Walters makes steady progress

On an abridged day at Colwyn Bay, Stewart Walters made progress for Glamorgan

06-Jun-2012
ScorecardOnly 34 overs were possible on the rain-ruined first day at Colwyn Bay. Glamorgan, who won the toss, had reached 117 for 3 in their first innings shortly after lunch before persistent showers removed the prospect of any further play.The home side, who have yet to win a game this season, made a solid enough start reaching 55 for 0 with Gareth Rees hitting Azeem Rafiq for six to bring up the 50. But Australian left-arm seamer Mitchell Starc changed the complexion of the morning. removing openers Will Bragg and Gareth Rees in quick succession.Bragg edged a delivery behind and was followed by Rees, who went leg before wicket but only after a delayed decision by umpire Paul Baldwin. Glamorgan had reached 58 for 2 at that stage, which became 79 for 3 when Marcus North fell to a sharp return catch from off-spinner Azeem Rafiq, who dived low to his right.After getting to lunch at 99 for 3 Glamorgan had a profitable opening over after the interval with Stewart Walters taking 18 off Starc – three fours and a six which struck the pavilion roof at midwicket. But the players went off the field straight after that because of rain with Glamorgan 117 for 3 after 34 overs.An early tea was taken and the umpires – Baldwin and Mark Benson – were looking to restart proceedings at 5.15pm. But they were forced to call the day’s action off 45 minutes before the scheduled close because of more rain.

South Africa consolidate after bowlers fight back

This is what a contest for the No. 1 ranking should be like; intense, gripping and fluctuating

The Report by Andrew McGlashan20-Jul-2012
Scorecard and ball-by-ball detailsDale Steyn removed Ravi Bopara for a duck during a fired-up spell•PA Photos

South Africa were a team transformed on the second day at The Oval. The intensity and aggression, lacking for most of Thursday, was back in the bowling as they limited England’s ambitions to 385 – not an insignificant total on pitch likely to offer increasing turn, but nowhere near enough to close out the match – then Graeme Smith and Hashim Amla gave an early indication of the sturdiness of South Africa’s top order.Before rain took an hour out of the evening session and zapped a little of the spark from the day this had developed into a contest worthy of a series with the No. 1 spot up for grabs. South Africa surged out of the blocks in a gripping start to the day, led by a revitalised Dale Steyn, to immediately set back England’s ambitions by removing Alastair Cook and Ravi Bopara in consecutive overs. England’s batting was given its toughest examination by pace since the Pakistan series in 2010, but they have not reached No. 1 by shirking a challenge.Matt Prior, who had again showed why he can lay claim to being the top wicketkeeper-batsman in Tests, found support from Tim Bresnan, Stuart Broad and Graeme Swann – the much-vaunted lower order – to ensure wickets seven to nine added 99 priceless runs. This was the ebb and flow expected between two such evenly-matched teams.South Africa did not find life easy at the start of their innings. In his second over James Anderson produced a pin-point inswinger to trap Alviro Petersen lbw. But that was the only breakthrough England managed. They targeted Smith’s pads, which brought some close shaves but also scoring opportunities through the leg side, while Amla timed the ball beautifully off front and back foot. Amla finds it almost impossible to hit an ugly boundary.One delivery, though, from Swann will have interested England more than most when it turned sharply to square up Smith on the back foot. There was also an opportunity, shortly before the close, for a vital wicket when the introduction of Bopara nearly paid off. Amla drove off the back foot and the edge flew to Andrew Strauss’s left – he was standing wide at first slip – and he could not grab it one-handed. Strauss, as is his style, verged on the defensive with his fields once the partnership was settled.Whatever had been said by the South Africans overnight made a huge difference. Steyn was curiously subdued on the opening day, sending down 21 wicketless overs and needing treatment off the field on his ankle, but emerged on Friday morning with a performance much more akin to the No. 1 fast bowler in the world. In the third over of the day he removed Cook, England’s lynchpin, who added just one to his overnight score when he dragged a drive into his stumps.That opened the way for his Essex team-mate, Bopara, to resume his Test career at No. 6 but it was not a happy comeback. The ball after a loud shot for lbw from Steyn – the delivery was just clipping leg stump – Bopara was left in two minds how to play a bouncer. He was caught between hooking and leaving, which resulted in him dangling his bat high in the air and feathering an edge to AB de Villiers.The quality of the bowling – Steyn’s pace and Vernon Philander’s subtle swing – kept England’s batsmen virtually scoreless. The opening eight overs of the day brought six runs for the loss of the two key wickets. Prior picked up the first boundary of the day when offered some rare width by Steyn, but was involved in a horrid mix-up with Ian Bell next ball that could have led to another wicket.Yet it was only momentary relief for the home side. Jacques Kallis was introduced as first change and produced an opening over of the highest class to dislodge Bell. He started with two outswingers before his fourth ball nipped back, Bell shouldered arms and the ball grazed the off bail. Kallis initially appealed for lbw before realising the job was already done. England had lost 4 for 33 going back to Kevin Pietersen’s gloved pull on Thursday evening and the game looked very different.The four-pronged pace attack offered few poor deliveries, although Morkel was the least consistent and Prior took advantage with a pull, a drive and a cut to relieve a little of the pressure. Prior could have gone on 17, when Jacques Rudolph spilled a low chance at gully, with England on 298 for 6.Having started to steady the innings it will have been galling for England that a poor delivery from Imran Tahir broke the seventh-wicket stand when Bresnan dragged on a short ball. However, Prior and Broad resumed after lunch with a positive mindset as boundaries started to flow. Prior led the way with a series of wonderful drives, but Broad wasn’t lost in comparison as he drove Steyn off the back foot through cover. Philander broke the counterattack when he swung one back into Broad although England did not block their way through the rest of the innings.Swann was clonked on the helmet second ball by Steyn, but responded by swatting the fast bowler for two boundaries in his next over. Swann is unlikely to miss the opportunity to remind his team-mates that he was the one left stranded at the end after Prior edged Morne Morkel and Anderson gloved down the leg side four balls later. That made it five catches for de Villiers in a very competent display as Mark Boucher’s replacement.

