I wanted to play one-dayers till September – Ganguly

‘They (the selectors) just asked me whether I wanted to continue one-day cricket’ © Getty Images
 

Dropped for the ongoing CB Series in Australia, Indian batsman Sourav Ganguly has revealed that he had planned to continue playing one-dayers for another seven to eight months before taking a call on his future. He also considered the fact that he didn’t see himself realistically continuing till the 2011 World Cup.”They (the selectors) just asked me whether I wanted to continue one-day cricket,” Ganguly told Times Now, an Indian news channel. “I said, ‘yes definitely, at least for the next 7-8 months.'”So I wanted to play till September, then probably take a call because at some stage you would not have gone on to play the 2011 World Cup.”There is not much of one-day cricket this year. There is the Australia series, then India go to Sri Lanka for Tests and one-dayers. So there are five one-dayers there and then the Champions Trophy in September and rest of the year is full of Test cricket.Ganguly and another former captain Rahul Dravid were omitted for the one-dayers in Australia after the national selectors opted for the core of India’s ICC World Twenty20 winning squad, with several players lacking in experience at the international level.Since his return to the one-day squad in early 2007, Ganguly has scored 1240 runs in 32 matches at an average of 44.28, and he celebrated his return with the Man-of-the-Series prize in the one-day series against Sri Lanka before the World Cup. However, his performances in the last ten matches saw the average dipping to 25.66. The team management in Australia had reasoned that Ganguly was overlooked for the sake of blooding youth, with the added emphasis on fielding abilities.”I was a bit surprised because I didn’t expect it,” he said. “But, all I can say for sure is that it is not on the basis of form.”

Australia advance on net run-rate in rain-hit match

Scorecard
Australia, on the basis of a superior average net run-rate through the tournament, have progressed to the final of the fifth place play-off in the Under-19 World Cup, after their match against Bangladesh at the Bayuemas Oval was abandoned due to rain.Chasing 116, Australia’s openers, Kirk Pascoe and Marcus Stoinis, had put on 18 runs in six overs before the players were forced off the field as the skies opened up. Earlier, the Australian bowlers combined well to send Bangladesh crashing from 51 for 1 to 115 all out. Clive Rose, the left-arm spinner, and right-arm seamer David King were the pick of the bowlers, taking two important middle-order wickets apiece. Rose accounted for Bangladesh’s top scorer, Amit Majumder, who made a 79-ball 43, while King bowled their captain, Suhrawadi Shuvo, for 1.

Nottinghamshire rout Kent by 10 wickets

Division One

Play at The Rose Bowl was abandoned as Hampshire drew with Sussex © Getty Images
 

Nottinghamshire became the first side to notch a win in 2008’s Championship with a comprehensive rout of Kent, who were beaten by 10 wickets at Canterbury. Nottinghamshire only needed 22 runs to complete the victory with Will Jefferson (5) and Matthew Wood (17) guiding them home.Hampshire’s match against the champions Sussex ended in a predictable draw, with rain preventing any play on the fourth day at The Rose Bowl.Persistent drizzle in London also called a halt to the game at The Oval, with Surrey drawing their match against Lancashire.

Team Mat Won Lost Tied Draw Aban Pts
Nottinghamshire 1 1 0 0 0 0 22
Surrey 1 0 0 0 1 0 11
Hampshire 1 0 0 0 1 0 10
Sussex 1 0 0 0 1 0 9
Lancashire 1 0 0 0 1 0 6
Kent 1 0 1 0 0 0 3

Division Two

Essex eased to their first win of the season, beating Northamptonshire by nine wickets on the final day at Chelmsford. After their poor day yesterday, when they slipped to 38 for 4, Northants’ batsmen fared much better with Lance Klusener cracking 92. But he became David Masters’ fourth victim, Essex dismissing Northants for 237 to leave the home side needing a mere 15 to win. Jason Gallian fell for 1 but Varun Chopra saw them home in the third over.Nadeem Malik took 5 for 51 to spark a mini Middlesex collapse in which they lost their last five wickets for 141 as Leicestershire romped to a six-wicket win at Grace Road. Owais Shah notched his fifty, adding to the fine 116 he made in the first innings, and Shaun Udal also cracked his maiden half-century for his new county, but Middlesex fell away to be dismissed for 258, leaving Leicestershire 166 to win. Chris Silverwood nipped out two early wickets to give Middlesex hope, but Matthew Boyce’s 66 and an unbeaten 69 from Jim Allenby urged Leicestershire to their target.Tony Frost, Ant Botha and drizzly conditions in Birmingham all conspired against Worcestershire, who were denied an opening victory against Warwickshire on the final day at Edgbaston. Resuming on 26 for 3, Warwickshire’s resilience began with the nightwatchman, Lee Daggett, frustrating for nearly an hour before he was bowled by Gareth Batty. Navdeep Poonia followed almost immediately, and when Luke Parker edged to gully, the hosts were 109 for 7. Enter Frost (46*) and Botha (18*) who ground Worcestershire down for an hour-and-a-half, and inclement weather prevented any further action after tea.No play was possible between Gloucestershire and Derbyshire at Bristol, the match dribbling to a damp draw.

