Gale ton carries Yorkshire to safety

A defiant century by Yorkshire skipper Andrew Gale carried his side to safety against County Championship leaders Durham as the rain-shortened match was shortened at Chester-le-Street

21-Jun-2011
Scorecard
A defiant century by Yorkshire skipper Andrew Gale carried his side to safety against County Championship leaders Durham as the rain-shortened match was shortened at Chester-le-Street.Gale’s second century of the season came off 192 balls and he was unbeaten on 101 at the close of play with Yorkshire 57 ahead on 280 for 4. But they took only two bonus points from the match, compared with Durham’s maximum of eight, and slipped to next to bottom courtesy of Worcestershire’s win against Hampshire.Adam Lyth made his season’s best score of 69 and the third left-hander, Gary Ballance, contributed 53 to an unbroken stand of 120. The only chance given by either of the fifth-wicket pair came with Ballance on 23, when Gordon Muchall was unable to hang on to a sharp head-high chance just to his left at first slip off Callum Thorp.Gale was very composed in an innings which spanned almost four hours, looking solid in defence while also hitting 15 fours. Durham were not helped by the absence of Paul Collingwood who was ruled out with a groin injury picked up while making a century yesterday.Steve Harmison also looked out of sorts in two wayward six-over spells on a pitch which had lost most of its early life. With a day and a half lost to rain, there was not enough wear in the surface for the spinners to play a big part, although Ian Blackwell did have Lyth stumped to end a stand of 95 with Gale.When Jonny Bairstow was run out two overs later Yorkshire were 160 for four in early afternoon, still 63 adrift. But Durham were flagging by tea, when the visitors were nine runs ahead. Only eight minutes play were lost to a light shower at 11.30 and shortly after the resumption Durham took two wickets.Lyth put on 50 for the first wicket with Joe Root, who made 28 before he fell lbw to a shooter from Graham Onions. Anthony McGrath’s struggles continued when he departed for a duck, following a leg-side ball from Harmison and providing Phil Mustard with a catch.But the only other wobble came with the loss of Lyth and Bairstow in quick succession. Lyth reached 50 off 100 balls, with six fours, by driving Blackwell through extra cover for three. But after adding five to his previous best this season of 64 he stretched forward and was smartly stumped by Mustard.Bairstow’s run out came when he played the ball to mid-wicket and set off before hesitating when Gale was committed. Dale Benkenstein whipped the ball in to beat Bairstow to the non-striker’s end.

Wes Durston relishes his second chance

At the end of last season Somerset decided Wes Durston had no future at the club and he was left contemplating a career outside the game

Sahil Dutta17-Jun-2010For a 29-year-old who had spent the last eight years of his life playing professional cricket, being dumped by the county that nurtured him since boyhood was a frightening situation. At the end of last season Somerset decided Wes Durston had no future at the club and he was left contemplating a career outside the game.One remarkable innings later his fortunes flipped. He cracked 117 off 68 balls in a chase of 325 in the Clydesdale Bank 40, the highest score by any side batting second in the history of 40-over cricket, to help the Unicorns, an ECB team made up of players outside the professional game, stun defending champions Sussex.He was then promptly snapped up by Derbyshire for the Friends Provident t20 and celebrated by hitting the first century of the tournament – 111 off 59 balls – against Nottinghamshire in his fourth game.”It has been a huge turnaround, I completely didn’t expect it. It was an incredible hour, where I just hit everything cleanly and that one innings against Sussex changed my life effectively,” he told Cricinfo. “Just a few months ago, I was out the game and trying to become a teacher. Suddenly now it’s all non-stop and I’m completely loving it.”Between the 2009 and 2010 seasons a host of players were quietly released by their counties, some finding new opportunities within the county game and others left scrambling outside the profession for new avenues to earn a living.”Losing your contract is a very painful experience,” said Durston. “You imagine yourself playing the game for as long as you can, and then suddenly I was 29 and out the game. It was very, very difficult to take.”In my mid-season appraisal last year there was no indication I’d be out of a contract. The communication from Somerset was really poor.”Durston was lucky enough to have a sports fitness degree to fall back on and had spent the previous four winters teaching hockey and cricket at Millfield school. Yet, despite his qualifications there was no job for him to walk into and it was left to the PCA to help him find his feet.”The PCA were very helpful. Within two weeks of explaining my situation to them they had found me two job interviews,” he said. “They play a crucial role making players seek out courses and work experience while they’re in the game so that when that day comes – an injury or retirement or something – people aren’t lost.”However, there is always that lingering hope for a second chance. Back in the professional game and scoring heavily, Durston’s story is a boon for the ECB, whose Unicorns idea was ridiculed in some quarters when it first emerged.They were little more than a hasty arrangement, invented as a 21st team for the new 40-over competition when Ireland pulled out of English domestic cricket to focus on international commitments. Yet their success, and Durston’s promotion, proves the side can be both competitive and act as a shop-window for prospective players.”I’m obviously the person that has profited most but people can see from my experience that there is a link back to county cricket through the Unicorns,” he said. “We were a fully-fledged team that trained throughout the winter, which meant that by time the game’s came round we had got to know each other quite well, had built up an understanding and had good camaraderie.”We beat Glamorgan and Sussex and proved there is definitely a space for having us in the tournament, that’s two professional clubs with egg on their faces and a feather in the cap for us.”For now though, he has set his sights higher. He wants to play all forms of the game and has been promised that good performances could lead to a full contract for the remainder of this season. If he keeps pummelling runs in Twenty20 cricket, however, even bigger riches may not be far away.

