Uganda take title with comprehensive win

An emphatic opening partnership gave Uganda an upset victory over Namibia in the final in Kampala, after the visitors had won both their previous clashes in the tournament. Roger Mukasa (42) and Arthur Kyobe (34) put on 82 in 8.2 overs and the pace of their stand meant that despite four quick wickets, Uganda were way ahead of the asking rate. Frank Nsubuga and Benjamin Musoke ensured Uganda eased to the title in the 18th over with an unbroken 44-run partnership.Namibia had got off to a similar start, when Louis van der Westhuizen – Player of the Tournament for his 406 runs and 14 wickets – and captain Craig Williams added 75 inside ten overs. Like Uganda, Namibia too suffered a middle-order collapse, but unlike the winners, they could never recover and kept losing wickets. Seamer Deusdedit Muhumza led the way for Uganda, picking up 3 for 26 to finish as the leading wicket-taker of the tournament with 18 victims from nine games. None of the Namibian batsmen apart from the openers made more than 15 as Brian Masaba and Davis Arinaitwe took two wickets each.Both sides had already qualified for the ICC World Twenty20 2012 Global Qualifier, having taken the top two places in the points table. The performances taken into account for determining qualification excluded all matches involving Kenya, who were assured of qualification being an Associate/Affiliate ODI nation, irrespective of the results of this tournament.Kenya, after having also lost both their games to Nigeria previously, finished on a high as a Nigeria batting collapse handed them victory by 23 runs in the third-place play-off. Ademola Onikoyi had given Nigeria a strong start in their chase of 163, putting on 43 with the steady Segun Olayinka. Offspinner Vinit Shikotra gave Kenya the breakthrough, trapping Olayinka leg-before, and his dismissal started a procession of wickets. Onikoyi tried to keep Nigeria in the hunt, hitting seven fours in his 53 off 39 deliveries. But left-arm spinner Raj Savala had him caught in a three-wicket burst which also included the wicket of Nigeria captain Endurance Ofem. Three run-outs rounded off a poor batting show and Nigeria ended on 139 for 9.The Kenya middle order had earlier batted around a half-century from Irfan Karim – son of former Kenya captain Asif Karim – who remained unbeaten on 55 off 49 deliveries. Karim steadied the innings after the dismissal of the openers left Kenya at 37 for 2. They were able to eventually get to 162 due to a furious cameo from Harrison Angila, who smashed four sixes in making 27 off only seven deliveries. Kenya were also helped by the 16 wides that Nigeria bowled.

Bravo, Sarwan set up West Indies' win

Scorecard and ball-by-ball details
How they were outDarren Bravo and Ramnaresh Sarwan were the key men in West Indies’ chase•Associated Press

In 12 balls Darren Bravo went from being cheap imitation to being a decent impression of Brian Lara, setting up West Indies’ win with 34 off 12 after his rather strange go-slow seemed to have countered Ramnaresh Sarwan’s 75, leaving them 80 to get off the last eight overs. This was the second time this season that West Indies won two matches after losing the series, but it was also a complete role reversal: usually known to fluff their lines in the end, they pulled this back in the last overs of both innings. Andre Russell and Anthony Martin facilitated the comeback with the ball as West Indies took the last seven wickets for 62, and Bravo’s effort transformed the seemingly intentless innings.The Sabina Park crowd danced its way to a din. Sir Viv Richards watched coolly from a box; the discarded Chris Gayle, sporting a new Afro, celebrated in the stands; and the current captain Darren Sammy jumped for joy after what seemed like hours of pensive silence in the players’ balcony. Immediately after the winning runs were hit, with an ultimately comfortable eight balls to spare, Samuels ran straight towards Gayle, jumped the fence, and shook his hand.That West Indies could hit so well in the end was also down to the best pitch of the whole ODI season in the West Indies. It had pace, it had bounce, it tested the batsmen, and it also offered value for shots – a welcome change from the slow and low affairs in Trinidad and Antigua. In the first half of the match, Virat Kohli and Rohit Sharma passed the test even as their team-mates struggled, and also managed to play the shots that got them runs.

