Pakistan to stage Champions Trophy in 2008

Shaharyar Khan: ‘It will be one of the biggest global sporting events ever held in Pakistan’ © Getty Images

Pakistan has been awarded the right to host the next Champions Trophy in 2008 by the ICC. West Indies, due to host the World Cup in 2007, will stage the Champions Trophy in 2010.By then the tournament promises to be more streamlined than the present version, with only the top eight teams taking part. The Pakistan edition is likely to be scheduled towards the end of September 2008 while the West Indies will do so in April and May 2010.Shaharyar Khan, the chairman of the Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB), said that Pakistan was delighted to have been awarded the event. “The ICC Champions Trophy 2008 will be one of the biggest global sporting events ever held in Pakistan. The decision of the ICC board to award this event to Pakistan is a tremendous show of support in the PCB, in Pakistan cricket and in our nation. We are very honoured to have been given the responsibility of hosting this important event and look forward to welcoming the top cricket nations to our country.”Ehsan Mani, president ICC, praised the efforts of Pakistan to be ready to host such an event. “The PCB has worked tremendously hard to get to a position where it is ready to host an event of this importance. It will be the first nation to host a streamlined Champions Trophy involving only the top eight sides in ODI rankings.”The Champions Trophy is an established part of the international cricket calendar and we were inundated with members that wanted to host this prestigious event. This means that we have been able to find very sensible time slots for this and other events in the years ahead. By reducing the number of teams taking part and moving the scheduling of the event the Champions Trophy will be a very strong component of the exciting package of events through to 2015.”Ken Gordon, chairman of the West Indies board (WICB), thanked the ICC for providing the West Indies with the opportunity to build on next year’s World Cup. “I’d like to thank the ICC for understanding that it is important that we have further opportunities to make use of the excellent facilities that we are building for the World Cup 2007. The hosting of the Champions Trophy provides the perfect opportunity for us to build upon the momentum of next year’s World Cup for the long term benefit of cricket in the region.”A decision on whether the annual ICC events from 2012 to 2014 will be Champions Trophies or Twenty20 World Championships will be made after the success of the events through to 2009 has been evaluated. The hosting right, though, have been allocated for the events in 2012 and 2014. Sri Lanka has earned the right to host the 2012 event while Bangladesh will host the major ICC event in 2014.”Sri Lanka has an excellent tradition of hosting ICC events and in recent times they have successfully staged two ICC Under-19 Cricket World Cups and one ICC Champions Trophy. We have every confidence that they will stage another memorable event in 2012 be it Twenty20 or ODI cricket,” said Mani. He added that, “Bangladesh hosted perhaps the most remarkably successful ICC event during my time as president (the Under-19 Cricket World Cup 2004). The fact that they have now been asked to host a major ICC event in 2014 as well as act as a joint host of the World Cup 2011 is testament to the progress that has been made in Bangladesh cricket over recent times.”

Lehmann considers handing Test spot to Clarke

‘He respects the game more than any other youngster that I’ve seen for a long time,’ says Darren Lehmann about Michael Clarke© Getty Images

Darren Lehmann could give his place to Michael Clarke, the “genius” who scored a fabulous century on debut in Bangalore, so he can have an unrestricted start to his Test career.In a move that could end his own international ambitions, Lehmann, the current vice-captain, said he would not stand in the way of a younger player and would consider moving aside for the third Test, when Ricky Ponting is expected to return from a broken left thumb.”That’s something I’ll think about and talk about after this Test match,” he said. “If I was a selector I would think that Michael Clarke should play every Test for the next 10 or 12 years. If a guy plays a genius knock like that in the first innings of his first Test and is earmarked by all of us to play well, you have to let him.”Clarke’s 151 created a batting-order traffic jam and before the first innings of the first Test was over there were calls for Lehmann, who averages 49.37 in 21 Tests and scored 17 and 14 in Bangalore, to be dropped.”We always knew he was pretty special,” Lehmann said. “We probably held him back for maybe a year or so to really make sure he was ready to play. He works bloody hard at the game and respects the game more than any other youngster that I’ve seen for a long time.”The move would cost Lehmann $15,000 for each missed Test and put in doubt his Cricket Australia contract, which is worth around A$650,000 a season. But Lehmann, 34, said it was not a generous decision. “Sometimes you have to make it for them [the selectors] because it’s a lot harder for them to make,” he said. “I don’t think blokes should be playing on too long. It is a bit different from state cricket where you can help out some young blokes. In international cricket sometimes you might be holding up a spot for a young guy.”

