Lancashire 'feel crap', but live to fight in Division One

In the end, the spectre of relegation did not materialise for either team, even though the heaviest defeat of their season in terms of runs left Lancashire sweating for a few hours

Jon Culley at Edgbaston23-Sep-2016
ScorecardJeetan Patel helped finish off Lancashire’s second innings•Getty Images

In the end, the spectre of relegation did not materialise for either team, even though the heaviest defeat of their season in terms of runs left Lancashire sweating for a few hours on the outcome of Hampshire’s escape bid in Southampton.Warwickshire knew they were safe at lunchtime in effect, with all three of the batsmen they had identified as most likely to deny them the win safely seen off. Lancashire were 72 for 6, having lost Haseeb Hameed, Steven Croft and Liam Livingstone in the morning session and the handshakes of congratulation exchanged between the Warwickshire players as they left the field did not seem premature.Indeed, within 50 minutes of coming out again the match was over. Lancashire did their utmost to resist, nightwatchman Simon Kerrigan manfully extending his duties to two hours and 22 minutes before he was at last winkled out by Jeetan Patel.Patel took three wickets to finish the season with 69 in the Championship, reaffirming his status as the most consistently effective spin bowler in the competition. Rikki Clarke, willingly bending his back as if he were 24 rather than 34, claimed four and Chris Wright, who has finished the summer looking rejuvenated, a couple. Their combined weight of knowledge, their ability to deliver when it matters was always likely to be too much for a Lancashire side at the other end of the spectrum in terms of experience. And so it proved.After winning a trophy at Lord’s last weekend, it has been a good week for Warwickshire. Yet no one is pretending there are not major issues to address after a season that they began with expectations – among pundits at least – that they would be pushing for the title.”It is satisfying in that the way we bowled and fielded in the first innings was exceptional, we then backed it up with the bat in the second innings and pressed home the advantage with the ball,” Warwickshire’s director of cricket Dougie Brown said.”We knew we had to play 12 good sessions and not lose our way as we have done in some games and we did that. But it is frustrating that we have left it to the last game of the season to play one of our best games.”Is everything rosy after winning a trophy? No. Because we don’t want to be fighting to stay in the division, we want to be competing for silverware on all fronts.”So we will reviewing the season as players and as a management team, looking at what we need to do.”We think we know what the conclusions will be but we need to get to the bits that are important and just make sure we have a focus during the next few weeks and months, so that we are champing at the bit at the start of next season.”Brown admits that the challenge he faces is to rejuvenate the team while still making the most of what Patel, Clarke, Wright and Keith Barker can still deliver with the ball, likewise Ian Bell and Jonathan Trott and others with the bat.”Refreshing the squad is difficult,” he said. “You are always faced with trading off performance against potential performance down the line. We know the age profile of the team is not going south, it’s going north.”But you can’t argue with the fact that Jeetan is top of the MVP ratings and Keith and Rikki are in the top 10. It would be madness to say that because these guys are older players you just cut them.”Injuries have not helped. Mark Adair would have played a lot more but he has a stress fracture in his back, as would Aaron Thomason, an extremely talented all-rounder, but he has a stress fracture in his back as well.”Bell’s season could have been better, but allowance has to be made for the refocusing he has had to make after slipping off England’s radar for the first time in more than a decade. What’s more his appetite to play on is undiminished.”It has been an adjustment for me,” he said. “The style of cricket and the amount of cricket has been different. The style of bowling is different, facing guys I have not faced before.”It has been a challenge. But I will learn from the experiences and I still want to improve. My desire is still to play for England but putting on a Warwickshire shirt means as much to me.”It does not work for everybody but I see Trescothick playing for Somerset at 40 with the same desire, likewise Paul Collingwood up at Durham and I want to go on as long as I can and win trophies.”For Ashley Giles, the previous occupant of Brown’s position and now Lancashire’s guiding force, emotions were mixed. The possibility of going down has been hard to take but he sees plenty of cause for optimism.”We have been beaten by the side, one with a wealth of experience, but you don’t like losing. It hurts,” he said. “Not winning more games has cost us, and we’ve only got ourselves to blame. Overall, if you don’t win games of cricket, you’re going to be behind the eight-ball.”There’s obviously been factors that will be pointed in my direction, such as not replacing Neil Wagner, although there were not a lot of available options. But Alviro Petersen going, we couldn’t do much about.”I will say at the same time that we’ve been able to blood some really good youngsters and we’ve seen some really good performances. I know it sounds like I’m looking for positives, but you can’t question the way Haseeb has come on, how Livingstone has come on and Rob Jones and Tom Bailey too. At the moment, we all feel pretty crap. But time’s a healer.”We outperformed expectations up front, and suddenly everyone’s going ‘we’re going to win the Championship’. That’s why I started the season saying ‘we need to stay up’. I didn’t mean that negatively. It’s because of where we are and we knew in reality it would be a struggle.”But I knew that if we consolidated our position in Division One, we’d be better for it next year. And I stand by that.”

