No ghosts of 2018: overlooking Bancroft 'purely a cricketing decision'

Selection chair George Bailey said there was no connection between Bancroft’s absence and Sandpapergate

Andrew McGlashan10-Jan-20241:30

Michael Clarke not concerned by ageing Australia Test side

Australia’s chair of selectors George Bailey has shut down conspiracy talk around Cameron Bancroft being overlooked for the Test side as having anything to do with the 2018 ball-tampering scandal.Bancroft was comfortably the leading Sheffield Shield batter last season and is again at the top of the run-scoring charts this summer but was unable to find a place against West Indies following David Warner’s retirement with Steven Smith promoted to open and Matt Renshaw named the spare batter.Related

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Bancroft has played Test cricket since his ban, featuring in two games against England in 2019, but comments he made in a 2021 interview about how the fast bowlers must have known what was going on led to them putting out a joint statement reiterating they had no knowledge of the plans.”Categorically, no,” Bailey said as to whether there were any lingering issues from that time which impacted his selection. “I’ve shared this with Cameron on a number of occasions. It has never at any stage been discussed from the panel’s perspective. It’s purely a cricketing decision.”There is not a member of the team that would have an issue with Cam playing, we certainly don’t have an issue with it. I’d be disappointed if people were looking to that as a reason. All I can do is reiterate to you and to Cam that’s not the case; never has been, and never will be.” Bailey acknowledged that Bancroft had made a strong case through his weight of runs but at the moment they viewed Renshaw as the next best batter in line. He also said that Marcus Harris, who holds a central contract and was the spare batter through the Ashes, could count himself unfortunate.”Cam’s record over the last couple of years has been phenomenal and it’s made this decision really challenging, a line-ball call,” Bailey said. “He is banging down the door. Think there’s a number of players who are banging down the door and that’s great.”As excited as Matt Renshaw and Cameron Green are, you know there’s always guys on the other side of the coin who are shattered and who are working their backside off. All those guys know what it’s like to be part of that Test team, all of them are striving to get back there…and there will be opportunities going forward.Point of no return? Cameron Bancroft has been unable to earn a Test recall•Getty Images

“And there’s no doubt that part of cricket selection is being in the right place at the right time, playing at close to your best at the right time. In that respect I certainly feel for Marcus Harris as well, whose been on a number of tours, in some respects was unlucky to get dropped last time he was playing Test cricket. I imagine it’s hollow for those guys at the moment, but it’s the age old thing of you have to keep doing what you are doing.”Speaking a few days ago, Bancroft admitted he would be “disappointed” if Australia opted for a non-traditional opener to replace Warner. “Cricket means the world to me and I’ve put my heart and soul into developing my game as an opening batter,” he said.Renshaw’s call-up puts him as next in line should another vacancy arrive in the top order – and there is a thought he is viewed as Usman Khawaja’s eventual replacement – although Bailey also namechecked Western Australia’s Aaron Hardie and South Australia’s Nathan McSweeney as two players pushing for higher honours, an indication they may be considered for the New Zealand tour in March if an extra batter is taken for the two Tests.

BCCI president Roger Binny: No need for contracts in domestic cricket at the moment

