Learning disability

Experience and youthful exuberance combined to swamp Bangladesh© Getty Images

There’s a macabre inevitability to the Bangladeshi batting that reminds you of the trashy tomato-ketchup-and-spray-paint Friday the 13th movies. Just as you knew that Jason’s knife would strike soft tissue a couple of times every reel, so you know that Bangladesh’s top order will manage convincing sitting-duck impersonations against the new ball.In their 32 Tests before this one, Bangladesh had survived long enough to sight the second new ball only on 22 occasions, and six of those were against fellow strugglers Zimbabwe. Their utter ineptitude when confronted by Irfan Pathan this afternoon was yet another indication that Dav Whatmore’s wards suffer from some sort of learning disability. For all his talent, Pathan is no Wasim Akram just yet, and most international batsmen cotton on to the fact that his most dangerous delivery is the one that swings back into the right-hander.Having lost their wickets to those inswingers in the first innings, it defied belief that the same mistakes were made at the second time of asking, with three men taking the caught-on-the-crease-lemming route back to the pavilion. The fourth, Habibul Bashar, should have trudged back thanking the good Lord that he doesn’t play for Ray Jennings, who would surely have made him crawl across the floor for a sip of water.The way Bashar allowed himself to be suckered made you scratch your head and wonder whether it was he or Pathan that was the inexperienced 20-year-old. From a novice, such a shot could have been written off as youthful indiscretion, but from the team captain and veteran of 30 Tests, it was a stroke that deserved a spell in solitary. Not since Andrew Hilditch – the happy hooker who Ian Botham used to set up for fun – has international cricket seen such low resistance to pull-and-hook temptations.The technical frailties that the Bangladeshi batsmen continue to exhibit are a symptom of a far greater malaise. On the eve of attaining Test status in 2000, this writer spoke to Minhajul Abedin, one of the stars of the pre-Test era. In that climate of euphoria, his was one of the few dissenting voices. He suggested that Bangladesh were not ready for the challenge because there was no culture of three-day cricket across the country. Almost all the players had been raised in the slap-happy climate of the Dhaka league, and while such a cavalier approach could pass muster in the one-day game, it would undoubtedly be found out in the longer version.As in Pakistan – several of their top order were also clueless against Pathan in the Tests played last April – quality coaching has yet to permeate to the grass-roots level. If India and Sri Lanka continue to produce technically sound batsmen, part of the reason is the coaching at the maidans and schools, which goes hand-in-hand with a culture of playing and watching three and four-day cricket. Pakistan’s batting titans – Inzamam-ul-Haq is a prime example – have thrived despite the system, and not because of it, helped by reservoirs of talent that no amount of coaching can instil.The crowd’s agony over the batsmen’s meek capitulation was exacerbated by a marvellous display from Zaheer Khan, who rode his luck to belt the cover off the ball in the morning session. The record books will say that his 75 is the highest score by a number 11, but most observers know that he should be batting higher up the order, being well capable of a noteworthy contribution when in the mood. Today, he was clearly energised by the presence of Tendulkar, and that inspiration was given expression through some dazzling hits down the ground.For all his mighty-oak status in Indian cricket, Tendulkar shares a wonderful rapport with the younger bunch. Besides being a senior whom they respect immensely, he’s someone that they can share a laugh, and a chocolate éclair – don’t tell the dietician – with. Greatness, when aloof, can inhibit others, but when it embraces, the ripple effect created can lead to unparalleled feats. For hapless Bangladesh, that morning ripple alone had the force of a tsunami.

