Kendall and Smith restore Hampshire's pride

Will Kendall and Robin Smith restored some pride to Hampshire’s batting by leading a spirited fightback in the final session at Taunton. Coach Jimmy Cook had demanded a more resolute approach after Piran Holloway’s first century for almost a year enabled Somerset to build a first innings lead of 226.And, after openers Andy Sexton and Giles White had fallen cheaply, an unbroken third wicket stand of 76 enabled Hampshire to close on 140-2, with the deficit reduced to just 86.Kendall smacked 10 fours in reaching only his second Championship half-century of the season and finished unbeaten on 74, while skipper Smith looked increasingly menacing as he move to 35 not out.It was a welcome relief to Cook, who was backing his side to produce a vast improvement on their woeful first innings effort of 142.”Away from home we have found opponents guarding against Shane Warne by leaving some grass on the pitches and our batsmen have lost confidence by being rolled over on some poor wickets,” he said.”This track is about the best we have encountered and I was interested in seeing how we performed in better weather than we encountered in our first innings. I told the players they should be looking forward to batting in such conditions.”By the closing overs Kendall and Smith were doing just that, with the latter producing some typically swashbuckling square cuts that were ominous for Somerset.Hampshire still have some way to go to save the game. But, with the weather forecast poor for the final two days, the home side are no longer cast iron favourites.They looked to be gaining a stranglehold on the match when Holloway and Mike Burns built a sixth-wicket stand of 110 after Somerset had resumed on 208-4.Holloway was given a life after adding just two to his overnight score of 53 when John Stephenson dropped a catch running back from slip off a top-edged hook. Peter Hartley was the unlucky bowler.It proved an expensive miss as the little left-hander went on make a typically determined 113, off 280 balls, with 12 fours, before edging a Warne googly to wicketkeeper Adrian Aymes.Burns put a string a low Championship scores behind him, producing several well-timed cover drives in his fluent 56, an innings ended by a brilliant leg-side stumping by Aymes off seamer Dimitri Mascarenhas.At 320-5 Somerset looked on course for maximum batting points. But Burns’ departure saw the last five wickets fall for just 48 as Warne reaped the reward for 38 overs of perseverance on an unhelpful pitch with figures of 4-91.The Australian never looked happy and was limping at times. But Cook is full of praise for his unstinting efforts.Hampshire’s second innings looked to be heading the same way as the first when Steffan Jones removed Sexton for four and White to the last ball before tea, lbw for 18.At that point Hampshire were 64-2. But the final session belonged to them and a Somerset attack, lacking its spearhead Andy Caddick because of England duty, still has it all to do to capitalise on what appeared a winning position.

Himachal completes facile five wicket win over J&K

Himachal Pradesh completed a facile five wicket win over Jammu andKashmir in their North Zone Cooch Behar Trophy Under-19 match at thePolice Stadium in Chamba on the third and final day on Tuesday.Himachal Pradesh collected eight points.Set to score 133 for a win, Himachal, guided by a fine 52 by opener HDogra, needed just 23.1 overs to overhaul the J&K total. Dogra wholost his partner Prasanth Kumar with the score at 27, forged a 61-runsecond wicket stand in 12.1 overs, ensuring Himachal of victory. Butafter his fall, Himachal lost three further wickets before theyreached home.Earlier, on the opening day, J&K put into bat, put up a fighting 242on the board. The chief architect was SS Salaria (87) who shared a 89run fourth wicket stand with Sathyajit Singh (52). Then I Sheikh (22)frustrated the Himachal bowlers to take the score past the 200 runmark.In reply Himachal took a slender 11 run first innings lead. Openers HAngarish (52) and Prasanth Kumar (45) gave Himachal a solid start byputting on 79 runs in 17.5 overs. The middle order batsmen came upwith some useful contributions, helping Himachal to total 253.J&K in their second innings were tottering at 33 for 6 before opener AJalani (55) and SS Salaria (53) added 74 runs for the seventh wicketto help J&K post a moderate 143 on the board.

