Gloucestershire eye victory after Payne haul

David Payne completed career-best first-class figures of 6 for 26 as
Gloucestershire strengthened their grip on the County Championship match
with Leicestershire at Bristol

09-Sep-2011
ScorecardDavid Payne completed career-best first-class figures of 6 for 26 as
Gloucestershire strengthened their grip on the County Championship match
with Leicestershire at Bristol.The visitors resumed the third day on 131 for 6 in the first innings, but
could add only four runs as Payne claimed three of the wickets. Will Gidman
finished with two for 24. Following on 259 behind, Leicestershire were then looking slightly rattled on 122 for three before a century stand between James Taylor (70) and Ned Eckersley
(52 not out) steadied things.They closed on 255 for 4, still four runs adrift and with Will Jefferson
having retired hurt because of an injured hand. Leicestershire could manage only one scoring stroke, a boundary by Eckersley, in losing their last four wickets at the start of the day.Three of the tail registered ducks, including overnight batsman Rob Taylor, who
had his off-stump uprooted by Payne. Eckersley had moved to 39 when he became the eighth man out, caught behind off Ian Saxelby, and Payne quickly wrapped up the innings by finding the edge of Jigar Naik’s bat before clean bowling Matthew Hoggard second ball.The last four wickets fell without addition to the total and Payne bettered his
previous best first-class figures of 5 for 76 in the opening game of this
season against Derbyshire at Bristol.When Leicestershire followed on they soon suffered another blow as Jefferson
was forced to retire on two, having been struck on his hand. He was taken to
hospital for X-rays, which showed no broken bones. Greg Smith (40) and Matt Boyce (44) took the score to 100 before falling in quick succession. Smith was caught at gully trying to force a ball from Payne off the back-foot, and at the start of the following over Boyce called for a
quick single as James Taylor played a ball to backward point and was run out by
Gidman’s direct hit.When Josh Cobb gave another gully catch to Kane Williamson off bat and pad to
make it 122 for three, another Leicestershire collapse looked likely. But the diminutive Taylor is big on talent and together with Eckersley began to make a fight of it.It was 145 for three at tea and the England Lions player went on to reach a
half-century off 88 balls, with six fours, looking particularly strong off his
legs. It took the wily Jon Lewis to dismiss him with a short ball, which Taylor
top-edged to fine-leg where Payne took a safe catch.Eckersley stood firm and moved to fifty off 116 balls, with four fours. The
22-year-old wicketkeeper was unbeaten at the close alongside Wayne White
(12no).

Shukla promises better injury management

The BCCI has said it will remain in close contact with the IPL franchises to ensure players remain fit for national duty

ESPNcricinfo staff25-Sep-2011In the light of the injury crisis India found themselves in on the tour of England, the BCCI has said it will remain in close contact with the IPL franchises to ensure players remain fit for national duty.”During our meeting with franchises we will emphasise that they pay most attention to these problems and give instruction to the team physios on injury management to avoid injuries,” the new IPL commissioner Rajiv Shukla told . “We will be paying full attention to these problems, we will keep in touch with physios, and various franchises so that any injury should be immediately addressed.”On a disastrous tour, where they were thrashed 4-0 in Tests and 3-0 in ODIs, India lost the services of Zaheer Khan on the first day of the first Test at Lord’s. After playing in the IPL, Virender Sehwag was ruled out of the first two Tests due to an injured shoulder while Gautam Gambhir, Praveen Kumar and Yuvraj Singh sustained injuries during the course of the series.Shukla defended the IPL, saying it shouldn’t be singled out for blame for injuries caused to players, but said the board will take steps to ensure there is “perfect” co-ordination with the franchises over the players’ fitness.”In my view, for injuries I don’t think only IPL should be blamed as every team is facing such problems and lot many players got injured during the England series also, so I don’t think IPL should be solely blamed for it,” he said. “But at the same time, the management of injury problems is also on our mind and some concrete steps will be taken to minimise injury problems. There will be perfect coordination between BCCI and various franchises.”

