Johnson flies to Melbourne for Pura Cup match

Mitchell Johnson will not be carrying the drinks for Australia © Getty Images

Mitchell Johnson has made a last-minute trip to Melbourne to play in Queensland’s Pura Cup match against Victoria after being named Australia’s 12th man for the first Test at the Gabba. Johnson will get some valuable first-class bowling time in the four-day game starting at the MCG on Friday.Queensland will be without Matthew Hayden and the now-injured Shane Watson, both of whom were members of Australia’s original 13-man Test squad. Craig Philipson, who is coming off 73 from 74 balls in Queensland’s Ford Ranger Cup game against Western Australia on Friday, has come in to the line-up.Ashley Noffke and the fast bowler Chris Swan, who took five wickets in his Pura Cup debut last month, have also been included in the squad. Noffke has not played a Pura Cup game this season after hurting his back on the eve of the Bulls’ first match against Tasmania.The injury crisis in Victoria’s fast-bowling stocks has been eased slightly with Shane Harwood to return from a side strain. Harwood has replaced Mick Lewis in the squad after Lewis injured his hip while bowling in Victoria’s draw with Tasmania last week.Harwood hurt his side in the Bushrangers’ season-opening clash with Western Australia last month and joined his fellow fast bowlers Allan Wise, Dirk Nannes, Rob Cassell and Peter Siddle on the casualty list. Victoria have also brought in the uncapped left-hand batsman Robert Quiney to replace Shane Warne, who is in Brisbane with the Australia team.The Victoria captain Cameron White said his team had moved on since their previous encounter with the Bulls, in last season’s Pura Cup final when Queensland declared at 6 for 900 and won by an innings and 354 runs. Both teams have one win from their first three games in 2006-07. “This is a new season, a different ground and a fresh opportunity for us,” White said. “Our batting has been going well and hopefully Shane’s inclusion will give us more firepower given Mick was forced to sit out most of the Tassie game with injury.”Victoria Pura Cup squad Nick Jewell, Lloyd Mash, Brad Hodge, David Hussey, Robert Quiney, Cameron White (capt), Andrew McDonald, Jon Moss, Adam Crosthwaite (wk), Clinton McKay, Shane Harwood, Gerard Denton.Queensland Pura Cup squad Jimmy Maher (capt), Lachlan Stevens, Martin Love, Clinton Perren, Andrew Symonds, Craig Philipson, James Hopes, Chris Hartley (wk), Andy Bichel, Mitchell Johnson, Daniel Doran, Ashley Noffke, Chris Swan.Queensland FR Cup squad Jimmy Maher (capt), James Hopes, Clinton Perren, Andrew Symonds, Craig Philipson, Michael Buchanan, Chris Hartley (wk), Andy Bichel, Chris Simpson, Ashley Noffke, Scott Brant, Chris Swan.

SS Das and Halhadar Das lift East Zone

ScorecardHalf-centuries by Shiv Sunder Das and Halhadar Das lifted East Zone to 265 for 7 on the first day at the Wankhede Stadium in Mumbai against South Zone. SS Das, the former Indian opener, scored a patient 82 at the top before Halhadar Das stepped in and led a lower-order revival after East lost half their side for 134.After they chose to bat first, East lost opener Arindam Das early, leg before to the seamer Vinay Kumar, and the top order failed to construct sizeable partnerships. NSC Aiyappa, the Karnataka seamer, struck twice in quick succession to reduce East to 54 for 3 before SS Das and Manish Vardhan added 48. SS Das was involved in stands of 32 and 36 with Palash Das and Halhadar respectively before edging offspinner R Ashwin to M Vijay at the slips for 82. He faced 160 balls and hit 12 fours in his knock.Halhadar and Tushar Saha settled down to construct the biggest stand of the day – 71 – before Saha fell to a brisk 29 off 39 balls to the seamer P Vijay Kumar. Halhadar remained unbeaten on 78 with Debasis Mohanty for company.
ScorecardMohammad Kaif top scored with 64 to propel Central Zone to a healthy position at 179 for 3 before England Lions picked up quick wickets in the last session to restrict the hosts to 238 for 7 by the end of the opening day’s play at Vadodara.Walking in at 70 for 2, Kaif struck 13 fours in his 121-ball knock to charge Central before he fell to the legspinner Adil Rashid, triggering a mini-collapse. Monty Panesar prised out Sanjay Bangar, the former India International, and Harshad Rawle and Mahesh Rawat fell in quick succession.Earlier, Central were off to a steady start, reaching 54 runs without any loss, before Steve Kirby removed Faiz Fazal (37) in the 19th over. Five overs later, Onions made further inroads, but the opener Vineet Saxena settled the nerves, adding 54 runs with Kaif.Saxena fell after scoring a 116-ball 34, but Bangar nad Kaif pushed the total to 179 before Rashid got Kaif to bring the Lions roaring back into the game. But Sanjib Sanyal, who has a first-class average of 43.35, guided Central to the close without any further damage.