Hall keeps his cool to edge Worcestershire into C&G final

Scorecard


Man of the Match Andrew Hall appeals successfully against Lancashire’s Andrew Flintoff

Andrew Hall held his nerve to bowl Worcestershire through to the Cheltenham & Gloucester Trophy final in a nail-biting and topsy-turvey semi-final against Lancashire at New Road. Mal Loye ended unbeaten on 116, but his brave effort was not enough as the Lancashire tail-enders lost their way.After being up against it for the majority if the match, Lancashire had the game in the bag needing only seven runs from the last over. But Hall (4 for 36) stayed calm and fired in the yorkers to great effect. He picked up two wickets and gave away only one run to take Worcestershire through to the final against Gloucestershire.Lancashire made a slow start to their chase of 255 and Nantie Hayward soon trapped Mark Chilton lbw with an inswinging yorker (15 for 1). Matthew Mayson then kept the pressure on with a superb spell of seam bowling (1 for 23 from 10 overs) and got his reward with the big wicket of Stuart Law, caught by Hall at second slip (70 for 2). Hall then got in the act with the two wickets of Carl Hooper and Andrew Flintoff, both lbw, and Lancashire had spluttered to 108 for 4.Meanwhile, Mal Loye stayed firm and gave Lancashire hope with his mixture of aggressive leg-side thwacks and sensible accumulation. He and Chris Schofield hauled Lancashire back in the game with a rollicking 63 stand in which Schofield savaged all before him in a cameo 32 from 31 balls. Gareth Batty may soon be an international, but Schofield – who is an international, in case you’ve forgotten – showed him no respect and crashed him for four boundaries in the 37th over to tilt the game in the balance.But Schofield soon found out that all good things come to an end when he slapped David Leatherdale to Hayward at mid-on (171 for 5). Glen Chapple, another new England call-up, kept Loye support and his enterprising 44 from 43 balls all but secured the tie for Lancashire. But when he was bowled by Kabir Ali going for another big hit, the game was thrown wide open. Warren Hegg and Peter Martin were bowled in the final over and John Wood run out as Lancashire self-destructed to a six-run loss.Hegg, the Lancashire captain, said before the game that Graeme Hick was Worcestershire’s dangerman, and his prediction was spot on, unlike his decision to bowl first. Hick belted 97 from 112 balls in a rollicking start. He got in to the groove straight away and he and the impressive Anurag Singh added 155 for the second wicket. The pair made the most of the good batting track and baking hot conditions as they cashed in on anything wide and short.Singh hit 63 from 104 when Lancashire made a much-needed breakthrough as Singh was caught by Schofield at point off Flintoff (159 for 2). Hick, who was dropped by Hegg in the thirties, continued to give it some humpty and clobbered 16 fours and was on course for another limited-overs century when Chapple struck to dislodge Hick when a leading edge flew to Carl Hooper at cover (191 for 3).Ben Smith (36) and Hall (26) kept up the momentum, and even though Hick’s wicket slightly took the wind out of their sails, their 254 for 5 was enough – just.

