Dar admits he wrongly adjudged Tendulkar out

Sachin Tendulkar wasn’t happy with Dar’s decision as he walked off © Getty Images

More than a month after wrongly adjudging Sachin Tendulkar out caught behind in the final one-day international against England at Lord’s, umpire Aleem Dar has apologised, saying that it occurred due to a sudden lapse in concentration.Tendulkar, batting on 30, was beaten while trying to drive a full-length delivery from Andrew Flintoff outside the off stump. However, replays showed that the bat had clipped the pad instead and Tendulkar stood long enough to register his bewilderment before slowly heading off. His wicket was a big blow for India as they were bowled out for a modest 188, losing by seven wickets and the series 4-3.”Immediately after I gave Tendulkar caught by wicketkeeper Matt Prior off Andrew Flintoff I realised from his reaction that I had given a wrong decision,” Dar told . “On that ball, Flintoff was very close to bowling a no-ball and as I was looking at his foot, my concentration was disturbed.”Though he regretted the decision, Dar said he didn’t consider recalling Tendulkar as it was something he had never done before in his international career.”Since I had never called any batsman after giving a decision I did not call him back,” he said. “So, if I were to call Tendulkar I would also call the last man if given wrongly out. I knew that match was the decider. And I was upset after giving that decision. It was a tough match.”Dar said he had apologised to Tendulkar after the match. “After the game when players shake hands with the umpires, Tendulkar also shook my hands on the field. As he did that I said to him ‘hard luck’.”

Farhat leads Pakistan's fightback

Scorecard and ball-by-ball details
West Indies how they were out
Pakistan how they were out

Imran Farhat produced his second half-century of the match to lead Pakistan’s comeback © AFP

Just when it appeared as if West Indies had assumed a vice-like grip on Multan Test, Pakistan hit back through an assertive batting performance, leaving a draw the most likely result. Led by Lara’s cracking double-century, West Indies managed an imposing first-innings lead but the flat nature of the surface, and lack of a quality spinner, thwarted their bid to force home the advantage.Facing a 234-run deficit, Pakistan chose to smash their way out of trouble with three of their top-order batsmen easing to half-centuries. Imran Farhat’s stylish 70 not out was buttressed with aggressive, yet contrasting, half-centuries from the two Ys – Younis Khan and Mohammad Yousuf – and it would require a sensational collapse for either team to force a result from here on.Farhat’s was an innings of two halves. The first 64 deliveries he faced produced just 15 runs and, uncharacteristically, not a single boundary. He endured a few jitters – swishing at the air with his customary wafts outside off, uncertain about whether to play or leave – and often preferred the edge of the bat rather than the middle. The eye-catching part of the innings followed, with spanking cover-drives pinging the advertising hoardings. His innings should have ended on 44 but Shivnarine Chanderpaul, despite a fine attempt, couldn’t latch on to a smoked cover-drive. Once let off, there was no stopping him; the extravagant flourish at the end of each drive made them that much more elegant.He was probably helped early on by Younis’s urgency. The duo came together at the fall of the first wicket – Mohammad Hafeez couldn’t keep out a speedy incutter from Jerome Taylor, in a post-lunch spell where he incessantly targeted the stumps. Younis telegraphed his intentions the moment he entered, scampering a single off his first ball, attempting an ambitious pull off his second, and flicking to midwicket off his fourth. He didn’t hold back against the wide ones, cutting fiercely to the point boundary; with one such shot he became the tenth Pakistani batsman to cross 4000 Test runs.Aggressive fields helped – West Indies had no other option but to put fielders around the bat and hope for an edge – and the belter of a surface provided a perfect stage.Yousuf, the other half-centurion, managed the most fluent innings of the day. On his way to becoming the highest scorer in a calendar year, he simply carried on in his magnificent form, easing effortlessly into drives. He was lucky on 51, not offering a stroke and being rapped on the pads, but Daryl Harper, somewhat inexplicably, preferred to give him the benefit of the doubt. That moment of uncertainty over, he continued his torment.Pakistan’s bowlers found some joy as well, once Brian Lara had brought up his ninth Test double-century. He needed to be cautious early on in the day to counter the dangerous reverse-swing that Umar Gul and Shahid Nazir were generating. He brought up his double-century with a pushed three through cover-point and continued to bide his time against accurate bowling.On 216, though, when he was just one run short of the highest score by a West Indian batsman in Pakistan (Rohan Kanhai’s 217 at Lahore in 1958-59) he was tempted into a false stroke, inducing a leading edge off Kaneria to long-on. Kaneria went on to earn a pyrrhic victory, finishing with 5 for 181 while Abdul Razzaq, who was also taken apart yesterday, cleaned up the last two wickets.