Aneurin Donald dunks Northants in DLS dash

Matthew Breetzke 94 in vain as home side get home in shortened chase

ECB Reporters Network14-Jun-2024Derbyshire 123 for 3 (Donald 68) beat Northamptonshire 193 for 8 (Breetzke 94, Dupavillon 3-43) by 24 runs (DLS method) A brilliant innings from Aneurin Donald gave Derbyshire Falcons a 24 run win over Northants Steelbacks under Duckworth Lewis Stern in the North Group match at Derby.Donald smashed eight sixes in a 26-ball 68, equalling his own record for Derbyshire’s fastest T20 fifty, to put Falcons ahead of the run rate on 123 for 3 after 11 overs when a violent thunderstorm ended the game.Matthew Breetzke batted superbly to score a T20 best 94 from 54 balls, sharing a stand of 81 with Sikandar Raza, as Steelbacks reached 193 for 8.Rain left Falcons with a revised target of 187 from 19 overs but Donald’s demolition shredded the bowling before David Lloyd (33), and Cam Fletcher kept the home side ahead of the game before the heavens opened.Steelbacks scored only six from the first two overs which included a maiden from Daryn Dupavillon before Breetzke took three fours from Pat Brown.Ricardo Vasconcelos was dropped at cover by Samit Patel off Brown but it did not prove costly as the opener was comprehensively yorked in the fourth over by DuPavillion.Breetzke was finding his range and pulled Zak Chappell into the car park before David Willey dished out the same treatment to Dupavillon. But Dupavillon had the last word by getting Willey to miscue a drive low to mid-off as Steelbacks ended the powerplay on 55 for 2.After a brief stoppage for a sharp shower, Breetzke and Ravi Bopara worked the ball around without taking risks and had put on 48 from 36 balls when Falcons made a big breakthrough.Bopara tried to launch Mitch Wagstaff over the midwicket boundary only for Ross Whiteley to take a well judged catch just inside the ropes.But Breetzke and Raza trod on the accelerator to plunder 79 in five overs as the ball disappeared to all parts. After Breetzke reached 50 from 36 balls, he pulled Brown for six and dispatched Ross Whiteley for another maximum before Raza launched Chappell over the ropes.Breetzke passed his previous highest T20 score of 80 by taking three consecutive fours off Dupavillon before a yorker ended a thrilling innings.Brown and Chappell dragged it back by conceding only 11 from the last two overs in which Steelbacks lost four wickets trying to push towards 200.Falcons needed a fast start and Donald delivered, driving Willey straight for six and pulling and driving Ben Sanderson for two more as they raced to 50 in the fifth over.Donald pulled Raphy Weatherall into the home dugout and smashed a Saif Zaib full toss for six before he launched a no-ball over deep midwicket to reach 50 from 19 balls.He hammered two more off Freddie Heldreich before holing out to long-off in the seventh over but he had done exactly what the situation demanded.Bopara had Wayne Madsen caught behind and Patel was caught at deep square but the Falcons had done enough by the time torrential rain ended the contest.

Jason Roy, Sam Curran seal England's series with 132-run victory

Bangladesh lose home rubber for first time since 2016 after dominant England performance

Andrew Miller03-Mar-2023England 326 for 7 (Roy 132, Buttler 76) beat Bangladesh 194 (Shakib 58, Curran 4-29, Rashid 4-45) by 132 runs Jason Roy’s 12th ODI century and second in five innings set England on their way to a hefty total of 326 for 7, but Sam Curran’s masterful spell of left-arm swing bowling wrecked any prospect of a contest in the second ODI at Mirpur. His opening burst of three wickets in eight balls condemned Bangladesh to their first bilateral ODI series loss at home since England’s last visit in 2016-17.Adil Rashid picked away at the middle order with 4 for 45 in his ten overs, but the game had been as good as won at 9 for 3 after 14 balls, after Curran – replacing Chris Woakes in the side – bagged Litton Das and Najmul Hossain Shanto for golden ducks in his first over before adding the key scalp of Mushfiqur Rahim for 4. England’s eventual 132-run victory wrapped up a 2-0 series lead with Monday’s third contest in Chattogram still to come, and so secured Jos Buttler’s first ODI series win in five attempts since taking over from Eoin Morgan at the start of the English summer.And if that record seems incongruous given England’s lofty status as dual World Cup-holders, then this was a throwback performance from a team that has been forced by circumstance to put the 50-over format on the back-burner in recent campaigns, but which retains a core of senior players who, on this evidence, will still be a force to be reckoned with come the defence of their title in India this winter.Related

