Thomas and Dale turn tables on Essex

A memorable day for Darren Thomas who recorded his maiden first-class century that assisted his side to a healthy total after they had slumped to 128-6 after winning the toss.With Adrian Dale, who also reached a century, he put on 163 for the seventh wicket. Dale had already scored 55 when his 26-year-old partner arrived at the crease but Thomas got off the mark with a pull for six and continued his belligerent demolition of the Essex attack who saw their earlier enviable position recede alarmingly thanks to the flailing bat of left-hander Thomas coupled with some wayward bowling.Dale was the first to reach his century having struck 10 boundaries but with his score on 113, he edged a lifting delivery to keeper Barry Hyam to give the persevering Andrew McGarry his third wicket.Thomas, having arrived at his half-century from only 40 deliveries, then faced a further 106 balls accumulating his next 50 runs, spending nearly an hour in the nervous nineties before reaching his milestone innings that embraced 14 boundaries including one six.He was unbeaten on 119 at the close with Glamorgan on 335-7 and in sight of their fourth batting point which had appeared so unlikely earlier in the day.Mark Ilott had dismissed Stephen James in the second over of the morning and the introduction of McGarry into the attack was rewarded by two wickets in successive overs for the 19 year-old who removed Matthew Maynard and Jimmy Maher.Michael Powell fell cheaply to Ronnie Irani before Dale and Keith Newell added 51 for the fifth wicket to ease the pressure on the visitors only for left-armer Ilott to strike back with two wickets before Thomas joined Dale to steal the show.

Johnson's century sustains Hampshire's promotion hopes

Neil Johnson’s first Championship century for Hampshire re-kindled the promotion contenders’ hopes of forcing victory at New Road.The Zimbabwean all-rounder made 103 in almost four-and-a-quarter hours and enabled his hard-pressed side to match Worcestershire’s first innings total of 247.Hampshire then pressed hard for an advantage by capturing three early wickets and the home side will be looking for a big effort from Graeme Hick with their captain closing on 43 out of 88 for 3.Their openers had fallen to James Schofield, who attended Worcester Royal Grammar School and appeared in Worcestershire’s second team before finding a base in Southampton.Anurag Singh edged to slip in Schofield’s first over and Philip Weston drove to cover before Vikram Solanki top-edged Alex Morris for a sprawling catch by Jason Laney.At that stage, seven wickets had gone for 40 runs in the crossover of two innings since Johnson departed. The sudden return of batting problems only underlined the value of his performance in guiding Hampshire from 38 for 4 to 232 for 7 when he was caught at cover off Andy Bichel.The watchful left-hander had his moments with 14 fours and two sixes, but circumstances demanded that he should concentrate on survival.Will Kendall was first to provide substantial assistance by reaching 36 before edging David Leatherdale to slip and Robin Smith took over his role with 26 in a partnership of 76.Smith, coming in as low as No 7, gave a return catch to the accurate Chris Liptrot, who also removed Alex Morris for an impressive return of 3 for 43 in 22 overs.

