Anyon and Rayner star in thumping win

Golden-armed spells by winter recruit James Anyon and offspinner Ollie Rayner helped Sussex maintain their 100 percent record with a 53-run victory over the Emerging Cape Cobras

Mark Pennell in Dubai19-Mar-2010Sussex 102 for 8 (Gatting 37, Ramela 3 for 8, Vallie 3 for 21) beat Emerging Cape Cobras 49 all out (Anyon 5 for 11, Rayner 3 for 6) by 53 runs
Golden-armed spells by winter recruit James Anyon and offspinner Ollie Rayner helped Sussex maintain their 100 percent record with a 53-run victory over the Emerging Cape Cobras in Dubai.The South African franchise youngsters, fresh from defeating Surrey in their opening game, capitulated for only 49 in the space of 14 overs in a hapless pursuit of Sussex’s modest 20-over total of 102 for 8.Anyon, who joined Sussex from Warwickshire in the close season, bagged 5 for 11 including a spell of four for one in eight balls, leaving Rayner to polish off the job by running through the tail with figures of 3 for 6 in three overs. Only two Cobras batsmen, Uwe-Karl Birkenstock and Chris Cooke, reached double figures as Sussex wrapped up their second win of the day with 36 balls to spare.The county’s batsmen had found batting on a crumbling pitch just as tough against a Cobras attack buoyed by their 46-run success against Surrey. Their spinners proved particularly tough to get away and Omphile Ramela and Mohammad Vallie justified their excellent figures as Sussex hit only one four in their entire allocation of overs to go with four sixes.Joe Gatting glued their innings together as best he could with 37 from 36 balls, but only Luke Wells (14) and Ben Brown (10) stuck around long enough to join him in double figures.The tournament concludes on Saturday when Sussex look set to contest the final on hopefully a firmer surface here at 7he Sevens Stadium.

No way but up for Kings XI Punjab

Punjab have been on a downward slope since the first IPL and this is pretty much rock bottom

The Preview by Jamie Alter01-Apr-2010

Match facts

Friday, April 2
Start time 2000 (1430GMT)It’s time for the likes of Brett Lee to deliver•Indian Premier League

Big Picture

It’s official. Kings XI Punjab are this season’s Kolkata Knight Riders. Their predicament mirrors that of Kolkata’s in 2009, when they won just one of their first seven matches and occupied the basement for practically the entire time in South Africa. Then Kolkata finished last, and now Punjab need to figure out how not to end up the same. Given the mess they’re in and rumours of serious discontent within the squad, it’s next to impossible to see how they’re going to do that.Punjab have been on a downward slope since the first IPL and this is pretty much rock bottom. In 2008 they reached the semi-finals; in 2009 theirs was an inconsistent journey as they went on a victory-defeat ride; in 2010 they have been awful. Five of Punjab’s six losses have been by margins of over 30 runs or four wickets. Only one of their batsmen has made it to the top 15 run scorers, only one bowler features in the top 20 wicket-takers. Statistics never tell the full story, many a critic will happily argue, but in Punjab’s case they sure give a good reason why the team is struggling this season.Bangalore have lost two in a row but there isn’t too much to fret about yet. Their batting and bowling still leaves them as the most balanced side in the tournament but the pattern to their last two defeats has been that the bowlers haven’t been able to curb the opposition. They allowed Delhi Daredevils to cross 180 and Chennai Super Kings to chase 162 in 19 overs. The batting also hasn’t been able to get to consistently challenging scores, especially when the big-hitting Robin Uthappa has failed to convert cameos into defining innings. It seems harsh to criticise the league’s leading run scorer, but Jacques Kallis’ 52 from 49 deliveries against Chennai actually hurt Bangalore. Bangalore will believe they’re a win away from getting back on track, and rightly so.

Team talk

Where to begin with Punjab? Kumar Sangakkara will return, but is that a good thing? He’s done nothing with the bat all season. With Shaun Marsh making a solid contribution in his first match, Mahela Jayawardene could finally be benched. Why Love Ablish, the leading wicket-taker for Punjab in the season’s Ranji Trophy, and Reetinder Sodhi, an attacking Twenty20 player, have not played a game is beyond this writer.Bangalore drafted in Kevin Pietersen and Cameron White for the last game and lost it, but don’t expect too much tinkering to the line-up. Ross Taylor joined the squad on Thursday, but it remains to be seen whether Bangalore will play him just a day after he lands, that too against the league’s laggards. Abhimanyu Mithun could be get a look-in given that Praveen Kumar has had two horror matches on the trot.