Sehwag and Tendulkar prop up India

Close India 284 for 3 (Tendulkar 73*, Laxman 29*) v Australia
Scorecard


Jason Gillespie toiled hard but had only two wickets to show for it
© Getty Images

The young apprentices served up a fine entrée in the final Test between India and Australia at the Sydney Cricket Ground, and then the modern masters got down to the task of preparing a substantial main course. As at Melbourne, Akash Chopra and Virender Sehwag set India up nicely with a century opening partnership. But the middle order did not squander the platform they had been gifted, and India finished the first day on 284 for 3. Sachin Tendulkar, the subject of much unseemly media speculation, constructed partnerships of 66 with Rahul Dravid and an unbeaten 90 with VVS Laxman on his way to an ominous 73 not out.The day began fittingly for a man who relishes the uphill battle. Steve Waugh lost the toss and watched the Indian openers tot up 98 runs before lunch. They spluttered to a start rather than roared to one. On a good bouncy pitch, Chopra and Sehwag began tentatively, playing and missing, prodding and poking, unsure of quite how to handle the swing and seam movement that Brett Lee and Jason Gillespie generated. Gillespie, back from injury, had trouble with his line, frequently bowling wide of the off stump, or on the batsman’s legs. Lee was quicker and more accurate, and any early breakthrough appeared likely to come from him.Then, in the space of two heartbreaking overs from Lee – heartbreaking for the bowler – the momentum shifted. First, Chopra edged a beautiful away-swinger and was caught behind – off a no-ball. The next ball was legitimate, and Chopra edged again, straight to Simon Katich at gully – Katich fumbled, and dropped it.Sehwag added sodium chloride to Lee’s lesions a couple of overs later, and again, a no-ball started it. Lee overstepped and dropped one wide outside off, Sehwag slashed over backward point for six. Lee overcompensated, drifted down leg, Sehwag clipped him to fine leg for four. Lee got his line right in the next ball, but not his length, as Sehwag punched a fuller ball in the corridor to the cover boundary. Singles followed, and 18 came off that over. Lee had been hit out of the attack.Chopra found his groove as the game went on, as his shot selection grew more assured, and fortune gave way to fortitude. Sehwag, meanwhile, opened up as the ball grew older. His aggression bordered mostly on the right side of recklessness; he put away most loose balls that came his way, but didn’t try any wild strokes against the good balls. When he did flash, he flashed hard.Just when Sehwag seemed set for another big innings, he edged a good-length ball from Gillespie after lunch, and was caught behind for 72 (123 for 1). Shortly after that, Lee earned a fine wicket. First, he unleashed a bouncer at Chopra, which Chopra left alone. Then came the yorker, which Chopra dug out superbly. Then, the faster inswinging yorker, which left Chopra clueless as it crashed into his stumps (128 for 2). Chopra had made 45 – once again, the openers had given India a good start. What would Rahul Dravid and Tendulkar make of it?Tendulkar, an irresistable force for so much of his career, was an immovable object. He played a solid and compact innings, with few expansive attempts to drive, and no expensive uppish slashes. He got his boundaries with the minimum of risk – as when he opened his account off a slightly underpitched yorker from Lee, meeting it nonchalantly with the full face of his blade, in a perfectly timed push to the long-on boundary.Dravid, at the other end, was his usual unyielding self, immaculate in his responses to every question thrown at him – from balance to footwork to every microscopic detail of technique. He was serene yet busy, solid yet fluid, and he outscored Tendulkar during their partnership of 66. He was clinical against loose bowling, much of which came, during his stay at the crease, from Stuart MacGill.Dravid cut and on-drove MacGill for fours in the first over after tea, then flicked and off-drove him for two more boundaries in his next over, and then chose the otherwise controlled Nathan Bracken for punishment, square-cutting him ferociously when he pitched short and slightly wide. But as in the first innings at Melbourne, he was out against the run of play, caught on his crease by an incutter from Gillespie for 38. At 194 for 3, India were on the same slippery slope as towards the end of the first day in the last Test.But Tendulkar and Laxman, promoted in the batting order above Sourav Ganguly, kept climbing. Tendulkar opened out as he grew more comfortable, using his wrists to work balls on off and further inside to the leg side, rocking back to punch or pull anything short. He did not allow the comfort with which he was playing to relax him, and played no loose strokes – though MacGill did fox him a couple of times, inducing edges that did not go to hand.Laxman’s last innings at the SCG was the gorgeous 167 in 1999-00, when he had nothing to lose. Today, he gave nothing away, as he settled in for the long haul. He found occasion to play his staple shots, the wristy flick to midwicket and the inside-out cover-drive, but was more a gatherer than the hunter he had been in his last Test here.In the previous Test, India’s middle order had made a meal of the start they had been given. But these men had worked too hard and dreamed too long of victory in Australia, and they batted as if they would not let anything come in the way of their just desserts.Waugh, no doubt, had other plans up his sleeves. After all, this was his party.