Only rain can save Notts from defeat

Gloucestershire’s excellent Championship form continued as Mark Alleyne’s side put themselves into a commanding position against Nottinghamshire.With Matt Windows (174) and Chris Taylor (148) taking their third-wicket partnership to 306, a record stand against Notts, Gloucestershire pushed on to build a big lead.Jeremy Snape helped himself to an unbeaten century as the visitors’ bowlers again erred in line and length, reaching the landmark in only 96 balls and striking a six and 11 fours.Skipper Alleyne too looked in good form, driving powerfully in front of the wicket for his 72 before he was fifth out at 502.The declaration finally came at 608-8, giving Gloucestershire a formidable lead of 286. Nottinghamshire’s woes continued as they lost three early wickets.Acting captain Darren Bicknell fell in the second over to Alistair Bressington for a duck and Greg Blewett’s miserable match continued as he bagged a pair, edging Averis to Ball at slip. Averis also claimed the wicket of first innings centurion Paul Johnson, also without scoring, to leave Notts on 10-3.Guy Welton batted defiantly for his 30 but after Kevin Pietersen had been caught down the legside by Russell off Bressington the opener lost his off stump to Alleyene to reduce the visitors to 54-5.John Morris was defiant, making a well crafted 54, but wickets continued to tumble and with the extra half-hour looming Chris Read became the sixth man out, leaving Alleyne with the easy decision to take the half-hour.Morris finally fell to Alleyne, eighth out at 125, and with Greg Smith run out it was left to Stephen Randall and Nadeem Malik to defy the Gloucestershire bowlers in a tense last five overs with Notts on 139-9, still 147 runs behind.

England Women to appoint new head coach

Paul Shaw, the head of England Women’s Performance, will step down from his job under a coaching restructuring following this summer’s Ashes defeat which will see a new head coach appointed early next year.The ECB has said they ideally want a coach with first-class or international experience, something Shaw does not possess, ahead of a period that includes the World T20 in India next March and the 2017 World Cup which will be hosted in England.Shaw has worked with England’s women’s set-up for seven years and was appointed to the head of performance role in 2013. He oversaw back-to-back Ashes series victories but England have not found success at a global event since winning both the World T20 and World Cup in 2009 although they have reached the last two World T20 finals – losing to Australia both times.Last month, England relinquished the Ashes 10-6 in the multi-point format having lost the one-day series and one-off Test. They won the T20 series 2-1, but a batting collapse at Hove – a theme of the season – when they fell to 87 all out chasing 108 decided the contest.”The important contribution that Paul has made to the development of England women’s cricket over the last seven years is unquestionable,” Clare Conner, the director of England women’s cricket, said. “When Paul was appointed to the new role of Head of England Women’s Performance in 2013, it was at a stage when professionalism of the England women’s team was imminent. His strategic planning, long term vision and relationship management have been instrumental in guiding the programme through this transition.”The women’s game is now fully professional and is in a different place to when Paul was appointed two and a half years ago. The decision to move back to a more traditional coaching structure, led by one overarching head coach, ideally with first-class or international playing or coaching experience, is what we believe is now needed to take the players to the next level in their development as professional cricketers.Shaw said: “I have very much enjoyed the past two and a half years working with the England women’s team. My personal highlights have been the successful back-to-back Women’s Ashes campaigns, both in England and Australia, as well as leading a young England team to the 2014 ICC Women’s World T20 final in Bangladesh.””The England women’s performance programme has evolved into a world class set-up over the past few years. With this in mind, I believe it is now time to step aside and give someone else the opportunity to take the programme and the team onto the next level, as I look to take on my next challenge.”I wish Charlotte and the team every success in what promises to be a very exciting couple of years ahead.”Interviews for the new head coach will begin next month with the ECB aiming to have the position filled before the tour of South Africa next February. Shaw will continue in his position until the end of the year.

