Rain washes out Sind-Federal Areas clash


ScorecardHeavy overnight rain and a persistent drizzle through the day ruled out any chances of play in the match between Sind Dolphins and Federal Areas Leopards in Karachi. Both teams had come into this game with four points each, and gain two points apiece from the no-result.The results means Punjab Stallions, led by Shoaib Malik, are assured of a spot in the final. The outcome of the remaining three league games will determine their opponents for the title clash on December 24. Punjab have 12 points from three games, while Sind and Federal Areas have six from the the same number of matches. Saturday’s match will see Baluchistan Bears take on North West Frontier Province Panthers.

Team Mat Won Lost Tied N/R Pts Net RR For Against
Punjab Stallions 3 3 0 0 0 12 +0.842 821/148.3 703/150.0
Sind Dolphins 3 1 1 0 1 6 +0.288 547/95.0 547/100.0
Fed Areas 3 1 1 0 1 6 -0.734 483/95.2 580/100.0
B Bears 3 1 2 0 0 4 -0.270 872/150.0 875/143.5
NWFP Panthers 2 0 2 0 0 0 -0.424 446/100.0 464/95.0

Pietersen admits to playing with a fractured rib

Kevin Pietersen: “There are no dramas. I will deal with it” © Getty Images
 

Kevin Pietersen has revealed he played the entire first Test against India with a fractured rib, which he sustained before the final ODI in Cuttack nearly three weeks ago.”I have got a fractured rib,” he told the after England’s six-wicket defeat in Chennai on Monday. “There are no dramas. I will deal with it. I don’t like injections. I will just take painkillers.”Pietersen, who managed 4 and 1 in the two innings, looked in obvious discomfort on the field on Monday, clutching his right side several times as he threw underarm.However, the captain was determined to play in the second Test in Mohali, starting Friday, and will look to bolster the team spirit, which was badly jolted by India’s successful run-chase.His admission that he had “sore ribs” after the Cuttack ODI was overshadowed by injuries to other England players – Andrew Flintoff jarred his ankle while Stuart Broad suffered a hamstring strain. Though he scored a century in that match, he needed treatment for what then appeared to be a side strain.Pietersen had suffered a similar injury nearly two years ago, forcing an early return home from an ODI series in Australia, when he walked down the pitch at the MCG to pull Glenn McGrath and was hit on the ribs after playing it too early.

Ojha puts Madhya Pradesh in command

Scorecard
A century from wicketkeeper Naman Ojha put Madhya Pradesh in pole position against Assam in Indore. Resuming on 150 for 2 – Assam were bowled out for 96 on the first day – MP’s hopes for a big first-innings lead were almost dashed after medium-pacers Krishna Das and Ranjitkumar Mali took six wickets in 27 overs. However, the tail hung on with Ojha to help the hosts gain a formidable lead. Assam lost two wickets in 22 overs of their second innings on Friday, and an innings defeat seems on the cards.Das, who took two wickets on the first day, completed a five-for: Devendra Bundela was caught behind for 64, and Jatin S Saxena and Brijesh Tomar did not last too long. Soon after Das’ strikes, MP captain Hrishikesh Kanitkar was out for 44, lbw to medium-pacer Ranjitkumar Mali. Sunil Dholpure also fell to Mali, and Anand Katti had Shantanu Pitre, who took five in Assam’s innings, caught behind. No. 10 Sanjay Pandey, though, played out 71 deliveries for his 23. At the other end, Ojha was picking the runs. His 116 came at a strike-rate of nearly 80, with 15 fours and four sixes.After a 90-run stand, Mali finally dismissed Pandey: he was the third catch of the innings for wicketkeeper K Saikia. Ojha put on 36 for the final wicket at nearly a run a ball with last man Yogesh Golwalkar, before he became Das’ sixth wicket. Das’ 6 for 61 from 31.1 overs was his best figures in a first-class innings.Assam, trailing by 236 on the first innings, lost opener Nishanta Bordoloi and one-drop Deepak Sharma before stumps.

