Wright enthusiastic about pre-season camp

John Wright has said that working with a pool of 36 players in two pre-season camps will give him and the selectors a good idea of which players can make the transition to the international level. Wright arrived in Bangalore yesterday with Gregory King, the newly appointed trainer, ahead of the conditioning camp which will be held from August 14-26.The Times of India quoted Wright as saying: "Managing 36 players could be a bit difficult but the main idea is to get more players used to the training methods of King. It’s the beginning of the season and as it progresses the number of players will come down. Having more players will also provide a wider pool of talent. It will give the selectors and myself a good indication of who’s keen on working harder."When asked about the absence of Javagal Srinath, who pulled out from the camp due to an injury in his right knee, Wright said that he hadn’t spoken to him yet. “Sri is an experienced professional. He is big enough to make up his mind. But at the end of the day we need to talk to him.”Wright also spoke about the areas where the team needed to improve. “There are certain areas like the top of the order, fast bowling and fielding …where we need more competition from players.”The list of 36 probables includes four openers apart from Virender Sehwag and Sanjay Bangar, who opened the innings in India’s last Test, but one name missing from the line-up was Sadagoppan Ramesh. Ramesh last played for India in 2001 before being forced out with an injury. Speaking on Ramesh’s chances of making a comeback, Wright said: “Ramesh is a good player. But there are always some unlucky players. He’s scored runs in the domestic season and will have to take his chances.”

Marillier anchors Zimbabwe for a tense win

The last time these two sides met, Zimbabwe were humiliated byseven wickets, allowing Kenya a passage to the World Cup semi-final.It was revenge time for Zimbabwe under lights at Sharjah, as theysurvived a minor hiccup and ran away winners by five wickets, gettingtheir first points of this tournament.The star of the day for Zimbabwe was Doug Marillier, who cracked asplendid 100 – the first century of his one-day career. His knock wasmagnificently paced, and allowed Zimbabwe to make light of achallenging target of 226, especially after they had struggled at the startof their innings. Marillier’s 130-run stand for the third wicket with GrantFlower (59) turned the tide, and ensured that Collins Obuya’s excellentspell – 2 for 31 from 10 overs – didn’t translate into a Kenyan victory.Kenya began their defence of the target with their usual enthusiasmand discipline. Martin Suji and Thomas Odoyo frustrated Marillier andCraig Wishart, bowling consecutive maidens and allowing just 55 runsin the first 15 overs.Collins Obuya then came on and struck twice in quick succession, firsthaving Wishart caught by Steve Tikolo at slip (56 for 1), and then takinga return catch off Gavin Rennie (68 for 2). Flighting the ball and gettingappreciable turn, Obuya consistently pitched on good length andtroubled all the batsmen. However, the Marillier-Flower partnershipgradually turned things around.Marillier, circumspect at the start, played none of the audacious slogswhich have characterised his batting in ODIs. His first fifty took all of82 balls – compared to 57 for his next – and though it included a fewpowerful drives and pulls, there were plenty of dot-balls too.None of this bothered Marillier, though. With Flower timing the ballsweetly and rotating the strike, Zimbabwe’s innings soon got amove-on. Flower completed 6000 runs in ODIs, and then proceeded tosweep Maurice Odumbe and Tikolo to distraction. Marillier struck bothof them for six, and an asking rate which had climbed to more than arun a ball quickly descended.But Kenya weren’t finished. Flower and Marillier were both snared byTony Suji – who was introduced in the 45th over of the innings – ineight balls, and when Andy Blignaut hoicked Odoyo straight to JosephAngara at midwicket, Zimbabwe needed 18 from 15 balls.Heath Streak, aided by some uncharacteristically sloppy work in thefield – Jimmy Kamande twice misfielded at long-off – made sure thatZimbabwe didn’t mess it up. The end came when Streak tonked TonySuji for six over long-off.Earlier, Zimbabwe had put in a disciplined performance in the field torestrict Kenya to 225. Kenya’s innings was characterised by plenty ofbatsmen getting starts, but no-one going on to convert that intoanything substantial.David Obuya clunked his way to 57 – his first fifty in one-dayinternationals – while Odoyo held the innings together at the end with aworkmanlike 46, but the rest of the batting fell away after promising alot. Kenya reached the four-an-over mark in the 26th over, with Tikoloand David Obuya going strong, but then lost three wickets in the next 12overs, and never quite regained the momentum.David Obuya and Brijal Patel put together 52 for the second wicket afterKennedy Obuya was nailed early on by Streak, but the best phase ofKenya’s innings came when Tikolo joined David Obuya in a 59-runstand.Obuya swished and missed plenty of times, but also connected with afew meaty blows, including an effortless six over backward square legoff Douglas Hondo. Tikolo’s was a classy knock. He struck only twofours in his 37, but rotated the strike superbly with deft flicks andfluent drives. However, the Kenyan innings began to unravel when DavidObuya hoicked Raymond Price to Gavin Rennie at long-off (114 for 3).Tikolo was dismissed against the run of play, top-edging a sweep offPrice to Marillier at square leg (131 for 5), while Odumbe – coming offan excellent World Cup – popped a return catch to Rennie.Odoyo and Hitesh Modi put the innings back on track with a sensiblepartnership, eschewing strokeplay and working the singles around toensure that Kenya batted through their 50 overs. But ultimately, the totalof 225 turned out to be about 15 too few.S Rajesh is sub editor of Wisden.com in India.