  • Apparent Shakib-Tamim issue a big storm in a tea cup

  • Malan shows how to play the perfect Mirpur innings

  • Malan special guides England home in tense chase

  • Moeen: England 'really looking forward' to thriving in packed Mirpur

No England player has had more 50-over exposure since that 2019 final than Roy – he’s featured in 31 of England’s 35 subsequent ODIs, despite struggling for fluency for long tracts of the past 12 months in particular. However, this was a performance that repaid the faith, as he tailored his typically proactive methods to the vagaries of another tacky Mirpur surface, one on which it was tough for all batters to make starts, as four of his top-six colleagues showed in making 24 runs from 54 balls between them.Roy’s own hard-handed approach caused him a few early scares, particularly off the probing seam of Taskin Ahmed whom he edged short of slip and past his own stumps inside the powerplay. However, his determination not to be cowed by the conditions was the defining aspect of a magnificent innings of 132 from 124 balls. In all he struck 18 fours and a six before falling lbw to Shakib Al Hasan, by which stage he had added a crucial stand of 109 in 15.3 mid-innings overs with Buttler, who went on to make 76 from 64 in a typically understated expression of his class in tricky conditions.Between them, England’s senior pair covered off the entirety of England’s first 44 overs, whereupon Moeen Ali and Curran applied a final flourish to a relay-race of an innings, crashing 75 off 54 balls between them as England added 106 more runs in their final ten overs.Jos Buttler rolls out the reverse-sweep•Gareth Copley/Getty Images

Bangladesh’s captain Tamim Iqbal hadn’t bargained for conceding the first 300-plus total at Mirpur in five years when he won the toss and inserted England, although had Roy not taken a leaf out of Dawid Malan’s one-man show from the first ODI, his gambit might well have paid off. Roy’s opening partner Phil Salt managed four scoring shots in a 15-ball stay before fencing Taskin low to Shanto at slip, while the introduction of Mehidy Hasan Miraz did for Malan this time, as he played back to his second ball to be pinned plumb lbw for 11.And though Roy kept busy to keep the score ticking, England were in danger of stalling at 96 for 3 in the 21st over, after Taijul Islam had combined with his fellow spinner Mehidy to tie down the new man, James Vince, eventually luring him outside his eyeline with extra flight and bounce to induce a nick to the keeper for 5 from 16.Buttler, however, arrived in a mood to get things moving, with a reverse-sweep for four in the same Taijul over, and continued to work the angles to pick off the spinners with minimum risk before greeting the extra pace of Mustafizur Rahman with a sweetly-struck cover drive to bring up the fifty partnership.That was the signal for England to pick up their tempo. In Mehidy’s next over, Roy took him down the ground for the first time in the match, with a free-flowing golf swing over long-on for six, and eased through to his hundred from 104 balls in Mustafizur’s next over, with a measured pull out through midwicket.Jason Roy hits over the top•AP Photo/Aijaz Rahi

Roy celebrated with a punch of the air but overall his reaction was muted – perhaps an indication of the struggles he’s endured in recent months, with no scores above fifty in last year’s series against India, South Africa and Australia, and a total of 14 runs from 32 balls in three innings since appearing to rediscover his touch in the opening ODI against South Africa in January.After his century, however, Roy relocated the sort of freedom that has characterised his most domineering displays. England went to drinks with their platform set at 165 for 3, whereupon he crashed five fours in his next 12 balls, including three in an over from the previously threatening Taskin – the last of them a full-toss that wriggled through the sliding Mahmudullah at deep midwicket, as Bangladesh’s heads started to drop.Shakib struck back in his next over, pinning Roy lbw on the sweep as he attempted one forcing shot too many, whereupon Will Jacks also discovered how difficult it can be to force the pace on this surface, as he climbed through a clip off his pads off Taskin and lobbed a simple catch to midwicket for 1 from 4.At 219 for 5 after 40 overs, however, Buttler took up the cudgels for himself. He clipped Taskin with sublime timing through midwicket to reach his fifty from exactly 50 balls, and after powering England past 250 with back-to-back sixes off Mehidy, it took a brilliant return catch one ball later to cut him off in his prime, as Mehidy stooped low in front of the non-striker’s stumps to cling onto another firm bash down the ground.Moeen, however, got the memo, carting Mehidy for two more vast sixes over deep midwicket in his next over, en route to a bruising knock of 42 from 35, and when he mistimed a clip to midwicket, Curran clattered through the death overs, with a brace of final-over sixes to finish unbeaten on 33 from 19.Sam Curran wheels away in celebration during his new-ball burst•Gareth Copley/Getty Images

