Coach Raman slams Tamil Nadu for 'elementary mistakes'

Tamil Nadu coach WV Raman has slammed his team for their poor fielding, which resulted in Saurashtra taking a first-innings lead against them

Kanishkaa Balachandran in Chennai01-Dec-2013Very little separated Tamil Nadu and Saurashtra over four days on a placid pitch in Chennai, but WV Raman, the coach of Tamil Nadu, believed that his team had no excuses for failing to restrict Saurashra to under 565, as the visitors comfortably overhauled that score and took three points by virtue of a first-innings lead.Raman was blunt in his assessment of his side’s performance in the field over the last two days, in which two dropped catches cost them. Jaydev Shah, who was dropped at second slip when on 8, went on to score 195 and added 353 for the fourth wicket with Cheteshwar Pujara. On the final day, Aarpit Vasavada was also let off on second slip when on 6 and used the second chance to full effect, making 70 and helping his side to the innings lead. The culprit on both occasions was M Vijay. In Tamil Nadu’s previous match against Uttar Pradesh, another let off, this time by Abhinav Mukund at point, gave Piyush Chawla a reprieve at 9. Chawla seized the opportunity and scored 153 to help his side to a big first-innings lead.”It’s not about disappointment. It’s about not latching onto the opportunities that come your way,” Raman said. “Any side that commits these kinds of elementary mistakes has to pay.”With Tamil Nadu needing a win to climb up the points table from No.6, a green top was prepared to give the seamers more assistance. It didn’t seem to work though, as the surface ended up producing two 500-plus scores.”I was not surprised at all at the way the pitch behaved when I saw it on the first morning,” Raman said. “It was very obvious after the first half an hour that it was going to be a bat-a-thon. All things considered we should have had the better of the exchanges.”Tamil Nadu dropped their offspinner Malolan Rangarajan for an extra seamer. Raman didn’t blame the bowling combination, but reiterated that the catching was responsible for their predicament.”The picked XI will have to do the job regardless of what the conditions are. We can’t be sitting and moaning after the game thinking about what we could have done. On a track like this when the bowlers produce opportunities the catches will have to be taken.”As far as the bowling goes, there is definitely room for consistency. But again, the number of chances floored were high as well. It is a question of which is which. Is it the chicken or the egg? If the catches were taken things would have been different.”Raman also praised Pujara, who scored 269, for playing a marathon knock to ensure Saurashtra gain the most out of the draw. “Let’s not forget that one individual epitomised what commitment is all about,” Raman said. “It is definitely a problem in our neck of the woods. It’s obvious that if you put your mind to it, you can get things done. It was exactly what happened as far as they were concerned. On the other side of it, the heads were not there, the intent was not there. We don’t have anyone but ourselves to blame.”

Sri Lanka seek boost ahead of Tests

Sri Lanka will hope their batsmen fire in the final ODI to not only get the consolation victory, but also some much-needed confidence ahead of the Test series which begins on December 31

The Preview by Andrew Fidel Fernando26-Dec-2013Match factsFriday, December 27, 2013
Start time 1500 local (1100 GMT)Dinesh Chandimal has not scored a ODI fifty since January•AFPBig PictureA series that at one stage seemed competitive has all of a sudden begun to feel like a one-sided one. Pakistan have been terrific with the bat all series before reclaiming their prowess with the ball, while Sri Lanka have allowed all areas of their game to slip. An eight-wicket drubbing to follow a 113-run loss does not bode well for the visitors in the final match.On Christmas Day, Sri Lanka were ailed by largely the same issues that have troubled them in the previous matches. The attack lacked confidence and penetration as Lasith Malinga went wicketless for the second time in the series and Nuwan Kulasekara was uncharacteristically wayward. Rangana Herath’s poise and experience has also been greatly missed, as has his indomitable spirit that has seen him script limited-overs comebacks before. Herath’s replacement, Ajantha Mendis, is yet to get a game.The batting has threatened in patches, but unlike Pakistan who have found a centurion in each match and made century stands a defining feature of their innings, Sri Lanka have not managed even one triple-figure partnership. The visitors’ only win was a result of several modest contributions stacked together, but ODI history suggests piecemeal efforts only rarely result in victories. Sri Lanka need a top-order man to anchor each innings, as Mohammad Hafeez has done so prolifically for Pakistan.Strangely for Pakistan, they have played safe, intelligent, formulaic cricket with the bat that Sri Lanka have not been able to challenge. Their attack has retained the flair that is the source of its menace. Saeed Ajmal claimed his best haul in the series in the last match, while both Umar Gul and Junaid Khan continue to bowl effective spells. If Pakistan can complete a 4-1 rout in Abu Dhabi, they will arrive in the Tests on a cloud of confidence, and will also have deflated the Sri Lanka batsmen who cross over into the longest format.Form guide (last five completed matches, most recent first)