Mitchell Marsh plucks six on bowlers' day

Newly arrived from his Australia debut in South Africa, Mitchell Marsh plucked 6-84 for Western Australia to help bowl out Queensland for 273 on day one of the Sheffield Shield match

ESPNcricinfo staff01-Nov-2011
ScorecardMitchell Marsh returned from South Africa to cut through the Bulls’ batting•Getty Images

Newly arrived from his Australia debut in South Africa, Mitchell Marsh plucked 6 for 84 for Western Australia to help bowl out Queensland for 273 on day one of the Sheffield Shield match at the WACA ground. On a lively pitch that aided swing and seam across the day, the Warriors’ reply was wobbly, reaching 3 for 71 at the close as Matthew Gale grabbed two wickets on debut.Marcus North was unbeaten on 30 and Adam Voges was on 9, and Western Australia still trailed by 202 runs. However, it was Marsh’s haul, aided by his employment of a full length, that dominated the day, demonstrating his potential as a strike bowler in addition to his batting talents.Twice Marsh was on a hat-trick, dismissing Nathan Reardon and Chris Hartley with consecutive full, swinging balls then later repeating the feat against Cameron Gannon and Gale.Marsh was taken for a few runs late in the innings, as Steve Paulsen made a fluent unbeaten 90 in his second Shield match, the major Bulls contribution besides 55 for Joe Burns.

Badani, Bahutule take Vidarbha to win

A round-up of the action from the third day of the second round of the Ranji Trophy Plate League 2011-12

ESPNcricinfo staff12-Nov-2011

Group A

Vidarbha completed a three-wicket win against Himachal Pradesh at the Himachal Pradesh Cricket Association Stadium in Dharmasala. Chasing 254, Vidarbha were in some trouble at 110 for 6, but veterans Hemang Badani and Sairaj Bahutule came good to carry them home. The pair put on 132 for the seventh wicket. Bahutule fell for 61 with victory in sight, but Badani stayed till the job was fully done, finishing unbeaten on 83. Himachal’s pacers did all the damage, Mohinderraj Sharma being the pick, but it was just not enough to thwart Vidarbha. The win puts Vidarbha at the top of Group A, just above Himachal.A 146-run stand between Venugopal Rao and Bodapati Sumanth put Andhra Pradesh in comfortable position against Tripura at the Indira Gandhi Stadium in Vijayawada. The pair took Andhra from a wobbly overnight score of 47 for 3 to 161 before Sumanth was bowled for 62. Not long after Venugopal hit one back to the bowler, offspinner Udit Patel, on 96. A half-century stand between AG Pradeep and Syed Sahabuddin followed, to take the lead past 300. Andhra declared on 271 for 6, setting Tripura 333. The hosts’ new-bowlers – Atchuti Rao, in particular – then put them firmly in charge, knocking over five top-order batsmen for single-digit scores, as Tripura slipped to 24 for 5 at stumps.Services secured a slim first-innings lead against Kerala, at the Nehru Stadium in Kochi. Kerala began the day on 121 for 4, after Services had made 253 on Friday, and most of their batsmen got into double figures but could not push on. Sony Cheruvathur showed some late resistance and almost pushed his side past Services first-innings total, but was run out as they finished with 249 – five runs shy of taking the lead. However, Kerala ended the day with a chance to win outright, picking up five wickets in 37 overs to reduce Services to 89 for 5 by stumps.

Group B

Only 2.1 overs of play were possible in Guwahati between Assam and Goa, during which Goa went from 277 for 8 to 282 without losing a wicket.No play was possible between Jammu & Kashmir and Jharkhand in Srinagar for the second day running, due to a wet outfield.

Pollard special not enough for West Indies

India completed a fantastic year as far as home one-day internationals are concerned with another victory over West Indies in a topsy-turvy ODI to make the series scoreline 4-1

The Report by Siddarth Ravindran11-Dec-2011
Scorecard and ball-by-ball details
Manoj Tiwary’s maiden ODI hundred set up India’s total of 267•AFP