Pietersen remains silent as Strauss retires

Kevin Pietersen has not made a habit of helping himself off the field – at least not this summer – and it could be argued that maintaining his recent vow of silence today was counter-productive

David Lloyd at Taunton29-Aug-2012
ScorecardKevin Pietersen has not made a habit of helping himself off the field – at least not this summer – and it could be argued that maintaining his recent vow of silence today was counter-productive.Saying too much has led to Pietersen current state of separation from England. But saying nothing at all here after rain had ruled out any chance of cricket and following Andrew Strauss’s retirement speech at Lord’s will be seen by some as a bad misjudgment.The – for the moment, at least – former England batsman has kept his thoughts to himself for a fortnight, and wisely so. Here, though, a short statement praising Strauss’s achievements over the years and wishing the ex-captain well for the future would have gone down well. Perhaps he has done that privately and, if so, then fair play to him, but a short public tribute might have mended some fences.Instead, Pietersen turned down several requests for a TV interview and it was made clear to newspaper and web site journalists that he would not be speaking. Instead, with the rain hammering down, he put himself through a series of shuttle runs on the sodden Taunton outfield.Marcus Trescothick, Strauss’s long-time opening partner at Test level, was happy to chat.”I wasn’t surprised, although I was hoping Andrew would continue as an England player,” he said. “I didn’t think he would come back and play county cricket once his Test career had ended and the only other scenario I could foresee was him quitting the captaincy while continuing to play Test cricket for a while.”He took England to No 1 in the world which had been a massive challenge for him and for the ECB, and winning the Ashes away from home would probably be the pinnacle of his time as captain.”I’m sure he would like to have gone out on a high by beating South Africa and keeping the No 1 ranking but sadly that didn’t prove possible.”I don’t believe the Kevin Pietersen issue had any effect on his decision. I’m sure this has been part of his planning for some time.”We were opening partners for England for a number of years and we became good friends. He was a good guy to share a dressing room with a strong leader. I wish him nothing but the best for the future.”

