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Anderson, Trott rested from ODIs

England have rested fast bowler James Anderson and batsman Jonathan Trott from the ODI series in India in January

ESPNcricinfo staff18-Dec-2012England have rested fast bowler James Anderson and batsman Jonathan Trott from the ODI series in India in January and replaced them with Chris Woakes and Jos Buttler. They have also included batsman Joe Root in the Twenty20 squad for the two matches in December before they return home for Christmas.”Woakes and Buttler replace Anderson and Trott in the India ODI squad as the selectors look to manage workloads,” the ECB said in a statement.Anderson had originally been selected only to play the first three matches of the five-ODI series, but he will now miss the entire contest after playing an important role in England’s 2-1 victory in the Test series in India.Woakes, who is currently playing domestic cricket in New Zealand, has played six ODIs, taking seven wickets at 29.14 and scoring 72 runs. Most of scalps came in one innings when he claimed 6 for 45 against Australia in Brisbane. He spent a lot of time around the squad during 2012 without commanding a regular place.Buttler, the 22-year-old Somerset batsman, only has one ODI cap under his belt. In that match, against Pakistan in Dubai, he collected a second-ball duck.Root was added to the T20 squad that was weakened by the injury to Stuart Broad, who will be replaced as captain as Eoin Morgan. Although Root face 229 balls for his 73 on debut, he also has a more flamboyant side to his game as he showed briefly in the second innings and has demonstrated for Yorkshire in the domestic Friends Life t20.England play Twenty20 internationals on December 20 and 22 before returning home for Christmas and the New Year. They return to India in the first week of January for the ODI series.Twenty20 squad: Jonny Bairstow, Tim Bresnan, Danny Briggs, Jos Buttler, Jade Dernbach, Alex Hales, Michael Lumb, Stuart Meaker, Eoin Morgan (capt), Samit Patel, James Tredwell, Luke Wright, Joe Root, James Harris.ODI squad: Alastair Cook (capt), Jonny Bairstow, Ian Bell, Tim Bresnan, Danny Briggs, Jade Dernbach, Steven Finn, Craig Kieswetter, Stuart Meaker, Eoin Morgan, Samit Patel, Kevin Pietersen, James Tredwell, Chris Woakes, Jos Buttler.

T&T on a roll with fifth win

A round-up of matches from the Caribbean T20 on Wednesday, January 16, 2012

ESPNcricinfo staff17-Jan-2013
Scorecard and ball-by-ball details
Trinidad and Tobago continued their impressive run in the Caribbean T20, picking up their fifth win in six matches. They beat Barbados comfortably, by five wickets, in St Lucia. For their second straight game, the bowlers bowled economically, with five out of six bowlers used conceding less than six an over. The spinners Samuel Badree and Sunil Narine kept Barbados in check and Rayam Emrit picked up two wickets with his medium-pace. Ashley Nurse was the top-scorer for Barbados, making an unbeaten 24 in 19, but it wasn’t enough, as his team only managed 101 for 6.T&T openers Lendl Simmons and Evin Lewis lay a good foundation for the chase with a 45-run opening stand. However, T&T lost their next four wickets for just 32 runs before Denesh Ramdin and Kieron Pollard steadied the ship, and took their team to the brink of victory, which was achieved with 29 balls to spare. They retained their position at the top of the table.
Scorecard
In a game that may not be of much consequence as far as qualifying for the knockouts is concerned, Leeward Islands won their first game of the Caribbean T20, beating Combined Campuses and Colleges by four runs. Spinners Ryan Austin and Akeem Dewar bowled miserly, wicket-taking spells, to limit Leewards to 127. The pair shared six wickets, and had left the opposition tottering at 81 for 8 before a late recovery from Justin Athanaze and Gavin Tonge pushed the score to a competitive one.Leewards managed to make steady inroads during CCC’s chase and at 72 for 5 in the 15th over, the former had the edge. But Sunil Ambris put together 26 for the sixth wicket with Akeem Dewar, who added a further 23 with Jason Holder. Holder also brought the required rate in control, smacking 20 off 8 balls. But Holder was run out off the last ball of the penultimate over with seven needed to win, and there were no runs scored for the next three balls during which Dewar was also dismissed. CCC only managed two off the final three deliveries, and Leewards snuck home.

