Seccombe turns the tide Queensland's way

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Wade Seccombe celebrates his century with Andy Bichel
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A defiant century by Wade Seccombe and four quick strikes by the Queensland attack lifted the them out of a crisis and into control of their Pura Cup match against South Australia at the Adelaide Oval.Chasing 284 to win, South Australia were in deep trouble at 4 for 17 at stumps on day three, with Mark Higgs on 1 and Andy Flower on two. Michael Kasprowicz and Andy Bichel each took two wickets in a nine-over burst before the end of play, leaving SA on the ropes. They need another 267 runs to win, while Queensland were only six wickets from their first win of the season.A total of 17 wickets fell today. After SA resumed on 7 for 283, their innings was quickly wrapped up for 301, giving Queensland a nine-run first-innings lead, with Bichel taking 2 for 3 in three overs to finish with 6 for 61.The Queensland top order then self-destructed, with Jimmy Maher, Clinton Perren, Martin Love, Andrew Symonds and James Hopes all falling cheaply, leaving them staggering at 5 for 46 in their second innings. But Seccombe (115) and Stuart Law (72) led the Queensland fightback with a 138-run sixth-wicket partnership, with the pair continuing their good form after both made half-centuries in the first innings. Seccombe and a free-hitting Bichel (44) then added a 69-run seventh-wicket stand to help Queensland to 274 all out.”One thing we talk about as a group is a lot of belief in ourselves,” Seccombe said of the team’s ability to extricate themselves from trouble today. “We mentioned it prior to this game and always obviously believing we can pull ourselves out of any situation and win from any situation. Obviously we take that belief into everything we do.”Seccombe was given a life by Mark Higgs at second slip, who dropped a straightforward chance off Shaun Tait’s bowling, when he was on 12 and the score was 5 for 84, in what proved an extremely costly fumble. His match-turning century was his fourth in first-class cricket and his first against SA, and came off 185 balls, with 13 boundaries and a six.Greg Blewett, SA’s captain was hopeful they could stage a similar late-order recovery tomorrow to snatch the match. He said: “It would have been nice to have a few more wickets in hand tomorrow, but one good partnership I think and the game’s still up for grabs.”

Sri Lanka and Pakistan go straight to final of Asian Test Championship

Sri Lanka and Pakistan have agreed to cancel their meaningless round robingame in the Asian Test Championship (ATC) and play a straight final fromMarch 6-10 at Lahore, the Asian Cricket Council (ACC) announced Tuesday.”The dates of the second Asian Championship final were decided after we gotthe consent of both the boards involved,” ACC secretary Zakir Hussain Syedtold AFP news agency at Karachi.All parties will be relieved to complete a tournament, designed to be amajor source of revenue for Asian cricket, which flopped after India pulledout last September because of increasing hostilities in India-administeredKashmir.Both Pakistan and Sri Lanka had crushed Bangladesh by an innings inSeptember, guaranteeing their respective places in the final, making theirproposed group game, originally scheduled for February, unnecessary.”We have a disappointing Asian Championship because of India’s withdrawal,”said Syed admitted, “and since the event was a major revenue-earner for uswe suffered badly.”Syed estimates that India’s last-minute withdrawal had cost the ACC anestimated $30million. “We hope to get a sponsor for the final, but it’sstill much below earnings than the last time.”Efforts are now focused on renewing cricket ties in time for the Asia Cup -a six nation one-day tournament – later this year in Pakistan.Pakistan, at least, will be delighted to welcome back international cricketafter the US invasion in Afghanistan prompted the cancellation of tours byNew Zealand and Sri Lanka, plus the rescheduling of the West Indies seriesin Sharjah.Indeed, Pakistan’s Cricket Board (PCB) had also proposed a five-matchone-day series in addition to the ATC final according to AFP, but the SriLankan Board turned that down with the team preparing in March for theforthcoming tour of England.