Surrey start with a bang

As the champions Sussex struggled against MCC at Lord’s, Surrey, their likely title rivals, made an authoritative start to their season against Oxford UCCE at The Parks. A strong side racked up 452 for 5 with three players scoring hundreds. Mark Ramprakash made 113 before retiring hurt, and two of the younger faces, Scott Newman and James Benning, who were the other centurions.Meanwhile, Lee Daggett took 8 for 94 as Durham’s students made life difficult for their professional counterparts at Chester-le-Street. Daggett, 21 and on Lancashire’s books, had a previous first-class best of 2 for 95 and with an average of over 100. Today, though, he almost single-handedly restricted Durham to 311, with Andrew Pratt rescuing his side from 129 for 5 with 67. The students closed on 24 for 1 in reply.Loughborough UCCE also made a decent fist of things, against a Somerset side including Andrew Caddick at Taunton. They reached 257 for 6 with Christopher Nash leading the way. He ended on 54 not out as Caddick finished with figures of 2 for 62.Elsewhere, though, the university sides struggled. Nadeem Malik took 6 for 41 as Worcestershire blasted out Cardiff UCCE for 118 at New Road. The two Stephens, Peters and Moore, then progressed to 21 not out each as Worcestershire closed on 44 for 0. At Fenner’s, Will Jefferson stood out for Essex against Cambridge UCCE with 144, including 19 fours. Jefferson put on 144 with fellow opener Aftab Habib, who scored 54. Ronnie Irani, Essex’s captain, put an end to his side’s extended net, declaring on 292 for 5. Adrian McCoubrey then struck twice before the close as Cambridge faltered to 19 for 2.Christopher Taylor and Simon Guy ensured that Craig White’s first day as Yorkshire captain went smoothly. They put on 200, with Taylor scoring 150, to help Yorkshire to 401 against Bradford/Leeds UCCE at Headingley. John Blain and Victor Craven then grabbed two wickets apiece as the students lost their way, stumbling to 57 for 5 at stumps. Lucky for them it’s not first-class.

McCullum to be backup opener in England

John Bracewell wants Brendon McCullum as a backup Test opener ahead of part-time openers James Marshall and Peter Fulton © Getty Images
 

Brendon McCullum has agreed to be a backup opener in the Test series in England as long as he can hand over his wicketkeeping duties to newcomer Gareth Hopkins. Though the squad includes other part-time openers, Peter Fulton and James Marshall, New Zealand coach John Bracewell said youngster Aaron Redmond will be given a chance and if he gets injured, McCullum will take over.”Brendon would play as a batter only and Hoppy [Hopkins] would come into the side as a keeper-batsman,” Bracewell told the New Zealand daily . “It would be unfair to ask Brendon to do both roles. I’ve spoken to him about that and said only injury will force a change. Brendon’s response was: if that’s the case he would prefer to do the one job.”Bracewell said the team management wanted Redmond to simply play off the back foot and defend, like former opener Mark Richardson did. “Aaron’s accomplished off the back foot and can rotate the strike and that was all Richardson could do. He [Aaron] is a guy who has taken on the opening position to become a Black Cap.”With no third specialist opener in the squad, Redmond is certain to make his Test debut this May. “The bottom line is, if you are looking for security, you can’t offer more to a new player than a year’s full wage [New Zealand contract],” Bracewell said. In preparation for the tour, Bracewell is getting the squad members to play with Duke balls used in England. “We ordered some in and the guys have been bowling with the Duke balls for the last month to make sure we are used to them and we’ve found out a couple of things about them.”