Warnaweera asked to step back from Galle Test preparations

Sri Lanka Cricket has requested that Galle curator Jayananda Warnaweera step back from preparations for next week’s Test, after he missed a meeting with the ICC’s anti-corruption security unit (ACSU) in Colombo on Wednesday

Andrew Fidel Fernando08-Oct-2015Sri Lanka Cricket has requested that Galle curator Jayananda Warnaweera step back from preparations for next week’s Test, after he missed a meeting with the ICC’s anti-corruption security unit (ACSU) in Colombo on Wednesday. Warnaweera would ordinarily oversee preparations of the surface and the ground for the first Test against West Indies, which begins on October 14, but SLC has instead asked national curator Janaka Sampath to take over at Galle.The board had been prompted to make other arrangements for this Test when ASCU staff alerted them about Warnaweera’s failure to turn up to the meeting. SLC is expected to have a clearer view of the implications of Warnaweera’s absence following a meeting between ACSU staff and SLC chairman Sidath Wettimuny this afternoon. The board is expected to make a statement some time in the next 48 hours. No official suspension of any nature has been handed down.Last Friday, Warnaweera had resigned from SLC’s interim committee, citing personal reasons. His appointment to the interim committee in March had raised minor criticism, because Warnaweera had also been an executive committee member in controversial previous administrations. At the time, then-sports minister Navin Dissanayake had postured the new board as a clean break from the past.Warnaweera could not be reached for comment. SLC officials said they had also had trouble getting through to him over the past 24 hours.

Sayers' five-for keeps contest even

South Australia’s batsmen handed back to New South Wales the fighting chance they had been given by another fine display from Chadd Sayers on day two of the Sheffield Shield match at the SCG

ESPNcricinfo staff15-Mar-2013
ScorecardSouth Australia’s batsmen handed back to New South Wales the fighting chance they had been given by another fine display from Chadd Sayers on day two of the Sheffield Shield match at the SCG.Defending a meagre 182 on another overcast day, the Redbacks nipped through the Blues’ batting with great success before lunch, and it took a trio of 40s by Trent Copeland, Steve O’Keefe and Gurinder Sandhu to forge a narrow first-innings lead for the hosts. Sayers’ five wickets gave him 47 at 18.29 for the season.However the SA opener Alex Carey was out to Josh Hazlewood second ball of the innings, and another three wickets left NSW in with a strong chance of securing the outright win they need to overtake the Redbacks and be a chance of sneaking into the Shield final.

Titans secure title with record win

A round-up of the final round of matches in the 2011-12 season of the SuperSport Series