Horne and Barnes seal comfortable Auckland win

Auckland sprinted away to an eight-wicket win over Central Districts before lunch on the fourth day of the State Championship match on the Eden Park Outer Oval – a performance which should produce a couple of interesting echoes amid the New Zealanders as they prepared for tomorrow’s third Test against Australia at the WACA.The first was that Auckland’s comfortable win – after three days of uncomfortable or restricted batting from both sides – should be built round an almost faultless century by Matt Horne, the discarded New Zealand Test opening batsman.Horne’s 18th first-class century was carefully built over 272 minutes, and apart from two rather hairy strokes, did not offer the frustrated Central Districts bowlers a chance.Horne, who had earned top marks from the selector Ross Dykes during the earlier New Zealand A tour of India, looked every inch a first-rate, technically correct opening batsman – assets which seem to have slipped out of Matthew Bell’s gear-bag in Australia.The second echo was more or less caused by Stephen Fleming, scathing criticism of his bowlers, ability to bowl the right line and length in the second Test at Hobart, and his subsequent plea that Dennis Lillee should be asked for starting-from-scratch coaching advice in Perth.A very senior bowler, who shall be nameless, remarked during the first three days of the Auckland-Central Districts match that the indifferent form of the New Zealand seamers in the two Tests in Australia was merely a case of chickens come home to roost in New Zealand.He was referring to the green Eden Park pitch which for at least the first two-and-half days gave the medium-fast seam and swing bowlers extraordinary help, and which left the batsmen resigned to being inevitably undone by some mischief from the pitch.This, said the senior bowler, was the precise fault with the production of the recent crop of New Zealand team medium-fast bowlers. On pitches even half as helpful as this mettlesome Eden Park pitch, New Zealand bowlers were given extraordinary help in the matter of whipping the ball into the pads for lbw, or nicking the outside edge for the fatal catch.The early Auckland and Central seamers had only to land one or two balls an over on the right line and length and they had a fair chance of taking a wicket.As the senior bowler pointed out, in Australia two balls on target would have left four balls for the home batsmen to murder.Five or six balls was the required rate of accuracy at Test level, especially on pitches in Australia which generally favoured Australian batsmen gifted both in the arts of driving and cross-batted strokes.Last evening and this morning Horne and his undefeated partner Aaron Barnes batted with more than a hint of Australian efficiency.In contrast, the Central Districts bowlers, who had looked like demons in the first third of the match, were as nasty as new-born lambs as the Aucklanders marched away to the win with their record-breaking and unbroken stand of 151.Central Districts were hampered slightly by the loss through injury of Ewen Thompson, with his broken forearm, which left them only three seamers and Campbell Furlong’s genial off-spin.Faced by poised and patient batsmen, the Central Districts bowlers were reduced to hopeful trundlers, for the pitch had lost almost all its earlier spite.Horne nearly gave a catching chance when he was 97, and once almost had a ball from Furlong trickle into his stumps.Otherwise, he and Barnes gave the Central Districts bowlers not the slightest bit of charity, and in a game that had already had 12 lbw decisions (and sufficient roared lbw appeals to satisfy a Cossack choir), there was never even one lbw appeal from the hamstrung Central bowlers this morning.There may be problems with with the quality of New Zealand Test bowlers and batsmen on the evidence available from Australia. The solution will not be found there, even from Lillee the grand master of fast bowling. If there are answers to the puzzles they are found in the quality, or lack of it, of the pitches on which New Zealanders play their cricket.

Eagles, Mountaineers off to winning start

Pacer Cuthbert Musoko’s maiden List A five-for bowled Matabeleland Tuskers for 130, setting up a 31-run win for Mountaineers in their first match of the Pro50 Championship. Musoko’s 5 for 19 off 8.4 overs helped Mountaineers defend a total of 161 with ease, after they had been left reeling by Tawanda Mupariwa’s 6 for 52.Tuskers began their chase of 162 solidly as the openers, Bonaparte Mujuru and Nkosana Mpofu, added 52. They collapsed quickly, however, going from 52 for 0 to 91 for 8, with Musoko, Tatenda Mupunga (2-33) and Shingi Masakadza (2-23) contributing to the slide. Mbekezeli Mabuza shepherded the score past 100 – a 34-run, ninth-wicket stand contributing to the team’s cause – but the chase was too much for the tail-enders.Mountaineers had had their own batting collapse, after being put in to bat, as Mupariwa cut through the line-up, taking five wickets to reduce the side to 57 for 5. They were lifted to 161 only through knocks from Hamilton Masakadza (46) and Roy Kaia. The batsmen added 41 for the sixth wicket, before Kaia shared in a 49-run stand for the ninth wicket en route to his 59 off 90 deliveries. Roy Kaia was the ninth wicket to fall and became Mupariwa’s sixth wicket.Fifties from Joylord Gumbie and Gary Chirimuuta, and a four-wicket haul from left-arm spinner Bright Mugochi set up a 67-run win for Mashonaland Eagles in their opening match of the Pro50 Championship against Mid West Rhinos.Gumbi’s 94-ball 80 powered the Eagles to a strong start as he shared partnerships worth 62 and 75 runs for the first and second wicket with Kudzai Maunze and Simbarashe Gupo respectively. After Gumbi fell, Chirimuuta consolidated, striking 68 off 60 balls with 10 fours, and contributed to a 72-run stand with Gupo to guide the side towards a strong total. Eagles lost quick wickets towards the end but were still able to post a competitive 265 for 7.Despite the early loss of Tendai Maruma, Rhinos rebuilt through a 74-run partnership for the second wicket between Bothwell Chapungu and Tarisai Musakanda. Mugochi, however, got both batsmen and then effected a run-out to leave Rhinos at a wobbly 92 for 4. A fifth-wicket partnership of 53 between Nyasha Mayavo and captain Remembrance Nyathi provided some resistance but once the stand was broken, Eagles quickly wrapped up proceedings.