Summer's coming – but the West Indies aren't

Australia’s four-yearly cycle of hosting Test tours by West Indian teams has been broken, following the announcement that New Zealand and Pakistan will be next summer’s main visitors. The strategic shift in mindset means that England is now the last remaining country guaranteed a Test series in Australia every four years.In another significant development the VB triangular one-day series, now entering its 26th year, will be the briefest on record. Each team will play only six preliminary matches, instead of the usual eight, with the competition wrapped up in a little over three weeks.Insatiable cricket watchers need not despair, however; Australia will battle New Zealand for a new prize, the Chappell-Hadlee Trophy, which is to become an annual neighbourhood shootout of three one-day games. New Zealand will host it the following year.”The Chappell-Hadlee Trophy will become as eagerly anticipated as other great annual sporting events such as the Bledisloe Cup,” predicted New Zealand Cricket’s chief executive Martin Snedden. Said James Sutherland, his Australian counterpart: “Chappells and Hadlees have been involved in a lot of the trans-Tasman cricket rivalry that goes back 50 years but, inparticular, goes back to the start of one-day international cricket 30 years ago.”Almost as ancient is the custom of Caribbean teams coming to Australia at least every four years. Although West Indies will later join Australia and Pakistan for the VB Series, next summer’s five Tests will be split between New Zealand (two) and Pakistan (three). Thus ends a tradition that began with Clive Lloyd’s raw but soon-to-be-ravishing West Indians of 1975-76.During those years the two teams have contested some powerhouse series, both gripping (1981-82, 1992-93, 1996-97) and one-sided (1975-76, 1979-80, 1984-85, 1988-89, 2000-01). Never has it been remotely boring. The West Indies’ absence next summer is officially an outcome of the undulating global timetable, a clash of fixtures, and supposedly has nothingto do with their dwindling box-office appeal. But you’d love to be a fly on the Cricket Australia wall. They were whitewashed 5-0 under Jimmy Adams in 2000-01, losing twice by an innings and twice inside three days. Wisden Australia called it a tour of “unrelenting misery”: their batting was “feeble in the extreme”, their bowlers “never looked consistently menacing”and the fielding was “sloppily amateurish.”Thrashed 3-0 by England recently, things are hardly looking up. They will return in 2005-06, along with South Africa, for three Tests – including one at Hobart’s Bellerive Oval – which was lopped off the calendar today for the third summer in a row. The Kiwis, meanwhile, are back for the second time in four years. It is a sign of strange times when New Zealand, traditionallythe uncharismatic ducklings of world cricket, are considered a more mouthwatering prospect than West Indies.The decision to trim a little flab off the VB Series is equally intriguing. Only 341,426 spectators attended last summer’s tournament – the third-smallest crowds ever and umpteen grandstands shy of the 553,730 who went along in the 1982-83 heyday of the old Benson & Hedges World Series Cup.Administrators have brainstormed tirelessly over ways to brighten up the competition: we’ve endured bonus-point systems, pop musical accompaniments, roped-in boundaries, draconian wide and bouncer laws, two Australian sides and endless costume changes. Perhaps they have fiddled too much; perhaps the tournament’s freewheeling, wild-swinging spontaneity got lost somewhere. Ultimately there’s only so much you can do with a limited, and limited-overs, product.

Kaneria seals Essex victory

Kent closed the third day against Sussex at Canterbury needing another 89 runs to climb to the summit of Division One of the County Championship. But they will have their work cut out, after slumping to 97 for 6 on a day in which 20 wickets tumbled. Kent had begun the day on 323 for 6 in their first innings and handily placed to claim a first-innings lead. But the Pakistani pairing of Mushtaq Ahmed and Naved-ul-Hasan cut them down for 348, a deficit of 30. Sussex in reply stumbled to 155 all out, with Amjad Khan taking 4 for 39, but they were back on top by the close. James Kirtley whipped out two early wickets before Mushtaq and Naved struck twice each.

Danish Kaneria took 6 for 74 in Northamptonshire’s second innings at Chelmsford, to set Essex up for a ten-wicket win. Northants were always up against it after conceding 506 in Essex’s first innings, and though Ben Phillips and Damien Wright delayed the inevitable for a while with a pair of half-centuries, as soon as the follow-on had been enforced the end was nigh. At 202 for 2, Northants were looking decent prospects for a draw, but Usman Afzaal and Bilal Shafayat fell in quick succession and the rest came meekly. Essex needed just two deliveries in the fourth innings to wrap up their win.

