'We can't rest Strauss' – Fletcher

Runs have been hard to come by for Andrew Strauss of late © Getty Images

Duncan Fletcher would like to rest the struggling Andrew Strauss but said he was hamstrung by the England squad’s lack of replacement batsmen. Strauss, who has made 12, 28, 18 and 19 in his four CB Series innings, will need to plug on at the top of England’s order in an effort to turn around his disappointing tour.With Strauss’ fellow opener Michael Vaughan already injured and replaced by the ageing newcomer Mal Loye, England are keen to retain the experienced Strauss in their top order. Should they wish to, they could bring in Ravinder Bopara, the uncapped Essex batsman, and push Ian Bell up a spot to open. Bell filled the role during the Champions Trophy but Fletcher appeared not to consider that an option in the CB Series.”We try to give them rests, but with the players missing at the moment we haven’t got a batter here to replace Strauss,” Fletcher told . “If we did, we would probably look at giving him a rest. Thoughts about resting players and when is best to do so are going through our heads all the time.”Fletcher said Strauss, who had a mediocre Ashes series and has been on the wrong end of a string of questionable umpiring decisions, would simply need to find some runs. “There is pressure on him,” Fletcher said.”He knows we have got to bat around him. He knows he is the centre of that batting order at the moment. These are two very good one-day sides we are playing against. He is struggling with that pressure at the moment.”

England Under-19 power past Malaysia

England bounced back from their 16-run defeat at the hands of Sri Lanka as they again efficiently disposed of Malaysia. A powerful batting display carried them to 316 before Andrew Miller took 4 for 27 as Malaysia were rolled for 159.England’s impressive total was built around half-centuries from Billy Godleman (55), Karl Brown (55) and Mervyn Westfield, who hit two sixes in his 54. Westfield added 75 for the seventh wicket with Alex Blake to boost the total beyond 300.Malaysia didn’t come close to making a game of it as Miller continued his encouraging form by removing the top order. Blake and Liam Dawson grabbed two strikes apiece, but at least Anwar Aruddin’s 71 gave Malaysia something to smile about. England have now won two out of three matches in the triangular series.

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.

Vandort century gives Sri Lanka A the upper hand

Scoreboard

Michael Vandort made his 12th first-class century and gave Sri Lanka A a good start to their four-day game against Bangladesh A © Cricinfo Ltd

Michael Vandort struck a century to put Sri Lanka A in a strong position on the opening day of the second four-day match against Bangladesh A at the Colombo Cricket Club Ground. Vandort scored 114 as Sri Lanka A reached 296 for 5 at stumps.Bangladesh A got off to a superb start after putting Sri Lanka A in to bat. Their new ball bowlers, Nazmul Hossain and Mohammad Sharif, removed Sri Lanka A’s openers, Mahela Udawatte and Kanchana Gunawardene, with the score on 39. Chamara Kapugedera joined Vandort and the pair added 64 runs for the third wicket before Nadif Chowdhury took his third catch to dismiss Kapugedera.The game was evenly poised on 103 for 3 when Jehan Mubarak came to the middle. With Vandort holding up one end, Mubarak got into his stride and soon gave Sri Lanka the advantage. They added 128 for the fourth wicket but Bangladesh A dismissed both batsmen late in the final session to end the day on a satisfactory note. Sharif’s best bowler was Bangladesh A’s best bowler with 2 for 36 in 15 overs.

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.

