BCCI treasurer against Dhoni link with management firm

BCCI treasurer Ravi Savant is the first board official to speak out against MS Dhoni’s possible conflict of interest, saying the India captain should immediately disassociate himself from the sports management company

ESPNcricinfo staff11-Jun-2013The new BCCI treasurer Ravi Savant is the first board official to speak out against MS Dhoni’s possible conflict of interest, saying the India captain should immediately disassociate himself from the sports management company that manages him and a few other India players.”Dhoni should immediately disassociate himself from the management firm while he is captain,” Savant told NDTV. “Dhoni should be given a notice for conflict of interest if this was not part of his contract earlier.”The new BCCI secretary Sanjay Patil, however, said the board was not going to act immediately. “Whatever Mr Savant has said is his personal opinion and the board has nothing to do with it,” he said. “The board has no intention to send any letter to either Dhoni or any other cricketer with the Champions Trophy going on. There was no discussion on this issue at the working committee meeting.”On Monday, the BCCI stand-in chief Jagmohan Dalmiya said the board would look into the issue involving Dhoni and Rhiti Sports Management Pvt Ltd, but only after the ongoing Champions Trophy in England.”I don’t want to disturb the team during the Champions Trophy. I gain nothing by doing that,” Dalmiya had following the BCCI’s emergent working committee meeting in Delhi. “We have taken note of the issue. We are looking into it but we are not going to hound someone.”The issue centres around Dhoni’s involvement with Rhiti Sports Management Pvt Ltd, the company that manages his commercial interests and those of some other India players such as Suresh Raina and Ravindra Jadeja, and looks after Chennai Super Kings’ marketing. Dhoni had owned 15% stake in the company for a little over one month earlier this year, meaning that, at least on paper, he was India captain with a say in the selection of players managed by the company he co-owned, and a possible share in the profits that their endorsements yielded.According to a statement issued by Rhiti Sports, the shares issued to Dhoni were bought back the following month, and the transaction was only to clear some of the company’s dues. “As on date, MSD holds no shareholding in Rhiti Sports Management (P) Ltd. However, it is made clear that shareholding was allotted to MSD on 22.03.2013 only to secure certain old outstandings which were due for more than one year,” the statement, signed by Rhiti Sports’ chairman and managing director Arun Pandey, said. “Further, the payments were cleared in April 2013 and the shareholding was transferred back to promoter of the company on 26.04.2013.”1445 GMT This story has been updated to include the quote from BCCI treasurer Ravi Savant

Gibson signs new three-year deal

Ottis Gibson has signed a new three-year deal to keep him as West Indies coach until 2016

ESPNcricinfo staff05-Feb-2013Ottis Gibson has signed a new three-year deal to keep him as West Indies coach until 2016.Gibson came close to becoming the new Warwickshire director of cricket last week, having attended a second interview on his way to Australia, but the WICB were keen to retain his services and he will now take West Indies beyond the 2015 World Cup.He became West Indies coach in early 2010, replacing John Dyson, having been England’s bowling coach since 2007. Under his charge West Indies have shown recent improvements, notably by winning last year’s World Twenty20 in Sri Lanka, although he has had to contend with his share of off-field issues such as the stand-off with Chris Gayle and the impact of the IPL on the Caribbean season.”I enjoy being involved in West Indies cricket and it is something I’m very excited about considering what we have achieved – especially in the last year – beating New Zealand at home in all three formats and winning the World Twenty20 tournament in Sri Lanka,” Gibson said. “This confirms that we are making progress and I am happy to continue with the team for the next three years as we look to take West Indies cricket forward.””There is a lot to do and things to look forward to. There is the Champions Trophy in England this year, we will be defending the World T20 title in Bangladesh next year and there is the World Cup in 2015. These are things we have talked about and these are things the selectors have been planning for.”We will also look to climb the ICC rankings in all three formats. This is something we have to strive for, to make the move up. There is a lot more one-day cricket than Test cricket this year, but next year there are quite a few more Test matches, so these will be opportunities for the players to perform and for the team to progress. You set goals and the real enjoyment is when you achieve those goals and see progress being made.”Michael Muirhead, the WICB chief executive, said: “Ottis has added significant value to the development of the West Indies team during his tenure and we are delighted to have secured his services for another three years.”Most notably is that he led the implementation of a system of professionalism within the team unit and curbed the negative results, which we were experiencing with some frequency.”While there have also been some challenges along the way, these are not to be unexpected in such a dynamic and high pressure environment and the WICB looks forward to the continued development of the West Indies team through this next critical phase under Ottis’ stewardship at the elite-team level.”West Indies are currently on tour in Australia for a one-day series then return to the Caribbean for a home season that includes a full tour by Zimbabwe, a triangular one-day tournament involving India and Sri Lanka, plus a Test series against Pakistan.

