Man United on the trail of Under-21 star

Manchester United are said to be close to agreeing a deal to bring Blackpool’s Thomas Ince to Old Trafford, The Daily Mail claim.

The talented midfielder has impressed at Bloomfield Road since moving to Ian Holloway’s men from Liverpool, and has been recognised with his first call up to the England under-21 squad.

The Red Devils are thought to be keen on the Blackpool man, who is the son of former United battler Paul Ince.

A £6 million bid is thought to be adequate for the Tangerines to part with their star man, who played in his side’s 3-0 defeat to Cardiff at the weekend.

Ince was wanted by Swansea in the summer, but rejected a switch to the Liberty Stadium in favour of staying with Blackpool.

However, it is believed that the draw of signing for one of the country’s biggest clubs would be too good to turn down, with a move set to be completed for the January transfer window.

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By Gareth McKnight

Code violations in IPL 2014 cleared by BCCI's anti-corruption unit

The BCCI’s Anti-Corruption Unit had pulled up IPL franchises and players for failing to adhere to protocol during the 2014 tournament, but the board and teams confirmed the ACU was satisfied with the explanations it had received

ESPNcricinfo staff22-May-2015The BCCI’s Anti-Corruption Unit had pulled up various IPL franchises and players for failing to adhere to protocol during the 2014 tournament, but both the board and teams confirmed the ACU was satisfied with the explanations it had received and the inquiries were considered closed.In an email to some officials in the previous BCCI administration, ACU head Ravi Sawani outlined instances where franchises had failed to provide guest lists for private parties and sponsor events in advance, and certain players had allowed visitors into their rooms without informing the on-duty ACU officer, according to a report in the .ESPNcricinfo confirmed the contents of Sawani’s email with BCCI officials.The ACU’s concern that certain players were still not following the code strictly stemmed from the scandal of the 2013 season, when some players and team officials were found to be involved in corrupt activities that brought the game into disrepute.One example Sawani cited, according to the report, was of a private party organised by Kings XI Punjab owner Preity Zinta on a boat on April 30, 2014. In this instance, though only players were invited, there was also a friend of Zinta’s in attendance, whose presence the ACU was unaware of. It is understood the ACU wanted to first establish whether there was a party and whether there was an outsider present.The newspaper also cited similar examples of Kolkata Knight Riders owner Shah Rukh Khan and Delhi Daredevils owners hosting events involving their squads without intimating the ACU. The Daredevils reportedly hosted a party at a five-star hotel in Delhi before IPL 2014 where all the players and support staff mingled with more than 100 outsiders.A BCCI official said franchises have started sending out guest lists for private parties and sponsor events in advance to the ACU, which vets the names and sends an alert in case of any undesirable elements being present.Another instance Sawani cited involved two Chennai Super Kings players allowing friends to stay overnight in their hotel rooms without informing the ACU officer. They breached ACU protocol, which states no individuals, “except blood relations or wife/ partner,” should be entertained by players in their room.Ranjib Biswal, who was the IPL chairman in 2014, said all the necessary actions had been taken by the BCCI. “Our ACU chief Ravi Sawani was constantly in touch with all the franchises,” Biswal told ESPNcricinfo on Friday. “Wherever necessary, he had reprimanded the owners and players concerned”A Kings XI spokesperson confirmed the boat party had taken place, according to the newspaper report, and that “the BCCI was satisfied with the action taken by the franchise.” A Delhi Daredevils spokesperson also said the details of their function were shared with the BCCI-IPL management through various channels.Ever since three Rajasthan Royals players – Sreesanth, Ankeet Chavan and Ajit Chandila – and a Chennai Super Kings team official Gurunath Meiyappan were arrested during IPL 2013 for their alleged involvement in corruption, the BCCI has been extra vigilant about keeping the game clean.There is emphasis on educating players during other domestic tournaments as well as IPL, and all franchise squads are accompanied with an integrity officer who keeps a watch on player movements.BCCI secretary Anurag Thakur had said the efforts were paying off. “As far the players being approached is concerned, the BCCI education policy is working very well. If someone is being approached by anyone, he has reported back to the anti-corruption unit,” Thakur said. “I think this is the thing to highlight and admire that the players are reporting back.”