Glamorgan confirm Harris departure

Glamorgan have announced that 22-year-old seam bowler James Harris will leave the county where he made his debut aged 16

31-Aug-2012
ScorecardGlamorgan have announced that 22-year-old seam bowler James Harris will leave the county where he made his debut aged 16 at the end of the season. The news came as Glamorgan batted their way to a draw against Northamptonshire, with Stewart Walters making 98.Harris, an England Lions player, is contracted to the Welsh club until the end of next summer but has a non-promotion clause that allows him to leave a year early. His most likely destination is Nottinghamshire, who are in Division One and offered the player a contract earlier this week.Harris, 22, has played 64 first-class matches since his debut in 2007, taking 227 wickets at an average of 27.53 runs. Glamorgan had been keen to retain the services of one of their brightest talents but were unable to reach an agreement.A club statement read: “Over the past few weeks, the club have held a number of meetings with James to discuss his future career, which culminated in the club tabling a substantial contract offer. Sadly, this offer was not accepted and James will now be leaving the club.”Glamorgan Cricket would like to thank James for his outstanding contribution to the club since making his debut back in 2007. He is a talented young cricketer and departs with the club’s best wishes. Like all other cricket supporters, we hope he will be able to fulfil his England ambitions in the near future.”Harris, the quickest man to reach 100 and 200 first-class wickets for Glamorgan, had a slow start to the current campaign after missing a month with a hernia problem but caught the eye with figures of 6 for 102 in the four-day game between England Lions and Australia A at Edgbaston earlier this month.In the Division Two game at Cardiff, Walters fell two short of his second century of the season as Glamorgan batted out a draw on the final day. Walters scored 98 from 226 balls with 14 fours and Marcus North contributed 57 as Glamorgan reached 302 for 5 in reply to Northamptonshire’s 432 for 8 declared.It was a tame final day as the captains – Mark Wallace and Andrew Hall – could not agree to set up a game. Glamorgan resumed on 10 without loss but, with little to play for, they reached 75 for 2 at lunch from 43 overs – at a pitiful run rate of 1.74. William Bragg and Nick James were the men to fall.Con de Lange thought he had a second victim on the stroke of lunch but Stephen Peters put down a difficult chance at short midwicket when North had made just one run. He went on to make his sixth half-century in 12 Championship innings this season.But North went shortly after reaching his own half-century to a fine one-handed catch by Alex Wakely off Hall. Wakely had to leave the field, however for treatment on an injured finger. Three overs later Ben Wright was neatly stumped down the leg-side by David Murphy standing up to Lee Daggett, to leave Glamorgan 177 for 4.Walters and Allenby put on 101 for the fifth wicket before Walters was bowled via an inside edge by Hall as Glamorgan went in search of a third batting point. Allenby and Wallace took Glamorgan to a third batting point before both sides shook hands.

Pakistan set for late entrance

Pakistan begin their World Twenty20 campaign against New Zealand, who crushed Bangladesh on Friday

The Preview by George Binoy22-Sep-2012

Match facts

September 23, 2012
Start time 1530 local (1000 GMT)Dav Whatmore has a word with Kamran Akmal in the lead-up to Pakistan’s first game•AFP

Big Picture

Pakistan, we’ve been expecting you. The team with the best World Twenty20 record is the last to open its campaign in Sri Lanka. Pakistan have World Twenty20 pedigree. In the first tournament in 2007, they were finalists, and so nearly champions. They won in 2009, and in 2010 they had one foot in the final before Michael Hussey blind-sided them.They’ve been put in the toughest group in 2012, with New Zealand and Bangladesh, and will play their first game against the stronger of those teams. Win against New Zealand, and Pakistan are almost certain to make it to the Super Eights; lose, and they will face a must-win against Bangladesh.The strength of Mohammad Hafeez’s side is unquestionably its bowling. In Saeed Ajmal, Umar Gul and Shahid Afridi, three bowlers of varied skills, Pakistan possess the highest wicket-takers in Twenty20 internationals. Any of those bowlers can turn a Twenty20 game single-handedly and a collective performance can be devastating. Their batting is less formidable; it can be hot or cold. In the two warm-ups for the World Twenty20, Pakistan chased 186 successfully against India but failed to achieve 112 against England. The challenge, as ever, will be for Pakistan to combine their enviable talent with discipline.New Zealand go into this game with the opportunity to win Group D. Doing so will make their progress to the Super Eight independent of the result of the Pakistan-Bangladesh fixture. Their evisceration of Bangladesh by 59 runs on Friday was almost faultless. The key battle in that game was tipped to be between New Zealand’s batsmen and Bangladesh’s spinners. They took 117 off 12 overs from the slow men. A strong performance against a more formidable Pakistan will make people sit up and take notice of a team that isn’t considered to be a strong contender for the 2012 title.