India completed a fantastic year as far as home one-day internationals are concerned with another victory over West Indies in a topsy-turvy ODI, on a sweltering day in Chennai, to make the series scoreline 4-1.The focus in dead rubbers is usually on fringe players auditioning for bigger roles, and plenty took centre-stage at the MA Chidambaram Stadium. Manoj Tiwary stated his case for a permanent place in an increasingly crowded India middle-order with his maiden one-day century and Kieron Pollard played his finest international innings without managing to complete a herculean task after West Indies’ top order did its familiar house-of-cards impersonation.Those two were the headliners but there were significant contributions from other players scrapping for a place. Andre Russell showed why he should be an automatic pick for West Indies, legspinner Rahul Sharma displayed great accuracy and a cool head in only his second international match and Irfan Pathan caused plenty of excitement with his famous inswingers with the new ball.India were missing their four biggest ODI batting stars but that didn’t prevent their next generation, led by Tiwary and Virat Kohli, from piling on 267 for 6 on a slow-and-low track. Then West Indies’ batting floundered against an attack that featured at most one player who would make India’s first-choice XI.Irfan swung out Lendl Simmons first ball, and added the wicket of Kieran Powell soon after. Abhimanyu Mithun, one of the quick bowlers selected ahead of Irfan for the Test series in Australia, also took two wickets with the new ball. When Denesh Ramdin was adjudged lbw in the 16th over, the game seemed over as West Indies slumped to 78 for 5.Pollard thought otherwise. The slow surface in Chennai is not suited to Pollard’s explosive style of batting but that did not prevent him from stroking some effortless sixes down the ground. The one shot he did put some power behind, in the 16th over, cleared not just the rope but the stands as well, landing on the roof over long-on. There were very few slogs in his entire innings; virtually all of his the sixes were hit with a straight bat.Keeping him company in an attempted revival was Russell, who has already shown his hitting skills several times. He matched Pollard stroke-for-stroke in a boundary-filled stand of 89 runs for the sixth wicket. Caribbean flair may be an old cliché but there was plenty of it in Russell’s batting, highlighted by a flick for six over midwicket off Rahul Sharma. He bustled to his 50 off just 37 balls, outpacing even Pollard, though he did get two reprieves from wicketkeeper Parthiv Patel.It was an athletic bit of fielding that broke the partnership that threatened to take the game away from India. Gautam Gambhir pounced on a Pollard dab towards short third man and scored a direct hit to run out Russell, who carried on running to the pavilion. Sammy failed once again but that still didn’t stop Pollard from believing.He farmed the strike and sprinkled in the odd nonchalant six in what was easily the longest innings of his international career. His wait for a first international hundred seemed set to be extended when he thumped Rahul Sharma to Kohli at long-on when on 99, but Kohli shelled the straightforward chance. With only the final wicket remaining, a rain of boundaries followed from Pollard before one mis-hit ended the game; he holed out to Ajinkya Rahane at long-off to leave West Indies 34 runs short.If that was a special innings from Pollard, there was an important one from Tiwary earlier. It was Tiwary’s first opportunity of the series, and he came in with a charged-up Kemar Roach on a hat-trick, three balls into the match. It was only his sixth game for India in nearly four years, spread across four different series. He had never made a hundred even in domestic one-dayers, and his previous highest score in internationals was 24.He was greeted by a sharp bouncer from Roach, but grew more assured as the innings progressed. A couple of eye-catching off-drives early on eased his nerves, before he started picking off plenty of leg-side boundaries off the spinners. He first steadied the innings through an 83-run stand with Gambhir, whose 31 had a mix of sharp singles and panicky running.That didn’t prove a setback for India though, as Virat Kohli gave another example of his increasing ease at the international level. He worked risk-free singles off seven of his first eight deliveries, and opened up once he got used to the pace and bounce of the track. Kohli and Tiwary put on 43 runs in a five-over spell starting from the 27th over. It was not even the Powerplay and was supposed to be part of the ‘boring’ middle overs with the field spread out.Tiwary had been cramping towards the end of his innings, and retired soon after reaching his century. Kohli became the highest ODI run-getter of the year and marched on towards his fifth one-day century of the year, but spooned a catch to long-off on 80.The final stages of the Indian innings showed how difficult a surface it was to score on. Only three boundaries were hit in the final ten overs, as Sunil Narine proved hard to read, and Anthony Martin and Marlon Samuels didn’t offer any freebies. The damage had already been done though, and despite Pollard’s best efforts, West Indies couldn’t reduce the margin of defeat in the series, which was far more closely contested than the 4-1 scoreline suggests.

'We have best spinners in the world' – Hafeez

Mohammad Hafeez has predicted Pakistan’s spinners can out-bowl their English counterparts and make the difference in the forthcoming Test series.