Team Mat Won Lost Tied Draw Aban Pts
Essex 1 1 0 0 0 0 22
Leicestershire 1 1 0 0 0 0 22
Gloucestershire 1 0 0 0 1 0 10
Warwickshire 1 0 0 0 1 0 8
Worcestershire 1 0 0 0 1 0 8
Middlesex 1 0 1 0 0 0 6
Derbyshire 1 0 0 0 1 0 3
Northamptonshire 1 0 1 0 0 0 3

Northants escape pitch penalty

Northamptonshire escaped any penalty for the state of their Wantage Road pitch after Matthew Hayden staged a batting masterclass to leave his Northamptonshire side in charge against Essex.The tall Australian cracked a six and 17 fours in his magnificent 164 off 260 balls as Northants closed on 337 for seven, a lead of 104 with two days remaining.And Hayden’s men were able to celebrate their promotion into Division One, albeit 24 hours late, following the ECB pitch panel’s decision not to order a deduction of points.Phil Sharpe, the Board’s Pitch Liason Officer, said: “During the cricket on the first day the ball turned sufficiently to warrant a further inspection, and I asked for a second opinion.””Having seen the cricket on the second day, along with Alan Smith, we came to the conclusion that this was not a substandard pitch and did not warrant a rating of poor.”Hayden and David Sales (61) posted 122 in 34 overs for the third wicket after off-spinner Tim Mason had removed Adrian Rollins and Jeff Cook cheaply.Sales struck nine boundaries in his 109-ball knock before edging Peter Such to slip, but Hayden powered on and gave a superb demonstration of footwork and concentration, securing three batting bonus points.”It has been a stressful day for us. Now we can celebrate a bit,” commented Northants’ relieved Director of Cricket Bob Carter when the panel’s findings were eventually announced shortly after tea.

Northumberland beat Lincolnshire by five wickets

Lincolnshire’s interest in the Minor Counties Cricket Association Knock Out competition ended in the first round as rain delayed the start of their game against Northumberland.No play was possible at the Jesmond ground until 3pm, reducing the match to 30 overs a side.Having won the toss, Northumberland put Lincs in to bat, a decision which seemed to suit the visiting side who, after 10 overs, had 49 on the board with just one wicket down – that of James Clark, caught off Steve Humble.This brought Matthew Dowman out to join Mark Fell at the crease to take the score to 60, but when the number three was bowled by Humble for 10, Lincs suffered a minor collapse, losing two more wickets cheaply.After 15 overs, the total had reached 70 for four, Fell hitting 37 before being out lbw to John Windows.Paul Pollard and Oliver Burford pushed the score along steadily, Burford making 32 before being trapped lbw by Steve Chapman.And Bob Chapman’s contribution of 21, an unbeaten 10 from David Pipes and a late knock of 17 from Jon Davies at number 11 helped Lincs to 159 for nine at the close.For Northumberland, Lee Crozier took three wickets for an expensive 51 off his six overs and Humble claiming two for 22 while David Rutherford bowled an economical six overs to finish with one for 15.Davies then got Lincs off to a flying start, taking the first wicket on five – Chapman caught by Dowman – and the second with only 16 runs on the board.By the 10th over, Northumberland had fallen behind the run rate, having made only 37 for three, the third wicket also falling to Davies. And with 51 scored, a sharp throw from James Clarke saw Chris Hewison run out for 14.But John Graham and Windows steadied the innings and by the 20th over, the home side were ahead of the Lincs’ rate on 100 for four, Graham having been dropped on 14.Windows finally fell to David Pipes, having contributed 18 to the fifth wicket partnership of 64 but Lincs could not unseat Graham or his new partner Humble and Graham went on to make an unbeaten 60 as Northumberland sealed a five wicket win with seven balls to spare.Davies finished with an economical three for 16 off six overs and Humble was unbeaten on 20 as his side earned a second round tie against Cheshire at Cheadle Hulme.

Warne axed by Channel Nine

Shane Warne showed promise as a commentator © Getty Images

Shane Warne has been axed by the Australian broadcaster Channel Nine – a contract worth $300,000 per year – due to his off-field conduct. Warne had been an employee of Nine for more than a decade, but the company’s management inserted a clause in his last contract allowing them to terminate it if his behaviour was unsatisfactory.Following the break-up of his marriage over the past month and the attention he drew to the UK’s tabloid press, the station owner Kerry Packer made the decision amid fears of tarnishing the station’s image. Warne showed great promise commentating for Nine during his 12-month drugs ban throughout 2003, an experience he was said to enjoy immensely.Jason Warne, Warne’s manager and brother, told the the move was extremely disappointing given the length of the relationship. “It [commentating] was something Shane was looking forward to doing in retirement,” he said. The Nine spokesman Lynton Taylor refused to comment.