Dravid: 'We're confident that Sachin will get it right'

Dravid and Chappell have found South Africa a far harder proposition than Sri Lanka © Getty Images

Rahul Dravid
On the pitch
It looks a good wicket. Too much was made of the pitch at Kolkata and I thought we didn’t bat well enough. Hopefully we will bounce back here but we have to take into account the dew factor that will play a role later on.On the Kolkata crowd
Luckily I was not fielding on the boundary line like others who had to put up with the abuses. I told the others jokingly that we are in good company, in the company of the great Sunil Gavaskar who too had to face a similar reception in Kolkata along with the 1983 World Cup winning team. If that side could get booed, I think we’re doing something right.On the form of his batsmen and pressure ahead of the game
We’d like to get off to good starts. Sachin [Tendulkar] has been looking really good at the nets and tomorrow he will be playing in front of his home crowd. We’re confident that he will get it right soon. There’s always pressure going into any game. South Africa have never won a series in India and there is pressure on them too. Both teams will be facing similar pressures.About the lop-sided nature of the games and the dew factor
The last three games have been one-sided contests with the side that’s bowling first dominating the game. The initiative has been taken away early and it’s been tough for the other team to come back. Maybe the dew factor has to be looked into and assessed. Converting day-night games into day games could be an option in the long-run.On the overall performance of the team since the start of the Sri Lanka series
We began the series against Sri Lanka on a very low ebb but the journey over the last few weeks has been great. It will surely be a period where we learnt how to become a better team. We need one big last effort tomorrow to level this series, but even if we don’t manage it we have done well. We played some tough cricket and I’ve been very happy with the spirit and atmosphere in the side.Greg ChappellOn whether they will continue to experiment
We will keep trying different things in different games. Sometimes they will look normal, at other times may look out of the ordinary. It’s a long journey to the 2007 World Cup and we would continue to do what needs to be done irrespective of what others think.On the benefits of playing a strong team like South Africa
It’s a very good thing that we have been challenged by a team like South Africa who play very good cricket. It’s a great challenge and a big learning experience for all of us. The benefits of this series would be seen in a few months or within the year. They are a good team and have come here on the back of a 20-match winning streak. We have come off a poor run in Sri Lanka and Zimbabwe. It’s not much use playing against weak teams and feeling content about winning.On Sachin Tendulkar and Virender Sehwag
I am very happy over Tendulkar’s comeback from injury. He has coped well with the work load. He’s been playing for 17 years and still has the same enthusiasm and the keenness to improve. He’s got great work ethics. Sehwag has had one good game like most others too. It will be helpful to him in the long run to bat in the middle order too. His batting has improved enormously, but we have not seen the best of Virender Sehwag yet, not by a long mile. He’s still in the development process. He’s ready to reach another new level, a higher one as batsman.

Malik and Younis blow away Hong Kong

Scorecard

Shoaib Malik and Younis Khan had a party at the expense of Hong Kong’s bowlers © AFP

