Dhaniram upbeat despite under-strength Canada

Sunil Dhaniram, the stand-in Canada captain, is upbeat about his side’s chances of beating UAE in the Intercontinental Cup this Friday, although he is without three important players.Dhaniram replaces regular captain Ashish Bagai, who has work commitments, while opening bowler Umar Bhatti and experienced all-rounder Jon Davison are also missing. Their replacements for the match in Toronto are Steve Welsh, Aftab Shamshudeen and Hemnarine Chattergoon.”We are missing a couple of guys but I think we have the players who can win,” said Dhaniram, the 38-year-old slow left-arm bowler and middle-order batsman. “I have every faith in the replacements coming in and I know we are going to give it our best shot.”I have played a few times against the UAE and they are always tough to play against. I think their batting is really their strength with Saqib Ali and Khurram Khan especially. But we will be trying to restrict them and then we will go in and get the heads down and try to get a win.”It is imperative for Canada to get their campaign back on track after losing by 45 runs to Netherlands last week. In a seesawing game, Netherlands’ all-rounder Peter Borren took responsibility in the second innings, scoring his maiden first-class century and setting up victory for his side. Borren was then the destroyer on Tuesday, with 96 off 70 balls as he helped Netherlands to an 117-run win in their ODI against Canada at Toronto CSCC.For Canada, the four-day version of the game takes priority from Friday and the quick bowling of Henry Osinde could be key. His performance was a highlight of the ICC Intercontinental Cup match against the Netherlands as he took seven wickets in the match and showed that even though he was batting at number 11, he can still contribute meaningfully in that department too, scoring 60 in the first innings and six not out in the second.Good form was also shown by Shahzad Khan, Dhaniram and Qaiser Ali with the bat and Bhatti (until he injured his hand) and Kevin Sandher with the ball. So all is certainly not lost for the north Americans.Meanwhile, the UAE began this tour with a visit to a wet and rainy Ayr to take on Scotland. However, only 46 overs of that match were played with Arshad Ali’s team recovering from 18-3 to 174-4 before the rain returned to call a permanent halt to proceedings.Coming from the heat of the Emirates’ summer, Arshad would have been nervous playing in what were typically Scottish conditions so he would have been happy with how his side recovered on day one.If he was, perhaps, secretly relieved to get away from Ayr with a draw, Arshad will feel he has the ammunition to threaten Canada with an outright win and victory will almost certainly put his side on top of the table at this early stage.Apart from the captain himself, the team boasts some consistent performers such as Saqib, the experienced Khurram and wicketkeeper-batsman Gayan Silva. There is also plenty of know-how in the bowling line-up with Ahmed Nadeem, Mohammad Tauqir and Javed Ismael having been on the scene for some time now.With rain having followed the UAE across the Atlantic Ocean, there may be some interruptions over the four days of the match but both teams need a victory so expect the players to make the most of conditions when they do get out on to the field.Canada in particular will be anxious not to lose two matches in a row at home. Given there is a new format for this tournament in place it is not yet clear how many defeats a team can afford to suffer and still hope to qualify for the final but two successive losses would be a serious blow to Canada’s chances of making another final, as it did in 2004 and 2006.

China make their way into the semis

Scorecard

Hu Ting Ting, playing despite a ligament strain, ensured that China made it through to the semi-finals © ACC

