Wickets continue to tumble at Old Trafford

Wickets continued to tumble on the second day at Old Trafford with someprecious late runs from Neil Fairbrother and Chris Schofield just aboutkeeping Lancashire in the box seat.They were in danger of squandering a strong position provided by five wickets from Peter Martin when they slumped to 43 for six in their second innings.But Fairbrother and Schofield responded with a seventh wicket stand of 53 in 22 overs. And after Fairbrother went for a grafting 43, lbw to Matthew Walker’s first ball of the match, Schofield was joined by a third left-hander, Gary Keedy, to take Lancashire to 110 for seven, with a lead of 191, when bad light and rain forced a slightly early close.Earlier Walker and Alan Wells had led a Kent recovery from 14 for four to 127 for five, sharing a fifth wicket stand of 75 – still the best of the match.But Martin’s return triggered a collapse as Kent’s last five wickets fell for 28, and the last three all went with the score on 155.The 31-year-old former England paceman had taken five for 44 in his last Championship bowl, against Derbyshire at the end of May, before having hisright thumb broken by a nasty rising delivery from Dominic Cork.Today he ended with five for 42, the 14th five-wicket haul of his career taking his tally of Championship wickets in an injury-ravaged season to 23 at an average of less than 12.But David Masters led a strong Kent response, bowling John Crawley with a ball which shot along the floor then having Mark Chilton and Sourav Ganguly caught at second slip in an impressive opening burst.Martin McCague weighed in with the wickets of Joe Scuderi and Warren Hegg with consecutive balls before Fairbrother led Lancashire’s recovery.

Gauci, Doran hundreds put Australia U-19s on top

ScorecardMatthew Parkinson helped England hit back with his legspin•Getty Images

Centuries from Jordan Gauci and captain Jake Doran gave Australia Under-19s a strong opening day to the one-off Test at Chester-le-Street, though Lancashire legspinner Matthew Parkinson took 5 for 85 on his U-19 debut to ensure England kept themselves in sight.Gauci, a 17-year-old from Penrith, New South Wales, dominated the first part of the day as he made a hundred from 136 deliveries after Australia had chosen to bat first. He shared a second-wicket stand of 106 with Caleb Jewell and then added 77 with Doran for the third wicket.However, when Gauci fell to Ben Green for 111, England hit back by claiming 3 for 6 in four overs. Parkinson, who earlier removed Jewell to break the second-wicket stand, added Will Pucovski for a duck while Green claimed his second when he trapped Tom Healy, the son of Ian, lbw for 1 to leave Australia 191 for 5 and the day in the balance.Doran, the 18-year-old who played the Big Bash for Sydney Sixers and for the Prime Minister’s XI against England in January, initially had a charmed life as he was dropped on 0 then caught on 1 off a Saqib Mahmood no-ball, mistakes England were left to rue as he took charge alongside Jhye Richardson. The pair added 152 in 37 overs for the sixth wicket as England struggled to keep control of the scoring rate.Doran went to 99 with a six off Parkinson and brought up his century with a boundary off the next delivery – his 165th – only to fall next ball in an eventful over as Parkinson trapped him lbw. Parkinson then had his fourth when he bowled Fletcher Seymour round his legs in his next over.Richardson was on the brink of seeing out the day alongside David Grant – with his own century in sight for the second day – when the Australian curse of 87 struck as he became Parkinson’s fifth wicket after more than 30 overs of impressive work for the legspinner.

Spiers makes key Wolves injury claim

Wolves right-back Nelson Semedo is back in training ahead of the visit of Aston Villa, reliable journalist Tim Spiers has confirmed.

The Lowdown: Semedo missing for key period

The Portuguese ace has been an undisputed key man for the Wanderers this season, having started 23 times in a largely positive Premier League campaign.

Semedo picked up a hamstring injury at the end of February and hasn’t played since, however, acting as a blow to Bruno Lage during an important period.

It now looks as though the right-back’s return to action is on the horizon, though, as Wolves prepare to host Villa on Saturday afternoon.

