There's life in the old dog yet

One wicket from victory … and the title. But there was still a four-and-a-half hour wait © Getty Images

The County Championship takes more than its fair share of flak. Uncompetitive, poorly supported, irrelevant …. only this week Bob Willis, one of its most vociferous detractors, weighed in with some all-too-familiar gripes.And yet it produced one of the most enthralling finales to a season in memory. It might not be perfect but, when it can generate such prolonged tension as it did today, it still has life and purpose.As the final day of the season began Durham sat at the top of the table courtesy of their three-day victory over Kent. Sussex still had to polish off an obdurate Worcestershire while, at The Oval, Lancashire were chasing a distant target of 489 and a place in history. Most people had written them off.Sussex, heavily disguised as Mushtaq Ahmed, duly did their bit in an hour and a half. The large crowd at Hove celebrated in a restrained way and then turned their attention to the match in London. Hundreds continued to mill around the County Ground like expectant fathers, unwilling to let go of the season until their county’s fate was known. The PA advised them to head off and come back later. Few took any notice and chose to bask and wait with their fellow fans in the late-September sunshine.Inpromptu games of cricket took place on the outfield and some of the Sussex players, too nervous to watch the Lancashire match on TV, joined in as players or umpires. There was a real sense that everyone was in it together.At lunch, Lancashire were 178 for 2 with VVS Laxman and Stuart Law in calm control. Even though Laxman fell soon after completing his hundred, to loud cheers at Hove, the tension grew as the afternoon session went on. Then two roars from the dressing room just before tea told the assembled spectators of the fall of two more wickets.While all this was going on ECB officials, in possession of the Championship trophy and the winners’ cheque for £100,000, were poised in their sponsored car on the M23, midway between the two venues. If they headed for Hove at the fall of those wickets, they were soon doing a U-turn and heading back towards Kennington as news filtered through that Lancashire were refusing to lie down.For the Sussex players it was too much. Mushtaq Ahmed went home, others got changed, some stayed in their kit. Beers were drunk but the tension grew. “It was the most excruciating afternoon,” Chris Adams, Sussex’s captain, admitted. “We were panicking like hell in there.” At The Oval the anxiety in the Lancashire corner was far worse, almost not daring to believe that they could pull off a sensational win.And then Dominic Cork swung and was bowled by Murtaza Hussain. Cork stayed on his knees, head bowed. The Lancashire players slumped, almost unable to believe they had fallen so close to the finishing line. Mark Chilton, their captain, buried his head in his hands and, in tears, admitted that “the lads are just broken”.Back at Hove the wicket was greeted with yells of triumph and a shower of champagne and beer, both inside and outside the pavilion. As the ECB car sped back towards the south coast, the celebrations, delayed for four-and-a-half hours, finally got underway.

West Indies board delays Samuels probe

The WICB is waiting for the report from the ICC before starting its investigation into Samuels’ alleged bookie connection © Getty Images

The West Indies Cricket Board (WICB) has delayed its probe into allrounder Marlon Samuels’ alleged bookie connection, which was raised by the police on West Indies’ tour of India in February 2007. Julian Hunte, the WICB president, has said that they cannot investigate the matter until they know the nature of the charge against Samuels.The ICC had asked the WICB to investigate Samuels after receiving a report from its anti-corruption and security unit. The ICC said the report contained allegations that Samuels indulged in “inappropriate activity” and behaved in a manner that was “prejudicial to the interests of the game of cricket”, and asked the WICB to submit the results of the investigation by January 31, 2008.”What the WICB has done is to write to the ICC, asking them for a copy of the report, so that we will know what Samuels has been charged with,” Hunte told the . “The WICB will await receipt of the report to enable it to determine how it proceeds to carry out an investigation, if any, in terms of the Samuels affair.”Hunte refused to comment on whether the investigation would hinder Samuels’ chances of selection for the tour of Zimbabwe and South Africa later this year.”I honestly do not know … and this is the honest, possible truth. A lot depends on the selectors, a lot depends on when the investigation is started, and they are so many imponderables that it would be wrong for me to speculate,” Hunte said. “What I can promise, whatever we put in place will be fair and transparent, and Samuels should have no fear.”On February 7, the Nagpur police had charged Samuels with sending team information to Mukesh Kochar, an alleged bookie, on the eve of the first one-dayer in Nagpur on January 21. At the time, Samuels defended himself and said he had known the man for many years and he was a family friend. The ICC allowed Samuels to take part in the World Cup and beyond, pending a final assessment.