Fly-in ten Doeschate can't deny Hampshire

Jimmy Adams celebrated the birth of his new born son by scoring his fastest ever T20 fifty as Hampshire started their bid for a sixth successive Finals Day with a 17-run win against Essex

ECB/PA15-May-2015
ScorecardJimmy Adams powers through the off side during his unbeaten fifty•Getty Images

Jimmy Adams celebrated the birth of his new born son by scoring his fastest ever T20 fifty as Hampshire started their bid for a sixth successive Finals Day with a 17-run win against Essex.Adams – who was also making his 100th T20 game for Hampshire – smashed his way to an unbeaten 55 from 25 balls – his milestone coming in just 22 balls.The Championship captain missed Hampshire’s horror performance against Yorkshire in the longer format to attend the birth of his second child, Joshua, on Monday.Hampshire have beaten Essex five out of the past seven meetings – with the other two games rained off – and looked likely to make it eight unbeaten against James Foster’s men from the early stages.In overcast conditions, James Vince won the toss and elected to bat and modestly started to compile a total – the openers taking 12 balls before Michael Carberry clipped away the first boundary of the night.But that started a flurry of runs as the opening pair of Carberry and Vince brought up a typically brisk 50 stand – from exactly seven overs.Wickets were at a premium for the Essex attack, but the introduction of Adeel Malik – brother of Pakistan Test player Shoaib – found Carberry slashing into the deep to make the breakthrough.Essex captain Ryan ten Doeschate landed in the country at six this morning and only signed his registration documents on the team bus 35 minutes before the five o’clock deadline after flying back from the IPL – but celebrated the wicket of Vince in the 12th over.

Insights

Hampshire are one of the most settled, if not the most settled team in the T20 Blast. They consistently select the same top four and shared their bowling between just five bowlers. Stability breeds familiarity and confidence. It has all helped them build an enviable records of reaching finals day.
Essex were always playing catch-up in the chase after they lost four wickets in the first ten overs, but losing four wickets in 28 balls in between overs 13 and 18 ensured they could not launch an unlikely assault on Hampshire’s impressive total.
Freddie Wilde

Adams struck the first six at the Ageas Bowl this season, before former Essex man Owais Shah followed suit with a humongous maximum over mid-on.New father Adams continued his onslaught with an upper cut six as he bagged a 67-run partnership with Shah – before the latter was well caught on the fence.Adams brought up his fifty with a single after five fours and two maximums to start this season as he ended last year, with a half-century.Sean Ervine was excellently snaffled by a diving Greg Smith in the final over but Hampshire reached an impressive 173 for 4 in their allotted overs.Essex’s reply started Chris Wood bowled dangerman Jesse Ryder in the second over – splaying his stumps across the deck before wheeling away in delirious delight.Fiery West Indian Fidel Edwards struck with his first ball for Hampshire at the Ageas Bowl with a speedy in-swinger – dismissing Nick Browne as the away side faltered.Velani set about a mini-rival with a considered 21 from 18 but gave himself too much room to home debutant Yasir Arafat – another set of stumps demolished.Greg Smith top scored for Essex with a 21-ball 30 before a clever change up to come around the wicket by his namesake Will sent him back to the dugout.Wickets kept on falling as Foster and Callum Taylor – making his first senior appearance – both fell to spinner Danny Briggs.Ten Doeschate quietly went about maintaining the contest with a fifty from 32 balls. The Netherlands man will travel back to India after Essex’s clash with Surrey tomorrow.Graham Napier bludgeoned the biggest six of the night before Arafat got him next ball before Malik was foolishly run out without facing a ball.Ten Doeschate created a nervous ending but was bowled in the final over as he finished on 68 but his side lost by a convincing 17 runs with three balls to spare.

Trescothick optimistic season isn't over

Marcus Trescothick, the Somerset captain, is hopeful his season is not over after an injury to his right ankle

ESPNcricinfo staff31-Aug-2011Marcus Trescothick, the Somerset captain, is hopeful his season is not over despite injuring his right ankle.Trescothick has been the leading scorer in the Championship this season, and has been pivotal in Somerset’s campaign in Division One and the Clydesdale Bank 40, having also taken his side to the finals of the Friends Life t20 where they lost to Leicestershire.With Somerset still challenging for two trophies, Trescothick’s absence is a major blow. He picked up the problem during Somerset’s CB40 game against Essex last Sunday, although had been carrying a niggle for some weeks, but following results from a scan has told the injury is not as bad as he first thought.”[It’s] not quite as bad as we feared, but I am not able to put any time limit on my recovery at such an early stage,” he said. “There is damage to a few tendons, with a couple of grade two/three tears and another one stretched, so it is just a case of waiting to see how the rehabilitation programme works.””I’m not saying my season is over yet, although clearly time is against me.”Somerset are currently 21 points behind leaders Lancashire with two games left after the current round of matches in Division One of the Championship and have a home semi-final tie against Durham in the CB40 on September 4.