[freshpress-poll id=“388780″]

The Latest: Spiers makes positive claim

Taking to Twitter on Friday, Spiers confirmed in a simple four-word verdict that Semedo is back in the fold:

“Semedo back in training.”

[freshpress-quiz id=“388797″]

The Verdict: Big boost for Wolves

Semedo has been a strong performer for Wolves, being hailed as ‘unbelievable’ by Spiers himself in the past, so this news is an undoubted positive.

Jonny has been filling in at right-back in his teammate’s absence but he isn’t as natural in that role as he is on the left-hand side, while youngster Ki-Jana Hoever remains a work in progress.

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Semedo’s return in the coming weeks should provide Wolves with an extra attacking threat – he has averaged 1.5 dribbles per game in the league this season – as they look to secure European football of some kind at Molineux next season.

In other news, a transfer expert has dropped a key Wolves claim. Read more here.

Dravid's class helps Karnataka dominate

1st day
Scorecard

Rahul Dravid scored another century in the Ranji Trophy game against Himachal Pradesh © Cricinfo Ltd

As he did at the Wankhede Stadium last week, Rahul Dravid stamped his class on the Ranji Trophy with another century. This time his team was not trailing and the opposition, Himachal Pradesh, was weaker but the temperament was the same on a slow and dry Chinnaswamy Stadium pitch. Dravid’s innings was flanked by two contrasting half-centuries, from opener KB Pawan and C Raghu, and at the end of the day Karnataka had 271 for 4 on the board.For the first 31 minutes of Karnataka’s innings Dravid sat in the far right corner of the dressing room, eyes fixed on the proceedings in the centre. The younger players sat a few rows away,chatting among themselves as Dravid shared a few words with Anil Kumble, the captain, and the coach Vijay Bhardwaj. As soon as Barrington Rowland slashed a poor drive into the wicketkeeper’s gloves in the eighth over, Dravid got up, gathered his helmet and gloves, and strode out.Having played much of his first-class cricket at his home venue, Dravid knew this surface, even though it’s been relaid. The feet moved, the head was still, the weight balanced. The distinct sound of ball middled on bat reverberated around the empty stadium and Dravid was away. Not once was he beaten all day, and the one instance he got into his shot early, against Ashok Thakur, the left-arm medium-pacer, he shook his head and walked to square leg.Dravid’s first four boundaries, all against the quicker bowlers, were back-foot elegance: with the first he rolled the wrists late and hard to cut through gully, and with the next three he shifted the weight to push through the covers. He was especially good off his pads, shuffling across to off and tucking the spinners into the gap at short fine leg and square leg.What stood out was his mood to dominate. He made the major contribution to the 50-run second-wicket stand with Pawan, and raised it with a six over long-on off Sarandeep Singh, the former India offspinner. Eight minutes before lunch Dravid brought up his half-century with a second six, again off Sarandeep, over the same boundary. On the last ball of what he thought was the final over before the interval he slammed a four over mid-on, tucked his bat under his left arm, and headed straight for the dressing room. The umpires had one more over in mind, though, and soon Karnataka’s hundred was raised.During the break Dravid was visibly relaxed, talking to his team-mates and spending a few moments with his family. Break over, he went out and resumed his role, slamming another six over long-on, this time off left-arm spinner Vishal Bhatia.Pawan, who reprised his first-innings fifty against Mumbai with a measured 56, hit a fine straight drive off Thakur and brought up his fifty with a cover-drive for four. It took 155 balls and Pawan received a congratulatory pat on the back from his senior partner. How much Karnataka’s youngsters have to gain by batting with Dravid is palpable.Against the run of play, Pawan received one outside off from Bhatia that sat up. Pawan initially went back but, as he tried to withdraw an angled bat, he played on to his off stump. He scored 56from 167 balls in 207 minutes, and helped add 131 with Dravid.Sarandeep returned for a second spell – his first saw ten overs for 38 – and should have had Raghu caught but short leg failed to clutch on to a low chance off the pads. Next ball, Raghu got to the pitch and drove four through the covers. He was far more aggressive than Pawanand the singles began to come at a fair clip.Dravid’s third six came over his favoured long-on, Sarandeep the bowler to suffer. He moved from 95 to 99 with a pleasing cover drive and at 2.32 on a pleasant afternoon, Dravid reached his second hundred in as many innings, off just 161 balls. It was almost too easy – he kneltdown and paddled one from middle and leg to fine leg, ran two, and raised his bat.Dravid’s fourth six wasn’t timed to perfection – it seemed he was eyeing extra cover rather than left of mid-on – but had enough on it to carry it over the boundary. Arguably his two best shots came inthe next two balls: Bhatia pitched fractionally short on the stumps and both times Dravid just went back and pushed boundaries perfectly between midwicket and mid-on.He was out soon after, beaten by a shooter from medium-pacer Vikramjit Malik, who had persevered all day. It pitched marginally outside off and kept very low to sneak under the bat and knock back off stump. For 180 balls and 251 minutes Dravid was a rock, playing good ball and bad with consummate ease, but the poorest of deliveries had him cleaned up. It was a pity there were no more than 50 people there to watch.During an extensive pre-match net session yesterday, Dravid said Karnataka wanted to bat just once and, judging by the platform he’s helped build, that may just be the case on an under-prepared track certain to help the spinners as this match progresses.

