Bennett bowls Canterbury back into final


ScorecardHamish Bennett’s four wickets helped keep the State Championship final evenly balanced after Canterbury were dismissed for 215 on the second day. Bennett grabbed 4 for 37 as Wellington reached 163 for 6 in their reply, trailing by 52 runs when bad light stopped play.The home side had moved their score along to 90 for 2 when Bennett snared two wickets in two balls. Neal Parlane was caught behind for 39 after building a handy 72-run stand with Grant Elliott, before Stephen Gellatly was also caught by Kruger van Wyk next delivery.Elliott, who made an unbeaten 196 in his last game, had to settle for 52 this time when he was bowled by Leighton Burtt and one run later Wellington lost Chris Nevin, who was lbw to Bennett. Luke Woodcock was on 19 at stumps and Dewayne Bowden had 18.Wellington had made a shaky start, losing Matthew Bell for 3 and Michael Parlane for 11 after Iain O’Brien’s five wickets appeared to put them on top. O’Brien finished with 5 for 70 and picked up the last two victims to end Canterbury’s innings after they added 50 on the second day, with Brandon Hiini remaining unbeaten on 31.

Plunkett stays cool while all around fall

Durham 72 for 7 (Plunkett 30*, Bichel 4-22) beat Essex 71 (Bichel 25, Plunkett 4-15, Killeen 3-9, Gibson 3-21) by seven wickets
Scorecard

Man of the Match Liam Plunkett celebrates hitting the winning runs © Getty Images

Low-scoring matches are often not short of drama, and that was certainly the case at Riverside where Durham scrambled into the Friends Provident Trophy final, their first big day at Lord’s. They beat Essex by three wickets with more than half their overs to spare, but that hardly scratches the surface.After a delayed start, Neil Killeen and Ottis Gibson ripped through Essex, exploiting a damp pitch and some indifferent batting. From the moment Gibson had Alastair Cook caught behind for 0 off a thin edge in the second over, the innings fell apart.By the time Steve Harmison was called into action Essex were 36 for 6, and in his second over he conceded the first boundary of the innings. But Plunkett came on as second change and blew away the tail with a career-best 4 for 15, Andy Bichel offering the only significant fight.If Durham thought that chasing 72 was a doddle, then two early strikes from Bichel and one from the on-loan Martin Saggers had the home supporters on the edge of their seats. A mini revival hit the rocks when Graham Napier grabbed two quick wickets to reduce Durham to 38 for 7.Plunkett then took charge and dominated a vital eighth-wicket stand of 34 – the biggest of the match – with Gibson. But Essex should have taken another wicket within one run of Plunkett’s arrival when Danish Kaneria dropped a chance at mid-on from a chipped drive by Gibson. Their frustration multiplied when later in the same over Napier bowled a no-ball and Plunkett smashed the free hit for a massive straight six.From then on Plunkett ground Essex down and it was fitting that he cracked Saggers for four through the covers to seal a remarkable win.

Sri Lankan board elections cancelled

The annual general meeting and elections of the Sri Lanka board which were scheduled for July 15 have been cancelled. This means that the Interim Committee will continue to be in charge of cricket in Sri Lanka.Announcing the decision, Jeewan Kumaratunga, the minister of sports, indicated that it was the wrong time for elections. “We have the South African team coming here for a Test series next week and it will be followed by a triangular series which also features India. Then, we have to work with a vision with next year’s World Cup in mind. Hence this is not the time to have elections,” Kumaratunga was quoted as saying in .Kumaratunga also feared that elections in the current environment could further vitiate the already bitter atmosphere which exists between the parties contesting for the top posts in Sri Lankan cricket. “Then the ICC could even question and we may have problems in hosting international matches and even playing in the World Cup.”The Interim Committee is currently headed by Jayantha Dharmadasa, and he was expected to contest the elections against Mohan de Silva, former SLC president. Media reports in recent days said the rivals had promised huge payments to member clubs to secure their votes for control of the nation’s richest sports body. Kumaratunga said the composition of the committee could change later, but insisted that the interim administration of SLC would continue.Dharmadasam, meanwhile, accepted the decision but insisted that he would have won had the elections taken place. “I am sure the Minister has taken this decision in the best interest of the game,” he said. Talking about the progress made in the 15 months he was in charge, Dharmadasa said he was happy with the progress both on the field and off it. “When I took over I had a time to put the house in order. Now we have established financial discipline corporate government, set target to each director, and performance are measured periodically. The achievement in England in the one day series [Sri Lanka won 5-0] was great.”I strongly believe that we could win the World Cup again, in 2007. I have done all basic work focused on the World cup. I have already earmarked people with professional competency to drive this program.”de Silva, meanwhile, expressed his shock at the cancellation of the elections. “Had the elections been held our team would have won comfortably,” he said in a media release.SLC Interim Committee
Jayantha Dharmadasa (Chairman), Adel Hashim (secretary), Sujeewa Rajapaksa (treasurer), Damien Fernando (member), K. Mathivanan (member) and Prakash Schaffter (member).