All-round Reza shines for Rajshahi

Barisal captain Shahriar Nafees put Khulna in to bat in Bogra and his bowlers Talha Jubair and Sajidul Islam struck immediately, removing the openers with 25 on the board. Six runs later it got dodgier for the hosts when Bashar had to leave the field following a muscle injury. From that point however Shakib-Al-Hasan dictated terms. In a 128-run stand with Tushar Imran, Shakib’s contribution was 81, off 105 balls. Shakib, the leading run scorer in this year’s NCL also went past 400 runs during the course of his innings. When he departed, Imran kept things under control and at stumps was unbeaten on 122 as Khulna ended the day at 312 for 6. Ziaur Rahman compounded the misery for Barisal with 58 and Khulna were finally bowled out for 396 after Imran had fallen for 165. Within five overs, Barisal lost Nafees and Hannan Sarkar, both lbw to Syed Rasel before Imran Ahmed (60) and Raqibul Hasan (38) staged a fightback with a stand of 96. However, they weren’t prepared for Murad Khan who clinically dismantled Barisal with his offbreaks. Grabbing the opportunity to play as Razzak’s replacement, Khan returned figures of 7 for 53 off 31 overs as Barisal were shot out for 206. Following on, their openers Nafees (0) and Sarkar (15) were again sent packing by Rasel. Raqibul (57) was run out and Khan chipped in with two quick wickets in the middle order as Barisal went into the last day on a hopeless 133 for 6. Rasel and Mashrafe Mortaza needed just over an hour in the final morning to wrap up the tail as Khulna won by an innings and three runs.At the Rajshahi Stadium, Dhaka captain Mohammad Ashraful sent the home team in on a lively track that had a distinct shade of grass and some true bounce. Despite that, Dhaka’s three seamers weren’t effective enough, as Rajshahi ended the first day on 257 for 5 on the back of half-centuries from Farhad Hossain (55), captain Khaled Mashud (68*) and allrounder Mushfiqur Rahman (65). Mashud fell early on day two, but Farhad Reza’s unbeaten 32 took to score to 298. Dhaka stumbled to 96 for 4 as seamer Alamgir Kabir took three wickets. Mehrab Hossan Jr. (43) and Shamsur Rahman (55) steadied the innings with an 88-run partnership for the fifth wicket but Dhaka denied the opposition full bonus points by declaring overnight on 205 for 9 on day three. Mahbubul Alam, Dhaka’s main wicket-taker in the NCL, then brought some excitement in the match by taking the wickets of Junaid Siddique, Farhad Hossain and Mushfiqur to reduce the opposition to 66 for 6. Reza single-handedly altered the course of the game, with an unbeaten 98 at stumps as Rajshahi stretched the lead beyond 300. Reza unfortunately fell short of his ton, lbw off the first ball from Alam on the fourth day, finishing with figures of 5 for 47 and a match haul of nine wickets. Dhaka depended on Ashraful (58) to chase the target of 323 but Reza again made a decisive contribution by dismissing him, while left-arm spinner Saqlain Sajib did the rest. He cleaned up the lower middle-order and the tail to finish with 5 for 92 as Dhaka were humbled by 70 runs.Opening batsman Gazi Salahuddin’s 136 helped Chittagong to a six-wicket win against Sylhet in Chittagong. Aftab Ahmed’s 46 was the only other innings of note but Salahuddin’s effort enabled Chittagong make 308 after they had opted to bat first. Sylhet then collapsed, quite inexplicably, on a decent batting track as Chittagong’s pacers and spinners shot them out for 127. After following on, defeat loomed for Sylhet when they ended the third day on 76 for 4. Wicketkeeper Golam Mabud made a defiant 110, adding 87 for the sixth wicket with Bangladesh wicketkeeper Mushfiqur Rahim (43) and then the tail wagged to set Chittagong 161. Left-arm spinner Enamul haque Jnr bowled an effective spell on the final day and got rid of Salahuddin, Nafees Iqbal, Nazimuddin and Aftab but captain Ehsanul Haque (34*) and Dhiman Ghosh (47*) steered their side home.