Ashraful appointed vice-captain

Mohammad Ashraful’s elevation to the vice-captaincy, amid speculation over Habibul Bashar’s future, may be a statement of intent © AFP

Mohammad Ashraful is the new Bangladesh vice-captain in an expected 14-man squad for the one-day series against India this month. Habibul Bashar kept his place as captain, even though it was reported that he would retire after the World Cup, as theBangladesh Cricket Board retained 14 of the 15 players that toured the Caribbean recently. Only Rajin Saleh, who didn’t play a game during the tournament, missed out., a Dhaka-based newspaper, said that Bashar, 34, was likely to retire after the series against India. Faruque Ahmed, the chief selector, had hinted that the selection committee was unlikely to make any changes, and added that the Test side would be announced during the three-match ODI contest.Bangladesh played their last Test in April last year against Australia at home.Bangladesh ODI squad:
Habibul Bashar (capt), Mohammad Ashraful (vice-capt), Javed Omar, Tamim Iqbal, Shahriar Nafees, Aftab Ahmed, Saqibul Hasan, Mushfiqur Rahim (wk), Mashrafe Mortaza, Syed Rasel, Abdur Razzak, Shahadat Hossain, Mohammad Rafique, Farhad Reza.

Peter West signs off

In the September 1986 issue of Wisden Cricket Monthly, Peter West’s successor Tony Lewis paid a farewell tribute to the familiar, genial TV anchorman as he retired as the face of BBC television’s cricket coverage