Brown tipped to get top Warwickshire job

Warwickshire are expected to confirm Dougie Brown, their assistant coach and Academy director, on Thursday morning

George Dobell30-Jan-2013Warwickshire are expected to confirm Dougie Brown, their assistant coach and Academy director, on Thursday morning as the successor to Ashley Giles as their new director of cricket.Brown has fought off other leading candidates for the job such as Graeme Welch, his former Warwickshire team-mate and the county’s bowling coach, and the West Indies coach Ottis Gibson, who has also been discussing the details of a promised new contract with the national side.Brown, who worked in close association with Giles as Warwickshire won the Championship last summer, and also reached the final of the CB40, is a former England and Scotland allrounder who can be sure to bring a passionate approach to the role. He is also a former PCA chairman.Other candidates for the Warwickshire role included David Parsons, the ECB performance director, David Hemp, former Glamorgan and Bermuda captain and now coaching at Solihull School and Andy Moles, the former Scotland, Kenya and New Zealand coach, who was discounted before the interview stage.

Hayden helps struggling batsmen

Few Australian batsmen are more qualified to give advice on scoring runs in India than Matthew Hayden and Michael Clarke, and the two men were locked in intense discussions out on the field after the end of the Hyderabad Test

Brydon Coverdale05-Mar-2013Few Australian batsmen are more qualified to give advice on scoring runs in India than Matthew Hayden and Michael Clarke, and the two men were locked in intense discussions out on the field after the end of the Hyderabad Test. Following the Chennai defeat, Clarke enlisted the help of Shane Warne to speak to the spin-bowling group and a similar scenario played out with Hayden in Hyderabad, as the Australians practised at a time when the second session should have been under way.A makeshift net was set up around the Test-match pitch and the batsmen rotated through a centre-wicket batting session against the spinners and the two left-arm fast bowlers, Mitchell Johnson and Mitchell Starc. While the coach Mickey Arthur and his assistant Steve Rixon watched from behind the batsman, Hayden, the batting coach Michael di Venuto and a padded-up Clarke stood to the side. They spoke between themselves and to whichever batsmen weren’t in at the time, Hayden demonstrating stances and footwork during his hour-long stay.Hayden is the only Australian who has scored more Test runs in India than Clarke’s 954; his 1027 runs came at an average of 51.35 across three tours from 2001 to 2008. He entered the first tour desperately in need of some big scores to secure his place as a Test opener and he responded with 119, 28 not out, 97, 67, 203 and 35. Much of his success against spin came because he employed the sweep shot to great effect.England’s batsmen also swept well during their series victory in India late last year, but when David Warner and Phillip Hughes tried the shot against R Ashwin coming over the wicket on the third day in Hyderabad, both were bowled around their legs. Hayden, who is in India commentating on the series, said on Star Sports before the fourth day’s play that Warner had fallen into the trap of sweeping a ball that was too full, meaning his stumps were vulnerable.”The line was good to sweep. The length, though, was questionable,” Hayden said. “We saw with Davey Warner that was a very full length and even though I loved to sweep the very first instinct I had in my mind was actually about whether the ball was full or not. In fact I’m sure bat-pad thought I was crazy, because as soon as I saw any width I’d yell out the word ‘full’ and that would get my feet moving into that position.”The ball that we saw Hughes get out on was actually the perfect length to sweep. But what is the perfect length? Because if you’re short or tall, your perfect lengths vary. That’s a very personal thing. And for me the whole bat-pad routine, you’re not really worried about a bat-pad if you’re looking to play aggressively. They only come into play when you’re feeling a little tentative or your footwork is slow and the ball is turning. You need the aggressive options.”That’s exactly why you want to either get the ball on the full to cover the spin, and also sweep on line and when the offspinner is coming around the wicket, you can’t be out lbw. It’s always got to be outside the line of leg stump.”The Australians batted for more than an hour and a half on the Hyderabad pitch after their innings defeat, trying out different strategies and shots. Hughes advanced to a few deliveries, which he had been reluctant to against Ashwin during the two Tests, but there remained plenty of work for all of the batsmen ahead of the third Test, which starts in Mohali on Thursday next week.