Smart Stats

  • The unbeaten 103-run stand between Darren Bravo and Ramnaresh Sarwan is the fifth-highest third-wicket stand for West Indies against India in ODIs

  • Bravo’s 86 is his fifth half-century and his highest score in ODIs. His previous best was 79 against Sri Lanka in Colombo earlier in 2011

  • Sarwan is third on the list of highest run-getters for West Indies in ODIs against India behind Desmond Haynes and Shivnarine Chanderpaul. His average of 61.66 though, is thje highest among all West Indian batsmen who have 1000 or more ODI runs against India

  • Andre Russell picked up his second four-wicket haul in eight ODIs. He now has 15 wickets at an average of 20.06. In three matches in the series, he has picked up eight wickets for 110 runs at an economy rate of 4.48

  • This is the 25th time overall and the sixth time against India that West Indies have successfully chased a 250-plus target in ODIs

  • The 110-run stand between Virat Kohli and Rohit Sharma is the fourth highest for India for the fourth wicket in ODIs against West Indies

After Kemar Roach and Andre Russell had hustled the Indian openers out, Kohli hardly looked at unease. He saw Manoj Tiwary look a bit uncomfortable, and then try to hit out, at the other end, but he never needed to resort to taking risks. For a man who favours the front foot a touch, Kohli didn’t show too many problems transferring the weight back, and more impressively wasn’t troubled when the bowlers tried the surprise full ball.There were edgy moments as was expected on a juicy pitch, but there were quite a few loose ones on offer too. And Kohli waited for them, taking full advantage. Rohit, at the other end, seemed to carry from his good form, ending as the series’ highest run-getter. He hit only two fours and a six in his half-century, but the duo still went at a brisk pace, adding 110 in 20 overs.Kohli’s run-out, a mix of an ill-judged second and a special bit of fielding by Sarwan at fine leg, started the turnaround. Martin was the first to capitalise on that, bowling Rohit in the first over the Powerplay. Russell then came back and went for broke. He bowled bouncers of different pace, didn’t mind the odd wide, and ran through the lower order with three wickets in eight deliveries.If Russell bowled like there was no tomorrow, the batsmen seemed to be leaving the chase for some other day. Adrian Barath and Bravo were the early culprits even as Sarwan played the best innings since his comeback. Barath benefited from two dropped catches and two run-outs in his 46-ball 17, and Bravo struggled with the same trait of either hitting shots straight to fielders or defending with hard hands. He took 58 balls to cross the strike-rate of 50.That meant Sarwan had to take risks. He pulled Ishant Sharma from wide outside off, backed away and cut over cover, and had to go big at the first sight of the part-timers. In the 33rd over, with the asking-rate having reached 7.38, he lofted Suresh Raina for a four and a six, and it seemed that finally the real Sarwan was ready to replace the pretender we have been used to over the season.With that six, though, he started cramping up, and after a struggle for five overs and more than a few raised eyebrows from the umpires, he walked off. Samuels came in, took his time to settle in, and Bravo too hardly seemed to be taking the initiative. Sixteen came in the first four overs of the partnership, and Bravo then asked for the Powerplay.Boom. The game changed. As inexplicable as his first 51 off 84 were, there was a ridiculous ease about his hitting in the Powerplay. R Ashwin was the first one to suffer, going for sixes over wide long-on and cow corner. Mishra for the first time in the series was out of his comfort zone, and he dished out a high full toss, which Bravo deposited into the grass on the other side of the boundary. The next ball was a regulation sweep, but it carried over square leg for another six. In the next over, he lofted a Vinay Kumar slower delivery over long-off. All three had respectable figures until then; not only were they rearranged, West Indies now needed just 42 off 33. Mishra came back to have Bravo stumped with a googly, but Samuels and Kieron Pollard showed enough sense, skill and power to turn the rest into a cruise.