Frustrations for Canada ahead of World Cup

Just before leaving for Canada’s trip to Kenya, national coach Andy Pick passed on some of his thoughts. Overall he was upbeat and looking forward to a busy tour.”As time ticks down to the World Cup, we have to look at and identify roles for the personnel in this team; to see who fills each role best. The importance of the World Cricket League with a Twenty20 Championship place in to be won (and the $250,000 from the ICC that goes with it) means we must go out and try to win. We can’t use this event to experiment with players.”Some of the Associate coaches control player selections, but this is not the case in Canada. Pick admitted: “It is frustrating that we cannot name our World Cup squad now (before the WCL trip). Time might be spent on a player or players in Kenya who are not named for the World Cup. It’s very frustrating, but the bottom line is it is very prestigious to qualify for the Twenty20.”Looking beyond the Kenya squad, he said: “there are a couple of the overseas batters not available for Kenya who are likely to be in the World Cup squad.” I am sure he was thinking in terms of opener Geoff Barnett (contracted to Central Districts) and Ian Billcliff (personal reasons – his wife is expecting a baby).””We can look at the encouraging performances in South Africa and look to players to step up again and look for continuing improvement through to the World Cup.”12 of the 13 named for South Africa are in the 15-man squad for the Tri-Nations and WCL series in Kenya. Given limited facilities for other players to prepare adequately, especially those outside the Greater Toronto area, it seems imperative for the core squad to do at least as well in Kenya as in South Africa.That still leaves some additional steps to climb when it comes to the likes of New Zealand and even England. But the core players have been working hard and, in my opinion, deserve their chance at the World Cup. Even so, there may be some disappointments for some of the current squad when it comes to the World Cup.

Redbacks win battle of the Baileys

Scorecard
Pura Cup points tableThe legspinner Cullen Bailey propelled South Australia to equal first on the Pura Cup table with a five-wicket haul as they beat Tasmania, who were led by George Bailey’s 130, at Adelaide Oval. The Tigers made a brave bid to force a draw through Michael Bevan, who reached 83 from 181 balls, and Bailey, the last man out as they were beaten by 194 runs.South Australia joined New South Wales on 20 points in a dramatic improvement after they sat at the bottom for most of last season. Darren Lehmann, the captain, grabbed three second-innings wickets to add to his run double of 182 and 58, but Bailey was the most penetrative bowler on a worn surface with 5 for 146 from 37.5 overs.He teased Bevan out of his crease shortly after lunch to give Graham Manou a juggling stumping, and tricked Sean Clingeleffer and Shannon Tubb into hitting close-in catches to ease any South Australian worries over the victory. Lehmann then chipped in with two wickets and Shaun Tait added one before Bailey ended the match with the scalp of his namesake. Bailey’s century, his third in a season of 610 runs at 50.83, came from 118 balls and his aggressive innings included 15 fours and three sixes.Tasmania also named their team today for the ING Cup match against New South Wales at Bellerive Oval on Wednesday. Dane Anderson, Luke Butterworth, Tim Paine and Adam Polkinghorne were players picked in the squad who were not involved in the Pura Cup match.Tasmania ING Cup squad Michael Di Venuto (capt), Travis Birt, Michael Bevan, George Bailey, Luke Butterworth, Dane Anderson, Tim Paine (wk), Adam Griffith, Xavier Doherty, Adam Polkinghorne, Brendan Drew, Ben Hilfenhaus.