That was just the warm-up act as far as Curran was concerned. Armed with the new ball (and with a headline act at the IPL to warm up for) he tore a swathe through Bangladesh’s top order, with a series of ball-on-a-string outswingers that confounded all attempts to negate him. Das threw his hands through the full length to scuff a drive high to point, Shanto opted for a block but was scuppered by half a bat’s width of movement, before Mushfiqur attempted a back-foot punch and was sent on his way after Buttler reviewed a feather into his gloves.Shakib and Tamim rebuilt as best they could in a fourth-wicket stand of 79, but England offered them little room for manoeuvre. Tamim had ground along to 35 from 65 when he attempted to launch Moeen over long-on but picked out Vince inside the rope, and when Shakib holed out to mid-off to give Adil Rashid the first of his four wickets, there could be no recourse. In the course of his spell, Rashid overhauled Stuart Broad to become England’s third-highest wicket-taker in ODIs – still some way shy of James Anderson’s seemingly unassailable record, of course, but a nice way to get back to the day-job after his uncomfortable afternoon on the (virtual) witness stand on Thursday.And though he went wicketless in his nine overs, the sight of Saqib Mahmood, back in the team for the first time since suffering a stress fracture of the back last year, capped an uplifting evening for Buttler’s men. They may be running out of opportunities to finetune their World Cup plans but, on this evidence, they aren’t as short of matchwinners as their recent results have implied.

Shakib, Shahriar, Bravo lead Barishal to victory

Gayle chipped in with a 45-ball 51 as well as Sylhet were shut out of the BPL playoff race

Mohammad Isam08-Feb-2022How the match played outFortune Barishal ended Sylhet Sunrisers’ hopes of a place in the BPL playoffs, beating them by 12 runs. After putting together a formidable 199 for 4 batting first, Barishal waited out Colin Ingram’s 49-ball 90 before closing out the game with tight overs in the second half of the chase.Shakib Al Hasan once again turned in an all-round performance, but this time it was his 2 for 23 from four overs that made more of a difference. His fourth over going for three runs helped Barishal turn the corner, before part-timer Najmul Hossain Shanto removed the well-set Ingram and Mizanur Rahman off consecutive balls to put the pressure back on Sylhet.The win solidified Barishal’s position on top of the table with 13 points from nine games. Sylhet remain rooted at the bottom after their sixth defeat in eight outings.Big hitBarishal’s batters combined to hit 14 sixes, the most in an innings in this season’s BPL. Munim Shahriar started the big-hitting by taking 17 runs off Sohag Gazi in the first over. He struck three sixes and six fours, reaching his maiden BPL fifty off just 26 balls.Shakib continued the run-spree with his 19-ball 38, hitting four sixes over midwicket, backward square leg and wide long-off. All this time, Gayle bided his time at the other end, playing a supporting role. He struck his first six in the 16th over, and although he went on to score a fifty, it was Dwayne Bravo towards the end who did actual damage. Bravo struck four sixes, one sliced off Shiraz Ahmed, and the others conventional over long-off and wide long-on.The left-handed Ingram gave Sylhet a brilliant start by hitting ten fours in the powerplay overs, the most by any batter this season. Six of those fours were off the usually economical Mujeeb Ur Rahman.Ingram reached his second BPL fifty in no time, as he crashed Mehedi Hasan Rana for 21 runs in the 10th over. He struck four boundaries, all along the carpet on the offside, bringing down the required run-rate below ten for the first and only time, in the chase.But a combination of Shakib, Bravo, Ziaur Rahman and Shanto made all the difference for Barishal.Big missSylhet leaked a lot of runs, mainly due to left-arm quick Shiraz who had an outing to forget. He conceded 56 runs in four wicketless overs. The Barishal batters took a liking to his pace, it seemed, hitting him for five sixes and three fours. It is the worst bowling figures in the BPL this season, beating Taskin Ahmed’s 1 for 53 from four overs. In his second game for Sylhet, Shiraz remains without a wicket in the tournament.Mujeeb also had an off-day, giving away 40 runs in four wicketless overs. It was rare to see the mystery bowler go for so many, with Ingram hitting him for six fours in the powerplay. Some of the fours were streaky, but Mujeeb was certainly knocked off his length by the left-hander.