Zimbabwe confirm tour to UK

The Zimbabwe Cricket Union (ZCU) has given the ECB formal confirmation that it will tour the UK this summer.Peter Chingoka, Chairman of the ZCU, confirmed the tour to the ECB Chief Executive, Tim Lamb, having consulted with the Zimbabwe government’s Sport and Recreation Commission.The team is scheduled to arrive on Wednesday 30 April for a tour which comprises two npower Test Matches against England at Lord’s and at Durham, followed by participation in The NatWest Series against England and South Africa.Tim Lamb said, “I am delighted that we have been given the definitive `green light’ from the ZCU for the tour to go ahead.”This guarantees a full international programme for the summer, including the first ever Test Match to be held at Durham’s Riverside Ground. I am also pleased to say that we have received formal confirmation from the British Government that the forthcoming tour has their full blessing.”With Zimbabwe, South Africa and Pakistan touring, I look forward to another great summer of international cricket.”

India high on Sehwag's 309

Close Pakistan 42 for 0 (Farhat 17*, Taufeeq 20*) trail India 675 for 5 dec (Sehwag 309, Tendulkar 194*) by 633
Scorecard

Virender Sehwag went past Gavaskar’s 236, and Tendulkar’s 241 not out, and Laxman’s 281, and then to 300 … but Hayden’s record remained safe© Getty Images

The second day of the Multan Test will be remembered as the one in which VirenderSehwag became the first Indian to hit a Test triple-century, and Sachin Tendulkarwas left 6 short of an impeccable double-century. However, it should also beremembered as the day when John Wright’s belief in putting the team ahead of the individual was clinically put into practice, as India declared on 675 for 5, giving themselves an hour of bowling against Pakistan’s openers.There is a jaunty air to Sehwag’s batting that belies the thinking and effort thatgoes into crafting innings like the one he played. You do not score 309 against aTest attack, even on the flattest track, by clattering away at every ball asthough it is the last you will face in your life. That he edges a deliverystraight to slip, sees the catch dropped, and plays a blistering square cut off thevery next one, as he did to go past VVS Laxman’s 281, does not mean thatpresenting slip fielders with catch practice does not bother Sehwag. That he waftsat deliveries outside the off stump when he could just as easily wait for theloose delivery does not mean that he is reckless – it means that he genuinelybelieved that the delivery deserved to be put away. It may not always be obvious, but there is a method to Sehwag’s madness.When the day began with India on 356 for 2 and Sehwag on 228, the method of choice was waiting and watching. Tendulkar, on 60, led the way, showing his moreimpetuous partner the virtue of leaving the ball alone, carefully choosing highpercentage scoring areas and targeting specific bowlers. Tendulkar preferred theacres of space available to him just backward of square on the leg side. He filledthat zone with ambled ones and jogged twos, slowly but surely pushing his scoreon.Only a fool or a brave man would tell Sehwag that he should show the same degreeof self-control as Tendulkar. After getting a significant chunk of the strike, andseeing off a probing spell of fast bowling from Shoaib Akhtar, Mohammad Sami andShabbir Ahmed, Sehwag opened his shoulders as the lunch break approached. Thegloves were off and Sehwag’s jackhammer slammed down on the ball with metronomic efficiency. If Tendulkar and Sehwag leaving the ball alone frustrated Shoaib, who bowled his heart out, this audacious attack drove him to despair.