A question of momentum

Was this the decisive moment of the series?© Getty Images

This series has been all about momentum. England had it in spades as they entered the first Test at Port Elizabeth, in the form of seven consecutive Test victories. They misplaced it at Durban when bad light halted their victory surge on the final evening, and they lost it entirely at Cape Town as South Africa squared the series with a relentlessly dominant performance.And now, as the fourth Test prepares to get underway at Johannesburg, the advantage would appear to be in the other camp. With an hour remaining at Durban, England were all but 2-0 up with three to play, but they have been reined in to such effect that now, almost entirely by accident, it is South Africa who appear to have taken on the mantle of favourites.This morning’s practice session at the Wanderers confirmed that impression. For 20 deliveries, Andrew Flintoff trundled in off a half-cock run-up, as he put his torn rib muscle through the most delicate of paces. It was not a sight to inspire confidence that he will be fit to play a full part tomorrow, but for England his absence was too gruesome to contemplate. “Sure, I’ve got an eye on the future,” acknowledged Michael Vaughan as he assessed the risk of further aggravating Flintoff’s injury, “but I’ve also got an eye on winning the Test series.”He had a point. At the start of the series, England would have earmarked the Wanderers as a result pitch, and given the prospect of extra bounce and greater zip through the rarefied high-veld air, it is a venue that ought to suit their seam attack down to the ground. And yet, with Steve Harmison misfiring and Flintoff’s fitness uncertain, the timing of this opportunity is not exactly ideal. Five years ago, when England themselves slumped to 2 for 4 here against Shaun Pollock and Allan Donald, it was on the opening morning of the series, when everyone was fresh – and the pitch even more so.Instead, Flintoff and his fellow bowlers have been given just seven days to recover from the excesses of three back-to-back Tests over the festive period. If a week is a long time in politics, then it is an eternity in a modern-day cricket tour, for that is the biggest break either side will enjoy until the one-day series is completed in February. But with that in mind, it seems the undoubted merits of England’s settled team (just one enforced change all series) may come back to haunt them.

Mark Boucher looks likely to take the gloves from AB de Villiers© Getty Images

The relatively high-flying South Africans, by contrast, have somehow hit upon the perfect formula for coping with the intensity of the modern-day itinerary – pick a controversial skeleton side for your first game, and improve it with every passing match until it is brimful with abrasive competitors with several points to prove. Where once the teamsheet included makeweights such as Zander de Bruyn, Andrew Hall and Thami Tsolekile, now it boasts such big guns as Herschelle Gibbs, Nicky Boje and, most pertinently of all, Mark Boucher.Boucher’s return to South African colours was even more of a shock than his original omission. Even he admitted that he thought his chance of playing had gone once AB de Villiers had made his stunningly composed debut behind the stumps. But, by accident rather than design, the timing of his return is a master-stroke. England would have taken heart from his continued absence, but now they are more likely to have a heart attack.There have been plenty of rumours of dressing-room unrest dogging the South African camp this week, and the prospect of yet more changes flies in the face of Graeme Smith’s appeal for continuity after the Port Elizabeth defeat. But just as England are prepared to hang the long term and risk Flintoff as an allrounder, so South Africa have decided to throw everything at victory, regardless of the consequences.That goes for their much-criticised selection policy as well, for AB de Villiers looks set to take on his third different role in four Tests, with the luckless Hashim Amla stepping down from his No. 6 slot. There had been talk of de Villiers resuming his opener’s role instead, to allow Gibbs to find his feet further down the order, but such a prospect now seems improbable. Gibbs and Smith have been a formidable opening pairing in the past, and their series aggregate of 40 runs in four partnerships can surely only improve over the final two matches.England have batting worries of their own, not least where their captain, Vaughan, is concerned. His return of 84 runs in six innings is worrying enough, but it is the breakdown of those innings that is the greater cause for alarm. Each one has fallen in the range of 10 to 20, which means he is getting in … and getting straight out again. A run of ducks in the manner of a Mark Waugh would have been a more reassuring sight.”I’ve been working hard in the nets with Duncan [Fletcher],” said Vaughan. “I feel relaxed and my feet are going nicely, so I’ve just got to take that out into the middle with me. So far in this series, 50% of my dismissals have been to good bowling, and the other 50% through poor batting. So if I eradicate that 50%, then a big score will be around the corner.”