Pakistan: WWLWL


Sri Lanka: LLWLW
In the spotlightSri Lanka do not have a Dale Steyn in their ranks, but even so, Mohammad Hafeez’s turnaround in ODI form has been staggering. Having not passed 35 in his last eight ODI innings, Hafeez now averages 203.50 in the series, with 147 more runs than the second-highest scorer. Hafeez seems at peace with his rhythm at the crease, and has rarely been tested by the Sri Lanka bowlers. Given his significant contributions with the ball and in the field, he is a certainty for the Man-of-the-Series award, regardless of what happens in the final match.Ashan Priyanjan has waited on the boundary in two series before finally making his international debut, but when he did, he made it count. Exceptional square of the wicket and off the back foot, first-match nerves did not seem to affect him as he progressed to Sri Lanka’s highest score of the series – 74. If he can replicate his success in the last match, he will put significant pressure on Dinesh Chandimal, who has not hit a limited-overs half-century since January, despite playing in almost every match since then. The selectors have expressed confidence in Chandimal’s talent, but if they have a superior alternative of the same age, they will not be able to justify Chandimal’s inclusion for long.Team newsShahid Afridi has flown back to Pakistan early due to personal reasons, but in any case, Pakistan may be tempted to trial young players in the dead rubber. Seam bowler Anwar Ali has been sitting on the sidelines for the whole series, as has left-handed batsman Haris Sohail. They may get a game tomorrow if Pakistan choose to rest key Test players, with the Test series starting on Tuesday.Pakistan (probable): 1 Ahmed Shehzad, 2 Sharjeel Khan, 3 Mohammad Hafeez, 4 Sohaib Maqsood, 5 Misbah ul Haq (capt), 6 Umar Akmal (wk), 7 Anwar Ali, 8 Bilawal Bhatti, 9 Umar Gul, 10. Saeed Ajmal, 11. Junaid KhanSri Lanka will almost certainly retain Priyanjan, and perhaps Kithuruwan Vithanage as well. If the surface looks like it will be receptive to turn, legspinning allrounder Seekkuge Prasanna could return in place of either Suranga Lakmal or Kulasekara.Sri Lanka (probable): 1 Tillakaratne Dilshan, 2 Kusal Perera, 3 Kumar Sangakkara (wk), 4. Ashan Priyanjan, 5. Dinesh Chandimal, 6. Angelo Mathews (capt), 7. Kithuruwan Vithanage, 8. Seekkuge Prasanna/ Suranga Lakmal 9 Nuwan Kulasekara, 10. Sachithra Senanayake, 11. Lasith MalingaStats and trivia In addition to Hafeez’ monumental series average, Misbah-ul-Haq, Sohaib Maqsood and Ahmed Shehzad all have averages exceeding 50. Sri Lanka’s best average for a batsman who has played more than one innings is 40 – to Angelo Mathews. Junaid has taken ten wickets in the series, Ajmal seven and Gul six. The most penetrative Sri Lankan bowlers have been Suranga Lakmal and Thisara Perera with three apiece.Quotes”I think Gul set the tone right from the start, getting wickets with the new ball, and everyone else is really bowling and batting well. A series win gives us more confidence and delight.”

“We didn’t do very well in all departments. They played good cricket and were far better than us, so they deserved to win.”

Jamaica all out for record low 49 against T&T

Trinidad & Tobago advanced to the Nagico Super50 final with a resounding seven-wicket win over Jamaica at Queen’s Park Oval.