China made their way into the semi-finals of the ACC women’s tournament after beating UAE by seven wickets in Johor.China’s was a schizophrenic performance throughout. At times they looked at par with Bangladesh and Hong Kong in the field yet at other times they looked the rawest of beginners. “”, said China’s manager afterwards: “A fault is one step away from the truth.”Invited to field, China’s bowlers, with the exception of the seamer Wang Meng, bowled a succession of wides and deliveries. But in between those extras they bowled decently and fielded with precision effecting three-run-outs. UAE’s top score was six and six batsmen didn’t score at all. China had UAE on the rack in the ninth over when they took three wickets in three deliveries but they undid the good work with some undisciplined bowling.With China bowling so sloppily UAE cashed in for a while by nudging runs of any delivery on the stumps. Overs passed, extras mounted and suddenly UAE felt they could not only pass 50, they could bat out the 30 overs.Crushed by Bangladesh in the opening game, ACC Development Officer Rumesh Ratnayake had been invited by the UAE manager to speak to the team before this game, and his simple advice to “take things one ball at a time” became the inspiring mantra which the UAE team adopted.Though UAE didn’t bat out the full quota of overs they did pass 50 and it meant China, having given away 37 extras, would have to work on their bowling before they face up to Hong Kong in the semi-finals. They will have an opportunity to correct their faults when they take on Bangladesh tomorrow.UAE are a better bowling side than they are batting with Natasha Michael and Jesar Shah bowling wicket to wicket, hitting the deck, and extracting bounce off the pitch. Left-armer Samiya Salim spears in yorkers off a short-run up. Three Chinese wickets fell quickly and the UAE were sensing the possibility of a major upset.But the early wickets just meant that China’s best batsman, Hu Ting Ting (19) had more time to influence proceedings. The first delivery she faced was edged high just short of third man but after that she played with calm assurance. Michael and Shah induced both inside and outside edges but Hu Ting Ting remained unperturbed.Her 31-run partnership with Duan Qiong took China to victory. Back in the shade, she stripped off her pads, rolled up her trousers and showed off some humungous strapping around her left knee. Having strained a ligament in training, she was playing against doctor’s advice. “I have played with worse injuries when I was a footballer. I wanted to help my team win this match,” she said. “I am playing for them.”

BCCI will support series that promotes Test cricket: Pawar

Sharad Pawar, the Indian board (BCCI) president, insisted that the BCCI is against “money-making” ventures and will only support series that promote Test cricket. Refusing to back down from his stance against the Indian Cricket League (ICL), Pawar again scoffed at the recently floated Twenty20 series proposed for October.”Test cricket is the real thing. It is the top level of the game and brings out the best in the players. We would be only happy if anyone does something for the sake of Test cricket. We will encourage it,” Pawar told PTI. “But Twenty-20 is for glamour. It can only bring in money.”On August 6, Digvijay Singh, general secretary of the Congress, the biggest party in the ruling federal coalition in which Pawar is a cabinet minister, wrote a letter to the latter requesting the BCCI to give up its “confrontationist” attitude against the ICL. “Instead of taking a confrontationist stand, you should act as a facilitator for the ICL to succeed,” Singh wrote. “I am sure the objective of the BCCI is not to make the millions but to popularise the game of cricket. I am sure you will prevail upon the hardliners in the Board and make them understand the sentiments of millions of cricket lovers in India.” Pawar chose not to comment on this.The BCCI secretary, Niranjan Shah, recenty said that players who take part in the ICL will never be eligible to play for India and would also be banned from domestic cricket in the country. Pawar maintained, however, that the BCCI would not interfere if retired players chose to associate themselves with the game: “I had said in Bangalore a few days ago that those who have retired from the cricket and pursue the game in whichever form and we won’t come in the way.”

Pakistan's fitness trainer targets Indian tour

David Dwyer, Pakistan’s new fitness trainer, has said that he expected his team to reach its peak fitness level in time for the tour of India. “The current fitness level is okay and I have been watching enough to know that I can see what their levels probably are, and the target is to reach the top level before the important series against India,” he said.”Basically we work with these guys so that we improve the area that they are weak in, trying to get rid of the limitations that they may have,” Dwyer said, adding that he would adopt a tough rugby-style fitness regimen.”The idea of having a rugby coach is not new in cricket, things are quite the same but they are put in a different way so that these guys get something new which they have not done before.” Dwyer, who has previously assisted Geoff Lawson, Pakistan’s coach, vouched for the regimen’s effectiveness. “I have worked with Lawson at the University of New South Wales cricket club in the year they made the grand final and won the one-day series, so the rugby style training has worked before.”Dwyer is on a two-year contract and has replaced Murray Stevenson, the South African trainer whose contract was not renewed after Pakistan’s first-round exit from the World Cup.