Batting fightbacks on 'slow pitch' please Misbah, de Villiers

South Africa’s AB de Villiers said the conditions at Kingsmead weren’t that “difficult” to deal with, but losing set batsmen at the wrong time cost the team some runs

ESPNcricinfo staff22-Mar-2013A lot of attention coming into the fourth South Africa-Pakistan ODI in Durban was centred around the pitch and subcontinental-like conditions the venue often proffers. While both captains agreed that the track was a bit slow, South Africa’s AB de Villiers said the conditions weren’t that “difficult” to deal with, rather it was losing set batsmen at the wrong time that cost his team.”The main thing was to adapt quickly and to assess the pitch conditions, it just took us a while and cost us a few wickets,” de Villiers said after the match. “After about three or four overs that I faced, I got used to the pace of the deck and realised that it wasn’t turning much. It only started to turn more after about 30-35 overs, because of which the leading edges were there. There wasn’t a lot of turn and it was quite slow; once we got used to that, we rotated the strike and picked up a few boundaries to get the momentum on our side again.”De Villiers was left to salvage the South African innings with David Miller, who replaced the injured Faf du Plessis, after the top order was carved up by Pakistan’s new-ball pair. Mohammad Irfan and Junaid Khan had the hosts gasping at 38 for 4 in 10 overs, before a 115-run stand between de Villiers and Miller put them back on track. However, both batsmen were dismissed within four overs on either side of the 35-over mark, denying South Africa an ideal finish.While that proved costly for his side, de Villiers pointed out that they were dismissed by the “best bowler in the world”, in Saeed Ajmal, so it was not “the end of the world”. “It was very important to bat till the end. But it’s part of the game, you’re not going to bat 50 overs every game as an individual.”My gameplan was to get to 45 overs, which I didn’t, and I’m sure Dave too wanted to bat longer,” he said. “I thought both of us batted really well, did a massive job for the team to get back into the game and to get a decent total. At one stage we were staring at a low total but we fought back well. Unfortunately I got out at a really bad time. It cost us 20 runs which would have been handy during the end of the bowling session there.”Pakistan’s innings took a similar course, with a clutch of wickets going down at the start, only for captain Misbah-ul-Haq to resurrect the chase in the company of Imran Farhat. Importantly for Pakistan, Farhat stayed till the 48th over, bringing them to the very brink. Misbah had good words for him: “The ball wasn’t coming at an even pace, there was a little bit of extra bounce in the second half, some balls were stopping a little bit, it wasn’t easy to bat on that, but I think at the end Imran batted well. They bowled well, but we showed a little bit of character and we managed to win this game.”It was a game Pakistan had to win to keep the series alive, and their chances of doing that took a blow early on as Mohammad Hafeez was out for a duck in the second over, becoming the first batsman in international cricket to be dismissed obstructing the field under the new laws. While Misbah accepted that the decision ultimately lay with the umpires, he said Hafeez’s reaction suggested he did not wilfully change course while running to get in the way of de Villiers’ throw.”He was just running in line, trying to shorten the length,” Misbah said. “He wasn’t looking behind when AB threw the ball, so he was suggesting it wasn’t intentional because he didn’t know where the ball was thrown [from]. But in the end, it was the umpire’s call.”