Tour management wants Saeed, Shoaib to return

Saeed Anwar is likely to be recalled for the two-Test series in South Africa after the national team management sent an SOS to the Pakistan Cricket Board on Wednesday.The left-hander opening batsman was not considered for selection after last September’s ICC Champions Trophy in Sri Lanka despite making himself available.”The team management has requested that specialist opener Saeed Anwar be flown to South Africa for the two Tests. But we have not taken any decision because several factors have to be taken into consideration before we reach a decision. We don’t to make a decision in haste,” a PCB spokesman said on Wednesday.”I am in contact with my fellow selectors but the final decision will be taken on Thursday,” Wasim Bari, the chairman of selectors, said.”The team management feels being self sufficient as far as fast bowlers were concerned. But they feel that they need an experienced hand on top of the order,” Bari said.Saeed, along with several other World Cup probables, underwent a fitness test in Lahore on Wednesday under the supervision of PCB’s panel of doctors. According to Dr Meesaq Rizvi, the 34-year-old former Test skipper looked in fine fettle.Saeed had not played in a Test since scoring a century against minnows Bangladesh in the opening match of the 2nd Asian Test Championship at Multan in August last year.Meanwhile, controversial fast bowler Shoaib Akhtar, once again broke down and ruled out of the Test series against the Proteas with knee trouble, has been asked by PCB to return home.The spokesman said on Wednesday that Shoaib was being recalled home as a precautionary measure with the World Cup just a few weeks away.”The team and local doctors in South Africa examined his knees that are sore after playing on softer grounds and he has been advised to return home and get proper rest and treatment by the PCB panel of doctors,” the spokesman said.The PCB spokesman said the first priority of the board would now be to ensure that the injury-prone paceman was fully fit for the World Cup.”Shoaib will undergo a rehabilitation programme under the supervision of the PCB medical panel once he returns home.”Besides wicket-keeper Rashid Latif is also returning home after missing the last couple of games in the one-day series against South Africa because of knee problems.Late last month Rashid astounded everyone when he chose to quit Test cricket but made himself available for One-day Internationals. Just days before that announcement he was forced out of the entire series in Zimbabwe with recurrence of an old neck injury.He was subsequently cleared by specialists in Johannesburg and later by PCB’s panel of doctors in Lahore before being allowed to rejoin the squad in South Africa.Shoaib’s latest injury leaves a disarrayed Pakistan side, who have already lost the one-day series to South Africa, with just 14 players available for the Tests at Durban (Dec 26-30) and Cape Town (Jan 2-6).Embattled Pakistan skipper, Waqar Younis is one of the three specialist speedsters left in the Test party along with Mohammad Sami and Mohammad Zahid. The latter has been all but a passenger on the African Safari.Wasim Akram and Misbah-ul-Haq, who were in the one-day squad, are also expected home on Saturday.

