Bob Woolmer's death stuns cricket world

A pall of gloom fell over the World Cup following the death of Bob Woolmer, the Pakistan coach, in hospital in Jamaica on Sunday, hours after he was found unconscious on the floor of his hotel room. He was 58.Tributes poured in from across the cricketing world, where Woolmer was known as an innovative coach and a scholar of the game. The Pakistan team, already eliminated from the World Cup on Saturday, said it would play its final match, against Zimbabwe, on Wednesday as scheduled.”We’ve been speaking to the doctors and they think it is either stress or a heart attack,” Russell Woolmer, his son, told South African radio from Cape Town. “There was a lot of stress in his job and it may have been stress that caused it. We’re all very shocked and we don’t know what to do.”The news of Woolmer’s death was announced by Pervez Mir, Pakistan’s media manager, a couple of hours after it first became known that he had been taken ill. “Bob Woolmer has passed away. I am speaking from the hospital and all the team management is also at the hospital. Doctors have pronounced him dead. Bob has passed away and it is very shocking news to all of the team and the team management.”Bob’s family and wife were informed by the management about his condition when he was brought to hospital”, Mir said, adding that Woolmer’s wife was on her way from South Africa.Mir’s statement added that there would be a coroner’s inquest and, in keeping with Jamaican law, an autopsy to determine the cause of death. Woolmer, a diabetic, was found unconscious on his hotel-room floor at around 10.45am after team officials grew concerned that they had not seen him since the previous evening. Mir said he had blood on him and there was vomit on the walls.Karl Angell, director of communication for the Jamaica Constabulary Force, said Woolmer was pronounced dead by doctors at the University Hospital of the West Indies in Kingston, where he had been rushed to, at 12.14pm on Sunday.Woolmer’s death comes less than 24 hours after Pakistan were knocked out of the World Cup following their defeat by Ireland. After the match, Woolmer spoke of the pressures of coaching. “Doing it internationally, it takes a toll on you,” he said. “The endless travelling and the non-stop living out of hotels.”I am deeply hurt and cannot tell you how it is going to affect me,” Woolmer told AFP late on Saturday after the Ireland defeat, saying he would answer more questions on email later in the week.Mir said Pakistan would still play their final World Cup group match on Wednesday. “The Pakistan team will continue its participation in the tournament. We are due to play Zimbabwe and we will play that match,” Mir told AFP by telephone from Jamaica.”Obviously the boys are extremely sad, they are very disturbed, they are shocked, but the boys have to play the match and they will.”

Dravid totally satisfied with preparations

Rahul Dravid: “For strategic reasons, I wouldn’t reveal my final XI. It’s always good to keep the opposition guessing.” © AFP

Rahul Dravid has admitted that going one-nil up is an ideal situation, while playing a three-match Test series, but was quick to add that they had to be good enough to fightback, in case it doesn’t go their way. Stating that the pitch at the Gadaffi Stadium was a “good wicket” that will help both the fast bowlers and spinners, Dravid said he was totally satisfied with his side’s preparation for the first Test.While playing his cards close to his chest, Dravid refused to divulge any team information, but admitted that he had decided on the final XI. “For strategic reasons, I wouldn’t reveal my final XI. It’s always good to keep the opposition guessing. It’s good to be in a situation where one can choose from so many good players. Five will be unlucky to miss out. Better to be in a position where we have choices rather than the other way around.”Adding that he was “very happy” with their preparations for the game, Dravid spoke about the quality net facilites that his team had been provided with. “We’re happy with everything – the hospitality, the net facilities, the practice pitches. We had a few sessions at the NCA”Dravid said that it was important for the team to win crucial points and big moments during the series and that could have a decisive influence on its outcome. He also added that the last tour in 2004 was also very much about cricket, though it was historic for a lot of other reasons.

Mark Waugh slams Australian selection panel

Mark Waugh: ‘In 50-50 calls, the Queenslanders are getting the rub of the green’© Getty Images

