Five wickets and a century for Webley for Under 19's

Somerset Under-19’s two day game against Gloucestershire at Keynsham fell foul of the weather last week, and in the end they had to settle for first innings win.Gloucestershire won the toss, and batting first were all out for 285. Tom Webley was the pick of the Somerset bowlers with the impressive figures of 27 overs 5 for 37, but there were also two wickets each for Arul Suppiah and James Hildreth.When Somerset batted they scored 300 for 6, with Webley scoring 108, Suppiah and Chris Gange each making 46 and Simon Green from Weston super Mare chipping in with 44.The Under 19’s are next in action when they travel to Kidderminster to take on Worcestershire in a two day game starting on July 25th.

Spearman raises tempo to blast Central to unlikely win

For a team to win by scoring 66 more in the fourth innings than the next highest total in the match is a rare event, but that is what Central Districts achieved against Northern Districts at McLean Park, Napier today.They did it with something to spare in the end, winning by six wickets with more than 20 overs to spare thanks to a thrilling and violent innings from their captain, Craig Spearman.The tempo of the match changed from dead slow to lightening quick and back again several times. It was a game that either side could have taken hold of at various stages, but that remained in the balance until Spearman took over.His 90 took 81 balls and included 11 fours and five sixes, the biggest of which sent the ball over the McKenzie Stand and out of the ground, off Yovich. Spearman took on each of the Northern bowlers in turn, with the same degree of contemptuous aggression. Joseph Yovich suffered more than most. The match was won when his recall was greeted with an upward gear change by Spearman.There are few players in New Zealand who can destroy an attack in this manner. Watching Spearman in this mood makes you wonder why he is not an entrenched member of the national squad.Opening batsman David Kelly’s contribution to Central’s win was just as vital. He gave solid foundation to the innings with 71. This was an outstanding effort from a batsman whose form had deserted him before this game.Glen Sulzberger also played a supporting role to perfection. He and Spearman put on 135 in 21.5 overs at a strike rate of 6.18 for the fourth wicket.Northern suffered the important – probably decisive – loss of Simon Doull before play began. He received a knock on the knee during his whirlwind fifty yesterday and could take no part in proceedings. Doull will probably miss Northern’s fixture at Whangarei next week.With Joseph Yovich used only in short spells, possibly an after effect of his marathon stint on the second day, the Northern bowling resources were severely depleted.Both Martin and Bradburn bowled tidily, but there was little help for the spinners in a pitch that seemed to get flatter as the game wore on. Most of the terrors that it appeared to hold on the first two days were in the minds of the batsmen, rather than in evidence on the cut strip.The loss is a blow to Northern’s title aspirations, though how much so depends upon other results. Earlier in the game Central coach Dipak Patel refused to discount his team’s chances in the Shell Trophy. This victory keeps the door open to the possibility of adding to their reputation as the come-back kids, earned after their victory against the odds in the Shell Cup.The reputations of several young cricketers have been enhanced over the past four days. Brent Hefford continued his meteoric rise with seven wickets earned by impressive control and cricketing intelligence.Andrew Schwass showed that he may be an undiscovered gem in first-class cricket, as well as in the one-day game. Joseph Yovich showed that he is a talent with bat and ball, bowling very quickly for a long time.There are some reasons for optimism in an otherwise gloomy week for New Zealand cricket.

With the Seconds

The Somerset Second Eleven match against Middlesex at Ealing last week was abandoned as a draw without a ball being bowled.In the first match of the season Somerset earned a creditable draw against a strong Warwickshire side during which Matt Bulbeck took his first wicket at senior level. Pete Trego made some good contributions with both bat and ball, which earned him a first team place for the Kent game , and triallist Ian Flanagan, an opening bat who was released by Essex at the end of last season showed quite lot of promise.Somerset were hoping that Matt Bulbeck would take another step on the road to his recovery in the Middlesex match, but sadly it wasn’t to be.The second eleven are next in action when they play against Gloucestershire at Bristol in the one day trophy on Monday and then entertain Surrey at The County Ground in a 3 day match that starts on Wednesday May 30th.