Indian news round-up

ATC fixtures finalised after BCCI clarification: DalmiyaThe former ICC president Jagmohan Dalmiya on Wednesday said that the Asian Cricket Council (ACC) had worked out the fixtures only after receiving BCCI’s clarification. Talking at a press conference in Kolkata, Dalmiya said “The fixtures were drawn up after receiving a clarification from the Indian Board. During the (Lahore) meeting, the BCCI had produced a clarification received from the Union Sports Ministry in response to its queries.” On the ACC’s decision to draw up the fixtures, Dalmiya said, “We were aware of the strain in cricketing ties between India and Pakistan. That is why we wanted something inwriting from the Indian Board. Since they had clarified our queries, we went ahead in finalising the fixtures”.Dalmiya said the Indian government, in its letter to the BCCI, had clarified that as per its general policy India could continue to play against Pakistan in multilateral tournaments at regular venues, including India and Pakistan. Dalmiya also released the copies of communication between the BCCI president AC Muthiah and the Sports Ministry. Earlier on Monday, the Union Sports Minister Uma Bharti pulled up the BCCI for making a “unilateral announcement” at the ACC that India would play against Pakistan.ACC to finalise compensation pact within two monthsThe Asian Cricket Foundation (ACF) chairman Jagmohan Dalmiya said the ACC would finalise the agreement between the four Test playing nations in the region to compensate for the losses suffered by the ACC, in the event of non-participation, within two months. Dalmiya said the decision to sign an agreement was mainly aimed at avoiding any embarrassment or losses to the ACC in the event of a country pulling out of a tournament. Talking at a press conference in Kolkata, the former ICC president said that the representatives of the four Asian Test playing nations would work out the agreement in detail before it is put in force ahead of the Asian Test Championship.During the conference, Dalmiya also said that the next edition of the Asia Cup would be held in Pakistan next year. “Pakistan will host the next Asia Cup but the fixtures will be announced later.”I know I am not a complete player: DravidIndia’s stylish middle-order batsman Rahul Dravid on Wednesday said he was far from perfect and was constantly evaluating his performances and bringing changes in his techniques. “I know I am not a complete player. I know that for a fact. You keep learning along the way. You learn every day. You try to grasp and may be try to put a few of those things in your game,” Dravid said in an interview to PTI in Mutare. He added “I am willing to listen to the criticism, look at it. If I feel it works for me, it makes sense for me, I would do something about it. If I feel it doesn’t make any sense, and somebody is criticising just for the sake of criticising, I forget about it. I have the ability not to think about it.”On playing down the order, the Karnataka player said “I have played alot at the number three position. There your job is to hold your endand ensure that you don’t lose too many early wickets to the new ball.Now that I am batting lower down the order, it may give me a littlemore opportunity to play a few more shots.”Replaying to another question, the Indian vice captain said “I personally feel we have got a good side. The fact that I play in the same side as (Sachin) Tendulkar, (Sourav) Ganguly and (VVS) Laxman gives me a lot of confidence. It takes a lot of pressure off me. Instead of being a deterrent, I think it (playing for India) has helped me and inspired me to play better.” Replying to a question on the Zimbabwe tour, Dravid said “I think we find the conditionson and off the field not to our liking. Maybe we don’t adjust to it. But then there are not many teams who win abroad.”BCCI’s decision to award sponsorship to IMG-TWI challengedThe BCCI’s decision to award the sponsorship right to IMG-TWI for the next three years was challenged in the Mumbai High Court by Gayatri Arts on Wednesday. Gayatri Arts, a Mumbai-based company which was one of the original bidders for the sponsorship rights, filed a petition seeking an injunction from the High Court on BCCI signing contract with IMG-TWI or any other group. It will come up for hearing on June 1, reports PTI.According to Sham Dhumatkar, proprietor of Gayatri Arts, the three-year contract was awarded to his company which had made the highest bid of Rs 90 crores through a legal tender advertised by BCCI in a newspaper. BCCI confirmed the contract in a letter to the company on May 3 and gave it 48 hours to accept the offer. Accordingly, Gayatri Arts accepted the contract in a letter to BCCI, the petition submitted. However, on May 22 the BCCI’s marketing committee held asecond meeting in New Delhi and awarded the sponsorship to IMG-TWI after an open bidding.Laloo’s election to give boost to rural cricket: RabriThe Bihar Chief Minister Rabri Devi said the boys in rural areas of Bihar can now look forward to a better cricketing future following the election of Laloo Prasad Yadav to the post of the President of the Bihar Cricket Association. Talking to PTI, Rabri said “Despite having the ability to excel in the sports arena, rural boys so far remained in oblivion in Bihar. Now they can hope for a better cricketing future under the stewardship of Laloo Yadav.”The Chief Minister, who is the wife of Yadav, said her government was determined to provide enough opportunity for the development of sports in Bihar. She added “We will organise rural sports events and nurture talent.” Rabri Devi has already directed the sports department to organise sports meets at village, block, sub-division, district and state levels so that sportspersons could get the opportunity to exhibit their talents.