England bowlers have all the answers to spark staggering Australia collapse

Woakes, Archer, Sam Curran claim three wickets each as Australia crumble

Valkerie Baynes13-Sep-2020England 231 for 9 (Morgan 42, Zampa 3-36) beat Australia 207 (Finch 73, Labuschagne 48, Woakes 3-32, Archer 3-34, S Curran 3-35) by 24 runsEngland’s bowlers answered every question asked of them to snatch an unlikely victory and level the series 1-1 as Australia capitulated in the second ODI at Emirates Old Trafford.Chris Woakes and Jofra Archer gave England every hope of avoiding their first bilateral ODI series defeat at home since 2015 by claiming three crucial wickets each before Sam Curran chimed in with three wickets of his own after a staggering Australian collapse to seal the win and keep the series alive going into Wednesday’s final encounter.Aaron Finch and Marnus Labuschagne put on 107 for the third wicket to build on the solid foundation set by Australia’s bowlers, who restricted England until a late partnership worth 76 between Rashid and Tom Curran gave the hosts something to bowl at.Chasing 232 for victory after England had won the toss, Australia stumbled to 37 for 2 and then lost four wickets in the space of 21 balls – three of them to Woakes – to give England more than a sniff of the victory which had seemed so distant after their performance with the bat and again when Finch and Labuschagne were cruising.Archer defied a used pitch which had been keeping low with devastating speed and bounce in an excellent five-over opening spell which delivered 2 for 22. He dismissed David Warner for a seventh time in international cricket with a scorching delivery up around the ribs which drew an edge through to Jos Buttler.Archer hit Finch on the helmet but the blow failed to trouble the visiting captain who, having passed the necessary on-field concussion testing, settled back into his rhythm even in the face of another wicket as Archer struck again with a short ball that reared up and found the shoulder of the bat as Marcus Stoinis fended awkwardly and was caught behind. Finch and Labuschagne wrested back control until Archer and Woakes returned and wreaked havoc.England brought in the Curran brothers for Mark Wood, who pulled up with a sore ankle, and Moeen Ali, left out in what Eoin Morgan described as “a tactical move”.Those tactics came under the microscope on a pitch which rewarded Australia’s legspinner, Adam Zampa, whose 3 for 36 combined with some miserly bowling by the seamers had contained England so well. But the decision paid off amid Morgan’s masterful captaincy as England again stood up against huge pressure.Zampa’s opposite number, Adil Rashid, was wicketless after his first three overs, having conceded 27 runs from them. Rashid returned from the opposite end only to be punished by Finch bringing up his half-century with a bottom edge through fine leg and a straight hit that sped through Rashid’s hands and all the way to the rope at long-off.Both Currans had failed to make inroads up to that point, prompting the return of Archer and Woakes. Archer struck Finch another brutal blow on the chest but Finch shrugged it off by clipping the next ball to the leg side and running a swift two.Labuschagne pulled Woakes gloriously for four and then brought up the 100-stand with Finch via a single off the next delivery. But Woakes made the breakthrough England so desperately needed when he dismissed Labuschagne lbw for 48 from 59 balls after England successfully reviewed umpire Michael Gough’s original not-out decision, sparking Australia’s collapse.Mitch Marsh entered with Australia needing 88 from 20.1 overs, having scored 73 in the first ODI and an unbeaten 39 in a player-of-the-match performance as Australia won the third and final T20I. But when Archer had Marsh so flummoxed on the sixth ball he faced that he chopped on, the spring returned to England’s step.They were positively jumping when Woakes bowled Finch for 73 as Australia lost a third wicket for just one run in the space of 11 balls. Archer had just completed his 10 overs with 3 for 34 when Woakes struck again next ball, bowling Glenn Maxwell for 1. From 144 for 2, Australia were 147 for 6 needing 82 runs from the last 15 overs.With Archer and Woakes – who claimed 3 for 32 – bowled out, England turned again to Rashid and the Currans. It was Sam Curran who claimed two wickets in consecutive balls, bowling Pat Cummins and having Mitchell Starc caught behind as Australia crumbled further to 166 for 8.Zampa survived the hat-trick ball but Sam Curran had the final say when he had Zampa caught by Archer to claim his third and put England within one wicket of triumph. Rashid claimed the last wicket when he had Alex Carey stumped off a googly as England won by 24 runs with eight balls to spare.Australia were unchanged from their 19-run victory in the first match despite Steven Smith passing a second concussion test in a move Cricket Australia insisted was precautionary after he took a blow to the head during training which kept him out of that game.Starc almost struck with the second ball when he had Jason Roy given out lbw to a delivery that pitched in line and nipped back in. Roy had the decision overturned on review when the DRS showed that the ball was going over the top of the stumps, but Starc made a breakthorugh a short time later with a ball that held its line and found the edge from a prodding Jonny Bairstow, caught behind for a duck.He inflicted more pain when Joe Root attempted to drive and edged the ball hard onto his back knee, and when Roy was run out to a sniper-like throw from Stoinis in the covers, England were 29 for 2.Root laboured to 39 off 73 before Zampa had him caught by Finch at first slip, putting England at 90 for 3. Root’s dismissal sparked a mini gear-shift from Morgan, who struck three fours in five balls from Marsh and Zampa, but when Finch changed up the attack with the re-introduction of Cummins, who struck with his third ball back to trap Buttler lbw for 3, England suffered another setback.Zampa dismissed Morgan lbw for England’s top score of 42 and Sam Billings with a legbreak that was too full for the cut attempted by Billings, who ended up chopping onto his stumps and trudging off with just 8 from 28 balls. The hosts then lost Sam Curran and Woakes in quick succession, but Rashid’s rearguard 35 from 26 balls combined with Tom Curran’s 37 off 39 limited the damage.