England heist denied by fading light

Scorecard and ball-by-ball detailsAfter 1,121 runs and 17 wickets in the first two innings of an extraordinarily slow-burning contest, the first Test in Abu Dhabi all but exploded into a Technicolor fireworks finish, as England fell agonisingly short of glory following a Twenty20-style run-chase.In scenes reminiscent of England’s last great Asian heist, at Karachi in 2000-01, a staggering and unscripted Pakistan collapse opened the door for a gallop to the finish in rapidly fading light. The hero of the hour was Adil Rashid, who turned his long-awaited maiden Test wicket into a redemptive five-wicket haul as Pakistan were routed for 173 in 57.5 overs. However, needing 99 for victory in what amounted to an hour’s worth of daylight, England could not quite defy the heavens in their gallant sprint for the line.Had there been time for Pakistan to bowl their full allocation of 19 overs, the target would have been a breeze for a spirited young line-up featuring many of the men who have revived England’s one-day fortunes this summer. However, despite the best efforts of Joe Root, who hustled 33 from 29 balls, and Jonny Bairstow, who clattered an enormous six over midwicket in a Wahab Riaz over that was dispatched for 17 runs, their rage against the dying of the light left them 25 runs short after an 11-over slog.Pakistan, inevitably, were in no hurry to get through their overs, but they could hardly be faulted for that. England themselves have used delaying tactics to their advantage in the past, not least during their great escape at Cardiff in the 2009 Ashes, when Bilal Shafayat, the 12th man, earned notoriety for his glove-delivering duties. Ultimately it came down to the umpires to assess the conditions, just as they had done on the previous evening. Fifteen years on from Karachi, and with no Steve Bucknor in the middle to take matters into his own hands, the end of the match was signalled with an apologetic shrug of the shoulders, as Bruce Oxenford and Paul Reiffel called a halt to proceedings at 5.46pm local time, seven minutes before sunset was officially confirmed.The first hint that something extraordinary was afoot had come in the third over of Pakistan’s second innings. The morning, up to that point, had been following the pattern of the previous four days – England, 569 for 8 overnight, added 29 runs for the loss of Rashid in a ponderous first hour, before Alastair Cook decided enough was enough and declared on 598 for 9. James Anderson, the not-out No.11, appeared oddly peeved at the decision – perhaps he had designs on a last-day century? – but whatever his gripe, he quickly channelled it into another superb spell of new-ball bowling.With a lead of 75 in the bank, Anderson charged in with all of his tricks on display, grabbing two wickets in five balls to reduce Pakistan to a jittery 3 for 2. Shan Masood was extracted in embarrassing circumstances for the second innings running to complete a miserable match -bowled off the grille on the first day, bowled off an under-edge into the crease on the last – before Shoaib Malik, the first-innings double-centurion, was deceived by a cross-seam bouncer that reared at his throat. Bairstow under the lid accepted a looping chance off the gloves with glee, and little wonder – it had taken 326 balls and 633 balls respectively for either side to double their wickets tally in the first two innings. Now Malik, with scores of 245 and 0, had made it two in 17.Mohammad Hafeez, on his 35th birthday, showed some enterprise in a counter-attacking 34 from 55 balls, including four fours and, on the stroke of lunch, a straight six off Rashid, who moments earlier had reviewed an appeal for caught behind that could, and maybe should, have ended his wait for that maiden Test scalp. But Rashid would be into the action soon enough. After the interval, Hafeez prodded a legbreak into the covers and set off for a suicidal single. Ben Stokes swooped, turned and blew out his candles at the non-striker’s end. At 47 for 3, England’s interest in the contest was ablaze.James Anderson removed Shan Masood and Shoaib Malik in the same over•Associated Press

That interest should, by rights, have been snuffed out by the grandees of Pakistan’s middle-order. After a familiarly skittish start, Younis Khan, with 45 from 114 balls, joined forces with Misbah-ul-Haq, who made 51 from 111, to draw the sting of England’s seam attack. There was one moment of fortune for Misbah, on 19, when he successfully reviewed a catch at gully off Anderson, but their fourth-wicket stand of 66 had taken Pakistan back into the lead, and – at 102 for 3 at tea – apparently out of danger. But then both men took leave of their senses.The first to succumb was Younis, who had played the spinners with such confidence and aplomb until one stroke too many, a wild swipe into the covers that plopped gently into the hands of Ben Stokes. After 265 deliveries and at a cost of 193 runs, Rashid finally had his breakthrough moment.Three overs later, he had doubled his tally and halved his Test average, as Asad Shafiq grazed a drive to be caught behind for 6. However, it was Misbah’s rush of blood that really turned four days of bloodless accumulation into a bare-knuckle fight to the finish. For 111 deliveries spanning 32.3 overs, he had been turning in the sort of responsible-but-glamour-free contribution that has been the hallmark of his time as Pakistan’s captain. But then, inexplicably, he galloped down the pitch to the offspin of Moeen Ali and was bowled through the gate with his head gazing up to the Abu Dhabi skyline.Pakistan, at that juncture, were six-down for 159 and, with the tail exposed and ripe for the docking, Rashid was primed for his slice of redemption. After Wahab had been snapped up at short leg to give Moeen his second of the innings, Rashid ripped through his variations to claim each of the final three wickets to fall and become the first England legspinner since Tommy Greenhough at Lord’s in 1959 to claim five in an innings.Anderson, one of the best spin-bowling slip fielders in the game, was on hand for each of those last three, quite literally in the case of his outstanding left-handed pluck off Zulfiqar Babar – a dismissal which the third umpire, somewhat surprisingly, upheld in spite of the usual concerns about foreshortening on TV replays. Rashid then took two in two balls to wrap up the innings, as Pakistan’s panic spread throughout their ranks.Faced with a time/runs situation, England prudently shuffled their pack, with Moeen and Jos Buttler sent out to wallop the new ball, and Root, Stokes and Bairstow all queuing up behind them. Back in the dressing-room, Alastair Cook sat behind the lines like a decorated military commander – with his Victoria Cross already secured for his above-and-beyond endeavours in the first innings, there was no further need for the captain to lead from the front. His example has already been absorbed by an inspired set of cricketers. If Pakistan assumed they had the measure of these visitors, they might need to think again.