ICC to look into BCCI's complaint over Lloyd's comments

The ICC will look into a complaint from the BCCI against Clive Lloyd, the ICC cricket committee chairman, for suggesting the unrecognised ICL and the IPL, run by the BCCI, should learn to co-exist. However, Haroon Lorgat, the ICC chief executive, said it would first check with Lloyd to understand the context and veracity of the remarks that were reported in an Indian newspaper.Confirming the ICC had received an email from N Srinivasan, the BCCI secretary, on the issue, Lorgat told Cricinfo the ICC would approach the issue in a “fair and appropriate” manner. There was no time-frame involved in the process, he said.Asked about the ICL during a private visit to Mumbai last week, Lloyd, the former West Indies captain had told that “there’s nothing like having a discussion to break the ice”, and suggested the West Indies needed leagues like the ICL and the IPL to revive the game in the country.The BCCI on Thursday wrote to the ICC seeking action against Lloyd and compared the situation to the stepping down of Sunil Gavaskar as ICC cricket committee chairman earlier this year. Gavaskar was asked by the ICC to choose between his ICC role and that of a media commentator.Lorgat said he didn’t believe the comparison was valid. “We need to first establish if the merits of the case are the same,” Lorgat told Cricinfo. “Personally, I don’t believe so. We need to just ensure he does not make comments that are not appropriate. And if it is different case we need to establish exactly what the facts are without which it is very difficult to make comments.”The BCCI has adopted a hard-line position against ICL, and banned players associated with it from all forms of official cricket. It has also refused to entertain requests from the ICL for recognition, and pushed for a worldwide ban on players and officials associated with the Twenty20 league.Interestingly, the BCCI’s Asian allies have emerged with conflicting policies on ICL. Sri Lanka Cricket, headed by Arjuna Ranatunga, has allowed six ICL players to participate in a domestic competition, while Javed Miandad, the new director-general of the Pakistan board, has questioned the intent of the bans enforced by past PCB administrations on players contracted with the ICL.

Morgan hopeful Sri Lanka will tour

David Morgan, the ICC president, has expressed his confidence that Sri Lanka’s tour of England next May will go ahead as planned, despite fears that a number of their leading players will instead opt for the financial lure of the IPL.”In respect of the FTP tour of Sri Lanka to England in 2009, I believe that the chairman of Sri Lanka Cricket and the ECB chairman, along with other board chairmen have had meaningful discussions such that the event will take place on the scheduled dates in England next year,” Morgan said at the conclusion of the ICC’s two-day board meeting in Dubai.”Very good progress has been made in the discussions that Arjuna Ranatunga (SLC chairman), Giles Clarke and other board chairmen have had. I would like to say that in our deliberations these past two days, there has been a good recognition of the primacy of ICC and FTP events.”Ranatunga, Sri Lanka’s former captain in the 1990s, has been unequivocal in his support for Test cricket. Understandably, he is aware of the financial benefits the IPL can provide to his players and happy for them to participate, but only “subject to them being available for any commitments with Sri Lanka Cricket at any given time.”However, Sri Lanka Cricket – a board whose finances aren’t as healthy as some – are in negotiations to seal a US$70-million bailout deal with the BCCI. Many fear that the financial clout will sway players to opting for cash over country.”As far as we are concerned, the tour is part of the FTP and there is no reason why it won’t go ahead,” an ICC spokesman told Cricinfo.

Napier wins Walter Lawrence Trophy

Graham Napier has won the 2008 Walter Lawrence Trophy for the season’s fastest hundred, having reached three figures off 44 balls against Sussex in the Twenty20 on route to his record-breaking 152.For the first time in its 74-year history the trophy was made open to all domestic county competitions this season so Napier becomes the first winner with a limited-over innings.Napier’s entire innings took just 58 balls as he hit 16 sixes – a Twenty20 record – and 10 fours. He will be presented with the Walter Lawrence Trophy and a cheque for £5,000 at a special dinner in the Long Room at Lord’s on October 15.At the dinner, Akbar Ansari, the 20-year-old Cambridge University allrounder, will be presented with the 2008 Walter Lawrence Trophy award for the highest-scoring batsman from the six MCC Universities. He made 193 against Oxford University in the Varsity match at The Parks on July 3.