Top TEN footballers whose presence upset the mix

Here is a list of the ten greatest footballers that God ever managed to make. He was having a fantastic day by his standards because these guys are just so good. It is a list of by far the best players who’ve ever graced the completely unworthy Premier League. The turf should be sealed off after they’ve played and turned into a pilgrimage site. Or so they think.

In reality this is a list of the biggest egos in the Premier League. The ten players who cannot handle being substituted and storm down the tunnel in a fit of rage, the players who kick out in disgust at water bottles and throw their shirts to the ground really really angrily. These are the players who scream at their teammates when they don’t get the ball but would never dream of passing if they had a chance from 40 yards.

All these players genuinely believe they are the best, they believe that taking them off is a stupid mistake and leaving them on the bench is pure lunacy. They are God’s gift to the game and to their team and to ignore God you must be a fool. In fact you’re all fools anyway, you just can’t comprehend their talent.

Managerial authority means absolutely nothing, the idea that somebody would tell them how to play when they have already mastered all there is to know is laughable. ‘Leave it to me and we will win’ they think, ‘who is this old goat who thinks Jermaine Jenas can replace ME! He must be mad!’ Cue strop.

In football, whole squads can be described as egos, particularly the most expensive ones. The Chelsea and Manchester City managerial jobs in particular require masterful ‘mass-ego management skills’ but that is a story for another day. Today we’re going to focus on the individuals, just as these players would want. It’s all about me, me, me. So here are 10 of the best.

Click on Drogba and Ronaldo below to see the Top TEN

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Sajidul Islam to replace Rasel in squad

Syed Rasel will miss out on the action in New Zealand © Getty Images

Uncapped left-arm medium bowler Sajidul Islam has been called up to replace the injured Syed Rasel, who has been ruled out of Bangladesh’s tour of New Zealand.Rasel dislocated his left collar bone while fielding in a tour game against Northern Districts. The Bangladeshis lost the match by seven wickets.Sajidul, who made his first-class debut in 2005, has taken 73 wickets at 25.61 a piece. In this season he has picked up 36 wickets at 19.63 from eight games.Bangladesh coach Jamie Siddons told commercial radio that Rasel would be seen by several specialists in New Zealand before deciding whether he would have surgery locally or return home for treatment.Bangladesh play three one-dayers and two Tests against New Zealand between December 26 and January 16.

'If I am asked to open, then I will do so' – Ganguly

Sourav Ganguly – ‘It’s really sad that we had to lose the match and series despite putting up such a good score in the first innings’ © Getty Images