Stanford hits impasse with MCC

The US$100 million deal between the ECB and Allen Stanford is in doubt after the MCC warned that it would not sanction Twenty20 matches featuring Stanford’s trademark black bats. Talks will continue today between the parties in an effort to rescue the plan for a series of Twenty20 games at Lord’s between an England XI, a West Indian All Star XI and two other international teams.Stanford wanted the matches to feature the black bats that have been used in the existing Stanford 20/20 tournament in the Caribbean. But MCC has revised the rules regarding the composition of bats, declaring that a bat must be wooden in colour, a regulation mainly aimed at ensuring modern materials to assist the batsman cannot be used in addition to willow.As well as the Lord’s games, Stanford’s proposal was to include matches between England and a West Indian All Star XI at his own ground in Antigua. One possible solution to the impasse could be to make the competition unofficial, and relax the bat rules in the Antigua games in return for using the more traditional equipment in the Lord’s outings.

Gloucestershire and Notts frustrated by rain

Gloucestershire and Nottinghamshire were frustrated by the rain on the second day of their promotion tussle at Bristol.Only 16.4 overs were possible, during which time Gloucestershire moved from 13-0 to 73-1 in reply to Nottinghamshire’s 216.A draw is unlikely to be any good to either side in their bid to go up, and an unsettled weather forecast for the final two days of the game could force the captains to set up a contrived finish.No play was possible in the morning session. An attempt was made at 12 noon, only for the players to come off for bad light just as the first ball was to be bowled.The action finally started at 1.20pm and Nottinghamshire enjoyed success in the third over of the day.Dominic Hewson pushed forward at a David Lucas delivery and was caught by Guy Welton at short leg for three.That left the home county on 13-1 in the eighth over, but the next 13 overs produced 60 runs as Kim Barnett and Matt Windows cut loose.Barnett was the main aggressor with an unbeaten 41 from 65 deliveries, with six fours cracked through the off-side.All of them were taken off pace bowler Andy Harris, who was punished for offering too much width to his former Derbyshire colleague.Windows had a couple of boundaries, one off Lucas and one off Harris, in his unbeaten 18, which was good enough to take him past 1,000 first-class runs in a season for the second time.Windows has now scored 1,004 runs this campaign, with 14 of those scored for the First Class Counties XI against New Zealand A.