Form guide

(completed matches, most recent first)Pakistan: LWWWL
New Zealand: WWLLL

Watch out for

The majority of New Zealand batsmen: Brendon McCullum, with his 123 off 58 balls, demolished Bangladesh single-handedly. So aggressive was his approach and so clinical his execution that there was almost no pressure on his team-mates. All they needed to do was give McCullum strike. It’s unlikely that anyone will play as explosive an innings against Pakistan, so the contributions need to be more collective to reduce the reliance on McCullum and Ross Taylor.Saeed and Shahid: In Ajmal and Afridi, not only do Pakistan possess the highest and third highest wicket-takers in this format, but also the third and fourth lowest economy-rates among bowlers who’ve played at least 20 Twenty20 internationals. Ajmal goes at 6.03 per over on average and Afridi 6.10. They strike and they stifle.

Team news

New Zealand opener Martin Guptill sustained a minor strain to his left hamstring while fielding against Bangladesh and has not recovered sufficiently to play Pakistan. He is expected to be fit for their first Super Eights match if New Zealand qualify. Their only reserve batsman is BJ Watling.New Zealand (probable): 1 Rob Nicol, 2 James Franklin, 3 Brendon McCullum (wk), 4 Ross Taylor (capt), 5 Kane Williamson, 6 BJ Watling, 7 Jacob Oram, 8 Daniel Vettori, 9 Nathan McCullum, 10 Tim Southee, 11 Kyle Mills.The four players Pakistan are likely to leave out of their starting line-up are Asad Shafiq, Mohammad Sami, Raza Hasan and Yasir Arafat.Pakistan (probable): 1 Mohammad Hafeez, 2 Imran Nazir, 3 Nasir Jamshed, 4 Kamran Akmal (wk), 5 Umar Akmal, 6 Shoaib Malik, 7 Shahid Afridi, 8 Abdul Razzaq, 9 Sohail Tanvir, 10 Umar Gul, 11 Saeed Ajmal.

Pitch and conditions

The forecast is for some showers in Pallekele. It threatened to rain during the Bangladesh-New Zealand game as well but there were no interruptions. The spinners didn’t get much turn either, with the ball coming on to the bat.

Stats and trivia

  • Pakistan played New Zealand in Pallekele during the 2011 World Cup and fed Ross Taylor a diet of full tosses and deliveries that were too straight. He scored 131 off 124 balls.
  • New Zealand and Pakistan have played eight Twenty20 internationals and the head-to-head record is 5-3 in Pakistan’s favour. New Zealand’s three wins, however, came in the last four matches.
  • In Twenty20 matches over the last 12 months, Afridi and Ajmal have economy-rates of less than six an over. Mohammad Hafeez and Sohail Tanvir conceded 5.82 and 5.94 on average during this period.

Quotes

“I’ve run out of words to praise him. His T20 performances have been match winning for Pakistan. Yes, recently, he has not performed very well but the way he is working hard and focusing on this tournament, I wish him the very best, and God willing he performs well for the team as always.”
“It didn’t spin as much as we thought it might. When you play a second time on it, it could probably spin a little bit more. We’ll have to wait and see.”
.

Yorkshire vie for piece of Indian pudding

ESPNcricinfo previews the Mumbai Indians v Yorkshire Champions League T20 match in Cape Town

The Preview by Devashish Fuloria17-Oct-2012

Match facts

October 18, 2012
Start time 1730 (1530 GMT)Mumbai Indians will look to their captain, Harbhajan Singh, to exhibit his trademark fighting spirit•AFP

Big Picture

Teams from Australia, South Africa and New Zealand have already humbled their illustrious IPL rivals, and that could be the inspiration Yorkshire – the only English team in the competition – need to score another upset when they take on the blue and flashy-gold festooned Mumbai Indians. At stake are first points for both teams and a chance to stay close to the two table toppers – Sydney Sixers and Lions.Yorkshire, the runners up from England’s T20 competition, came into the main group stage the hard way, unlike the No. 4 IPL side, scoring solid wins over Uva Next and Trinidad & Tobago, before being blown away by the Sydney Sixers pace attack in their first group match. Mumbai Indians do not pose a threat with their bowling in these conditions, except perhaps through Lasith Malinga, who the batsmen will need to be careful against. Yorkshire don’t posses any internationally known batsmen, but as Gary Ballance showed against T&T, they do have the skill to surprise any team. They have lost their big name – the South African David Miller – to first-class commitments, so a lot will also depend on Joe Root, who hasn’t fired in the tournament yet, to give Ballance support.The fate of the match could be determined by how Mumbai’s strong batting performs. They have innings-builders and big-hitters all the way down to No. 8. In their last game, the tactic to send Mitchell Johnson up the order backfired but the rest of the batsmen still put up a competitive 157 on the board. Sachin Tendulkar scored a scratchy 24-ball 16 and would be desperate for some runs to ward-off the cloud of criticism that has engulfed him lately and push Mumbai Indians to a safer position.