Sri Lanka confident ahead of crunch South Africa match

Sri Lanka coach Dav Whatmore believes the confidence gained from his sides’s nail-biting win against West Indies will pave the way for a Sri Lanka win against South Africa.The match is another must-win game for both teams. If Sri Lanka win they will top Group ‘B’ and qualify for the Super Sixes knocking South Africa out of the competition.If Sri Lanka lose, they can still qualify provided they have a better net run rate than New Zealand with whom they will be fighting for third place.Whatmore said that his team can still qualify even if they don’t win tomorrow’s match. “But that’s not our first objective,” he said.”We had a terrific match a couple of days ago at Newlands and it’s given a lot of confidence to our guys. It was a tough and a tight match. It’s always nice to win the tough ones. If any team has to do well in the World Cup, it needs to play big games like this. We are very confident,” said Whatmore.”It is a very important game for both sides. The only thing that I am concerned with is having our team continuing to play some fairly good cricket. That will be the case tomorrow night,” he said.Sri Lanka captain Sanath Jayasuriya said that his side no longer had to worry about the bouncy pitches.”We have been playing well and won most our games in South Africa. Tomorrow is just another international game and we have just to go and play it like we did the other day,” said Jayasuriya.He said that although South Africa had a better record against Sri Lanka it was all in the past. “It’s a new game tomorrow,” said Jayasuriya.He said that it was important to bat first on this pitch because of the difficulties faced by the side batting second so far in the tournament.Jayasuriya said that it was rather unusual for the Kingsmead pitch to have so much of grass on it. If that is the case, it will certainly favour the South African seam attack.Jayasuriya concern is his middle-order batting which he said would make a come back at any moment.

Bodi sets it up for Dolphins as as Jumbos and Griquas also win

Limited overs champions KwaZulu-Natal built on three successive victories on the road with a three-wicket win over Easterns at home in their Standard Bank Cup match at Kingsmead on Friday night. In other games, the Eastern Province Jumbos added to the Highveld Strikers’ miseries with a five-wicket win at St George’s Park while in Kimberley Griquas accounted for Free State by four wickets.KZN’s triumph was set up by a blistering 57 off 51 balls from Gulam Bodi as the home team chased Easterns 154 for eight. Despite the start given the Dolphins by Bodi, the home team wobbled in mid-innings before getting home with more than eight overs to spare. Andrew Hall, with 67, provided the substance of the Easterns innings.In Port Elizabeth the Strikers collapsed after Adam Bacher (70) and Daryll Cullinan (30) had put on 73 for the first wicket. Garnett Kruger at one point took four wickets in 11 balls before finishing with five 29 as the Strikers were bowled out for 158 and with Dave Callaghan making 53, the Jumbos were able to get home in some comfort.In Kimberley, Warwickshire’s Mike Powell hit an unbeaten 62 to guide Griquas to a four-wicket win over Free State. Jimmy Adams’ 60 had enabled Free State to reach 186 for seven and at one point the Diamonds were creaking on 99 for five before Powell and Wendell Bossenger (31) added 68 for the sixth wicket to stabilise the innings.