Sourav Ganguly is eyeing a recall into the one-day team and has reiterated his willingness to open the batting.”I know people have been talking about that [opening the batting in ODIs],” he told reporters in Kolkata. “And many people have asked me about it. I have opened the batting in one-dayers in the past many times, so I have no problems. If I am asked to open, then I will do so.” India play eight matches against the West Indies and Sri Lanka at home, which will decide the team composition for the World Cup.Asked whether he is looking forward to the World Cup, Ganguly said, “Let’s not think about that now. I want to approach these home one-dayers first, and one at a time. Obviously playing in conditions like Australia and South Africa always help your game. If I get an opportunity in one-day cricket, I think that will help.”Ganguly also voiced his support for Sachin Tendulkar, who’s come under criticism for his slow batting in the third Test. “Don’t forget that Sachin has got 70 international hundreds to his credit, nobody has such a record in the world. The decline in form is part of the game, it happens to every cricketer. He is a genius.”Meanwhile, former cricketers have pressed for Ganguly’s recall into the ODI team. “Ganguly must be chosen for the one-day team, especially since Sehwag is short of confidence,” Ajit Wadekar told . “An experienced player like Ganguly knows how to pace his innings, which can be invaluable for a big tournament like the World Cup,” Wadekar added. Madan Lal, the former Indian allrounder, also concurred. “With Sehwag out of form, Ganguly should be given a chance to open,” he says. That would mean reviving the old Sachin-Sourav partnership. Both are past their prime. But even if only for old times sake, most Indians would look forward to that.”Looking back on the series against South Africa, Ganguly said he was satisfied with his batting in what was his “toughest tour” yet. “I am feeling good. Of course, I wanted to score more runs. But I batted lower down and with the tail sometimes. But that’s okay though.” But he rues the missed opportunity to win the series. “We should have won the third Test. Playing in South Africa, you don’t get chances like this to win the series. We scored 414 runs in the first innings. It’s really sad that we had to lose the match and series despite putting up such a good score in the first innings.”Ganguly averaged 42.80 and was the only Indian batsman to score more than 200 in the series.. “I have never worried about my criticism and I hope that I keep scoring runs in future.” Ganguly made it clear that this comeback (after a ten-month lay-off) was more difficult and, therefore, more satisfying than the one in 1996.

Match on

As of now, Sharad Pawar seems to the frontrunner for the top job © Getty Images

And the battle lines have been redrawn. After the aborted Annual General Meeting of September 23, the warring factions have once again come head to head. The venue is the same – Kolkata, and the opposing chiefs no different. Ranbir Singh Mahendra, heavily backed by Jagmohan Dalmiya is doing his best to hold on to the post of president, but all indications point to Sharad Pawar, the president of the Mumbai Cricket Association and former defence minister, taking the job.Goutam Dasgupta is the Dalmiya group’s nominee for secretary while Niranjan Shah is contesting the same post from the Pawar group. N Srinivasan (Pawar group) and Jyoti Bajpai fight it out for the post of treasurer, while the joint secretary’s post sees a match up between MP Pandove (Pawar group) and Brijesh Patel. All these nominations have been put forward to TS Krishna Murthy, the observer, and he will scrutinise and accept or reject them before the actual election takes place.While it is next to impossible to predict which way the voters will swing in the last moment, as hectic parleys are likely to take place till the very moment the election begins on Tuesday 11.30am, one can safely say that the going will not be easy for the Dalmiya group. If various interested and suddenly talkative sources are to be believed, Pawar has already been promised at least 20 of the 30 votes, and that there’s a strong chance of more defections once a clear leader emerges.The one twist that happened in the day was unconfirmed reports filtering in that the Pondicherry Cricket Association had approached the Supreme Court and successfully won the right to vote in the elections. This then meant that the vote of the Tamil Nadu Cricket Association would be made in a sealed envelope and only revealed on December 12.What has caused the Dalmiya faction to rally around is the ruling that some members that traditionally vote in favour of Dalmiya – Uttar Pradesh, Delhi and District Cricket Association and National Cricket Club for example – were allowed to vote, while there was a strong chance that they would be restrained from doing so. Yet, this should not be construed as a major victory for the Dalmiya camp, as they have a stiff battle ahead of them to make up the numbers.With 31 votes including the chairman’s vote, the Pawar camp needs 16 votes to guarantee them victory. If Pawar’s opponent was anyone but Dalmiya, punters would safely put their money against the ruling faction. But Dalmiya is not a man to take lightly when elections come around. He knows every loophole in the constitution of the board, and is unafraid to exploit them when push comes to shove. And the opposition camp knows this. Despite some strong proclamations that they already have the numbers they need, work has not ceased. They have set up base camp at the Oberoi Grand hotel, staying far away from the Taj Bengal where the observer is stationed. There will not be any let off, and Pawar’s arrival by a private jet at 8pm will only mean increased activity. Till the verdict is signed and delivered, this lot won’t rest.How they could votePawar 1 Andhra, 2 Assam, 3 Association of Indian Universities, 4 Baroda, 5 Mumbai, 6 Cricket Club of India, 7 Goa, 8 Himachal Pradesh, 9 Hyderabad, 10 Jammu and Kashmir, 11 Madhya Pradesh, 12 Maharashtra, 13 Punjab, 14 Railways, 15 Rajasthan, 16 Saurashtra, 17 Services, 18 Tamil Nadu, 19 Tripura, 20 Vidarbha.Mahendra 1 Bengal, 2 Delhi and District Cricket Association, 3 Haryana, 4 Karnataka, 5 Kerala, 6 National Cricket Club.Those that could swing either way 1 Jharkhand, 2 Gujarat, 3 Orissa, 4 Uttar Pradesh.