George Dobell15-Jan-2012Mohammad Hafeez has predicted Pakistan’s spinners can out-bowl their counterparts and make the difference in the forthcoming Test series.Hafeez, Pakistan’s opening batsman and offspinner, said their spin attack has already shown its mettle in the UAE, where conditions are expected to offer little assistance to England’s faster bowlers.”We have the best spinners in the world,” he said. “They have done well here in the last few games and the conditions should suit them. The important thing is that we have bowlers who can take 20 wickets. We showed that in the Tests we played last year.”England’s spinner Graeme Swann has poked fun at Saeed Ajmal’s claim that he has developed a new delivery but Hafeez said he had faced the ‘teesra’ in the nets and said that Ajmal had produced something “a bit different; a new weapon”.”It will be something new in cricket,” Hafeez said. “He has worked on it a lot for the last six to eight months, but not bowled it internationally. It means he has a new weapon and, because of his extraordinary work he has command over it. I don’t want to reveal anything; you’ll get to see it soon.”Hafeez accepted Pakistan are more familiar with the conditions, but he played down the notion of home advantage. “We have an edge in that we are more familiar with the conditions. We played a tough series against Sri Lanka a few months back and the conditions are favourable, but we’ll have to play good cricket.”Since returning to the UAE in November 2010 Pakistan have not lost any of their five Tests. They drew 0-0 with South Africa in their first series back in the region before beating Sri Lanka 1-0 in October 2011.”Dubai is not in Pakistan,” Hafeez said. “You miss your own crowd. When you play in Pakistan the crowds back you all the time. The conditions are totally different. We as a team have done well in the last year-and-a-half and we deserve credit for doing that in neutral venues.”Continuity of selection was a prime reason, he said, why there was an improved spirit within the Pakistan side. “One thing is for sure. When you play as a team your performance gets better and better. We have the plus point that the same six batsmen are playing. We know each other and that is good for partnerships.”

Raj, Kaur give India dead-rubber win

Having already lost the series, India Women won the final Twenty20 in St Kitts to finish the five-match contest with a 2-3 scoreline

ESPNcricinfo staff28-Feb-2012
ScorecardHaving already lost the series, India Women won the final Twenty20 in St Kitts to finish the five-match contest with a 2-3 scoreline. Chasing 116 for victory, India achieved the target with six wickets in hand and a ball to spare.India slipped after a steady start to their innings, going from 31 for 0 to 33 for 3. Amita Sharma scored a steady 24 at the top of the order, but it was Mithali Raj and Harmanpreet Kaur who ensured victory. Raj scored an unbeaten 37 off 31 balls, while Kaur’s 36 came off only 22 deliveries. They added an unbeaten 57 runs for the fifth wicket and won the game in 19.5 overs. West Indies used eight bowlers and Shanel Daley had best figures -1 for 15 in four overs.India’s bowlers had managed to restrict West Indies to 115 for 4 after Anjum Chopra chose to field. Subha Laxmi dismissed both openers cheaply and West Indies were struggling for momentum until Stacy-Ann King scored 37 of 23 balls. Archana Das bowled an economical spell, conceding only 14 in four overs, though she didn’t take a wicket.

Australia Women complete clean sweep

Australia Women cantered to their third straight win against Indian Women, at the Wankhede Stadium in Mumbai, to complete a clean sweep in the three-match ODI series

ESPNcricinfo staff16-Mar-2012
ScorecardAustralia Women cantered to their third straight win against Indian Women, at the Wankhede Stadium in Mumbai, to complete a clean sweep in the three-match ODI series.India chose to bat and were immediately in trouble as they lost their first three wickets for just 30 runs. With the 221-run drubbing from two days ago still fresh in India’s minds, captain Anjum Chopra favoured a cautious approach, scoring 31 off 100 balls. At the other end, Harmanpreet Kaur played an attacking innings of 63 with 10 boundaries and a six to boost the home team. The departure of the two set players, and some tight spin bowling by Jess Jonassen, put the brakes on the Indian innings as they could only manage 40 runs in the last 10 overs.In their chase, Australia lost opener Alyssa Healy for 6 to ODI debutant Sharma Subhalaxmi, who also dismissed series top-scorer Meg Lanning cheaply. Rachael Haynes (42 runs off 52 balls) and Jess Cameron (90 not out off 87 balls) prevented any further damage, and brought up the 100 in quick time. India were given brief hope of a revival when two wickets fell in the space of nine balls, but a solid 45-run partnership between Cameron and Lisa Sthalekar steadied Australia. Sthalekar became Nooshin Al Khadeer’s 100th wicket in ODIs when she was dismissed for 11 off 26 balls. However, with only 25 runs required off 20 overs, India had already been outplayed. Australia strolled to the target to maintain their supremacy in the series.The teams will now play five Twenty20s, with the first on March 18 in Visakhapatnam.