Surrey capitulate against Sussex spin

Sussex extended their unbeaten record to three matches after skittling Surrey inside 16 overs for a paltry 67 to win the first county head-to-head in Dubai by 34 runs

Mark Pennell in Dubai20-Mar-2010
ScorecardSussex extended their unbeaten record to three matches after skittling Surrey inside 16 overs for a paltry 67 to win the first county head-to-head in Dubai by 34 runs.The low-scoring Emirates Airline Twenty20 clash proved a tense affair played out on pitch that had been watered in the twilight hours and allowed to bake in near 40-degree temperatures leading up to the match.With two wins on the opening day of this inaugural festival, Sussex started slight favourites, especially so once they won the toss and elected to bat first to enjoy the best of the pitch and the coolest conditions of the day.Sussex’s openers Joe Gatting and Ollie Rayner posted 30 with Gatting catching the eye by dancing down the pitch to drive consecutive Jade Dernbach deliveries for four through the covers. But once he went for 33 off 28 balls Sussex’s innings simply unravelled in the face of a joint spin threat of Matthew Spriegel and Gareth Batty who claimed 4 for 12 and 3 for 17 respectively as Sussex succumbed in 19 overs.Only Ben Brown (10) and Chris Nash (18) limped into double figures and Surrey left the field in buoyant mood feeling that a run chase at 5.1 an over would be well within their compass despite a rapidly deteriorating pitch. How wrong they were.In the event, only their opening batsman and captain Rory Hamilton-Brown with 27 from 23 balls, made it into double figures, indeed his three fours and a six were the only boundaries in Surrey’s toothless reply.Tall offspinner Rayner got the odd one to shoot and turn as he swept through the middle order with 4 for 7 off 21 balls while diminutive legspinner Beer enjoyed plenty of turn to bag 3 for 17 in his four overs as Sussex secured victory with 27 balls to spare.With two defeats already to their name, Surrey will need a minor run-rate miracle in the last qualifying game in order to make tonight’s final when Sussex seem likely to face South African opposition in the form of the Emerging Cape Cobras.