Pakistan trio's careers on the line

The hearings into the spot-fixing scandal involving three players from Pakistan will begin from Thursday in the unlikely setting of Doha, Qatar. At stake during the hearings is the playing future of Salman Butt, Mohammad Asif and Mohammad Amir as well as the reputation of the ICC as a governing body able to deal with a problem that strikes at the very heart of the game.Michael Beloff QC, the head of the independent tribunal and chairman of the ICC’s code of conduct commission, addressed the media at the Qatar Financial Centre Civil and Commercial Court, where the hearing will also take place. The briefing was a formal one, merely outlining the procedure the hearing will follow.Beloff outlined the history of the charges against the trio, stemming from a News of the World investigation into the Lord’s Test between Pakistan and England in August last year, as well giving brief profiles of the other members of the tribunal, Justice Albie Sachs from South Africa and Sharad Rao from Kenya.The hearing will be held behind closed doors, with only the tribunal, the ICC’s lawyers Jonathon Taylor and Ian Higgins, the players and their lawyers and witnesses present. The process, Beloff said, will begin with an opening statement from the ICC presenting its case against each of the three players. The players will each then be entitled to respond.”Thereafter, the ICC will present all of the evidence that it has prepared in support of the charges it has brought,” Beloff said. “That will take various forms and will include hearing from witnesses ‘in person’ and over the telephone.”Witnesses from the ICC are set to include representatives from as well as teleconferences with Shahid Afridi, the Pakistan limited overs captain, and Waqar Younis, the team coach.The players will then be expected to present their defence, and will be open to cross-examination by the ICC’s lawyers and the tribunal, before closing statements are made. Though January 11 is the last working date of the hearing, a decision could conceivably be arrived at before that. Alternatively the judgment could also be reserved till after the final date.The players arrived in Doha on Tuesday and as they have done all along, again protested their innocence. Butt, who was captain at the time of the Test and will be represented by London-based barrister Yasin Patel, told AFP, “I have always played the game for the love of it and have never been involved in any wrongdoing.”I am confident that I will soon be playing for my country. I have been practising all through this difficult phase of my life so that whenever I am cleared I am able to play.”Amir, who along with Asif is alleged to have bowled the deliberate, pre-planned no-balls, said, “This is the toughest phase of my life. My elders tell me that such phases come in the life of a professional, so I am bravely facing this situation and will hopefully come out of it to play for Pakistan.”Shahid Karim, Amir’s lawyer, said the incident had affected Amir emotionally. “One of the mitigating factors is age and the other mitigating factor is Amir’s previously unblemished record,” he told AFP.”Emotionally he is drained, he’s been affected badly by it, but he’s coping as best he can and above all he is very confident that he will come out of this clean.”The hearing is taking place in Doha because the third player, Asif, is not allowed to enter the UAE after he was deported from Dubai in 2008 because of a drug-related offence.The three were provisionally suspended by the ICC soon after the scandal emerged and though Butt and Amir contested that decision, their appeals were rejected. If found guilty, they could be banned for anywhere from five years to life.This is the first time such a case is taking place with the ICC effectively the prosecutors. Past offenders, such as Salim Malik and Hansie Cronje, were punished by their own boards.