Sehwag century and Pujara give India control

The flamboyance and adventure of the first half of the day faded during the final session in Ahmedabad as India consolidated their position with measured batting to reach a handsome 323 for 4 at the close

The Report by David Hopps15-Nov-2012
Scorecard and ball-by-ball detailsFile photo: Virender Sehwag made an early mark on the series with a run-a-ball hundred (ESPNcricinfo will not be carrying live/action pictures from the India v England series due to restrictions placed on agency photographers covering the matches)•AFPWelcome to India. The greeting came from Virender Sehwag and, this being Sehwag, rather than scatter rose petals on the bed he scattered England fielders in all directions with a buccaneering century which brought a rousing start to the opening Test in Ahmedabad. This being India, where Test cricket no longer draws the crowds, there were only a few thousand in the stadium to watch it.That England recovered some ground by the close of the first day was almost entirely due to Graeme Swann, who, as their only specialist spinner on a chronically slow surface, bore an onerous responsibility and took all four Indian wickets to fall. In the process he passed Jim Laker as the most successful England offspinner in history. Roughly half of them have been left-handers, an advantage Laker never enjoyed in an era when lefties were in shorter supply.Only Swann, late in his innings, was able to stem Sehwag’s progress as he struck a run-a-ball 117, his first Test century for two years. It was a strange first session, dominated by Sehwag, who was adventuresome but far from explosive. His innings was typically more reliant upon eye than footwork as he manipulated the ball with disdain, drove at an excess of wide deliveries and defended only as an afterthought.He is a character cricketer in the manner of Chris Gayle or Kevin Pietersen, an unconventional batsman with a commanding presence and a style all of his own and, at 34, especially on low, ponderous pitches such as these, he is not quite done yet.Swann’s wickets served to strengthen the conviction that England had erred in omitting a second specialist spinner in Monty Panesar. This is a virgin surface, of lower clay content and with no time to bed down, which threatens to drive the pace bowlers to distraction and turn sharply as the Test progresses. Doubts about Stuart Broad’s fitness will have made England especially reluctant to field only two fast bowlers and they will wave all manner of statistics to support their selection but the evidence of the game was against them.Swann’s success was in strict contrast to the mood elsewhere. The only impression England’s pace bowlers made was on the footholds. Anderson was wearing his worried expression, his new-ball spell limited to four overs. Broad stubbornly dug balls into an unsympathetic surface, saw them bounce no higher than the top of the stumps and looked at them quizzically as if he could stare it into behaving differently. Tim Bresnan went at nearly six an over. It was a huge toss for India to win.By lunch, at slip, Alastair Cook pondered whether his elevation to the Test captaincy really was a good idea after all. By the close, Swann had reminded him that in a four-Test series Sehwag’s assault was merely the beginning, but a trial by spin still awaits England.Gautam Gambhir was Swann’s first victim after an opening stand of 134 in 30 overs, bowled trying to fashion one of his high-risk carves through point and beaten by a hint of turn and weary bounce. Sehwag had briefly fallen into contemplative mood in mid-afternoon, as if recovering energy for his next assault, when he was bowled, sweeping.Swann’s third wicket the most remarkable of all, that of Sachin Tendulkar who lofted to deep midwicket in an extraordinarily misconceived manner only a few minutes before tea. Finally, Virat Kohli, who had played circumspectly, was deceived in the flight and bowled through the gate.Smart stats

Virender Sehwag’s century is his 23rd in Tests and his 13th in home matches. Only Sachin Tendulkar, Sunil Gavaskar and Rahul Dravid have scored more centuries in India.

The century opening stand is the first for India since the Centurion Test in 2010. In 20 innings in between, Sehwag and Gautam Gambhir aggregated 605 runs at an average of 30.25.

The century opening stand is only the third for India in the match first innings against England. It is also the second century stand between Sehwag and Gambhir in home Tests against England after the 117-run stand in Chennai in 2008.

This is the sixth century that Sehwag has scored at a strike rate of 100 or more. In matches since 1990, only Adam Gilchrist has done so more often (7 times).