“I think domestic players…Ranji players are looked after pretty well,” he said

Shashank Kishore21-Oct-2022It’s perhaps understandable, given he has only just taken over as BCCI president, that Roger Binny was unlikely to go into the nuts and bolts of every single burning issue in Indian cricket during his first press interaction. Nonetheless, his answers in Bengaluru on Thursday gave you a peek into what the general sentiment in the BCCI regarding domestic cricket – and player contracts specifically – is.”I think domestic players … Ranji players are looked after pretty well,” Binny said in response to whether central contracts for domestic players was one his bucket list of things to accomplish while BCCI president.It was something Sourav Ganguly had touched upon as well when he took over as BCCI president in October 2018. Unlike Ganguly, Binny was clear that wasn’t going to be priority, especially since the board had introduced pay hikes for them last year.”They’re taken care of well, they have good facilities, they stay in good places. There’s no need for that at the moment. What’s needed is to lift the standard of the Ranji Trophy,” Binny said. “It’s the premier tournament. Along with Ranji, you have the Duleep Trophy and Irani Cup. How many people knew Irani Cup happened a month back? How many watched it? We have a culture; cricket fans need to support that. We need to change that.”Having just returned from his unveiling as BCCI president in Mumbai, Binny was the talk of the town at the M Chinnaswamy Stadium, his “home turf”. And as he regaled his colleagues, friends and former team-mates at the Karnataka State Cricket Association (KSCA), the former India allrounder touched on another important subject – selection.”That is best left to the selectors, I won’t interfere,” he said. “We’ve picked them to do a job, we will let them do it”. He wanted to be clear that people with certain responsibilities will be allowed to carry out their duties. Like the medical staff at the NCA, who he felt needed to do better.”You can’t have a [Jasprit] Bumrah breaking down 10 days before a World Cup,” Binny said. “We need to address why and how players are breaking down so easily, not just now but over the last four-five years. It’s not that we don’t have good trainers or coaches. Whether the load is too much, whether they’re playing too many formats, something needs to be done. That is my priority…not just mine, the entire board’s.”Binny was flanked by all the KSCA office bearers and members who handed him bouquets upon arrival. He joked about how the need to be in formal attire had turned a short metro ride from his home to the stadium into a long drive. As he entered the long hall, he soaked in the applause and began his introductory speech reminiscing about his first time at KSCA as a schoolboy in the 1970s.Binny identified every team-mate of his, irrespective of which level it was at, from the gathering, before saying, “I’d never imagined to one day become BCCI president. It’s a great honour, I can’t tell you how happy my family and I are today at this new responsibility. I will do my best.”As the floor was opened for questions, he was asked about Ganguly on a couple of occasions – if there was a sense that he had underachieved as BCCI president. Binny sidestepped that. He was asked about the thorny India-Pakistan issue, the obvious background being a statement made by the BCCI secretary Jay Shah in his capacity as president of the Asian Cricket Council.Shah had said that India would not travel to Pakistan for next year’s Asia Cup. That prompted a response from the sports minister Anurag Thakur. And another from Binny as well.”That is not the BCCI’s call,” Binny said. “We need the government’s clearance to leave the country. Whether we leave the country or teams are coming into the country, we need clearance. Once we get that from the government, we go with it. We can’t make decisions on our own. We have to rely on the government, we haven’t approached them yet.”Binny also spoke of raising the standard of pitches across the country. “Pitches around the country are still too docile,” he said. “They’re unfit for fast bowlers. If our team goes to England or Australia, it takes us two weeks to a month to settle in with the movement and bounce. We should be able to acclimatise here before we go there. That’s another area we need to look into.”As he left the stage, Binny reminded his former KSCA colleagues of how he’ll continue being a regular visitor to his former office. “To you guys, I have some bad news. I’m not going away from here, I’ll keep coming back (laughs).”

BCCI asks ECB to rejig Test series schedule for IPL window

Requests the possibility of advancing series start and end by a week

Nagraj Gollapudi20-May-2021The BCCI has put in a late request to the ECB to bring forward the start and the end of the five-Test series by a week, in a bid to complete the pandemic-interrupted 2021 IPL season. ESPNcricinfo has learned the request was put in this week and the ECB is yet to respond.As things stand, the first Test is scheduled to begin on August 4 and the series to end on September 14. The move is aimed at having a longer window in September to finish the remainder of the IPL season, which was suspended midway due to a growing number of Covid-19 cases among players and staff.Related

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The series opener in Trent Bridge from August 4-8 will, according to the current schedule, be followed by Tests at Lord’s (August 12-16), Headingley (August 25-29), The Oval (September 2-6) and Old Trafford (September 10-14).If the final Test ends around September 7, it would give the BCCI a three-week window – which is how much time the board feels it needs – to complete the remaining 31 games. That would then allow time for international teams to converge for the T20 World Cup, which is to run from the middle of October and until November 14.When approached, the ECB said no official request had yet been made by the BCCI.Such a change, though, could disrupt the ECB’s plans, not least the schedule of The Hundred. For one, it would mean the Test series starting just a week after the launch of the tournament, which is scheduled to run from July 21 to August 21. And given that The Hundred’s games are being played at grounds at which the Tests are meant to be staged, it could require some venue rescheduling, which could in turn impact hotel bookings, bio-bubble arrangements, broadcast schedules, and ticket sales for the affected Tests.It would also impact the window that had been allocated to allow England’s top players to make appearances in the tournament. England’s Test players were meant to be available for up to three group games at the start of The Hundred, and then the Eliminator and the Final (currently scheduled between the second and third India Tests) if their teams qualify.The ECB will also have a lot of explaining to do to the affected counties as well as the fans who have already bought tickets for the India-England tour, the marquee series of the summer.Currently, days one and three are sold out with limited availability on days two and four for the Trent Bridge Test; at Lord’s, day one is limited while days two to four are sold out; The Oval is already sold out for the first four days; Headingley has availability on the first two days while the third and fourth days are sold out; at Old Trafford the first three days have been sold out.The request brings into sharp focus the havoc the pandemic has wreaked on the cricket calendar. It is currently unclear, for instance, where the remainder of the IPL will actually be held. The UAE has been tipped as a frontrunner to host it, and English counties and Sri Lanka have also expressed an interest.Though the T20 World Cup is scheduled to be hosted by India, that destination has become less certain in the wake of the second wave of Covid-19 the country is currently in the grip of. Realistically, the BCCI has only two windows in which to finish the IPL, which fall on either side of the T20 World Cup.