Indian women comfortably placed

India 143 for 3 (Jain 55) trail New Zealand 201 for 9 dec (Tiffen 66*) by 58 runsScorecard
India established their stranglehold over New Zealand on the second day of the one-off women’s Test at Vapi. New Zealand’s lower order were rallied by a determined 66 from Haidee Tiffin, made in more than five and a half hours. A ninth-wicket partnership of 33 with Louise Milliken saw New Zealand past the 200 mark.Neetu David and Nooshin Al Khadeer were the most successful Indian bowlers with three wickets each. Seventy-two overs were left on the second day when India began their chase. Anju Jain hit a fine half-century to give India the advantage.The Indian reply showed more application after a shaky start, and they finished the day at a comfortable position of 143 for 3. Sunetra Paranjpe, one of the openers, was forced to retire hurt very early on when she injured her shoulder having been forced to dive back into her crease to avoid being run out. Anjum Chopra hung around for 71 balls without too much of a contribution. But a 65-run partnership between Jain, the other opener, and Mithali Raj put India on a firm footing. Both struck four boundaries apiece and hustled the singles with a great deal of urgency.However, both fell as stumps approached and New Zealand made sure they were still in the contest. Raj was unlucky to get a leading edge to a wide, full ball down leg-side and was caught at mid-wicket. Hemlata Kala and Jhulan Goswami were at the crease when stumps were drawn. New Zealand had a good last session with the ball and would look to carry on in a similar vein tomorrow. As far as India are concerned, application will be the buzzword.Rebecca Steele, the left-arm spiner, was the pick of the New Zealanders, bowling Chopra, the former Indian captain, with a ball turning back into the left-hander from wide outside off stump. She also had Jain’s wicket, caught and bowled.

Anderson back in England squad

James Anderson: back in the squad© Getty Images

England have recalled James Anderson into their squad for the third Test at Trent Bridge which starts on Thursday.Anderson pulled out of the side for the Leeds Test which a heel injury. Scans showed that there was no serious damage, and he will undergo a net session at Old Trafford tomorrow and, assuming that he suffers no adverse reaction, he will then travel to Nottingham.Paul Collingwood, who was in the squad for the first two Tests, has been released to play for Durham against Yorkshire in the County Championship.England squad Marcus Trescothick, Andrew Strauss, Mark Butcher, Michael Vaughan (capt), Graham Thorpe, Andrew Flintoff, Geraint Jones (wk), Ashley Giles, Martin Saggers, Matthew Hoggard, Stephen Harmison, James Anderson.

Ockbrook in quarter-final after thrilling win

Graham Lloyd’s century for Bootle proved to be in vain© Getty Images

The wet weather certainly hasn’t dampened the spirits of the sides hoping to progress in this year’s Cockspur Cup, the England & Wales Cricket Board’s premier club knockout competition, with Ockbrook & Washbrook, Barnt Green and Doncaster Town all through to the quarter-finals after winning their matches last Sunday.Waltham gave their quarter-final hopes a boost by comprehensively defeating Saffron Walden, the champions in 2002, in an all-Essex encounter. They restricted Walden to 111 for 9 in 45 overs, with Ata-ur-Rehman, who played 13 Tests and 30 one-dayers for Pakistan, taking 4 for 17 in nine overs. Waltham completed an emphatic victory in just 20.4 overs, with Arshad Ali making 82 in 72 balls. They will now play Teddington for a spot in the quarter-final against either Taunton or Kibworth.Robbie Hodges helped Finchley to 250 for 5 against Hampstead, making 84. He was well supported by Keerthi Ranasinghe, a former Sri Lankan international one-day player, who smashed 76 from only 50 balls. Faced with such an imposing total, Hampstead fell well short, and were bowled out for 193. Mark Harvey, Hampstead’s captain, was the only major contributor, scoring 70. Finchley will play Havant this Sunday, and should they win that game, an away quarter-final game at High Wycombe will follow.Following their demolition of the Vauxhall Mallards, Barnt Green, from Birmingham, dismissed Ormskirk for a paltry 83. Richard Illingworth, the former Worcestershire and England slow left-armer, sent down his nine overs for a miserly 10 runs, and took three wickets. He was ably supported by Gavin Haynes, another former Worcestershire man, who picked up 2 for 15. Barnt Green will be sure of a tougher challenge in their quarter-final game against Doncaster Town, who thrashed Barrow by 180 runs.Batting first, Doncaster made 243 all out in 44.5 overs, with Simon Widdup and Andrew Renison both scoring half-centuries. Paul Stokoe then took 4 for 18 in seven overs as Barrow were bowled out for just 63 in 25.1 overs.Ockbrook & Washbrook, a Derby side, beat Bootle, from Liverpool, in a thrilling encounter at home. Ockbrook made a formidable total of 267 for 8 in 45 overs, built around a solid 83 by John Owen, the former Lancashire batsman, and a spectacular 41 off 17 balls by Ian Darlington.Graham Lloyd, the son of David, the England-coach-turned-commentator, stroked a masterly 103 for Bootle, holding the batting together after they had collapsed to 123 for 6. He added 102 with Ian Cockbain for the seventh wicket, and Bootle went into the last five overs needing 43 to win with three wickets in hand. They lost two more wickets in the next three overs, but in the penultimate over of the match Charlie Lamb clubbed Lian Wharton for four sixes to keep Bootle in the game. However, he was bowled swinging at the first ball of the last over, bowled by Charlie Windmill, handing victory, as well as a place in the quarter-finals, to Ockbrook.The draw for the Cockspur Cup quarter-finals is as follows:
Grange or South Northumberland v Ockbrook & Washbrook
Barnt Green v Doncaster Town
High Wycombe v Havant or Finchley
Kibworth or Taunton v Waltham or Teddington