Head to head

Punjab 3 Bangalore 2
Punjab strolled to two comprehensive wins in the first season – by nine wickets at home, and six wickets at the Chinnaswamy. The teams split the matches last year – Bopara powering Punjab to a seven-wicket victory in Durban, before Bangalore scraped home by 8 runs at the same venue. Bangalore chased down a target of 204 with seven deliveries remaining in their earlier match against Punjab this season.

In the spotlight

Shaun Marsh: He marked his return to the side with 57 from 47 balls and as one of two players to have been away from the squad for an extended period, Marsh could be the least affected by the malaise plaguing Punjab. Fans of the team will hope that is true and that Marsh continues where he left off in 2008, scoring a bucket of runs and providing a change in Punjab’s fortunes.Praveen Kumar: Bangalore’s opening bowler has always been a bit of a blow-hot-blow-cold cricketer, capable of getting big movement one day and none the next, and his erratic ways have played a role in the team’s two straight losses. Coming off a stellar outing of 1 for 21 from his four overs in the win over Chennai last week, Praveen has given away 87 from seven overs without a wicket in the last two.

Prime Numbers

  • Bangalore have conceded the second lowest amount of runs in the middle overs – between seven and 14 – this season: 395.
  • Yuvraj Singh averages 14.00 from seven matches in 2010.

Chatter

“There will be some changes, but these are not going to be a wholesale sweep.”

“We’ve got a strong bench and this is going to become important as we reach the halfway mark of the tournament.”

Exciting final day in the offing

The fixture between South Africa Academy and Bangladesh Cricket Board Academy is evenly poised heading into the final day in Chittagong

Cricinfo staff24-Apr-2010
Scorecard
The fixture between South Africa Academy and Bangladesh Cricket Board Academy is evenly poised heading into the final day in Chittagong. South Africa had led by 195 for the loss of just two wickets at the end of the second day, but Bangladesh hit back on the third, bowling out their opponents for 274, leaving them to chase a target of 395.Saqlain Sajib captured four wickets for 91, but South Africa had done well to recover with help from their middle and lower orders. Yaseen Vallie scored 82 and the batsmen who followed chipped in with useful contributions to extend South Africa’s lead. Bangladesh were dealt an early blow in their chase, losing their first wicket for 5, but Rony Talukder, who scored a century in the first innings, followed up with 58 in the second. However, by the end of the day, Bangladesh had lost three wickets to reach 145. They need a further 250 with seven wickets in hand on the final day.

Amin to meet franchise heads on June 24

The BCCI has called the ten IPL franchises for a meeting on June 24 in Mumbai, ending a brief communication lull

Nagraj Gollapudi10-Jun-2010The BCCI has called the ten IPL franchises for a meeting on June 24 in Mumbai, ending a brief communication lull. The significance is that the franchises will finally get the opportunity to get acquainted with Chirayu Amin, the league’s interim chairman, after the BCCI suspended Lalit Modi on April 26.The letter, a copy of which is with Cricinfo, was sent on June 8 and addressed to “the owners of the franchises” by N Srinivasan, the board secretary. Without elaborating the agenda, the brief communiqué read:”BCCI President, Shri. Shashank Manohar and Interim Chairman IPL, Shri. Chirayu Amin desire to meet the owners of the IPL franchise to discuss matters pertaining to the IPL.” Also attending the meeting are Ratnakar Shetty, the board’s administrative officer and Sundar Raman, the IPL’s chief operating officer.Even as the BCCI top brass got immersed trying to sort the IPL mess after Modi’s suspension, the franchises, especially the original eight, were anxiously waiting to hear from the board about the way forward.At the moment, most franchises Cricinfo spoke to are keen to understand what Amin and co. have in mind regarding the player auction, how many players each team can retain and the total number of matches from IPL 4 after the addition of two more teams.”Most would expect a road map, what is going to happen here on,” a top official from one of the franchises, who did not want to be named, told Cricinfo. “We don’t even know what will happen.” But, according to him, invariably most franchises would read their demands from the same sheet.”Player auction, central revenues, the retention of players, the sponsorship avenues – these would top my list and I reckon most others would want to know the same,” the official said. Central revenues comprise the monies that come from the broadcasting revenues, the title sponsorship, and other avenues like the the MRF blimp. Till last year, each team received 10% of the central sponsorship, with 20% going to the IPL. “We are worried if that will change for the third season,” another franchise official said.Another important issue likely to be discussed is if the number of matches scheduled to be played from IPL 4 needs to be reviewed. A total of 94 matches were slotted originally, an excessive workload – critics have pointed out – which could endanger the players’ fitness and add to the stress. In fact, Mansur Ali Khan Pataudi, a member of the IPL governing council, voiced concerns about the relentless schedule and the IPL workload, after India were knocked out of the ICC World Twenty20 in the Super Eights for the second year in a row.Interestingly the matter is already being discussed by the board officials internally. According to a top BCCI official, the IPL governing council will study a proposal which recommends the teams being split in two groups, with a total of 68 matches. It is understood that the IPL governing council will meet in Mumbai on June 25, the day after meeting the franchises.