Mumbai humbled by the other Shane

Scorecard and ball-by-ball details
Shane Watson was all over Mumbai Indians•AFP

The prospect of a final face-off between Sachin Tendulkar and Shane Warne had dominated the build-up to this clash, but on the field it was overshadowed by an imposing performance from Shane Watson. Not only did he deliver a fitting farewell for his captain from competitive cricket, he also left Mumbai Indians under serious pressure to keep their qualification chances alive following a third straight defeat. For someone who had struggled to capitalise on starts through this tournament, Watson compensated with a splendid all-round effort, with each of his crushing blows serving Mumbai a painful reminder of what they should have achieved on a good pitch.The Tendulkar-Warne contest should have been a non-event as left-arm spinner Ankeet Chavan trapped Tendulkar twice in front, only for umpire Paul Reiffel to think otherwise. Backed up by his disciplined bowling at one end, Watson dismissed T Suman and Ambati Rayudu in successive overs from the other, depriving the hosts of the attacking start they would have hoped for after choosing to bat. And just as Kieron Pollard had warmed up at the death after muscling a couple of boundaries, Watson cleaned him up to restrict Mumbai to a below-par total, one that was given some respectability by a classy half-century from Rohit Sharma.It didn’t take long for Watson to set about punishing Mumbai, as he smote Harbhajan Singh for two massive sixes over midwicket in the second over of the chase. He followed that up by drilling Lasith Malinga past mid-off in an over that perhaps produced his only moment of discomfort. Malinga responded venomously, knocking back Watson’s chin with a bouncer – it escaped the grill, there would have been some pain but Watson didn’t flinch. His own response? A memorable counterattack, pulling Malinga each time he dropped short, his next seven balls producing three fours, a flat six and a stunned crowd not used to seeing their star-studded home team being overwhelmed in that manner.A sense of resignation was felt in the crowd, if not among the players, when Watson smacked Harbhajan for three consecutive fours in his comeback over, while Rahul Dravid, happy to play the supporting role, showed his own class with some delightful boundaries off Pollard and Munaf Patel. The pair remained unbeaten, Rajasthan cantered home, marking a satisfactory end after their turmoil-filled build-up to the tournament.Rohit had won praise from Warne as one of the most exciting talents in Indian cricket, and he undoubtedly would have impressed his opposing captain with his performance today. He quickly took the lead in the stand with Tendulkar, his stand-out shot being an imposing drive against Warne through extra cover, matched by a delightful punch in the same region off Johan Botha who couldn’t restrain Rohit despite chasing him as he made room.Rohit used his feet well to spin, and stepped up in the late overs after Tendulkar perished to an upper cut off Amit Singh. Warne though, wasn’t finishing his spell without a cheer. His final victory with the ball was the stumping of Rohit, stunned by the turn and losing his bat to square leg with a wild swing gone bad. At the end of the game, Warne was still smiling while Mumbai stayed baffled.

McDonald ton holds Leicestershire together

ScorecardAndrew McDonald smashed an enthralling century for Leicestershire on the first day of their County Championship match against Northamptonshire at Wantage Road.The visitors were teetering on 15 for 3 when Australia international McDonald came to the crease but he hammered 164 off just 140 balls with his sensational knock including 26 fours and two sixes.Paceman Jack Brooks took the first five-wicket haul of his career, with figures of five for 80 as Leicestershire were bowled out for 313 before Northants survived 12 overs to close on 32 without loss. Leicestershire won the toss and chose to bat but they lost Will Jefferson for just a single in the fourth over when he was trapped lbw by Brooks, who was to wreak havoc from the Lynn Wilson End.Veteran Paul Nixon then made only three before chopping Brooks’ delivery onto his leg stump and things were to soon get worse. England Lion James Taylor edged to Northants wicketkeeper David Murphy to give Brooks his third wicket, but McDonald led the recovery by crashing a half-century off 51 balls.However, Brooks was to have the last word before lunch by forcing Matthew Boyce, who was on 26, to edge to Northants captain Andrew Hall at first slip. McDonald went on to complete an explosive century off 98 balls with a four behind square leg off Hall.Wayne White was to fall just short of a half-century on 47 when he smashed James Middlebrook to Stephen Peters at mid-wicket to end a fifth-wicket stand of 118. McDonald then reached 150 off 130 balls with a straight six off Brooks as the visitors piled on 174 runs in the afternoon session to reach tea on 264 for 5.But he walked after the first ball of the evening when he nudged David Lucas to Murphy to end a breathtaking innings. Wicketkeeper Paul Dixey then faced 16 balls without scoring before being pinned lbw by Middlebrook after missing his attempted sweep.Leicestershire were now struggling again and they soon lost Jigar Naik for 27 when he wildly slashed Lucas to Middlebrook at gully. Their captain Matthew Hoggard went for a duck when he was caught by Murphy off Lucas before Brooks sealed his five-for when Claude Henderson (23) launched him to Alex Wakely at mid-on to end the innings.The Northants openers, Peters and Ben Howgego, then batted through to the close of play and will resume tomorrow on 26 and 6 respectively.