Bell finds his touch as Australia are set 412

Scorecard and ball-by-ball detailsWelcome to Wales, land of rain and anxiety. Cambridge scientists recently concluded that it is here where the United Kingdom is at its most neurotic. And it is here where Australia did their utmost to prey on those nerves and insist against all logic that even though they must embark upon a seemingly impossible pursuit of 412 on the fourth morning, and the pitch is both turning sharply and bouncing irregularly, they are not quite dead in the Cardiff Test. They are. They must be.Pessimism can cling to a side with recent memories of an Ashes whitewash. England initially made rapid headway as they sought to turn a formidable first-innings lead of 122 into a bridgehead for victory and a 1-0 lead in the Investec Ashes series. The impetus from bundling out Australia in their morning spread into the batting of Ian Bell and, less obviously, Joe Root in the afternoon. And even as the lead built, millions of England supporters looked on and spoke of “only”.The lead was only 200, 300, and 20 minutes from the close, with great relief, 400, as England’s No. 10, Mark Wood, swung the offspin of Nathan Lyon towards the River Taff for six and then reverse lapped him for four to applause from the England balcony. The wickets remaining slipped to only eight, four, two. But by the close of the third day, an awkward spell in which Bell, Root and Ben Stokes had their wicket struck in turn and Australia felt a glimmer of hope, Wood, a tail-ender with a sense of fun, had an unbeaten 32 from 18 balls and England were out of sight. Finally, there was not an “only” to be heard.Australia like to speak of the highest Test run chase ever pulled off in England, of Headingley 1948, of Don Bradman and of 404 for 3. Even that would not be enough now. The forecast for Sunday is indifferent, but as the Welsh have it, it is not expected to rain old women and sticks. This excellent game deserves a winner and logic suggests that it is England.Four wickets for Lyon were deserving of respect, if an expected reward on a dry pitch offering considerable turn. Australia’s bonus was Mitchell Starc. When he left the field for the last time, the clock had gone beyond six o’clock and a bowler whose first ball of the day had seen this lissom left-armer hop gingerly through the crease in mistrust of an ankle injury had got through 16 overs, logged Alastair Cook and Stokes in the wickets column and, at 92.8mph, had clocked the fastest ball of the match. Impressive stuff – but he might miss the Lord’s Test as a consequence.Australia were not averse to playing on England’s insecurity. New ICC regulations might make sledging a risky business, and not before time, but nobody said anything about mind games. Lyon and David Warner more than once held conversations at the point in the crease where Stokes, idiosyncratically, likes to sweep the crease in a semicircle. Brad Haddin had more appeals than the Salvation Army.It would be tempting to term the pitch treacherous, but considering its particular difficulty to Australia, whose batsmen are brought up with pace and bounce, perhaps it was actually suffering from excessive loyalty. It has also produced magnificent entertainment from the outset.It had taken England only 14.5 overs to polish off the last five Australian wickets, 44 runs added in the process, and although the stand-out performer was James Anderson, who provided a brief exhibition of new-ball bowling to log 3 for 43, every England bowler took a wicket in what had been a consistently focused display.The sense that batting might remain a taxing business was encouraged when Alastair Cook, England’s captain, failed for the second time in the match, driving at a gentle, wide outswinger from Starc which was well picked up by Lyon, low at backward point. He seems, perhaps temporarily, to have abandoned his habitual insistence of making bowlers bowl at him in a desire to buy into England’s much-vaunted commitment to enterprising batting.If Cook could rue a puff of dust from the footholes, Gary Ballance had more reason for frustration. Two excellent swinging deliveries from Starc left him fortunate to reach lunch unbeaten – but still on nought. Ballance might have reached the interval, but that first run never came as soon after the resumption he received a climbing delivery from Josh Hazlewood and gloved to the wicketkeeper.Bell’s three hundreds won him the Man of the Series award the last time the Ashes were contested in England, but who had been bereft of form with six scores of 0 or 1 in his last nine Test innings. It was a timely moment for him to regain form. He drove sublimely through the off side from the outset, two early boundaries against Starc setting the tone from a half-century of elegant ambition. There were 11 boundaries in his 60 before he became Mitchell Johnson’s first victim, expecting inswing but beaten by one that seamed away.Bell’s authority briefly rubbed off on Adam Lyth, whose slog-swept six against Lyon summed up his rising ambition. Lyon, though, gradually unravelled his game and outdid his defensive poke for Michael Clarke to hold a wonderful springing catch to his left at slip.At 207 for 4, England’s lead was already 329, but the loss of Root, bowled by a nip-backer from Hazlewood, was the start of an uncomfortable period in which four wickets fell for 38 in nine overs. Jos Buttler might have regretted this reverse sweep more than most as Lyon had him caught at the wicket; Stokes’ controlled 42 ended with a drag-on as Starc scudded one through; Broad flung his head skywards and reached deep mid-off, running in. Wood banished the nerves.Australia had begun the morning at 264 for 5 and might have shrugged off the loss the nightwatchman, Lyon, as he fell lbw to Wood, immaculate in line throughout, but the dismissal of Shane Watson that preceded it was drainingly familiar as he played across his front pad against Broad. For Watson, it was another Test match 30 and a striking record of 28 lbw dismissals in 108 innings, unmatched for a player of such longevity. He left with mournful, pursed lips, as if he could not believe that fate had conspired against him once more.Haddin was a danger, memories of his productive last series against England still fresh, but Anderson found prodigious movement both ways and it was not long before Haddin edged an outswinger to the wicketkeeper. Johnson clipped Broad to midwicket and Australia’s innings came to a close when Anderson had Starc expertly held by Root, diving to his left, one of five England slips stationed for a catch, an attacking flourish they clung to, refusing whatever the doubts around them to let the talk of “only” enter their thoughts.