Tottenham injury news on Skipp

Sky Sports journalist Michael Bridge has now revealed some big Tottenham Hotspur injury news involving Oliver Skipp.

The Lowdown: Return closer

As per Football.London’s Spurs reporter Alasdair Gold, Skipp is now closing in on a return to action, and is feeling less pain as he continues his recovery from a pelvic injury.

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The central midfielder has not featured for the North London club since the 2-0 loss away at Chelsea in the Premier League back in January, but now it looks as if he could make a swift return, with Antonio Conte’s team set to play against Newcastle United at home in their first game back after the international break.

The Latest: Newcastle return?

Speaking to GIVEMESPORT, Bridge has revealed that the Lilywhites are now trying to target the match against the Magpies for Skipp’s potential return:

“I’ve not heard anything too negative.

Apparently, they’re trying to target Newcastle, but nothing’s set in stone yet, so they’ve got a week-and-a-half.”

The Verdict: Big boost

If Skipp is able to return to the XI straight away, then it will certainly be a big boost for Conte and his side.

Since his injury, THFC have lost four out of their last nine games in the top flight, and have also been knocked out of the FA Cup (Transfermarkt), suggesting that they are better with him in the team.

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Skipp ranks highly among his teammates in terms of average tackles and passes per match in the league, while he boasts the best pass competition rate (90.1%) of any Tottenham player to have made ten or more appearances this season (WhoScored).

Nonetheless, the Englishman will certainly be welcomed back by the Spurs faithful.

In other news, find out who THFC have now ‘got in touch’ over signing here!

Mills ruled out of third Test

Kyle Mills’ absence gives Tim Southee an opportunity to make his debut © Getty Images
 