Bengal spinners peg back Assam

Half centuries from Parag Das and Rajesh Bora helped Assam to a useful272/9 on the opening day of their East Zone Ranji Trophy clash againstBengal at Maligaon. Assam are playing their first match while Bengal arefresh from an innings victory over Tripura last week.Assam skipper Zakaria Zuffri won the toss and elected to take strike. Theright-left opening combination of Parag Das and Subhrajit Saikiaestablished an early dominance by piling on 127 first up. Bengal howeverregained the initiative by grabbing four wickets in the space of 13 runs.Off spinner Saurashish Lahiri, a trainee at the National Cricket Academy,collected three of those scalps while veteran left arm spinner UtpalChatterjee chipped in by removing Das for 68 (147 balls, 13 fours), whichturned out to be the topscore for Assam.Rajesh Bora resurrected the innings with a brisk 55 (73 balls, 6 fours, 2sixes) and built two useful partnerships in the middle order to help Assamto 257/5. Another collapse followed as four wickets tumbled for 15 beforestumps were drawn three overs early due to bad light. The last wicket pairof Sunil Subramaniam and Javed Zaman will resume battle on Monday. Lahirifinished with 4/65 while Chatterjee returned figures of 3/50.

Pete O’Rourke drops 49ers claim on Leeds United

Journalist Pete O’Rourke has dropped a claim on the 49ers potential increased involvement at Leeds United…

What’s the story?

According to recent reports, the Whites’ chief executive, Angus Kinnear, is set to resign at the end of the season, throwing a lot of things up into the air.

And now, O’Rourke has delivered his verdict on Kinnear’s potential exit, and what that could potentially mean for the 49ers too.

He said: “Angus Kinnear has done a good job in the background at Leeds United, so they wouldn’t want to lose him as well as Bielsa in a matter of months.

“Maybe that might point to more influence from the 49ers and the American side of things as well.”

Could be exciting times for Leeds

Leeds supremo Andrea Radrizzani has previously said: “Now we are partnered with 49ers, this is fundamentally very important because it will be very difficult to stay in the Premier League, but if we stay in it this year I think we can go much more than last year and go into the top six.

“Start to renovate the stadium and continue to grow the value of this club.”

The summer just gone by saw the Whites take a more reserved approach to the transfer market, but another season of staying in the Premier League would surely allow them to loosen the purse-strings.

Leeds fans will no doubt be watching the likes of Newcastle being taken over by new owners and the prospect of massive amounts of investment, and will be longing for a similar kind of spending spree in the future.

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If Kinnear does end up leaving and thus allowing for the 49ers to have increased influence, that could spell exciting times at Leeds in terms of potential new signings and the ability to compete with teams far higher up in the table than they are right now.

It could breathe some fresh air into things behind-the-scenes at the club and usher in a new era, particularly when they’ve also got a new manager at the helm too in Jesse Marsch.

Meanwhile, Leeds must finally unleash this rarely-seen star…

Bracken hunts for Test recall

Nathan Bracken roars in one-dayers but wants a chance in Tests, too © Getty Images
 

Nathan Bracken hopes to fend off increasing competition and gain a recall to Australia’s Test side, but knows that no matter what he does in the one-day arena it’s his first-class results that count. Bracken is ranked sixth in the world for one-day bowling – and was as high as second last year – yet can’t nudge into the longer form for Australia. He has not played a Test since December 2005.Bracken’s Pura Cup form is solid, with 21 wickets at 20.71 for New South Wales so far, and he has worked on his fitness to increase his endurance. But his new-ball partner Doug Bollinger, yet another left-armer, is outbowling him at New South Wales with more than double the wickets; he has 44 at 14.02, and he impressed for Australia A in their preseason tour of Pakistan. Queensland’s Ashley Noffke also has a better tally and average with 44 wickets at 17.56, including a match against the touring Sri Lankans in October, and he is clearly in the selectors’ thoughts after recent call-ups for internationals in the shorter forms.Mitchell Johnson, a fellow left-armer, is way ahead of Bracken in the pecking order at the moment, having secured his Test place for now, with fair showings in the recent Test series against Sri Lanka and India. Shaun Tait was also in front, called up to the Perth Test as the fourth quick bowler, but has slipped off the radar for now after announcing a break from cricket.”In Australia at the moment it’s whoever is performing well at the right time,” said Bracken. “A lot of guys are putting their hands up consistently. Ashley Noffke got the opportunity in Brisbane, he’s been putting his hand up for the whole season and Doug Bollinger’s in the same boat and there’s a few other guys in other states.”I’m just trying to pull my weight in one-day cricket. I’ve been told that four-day cricket results relate to Test cricket so I have to perform well [at state level], and one-day cricket results reflect on one-day cricket, so for me it’s perform well here. If that leads to something more then that’s great and if it doesn’t I still get to play one-day cricket for my country.”His next one-day appearance will be on Friday against Sri Lanka in Sydney, where he should be joined by Stuart Clark who is back after missing Sunday’s opener against India for personal reasons. Clark hasn’t played an ODI since September, but Australia called him back to replace Tait, and now he should get the call-up with Brett Lee expected to be rested.Bracken backed the rotation policy, while acknowledging it was hard for players to miss out. Everyone wants to play every game for their country,” he said. “Nobody puts their hand up and says ‘I’m a bit tired, I want a rest’. They all want a go, but you’ve got to understand the situation.”Matthew Hayden will return from a hamstring problem to boost his side with his batting but also fielding-wise. “It will make a big impact having Matthew back into the team for no other reason than he can get into first slip and get some normality back to our slips cordon,” Tim Nielsen, Australia’s coach, told The Age. “I think the balance of the slips cordon has been upset a little with different roles for different blokes regularly and Hayden missing out.”Australia will also hope that the third CB Series match isn’t, like the first two, washed out.