Missing scorer leads to last-minute call up for Australia-Pakistan match

James Emmerson deputises after official match scorer fails to show up for World Cup game

George Dobell12-Jun-2019Match organisers in Taunton were forced to turn to the press box when it became apparent they were missing a scorer for the World Cup match between Pakistan and Australia.Moments before the toss, James Emmerson – a stewardship officer with the Church of England – was asked to deputise when it became apparent that one of the official scorers wasn’t going to arrive. The original choice claims he had no knowledge he was expected to score the game.Emmerson is no stranger to scoring. His detailed scorecards and knowledge of statistics make him a popular figure in the press box, where he has worked from time to time as the media’s scorer, while he has previously deputised as an official scorer for two Tests and an ODI at Old Trafford when the Lancashire scorer has been busy on county duty. In one of those Tests he demonstrated the unflappable temperament which served him so well in Taunton by somehow managing not to miss a single delivery despite his fellow scorer vomiting heavily over both him and his scorebook during play.Remarkably, Emmerson managed not just to fulfil his duties as official scorer in Taunton (alongside Gloucestershire stalwart Keith Gerrish, who was the other official scorer) but fulfil his original role keeping the media updated on any items of statistical interest as they arose.”He did an amazing job in tough circumstances,” Sally Donoghue, the Chief Operating Officer at Somerset told ESPNcricinfo. “It was all very last minute, but he was very calm and seemed to enjoy every minute of it.”Emmerson said: “I did enjoy it. It was a great honour to score such a prestigious match and I hope I gave a good account of myself.”

Norman Vanua, Charles Amini help PNG defend 200

The two bowlers claimed four wickets each to consign Hong Kong to a 58-run loss and the last spot in the World Cup qualifier

The Report by Liam Brickhill at Old Hararians17-Mar-2018
Getty Images

Papua New Guinea surged to a 58-run win over Hong Kong in their ninth place playoff match against at Old Hararians, with fast bowler Norman Vanua and legspinning allrounder Charles Amini taking four wickets apiece. Tony Ura’s 49 and Chad Soper’s 40 helped Papua New Guinea to battle to 200, which didn’t look like nearly enough when Hong Kong cruised through the Powerplay at eight an over. However, Amini tore through the middle order to turn the match on its head, and was named Player of the match for his career-best 4 for 27.Hong Kong had set about the chase as though in a rush to finish the game, but their top order’s strokeplay also created chances for PNG. Nizakat Khan cracked two boundaries off Assad Vala’s opening over, and then laced seamer Vanua up and over the covers. But he got himself into a tangle to Vanua’s follow-up bouncer, and spliced a shot to John Reva, running in from mid-off.Hong Kong captain Babar Hayat arrived at the crease like a man determined to leave his mark on this tournament, and on ODI cricket. Mixing audacious attack with studied defence and accurate placement, he hit a flurry of boundaries. Hayat took 17 runs from Damien Ravu’s first over, including a top-edged pull for six off a free-hit and a mighty strike over the hospitality tents at long-on.Where Hayat had relied mainly on raw power, Anshuman Rath utilised finesse to find the boundary, and together they kept Hong Kong motoring along at better than eight an over. It seemed Hong Kong would race to victory, but the complexion of the match changed entirely in the space of 15 minutes when Amini was brought into the attack.Spearing flat and fast legbreaks, Amini nevertheless found significant grip in the surface, and against the run of play he removed Rath in his very first over, Vala holding on to a low catch at midwicket. Hayat then charged at him and ran past one that dipped on him, the ball crashing into his middle stump. In his next over, he trapped Simandeep Singh lbw, and his figures read 3-0-5-3, while Hong Kong had slipped from 68 for 1 to 85 for 4.From then on, every time Hong Kong started to rebuild, a wicket fell and PNG soon took control, captain Vala cycling through his attack and using no less than eight bowlers. Vanua had Tanwir Afzal caught behind and McKechnie caught in the covers to take his tally to three, and when Ehsan Nawaz was needlessly run out for a duck, it seemed Hong Kong were raising the white flag.Amini returned, and all but assured the result with his fourth wicket. It was a classic legspinner’s set-up – drawing the batsman forward, the ball dipping and gripping, and the edge landing in slip’s lap. When Vanua returned once again to slip a quick yorker under Nadeem Ahmed’s bat, PNG had secured their fourth win over Hong Kong in ODIs, and their first of the tournament.That result looked a long way off when PNG frittered away a 68-run opening stand by repeatedly losing wickets in clumps. Nadeem Ahmed took two wickets in an over, having Vala caught behind and bowling Sese Bau, and when Ura was trapped lbw by Ehsan Khan, PNG had slipped to 72 for 3. Particularly vexing was Ura’s dismissal – he had looked comfortable against both pace and spin, and had just hit Ehsan for a massive six when he fell for 49.Hong Kong heaped on the pressure with close-in catchers, prompting a counterattack from Amini, who hit Nadeem straight back over his head for a six. PNG began to rebuild, with Amini adding 37 with Soper. After he was caught behind, Soper found an able partner in Mahuru Dai, and together they added a further 59 before Soper, who had just started to come out of his shell, was trapped lbw by Kinchit Shah’s offspin. Once again, wickets fell in a clump, and Shah finished with 4 for 11, PNG having lost 6 for 32 to be all out for 200. Eventually, that would prove to be more than enough.This was the 4000th ODI to be played since the format came into existence more than 47 years ago. It was the 18th PNG had played since they gained ODI status after the last World Cup qualifying tournament in 2014, and it was the 24th Hong Kong had been part of since their Asia Cup debut in 2004. It was also the last either team would play for the next four years. PNG and Hong Kong both lost ODI status after this match. But PNG rallied to ensure they would leave cricket’s top table on a high.