Karnataka in Ranji final after 112-run win

ScorecardSeventy minutes, 14.1 overs. That’s all it took for Karnataka to wrap up the Mumbai tail and take one step closer to defending their Ranji Trophy title.Mumbai started the penultimate day of the semi-final at 277 for 6, 168 runs behind the target of 445. Their best hope of an outside chance to chase down the target was for one of the bowlers to bat with Siddhesh Lad, the specialist overnight batsman. However, Abhimanyu Mithun, S Aravind and Shreyas Gopal picked a wicket each to complete a convincing 112-run victory, their second successive win against Mumbai at the M Chinnaswamy Stadium.Lad, who resumed batting on 41, took the initiative on the fourth morning while Balwinder Singh Sandhu tried to occupy one end of the crease. Sandhu, however, was adjudged leg before off Mithun following a doubtful decision. The fuller, incoming delivery had taken a thick edge off his bat on to the pads, but the umpire Vineet Kulkarni ruled in favour of the bowler. The wicket was Mithun’s fourth of the inningsAfter Shardul Thakur survived the initial burst, captain Vinay Kumar brought Shreyas Gopal in his place. The legspinner struck with his second ball, getting an edge off Thakur’s willow straight into Vinay’s palms at slip.Lad, who stretched his innings to 74, was left with too much to do and the end came when Aravind bowled a gem to extract an edge off his bat soon after the drinks break. With the target being completely out of reach, Mumbai opted not to play allrounder Abhishek Nayar, who had struggled while batting out 12 overs on the third evening. Nayar had suffered a concussive head injury on the first day.The defending champions will now get an extra rest day before heading to Mumbai for the final.

'Weary' Afghanistan put positive spin on scheduling

The Afghanistan squad could be forgiven for looking a little bleary-eyed as they ran around the outfield at McLean Park and it would have been no surprise if they weren’t quite sure what the time was.In the space of a week they have criss-crossed a continent, racking up 10,000kms in the air, traveling from Dunedin to Perth after playing Scotland and back again to Napier following the thrashing by Australia. They were grateful to be in the big seats up front, but the coach Andy Moles did not shy away from the fact that it has been a tough schedule.”It’s not ideal. We were in Dunedin and it would have been much better and easier for us to come straight here then go to Perth,” Moles said. “I’m sure there are elements we aren’t aware of to squeeze the fixtures in. We are being positive, we managed to get to the front of plane which was nice and we got some rest. We are not using it as an excuse.

Starc helps out Hamid Hassan

Mitchell Starc took time after the match at the WACA to speak to Afghanistan’s three quicks, sharing some thoughts on the fast-bowling trade, and also tried to help Hamid Hassan overcome problems he has had with his bowling boots.
Hassan has been through five pairs already at the World Cup and Starc showed his fellow fast bowler the equipment he uses to see if it could be a solution.
“We have got problems with Hassan, particularly,” Moles said. “The soles keep breaking off and Mitchell Starc brought his boots out and they discussed how he gets them made, where he sends them and they did talk about some bowling.
“With the schedule players rush off after games, but it was nice to see Mitchell come and talk to Shapoor, Dawlat and Hamid so there was some communications there which was excellent.”

“It’s true to say we are bit weary. We’ve tried to put a positive spin on it; the guys have seen a new part of the world so for their development as human beings it’s been a good thing. I think every side is feeling a little weary. We’ve had a bit of a jaunt but we all ready for tomorrow.”Following the 5500km flight from Perth, Afghanistan have had a low-key build-up to the match against New Zealand. They did not train on Friday and had just a very light session on Saturday. Having not “got out of the blocks with the bat” against Bangladesh, as Moles termed it, they then pushed Sri Lanka very close in Dunedin before the historic one-wicket against Scotland.Despite the overwhelming 275-run reversal against Australia, where they felt the full force of David Warner, Steve Smith and Glenn Maxwell, Moles is confident that his charges will be able to find reserves of energy for the final two contests, which include another skip back across the Tasman to face England in Sydney.”The thing about these Afghans is that they are very passionate and very proud – their history shows that,” Moles, who coached New Zealand for an 11-month period in 2008 and 2009, said. “They will want to show everyone, they are in the shop window. They want to make sure we compete. It didn’t happen in Australia, and we know we are in a very tough examination against New Zealand but as a group we are putting our best foot forward.”The match at the WACA Ground was an eye-opening experience for all involved. For the first 10 overs, which included Dawlat Zadran removing Aaron Finch cheaply, it was closely fought but then the chasm appeared between the sides.”It was a good experience to play against Australia in their conditions,” the wicketkeeper Afsar Zazai said. “We enjoyed the match but we had a bad day. But I can say when our team has a bad game the next game we come back strongly and we will try our best against New Zealand.”We had not faced 150kph bowlers before and we faced Mitchell Starc and Mitchell Johnson so we learned a lot. When we go home we will work hard on our game to get used to the pace and hope we get more chances against the big teams.”There are discussions in progress to make those chances a reality. Afghanistan, along with Ireland, are now a full part of the one-day rankings but that is unlikely to generate a mass of fixtures, certainly from the more influential Full Members. Echoing the thoughts of William Porterfield, the Ireland captain, who wants his side to benefit from teams who tour England, Moles wants greater consideration given to including Afghanistan when teams visit the UAE.”We’re realistic, we’re very rarely going to get standalone tours but it’d be nice if we could add on to a series somewhere and make it a tri-series where we could pick up the opportunity to compete against some of the better sides,” he said. “If we can present ourselves as good preparation ahead of a Test series or ahead of a ODI series by coming and playing us in some cricket then it’s excellent for us and I think it’ll be a huge benefit to any of the sides heading into the UAE.”