Gambhir has now been dismissed six times by Graeme Swann in six matches. No other bowler has dismissed Gambhir as often as Swann.

Swann is now behind only Derek Underwood on the list of most successful England spinners after going past Jim Laker’s tally of 193 wickets.

A Gujarati hero emerged for the crowd to applaud. Cheteshwar Pujara, upright and accomplished, was two runs short of his second Test century by the close and looked a convincing replacement for Rahul Dravid in an understated innings, showing a collected manner and good timing. But he needed a let-off on 8 as his gentle leading edge against Bresnan was misjudged by James Anderson, who ran in too far at mid-on.England spurned three other opportunities. Sehwag was dropped on 80, glancing Anderson, whereupon Matt Prior spilled a difficult chance and Prior also missed a stumping against Gambhir. The most embarrassing drop, though, belonged to Jonathan Trott, who fluffed a slip catch off Swann from Kohli and rolled the ball into the turf before shamelessly claiming the catch in a slightly perplexed manner. The umpires sought replays; for Trott they did not look good.Gambhir and Sehwag had been an alliance in decline, and fleetingly there were hints of vulnerability, but these were not conditions to ask questions of defensive technique. Gambhir had proclaimed before the match that they were the best opening duo in the country and few would find much cause to question that as India sailed to 120 without loss by lunch. It was their first century opening partnership since India faced South Africa in Centurion in 2010.Sehwag spoke of playing watchfully,and met by a deep point, he did glide regularly to third man, but his 50 still came in only 45 balls and by lunch he had 79 from 66 with 12 fours and a six. England’s pace attack strayed wide too often and runs came at a tempo that Test cricket rarely sees: 50 by the 12th over; 100 by the 20th. Sehwag possessed a hunched, insouciant air that suggested the match was of little consequence and he was just having a bit of a bash.England calculated that the ball might reverse for Bresnan, as it did as early as the ninth over in a warm-up match on the adjacent B ground, but Bresnan had a dispiriting day, never worse than when Sehwag took him for 4-4-6 in his sixth over, the second boundary, a drag through mid-on against a ball that crept past the fielder verging on the insulting; the six over wide long-on that followed, a full swing at a length ball.India have never lost a Test at home after beginning with a century stand. That statistic tells England that their chances are already slim. It was all a long way from England’s domination of India in English conditions last summer.

VIDEO: Hero to villain! USMNT star Folarin Balogun scores exquisite goal before missing another penalty for Monaco

Folarin Balogun went from hero to villain in his latest outing for Monaco, as he scored an exquisite goal before missing another penalty.

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United States international broke the deadlockSaw spot-kick saved by Lens keeper SambaDramatic winner from Minamino got him off the hookWHAT HAPPENED?

The United States international was included from the off in a Ligue 1 meeting with Lens and made the best possible start as he broke the deadlock inside 19 minutes. The 22-year-old displayed impressive strength, touch and composure when battling his way down the left wing and crashing the ball into the back of the net.

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Ex-Liverpool star Takumi Minamino doubled Monaco’s lead on the half-hour mark, but they conceded within 60 seconds and blew their advantage entirely in the 77th minute as the home side battled back to draw level.

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Balogun was given an opportunity to put Monaco back in front in the 82nd minute, but the USMNT star saw his tame spot-kick saved by the legs of former Nottingham Forest goalkeeper Brice Samba – who earned a reputation as something of a penalty-saving specialist during his time at the City Ground.

Highwayman Warner takes the slow lane

Like a highway traveller learning to negotiate Sydney’s notorious Parramatta Rd, David Warner is finding out how to drive in heavier traffic