Markram blazes SA trail to 1-0 after Maharaj, Mulder trip up England

Home side bowled out in 24.3 overs, then blitzed in chase that only last 20.5

Firdose Moonda02-Sep-2025South Africa 137 for 3 (Markram 86) beat England 131 (Smith 54, Maharaj 4-22, Mulder 3-33) by seven wicketsEngland’s batters lasted more than 100 balls, but not much more. They were dismissed in 147 balls for their fourth-lowest total against South Africa in a display of batting that could best be described as fatigued, perhaps from a month of playing in the Hundred.By the time South Africa’s batters had faced 100 balls, the job was as good as done. Aiden Markram scored the fastest fifty by a South African opener, off 23 balls, and dominated an opening stand of 121 with Ryan Rickelton to take South Africa home and open the series with an emphatic win. They batted for 125 balls.The whole match lasted just 272 balls, perhaps as a nod to the difference in preparation for these two sides for this series to where there are on the road to 2027. While South Africa played a series Australia, England only had an optional training session as they rolled in straight from the Hundred. That may also mean England are just beginning their planning for the next World Cup, while South Africa see themselves as on the path as they seek to adopt a more fearless style of play. England often use that kind of language but their loose drives and soft chips were more reckless than brave against a well-drilled South African attack.Keshav Maharaj, recently elevated to No. 1 on the ICC’s ODI bowling rankings, was the most successful bowler and picked up the third four-for of his career. Wiaan Mulder scooped 3 for 33 to mark only the second time he has taken three wickets in an ODI. South Africa also took all their catching chances, seven in total, after a ragged showing in Australia, and made good on Temba Bavuma’s decision to bowl first.England started off in signature style as Jamie Smith closed out the first over with back-to-back drives off full Nandre Burger deliveries and Ben Duckett pushed one past Lungi Ngidi that went for four. But Burger also found swing and in his second over, Duckett was tempted to play at a good-length ball without moving his feet and nicked off to continue a tough run. Duckett only had one score over 20 in eight innings in the Hundred but concerns about his form seemed immaterial when Joe Root drove Burger for four with a high elbow off the second ball he faced and held the pose for good measure.Runs kept coming in boundaries as Root took two off Ngidi and Smith took advantage of width from Burger. However, Bavuma stuck with his frontline seamers and it paid off. Root prodded at an Ngidi ball and edged behind, Ryan Rickelton diving to his right to hold the ball in his glove but it popped out as he hit the ground. He was able to get both gloves to the rebound and claimed the catch, which was confirmed on replay.Harry Brook responded by tonking Ngidi’s first ball for four and Smith just kept swinging. Corbin Bosch was brought on in the ninth over but was guided past third and then through midwicket as Smith entered the 30s. England finished the Powerplay on 57 for 2, with 44 of those runs in boundaries.The Smith-Brook partnership grew to 38 and the pair were on top of South Africa’s seamers when a moment of misjudgement separated them. Brook hit Mulder into the covers and called for two but the second run wasn’t on, Tristan Stubbs swooped in and threw to Rickelton, who broke the stumps and England were 82 for 3. Still, with Smith batting well, they would not have had many concerns. Smith brought up his second ODI fifty, and second successive one, when he sent Maharaj through the covers for four off the 46th ball he faced.At the end of that over, Jos Buttler hit the ball to the boundary, where Tony de Zorzi dived to stop four and hurt his hamstring in the process. He left the field for treatment, did not field again and was not required to bat.An incident like that could easily have shifted momentum England’s way but the opposite happened. In the next over, Smith flicked Mulder to fine leg, Bosch made good ground to his left and took an excellent one-handed catch and the collapse had begun. England lost seven wickets for 29 runs in 43 balls and almost all of them were avoidable.Jacob Bethell was lured into a drive by a floated up Maharaj delivery, got a thin edge and the ball was parried off Rickelton’s gloves to Markram at slip. He took the catch while almost blindsided by his own keeper. Will Jacks popped a simple return chance back to Maharaj; Buttler was leaden-footed when he drove and inside-edged Mulder to Rickelton and Jofra Archer nicked the next ball low to first slip, where Markram picked up another. Mulder was on a hat-trick but Maharaj cleaned up. He had Adil Rashid trapped in front of leg stump and removed debutant Sonny Baker’s middle stump to dismiss England inside 25 overs.Baker would be the first to attempt to defend their score. Given the opening over on debut, his second ball slid down leg and Markram helped it on its way for four. Baker then overcompensated and offered width as Markram cashed in on the off side. The first over went for 14 runs.Rickelton, who has struggled for rhythm from the Australia tour, could not find any early on in England either. He could not get Archer’s first four balls away and then edged the fifth one in the direction of first slip. Root claimed the catch as he seemed to think he got his fingers under the ball and while some replays agreed, others seemed to show the ball bouncing just in front. Rickelton was given not out. Archer finished the over by hitting him on the pads but England didn’t review. If they had, Hawk-Eye showed the ball would have been hitting leg stump and Rickelton would have been out for a duck.Instead, he watched as Markram continued to show Baker no mercy and took 20 off his second over, including two sixes. Rickelton’s opportunity finally came against Baker in his third over and he just about found his touch. He drove Baker for four, edged him short of slip and then flicked off the pads. Despite his first three overs costing 44 runs, Baker got a fourth over and still could not get it right. He overpitched, Markram drove for four, then down the ground and then over the covers to bring up his half-century off 23 balls, with 44 runs scored in boundaries.Baker’s four overs cost 56 runs and he was taken out of the attack before bring brought back in the 12th over and delivering a boundary-free six balls. His relief was short-lived. Baker’s next two overs cost 18 runs and his final analysis of 7-0-76-0 was the most expensive by an England player on debut.Markram had three figures in his sights but with 11 runs left to win was strongly caught by Smith at cover, who intercepted a ball that was destined for the boundary. Bavuma tried to finish it quickly but was caught at mid-off and Tristan Stubbs’ nightmare run continued as he was bowled for a duck to leave Rashid on a hat-trick. Across all formats, Stubbs has only scored one half-century in 35 innings this year. Dewald Brevis finished it off with a six as England lost for the third successive time to South Africa.