Australia reconsider India preparations

Stuart Clark is keen to have the best possible preparation before tackling India © Getty Images
 

Australia will consider leaving early for their Test tour of India if they do not take part in the Champions Trophy in Pakistan. The first Test in Bangalore begins on October 9, which is 11 days after the final in Lahore, but if Australia do not defend their Champions Trophy title they will have had very little cricket for three months.The players have been home from the West Indies for more than a month and their only other commitment is a three-match ODI series against Bangladesh in Darwin starting on August 30. They have only one tour match scheduled in India and Stuart Clark said without warming up in Pakistan it would be tough to acclimatise to the subcontinental conditions.”It’s always hard going to India,” Clark told the . “You really need to go there and familiarise yourself with the country, the wickets and the conditions.”It’s all good and well to train here but the conditions are so different sometimes that if we go a few days early that wouldn’t bother me because I think it will be very important for my preparation to get acclimatised to those conditions. It can be very different and daunting but it’s a challenge and if we go early it wouldn’t hurt anyone.”Another option could be to hold a longer training camp in the lead-up to the India tour, where Australia will be aiming to retain the Border-Gavaskar Trophy after regaining it on the subcontinent in 2004-05. The coach Tim Nielsen said something would need to be scheduled if Cricket Australia pulled out of the Champions Trophy.”We’re looking at it,” Nielsen said. “At the moment the Champions Trophy is still going ahead, so we can only plan as if that is going to happen. The ideal situation won’t be that we go to Darwin for one-dayers then home for two-and-a-half weeks then go to India. We will certainly have some other things on the go.”

Ireland to host inaugural World Twenty20 qualifiers

Ireland will host the inaugural World Twenty20 Qualifiers between August 2 and 4, with the top six Associates vying for the two places available to them in next year’s ICC World Twenty20 in England.The hosts are the No.1 seeds and have been placed in Group A, which also includes Scotland and Bermuda. Group B comprises Kenya, Netherlands and Canada. The seedings were decided according to how the teams stood in the one-day rankings on February 2.The tournament will be the first time that Ireland, Bermuda, Netherlands, and Canada have played international Twenty20s. Kenya and Scotland had their first experience of the format when they took part in the inaugural World Twenty20 in South Africa last year.There will be three matches a day, all hosted at the Civil Service Cricket Club in Belfast. The opening game will be between Kenya and Netherlands.Click here for the tournament itinerary

Punjab sneak a one-run thriller

Scorecard and ball-by-ball details
How they were out

Shaun Marsh hit 81 off 56 balls in Punjab’s 189 © Getty Images (file photo)
 