Trinidad and Tobago win six games in a row

A round-up of Regional Super50 matches played on April 7, 2013

ESPNcricinfo staff08-Apr-2013Trinidad and Tobago made it six wins out of six, beating Barbados by 41 runs in Port of Spain. After choosing to bat, they were in trouble at 5 for 3 but captain Denesh Ramdin and Jason Mohammed put together a match-winning stand. Ramdin struck 134 at better than a run a ball, with 12 fours and four sixes, and Mohammed played a steady hand of 63. The pair added 170 and helped take the score to 264 for 8. Seamer Marlon Richards struck early for T&T in the chase and he was supported by the rest of the bowling contingent, as Barbados lost wickets at frequent intervals. Though many of their batsmen got starts, only one, Jonathan Carter, went on to score a half-century. Shannon Gabriel, Rayad Emrit, and Yannick Cariah bagged two wickets each, as Barbados were bowled out for 223.Leeward Islands slipped to their fifth defeat, losing to Windward Islands by 36 runs in a low-scoring game in Antigua. Windwards chose to bat and though Leewards struck regularly, the middle order, led by a half-century from captain Liam Sebastien, took their team to 194 for 9. Jacques Taylor took four wickets but his effort was in vain. Six of Leewards’ batsmen reached double-figures but no one stuck around long enough to guide the chase. Shane Shillingford, who had an excellent home Test series against Zimbabwe, grabbed his best returns in List A cricket, taking 6 for 32, and restricting Leewards to just 158 for 9.Jamaica will meet Windward Islands in the semi-final after they beat Guyana by two wickets in a rain-affected match in Guyana. Electing to bat, Guyana could not put up a challenging score as David Bernard (4 for 24) and Nkrumah Bonner (3 for 23) struck regularly. Guuyana then lost four wickets within 15 runs and managed to score 190 for 9 in 49 overs, as Anthony Bramble and Assad Fudadin top-scored with 31 each. Jamaica’s top five batsmen put together only 55 runs but Carlton Baugh’s 40 and double-digit scores from Nikita Miller and Andrew Richardson for the ninth wicket completed the chase off the last ball.

Allenby frustrated but committed at Glamorgan

Jim Allenby remains committed to Glamorgan after considering leaving the county having been stripped of the T20 captaincy for 2013 in favour of Marcus North.