An unbeaten 99 by Imran Ahmed and a half-century by Hannan Sarkar (70) helped Barisal to a comfortable four-wicket win against Khulna in Bogra. Imrul Kayesh made 55 and the other specialist Khulna batsmen all got good starts but failed to push on as they finished on a disappointing 240.An unbeaten 73 by Naeem Islam rescued Rajshahi from 156 for 7 to a match-winning total of 224 against Dhaka at the Rajshahi Stadium. Junaid Siddique made 59, while Dhaka’s left-arm spinner Mosharraf Hossain kept a check on the scoring rate in the middle overs by taking 3 for 18 from his ten overs. In front of an intimidating local crowd, the Dhaka chase never took off after Shafaq Al Zabir accounted for openers Javed Omar (9) and Al Sahariar (11). Ashraful (55) played a lone hand but the match was effectively over when he was the sixth man out with the total at 150. The 21-run victory enabled Rajshahi to maintain their unbeaten record.An attacking half-century by Tapash Baishya in Chittagong, belting four sixes, rescued Sylhet from 109 for 6 to post a winning score of 210. In reply, Aftab blazed to 32 off 21 balls it looked as if Chittagong were going to run away with the match but the steady fall of wickets at crucial moments led to their undoing. Enamul Haque Jnr took 3 for 23 as Chittagong fell short by 25 runs.Player of the Week – Farhad RezaThough team work has been the main ingredient behind Rajshahi’s success in both forms of the NCL, allrounder Reza has managed to distinguish himself. As a batsman, he has fitted in in all positions in the middle order, and is his captain’s trump card to bowl in pressure situations. His fielding has always been an asset as well. A dasher by nature, Reza’s 98 in the second innings against Dhaka was however a mark of his growing maturity as he left no stones unturned in an effort to occupy the crease. Then with Dhaka just beginning to look threatening chasing 323 he took three wickets including the most crucial one of Ashraful.

National Cricket League

Team Mat Won Lost Tied Draw Aban Pts
Khulna Division 5 2 0 0 3 0 62
Rajshahi Div 5 3 1 0 1 0 55
Dhaka Division 5 2 1 0 2 0 47
Barisal Division 5 2 2 0 1 0 46
Chittagong D 5 1 2 0 2 0 37
Sylhet Division 5 0 4 0 1 0 25

National Cricket League one-day

Team Mat Won Lost Tied N/R Pts Net RR For Against
Rajshahi Div 5 5 0 0 0 10 +0.714 1166/243.0 1021/250.0
Khulna Division 5 3 2 0 0 6 +0.302 1122/250.0 1022/244.1
Chittagong D 5 2 3 0 0 4 +0.128 1135/235.3 1173/250.0
Dhaka Division 5 2 3 0 0 4 -0.048 1005/238.2 1064/249.3
Sylhet Division 5 2 3 0 0 4 -0.258 1001/250.0 1020/239.2
Barisal Division 5 1 4 0 0 2 -0.834 1008/249.1 1137/233.0

Rain ruins second ODI in Sydney

Match abandoned due to rain Scorecard and ball-by-ball details

Brett Lee struck when he removed Lou Vincent in the first over and further success followed before rain stopped play © Getty Images