Younis Khan and Shoaib Malik scored well-paced centuries, shared a 223-run partnership, and took Pakistan to 343 for 5, a score that ended the match as a contest at the half-way stage. Once this huge score was on the board, Hong Kong came under immense pressure and folded for 169, as Pakistan romped home by 173 runs. Persistent rain interruptions reduced the target to 339 from 47 overs, but this didn’t make the slightest bit of difference to the eventual result. This sobering loss ended Hong Kong’s brief association with one-day international cricket for the moment, as they were knocked out of the Asia Cup.Hong Kong’s best chance – and that was a minute one – lay in restricting Pakistan to less than 250. Their bowlers kept them in the match against Bangladesh, restricting them to 221, and a similar effort was needed to keep Pakistan quiet. And Khalid Khan, the left-arm seamer, snapped up both the openers and gave them a glimmer of hope. But all thoughts of restriction were squashed when Younis joined Malik and displayed a whippet-like urgency between the wickets and improvised with ease. Then came the torrent in the last 10 overs and the total went way beyond Hong Kong’s reach.Malik has been a handy customer while coming in lower down in the order and smashing it around towards the end, but hadn’t replicated the same success at No. 3. Yesterday he fell to a needless run-out, but he made sure he didn’t miss out today. He began with a flurry of boundaries, shifted to a lower gear for a short while in the middle overs before launching into an assault towards the end. Loose balls, which were readily available, weren’t spared and the run-rate was constantly hovering around the five-and-a-half per over mark.Younis, who has been in and out of the Pakistan side, also missed out yesterday and hadn’t scored a fifty for nearly a year. His cheeky glides and paddle-sweeps put the bowlers completely off their rhythm and the running between the wickets, along with Malik, kept them within sight of a 300-plus total. Younis, who made nearly 70 runs behind the wicket, swept consummately in the arc between fine-leg and midwicket. Around the 40-over mark, both batsmen shifted to clatter mode and kickstarted the barrage of fours and sixes.Malik, whose hundred came at a run-a-ball, finally fell for 118 as he was caught short of his crease by a direct hit (274 for 3). This was Malik’s third century in one-dayers and included ten fours and two towering sixes. Younis brought up his maiden one-day hundred a shade faster, off 99 balls, and went on a rampage soon after. Abdul Razzaq, an ideal batsman to have in such a situation, joined in the fun and helped propel the total past 300. Younis’s last 44 runs came in only 23 balls, before holing out to Nadeem at midwicket and the last 10 overs produced 105 runs.Chasing 344 is monumental in itself, but having to do so under murky skies with Mohammad Sami and Razzaq producing some unplayable balls makes it almost impossible. Hong Kong crawled along for most of the innings barring a cameo from Tabarak Dar in the middle. After Nasir Hameed was out to the third ball, Tim Smart and Alexander French shared a painful partnership, with French hardly looking for any scoring opportunities. Both were beaten on several occasions and Smart was finally out to Razzaq with Younis completing a sharp chance at second slip (45 for 2).Dar’s six boundaries, four of which were crisply struck, added a coating of vim to the lethargic afternoon. He went after anything short that Naved-ul-Hasan dished out and even dug out a yorker and sent it speeding to the long-off fence. Malik’s fuller one finally did him in as he was bowled trying to sweep from outside the off (95 for 3). French fell in the very next ball, playing on to Farhat, and that triggered a mini-procession. Farhat struck two more quick blows and Sami came back and pocketed the wicket of Ilyas Gul (102 for 7).Razzaq put in an improved performance after a lacklustre show yesterday but the extras bug haunted all the bowlers – they sent down 18 wides and seven no-balls. Manoj Cheruparambil and Afzaal Haider delayed the inevitable in fading light, before Malik wrapped up the tail and completed a great day at the office. Similar days, though, will be vital when the second round of matches begins on Wednesday.

St Cross aim to extend lead at Div 2 summit

St Cross Symondians chase their sixth successive win when they entertain Southern Electric Premier League, Division 2 strugglers Gosport Borough at the Royal Green Jackets Ground, Winchester, tomorrow, 1pm.Four points ahead of Old Tauntonians & Romsey and six clear of Easton & Martyr Worthy, St Cross are anxious to stay in front as the second-half of the league programme gets underway.Fresh from graduating with an Honours degree in Art, Ben Adams returns for St Cross, as does Marc Rees.All three contenders start favourites to win tomorrow, with OT’s entertaining Sparsholt at Romsey and Easton going to unchanged Burridge.Ian Tulk is missing for OT’s, but the absence of in-form Tim Richings will be a major blow for Sparsholt, whose four-match winning run was ended by Burridge last week.Lymington are at last back to full strength as they bid to halt a four-match losing sequence at Purbrook, who have lost all six matches since last season’s heady Premier 3 title triumph.Hursley Park go to United Services, where Hampshire’s Chris Tremlett, who took five Lymington wickets last week, may be looking to continue his injury return by getting some much needed batting practice.