Chennai hold nerve in tight game

Chennai Super Kings raised their game in front of their home supporters to even the score with Pune Warriors, defending 164 with an all-round performance

The Report by Kanishkaa Balachandran19-Apr-2012
Scorecard and ball-by-ball detailsMS Dhoni provided the late flourish for Chennai Super Kings•AFP

Chennai Super Kings raised their game in front of their home supporters to even the score with Pune Warriors, to whom they had lost five days ago. Warriors needed 21 off the last over, achievable by this tournament’s standards, but couldn’t finish the job. The Warriors had their moments with the bat but couldn’t sustain their partnerships, thanks to some sharp catching and miserly death bowling by the hosts.On a pitch with variable bounce, and the sapping humidity to deal with, it was a commendable effort by Super Kings’ Faf du Plessis and S Badrinath to stage the first century opening stand of the season, 116. The surface was slow, and as a result, the openers used their feet against the seamers to get to the pitch of the ball.Du Plessis was dropped early in his innings – albeit a tough chance – but he continued to look positive, lofting Bhuvneshwar Kumar to the second tier over long-on and then chipping down the track in a 14-run over, the costliest in the first half of the innings. He had another let-off on 40, when he went down the track to Marlon Samuels and was beaten by the low bounce, only for the wicketkeeper Robin Uthappa to fluff a stumping. Luck was on his side again the following over, when on 51, he attempted a quick single to cover, turned back and dived at the crease. The third umpire studied several replays but gave du Plessis the benefit of the doubt as he wasn’t convinced that the bail was completely off the groove before he made his ground.Badrinath vindicated the decision to replace the out-of-form M Vijay at the top by getting a fifty of his own. He was circumspect against the spinners, and didn’t always find the right timing, especially with the slog. But three consecutive boundaries off Bhuvneshwar fast-tracked him to his half-century.The Warriors then clawed back by getting rid of the pair in the next over. Both fell in similar manner, holing out to Angelo Mathews trying to slog. It wasn’t the worst thing to happen for Super Kings as MS Dhoni helped his team bash 39 off the last three overs, which included a helicopter-shot for four which nearly cleaned out the bowler and umpire, and a six which cleared the roof.The Warriors were halted in their chase by some terrific catching by Super Kings, starting with Robin Uthappa’s early departure. He spliced it to mid-off where R Ashwin timed his dive and plucked it inches from the ground. Jesse Ryder pulled Nuwan Kulasekara to deep midwicket where Dwayne Bravo followed up his diving catch with a dance. A couple of overs later, Badrinath had to cover a lot of ground to catch a skier to send back Manish Pandey.Prior to Pandey’s fall, Sourav Ganguly had just knocked 18 off a Doug Bollinger over which featured three pleasing boundaries to the on side. However, the spinners applied the stranglehold in the next five overs, as the run-rate dropped from 8.83 to 6.50. Marlon Samuels broke the rut with two boundaries off Shadab Jakati and a top-edged six off Bravo, but the slower pace of Ashwin led him to spoon a catch to short cover. Warriors needed 68 off 40 when he departed, but they were leaving the rest to their last recognised pair.Steven Smith and Mathews failed to bisect the gaps in the field, as the Warriors managed just two boundaries in the last eight overs. Super Kings threw themselves around in the field, and the bowlers, importantly, didn’t dish out full tosses to give the batsmen any chance. Bollinger conceded just four and took a wicket in the penultimate over, and Bravo’s slower balls in particular made the task tougher for Super Kings.Though the century stand set them up to a competitive 164, Dhoni’s final blaze made the difference in a evenly fought contest.

Berrington joins Leicestershire on loan

Leicestershire have announced the signing of Scotland allrounder Richie Berrington on a one-month loan deal

ESPNcricinfo staff02-May-2012Leicestershire have announced the signing of Scotland allrounder Richie Berrington on a one-month loan deal.Berrington has been brought in to add depth to a squad that has seen early season injuries to Will Jefferson, Nathan Buck, Matthew Hoggard and Paul Dixey. The 25-year-old scored 261 runs and took seven wickets for Scotland in the recent ICC World Twenty20 Qualifier and will still be available for the Saltires in their CB40 campaign during the arrangement.Berrington, who was born in South Africa, averages 29.94 in first-class cricket, with one century, and has taken 18 wickets. The loan arrangement with Leicestershire will be reviewed at the end of the first month.