Mark Waugh has slammed the current Australian selection panel and claimed that there is a bias towards picking players from Queensland. Waugh, who is being pushed as the New South Wales candidate for the national selection panel, revealed that he had been baffled at Andrew Symonds playing ahead of Simon Katich on Australia’s tour of Sri Lanka last year and even termed it as “one of the worst decisions” he had seen. He also felt that Nathan Hauritz and James Hopes were undeservedly given chances ahead of Stuart MacGill and Cameron White.In a column for , Waugh wrote that half the selection panel was from Queensland (Allan Border and Trevor Hohns) and said that “people subconsciously favour what’s close to their heart and home.””I think there are a couple of Queenslanders in the past season or two who have been lucky to gain a spot in the one-day or Test teams,” Waugh continued. “Andy Bichel is probably the exception, but I can count three players and situations that would support the theory that the bananabenders are receiving a leg-up.”Though Queensland have been the benchmark in recent years in domestic cricket and that inevitably gives you more oomph at the selection table, there is that lingering thought that in 50-50 calls, the Queenslanders are getting the rub of the green.”Speaking about Katich’s exclusion from the side after making a brilliant hundred in the Sydney Test against India, Waugh said: “Admittedly, Symonds’s offspin may have been handy on the spin-friendly pitches but Katich can bowl decent left-arm spinners and the position was primarily for a batsman.”The next selection, which was a major surprise, was the inclusion of Nathan Hauritz in the tour party to India ahead of the second-best spinner in world cricket, Stuart MacGill. Hauritz is a pretty good one-day bowler but he was averaging about 50 or 60 with the ball in first-class cricket at the time and to think he could be Australia’s second spinner on such an important tour was a selection totally from left field.”Waugh was also surprised at James Hopes being picked for Australia’s current tour of New Zealand. “I played against Hopes last season,” he said, “and I couldn’t see him wearing Australian colours. Despite Hopes’s recent improvement, I believe Cameron White could consider himself most unlucky. He has better overall figures than Hopes and led Victoria to a Pura Cup win last year.”The strength of the current Australian team, Waugh believed, allowed the occasional blunder and he also acknowledged that “by and large the selectors have done a good job.” Yet, he thought it was a time for change so that other states could get “a fairer run for their money”.

'I ran out of steam'