Netherlands coast to easy win

Scorecard

Bas Zuiderent led the way for Netherlands with an unbeaten 41 © Getty Images
 

Netherlands bounced back from their crushing defeat in last week’s four-day game to cruise to a six-wicket win over Kenya in a rain-affected ODI in Rotterdam.After the heavy rain over the previous week reduced the game to a 24-over affair, Netherlands captain Jeroen Smits unsurprisingly chose to bowl first on a slow pitch. Kenya’s openers Kennedy Otieno and Alex Obanda provided a steady, though slow, start before left-arm spinner Pieter Seelaar struck.Otieno and his captain Steve Tikolo, two of Kenya’s most experienced batsmen, took their side to a promising 96 for 1 before Otieno was run out. Tikolo fell soon after – stumped for a 32-ball 34 – as Kenya lost their momentum; they mustered only 22 runs in the final eight overs to finish on 118. Seelar, fresh from his five-for in the four-day match, was the most effective bowler with returns of 3 for 22.Netherlands’ chase got off to a poor start as Darron Reekers fell in the first over, giving a catch to Obanda at backward point. Eric Szwarczynski and Tom de Grooth kept the asking rate in check and had taken the hosts to 40 by the ninth over before de Grooth was run out by a direct hit. Bas Zuiderent (41 not out), returning from a thumb injury, and Szwarczynski then added 66 to ensure that their bowlers’ good work didn’t go in vain.The next stop for Kenya on their European tour is Belfast, where they play three one-dayers against Ireland.

PCB not worried over possible pullouts

Nasim Ashraf: ‘It would be their loss to miss a mega event’ © AFP
 

Nasim Ashraf, the chairman of the Pakistan Cricket Board, has said he is not worried about the prospect of several international stars skipping the Champions Trophy in the country in September over security fears.The ICC on Thursday confirmed that the tournament would stay in the country but players from South Africa, Australia, New Zealand and England have reportedly expressed reservations about touring. If players still aren’t convinced, cricket boards could be forced to send second-strength teams.”If some players do not come it would not make any difference,” Ashraf told . “It would be their loss to miss a mega event.”Ashraf quoted the example of the ICC World Twenty20 in South Africa last year which was a success despite some senior players, particularly from India, missing out. India, incidentally, went on to win the tournament.”We have the example of the Twenty20 World Cup in South Africa last year where some top players did not feature in teams, but the event was still a huge success,” said Ashraf.Haroon Lorgat, the chief executive of the ICC, said that players cannot be forced to tour, nor would they or their boards be penalised as a result. He hoped the task force formed to assess the security ahead of the tournament would be able to convince players.Pakistan had successfully hosted the recent Asia Cup in Karachi and Lahore and Ashraf implied that the security situation isn’t as bad as reports suggest.”I invite players’ representatives of all the countries to come and see the ground realities,” Ashraf said. “There are several Australian companies with their citizens working in Pakistan, which prove the fears are unfounded.”

Kohli gets surprise call-up

Virat Kohli has been included in India’s squad for the Sri Lanka ODIs and the Champions Trophy © AFP
 

Virat Kohli, who led India to victory in the Under-19 World Cup earlier this year, has earned a surprise call-up to the national squad for the ODIs against Sri Lanka as well as for the Champions Trophy. Mahendra Singh Dhoni returns to take charge of the team after pulling out of the ongoing Test series while Sachin Tendulkar and Zaheer Khan are back in the squad. Ishant Sharma has been rested for the Sri Lanka ODIs and will return for the Champions Trophy, with Parthiv Patel and Munaf Patel missing out.Robin Uthappa, who has been in indifferent form, has been dropped along with Piyush Chawla and Yusuf Pathan. The selectors also decided against including Sreesanth, with Niranjan Shah, the BCCI secretary, saying that he needed to “prove himself in domestic cricket.”It has been a steady rise for Kohli, who, after making his debut for Delhi in the 2006-07 season, came into national prominence during India’s triumphant U-19 campaign in Malaysia. An attacking batsman in the mould of Virender Sehwag, Kohli finished the the tournament with 235 runs at 42.16. He then joined the Bangalore Royal Challengers for the Indian Premier League, but his performances were below-par. Kohli staked his claim for national selection by becoming the second-highest run-getter for the India in the recently concluded Emerging Players Tournament in Australia.Zaheer is back after a nine-month absence; he last played for India during their home ODIs against Pakistan in November, while Tendulkar returns after he missed the Kitply Cup in Bangladesh and the Asia Cup to recover from a groin injury.The first of the five ODIs against Sri Lanka will be held on August 18 in Dambulla.Squad for Sri Lanka ODIs
Mahendra Singh Dhoni (capt), Sachin Tendulkar, Gautam Gambhir, Virender Sehwag, Yuvraj Singh, Rohit Sharma, Suresh Raina, Virat Kohli, Parthiv Patel, Irfan Pathan, Praveen Kumar, Harbhajan Singh, Zaheer Khan, RP Singh, Munaf Patel, Pragyan Ojha.Squad for Champions Trophy
Same as above…
In: Ishant Sharma.
Out: Parthiv Patel, Munaf Patel