Hodge ton leads Bushrangers

A gritty unbeaten century by Brad Hodge put Victoria in a comfortable position after day one of the Pura Cup cricket match against South Australia at Adelaide Oval today.Hodge battled tough conditions to be not out 100 at stumps as the Bushrangers reached 4-228.He was joined by Ian Harvey, who remained not out 29.Play was extended for an hour after three rain interruptions during the day and even when the lights were switched on, the atmosphere was dim.But the pair faced up well to the new ball late in the day, putting on a 53-run partnership with Hodge reaching his 13th first-class ton off 209 deliveries, including 12 fours.”It wasn’t my most glorious innings in the world,” Hodge said.”It’s good to get off to a good start. Last season I started off with an 85 not out against a full-strength New South Wales and that kicked me on my way, now this, it’s good for the team.”I struggled a bit because I’m a bit colour-blind. It got really dark.”With key strike bowlers Paul Wilson and Brett Swain out injured, SA youngster Paul Rofe (2-38) stepped up in only his fourth first-class match to make thebreakthrough for the Redbacks on the last ball before lunch.Jason Arnberger had reached 17 before he slashed at a delivery from the 20-year-old paceman, hitting the ball straight to Ben Higgins, who took a comfortable catch low to his left at cover point.The visitors added just two runs to their lunchtime total before Rofe struck again when Matthew Mott edged a catch to wicketkeeper Graham Manou to put Victoria at 2-47.Victorian opener Matthew Elliott looked dangerous, facing 119 balls and hitting five fours on his way to 42.But when Hodge hit a Mark Harrity delivery and the pair set off for a run, SA skipper Darren Lehmann pounced on the ball and returned it underarm to the ‘keepers end, catching Elliott out of his ground.Hodge then combined with Michael Klinger for 83 runs.After batting for more than an hour and facing 67 deliveries for just 13, Klinger picked up the pace after tea, adding another 22 from 44 balls, including four fours.But Klinger’s innings ended on 35 when he edged Harrity to the ‘keeper.Test paceman Jason Gillespie bowled well without reward, finishing on no wicket for 45 from 23 overs while Harrity finished with 1-65 from 21 overs.

Ervine ton gives Zimbabwe series

Scorecard and ball by ball detailsFile Photo – Craig Ervine hit nine fours and two sixes during his unbeaten 101•Associated Press

An unbeaten century from Craig Ervine guided Zimbabwe to a series win over Ireland in the second one-day international at the Harare Sports Club. Ervine batted for more than 40 overs in stifling heat to set up Zimbabwe’s five-wicket win with an over and a half to spare. He shared in a 98-run third wicket partnership with Sean Williams that laid the platform for Zimbabwe, after which Tino Mutombodzi helped to keep things ticking over and Sikandar Raza’s 29-ball 33 took the game away from Ireland. All the while, Ervine continued to pick gaps and the odd boundary, bringing up his ton and the end of the match with his ninth four.

Ireland coach calls for more fixtures

John Bracewell, the Ireland coach, has said that his side needs more fixtures against quality opposition to keep improving. Ireland ran Zimbabwe close in the first two games of their ongoing ODI series but lost both in the penultimate over.
“At the moment Zimbabwe have shown greater composure at the pressure points and that counts for a lot,” Bracewell said. “They have been playing a lot of tough cricket for a period of time, and that really helps you deal with pressure points. You have just come out of a series against Pakistan, you had a competitive series against New Zealand. You are getting used to competing because you are playing a lot more cricket.
“We have recognized that as a country, we need to have more fixtures, exactly like how you guys are doing – having series, being competitive, playing day in and day out, and on surfaces that are going to test you.
“We have been an event-based country. We fire up for World Cups and that is pretty much all we get. We get fragments of games in between that. We now need to play basically around the clock like all the international teams. The gap will narrow on teams the more cricket we get.”