Rafiqul Alam to head Bangladesh selection panel

Rafiqul Alam, the former Bangladesh batsman, has replaced Faruque Ahmed as Bangladesh’s new chairman of selectors, the Bangladesh Cricket Board announced today. Naimur Rahman, Bangladesh’s first Test captain, is the other change in the selection panel and he replaces Athar Ali Khan.The new selectors were appointed by a panel appointed by the ad-hoc executive committee of the board and will begin their duties from September 1. Akram Khan continues as selector. The changes were necessitated as the contracts of Athar Ali Khan and Ahmed expire at the end of the month.”We commended the previous selectors’ work over the past four years but we thought that there was a need for change,” Shafiqur Rahman Munna, the head of the sub-committee that appointed the selectors, told . “I think we have selected two competent individuals for the demanding job because they not only played for the national side but have adequate knowledge of the domestic and international cricket.”We will maintain the same salary structure for the selectors, something that was made by our previous committee, but there will be some changes in the terms and conditions. We met with both the new selectors before finalising their names. We want hundred per cent commitment in the job because now it is no more an amateur duty.”Alam said the focus will be on improving Bangladesh’s Test record. “I would not like to comment on the previous committee. What I must say is that we are quite a handful side in one-dayers now but are far, far behind in Tests and our focus should be on the longer-version.”Alam played two one-dayers during the tour of Sri Lanka in 1986. He is also a match-referee with the board and has been involved in coaching as well.Offspinner Rahman led Bangladesh in its first ever Test, against India in Dhaka in 2000. He played eight Tests and 29 ODIs and was the first Bangladesh bowler to take a five-wicket haul in Tests, incidentally in their maiden Test.

Arnald Konwar quits ICL

Arnald Konwar, the Assam offspinner who had signed up for the Indian Cricket League (ICL), has announced his return to the fold of the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI).”I had signed up for Rs 60 lakh for two years with the ICL hoping to get a chance to play alongside greats like Shane Warne and Glenn McGrath,” Konwar told reporters in Guwahati. “But since they had not joined, I decided to return.”Konwar and five other players from the state had joined the ICL alleging that they were not given a chance by the Assam Cricket Association (ACA) to play at the national level. Konwar claimed that it was not the money that had lured him into the league, but a genuine intention of playing alongside cricketing greats. Both Warne and McGrath have instead signed up for the Indian Premier League (IPL), launched by the BCCI.Konwar alleged that the ICL itinerary was yet to be fixed and even the grounds had not been finalised. “One cannot continue in such uncertainty,” he said.Bikash Baruah, ACA secretary, denied the allegations of the other five players that they were patronised by the body when it came to selection for national-level tournaments. He said they were denied opportunities due to below-par performances.

Ponting eager to play against champions

Ricky Ponting: “Everything you do through a 50-over game, you have to do it right at the start of a Twenty20 game” © Getty Images

Ricky Ponting says his players are keen to test themselves against the World Twenty20 champions in Mumbai on Saturday. “We are pretty excited actually and looking forward to the match against a team which won the World Cup a few weeks ago,” Ponting said. He also sought to underplay the hype surrounding the game, just as he hoped the tired debate over verbal volleys would die down.”There are a lot of things said in the build -up to this game,” he said. “Probably there was more talk about this game than the one-dayers. So I would expect good entertaining Twenty20 cricket and we are looking forward to it. It’s a nice way to wind up the tour – to tell you the truth – to be playing a game like this around which there has been so much build up and talk.”When asked whether it was more difficult to adjust to the shorter version from the longer version Ponting said: “I am not sure what is more difficult, going into a longer-format of the game from Twenty20 or the other way round. But we do prepare slightly differently for this form of the game.”We get time to go out there and settle down in a 50-over game. There is some time in Twenty20 also, but not much. So you might go there and start hitting everything from the first ball and make sure you are timing everything spot on right from the word go. It’s a lot more intense. Everything you do through a 50-over game, you have to do it right at the start of a Twenty20 game. That’s the way the preparation is.”Ponting also conceded that it was difficult to plan too much for a Twenty20 match. “This game is harder than any other game to plan. Because things just change so quickly, you’ve got to be changing your field placings almost every ball, mix and match your bowlers to suit the batsman. Everything is on-the-spur-of-the-moment stuff here.”There was also some doubt about Matthew Hayden playing the game, as he has a sore throat, but Ponting “pretty much guaranteed” his return. He also acknowledged Brad Hogg’s impact in the series, but said his selection in the side wasn’t guaranteed.”That’s the thing we have to decide. We had a look at the wicket, it looks good. There is no doubt the wickets turn a bit in this part of the world as we saw in the Champions Trophy. But even in that tournament we played five fast bowlers, four frontline and Shane Watson. I think we’ve got bowlers who can adapt and adjust to any conditions so we leave that decision until we finalise our side on Saturday.”