Yusuf and Co. make sloppy Deccan Chargers pay

Scorecard and ball-by-ball detailsDeccan Chargers let themselves down badly on the field•AFP

Deccan Chargers dropped too many catches in the first half of the game to allow Kolkata Knight Riders to motor along to 169, and then dropped intensity alarmingly in the chase to succumb to their sixth defeat in nine games. Yusuf Pathan was the biggest beneficiary of Deccan’s fielding largesse, surviving three clangers to pummel his way to his highest score of the season. His assault yielded 47 off 26 balls, and he helped Kolkata double their score in the last eight overs in Manoj Tiwary’s company.Deccan’s pursuit followed a similar template to their misfiring chase against Chennai: Sunny Sohal kept opening up the off side and swiping in hope and Shikhar Dhawan once again receded into a shell after starting with promise. As he has done regularly this season, Iqbal Abdulla made things happen, removing Sohal and Kumar Sangakkara in his second over with clever changes of pace. Cameron White then crawled listlessly as the chase slumped to a mid-innings comatose. Rajat Bhatia put White out of his misery in the 11th over, and the game was over as a contest when Daniel Christian was wrongly adjudged lbw three balls later. Dhawan tried to reignite Deccan’s hopes, but the innings had meandered too far off course by then.It seemed unlikely that Deccan would be chasing 170 when they limited Kolkata to 84 for 3 by the 12th over. Gautam Gambhir exited at that pivotal juncture, leaving two new batsmen to do a repair job. Deccan, however, simply refused to seize the moment. Pragyan Ojha kept attacking with flight, and Yusuf tried to break free by lofting over the leg side. He was beaten in the air, though, and Amit Mishra ran back at long-off to get under the mis-hit. Drop. In the next over, Mishra had Yusuf miscuing in the same direction, towards Christian. Another drop. The next ball was whacked with the turn over the extra-cover boundary, and Kolkata never looked back.Sangakkara missed a trick by holding Dale Steyn’s second spell back until the 16th over. Yusuf had got his eye in by then, and the fact that Tiwary faced that entire over did not help Deccan’s cause. Tiwary looted two off-side fours off Steyn, before Yusuf thumped Ishant Sharma for a massive six over long-on. By the time Dhawan grassed Yusuf again in the 19th over, Deccan were in damage-control mode, and doing a poor job at it. Tiwary launched Christian for six more, before Yusuf fore-handed Ishant and whipped Steyn for boundaries to ensure Kolkata finished with a bang.The start of Kolkata’s innings was a dawdle by comparison, in spite of Eoin Morgan’s innate energy at the crease. He nearly ran himself out first ball, and charged out to the third and dumped Christian over long-on for a six. Thereafter Jacques Kallis settled into accumulation mode. He checked in with a typically pristine set of boundaries, charming Steyn through the covers, before redirecting short balls from Ishant on either side of the wicket for fours.Gambhir took charge after Christian foxed Morgan with a slow offcutter. Gambhir lofted his first ball emphatically over the covers for four, before slashing Ojha through point. His joust with Christian was the most captivating mini-battle of the session, and included a heaved pull for six, a drop, a collision and a heated exchange of words. Kolkata progressed to 73 in the first ten overs, and Deccan were in need of some inspiration. The spinners produced just that, with Mishra foxing Kallis in the flight and Ojha hoodwinking Gambhir, but the fielding was about to let them down big-time. Yusuf exacted full toll, and ensured it was another forgettable night for the Hyderabad supporters who have witnessed only one home win in three-and-a-half seasons.