Kasprowicz gives Australia the upper hand

Close New Zealand 7 for 250 (Sinclair 69, Oram 63*) v Australia
Scorecard and ball-by-ball details

Mike Kasprowicz: double strike in the first hour© Getty Images

Mathew Sinclair and Jacob Oram contributed a pair of contrasting half-centuries on the opening day of the first Test at Brisbane, to ensure that New Zealand did not entirely squander the opportunity of batting first on a typically hard and true Gabba wicket. Even so, it was Australia who emerged with the day’s honours, thanks to another sterling contribution from their renaissance man, Michael Kasprowicz, who grabbed each of the first three wickets to fall in front of his home crowd, to ensure that New Zealand were playing catch-up all day long.New Zealand had their moments throughout the day, but they were all too brief as wickets fell in clusters in each of the three sessions. Kasprowicz dealt their hopes an early blow with two wickets in the space of four balls in the first hour, and Australia then stole the honours in the afternoon session as well, with two quick wickets almost on the stroke of tea. By the time the new ball was taken, with ten overs of the day remaining, New Zealand’s innings had been reduced to the bare bones, thanks to a pair of sucker-punches from Shane Warne, who defied the pain of a broken thumb to extend his world record to 543 wickets.Oram and Daniel Vettori rallied the total in the final half-hour, but by then the damage had already been done, thanks to a hugely disciplined performance from Australia’s three-pronged seam attack. They were presented with a typically hard and true Gabba pitch, far removed from the dustbowl that was served up for Australia’s most recent Test, at Mumbai earlier this month, and they quickly reacquainted themselves with their home comforts.All three extracted kicking bounce and taxing seam movement, but it was Kasprowicz, whose subtle seamers were once again preferred to the express pace of Brett Lee, who proved to be the biggest handful. He struck in his third over to remove Mark Richardson, who began in typically attritional fashion but had no answer whatsoever to a perfectly-pitched legcutter. Three balls later, Stephen Fleming fell victim to a similar, fractionally straighter, variety (2 for 26).Kasprowicz added a third soon after lunch, when Scott Styris – his feet caught in no-man’s land – edged a simple catch through to Adam Gilchrist for 27. At 3 for 77, New Zealand were there for the taking, but instead Australia went off the boil, in a period of play marked by a pair of badly fluffed catches in the outfield.