Rain ended Australia’s hopes of regaining the Chappell-Hadlee Trophy within three days as only six overs were possible in the second ODI at the SCG. Australia were well on top when the weather turned bad, reducing New Zealand to 3 for 30 after Daniel Vettori chose to bat.The umpires called for the covers at 3.30pm local time, just 30 minutes after the start, which had also been delayed due to drizzle. As the day progressed the weather radar continued to display a bleak outlook and only the most optimistic spectators stayed at the ground.Scott Styris remained unbeaten on 12 and Ross Taylor was on 5 following the early fireworks from Brett Lee and Nathan Bracken. Lee finished with 2 for 12 from his three overs and Bracken collected 1 for 18.The day began badly for New Zealand when the out-of-form Lou Vincent edged Lee to Ricky Ponting at second slip for 0 from the second ball of the match. Last time Vincent was in Australia, for the CB Series, he made three half-centuries from four innings but his only ODIs since the World Cup have yielded 6, 9, 18, 5 and 0.He was followed in the next over by Jamie How, who made 4 before he tried to cut a Bracken inswinger that was too close to his body. How sent a simple chance to Matthew Hayden at first slip and New Zealand were 2 for 7.That became 3 for 12 from three overs when Lee deceived the dangerous Brendon McCullum (5) with a wider, slower delivery that McCullum drove in the air to Brad Hogg at mid off. Styris was lucky to survive when he fended Bracken just wide of second slip and he was just starting to find some form with a pair of boundaries cut forward of square off Bracken when the umpires called for the covers.The abandoned match was as good as a victory for New Zealand, who lost the first game at Adelaide Oval on Friday. As the holders of the Chappell-Hadlee Trophy they will retain the prize if they level the series with a win in the third match in Hobart on Thursday.

UP take charge on bowler-dominated day

Scorecard

Mohammad Kaif’s 80 ensured UP reached 188 © Cricinfo Ltd
 

Saurashtra’s new-ball bowlers Sandeep Jobanputra and Sandip Maniar were the stars with the ball as Uttar Pradesh were bundled for 188, but by stumps, one of them was batting and the other – the last man – was padded up, as UP had Saurashtra tottering at 116 for 8.On a day when eighteen wickets fell – including four occasions when two fell in the same over – Saurashtra will rue letting UP recover after having them at 69 for 7.Saurashtra’s decision to field seemed to have paid off, with Maniar using the early morning freshness and the life in the wicket intelligently. He struck with the first ball he bowled, as Rohit Prakash opened the face and edged to wicketkeeper Sagar Jogiyani. A loose drive from Suresh Raina resulted in another edge to Jogiyani, before Amir Khan, playing in the absence of Tanmay Srivastava, was done in by one that pitched on the stumps and moved away. The first three dismissals had all come in similar fashion – caught Jogiyani bowled Maniar – as UP were reeling at 15 for 3.Mohammad Kaif and Ravikant Shukla then put together a sensible partnership, lifting the total to 69 in quick time. Kaif got a reprieve on 20 when he drove uppishly to wide mid-on; Rakesh Dhurv was late in moving and only got his fingertips to the ball. Shukla scored 29 off 28 balls with six cleanly struck boundaries, before he was out shouldering arms to Jobanputra off the first over after drinks.Piyush Chawla, promoted to No. 6, was caught on the crease to his first ball and Rahat Elahi didn’t stay long, edging a widish delivery off Maniar to Jogiyani. Praveen Kumar hit two fours before missing one from Kanaiya Vaghela as UP were reduced to 110 for 7 five minutes before lunch.The Moti Bagh wicket has a reputation for assisting the bowlers in the first and third sessions, and the first day’s play followed the script, as Bhuvneshwar Kumar, playing his third first-class match, hung around with Kaif after lunch. He stuck to his task of playing second fiddle to Kaif: his first run came off the 17th ball he faced, the second off 29th, and the third from the 38th. The two put together 28 runs as Saurashtra let the game drift, allowing Kaif to take singles even off the fifth or sixth ball of the over.Kaif top scored with 80, and the lack of a third seamer hurt Saurashtra as Jobanputra and Maniar operated for the majority of the innings. Kaif, the UP captain, finally fell to a good diving catch by Jaydev Shah, his Saurashtra counterpart. They were lucky to nail him immediately after he had been reprieved: off the previous ball, Firoze Bhambhania had spilled a chance at mid-off off Maniar. The eighth-wicket partnership cost Saurashtra 49 crucial runs, with Bhuvneshwar contributing 14. UP were finally dismissed for 188, with Bhuvneshwar unbeaten on 33. Maniar took 6 for 88 and Jobanputra 3 for 60.Saurashtra were on top after bowling out UP for a low score, but it was now their turn to struggle with the bat. Praveen and Sudeep Tyagi took three wickets each while Bhuvneshwar took two. Praveen struck first in the third over, when Kanaiya Vaghela edged one which moved away.Shitanshu Kotak, who had batted for 796 minutes without getting out against Mumbai in the previous match, spent only two minutes and two balls in the middle this time. He was superbly set up by Praveen: the first ball moved away, and Kotak let it pass, but the next one straightened and trapped him plumb in front. Sudeep Tyagi then scalped the big wicket of Cheteshwar Pujara, who played on to one that was quicker and rose more than expected. Saurashtra were reeling at 7 for 3.Shah, who in a surprise move opened the innings and was the best batsman of the day, then began to rebuild the innings. He played with soft hands, and didn’t miss out on any scoring opportunity.With Jogiyani, Shah added 31 for the fourth wicket before Praveen struck again as Jogiyani missed an offcutter. Shah dominated another brief partnership but Bhuvneshwar took two in two to pull Saurashtra down again. Soon after Shah reached his half-century, Mohammad Kaif brought Tyagi back into the attack and he delivered, removing Shah and Kamlesh Makvana off successive balls. Jobanputra survived the hat-trick and hit a few lusty blows in an unbroken 29-run ninth-wicket stand with Dhurv, who was not out on 21 at the close.