McGrath expected back as England sweat on Vaughan

HOBART – A revitalised Glenn McGrath is confident he’ll be fit to playas England sweat over star batsman Michael Vaughan ahead of theirone-day cricket match in Hobart tomorrow.McGrath, who’s been out with a side strain, said today it had been toughwatching from the sidelines as Australia lost the fifth Test and wasbelted by Sri Lanka last night.”I just can’t wait to get back out there,” he said.The fast bowler said he was “90 per cent-plus fit and feeling prettygood”.But management will wait until they see how he pulls up following anafternoon bowl before deciding whether he will play.”If it’s going the same way it has from the last few bowls I’ve had, yesI’m confident I’ll play,” McGrath said.However the management, which also has worries about Darren Lehmann’sfitness following illness, will wait until the morning before finalisingthe team.Captain Ricky Ponting said Lehmann was still feeling a bit tired andrundown.”He’s had a couple of days of not doing too much and we’ll see how hepulls up in the morning,” Ponting said.England, with concerns over Vaughan’s knee and shoulder and fast bowlerSteve Harmison’s shin splints, will also wait until the morning to nametheir team.Captain Nasser Hussain is anxious to slot Vaughan, who made a mountainof runs as an opener in the Tests, into the top three of the one-dayside.Oddly, Vaughan has always batted at four or lower for England and hiscounty Yorkshire in one-dayers.”We would like to bat him in the top three, definitely,” Hussain said.”When he is the number two batsman in the world there’s no point hidinghim down the order.”But with the World Cup a month away, Vaughan and Harmison would betreated very carefully.Hussain seemed unsurprised by Sri Lanka’s stunning form reversal lastnight.He said that while they appeared down and out after their match againstAustralia A in Adelaide, they had a much better batting lineup thantheir recent statistics suggested.Ponting was still smarting from the heavy loss.”Last night’s game was disappointing,” he said.”It was not really an Australian team that took the field last night, Idon’t think.”Our performance was not up to the high expectations we have of the teamand we have spoken about that and we will speak about it again today andwe will make sure that we are a better side tomorrow.”He agreed fatigue may have been a factor.”I would be lying if I said some of the guys weren’t a little bittired,” he said.In that regard, McGrath’s enforced rest may be a blessing in disguise.McGrath said he’d been able to have a rest, work on his fitness andspend more time with his family.”So even though it’s been negative in one way, I’ve used it as apositive,” he said.The match should be played in fine weather on a Bellerive Oval wicketcurator Peter Apps said should be dry, even and hard.The match is a sell-out at the 16,000 capacity ground.

Rain spoils Blues' push for a win

Rain should ruin any chance of an outright result in the Pura Cup cricket match here between Victoria and New South Wales.Showers forced four delays today, with more than two and a half hours of play lost, and the forecast is also grim for tomorrow’s final day.Victoria was 4-69 at stumps, with Ian Harvey 12 and Darren Berry 10, after losing 3-0 in a brief session of play soon after tea.Stuart Clark had 2-15, while Nathan Bracken and Stuart MacGill had a wicket apiece and Brad Hodge scored 26.NSW was dismissed for 338 before lunch, giving it first-innings points and a lead of 79 after Victoria made 259.Michael Bevan top-scored with 128, Mathew Inness impressed with three wickets this morning for innings figures of 4-61 and Harvey snared 3-53.The Blues resumed on 5-257 and Brad Haddin (33) sent them past Victoria’s first innings score with a four in the second over of the day.Victorian captain Matthew Elliott was unable to field again this morning because of a stomach virus that had him laid up on a massage table in the changerooms.Under competition rules he was unable to open the batting, but if he is well enough and any play is possible tomorrow, he will be the next man in for Victoria.