Lara and Inzamam named in ICL teams

Brian Lara will play for the Mumbai Champs in the Indian Cricket League © AFP

Brian Lara and Inzamam-ul-Haq headlined the list of players as the Indian Cricket League (ICL) announced its teams for the inaugural tournament. Lara has been named in the Mumbai Champs side while Inzamam will play for Hyderabad Heroes.Inzamam and Lara, along with Stuart Law, Chris Cairns and Craig McMillan are likely to lead the teams.The other international players include Abdul Razzaq, Taufeeq Umar and Shabbir Ahmed of Pakistan, Australia’s Ian Harvey, South Africa’s Johan Van der Wath, Lance Klusener, Nicky Boje and Andrew Hall, New Zealand’s Nathan Astle, Chris Harris and Daryl Tuffey and England’s Vikram Solanki. The ICL is in talks with Sri Lanka’s Marvan Atapattu, while Russel Arnold and Upul Chandana have already signed.The overseas players have been spread among the six teams – Mumbai, Hyderabad, Chandigarh Lions, Chennai Superstars, Delhi Jets and Kolkata Tigers. The coaches for these teams are Sandeep Patil, Madan Lal, Balwinder Sandhu, Moin Khan, Daryll Cullinan and Michael Bevan.”We have ensured the teams are balanced in every way and receive the best facilities in terms of coaching, showcasing their talent and exposure to international cricket,” Kapil Dev, the chairman of the ICL’s executive board, said. “I wish all the players best of luck for the tournament.”The teams will be taking part in a practice camp in their respective cities.The tournament begins on November 30 in Panchkula, a town near Chandigarh.Teams:Chennai Superstars: Stuart Law, Ian Harvey, Hemang Badani, Chris Read (wk), Russell Arnold, Sridharan Sriram, Shabbir Ahmed, V Devendran, R Sathish, Dakshinamoorthy Kumaran, Hemanth Kumar, Jamaluddin Syed Mohammed, Thiru Kumaran, J Hareish, V Sarvanan, R Jesuraj, Sanjeev Martin, G Vignesh, P Vivek.
Coach: Michael BevanHyderabad Heroes: Inzamam-ul-Haq, Chris Harris, Nicky Boje, Abdul Razzaq, Azhar Mahmood, Anirudh Singh, Ambati Rayudu, S Shahubuddin, Stuart Binny, IS Reddy, Vinay Kumar, Ibrahim Khaleel, Kaushik Reddy, Bheema Rao, Alfred Absolem, Shashank Nag, PS Niranjan, Baburao Yadav, Zakaria Zuffri.
Coach: Moin KhanKolkata Tigers: Craig McMillan, Lance Klusener, Darren Maddy, Abhishek Jhunjhunwala, Rohan Gavaskar, Upul Chandana, Deep Dasgupta, Abu Nechim, Parviz Aziz, Shiv Sagar Singh, Boyd Rankin, Mihir Diwakar, Rajiv Kumar, Sayed Akhlakh, Subhomoy Das, Sujay Tarafdar, Pritam Das, Anshu Jain, Ali H Zaidi.
Coach: Daryll CullinanDelhi Jets: Taufeeq Umar, Niall O’Brien, Paul Nixon, Dale Benkenstein, JP Yadav, Mohnish Mishra, Abbas Ali, Ali Murtaza, T Sudhindra, Abid Nabi, Sachin Dholpure, Abhishek Tamrakar, Dishant Yagnik, Dhruv Mahajan, Abhinav Bali, Raghav Sachdev.
Coach: Madan LalMumbai Champs: Brian Lara, Vikram Solanki, Robin Morris, Nathan Astle, Kiran Powar, Shreyas Khanolkar, Johan Van der Wath, Rakesh Patel, Avinash Yadav, Nantie Hayward, Subhojit Paul, Dheeraj Jadhav, A Sanklecha, Ranjeet Kirid, Pushkaraj Joshi, Suyash Burkul, Raviraj Patil, Nikhil Mandale, Sridher Iyer.
Coach: Sandeep PatilChandigarh Lions: Chris Cairns, Imran Farhat, Dinesh Mongia, Hamish Marshall, Andrew Hall, Reetinder Singh Sodhi, Rajesh Sharma, TP Singh, Sarabjeet Singh, Ishan Malhotra, Daryl Tuffey, Sumit Kalia, Chetan Sharma, Manish Sharma, Luv Ablish, Bipul Sharma, Karanveer Singh, Amit Uniyal, Gaurav Gupta, Harpreet Singh.
Coach: Balwinder Sandhu