ESPNcricinfo staff13-Feb-20140:00

Croft: To make 49 is very disappointing

Scorecard and ball-by-ball detailsTrinidad & Tobago captain Dwayne Bravo made the most of a seaming pitch after asking Jamaica to bat first, leading the way with 3 for 10 in an opening burst which decimated the Jamaicans before they were eventually bowled out for 49 in T&T’s seven-wicket demolition in the first semi-final of the Nagico Super50 tournament at Queen’s Park Oval on Wednesday. Bravo was named Man of the Match after his spell left Jamaica reeling at 5 for 4 and their final total was the country’s lowest ever in the 50-over West Indies regional tournament.Bravo’s first strike was in the third over when he had opener John Campbell given out caught behind off a defensive prod. Nkrumah Bonner entered at number three on the back of making 122* against Guyana in his side’s previous match but he only made 1 on Wednesday before dragging a pull straight to Evin Lewis at midwicket to end the fourth over with the score 2 for 4.Bravo took a wicket on the very next delivery to start the fifth over, trapping Kennar Lewis for 2 after the opener played across the line to a full delivery. Tamar Lambert departed without scoring to another leg before appeal from Bravo after not offering a shot and the rout was on.Dwayne Bravo won two successful lbw appeals on the day against Jamaica in Trinidad & Tobago’s seven-wicket rout•WICB MediaRayad Emrit carried on with the work that Bravo started by wiping out the rest of the middle order and tail to finish with 4 for 19, extending his tournament lead to 10 wickets. With the score at 25 for 5, he claimed his first scalp when Jamaica captain David Bernard was beaten for pace attempting to pull and offered a simple catch to Darren Bravo at cover. Andre Russell went for 4 when he edged a drive behind to Denesh Ramdin. Andre McCarthy flicked Emrit to Lewis at midwicket for Jamaica’s top score of 16. The final wicket fell when Andrew Richardson sliced Emrit to the cover boundary where Lewis was stationed for his third catch as the innings wrapped up in just 24.2 overs.Jerome Taylor claimed all three wickets in Trinidad & Tobago’s brief chase. Lewis top-edged a slog to mid on at the end of the first over before Imran Khan was struck in line with the stumps to go leg before as T&T got off to a slightly nervy start at 10 for 2. Lendl Simmons showed a bit more restraint during the power play overs and fell for 21 when his footwork betrayed him and an inside-edged drive was dragged onto the stumps.Captain Bravo was spared in T&T’s sloppy pursuit when a skied chance to mid on was dropped by Bernard in a moment that summed up Jamaica’s day. He finished the match a short time later by whipping Nikita Miller through mid on for a boundary on the first ball of the 14th over. Darren Bravo finished with 23 not out at the other end. The winner of Thursday’s second semi-final between Guyana and Barbados will play T&T in the tournament final on Saturday.

Dhoni out of Asia Cup with side strain

MS Dhoni has been ruled out of the Asia Cup in Bangladesh because of a side strain. Virat Kohli will lead India in Dhoni’s absence and Dinesh Karthik slots in as the replacement wicketkeeper

ESPNcricinfo staff20-Feb-2014MS Dhoni has been ruled out of the Asia Cup in Bangladesh because of a side strain. Virat Kohli will lead India in Dhoni’s absence and Dinesh Karthik slots in as the replacement wicketkeeper.India will have to do without MS Dhoni at the Asia Cup•Getty ImagesDhoni suffered a grade-one strain to his left side during the second Test against New Zealand in Wellington and will undergo rehabilitation for ten days. The Indian squad landed in Mumbai today after failing to win a single game in New Zealand.Kohli has led India in eight ODIs previously, when Dhoni was injured during a tri-series in the West Indies involving Sri Lanka and then rested from a tour of Zimbabwe in July and August 2013. India won seven of those matches. Karthik has not played for India since the tour of Zimbabwe last year either.India’s first game in the Asia Cup is against Bangladesh on February 26. The tournament ends on March 8, and the ICC World Twenty20 begins on March 21, also in Bangladesh.