As the match neared its conclusion, the result seemed a foregone conclusion and the question was whether or not Ervine could reach his ton within the limited runs remaining. The jovial, celebratory atmosphere in the ground was a far cry from the pressure cooker Ervine had entered into when Zimbabwe lost both of their openers within the first nine overs of their chase.Chamu Chibhabha and Richmond Mutumbami had approached their task with attacking intent, but when they fell in consecutive overs the Ireland attack had their tails up and a clear opening with Zimbabwe at 51 for 2 in the ninth over. The response from the left-handed pair of Ervine and Sean Williams was to go on the counterattack, and Ervine motored into the 20s with a flurry of boundaries, the pick of which was a shimmy-and-swipe off George Dockrell that flew high over long off.Williams, meanwhile, used the sweep to particularly good effect and brought up the fifty partnership with a one-kneed swat to the long-leg boundary. He continued to be proactive against spin, but eventually perished playing one shot too many when he lifted offspinner Andrew McBrine straight to Ed Joyce at long on. Zimbabwe were 149 for 3 then, and Ireland might have surged once more but Mutombodzi, elevated up the order, picked up where Williams left off to keep Zimbabwe ticking over.At the other end, Ervine was in cruise control, setting himself to bat right through the innings and anchor Zimbabwe’s chase. An inspired piece of fielding from George Dockrell in the covers eventually got rid of Mutombodzi in the 37th over, and had Niall O’Brien been able to hold a thick edge off Ervine’s bat in the next over, standing up to the stumps to John Mooney, Ireland might have been able to wrest back control of the match.Just as the pressure threatened to build once more, Ervine found a brace of boundaries on the leg side off Tim Murtagh and then moved into the 90s with a clean six down the ground followed by a controlled sweep for one off Paul Stirling’s offspin. When Raza kicked his own batting into overdrive, it seemed Ervine might not reach his hundred, but he departed with 13 still needed and Elton Chigumbura left it to Ervine to take Zimbabwe home – and reach his second ODI hundred in a successful chase – with his eighth and ninth fours off John Mooney.His efforts bettered an industrious day with the bat for Ireland. They had been put in to bat by Zimbabwe in the morning, but responded in bellicose fashion. Paul Stirling weathered the early loss of his captain and opening partner in his own inimitable style, rushing into the 70s at close to a run a ball before he was trapped lbw by Raza.Niall O’Brien continued the fight with a half-century that included three huge sixes, and Gary Wilson ensured their good work was not undone as he marshaled Ireland’s charge at the death. Zimbabwe picked up regular wickets, but Wilson found even more regular boundaries as Ireland reached an imposing 268 for 7. But after an early wobble in their chase, Zimbabwe managed to stay ahead of the asking rate for most of the afternoon thanks to Ervine and a vocal home crowd cheered their moral-boosting victory.