A see-saw last over – which included a six, a four, a dropped catch and three run-outs – allowed Kings XI Punjab to end Mumbai Indians’ six-match winning streak and boost their hopes for a place in the semi-finals.Shaun Marsh and Luke Pomersbach’s 134-run stand laid the platform but it was Punjab’s accurate bowling at the death under pressure that brought the game to a head in the final over.The over, from VRV Singh, began with Mumbai needing 19, three wickets in hand and Siddharth Chitnis and Dilhara Fernando out in the middle. The first ball was a waist-high no-ball, which Chitnis hit it for six over third man. Twelve to get off six balls. The next delivery was full and wide and Chitnis lifted it over extra cover, where Tanmay Srivastava dropped a difficult catch and the ball ran over the line. Eight needed off five, and the advantage squarely with Mumbai.Then it all went pear-shaped for the home team. The next delivery saw the ball hit to Srivastava, who threw it back to the keeper and Chitnis was run out trying to take a second run.Seven off four, with two wickets in hand. New batsman Ashish Nehra sneaked a bye to get Fernando on strike. Six off three and Fernando drove a fuller delivery through cover and it was Srivastava again who fielded the ball and ran out Nehra as the batsmen tried for a risky third run. Four runs off two balls with one wicket remaining – Vikrant Yeligati dropped the ball on the pitch and the batsmen ran two as Punjab’s fielders muffed up what would have been the fifth run-out of the innings.With two needed off the final ball visions arose of the tournament’s first bowl-out. Yeligati drove to mid-off and set off but he picked the wrong fielder – the ball raced to Yuvraj Singh, who picked it up and ran towards the stumps to knock them down full stretch, Jonty Rhodes style, and Punjab had won by a run.It was an incredible turnaround in a match where Mumbai looked like reaching Punjab’s formidable target while Sachin Tendulkar was still at the crease. Punjab’s bowlers nearly undid the efforts of Marsh and Pomersbach, starting with the first two overs.Sreesanth started the innings with three wides – the second racing past the keeper to the boundary – and Irfan Pathan followed with over-pitched deliveries that Sanath Jayasuriya sent for two sixes over long-on and two fours in front of and behind the wicket. However, Sreesanth recovered in his next over to trap Jayasuriya lbw with a sublime legcutter. But Tendulkar chose the moment to strike form in this tournament, taking hold of the reins and punishing VRV’s poor length with fours to fine leg and third man. He reached his fifty by cheekily lobbing a Yuvraj Singh delivery to third-man boundary.Though the required run-rate was more than nine an over, Punjab’s bowlers did not apply much pressure and conceded a boundary in virtually every over. Also, other than Marsh, no Punjab fielder saved enough runs to make Mumbai’s task tougher. Pomersbach dropped Abhishek Nayar in the deep on nine off VRV and Nayar made use of the life to belt two sixes and a four off the bowler’s next over. But once Tendulkar was run out, when Rohin Uthappa sent him back, the Punjab bowlers smelt an opening. Yuvraj Singh, who had gone for 10 runs in his first over, got Shaun Pollock to edge the first ball he faced, to Piyush Chawla at short third man. Uthappa, the only proper batsman left, felt the pressure to go after the runs and was caught in the same over trying to clear long-on.Then Sreesanth came back for his final over to remove Pinal Shah and conceded only eight runs in the process. That set up the final-over drama.

Sachin Tendulkar’s wicket brought Punjab back into the game © AFP (file photo)
 

But it was really Marsh and Pomersbach’s partnership that gave Punjab the fuel to fight with. Marsh was the more orthodox of the two, playing the spinners by getting inside the line while cutting and pulling the faster bowlers. While both used their feet against the spinners, Marsh cashed in by lofting Yeligati inside-out for a six over long-off and Chitnis for one over long-on. Pomersbach, meanwhile, was in a hurry to score and repeatedly stepped out of the crease, mistiming more often than not. He failed to connect when trying to sweep the spinners and also swung his bat wildly at Fernando’s slower deliveries. But two brutal shots came off his bat in the third over against Nehra – he lifted a good length delivery for six over long-off before swivelling round to pull a four to midwicket.However it was Marsh who directed the partnership. He hooked Fernando for a six to fine leg and flicked Chitnis to four to take Punjab past 50 in the seventh over. He got to his fifty in 35 balls. The two ran hard between the wickets and apart from Shaun Pollock, early in the innings, no other bowler looked threatening enough to dislodge them.Eventually it was Punjab who held their nerve in the final minutes and that decided the match in their favour.

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