Smith banks on aggressive bowling line-up

Graeme Smith may have anticipated walking into a wind tunnel for his pre-match press conference at the VCA Stadium. With Group B’s headline clash, between South Africa and India, just a few hours away, the media conjured up a gale force of questions, many of them not about the upcoming game. It began as a breeze, with a few small chats about bowling options, got gustier once the line of questioning changed to mindset, and then the hurricane arrived. “This team usually arrive as favourites and end up being branded chokers, how do you stay sane?”The reporter meant little malice, but it was just the type of question that had the possibility to annoy Smith. But he was stronger than that. The smile stayed on his face as he answered. “The sanity in the squad is keeping all the outside influences out,” Smith said. “We’ve been able to put a decent perspective on things in the group.”It’s the angle that Smith and his team are viewing things from that refused to allow him to be swayed by the sentiment that the loss against England has left them in crisis, not necessarily as far as qualifying for the knockouts goes, but mentally. Smith said that it has not. “I’d like to think that our confidence and strength within the group is more powerful than one result.”What that one result seems to have done is given the team the confidence to face the graves of all their past stumbles that the critics have dug up. “Our past is our past and we can’t hide from it. There is no point in trying to hide from the perception [that we struggle under pressure], the current group of players have to challenge the perception.”Even if it means that until they win a major tournament, they will be challenging that perception every time they step onto a cricket field, it’s something they are willing to do. The challenge starts again against India, who South Africa beat 3-2 in an ODI series at home before this World Cup, and at a venue where they have enjoyed success, albeit in a Test match, just a year ago.Dale Steyn is one of the many wicket-taking options that Graeme Smith says South Africa have•Getty Images

“I think I’ve spent a month of my life in Nagpur now, so we know it pretty well,” Smith joked before turning to the more serious matter of the value that familiarity of the opposition will add. Although the Indian ODI squad in South Africa was without Virender Sehwag, Gautam Gambhir and Sachin Tendulkar, Smith feels that South Africa have seen enough of them to feel comfortable that they have adequate first-hand knowledge of India. “We know each other quite well having spent the whole summer playing against each other. It’s going to be a wonderful occasion and we’re looking forward to it.”The Indian batting line-up, in particular the three who missed the series in South Africa, will be drooling at the sight of the Nagpur pitch, devoid of grass and promising runs. What they have to come up against is a South African attack that has conceded less than 230 in all three outings in the tournament so far. Besides being disciplined, they’ve been dangerous and have bowled out all three sides they have come up against. “As a bowling unit, we’ve been very strong and our unpredictability stands us in good stead,” Smith said.It’s the element of surprise that makes them so different to the seam-heavy attacks of the past and the fact that all bowlers are now wicket-takers that makes them a tricky attack to plan to. While Dhoni said he was happy for his bowlers to concede sparsely and not take wickets some of the time, Smith feels it’s the attacking intent which has proved a good form of defence for them. “We feel it’s the best way to curb run-rate and to control the game. We’ve got a lot of wicket-taking options in our line-up, which is what we wanted.”With legspinner Imran Tahir a doubtful starter, South Africa may bring back left-armer Lonwabo Tsotsobe, who has not played a game in the tournament yet. He was the leading wicket-taker in the series against India, with 13 scalps and in batsmen-friendly conditions, the extra seamer could be a better option than the extra batsman.With the bowling options appearing limitless, and the batting strong, South Africa seem to have few worries ahead of the big match. Smith wasn’t allowed to breathe in the fresh air outside the media cauldron, or even just a sigh of relief, before being asked about his own nemesis, Zaheer Khan, who has the better of him in five out of 13 ODIs. “He is a quality bowler but I have worked on a few things with Duncan [Fletcher] and hopefully it will pay off.”

Ramprakash extends Surrey contract

Mark Ramprakash has extended his playing deal at Surrey County Cricket Club until the end of the 2012 season. Ramprakash, who will now be 43 by the time the deal expires, has scored 15,030 first-class runs for Surrey at an average of 74.40, including 60 of his 113 first-class centuries.Although he is currently rehabilitating following a cruciate knee ligament injury suffered whilst playing football in November last year, Ramprakash expects to be back playing by late May.During the 2008 season, Ramprakash became the 25th cricketer to reach 100 first-class centuries, notching 106 not out against Yorkshire at Headingley. Since then, he has recorded a further 13 hundreds, a tally that puts him just one below the great Sir Vivian Richards and he only requires five more to surpass Sir Donald Bradman.”I am still enjoying my cricket, maintaining my fitness and am still able to score runs for Surrey, so extending my contract was a very simple decision for me,” said Ramprakash.”Under Chris Adams and Rory Hamilton-Brown, Surrey has a very exciting young side who I feel have the capability to win trophies over the next two years. Helping them achieve their potential will be both enjoyable and rewarding and I look forward to playing my full part over the next two years at the Kia Oval.”Surrey Professional Cricket Manager Chris Adams added: “Mark Ramprakash is the finest domestic batsman of his generation and still has a huge amount to offer Surrey County Cricket Club.”To have a man with his ability, experience and energy in your dressing room is simply something that cannot be bought and I look forward to continue working with him for the next two seasons.”