Saha returns to Bengal for upcoming season; to play Bengal Pro T20 league

Saha has will turn out for Rashmi Medinipur Wizards in the Bengal T20 league which starts on June 11

ESPNcricinfo staff10-Jun-2024Wriddhiman Saha is all set to return to Bengal for the upcoming Indian domestic season, and will also feature in the inaugural Bengal Pro T20 league that gets underway on Tuesday at the Eden Gardens.Saha, who represented Bengal for close to 15 years since making his first-class debut in 2007, moved to Tripura ahead of the 2022-23 domestic season as a player-cum-mentor. He had asked for his NOC after being hurt by comments by a senior administrator before the 2021-22 Ranji Trophy quarter-finals. After two years at Tripura, Saha is now back at Bengal.He wasn’t on the initial draft list of the Bengal Pro T20 league but has been picked by the Rashmi Medinipur Wizards team as a replacement for the injured Abhimanyu Easwaran. Wizards will be led by Sudip Chatterjee in the league and also have former India U-19 fast bowler Ishan Porel in their ranks.There are a total of eight teams taking part in the Pro T20 league. Each team will play seven league-stage matches, followed by the semi-finals and the final on June 28 at the Eden Gardens.”We are very happy to have Wriddhiman back in Bengal. Also, his interest in playing at the Bengal Pro T20 League will add more glamour to the League,” Snehasish Ganguly, the president of the Cricket Association of Bengal, said.Saha, 39, has played 136 first-class matches, scoring 7013 runs at an average of 41.99. So far, he has hit 14 centuries and 43 half-centuries. This includes 1353 Test runs in 40 matches at an average of 29.41.Saha was picked up by Gujarat Titans at the IPL 2022 auction and was part of the side that won the title in its inaugural season. He had an underwhelming IPL 2024, though, where he could only manage 136 runs in nine innings while averaging 15.11. His loss of form coincided with Titans’ slide as they finished eighth in the season.

Burns, Clark centuries give Surrey the upper hand

Hosts took first-innings lead of 208 when they were bowled out for 359 on stroke of tea

ECB Reporters Network27-Apr-2024Hampshire 151 and 31 for 2 (Gubbins 6*, Vince 4*) trail Surrey 359 (Burns 113, Clark 106*) by 177 runsHundreds in contrasting styles by skipper Rory Burns and Jordan Clark put champions Surrey in control against Hampshire at the Kia Oval.Burns’ seven-hour 113 – his 25th first-class century but first since July 2022 – laid strong foundations and Clark built on them with a run-a-ball unbeaten 106 as Surrey took a first-innings lead of 208 when they were bowled out for 359 on the stroke of tea.Hampshire lost openers Ali Orr and Fletcha Middleton in successive overs before bad light and rain took 20 overs off the day’s allocation. Hampshire will resume on 31 for 2, trailing by 177.Burns led Surrey to their second successive Championship last year despite, by his high standards, a relatively modest contribution with the bat of 631 runs at 27.43. He had seen four team-mates depart at the other end to leave Surrey 44 for 4 replying to Hampshire’s 151.But having helped tilt the balance Surrey’s way by adding 75 with Ryan Patel, he made sure they didn’t squander their advantage on day two.The pitch had lost a bit of zip but Hampshire’s seam attack – and in particular the outstanding Mohammad Abbas – still asked plenty of questions with their probling lengths and judicious use of the short ball.Burns found an unlikely ally in nightwatchman Kemar Roach with whom he patiently put on 66 in the morning session. They had to negotiate testing opening spells from Kyle Abbott and Abbas, and Burns would have been run out had Orr, running in from cover, hit the stumps with Burns, who was on 55, stranded well short of his ground.Sub fielder Ian Holland couldn’t quite hold on diving one-handed to his right at mid-off to reprieve Roach on 12 and Roach celebrated by clipping the 86th delivery he faced through mid-wicket for his only boundary.Brad Wheal broke the stand when Roach (19) drove expansively at his outswinger, but Cam Steel helped Burns take the lead past 150, upper-cutting Abbott for six over backward point to get off the mark before Abbott had him caught behind in the third over after lunch.The luckless Abbas – who finished with 1 for 43 from 28 overs – looked ruefully to the heavens when Tom Prest dropped Clark at slip on 16 and how the all-rounder made Hampshire pay, first by helping Burns put on 98 in 19 overs.Burns did a superb job blunting Abbas and Abbott in particular and was ruthless with anything loose. He tucked his 236th ball into the leg side for the single which took him to his first hundred at the Oval in two years and by then Clark had begun to plunder a wilting attack. He struck nine fours in a 53-ball fifty and then greeted Liam Dawson’s belated arrival by launching the left-arm spinner’s third ball over mid-wicket for six.Burns’ 424-minute marathon finally ended on 113 (256 balls) when he tried to up the tempo with a reverse-sweep off Dawson. He departed to a standing ovation and in the next over Abbott uprooted Gus Atkinson’s middle stump, but Worrall hung around long enough for Clark to complete his fourth first-class hundred and third for Surrey, off 101 balls with 12 fours and a six.Roach and Worrall then emphasised Surrey’s control by each taking a wicket with the new ball. Worrall’s yorker-length was too good for Orr and Middleton was caught at second slip nibbling at one from Roach that did just enough off the seam.