South Africa incensed as Jofra Archer escapes beamer suspension

Philander calls on umpires to ‘stand your ground’ after rescinding second no-ball

George Dobell at Centurion27-Dec-2019Vernon Philander has called on the umpires to “stand your ground” and withdraw Jofra Archer from the attack in the first Test in Centurion.Archer, the England fast bowler, appeared to be called for a second no-ball by the square-leg umpire Paul Reiffel after ending his day with a pair of beamers. While there is no doubt both deliveries were unintentional – replays suggested Archer had attempted to bowl two
successive knuckle-balls – clause 41.7 of the ICC’s Test playing conditions dictate that any bowler who has delivered two such balls should be suspended from bowling for the rest of the innings.But the umpires also appeared to rescind the no-ball call on the basis that the second delivery was dipping towards the stumps and should be considered more of a full-toss than a beamer.That left the South Africa camp incensed. The captain and coach, Faf du Plessis and Mark Boucher respectively, could both be seen seeking clarification from officials the moment play ended – the incident occurred in the penultimate over of the day – and Philander, the South
Africa all-rounder, suggested the umpires should be “setting an example” in order to maintain standards in “the purest format” of the game.”If you’re at square-leg and you call no-ball you’ve got to stand your ground,” Philander said. “At no time did they actually cancel it.”For me it’s plain and simple: we’re playing a game and we’re setting an example for the rest of the people coming into this game. You’ve got to make the right call.ALSO READ: The stats stack up as Philander approaches his endgame”That’s why it’s called the purest format. Are we going to tolerate it at another game or are we going to put a stop to it right here? It’s in the hands of the umpires.”Unsurprisingly, Joe Denly, the England batsman, saw the incident quite differently. While he accepted the first delivery was indeed a beamer, he insisted the second passed just over the stumps as the batsmen ducked and was nothing more than a full-toss.”I was at leg slip and I wasn’t expecting two beamers,” Denly said. “The first one fair enough. The second one just missed the stumps.”I saw the umpire put his arm out and I think he tucked it in quite quickly. They withdrew that second no-ball.”Denly’s version of events – at least as regards the umpires’ decision – would appear to be borne out by events. The final ball of Archer’s over was not bowled again, as would have been necessary had it been ruled a no-ball, and at no point did the umpire at the bowler’s end, Chris Gaffaney, make the no-ball signal.Replays suggested such a call on the second delivery was very tight, despite the ball dipping towards the bails having passed the batsman on the full. Either way, Philander had little sympathy for Archer, suggesting he should not have attempted such a tough delivery to execute in such a situation.”Don’t try silly things that can cost you bowling another ball in the innings,” Philander said. “The umpires have to make a call and hopefully it’s the right one for the game looking forward.”ICC playing conditions on the issue state: “Any delivery, which passes or would have passed, without pitching, above waist height of the striker standing upright at the popping crease, is to be deemed to be unfair, whether or not it is likely to inflict physical injury on the striker. If the bowler bowls such a delivery the umpire shall immediately call and signal No ball.”If, in the opinion of the umpire, such a delivery is considered likely to inflict physical injury on the batsman by its speed and direction, it shall be considered dangerous. When the ball is dead the umpire shall caution the bowler, indicating that this is a first and final warning.”Should there be any further instance (where a dangerous non-pitching delivery is bowled and is considered likely to inflict physical injury on the batsman) by the same bowler in that innings, the umpire shall: call and signal no-ball [and] direct the captain of the fielding side
to suspend the bowler immediately from bowling. The bowler thus suspended shall not be allowed to bowl again in that innings.”

England reap rewards of brave selection policy – Trevor Bayliss

Big calls vindicated after England secure second series win in Sri Lanka in five attempts since 2000-01

ESPNcricinfo staff18-Nov-2018Trevor Bayliss says that England have reaped the rewards of their new, bold approach to selection, after his team wrapped up a 57-run victory in the second Test in Pallekele to secure their first overseas series win in three years.Bayliss, whose successes with England’s white-ball squad had at times been at odds with a lack of progress in the longer format, told Sky Sports that he felt vindicated after securing England’s second series win in Sri Lanka in five attempts since 2000-01.”Obviously it can be very difficult to come here and play a team in their home conditions, but it’s been a fantastic effort by all 11 players,” said Bayliss, who had himself coached Sri Lanka from 2007 to 2011.The victory was achieved in a markedly different style to their last visit to Asia in 2016-17, which resulted in a hard-fought 1-1 draw with Bangladesh and a 4-0 drubbing in five Tests against India. This time England took the tough decision to leave out some senior players, not least Stuart Broad, who has 433 Test wickets to his name, and impressed upon their batsmen in particular to maintain a positive aggressive approach, even when the ball was spinning.