ESPNcricinfo staff11-Feb-2012With a victory as commanding as victories come, the Titans won the SuperSport Series. Their margin of an innings and 325 runs against the Dolphins in SuperSport Park is the largest in a first-class match in South Africa.The Titans began the last round of fixtures 0.68 points behind the Cobras but ensured the men from the Cape had no chance of surging ahead. Frequent weather interruptions also played a significant part in the Cobras draw with the Lions at the Wanderers.After being put in to bat, the Titans scored at over five runs an over to amass 473 for 9 declared on the first day and capture seven bonus points. By the end of play on day one, they had already taken two Dolphins wickets and went on to shoot the opposition out for less than 100 in both innings. The Dolphins made fewer runs in the match than Faf du Plessis did on his own, making it the first time since the 1988-89 season that a team has sunk to such a low.The Titans lost Jacques Rudolph early but Heino Kuhn and the captain Martin van Jaarsveld added a brisk 102 runs for the second wicket. van Jaarsveld made 50 off 74 balls but Kuhn was quicker, scoring at a strike-rate of nearly 90 during his innings of 128. When he was dismissed in the 48th over, the Titans had already scored 255.The quick scoring did not stop with Kuhn’s departure. du Plessis struck 15 fours and four sixes during his 157 off 162 balls, adding 156 for the fifth wicket with Henry Davids, who made 73 off 95 deliveries. So severe was the ransacking of the Dolphins’ bowlers – Brandon Scullard conceded 143 in 20 overs – that Titans declared after 87.1 overs, just before stumps on day one, giving their bowlers a two-over crack at the weary Dolphins openers.Neither Imraan nor Divan van Wyk got off the mark. Rowan Richards and Ethy Mbhalati dismissed them in successive overs to leave the Dolphins on 5 for 2 at stumps. Daryn Smit, the No. 3 batsman, also fell for a duck on the second morning and the collapse did not stop, with only Vaughan van Jaarsveld making more than 20. Richards, Mbhalati and CJ de Villiers took three wickets each to skittle Dolphins for 62.With a lead of 411, and his bowlers needing only 20.5 overs to dismiss Dolphins in the first innings, Martin van Jaarsveld enforced the follow-on, with telling effect. The Dolphins top three got off the mark in the second innings but none of them made it to double figures. All of them fell to Mbhalati, who went on to finish with 5 for 32. No Dolphins batsmen made it past 20 this time and they folded for 86 in 28.5 overs.The Titans had won the first-class competition in the 2008-09 season and now claimed their first trophy under the new management of Matthew Maynard and Martin van Jaarsveld. When Maynard took over at the start of the season he was told that he would have to win at least seven trophies out of a possible nine in his three-year tenure.Titans’ emphatic win at SuperSport Park meant the Cobras had no chance of defending their title after the first three days of their match were affected by rain and bad light. The Cobras put the Lions in under cloudy skies and had early reward when Stephen Cook was bowled by Rory Kleinveldt for 4. Alviro Petersen and Gulam Bodi grew roots and put on 131 for the second wicket. The pair scored slowly and denied the Cobras any chance of a point. Their attack only had rewards late on the first day when Bodi and Neil McKenzie were dismissed within 11 runs of each other.The Lions middle order was strong again, with Temba Bavuma continuing his fantastic debut season with 64, and Chris Morris contributing with 60 at No. 8. They were eventually bowled out for 410 on the third day.The Cobras had to score quickly to have any chance of staying in the match but stuttered through the early part of their innings. Yaseen Vallie* was the major contributor with a career best 167 and starts from everyone else gave the Cobras a 10-run lead. Morris’ good all-round performance continued with 4 for 100.With a draw looking the likeliest result, the Lions batted sedately to just before 4pm before the teams shook hands and ended the game. Their captain, Petersen, did not bat in the second innings but ended the competition as the top run-scorer – 816 runs at an average of 62.76.A dead rubber was played in Port Elizabeth, where the Knights beat the Warriors by 161 runs.The Knights had a tough first innings and were bowled out for 240, with Johann van der Wath the top-scorer with 79. Arno Jacobs scored a massive 152 and Ashwell Prince got 60 to take the Warriors to 318, a lead of 78. The match remained a tight affair in the third innings. Morne van Wyk’s 155 and Ryan McLaren’s 90 led the Knights to 373 in their second innings.The Warriors were set 205 to win but collapsed to 134 all out. Quinton Friend took six wickers and Werner Coetsee claimed four for the Knights. The Warriors do have the competition’s top bowler in their ranks. Simon Harmer ended the season with 44 scalps at an average of 31.75.*04:00 GMT, Feb 13: This story previously said that Stiaan van Zyl’s 167 gave Cobras the lead. This has been corrected

Tremlett named World Cup reserve

Chris Tremlett, the England fast bowler, will fly out to Bangladesh as a traveling reserve with England’s World Cup squad