It’s really that bad for Steve Harmison© Getty Images

England’s other big concern surrounds the other former world No. 1 in their ranks. All series, Vaughan has been reaffirming his belief that Steve Harmison has a matchwinning spell up his sleeve, but now, with just two crunch matches to come, his window of opportunity is rapidly receding. But the Wanderers wicket, with its pace and carry, might just be the one to tickle his fancy. “We can never take him for granted,” warned Smith. “He has pace and bounce, and on any given day he can be destructive.”Smith added that a late decision would be made on the inclusion of Charl Langeveldt, the swing bowler who defied a broken hand to grab a five-wicket haul in the first innings at Cape Town, his on debut. “Charl’s not 100%,” he conceded. “If the selectors decide to play him it will be a risk. But he’s improving every day, and he did superbly in the last Test.”And talking of swing, there is even the prospect of a rare appearance for James Anderson in the starting line-up. With Flintoff struggling for full fitness, Anderson and his mercurial wicket-taking ability may be preferred to Simon Jones, who bowled just 27.3 overs at Cape Town and did not appear to have the full confidence of his captain. “Jimmy’s looked good in the nets all tour,” said Vaughan. “It makes our job difficult, but it’s nice to have a guy like that pushing the guys in the team. The swing element plays a big part here, so that’s brings Jimmy into the picture in a big way.”Given the relative success of South Africa’s “treat ’em mean, keep ’em keen” policy, there may yet be some logic in throwing Anderson into the fray, for all that his last competitive outing was against Zimbabwe on December 4. If nothing else, he might just produce the jaffa that is currently needed to dislodge Jacques Kallis.South Africa (probable) 1 Graeme Smith (capt), 2 Herschelle Gibbs, 3 Jacques Rudolph, 4 Jacques Kallis, 5 Boeta Dippenaar, 6 AB de Villiers, 7 Mark Boucher (wk), 8 Nicky Boje, 9 Shaun Pollock, 10 Makhaya Ntini, 11 Charl Langeveldt.England (probable) 1 Marcus Trescothick, 2 Andrew Strauss, 3 Robert Key, 4 Michael Vaughan (capt), 5 Graham Thorpe, 6 Andrew Flintoff, 7 Geraint Jones (wk), 8 Ashley Giles, 9 Simon Jones, 10 Matthew Hoggard, 11 Steve Harmison.

Denis Rogers AO honoured at Bellerive Oval

The Chairman of the Tasmanian Cricket Association, Denis Rogers AO was honoured in a private ceremony at Bellerive Oval on Saturday 1st November 2003.The Chairman’s Room, Board Room and Viewing Area at Bellerive has been re-named the "Denis Rogers Suite" in honour of Mr.Rogers’ contribution to Tasmanian, Australian and International cricket.Mr. Rogers’ family, friends and close associates, attended the function.In unveiling the plaque to re-name the room, Brent Palfreyman, Deputy Chairman (TCA) spoke with enormous warmth and respect as he outlined the vast contribution made by Mr. Rogers.Mr.Rogers said in response; "It is always one of the greatest honours that can be bestowed upon someone, being recognised in your own State and I feel very humble."He paid tribute to his family, friends and acknowledged the hard work of all those involved throughout his long career as a cricket administrator.Denis Rogers AO was appointed to the TCA Committee of Management/Board of Directors in June 1986 and elected Chairman in July 1986.Denis has been instrumental in a number of landmark actions including:

  • The restructure of Tasmanian cricket in 1991.
  • International cricket coming to Tasmania.
  • Securing Tasmania’s 1st Test match in December 1989.
  • Securing Commonwealth and State Government support to enable the re-development of Bellerive Oval.
Denis was elected as Tasmania’s representative to the Australian Cricket Board (ACB) from 1989 to 2002. During that time he served with distinction as Chairman for two three-year terms from 1996 to 2002.He is recognised as a national leader in sporting administration and has made significant contributions to the advancement of World cricket.

Tareq Aziz hopes to operate the new ball in BKSP

Bangladesh-A is going to take on mighty Pakistan for a 3-day match in BKSP starting from January 5. The hosts have declared their 14-member squad and it is not surprising to see the name of Tareq Aziz there.Tareq, the right arm medium fast bowler, has pulled off with 10 wickets against Dhaka Division very recently in National league 2001-2002. Despite his gallant effort in both innings when he took 5 wickets from each, Chittagong Division had to accept a 24-run defeat. But the remarkable part is Tareq’s bowling – particularly in Dhaka’s second innings when he alone caused the mayhem.Tareq Aziz is bowling brilliantly for last six months. The National Squad was taking the service of two pace bowlers from Bangladesh-A for their net sessions in BKSP and Dhaka before they were heading off for Multan to play for Asian Test Championship in August 2001. One of them was Tareq Aziz who was pretty impressive in the net.He played the practice matches against the National team before Bangladesh faced Zimbabwe in home ground. Those matches were eventful for him too as he saw a total of 20 wickets beside his name when those matches were over.All credits have gone to coach Sarwar Imran whose professional guidance has brought him this far – he acknowledges. This prominent coach has left his vast role in modifying Tareq’s bowling action. While he started following those instructions he began to carry off.Being a new ball operator he played the exhibition match against the Zimbabweans in December this year. The venue was Chittagong and Tareq finished his spell claiming 3 wickets in his tight spell. It is worth mentioning that batsman like Andy Flower saw his middle stump uprooted by a vicious Tareq delivery when he was 3. That was not a wicket he met by chance – the ball curved a bit after it had pitched and fooled the famous Zimbabwean.He started from Nirman School Cricket as a kid pace bowler for Fulkuri cricket Club and removed seven batsmen in his debut match. Those were the earlier days in his career in Rajbari, his hometown.He hoping for a break against Pakistan for Bangladesh-A in that 3-day, which would be the biggest match in his career.

Punjab in trouble despite Ricky's 97

After winning the toss and electing to bat first at the Karnail Singhstadium in Delhi, Punjab were in some manner of strife at the end ofthe day against Railways.Captain Vikram Rathour was the first to go after the scored just 3runs. Caught by Goud off the bowling of opening bowler Rawat, Rathourgave way to young sensation Yuvraj Singh. Coming off a successfultournament in Sri Lanka, Yuvraj joined another youngster who is makingwaves in Indian cricket – Ravneet Ricky.Between them the two youngsters put together what was to be the onlyuseful partnership of the day. Ricky batted slowly, not hurryinghimself in any manner. At the other end, Yuvraj, a natural strokemaker went about things in a much quicker manner. As is often thecase, the faster scoring batsman perished first. Yuvraj was dismissedsoon after he made his fifty, being cleaned bowled by Devendra Singhwhen he was 54.After that, it was very much a one-man show as Ricky attempted tobring some semblence of decency to the Punjab innings. Pankaj Dharmanimade a first ball duck and the rest of the Punjab batsmen did not showmuch initiative. Dinesh Mongia and (31) and wicketkeeper Jagnu (30)got starts but could not go on top play innings of substance. WhenRicky was dismissed just three runs short of what would have been awell deserved century, Punjab were in trouble at 216/6.At the end of the first day’s play, Punjab were badly off at246/7. From here on it will be a fight to stay alive in the game.