Peter West interviews Imran Khan © Getty Images

Peter West is 66 this month and he has taken that as his cue to retire from television cricket. I would not argue with his timing, because “Westy” never misses a cue – he is a master of talking to the camera while, through an earpiece, obeying the second-by-second countdown. He will have got it right. He will have met the junction for the next programme perfectly, which, by the way, is tending his Cotswold garden, where bad light never stops play, where the only balcony interview will be with his wife Pauline, and where there is only one question: “Red or white, darling?”Peter West has been so much part of our lives, and yet his very skill in presenting cricket and interviewing players has revealed a mass about others but little about himself.Just in case you need confirmation from someone who has worked alongside Westy for 25 of his 35 seasons of television cricket, I quote Richie Benaud: “Peter is one of the finest professionals I have ever seen or with whom I have had the pleasure of working. Sometimes faced by chaotic situations, often brought about by hours of bad light or rain, he handles them calmly – an object lesson to me when I took over a similar presentation job with Channel 9 in Australia.”Peter was born in Addiscombe, Surrey. He was only four when his father retired early from the oil business to live in some splendour on 30 acres of the Kentish Weald at Cranbrook. Unfortunately, West senior lost every penny of his fortune in the slump of 1931; he was forced to sell up and trudge back to the City. In those pre-Jeffrey Archer days, recovery was long and arduous.Young West, 11 years old now, came to the aid of the family by winning a scholarship to Cranbrook School, but he was already dreaming of the cricketers he had seen on the old Angel Ground at Tonbridge when he and the lads of Yardley Court Prep School were treated to the frequent sight of st Ames b Freeman. He saw Woolley bat and Percy Chapman and wondered at the style and self-confidence of BH Valentine.However, it was another Mr Chapman, not APF, who taught Peter West his young cricket: this was his father’s farm manager. At Cranbrook, other games attracted, and Peter won his cap in five sports – cricket, rugby, hockey, athletics and fives. The sad history is that bad luck had not finished with the Wests. When he was 16, Peter began to have pains in the back. It was not long before he became a victim of the recurring family ailment spondylitis, the inflammation of the vertebrae. A rugby cap was his greatest hope, because his richest talent was in that game, but at 19 he had to stop playing.Off to Sandhurst in August 1939, a 19-year-old subaltern in the Duke of Wellington’s. In 1944 Captain West was invalided out of the service after spending 18 months in hospitals undergoing deep X-rays of the back.How did he become a broadcaster and writer on sport, a job which is the envy of millions who toil away, nine to five every day? It was not a job on the career list at school. First he worked for SSAFA, the Soldiers, Sailors, Airmen Families Association. He was sacked. “I deserved it, but I got them back: I stole their secretary Pauline. I married her.” Then he got the job he wanted, as a general sports reporter with the Exchange Telegraph on the 1945 NUJ minimum wage of five guineas a week. The next, sudden surge upwards came in an astonishing way.The scene was the press box at Taunton in 1947. He had been chatting away to the distinguished gentleman in the back row who represented the . Ever eager to please, the cub West inquired of the man – whom he knew to be over 70 – “Can I phone your copy for you, sir?” He did. The old man was grateful and asked an odd question. “Ever thought of being a radio commentator?””No, sir.””Looking for new voices. I’ll send your name in.”What Peter West did not admit to the old gentleman, who, by the way, was CB Fry, was that he had already failed a newsreading audition at the BBC. He had got tense and nervous and hardly got a clear word out. However, when Fry turned out to be every bit as good as his word, he returned to Broadcasting House to meet a man who looked 8ft tall, who had a devastatingly clear and analytical mind, SJ de Lotbiniere.His test was given by Rex Alston. Six weeks later the call came. “Young West, we’re going to throw you to the lions. You will be our commentator at the Warwickshire-South Africa match at Edgbaston.”Every commentator has his own tale of nerves on debut and they all start with the extreme sensitivity you feel when you talk out loud in front of a boxful of broadcasters who have been doing it for a long time. Peter West was in fact the only commentator, but he was positioned outdoors on the verandah and the South Africans could hear his every word and kept turning around as if there was a funny smell about. He had three more radio commissions in that 1947 season.Peter is very much the allrounder in the communications business. He was soon doing rugby on radio and then, in 1950, on television. The eggs were popping into several baskets. For instance, he began a six-year stint as the first editor of .Along came televised Test cricket for the first time in 1952. Peter West was on the commentary team, so you see, we are saying farewell to a founder member, a pioneer who helped make the profession for many who have come along to join him. His own personal appeal went wider than sports broadcasting. He was on the panel of and chairman of several panel games, perhaps the best remembered of which is with Eunice Gayson and Michael Pertwee as resident team members.For 15 years Peter hosted . Often I have heard people wonder how he managed to confuse his public image so much. Surely games-watchers on TV did not want to have the play described by the dancing master! The West reply is plain and practical. “There was not enough money in sports broadcasting along in those days, although I presented Wimbledon 27 times and many Olympic and Commonwealth Games. I was the worst dancer out of captivity, but they wanted a sound technical performer. Remember our programmes were mostly live in those days.”He gave up when he became the rugby correspondent of in 1972, a position he fulfilled with tremendous enthusiasm and caring for 12 years. Then, also in the early 1970s, he went up front at the cricket and became the regular front man for the BBC’s television cricket coverage.Why has Peter West stayed at the top so long, as long as he himself has chosen? You must see him at work to a TV camera with the dreaded talk-back rattling away in his ear: WEST -EARPIECE -WEST (with rhythm unbroken) -EARPIECE -WEST – (still warmly smiling, serene on top of the water, but paddling like hell underneath to shift the subject matter to Gower)EARPIECE -.WEST – (buying time for his team-mates with the technical problems down below and still advancing without hesitation and with steady tread) EARPIECE – Right, Westy. Here comes Gower. Lead us to it.And away he goes. His job is viciously difficult, and yet he glides through a technical minefield, calmly covering the impossibility of the jobs done out of sight, when the gremlins hit the hardware or the software or both at the same time. Television cricket is a team game. He personifies that.Lest you think I exaggerate my praise because he is retiring, or because I have just joined the television team, I must turn to the man whose job it is to assemble the team, I must turn to the man whose job it is to assemble the team, executive producer Nick Hunter. Why has West survived so long in a highly competitive field?”Because his love and understanding of cricket have never let him down. He can talk to anyone about cricket. Do you remember that Centenary Test? He interviewed over 40 cricketers. What’s more, when it rains, and the stage is all his, he looks forward to going on it. Very important. He will go anywhere at any time. Phone him late on a Saturday night and say you need him on a Sunday, and he’ll be in the car. He is also brave. Those balcony interviews with captains, especially losing captains, can be hell, but he never shirks the hard editorial question, not even in front of players and officials, crowds yelling below, and all the viewers. He would still ask Botham if giving up the captaincy changed his batting form.”On TV you can throw Peter West any ball and he can play it. His ability is the fruit of his wide broadcasting experience (especially in live situations), his almost genial love of the crisis, and the durability which is essential to the freelance, who has no guarantee of work but the next telephone call.Remember Edgbaston? Rain belting down. No covered interview areas in those days. West under umbrella interviews Benaud, not quite under the same umbrella. Unfortunately for Benaud, West is holding the umbrella at such an angle that the rainwater is running off the nylon straight down the back of Benaud’s neck. Benaud, another true professional, keeps going, until Peter inquires at the end, “Anything you’d like to add, Richie?””Only that I’d be delighted to move, to get away from the water running down my neck.””Never mind,” comes back West. “They tell me there’s a drought in Australia.”I wish him no droughts in his garden, luck with his forthcoming autobiography, lots of fine times with three children, Jackie, who lectures at Bristol University, Simon, a Bristol solicitor, and Stephen, a doctor in Cheltenham, and also with his five grandchildren. He will be pottering about. He says it’s therapeutic.”But I’m only retiring from cricket. I’m still open to offers. Mind you say that.” There speaks a true freelance.News – Peter West dies aged 83