BCCI welcomes Bucknor's Test dropping

Out: Steve Bucknor has been dumped for the third Test in Perth © Getty Images
 

The Indian board has welcomed the removal of umpire Steve Bucknor from the third Test against Australia in Perth but has said the bigger issue is the three-Test ban on Harbhajan Singh. The focus now shifts to the meeting of the board’s working committee in New Delhi on Tuesday evening – that, the board president, Sharad Pawar, said is where the next course of action would be decided on.”We are watching the Harbhajan issue more closely,” the board secretary, NiranjanShah, told PTI. “It is more important that the umpiring issue because he has beenaccused of racism and we will never tolerate any such thing. We have already made anappeal against his ban and we are waiting for the process to start.”His words were echoed by the board’s chief administrative officer, Ratnakar Shetty.”For us, Harbhajan’s case is more important at this point of time,” he said. “Themanner in which the hearing was conducted, that itself has been challenged.”While speculation is rife over the future of the tour to Australia the thinking inthe board appears to be focussed on the “battle of nerves”, trying to get theirdemands without taking any extreme step like boycotting the tour.The emergency meeting of the board on Monday involved officials speaking to AnilKumble, Sachin Tendulkar, Sourav Ganguly and Chetan Chauhan, the team manager. Allnarrated first-hand accounts, including Ganguly and Tendulkar talking about whatwent on when they were in the middle.The board it is learnt, felt that priority should be given to sorting out theumpiring matters instead of quitting cricket. A pull-out, it seems, is being seen asa last resort, especially given the implications of such an action. Apart from heavyfinancial losses, which the board can probably absorb, there is also a matter ofAustralia and India set to play quite a number of bilateral series in the nearfuture.There was a bit of debate about the team staying on in Sydney, considering that theywere booked only till January 7, but the board decided to pay for the team’s stay incase Cricket Australia had a problem. It is still unclear if CA is bearing the costsfor the stay but the team has decided to stay put till receiving furtherinstructions from the BCCI.

Plucky India grind down sloppy Australia


Scorecard and ball-by-ball details
How they were out

Harbhajan Singh and Anil Kumble added a very handy 107 for the eighth wicket © Getty Images
 