Richardson's five scripts dramatic Australian comeback


Scorecard and ball-by-ball details4:58

Agarkar: India relying heavily on top three

In turn imperious then inept, India tripped over in sight of the finish line at Manuka Oval to gift Australia a fourth victory from as many matches. John Hastings and Kane Richardson were the architects of a staggering passage of implosion by the visitors – losing 9 for 46 after centuries from Virat Kohli and Shikhar Dhawan had taken India to a mere 72 runs shy of victory with 75 balls remaining.Hastings and Richardson claimed a combined 5 for 17 from 27 balls to ensure the afternoon work of Aaron Finch, David Warner, Steven Smith and Glenn Maxwell was not wasted, on a Manuka surface the Australian captain had hoped would become more difficult to bat on under lights.For a time Smith was facing Australia’s first defeat of the summer and an end to their record streak of ODI wins, but he marshalled his men grandly as India self-destructed. Their loss maintained another proud record for the hosts – never have Australia failed to defend a tally of greater than 300 on home soil.There was one unsettling factor in India’s chase: Ajinkya Rahane suffered split webbing in his right hand when fielding and a spokesman said he would bat “if required”. He did not come in at his usual No. 4 position; the resultant shuffling up of MS Dhoni, Gurkeerat Singh Mann and Ravindra Jadeja played some part in the hectic collapse that was to follow.Dhawan had shrugged off an indifferent start to the series by pushing on to a determined century, but it was Kohli who once again exhibited his genius in a run chase. This was his 15th ODI hundred when batting second, and he appeared destined to take India home. When he spooned the first ball of Richardson’s ultimately pivotal spell to mid off, Kohli stood motionless at the crease in disbelief.In front of a sold-out crowd of 10,922 as Canberra pitches for an inaugural Test match next summer, Warner and Finch added 187 to set the perfect platform before Smith and Maxwell added plenty of late-innings pyrotechnics to pile up 111 from the last 10 overs of the innings.Batting under lights for the first time in the series, Rohit and Dhawan had been faced with the unexpected sight of Nathan Lyon taking the new ball in his first ODI since late 2014. Whatever Smith had hoped to achieve by having Lyon on early, two overs that cost 23 were not in his plan. Those early runs allowed India’s chase to gain momentum against the new ball, something hardly scotched when Rohit gloved Richardson down the leg side to be nicely held by Matthew Wade.Kohli dispatched two boundaries in the space of his first four balls, and five more allowed him to shimmy to his 50 in a mere 34 deliveries. He took a particular liking to James Faulkner, who was hammered for 29 from the 16 balls he delivered to India’s Test captain. Dhawan took a similarly heavy toll on Lyon, and when George Bailey’s claim for a low catch off Dhawan was found to be unfounded there seemed no other conclusion than an Indian victory.By the middle of the 38th over India needed just 72 runs from 75 balls with nine wickets standing. But in his last over of another exemplary spell, Hastings was rewarded for keeping things tight: Dhawan sliced a slower ball to backward point, then two balls later MS Dhoni touched a leg cutter behind. The next Lyon over cost only one and Richardson, replacing Hastings, had Kohli caught at mid-off by Steven Smith off the first ball. A pitch and equation that had seemed all too straightforward for set batsmen now began more difficult proportions for new ones, and Smith closed in admirably with tight fields that also sought wickets.Twice Smith was rewarded with catches at slip, the first an excellent low snaffle to get Rahane, while Lyon’s improvement across the night was shown by the fact his final three overs reaped 1 for 15 after his first seven cost 61. India’s required run rate blew out, runs became scarce, and by the end the Australians were toasting a victory that had seemed unfathomable merely an hour before.There had been less such ebbs and flows when the hosts batted. Warner did not take long to find his range on return to the team. He had a sighter – 3 off 12 – before the new white balls began pinging off his bat with regularity. Warner launched Bhuvneshwar for a trio of boundaries in the fourth over and exposed the variable lengths and lines of the visiting attack. Three more balls sent to the fence in the next over, off Umesh Yadav, and the tone of the innings had been set.It was to be further underlined when Finch and Warner both inflicted injuries on those in the path of their pummelling, the umpire Richard Kettleborough limping off the field after a heavy blow to the leg, before Bhuvneshwar needed treatment for a finger stung by Warner’s straight drive.From this point Warner was in complete command while Finch rode happily in his slipstream, their union only broken when the Australian vice-captain took a big swing at Ishant Sharma and dragged on, for 93. Even in this dismissal a difference between Australia and India could be seen – a looming hundred made no difference to how Warner would play.There was something a little more hesitant in the batting of Mitchell Marsh, promoted to No. 3 for seemingly no other reason than to grant him some time in the middle now that the series is decided. The responsibility appeared to weigh heavily on Marsh, who battled for timing and also to rotate the strike, even as Finch accelerated to his second century in successive ODI innings on this ground.Finch’s increasing sense of urgency resulted in a skied pull shot well held by Ishant, to bring Smith to the middle with 12.3 overs remaining. The gulf in batting touch between Marsh and Smith was swiftly illustrated as Smith took no time at all to get into stride, one pratfall when trying to sweep Jadeja the lone exception. Marsh eventually mistimed a high ball to long-on, prompting another batting order tweak as Maxwell joined Smith.Smith skipped to his fifty from 27 balls before falling to another skier. A hustle-and-bustle last four overs reaped 47 even as regular wickets fell and the final over cost 18 before Maxwell was out to the final ball, hobbling from the middle and later being subbed off the field after he was struck on the right knee by the ball. India fancied themselves in the chase, but for many a long year they will ask themselves a simple question: “How?”