Australia reschedule Zimbabwe tour

Australia have pushed back their tour of Zimbabwe from June to September 2007 so they can make the trip in conjunction with the Twenty20 Championship in South Africa, according to Cricket Australia.Australia are due to play three ODI matches against Zimbabwe on their first tour there since 2004. Issues around the team’s security will be considered after the World Cup which starts next week.AAP reported Cricket Australia and the Australian Cricketers’ Association would send a security delegation to Zimbabwe in August. No Tests will be played as Zimbabwe do not regain their full status until November.

Taylor in line for ODI debut

Ross Taylor, the 21-year old batsman, is in line to make his ODI debut for New Zealand. Taylor and Kyle Mills have been drafted into the New Zealand squad for the fourth one-day international against West Indies.The call for Taylor comes on the back of a strong domestic season where he scored three centuries in the limited overs State Shield competition. Mills was already on standby as cover for Michael Mason, who has a mild strain of the lower back, but now has been named as a full member of the squad.New Zealand’s selectors announced that James Franklin and Jamie How were being released from the squad to play domestic cricket. However it was not clear whether this selection was specifically for the fourth ODI or for the whole series. New Zealand have already sealed the series 3-0 and all along have.Squad Stephen Fleming (captain), Nathan Astle, Lou Vincent, Ross Taylor, Scott Styris, Peter Fulton, Hamish Marshall, Brendon McCullum, Daniel Vettori, Kyle Mills, Shane Bond, Michael Mason, Jeetan Patel.

Counties court Lee for pre-Ashes stint

Drinks waiter: Brett Lee is itching for action© Getty Images

Brett Lee may currently be surplus to Australia’s requirements, but he remains a massive drawcard nonetheless, not least in county cricket, where he has been inundated with offers to play in the forthcoming season. According to his manager, Neil Maxwell, Lee has been approached by Worcestershire, Surrey, Leicestershire and Middlesex, although any decision would have to be made with the blessing of Cricket Australia.Lee, who has been a big hit in one-day cricket this season, cannot at present force his way past Mike Kasprowicz in the Test side. Because of his lack of match practice, Cricket Australia this week considered agreeing to a bold request from New South Wales, who floated the possibility of Lee flying out from Wellington to Brisbane to play in the Pura Cup final. That idea was eventually shelved, but with an Ashes summer approaching, the opportunity for regular four-day cricket is tempting.In principle, however, Cricket Australia are reluctant to release their Test players for county cricket this summer, as they wish to keep them fresh for the Ashes. “We would listen to them [CA] very closely, they’re the ones who have to plan for Brett in the future, so it would be a joint decision,” Maxwell told AFP. “From our perspective it won’t be straight after the New Zealand tour because Brett’s got some holidays booked, but there may be some merit to play in some county games before the tour starts."