Watch out for…

The experienced Ryan Sidebottom is the leader of the Yorkshire bowling attack and he showed his worth in the crucial qualifying match against T&T in which he picked up three wickets for 13. Knowing that Mumbai Indians struggled against the left-arm bowlers – Dirk Nannes and Sohail Tanvir – in the last match, his form will be crucial. Sidebottom still bowls with pace and his accurate yorkers can test the best.Harbhajan Singh had a bad start to the tournament. Not only did he appear short of ideas when Quinton de Kock and Neil McKenzie took control in the previous match, but his insipid bowling was dealt with easily. Harbhajan, though, led Mumbai Indians to the Champions League title last year with some fighting performances and his resurgence will be crucial if Mumbai want to impose themselves with the ball.

Stats and trivia

  • Sachin Tendulkar’s strike-rate of 119.70 for Mumbai Indians is the second-lowest in their top-order, above only Dinesh Karthik’s 115.76. But Tendulkar is the only batsman to score more than 2000 runs for the team.

Quotes

“It’s good for cricket. The Mumbai Indians and Chennai Super Kings are dominant when they play in their home conditions. Having a tournament here gives a chance to everyone and there are no favourites.”

Brisbane dominance is history, says Hussey

Any sense of haughtiness among Australia’s players, after what amounted to a points-victory over South Africa in Brisbane, has been ardently shooed away by Michael Hussey

Daniel Brettig18-Nov-2012Any sense of haughtiness among Australia’s players, after what amounted to a points-victory over South Africa in Brisbane, has been ardently shooed away by Michael Hussey as the two sides reconvened in Adelaide. Much chatter was devoted to the momentum the hosts gained over the final three days of the Gabba Test, recovering from a poor first day with the ball and a dire first hour with the bat to be the only side with a chance of victory on the final afternoon.Chief among the proponents of this view was Australia’s captain Michael Clarke, who opened his regular newspaper column with the following words: “It’s amazing how much can be taken out of a draw”. Hussey, however, was intent on snapping Australia out of repose and back into a state of urgency, rejecting the notion that Brisbane’s psychological blows would have much bearing on proceedings at Adelaide Oval from Thursday.Reminded of the corresponding sequence of Test matches during the 2010-11 Ashes series, in which England batted their way out of a considerable hole in Brisbane and then took that confidence into fashioning a startling first half-hour in Adelaide, Hussey said the first session of the second Test would say far more about its outcome than any of the days’ play that preceded it in the first.One significant difference between 2010 and 2012 is the additional times the two sides have had between matches, allowing South Africa’s players to holiday while Australia’s returned to home ports. Whatever fatigue developed over the course of two lengthy first innings in Brisbane has thus been suitably flushed out.”I don’t really like to think we take any momentum coming out of Brisbane,” Hussey said. “I think we start nil-all again, and the first session is very important. Coming out of Brisbane in the Ashes a couple of years ago we lost the first session against England here in Adelaide very poorly, we were 3 for 1 in the first half an hour of the match and were basically playing catch up from then, so it’s very important that we start this match well.”What’s happened in Brisbane is gone, it doesn’t really matter, what matters is that first hour, that first half an hour in this Test match – we’ve got to start better than we did a couple of years ago against England.”Clarke used the term “patchy” to define Australia’s overall display at the Gabba, and this is something that must improve if his team is to prosper this week. Should the bowlers be called upon first, they will have an even narrower window for early wickets than was afforded by the Brisbane surface, as Adelaide’s turf can lose its vestigial early moisture in a matter of minutes. The top-order batsmen, meanwhile, cannot rightly expect to give up 3 for 40 and again be bailed out by Clarke and Hussey.South Africa are also unlikely to be so accommodating again if they have the chance to press home an early advantage. It was clear in Brisbane that the loss of the second day to rain sapped Graeme Smith’s side of the expectation that there was sufficient time to win the match, but no such precipitation is forecast for Adelaide and its desert climate. Hussey would not entertain the suggestion that South Africa’s Test side is not collectively ruthless enough, pointing to the world rankings as proof of their capacity to go in for the kill.”They’re the No. 1 team in the world, so they’ve obviously been ruthless in Test matches and won Test matches playing their style of play,” Hussey said. “So I don’t think you can question the way they go about their Test cricket, because they’ve been so successful for quite a period of time.”I think we’re close definitely, and I believe we can beat them definitely, but we’re going to have to play good, hard disciplined Test match cricket for long periods of time. We can’t just do it for an hour or a session, we’ve got to be able to do that all day, and back it up day after day. The one thing they’ve been able to do in the past few years is they play good, hard disciplined Test cricket for long periods of time, and that’s why they’re No. 1.”That’s what we’re aspiring to do and I don’t think we’re far away, particularly playing in our home conditions, where we know the conditions really well. I think that definitely brings us closer.”Shane Watson arrived in Adelaide with a steep task ahead of him in order to be available for the Test, and his success in recovering from a calf strain will be monitored closely from the time Australia commence training on Monday morning. “I believe he’s been running, so that’s positive, there’s still three or four days leading up to the Test match, so I’m sure he’ll be given every opportunity to prove his fitness to get ready for the second Test,” Hussey said. “I did speak to him in Brisbane and he was very keen to try and make sure he’s right for this Test match.”Even batting a long innings can take a bit out of the body, so he’s got to make sure he can get through that first, then hopefully offer something with the ball as well.”