ESPNcricinfo staff03-Apr-2013Jim Allenby, the Glamorgan allrounder, remains committed to the club after considering leaving the county.Allenby, 30, was stripped of the T20 captaincy for 2013 in favour of Australian overseas player Marcus North after leading the side in just five matches last season.He and Mark Wallace, the four-day captain, had shared the one-day captaincy in 2012 but now North will take on the role in both T20 and YB40 cricket.”Initially I was extremely disappointed,” Allenby told the “I felt after only captaining for five games I was not given a proper run at it. I would be lying if I said I had not considered my future and whether my ambitions might be met elsewhere.”But these things happen in sport where decisions are made which you don’t agree with. I have accepted the decision and completely moved on and I am 100% behind Mark and Marcus. I am absolutely committed to Glamorgan.”In a campaign ruined by the weather, Allenby only had five matches to make his mark as captain. Glamorgan lost three matches but did manage to do the double over Warwickshire. But he is keen for another crack at leadership.”It has been an ambition of mine for a long time to captain sides because I enjoy the role and feel I am good at it,” Allenby said, having missed the club’s preseason tour to Potchefstroom with an ongoing medical condition. “Whether I am a future Glamorgan captain we will have to wait and see who is making the decisions. But I still have those ambitions and feel the experiences I have had over the last couple of years will stand me in good stead.”Allenby was the leading allrounder in first-class cricket last season and was named Glamorgan’s player of the year. But he is is out of contract at the end of the season and a move away from Cardiff could be his next step.Since joining from Leicestershire, initially on loan in August 2009, only in 2010 – when Glamorgan missed out on Championship promotion by five points – have Glamorgan been challenging for honours.”I have a mortgage and only one career which I am in the middle of,” Allenby said. “I have spoken with the club this year and last year and told them my ambitions are to win trophies and play at the highest level I can. This has not changed and I would love for at least one of those things to happen here and all problems would be solved.”I will be playing my cricket where I think I can achieve those goals. I have made no secret of that and will tell anyone who asks me. I want to fulfil my goals here but if it is not we will look at things again. We will see how the next few months go.”

Hampshire wrap up commanding win

Daryl Mitchell made a dogged 92 but Hampshire claimed the five wickets they needed before lunch to secure an innings victory

Ivo Tennant at the Ageas Bowl27-Apr-2013
ScorecardDavid Balcombe took two of the wickets to fall on the final day as Hampshire crushed Worcestershire•PA Photos

For Hampshire, this was a triumph deserved not least for having been thwarted by the weather when they were in an almost exact situation a fortnight ago, against Leicestershire. Then, as now, they required five wickets on the final day of the match. The difference on this occasion was that, although the floodlights had to be turned on before Worcestershire’s final wicket fell, the skies remained clear.The one batsman who might well have prevented Hampshire from winning by an innings, or indeed winning at all, was Daryl Mitchell. The Worcestershire captain was making his 100th first-class appearance and he deserved to mark it with a century given that his application was altogether of a different kind to what the rest of his team had produced.Mitchell remained at the crease for a further 50 minutes, collecting straightforward runs at the start of the session when James Vince and Liam Dawson were on. The new ball would clearly be the sticking point. This was duly handed by Jimmy Adams to Chris Wood and David Balcombe, the thinking being, perhaps, that it was too cold for James Tomlinson to gain any swing.The captain was but eight runs short of a century when he aimed slightly across the line at Wood and was leg-before. Whether this was through a momentary lapse in concentration or momentary movement, his and Worcestershire’s hopes of drawing this match went with him. He had faced 249 balls and struck just eight fours, which told more of his resolve than any inability to find the boundaries.Michael Johnson, who had once played club cricket in these parts, was supportive in contributing 44 with six fours but, 14 runs later, he too went leg-before, going back on his stumps to Balcombe. The tail went swiftly: Richard Jones chipped to midwicket, having been softened up by a bouncer, and Danny Briggs, sensibly brought into the attack at this point, had Gareth Andrew held at long-on, failing to clear Sean Ervine. Briggs then bowled Chris Russell for a duck, the batsman groping uncertainly against perceived turn.Whether it was worth turning the floodlights on for Russell to try to contend with Briggs – it would not be unkind to state that he would have groped uncertainly whatever the conditions – was another matter. The cost of so doing, although not as expensive as many punters might imagine, would still hardly be borne by the size of the gate. Not that spectators do not like a good moan. There are already complaints here that they will not be able to afford to stay in the new four star hotel at the Northern End, which will be completed in time for next season.What can Adams glean from this initial success, other than that his own batting is in fine order and that his attack, although lacking a strike bowler, is quite capable of bowling out (weak) batting sides such as Worcestershire’s? He admitted that he thought hard about giving them first innings upon winning the toss on Wednesday. It was perhaps just as well he didn’t, for rain was falling not long after victory had been secured shortly before lunch.