The Perceptive Bloke

He is the hero of his team-mates, more ruthless than Don Bradman and impossible to get rid of. Is Steve Waugh the greatest captain Australia has ever produced?Steve Waugh appeared on Andrew Denton’s Monday-night chat show a few weeks ago dressed in businesslike blue. He chuckled blokishly, groaned and grimaced in all the right places, and talked and talked and talked – about growing up and raising kids and visiting leprosy colonies. It was pretty dull, everyday fare. Denton, sensing a million Australians dozing on their couches, couldn’t get him off soon enough.Waugh, you see, was not wearing his baggy green cap, which is like Superman trying to rescue the world without his red cape and underpants, or Prime Minister John Howard fronting up for an election campaign without his squadron of pollsters. Underneath his cap Waugh – like Howard and Superman – is capable of inspiring extraordinary faith and trust among his believers, of making the world seem a safer, controllable place. Without it, this same extraordinary man is rendered ordinary.Thankfully for the sake of Australian cricket, Waugh does not take his cap off very often. Australia’s brutal defeat of Bangladesh in July marked Waugh’s 37th win as skipper, beyond what any other Test captain has ever managed. His victory ratio stands at 75%, beyond what any other Test captain has ever dared imagine. If – and it’s still a sizeable if – he retires after Australia’s tour of India next September, that leaves him 13 more matches in charge and a probable 50 Test victories on his CV.Statistically, Waugh is not simply without equal; statistically, in all likelihood, he will never be equalled.Statistics, though, are no way to measure a captain. If they were then Clive Lloyd, the grandfatherly West Indian of the 1970s and ’80s, would have to be judged the second greatest captain the world has seen. Lloyd was a calming influence but a boring leader, whose idea of tactics involved shoving an extra short-leg up the batsman’s nose and swapping one fast bowler with another. Third best would be Allan Border, taut and tigerish but hardly a visionary. And Viv Richards would rank fourth. Refer Lloyd.If statistics mean little, then how do we assess the legend of Captain Waugh? Richie Benaud famously decreed that captaincy involves 90% luck, 9% hard work and 1% skill – just don’t attempt it, Benaud added, without that elusive per cent. It’s a neat line but even Benaud, one suspects, doesn’t believe it for a second. It might be true of captaincy in rugby or soccer or Australian Rules football, where a ball bounces and men lunge at it, following their instincts. In those sports luck has its place. In cricket you tend to make your own.Cricket involves more thinking than doing. For every one second of action there are forty seconds of standing around waiting, mulling over what’s gone wrong, fretting about what might happen next. These forty seconds explain, in part, why old cricketers are more likely to commit suicide than any other retired sportsmen. These forty seconds also allow a captain to impose himself as in no other game, to psyche out his opponents and bring out the best in his own men. It is a knack shared by Warwick Armstrong, Don Bradman, Richie Benaud, Ian Chappell and Mark Taylor, the five captains generally considered Australia’s most astute and successful. Waugh has it in spades.Sometimes, with Waugh, all it takes is a word or two. Brett Lee tells the story of his Test debut at Melbourne, Boxing Day 1999, when Waugh tossed him the ball before lunch. “Well, this is it. Enjoy it,” was all Waugh had to say. Lee, inspired by his captain’s mumbled mantra, nailed a wicket with his fourth ball, found himself on a hat-trick a few overs later, and has seldom looked back since.At other times Waugh doesn’t even have to speak. On the eve of the first Test of the 2001 Ashes tour Waugh passed on to Justin Langer the unwelcome news that he had been left out of the team. Then, before leaving the room, he dropped his eyes to the floor and patted Langer on the shoulder. A simple gesture but, as Langer commented months later, it was “worth reflecting on”. Four Tests later Langer was back. He has averaged a tick under 60 ever since.Spend any time with contemporary Australian cricketers and the conversation is invariably dotted with constant references to Waugh. They speak of him with the same gushing reverence the surviving 1948 Invincibles reserve for Bradman. “If he was to ask me to run through a brick wall I would start running as hard as I could,” Langer wrote last year. Others talk of memorable meals they have had with him; a nugget of encouragement here, a timely shard of