England contemplate the spinning option


England prepare beneath the clocktower of Galle Fort
© Getty Images 2003

This is more like it. All England’s tour needed was a change of scene. After days of downpours so predictable you could set your watch by them, the England squad have pitched up in Galle, where the rains have temporarily lost track of their movements, give or take a sprinkling of a shower in the late afternoon. Today’s practice session at the international stadium was stiflingly hot – so hot, in fact, that one half-longed for the usual claps of thunder and one of those refreshing ten-minute deluges.Instead, the team got stuck into a three-hour sweatathon, at the end of which Michael Vaughan was edging his thoughts towards a spin-based attack – which would represent quite a U-turn in strategy after the dominance of England’s seamers in Bangladesh. “We have to consider all options at a venue like this,” said Vaughan. “Galle is one of those horses-for-courses grounds, and in the next 36 hours we will have to come up with the best formula to approach a one-off Test.”If visualisation has been a big part of England’s preparations in the recent rain-blighted fortnight, then the sight of a typically flat, dry, grassless pitch will have given many of the squad the heebie-jeebies. It was on this ground, two and a half years ago, that Marvan Atapattu sailed serenely to 201 not out in 170 overs, as England lost their tempers and several gallons of sweat, en route to an innings-and-28-run defeat.”The conditions are very similar to last time around,” confirmed Vaughan, who did not play in that match, but watched from the sidelines as his current opening partner, Marcus Trescothick scored 40% of England’s runs and, according to Michael Atherton, made the rest of the batsmen “look like fools”.”The pitch should play well for the first two days, ” added Vaughan, before admitting his first and most important job will be to win the toss on Tuesday morning – a tough ask for a man who has lost seven out of eight tosses in all international cricket since the Trent Bridge Test last summer. Thereafter, it will be over to England’s posse of spinners. Ashley Giles and Gareth Batty seem to have cemented the first two slots. It remains to be seen whether Robert Croft’s late charge amid the Colombo showers will sway the selectors.In keeping with their try-anything-once attitude for this match, Andrew Flintoff was handed the new ball in a tough nets session, just so that all options were covered. “A wicket like this would definitely favour three fulltime spinners,” said Vaughan, who seems strangely reluctant to bowl himself these days. Then again, once you’ve bowled Sachin Tendulkar through the gate, as Vaughan did at Trent Bridge in his annus mirabilis of 2002, everything else must pale in comparison.Another contender for the new-ball role, and the most unlikely option since Mark Waugh filled in for Craig McDermott in the 1993 Lord’s Test, would be Rikki Clarke. “He definitely has a chance of playing,” enthused Vaughan, although James Kirtley’s late burst of form in the warm-up game in Colombo has caused one of those habitual selectorial headaches.In fact, the only man who has not been mentioned in dispatches is Richard Johnson, England’s nine-wicket hero of the Chittagong Test. It is unlikely that he would displace the industrious Matthew Hoggard if there were only a solitary seamer’s position up for grabs, so Johnson faces a nervous wait before he can add to his 15 bargain-basement wickets in two Tests against Zimbabwe and Bangladesh.”We need to be a bit lenient on the seamers,” said Vaughan – an interesting choice of words, seeing as Sanath Jayasuriya and co. will have no intention of that sort. “Gough, Caddick and White were all outstanding [in 2001], but none of them are here this time.” But it is a measure of how decimated England’s fast-bowling stocks have become that they can countenance such a drastic change of policy.Then again, it is equally unusual that an England touring side has taken their cue from the opposition. Every indication from the Sri Lankan camp suggests that they intend to shoehorn three spinners into their starting line-up as well. “Kumar Dharmasena and Upul Chandana are a pair of experienced bowlers to partner Muttiah Muralitharan,” said Sri Lanka’s captain, Hashan Tillakaratne, “and I am sure they will surprise a few people.”Jayasuriya is likely to resume his spinning allrounder’s role – with 16 English scalps, he was the top wicket-taker in the series last time around – and this Test is beginning to resemble, on paper at least, a throwback to the 1950s, with perhaps as many as eight frontline spin options to get the purists purring.For that comparison to be completed, however, there will need to be an improvement in on-field relations – something that both captains have been keen to emphasise since the filthy-tempered fracas in 2001. “We will be playing it hard but fair,” confirmed Vaughan. “A bit of banter is good for the game, so long as it doesn’t get out of hand.””We are keen, fresh and ready,” added Tillakaratne, whose team has not played a Test since June. “We know England are a well-balanced side with a world-class top six, and we fully expect a high-scoring series.”Sri Lanka (possible): 1 Sanath Jayasuriya, 2 Marvan Atapattu, 3 Kumar Sangakkara, 4 Mahela Jayawardene, 5 Hashan Tillakaratne (capt), 6 Romesh Kaluwitharana (wk), 7 Kumar Dharmasena, 8 Upul Chandana, 9 Chaminda Vaas, 10 Dinusha Fernando, 11 Muttiah Muralitharan.England (possible): 1 Michael Vaughan (capt), 2 Marcus Trescothick, 3 Mark Butcher, 4 Nasser Hussain, 5 Graham Thorpe, 6 Andrew Flintoff, 7 Chris Read (wk), 8 Ashley Giles, 9 Robert Croft, 10 Gareth Batty, 11 Matthew Hoggard.