Sachin Tendulkar played with restraint and determination to bring up his first Test century in Pakistan© Getty Images

Laxman’s mark of 281 fell and records tumbled. At the stroke of 1pm Sehwaglaunched Saqlain Mushtaq into the stands over midwicket to become the first Indianto reach 300. When he edged Sami to Taufeeq Umar at first slip (509 for 3),Sehwag’s blazing knock of 309 (375 balls, 531 minutes, 39 fours, 6 sixes) had cometo an end. It brought to a close the third-wicket partnership of 336, which beatthe previous best of 316 made in Chennai in the 1991-92 series against England.The eventual Indian total, 675 for 5 declared, was the highest ever againstPakistan, beating the 531 for 9 at Chennai in 1961.But, it was not milestones that the Indian think tank had in mind when theirbatsmen piled on the runs. Every run beyond the 600-mark piled on additionalpressure on Pakistan’s batsmen. Mountains often seem harder to climb when youcannot see the top. In this light, it was hardly relevant that VVS Laxman (29)scratched around before being run out (565 for 3) or that Yuvraj Singh (59) scoredhis maiden Test half-century. To a lesser extent it was not even relevant that theinnings was declared with Tendulkar within sniffing distance of a fourthdouble-century. That he made 194 of the most solid runs, spending eight hours and13 minutes at the crease, was vital. Tendulkar is too mature a cricketer to wonderwhere his next double-century is going to come from.Having put 675 runs on the board, India’s bowling attack had something to workwith. Whether you’re batting on a flat deck, like this one, or a bowler’sparadise, becomes less relevant, because the pressure comes from within. ImranFarhat and Taufeeq Umar, who had both dropped catches when India were batting, had a chance to make up by getting Pakistan’s first innings off to steady start. Theydid just that, seeing off 16 overs in the fading light. Pakistan were 42 for noloss and still in the long shadows of India’s 675, and Sehwag’s 309.Anand Vasu is assistant editor of Wisden Cricinfo. He will be following the Indian team throughout this tour.