Curran in doubt for Colombo – Bayliss

Sam Curran could be a doubt for the third Test in Colombo next week, after coach Trevor Bayliss warned that he could risk aggravating a side strain he sustained during the Pallekele Test.
Curran, who made a vital half-century in England’s first innings, bowled just four overs in the match and none at all in the second innings after appearing to hurt himself while batting.
“We’ll have to wait and see,” said Bayliss. “I don’t think it’s a bad one, we just don’t want to risk making it worse.”
Asked if there was a temptation to retain Curran as a batsman only, Bayliss hinted that that was an unlikely route to take.
“Playing as a batsman brings extra pressure,” he said. “We’ve got players down the bottom who can bat, but it is their second skill which sometimes makes it just a little bit easier.”

“I think the fact that we have gone in a little differently has shown that, in past series we’ve talked about possibly playing different combinations but when it’s got to it we haven’t,” said Bayliss. “But on this occasion we said ‘no, look, it’s time to actually play the conditions’, and if that means some good players miss out then, unfortunately, that’s the way it goes.”It had been a complete squad performance, Bayliss insisted, adding that the experience on the sidelines had been instrumental in helping some of the newer names in the starting XI settle into their roles.”Jonny [Bairstow] and Stuart Broad have been fantastic behind the scenes,” he said. “The work they’ve done as 12th men is very significant. It’s been very much a team effort”Both Rory [Burns] and [Ben] Foakes, they are only playing their second Tests, but they looked so calm, they looked like it was their 30th or 40th, which is a great sign going forward. They might have been feeling a bit more underneath but outwardly they were very confident, and that sends a message to the opposition.”Bayliss also had special praise for his captain, Joe Root, whose second-innings 124 at Pallekele secured him the Man-of-the-Match award after propelling England towards a defendable total.”it was right up there, especially in these conditions, which were something completely different to what he’s faced before,” said Bayliss. “He was under a bit of pressure of wanting his players to go out and play that way, so it was a great innings. He was probably a little bit nervous early on, but once you got in on this wicket, it wasn’t impossible to play, which we saw from a number of players getting 50s and 60s in this match. But the wicket was hard to start on so credit to him.”He was impressed too by the resolve that England’s spinners showed in closing out the victory with a national record of 19 scalps between them, backed up by a fine fielding effort, epitomised by Ben Stokes’ first-innings run-out of Dimuth Karunaratne, and Keaton Jennings’ livewire performance at short leg.”In the first innings we were a bit below par, with not enough balls in the right area, but we spoke about that and, under pressure to perform in the second innings, they did a fantastic job.”It’s good to know that all the hard work from a coach’s point of view pays off as well,” he added. “We certainly don’t have to goad the players into doing anything extra, sometimes it’s quite the opposite. But there were some brilliant catches.”

Amin smashes season's second ton; Masood, Aslam falter again

A round-up of the all the action from Pakistan’s Quaid-e-Azam Trophy after the conclusion of the fourth round

ESPNcricinfo staff18-Oct-2017Amin revives himselfUmar Amin’s 270-ball 145 helped Sui Southern Gas Corporation build a solid first-innings total of 323, thereby leading his team to victory by an innings and three runs against Faisalabad. The 344-minute knock was Amin’s second hundred of the season. Over the past few seasons, he had been out of selection contention due to injuries but his name has come up again after the retirements of Misbah-ul-Haq and Younis Khan. He is currently considered one of the top choices to replace the two recently-retired players, and while he has already made his mark in the shorter format, Amin looks to revive his lost form in the longer format as well.Test openers continue dry runShan Masood and Sami Aslam – after having a disappointing Test series against Sri Lanka – returned to the domestic circuit after the series ended. But their poor run of form continued at home too. Although Sui Southern Gas Corporation won, Aslam contributed only 16 with the bat.And while Masood’s captaincy led United Bank Limited to a seven-wicket win against Rawalpandi, the opener scored only 15 and 21. The duo has been struggling to get big runs, and their dry spell has opened up a slot in Pakistan’s top order – allowing for more experimentation – ahead of Pakistan’s next red-ball action against Ireland in May 2018, before the tour of England.LCCA pitch comes under spotlightAs many as 17 wickets fell on day one at the Lahore City Cricket Association Ground as Lahore Blues were bundled for 108 in the first innings before SNGPL, led by Misbah, lost their seven wickets before stumps. Blues fought back in the second innings to put up 215 but that set SNGPL a target of only 125 which they chased down by losing no more than five wickets. The pitches being prepared during the tournament received criticism from Misbah who expressed his “disappointment” saying the tracks were being overused.Fawad watch
Fawad Alam’s season of ups-and-downs continued after he scored only seven runs and returned bowling figures of 0 for 19 against Faisalabad in the fourth round. After being overlooked by the selectors in the past, which raised eyebrows across the board, the spotlight was on him to shine but he couldn’t do so.Fawad’s form this season has been much worse than the last few seasons, but despite the lack of runs, his first-class average still reads 56.11, having scored over 10,000 runs in his career. Fawad did, however, score a match-winning 105 against Lahore Blues in the third round.