Donald and Venter have Easterns on the back foot

Free State probably shaded the first day of their Supersport Series SuperEight encounter against Easterns at Willowmoore Park, although the home sidehad made some inroads into their batting order by the close.Visiting captain Gerard Brophy, who had made the decision to put Easterns inafter winning the toss, certainly had cause to feel that his choice had beenvindicated after the home side were knocked over for 224, with speedsterAllan Donald and off spinner Kosie Venter each grabbing three wickets.However, the hosts did hit back with two wickets in the 17 overs thatremained, with Gerhardus Liebenberg unbeaten on 22 and Wiaan Smit on 17 asEasterns reached 64 for two by the close.Early swing assisted the Free State bowlers as the pace trio of Donald,Victor Mpitsang and Dewald Pretorius each grabbed a wicket as Easterns werereduced to 37 for three. However, that brought Mike Rindel to the wicket andthe veteran left-hander took the game to the visitors with a swashbuckling69 off just 84 balls, including eight fours and a six.Rindel added 54 for the fourth wicket with Derek Crookes, but the home sidethen lost another three quick wickets to be 125 for six, before anotherleft-handed import, Ant Botha, and Albie Morkel combined to add aface-saving 69 for the seventh wicket.Even after Morkel (25) and Gareth Flusk (0) were run out in quicksuccession, there was still some resistance from Easterns, with Botha andAndre Nel adding 29 for the ninth wicket. Donald eventually knocked over Nel(10) and then had Botha caught at short leg by Rasheed Lewis for 59 to endthe innings.Morkel and Flusk grabbed the scalps of Andrew Gait (0) and Louis Wilkinson(17) respectively to keep the home side in it at the close.

De Villiers pleased with win after Sri Lanka flop show

AB de Villiers has praised his team for showing a “killer instinct” to close out the series against Pakistan, especially after their poor one-day showing in Sri Lanka. He said he was also pleased that Quinton de Kock was showing his batting potential “so early” in his career.”Happy and proud of the boys with this series win away from home, especially after a really bad series in Sri Lanka,” de Villiers said after the match in Abu Dhabi on Friday. “I wasn’t thinking of [the fifth and final match in] Sharjah, I was thinking of one ball at a time, not to think too far ahead. Having won here two days ago, we had the confidence. If the decider had gone to Sharjah it would have been tight, but its good we wrapped things up here.”South Africa posted 266 for 5, and then bowled Pakistan out for 238 in a see-sawing chase. That South Africa got to 266 was mainly down to 20-year-old de Kock’s maiden ODI century. In the chase, Pakistan needed 45 off 36 with five wickets in hand. Then Dale Steyn struck with the big wicket of Misbah-ul-Haq in a triple-wicket over, and eventually went on to claim a career-best 5 for 25, as Pakistan slid from 228 for 5 to 238 all out.De Kock, like the rest of the team, did well to overcome the Sri Lanka series setback, de Villiers said. “Quinton de Kock is a serious talent for the future in South Africa. I was expecting him to come through in two or three years’ time but to do it so, so early, especially after a tough tour to Sri Lanka where he had some mental and technical issues, is great.” De Kock could not go past 27 in Sri Lanka in July, and like most of his team-mates, struggled in the spinner-friendly conditions.Steyn, de Villiers said, showed good spirit. “It’s nice to have Steyn in the team, I play around him and he has that killer instinct.”In fact, everyone had it in this game. I really enjoyed captaining tonight, it was a hard game, I knew it wasn’t going to be easy and Pakistan would come at us hard which they did. We hit back with our patience and the communication was pretty good. Hashim [Amla] was always at my ear and we took out catches and got some run-outs and things worked out. It’s a very proud moment for me to win a series away from home and would love to make it 4-1.”

International stars vie for main stage

Match Facts

September 17, 2013
Start time 1600 (1030 GMT)Faisalabad Wolves will compete in their first Champions League•Pakistan Cricket Board