Worrying times for Worcestershire

ESPNcricinfo considers Worcestershire’s prospects for the 2014 season

George Dobell03-Apr-2014Last year 5th, CC Div 2; Group stages, FLt20; 5th in Group A, YB40.2013 in a nutshellThe excellence of Moeen Ali and, to a lesser extent, Alan Richardson, masked some of the problems at New Road last year. Moeen, judged to be county cricket’s most valuable player in 2013, top-scored for the club in two of the three competitions and scored in excess of 500 runs more than the club’s next highest scorer in the Championship. Richardson, meanwhile, claimed more than double the number of Championship wickets of his closest rival and also delivered in excess of 200 overs more than the next busiest bowler. In the victories over Kent and Worcestershire, Richardson claimed 10-wicket hauls while Moeen top-scored, while in the victory over Glamorgan, Moeen recorded a career-best 250. In the victory over Northants, both Moeen and Richardson claimed five-wicket hauls. Worcestershire relied on the pair heavily.Richardson apart, the bowling lacked potency and Moeen apart, the batting lacked consistency. Thilan Samaraweera, though he scored respectably, was past his best and the likes of Alexei Kervezee – who averaged 10.57 – and Michael Johnson – who averaged 14.15 – were bitterly disappointing. Daryl Mitchell enjoyed a good YB40 but failed to score the runs required of him in the Championship, while Matt Pardoe looked solid and offered some hope for the future. Perhaps more worrying than the modest on-field form, was the departure of a couple of younger players once thought of as ‘the future’ of the club. Richard Jones was allowed to leave for Warwickshire despite having a year remaining on his contract and 20-year-old Aneesh Kapil was released due to a lack of progress and will start the 2014 season playing second XI cricket for Surrey. For the club to fail to coax the best of out such players and, in the case of Kapil, to give up on them so early, is a concern. If the club is unable to compete on salaries, it is in serious trouble if it can also not compete in talent development. David Lucas and Johnson also left the club at the end of the season.2014 prospectsIt is hard to be wildly optimistic. Without Richardson and, perhaps, Moeen Ali, there is a chasm at the heart of the Worcestershire side. The pair were head and shoulders above their colleagues in the bowling and batting returns from 2013 and the fact that no new players have been brought in to compensate is a concern. Jack Shantry was the club’s second highest wicket-taker in the Championship last year – he claimed 34 – but he will require far greater support from the likes of Chris Russell – 16 wickets at 44.37 last year – or Graeme Cessford – 15 at 34.93 – if the Worcestershire seam attack is to make any impact.Worcestershire supporters are braced for a chastening season. There is some hope. In the likes of Kervezee and Gareth Andrew, Worcestershire have talented players who are capable of more than they delivered last year. Ross Whiteley is an all-rounder of some potential, too. Capable of bowling at a sharp pace and hitting the ball hard, he could prove a wise recruit in all formats. So should Saeed Ajmal, who might just be the best overseas player in the 2014 season. The club are currently talking to other options as a second overseas player in the T20 Blast. Junaid Khan and Brett Lee are among the more intriguing possibilities.With promotion looking most unlikely – it may well be events at the other end of the table that occupy the minds of Worcestershire supporters – the best hope is a run in the limited-overs competitions, but without Moeen there will be an absence of quality batting and the burden on Ajmal looks onerous. The completion of the long-awaited hotel at the ground, and with it some new facilities for the club, also offers hope of greater revenues in the future. That will be crucial as Worcestershire seek to retain and attract players.Key playerSaeed Ajmal could prove to be a wonderful signing. One of the finest spinners in world cricket, he should be able to bowl a large number of overs and give his side both some control and a potency with the ball that is unmatched in the rest of the squad. There are some concerns about the burden he carries, though.Bright young thingThe presence of several highly-talented young players within the Worcestershire system provides the club’s brightest hope. In Tom Kohler-Cadmore the club have a 19-year-old batsman who broke schoolboy records at nearby Malvern College, while Ed Barnard, who was part of the England side in the U19 World Cup, is an all-rounder who has more than a hint of class with the bat. But it is Tom Fell who offers the most immediate prospects of success. A 20-year-old batsman who made a good impression in 2013, more will be required of him this season and he should benefit from the exposure to first team cricket. In the longer-term, Worcestershire need to get the best out of such talents, rather than seeing them leave for other counties – like Steven Davies – or fail to develop – like Jones or Kapil.Captain/coachSteve Rhodes, the director of cricket, seems to have been a feature at New Road as long as the chestnut trees and cathedral. And, under the leadership of David Leatherdale, the chief executive and former teammate of Rhodes, he probably has a job for life. Matt Mason remains as bowling coach and Daryl Mitchell remains as captain. Whether that leaves Worcestershire overly cosy or run by passionate men with more knowledge for the club and passion for their roles remains a moot point. Both points probably have an element of truth.ESPNcricinfo verdictWorcestershire is something of an anachronism in the modern world. It seems many supporters are happy so long as tea is served in a timely manner in the Ladies Pavilion and, judged by that standard, 2014 will no doubt be a success. But whether the club’s bucolic charm is in keeping with a high-performance centre of sporting excellence is another matter. If Moeen is required by England, the squad looks thin and only the presence of Ajmal offers hope of avoiding the wooden spoon. Questions about recruitment, retention and talent development need to be asked, but Worcestershire’s slide into mediocrity seems to have been accepted with a phlegmatic shrug by members. The example of Northants and Derbyshire shows that more can be achieved from clubs of similar resources.