Magnificent Moeen punishes Pakistan for lapses

Moeen Ali made his third Test hundred and his second match-defining score in as many innings to rescue his side from a familiar top-order collapse in the fourth Investec Test.

The Report by Andrew Miller11-Aug-2016Pakistan 3 for 1 (Azhar 0*, Yasir 0*) trail England 328 (Moeen 108, Bairstow 55, Sohail 5-68) by 325 runs

Scorecard and ball-by-ball detailsMoeen Ali once again demonstrated the power that resides in England’s allrounder-laden middle order as he stroked his way to a brilliant counterattacking 108 – his third Test hundred and his second match-defining score in as many innings – to rescue his side from a familiar top-order collapse in the fourth Investec Test.By the close of the opening day’s play at the Kia Oval, England had seized control of a contest that could yet propel them to the top of the world Test rankings, if results elsewhere go their way. Left with three overs in which to go for broke before the close, Stuart Broad prised out Pakistan’s most obdurate find of the tour, Sami Aslam, lbw for 3, as England inched closer to their coveted clean sweep of series wins against all Test opponents.But, with Wahab Riaz back in the Pakistan side and restored to the fire-breathing hostility that had secured the spoils in the last Test series between these sides before Christmas, they had been required once again to take the scenic route to the ascendancy.The first delivery of Moeen’s innings summed up the challenge that England faced shortly after lunch, as he arrived at the crease to join Jonny Bairstow with his side floundering on 110 for 5 after winning the toss under overcast skies, and on a livid green pitch that looked more threatening than it actually turned out to be.Wahab – with three wickets, one drop and a no-ball reprieve already to his name in the first eight-and-a-half overs of a typically vigorous onslaught – greeted the incoming Moeen with a scorching bouncer that tailed into the left-hander and sconed him so hard on the badge of his helmet that it rebounded clean into the hands of backward point.Pakistan, at this stage, were swarming as only they can when that whiff of cordite hits their nostrils. But Moeen’s refusal to be flustered is a trademark of his game, and in the course of two vital and urgently-paced stands – 93 for the sixth wicket with Bairstow and 79 with England’s man of the moment, Chris Woakes – he first shored up the foundations of England’s innings before taking the game away in the final session from a tiring Pakistan attack.Sohail Khan once again emerged as Pakistan’s stand-out wicket-taker, with 5 for 68 in 20.4 toiling overs, but Pakistan’s fielders were unable to match the application of their bowlers. Mohammad Amir proved especially luckless in his best spell since his return to Test cricket as a genuine opportunity to roll England aside inside two sessions hit the turf with a thud.

Hales decision under scrutiny

Two England players retweeted footage that appeared to cast doubt on the veracity of the catch that dismissed Alex Hales. Hales looked furious after he was adjudged to have been caught by Yasir Shah at mid-wicket. While TV replays appeared inconclusive, some felt that still pictures suggested the ball may have bounced.
Certainly Hales’ Nottinghamshire team-mate Stuart Broad seemed to think Hales had been unfortunate. He tweeted: “Replays are unclear? You don’t believe that do you?” Hales, however, seemed to accept the umpires’ decision had been far from straightforward, tweeting a pixelated picture with the comment: “Bit blurry to be fair.”