Big Picture

The first match of the qualifying round is significant for both teams because Faisalabad Wolves are making their Champions League debut, and Otago Volts, after failing to qualify for any of the previous editions since the inaugural tournament in 2009, get another crack. After some uncertainty as to whether Faisalabad would feature in the tournament, the first qualifier will go ahead as planned.Faisalabad possess a number of key players who could help propel their campaign into the group stage. They are led by Misbah-ul-Haq, who has enjoyed a consistent run of good form in limited-overs cricket over the past eighteen months. They also have one of the most dangerous spinners in the game in Saeed Ajmal, whose personal performance will help determine how far Faisalabad progress in the tournament. Ehsan Adil and Asad Ali’s limited international experience will hold them in good stead as they round off a decent bowling attack.Otago come in as one of the tournament’s surprise packages. Led by Derek de Boorder, the squad consists of a number of former and current international players. Brendon McCullum, whose T20 exploits are well known, is a key figure. With Ian Butler, Neil Wagner and Nathan McCullum as well, Otago have an attack that can compete against some of the more illustrious sides in the tournament. They will, however, be without their Netherlands allrounder, Ryan ten Doeschate, who is still tied up with commitments for Essex, at least for the first game.

Players to watch

Brendon McCullum will forever be associated with Twenty20 cricket. He smashed an unbeaten 158 in the inaugural match of the IPL in 2008, and an audacious 116* against a fiery Australian attack that included some scoops off the 150kph Shaun Tait. On his day, McCullum can take apart any international attack. The bowling partnership between Nick Beard and Jacob Duffy will also play a vital role as they tied for first on the wicket-takers’ list at the HRV Cup – 15 each. How they fare on flatter Indian pitches will be an indicator of Otago’s chances.Asif Ali finished as the third leading run-scorer in the Faysal Bank Super Eight T20 Cup. He scored 152 runs in five innings at an average of 50.66 and strike rate of 129.91. In the tournament final, he was involved in a match-turning partnership with Misbah after Sialkot Stallions had reduced Faisalabad to 79 for 3 in the 13th over. The pair put on 79 in 46 balls, which proved the difference as Faisalabad won by 36 runs. Ali ended up getting his highest score of the tournament in that match, an unbeaten 70 off 49 balls.

Stats and Trivia

  • Faisalabad’s Ehsan Adil finished on top of the wicket-takers list in the Faysal Bank Super Eight T20 Cup this year with 12 scalps in five matches
  • Otago Volts had won nine games on the trot in the HRV cup this season en route to qualifying for the Champions League

Quotes

”All the teams have got players with X-factor. Our first concern is about the Wolves and Misbah-ul-Haq and one or two other internationals in their team.”
“This is a positive sign. I think it will be the first step towards reviving Indo-Pak cricket, which is so cruelly suspended.”

Reece sees Lancs cement top spot

ScorecardLuis Reece eased Lancashire home•Getty Images

Lancashire moved closer to locking down the County Championship Division Two title by wrapping up a nine-wicket victory over Worcestershire at New Road.A fifth win in the last six games has put Glen Chapple’s table-topping team 34 points clear of Northamptonshire and 65 ahead of Essex, having played a game more than the third-placed county.Although Worcestershire began the last day only 12 runs ahead with five wickets standing, they did their best to delay the Lancashire bandwagon before bowing to the inevitable. After resuming at 166 for 5, the home side finally capitulated for 241 and Lancashire cleared off their target of 88 with more than half a day to spare.Chapple removed the biggest obstacle when his ninth ball of the morning accounted for Worcestershire’s show-stealer, Moeen Ali. With scores of 104 and 109, the England Lions batsman emulated Graeme Hick, the last Worcestershire player to score two centuries in a match on the New Road ground, against Essex in 2006.In six home Championship matches this season Moeen has scored 779 runs at an average of 111.29 and in his last six completed innings at New Road he has made a double hundred, three centuries and two fifties.For Worcestershire to have seriously stretched Lancashire, more was needed fromMoeen than the eight runs he added on the last morning. After taking one more boundary off Kyle Hogg – in all he hit 12 fours and three sixes – he edged Chapple to Gareth Cross for the first of four successive catches by the wicketkeeper.The lower order battled on as best as they could but Hogg landed two blows by removing Jack Shantry and Joe Leach in successive overs. Finally it was over to Tom Smith to polish off the last two wickets in the space of six balls. Graeme Cessford thin-edged an expansive drive and Ben Cox was leg-before for 11.Cessford was quickly back in action with the new ball and with the last delivery of his second over had Paul Horton caught at point. The light became a problem as Cessford banged the ball in short of a length and with the score on 42 for 1 the umpires took the teams off for 10 minutes.On the resumption Luis Reece continued his impressive introduction to Championship cricket, reaching his fourth half-century in a row with a straight six off Moeen. He also had 10 fours in an unbeaten 56 in 51 balls when Ashwell Prince, who made 19 in a stand of 71, hit the winning boundary off Shantry.