Brown and Lewry earn maximum bonus points for Northants at Wantage Road.

Jason Brown and Darren Cousins shared eight wickets to earn Division Two leaders Northamptonshire maximum bowling points against Sussex at Wantage Road.Off-spinner Brown (4-53) and paceman Cousins (4-36) helped dismiss the visitors, who began the day only three points behind Northants, for 232 after Chris Adams won the toss and chose to bat.The home side closed on 23-0 from five overs to set the seal on a successful opening day as they look to build on victories in their previous two games, over Warwickshire and Worcestershire.Cousins struck the first blow when he trapped former Northants opener Richard Montgomerie leg-before in the fifth over of the match, and from then on it was a struggle for Sussex against the combination of spin and seam.Only Wasim Khan, making his first Championship appearance of the summer as replacement for the prolific Australian Michael Bevan, offered any serious resistance. He battled his way to 74 in four-and-a-quarter hours, hitting 11 fours, until Brown had him caught at silly point.Wasim and Robin Martin-Jenkins (27) posted 51 in 23 overs for the fifth wicket – the biggest partnership of the innings – but Northants kept chipping away, and removed Martin-Jenkins just before tea and Wasim just after.Cousins rounded off the innings by holding a regulation catch at long-on as Jason Lewry looked to hoist Brown over the Indoor Cricket Centre, and home openers Matthew Hayden and Adrian Rollins then safely negotiated a potentially tricky 15-minute session before the close.

Ireland survive wobble to win

ScorecardFile photo – Javed Ahmadi scored 81 before chipping in with 4 for 37•AFP

Ed Joyce’s 51 and a steady 52-run partnership between Andy Balbirnie and Alex Cusack helped Ireland survive a couple of batting wobbles to secure a three-wicket win against Afghanistan in their opening game of the Dubai triangular series. Afghanistan’s loss meant that Javed Ahmadi’s career-best performance with the bat and ball was in vain.Ireland did not get off to the strongest of starts after their bowlers had dismissed Afghanistan for 180. Gary Wilson’s wicket in the 10th over brought the score to 29 for 3 before a steady 44-run partnership between Joyce and Niall O’Brien put the chase on track again. Ahmadi’s 10 overs of off-spin, however, threatened to turn the advantage Afghanistan’s way as he controlled the runs and chipped away at the line-up, accounting for O’Brien and Joyce, who had reached his ninth ODI fifty off 66 deliveries. In the penultimate over of his spell, Ahmadi dismissed Kevin O’Brien and John Mooney within three deliveries to leave Ireland at 129 for 7.Afghanistan’s low score meant that Ireland had time on their side, and Balbirnie and Cusack focused on turning the strike over, while hitting the occasional boundary. Until Cusack struck three successive fours to help Ireland draw level with Afghanistan’s score, the pair had hit only three fours in 11 overs.Apart from taking a career-best 4 for 37, Ahmadi was also one of only two batsmen to prop Afghanistan’s innings after they were put in to bat by Ireland. Ahmadi kept finding the boundary right from the start of the innings, thumping John Mooney for a six in the second over of the game, but could only watch from the other end as Afghanistan stumbled, with five of the top six batsmen contributing in single figures. Ahmadi had scored 54 of the side’s 81 runs by the time Mohammad Nabi was dismissed in the 20th over to leave the score at 81 for 5. It was also his second successive fifty, after his 74 against Scotland in the last game.Ahmadi strung together a 49-run partnership for the sixth wicket with Najibullah Zadran before falling for his highest ODI score of 81. Zadran stretched the score further with his 45 off 63 balls but once he was dismissed by Cusack, George Dockrell cleaned up the tail by the 45th over. Apart from Dockrell’s 4 for 35, John Mooney picked up two wickets while Paul Stirling had returns of 9-1-13-0.