Despite the excellence of their contributions, both Moeen and Bairstow were the beneficiaries of key reprieves early in their innings that Pakistan will be sure to rue as this contest develops. On 13, and without having added to his lunchtime score, Bairstow poked flimsily at another exocet outside off stump and lobbed a simple catch to Yasir Shah at backward point.Wahab’s celebrations, however, were cut short by umpire Marais Erasmus’s outstretched arm – and the bowler could have no complaint. He had been warned after the first ball of the over that he was getting close to transgressing, then called for both of his subsequent deliveries, the second of which was the vital one.Bairstow, whose 83 at Edgbaston had arguably been the defining knock of that contest, instantly bunted a four through the covers to rub salt in Wahab’s wounds, and set about ensuring that Pakistan would be made to pay for his let-off.It wasn’t just Wahab whom the pair had to overcome. At the other end, Amir was locating that prodigious late swing that made him such a threat in his first coming as a Test cricketer, and on 23, he rapped Bairstow on the back pad with a fierce late inswinger that Pakistan felt obliged to review – the ball was shown to be slipping over the top of off stump.Then, on 9, came the key let-off, as Azhar Ali at third slip made a Horlicks of a low edge off Amir that hit him on the wrists. A similar juggled opportunity had earlier been good enough to send Gary Ballance on his way for 8, but this one refused to stick, as did another technical chance at the hands of the same fielder six runs later, although only a harsh judge could criticise Azhar for this one – a firm clip off the pads against Yasir that struck him on the chest at short leg but rebounded out of his reach.But as the session progressed, England’s confidence grew, and with it the urgency in their run-harvesting. Bairstow’s exemplary judgment of a quick single means that his stands are rarely anything less than hyper-charged, and with tea approaching, the pair were reprising their game-changing efforts in the second innings at Edgbaston.Moeen clipped the debutant Iftikhar Ahmed over midwicket for the first six of the innings, then rolled his wrists on a pull through midwicket four balls later to join his team-mate on fifty, and though Bairstow fell soon afterwards for 55, dangling his bat outside the line to inside-edge Amir through to the wicketkeeper, the arrival of Woakes offered Pakistan no let-up.With an England-record 23 wickets in a Test series against Pakistan, Woakes would be having the time of his life with or without any extra strings to his bow. Throw in his sublime form with the bat, however, and you end up with an allrounder with the form and confidence for any situation. With his cover-drive in preposterously good order, he cashed in on Wahab’s angle across his bows to breeze along to 45 from 57 balls, before feathering a thin edge to give Sohail and Pakistan a late chance to get their way back on track.Sohail did his best to oblige, extracting a marginal lbw against Stuart Broad for 0 before bowling Steven Finn through the gate for 8 to give Moeen a nervy few minutes as he biffed his way through the nineties with only James Anderson for company. But, having flashed a four past a baffled Younis Khan at slip, he took a premeditated swipe for six over deep midwicket off Yasir, to complete his century and cement England’s revival.Though he fell soon afterwards for 108, caught at square leg to complete Sohail’s five-for, Moeen’s personal contribution had all but doubled England’s halfway innings total.There had been little in the day’s opening exchanges to hint at the ebb and flow to come, with Alex Hales’ contentious early dismissal at square leg appearing to come against the run of play, given the fluency of Alastair Cook and Joe Root’s initial strokeplay. Hales, on 6, clipped firmly to Yasir at square leg, who scooped a low chance that umpire Oxenford referred upstairs for a second opinion. His initial instinct was that it carried, but the incident happened so quickly that none of the TV cameras could keep up with the blur of action, so the decision stood.England, however, had reckoned against the determination of Wahab to make an impact on the series. After entering the attack in the 12th over, he should have struck with his 13th ball, when Iftikhar shelled a low edge at first slip off Cook – ironically the same position in which Mohammad Hafeez, the man whom he had replaced, had been standing when he gave Root a crucial reprieve at Edgbaston last week.For once, Cook failed to make that sort of a let-off pay. He had added just one more run when he leant back on a pull against Sohail and under-edged into his own stumps. One over later, Root, whose stunning double-century at Old Trafford has been bookended by a cluster of limp dismissals, was suckered by Wahab’s extra pace and lift to tickle an edge through to Sarfraz Ahmed.In Wahab’s next over, he made it a collapse of 3 for 5 in 15 balls when the under-pressure James Vince was detonated from the crease by a fierce lifter that forced a defensive back-foot poke to give Sarfraz his second catch of the morning. At that stage, the contest was ripe for the seizing. But Moeen and his middle-order cohorts had other plans.

Wood ready to put body on the line

England fast bowler Mark Wood has said he does not wanted to be rested during the Ashes despite concerns about how his body will cope with the demands of a five-Test series

Alan Gardner25-Jul-20151:39

‘Bayliss allows captain, players to take charge’ – Wood

England fast bowler Mark Wood has said he does not want to be rested during the Investec Ashes despite concerns about how his body will cope with the demands of a five-Test series. Wood has made a good impression as England’s third seamer in his four Test appearances but picked up 1 for 131 at Lord’s amid worries that he struggles with back-to-back matches.Wood has had to deal with side and ankle injuries in recent times and has rarely played consecutive first-class fixtures for Durham. He admitted his pace was down during the second Test against Australia and said that was “something I’m going to have to address” but, after a rest period back home in the North East, he was bullish about being involved at Edgbaston and Trent Bridge, when there will again be a three-day turnaround.”I definitely don’t want to miss games for England,” he said. “We’ve had a little bit of rest time going into Edgbaston, then we’ve got Trent Bridge where famously I have played more first-class games than anywhere else, and done well there. I wouldn’t want to miss either of these two games.