Cook ton hopes to herald new dawn

If English cricket is about to experience a bright new dawn, the first few rays may have pierced the clouds. Alastair Cook’s first three-figure score since a tour game in November was a moment to savour,

Alan Gardner in Chelmsford14-Apr-2014
ScorecardAlastair Cook made his first century since a tour match in November•Getty ImagesIf English cricket is about to experience a bright new dawn, the first few rays may have pierced the clouds. Alastair Cook’s first three-figure score since a tour game in November at the start of an ill-starred Ashes campaign was a moment to savour, not least because it came on his home ground, as the sun shone. His celebration, cradling his arms in a baby-rocking gesture towards the balcony to mark having recently become a father, added a somewhat clumsy emphasis to the sense of rebirth.Cook has had plenty of time to sit and analyse the winter passed, his second as England captain. But the strength of his leadership has always been what he does with the bat in hand and the days between his final ODI appearance against Australia on January 26 and the start of Essex’s season must have ticked by slowly.The arrival of his daughter, born at the start of the month, would have helped distract him, not to mention the lambing season. Now he can get back to run scoring. Having harvested a half-century against Cambridge in the tranquil setting of Fenner’s last week, he sharpened his focus for the sort of remorseless accumulation he is usually associated with. This was his 46th first-class hundred, 15 innings after his last, and the closest he came to giving a chance was when a top-edged cut flew past slip after he had passed the landmark.He ended the day unbeaten on 139, perhaps a few short of official “daddy” status but only in strict, Goochian terms. Cries of “Well done, Cookie” were followed by a warm ripple of applause as he made his way off the ground.Never mind country, this was just the innings his county needed. Essex boast a squad studded with England internationals past, present and possibly future, which makes them a tempting pick when the pre-season promotion prognostications are made, but they did not give a good account of themselves with the bat on the opening day.Cook happy to be back on the job

Alastair Cook said he was pleased to have been able to get straight back to work after the birth of his first child, Elsie. Less than two weeks after becoming a father, Cook made his first century in five months, with paternity leave shunned in favour off leaving outside off.
“My wife has been very good to me, she’s been excellent,” he said. “Fingers crossed baby Elsie is sleeping okay and feeding okay. There’s not so much a man can do early on. I just wanted to bat and the baby was 10-12 days late and you can’t really control that.”
While Cook’s wife Alice was left in charge of the baby, the England captain took charge of Essex’s Championship match against Derbyshire. He described his baby-rocking gesture as a bit of mickey-taking because “I’ve seen everyone else do it”.
He said it was “nice to contribute” a big score after a difficult winter but wasn’t about assume his job was complete. “I think it’s been a few months without scoring a hundred, any batter is judged on scoring hundreds and it’s nice to do that. My job’s not done yet.”