Injury cuts short Best's Lashings stint

Tino Best has been advised a minimum of six weeks’ rest © The Nation
 

A side strain has cut short Tino Best’s contract with Lashings World XI, and he is expected to return home to Barbados.Best, who played 12 Tests for West Indies between 2004 and 2006, has signed up the Indian Cricket League (ICL), which has not been recognised by the ICC. He picked up the injury during Lashings’ match against South Northumberland last Wednesday, and missed two games in order to recuperate.However, the injury is more serious than initially thought, and Best has decided to go back home for treatment and rehabilitation. According to the club’s website, he has been advised a minimum of six weeks’ rest.Best told the he was aiming to recover in time for the ICL tournament later this year. “I need to be in the best of health and shape to go back to India, as Twenty20 cricket is very tough and demanding, especially for a fast bowler,” he said. “This is seven years that I haven’t been at home during the summer, and while it will allow me to be in Barbados at Crop-Over time (a five-week summer festival), my first priority is ensuring that I get the right treatment and necessary rest to recuperate.”Best joined the ICL earlier this year, which at present rules out any possibility of playing for West Indies.

Central Districts Under-15 teams named

At the Central Districts’ Under-15 tournament (eight District teams) held in Masterton December 9-12 Nelson won the Graham Morrison Cup.Morrison has been a junior cricket administrator for some time prior to joining the CD Board. Farming duties have forced a premature retirement from administration but he should return in the future.The following teams will represent Central Districts at the zonal tournaments in January.Central Districts A to play in North Island tournament with Auckland, ND and Wellington in Rotorua from January 12-17 is: Michael Coman (Nelson), Daniel Cooper (Nelson), Scott Davidson (Taranaki), Jason Domdroski (Taranaki), Bryce Grant (Manawatu), Martin Kain (Nelson), Chad Law (Manawatu), Hamish Malcolm (Nelson), Ryan O’Sullivan (Hawke’s Bay), Michael Taiaroa (Hawke’s Bay), Christopher Taylor (Hawke’s Bay), Joseph Wheeler (Marlborough). Coach: Jamie Watkins. Manager: Alan Manton.Central Districts B to play Wellington B at Wellington from January 13-16 is: Max Carroll (Wanganui), Israel Dagg (Hawke’s Bay), Shane Eglinton (Horowhenua Kapiti), David Hughes (Taranaki), Ted Jefferd (Wanganui), Sam Kinross-White (Hawke’s Bay), Sean Lance (Wanganui), Andrew Mason (Taranaki), Daniel Norman (Manawatu), Cody Parker (Wairarapa), Hadleigh Parkes (Manawatu), Chris Ryan (Hawke’s Bay). Coach: Lincoln Doull. Manager: Chris Dear.

Nadeem spins Pak Gym to victory

Former Test slow-left-armer Nadeem Khan produced a match-winning spell as Pak Gymkhana defeated Total Energy by 19 runs in the Aga Khan Gymkhana Ramazan Cricket Festival at AKG Ground here Wednesday.Nadeem, who was declared Man-of-the-Match, captured four for 17 in 4.3 overs as Total Energy were bowled out for 129 in 23.3 overs.Mahmood Hamid, who played a One-day International, provided good support with three for 20 with his off-spinners.Opener Faisal Mirza top-scored for Total Energy with 41.Earlier, Sohail Jaffar (46) and Irfan Ali (37) helped Pak Gymkhana score 148 for nine in 25 overs. Slow left-armer Arif Mahmood claimed four for 28.Summarised scores:PAK GYMKHANA 148-9 in 25 overs (Sohail Jaffar 46, Irfan Ali 37, Mohammad Naved 25; Arif Mahmood 4-28, Haaris Ayaz 3-23);TOTAL ENERGY 129 in 23.3 overs (Faisal Mirza 41, Mansoor Khan 23; Nadeem Khan 4-17, Mahmood Hamid 3-20).Thursday’s fixture: Tapal CC v Pakistan CC at 1.00pm.

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