England will bounce Rogers

Mark Wood said that England’s attack would continue to use the short ball against Chris Rogers if the Australia opener was passed fit to play in the third Test, starting at Edgbaston on Wednesday.
Rogers was hit on the head by James Anderson at Lord’s and has continued to receive treatment after suffering a dizzy spell during the second innings, which required him to retire hurt. Australia said he had suffered “damage to the vestibular apparatus” near his right ear, rather than a concussion.
While there was concern among the England players when Rogers went down on the fourth morning, Wood said that aggressive bowling was “part and parcel of the game”.
“It’s never great when you see someone get hit or go down,” he said. “You might have the intent or aggression to hit people but when they do get hit it’s not really that nice, especially when he had a dizzy spell.
“If he declares himself fit for the next game, that will not deter me from bowling a bouncer though. I’m sure the rest of our lads will be the same – if he declares himself fit then he’s fit. You don’t want to see someone have a dizzy spell, I wish him all the best, hope he’s all right. But if he’s fit then he’s fit, so it’ll be just the same as normal.”

“We have got some good fast-bowling stocks and say the next fast bowler was to come in and take five wickets then I am out of the team and can’t get back in, then being rested looks pretty stupid. I don’t want to miss games.”Wood has to ice his ankle at the end of a day in the field and also uses heat patches for muscular pain relief – as well as the usual physio rub downs – but said that the coach, Trevor Bayliss, had not yet suggested the option of sitting out a Test.”They have asked me how my body is and how I feel, without saying you’re going to be rested,” Wood said. “They’ve mentioned that my pace was down. At times when it is a flat pitch and people get in, you don’t want to concede runs so you might bowl within yourself. I wasn’t consciously down on pace, maybe it was tough on my body. There is only one way I am going to get better and that is by playing back-to-back Tests. I wouldn’t want to give anyone else an opportunity – I want to cement that spot.”At the age of 25, Wood has only played 28 first-class games – three of which have been at Trent Bridge, second only to his home ground at Chester-le-Street – and never more than eight out of 16 in a Championship season for Durham. He has had a good run in 2015, however, playing in all but one fixture on the Lions trip to South Africa at the start of the year, before touring the Caribbean with England and then making his international debuts in all three formats at the start of the summer.His ability to bowl consistently above 90mph risks being compromised by the demanding workload of international cricket, something England appeared to acknowledge when resting Wood for the first two ODIs against New Zealand following the Test series. Steven Finn is also in the 13-man squad for Edgbaston, where England could also consider playing Adil Rashid as a second spinner, but Wood is relishing the prospect of another Ashes double-header.”It’s tough. The intensity of things is different but it’s something I feel I can handle,” he said. “The New Zealand Tests were the same, back-to-back. I’ve been on Lions tours as well where there have been back-to-back games and I never missed a game. It’s obviously different to Ashes cricket but I did it.”My pace was down, which is something I’m going to have to address. But I’ve only played four Tests now and I’d say the more I play the better I’ll get. I’m still relatively new and will take time to get used to back-to-back Tests. For me the positive at the minute is I’ve managed to come from the end of last season when I needed an operation and it was doom and gloom body wise to now having been available for selection throughout the summer and before in the West Indies.”The 405-run defeat at Lord’s, which levelled the series at 1-1, left England with more issues to ponder than whether to rest a fast bowler. Wood said Bayliss wanted England’s players to focus on their own game, rather than what Australia might do to them, as they attempt to regroup and win the third Test of an Ashes series for the first time since Headingley 1981.”It was quiet,” Wood said of the atmosphere in the dressing room. “There was disappointment after the game and then Trevor spoke well – he is very clear-cut in what he says. He spends more time in the background, in the shadows, and then when he speaks everyone listens. At the end of the game he said that basically it wasn’t good enough, we’ve got to show more fight and forget about what’s gone.”We knew Australia were going to come back hard at us and he said maybe we thought about Australia too much in that second game. Whereas the first game in Cardiff we concentrated on ourselves more and I think that’s what we’ve got to do against them in Birmingham.”