advice there. Many of the current XI say they wouldn’t be where they are now if not for Waugh. Many of them are right.Take Langer and Matthew Hayden, those stand-and-deliver aggressors who have revolutionised the art of opening the batting. When Waugh took over the Test side Langer was firmly pigeonholed as batting’s ugly duckling, not the strokeplaying swan of today. Hayden hadn’t played for his country in two years. Critics saw him as a clunky, flat-track bully who tripped over his own feet when confronted by top-class speed. Waugh saw something else.”I felt they weren’t getting enough credit for their talent,” Waugh told Peter Roebuck last year. “And there’s something about them. If there’s one thing I’m good at, I’m pretty perceptive. I can see things others might not see … It’s a karma, something they give the side. People feel more secure and strong because of these guys. People around them must believe in them, that’s the key.”A gimlet eye for talent, tenacity and character – there’s another of Waugh’s defining strengths. When Armstrong, Bradman, Benaud, Chappell and Taylor were captaining Australia, everyone knew who was boss. They were giant, shimmering icons of their time. It’s the same with Waugh. This is his team.It was not always so. Amid the national outpouring of sorrow following Taylor’s retirement, many insiders questioned Waugh’s capacity to succeed so statesmanlike, risk-embracing and vivacious a leader as `Tubby’. Ian Chappell declared that Waugh was a “selfish cricketer” – and selfish cricketers, as everyone knew, made less inspiration-al captains than selfless ones. Shane Warne, with his boyish enthusiasm and football-style pep talks, was considered the more adventurous leadership candidate. Waugh, crazy as it seems now, was the safe, boring, unimaginative option. And since when were men lacking imagination appointed to the second highest office in the land?Waugh’s first press conference as Test captain, in February 1999, likewise offered little inkling of what was to come. “I don’t think I need to change too much,” he muttered. “It’s pretty much a winning formula.” That day, Waugh spoke not of winning matches but drawing them. He pointed to the team’s habit, under Taylor, of muffing dead Tests. “We could probably draw a few more games that we’ve lost.”This, four years on, seems the supreme irony. Rather than drawing more Tests, Waugh has steered the draw towards dodo-like extinction. Only five stalemates, four of them rain-influenced, have infiltrated his 52-match tenure. He has effectively turned cricket from a game of three likely outcomes – win, lose or draw – into a game of two.But this is now, that was then. Waugh’s first series in charge, a 2-2 draw in the Caribbean, was notable for Brian Lara’s swaggering one-upmanship and the dropping of an undercooked Warne for the last Test. Warne, in his autobiography, described his non-selection as an attempt by the new captain to “be seen to be doing something”. From there the team lost a rain-ravaged series in Sri Lanka 1-0. Maybe Australia’s selectors really had backed the wrong horse.Before coming home, the Australians stopped off in Harare for their inaugural Test against Zimbabwe. Historians have roundly ignored this match: a predictable 10-wicket victory, another notch in Australia’s booming bedpost. Yet both Damien Fleming and Colin Miller, retired players who speak with the benefit of hindsight, pinpoint the fourth afternoon as the moment Waugh’s Australians went from good to great.Trevor Gripper and Murray Goodwin were at the crease, sluggish but immovable. Nerves jangled, tempers simmered. Lowly Zimbabwe, 228 runs behind on the first innings, were sailing towards an unthinkable draw. Finally Gripper imploded, heads lifted and the final eight wickets skittled for 32. Last man out Goodwin was caught Waugh, bowled Warne – fittingly. Australia finished the game with every player, bar bowler and keeper, in the slips. Something seismic shifted that afternoon.”At the start,” wrote Warne, “while he was feeling his way, he wanted to make sure everybody knew he was going to be a good captain.” Not any more. Now Captain Waugh was his own man.To a point, at least. In many respects Waugh is not his own man but many men: a unique blend of the unique qualities that made past Australian captains unique. We know this thanks to Ray Robinson’s 1975 study of Australian skippers, On Top Down Under, not only this country’s finest cricket book but a gleaming gem of Australian literature.Australia’s first great captain was probably Harry Trott, with his manicured moustache, in the closing years of the 19th century. Tactically alert, he was one of the earliest captains