Hair returns to umpiring

Darrell Hair made his return to international cricket on Thursday when he officiated on the first day of the Intercontinental Cup clash between Canada and the Netherlands in Ontario.Hair, a veteran of 76 Tests, was voted off the ICC’s panel of elite umpires in November last year, following his handling of the Oval Test against Pakistan in August 2006, when Pakistan were penalised for alleged ball-tampering and subsequently forfeited the match.He remains under contract with the ICC until April 2008, but his appearances since November have been sporadic. He officiated in the World Cricket League final between Kenya and Scotland in Nairobi in February, but there seems little prospect of him ever standing at the highest level again. Hair, 54, is suing the ICC for racial discrimination in a hearing that starts in London on October 1 and is expected to last two weeks.Since the incident at The Oval, Hair has left his home in the UK to live in Sydney and is believed to be writing his memoirs. In the match at Ontario, he is standing alongside the Bermudan Roger Dill, a 49-year-old firefighter.

ECB pledge £250,000 flood fund

Gone fishin’ © Getty Images

The England and Wales Cricket Trust has committed £250,000 to help cricket clubs that have been affected by this summer’s torrential weather and floods.It has been a forgettable summer, leading the weather forecasters to gloomily predict that July is heading for the wettest on record. And the consequences for county cricket are starting to look ominous, financially and for team’s prospects in the table. Yesterday, Worcestershire were forced to abandon their Championship match against Lancashire at New Road – the second abandonment in succession at the club.Though the ECB and their trust can’t do much about the torrential rain, the sum they have pledged ought to at least aid clubs’ recovery – not just in county cricket, but for clubs and leagues too.”The weather this summer has created serious problems for cricket clubs at all levels of the game,” David Collier, ECB’s chief executive said. “Many of the club grounds are the centres of the community and we, at the ECB, felt it was important to do our best to support them at this difficult time.”Details of how the £250,000 will be spread among the clubs have yet to be worked out, and the ECB have also approached Sport England to match this funding.

Willoughby leads Derbyshire rout

Division One

Harbhajan Singh claimed five wickets in the second innings at Guildford, but the match ended in a draw © Martin Williamson