Minister brokers deal with striking Kenyans

Kenya will send a full-strength side to the ICC World Cricket League Division One tournament in the Netherlands after the country’s ministry of sports intervened to end a stand-off between players and board

Martin Williamson22-Jun-2010Kenya will send a full-strength side to the ICC World Cricket League Division One tournament in the Netherlands after the country’s ministry of sports intervened to end a stand-off between players and board.The players refused to travel to England last Friday to honour a commitment to play warm-up matches ahead of the competition, and were trying to force Cricket Kenya to back down and agree to revised terms regarding central contracts as well as the removal of the head of selectors.On Monday, the ICC gave CK 24 hours to either agree to send a side to the Netherlands or risk expulsion from the event, a suspension of its grants, and severe fines. The ICC warned that “if it fails to deliver on its obligations … [it] may be in breach of its obligations to its commercial partners” and that would mean its funding would be suspended and there would be additional penalties levied. “It goes without saying that they will have a far reaching impact on cricket in Kenya,” the ICC continued.Were that to have happened then it would have meant CK would not have been able to afford any central contracts, leaving those same players who are demanding more money and a say in selection without a job.CK had looked at the fall-back of sending a second-string side but that would not have been possible because of visa complications.Ministry of sports representatives met with the players last night and senior CK officials today and are believed to have told the players any contractual issues should be addressed after they had honoured their international commitments.Maurice Ouma will lead the side in the tournament but his position as captain is in doubt as the players’ actions last week have left CK around £50,000 out of pocket.He claimed to the local media that the lowest-paid Kenyan cricketer was earning around US$4 a day. However, Cricinfo has seen documentation which shows the lowest centrally-contracted player earned around $700 a month in 2009. The lower figure quoted by Ouma was for casual non-contracted cricketers who turn up for nets and other events on a day-by-day basis.

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.

England focus on the task at hand

It’s never dull when the Pakistanis are in town, and anyone who dares to treat these matches as nothing more than an Ashes appetiser might well find themselves too full to move by the end of it