Daniel Brettig at Windsor Park24-Apr-2012Like a highway traveller learning to negotiate Sydney’s notorious Parramatta Rd, David Warner is finding out how to drive in heavier traffic. Warner has a Test hundred from 69 balls, but at Windsor Park he agonised for 136 deliveries to scratch out a valuable 50, demonstrating plenty of resolve on another difficult day for Australia’s batsmen. Use of the sweep against Shane Shillingford, the West Indies’ most dominant bowler on a pitch taking turn, showed that the lessons are gradually proving to be useful.This was far from a blemish-free innings from Warner, but it was worthwhile for its ugliness. Should Warner find a way to survive on days when the runs are not flowing, he will be a far more consistent run-maker, adding many more half-centuries alongside the days like that in Perth when everything flowed and he reached three figures from the aforementioned number of balls.”It’s something Darren Sammy reminded me of out there, it’s not the way I play, but these are the kind of wickets where it’s all about patience,” Warner said. “I’m still learning that, learning the game. This is my ninth Test, and my first tour out of Australia as well. In Australia it’s coming onto the bat a lot easier, they’re running away for four, especially in Perth. It’s only basically Adelaide Oval and the MCG where you really have to run for your shots.”We’ve just got to work on getting our ones and two, and the boundaries aren’t going to come. I was hitting good shots to mid-off but they weren’t going anywhere off the square because it seemed a little dusty surface where the ball doesn’t kick on. Whereas in Australia it skids off the square. They’re the things I’ve got to keep in mind, particularly our running between the wickets.”Moving forward we’ve got Tests in Australia then the Indians in India, it’s something I’ve got to adapt to, I’ve got to bat long periods of time – that’s my job as an opener, and I’ve got to keep working towards that and that’s perfect experience for me here. The ball’s turning and bowling’s stump to stump it’s going to be harder for me to score.”On the sorts of pitches that have prevailed in the Caribbean, Warner battled visibly at first, unable to have much impact on either the ODI or Twenty20 series. He has made a series of starts in the Tests, and after being swiftly disposed of by Shillingford in the first innings in Trinidad, he found a way to hold his own for a time in Roseau.”It is [the toughest conditions I’ve faced], you go back to the one-day wicket in St Vincent where we had [Sunil] Narine bowling there, and you just figured in the back of your mind if he was playing alongside Shillingford, how are you going to score?” Warner said. “They’re things we’ve got to look forward to when we’ve got four Tests in India when they’ve got very good spin bowlers as well – how are we going to score? That’s something we’ve got to work out and find our game plan for that.”[The sweep is] one of the things I’ve looked at. The lines he [Shillingford] is bowling to me, some [balls] are pitching outside leg, some are pitching on leg. In Australia, the player I am, I don’t need to sweep. In Australia you can sweep if you want, but I find it a high risk shot in Australia because the ball skids on. When the wickets turning you’ve got to try to hit down on the ball, and I’m hitting against the spin as well.”So it’s an option for me to get off strike, you saw the off side’s very cramped. So for me to score runs there is the cut shot, obviously I got dismissed [to it] but there were three there I should’ve hit for four as well. So they’re the things I’ve got to learn, and I’ve got to be a bit more patient as well I think.”Warner also doffed his cap to West Indies, pointing to their athleticism in the field as much as their precision with the ball as a reason why Australia had appeared so constrained with the bat across this series. He noted their methods were best suited to slow Caribbean surfaces.”The way they started in the one-dayers, it felt like you couldn’t run a two in the outfield; they were so athletic and throwing off balance over the stumps with power,” he said. “You thought there ‘how are we going to get twos and threes, we’ve just got to hit boundaries’ and that resulted in us being pegged back to low totals.”The same thing here, they’ve bowled very well to us, they’ve obviously done their homework and they’ve got players playing at balls, they know some of us like to pull a lot and they’ve worked out what they need to do to get us out. It’s slow and flat, the way to approach that is to be boring and patient. Credit to them, they’ve bowled fantastically.”

Saxelby leads Gloucs to first win

Ian Saxelby took 4 for 16 as Gloucestershire defeated Northamptonshire by eight runs to register their first win in the Friends Life t20 and keep their opponents waiting for their opening success of the group campaign.