Eighteen wickets tumble at Mutare


Scorecard

Vusi Sibanda: 62 for Midlands© Getty Images

It was a day for bowlers at Mutare Sports Club where Midlands, after losing the toss, bowled out the home side Manicaland for 181, and then finished the day on 161 for 7 themselves. The weather was hot and dry, the ground in good condition and the pitch, usually a featherbed, gave a little help to the seamers, but on the whole there was too much poor batting by both sides.The offspinner Prosper Utseya took his best first-class figures of 5 for 32 when Manicaland batted, the top-scorer being Dion Ebrahim with a fluent 38. Eight batsmen reached double figures, but none went on to play a major innings, so they had only themselves to blame for their inadequacies.Midlands began with 69 for the first wicket, Vusi Sibanda scoring 62, and reached 95 for 1. At that point Ryan Bennett and Blessing Mahwire bowled superbly in tandem to break through the middle order and transform the innings, with only Craig Ervine (40) showing much resistance.

Sussex retain Championship title

Clare Connor: led Sussex to Championship victory© Getty Images

Clare Connor, England’s captain, led Sussex to victory in the Frizzell Women’s County Championship in Cambridge for the second year in succession. Sussex were undefeated in their five matches, recording wins against Nottinghamshire, Surrey, Lancashire, Kent and Yorkshire.Kent, skippered Charlotte Edwards, finished second after beating Yorkshire by eight wickets in their final match. Edwards was the leading run-scorer of the competition and remained unbeaten on 79.Somerset won division two and will gain promotion next year to the top flight. Surrey were relegated from division one, and Durham drop from division two into the Emerging Counties Cup next year.”I’m delighted with our performances this week and that we have retained our title," Connor said. "We have some great players in Sussex which reflects the tireless development work done by people throughout the county. I just want to take the winning habit to the matches against New Zealand now and to begin the NatWest women’s series on home soil will be fantastic”.

Canada prepare for first overseas tour

The inaugural overseas tour by Canada women will feature five matches in Trinidad and Tobago. The team leaves on April 10 for their two-week trip including two matches against Trinidad & Tobago Under-21. They also have two games against a Development XI and one against Tobago with the National Cricket Centre (NCC) in Couva, Trinidad their main base.Mona Persaud is to captain Canada for the first time on this trip. Speaking after a practice session at Etobicoke’s Qasra Sports, she said: “It is a very young team. Not all the girls have got much experience but we are looking forward to this first Canadian team tour. It is going to be tough but we have been working hard.”The players had been through fitness exercises and fielding drills in addition to batting and bowling in the nets. “Hopefully we will get more exposure so we can attract people to the game.”Sheryl Tittlemier, who is based in Ottawa but was born in Selkirk, Manitoba said: “I am absolutely looking forward to the trip” but was “not looking forward to the weather.” It has been a snowy winter in the GTA and Ottawa but the trip will bring a major contrast in temperature.”This will be my third full season, after attending practices about four years ago.”Her family has about 25 years’ involvement in baseball. “A good friend of mine, who comes from Trinidad, Greg Tony, was responsible for me getting into cricket.” Tittlemier plays with the men’s club New Edinburgh in the Ottawa Valley Cricket Council as a right-handed batsman. “I can’t say enough good things about the guys at the club that I play with.”This trip comes before the season has begun in Canada, so the heat is unlikely to be the only challenge, although the schedule was adjusted to ensure the players have a day or so to practice before the first match which, in reality, is not a lot of time.Canada beat Bermuda and Argentina to win the first ICC Americas Regional Women’s Championship in August 2007, but lost to the Trinidad & Tobago Under-17s. But it was useful experience albeit experience gained eight or nine months ago.ScheduleApril 13 v Development XI (National Cricket Centre, Couva)
April 15 v Tobago (Tobago)
April 17 v Trinidad & Tobago Under 21 (UWI, St Augustine)
April 19 v Development XI (NCC)
April 20 v Trinidad & Tobago Under-21 (NCC)

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