No tinkering with World Cup side – Hooper

Carl Hooper is sticking by the old adage that if it’s working, don’t fix it.The West Indies captain influenced chief selector Sir Viv Richards into maintaining the combination of seven batsmen, wicket-keeper Ridley Jacobs and only three fast bowlers they have used since last June’s one-day home series against New Zealand for Sunday night’s World Cup opener against South Africa."It’s often best to let the captain have his way," Richards acknowledged on radio as the West Indies, built their total of 278 for five that proved just enough for victory by three-runs.Batting first on a true pitch in clear, warm sunshine, the team rallied from 49 for two after 20 overs behind Brian Lara’s expert 116, successive partnerships with Shivnarine Chanderpaul and Hooper and a blistering finale of 63 off 28 balls between Ricardo Powell and Ramnaresh Sarwan, batting No.6 and No. 7.And Hooper made it clear afterwards that it would be the continuing policy "until we get ourselves into serious trouble"."This is the make-up we’ve been using for the past six to eight months and it’s been working for us, three front-line bowlers and Chris (Gayle), Marlon Samuels, Ricardo Powell, Wavell Hinds and myself doing the rest," he said.It was the balance that would continue to be used, he added, with one proviso."If, for argument’s sake, we see the pitch is a green seamer, we’d probably contemplate playing the extra bowler but, all things being equal, that is the way we will go," he stated.The problem for Hooper and his co-selectors at present is an embarrassment of batting riches.Samuels’ clearcut class and recent record should make him an automatic choice in the batting order. But Powell’s breathtaking, unbeaten 40 off 18 deliveries on Sunday and his athletic fielding in the key positions behind point and square-leg have guaranteed him his place.Lara was simply Lara, in a class by himself, against South Africa. But Powell and Sarwan lost nothing by comparison.Two straight drives by Powell, the first straight as an arrow off Pollock that landed on the blackened sightboard for six and the other off Makhaya Ntini that passed bowler Makhaya Ntini as a white blur on its way to the boundary, were two of the most fiercely struck strokes of the match, Lara’s and South African Lance Klusener’s included.Discarded by the previous selectors for his inconsistency, Powell was recalled by the Richards panel last September and has responded by tempering his extravagant strokeplay.In India and Bangladesh and now here, his methods have become more orthodox but no less effective.Sarwan has developed into the West Indies equivalent of Michael Bevan, regarded as the best "finisher" over the closing overs in the limiting overs game. In India, he was unbeaten 83, 39 and 88 in three of his seven innings and 102 in his second of three.But his 32 off 15 balls, with a couple of thumping sixes, was more reminscent of his unbeaten 72 off 54 balls at No.6 against Australia in a practice match prior to the Champions Trophy in Colombo last September.The only likely change in Thursday’s eleven would involve Pedro Collins who, apart from the major wicket of Jacques Kallis to a perfectly pitched delivery angled away from it, had an indifferent match Sunday.He was taken for 54 from nine overs and his carelessness in catching the rampant Klusener at long-leg off Gayle and then stepping back onto the ropes prevented a more comfortable victory – created hundreds of thousands of heart palpitations throughout the CaribbeanThere are five more group matches and five after that if the West Indies advance to the final, the odds on which have dropped as rapidly as the stock exchange.Their next encounter in Port Elizabeth on Thursday against New Zealand whose chances diminished with defeat to Sri Lanka in Blomfontein yesterday.The New Zealanders have already declared they will not fulfil their fixture against Kenya in Nairobi because of fears over security following the terrorist bomb that killed 14 in a hotel in the second city of Mombasa late last year.It basically means the New Zealanders would have to win all their remaining matches against South Africa, the West Indies, Bangladesh and Canada – or depend on an unusual sequence of results – to advance.As far as Hooper is concerned, Sunday’s victory over South Africa was just what was needed."It sets up the tournament for us in that we’re off to a good start," he said. "The manner in which we came back after the start we had to make 270-odd was really great. Its brought a lot of confidence in the side."And confidence is a commodity is short supply in West Indies teams in the recent past.

Second XI Trophy Results

Grace Road:
Middlesex 2nd XI 224-8 (NJ Brown 58)
Leicestershire 2nd XI 226-5 (CP Crowe 99)
Leicestershire 2nd XI won by 5 wicketsMaidstone:
Kent 2nd XI 266-6 (IN Flanagan 79, PS Lazenbury 62)
Sussex 2nd XI 210 (GRA Campbell 53)
Kent 2nd XI won by 56 runsBingley:
Yorkshire 2nd XI 261-8 (S Widdup 81, JD Middlebrook 53)
Durham 2nd XI 164
Yorkshire 2nd XI won by 97 runsOmbersley:
Gloucestershire 2nd XI 245-9 (DR Hewson 82, RCJ Williams 53no; P Baxter 3-52)
Worcestershire 2nd XI 248-5 (MAP Dale 90, S Moore 86)
Worcestershire 2nd XI won by 5 wickets

Under-19 players included in Pakistan and SA academy squads

Several players from South Africa and Pakistan, who featured in the Under-19 World Cup last month in Malaysia, are part of academy sides to tour Bangladesh in April for the Grameenphone Academy Cup.Fast bowlers Matthew Arnold and Reeza Hendricks along with wicketkeeper Bradley Barnes, who were part of the squad that reached the World Cup final, are part of South Africa’s academy squad scheduled to reach Bangladesh on Tuesday.Pakistan’s Under-19 captain Imad Wasim, along with Adil Raza, Ahmed Shehzad and Ali Asad, has been included in the academy squad which will arrive in Bangladesh on April 14. Batsman Khurram Manzoor, who made his international debut against Zimbabwe last month, is also part of the squad.South Africa squad
Matthew Arnold, Sammy-Joe Avontuur, Bradley Barnes, Richard das Neves, CJ de Villiers, Reeza Hendricks, Rushdi Jappie, Mondli Mahlombe, Mafinki Serame, Mthokozisi Shezi, Abdul Temoor, Shadley van Schalkwyk, Dane Vilas, Neil WagnerPakistan squad
Khalid Latif (capt), Khurram Manzoor, Raheel Majeed, Asad Shafiq, Ali Asad, Ahmed Shehzad, Azhar Ali, Anwar Ali, Adil Raza, Mohammad Aamer, Azharullah, Imad Wasim, Naeem Anjum (wk), Yasir ShahReplacements for the four-day matches: Sohail Khan, Wahab Riaz, Sarfaraz Ahmed, Fawad Alam