Scorchers in semis with huge win

Adelaide Strikers were crushed under the weight of a big total as Perth Scorchers romped to the semi-finals of the Big Bash League with a 98-run win at the Adelaide Oval

ESPNcricinfo staff10-Jan-2013
Scorecard and ball-by-ball detailsPerth Scorchers’ win was the second biggest in BBL’s history•Getty Images

Adelaide Strikers were crushed under the weight of a big total as Perth Scorchers romped to the semi-finals of the Big Bash League with a 98-run win at the Adelaide Oval. Aggressive half-centuries from openers Shaun Marsh and Herschelle Gibbs, and a quickfire 36 from Adam Voges led Scorchers to 189 for 4, and their opponents wilted under pressure, to be bowled out for 91, the lowest total this season, and the third lowest in BBL’s history.The 95-run opening partnership between Marsh and Gibbs set up the win for their side. Gibbs scored his second fifty this season, dominating the stand with the help of five fours and two sixes, striking many through extra cover. No. 3 Voges then took over the attacking role in the company of Marsh, and the Scorchers added another 62 runs in 5.2 overs before Voges departed in the 18th over, with his team having built a huge total already.Marsh’s innings, although marginally understated in comparison with Gibbs and Voges, was smartly constructed. In both the partnerships, he held one end up and scored the odd boundary. He was batting at around a run-a-ball till the 13th over, before lifting his strike rate marginally with Voges. When Voges got out, he was unbeaten on 64 off 53 deliveries, and in the ensuing over, he struck two fours and a six to boost his rate, before holding out to mid-off for 79 off 60.In contrast to their innings however, the Strikers lost their openers by the second over, and couldn’t recover. The middle order played cautiously till the sixth over, but soon the Strikers lost three more wickets cheaply to seamer Nathan Coulter-Nile, to be 39 for 5. The rest of the batsmen managed to add 52 runs, but the contest had been over a long time ago.There was a brief confusion in the 11th over, when Kane Richardson trod on to his stumps while playing the pull shot. Initially, he was declared out, but without any appeal from the Scorchers’ players, he was recalled. That didn’t change the scenario of the match.The loss has ended Strikers’ season.**12:50am, January 11, 2013: The piece had initially stated that the Adelaide Strikers had a chance of qualifying for the semi-finals. This has been corrected.

Loss costs WAPDA a place in finals

A round-up of the fourth day of the final round of the Quaid-e-Azam Trophy Division One 2011-12

ESPNcricinfo staff17-Dec-2011Water and Power Development Authority‘s third defeat of the season – by 82 runs to National Bank of Pakistan – cost them a place in the Quaid-e-Azam Division One final. Set to chase 304 on the final day at the Gaddafi Stadium in Lahore, a win would have given WAPDA six points and taken them to first place in the table. After losing opener Asif Khan for a duck, Rafatullah Mohmand and Imranullah Aslam set about building their chase. They scored briskly, taking WAPDA to 93 for 1 before left-arm spinner Raza Hasan had Aslam caught behind for 38. After Bilal Khilji fell quickly, Hasan struck again, bowling Mohmand for 51, to reduce WAPDA to 102 for 4.Ammer Sajjid and Ali Azmat attemped to revive their side’s fortunes, adding 57 before Pakistan fast bowler Wahab Riaz bowled Azmat for 33. Hasan’s fellow left-arm spinner, Qaiser Abbas, took over from that point, taking four of the final five wickets to fall – Hasan grabbing the other – as WAPDA capitulated for 221 from 63.1 overs. Abbas ended up with 4 for 57, and 8 for 111 in the match.The result means the QEA final will take place between Pakistan International Airlines and Zarai Taraqiati Bank Limited at the National Stadium from December 20 to 24. The final will be a day-night game, and will be played using pink balls.Mohammad Imran and Prince Abbas took eight wickets between them to set up Sialkot‘s 185-run win over Faisalabad at the Jinnah Stadium in Sialkot. Needing to make 380 on the final day for victory, Faisalabad were never in with a realistic chance of winning the game but instead of their batsmen settling in for the long haul, most of them chose to attack the bowling. Zeeshan Butt made 50 from 59 balls and Shoaib Shah a more patient 44 from 79, but given the approach of the majority – nine of the 11 batsmen had strike-rates over 60 – Faisalabad succumbed in 50.3 overs. Abbas ripped through the lower order to finish with 4 for 95, while Imran finished with 4 for 77.Battling half-centuries from Faraz Patel and Javed Mansoor helped Karachi Blues secure a draw with Islamabad at the National Stadium in Karachi. Having begun the day still trailing by five runs, Karachi needed a strong batting effort to save the game. Yasir Mushtaq fell early on the final morning but Patel and Mansoor were up for the fight, scraping together 98 runs before Mansoor fell leg-before to Nasrullah Khan for 56. At that point, the lead was only 93 but Patel fought on, batting for four hours and five minutes for his 77 as Karachi posted 303 and set Islamabad 170 to win. The openers added 78 in 25 overs as the game meandered to the close.