Andrew Miller at Trent Bridge28-Jul-2010It’s never dull when the Pakistanis are in town. While the team was tearing itself apart during a dreadful tour of Australia six months ago, there was a legitimate fear that this coming series would be a massive mismatch – especially when the PCB, in its infinite wisdom, chose to slap life bans on Mohammad Yousuf and Younis Khan, the two batsmen most likely to bat England out of contention in any given contest.And yet, is there any team in the world with a greater gift for regeneration than Pakistan? The volatility of their performance against Australia at Lord’s – which culminated in the dramatic resignation of the brand-new captain, Shahid Afridi – gave way to a performance at Headingley that was forged from pure inspiration. With Mohammad Aamer swinging the ball like a latterday Wasim Akram, the two Ys were scarcely missed until the tense final stages of that fourth-innings run-chase. Who needs runs on the board when you can roll a side over for 88?Such is the nature of England’s latest opponents. Bursts of brilliance are to be expected throughout the coming four Tests, interwoven with periods – protracted or otherwise – in which Pakistan’s focus drifts off into the ether. It is a mercurial tendency that promises to deliver a flawed but fascinating series, and anyone who dares to treat these matches as nothing more than an Ashes appetiser might well find themselves too full to move by the end of it.”You know that Pakistan are unlikely to be on their game for the full five days of a Test match, and if you can make sure you can play consistent cricket, I think that gives you an advantage,” said England’s captain Andrew Strauss. “They have a good varied bowling attack, but I don’t think it’s our job to overly hype the opposition. Most Test teams you play against have got a good bowling attack, and Pakistan is one of the better ones we’ll see.”Nevertheless, England know they will have to be on their guard at a ground where swing bowlers have habitually ruled the roost, and against a team that may now be classified as the away side, but is likely to feel very much at home after two hard-fought Tests against Australia at Lord’s and Headingley.”I think it was very good to start the tour having played such a good side in the conditions,” said Pakistan’s captain, Salman Butt. “The local community and the local people from this country have all supported us and we are very thankful for this ‘homely’ atmosphere, though this is not home. Our side is very young, with limited experience, so it is good for us. We needed all the practice we could get, and this is the best possible practice we could have had.”While Strauss acknowledged that England were unlikely to catch their opponents cold after such a build-up to the series, he still felt that the schedule would ultimately tell against Pakistan. “They are more used to the conditions than they would be if it was the first Test match in the series,” he said, “but at the same time it’s a hard schedule with six Test matches in such a short time. The most important thing for us is that these are our own conditions, we’re very comfortable here, and we know what type of cricket we need to play. We need to use that to our advantage over the course of this summer.”England’s attack will have to perform at peak levels if they are to outshine a Pakistan attack that put Australia’s frontline seamers to shame in both the Lord’s and Headingley Tests. Aamer’s zippy left-arm line is perfectly complemented by Mohammad Asif’s stingy seam and the reverse-swing of Umar Gul, and as Butt admitted: “I am a lucky person to have all these three up my sleeve.”They’ve been producing results, taking wickets and troubling the batsmen, so I think these things are very eye-catching for all the teams and spectators,” he added. “They bring a lot of confidence to me as a captain and us as a team because whatever totals you manage, you are always confident you have a good bowling attack and you can defend it.”England’s own pacemen have plenty of strengths to call upon, although they aren’t exactly a like-for-like line-up. Stuart Broad is on his home turf, and is walking on air after a career-best 8 for 52 against Warwickshire earlier in the week, although seam not swing is his particular strength. The same goes for Steven Finn, whose 6’8″ frame will test the mettle of a Pakistan middle-order that occasionally looked vulnerable when the considerably less lanky Doug Bollinger started ramping up the aggro.But given Trent Bridge’s reputation for lateral movement, the focus will undoubtedly fall on James Anderson, a player whose credentials as the leader of the attack have suffered in recent months with his omission from the victorious World Twenty20 campaign in the Caribbean, as well as an off-the-boil showing in the recent spate of one-day contests against Australia and Bangladesh.”Jimmy Anderson is under some pressure, as we all are,” said Strauss. “We want healthy competition in the ranks, and it would be wrong ever to assume that your place in the side is cast in stone. I think we have got a fair amount of competition, both in the batting line-up now, and there are some bowlers chomping at the bit to get in as well. Jimmy, we know what he can do, and in the right conditions there’s no better bowler in world cricket, I don’t think. Like everything, we want our bowlers to be as consistent as possible in all conditions, so that’s the challenge for him.”The challenge for England is to treat the coming contests as an end in themselves, regardless of any temptation to look straight through the here-and-now and rest their gaze on the Ashes. With that in mind, Strauss is already attempting to be ambivalent about the state of Australia’s current preparations, particularly in light of that first-innings humiliation at Headingley.”My first thought was that it just proved I should have bowled first at Headingley last year,” he said, recalling how England themselves had been blown away for 102 by the Aussies, en route to a two-and-a-half-day defeat. “We had an interest in that series but it wasn’t a close interest, because it’s not that relevant right at the moment for us.”It was relevant to have a look at the Pakistani bowlers and how they were looking to bowl at right- and left-handers for instance, but as far as Australia is concerned, I still think that’s something that’s a little bit down the road. We don’t need to be side-tracked by that at this moment.”He is quite right of course. Come Thursday morning, and given the sort of cloudy conditions that hung over Trent Bridge on the eve of the contest, England might well have plenty to preoccupy them as it is.