22-Jun-2012
ScorecardIan Saxelby took 4 for 16 as Gloucestershire defeated Northamptonshire by eight runs to register their first win in the Friends Life t20 and keep their opponents waiting for their opening success of the group campaign.Kane Williamson (39) and Ian Cockbain (36) were the main contributors to Gloucestershire’s modest 139 for 9 but superb bowling from Saxelby and Muttiah Muralitharan, who also gave away just 16 runs in his four overs, ensured it was enough as the visitours were restricted to 131 for 8.Northants were always struggling after being reduced to 18 for 4 but Kyle Coetzer, with 44 from 38 balls, led a recovery until he was bowled around his legs by Muralitharan.After being put into bat by Northamptonshire skipper Alex Wakeley, Gloucestershire made 46 from the six Powerplay overs for just the loss of Hamish Marshall, who miscued a pull off David Willey to Con de Lange at mid-on. However, spinners James Middlebrook and De Lange slowed the Gloucestershire momentum in the middle overs and the home side never really broke free from the stranglehold in the rest of the innings.Williamson, in his last home match before departing for New Zealand’s tour of the Caribbean, struck five boundaries in his 39 before he pulled Middlebrook to deep midwicket, where Rob White took a low catch. Alex Gidman was also caught on the midwicket boundary by David Willey off De Lange, and it became 106 for 4 in the 16th over when James Fuller, who had hit two sixes in his 18, holed out to White at long-on to give Middlebrook his second wicket.Jack Brooks accounted for Jack Taylor, caught at midwicket by De Lange, and Cockbain was taken at long-off by Coetzer from Chaminda Vaas’s bowling, having struck the Sri Lankan for a straight six off the previous delivery. A further three wickets fell in the last three overs as Ed Young and Dan Housego were run out and Jon Batty was caught at third man by Coetzer off Brooks.Gloucestershire’s total looked a little below par, but the home side took control of the game by reducing Northants to 18 for 4 inside four overs of their reply.Fuller had White caught behind off a defensive edge and Housego took a steepling catch at midwicket to dismiss Robert Newton off Saxelby, who then had Wakeley taken at cover by Cockbain in the same over. Cameron White was the next to go, caught by Marshall at mid-off from Young’s off-spin, but Middlebrook and Coetzer then rallied the innings with a partnership of 54 in 51 balls.Middlebrook had contributed 23 when he mistimed a drive at Williamson’s off-spin and Muralitharan ran in from short third man to take the catch.Coetzer hit sixes off Taylor and Williamson to keep the game in the balance, but it started to swing back Gloucestershire’s way when he was bowled while trying to sweep Muralitharan, which made it 96 for 6 in the 16th over. Saxelby returned at the Ashley Down End and he effectively sealed the win by bowling Willey and having David Murphy caught at cover by Marshall.

Taylor to lead Zimbabwe in comeback Test

Brendan Taylor will lead Zimbabwe in the one-off home Test against Bangladesh which marks their return to Test cricket