David Wiese smashes 66 against Netherlands to keep Namibia's Super 12 hopes alive

Namibia completed their highest-successful chase in a T20I to keep their Super 12 hopes alive and put Netherlands on the brink of an early exit. The Dutch have now lost two group stage matches, have to beat Sri Lanka and hope Ireland win both their remaining games. Namibia, on the other hand, have their fate in their own hands after completing their maiden World Cup win in senior men’s cricket.After conceding 164 runs, a total which could have been lower after a fielding effort filled with fumbles, Namibia stumbled to 52 for 3 in the ninth over and were facing an uphill battle. But a 93-run fourth wicket stand between Namibian captain Gerhard Erasmus and David Wiese, which came in 8.3 overs, put Namibia on the brink of victory before Wiese and JJ Smit saw them home. South African of the match
There were several candidates to choose from in this fixture but this unique award has to go to Wiese. He turned Namibia’s innings around with a vintage performance that involved clearing the rope five times, all in the ‘V.’ Wiese’s first shot in anger came when he charged Roelof van der Merwe and hit the ball over his head for six, which put Namibia on 68 for 3 at the halfway stage, needing 97 runs off the last 10 overs. Namibia scored 52 runs off the next four overs, and Wiese was responsible for 37 of those. He brought up his first fifty for Namibia off 29 balls with a six over cover point and brought their required run-rate down to just over six runs an over in the last three overs, when they needed 19 runs. Wiese only faced one ball in the final over, and Smit hit the winning runs, but he set the victory up and finished on an unbeaten 66 off 40 balls. Wiese also took the Player of the Match award.Bounced out, slowly
Pace off the ball is likely to become the phrase of the tournament, and if you need a visual, look no further than the first two wickets of the Dutch innings. Jan Frylinck delivered a slow-motion bouncer to Stephan Myburgh, who tried to upper-cut him over point, but was earlier on the stroke than he would have liked and lobbed it to Stephan Baard at point. Two overs later, Wiese bowled a short, wide, and slow delivery that van der Merwe tried to cut but ended up slashing high to Bernard Scholtz at third man.Gerhard Erasmus and David Wiese shared a 93-run fourth-wicket partnership•ICC via Getty

Max(imum) number of lives
Max O’Dowd brought up a second successive half-century at this tournament, this one laced with leg-side boundaries, but it was not without its fair share of luck. He survived four times against some sloppy Namibian fielding, which could have seen his innings end much earlier. O’Dowd could have been run out in the 11th, when he was on 38, and he pushed a Ruben Trumpelmann delivery to cover and set off for a single, but almost immediately realised it was the wrong decision. He gave up about three-quarters of the way down but the throw missed the stumps. Then, when he was on 46, he hit the ball to extra cover, took off and again realised he was too hasty. O’Dowd was ready to run back to the dug-out but the throw was inaccurate. He brought up his fifty six balls later with an inside-out drive over the covers.O’Dowd entered the last five overs on 65 and sent an aerial shot in the direction of long-off, but the chance fell short. He added two more runs before he got a leading edge off JJ Smit. Baard ran in from the covers and got hands to it but could not hold on. O’Dowd had reached 70 by the last ball of the penultimate over and snuck two byes off a ball that struck him on the leg. He should have been run out at the wicket-keeper’s end but the throw went to the bowler. Eventually O’Dowd was run-out in the last over, chasing a second run but flagging in the heat. He became the first Dutch player to score back-to-back half-centuries at a World Cup.More missed chances, but it doesn’t matter as much
The fielding remained messy when Netherlands began their defence. In the third over, Baard punched a ball into the covers and took a single which appeared completely out of the question. van der Merwe rushed his throw that would have run Baard out at the striker’s end and he escaped an early exit. Two overs later, Namibia’s mini-collapse began, when Zane Green dragged an attempted pull onto his stumps off Frank Klaasen. They went on to lose 3 for 18, with Baard the third of those wickets when he missed a flick and was bowled by the Dutch captain Pieter Seelar. But then came the 93-run stand between Erasmus and Wiese to seize the advantage for Namibia once more, and that was that.

Game
Register
Service
Bonus