in the 44th over the Lankans seemed well placed for greater things. They sputtered a bit in the end, after Jaywardene (67, off 59 deliveries, five fours, three sixes) was finally caught and bowled, trying to reverse sweep Saqlain, losing four wickets for 34 runs. But Zoysa made sure that they finished strongly by making 11 off four deliveries, clouting Saqlain for a six on the last ball of the regulation 50 overs.That was a few runs too many for Pakistan, especially because they are known to make a hash of things while going for a chase. But they only had themselves to blame for allowing the Lankans to get to this huge total.

ECB38 County Cup Results – Round 1

Group 1:
Wiltshire 187-5 in 49.5 overs (C Budd 63)
Somerset Cricket Board 185-9 (M Coles 59; Paul Marsh 4-22)
Wiltshire won by five wicketsGroup 4:
Berkshire 222-6 (N Wilton 56, S Brogan 50)
Middlesex Cricket Board 221 (R Rao 88)
Berkshire Cricket Board won by four wicketsGroup 5:
Gloucestershire Cricket Board 176 (JA Pearson 51)
Worcestershire Cricket Board 216-9 (Round 67, Candola 54)
Worcestershire Cricket Board won by 40 runs

Ali secures dramatic last-ball double

ScorecardChris Wood was the pick of the Hampshire bowlers as they scrapped their way to a second one-day trophy•PA Photos

Hampshire have proved more than a few times this season that it pays not to write them off and here they did so again, denying County Champions Warwickshire despite Ian Bell’s 81 to steal a heart-stopping victory at Lord’s.With the scores tied, Neil Carter, playing his final match for Warwickshire, failed to collect the required single off the bowling of Kabir Ali to give Hampshire the trophy by virtue of having lost fewer wickets. Following their last-over win against Yorkshire in the Friends Life t20, this must surely have been the most dramatic one-day double in county cricket’s history.Bell had seemingly done enough to take Warwickshire home, passing fifty for the fourth time in a domestic one-day final. But Hampshire are more than the sum of their parts and when Bell picked out Michael Carberry at deep square leg with 27 required they had the crucial wicket. Just as during the 2005 C&G Trophy final, Bell’s half-century against Hampshire was to be in a losing cause.Until then, he had guided the chase in phlegmatic style. Wickets fell around him but although 83 were needed from the final ten overs, and 52 from the last five, Bell exuded a sense of control. Even when he departed, Chris Woakes took up the challenge and, with seven required from the last six balls, Warwickshire appeared to be the favourites. But Ian Blackwell was bowled and despite Carter’s shovelled four off the penultimate delivery, Ali, like Chris Wood in Cardiff three weeks previous, held his nerve, beating the bat before sprinting off to be engulfed by his team-mates in celebration.It was a poignant moment for Ali, born in Birmingham but discarded by Warwickshire at a young age, and came after he had dropped Bell earlier in the innings, a difficult chance at long leg when the batsman had 41.Wood was also magnificent, his concession of just a single and a leg bye from the 35th over, in which he also dismissed Rikki Clarke, a crucial point in the match. His 3 for 39 followed 3 for 26 in the FLt20 final and, having scored his maiden first-class century the day before that, it is fair to say he has had quite a month.This has not been a stellar year for Bell, by his his own high standards, but one-day cricket has been his tonic. Put him in a snooker hall and he would likely chalk up a 147, such has been his affinity for the white ball. A conversion to opener for England’s ODI side brought a century and four fifties and it seemed as if his season would end with a match-winning hundred in a one-day final at Lord’s. It wasn’t to be.Warwickshire, mssing the services of William Porterfield, at the World Twenty20 with Ireland, curiously preferred Darren Maddy as Varun Chopra’s opening partner. Bell had previously guided them to victory in the 2002 B&H Cup final – scoring 65 not out batting at No. 3 – and against Somerset in the CB40 in 2010 – when he scored 107 at No. 4 – but it was to be his 54 in vain seven years ago that provided the precedent.With Hampshire in dark blue and Warwickshire in black, both offset by yellow piping, there was little to tell the sides apart visually. In such a tight finish, even the scorers had trouble – Carter was not stumped off the last ball, as he appeared to have been in the frantic finale. The association was more than kit deep, too: both had won a title already this season; both had won Lord’s finals of recent memory (Hampshire in 2009, Warwickshire in 2010); and both line-ups featured veterans from 2005.Hampshire were led to victory by a Sean Ervine hundred that day and he made his side’s most vibrant contribution with the bat this time around. After the final-day draw that sent last season’s Championship pennant to Lancashire, Warwickshire fans will likely swear off holidays to the New Forest for a while.Even with an attendance of 16,000 and a fair proportion of the white seating left empty, Lord’s still jostled and thrummed with the excitement of a crowd that seemed demob happy, eager to drink from the county cup one last time. Children played kwik cricket on a section of the nursery ground, young men in ties mingled with old men in baseball caps, while the interval entertainment was provided by a troupe of schoolgirls performing a dance routine on the outfield. The atmosphere was lively and expectant and the spectators were treated to a denouement that will resonate long in the memory. The one-day competition needed a final like this.Put in to bat under milky blue skies after Warwickshire won the toss, Carberry and James Vince set about the task with the sort of cold-blooded violence that marked their decisive 129-run opening stand in the semi-final against Sussex. Carter started with a leg-side wide that set the tone and neither he nor Woakes could curb the enthusiasm of Hampshire’s openers.Vince pushed his “Michael Vaughan” buttons early on, strictly come dashing out of the crease a couple of times and threading one exquisite drive between extra-cover and mid-off. Having taken Carter for successive boundaries, however, he pulled the next ball flat to deep square leg. Carberry, meanwhile, left-hooked Woakes for six over deep midwicket during an over that cost 14 but he too departed tamely soon after. From 70 for 2 after 11 overs, Warwickshire steadily obtained a handle on the scoring rate, as spinners Blackwell and Jeetan Patel wheeled away in bright sunshine.A dogged innings from Hampshire’s captain, Jimmy Adams, kept the scoreboard ticking but it was left to Ervine and Simon Katich to haul Hants up towards 250, as they turned on the tap in the final overs. Carter was handled without a trace of sentiment as the fifth-wicket pair put on 69 from 43 balls before Ervine was cramped for room after making a breezy 57.It was becoming difficult to get Carter’s selection, other than on nostalgic grounds, until the final over, when he could not be got at, conceding just four singles. In the end, however, it was Carter’s inability to get anything on the last ball of the day that proved decisive.

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