When James Foster won the toss and decided to make first use of the pitch, the plan would have been to make Derbyshire sweat under a brazen April sun. Fast-forward 24 hours and Cook did just that – in fact, it almost felt as if a few months had flashed by, with two spinners toiling away on a seemingly becalmed surface. Paul Grayson, who left the team to their own devices on Sunday in order to run the London marathon, would have felt the spring returning to his step even as the feeling came back to his toes.Most of Cook’s shots drew an appreciative murmur from the members’ stands but one off drive during the afternoon session stood out. Tim Groenewald, who had recently broken a 103-run partnership for the second wicket, overpitched a fraction and Cook snapped like a bear trap, crisply driving four through mid-off. He rattled into the 90s with shots either side of the wicket off a tiring Mark Footitt and reached three figures with a square push against Groenewald. The last time he experienced the sensation was against a lightly equipped Australia A attack in Hobart.There were moments, particularly early on, when he had to grind out the runs (when are there not, some might say). Cook’s familiar shuffle across his stumps and reassuring tuck to leg were not quite in sync and on more than one occasion he came close to tickling through to the keeper as he fell to off, in the manner of his first-innings dismissal. But initially in partnership with Tom Westley, who played some flowing strokes in his 56, and then Ravi Bopara, who fell just short of his own fifty in another century stand, Cook dragged Essex up by the bootlaces. His next, weightier, task is to do the same with England.Derbyshire were reduced to the status of pliant co-conspirators in a greater drama. Having dismissed Essex for 94 in the first innings and begun the day 45 runs ahead with five wickets in hand, they appeared to have a strong hold on the game. “Who ever hoped like a cricketer?” wrote RC Robertson-Glasgow. Hope appeared to be all Essex had, though David Masters shrugged his broad shoulders at the suggestion. By the close, the game had turned around to the extent that Derbyshire were the team looking for something to cling to.”There’s always money in the banana stand,” goes one of the jokes from the US TV series . The Bluth family, in a perpetual state of crisis, set symbolic store by the frozen banana business that abides even as grander schemes collapse around them. For Essex, who have experienced a degree of self-inflicted hardship in recent years, Masters remains as reliable as the banana stand; unflashy but never unloved and always a banker.It was Masters, a week before his 36th birthday, who provided the early inspiration for Essex’s fight back. “If we can bowl like we have today I’m sure they won’t get too many more,” he said on Sunday. They did not get too many more as Masters followed word with deed, taking three wickets in his opening two overs as Derbyshire lost 5 for 15 on the second morning. His reward was the 21st five-wicket haul of an Essex career that only began in 2008.Shivnarine Chanderpaul stood aloof from the commotion, attempting to retain the strike in a familiar, crabby rear-guard. When the innings finished, it was hard to say Chanderpaul was, unbeaten on 75 and with no one to accompany him on the dance floor any longer. But it was to be Cook who had the last waltz.

Vithanage, Priyanjan get T20 call-ups

Sri Lanka have included batsmen Kithuruwan Vithanage and Ashan Priyanjan in their 15-man squad for the one-off T20 that kicks off their tour of England in May

ESPNcricinfo staff23-Apr-2014Sri Lanka have included batsmen Kithuruwan Vithanage and Ashan Priyanjan in their 15-man squad for the one-off T20 that kicks off their tour of England in May. Slow-bowling allrounder Chaturanga de Silva, who was initially included in the World T20 squad as cover for Rangana Herath, has also been named. Herath has been rested, while the team will be without the veteran pair of Mahela Jayawardene and Kumar Sangakkara, who retired from T20 internationals after the World T20.The team will be led by Lasith Malinga, who took over as captain at the World T20 after Dinesh Chandimal had to sit out due to an over-rate offence and was then dropped on form. Lahiru Thirimanne, who was appointed vice-captain across formats earlier on Wednesday, will deputise.Though uncapped in T20 internationals, Priyanjan and Vithanage have been included ahead of Angelo Perera, who played for Sri Lanka in February, against Bangladesh. Both aggressive middle-order batsmen, Priyanjan and Vithanage have had encouraging starts to their international careers in other formats. Priyanjan averages 33.33 after seven ODI knocks and Vithanage has scored at 69.66 in four Test innings – all against Bangladesh. Priyanjan also bowls part-time offspin.Sri Lanka’s selectors have officially relieved Dinesh Chandimal of the T20 captaincy and ODI vice-captaincy but did not omit him from either squad.Five seniors – Jayawardene, Sangakkara, Herath, Malinga and Tillakaratne Dilshan – have all also been rested for the Ireland leg of Sri Lanka’s tour, which features two ODIs in Dublin. Opener Upul Tharanga, 20-year-old wicketkeeper-batsman Niroshan Dickwella, and fast bowler Dhammika Prasad are in that squad, after encouraging performances for Sri Lanka’s A team and in domestic cricket. Sri Lanka play Ireland on May 6 and May 8 before going to England.The selectors are expected to name the ODI and Test squads for the England tour over the next few days.England T20 Squad: Lasith Malinga (capt), Lahiru Thirimanne (vice-capt), Kusal Perera, Tillakaratne Dilshan, Angelo Mathews, Dinesh Chandimal, Kithuruwan Vithanage, Ashan Priyanjan, Thisara Perera, Nuwan Kulasekara, Chaturanga de Silva, Sachithra Senanayake, Suranga Lakmal, Seekkuge Prasanna, Ajantha MendisIreland ODIs Squad: Angelo Mathews (capt), Lahiru Thirimanne (vice-capt), Kusal Perera, Upul Tharanga, Niroshan Dickwella, Dinesh Chandimal, Kithuruwan Vithanage, Ashan Priyanjan, Thisara Perera, Nuwan Kulasekara, Chaturanga de Silva, Sachithra Senanayake, Suranga Lakmal, Dhammika Prasad, Ajantha Mendis