More than 20,000 walked through the turnstiles, many of them hoping to see a Sachin Tendulkar double-century, and a strong riposte from the home side. But Tendulkar fell for 153 halfway through the morning, and Australia’s opening batsmen got only 21 overs to show off their wares.One setback India may face on day three is not having RP Singh in their attack as Australia chase their first-innings 526. RP hobbled off the field clutching his hamstring after bowling four overs. He was examined at a local hospital and is unlikely to bowl on Saturday.The story of the day however was India’s spin duo of Anil Kumble and Harbhajan Singh. They didn’t break through with the ball, but a 107-run partnership with the bat helped push India past the 523 they made in their last Test here. Kumble fell 13 short of what would have been his second century, but by then Australia had been kept in the field more than five sessions.Kumble finished with 87 that spanned 205 balls and more than four hours, while Harbhajan rattled off 63. Both men were caught by Adam Gilchrist, who went past Mark Boucher on the all-time dismissals list, finishing the innings with 414. The celebrations were muted though, with the last man, Ishant Sharma, having helped Kumble to thwart Australia for 123 balls and 58 runs.Once again, Australia were sloppy in the field. Kumble had just seven when Phil Jaques put down a chance off Brett Lee at short leg. That it was the ball after Tendulkar’s dismissal made it even more pivotal. There were just 359 on the board then, and the mistakes only mounted as the day wore on.Ricky Ponting and Michael Hussey dropped tough chances, while Michael Clarke fluffed a simple return catch offered by Ishant as Australia began to look increasingly ragged. They found redemption only at the end of the day, with some booming drives from Matthew Hayden and some dogged batting from Jaques knocking 62 off the deficit.India’s day had started perfectly, with Tendulkar flicking Lee’s first ball for four. And though he was almost run out by Clarke soon after, the positive approach was very evident as 18 came from the first two overs. The overnight partnership was worth 54 when MS Dhoni gave it away with a poor shot. Having slashed Lee for four just minutes earlier, he attempted a repeat against Johnson, only to scoop it straight to Andrew Symonds at deep point.That setback didn’t faze Tendulkar though. Lee was bowling at ferocious pace, and there was the odd awkward fend, but there was also a cut that sped off the bat and past the man at point. A peachy cover-drive took him past 150, but when he inside-edged a pull on to his knee off the next ball, there was a lengthy delay.After being treated by the physio, Tendulkar resumed guard, but the focus had been disrupted. Lee summoned up another short ball, and this time the miscued hook was taken by Brad Hogg running in from backward square. Tendulkar’s innings had spanned 205 balls, and his exit might have been expected to dent hopes of a huge total.Instead, Kumble played some superb drives off Stuart Clark, while Harbhajan clouted Johnson over mid-on as India added 96 in the first session. Harbhajan did survive two very good shouts from Hogg, but was otherwise the dominant partner in an association that drove Australia to the end of their tether.The pressure valve was really opened when the spinners came on. Symonds bowled his first over of the match 40 minutes after lunch, and with Hogg on at the Cathedral End, the runs came steadily. Harbhajan smashed Symonds past mid-off to bring up his 50 from 87 balls, and then thumped his chest in celebration.Kumble joined in, biffing Hogg down the ground for four, and reached his own 50 (135 balls) with a drive down the ground off Symonds. It was his first half-century against Australia, and even when Harbhajan departed for 63 (103 balls), miscuing Symonds for Gilchrist to take a catch running towards square leg, the misery didn’t end.RP chipped Clarke to midwicket to be out for nought, but there was still plenty of time for Kumble and Ishant to add formic acid to the wound. Kumble stroked a lovely cover-drive as 500 came into view, and four leg byes got them there. Australia finally broke through 11 balls after tea, giving Johnson his fourth wicket of the innings. And despite Hayden’s statement of intent, it was once again India’s day, with Australia made to struggle like so many of the sides that they’ve taken toll of down the years.

IPL faces another Australian stumbling block

The number of Australians who will be involved in the IPL is still in doubt © Getty Images
 

A quirky Cricket Australia regulation has provided a last-minute hitch in negotiations to allow its contract holders to take part in the Indian Premier League. Lalit Modi, the IPL commissioner, has set a Sunday deadline for registration for Thursday’s player auction, but that is in doubt due to a condition that prevents more than two Australians appearing in the same overseas team.Sixteen Australians have expressed interest in joining the Twenty20 competition starting in April, but Cricket Australia wants to wait until after the draft before releasing any of them to satisfy its limit. The move extends the uncertainty over how many of the country’s players will be involved in the IPL.Modi has previously said anyone who didn’t sign by Sunday would have to wait three years for another chance to join, but Cricket Australia believes the BCCI understands its situation. However, the news has not been as well received by some of the eight franchises who are preparing bids to develop their squads.”The long-standing regulation, which was around back when Cricket Australia was the Australian Cricket Board, means we won’t give clearance to more than two players in an overseas domestic team,” Peter Young, Cricket Australia’s general manager of corporate affairs, told Cricinfo. “We don’t want something that could be seen as a de-facto Australian team.”It’s a condition that has been around for years in county cricket and has been well understood. As long as it is understood by everyone it will be fine.”Until now there has not been significant interest in groups of players appearing in countries other than England, and a board meeting would be required to change the regulation. Cricket Australia has no intention of relaxing the rule, which would prevent one of the franchises stacking its team with Australians.The development came as Indian board officials were confident of solving the outstanding issues. Cricket Australia and IPL representatives in India and London have been trying to resolve the contract concerns throughout the week and the main problem centres around protecting its sponsors.Another roadblock to the current players being involved is whether the March tour of Pakistan goes ahead. The country will hold an election on Monday and Young expects some “clarity” on the situation over the next week. The timing of the trip to the West Indies, which starts early in May, also means the squad members will only be able to participate in the first half of the IPL.