Javagal Srinath: aggressive in his own way

Why did you retire from Tests so suddenly?
It was a question of body and mind. It had been on my mind for a while and I got enough signals from the body during the series in the West Indies. I really wasn’t prepared for that, and my body didn’t respond during the last two Tests. Like the team, I started the series well, but things fell away after the first two Tests. Also, I don’t think I was bowling upto to my expectations on a consistent basis. I was looking for a green patch or two to help me and to be honest, at this point in time, I don’t see myself in the Test squad on Indian wickets.I’ve always advocated that only the best fast bowlers should play and I had reached a stage where my body couldn’t do what my mind asked of it. I was running out of steam and I was depending on helpful wickets, regardless of the fact that I was still bowling a decent line and length. The results also played their part. Had we won in Jamaica, I might have changed my mind and played through the tour of England.Why did you want to carry on playing one-day cricket then?
A lot of wrong signals have been given by certain sections of our board. I love one-day cricket with its entertainment value and high intensity, but the real game is Test cricket. Having played so much cricket – and bowled so many overs in both forms of the game – it wasn’t possible to keep going without a break. I did ask the selectors to rest me for one or two one-day tournaments just so I could be fit for the Tests. The bowlers who are playing now will face the same problem soon enough, with so many matches being played.I still maintain that Test matches are special. You win one, you’ll cherish it for life; and if you lose, it might haunt you forever. In the one-day game, you can win today, lose tomorrow and then win again the day after. It’s not right for people to say that I pick and choose my matches. I took the break because my body needed it but when I’m not playing, I really miss the game. I don’t think it’s right to perform well below your best – but just about good enough – merely to keep your place in the side. In such a case, it’s better to take a break and come back refreshed.Disappointed to miss out on the one-day squad?
Not really. I expected these things to happen. A few people in the system haven’t understood me. After all, how many have bowled for the country as much as I have? Only someone who has done that can understand the plight of fast bowlers in this country.Wasn’t the English tour a big temptation for you, having done so well the last time?
You could say that, but the West Indies tour was very disappointing, especially after we started so well. If we had won in Jamaica, things might have been different. But by then I was tired, body and mind, and bitterly disappointed with my own performance.When you look back at your Test career, are you satisfied?
There are highs and lows.But do you feel you’ve underachieved?
To some extent, yes.You once said that you were a mediocre performer compared to someone like Glenn McGrath…
I don’t like to make excuses for myself. For example, I could say that I have played half my cricket on docile tracks that aren’t conducive to fast bowling. Even if it’s a good grassy pitch overseas, you still have to bowl well to take wickets. At the end of the day, it comes down to your own performances and how they’ve served the team, and in that aspect I don’t think I’m in the same bracket as Waqar [Younis], Wasim [Akram], McGrath and a few others.Your strike-rates and averages are much better at home…
I think one of the biggest problems when we go abroad has been the lack of a third seamer. The situation is getting better now. But over the last 10 years, how often have we had an effective third seamer? Why didn’t the third seamer deliver most of the time? We invariably got breakthroughs in most of the games but the third seamer failed because he had no experience at that level. Why is that? Because he can never find a place in the team when we play at home. I think the change has to come at the grassroots. We need to see pitches that allow you to play three seamers.One of the biggest criticisms directed at you down the years has been your comparative lack of aggression…
I respect those opinions but I’m aggressive in my own way. It’s just that my brand of aggression is not for the TV. I just take the ball and do my job.But could your body language have encouraged the opposition?
Body language doesn’t get you wickets. I don’t believe that aggression can get you wickets…Of late though, you had taken a different approach to your bowling, pitching the ball up a lot more…
Things were getting better, yes, but the results still weren’t there. I was trying my best to do that. You have to adapt as you go along and this was one of the changes that paid dividends. When you’re a young fast bowler, there’s always a tendency to pitch it a little short. It depends on the conditions too, to an extent. But sooner or later, a bowler realises that pitching the ball up is the key.Did you get the right advice in the early stages of your career?
Yes, I did. Kapil [Dev] was great and I used to speak to him all the time. Dennis Lillee was another great influence. The sad thing is that I didn’t get to play enough with Kapil.But did any of them tell you to pitch the ball up more?
Yes, they did but I used to get wickets even otherwise. Maybe if I had pitched it up more, I might have got more wickets. That is certainly one of my regrets.You once said that most Indian captains were batsmen, which was why you never got bowler-friendly pitches here. Can you elaborate on that?
That’s a matter for the captains and the team management. They need to realise that if we are to win consistently abroad, we need to produce pitches that give at least some encouragement to the fast bowlers.How disappointing was it for you to see a grassy pitch shaved off on the captain’s instructions?
This was one of the factors that contributed to my retirement. Earlier, I never used to think about how the wicket might play, whether it had grass or not. But with age catching up, you look at these things.Did your relationship with the captain have anything to do with the decision to retire?
A lot of people have been talking about my relationship with [Sourav] Ganguly. As such, there is no problem between us. Why would my decision be based on someone else’s actions or reactions? Ganguly and I go back a long time. I’m much senior to him and I know him very well.Expressing your emotions on the field doesn’t mean that we don’t get along well. People have read it wrong. As long as our expressions are directed towards winning the match, there is no problem.We are both very frank people who have known each other a long time. People just try too hard to read something into certain gestures.Any regrets when it comes to your batting?
It was disappointing, but with the amount of bowling I did, it was hard to concentrate with the bat. The injuries and the fractures didn’t help.Talking of injuries, how much did that shoulder injury in 1997 set you back?
Tremendously. That was a period when I was peaking and had I maintained that form for three or four years, I might have been a very different bowler. That pushed me back to square one and it took eight to nine months just to get back.Who complemented you best with the new ball?
Look, I don’t have any favourites. [Venkatesh] Prasad and I got the chance to bowl together for quite a long time; Zaheer [Khan] is a very good bowler. So is Ashish Nehra. He moves the ball well. Tinu Yohannan is one of the best athletes I have ever seen in Indian cricket.You were a young man when you first toured abroad. How did you think the touring experience can be made easier for rookies?
Long tours are always hard. I think fitness is key, and in that regard Andrew Leipus has done a fantastic job for us. The physiotherapy aspect is just as important. You need to get to the root cause of the injury and treat it…But from a mental aspect?
That’s all part and parcel of the game. When you go abroad, you have better conditions, better practice facilities and the best food. There is nothing to complain about. The only thing is, when you lose, your mental state can become quite fragile and you start doubting your own capabilities. The food, the travelling, the different culture, that shouldn’t really bother you. It’s for the seniors to buck up the young players if they’re going through a bad patch.Were the seniors very supportive when you were starting out?
Yes, and that’s still the case. The players take a great deal of interest in each other’s game and the youngsters get a lot of encouragement. Some of the youngsters – [Mohammad] Kaif, [Dinesh] Mongia and the fast bowlers to name just a few – have a great attitude and that helps.What does the future hold for Javagal Srinath?
I believe I just need to work hard and keep myself fit for the World Cup. I’ll make myself available and it’s up to the selectors to pick me. It’s only right that they groom players for the future but I’ll keep working and see how it goes. I really want to play the World Cup though.That would be the logical conclusion to your career…
Yes. I don’t see anything beyond that.