Buttler would get Test chance… if he were Sri Lankan

Would Jos Buttler play Test cricket this summer if he was Sri Lankan? According to one adversary the answer goes without saying. “Obviously,” said Sachithra Senanayake

Tim Wigmore02-Jun-2014Would Jos Buttler play Test cricket this summer if he was Sri Lankan? According to one adversary the answer goes without saying. “Obviously,” said Sachithra Senanayake, speaking at The Oval the day after Buttler’s incredible assault narrowly failed to prevent Sri Lanka from levelling the one-day series.Buttler is not the sort of player that county academies can mass produce. In his unorthodoxy, chutzpah and ebullient self-confidence, his style is more reminiscent of Sri Lankan cricketers.His scintillating 121 at Lord’s was the most remarkable example yet of such explosiveness – but it was emphatically not a one-off. In 18 ODIs since last September, Buttler has scored 616 runs at 51.33 and with a strike-rate of 129.14. He has always had a rare capacity to thrill, but now it is being married to a formidable consistency.No matter. Even in the aftermath of his maiden international century, Buttler was described by Alastair Cook as “not quite ready” for the Test arena. The doubts are legitimate: Buttler has scored just three first-class hundreds in 51 matches, averaging a mediocre 32.61. Yet Sri Lanka, one suspects, might take a rather less conservative approach to finding out whether Buttler is ready to thrive in the Test arena.Senanayake is one of Sri Lanka’s unorthodox talents – as if to underscore the point he was reported to the ICC over a suspected illegal bowling action on Monday – and he gave a straightforward answer when asked whether Sri Lanka would elevate Buttler on the compelling evidence of his recent work in limited-overs cricket”If someone’s performing in whatever category we would give him a chance to perform in all three formats,” he said. “He got an opportunity and he took it. He played lots of reverse sweeps, sweeps and other stuff. It was a really safe match for us but Buttler did damage. He played his normal game. He’s so positive. That’s why he’s scoring runs.”The style in which he did so was very different to that which has taken Mahela Jayawardene within sight of 25,000 international runs. But Jayawardene was equally enthusiastic about Buttler.”He is a very good player,” Jayawardene said. “We knew he was dangerous because he’s done it a few times before. At Lord’s everything seemed to come off for him and he connected with everything. He’s definitely a dangerous customer. It is good to see all these younger guys thinking out of the box and playing the conditions and situation. It is all good for the game.”Whether such innings are transferrable to Test matches is the question that English fans increasingly want answered, whatever the reluctance of the selectors to find out. “How he played at Lord’s is not the way you would approach Test cricket, but he is very talented,” Jayawardene said.

Allenby ton eases Glamorgan chase

A captain’s innings of 105 from 63 balls by Jim Allenby propelled Glamorgan to an impressive six-wicket win against Middlesex at Richmond that keeps up their hopes of quarter-final qualification