Vettori: Ambrose's innings was the difference

‘We fed [Ambrose’s] strengths and he capitalised. He played very well too, and probably took the game away from us’ © Getty Images
 

New Zealand’s captain, Daniel Vettori, was predictably despondent as he reflected on his side’s 126-run defeat against England at Wellington, a result that levelled the series and gave England the momentum going into next week’s decider in Napier. The match was played on the liveliest pitch that the teams are likely to encounter on this trip, and Vettori believed that New Zealand’s failure to capitalise on their first-day breakthroughs was the decisive moment of the match.On the first afternoon England’s middle-order, visibly lacking in confidence after their horrific display at Hamilton, had been on the ropes at 136 for 5 after being asked to bat first. But the carefree Tim Ambrose, playing in only his second Test, counterattacked gamely in a superb 149-ball 102. England never looked back after that, and though their catching went awry in the second innings, a brace of five-wicket hauls from James Anderson and Ryan Sidebottom cemented their dominance of the game.”Obviously it’s a very disappointed dressing-room,” said Vettori. “If we reflect back on the Test match it was a pretty even one expect for the third session on the first day. We let Tim Ambrose get away through some poor bowling and by feeding his strengths, and if you analyse the rest of it, it was a pretty even contest. But because of that [first day] we left ourselves too much to do on the last day.”It wasn’t immediately apparent just how significant Ambrose’s efforts would be to the end result. Vettori had no qualms about bowling first at the Basin, a pitch that traditionally plays at its best on the second and third days, but admitted that New Zealand soon came to rue their missed opportunity of that first day.”We didn’t reflect on it at the time but as the days went on I suppose we started to realise how important that lost session was for us,” he said. “We knew the wicket was pretty sporty, but for us to have made inroads and for them to post the score they did, we knew we had to bat very well and we didn’t. But it just all comes back to that session. We fed [Ambrose’s] strengths and he capitalised. He played very well too, and probably took the game away from us.”After the total team effort that New Zealand put together at Hamilton, the Wellington Test was something of a reality check for Vettori and his men. Although the selectors made no changes to the batsmen for Napier, definite shortcomings among their top-order were exposed on a pitch that aided England’s younger, faster, seam attack. Their senior seamer, Chris Martin, was also visibly off the pace after his exertions in the first Test, while Kyle Mills finished the match with pain behind his left knee, a development that earned a precautionary call-up for the 19-year-old paceman, Tim Southee.”I thought Jacob [Oram] and Kyle Mills were outstanding in the way they bowled on this wicket,” said Vettori. “Chris may be a bit disappointed but we will give the seamers a bit of a rest before the final Test. They’ve had a huge workload over the last two Tests and hopefully they can get a rest and come into the third Test on a wicket that we know will be extremely flat, and a tough ask for our bowlers.”Even so, the Napier pitch is likely to suit New Zealand’s adhesive style of play. Their success in Hamilton stemmed from the patience they were willing to show on a flat, lifeless deck. England contributed to their downfall by scoring at barely two runs an over, but they received an exclusive diet of wicket-to-wicket deliveries and were offered none of the width that Ambrose in particular was able to exploit in this Test.”The Napier pitch will be very flat, we know what to expect,” said Vettori. “It’ll be a good deck and tough work for the bowlers but it was like that in Hamilton and we expect the same thing from them in Napier. It always does [have more pace than Hamilton] but if you get a couple of days of sun then it will tend to slow down a little bit. It’s generally quite a good cricket wicket, because if you’re prepared to put something in then you’ll get something back.”