India need seven wickets on final day

India ended the fourth day of the Hyderabad Test needing seven wickets for a victory

The Report by Sidharth Monga12-Feb-2017
Scorecard and ball-by-ball details5:40

Binoy: Odds are heavily stacked against Bangladesh

Centuries by both keepers in the same Test

  • 2 Number of centuries for Mushfiqur Rahim against India in Tests – the most for Bangladesh against India. He now has centuries in consecutive matches following his 159 against New Zealand in Wellington.

  • 299 Lead for India at the end of the first innings. – the second-largest for India against Bangladesh while bowling second. Incidentally India has taken a lead of more than 200 in three out of four Tests played in Hyderabad.

  • 4 Instances of wicketkeepers from both teams scoring centuries in a Test. Mushfiqur made 127 while Saha was unbeaten on 106. India have been involved on three of the four occasions.

  • 142 Most overs faced by Bangladesh in Tests in the fourth innings of a Test. This was against Zimbabwe in Dhaka in 2005. Bangladesh’s biggest score in the fourth innings of a Test is 413 against Sri Lanka in Dhaka in 2008.

Tests hurtle towards results on the moving day in India, which has of late shifted to the third from the fourth day. On a flatter surface in Hyderabad, the Test moved on the fourth day but decisively so towards India after only 12 wickets had fallen on the first three days. India took the four remaining first-innings wickets in one session despite an impressive Mushfiqur Rahim century, followed it up with a busy session to take their lead to 458 and took three second-innings wickets in the final session to bring themselves within sight of a win.There might be some disappointed that India didn’t enforce the follow-on keeping in mind the flat nature of the pitch, but India always looked like giving Bangladesh four sessions to survive, which was going to be a daunting task. In fourth innings in India, only twice have visiting sides batted more than the minimum of 125 overs Bangladesh were asked to bat. This was also only 2.5 overs fewer than what Bangladesh played in the first innings, only the second time they have lasted 100 overs against India.It became all the worse when R Ashwin, who had become the fastest to 250 wickets with the last first-innings wicket 10 minutes before lunch, removed Tamim Iqbal as early as the sixth over of the final innings. Ashwin might have got just the two wickets in the first innings, but he was well and truly in rhythm bowling with the new ball against left-hand batsmen at the top of the innings. The rough outside their off stump had now become active, and Ashwin kept pitching just outside off, dipping the ball to make them stretch forward. This is when the natural variation becomes lethal as Tamim found out, bat-padding one that didn’t turn as much as expected.Soumya Sarkar and Mominul Haque kept India at bay for 16.4 overs, with India bowling seam at one end and spin at the other, but the introduction of Ravindra Jadeja brought a new challenge. Jadeja began targeting that rough obsessively, and in his second over he had the tall Sarkar stretching in front of his body to play a forward-defensive. This time the ball went straight on as opposed to turning, and Ajinkya Rahane took a sharp one-handed catch low to his right at slip.In the next over Ashwin made it a double strike, moving over the wicket to Mominul and drawing a regulation edge. There was dip and there was a piece of pitch that came off when the ball pitched on leg stump. There wasn’t much Mominul could do there. Shakib Al Hasan and Mahmudullah then went through a nervous 10.5 overs to give Bangladesh a half chance of saving the Test.It was quite different to how comfortably Mushfiqur and Mehedi Hasan had batted out the final session on day three. That calm was disrupted with Bhuvneshwar Kumar’s reverse swing in the first over on the fourth morning. He did it each way: swinging the first ball in, the second out, the third in, and the fourth through the defence of the impressive Mehedi who had begun the day on 51.Through some fortune and through some application, Mushfiqur and Taijul Islam batted together for close to 10 overs. Taijul faced 38 of those deliveries as Mushfiqur didn’t farm the strike. Umesh Yadav and Ishant Sharma tested both of them with bouncers with Taijul finally gloving one through to Saha.Mushfiqur might be struggling as a captain and a wicketkeeper but as a batsman he stood between India and complete and utter dominance of the Test. He had a hamstring issue towards stumps on day three, he had his gloves peppered, he saw his lower-order partners struggle against India’s fast bowling but went on to complete a second consecutive century as India took almost the whole first session to bowl Bangladesh out. Along the way he overtook Habibul Bashar to become the third-highest run-getter for Bangladesh.Mushfiqur, who had added only six more singles to his overnight score by the time Taijul got out, then got a six off a top-edged hook and started to score more freely. A misfield from Ishant at fine leg brought up the century. Mushfiqur wasn’t done yet as he targeted Ashwin after spin was introduced only in the second hour, hitting him for two fours and a six. Jadeja and Ashwin remained persistent, though, and finally broke through. Jadeja’s dismissal of the left-hand No. 10 Taskin Ahmed was almost identical to how he got Sarkar caught at slip in the second innings.Ashwin then got to his record through a stunning catch by Wriddhiman Saha down the leg side off a carrom ball. The shot was on, though: the ball was short, Mushfiqur had only No. 11 for company, and he attempted a fine pull. He managed to just glove it through but Saha had moved well with the ball to catch it.Having secured a lead of 299, India chose to give their bowlers a breather and batted on in the middle session. Cheteshwar Pujara, Virat Kohli and Ajinkya Rahane scored quick runs, with Pujara hooking Taskin Ahmed for only the eighth six of his Test career. India scored 158 in the middle session to take their lead to 458. Pujara scored an unbeaten 54 off 58, and also batted with Saurashtra team-mate Jadeja for the first time in a Test.Later in the day, Jadeja would go back to team up with a familiar partner, Ashwin, to strike telling blows.