Liam Brickhill01-Aug-2011Brendan Taylor will lead Zimbabwe in the one-off home Test against Bangladesh which marks their return to Test cricket. Only eight of the 13 selected, including Taylor, have played Tests, a format Zimbabwe haven’t played in since 2005 when they voluntarily suspended themselves following concerns they were not competitive enough at the top level.The selection of the Test side thus presented the Zimbabwean selectors with an issue that had surely not been felt quite as acutely in the limited-overs sides that have turned out in the interim: that of balance. In the event, Prosper Utseya and Regis Chakabva are unlikely to play and so the probable starting XI includes five specialist batsmen, with Tatenda Taibu at No. 6 – and, considering his pedigree alongside those in front of him in the order, he must surely also be counted as a frontline batsman – followed by two allrounders, a spinner, and two new-ball seamers.Taibu – who had been out of action after the World Cup 2011 with a thumb injury – was included after he kept wicket in the three-day tour game against the Bangladeshis. Chakabva is his understudy, which means that yet again there is no place for Forster Mutizwa, whose unbeaten 87 led Zimbabwe XI to victory over the Bangladeshis. Mutizwa also cracked a fluent 67 in the two-day match against Australia at Kwekwe, and his boundary-hitting ability means he may well come back into contention for national honours in the one-day leg of the series.Brian Vitori, the 21-year old left-arm seamer, was the only player without international experience to make the squad. His elevation to the Test squad is the culmination of a meteoric rise for the Masvingo-born Vitori, who made his domestic debut during the pitiable Faithwear one-day competition in 2005-06 and, until the end of last season, had remained under the radar.While it’s virtually assured that the much-improved Chris Mpofu will take the new ball, it’s not entirely clear whether Vitori or Keegan Meth will partner him. Meth does share new-ball duties with Mpofu in domestic cricket with the Matabeleland Tuskers, and the added control he brings with him may sway the odds in his favour.The return to Tests also means Zimbabwe will have to break up one of their most dependable bowling partnerships, as only one of either Utseya and Ray Price are expected to be included on Thursday. While both men are automatic selections in limited-overs cricket, Zimbabwe are attempting to move away from their reliance on spin as they re-enter the Test arena.”Test match cricket and one-day cricket are totally different animals and when you play Test cricket in normal conditions you’re always going to be looking to play your extra seamer rather than your extra spinner,” said chairman of selectors Alistair Campbell. “We’ll still have a look at the wicket on Thursday morning and see what we think it’s going to do.”It is a bit of a foreign concept for us because we’ve become used to playing a spin-based attack because all of our games have been one-day cricket, but we started thinking about it a long time ago. We knew that this would come about, so for the past six months we’ve been thinking about which seamers would be in the frame. We’ve got four here plus Elton, and those are the guys who’ve shown that they’re best equipped to deal with the rigours of Test cricket.”The most obvious weakness in Zimbabwe’s squad is their opening pair: Vusi Sibanda and Tino Mawoyo. The pair were able to cling to the crease for almost 55 overs in the first innings of Zimbabwe’s match against Australia at the Academy ground in Harare two weeks ago, but neither man lends a feeling of solidity.Sibanda was able to grind out a dogged 91 in that tour match against the Australians, but would be far happier in the middle order, which is where he plays his domestic cricket. That said, there is possibly no batsman with better, more orthodox technique in the country and Zimbabwe, who seem only ever to select Sibanda as an opener, must be hoping that that will be enough to see off the hazards of the new ball.Mawoyo doesn’t have quite as strong a case for inclusion. While he’s showed some tenacity in recent times, his last significant innings was an unbeaten century against New Zealand A last October. At the very least, his experience as an opener in domestic cricket should stand him in good stead, as should Zimbabwe’s extensive preparations for this match.”The team is very much well-prepared,” said coach Alan Butcher. “We have had a fitness programme since back in May and we had extensive match practice from the matches against South Africa A sides.”We’ve had good variety in terms of the experience we’ve gained and the match preparation we’ve had, so I’m very confident that we’re fully prepared and ready for the challenge on Thursday.”Zimbabwe squad: Brendan Taylor (capt), Regis Chakabva, Elton Chigumbura, Craig Ervine, Hamilton Masakadza, Tino Mawoyo, Keegan Meth, Chris Mpofu, Ray Price, Vusi Sibanda, Tatenda Taibu (wk), Prosper Utseya, Brian Vitori, Kyle Jarvis.

Mohsin tells Shafiq off 'in a loving way'

Pakistan’s interim coach, Mohsin Khan, has admitted that he ticked off Asad Shafiq for an irresponsible dismissal just before the second new ball was available to England in Abu Dhabi

ESPNcricinfo staff25-Jan-2012Mohsin Khan, Pakistan’s interim coach, said he criticised Asad Shafiq “in a loving way” for an irresponsible dismissal just before the second new ball that enabled England to take control of the second Test in Abu Dhabi.Shafiq fell to an ambitious slog-sweep at Graeme Swann with the new ball only one over away; the first of three late wickets for England that allowed them to repair the damage caused by a century stand between Shafiq and Misbah-ul-Haq for the fifth wicket and leave Pakistan 256 for 7 at the close.”I had a go at him – but in a loving way,” Mohsin said. “We were hoping for 300 for three or four by the close. Shafiq was playing wonderfully well and after he got out the pressure came back on us and the team suffered. If someone is playing for their country they must understand their responsibilities.”Pakistan failed to make good use of winning the toss, losing four wickets for 103. “We knew that the pitch would play a few tricks in the first session but we wanted to capitalise on it later,” Mohsin said. “Misbah has played a tremendous innings for us so far.”