India fight back to bowl out South Africa

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

Graeme Smith led South Africa’s confident start with a composed 69 © Getty Images
 

It took nine days for the series to finally witness an absorbing battle between bat and ball. While Chennai produced a featherbed and Ahmedabad saw a track with generous sprinklings of green, Kanpur laid out a crackling surface that assisted turn. South Africa made the most of winning the toss, grinding out 265 at the end of a tense first day, but India’s spinners, with some good support from Ishant Sharma, ensured they remained in the hunt.A bone-dry pitch with conspicuous cracks gradually deteriorated through the day. Graeme Smith and Hashim Amla thrived when conditions were best for batting, steering South Africa to 152 for 1, before India clawed their way back through turn and bounce. Seven of the ten wickets fell to spinners, both specialist and part-time, but plucky contributions from the lower order stretched the score past 250. With the ball stopping on the batsmen, and a few starting to stay low, it could well turn into a match-winning total.South Africa ensured they didn’t miss out on scoring opportunities. Smith led the early charge and the plucky duo of AB de Villiers and Mark Boucher made valuable contributions down the order. None of the batsmen were completely assured at the crease – they survived vociferous appeals every once in a while and the ball regularly beat the outside edge – but made sure they scored at a healthy clip.India’s shoddy fielding hurt them, as did their inability to sustain pressure. Barring Harbhajan Singh, who was miserly throughout the day, the rest regularly doled out loose deliveries that allowed the batsmen to break free. Both Piyush Chawla, in his second Test, and Ishant struggled with their accuracy and a number of misfields only hurt them further. How Anil Kumble would have wished to be out in the middle rather than nursing a groin injury back in the dressing room.Kumble’s absence, for the first time since December 2003, meant that Mahendra Singh Dhoni became the first wicketkeeper to captain India. He didn’t have a great start, though, losing the toss and then watching his faster bowlers squander the new ball. Sreesanth had a perilously close lbw appeal turned down in the fourth ball of the match – against Neil McKenzie, who shouldered arms to one that came in – but didn’t go on to make the batsmen play enough. Ishant’s first six overs cost 35 and allowed South Africa’s openers to lay a solid base.

Hashim Amla scored 51 before Ishant Sharma removed him © Getty Images
 

Sreesanth didn’t cause too many flutters through the day but Ishant came back with renewed enthusiasm. Managing reverse-swing at a pace close to 140kph, he broke through Amla’s defences during his mid-afternoon spell. He returned late in the day to nip out Boucher, with one that jagged back and kept low, and polished off Paul Harris with one that uprooted leg stump.The spinners, though, had most of the say. Chawla created the first breakthrough, beating McKenzie in flight and luring him out of the crease, while Yuvraj foxed Smith with one that fizzed off the surface. It was a crucial wicket, especially because of the confidence with which Smith was handling the spinners. He appeared to have sussed up the situation perfectly – clattering the loose balls and showing the temperament to overcome the nervy moments. Along with Amla, who milked the spinners with wristy manoeuvres, he was threatening to take the game away.Yuvraj, though, should have had Smith with his very first ball, when the batsman was on 50. Turning one across Smith, he caught him on the shuffle with a ball that would have gone on to rattle leg stump. Undeterred with the decision, Yuvraj struck a few overs later and triggered a mini-collapse – Amla, who had added 91 with Smith, was undone by Ishant’s reverse-swing, deflecting a pacy ball onto his stumps, and Kallis lasted only seven balls, playing on to the stumps to Harbhajan.The rest of the day was a cat-and-mouse battle – South Africa’s middle order snaffling runs at the slightest chance, the spinners beating the bat, appeals flying and puffs of dust appearing on the pitch. Ashwell Prince was bogged down by 21 dot balls in a row while de Villiers refused to be tied down, doing his best to use his feet against the spinners. Boucher held the lower order together – with Morne Morkel and Harris chipping in – but just when he appeared to shut India out, the bowlers mopped up the tail. Harbhajan ended with 3 for 52 in a marathon 32-over effort but on another day, with more luck, he could have easily doubled the wickets tally.

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