ESPNcricinfo staff09-Feb-2011Chris Tremlett, the England fast bowler, will fly out to Bangladesh as a traveling reserve with England’s World Cup squad. He has recovered from a side strain, and will be on stand-by to be added to the 15-man squad in the event that the selectors need to replace an injured player.Tremlett, 29, was awarded an incremental contract after his role in England’s victorious Ashes campaign, and played in the first four one-dayers against Australia in January, taking six wickets at 33.50.Eoin Morgan has already been ruled out of the World Cup due to a fractured finger and England are currently sweating on the fitness of five more members of their squad. Paul Collingwood received an injection on Monday, having suffered a back spasm during the penultimate ODI in Sydney. Tim Bresnan is stepping up his training having succumbed to a calf strain, while Ajmal Shahzad’s hamstring injury is still causing concern.Stuart Broad is believed to be on track having torn a stomach muscle back in December, while Graeme Swann is set to test his injured knee in the nets on Tuesday, having missed the latter stages of the Australia tour.ECB National Selector Geoff Miller said: “While the injured bowlers in the 15-man squad are all progressing well, the selectors have decided it would be prudent to have an additional player on hand who is acclimatised in case we need to apply to the Event Technical Committee for a replacement due to injury.”

Australia romp to 125-run triumph

In a summer of big one-day wins, Australia saved their heftiest victory for last.

The Bulletin by Brydon Coverdale at the MCG19-Feb-2010
Scorecard and ball-by-ball detailsJames Hopes provided some highlights with a 24-ball half-century•Getty Images

In a summer of big one-day wins, Australia saved one of their heftiest victories for last. After Ricky Ponting, James Hopes and Shane Watson set up a daunting 5 for 324, Doug Bollinger continued his torment of Chris Gayle and the West Indies top order crumbled – again – to leave the crowd in no doubt about the approaching result less than five overs in to the chase.The 125-run triumph maintained Australia’s chances of going through the summer undefeated in all forms of the game, with two Twenty20s against West Indies all that remain. Already they have equalled their effort of 2000-01, the only other home season when they did not lose a Test or ODI. Back then the team boasted Shane Warne, Glenn McGrath, Adam Gilchrist and Mark Waugh, and faced West Indies and Zimbabwe.The developing Australia of this summer will be extra pleased with their record, although their opponents Pakistan and West Indies have been weak. Here West Indies dropped five catches and for the third time in the series they were three down by the end of the fifth over. Little wonder that at the end of a string of such one-sided contests, only 15,538 fans turned up – the fewest ever for an ODI between the two teams at the MCG.Those who did attend saw Bollinger snuff out West Indies’ chances when he picked up Gayle’s wicket for the sixth time in seven matches this summer. The only Test or ODI in which he failed to do so was the Sydney wash-out, when West Indies batted for six balls. Two top-edged sixes from Gayle were followed by a leading edge to cover and Bollinger had two wickets having trapped Travis Dowlin lbw from the second ball of the chase.Ryan Harris added Narsingh Deonarine, who played on for 4, and Wavell Hinds, who gave Steven Smith his first ODI catch. Kieron Pollard’s 45 featured two sixes but when he holed out to Smith in the deep off Hopes, all that was left for the crowd to look forward to was Smith’s maiden wicket, an lbw against Denesh Ramdin, and a fighting 47 not out from Darren Sammy. Still, they had been treated to some exciting strokeplay during the Australian innings.Ponting and Watson built the platform with half-centuries before Hopes and Adam Voges blasted them past the 300-mark in the final stages. Their 82-run partnership in 7.1 overs featured superb placement from both men, especially Hopes, who struck ten fours and found the gaps with ease. He made his third ODI half-century and took only 24 balls to do it, giving him the fifth-quickest one-day fifty by an Australian.Hopes finished unbeaten on 57 while Voges remained not out on 45. Hopes was put down at long-on by Hinds late in the innings and it continued a woeful fielding effort from West Indies. The selectors also made the strange decision to make no changes to the side that lost in Brisbane, despite the strike bowler Kemar Roach being passed fit.It meant that the openers Watson and Brad Haddin were confronted with medium-pace new-ball offerings and they enjoyed hitting through the line, down the ground and over the top. Dwayne Smith and Ravi Rampaul obliged by serving up half-volleys and both men watched sixes sail back over their heads.Watson in particular butchered the bowling and he brought up his half-century from 49 balls with perhaps the best of his three sixes, a searing pull over wide midwicket off Sammy. Two deliveries later Watson tried to work a Sammy full toss into the same region and was taken at deep midwicket for 51. Haddin was the quieter partner but still struck two sixes in his 42-ball 32 before he played on trying to pull Pollard.Michael Clarke and Ponting calmly compiled a 104-run stand that included a couple of sixes but mostly consisted of push-and-run play with the field back. Ponting fell on 61 from 55 balls when he tried to glide Pollard through the vacant cordon and managed only to find the wicketkeeper’s gloves. Clarke’s 58-ball 47 ended when he miscued a pull off Rampaul and skied a catch to mid-on, where Deonarine barely clasped the chance.Deonarine had already dropped Ponting on 47 at square leg when the batsman’s sweep off Nikita Miller stayed a bit low. Ponting was given another life on 55 when Hinds’ throw missed with Ponting a long way out of his ground. Haddin also enjoyed two breaks. On 7, Dowlin dropped a sitter at second slip before two balls later the bowler Smith couldn’t quite hold on to a flat-batted smash back at him. Watson was also grassed on 29 when he flicked Smith to short fine-leg, where Rampaul missed a chance he should have taken.It all combined to mean another easy win for Australia. Gayle predicted at the start of the series that West Indies would beat Australia 4-1; they lost 4-0. But they did win the tosses 4-1.