Unstoppable England create their own history

England were kept waiting for their moment of sweet release – an hour and 53 minutes in fact – until Chris Tremlett kicked a length ball off the inside edge and into the stumps of Australia’s No. 11, Michael Beer. But far from being a frustration, their leisurely saunter to victory was an opportunity to soak in a day that will live with these players until they are buried as far into history as Douglas Jardine, Len Hutton, Ray Illingworth, and every other England cricketer who has played a part in winning an Ashes series in Australia.”It’s going to be a dressing room full of pride this afternoon,” said England’s victorious captain, Andrew Strauss. “And probably a bit of alcohol I would have thought.” Some six hours after the final wicket had fallen, Strauss was true to his word, as he and his unsteady team-mates staggered out to the precise spot where Beer had been bowled, and sat in a circle to crack open some stubbies and suck in that winning feeling.A crowd of 19,274 rolled through the turnstiles free of charge on the final day of the series, and some 17,000 of those were ecstatic England fans, parked down at third man at the Randwick End and rattling through a repertoire of Barmy Army songs – “Swann will tear you apart”, “That Mitchell Johnson …” – that are sure to appear in these players’ dreams, for better (and in many Australians’ cases for worse), for months and years to come.It was a day punctuated by showers, and maybe even by tears, as Paul Collingwood – a self-proclaimed “softie” – was given the honour of leading the players down the pavilion steps and onto the field for his final day as a Test cricketer. It was also punctuated by a handful of meaty blows, as Steven Smith took the opportunity to snaffle his first Ashes half-century, a futile gesture that used to be England’s stock-in-trade in situations such as this. But as each of England’s players in turn responded to their fans’ request for “a wave”, it was clear that this was no ordinary morning of Ashes cricket. Not for a generation has an Australian defeat been so inevitable.”It feels pretty special if I’m honest,” said Strauss. “Until an Ashes series is finally over you’ve got half an eye on what’s to come, so even in Melbourne we were still very conscious that we wanted to finish on a high and show people that we deserved to win this series. Now we’ve done that I think we can have a big sigh of relief and be very proud of what we’ve achieved, because not many sides have come out here and won, certainly not many that [have won] as emphatically as we did in the end.”England’s triumph has been staggeringly conclusive, not merely because of the sizes of their victories or the magnitude of their statistical achievements, but for the breadth and depth of the contributors along the way. Alastair Cook’s gargantuan tally of 766 runs in seven innings was the stand-out performance – maybe even of the decade, let alone the series – but as Michael Vaughan would testify, after racking up 633 in England’s 4-1 defeat eight years ago, it would have counted for nothing without support from the other end.It wasn’t just support, but solidarity that Cook received along the way, as England turned the statistical tables after their peculiar triumph in 2009, and outscored Australia by nine centuries to three. Their final innings of the series, 644, was their highest of all time in Australia, and only their third 600-plus total in Ashes cricket since the second world war – the second of which, 5 for 620 declared, came three Tests ago in Adelaide. With 513 at Melbourne and that unforgettable 1 for 517 in the second innings at the Gabba, England even outstripped the Wally Hammond-powered campaign of 1928-29 in passing 500 on an unprecedented four separate occasions.”It’s not often you get as many people in great form as we’ve had on this tour, but when you do it’s a pretty hard force to stop,” said Strauss. “You’ve seen what our side’s all about, it’s about discipline and patience and building pressure, and relying on performances from all 11 people. What happens over the course of a series – and we found in 2006-07 – that once one side gets on top and wins emphatically once or twice, then it’s very hard to come back at them. I think that’s maybe where we got to in this Test match, because we were as confident as I’ve ever seen an England team.”The bowling, in its own way, was every bit as remarkable. With the exception of the second innings at the Gabba, where England were limited to 26 overs on a surface better suited to the