'USA should revoke membership of ICC'

Frustrated with the lack of progress in the development of cricket in the United States of America, the head of the nation’s youth cricket association has called on the country to relinquish its membership of the ICC.Despite having been an been an associate member of the ICC since 1965, cricket remains a minority sport in the USA, with fewer than 10 grass pitches and only three of the current national side born in the country.USA’s membership has twice been suspended from the ICC and plans for a high-profile T20 league have never progressed beyond discussions. USA are currently in Division Three of the World Cricket League and USA Cricket Association, the official board, are believed to be US$2 million in debt and mired in controversy after highly criticised internal elections.Now Jamie Harrison, president of the volunteer organisation USA Youth Cricket Association has called for change. While Harrison is loathe to turn his back on the funding provided by the ICC – currently around $300,000 per year – he is among those to have lost faith in the USA Cricket Association, the official board, who have, he says, “proven itself incapable of establishing cricket as an American sport”.According to Harrison, if the ICC is unwilling or unable to see that USACA are part of the problem rather than part of the solution, the country would be better off without their involvement.”After nearly fifty years of Associate membership of the ICC, cricket in the United States still languishes as a niche sport for expatriates,” Harrison told ESPNcricinfo. “The national governing body has proven itself incapable of establishing cricket as an American sport and the world governing body sees America’s value solely in terms of the commercial prospects of its expatriate fan base.”Ample evidence exists to support the conviction that the United States has evolved into little more than a dysfunctional cricket colony, forever doomed to the backwaters of the international game, unless a new path is chosen.”It is clear to me that the time for this new path has come, and that for the immediate future, that path must shun ICC entanglements. Only by shedding its international rewards and responsibilities can America free itself from those in its current cricket administration, find true visionaries for its leadership, and turn its ample resources toward building a domestic game.”Rather than prop up a dysfunctional, unpopular body saddled with crushing debt that cannot act in the best interests of American cricket, the ICC should do the right thing and let us begin again, and if the ICC won’t get on the right side of the debate, then the USA should just do it without them.”The time has come for change. No longer is the status quo, where out-of-touch administrators smugly dictate to American volunteers, an acceptable state of affairs. We believe that a fresh start, a start controlled from the grassroots by those doing the hard work of building the game, is required.”One of the fundamental problems, in Harrison’s view, is the link between ICC funding and the success of the national side. It has, he claims, led to short-termism both in regards team selection and development funding with administrators chasing immediate gains and the expat market, to the exclusion of youth development and engagement.He hopes that, in time, the ICC will embrace the American Cricket Federation as a viable alternative to USACA.”The ACF is a relatively new national organisation that has attracted some of the best cricket administrators in the country to its ranks,” Harrison explained. “Its constitution and governance structure is superior to USACA and they go to great lengths to give representation to all cricket stakeholders. More to the point, its leadership is motivated by altruism, not ego-inflating ICC baubles.”The USYCA was formed by Harrison in 2010 with the intention of making a more vigorous effort to grow the game in the US, and claims to have reached around 250,000 school students, though that figure is disputed by the ICC. The association has distributed more than 1,500 cricket sets to schools across the country. But Harrison said he had found his efforts to push the game at the grassroots level had not corresponded to the way he feels the ICC sees the US – primarily as an extra marketplace for the current Full Member countries.Tim Anderson, global development manager at the ICC, accepted the development of US cricket had been “challenging” but insisted that USACA was now putting in place the changes required to progress.”It’s important to acknowledge the history of cricket in the USA,” Anderson told ESPNcricinfo. “The majority of cricket played in the USA is by people of Caribbean or south Asian backgrounds, and limited progress has so far been made in taking the game to the wider population. USACA has also faced governance and administration challenges in the past that saw it twice suspended by the ICC for failing to meet membership criteria.”But that approach wasn’t effective and therefore a closer working relationship has now been established. To the USACA Board’s credit, it has recognised that change is needed for the game to move forward more purposefully, and over the past year this has led to the appointment of a new CEO, the implementation of an independent governance review and the development of a new strategy and staffing structure that has a focus on both improving performance and growing participation.”We admire the work of USYCA and other youth development organisations across the USA that are promoting cricket to the youth of America. Their work supports USACA’s national development mandate and will hopefully assist in the long term realisation of cricket’s vast potential in the USA.”Darren Beazley, who became chief executive of USACA in February, admitted the long-term history of his organisation was “chequered”, but felt the short-term results promised far more.”I can’t deny there have been problems in the past,” he told ESPNcricinfo. “But we’re heading in the right direction now. We’ve made real progress in the last six months and I hope, in time, we can persuade Jamie Harrison to work with us.”