Symonds likely for New Zealand ODIs

Australia believe Andrew Symonds should be fit for their next international series © Getty Images

Ricky Ponting is confident Andrew Symonds will be fit for Australia’s push to regain the Chappell-Hadlee Trophy, which begins on December 14. Symonds hurt his ankle while batting in the first innings of the Hobart Test and took no further part in the match after posting his half-century.”We’ve got three weeks before the Chappell-Hadlee, I would imagine he would be right for those,” Ponting told . “If you look at the way he has batted in the last couple of games, he has gone out when we were looking at declaring and got 50 off 50 balls both times.”We know how destructive he can be and we saw that in Melbourne last year, that magnificent [Test] hundred he made there. It’s not only his bowling. He gives us a fair bit with the bat and he can give us a lot in the field as well. He’s a pretty vital cog in our team at the moment so we hope he can be back on the park pretty quickly.”Ponting is keen to regain the trophy after New Zealand surprised Australia with a 3-0 series win in February. During that tour Australia rested Ponting and Adam Gilchrist, leaving Michael Hussey in charge of an under-strength side that came up against some impressive New Zealand batting.However, New Zealand’s results so far on their South Africa tour – they lost both Tests and failed to post 200 in any innings – suggest they are not in the same kind of form as earlier this year. “New Zealand right at the moment they’ve got a few injuries as well,” Ponting said. “Shane Bond is down and Jacob Oram is down. A few of their guys have gone down over in South Africa.”Ponting said a 3-0 result had not reflected the closeness of the February series. “There was a lot spoken about in that series about probably how badly we went,” Ponting said. “If you actually look at the games I don’t think we played that badly at all. We scored 340 and 350 in a couple of those games and lost. There’s extra motivation there.”New Zealand’s tour opens with a Twenty20 international in Perth on December 11. The three-match Chappell-Hadlee Series follows with games in Adelaide, Sydney and Hobart before Australia switch back into five-day mode for the Boxing Day Test against India.

Glamorgan to build Museum of Welsh Cricket

Glamorgan Cricket will receive £516,000 from the Heritage Lottery Fund to help create the Museum of Welsh Cricket at Sophia Gardens. It will be the first sports-specific museum at a sporting venue in Wales and should open next summer.The museum forms part of a major redevelopment of Glamorgan Cricket’s headquarters in Cardiff. A statement from Glamorgan said “the state-of-the-art visitor attraction will be a high-tech gadget-rich museum, full of digital and electronic resources designed to celebrate the history of cricket throughout Wales and to inspire the next generation of Welsh cricketers.”The award will also support CricEd Cymru, a cricket-based learning programme for both primary and secondary schools, which has already been piloted, and an outreach ‘Beyond Boundaries’ scheme, which aims to maximise community participation through talks, seminars, and a travelling exhibition.R. Paul Russell, the Glamorgan chairman, said: “Glamorgan Cricket is delighted to receive this substantial grant from the Heritage Lottery Fund, especially as the creation of the Museum of Welsh Cricket has been one of the key features of the new pavilion complex here at the club’s redeveloped headquarters in Cardiff.”Cricket has played a unique part in the sporting heritage of Wales, and the creation of the Museum will add the range of visitor attractions at the new Test Match stadium which Glamorgan Cricket has developed in the heart of the Welsh capital city. The Museum will provide visitors to the city with an opportunity for the first timeto study the fascinating history of cricket and the part it has played in making Wales one of the world’s great sporting nations.”In Dr. Andrew Hignell, the club is fortunate to have the leading expert on the history of cricket in Wales. Dr. Hignell has been driving force behind both the Museum of Welsh Cricket, and the Glamorgan Cricket Heritage Gallery, and we are building on his vast experience in the world of teaching by combining a wide variety of learning-activities and community projects with the museum.”

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