England omit Pietersen for New Zealand series

England have omitted Kevin Pietersen for their T20 and one-day squads in New Zealand

David Hopps23-Dec-2012Kevin Pietersen has been omitted from England’s one-day squads for their tour of New Zealand next year as England’s selectors have accepted that he needs to rest to survive a heavy international schedule.Formal rest periods have become ever more prevalent in England cricket, but Pietersen’s absence from the New Zealand squads as England look to manage his workload is nevertheless a notable concession to the player so soon after his lengthy dispute with the England hierarchy.Geoff Miller, England’s national selector, said: “There are a number of players who we have decided not to select for parts of the competitive programme this winter as we look to manage their workloads effectively while ensuring we remain competitive across all formats. We feel this is the best way of keeping players as physically and mentally fresh as possible during a demanding 2013 and beyond.”Kevin Pietersen will miss the limited overs tour of New Zealand with Graeme Swann missing the T20 leg of the tour. This approach also provides an opportunity for talented young players to gain more international experience which will be important for their development and the development of England sides in the future.”Pietersen is expected to play in the Test series in March before heading to India for the IPL ahead of the English season.Since his much-publicised “reintegration” into the England set-up Pietersen has missed two Twenty20 series despite being one of the world’s most outstanding players in this format. He was also rested for the two matches against India, but England still drew the series 1-1 after winning in Mumbai and registered their highest winning total in Twenty20 cricket in the process.England’s introduction of a job share in their coaching set-up, with Andy Flower running the Test squad and Ashley Giles taking charge of the the ODI and Twenty20 sides in the New Year, supervised by Flower as overall team director, is another recognition of cricket’s demanding calendar.England have played 44 matches in all formats this year and the ECB has now accepted that for players and management rest periods are essential if they are to maintain hunger, fitness and a stable family life.England’s T20 squad in New Zealand shows two changes from the original India party with Stuart Broad, recovered from a heel injury, returning to captain the side and Steven Finn also called up after back trouble. Jonny Bairstow, who left the T20 series against India early for personal reasons, is also named. England play two warm-up fixtures against a New Zealand XI in preparation for a three-match series starting on February 9 in Auckland.For the three match ODI series, which begins on February 17 in Hamilton, Swann, James Anderson and Jonathan Trott return to the side after being rested for the ODI tour of India.
As well as announcing squads for all three formats in New Zealand, England’s selectors also put Joe Root in charge of the England Lions one-day tour of Australia in February, barely a week after his mentor, the former England captain Michael Vaughan, had identified him as a future England captain.Root, who made his England Test debut earlier this month against India, will captain a Lions side in five one-day matches against Australia A which includes 12 members of the 2012 England Performance who have recently returned from India.Reece Topley, Essex’s left-arm quick bowler, has an opportunity to win his first England Lions cap alongside Gary Ballance, Varun Chopra, Ben Foakes, Toby Roland-Jones and Chris Wright.Twenty20 squad: Stuart Broad (capt), Jonny Bairstow, Tim Bresnan, Danny Briggs, Jos Buttler, Jade Dernbach, Steven Finn, Alex Hales, Michael Lumb, Stuart Meaker, Eoin Morgan, Samit Patel, James Tredwell, Luke Wright.ODI squad: Alastair Cook (capt), James Anderson, Jonny Bairstow, Ian Bell, Tim Bresnan, Stuart Broad, Jos Buttler, Steven Finn, Craig Kieswetter, Eoin Morgan, Samit Patel, Graeme Swann, James Tredwell, Jonathan Trott.Lions squad: Joe Root, Gary Balance, Scott Borthwick, Danny Briggs, Varun Chopra, Matthew Coles, Ben Foakes, Alex Hales, James Harris, Simon Kerrigan, Toby Roland-Jones, Ben Stokes, James Taylor, Reece Topley, James Vince, Chris Wright.This article was updated on December 23 at 6.25pm after the ECB advised that James Vince had been omitted from the Lions squad because of an administrative error.