Kyle Mills will miss the third Test in Napier after failing to pass a fitness test on his injured left knee at training. Mills’ absence means that the 19-year-old Tim Southee will almost certainly make his debut as New Zealand have decided to choose their XI from the 13 remaining players in the squad.Southee made his international debut in the Twenty20 matches against England last month, where he impressed with his pace and control. He then joined the New Zealand Under-19 World Cup squad, taking 17 wickets at 6.64 to emerge as the Man of the Tournament.”He is a really good talent and he does swing the ball a bit,” said Andrew Strauss, who played alongside Southee at Northern Districts earlier this year. “He’ll be pretty excited to make his debut.”Even so, the loss of Mills will be a blow for New Zealand, especially after his performance in the first Test when he ripped through England’s second innings with four quick wickets. “It’s something I haven’t had before,” he said of his injury. “I’ve had strains and tears before and I know what they feel like. This is just the back of the knee.”It all started in the Twenty20 game back at Eden Park,” said Mills. “It’s sand-based and I dove into it and got jammed up, really. Ever since then it has been niggling me. It’s just been hard to run freely. Not only in the bowling but in the outfield as well.”Mills admitted that the strain of back-to-back five-day Tests had taken their toll. “After the heavy workload in the first three days of the last Test, it got tired there towards the end. It came up with a little tear in the top of my calf muscle. I don’t have an issue with my calf muscle at all. It feels fine. It’s just the inflammation around that tear that is giving me some problems.”Even though he will take no part in the decider at Napier, Mills will look back on the series with fond memories, and already has his sights trained on the tour of England in May. “At the start of the summer we were always considered the better one-day side and they were always the better Test side,” he said. “To win that first Test was huge for us and we probably only lost one session in the second Test when Ambrose got away from us.”I definitely feel we are competing with them,” he added. “I personally consider this as part of a six-Test series and whoever wins this Test match will get some momentum going into the Test series in England.”

South Africa fined for slow over-rate

Graeme Smith made 12, and was fined 10 per cent of his match fee © Getty Images

Chris Broad, the ICC match referee, rubbed salt in South Africa’s wounds by handing them a fine for a slow over-rate fine during their 67-run defeat against Bangladesh in Guyana.”Chris Broad imposed the fines after Graeme Smith’s side was ruled to be one over short of its target at the scheduled finish of the Bangladesh innings when time allowances were taken into consideration,” said a statement. “In accordance with the ICC Code of Conduct regulations governing over-rate penalties, players are fined five per cent of their match fees for every over their side fails to bowl in the allotted time, with the captain fined double that amount. As such, Smith has been fined 10 per cent of his match fee while his players have each received five per cent fines.”The Bangladesh defeat left South Africa on four points from as many matches and still must face England, West Indies and New Zealand. They need to win all their remaining matches to be in contention for a place in the semi-finals.India, Pakistan and West Indies were the other sides who have been fined for slow over-rates in the tournament.

Five bowlers the way to Test success: Chappell

Greg Chappell: ‘I am convinced that India need to persist with the five-bowler theory in order to win more Test matches’ © Getty Images

India will persist with their new strategy of fielding five frontline bowlers in Test cricket, according to coach Greg Chappell, who believes the five-bowler theory is the only way India can win more matches.Chappell also sees a key role for his young pace battery in improving India’s floundering reputation in Test cricket, saying that the team can improve only if it “replicates the lessons of our one-day success in Tests”.”It’s the bowlers who win Tests and we all know that. I am convinced that India need to persist with the five-bowler theory in order to win more Test matches,” Chappell told PTI shortly after the Indian team’s arrival here. Chappell said he expects his young fast bowlers to step up to the task and excel in Tests as well. “It’s an opportunity for them to seize the moment and prove themselves in demanding conditions.”Chappell’s eyes looked blood-shot with the trip across continents, yet the importance of the series goaded him into summoning Ramakrishnan, the computer analyst, and Ian Fraser, the bio-mechanist for an impromptu computer session within a couple of hours of checking in at the hotel. Irfan Pathan, Munaf Patel, Sreesanth and Rudra Pratap Singh carry the torch of India’s fast bowling challenge, and Chappell expects them to make light of hot and humid conditions as well as of wickets which might not be of great assistance in terms of pace or movement. There is also this little matter of bowling to the irrepressible Brian Lara.”If they are uptight about bowling to Lara, I don’t know. But individuals don’t matter as long as you stick to the process. In any case I’m not too keen to dwell on the negatives at the start of the tour,” remarked Chappell.An elementary part of this “process” for Chappell is that bowlers should dry up the scoring and build up the pressure on opposition batsmen. “It surely is important if bowlers can build pressure from both ends. It adds to a team gaining control of the situation.”India have made a complete reversal of their fortunes in one-day cricket under Chappell but its stock has fallen in the longer version of the game, with defeats to Pakistan and England in the first four months of the year. “It would be good if we could replicate the lessons of our one-day success in Tests but it is also worth remembering that compared to 25 one-dayers, we have played only eight Tests in the same period.”It takes time to understand the particular rhythm of Test cricket. It doesn’t happen instantly. I’m hopeful the boys would come to grips with it soon.” Chappell felt it was only a “bonus” for his young team to get first-hand experience of these conditions which would come handy during the World Cup next year.He said it was worth keeping an eye on West Indies’ fast bowling resources since they had a few talented youngsters in the line-up. “But there is no reason to believe that our batsmen wouldn’t be up to the task. How well we would do, who knows.”The Indians spend the next two days in Kingston before flying to Montego Bay for a practice match against a local eleven.