Timeless Test of 1928-29, they claimed every single Australian wicket bar the injured Ryan Harris at Melbourne, and did so with a repertoire of seam, spin, swing and thrift that few imagined could come to them so easily in conditions that were thought to be so alien.James Anderson is an unlikely name to bracket alongside Harold Larwood, Frank Tyson and John Snow – the out-and-out pacemen whose names are synonymous with the triumphs of 1932-33, 1954-55 and 1970-71. However, with 24 wickets at 26.04, and no more than four in any given innings, his claim to a place in that pantheon is immense. They said he would not be able to make the Kookaburra dance to his tune, and he demonstrated a mastery of every weapon a modern fast bowler could require; new-ball swing at Adelaide, conventional seam at Melbourne, and old-ball reverse at Sydney, as Australia’s batting crumbled for the final time on another blameless surface.More than anything, however, it was the frugality of England’s methods that pushed Australia to the brink. As Strauss admitted in the aftermath of the Melbourne win, the greatest lesson of the 2006-07 whitewash had been the power of suffocation – never more aptly demonstrated than at Adelaide in that fateful second Test, when England’s collapse was set in motion by a run-rate that never exceeded two an over.So England adopted the technique, and adapted it to their own purposes. Stuart Broad may have claimed just two wickets at 80.50 in the series before succumbing to his stomach injury, but he set the benchmark for attrition by conceding his runs at just 2.30 an over, a policy that was adopted with staggering success by Tim Bresnan when his own turn came to front up in the festive finale. But above all there was Anderson, whom Australians recall for a four-ball an over four years ago, diligently buzzing along the party line, and following the exhortation of his bowling coach David Saker, that a cuttable delivery was the work of the devil.”I certainly had a feeling after the last Ashes out here that the best way to compete out here is to strangle the opposition, especially Australia, I suppose,” said Strauss. “In order to do that you need very accurate bowlers, and fortunately very accurate bowlers turned up at the right time for us. We knew pretty much what we were going to get out of them. We’re very fortunate that those guys were able to deliver so the plan was able to work.”Little of what transpired, however, would have been possible without the holy ghost of England’s Ashes-winning trinity, a set of fielders who, as a unit, can scarcely have been bettered in the team’s entire Test history. Leading the line in that department – as he has done throughout his international career – was Paul Collingwood, whose nine catches were the most by any outfield player, and included the outstanding pluck of Ricky Ponting in the first innings at Perth. Meanwhile Jonathan Trott, a potential weak link, turned himself into a dead-eyed stalker at midwicket, from where he pinged down the stumps at Adelaide to run out Simon Katich without facing a ball, and set the standard for England’s “perfect” Test.”I think we have proved it is possible for English sides to win out here, and proved you don’t need a mystery spinner or a guy that bowls at 95mph to do it,” said Strauss. “You just need a lot of guys performing well and consistently. Australia will regenerate and come back strong, because that is the way Australian sport is, but I think we have overcome a barrier. But if we just turn up next time expecting to win we will get the treatment we have had for the last 24 years.”Whether Strauss returns in four years’ time remains to be seen – the likelihood is that, at the age of 37, he will already have passed the reins to his deputy, Alastair Cook, whose formidable performance on this trip ensures he will be treated with nothing but reverence when he next sets foot on these shores. But as was the case in 2009, the time for proper reflection will have to wait until he’s settled back in an armchair with his pipe and slippers,and no doubt replaying in his mind the images he accrued on a memorable final morning.”I think at the end of my career I will sit back and think it is one of the most special times in my career definitely,” he said. “But while I am captaining the side I am not doing my job properly if I am not looking forward to what is to come, and trying to get the guys to keep improving and going forward as a side. I can’t pat myself on the back too much at this stage and even if I did I don’t think my team-mates would let me.”