Mumbai boss their way to No. 40

True to their reputation of being at their best when it matters, Mumbai delivered that perfect match on the biggest domestic stage to reclaim their familiar position as Ranji champions

The Report by Siddarth Ravindran in Mumbai28-Jan-2013
Scorecard and ball-by-ball detailsAjit Agarkar carved up Saurashtra’s top order to put Mumbai well on their way to victory•ESPNcricinfo Ltd

Before the Ranji Trophy final, the Mumbai captain Ajit Agarkar had talked about his side not having put together the perfect match this season. True to their reputation of being at their best when it matters, Mumbai delivered that perfect match on the biggest domestic stage to reclaim their familiar position as Ranji champions.Agarkar and Dhawal Kulkarni were so devastating with the new ball that at one stage Saurashtra, who have built up a reputation for scoring big, were in so precarious a position that journalists scrambled to find the lowest totals in first-class history. They avoided those levels of ignominy but were still rolled over for a measly 82, handing Mumbai a handsome innings and 125-run victory.Saurashtra had their best chance of a fightback when they had Mumbai six down on the second evening and only 89 ahead. They let that lead swell to 139 yesterday, and on third morning Hiken Shah strengthened Mumbai further with more than two hours of resistance.Saurashtra needed a solid start if they were to pose any challenge, but their innings unravelled with unseemly haste. There was a poignant moment in the first over as Shitanshu Kotak, who waited two decades to play in a Ranji final, was caught-behind for a duck in what could be his final first-class game. He dejectedly walked past the trophy, which had been brought out and displayed on the boundary’s edge, on his way to the dressing-room.The other opener, Sagar Jogiyani, has also had a game to forget. He had fallen for 1 on the first day, muffed a chance to run out Wasim Jaffer on the second and rounded off the game with a duck on the third.Agarkar and Kulkarni were getting the ball to move both ways, and maintained a tight line and length, but Saurashtra’s batsmen looked so out of their depth that the persistent doubts over their ability to score outside the benign surfaces of Rajkot will not be swept away any time soon. Saurashtra coach Debu Mitra admitted after the match that his batsmen needed to spend more time on seaming tracks, and that they didn’t have enough experience of difficult batting conditions.

Sachin Tendulkar on Mumbai’s victory

“Wonderful feeling that we’ve won for the 40th time. Mumbai has shown again that we are a champion side, got some real good players, nice blend of seniors and youngsters and a beautiful combination. There were moments when the going got tough but that’s when the team stuck together and performed brilliantly.
I feel especially happy for Ajit Agarkar who had a rough season last year, it was fairly difficult for him, all the more reason to be excited. He has led from the front, and led beautifully, performed when it mattered, and the team supported him along with the support staff.
It is a wonderful moment for Mumbai cricket, not just the players but also from the administrative side. It has been team work and I take this opportunity to congratulate everyone.”