Phil Jaques’ second century of the season guided Worcestershire to a draw against Surrey at Guildford. His 103 carried the visitors into the lead alongside half centuries from Stephen Moore (54) and Ben Smith (66). Worcestershire were never really in danger on the final day once Jaques and Smith added 112 for the third wicket. Harbhajan Singh claimed all five wickets to fall, taking his match haul to nine, but couldn’t grab breakthroughs in clusters to force Surrey a victory. A draw wasn’t what either side needed from this match with them stuck in the two relegation places.John Crawley struck a fine century, but Hampshire couldn’t force a win against Sussex at The Rose Bowl despite handing them a scare with three early wickets. Rana Naved-ul-Hasan took out Hampshire’s middle order, but Crawley held firm and reached his hundred off 148 balls. Once Crawley had taken Hampshire to a second batting point, Shane Warne declared and Sussex’s top order wobbled. James Bruce, Dimitri Mascarenhas and Daren Powell did the damage and suddenly the pressure was on. Murray Goodwin and Chris Adams calmed nerves with a stand of 89 and Hampshire took the points honours nine to seven.Younis Khan hit an unbeaten double-century as Yorkshire and Kent played out a draw at Scarborough

Division Two

Derbyshire were decimated by Charl Willoughby and Andy Caddick, capitulating for 52 as Somerset completed a 278-run win at Derby. Chasing 331 after yesterday’s negotiations, the home side were soon in tatters at 13 for 5 as Willoughby claimed four of the top five. The spinners, Ian Blackwell and Cameron White, then ran through the tail as Derbyshire folded inside 28 overs. Ant Botha was the only batsman to reach double figures before falling to Blackwell for 21.Chris Taylor’s 101 almost enabled Gloucestershire to turn impending defeat into victory against Essex at Bristol in a match played over one innings after rain washed out the first three days. After being inserted Gloucestershire slumped to 23 for 4 and 122 for 8 against impressive bowling from Andy Bichel and Ravi Bopara. They claimed eight wickets between them, but Taylor found support from Steve Kirby and Ben Edmondson as the last two wickets added a priceless 62 runs. Gloucestershire’s attack then repeated the damage to the visitors with Kirby’s four wickets sending Essex sliding to 89 for 7. But Bichel (22 not out) and Alex Tudor (16 not out) held firm in the closing stages and the honours were shared.The match at Abergavenny between Glamorgan and Leicestershire was abandoned without a ball bowled due to unsafe run-ups. “It’s a shame for all concerned and especially Abergavenny Cricket Club but unfortunately we had to do the right thing and the run-ups were just not fit,” said umpire Barrie Leadbeater.3rd dayCenturies from Stephen Fleming and Mark Wagh put Nottinghamshire in the driving seat against Northamptonshire at Wantage Road. Fleming struck 19 fours and a six in his even 100, adding 112 for the second wicket with Wagh, before he was stumped off Jason Brown. Wagh then combined with Samit Patel (54) to add another 111. Wagh took 174 delivers over his third Championship ton of the season and Nottinghamshire are poised to take a lead. Earlier, the home side added 102 to their total mainly through the efforts of Johann van der Wath, who struck and unbeaten 59, and an eighth-wicket stand of 69 with David Lucas.

Team Mat Won Lost Tied Draw Aban Pts
Yorkshire 11 3 1 0 7 0 139
Sussex 10 4 2 0 4 0 123
Hampshire 10 3 1 0 6 0 109
Warwickshire 10 2 1 0 7 0 109
Durham 10 3 4 0 3 0 107.5
Lancashire 9 2 0 0 6 1 99
Kent 10 2 3 0 4 1 98
Surrey 10 1 4 0 5 0 84
Worcestershire 10 0 4 0 4 2 59
Team Mat Won Lost Tied Draw Aban Pts
Somerset 11 6 1 0 4 0 168
Nottinghamshire 11* 4 1 0 5 0 143.5
Essex 11 3 2 0 6 0 124
Derbyshire 10 2 2 0 6 0 100
Northamptonshire 10* 3 4 0 2 0 96
Middlesex 9 3 1 0 5 0 95.5
Leicestershire 11 1 4 0 5 1 88
Gloucestershire 10 1 4 0 5 0 74
Glamorgan 9 1 5 0 2 1 57

* – match still ongoing

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