Bracewell backs Twenty20 revolution

John Bracewell hopes Twenty20 cricket attracts more children to play the game © Getty Images

John Bracewell believes the Twenty20 format could revolutionise cricket in the same way one-day internationals have changed the game over the past few decades. Bracewell returned to Christchurch on Tuesday after New Zealand’s semi-final exit at the ICC World Twenty20 in South Africa and he expressed his satisfaction with the shortest form of the game.”I think it’s got an enormous financial future and I think it has some really good benefits for the game in general in terms of the broad base of the game,” Bracewell told the . “It must have a positive spin-off on kids with the style in which it’s played. There is a great opportunity to revolutionise the whole game of cricket.”Bracewell said 50-over cricket had changed the way Test matches were played and there would be a similar flow-on from Twenty20.”I think this will help the entertainment factor of cricket,” he said. “Test cricket we value greatly, 50-over cricket is the financial driver of the game and now we have Twenty20 which has proved immensely popular.”

A bar-brawl, not a breeze

Paul Collingwood: fighting for his team and his place © Getty Images

After his century at Brisbane in last week’s first Test, Justin Langer told the assembled scribes how grateful he was to have been “under the pump” throughout his Test career. “I’ve had a lot of distractions and people questioning my ability,” he said, “but it’s meant that I’ve had to eliminate all those distractions and become very mentally strong.”A variation on the same theme could apply to Paul Collingwood. England’s perpetual understudy has risen above the doubters to become the linchpin of their batting, no less, and yet still it seems he doesn’t quite fit. Today’s nuggetty knock of 98 not out was typical of the man. At times, in partnership with Ian Bell, he became so immersed in the business of survival that his vigil seemed almost counterproductive. And yet he endured, in the manner that few of his team-mates have come close to matching. And that, ultimately, was all that counted.”Mentally, I think he’s a gutsy cricketer, and I think that’s the difference between him and others who have gone out there in the past,” said Bell, who added an invaluable 60 to England’s cause. “He gives it everything, and he’s not frightened of tough situations. He’s shown already on this tour that when it’s tough he’ll get in there and fight for England.”That’s because Collingwood, like Ashley Giles, has been fighting public perception much longer than he’s been fighting the Australians. He is the fall-guy in England’s batting line-up, the man who makes way when everyone is fit and available, and that inherent insecurity is what keeps him honest in even the toughest of situations. “I’m feeling more secure than I have done in the past,” he said at Lord’s last summer, and that was after reeling off the small matter of 186 against Pakistan.Collingwood is now in his sixth year as an international cricketer, and yet at no stage has he been allowed access to the comfort zone. His Test debut, in Sri Lanka in 2003-04, came as a replacement for Nasser Hussain. His recall at The Oval last summer, after 24 Tests on the sidelines, was as a poor man’s Simon Jones. His retention in Pakistan came about through a combination of Michael Vaughan’s knee injury and Andrew Strauss’s paternity leave. And his omission for Brisbane would have been a done deal had Marcus Trescothick not flown home early.But in the midst of his uncertainty, he has finally started to forge a tidy Test career. This is his 13th consecutive Test since his breakthrough game at Lahore, exactly 12 months ago. On that occasion he scored 96 and 80 in a desperately lost cause, and responded to the realisation that he had blown a golden opportunity by creaming a glorious unbeaten 134 against India at Nagpur, in his next Test. He’s still two runs from achieving a similar feat at Adelaide, but the mental fortitude of the man is already on full display.Australia still think he’s weak though, which is something of a paradox. He was suckered by Warne’s mind games at Brisbane, and Stuart Clark today admitted that Australia would be climbing straight into his head when play resumes tomorrow morning. “Batters get a bit tense in the nineties,” he warned with a glint in his eye. “Hopefully we’ll go there in the morning and keep him out there for a couple of overs and get him out.”All of a sudden though, Collingwood epitomises England’s position in this series. He’s the man with his back to the wall; the man who – along with Bell in 2005 – didn’t quite fit in in the Trafalgar Square celebrations and the mass awarding of MBEs. When Andrew Flintoff instigated a team meeting on the eve of the game, and called for his players to show a bit of “fight”, you can bet it was Collingwood’s inspiration that he was seeking to draw on.In England last summer, it was all too easy – a fit and focussed squad with a sprinkling of destiny guiding their steps. This time it’s different. It’s a bar brawl, not a breeze. That should suit Collingwood down to the ground. He’s not a man who is used to getting things easily.