‘For us to be bowled out for 198 in the first innings was purely down to Anderson. He hit the right lengths early on and did a really good job © Getty Images
 

That wasn’t quite the case at Wellington, and in the build-up to the Test, Vettori was openly critical of the surface that Brett Sipthorpe, the curator, had prepared for this Test. But he refused to use it as an excuse in the aftermath of defeat. “If you want to be a good side then you have to adapt to all conditions and have to win in all types of conditions,” he said. “You can’t turn up in Sri Lanka and ask for the type of deck you want, so you have to be adaptable.”Vettori added that he doubted whether England would have wanted such a sporting track either, although the way in which their bowlers fared would suggest otherwise. England were devoid of both their most experienced men, Matthew Hoggard and Steve Harmison, but Anderson thrived in the first innings, Sidebottom starred in the second, and Stuart Broad played a vital enforcing role in both innings, on a pitch far removed from the lifeless horrors of his Colombo debut.”You have to look at the way Anderson bowled,” said Vettori. “For us to be bowled out for 198 in the first innings was purely down to him. He hit the right lengths early on and did a really good job. I suggest Hoggard would have done a similar job but to have fresh legs to do some very good work can only lift a team. New players coming in bring in enthusiasm and it lifts a team.” They were sentiments that suggested that Southee could yet feature in the final match.The spotlight, however, will be on New Zealand’s batsmen when the third Test gets underway. Not only will it be Stephen Fleming’s swansong after a record-breaking 14-year international career, it will also be a chance for Mathew Sinclair and Matthew Bell to repay the selectors’ faith after sketchy starts to the series. Bell received a further boost after the game when he was awarded a Cricket New Zealand contract, but with a series top-score of 29, he’ll need to keep up his interest payments.”The top five didn’t get the runs we required but thought Mathew [Sinclair] batted well in the second innings,” said Vettori. “I enjoyed how positive he was in trying to get on with the job. That was exciting to see. In saying that, you still need to keep getting the runs to keep getting selected. The selectors have to ask some questions but hopefully those guys have a lot more runs in them, and more chances to score those runs.”

Gayle looks to regroup before second Test

The decision to promote Dwayne Bravo to open the innings turned out to be an excellent one, but it couldn’t prevent a West Indies defeat © AFP
 

“It’s just for us to go back to the drawing board and come back really prepared, focused and ready to play a tough Test match in Trinidad.”West Indies captain Chris Gayle is looking for a quick regrouping from his team in time for next week’s second and final Digicel Test match against Sri Lanka at the Queen’s Park Oval. On Wednesday, West Indies lost to the Sri Lankans for the first time on home soil, by 121 runs, at the National Stadium in Providence.But Gayle still saw positives in defeat – the bowling and the general contribution of debutant Sulieman Benn, the half centuries by vice-captain Ramnaresh Sarwan, and the second-innings 83 by Dwayne Bravo, who took Gayle’s place at the top of the order.Questioned about that move, Gayle explained how it came about: “While Bravo was bowling, I went up to him and said (jokingly): ‘Bravo, you want to open the batting?’ And he said, ‘Yeah man, that will be better off for me as well.’ So I decided to exchange positions.”It paid off in the end. He got a half-century, I got a half-century. But it’s not something I’m looking at for the next game, for Bravo to open the batting.”Gayle did admit too to his difficulty against Man-of-the-Match left-arm swing bowler Chaminda Vaas. “It’s no secret. Yes, he has got me out the majority of times in Test cricket whenever I play against Sri Lanka. It’s something you have to face and something you have to deal with. I tried something different, tried something new, coming a bit later when the ball is a bit older, and it worked. But I don’t know if I’m going to do it in the next game.”Gayle’s unbeaten 51 yesterday, however, was not enough to save his side. But he is hopeful that it was the start of better for him against Vaas and company.”The stats haven’t been very good against Sri Lanka, so this is a motivation factor for me, to try and move on from strength to strength.”