to swing bowlers and fielders around in pursuit of a breakthrough. He also bowled hard-spun leg-breaks and possessed, observed Warwick Armstrong, “an almost uncanny knowledge of batsmen who were likely to succumb to his wiles”.Robert Key, the English batsman, would know a thing or two about that. At Sydney last summer, with England building a big total on a hot afternoon, Waugh surprisingly brought himself on to bowl his dilapidated mediums. He promptly pinged Key leg-before with a ball that deviated not a millimetre. Key would later lament: “I was thinking, `I don’t want to get out to Steve Waugh, he’s a joke bowler.'” Which, of course, was all it took to ensure he did. Waugh had done it again.Five years after Trott came Monty Noble, a rugged disciplinarian who disapproved of substitute fielders unless a player was ill or didn’t show up. Shades of Waugh at The Oval, nearly a century later, when he refused himself a runner while pilfering 157 runs off England with an aching buttock and two gammy legs. “Why should batsmen get special treatment?” Waugh sneered afterwards.Noble was also the first visiting captain to ask England to bat first, making him a forerunner of sorts for Waugh. On 11 of the past 23 occasions he has won the toss Waugh, contrary to accepted cricketing wisdom, has sent the opposition in. It is part of his ongoing mind game, his quest to sap enemy resolve. “Fair pitch or foul,” he is effectively taunting his rivals, “you guys will quake before our quicks.” The toss, previously a quaint anachronism, has become yet another sharp-edged implement in Waugh’s toolshed.The 1920s brought Warwick Armstrong as captain. “In confidence, dominance, willpower and ability to get his own way,” said Robinson, “Armstrong is the nearest down under approach to WG Grace.” The nearest, that is, until Bradman and Waugh came along.The 1930s ushered in Bill Woodfull whose leadership, noted Robinson, won him “fidelity bordering on devotion”. Just like Waugh. Like Waugh, Woodfull was a master of funnelling the best out of his players. Like Waugh – and unlike, say, Ian Chappell – he was never a big drinker, never a knockabout ruler, never a man to bond with his players round a bar.With Woodfull this was viewed as strength of character. With Waugh it has been seized on, unfairly, as a flaw. “I don’t particularly want to go into a bar and drink 10 beers with the guys and talk cricket,” Waugh offered recently in his defence. “That’s the way I am.”Woodfull eventually made way for Bradman, who shared Waugh’s sixth-sense about opposition weaknesses and his determination to pounce on them. Bradman was the one thing Waugh gets branded most frequently: ruthless. It was not enough, in 1948, for Bradman’s men simply to defeat an England side weakened by war. Bradman had to squeeze the life out of the poor Poms, crush their morale, traipse through the entire 31-match tour unconquered. Even Waugh has never managed that.And yet Waugh, in a way, has taken ruthlessness to new levels. Bradman’s focus was on destroying the opposition. Waugh’s focus, backed by a visionary coach in John Buchanan, is on his own XI, whom he consistently cajoles to unprecedented levels of brilliance. The execution is the same, only the emphasis different. Simon Barnes, the perceptive British sportswriter, likens Waugh to the late Brazilian formula one driver Ayrton Senna. “Waugh has that air possessed by very few, even at the highest level of sport: that sense of vocation, that urge to beat not the opposition but the limitations of yourself, your game, your world,” writes Barnes.Waugh’s first job was to transform his own game, eliminating error and playing strictly to his strengths. Now he has done the same to his team. For contemporary cricket, blighted by match-fixing and greedy schedulers and Pepsi-obsessed commercialism, this is a blessing. Waugh’s teams rattle along at 350 runs a day and put bums on seats. Cricket, as well as Australia, is the winner. Yet as Barnes reminds us: “Waugh did not do it to enthral. He did it to enslave.”In the half a century between Bradman and Waugh, three Australian captains stand out like lighthouses: Benaud, Ian Chappell and Taylor. All three were masters of man-management, fitting 11 disparate personalities into one jolly dressing room. Chappell did it by making his players stay behind for two hours after stumps; Benaud by encouraging on-field hugs, a practice unheard of back then. Now it is unheard of not to.Waugh has the same welcoming touch. Under another captain Colin Miller, 34 when picked and boasting almost as many hair colours, might never have got a look in. Stuart MacGill, a widely read wine connoisseur who has lived his adult