Chetan Sachdev holds Tripura together

The innings held together largely by Chetan Sachdev, Tripura reached atotal of 266/6 by the close of play on Day One of their Ranji Trophyleague match against Bihar at Agartala.Winning the toss, Tripura elected to bat but found themselves reelingat 63/4. A small partnership then developed between Timir Chanda andSachdev before the former departed at 116, having made 44.Sachdev was then joined by Abdul Sattar, and the two put on 134 runsbefore Sattar was dismissed for 63. At the close of play, Sachdev wasunbeaten on 99 off 209 balls, and Rajib Dutta (8*) was also at thecrease.

Soggy welcome for Zimbabweans

Zimbabwe received the dampest of welcomes to England, on and off the pitch,as the first day of their opening tour match against British Universitieswas reduced to 38 overs by rain. By the close, the universities had madesteady and unspectacular progress to 92 for 2, though they were denied fullvalue for their shots by a quagmire of an outfield.Most of the interest in the game lay elsewhere, in the expected protestsfrom the Stop the Tour campaign, who have described the Zimbabweans as”spokesmen for Robert Mugabe” and have promised to stage demonstrations atevery ground. But, like the smattering of spectators, they were unenthusedby the conditions, with no more than seven protestors turning up.Warwickshire’s chief executive Dennis Amiss, who had instigated extensivesecurity arrangements for the match, was very satisfied with the day. “I amquite happy,” said Amiss. “There has been no sign of any trouble. Theprecautions taken have been worthwhile and the extra expense is nominal.”On the field, the universities captain, Jimmy Adams, top-scored with anexcellent 42, before falling in the last over before lunch.

The mirage of a promising series

Rarely could a contest that promised so much have produced so little as the 1981-82 series between India and England. The Indians had performed very well at home over the past few years, and their feat of sharing a rubber in Australia for the first time the previous season had generated considerable interest. The Englishmen, for their part, had come back in dream fashion during the summer to win the Ashes after a fascinating contest with Australia. Naturally, the stage seemed set for a battle royal.


Kapil Dev and Dilip Vengsarkar provided some entertaining batting along the way, and Ravi Shastri, with ‘a 30-year-old head on 20-year-old shoulders,’ came of age as a utility man during the series. But the inability of Krishnamachari Srikkanth, Pranab Roy, Kirti Azad, Ashok Malhotra and Sandip Patil to make the most of their opportunities was a handicap that India could ill afford.