Re-match of last season's finals will provide edge in New Plymouth

Canterbury will need no special motivation for their State Shield opener against Central Districts in New Plymouth tomorrow.The two teams are the finalists from last year’s one-day competition and with Central Districts upsetting Canterbury there is every incentive to give the holders a reminder of who the real bosses are.On the occasion, Canterbury has to be favoured. With its internationals back in for the match it has a formidable look to it.Craig McMillan, Chris Cairns, Shane Bond and Chris Martin give the side a real edge, and CD without their mastermind captain from last year Jacob Oram will have a real battle to take this game out.Canterbury will also be looking to get a good start to the competition as they follow up with a game on Thursday in Auckland, so maximum points would be a good start from which to launch the remainder of the campaign.CD are not without hope however, as Mathew Sinclair especially is looking for runs in a big way and if he could get going on the Pukekura Park pitch there could be some scoring fireworks.The teams are:Central Districts: Glen Sulzberger (captain), David Kelly, Jamie How, Mathew Sinclair, Ben Smith, Richard King, Campbell Furlong, Bevan Griggs, Andrew Schwass, Michael Mason, Brent Hefford, Richard Scragg (12th man).Canterbury: Gary Stead (captain), Craig McMillan, Chris Harris, Chris Cairns, Paul Wiseman, Shane Bond, Chris Martin, Brad Doody, Michael Papps, Darron Reekers, Gareth Hopkins, Carl Anderson, Warren Wisneski.

Surrey storm to a sixth championship victory


Martin Bicknell bowling blitz – the best since Laker’s record
Photo © Paul McGregor

Surrey completed a resounding victory over Leicestershire by 10 wickets atGuildford today – their sixth win in the championship this summer. The homecounty scored 119-0 from 39.3 overs with Mark Butcher (47 n.o.) and Ian Ward(61 n.o.) taking the title-holders home with a day and a half to spare.Martin Bicknell, who took all four wickets in the first innings, producedyet another magnificent display of fast bowling. His return of 9-47following 7-72 in the first innings gave him a match analysis of 16-119 -the best achieved in England since Jim Laker, also of Surrey, took 19Australian wickets in the Test Match at Manchester in 1956. Bicknell becamealso the first bowler to achieve 50 wickets in the championship this summer.
The 47 runs put on for the seventh wicket by Vince Wells and Phil DeFreitas,who hit 24 in one ball less, alone provided any resistance. Bicknelldismissed both within three deliveries to catches by Butcher and Brown. Withthe last two wickets folding tamely Leicestershire were all out for 87. Incontrast to that batting debacle the Surrey opening batsmen showed howplacid for run-scoring the pitch could be, and they knocked off the runswithout giving a chance. Butcher brought up the victory with a cover-drivefour, one of eight boundaries in his innings.Bicknell, who played club cricket for Guildford, said: “I love playing atGuildford, it’s my home ground and I know a lot of people here. Playing thisweek every year is something I look forward to.”He has taken five-wickets in an innings three times this season – a feat hewas not able to achieve once last year. Although he claimed to be doingnothing different this summer to the blast four or five seasons Martin washappy for the figures to speak for themselves. He recognised that chanceshad to be taken when they arose because otherwise Saqlain Mushtaq and IanSalisbury would take the wickets, but he would gladly exchange this analysisfor another championship.

Price sees ray of hope

Ray Price believes spending time out in the middle is paramount as Zimbabwe try and find their way back into Test cricket © Getty Images
 

Zimbabwe may be facing certain defeat in their four-day match againstPatron’s XI at Karachi, but Ray Price, the veteran left-arm spinner,believes there are still positives to be drawn from the game.Zimbabwe have largely struggled through three days, bowled out for 209 onthe first day and struggling at 111 for six in their second innings. Theirbowlers fared little better, conceding 479 runs, though admittedly thelocal squad has been a strong one.But Price maintained at the end of day three that the game was a significant one. “The game is very important, especially to get some time out in the middle for our guys. It is important for our batsmen to spend time in the middle and doubly important as we are such a young side,” Price said.Price is one of only two players in the 15-man squad to have played more than ten Tests (and of only two men over 30 years in age) and has only recently returned to the national side. Zimbabwe have been suspended from Test cricket since January 2006 but have since been playing four-day matches against representative sides in order to find a way back.”It’s important for us to keep progressing towards starting to play Test cricket again,” said Price. “We’re very positive about it. We played some good cricket in South Africa before this [where Zimbabwe won four four-day matches].”Ultimately, these matches are more beneficial to us, playing four-day cricket against good sides, because we’re trying to spend some time in the middle and improve.”Price, one of Zimbabwe’s most successful Test bowlers before their suspension, was the tourists’ best bowler against the Patron’s XI, picking up 4 for 130. “This is my first time in Pakistan but I always enjoy bowling in the subcontinent.”