Mulder: 'Lara keeping that record is exactly the way it should be'

Mulder explains why he declared SA’s innings when he was unbeaten on 367 at lunch on day two

ESPNcricinfo staff07-Jul-2025

Wiaan Mulder brought up the second-fastest triple-century in Test cricket•Zimbabwe Cricket

Wiaan Mulder had a shot at overhauling Brian Lara’s world-record 400* when he went to lunch at 367* on day two of the second Test against Zimbabwe in Bulawayo. Mulder, the stand-in captain, though, declared the innings at the break, and stopped short of the record because he felt “Lara keeping that record is exactly the way it should be”.”Well, first things first, I thought we’ve got enough, we need to bowl. And secondly, Brian Lara is a legend, let’s be real,” Mulder told Shaun Pollock during the post-day interview with SuperSport. “He got 401 [400*] or whatever it was against England. And for someone of that stature to keep that record is pretty special. I think if I get the chance again, I’d probably do the same thing. I know I was speaking to Shuks [coach Shukri Conrad].”He kind of said to me as well, like ‘listen, let the legends keep the really big scores’. You never know what’s my fate or whatever you want to call it, what’s destined for me. But I think Brian Lara keeping that record is exactly the way it should be.”Related

  • Mulder: Lara told me I should have gone for the record

  • Gayle on Mulder's 367* declaration: He 'panicked and blundered'

  • Dominant South Africa wrap up 2-0 sweep inside three days

  • Stats – Wiaan Mulder breaks records and Zimbabwe with 367*

  • Mulder's 367* headlines SA's day of domination

Mulder, though, broke a number of other records and Zimbabwe’s attack on the day. He became only the second South Africa player after Hashim Amla to score a triple-hundred went on to surpass Amla’s 311*. And he did it while humming away to himself.”I mean, there was a lot of thoughts,” Mulder said. “In the end, it’s just singing my song between balls and trying to keep myself natural and trying to keep myself present. Kept feeling my shoes, that type of thing, to make sure I’m in the moment and not too far ahead.”And, to be honest, when I went past Hash’s score, I didn’t really notice what actually happened until I looked up. I was on 312. I was like, ‘oh, wow! I was just on 300’. I don’t know how I got there, but yeah, it was truly special.”In Bangladesh, it was an Afrikaans song that I got to my hundred with and I lost it a little bit along the way. And in this song, in this game, it was by The Cranberries. So I just sing .”Mulder had made his international debut for South Africa in an ODI in 2017, when he felt that he wasn’t well-equipped to deal with the pressure and ruthlessness of top-flight cricket. He has since evolved as an allrounder, thanks to playing three seasons of county cricket at Leicestershire.”I think when I started playing with South Africa, I was nowhere near good enough, to be honest with you,” Mulder told Pollock. “It did offer me a lot of opportunities to learn from great players who have retired now, and some guys are still playing. But going to England really gave me a chance to understand what type of batter I want to be as well and figure out some technical things.”I think I came across the ball for a very large portion of my career. And in England, if your front pad’s in the way, you kind of get exposed quickly. So those were lessons. I mean, there’s many more I can name, but those were lessons that I continuously kept learning in England as well as in South Africa.”Batting at the Wanderers is pretty difficult. So, yeah, I think it’s all put me in a good place. The head coach, Justin Sammons of Zimbabwe, played a massive role in my batting. In particular, playing the short ball. So, I mean, there’s a lot of growth that’s happened over the last couple of years.”ESPNcricinfo Ltd