Yuvraj, Pietersen list IPL base price at INR 2 crore

Yuvraj Singh, Kevin Pietersen, Shane Watson, Ishant Sharma, Mitchell Marsh are among 12 players that have listed the highest base price of INR 2 crore for the IPL players auction, scheduled for February 6 in Bangalore

Nagraj Gollapudi23-Jan-2016Yuvraj Singh, Kevin Pietersen, Shane Watson, Ishant Sharma, Mitchell Marsh are among 12 players that have listed the highest base price of INR 2 crore (approx $296,000) for the IPL players auction, scheduled for February 6 in Bangalore. These players feature in a 714-strong long list – accessed by ESPNcricinfo – which will be trimmed by January 25 to form the final pool of players for the auction.

Prominent names in the long list

INR 2 crore – Yuvraj Singh, Kevin Pietersen, Shane Watson, Ishant Sharma, Mitchell Marsh, Ashish Nehra, Dinesh Karthik, Stuart Binny, Sanju Samson, Dhawal Kulkarni
INR 1.5 crore – Dale Steyn, Mohit Sharma, Jos Buttler
INR 1 crore – Irfan Pathan, Tim Southee
INR 50 lakh – Martin Guptill, Jason Holder, Barinder Sran

Ashish Nehra, Dinesh Karthik, Stuart Binny, Sanju Samson and Dhawal Kulkarni are the other Indians who have put a reserve price of INR 2 crore. Australia veteran Michael Hussey might have turned 40, but he remains confident about playing a role in a format perceived to be a young man’s game as he too put INR 2 crore as his base price. Hussey has not only captained Syndey Thunder to the final of the ongoing Big Bash League, but he is also the tournament’s leading run-scorer.The other overseas player who has attracted the INR 2-crore base price is Australia fast bowler Kane Richardson.The auction is likely to be a busy affair considering not just the two new franchises – Rising Pune Super Giants (RPSG) and the yet to be named Rajkot team – but also established teams like Delhi Daredevils are expected to bid fiercely at the single-day auction.Last month, Daredevils released the maximum players – 13 – from last year’s squad which included marquee names Yuvraj and Sri Lanka captain and allrounder Angelo Mathews. Last year, Yuvraj was the most expensive buy for the second consecutive auction after the Daredevils raised the bid price to INR 16 crore ($2.3 million). Daredevils also paid INR 7.5 crore ($1.1 million) for Mathews. However, both players failed to create the desired impact and the franchise consequently decided to release them to bolster their purse going into this year’s auction.A total of 61 players were released by the six franchises when the first trading window closed on December 31. Among them was the second most expensive player of last year’s auction, Karthik, who was secured by Royal Challengers Bangalore for INR 10.5 crore ($1.5 million).Following is the purse remaining with the each of the eight franchises:Delhi Daredevils (INR 37.15 crore), Kings XI Punjab (INR 23 crore), Kolkata Knight Riders (INR 17.95 crore), Mumbai Indians (INR 14.405 crore), Royal Challengers Bangalore (INR 21.625 crore), Sunrisers Hyderabad (INR 30.15 crore), Rising Pune Super Giants (INR 27 crore), Rajkot (INR 27 crore).