life in Warne’s shadow, might have gone off the rails. Not under Waugh’s command. Waugh, who is a fan of the country singer John Williamson, will take the time to quiz MacGill, who is not, about the latest CD in his shopping bag. “He doesn’t like my music any more or less than he did before,” MacGill explained last year. “But now he knows – that’s Stuey’s band.”All four great captains of the last fifty years share a flair for moments of rare tactical intuition. Chappell and Taylor regularly unearthed gold from their explorative forays with part-time bowlers. Benaud used to leave onlookers gobsmacked by shuffling the field around before a ball had been bowled.Chappell, Taylor and Waugh all won series in the Caribbean – never an easy feat at the best of times – with mid-strength attacks. Chappell did it in 1973 without Dennis Lillee and Bob Massie; Taylor in 1995 without Craig McDermott and Damien Fleming; and Waugh pulled it off earlier this year without Glenn McGrath, for two Tests, and Shane Warne. All three sides exuded a verve and aura in the field which, according to the team-sheet, simply should not have existed.Mostly, though, Waugh leans on McGrath and Warne when the going gets tough, just as Taylor did, and in the same way that Benaud relied on Alan Davidson and Chappell overbowled Lillee into a premature date with the surgeon’s bench. Indeed Australia’s most recent defeat, when West Indies reeled in 418 at Antigua, was notable for two curiosities: Waugh largely ignored his part-timers and did not employ McGrath on the final morning until the horse had bolted. At critical times the cameras even spied Waugh yawning. Yawning. Has he lost his magic touch?The question was overshadowed that day by McGrath’s graceless finger-wagging tantrum with Ramnaresh Sarwan. Waugh was crucified for not intervening, for lowering cricket’s moral tone, as if all previous Australian captains were angels.Woodfull is commonly rated the most gracious and gentlemanly of them all. Yet it is often overlooked that this same gent, when Bert Oldfield was sconed by Harold Larwood at Adelaide in 1932-33, strode out to the middle in suit and tie to check on his batsman’s welfare. If that wasn’t a provocative act, what was it? No wonder the crowd nearly jumped the fence. Nonetheless Waugh must rank behind Taylor and Benaud, and perhaps Chappell too, for boorishness, his men behaving more badly as time goes on.Timing, indeed, is everything when it comes to assessing Waugh’s place in history. Our final images of the best captains are triumphant ones. Armstrong retired undefeated as leader. Bradman ducked out – so to speak – with that anticlimactic nought at The Oval but the lustre of invincibility. Benaud, Chappell and Taylor were all youngish men when they relinquished the job, signing off before wear-and-tear set in. What will be Waugh’s parting shot?For now he stands ahead of Armstrong, whose reign was sweet but short, and Woodfull, a safety-first commander. Waugh is probably a better captain than Bradman, whose biggest asset was his own blade, and Taylor too. Taylor, like Waugh, inherited a powerful nucleus from Border but did less with it. Waugh has eliminated draws, eradicated nightwatchmen, excited spectators. Taylor manufactured a very good side; Waugh changed cricket forever.Only Benaud and Chappell, beloved skippers who turned scruffy teams into spellbinding ones, come close. Which means that, until he finally hangs up that stinking, sweat-soaked baggy green, we must do something thoroughly unWaughlike and sit on the fence. Safe to say, though, that he has been a great captain. Truly great.And not a bit ordinary.

Wellington produce score of the day at Under-17 tournament

Wellington produced the best score of the day at the National Under-17 tournament at Nelson Park in Napier today when scoring 258 against Canterbury.C Spring scored 95 and M Martin 67 not out for Wellington while M Goldstein took 5-68 for Canterbury.In reply, at stumps, Canterbury were 19/2. S Rennie had taken two for five while not out were L O’Sullivan nine and Todd Astle six.Central Districts scored 192 with D O’Sullivan 44, B Rowney 36 while J Morgan took two for 30. In reply, Northern Districts were well placed at 54/2 with K Read 20 not out and P Carey 14 not out.An interesting stage had been reached in the Otago-Auckland game. Otago scored only 129 with J Pyle 36 and W Lawson 32 not out. B Stevens took three for 21 for Auckland, H Hussain two for 16 and C Frauenstein two for 32.Auckland were interestingly poised at 54/4 in reply with D Winger 23 not out and D de Boorder four not out. B Paterson had three for 12.

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