Australia Prime Minister praises Khawaja's courage amid ICC saga

Anthony Albanese referenced the batters attempts to promote human rights

AAP01-Jan-2024Australia Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has praised Usman Khawaja’s courage in fighting to show solidarity with victims of warfare during the Test series with Pakistan.Since the days before last month’s series opener, Khawaja has been lobbying to voice his support for those affected by ongoing conflict in the Middle East, first by writing “all lives are equal” and “freedom is a human right” on his shoes.Related

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The International Cricket Council (ICC) barred Khawaja from displaying the phrases during the Perth Test on the grounds that international players are prohibited from wearing personal messages on their uniforms.The veteran opening batter eventually taped over the messages, but the ICC charged him for breaching clothing and equipment regulations with the black armband he wore instead.Khawaja did not wear the armband in the second Test at the MCG from Boxing Day and had hoped to display a dove holding an olive branch on his bat, but this too was banned by the ICC.Khawaja, who has received widespread support from current and former Test players, wrote the names of his daughters on his shoes in the MCG Test in place of the original messages.Mr Albanese made mention of Khawaja on Monday as he addressed the Australian and Pakistani teams at Kirribilli House during his annual New Year’s Day reception before the SCG Test.Usman Khawaja’s attempt to display a dove logo and an olive branch on his shoes was denied by the ICC•AFP/Getty Images

“I’d like to congratulate [Khawaja] for the courage he has shown standing up for human values,” Mr Albanese said. “He has shown courage, and the fact that the team has backed him in is a great thing.”This week’s Test match will be Khawaja’s last batting with opening partner David Warner, who is hanging up his baggy green at the conclusion of the match, which begins on Wednesday.”When Ussie and Dave go out, it will be a very special moment, when you walk on to the SCG,” Mr Albanese said.The pair of childhood friends have formed a formidable duo at the top of the order since Khawaja’s recall to the Test team during the home Ashes series two summers agoWarner became emotional speaking about Khawaja in his pre-match press conference on Monday.”Just to see him come back the way he has the last two years has been absolutely amazing,” Warner said. “I know his family are really, really proud of him. I’m really, really proud of him as a mate.”When you’re childhood friends dreaming big and you get to go out here at the SCG, it’s fitting.”

Jadeja penalised for using 'soothing cream' without intimating umpires

Jadeja fined 25% of his Nagpur Test match fee and handed a demerit point

ESPNcricinfo staff11-Feb-2023Ravindra Jadeja has been docked 25% of his match fee and handed a demerit point for breaching Article 2.20 of ICC’s code of conduct for players during the Nagpur Test against Australia. The clause relates to displaying conduct that is contrary to the spirit of the game.The incident in question took place in the 46th over of day one of the Test, which India won by an innings and 132 runs on the third day, when Australia’s first innings was on. He was seen applying a cream – a pain-relief ointment – on the index finger of his bowling hand. Images from the broadcast showed Jadeja taking a substance off Mohammed Siraj’s hand and using it – but not putting it on the ball.The Indian team management later said that the cream was for swelling on Jadeja’s finger, but the same hadn’t been communicated to the on-field umpires.The match referee, Andy Pycroft, was satisfied with Jadeja’s explanation that the cream had been used only for medical purposes and not used to alter the condition of the ball. He, however, charged Jadeja for breaching the spirit of the game under the code.As for the demerit point, this was Jadeja’s first offence in a 24-month period.Jadeja was one of the heroes of India’s win. He picked up five wickets in the first innings as Australia finished on 177. He followed it up with an innings of 70 as India got to 400 in their only innings, and then picked up two more wickets as Australia collapsed for 91 in their second innings. He was named the Player of the Match for the Test.

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