Sreesanth and Chavan given bail

Sreesanth and Ankeet Chavan, two of the three Rajasthan Royals players arrested on charges of alleged spot-fixing, have been granted bail by a trial court in Delhi on Monday

ESPNcricinfo staff10-Jun-2013Sreesanth and Ankeet Chavan, two of the three Rajasthan Royals players arrested on charges of alleged spot-fixing, have been granted bail by a trial court in Delhi on Monday. Seventeen others arrested in relation to the case were also given bail.The 19 accused will be released from Tihar Jail on Wednesday, but have been asked to surrender their passports.Ajit Chandila, the third Royals player under arrest, has not applied for bail yet.The judge said the Delhi Police had not produced enough evidence to charge the players under the Maharashtra Control of Organised Crime Act (MCOCA), a special law passed by the Maharashtra state government to tackle organised crime syndicates and terrorism which contains far stricter provisions relating to bail and admissibility of confessions compared to the Indian Penal Code.Sreesanth, Chavan and Ajit Chandila were arrested on May 16, following which they were suspended by the BCCI pending an inquiry. They were charged under the Indian Penal Code sections 420 and 120B, which deal with fraud, cheating, and criminal conspiracy. Royals also suspended the contracts of all three players, who were allegedly promised money ranging from US$36,000 to 109,000 by bookies for under-performing.

Chandila sent to three-day police custody

Ajit Chandila, the suspended Rajasthan Royals cricketer, has been sent to three-day police custody by a Delhi court for interrogation under provisions of Maharashtra Control of Organised Crime Act

ESPNcricinfo staff17-Jun-2013Ajit Chandila, the suspended Rajasthan Royals cricketer, has been sent to a further three days in police custody by a Delhi court. He was arrested for his alleged involvement in the IPL spot-fixing case, along with his Royals team-mates Sreesanth and Ankeet Chavan.”The matter is being investigated under the provision of Maharashtra Control of Organised Crime Act (MCOCA),” the judge Ajay Kumar Jain said. “The prosecution is to be given full chance to unearth the entire crime. The accused is remanded in 3-days of police custody.”Chandila is required to corroborate evidence collected from the other accused cricketers after invoking MCOCA, which is a special law passed by the Maharashtra state government to tackle organised crime syndicates and terrorism and contains far stricter provisions relating to bail and admissibility of confessions compared to the Indian Penal Code. It allows police longer spells of custody of the accused.Chandila has been directed to be produced in court on June 20. The court also deferred the hearing on bail applications of Chandila and five others, including former Ranji player Baburao Yadav, to June 22 after being informed by the police that some statements of the bookies arrested in the same case have to be placed on record.Chandila was arrested on May 16 and remained in police custody till May 28 before he was remanded to judicial custody.While Sreesanth and Chavan were granted bail on June 10 and released the next day, Chandila had not applied for bail.The three Royals cricketers were arrested, along with 11 bookies, and were charged under the Indian Penal Code section 420 and 120B, which deal with fraud, cheating and criminal conspiracy.

Lyon leads strong Australia display

Nathan Lyon’s remarkably incisive contribution was central to England’s sharp decline from 149 for 2 to 238 for 9 on the first day at Chester-le-Street

The Report by Daniel Brettig09-Aug-2013
Scorecard and ball-by-ball detailsNathan Lyon removed England’s Nos. 3 to 6•Getty Images