Plunkett shines as Durham surge

Dominic Cork: runs and wickets for Lancashire in their clash against Somerset© Getty Images

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Worcestershire’s patched-up seam attack will have fewer easier outings than this as Derbyshire, without a home win in almost three years, suffered a familiar collapse and were asked to follow on by Vikram Solanki. Michael Mason did the early damage, having Michael di Venuto caught behind in the first over, and shortly after dismissing Jon Moss in similar fashion. David Wigley weighed in with three wickets, as only Chris Bassano offered much in terms of resistance with a rapid 26-ball 30. Alamgir Sheriyar, the first player to be loaned out under the new ECB rule, wrapped up the tail to bag a three-wicket haul and take his career aggregate past 500. Earlier, Solanki had shown his keenness to move the game forward by declaring once his side had reached 350 – the mark for four batting points – rather than scratch around with the final-wicket pair. If the rain stays away Worcestershire will expect to get their promotion bid off to a flying start.
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Play did not start until 4.30 at Chelmsford and the Essex batsmen could only extend their first innings slowly as the Yorkshire attack showed an improvement from their opening day efforts. Grant Flower could only add 10 to his overnight score before a mistimed pull gave Matthew Hoggard his first wicket of the season, and Hoggard struck again to remove Ravinder Bopara for a sprightly 46. But without some imaginative captaincy this game is going to become a battle for bonus points.
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Ian Blackwell offered the only real resistance as an impressive allround performance from the Lancashire attack put them in a strong position at Old Trafford. Blackwell, never one to hang around at the crease, was dropped at slip by Stuart Law when on 17, going on to make 74 before bad light stopped Lancashire making any further inroads and securing a useful first-innings lead. Jimmy Anderson, in his first serious bowl since his chastening experience in the Johannesburg Test, opened with an encouraging spell of 11-7-11-1. But it was Dominic Cork who started the rot, dismissing both openers with just 22 on the board. It was good day for Cork, who helped Lancashire pass 300 by hitting 65 before giving a return catch to Andy Caddick and Sajid Mahmood made his second first-class half century, an aggressive 57 from 71 balls. Mahmood also chipped in with a brace of wickets, and Gary Keedy removed an obdurate Michael Burns following a stand of 80 with Blackwell.
Scorecard
The Durham attack dramatically backed-up their batsmen’s efforts in racking up over 500 by scything through the Leicestershire order, forcing them to follow-on a massive 400 runs behind and justifying Leicestershire’s pre-season odds of 50-1. All eyes were focused on Steve Harmison to see if he could bounce back from a poor winter, but it was Liam Plunkett, his opener partner, a similarly tall but not yet as fearsome fast bowler, who stole the show. He grabbed the first four wickets to fall, including HD Ackerman and Darren Maddy, then returned to mop up the final wicket and finish with 5 for 43. Two run outs further undermined the Leicestershire innings and vindicated Michael Hussey’s decision to grind them down with over 160 overs in field. Hussey was finally dismissed for 253, caught off David Masters and he declared once Philip Mustard was stumped for an aggressive 28. Harmison must hope that it his turn, next, to contribute to this match.

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