Record stand revives England

ScorecardHeather Knight and Laura Marsh put on a record-breaking partnership for the seventh wicket•Getty Images

Heather Knight made her first Test century as England continued their dogged rearguard action well into the third day at Wormsley. Knight’s 157 from 338 balls was the seventh-highest Test score by an England woman and she was joined by the equally obdurate Laura Marsh in a stand of 156 – England’s best for the seventh wicket and one run shy of the Test record – that went a long way to staving off the threat of defeat to Australia.With six points on offer in these multi-format Ashes, the incentive to win was clear and evinced by Jodie Fields’ decision to declare with her team six down on the second day. But with the prospect of defeat coming at such a price – a draw will give each side two points – England have knuckled down in an attempt to make sure they don’t lose. Australia had extended their lead to 81 by reaching 64 for 1 by the close, making a draw the most likely result.Resuming on a perilous 172 for 6, still 149 runs behind, Knight and Marsh forged on in the same manner in which they had gone about their business on the on previous evening. The pair soaked up 73 overs of pressure before Knight was run out after being sent back looking for a single.Knight was dropped on 105, wicketkeeper Fields missing a chance down the leg side, but by then she had long-since surpassed her previous best innings, in her only other Test, of 19. She hit 20 fours in all and was particularly strong off her pads in making the third-highest individual total for England against Australia.Marsh, 13 from 114 balls at the start of the day, had progressed to 35 when she lost her partner and Katherine Brunt, who hit her first ball for four, went soon after. But Danielle Hazell stuck around for another 20 overs as Marsh went to her first Test half-century, eventually facing 304 balls for her 55. By the time Australia claimed the final wicket, Erin Osborne finishing with 4 for 67, the deficit was just 17.”I’m really pleased, I think when I went in we were pretty up against it,” Marsh said. “I was just really pleased to be able to hang in there with Heather and support her.”It was the job the team needed and I tried to stick in there and be disciplined with my decision-making. It was really helpful to have Heather at the other end for the vast amount of the time I was there because she just played brilliantly and we kept each other going.”I tried to be positive in defence and approach it that way and pick up runs when they became available.”With a slim lead and a potentially tricky couple of hours to negotiate amid rain showers, Australia’s openers began at a similarly watchful pace, reaching 40 before Jenny Gunn removed Rachael Haynes. First-innings centurion Sarah Elliott accompanied Meg Lanning safely to the close but it will take something special from the usually attacking Fields to force a result.

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