Press Association03-Jul-2014
ScorecardJim Allenby scored a rapid century to set up Glamorgan’s chase•Getty ImagesA captain’s innings of 105 from 63 balls by Jim Allenby propelled Glamorgan to an impressive six-wicket win against Middlesex at Richmond that keeps up their hopes of quarter-final qualification from the NatWest T20 Blast’s South Division.Allenby hit three sixes and 14 fours and was joined by his opening partner Jacques Rudolph in a record Twenty20 stand for Glamorgan of 136 after Middlesex had totalled 184 for 3, in which Dawid Malan carried his bat for 68 not out and Dan Christian thumped five sixes in a 29-ball 48.Rudolph, the former South Africa Test batsman, contributed 42 from 35 balls to a partnership which beat Glamorgan’s previous T20 record – for both the first wicket and all wickets – of 129 between Matthew Elliott and Robert Croft against Gloucestershire at Bristol in 2005.Eoin Morgan also hit a 28-ball 41 for Middlesex, but with the ground’s short boundaries their total was never going to be enough once Allenby and Rudolph got going to provide a 2,000 crowd with even more entertainment.In the end, despite Allenby’s eventual dismissal by James Harris in a 19th over in which Ben Wright also pulled his first ball straight to deep midwicket, Glamorgan – who needed just six runs from the last over – completed their fourth T20 Blast victory of the season with three balls to spare to go into fourth place in the southern group.Allenby kicked off Glamorgan’s excellently controlled chase by whipping Harris for six over midwicket, and then taking four fours from fellow seamer Harry Podmore in the fifth over. Rudolph twice reverse-swept Ravi Patel for four in an eighth over costing 14, while Allenby clubbed further sixes off both Neil Dexter and Christian before reaching his hundred – only Glamorgan’s second in Twenty20 – with a lovely extra cover four off Harris from the first ball ofthe 19th over.By then he had lost Rudolph, caught reverse-sweeping Dexter, and Mark Wallace, caught in the deep off Podmore after hitting a few valuable fours off the suffering Harris in a quickfire 18. Glamorgan had needed only 49 from six overs when Rudolph was out, such was the perfect pacing of the chase by the two openers.Middlesex began slowly, with just 10 runs from the first three overs, in which Joe Denly was quite brilliantly caught on the long-off boundary by a diving Stewart Walters for 5, before Morgan ignited the innings. Morgan pulled Michael Hogan for six in the fifth over, the ball sounding like a rifle crack off his bat, and he also launched Will Owen’s fast-medium over long-on for another maximum in a ninth over which cost 17 runs.The scoring rate dipped again when Morgan fell, smartly held low to his left at cover by Hogan off left-arm spinner Dean Cosker, but after the 100 arrived in the 14th over the accelerator was pressed by Christian, who drove Cosker for three sixes in a 15th over that brought 22 runs. Malan, in the same over, was dropped at deep midwicket by Chris Cooke, when the fielder clearly lost the ball in the low sun setting over Old Deer Park.After Malan had completed a 38-ball 50,Christian chose the 17th over to plunder two more sixes and a four off Hogan before Cooke atoned for his earlier miss by pulling off a superb low catch as he dived to his left on the cover boundary to end the Australian’s brutal innings.There were two more sixes before Middlesex were finished, one each for Malan and Ryan Higgins hit straight off Owen in a 19th over that went for 17 runs. In the end, though, on a beautiful summer’s evening, it proved not to be enough.

NZC annual contracts for 10 women players

Ten of New Zealand’s top women cricketers will be given annual contracts following a Memorandum of Understanding between NZC and the New Zealand Cricket Players Association

ESPNcricinfo staff22-Jul-2014Ten of New Zealand’s top women cricketers will be given annual contracts following a Memorandum of Understanding between NZC and the New Zealand Cricket Players Association (NZCPA). The ten players will be named on Wednesday by coach Hamish Barton.Previously, they had been given assembly fees when training and playing for the national side. Four players had been awarded professional contracts last year.The contracts have been structured in a manner similar to the men’s senior team, with the top 10 players receiving an annual retainer based on a ranking process involving T20 and ODI cricket. The contract retainers are tiered between $10,000 to $12,000 per annum and also provide for daily assembly fees for all players selected for training camps and international tours. Players outside the top-ten bracket will receive a casual playing contract when they are selected in the team.Lindsay Crocker, NZC’s head of cricket, said the focus of the contract system was on keeping the top women cricketers prepared for international cricket even in between series.”The contract system is designed to keep New Zealand’s best women’s players in the game for longer,” Crocker said. “It provides a training structure between tours so our leading players can compete at international level while still maintaining full-time employment outside cricket.”NZCPA player services’ manager Henry Moore said the contract system sought to find a balance between a player’s professional and personal commitments, including academic ones, and her time within the cricket team. According to Moore, a leading cricketer could, depending on her selection, earn nearly $25,000 a year, while having the opportunity to work or study.”One of the key features of the MoU is that players who receive annual retainer contracts will be able to balance work and study commitments with their White Ferns obligations, as they will not be required to train or practice during normal business hours when not assembled with the team,” Moore said.

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