Australia's chance for Twenty20 success

ESPNcricinfo previews the second Twenty20 between South Africa and Australia in Johannesburg

The Preview by Brydon Coverdale15-Oct-2011Match factsOctober 16, Johannesburg
Start time 1430 (1230 GMT)Graeme Smith is 42 runs shy of 1000 Twenty20 international runs•AFPBig PictureSouth Africa were rusty in the first game, which was to be expected after such a long lay-off. They missed chances in the field and, JP Duminy aside, didn’t hit their straps with the bat. But on a better batting pitch in Johannesburg, they will be able to use the pace from Australia’s fast men and feel the ball coming off the bat. Hashim Amla now has a match under his belt as the country’s captain and he will lead with more confidence at the Wanderers. The key for the hosts is to produce a more consistent performance – Duminy, Morne Morkel and Lonwabo Tsotsobe played well in the series opener, but they cannot be expected to carry the side.For Cameron White’s Australia, this match presents a rare chance to win a Twenty20 series. Flying in to a country for one or two Twenty20s and then heading home could become a familiar feeling for White, who is not part of the ODI squad, and it would do his confidence a world of good to depart with a 2-0 result. Shane Watson has been told by Michael Clarke not to expect a rest any time soon, even if he feels tired after his Sri Lanka tour and Champions League commitments. Watson is not the type of player who would want a break in any case. His strong half-century in Cape Town showed the kind of form he is in, and if he and David Warner make a good start, Australia will be hard to beat.Form guideSouth Africa LLWWW
Australia WLLWLIn the spotlightSouth Africa’s batting in the first match was built around JP Duminy, who played himself in and then started finding the middle of the bat. He enjoys playing against Australia and will again be a key man at the Wanderers.David Warner finished the Champions League T20 with a pair of centuries but viewers didn’t get to enjoy his fireworks in Cape Town, where he was run out in the first over. If Warner spends a few overs at the crease in Johannesburg, expect plenty of balls to fly into the crowd.Team newsRusty Theron was a weak link in South Africa’s attack and could be under pressure from Wayne Parnell. Graeme Smith was rusty in the first game and would benefit from another outing. Richard Levi has a strong case to be included, and it could be at the expense of David Miller.South Africa (possible) 1 Hashim Amla (capt), 2 Graeme Smith, 3 JP Duminy, 4 Colin Ingram, 5 Richard Levi/David Miller, 6 Heino Kuhn (wk), 7 Johan Botha, 8 Robin Peterson, 9 Morne Morkel, 10 Rusty Theron/Wayne Parnell, 11 Lonwabo Tsotsobe.The spinner Steve O’Keefe was given only one over in the first game, with David Hussey effectively acting as the lead spinner. That could mean the selectors will consider leaving O’Keefe out in Johannesburg, especially with a harder pitch on offer, and handing a debut to Mitchell Marsh, a powerful batsman who can also offer another seam-bowling option.Australia (possible): 1 David Warner, 2 Shane Watson, 3 Shaun Marsh, 4 David Hussey, 5 Cameron White (capt), 6 Steven Smith, 7 Mitchell Marsh, 8 Matthew Wade (wk), 9 James Pattinson, 10 Patrick Cummins, 11 Doug Bollinger.Pitch and conditionsThe Wanderers surface is expected to be hard and bouncy, with plenty of runs available for the batsmen. The seamers are likely to find more assistance than the spinners. The forecast is for a sunny day and a top of 27C.Stats and trivia South Africa and Australia have met in seven Twenty20 internationals. Thursday’s win by Australia was the first victory in those seven games by the away team. Graeme Smith needs 42 runs to become the third man to reach 1000 runs in Twenty20 internationals, after Brendon McCullum and Kevin Pietersen.Quotes”If we can improve 5-10% every game, we are heading in the right direction.”

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