Stephen Fleming falls for a duck, as New Zealand struggle early on© Getty Images

Nathan Astle was the beneficiary on both occasions. Earlier this week, Astle was targeted by Glenn McGrath as New Zealand’s main man, and McGrath should have had his scalp on 16, when Darren Lehmann made a horlicks of a swirling catch at backward square leg. Two runs later, Astle swished at Warne, and this time the culprit was Australia’s man of the morning, Kasprowicz, who was unable to steady himself in time, as he back-pedalled from mid-on.The sloppy spell lasted for all of two more deliveries, however. In the very next over, Astle fended Jason Gillespie towards gully, where the ball was parried into the path of Michael Clarke, swooping in from point. Quick as a flash, Clarke picked up and hurled at the non-striker’s end, and a nonplussed Astle was run out by a good six inches (4 for 138).Suitably geed up, Gillespie then prised the limpet-like Sinclair from the crease, with a pearling off-stump delivery that was angled low into the hands of Ricky Ponting at second slip. Sinclair was gone for 69, a vital contribution to New Zealand’s cause, but an innings that had mixed the stately with the streaky – in all he had faced 163 balls, with nine fours of varying degrees of rashness, including an inside-edge past the keeper to reach his fifty.Oram and Craig McMillan did their utmost to patch up the innings, but for McMillan in particular it was a fretful innings. The unexpected nature of his recall was clearly playing on his mind as he weighed up the pros and cons of an all-out assault on the semi-fit Warne, whose looping legbreaks were lacking their usual venom. After allowing one rank long-hop to go unpunished, McMillan reacted by depositing Warne deep into the stands at long-on, but it was to be his last act of aggression. Moments later, Warne dragged him out of his crease with a pinpoint flipper, and McMillan would have been stumped by a country mile had he not feathered a thin edge through to Gilchrist in the process.Warne then struck for a second time, as Gilchrist snatched a leaping legbreak and whipped off the bails with Brendon McCullum’s back foot millimetres out of its crease, and at 7 for 206, New Zealand were staring at a first-day wipeout. But Vettori’s uncomplicated grit was precisely the partner that Oram needed, and they had added 44 vital runs by the close. It was not enough to mask the deficiencies at the top of the order, but it was evidence that there is still plenty to play for in this match.Andrew Miller is assistant editor of Wisden Cricinfo.

Inzamam back in the reckoning

Inzamam-ul-Haq, who has been out of favour with the selectors since the World Cup, is back in the reckoning for Pakistan’s home season. He has been included in the list of 20 probables for the forthcoming series against Bangladesh. Aamer Sohail, the former Test opener who is now the chairman of Pakistan’s selectors, said: “We never dropped Inzamam but gave him rest, and hope that this rest will do a world of good to him in the coming home season.”Inzamam was one of eight players dumped after Pakistan’s disappointing first-round exit from the World Cup in March. But there is no place for Pakistan’s then-captain Waqar Younis, who recently said he still wants to play for the country. Sohail explained: “We are focusing on players who we have used in the last four months in our transition phase.”Inzamam said he was delighted to be back in the reckoning: “I was a bit disappointed on being out of the team, but now I am ready for the home season.” Inzamam has scored 6214 runs in 85 Tests, plus 8957 in 290 one-dayers. His last Test innings on home soil produced Pakistan’s second-highest score – 329, made against New Zealand at Lahore in May 2002. But Inzamam managed only 19 runs in six World Cup games – a phase he described as the worst of his career. But he explained: “Never in this phase I thought of leaving cricket, I have a lot of it left in me.”Pakistan take on Bangladesh, who have lost 20 of their 21 Tests so far, in a three-match series which starts at Karachi on August 20. The Test series will be followed by five one-day internationals, before Pakistan host South Africa in three Tests and three ODIs in September and October. New Zealand also visit for five one-dayers in November.Pakistan had faced a shortage of players for the Bangladesh series after their fast bowler Shoaib Akhtar, allrounder Azhar Mahmood and batsman Younis Khan were allowed to skip the series. Then Mohammad Sami, another fast bowler, was ruled out with an ankle injury he picked up playing county cricket for Kent, which forced the selectors to reverse their earlier decision about Shoaib. Sohail explained: “We had to call Shoaib from England where he was playing county cricket [for Durham] to cover Sami’s injury – but we are not taking Bangladesh lightly.”Farhan Adil, an uncapped batsman from Karachi, is tipped to make his debut in the first Test – the squad for which will be named on August 12 – while two other uncapped players called up are Mohammad Khalil, a left-arm fast bowler, and the left-arm spinner Abdul Sattar.Pakistan preliminary squad Mohammad Hafeez, Taufeeq Umar, Farhan Adil, Yasir Hameed, Inzamam-ul-Haq, Yousuf Youhana, Misbah-ul-Haq, Hasan Raza, Rashid Latif (capt and wk), Shoaib Malik, Abdul Razzaq, Kamran Akmal (wk), Umar Gul, Shoaib Akhtar, Shabbir Ahmed, Mohammad Khalil, Najaf Shah, Danish Kaneria, Abdul Sattar, Jaffer Nazir.

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