As he wheeled away through 38 quite exemplary overs at Old Trafford for the reward of one wicket and the loss of the Ashes, Nathan Lyon must have wondered when fortune would deign to smile on him and Australia. The answer was not long in coming at Chester-le-Street, on a day when Lyon’s remarkably incisive contribution was central to England’s sharp decline from 149 for 2 to 238 for 9.Alastair Cook’s men may have the urn in their keeping but any sense of superiority is steadily eroding. They were guilty of profligacy at some times and paralysis at others, never finding the right gear for a pitch that was slow and nibbly but far from treacherous. Ian Bell in particular will curse his maddening choice of shot in the first over after tea, while Australia’s seamers ensured the blows applied to English confidence in Manchester were followed up in Durham.Ryan Harris, Peter Siddle and Shane Watson all contributed at various times, and Jackson Bird had a notable first day in Ashes matches, nagging away and capturing the prized wicket of Cook after England’s captain had set himself for the kind of stony occupation he trademarked in Australia in 2010-11. But the major plaudits were reserved for Lyon, who won a significant battle with Kevin Pietersen and troubled every batsman with his flight, drop and changes of pace from around the wicket. His omission from the first two Tests of the series increasingly appears an error as grievous as that committed by Bell four balls into the evening session.The early overs had lacked a certain energy, as Harris fought to relocate the rhythm and swing of Old Trafford, while Bird settled into a line and length that encouraged defensive dead bats but did not coax any edges into the Australian slips cordon. There was the merest hint of seam movement but the surface was otherwise slow, as was the outfield. Cook and Joe Root battled to find their timing, England’s captain leaving plenty outside off stump while also coping with the full length Australia have forced him to deal with throughout the series.Clarke again resorted to Watson before Peter Siddle, hoping for some new-ball movement, and after a somewhat wayward start it was the newly demoted allrounder – expected to bat at No. 6 in this match – who struck. Root was somewhat tardy getting forward to a ball sliding away from him, and the sound of the nick was clear to all except the umpire Tony Hill, who was soon crossing himself and raising his finger after Clarke’s referral showed up a noise, a deflection and even a Hot Spot.The wicket brought Trott to the crease, and he immediately showed signs of improved fluency after a poor third Test. His one boundary before the interval was an edge through the slips but there was also a more decisive flick through midwicket and a pair of confident strides out to drive. Clarke did not chance an over from Lyon during the morning, preferring to let his seamers push during a session that yielded them less than they might have hoped for.Trott and Cook were largely unhurried and unfazed in the hour after lunch, and it was a shock to many when England’s No. 3 squeezed a Lyon offbreak to short leg, where Usman Khawaja held a neat catch. Pietersen swung lustily at his very first ball and was fortunate to mistime it into the expanses beyond midwicket, but some better struck boundaries ensued and Lyon was withdrawn.It was not until he returned that England were troubled again, a ball looped teasingly from around the wicket drawing an edge from Pietersen and a fine catch by Brad Haddin up to the stumps. If that wicket had altered proceedings, that of Cook’s changed the complexion of the day completely, Bird finding just the right amount of seam movement to have the captain pinned in front of off stump with his bat never intended for use.Cook had underestimated Bird’s capacity to move the ball, and in the first over after tea Bell would pay for treating Lyon with contempt. Four balls into the evening, he advanced to drive at a flighted delivery, failing to get to the pitch and shelling a catch in the general vicinity of mid-off, where Harris clasped a sharp chance. It was a vainglorious stroke, and consigned Matt Prior and Jonny Bairstow to a major salvage task.They started well enough, working the ball around, but as Clarke and his bowlers tightened up in response both batsmen were rendered near enough to shotless. Only 34 runs had been added in a union nearing 20 overs’ duration when Prior was pinned in front of the stumps by Siddle. Aleem Dar declined the appeal, but Australia’s referral showed the ball to be striking enough of leg stump for the decision to be overturned.Bairstow fought desperately, denying his usual aggressive tendencies, but ultimately the pressure told. He went down on one knee to sweep Lyon from around the wicket and missed, Hill’s finger was raised and Bairstow’s anguished review showing the off break had straightened enough and would have clipped the top of the stumps. Stuart Broad soon followed, spooning Harris ineffectually to cover, and Graeme Swann picked out deep square leg.Tim Bresnan and James Anderson played the day out comfortably, adding 24 from 20 balls. It was a sight that cheered the crowd but had to discomfort England, given their earlier wastefulness.

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