All of those lessons helped Mulder dictate terms against Zimbabwe in the second Test and put South Africa on the path to an innings win. In response to South Africa’s 626 for 5 declared, Zimbabwe folded for 170 in their first innings and went to stumps on 51 for 1 in their second after being asked to follow-on.”Yeah, it’s pretty special,” Mulder said. “I’ve never even dreamt of getting a double-hundred, never mind a triple hundred, but super special. The most important thing is to put the team in a good position to hopefully win this Test.”South Africa head coach Shukri Conrad was full of praise for Mulder’s knock.”Wiaan’s innings was nothing short of extraordinary,” Conrad said in a CSA statement. “Being the captain, then batting at No. 3, where he had to absorb early pressure and face the new ball, which he did with immense composure and control – it was unbelievable.”The way he constructed his innings, session by session, was a masterclass in temperament and shot selection. It’s the kind of performance that anchors a team and sets the tone for the entire match. We’re incredibly proud of what he’s achieved today.”

Roy's 84* hands Chennai Braves thrilling win; Perera, bowlers star in NY Strikers' comfortable win

Team Abu Dhabi fell short by four runs in pursuit of 116; de Kock, Charles and Powell made a mockery of Gladiators’ total

ESPNcricinfo staff29-Nov-2023A 20-ball 50 from Kusal Perera combined with the efforts of bowlers gave New York Strikers their first win of the season as they beat Bangla Tigers by eight wickets.Having been put in, Tigers lost opener Chris Lynn third ball of the innings to left-arm quick Muhammad Jawadullah. Kusal Mendis then joined Jordan Cox to plunder 59 runs off the next 24 balls before Jawadullah struck again in the fifth over to remove the latter. In the next over, Sunil Narine had Mendis caught at deep midwicket. Tigers’ innings never took off after that, as Chamika Karunaratne and Akeal Hosein struck to restrict them to 101 for 7.In return, Strikers lost Rahmanullah Gurbaz early, but Muhammad Waseem and Perera struck a strong partnership, making 58 runs together off 28 deliveries. Benny Howell removed Waseem in the seventh over for the breakthrough, but Perera launched him for 4, 6, 4 in the same over to take Strikers closer to win. With 11 runs needed off 18 balls, Perera then hit a four off the first ball of the eighth over and then launched a six fourth ball to hand Strikers a comfortable win.Jason Roy scored 84 off 39 balls•Abu Dhabi T10

Leus du Plooy and Colin Ingram combined to smash 17 off the last over, but Team Abu Dhabi still fell short by four runs in a thrilling finish against Chennai Braves. Abu Dhabi needed five to win off the last ball, but du Plooy was beaten by Obed McCoy, who bowled a dot ball to end the game.Abu Dhabi were set 116 by Braves on the back of Jason Roy’s unbeaten 84 from 39 balls, which featured six fours and seven sixes; the next best score by a Braves batter was Kobe Herft’s 14. Roy led the way by helping clobber 48 in the last three overs to take Braves up to 115, even as Abu Dhabi’s captain Dwaine Pretorius removed Stephen Eskinazi on the fourth ball of the eighth over, before running Charith Asalanka for a duck next ball.But Abu Dhabi couldn’t keep pace with the run chase during the middle overs, leaving themselves with another 61 to get from the final four overs. That is when du Plooy and Ingram joined hands. Although they took 32 off the next two overs, Sam Cook allowed just seven runs in the ninth to leave Abu Dhabi with 22 required in the final over. Eventually, du Plooy cracked 47 not out off just 18 balls, but missed the final delivery as Braves scraped through.Quinton de Kock scored a half-century•Abu Dhabi T10