Nick Knight to lead PCA XI against West Indies

The Professional Cricketers’ Association have named their side to take on West Indies in a charity Twenty20 match at Arundel on June 26.The PCA XI will be captained by Nick Knight and will include former England players Robin Smith, Dean Headley, Chris Lewis, Rikki Clarke, Martin Bicknell and James Foster as well as New Zealand’s Nathan Astle.The game, which will raise funds for the PCA’s charity work, will give West Indies a taste of Twenty20 cricket ahead of their two matches against England.Steve Marsh, events director for the PCA, said: “With nearly 20 matches scheduled for the summer and the appointment of Nick as the side’s permanent captain, the PCA Masters Series is going from strength-to-strength. The PCA Masters has become a side to be reckoned with and the lads really rate their chances against this West Indies side. It should prove to be a very keenly contested match.”PCA XI Nick Knight (capt), Nathan Astle, James Benning, Martin Bicknell, Rikki Clarke, Nayan Doshi, James Foster (wk), Dean Headley, Chris Lewis, James Middlebrook, Robin Smith.

  • Tickets for the match, which starts at 5:30pm, are £20 (concessions at £15), proceeds from which will aid the PCA’s benevolent work. Enquiries can be made by phone on 01903 882462 or email to [email protected].

  • Indians take on inexperienced Antigua

    Anil Kumble will get a chance to get used to the conditions before the first Test on June 2 © AFP

    Just two days after suffering their worst one-day series defeat in recent times, the Indians will find themselves in a school-like setting, against a team largely composed of freshmen. In a two-day work-out ahead of the first Test, they will take on an inexperienced Antigua & Barbuda side at the nondescript Police Recreation Ground.Rahul Dravid had no qualms in admitting that India were “out fielded” in the one-day series but, considering the arena served up for the practice match, his team would do well to shelve their acrobatic skills for the moment. A day before the match, the Police Recreation Ground resembled a football field. A furrow ran through the centre and there were several large chunks of rough patches on the outfield. The groundsman, a jovial man who bowls legspinners for the Police club, attributed this to the drought that the area is experiencing.The ground is also characterised by a distinct slope, one that might remind a few Indians of Lord’s. The main square, though, is situated on a mound, one that may remind Ramesh Powar of Shivaji Park, his club in Mumbai. The size of the field may get Virender Sehwag and Mahendra Singh Dhoni smacking their lips and at some stage of the game, spare balls may become a priority. Whether either will take the field is another issue, considering that the Indians might want to rest them ahead of the opening Test that is just three days away.With a number of weary legs doing the rounds, the Indians may want give a chance to the five players – Dinesh Karthik, Anil Kumble, VVS Laxman, VRV Singh and Wasim Jaffer – who have flown down for the Test series. The opponents they face, though, are largely unknown. Only Sylvester Joseph, who is leading the side, Adam Sanford and Kerry Jeremy, the medium-pacers, have played international cricket. Justin Athanaze, the promising Under-19 star, Chad Hampson, the talented medium-pacer, and Gavin Williams, a batsman who’s been playing club cricket in Australia, may be the others to watch out for.Indians
    Wasim Jaffer, Virender Sehwag, Rahul Dravid (capt), Yuvraj Singh, VVS Laxman, Mohammad Kaif, Suresh Raina, Dinesh Karthik, Mahendra Singh Dhoni (wk), Anil Kumble, Harbhajan Singh, Irfan Pathan, Munaf Patel, Sreesanth, VRV Singh.Antigua & Barbuda
    Sylvester Joseph (capt), Justin Athanaze, Adam Sanford, Kerry Jeremy, Anthony Martin, Devon Thomas, Chad Hampson, Gavin Williiams, Kerry Mentor (wk), Daniel Thomas, Michael Challenger, Greg Skepple, Stephen Matthew