Williamson and Taiaroa lead recovery

A series of dropped catches by the India Under-19s let New Zealand Under-19s off the hook on the second day at Carisbrook in Dunedin, as the hosts ended the day at 245 for 6. New Zealand, after wrapping up the Indian innings for 129, were in trouble at 100 for 5 before Kane Williamson and M Tairoa averted another collapse.The duo were particularly harsh and against the spinners, and dropped catches from Abu Nechim Ahmed and Sumit Sharma didn’t help India’s cause. Williamson fell 12 short of a ton while Tairoa remained unbeaten on 56, helping New Zealand finish with a lead of 216 with four wickets in hand.

Rajan's ten-wicket haul gives MP shot at victory

ScorecardAnand Rajan, Madhya Pradesh’s debutant fast bowler, gave his side a good chance for victory by bundling out Jharkhand for 131 on the third day at Indore – leaving MP 210 to win on the final day. This was an impressive performance from the 20-year-old Rajan, whose five wickets completely dominated the day’s play and capped a fine comeback for MP, who had earlier lost four quick wickets in the morning as Shankar Rao’s medium pace ripped through the tail. Much of MP’s fortunes in the run-chase will rest on Devendra Bundela, their first innings centurion, after they got off to a shaky start, losing two quick wickets towards the end of the day.ScorecardSwapnil Asnodkar compiled his highest first-class score as Goa surpassed Tripura’s first-innings total on the third day’s play at Margao, ending on 316 for 6. Asnodkar batted for a marathon 530 minutes, stroking 21 fours, and he added 117 runs for the seventh wicket with Shabad Jakati, the left-arm spinner. Eight bowlers were used by Rasudeb Datta, Tripura’s captain, with only Vineet Jain’s medium pace accounting for two wickets on a tough fielding day.
ScorecardSadagoppan Ramesh’s fine hundred and fifties from Koragappa Chandrasekhara and Suresh Kumar took Kerala to 370 in its first innings, but Rajasthan’s openers had whittled that lead down to just 15 at the end of the third day at Jaipur. Ramesh’s 16th first-class hundred, which was punctuated with 15 fours, set the base while Chandrasekhara and Kumar used the long handle to good effect towards the end of Kerala’s innings, striking two sixes apiece. Mohammad Aslam, the left-arm spinner, was the most successful bowler for Rajasthan with 5 for 87.
ScorecardThe spin duo of Sanjay Satpathy and S Sehgal combined to dismiss Vidarbha for 271, giving Orissa a lead of 111 going into the final day of their Plate Group match at Nagpur. For Vidarbha, a fine opening stand of 117 between Faiz Fazal and Amit Deshpande made way for a frenetic collapse as Satpathy and Sehgal – who bowled 78.2 overs between them – ripped through the batting order. Orissa, whose top order came good in the first innings, now had the chance to put some quick runs on the board before letting their bowlers have another crack at Vidarbha on the final day.
ScorecardJ Arunkumar’s hundred was the highlight on the third day of the Plate Group match between Assam and Jammu & Kashmir at Guwahati, taking the hosts to 353 – a clinical 101-run lead – heading into the final day. His was an assertive knock, and he was ably supported by Nishantha Bordoloi in a 146-run partnership for the seventh wicket that propelled Assam past J&K’s first innings total. Significantly, Vikrant Taggar and Sajjad, J&K’s openers, played out 16 overs for a paltry 12 runs – an indication of what lies ahead for those planning to watch the final day’s passage.

Bryan Strang on comeback trail

Bryan Strang: back in the picture© Getty Images

The former Zimbabwe left-arm seamer Bryan Strang has bounced back into the picture after he was named in a 17-member Zimbabwe A side to play four limited-overs matches in Namibia.Strang, 32, has not played for Zimbabwe since 2001 because of a career-threatening injury. His bid to make a first-class return hit a brick wall last year when Zimbabwe Cricket banned him after he said that Zimbabwe should have not hosted World Cup matches in 2003 on moral grounds.Strang has played a number of matches for Old Hararians in the national league this season, and is one of the leading wicket-takers despite having lost pace and bowling off a shortened run-up.He played 26 Tests and 49 ODIs for Zimbabwe between 1995 and 2001, taking 56 Test wickets. His last appearance was against West Indies at Harare Sports Club in July 2001. Between 1995 and 2001, Strang formed a useful opening bowling partnership with Heath Streak.

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