Delhi Bulls’ top three thrashed their way to the target of 121 in just 8.3 overs, stunning Deccan Gladiators by nine wickets to start their Abu Dhabi T10 season with a victory. Opening batters Quinton de Kock and Johnson Charles bashed 73 in five overs to set the tone for Bulls, for whom captain Rovman Powell then completed the chase in a hurry.Powell finished unbeaten on 31 off only 12 balls, smashing five fours and a six on the way, after Charles fell for 36 from 13 deliveries, with as many fours but one more six. Those rapid cameos all but sidelined de Kock’s innings of 50 not out – his strike rate of 192 felt pretty inferior to that of Charles’ 276 and Powell’s 258 – and put the efforts of Gladiators’ batters in vain.Gladiators had opted to bat, and were led by Tom Kohler-Cadmore for the second successive night, as he followed up an undefeated 68 against New York Strikers with 42 against Bulls at double the pace. Andre Fletcher hit 34 off 20 balls, while Andre Russell’s cameo of 19 from only five deliveries provided the finishing touches. But all that wouldn’t prove to be enough in the end.

Kuldeep Yadav, Prasidh Krishna part of India A squad to face New Zealand A

Umran Malik, Tilak Varma, Ruturaj Gaikwad and Sarfaraz Khan also make the cut for the three four-day games

ESPNcricinfo staff24-Aug-2022Kuldeep Yadav and Prasidh Krishna have been named among a contingent of international players in the India A squad to face New Zealand A over the course of three unofficial Tests starting on September 1.A majority of the 16-member squad consists of up-and-comers such as Umran Malik, the Jammu & Kashmir fast bowler, who lit up IPL 2022 with his ability to bowl at 150kph, and Tilak Varma, the Hyderabad batter who earned high praise from Mahela Jayawardene while playing for Mumbai Indians.A couple of India A mainstays – Priyank Panchal, who will captain the side, and Abhimanyu Easwaran – are to shoulder most of the batting burden in the long-form matches. Both players have an enviable record in first-class cricket as well as the experience of being around India’s Test squad.ESPNcricinfo Ltd

Also part of the squad are Rajat Patidar, who scored a century in an IPL knockout match this year; Ruturaj Gaikwad, who has been travelling with India’s white-ball teams as back-up opener; KS Bharat, widely regarded as Rishabh Pant’s understudy in Test cricket; and Sarfaraz Khan, the top run-getter in the 2021-22 Ranji Trophy with 982 from nine innings.India A and New Zealand A will play each other across three first-class matches to be held in Bengaluru and Hubli between September 1 and 18, and three 50-over matches to be held in Chennai between September 22 and 27. New Zealand A have named a strong squad for the tour.

Max O'Dowd, bowlers lift Netherlands to victory against Scotland in rain-hit ODI

The opening batter’s 82 helped Netherlands recover from 59 from 5

ESPNcricinfo staff20-May-2021Discipline from their bowlers after an anchoring knock by opener Max O’Dowd lifted Netherlands to victory in a rain-hit first ODI against Scotland in Rotterdam on Wednesday.The wet weather and outfield meant the game was reduced to 33 overs a side. Netherlands, batting first, were in deep trouble at 59 for 5 in the 16th over, with five of their top six out for 10 or fewer. But O’Dowd held firm at his end, steadying things with 82 off 102 balls. Logan van Beek provided some late thrust with 24 off 21. Pacer Gavin Main, who’d struck twice during Netherlands’ early slide, produced the best of the figures for Scotland: 7-2-16-2.In reply, Scotland seemed on track while Richie Berrington was around. They, too, had an early wobble – they fell to 31 for 3 in the 11th – but then Berrington took charge, scoring 41 off 43 with three sixes as Scotland rattled up 69 in the next 11 overs. George Munsey was accompanying him, but Netherlands struck a big double-blow when they got rid of both set batters within one run of each other. The score went from 100 for 3 to 101 for 5, and Scotland faltered from there, despite the best efforts of their lower order. They finished on 149 for 8, 15 runs short of their target.van Beek and Vivian Kingma, Netherlands opening duo, took four wickets between them, allowing only 46 runs in 14 overs. They also accounted for the key wickets of Munsey and Berrington between them.The two teams will play another ODI at the same venue on Thursday.