Mark Jonkman suspended for illegal action

The ICC has suspended Netherlands fast bowler Mark Jonkman from bowling in international cricket after his action was found to be illegal

Cricinfo staff16-Aug-2010The ICC has suspended Netherlands fast bowler Mark Jonkman from bowling in international cricket after an independent test found that his deliveries exceeded the tolerance threshold level of 15 degrees for bending of the elbow.The independent analysis was performed by Prof. Bruce Elliott, member of the ICC Panel of Human Movement Specialists, at the University of Western Australia (UWA) in Perth on July 30.Prof Elliott, in his report, said, “Mean elbow extension levels of 32.9 degrees (±3.74) and 31.4 degrees (±4.52) for the length and yorker deliveries respectively, unfortunately show Mr Jonkman at more than double the allowable extension threshold. Additionally, a mean elbow extension level of 38.8 degrees (±3.73) for the bouncer delivery indicates that Mr Jonkman’s extension levels increase significantly as he bowls the ball shorter.”Jonkman had been reported by on-field umpires Kumar Dharmasena and Buddhi Pradhan following a match between Netherlands and Ireland on July 9 in Amstelveen during the ICC World Cricket League Division 1.Jonkman can apply for re-assessment of his action after he has modified it in accordance with clause 2.4 of the regulations for the review of bowlers reported with suspected illegal bowling actions. He also has the right to appeal against UWA’s conclusions to the Bowling Review Group, within 14 days of receiving the report.

Modi disciplinary hearing adjourned

The BCCI’s disciplinary committee considering the case against suspended IPL chairman Lalit Modi has adjourned its proceedings to September 26

ESPNcricinfo staff15-Sep-2010The BCCI’s disciplinary committee that is considering the case against suspended IPL chairman Lalit Modi has adjourned its proceedings to September 26, after today’s hearing could not be completed in time.The BCCI has produced four witnesses on its behalf: IPL chief executive Sundar Raman, and three members of IMG, Peter Griffiths, John Loffhagen, and Paul Manning. One of Modi’s lawyers requested more time to cross examine Griffiths, the BCCI said in a statement.The hearings were originally scheduled to begin on September 13h, but were postponed for two days because Modi appealed to the Bombay High Court to remove board vice president Arun Jaitley and interim IPL chairman Chirayu Amin from the committee, saying they were biased against him. The High Court dismissed Modi’s petition earlier today. It is the second time Modi has petitioned the court to intervene in the BCCI’s proceedings against him, both times unsuccessfully.The next hearing will be held at 3.00 pm at the Taj Palace Hotel in New Delhi, with two more on September 27 and 28, as originally scheduled. If necessary, an additional session will be held on September 29 at 4.00 pm in Mumbai.”It is made clear that the recording of the cross-examination of Mr Peter Griffiths, Mr John Loffhagen, Mr Paul Manning and Mr Sundar Raman would be endeavoured to be concluded during this time,” the board said.

Batting was a disappointment – Vettori

New Zealand captain Daniel Vettori has expressed disappointment after his side’s second successive defeat against Bangladesh, giving the hosts an unbeatable 2-0 lead in the five-match ODI series with two games to go

ESPNcricinfo staff11-Oct-2010New Zealand captain Daniel Vettori has expressed disappointment after his side’s second successive defeat against Bangladesh, giving the hosts an unbeatable 2-0 lead in the five-match ODI series with two games to go. Vettori identified New Zealand’s continued struggles against Bangladesh’s spinners as the reason for the defeat.”We are disappointed with the batting,” Vettori said after the game. “[Jesse] Ryder and [BJ] Watling set us up, but from then on we were under pressure. The spinners for Bangladesh bowled very well and we have to adjust quickly. We have to post a decent score in the next game to put some pressure on them.”After the early loss of Brendon McCullum, New Zealand recovered through Ryder and Watling who added 55 for the second wicket. However, their good work was undone by the home side’s spinners, with left-armer Suhrawadi Shuvo taking 3 for 14 in 10 overs.Chasing 174 for a win, Bangladesh cantered home with 10 overs to spare, the first time they have managed to string two consecutive wins against top opposition, not counting the 3-0 victory against a depleted West Indies side last year.”Suhrawadi bowled well and we kept taking wickets,” the stand-in Bangladesh captain Shakib Al Hasan said. “Our opening batsmen then batted solidly and gave us a good start, that’s what we needed.”

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