What was served up to an unsuspecting public, however, was a damp squib. Five of the six Tests were drawn, all of them in a row after India wrapped up the first Test in four days. The cricket was of the comatose variety, the batting uninspired, and the bowling little better.Moreover, it was largely slow-motion cricket, with a negative strategy being blatantly pursued by both sides. Even slow bowlers took their time in sending down their overs, and time was wasted at any available opportunity. Symbolizing the tardy approach was the England over rate on the third morning of the fifth Test at Madras, less than 10 per hour. Laborious batting, ridiculously slow over rates, and defensive tactics ruined the series as a spectacle, despite the fact that there were dynamic players on both sides, including two of the leading all-rounders in the game in Kapil Dev and Ian Botham.The England super-star came to this country riding a crest of success following his unbelievable feats in the Ashes series. He did not disappoint, topping the Test averages with 440 runs at 55.00. Only in bowling was he some disappointment. But then, on slow, placid pitches, it was almost next to impossible for any bowler to pick up wickets easily, and his figures of 17 wickets at 38.82 must be viewed in this perspective.Graham Gooch and David Gower were the other enterprising players. The former topped the aggregates both for the Tests (487) and the tour (967) and generally was in rip-roaring form. Gower was less consistent, but he did get 375 runs in the Tests and 755 on the tour. Geoffrey Boycott and Chris Tavare were predictably more cautious in their approach, but they also finished among the runs. Boycott, making his first tour of India at 41, played only in the first four Tests, but this was enough for him to achieve his primary objective of becoming the highest run-getter in Test history. In the third Test at New Delhi, he surpassed Gary Sobers’ tally of 8032 runs, also completing his 22nd and last century in what turned out to be his penultimate Test. He also had the satisfaction of heading the tour figures, scoring 701 runs at an average of 77.89. The inability of skipper Keith Fletcher to strike form and the failure of Mike Gatting, however, meant that the batting had loopholes and could be pierced.The much-vaunted England bowling of Bob Willis, Botham, John Lever, Derek Underwood, Graham Dilley and John Emburey was blunted by slow pitches, and the Indian batsmen had no difficulty in negotiating them. Sunil Gavaskar ended up with his usual packet of runs ­ 500 runs at 62.50, including a mammoth 172 in the second Test at Bangalore, for which he batted 708 minutes ­ the longest innings by an Indian in first-class cricket. In fact, he was on the field for all but four balls of the match, opening the innings and being ninth out. Gundappa Viswanath, after a slow start, got a century and a double century, finishing with 466 runs at 58.25. His 222 in the fifth Test at Madras was the highest by an Indian against England.During that match, he and Yashpal Sharma also became the seventh pair of batsmen to bat throughout an uninterrupted day of Test cricket. Indeed, it was only the second time that England had failed to take a wicket during a complete day’s play, and the two became only the second Indian pair after Vinoo Mankad and Pankaj Roy (during their record 413-run opening partnership) to bat unbeaten through a day’s play in Test cricket. The third-wicket partnership of 316 runs between Viswanath and Yashpal was the Indian record for that wicket against all countries.Kapil Dev and Dilip Vengsarkar provided some entertaining batting along the way, and Ravi Shastri, with ‘a 30-year-old head on 20-year-old shoulders,’ came of age as a utility man during the series. But the inability of Krishnamachari Srikkanth, Pranab Roy, Kirti Azad, Ashok Malhotra and Sandip Patil to make the most of their opportunities was a handicap that India could ill afford. Patil was a major disappointment, especially after his heroics in Australia, and was dropped midway through the series, as was Srikkanth, who had been hailed as a bright new star with his swashbuckling approach.The Indian bowling, in the hands of two medium-pacers and two left-arm spinners, lacked variety. With the exception of Dilip Doshi, the attack could do little on the unhelpful pitches. Shastri was still on the learning curve, while Kapil Dev and Madan Lal, after their purple patch at Bombay when they dismissed England on their own for 102, could achieve little. Doshi, however, bowled with his heart on his sleeve and finished with 22 wickets at 21.27 apiece ­ a splendid record, given the circumstances. The tour also featured a one-day international series in which India performed commendably, winning by a 2-1 margin. The first match of the series at Ahmedabad was, in fact, the first one-day international in India.

Frustration at Edgbaston as match ends in draw

There were angry shouts from spectators as Warwickshire’s CricInfoChampionship Division Two game against Derbyshire lapsed into frustration and bloody-mindedness before ending in a draw, which served neither county’s best interests.Derbyshire needed victory to ease their plight at the bottom of the table and Warwickshire to improve their chance of promotion but the loss of 75 minutes of play at the start of the day effectively ruined the chance of a positive outcome.Derbyshire, 165-runs ahead overnight and with eight wickets standing, needed to make runs quickly to get the arithmetic right for an equitable declaration but Warwickshire frustrated this hope with defensive fields and the outcome was an attritional day.”We might have been able to come up with something if Warwickshire had played ball a bit but as soon as we started getting after the bowling they put two sweepers on,” commented Derbyshire’s cricket manager Colin Wells.Warwickshire could reasonably argue that the loss of in-form batsman Dominic Ostler, ruled out for the rest of the season with an elbow injury, limited their scope for contriving a result but there was precious little sympathy for either team from spectators.When drinks were taken in mid-afternoon one man yelled: “Get on with the game you bloody loafers” and there were more jeers when the game ended with Derbyshire declaring at 435-5, a lead of 396.Graeme Welch added an innings of 64 – his best for Derbyshire – to figures of 5-53 against his former county and Luke Sutton also took full advantage of an assortment of occasional bowlers to score 110 not out, his maiden first-class century.

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