They fished at far too many deliveries that should have been left alone. Mumbai operated with four slips and two gullies for much of the first hour, and the catches duly arrived.There was bounce as well for the new-ball bowlers, and it was one of those lifting deliveries that removed Rahul Dave, hit high on the bat as he edged to the cordon. Aarpit Vasavada, who provided much of Saurashtra’s resistance in the first innings, got a rough lbw decision after being struck outside off. Jaydev Shah avoided a pair but was bowled through the gate for 6.Agarkar had high praise for Kulkarni’s bowling. “They probably don’t have the depth of batting that we do,” he said. “Little bit surprised (at how easy the victory was), Dhawal bowled exceptionally well, he could have had eight wickets if luck was on his side.”At 11 for 5, the game was effectively over. Never have Saurashtra missed Cheteshwar Pujara as badly as they did in this match. They may have been outclassed in the final but, still, that won’t take the shine off Saurashtra’s best season in nearly seven decades.For Mumbai, another title is only a return to business as usual after missing out in the previous two seasons. If the 40th trophy wasn’t enough to show their domestic dominance, it comes in a season when they have won the Under-25 and U-16 titles too, and are battling it out in the final of the U-19.

One-day specialists boost Sri Lanka

Sri Lanka will welcome Lasith Malinga and other limited-overs players into their squad as they look to build on their success in the shorter formats in Australia

Andrew Fernando in Sydney09-Jan-2013One of Sri Lanka’s biggest frustrations during the Test series was their inability to call up Lasith Malinga to spearhead the attack, despite him already being in Australia, and in wicket-taking form. The possibility of a Malinga Test comeback was floated repeatedly, but team management maintained he was not fit enough for five-day cricket, though at times, they were hopeful he might eventually return in whites.They will no longer be without their most penetrative bowler though, with Malinga having joined the Sri Lanka squad on Tuesday, after completing his stint with the Melbourne Stars. He has been the standout bowler of the Big Bash League in the last month, taking a tournament-high 13 wickets, while his average of 10.69 and his economy rate of 4.96 are both the best in the league for any bowler with more than five scalps.Allrounder Jeevan Mendis said Malinga’s arrival in the team had already boosted the side, and that he and the other limited-overs specialists will likely inject energy into Sri Lanka’s Australian campaign. In addition to Malinga’s BBL exploits, he was also 2012’s highest wicket-taker in ODIs.”Any team would like to have Malinga,” Mendis said. “Having him in the one day team is a great opportunity for us to do well, and it also gives us confidence. With Malinga coming in and some other guys from Sri Lanka like Akila Dananjaya, and Upul Tharanga, we have a better chance of doing well in ODIs than we did in the Tests.”Though Dananjaya, Tharanga and Ajantha Mendis just arrived in Australia, both Jeevan Mendis and Thisara Perera have been playing in the BBL, while Nuwan Kulasekara, who has been in Australia with the Test team, is expected to recover from a cracked rib in time for the first ODI. If Kulasekara plays, he will complete a much more formidable attack than the bowling unit that struggled in the Tests, with four bowlers in the squad who have already had a taste of the conditions.”I have been playing for the Sydney Sixers, with whom I have a contract for four games, and that helped me get used to playing here,” Mendis said. “To come to Australia and play is a difficult task. It’s one of the best teams in the world, but if we take a look at the last few years, Sri Lanka have been doing well in ODIs and Twenty20s.”Encouragingly for Sri Lanka, they have won more matches than they have lost against the hosts in their last two limited-overs series in Australia. Sri Lanka were beaten in the finals of last year’s tri-series, but defeated Australia in four matches from seven in that tournament, while in 2010, Sri Lanka won a three-match bilateral series.Mendis said Sri Lanka’s versatile ODI squad, which can contain up to three allrounders in Mendis, Perera and Angelo Mathews, would give the visitors the edge in the upcoming series as well. “It was a great series to beat Australia here in 2010. It gives us confidence going into the ODIs. With the number of players we have that can both bat and bowl, we can do something good. We are good enough to win again. We need to forget about the Tests and focus on the ODIs and Twenty20s.”This will be Sri Lanka’s second ODI series under the new rules, which do not allow more than four fielders outside the 30-yard circle at any time in the game. The visitors prospered in their first dalliance with the new laws, winning a rain-affected series against New Zealand 3-0, and Mendis said Sri Lanka had since stopped thinking about the new rule as a limitation.”We are not used to it, but in one way it’s good for a spinner, because it allows us to bring the field in and gives a little more opportunity to get wickets. We’re thinking about the positive side about what we can do with the new rule. The first time it was difficult to bowl with the five fielders in, but as time went on, we thought it was a good opportunity for the bowlers to get some wickets. With the new rule, you have to be perfect as a spinner and you have to be smart about the field.”