Canada and Barbados win on bowlers' day

Canada opened their Caribbean T20 campaign with a convincing 23-run win over Hampshire at the Sir Vivian Richards Stadium in Antigua. After choosing to bat, Canada seemed to have made an inadequate 129, but it proved sufficient as a couple of run-outs and a stifling spell from left-arm spinner Parth Desai kept Hampshire to 106 for 8.Canada made a solid, but unhurried, start as their openers put on 39 in six overs before Hiral Patel was run out. Ruvindu Gunasekera, who dominated the opening stand, fell in the next over and their batting mainstay, Ashish Bagai, was also dismissed soon after for 8. Thirty-two-year-old Rizwan Cheema then ensured the run-rate remained above six with a quick 31 that included two sixes.Chasing a smallish target, Hampshire made a slow and steady start before losing their way. Even at 65 for 3 in the 14th over, they were not irredeemably off course, but they lost three wickets for five runs in the next two overs to be shut out of the match.The day’s second match was also a low-scoring encounter, during which Barbados chased down 113 despite two brief rain interruptions. Leeward Islands had opted to bat, but a top-order failure meant they didn’t make the most of winning the toss. They were 44 for 5 at one stage, and out of the top five only Devon Thomas made it to double digits. Thirties from Tonito Willett and Justin Athanaze pushed Leewards past 100, but their total still proved too small.Barbados’ top-order also failed, and they were stuttering at 23 for 4, with big-hitter Dwayne Smith dismissed for 13. Man of the Match Alcino Holder, though, made an unbeaten 44, the highest score in the match, to steer Barbados to victory in the final over.

Morkel awaits duel with 'dangerous' openers

The three-Test series between South Africa and India starting in Centurion on Thursday has been dubbed a contest between South African bowling and Indian batting. For Morne Morkel, the crux of that battle will be between the openers on both sides of that equation.”Gautam [Gambhir] and [Virender] Sehwag upfront are very dangerous. Not long ago Gautam was No. 1 in the world and we all know how destructive Virender can be against the new ball,” Morkel said at a press conference in Centurion on Tuesday. “It’s a contest we are looking forward to especially here on South African wickets where you don’t just have five overs where the new ball is vital – it tends to bounce for a bit longer.”Morkel knows the Centurion pitch very well. He plies his domestic trade at SuperSport Park for the Titans and has observed a few changes in the strip he has bowled on for so many years. “They’ve changed the square a little bit and there is a little more life in the wicket,” he said. Being on national duty has meant that Morkel has not played many franchise games, but in the one first-class match he managed to fit in this season he was impressed with the deck. “We asked for a nice quick wicket then and we bowled out the Warriors for 70-odd. The pace and bounce was very good.”With wet weather hanging over the Highveld, the bowlers are likely to benefit from a pitch more lively than a Jack Russell puppy. “If there are overcast conditions like we’ve had, who wouldn’t put his hand up to bowl first?” Morkel asked and enthusiastically almost raised his hand as well. Before he could do that, he stopped himself and reminded the audience that the South African seamers were going to be bowling to a very competent Indian line-up.Even though coach Corrie van Zyl didn’t think the time India’s batsmen spent in South Africa during the IPL and Champions League would benefit them much, Morkel disagreed. “The way they have been playing in the IPL and the CLT20, they have definitely improved their game on South African conditions.” Morkel also thinks India’s coach, Gary Kirsten, would have passed on a few vital tips for his troops. “Gary Kirsten has got all the insides and knows how to play on SA wickets, so the he would have been a big help for them for how to play on a bouncy wicket.”While the focus has been on one side of the contest, Ashwell Prince thinks that the other side could be just as important especially because Indian pace attack will also enjoy responsive pitches. “We respect the Indian seam attack. They normally do very well in subcontinent conditions which don’t support the fast bowlers much and they must be looking forward to having assistance from our wickets.”Although the wickets are being prepared for seamers, Prince did not negate the role Harbhajan Singh will play for India. “He will be a threat as he is one of the best in the world. I’m sure he is looking forward to the series as well. Graeme Swann had good series in SA last year and at moment Swann is rated the best spin bowler in the world. Maybe Harbhajan would like to have his say about that and look to make an impact.”Prince expects “some movement off the seam,” but doesn’t think the bowlers will be the only ones enjoying some time in the sun. “If it’s 34 degrees and the pitch bakes, it will be a good wicket to bat on.”

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